Those Friday . . . MICHIGAN Sunny . _ opposed to righteousness with a high in the mid 60s. STATE NEWS . . I Ching . with injury. - STATI Outlook good for Saturday. UNIVERSITY ^0 63 Number 180 East Lansing, Michigan Friday, May 14, 1971 Black Panthers acquitted .(JfO of murder plot charges NEW YORK Minutes before Murtagh ordered (AP) - Thirteen Black state Supreme Court Powell removed from 11. OUT Panthers were murder conspiracy acquitted of bombing and Justice John M. Murtagh concluded his the courtroom for a few minutes, but -LW charges Thursday by a jury that agreed on the first ballot. charge to the jury of 11 men and one woman a courtroom readmitted him before submitting the case to the jury, which included five blacks. disruption occurred. "The miracle was that 12 As defense lawyers took exception to people of such The prosecution contended that the extraordinarily diverse backgrounds all felt Murtagh's jury charge and claimed it had pretty much the same way," said juror been biased and defendants were part of a massive, terrorist prejudicial against the Frederick Hills. defendants, one of the defendants, Curtis plot for the height of the 1969 Easter "I'm dazed — I'm just season. The defense contended the dazed," said Curtis Powell, leaped to his feet and shouted Powell, one of the jubilant defendants, Panthers were merely "blusterers." "pig." most of whom have been in jail for more than two years. Later the Panthers, their lawyers and the jurors gathered in the ground floor hall of the Criminal Courts around, Building and stood beaming and shaking hands. It took the Alienation foreman, James Fox, a black musician, 10 minutes by hite schools to read the verdict on each of 12 counts for each of 13 defendants, and tension mounted until he read the last of 156 verdicts, all "not guilty." By NAT ABBATE attend school and may have a high rate of Outside the courtroom, Fox said each absenteeism. Recruiters meet with juror was surprised to find the others were State News Staff Writer He added that very few Indians can opposition of like mind. In addition to afford to send their children to that most Indians who come to MSU college and [students staged a protest outside of the Placement Bureau in the Student Services Building Thursday when case went eight months of trial, the through seven months of pretrial There would be more American Indians at MSU if the white man's school receive financial aid through programs [recruiters fo, the Marine Corps were on campus. State News photo by Tom Gaun( hearings, often marked by disorder, and did not "push out" Indian students before system offered by the Center for Urban Affairs in the final day was no exception. conjunction with the Bureau of Indian they got to college, John Winchester, coordinator of American Indian Affairs (BIA). programs The Indian program at the Center for in The Center for Urban Affairs, asserts. Urban Affairs has been in existence since Fight b rews the fall, 1969, Winchester said, and since draft bill In an interview Wednesday, Winchester then Indian enrollment has risen from said the present educational over system does three to 10 students. not relate to Indians and consequently "We hope to double that forces them to drop out of school. figure by fall, though," he said. "In schools There is at least one student of Indian WASHINGTON (AP) — Senate Republican threatening the economic stability of the sticking to its "no compromise" position. Jackson said that the cutback in U.S. today," he said, "Indians descent on this campus who feels that are pushed from one grade to another. er Hugh Scott said Thursday President United States. President Nixon had an afternoon troops proposed by Mansfield would imply The college may not be the answer to the schools try to push the kids out 11 veto the draft extension bill if A Senate vote on the amendment just to get by meeting with a group of prominent citizens a greater reliance on nuclear weapons and them out of their hair." American Indians' problems. i attaches the pending Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield is to discuss the troops matter. their incoroporation in "I'm not sure that this place, or radment to cut U.S. military operations any European troop scheduled Wednesday. Nixon also has asked Gen. Andrew J. at a very early phase of hostilities. Winchester cited economic and college, is the best thing for Indians," he kth in half. One Republican opponent said a Nixon Goodpaster, commander In chief of NATO "We must not leave the American psychological problems as reasons for the said. He asked to remain anonymous. Charles McC. Mathlas Jr., administration head count looked "very forces, and Robert President with only the nuclear button in low number The Indian's culture is Ellsworth, U.8. of Indian high school hunting and [uwhile. warned that enactment of the bad" and that prospects of defeating the ambassador to NATO, to come here from his hand In the event of crises," he said. graduates. He said that frequently an fishing, he said, and most Indians are not t might prompt West Germany move In the House might also be difficult. Europe, White House prem secretary Indian student may have to work as well as rt selling its billions of U.S. dollars. Still, the White House was reported Ronald L. Ziegler said. (Please turn to page 18) Goodpaster told newsmen in Belgium Thursday that if NATO is weakened, "it fOTE 13-7 would jeopardize peace in Europe and no LAND DISPUTE one could further guarantee the maintaining this peace." Senate The first Senate vote will come on a substitute proposal by Mathias, which pan supports President Nixon's announced intention to keep the present 300,000-man level of U.S. forces in Europe and says Mountaineers fight restoration significant changes in the level of United States forces in Europe should not be made without full consultation with the This BALSAM GROVE, N.C. (AP) - little community of a few WASHINGTON (AP) — A Senate panel Before Boeing and other companies Congress." hundred mountaineers has taken on |lorsed the House-passed revival of the involved could start again, Allen said, all Talking to reporters before he left for the U.S. government in a feud over a i supersonic transport Thursday contract would have to be renegotiated; Japan to attend a weekend conference of one - acre tract of land. ftd reports that renewal of the The mountaineers are program undoubtedly at higher prices. parliamentarians, Scott said "I have as near complaining Tit cost U.S. taxpayers up to $1 billion. a certainty as a man could have that the over the burial of a trailer lived in And this time, he said, the goal should be by *ie Senate Vernon Appropriations Committee not merely production of two SST President would veto the draft bill if it has McCall, 40. They say forest ri 13 to 7 to reject a bid by Sen. prototypes but the construction of an the Mansfield amendment in it. rangers bulldozed a big hole on the im Proxmire, "The President will not and cannot tract, pushed the trailer in, filled up D-Wis., to delete the $85 American commercial passenger fleet. M in SST funds voted the hold with red mud and by the House in accept a forced reduction of forces," he planted prise move Wednesday, I want to see this program go forward grass over it. added, ft the Ten committee's chairman, Sen. but I don't want Boeing to be in a position On the Senate floor, Mathias and Sens, McCall has signed a warrant Ellender, D-La., previously a strong of misleading anyone," Allen said. "There Henry M. Jackson, D-Wash„ and John charging the district U.S. Forest p backer, voted with the minority and has to be determination on the part of the Sherman Cooper, R-Ky., spoke out against Service ranger, Dan Hile, with rr told newsmen: "I think it's still dead. United States to see the program through, the Mansfield proposal. Sen. Alan malicious damage to personal fi won't get the votes in the Senate. It's You just don't turn it on and off like a Cranston, D-Calif., supported it. property, and the government has filed JWnple." spigot in this business," he said. a civil suit against McCall and his father, Cannon McCall, 69, who claims percussions Wed from the House action Proxmire said in a Senate speech the mostly on how P to get the SST much it would declaration by the aerospace industry on 'Cuckoo's Nest' ownership of the land. Tl»e affair is scheduled to reach the assembly program the J"! Main. The estimates range from a costly business of restarting the The MSU New Players will continue courts for the first time today at program p rovides "the clincher" to Asheville with InnPorter .200 million offered by SST's chief Sen. Warren anti-SST arguments. performances of "One Flew Over the trial of against Hile, who has remained free the charge G. Magnuson. Cuckoo's Nest" this weekend in under a $500 bond. ■ wir to a possible $lbillion suggested Those arguments have included an attack Wonders Hall kiva at 8:30 pjn. today, 7 No trial date has been set for the Allen, board chairman of the on any federal subsidy of a private and 10 p.m. Saturday and 7:30 p.m. civil suit against the McCalls, filed "Svorp,, prime SST contractor. commercial project, predictions an by Sunday. Tickets are $2 and may be U.S. Dist. Atty. Keith Snyder. [' news conference Allen said $500 American SST would be commercially purchased at the Union, Lums, Marshall £!?[°bably It ke 10 wou,d ** the minimum it unsound and lose tax money, and fears it Music in East Lansing, State Discount (Please turn to page 18) "pick up the pieces" of the would trigger a long series of adverse environmental effects. and Campbell's Smoke Shop. WMBHHHHi Drug sellers discuss market By NAT ABBATE State News Staff Writer Hp rpfnspd He refused to to comment further on on the houses or the organization of the families, but did say that the Mafia is not involved. heroin. "Heroin scares the hell out of me," he said. "It doesn't even sound like dope." who runs them. on campus he has never been heen in one one anH has and has nn iHpa no idea sell marijuana if the government set prices Loman said that he sells too high. Jones, Jones said he tests the quality of his Jones said he would not sell heroin not a great deal of a fictitious name for an his drugs to high school students, who he Capt. Adam J. Zutaut and Lt. H. W. iHinljJ, ,student, estimates that he has drugs before selling them by either trying them himself or giving some to a friend. He only because it could ruin someone's life, but also because the Federal Bureau of said are buying harder drugs than just Julian of the Dept. of Public Safety and tt^ugs VingS 25 times this term by said that if he knows the source of the Investigation (FBI) is usually one step marijuana. He said that he does not think he will be Roy Swerdfeger, a detective with the Metro Squad, a narcotics squad, disagree l%!dt,this term with $17," Jones drugs to be reliable, he does not bother to behind the heroin pusher. Fear of arrest does not bother Jones too arrested because he turns over his drugs to with the assertion that legalizingmarijuana > J* t People 1 v,e 8°t $250 in cash, $90 in owe me test them. "Nobody has complained about my dope much, he said. Because he only sells to other buyers as soon as he can. would put pushers out of business. "This pusher who says he does it to make $100." Both Jones and Loman said they would yet, or had a bad reaction from it," he friendis, he said, he is confident that he will fence h'n8 fresfiman who lives in a added. not be caught. probably be put out of business if people happy won't quit dealing if grass is id m *'• ^id he sells marijuana, While he sells "The only time I worry is when I do marijuana was legalized. Jones said he legalized," Julian said. "What about the f0Pi?rS!m\THC' Psilocybin, LSD drugs mainly for the Jones said he enjoys seeing people something stupid," he said, "like selling to would gladly quit selling hard drugs if grass people who would still want LSD? He'll ^ • till, he dislikes being called a money, get high and usually gives away drugs after someone I don't know or talking to a was legalized, but added that he might still want to make them Swerdfeger said he had no happy." idea of how he earns a small profit. reporter." _ Kotce uUSh' " he said> "I sell dope. I "If someone comes up to buy Willie Loman, a fictitious name for many pushers exist on campus, but said he felt there are no really l^onlvtn f°" any°ne " He said he sells something," he said, "I know he's got to another MSU student, said he sells drugs Tickets available "What you have instead," he big ones. Vhim to son ,nends who come to him and not only to friends, but to anyone who said, "are from people higher up want it pretty badly, so sometimes I'll tell m caitf!to them- Jones' drugs come a person that if they eat it here, it's free. I wants to buy from him. people who happen to have a small in the "system," he said. quantity to sell L° ^arsbegan ^ing drugs about >t like to see people happy." Loman, 19, a freshman who also lives on Tickets are still available for the Guess every so often. "I doubt if JSced hil°' short,y after a friend "They're organized into families, he Who concert at 8 p.m. there are any very big pushers on campus said "These people have houses set up like Jones, who calls himself a small drug campus, estimated that he has made about today in Jenison at all." f1* foundhi\first dru*' LS0- He grocery stores where you can go and pick dealer, said that he personally knew of at $2,000 in the past year by selling Fieldhouse. Tickets will be sold at the Swerdefeger said it "very possible" l^titites t cheaper to buy drugs 8 quantities. I've been to a couple of dope least 25 other people on campus who sell "everything except heroin." door, and at the Union, Campbell's for Loman and Jones to was IN Of' va°n„ b!gan buy'n8 houses in IDetroit and Lansing. They re big, drugs. Like Jones, Loman said that he gets his Smoke Shop and Marshall Music in East much money as have made as they claimed. He said that One drug Jones said he will not sell is drugs from "dope houses," but added that Lansing. Prices are $2.50 and $3.50. (Please turn to page 18) 1 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Frida ^Mayu news Ruling By BARBARA FARY on 'Holden 23' declined policy. No time has been set for the student - their owrt acts and face the consequences of "the registration policy does summary State News Staff Writer faculty hearing. The decision by AUSJ not to rule on the case favors "the Holden 23," who wanted to possible violation of law with duly appointed authorities, like any student residing off campus. "We favor the latter policy. Since the campus benevolent intention. University alcohol policy toward the realization of Overall is refl*t i ,We f* « From the wires of AP and UPI. In the first test of the year - old University challenge the alcohol policy through a Student - police ideally have the potential to fulfill the this is appreciated. student1» alcohol policy, the All - University Judiciary Faculty Judiciary hearing. enforcement of the ordinance, further" that step is diminished However th* ^ *4 (AUSJ) referred the case of "the Holden 23" Thursday to the Student - Faculty Judiciary. The group maintains that students under 21 enforcement (by the University) seems policy' clause. We ask that the by the ^' l AUSJ declined to pass verdict on the case because of the substantive law involved, a drink at campus parties and that the registration policy is selectively enforced by resident advisers. unwarranted. "If the University is concerned with the be subjected to considerable regUtrZ^ and intent The statement presented at AUSJ contends welfare of students." the statement concludes. and we encourage spokesman said. No comment accompanied their elimination of decision. AUSJ heard the case Tuesday night. that the alcohol policy violates the Academic "I have as near a certainty as a "The Holden 23" is a group of Holden Hall Freedom Report, Section 1.5.02. It also takes Project for nation issue with the University's attempt through the man could have that the President residents who were reported to AUSJ last month when they failed to register a party with the policy to act as a buffer between students and would veto the draft bill if it has civil authorities, stating that the administration is office of the vice president for student affairs. the Mansfield amendment in it. not and should not be a law enforcement agency. Under the alcohol ordinance, on-campus parties The President will not and cannot with liquor must be registered with information "Upon review the administration has two of blacks discussed accept a forced reduction of on the date, location and time of the event, the alternatives from which to choose," the statement reads in part. "It can make a step forces." procedures for financing, the type of party to be held and procedures for excluding those below backwards in regards to students' rights, or what - Sen. Hugh Scott, R-Pa. the we call a return to the 'Dark Ages.' drinking age. Residence Halls Assn. and ASMSU "This would entail the strict enforcement of a cheaper than the real (See story, page 1) recently thing. The same h„u passed resolutions favoring a re-examination of strict policy such as was the case before the for imitation nationalism. s becau° By JAMES BARFIELD That's the University alcohol policy. The Student - ordinance. State News Staff Writer put less into it. ^cause p. Faculty Judiciary will decide whether to hear the "Or the administration has the option of But in America there are also case, reject it or make recommendations on the allowing students to accept the responsibility of A nation exists only when people share a nationalists such as the New government, share a common land and They understand what nationalism man. Africans h,,!! Sadat's aides resign share a common history or culture," Chokwe understand that land means u Put every thin?'a ' Egypt's war minister and five other members oft your parents up with us! Lumumba, Republic of New Africa (RNA) counselor, said Wednesday. understand that it is the basis of life i^J •President Anwar Sadat's 32 man Cabinet resigned - Parent's weekend May 14,15,16 Lumumba, Detroit rep. to the RNA, was on "The plan that we have 'Thursday night. campus to talk about the plans the RNA has for than a dream," Lumumba we know is hud The successor of Gamal Abdel Nasser was faced with establishing a black nation that will eventually dreams don't come true. But if said, "bec.u« J involve five southern states. we are to Lj other resignations from the Cabinet and by top officials of the Arab Socialist Union. Egypt's only legal political "These three things that enables a people to we are gong to need the political, econoS have a nation," he said. "In this country today, social strength of all black people." H .party. In addition to Lt. Gen. Mohammed Fawzi, the there is a nationalist revolution. It is a nationalist It will be necessary for all come to a basic those involwj war revolution because it is a revolution for land. understanding to develop minister. Interior Minister Shawari Muhammed Gumah Land is the basis for any nation," he explained. consciousness, he said. also There are two types of nationalism, Lumumba "The RNA can only be as was among those who quit. strong as bl The said. One is an imitation. This type of people will make it," Lumumba said. resignations came as Sadat at ordered an immediate end to all kinds of police surveillance, nationalism, he explained, is like when people One of the main objectives of the build up stores in hopes of becoming black RNAh J including the tapping of telephones, in Egypt. capitalists or like when people try to elect others offer alternatives to the people, he explained to offices to tear down present day structures. "We will offer alternatives to let peopledecidfl Viet MOTOR HOTEL This type of nationalism is cheap Lumumba said. He cited furs and leathers as an example. if they want to be New Africans or not, as well J. Cong attack When imitations first came out they were much alternatives candidates to run Lumumba said. against whital ® One mile east of M.S.U. North Vietnamese forces have gone on the attack to defend the A Shau Valley. They launched two strong assaults Wednesday against South Vietnamese marines Plenty of Parking 60 per cent book buy-bac ^menacing their long - time operating base close to the Area Code 517 2736 E. Grand River ;Laotian border. 337-1621 East Lansing gets go-ahead starting fall 2 The attacks produced the first major fighting since ^South Vietnamese forces undertook a hesitant and so ;far unproductive campaign against Hanoi's valley Stronghold a month ago. A recommendation to the Thursday. a member of the booksb Z South Vietnamese headquarters in Saigon reported MSU Bookstore to adopt a The recommendation subcommittee, said the ratios policy of buying back used designates Sept. 1, 1971, for the 60/75 ratio -Thursday both attacks were repulsed and claimed 200 as the v books from students at 60 per operation date and provides for permit an increase in the numbi •North Vietnamese were killed. cent of the retail price and a re-evaluation of the of used books available thro policy in selling them at 75 per cent was spring term, 1972. local bookstores. approved unanimously by the Albert Blum, "The threat of a 50/65 (b Black colonels promoted Business Affairs Committee professor of labor and industrial relations and back, sell) ratio has i decreased the number of h The Army, which broke the color line in 1940 with books available. Theoreticallyil ihe first black general in U.S. military history, named The State News, the student newspaper at would be nice, but in practical three black colonels Thursday for promotion to Michigan State actually reduces the number of University, is published every class day during four school used books," Blum said. brigadier general. terms, plus Welcome Week edition in September. Blum also told the committee's open hearing would provide better communication B ARISES Jtdrawn balance on the between the board and the of East Lansing Iksturc or account. bookstore. Ie said the policy of ASMSU . the finest in Try any of our locations lanteeing student accounts Roses, Centerpieces 5751 South Cedar 5417 W. Saginaw 3214 N. East overdrawn balaim Has Entertainment Really a i ill Corsages I instituted in the last year | that because the bookstore "THE DOGS"? i We telegraph flowers s established before Set them for vow self world-wide I time it was not covered bv HSU. | 12 Noon Union Mixed l ounge | Wilkinson said the Office Summer's easy pieces — ready in summer when life rolls out-out-doors, what's wanted are lots of little easy-breezies that you don't have to think about twice. Fall into this cotton terry romper in the morning and sun around all day. Red/ navy, white/navy, navy/sun¬ shine. 5-13. 16.00. Green, blue, red or yellow terry sea- legs — low on the waist, easy on the way down with its long tunic in matching stripes. Pants 6-14. 20.00. Tunic 6-14. 24.00 OPEN WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY UNTIL 9 PM the bagpiper 321 east grand river, east lansing M ICHIGAN POINT OF VIEW STATE NEW' UNIVERSITY Business subcommittee a was set up — followed by a closed meeting farce discussed the South By ANABEL DWYER University. MSU owns about 6,000 shares African KEN LYNAM with the two GM representatives. Mr. Onek summarily put this University Village Resident of GM stock. This year there are four more than adequately answered any Universitv ^ « advertising manager In March,three Campaign GM proposals important proposals on the GM proxy. University channels had to deal with objections of GM management. In the vote, Dr. Little's committee was ^'heTdd0PC" Dr. Little's DAVE PERSON, managing editor introduced into the University these four proposals and the following is new were subcommittee u I BOB ROACH, city editor Business Affairs Committee with the hope what happened: split, but fully half the faculty on that Suppose it decides MSU should ""l JOHN BORGER, campus editor BARNEY WHITE, editorial editor that discussion of MSU's relationship with GM in particular and of MSU's social Three proposals, put on the GM proxy by the Project on Corporate Responsibility committee, including Dr. Little, did not vote from any "objective reasoning." They Stock and stop all corporation with business in deali^'l?! wh "1 RICK GOSSELIN, sports editor responsibility as a stockholder in general (Campaign GM II), dealt with voted out of a conservative political desire would result — it didn't. democratizing the selection of members of not to rock the boat with GM - an m"ior oil Seven.time recipient Two months later Dr. Little, the the GM Board of Directors and with important element in the life of MSU. if!f comP»"y town i„ 5,1«l of the Pacemaker award committee chairman, announced a disclosing specific figures on minority In their April meeting, the majority of doing that with the above M for outstanding journalism. the board of trustees, Mssrs. Thompson, subcommittee of the Business Affairs hiring, autopollution, and autosafety. ridiculous. Suppose Dr Committee on University stock policy. In March, Dr. Little asked that his Huff, White, Hartman and Merriman took subcommittee decides to the split vote of the Business Affairs of the top 10 defense sell stnoi 1,1 The Business Affairs Committee is set up committee hear representatives from to advise the administration on business Campaign GM and GM management. An committee and ignored it. They refused to one of those. contractors-'Si Suppose Dr iJL EDITORIALS affairs. The board of trustees makes all open meeting with Joseph Onek, a director discuss the proposals or the issues of the proposals and abidcated all responsibility subcommittee decides to sell decisions on financial matters of the of the Project on Corporate Responsibility, to the Ann Arbor Trust Company, which stop all dealings with which contributes any ll will vote with management. substantiVif!'1? environ^ '"y ^ SST revival: The fourth proposal on the GM proxy this year asks that GM either remove its pollution of the automobile and oil that.. So industries do Dr. Little's LI facilities from South Africa or openly refusing to deal with specifics, subcommittee J confront the South African government's deal in generalities. will uiTlf ^ and a little apartheid recommends policies. GM management a vote against the proposal on And even were the decide anything, the subcommittee J the grounds that GM should abide by the of the board of trustees five-member mZ In a classic case of political The core motive behind the laws of the country it is in. wouldn't Ik They passed such a motion at t myopia, the House voted Wednesday revival attempt, however, is quite A quote from a Council on Economic meeting. Priorities Report on U.S. Automobile to revive the Supersonic Transport simply some shrewd short-run Corporations in South Africa illustrates the There is no stockholder voicing his inconsistency in I (SST). The resurrection bid will go politics. In view of the lack of position of GM management and a reason corporation in which he holds stock opinion of I before the Senate next week, where positive reasons for building such a Ami Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield plane, the SST movement appears to of Montana predicts the outcome be an attempt to buoy up the will be close. employment picture before election The starting rate for Africans or Coloureds If successful, the SST proposal time at any cost, regardless of the will take the $85.3 million (legal classifications of skin color in South A frica) long-run consequences. House at the GM plant is 52 cents an scheduled for the termination of the hour, or $83 a Republican Leader Gerald Ford of month. A semi-skilled worker, usually a project and use it for further Michigan has stated that the project Coloured, receives between 70 cents and $1 an hour be revived because "the SST A development. Unfortunately, one must skilled artisan, ... fact remains: there are no better workers who have been laid off since always a White, receives over $2.10 an hour. reasons for supporting the SST now the decision was made to kill the than there were two months ago project demanded that decision be when it was killed in the Senate. reversed." What burning national problems will The building of a white elephant why the proposal was necessary. against management is no more g be solved by pouring billions of tax like the SST is often clothed in the Wages: According to J.M. than vote with management. Roche, a dollars into an 1,800 - mile - an - rhetoric of progress - the U.S. can, chairman of the board of General Motors: A vote with management, at least intJ hour passenger plane? and invaribly will, build 'em bigger "With regard to GM South African's case of GM this year, is a conservativeu] The SST offers slim prospects of and better and faster. Which is fine, wage policy, GM South Africa does not political stance. (Dr. Wharton's claim thi discriminate between the races as to wages, the University is politicized only whenifl any substantial returns on such a until you reach the point where you asked to discuss leftist issues or take ■ except for a difference in starting rates huge investment. The British and start getting diminishing returns for which are higher for whites than for liberal position is nonsense. This Univei French are currently learning this in additional massive investments. colored or native employes. Any employe takes definite political and < regard to their own supersonic of any race can progress to a higher rate of conservative political positions all the tin In a time of intense domestic The conservative stance this year has iw transport, the Concorde, which Jean- pay depending on his job performance and problems on all sides - housing, length of service." that this University is in official a{ Jacques Servan - Schreiber has The starting rate for Africans or with the autocratic and described as "an industrial education, increasing crime - it seems dysfunctional to divert funds, Coloured (legal classifications of skin color system of GM management. Tbl Vietnam." A number of surveys, in South Africa)' at the, GM plant i& ^2 conservative political stance this year hf to the cause of getting someone from including one by BOAC, the cents an hour or $83 a month. A meant, horribly, that this University kil New York to Paris a little faster. The semiskilled worker, usually a Coloured, official approval of the South AfiiaT nationally owned British airline, indicate the high operating costs of logic of "build 'em bigger and receives between 70 cents and $1.00 an government whose foundations ai better" regardless of the need is the hour. Machine setters and changers, mostly and legal discriminatin according to ski the Concorde will prevent it from same logic of overkill that brought whites, earn between $1.40 and $2.00 an color. operating at a profit in its present hour. A skilled artisan, always a white, I hope that the board of trustees' quia you a $1.3 billion Sheridan tank that form. receives over $2.10 an hour." doesn't work or a $2 billion MBT - The Business Affairs Committee did not abdications and Dr. Little's generalities not continue to keep this University for d| Furthermore, the same high "Europe told me to go to hell, but you know me 70 tank that has never gotten past feel compelled to deal with the South openly discussing and taking positions J operating costs mean a supersonic I'd like to die beyond my means, too." African proposal at all. The board of the prototype stage. ... real and specific issues of s transport will be an expensive vehicle trustees and the administration nowhere responsibility. for passenger, limiting its use to an A further example of logic or the elite rather than the great mass of lack thereof in the SST case is people who would be paying for its offered by Speaker Carl Albert of A PRESIDENT'S PERSPECTIVE development with their tax dollars. Oklahoma, who thinks the plane Against this lack of plusses stands should be revived because it would the possible negative effects on the be foolish to kill the project after environment of such a caraft. To be sure, the SST will bring financial returns to a small number already spending $1 billion other words, if you've made a mistake and sunk a lot of the on it. In We must not discount history of interest groups, most notably its taxpayer's money into a bad By CLIFTON R. WHARTON JR. contractors, Boeing Aircraft Co. In investment, you cover up that Today, May 14, commemorates the tragic But today we mark an event in history in pushing for the SST, the mistake by pouring a whole lot more deaths at Jackson State College and which all of us were participants. When one who left us, with whom we were not doubt the rapidly growing pubjj administration is following its habit knowledgable during their own lifetimes, disapproval of that war, that® money down the shoot. It seems although the ceremonies were joined with is a participant in history, one has a unique of bailing but whom we came to know in spirit and disapproval is being felt at the nignc out giant defense-related we've heard that line of reasoning those of Kent State last week, I thought it opportunity to learn directly from that to identify with after their deaths. levels of our country and that decisions an corporations, such as Lockheed. before - in Vietnam. appropriate to reproduce some of my experience, and learning is the heart of But I think it would be a mistake to being made which reflect that disappro remarks from the teach-in on that occasion. education. All of us here today were When a quarter of a million people ma assume that that sense of sisterhood and Any commemoration is in a sense an participants in different ways in the sad brotherhood was limited to the young in Washington, D.C., the message is i Test dorm ru attempt to recall and focus upon history. Very often, the younger generation tends to discount history perhaps due to the events a year ago — which culminated in deaths on the campuses of two of our sister institutions of higher education. Students alone. Those needless and tragic deaths forced a bond of sympathy, compassion lost. The irony is that the message diluted and shunted aside if, canj j and understanding throughout all attention thereafter focuses on sen The University's restrictive housing feeling that history does not "speak to — white, brown, black — felt a sudden and deliberate provocation. Polytechinc Institute when sued on their condition." generations. Any sensitive person — those brotherhood and sisterhood with those policy, under almost continual fire similar grounds, less than a year age. with children, those who have watched the Yes, there is still injustice at homei w from students, may soon be ever-increasing strains and tears in the abroad. There is pollution of the air, A primary question in the OUR READERS' MIND fabric of our society, those who saw the is still poverty, there is still questioned in federal court. If and litigation will be whether the campus as a citadel or even a sanctuary of tendency is, of course, to claim ha when the suit against the University and calm in is no change. But I don't believe that trie, University's housing limitations are a reason a world otherwise torn is filed, chances are that MSU's reasonable extension of state power. by dissention — to each of us the deaths has been any other period in history w _ housing policy will either suffer significant revision or be scrapped altogether. This argument will center on the role of University housing as a living-learning environment. If the Faculty: insensitive? were the ultimate tragedy. But I would ask the basic question — what have we learned? Did six persons die and all that we learned was that more there has been so much question1"? status quo, the refusal to ac P superficial answer, and, in fact, challenge to the moral Tightness o 1 j J To the Editor: that I thought the no work/no pay edict According to informed sources, the University can prove that its housing A week in violence is the answer? Or did the sudden a period when court decisions 1 the life of a middle-age, was politically intimidating and violated suit will challenge the University on shattering sound of gunshots cause us to championed the primacy of the contributes to the educative nonconforming faculty member: my academic freedom. or when it becomes obvious that four grounds: 1) the housing policy processes by creating a Monday, May 3: I should be in Saturday, May 8: Received an stop and say, wait, what madness is this? J] violates the students' rights to What goal can justify death? So I think we against pollution and to ^e our 2aj "living-learning" situation, the suit Washington. All of this antiwar burden anonymous phone call to the effect that: freedom of should not fall on the young. After all, if "I saw your name in the paper. You have to look back on those 12 months and resources is not a passing fad- association and against the University might be Dr. Spock can make the sacrifice, why Communist son of a bitch. You are on our ask ourselves the question whether those momentum daily. . at movement as guaranteed in the First thrown out. shouldn't I? I wonder if Mitch Stengel is list." What list, I wonder? deaths really made any difference in the It is not death or riots that bring Amendment; 2) it violates the It is doubtful that the University Sunday, May 9: Life would be much nature of things. such changes. It is dete . 0ftJ getting busted. so students right to privacy; 3) it has will be able to prove this contention Tuesday, May 4: Attended a rally of 30 easier and better if the older would only The cynic will say, "no," it hasn't made persistence, reason and a knowledge impermissible basis for regulation in in a court of law, however. Several lonely faculty members who were listen to the younger, if the administration any difference, the Vietnam war is still on. There is still injustice in the world which system and how to push of many people, it alo g. ^ (1 that the housing restrictions are rather involved studies have protesting the no work/no pay edict. and the faculty would take their authority concern n0JJ ,tin„r recently must be righted now, immediately, on my who think that they alone have promulgated solely to insure Where were the other 2,100 members? less seriously, and if people weren't so payment of the bonded indebtedness disproved the University's claim that its residence halls provide a setting Can't they see that this issue involves both insensitive to war, poverty and racism. terms. The fortune teller will times have changed, what say, "Yes," happened at wisdom and vision of the things. To mo, this is th.Je®' „J n£«l academic freedom and the war in Theme of the Week for the faculty and of the residence halls; and 4) it which promotes personal, social and Indochina? the administration: Kent and Jackson and on other campuses perhaps we may have learn ■ ^ ^1 discriminates against a specific class academic development. If the were a phenomenon, an explosion which new lesson, but what haPPe.. vaiidityl Wednesday, May 5: I had no class on of students, thereby violating the Wednesday, but nevertheless presented Eyes they had, but saw not; cleared the air and restored calm and we and Jackson have reinf°['ce mon sens! equal protection clause of the 14th University's defense collapses, the Provost Cantlon with a letter protesting the Ears they had, but heard not; Mouths they had, but spake not. are returning to complacency and hope that now we have the co t T equal protection clause of the 14th indifference. the dedication to justice ana r - Amendment. no work/no pay edict. Attended the rally Milton C. Taylor But in Amendment will have been violated. at Demonstration Hall. Where was the my view, neither of these human dignity and the ng tinUOusly i Past cases similar to this such as Such a court challenge should be professor of economics interpretations is correct. Yes, the war is build constructively and tonti | Moliere v. Southeastern Louisiana, faculty, the Academic Council, the May 10,1971 still with us, but can what we have lamed. welcomed and supported by the anyone honestly administratin, the trutees? Only the seem to indicate that the likelihood student body. Approximately students, the young faculty and the FBI of the suit being accepted are good. 22,000 students, 53 per cent of the seemed to be present. em NOU) ANPWig Quite possibly, the suit may force student body, presently reside in Thursday, May 6: Provost Cantlon issued PLA6UEP W SELfWjJ a statement indicating that faculty an out-of-court settlement initiated University approved housing. Most members who take issue with the principle by the University. If the University of no work/no pay are "abusing the deems the litigation likely threat to are undoubtedly there voluntarily but the significant minority that are principle of academic freedom and further housing policies, it may very responsibility." Tilings are getting better; I not should not be penalized for the used to be called disloyal to the University. ^ well revise and liberalize its housing kjestrictions poor planning and financial Friday, May 7: Helen Clegg of the State as did Louisiana insecurity of the University. Journal had a brief article which indicated Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, May 14. 1971 5 LP NEWS ANALYSIS California inmates fight death in courts Hill also expressed hope that the American Civil Liberties There's also been a i joking about when you go," Hill For Paul Perveler, 54 - year - old former insurance adjuster By EDITH M. LEDERER Union or the National Assn. for the Advancement of Colored said. convicted of murdering his second wife and another man in what Associated Press Writer People might come up with a blanket new challenge to the death For every death row inmate, meeting death i l individual authorities said was a scheme to collect $105,000 in life penalty that would affect all death row inmates. |c\N QUENTIN, Calif. — The sound of pounding typewriters Though the decision was generally expected, all those thing. Rhinehart said, "I've seen too much of death to fear it. I've insurance, "there are worse things than dying." Perveler, who hopes to be freed by the California Supreme through San Quentin's death row as inmates start interviewed said they were disappointed that the court did not set seen too much of life to be Court, which is reviewing his case, said that according to state Sparing new appeals, hoping to keep alive following the U.S. disappointed in it. Not that I'm going specific guidelines on who shall live and who shall die. to go Atty. Gen. Evelle Younger "20 million Californians are now Ipreme Court ruling supporting the death penalty. "There should have been some guidelines," said Stanley Carl down there quietly. They have no right to take my life and I'm going to fight. gratified that they can murder us." ■ Nearly all the 93 men on the nation's most populous death row Rhinehart, a tall, well-built former collegiate football player. ■mected the court to affirm the death penalty as it did last week. "I think it's set the judicial system back 25 ■Execution dates have not been set for most of the prisoners "I don't think the death penalty is cruel and unusual years. Icause the California Supreme Corut has not yet ruled on their punishment. It's the way it's applied The death penalty Itomatic appeals. But 25 had been given stays pending appeals . . . T the U.S. Supreme Court and higher courts, and for them the depends on who the person is. "Say like me. What motivated the jury to give me the death Le factor is acute. penalty? I'd never been arrested. Had an honorable discharge. f'There is a tendency to put the thought of death out of your What motivated the jury to give me the death penalty when Ijnd " said Robert Douglas Hill, under sentence of death for guys blue jeans on several felonies get life? It's all political." Xjrder. "And a lot of us really haven't thought about it for a Rhinehart was convicted of murdering Patricia Graham, 22 - ie. But you have to get used to it." year - old secretary to Los Angeles City Councilman Thomas, iHill. a 27 • year • old former salesman, was convicted in Lof Bradley, and her fiance, Osborn Crump, 23. He said he was Ingeles five years ago of the rape and murder of a pregnant framed and is hoping for a reversal by the California Supreme fcusewife. He had an execution date two years ago but it was Court, where his case is pending on automatic appeal. hi rise, lo rise all colors tyed pending the high court ruling. ™ Not optimistic Not whim ■As one of the 24 \s not optimistic. directly affected, Hill said in an interview he Nonetheless, he said he typed several letters Hill agreed, saying "It seems to me that a death should be decided on something other than whim. The question of life or regularly jury [his attorneys and others within hours after the decision was could not like the length of your hair, your looks — inded down in May. at all and that's enough." any prejudice $7.50 f1 You start thinking about all sorts of things," he said. "I have to Time still hangs heavy on death row. But the court decision has Lke out a will shortly. And what am I going to do with my made a difference. As Hill put it: "You were kind of straddling now ? I have a few little things. Who am I going to give them to the a fence. Now you're kind of tilting in one direction. ... one of the first to go?" "Nobody outwardly reacts with a great show of emotion," he [Hill said he expects the U.S. Supreme Court to turn down his said. "You see only little things, an increase in the noise of [peal since it was based on many of the same issues the high Jurt rejected in its decision involving fellow San Quentin inmate ■nnis C. McGautha. typewriters. I think the closest anyone comes to showing they're upset is when they step out of character - like doing more talking. "That's what they've been talking about — Would you like to $6.00 phe high court rejected McGautha's argument that juries should go by yourself or would you rather go with somebody else? 1 stripped of "absolute discretion" to decide on he death ■nalty in capital cases. It did not rule on whether the dealth |nalty constitutes "cruel and unusual punishment." Will held out little hope that the court's refusal to rule on this ■imate challenge would block future executions. WE SERVICE ALL MAKES Nonetheless, he said, nearly all inmates had written their Lyers and were rereading transcripts of their cases looking for DELL TELEVISION SERVICE ■w constitutional issues to raise. 1000 E. GRAND RIVER T^i Ph. 482-0868 $1 OFF on all carry-in items authorized PANASONIC servicenter 8TEUAFPHCNIG,. MOOG pay 21.22,23- 28,29,30 ■ 8and 10pm Sat - 2:30,8 and 10pm Sun - 4pm only kets available at Union & Planetarium box offices $i bo The Moog Synthesizer fWO WEEKENDS ONLY IlVE-ON STAGE at ABRAMS PLANETARIUM I Moog music, featuring a 10 channel multi - stereo sound system, ormed LIVE by members of the MSU Music Department, tastic visions by THE EYE SEE THE LIGHT SHOW CO. Many ' far out lighting effects blend with the electronic moods of the _ og synthesizer. ADVANCE TICKETS on sale now. I STF.LLARPHONIC MOOG . .. don't miss it! INFORMATION ABRAMS SKY SCAN: ;ram , emphasizing current second Thursday of each nST J^LANETARRIM^ PIZZA LANSING COMMUNITY COLLEGE PAR presents its 1970-1971 Fine Arts Concert Series EXCELLENCE! L.C.C.'s opera workshop in the opera LAKME by Leo Delibes Featuring Eighteen Audition Winning Soloists The L.C.C. Dance Orchesis and The LanSymphonic Choir with Orchestra Directed by Dr. David Machtel One performance Saturday, May 22, at 8:15 P.M. Everett High School Auditorium ADMISSION PRICES L.C.C. Students - $ .25 Non L.C.C. Students $1.50 - Entire Family, General Public - $3.00 |F°ur Ways to Get Your Tickets: DOMINO'S pHPIilM Pick up tickets at: (1) Student Activities Office, L.C.C. 966 Trowbridge (2) Evening College Office in Old Central, Room 107 L.C.C. (3) Evening College Office in CAS, Room 105 351-7100 (4) Gibson's Book Store, CAS L.C.C. 227 ANN K>AHT STORE For pick-up or free delivery to East complex, Shaw (5) Technology Office, L.C.C. Lane, South complex, Brody dorms and married (between discount . (6) Paramount News, Lansing Branch records & marshall I ^one Reservations: Call 489-3751 - extension 333 Open 5 p.m. 1 a.m. - weekdays; 5 p.m. - 2 a music) 8t Sat.; 4 p.n -1 Sunday. 1 Mail Order: Send a.m. - self-addressed return envelope with 12 — 8pm | ,icket request and check made out to L.C.C. to: The pizza people Jean William Monroe Mon.—Sat. Technology Division J19 N. Capitol Avenue of MSU. ^nsing, Michigan 48914 .^Office: Get tickets on the day of performance. <6 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Muslim students sponsor NR talk on Muhammad, Islam Ahmed Totonji from the The following background International Islamic Federation information was supplied Mecca, to meditate. On one of your Lord who created you. the pen, taught mankind what by the of Student Organizations will Muslim Student Assn: occasion an angel appeared to Recite your Lord is the most they did not know." him saying, "Read in the name Bountiful One, who taught by speak at 7 p.m. today in 35 Muhammad, the son of Following the revelation Union. Abdulla the prophet, was born Muhammad united the people of Totonji's speech, "Islam — The Religion For All Times," is sponsored by the Muslim title in 670 in Mecca, Arabia. The people of Mecca gave him the "Al-Amin," which means Doctoral candidate Mecca and spread the Islam to the east and west. Student Assn. of MSU in Learning became the most "the Faithful." important thing in Islam. "Seek conjunction with the celebration of the birth of Muhammad, May 7. wins award in music Knowledge," Muhammad said. A favorite inscription above Jim Hartway, a doctroal candidate in music theory and composition at MSU, recently received the second place award in collegiate portals in Muslim Spain reads: "The world is Weekly Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia's eighth annual composition competition. supported by four things only: These coeds are vigil distributing information to passerbys during the weekly peace vigil in f the learning of the wise, the I He received the award for his composition, "Three Ways of Bessey Hall. The purpose of the vigils is to educate people on the war and MSU's involvert»n,0f FREE BEVERAGE Looking at a Blackbird" — a setting of the first three vases of Wallace Stevens' poem, "Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird." justice of the great, the prayers of the righteous and the valor of the brave." it and to give information regarding local peace activities, spokesmen said. State News photo by Fred Mendenhall nt>ri I when you try our NEW PASTIES Jews seek new or Opinion is divided among MSU's Jewish students about the young Jew's search for a new religious style. has He said the movement away from the synagog - based activity only recently surfaced here. In parts of the country it is fairly "The ethics and culture of Judaism appeal to David Bale, Southfleld sophomore, said. "But young they are Jews"! turnedoffI "Young people are taking traditional beliefs and putting them widespread. by the Jewish institutions because they see hypocrisy in oth«| SANDWICHES in a modern context," Herbert Konstam, Detroit sophomore, institutions and assume this is true of theirs." | said. "There is a multiplicity of organizations doing a traditional "The new attitudes could stem from something which hi TODAY THRU MAY 20 religious thing, but not through the synagogs. "These people refuse to be part of the hypocrisy of the larger Baha'is to sponsor come up in Israel," said Charles Mostov, Toledo, Ohio, senior ami codirector of the MSU Jewish Liberation Project. "A group oil organizations, bit don't want to abandon Judaism," he said. young Jews have formed a movement that entails a rejoicii*I of life while maintaining contact with the moral teachings oil SATURDAY Noon - 9 spring youth confab Judaism. conscious ofl I OPEN SUNDAY Noon - 9 DAILY 10 to 9 MSU KARATE CLUB'S 5TH ANNUAL The Baha'i Club, a religious organization, will hold a spring "Young Jews in America have become Judaism since the six day war in Israel four years - more "and don't want to express It the way their fathers did." ago," he aid, I I SEE US AT THE PASTY SHOPPE KARATE TOURNAMENT youth conference in G-8 Holden Hall Saturday. The conference will be held in two sessions, the first beginning "People are going both ways," David Black, HuntingtonI Woods junior, said. "I know people who are as entrenched Kmyl at 1:30 pan. and the second at 7:30 pjn. Irma Hayden, nationally prominent Baha'i and wife of poet grandfather, and people who are going the other way." I 545 E.GR. RIVER Eliminations 12 FINALS 7:30 p.m. noon Robert Hayden, will speak along with Irvln Thomas, a Baha'i and "Some people are searching," Sue Canon, Ann Arbor sophomore, said. "It depends upon the individual. Many ml | Sports Arena Men's IM counselor at Washtenaw Community College. trying to find a new way of belief, but they are also falling backl May 15 A rock band, "Revelation" and songwriter Tom Sharrad will on a Jewish education." EDGEWOOD UNITED Championship matches in white belt, green belt, brown conclude the evening program. "The majority of young Jews don't know what r CHURCH FIRST ASSEMBLY OF GOD belt, women's and black belt divisions. Demonstrations of about," Robert Meer, Oak Park junior, said. 469 N. Hagadom self defense, board breaking and other martial arts. - "These kids want to be Jewish, but they don't know whit I Baha'i Conference IMAI lUlMAL 1125 Weber Dr. Lansing An Ecumenical Fellowship BAHA'U'LLAH is NOW form to take. In the end they will only be satisfied by Orthodox| POETRY (Blk. No. of E. Grand River Judaism." Worship Services 9:30 Sermon UNIVERSITY 11:00 New Liturgy Service Sermon by Dr. Truman 7:00 EVANGELISTIC MAY 19 - 30 BAPTIST CHURCH This Space Is For Rentl Call 355-8255. Fri. May 14 at 7:30 p.m. Rm 34 Union July6-14v1971 Group sets A. Morrison Weekday (except Mon. & Sat Meeting temporarily at festival of poetry post*. & students Dr. Robert Harris, Choirmaster Campus Church Bus Service, Morning and Evening Call SINGER A EVANGELIST Wardcliff Elementary School John D. Walden - Pastor NOW!! Sat. May 15 1-4, 7:30-11 Rm. G8 Holden Hall o» poetry on the campus of Thomas Jefferson College near Grand Rapids Readings, workshops, poetry events, by seminary 337-1220 exhibits. 4c Early enrollment suggest The Geneva Forum, a student organization of the C 332-0606 or 332-8693 For Information 332-1888 For bulletin: Poetry Festival. TJC. or Transportation EPISCOPAL COMMUNITY 351-8193 Reformed Church, Is sponsoring the appearance of the Cthigfl College Landing. Allendale. Michigan Bus Schedule 332-8472 AT M.S.U. 49401 Seminary Choir at 7 p.m. Sunday at the Christian Reformed! OKEMOS FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Church, 1509 River Terrace Drive. I CORSO CREELEY LOGAN Under the direction of Herbert Start, the 25 • voice choir wil 4684 Marsh Rd., Okemos Central United Methodist WAKOSKI YOUNG HALL present a two - part program. The initial portion will inchidtl (2 mi. E. of Hagadom, >/< mi. S. of Gd. R. behind MEIJER'S) ev. Jack Hllyard, Chaplain songs of worship and praise, after which John Kromminga, the I Across from the Capitol Phone 351-7160 BLY • SANCHEZ MAC LOW seminary president, will conduct a brief service. I UNIVERSITY The performance will then conclude with a number An Independent Church With A Biblical Message WORSHIP SERVICES o(| SEVENTH-DAY 9:45 and 11:00 a.m. spirutuals and other selections by contemporary composers. ALL SAINTS CHURCH 9:45 a.m. Church School — all ages ADVENTIST CHURCH Topic 800 Abbott Road 11:00 a.m. & 7:00 p.m. Worship Services "Will The Real Jesus Sabbath School 9:30 Please Stand Up?" ABRAMS For Transportation Call 349-2830 349-2533 Worship Service 11:00 A or Dr. Lyman W.E. Robinson, Pastor K. G. Smith, pastor Church School 9:45 to 11:45 UNIVERSITY CHRISTIAN 149 Highland Ave. Call 351-8994 if you 8:00 Holy Communion 0:00 Morning Prayer and Sermon Crib Nursery i \ PLANETARIUM Vt (UP CHURCH need transportation CAMPUS HOUSE 310 N. Hagadom 251 W. Grand River Discussion Groups 9:30 a.m Pastor E. Eugene Williams ••First East - Then West" n:oo A.M. PEOPLES CHURCH EAST LANSING An program, original Science Fiction written and produced exclusively for presentation in the 'planetarium chamber. MS TIFFANY ALWAYS OPEN east lansingTrinity church W. Grand River THE NEW WORLD is for a mature audience material presented being designed .... the thought RESTAURANT ] B Minister, Kail Ruffner Campus Minister, E. Eugene Williams, 841 Timberlane Drive it Michigan provoking and somewhat abstract. 8c LOUNGE Minister You will witness multi 332-5193 332-3035 If I East Lansing - media sounds and visions, and periods of " I StanA«Sa?teilly' Interdenominational total darkness. Telephone: 351-8200 SUNDAY SERVICE Take your young children. parents University Class 9:45 a.m. Program Schedule to dinner 9:30 and 11:00 Eugene Williams Owosso College Chamber Chorale 6:00 p.m. Fridays 8-f Saturdays ~ "3:00 p.n at Jim's.. ■ Wednesday: Mid-week discussion & prayer 7:00 p.m. "The Path of Life" Sundays 2:30 & < they 'II Dr. Wallace Robertson Due to the increased interest in enjoy it. the New World program, four INFORMATION 355-4672 Abrams Planetarium, LUTHERAN CAMPUS MINISTRIES Science Rd. and Shaw Special Lane, MSU, East Lansing. Greek menu ALC - LCA LCMS CHURCH SCHOOL LAST WE Saturday evening for Students and Faculty at for Students at 9:30 & 11:00 For THE NEW WORLD University Lutheran Church Martin Luther Chapel DOWNTOWN LANSING ■ Division & Ann Streets 444 Abbott Road Crib through Adults Special Midnight Showing Fri. & Sat. Night 116 E. Michigan 1 332-2559 332-0778 FREE EVENING PARKING■ Coffee Hour following Friday & "EMERSON, LAKE Pastors: Walter Wietzke Pastor David Kruse After Services & PALMER" George Gaiser WORSHIP HOURS WORSHIP First Church of 8:15 a.m. Matins 1 st and 3rd Communion 9:15 a.m. Common Service 10:30 a.m. Common Service 9:30 and 11:00 2nd and 4th Christ, Scientist Grand River at Haslett Entrance 11:30 a.m. New Expressions Matins 9:30 only East Lansing SOUTH BAPTIST CHURCH Christian Reformed Church ^unday Services Lesson — 11 a.m. Sermon Subject 1518 S. Washington and Student Center Sunday 7 p.m. Lansing "I Want To Be Free, But..." 1509 River Terrace Mortals and Immortals SEE ALL THE (across from Hubbard Hall) Glenn R. Blossom NEW 71'S - .Wednesday Testimonial Meeting Visit our new Student Center — 9:45 A.M. 8:00 p.m. College Bible Class COLLEGIAN open daily 9 a.m. -11 p.m. Sunday School to age 20 OPEN WED. AND in the fireside room. FELLOWSHIP Lunch THURS.'TILLS Dr. Ted Ward, 8:30 p.m. Wednesday 12:30 -1:30 MSU, Teacher Fireside Room MORNING SERVICE 1200 E. OAKLAND | EVENING SERVICE Dr. Howard F. Sugden, Pastor 10:00 A.M. Glenn R. Blossom, Youth Pastor 7:00 P.M. 482-1226 Mon., Tims., Thurs., Fri. 11:00 A.M. Rev. Hoksbergen Calvin Life With Purpose Seminary Dr. Sugden, speaking "Civil Disobedience" Choir FREE BUS SERVICE Morning and Evening Call 482-0754 for information. for transportation call 351-6360 or 882 1425 SP0RTSCAR CENTER Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, May 14. 1971 7 Ibv B davidbassett very good (scores of colleges terminated severely curtailed rock concerts), year Buttotel? fllr'oSr'uSd! 5e«"dare,ee[rTo[hr '.hel™o° for Pop Entertainment concerts. As for next year, all V:e News Staff Writer to one ,ollowl"8?' SI>L »PPeals ttey KtaMd segment, Judy Collins to , Costs climb indications point toward an ,0, .he in exception of Sly;. January, this year's do. rod.concert. ^".Ke Byrdj, Sly end thoF«l.Uy Stone In 1969.,0> ^ c„nc»t IV, the , IWMwSi.fcb"^ the schedule another and the Guess Who to mcluded^concerts by the Classics still another. It might also be noted that, with the exception a This year, however, has far different story. Sly wound up being paid $18,000, but the been attempt to recapture the "supergroup" crowd. ASMSU has bids out on James Taylor, KTSU P«P Entertainment " have placed faculty c.j^l'L'^hat^ASMSU Tas ;««£»« Wh^ a"d,t?niBh}nlh« Guess sold"out"- u.onne Warwick in /iff ^ a total of 10 concerts three hours and Blood, Sweat Neil Diamond Smokev Robinson and °he Miracles and of Sly and the Byrds, none of entire concert cost more than Three Dog Night (homecoming), these followings have been large 427,000. Whereas it cost $1,715 Chicago, Airplane, Santana and t! Randolph Webster Jr. 8/°PPed catering to the and 16 groups": and Tears in two days, for Henry Mancini. enough to fill either Jenison or to produce the Beach Boys in the Fifth Dimension. * '® P° S'£ oflL'^ «vV pntreoreneur ^iWlS the Pseudo hippie freak - - rock sponsored^these Temptations "Scer'Tthe 9^" the f-'if»h n**"""!'- ™ jy*' was in»' jj» , The previous yea,, groups „n the camPus included the American the Auditorium (Stevie Wonder drew 2,000 for two shows out of 1967, ASMSU this year spent $1,600 for police, $3,500 for While possibly distasteful to crowd, careful ,tudy reveals that Dimension; Blood, Sweat and ho'weter.onlJ s^Snd^he B^ds Hope, ?.reed'Simon the Lovin'Spoonful, and Garfunkel,Bob the a possible 7,600). There have been numerous bleachers and maintenance, $1,000 for publicity, $750 for some, the "supergroup" pattern to be the dominant ^yearZ>ct*ofandskyrocketing ASMSU has this year presented artist fees 0,6 most and some of the ^st Tears; the Association; Dionne SL°"t*u!?1»y J" Jen^fn' the ^amsey. Lewis Trio and Sammy gate problems this year, including sound equipment (an extra seems consideration of most people on t Mion and artist costs fput d "«rt fees coMege rocR ^2.^ ** Warwick and Woody concerts jn the Herman; Byrds in the Auditorium). Davis Jr. Before that, sporadic crashers, smoking and $1,000 for Sly), $250 on tickets, this campus, if attendance t $8 000 to on each ue*e G^rdo^YfJhth^t0n' The cause of this noticeable *"? vauoic Ul ",,s iKJiiceauie concerts w< presented by such concerts were blocking aisles with chafrs, but $350 for chairs and $500 for figures are to be believed. Barry t this year over and above country- Air Festival which featured Ihe 'support^ h^Tecome Sincere "ngfiBi *0 Ser®nd'pity the most significant has on each Blatt, Pop Entertainment fees) the — increasingly During the 1970-71 school and been agents' commissions chairman, said that while jsical actions of performers year, jCi Donovan and Laura appeared on campus: Richie —■« *«*■ STe"S-^^r S conccr,! ASMSU broke Last year, it made a profit relatively smaller groups will continue to appear on campus, 11 cancelled here this year) Havens, Ten Wheel Drive, schedule groups of somewhat the Americans (1966), Bobby v „ j Spoonful concert, a..u that uu» of $30,000 which provided down the emphasis will be on the ■ the growing uneasiness of Catfish, 1 Jethro Tull, Judy and Chicago, t,ie smaller stature and nino^ VintonHighwaymen ~ (1966), John Gary and included the group's fee of payments for this year's money-makers and University officials Collins, Pacific Gas and Electric, A comparison of style. This has fit general the (1966), the $5,500. And that was when the New Christy Minstrels (1966) Spoonful was still selling and the Supremes (1967). million copies of every record Honeywell has a graduate school ireek Week called effort While it endlessly can be debated whether the quality that can put your education has improved, it nonetheless is a to work with computers. fact that the concerts in the past cftowin two or three years have become Start working for your future major was in college, you more numerous and have ^East^aqsing... in the computer industry by can learn computers from pull together all students embraced wider learning all you can from our experienced instruc¬ a variety of styles. one of the world's leading tors. With proven course Superstars computer manufacturers structures and text materi¬ A second pattern has emerged and educators. Honeywell. als. And you'll gain valuable IeEK WEEK, a nine-day University teams in a tug-of-war riders from residence halls and Hall, women's residence hall and this year which has had an effect Only Honeywell Institute experience on the very Kdule of dances, parties, over the Red Cedar River. In the Greek houses compete for cash sorority teams pedal against the on attendance, this being a move of Information Sciences has latest on-site computer sys¬ Terts and other activities, competition sponsored by Phi prizes aicf trophies in the annual clock in the Delta Chi tricycle toward fewer "superstars." With cQiecPretzelcBell a tuition education program tems. Financial assistance hs Sunday. Kappa Tau fraternity, teams of Lambda Chi Alpha "Junior race. virtually no exceptions, all exclusively for college grad¬ is available. Unizers describe the annual 30 members each will struggle That's where you'll not only re¬ If you want the kind of 500." concerts before this year uates, our Postgraduate Sunday, at 1 p.m. on the ceive the finest food and most kir of fun-and-games until one team is completely Saturday, at 4 p.m. at 451 intramural field across from featured groups of vast courteous service around, but Studies Program for mana¬ work your education titles as a collective effort to immersed in the river. Evergreen St., Alpha Tau Wonders Hall, a Greek team followings which practically you'll find yourself surrounded by gerial candidates. deserves mail this coupon. ■ng together Greek, Tuesday, at 4 p.m. on the a pictorial history of MSU and the No matter what your Or call. Omega hosts a chicken-dinner composed of members from all guaranteed sell - out crowds lampus and residence hall front lawn of the Phi Delta Greek Feast orgy. Tickets are fraternities challenge East regardless of location. East Lansing And there's area. You'll Theta house, 626 Cowley St., $2, available from house This more. see over pits. Lansing and MSU police to a year, however, has 50 original finalists in the Greek frisbee witnessed Tiffany type lamps representatives. Softball game. a move toward more plus a 17 foot high fireplace im¬ e GREEK WEEK schedule tournament toss for top honors. ; the following activies; Saturday, at 4 p.m. also at "underground" groups with ported from merry old England. 17515 West Nine Mile Southtield. Michigan Wednesday, as part of a the Evergreen Street address, And there's still more so drop of whieh still need ... i Phone: (313) 352-1900 "men's economic recovery residence hall and Greek groups in and enjoy yourself won't you? Jcipants: period," sororities will host will display strength and balance BACK You'll find the Pretzel Bell to be ■urday, from 10 a.m. to 3 dinners and desserts for in the an interesting dining experience. Alpha Delta Pi pyramid I., organized groups from fraternities. POPULAR ■ house will meet in front of Thursday, from 1 to 4 p.m., ll'nion for instructions, then work of local artists will be Sunday, at 11 a.m. in the -n > various projects for parking lot across from Anthony REQUEST! displayed along Grand River |lSU Volunteers, Avenue in the Alpha Epsilon Phi today, at 3 p.m., at the art show. Entries will be ■itorium, fraternities and and judged KARATE "THE Krities compete for top show.prizes awarded before the TO URNAMENT 1020 Trowbridge Road Approved^ lo^velerariSj Irs in song and dance ■ntations. Tiday, from 6 to 12 p.m., Building, pushcart the Saturday, at 1 p.m. in front of Women's Intramural MAY 1 5 ONES" & J&m East Lansing, Michigan 517/351-0300 The Other Computer Company Honeywell runners and fnd Meridian Mall, four 1 play for an open-air DANNY |ertnt and dancing. There is a charge for the event. HERNANDEZ Inday, at 3 p.m. for women 13:30 p.m. for men, behind AT y Hall, Greek teams take on You Are Here £ THE DELLS to Learn the ■ LAKE LANSING ■ s49951 "FREE" B's Appearing This Week what makes Phe Stereo Shoppe Drinks at Popular Prices a knit Fortrel® with 543 E. Grand River next to Para Ph. 337-1300 N well worth the price Only a 50c Cover Open Wed. 'til 9 p.m Knits are very comfortable, won't sag, almost never need ironing, have a great look. Made expressly for Redwood You cant hop a jet like a freight train & Ross. We have the best; pure polyester double-knit So, if you're thinking of Europe this summer. Or just to Pittsburgh to visit trousers, flared or straight your grandparents, think of a student Master Charge account. leg . . . what's more Good around the world for they're well worth just about everything. Good even at Northland the price. and Somerset. 16.00 to 22.50 All Juniors, Seniors, and Graduate Students eligible regardless of age. Please apply in person at the Brookfield Plaza Branch. IMSU Student faster Charge Application use only a 1 1 1IMI 1 1 1 (please print all information requested below) draft status j your last name first name [student number age| spouse's student number j full name of spouse j msu address ,sw■ J zip code rn own major cTass 1 1 telephone number social security number |gpa position how long monthly salary j name of present employer (if any) 1 business phone j business address position j name of spouse's employer j monthly salary | name and addressof your parents j NAME OF BANK 5EP|™E5 j"] checking [J savings \j loan Q (other) ! CREDIT REFERENCES balance due monthly payment | mortgage holder or landlord stores & other Fortrel®i$ a trademark of Fiber Industries, Inc. i . (we) represent that THE INFORMA1 ION CONT AINED IN T HIS APPl. ll will rely upon ITSTRUTH INGRANTING CREDIT TO THE APPLICANT(S). At ION IS I RUE AND COMPLETE and understand that your bank | date JURE OF APPLICANT Customer Parking available Rear of Store i signature of spousl Bank Cards honored Redwood £ Ross East Lansing State Bank East Lansing Okcnos Hauled Brookfield Plaza Red Cedar at Trowbridge 8 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Guess Who tops Canadian rock group weekend entertainment] famous for MUSIC FEST - An open air Park located behind the East nurse and an Irish patient who in Memphis in 1910. Sheer young to deadly extreme. 06,1 and the songs like "These Eyes," concert featuring four bands, Lansing bus depot. becomes her victim. entertainment from beginning to BellK^ "Laughin," "No Time" and Frightening and spellbinding "*****■ At 7,8 from noon until 5 p.m. Saturday Plays Performances at 8:30 p.m. end, "The Reivers" has initially, "Joe" cops out in the oyi«'I "American Woman" appears in between Wells and Erickson TOM PAINE - Paul Foster's Friday and Sunday and at 7 and authenticity of setting and end with si am P-m. Friday and <£ m 4 A big weekend with open air concerts, three plays, movies, a concert at 8 p.m. Friday in Jenison Fieldhouse. halls. biographical drama of the 18th 10 p.m. Saturday in Wonders sentiment to distinguish it. Steve sensationalism. bang Shows at 7:30 Wells Hall. ^rfcyilj community picnic and the OPEN AIR CONCERT - SUNday — Picnic century revolutionary. The play A picnic with live offers a new look at Paine, Hall kiva. Admission is $2. McQueen stars. At 7:30 and and 9:45 p.m. Friday in Wilson „ metropolis,1 silent film Movies 9:30 p.m. Friday in Conrad Hall; ; appearance of the Guess Who crowds the entertainment Nebula, Francis X and the Bushmen, Otis and others will folk music designed to portraying him not only as an FUNNY GIRL - The musical Saturday in Wilson Hall. Hall, at 8:30 p.m. Brody Hall, and at 7:30 and Friday in fcrrynwe in "<• Hyde" in ••n™ •"» »i ' encourage dialog between idealistic rebel but also as a lazy that claims to be about Fanny JOE — A film about the 9:30 Saturday in Conrad Hall. calendar. from 6 to 12 p.m. students and the East Lansing drunkard. Performances at 8:30 Music appear Sunday in the Meridian Mall community. From 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Friday and at 7 and 10 Brice but is really a justified celebration of Barbra Streisand. relationship of a $160 - a - week factory worker and a $60,000 - a ROCK AROUND CLOCK — For 50s nostalgia THE LOVE CAMP7-,i'J GUESS WHO - The parking lot. p.m. Sunday in Valley Court p.m. Saturday in the Shaw Hall The celebration is in three parts. - year advertising executive who buffs. Bill Haley and the Little Theatre. Admission charge First, dote Barbra the on carry their hatred and fear of £he Comets, the Platters and Freddie is $1.50. comedienne who wisecracks her SLOUCHING TOWARD way through a plush red room Bonds BETHLEHEM — An original encounter and disrupts a roller play by Jim Cash, East Lansing skate number for attention. graduate student. A student Then, celebrate Barbra the singer to concert!prese visits a zoo, meeting a host of who prompts goose bumps with strange people all of whom her "Don't Rain on My Parade" represent some facet of his and tears with her "My Man." character. Performances at 7:30 Finally, p.m. Friday and Saturday in the actress basement of Fairchild Theater. sympathetic, dynamic woman admire Barbra the who creates a outdoors evening Sunda Admission is 75 cents. between MSU's concert and activity Other guest conductors on songs and comic the Symphonic Band ONE FLEW OVER THE routines. At 7:30 p.m. Friday in lands will provide outdoor the program will be Richard C. sponsored by the Mi CUCKOO'S NEST - The second the Auditorium. music at 6 p.m. this Sunday west Sang, an Okemos graduate Students of MSU. weekend of Ken Kesey's drama. THE REIVERS A robust of the new Day Care Center in student with the Activity Band; Cliff VhU - Spartan Village Set in a mental institution, the Spartan Village. and Dennis D. resident md comedy adventure of a young Anderson, representative of the play deals with a dictatorial boy's eye - opening adventures The concert will feature Ludington senior, and Robert A. that more than group J 500 turned! lighter music which should Scott, St. Clair Shores graduate for the concert. 1 appeal to the whole family, said student. The concert is David Catron, conductor of both free to J NOW groups. This concert and presented last Sunday featuring one public. Parking concert site will be close to 1 available I Included in the Activity OPEN 24 HOURS Band's selections will be tunes AM 670 nI1 from Italian movies and several I MON thru SAT marches. The Concert Band will open 1 SUNDAY TILL 11 P.M. its "Great half with Mussorgsky's Gate of Kiev" with Kenneth Bloomquist, director of PROGRAM HIGHLIGHTS UNIVERSITY bands, appearing as guest conductor. The group will also South Bend, Ind. BIG BOY perform highlights from Sunday 2 p.m. CLEVELAND Wednesday 1050 TROWBRIDGE RD. "Camelot," Jager's "March Dramatic" and selections by ORCHESTRA: "Five Pieces for 10:30 a.m.' RAD . profc SMITHSONIAN: Part Three ured i Orchestra," by Webern. 351-5132 Glenn Osser and Leroy 4 p.m. FROM THE "The Jazz Scene," with JuU forma Anderson. "Reconciling Science Euell, MIDWAY: and Donald Byrd. iphony and 11:30 a.m. BOOKBEA Democracy." Ernest K. Gann, author of" vr'S THt WHOLE SlhovJ Tuesday 11:30 a.m. U.S. SENATE, Antagonists." is interviewed. 1 p.m. LECTURE CLASS OF *71: Bill Moroney talks with the new senators DISCUSSION: "Japan's . Thrust in Southeast Asia"-] elected in 1970. F. Roy Lockheimer, Amerk 1 p.m. LECTURE - Universities Field Staff. DISCUSSION: "Perspectives on Violence" — Herbert G. Klein, Thursdav 11:30 a.m. FEDERJ communications director for CASE: "Chicanos and I President Nixon. Media" - interview i 1:30 p.m. MSU BASEBALL: MSU vs. Notre Dame, from Domingo Nick Reyes of t National Mexican • CANOERS Anti - Defamation Commit! 1 p.m. LECTURE T HAY DOORS OPEN 7:00 p.m. DISCUSSION: Convocation Albion I Series: Bel ■ W LJ f\ | Feature 7:35 Friedan, author Feminine Mystique," is I speaker. 215 ABBOTT RD. - DOWNTOWN HIGHEST RATIHGI with SPELLBINDING I PERFECTION!" - NEW YORK DAILY NEWS The Platters & Freddie Bell & His Bellboys Fri. & Sat. PROGRAM INFORMATION 482-3905 "THE NIGHT VISITOR'IS starts UNCOMMONLY FASCINATING! 0 ICHIGAN 1:00 p.i A CAPTIVATING THRILLER I" Complete Shows at Theatre Lansinq • 1:15-3:15-5:20-7:25-9:30 p.r 217 S. -NEW YORK TIMES WASHINGTON-DOWNTOWN "ONE OF THE BEST CONCERT FILMS SO FAR." "A SUPER-THRILLER! Relax, clutch the seat and be sure to "COCKER MESMERIZES HIS AUDiENCE. see it from the It's straight-forward, honest and enjoyable. The repertory of is superb. A fun film." beginning!" songs —Gene Shalit, NBC-TV "A CHILLING VIOLENT SUSPENSE THRILLER! It's been so long since I've really been ^jscared by a movie, I forgot how much fun -WOMEN'S WEAR DAILY it is." "Truly a Nordic tragedy of powerful Ck THAT SCREAMED passions and twisted psyches working | K4 Friday: 5:45, 7:45, 9:45 Saturday: 1:45, 3:45, 5:45, 7:45, 9:45 Twl-Ute Hour, Adults 90c, 5:15-5:45 out to an 0. Henry twist for the finale." NEW YORK POST NICHOLSON - JACK "BONE-CHILLING AND FEARSOME! m F Tlie cast couldn't be better if Hitchcock v® KHSil was leading the way." - PLAYBOY MAGAZINE "Years have fled since we've had a chilling mystery, but here is one at last to squeeze the mind. IF YOUR FLESH DOESN'T Rljn "Something «ls«" from CRAWL, CORl" ,he Sector of M A S H , IT'S ON TOO TIGHT!" SALLY ® i - LOOK MAGAZINE KELLERMAN Friday: 6:15, 8:15, 1j0:10 ■ Saturday: 2:15, 4:15, 6:15 ! L\ 10:10 I fif Twl-Llte Hour, Adults 90c, |_V 5:45-6:15 SIDNEY GLAZIER presents the VALDEZk IS fK They buried t Howard night visitor Liv Ullmann. Per Oscarsson and Max COMING"' his"ide inThe Night Visitor . Von Sydow as Salem Friday: 6:00, 7:45, 9:3 few'iTn'" hy GUyt.YtlmCS ' MUS'C by Henry Mancim • A Hem,sphere Production • Produced by Mel Ferrer METRO-GOIDW YNMAYER presents JOE COCKER' MAD DOGS & ENGLISHMEN" with IEON RUSSEtl [GP) Saturday: 2:00, 4:00, 6:00, f 0 * » - : ■ '■ ' l.» sloBenedeh. Color- UMC PICTURES- ■ Produt«rJERRY MUSS Associate I'roducet SIDNEY IEVIN Produced by PIERRE ADIDGE, HARRY MARKSond ROBERT ABEl 7:45,9:30 a d.v.sion of un.versal mar.on TwI-LIm) Hour, Adults 90C corporation (M* Dirtcled by HLRRF APIPf.{ An A&M Film In Asyjctotion Wiih < .renhve Film Associates In Color Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, May 14, 1971 9 Fools -romantic tragedy An RHA presentation full of schmaltz, sentiment are The By ROBERT KIPPER State News Reviewer no men who made "Fools" fools. They're not real filmmakers, either. They are The can woman wants happy. The merely to be man wants be shown that life, even at be opened up with the rediscovery of possibilities. only to Together, each achieves his goal, blissfully prancing about San 50, manner. seems Her only real to have been outdoor scenes. brings life to the older man, hamming one moment and assuming the role of loving challenge keeping her long hair out of her face during the Robards "joe "A RIP-SNORTER. A TRIUMPH!" "★★★»★ BRILLIANTLY CONCEIVED, -Jud^c™ businessmen, or possibly computer programmers. Francisco, planning only protector the next. As the angry BRILLIANTLY DONE! DEVASTATINGLY FUNNY!" casually about their future husband, Scott Hyland is I gushy They have slapped together romantic tragedy a together. Unfortunately, the woman's properly menacing. The acting and Kathleen Carroll. New York complete with carefully appearance, Daily News researched husband has a goal, too: to get however, are the only elements ingredients and his wife back. of served it Initially, he has "Fools" that don't seem up for mass her followed by a private antique. The plot and the consumption quickly, before the "Love Story" hysteria burns detective and ultimately he characters are strictly of another itself out. intervenes himself to abort her age. They would have been romance with the older man. Take away the schmaltz and convincing, perhaps, in the sentiment. Turn off the frequent Although the role asks little forties — the age in which "Love :\ love ballads. Dry the tears. of her, Miss Ross plays the Story" also should have been in in a Eliminate the soft, fancy winning, easygoing confined. camerawork. Ignore the pastoral A story o river scenes and the strolls in the lingering country. What remains of "Fools" is but a ■ Katherine Ross of "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid" and Jason Robards of routine romance that ■ Clowns" star in "Fools" now playing at the Campus Theater. "1000 glides along on the thinnest of plots and emptiest of dialog and ends, to no one's surprise, in tragedy. Beneath the modern 'oncert to featu re contrivance, "Fools" looks like an exhumed old Hollywood sob polished and and story, dusted off, manipulated. Refaced, the still creaking script at HOLIDAY LANES Lanes available for OPEN Bowling all day and evening A funny and terrifying motion picture serves as a vehicle for Katharine Open 9 a.m., daily tapek if 'o there loist Ross and Jason Robards and can ever was one. Just north of Frandor 337-9775 - satisfy, its producers hope, the Billiards * Cocktails * Good Food COLOR BY DELUXE- R legions of love - hungry patrons A CANNON RELEASE \ who got such a thrill watching OPEN AT 12 Noon Ali MacGraw die and Ryan y 1 PROGRAM INFORMATION 485-6485 ' o soloist Ralph Votapek, perform Mendelssohn's "Fingal's The Okemos Fine Arts Center O'Neal suffer in "Love Story." professor of music, will be Cave" overture, inspired by the Okemos Road is located "Fools" deals with a romance ured in this season's final composer's formance 1829 trip to north of 1-96 and by the MSU Scotland to visit the Hebrides. Mount Hope Road, south'"of between yet - divorced starring young woman and an older ihony Orchestra, man. Peter Boyle inducted by Dennis Burkh, orchestra will perform at i.m. Monday in the Fine Arts Center WVIC plans Carpenters, Fi/Xt f is Best Ton ite — 2 locations s um. There will be no Best Picture n charge. Mark Lindsay in concert Best Actor 7:30, 9:45 Wilson I Minor for Piano and Richard Carpenter's musical the Carpenters, and in 1969 Best Director 8:30 Brody — Southwest •a." This work, Burkh By DAVID BASSETT career began with his Bed. contains two State News Staff Writer studying "Offering" was released. From pcult cadenzas which are a extremely The off - campus music the accordian as a youngster in this album came their first big New Haven, Conn., which in single, the Beatles' "Ticket to Dining Hall e test of the pianist's skill. drought has at long last been turn led to his |/otapek joined the music ended i 1968, combining the by WVIC-radio presenting Carpenters at 8 p.m. being a solo Ride." pianist with his high school orchestra and a promising "Rainy Days and Mondays," Saturday in Conrad young their present single, is a Tuesday in the Lansing Civic performer in New Haven bars continuation and arming schedule. He won Center, less than two weeks after expansion of 7:30, 9:30 f:bing with an active and clubs. the Carpenters' smoothly first Van Cliburn piano it hosted Blood, Sweat and When the family moved to flowing, pleasant style. petition in 1962. H highlight of the program Tears. One of America's brightest California, Karen joined her brother and the two, with the Also featured with Carpenters Tuesday night will be the $1.00 admission be Paul Hindemith's young groups, Karen and addition of a bass player, Mark Lindsay, former lead singer Jphonie suite, "Mathis Der Richard Carpenter, raised became a jazz trio. In 1966, the of Paul Revere and the Raiders. I.D.'s required »r." This is a symphonic eyebrows at the recent Grammy group won a battle of the bands Tickets for the concert are Awards by walking off with in the Hollywood Bowl, and was ction of several sections $6, $5 and $4 and are available awards for best album and best i his opera of the same new vocal group of the year over soon signed by a major record company which never released at both seats reserved. Wurzburg stores. All 2o c.n.ur,.Fo. pr,„n„ Shown at 12:15-5:00-9:45 A Reiver Recording such brilliant performers as to Burkh, this is Elton John and James Taylor. the two singles they recorded. Boredom overcame the bass Gi:01U>KC. SCOTT/HAUL MVII)IX is a one of the most In addition, they also have received a gold album for "Close player and the Carpenters again became ill"l»Vn O\" in Color - GP rascal. [cult works the orchestra has ormed recently. The opening a duo. A short time to You" and gold OSCAR WINNER 'BEST SCREENPLAY' singles for Burt Plus - later, Karen and Richard joined the last movement is a Bacharach's "Close to You" and sd) anythsize;B ictive orchestral recitative "For All We Know" from the the rock group Spectrum, which later broke up. Steve MASH a free iters H interpretation ■ led by the whole orchestra, movie "Lovers and Other A short time later, several 972 ■he orchestra will also Strangers." members of Spectrum rejoined McQueen MSU RUSSIAN CHORUS is the "Naked 'No Exit' SPRING CONCERT came thee out of, they mother's womb, and naked shall thee head of LITURGICAL & FOLK return thither! The Lord the Lord taketh away. Blessed be the giveth ami _ Reiver. ^ experimental version of MUSIC " name of the Lord! WHERE'S THE /e's "No Exit" will be TUES. MAY 18 PEOPLES GIN?" f"ted andat 8 p.m. today, 8:00 p.m. CHURCH Sunday in Brody f Room B. There will be no FREE GRAND ADMISSION RIVER HELD OVER 2ND BIG WEEK Tonite in Conrad TOM PAINE 7:30, 9:30 a play by Paul Foster Saturday in Wilson LANSiNG S. CEDAR ST. NEAR JOLLY RD. Tonight & Tomorrow Shaw Tickets Little Theater 7:30, 9:30 at the Union & the door Friday & Saturday Shows 8:30 P.M. $1.00 admission I.D.'s rrquired 10 Michigan State Nfews, East Lansing, Michigan _Hrfalay. M,y ,4 , Faculty, public support sought for college By BARBARA PARNESS for further work. The "some time ago." sitting around," he said. "MSU outset that the center was "The College of Urban Affairs wouldn't be the sole home of curriculum vxould noi ri, , ft administration viewed this first Although the trustees could operates on as tight a budget as designed to initiate programs, any efforts i„ other J Campus Editor, 1970-71 them indefinitely. ethnic studies," Cantlon said. "I The creation of a College of proposal as a "policy create the college, they could statement," not a formal not approve a curriculum in any place." One funding problem involves not to sustain In addition to funding issues, think that ethnic studies may Cofeg.' of Huma„ M example. pr„vi(K '^ for| Jn >1 llrban Affairs and Ethnic proposal. urban affairs and ethnic studies $500,000 the center now spends Cantlon said, the administration need some coordinating but I for a new think the substantive courses in college n akin The rough draft of the revised without going through the must examine the areas of ptudies at MSU may be far in to support urban - related existing units hke the proposal to be submitted this appropriate faculty channels. possible competition between an ethnic music, for example, chemistry and Jhe future, because the "Golden Age of public acceptance of fall to the administration is 193 Green said he has a programs in other University units. If the center becomes a urban affairs college and other belong in the Dept. of Music, phyMo!()gvepts «l University units. and the substantive courses in Cantlon said he higher education" is over, pages long. MSU's three "commitment" from Cantlon college, this support would have with hav ethnic art in the Dept. of Art." according to Provost John E. Cantlon. residential colleges were all created on the basis of proposals and Wharton to support the college proposal when it is fully to be withdrawn and the individual units would have to He said difficult, he thinks it will be and "not very "The challenge is realty to some urban oreint? But Robert L. Green, director of less than 10 pages. practical," to consolidate all wake up the whole University. developed. assume fundings. of the Center for Urban Affairs The provost maintains that a If the trustees "Once you've farmed urban and ethnic related units We don't want to ghettoize create the out But, he admitted the problem and separate it from "Wo j(CUA), thinks the public will longer, more detailed proposal is college, the program will also dollars to various units to on campus into one. havent met as the mainstream of the much as we fcccept the college proposal if the needed for the College of Urban have to be approved by the state promote change it makes no For example, he said, criminal should." we University administration and Affairs and Ethnic Studies. Dept. of Education. sense to withdraw support to justice has ties to urban studies University," he said. "I think it "Residential colleges were and sociology, and urban would be a mistake to centralize He refused faculty support the idea. "The governor's office will not form a college," Cantlon said. ulate small But Green maintains that planning has ties to urban all ethnic studies in the Center when o, ; "Legislators and the public are working on a p«fposal to experimental colleges set recommend funding for programs admiu.atraion for Urban Affairs." begin definite jend not to strongly oppose make the center a four • year, up really to look at how you set that aren't approved by the state Cantlon and the people in these studies and landscape Green said the college planning J universities when a program is degree - granting unit, up undergraduate teaching," Dept. of Education," Cantlon other units understood at the architecture. new college. presented that has strong Such a proposal was first Cantlon said. They provided said. "We would have to work University support," Green said, submitted to the administration only a "different emphasis in out these programs before we . Green and several of his staff a year ago. but it was. returned education rather than altering could ask for funding." MSU INTERNATIONAL FILM SERIES presents fundamental concepts." Green said he is willing to Cantlon said an urban affairs defend the college proposal at college involves more problems the University level and before of funding and organization than legislators and other state PASOA organiza the residential colleges did. officials. While the trustees have not "We're going to present a formally discussed the creation reasonable and rational proposal of such a college, President and we'll be willing to defend Wharton said several trustees our position that a College of expressed an interest in the idea Urban Studies Affairs can and Ethnic be used for the program for regional African socialism will be discussed at the Pan-African Student Academy are also working with this symposium. meet resolution of social problems," From 1 to 5 p.m. Friday, registration and Organization in the Americas (PASOA) assignment rfi SKYDIVING j . he said. The conference is being sponsored by the midwestern chapters workshops will take place in the African Studies Center inJil Green maintains that no of the PASOA. in the International Center. **■ Come On Out J additional funds would be The Black Liberation Front International (BLFI), the Black Welcoming speakers will be Nolen Ellison, assistant to President! PVv.. BARBRA STREISAND OMAR SHARIF to Jewette Airport | needed initially if the center United Front (BUF) and the Malcom X Communications Skills Wharton and Kimathi Mohammed, chairman- general of Bm| "FU:,NY GIRL" j became a college, but Cantlon They will speak from 7:30 to 9 p.m. Friday in lt;<) Anthony Hal!I in Mason V disagrees. <" > - •} ' TECHNICOLOR* PANAv SON* £ ® Sat. or Sun. at 9 a.m. "Malcolm X: Evolution of a Revolutionary" will l» d„!™l | "Every time you set in motion from 9 to 10 p.m. in 109 Anthony Hall. Tonight — 7:30 p.m. or More Information Contact Chet 351-0479 t some I people who new are activity and put busy on this new Groups to sponsor Following the film, there will be PASOA and BLFI members on "Malcolm X: His a panel discussioi i-ontributiontofl Bob 351-8336 I activity, you either have to give Pan-Africanism." I up something you're doing or UNIVERSITY AUDITORIUM From 9 to 11 a.m. Saturday, in 100 Engineering Bldg .thJ Admission $1.00 add more funds," Cantlon said. "There aren't any cookies jars Palestine symposium will be a general assembly consisting of speakers Sekou history instructor from Dillard University, New Orleans, La Toure! audi Dhirendra Sharma, visiting associate professor of A two - day symposium on for Peace in Vietnam, the philosophy. A panel discussion will follow and continue until noon. the "Palestinian Struggle for symposium will conclude The second session of the general assembly will be at 2 Liberation" will begin at noon Sunday afternoon with a film on p... ^ 351-0030 ^ Saturday in 36B Union. Palestinian guerrillas. Saturday in 100 Engineering Bldg. Yosef ben-Joehamnan will Sponsored by the Young speak on African Communalism. 1 Saturday's speakers will From 3:30 until 5 p.m., workshops will be held in thel Socialist Alliance, the include Paul Boutelle of the Organization of Arab Students, Young Engineering Building. Socialist Alliance and "The Role of the African Women in the Liberation Sir..^le"B Stey/Srd the Iranian Students Hamid Husseini of the Iranian cThe will be discussed in 130 E Engineering BIHg i'hairnu Confederation and the Veterans Students Confederation. Mrs. Malakai and Daphane Williams. Soraya Sharif, professor of In 136 Engineering Bldg., "Education for Sell Reliance" wi English literature at Wayne State the topic. Chairmen are Chui Karega and Kimathi Mohami University, will speak at 1 p.m. both of BLIF. TOUR NAM ENT Sunday on Arab women and the PRESENTED IN "Africa: Her Sons and Daughters in Diaspora" will be discuss Palestinian revolution. T0DAYAT: Sfliiaif® WllSII®iM There will be no admission in 140 Engineering Bldg. Chairmen are Edward Voughand ionyl Martin. r 7:00-8:35-10:15 charge for the symposium. "The Liberation Movements" will be discussed in 13| Engineering Bldg. Chairmen 4re KartiUyu-wa Kangethe and Frai SATURDAY: ACADEMY AWARD WINNER Chiteji. 1:30-3:15-4:55 6:40-8:20-10:05 BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR NOW SHOWING John Mills 210*T 3 Top H BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY tAST UNSING ON M 43 ★ PHONE tD METRO-GOLDWYN- "YOU MUST SEE THIS FILM!" MAYER Presents — R>chard Schickel, LA THE A COLUMBIA PICTURES P<>- ■ - r-. ,i flfiS K - story of love. UNPUBLISHABLE NOVEL IS NOW Mm Filmed by David Lean JAC AMERICA'S MOST ehsu CONTROVERSIAL FILM! Ryan's CHRISTINA HART-MICHAEL GARRETT ANGELIQUE PEMOLINE — \ RATED X Daughter ROBERT MITCHUM TREVOR HOWARD DONNA STANLEY + T* CHRISTOPHER JONES • JOHN MILLS EASTMANCOLOR LOUIS K°SHER ALF'SITUMANVR. LEO McKERN ^ SARAH MILES • HURT LANCASTER . LEE MARVIN ROBERT RYAN JACK MLANCEI RALPH BELLAMY (..CLAUDIA CABDIHAU [ HORROR SPECTACULAR THtPROFESSiONMS f A COLUMBIA PICTURES RELEASE WNAV1SION*''' "inR ^ ■ SHOWTIMES Monday thru Friday evenings at 8:00 p.m. THE PHAHTOM Wednesday 2:00 & 8:00 p.m. Saturday 2:00 8t 8:00 p.m. Sunday 2:00 & 7:00 p.m. OF THE OPERA Final 5 Days! iiaAsU+tef Clau in TECHNICOLO 'ELOQUENT RNOVI iMPorrmniT!" -PENELOPE GILUATT. TheNc* jj Madness...can m "YOU MUST SEE THIS FILM!" 0 be beautiful! luiMBi* Picrowfs "■<• JACK NICHOl Sr - 2 Escape from the mad world...into this SF hilarious romantic adventure! ACADEMY AWARD > BEST ACTOR IN 'PATT0N' JOclIMC George C. Woodw&rd Paul Newman * *> TECHNICOLOR* They Might Be Giants' is Harper J jn-ussa=~«« nsf BURT LANCASTER -tub F J "Phantom" shown at 7 & 10:20 i ^ CARRIE 8N0DGRE8S diary of a mac* hOU»«Wlt« UlHNICOLOtr ^ LEE MARVIN • ROBERT RYAN JACK PAliM RALPH BELLAMY -CLAUDIA CARDINAL? the PROFESSIONALS . 4 91 "Son" at 8:40 ONLY! Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, M.-iy 14. 1971 IT RHA asks trustees By RANDY GARTON to fix rates Treat your parents to State News Staff Writer appropriation. There are no state-controlled rates to be determined now because of the funds in the housing fund, anticipated increase in however. The size of the labor contract wages in the new labor contract. Food costs are also are the and increased food costs rise. expected to e MSU Residence Hal! Assn. (RHA), in conjunction with yearly variables in determining room and board rates. "If the board determines room and ■MSU, recently passed a resolution calling on the board of Generally the size of the labor contract is not known until late board costs now, itwould summer, but this year reduce a lot of ■stefS'to determine room and board rates for 1971 - 72 at their University officials know what next year's uncertainly among students," Flintoff said. "As it labor rates will be. is now, many students don't know X 21 meeting. In the past, the board has ' afford living in a residence hall next whether they will be able to [•"The board has to wait for legislative appropriations before it and board rates all In one set and approved tuition and room "Let's know now," he year. 1 approve tuition rates," Mike Flintoff, RHA president, said, RHA spokesmen said package, usually in July or August. middle of the summer when it said, "instead of waiting until the |ut as far as 1 know. room and bo«rd rates can be determined they would like the room and board might be too late to make alternative plans if dorm rates too Kt now." are high." ■ Tuition money goes into a general fund composed of student s and state appropriations. The board usually doe? not set BY CMU FACULTY rates until the state legislature determines this 3-year By STEVE WATERBURY contract approved first year to 2 per cent in the third State News Staff Writer year. The contract must still be ratified by the CMU Board of Trustees before it will become effective. The Faculty members at Central Michigan University present one year Investigation was CONTINUING Thursday into a fire Wednesday to approve a three year contract negotiated between (CMU) voted contract is set to expire June 30. |\ thjS week caused an estimated $8,000 damage to the - the administration and CMU Faculty Assn. (CMUFA), an affiliate Bral poultry laboratory on Mount Hope Road. MSU police, Rp troopers and federal agents conducting the inquiry reported \ cause of the fire had not yet been determined. of the in Michigan Education Assn. About 56 per cent of the approving the contract by eligible faculty members cast ballots a 248 to 88 vote. The CMU University Chorale for had earlier rejected a contract that faculty L caNOE from the Bessey Hall rental docks is now Fevidence after officers recovered it last week when rental being held CMU administration and CMUFA The accepted version of the had been agreed upon by a 222 to 173 vote. contract calls for a 6.5 by the plans public concert authentic Italian dishes linloves reported the canoe was taken out and not returned. plus $66 salary raise during the per cent first year of the contract a 6.54 The University Chorale, MSU's newest performing group, will Trwo Okemos youths told police May 6 they found the canoe [ the Red Cedar River bank in Okemos at the time an MSU per cent plus contract and $100 salary increase during the second year of the a 6.6 per cent present Auditorium. a concert at 8:15 p.m. today in the Music Bldg. for lunch and dinner plus $200 salary increase during the L-lcrr and a county sheriffs deputy were searching for it. Police third year. The 23-voice chorale, consisting mostly of graduate or ■d they recovered the canoe and found that someone had been Fringe benefit increases will range from 1.2 advanced music students, will be conducted by Robert Harris, Spaghetti Veal Parmigiana per cent in the associate Knting it silver. professor of music. "The group's performances Beef Ravioli .■Officers said they traced an address listed at the rental docks to are of professional caliber," he Lasagna Harvard professor to discuss a ■Lansing woman who said her drivers license was missing and said. imeone apparently used it to rent the canoe. No arrests have yet The concert is open to the public without charge. 2167 E. Grand River >n made. Okemos a CASSETTE TAPE PLAYER valued at $100 was reported human skill, poverty impact 2 blocks west of meridian mall 349-2630 Men sometime between midnight and 9 a.m. Wednesday from Two seminars and Fri., Sat. 11 2 je front seat of an automobile parked in the Cherry Lane lot, a speech will be presented today and a.m. - a.m. Sun. 4-12 p.m. fcner Teresa M. Pechacek, Clare freshman, told MSU police. Saturday by Jerome Bruner, professor of psychology and director | of the Center for * ♦ * Cognitive Studies at Harvard University. [two south WONDERS HALL ROOMMATES told police ..'s watch, valued at $31.15, and $3 in cash was stolen from a "The Growth of Human Skill" and a discussion on his research on infant development will be presented at 10:15 a.m. recent 2 BIG RUNS AT A a today in Erickson Kiva. Lelry box and from a purse in their residence hall room. ■Police said the Incident occurred between 5 and 9:20 p.m. "A Retrospective Look at the Curriculum Reforms of the 60s" Local Drive In! is the seminar to be held Wednesday when the coeds, Barbara A. Tillman and Ruth E. today in 507 Erickson today. From 10 to 12:30 p.m. fciith. both Dearborn freshmen, were absent from the room. The closed but not locked. will be held on "The Saturday in Erickson Kiva a seminar Impact of Poverty on Children." 2 BIG RUNS AT THE Bruner has written and coauthored many books and articles on A FIRE ALARM HORN, valued at $35, was discovered mising psychology and education. Among his books are "The Process of Education," "Toward a Theory of Instruction," "A Study of DOWNTOWN ART! jednesday from the basement of East Wilson Hall when a Tysical plant employe noticed the horn had been uscrewed from Thinking," "On Knowing" and "Studies of Cognitive Growth." ••••••••••••••••••••£ "THE GOLD RUSH" Charlie Chaplin & "YOU • Uncle John's SAID A HATFULL" Charlie Chase Sun. • CINE 16, Edgewood Church, 469 N. Hagadorn, E.L. May . # SERIES Donation 75p. 2:30. lancake "ROOTS" 4 short stories from Mexico. BRINGS TO CAMPUS ONE OF it Spanish - English titles. Wed. May 19, 106B Wells Hall, MSU. Donation $1.00 8:00 p.m. LANSING'S AND MID-AMERICA'S fork of Art - Exploring Cinema Society. More info? FAVORITE FILMS Phone 351-0979. THE CHILDREN OF EUROPE ENTERED... Sun. thru Thurs. 6 a.m. to 11 p.m. Frl. & Sat. TONIGHT and SATURDAY 106B WELLS ART OF A VERY BAD TRIP NORTHSI0E cDrive - in jSr^eatre Robert Louis Stevenson author of A CHILD'S wiiUp '"'w OF VERSES and TREASURE ISLAND took a bad tip on cocaine during which time he GARDEN three day wrote the great im horror classic DR. JEKYLL and MR. HYDE. John EXCLUSIVE FIRST RUN SHOWING! Barrymore stars in this FIRST and BEST VERSION. (3) EXCITING HITS! SEE IT! ONE BY ONE THEY WILL DIE! - and only the killer knows why ..and how ...and who is next! Shul ^M_Shown Twice at 8:45 and 12:00 mTRopoas "AFTER SHOCK 7:30 a fitting destination for a bad trip 9:45 BLOOD ■LMM igB^m EVERY SCENE IN THIS PICTURE IS BASED ON HISTORICAL FACT ... IT WAS FILMED ON LOCATION AND * FOR THE FIRST TIME OPENS THE Shown Twice at one of the most copied Films ever made e.g. ESCAPE RECORDS OF HITLERS LOVE CAMPS! FROM THE PLANET OF THE APES $1.00 no ID 106B 8:15 and 12:10 ABSOLUTELY ADULTS ONLY - FROM OLYMPIC INTERNATIONAL Wells next week Beal Film Group presents Fri. Room Shown at 8%, SWEET BIPPY, KING KONG ESCAPES and Sat. 108B Well;. 7,8:40 fc 10?O SIM Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan . Friday.May 14 -SPORTS- Green-White By GARY SCHARRER annual Green and White game This spring's Green-White contest-- selections. Both predicted tossup RICK GOSSILIN Sports for all State News Sports Writer Saturday. Tickets for the 2 p.m. game will be set up differently certain victory Saturday. .. . Maybe it ... ..... , . s a little early to get . kickoff are still available at than in past years. Instead of Daugherty, who said that he paramount News or at the pitting the number one units excited about football, since the season isi still four months away, athletic ticket office in Jenison against the rest of the team as won't have anything to do with the game, stirred the fires by this weekend Fieldhouse. The tab is $2 for the the Spartan but with the development and coaching staff did indicating that losing coaches general public and $1 for MSU two years ago, or the number would assist the enthusiasm shown by the MSU students and kids of high school Qne offense losing squad in against the first serving the winners at a team in spring drills it s easy to age and younger. A limited string defense like last spring, get encouraged for the upcoming post-game chicken barbecue, number of $5 press box seats are Coach there wont be any excuses about Duffy Daugherty divided Daugherty said that there For once not att^ also available. All tickets may be his staff and they held a player would be a sudden death playoff least one athletic contest on campus this weekend. g The Spartans will give purchased at the stadium the draft. if the regulation game ended in a The standard alibi, "It doesn't appeal to preview of the 1971 squad at the day of the game. me," is aboi as Daugherty appointed Gordie tie. base as Hank Aguire at the plate on a bad day. off I Serr, Dennis Stolz, Sherman On paper the Green team This weekend, there is a little bit of everything that sh I Lewis, Ed Rutherford, George appears to be more solid and able to encompass each and every student MSU And i ' Webster and Tommy Wilson to some of the Green coaches listed cases, the competition isn't just a token event, but many I show Antique Car S oftop I coach one team, and Buck flight talent. fa Nystrom, George Perles, Joe (See reJated Jtory p 15) The me uictii and - White game at Green "- a..u at Spartan Stadium On S»tu.A opurwn Stadium Carruthers, Ed Youngs, Herb is an excellent opportunity for the football fan to catch Jr 1' Paterra and Joe Badaczewski to of the players representing MSU next •easoT^rfTOtbafr1* Sunday, May 16 head the other. The first four of themselves as 14 point favorites, for next year merits some honest - to - goodness nnT , Come see the "hot cars" of yesteryear: the sexy each group are full-time Spartan start,n8 I'neup for the Green Discarding the fact that the Big Ten will be balanced team h Chevy Convertible, the classy *31 Chevy Coech, the "mean" coaches. The last two are o{Len^ ,s»s t „ team for the first time since Rockne came in with the "T» a student, part-time aides. Serr's Tightend, Tom Brown, tackles, Spartans are considered a genuine contender not *32 Chevy Roadster. group will coach the White team D e Lamielleure, Marv Ail these and more will be on display Sunday on the and Nystrom's will handle the *obe^ S^rds, Mark Loper, n the I Mell. Green unit Rex Woulfe; center, Bob Mills; Throw in an all-star cast of professional players who will »nno The coaches selected the ^tthews; split I Sponsored by the Vintage Chevrolet Ctub of America. before the game for an autograph session, and the players for the spring practice end' V?lk® Hurd- opportunity to make something of his Saturday afternoon football fan h I an 1 Henry Matthews ., ... , finale like a national In the Green backfield will be Best in baseball Q^rterback,, George Mihaiu; |S| lanslng mall championship When the was at stake. drafting was finally completed Tuesday night, both "ba«k• Earl Anderson and fu"Ja<* Jim Bond safeties, Bill McLee. Simpson, Brad we picked the Green." Serr, coach of the White squad So you say football is not your idea of an entertainin I afternoon? Well, the number two college baseballl land will be on campus for the last time this team in th season in a nair I 5330 W. Saginaw Hwy. groups claimed they had beaten T. a ne defenslve Paterra, one of the Green predicted a close game even doubleheaders Friday and Saturday. And Danny Litwhiler who I the other in making the unit will be: Ends, coaches said that the game though the Green team may be has always prided himself on baseball excellence, now has a te I Doug Halliday; Ralph wou)d be defensive struggle favored. that can claim all of the collegiate marbles. Needless Wieleba; tackles, Gary VanElst, ball control would be The starting lineup for the to sav IT I Duane McLaughlin; middle White offense is: support would make the Big Ten title race and a ouest f™ I needed to win the game. He said national title that much easier. ™ I guard. Bob Saleh; linebackers, that because the Green team had Tightend, Billy Joe DuPree; Tom Barnum, Gail Clark; corner the personnel to control the tackles, Jim Higgins, Bob Not baseball either, eh? Well, the two best teams in MSU and Indiana, will be featured at the BieiVnI backs, Mike Holt, Doug Barr; football, they would win. McClowery; guards. Bill Peters, dual meet that promises to be a preview of the Ralph Young Track ini I Perles said, "If the Green team Chris King; center, Errol Roy; parade. It'll be the last chance for track backers to salute confat?nrescorii»l John I ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■a is the favorite, then I want Hanker, Randy Davis; split end, Mock, Wayne Hartwick, Kim Hartman, and Howard for I Can You Take ■ Steve Kough. their fine contribution to not only MSU Doughty everyone to know that Buck track, but also to Bi« I 7 Hours of Film ^ Nystrom, Joe Carruthers, Ed The White backfield consists Ten athletics. I FREE « of quarterback, Mike Youngs, Herb Paterra and myself If you like up-and-down, non-stop action and you feel that I Union Ballroom 4-11 p.m. Bruce Union Day — May 17 J did a hell of a job of drafting. "We know all the fans will be Rasmussen; tailback, Anderson and fullback Mark none of the above mentioned contests can then head on over to the soccer field, where the MSU provide you with it g soccer team I for the underdog, White team so Charette. will exhibit its own version of "spring football." The The White starting defense is: varsity te..„ of next season will challenge an alumni squad Ends, Bill Chada, Tom of the greatest players ever to don Spartan soccer comprised of some I Kronner; tackles, Ron Curl, Jim togs. Coach I Payton Fuller claims that his team of next season has a starting I Talbert; middle guard, Daryl eleven that is as good as any Smith; linebackers, Ken the best of all attractions. in the country. Now that could be I Alderson, Ron Kumeiga; corner What about lacrosse? backs, Mark Niesen, Paul If you are in a quandry and can't decide which of these events I Hayner; safties, Bruce Harms, to attend because more than a few of them appeal to you, there is I John Lorente. a sure fire method of solving your problem. Experiment w... White backfield Coach your tastes a bit and attend the lacrosse game at Old College Reld I Sherman Lewis said the White team would win "because I have on Saturday afternoon. After all, lacrosse is almost all of the above mentioned sports — a combination of | and then some. been on a losing team in MSU's lacrosse team sets records with every game it plays and is the Green and White games and I favored against the Chicago Lacrosse Team. Try it. the streak is going to continue." Still nothing? Well, the Federation of Club Sports just happeiK I to be having its "open house"! weekend, and if you cant findf anything there that interest you, then this just isn't y weekend. The Sports Car Club is puttinJ on its own version of the Grana Prix this Sunday with ^ Commuter Lot. The Rugby Club has t games with the Detroit Cobrd on Sunday at Old College Field! There will also be weightliftinl demonstrations, rock climbing sailing on Lake Lansing, kendo demonstrations, jud| instructions, tournament on Saturday thij features board breaking and beT matches. And you still say nothinl interests you? Well, there's I possibility that the final Stanlel Cup hockey game will be playei Sunday afternoon o~rr" Rogue's Rope doubleknits of TrevircT by Spyder Mark* Great news! Great slacks. Created for the Trevira® era by Spyder Mark, in a handsome over-stripe rope twill look. Beltless model with modified western pocket and gentle flare. Machine washable and dryable Trevira® polyester doubleknit in tobacco, wine or dark gray. 32 to 42. $22. Store for Men, main floor Downtown and Meridian Mall. Knapp's Shop Knapp's Downtown and Meridian Mall tonight 'til 9 Saturday, Downtown 10 to 5:30, M^rirJian Mall 10 to 9 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, May 14. 1971 13 SPORTS Batsmen play home finale Wisconsin put some breathing year. opponents hitters but he seems By JOHN VIGES possiblv because he had a sore space between the Spartans and Wisconsin and their pitching, to have the same effect his State News Sports Writer on aj.m. T"he lefty has had a week to Minnesota by defeating the however, promise to be the own teammates. In his last three rest and should be in good shape Gophers twice in Madison 4-1 stiffest challenge for MSU. starts, the Grand Rapids for the weekend's action, MSU was singing the praises and 4-0 but would be happy to Luckily the Spartans will not sophomore has given up only jaVe Leisman and Kirk Maas of Wisconsin one week close the gap ago but again by beating be facing top flight pitchers for one run in 24 innings but he has will have the mound assignments the tune will MSU. undergo a drastic the first time this been supported with only five change today when the Badgers year. agaiast Northwestern but the Although there is little Minnesota's excellent MSU scores. planned schedule could easily be and Spartans meet in a 2 p.m. probability of Wisconsin winning sophomore Dave Winfield Ike will team up with Rob changed if Clancy or Ike has doubleheader. MSU faces the crown, the Badgers are not and Michigan's classy Jim Burton Clancy to pitch Friday's trouble. Spartan coach Danny Northwestern in a twin bill eliminated from the race have yet, both been victims of doubleheader. Clancy, with a Litwhiler was emphatic when he Saturday at 1 p.m. and they could find themselves Spartan hitting. perfect 9-0 record, has been The four games will be the last said he would not hesitate to use close to the top if action of the year for the second they won four MSU opened up with their shakey his last two times out, either man in relief Friday. games from the Spartans and home run guns against Notre ranked Spartans at John Kobs Michigan. Dame and Spartan Hurler Larry £ IFI BUYS DISC SHOP HIFI BUYS DISC SHOP HIFI BUYS DISC Field. Lon Galli and Jim Enlund are Ike is hoping they keep the IDURING THE MONTH OF MAYl The contests are crucial for can the pair that limited Minnesota MSU. If the Spartans could win power switched on when he to only one run in two games four they would be in excellent pitches the first game Friday. and they will Ike try to do the same has been devestating to position for the last weekend conference play but more than one loss would throw MSU back of to the hard hitting Spartans. Galli is a little lefthander with I YOU CAN SAVE $10 ON THE I Bears off a 2.63 earned run within the reach of average. champion Minnesota. defending MSU is 7-1 in conference while Minnesota is 8-4 and Illinois 7-3. Enlund pitches from the side effective and has not throughout the been right season as 1 SONY TC-60. Already giving as his southpaw sidekick. Enlund the record has a 3-4 record and a high, bookkeepers writers cramp, 4.99, ERA. to Soldiers' 00 — ± That's right during the Mor SHOP you can save $10 of Holding the Sony TC-60. Here's the c e on-the-go s MSU runner could add another Although the Spartans other I Coach Danny Litwhiler's running game has kept opposing pitchers on edge everytime a Spartan accomplishment this weekend if foe, it wins three games. Northwestern, has a The reputation as the doormat of the Field in 71 O. lectures. And the TC-60 Is ecording busir I gets on base. The pitcher must not only worry about the batter, but also the base runner. Here, Spartans are 30-6 for the year league, the Wildcats are not U AC/DC operattorfand'tone I Steve Cerez teste a pitcher with an extended lead - off, but gets back in time to beat the throw. and the record for most wins in without offensive punch as they CHICAGO (UPI) - The popular Sony is now on s a season is 32, set in 1968 State News photo by John Harrington by demonstrated by defeating Chicago Bears and the Chicago Steve Garvey and Co. Wisconsin Park District announced 14-7 earlier in the IpRINTS KEY RACES Thursday that the Bears found a new home venerable Soldier Field, and — have in for at least three years. President George S. Halas of Trackmen duel Indiana here even the score with Indiana's the Bears announced and Dan president of the Park District, after negotiating session that the Bears have signed a three year Shannon, a joint By DON KOPRIVA Jack Keeler, who placed second Indiana's Bob Somesan, Dan lease on the lakefront quarters, | State News Sports Writer ahead of Hartwick in last year's Hayes and Paul Olson are all in jump, where Eric Allen Hoosier Doug Vine. will meet with two successive one - year the 4:10 range and could be Allen is Big Ten meet. The track record options. _> MSU track team's dual threats to a 1 - 2 - 3 sweep by undefeated in two dual meets For of 52.6, which Hartwick tied last The Grand Rapids freshman's years, the Bears have with a best of 48 Ket Saturday with Indiana week, is again in jeopardy. the Spartans. remarkable 46.8 effort which - 5 while Vine played at Wrigley Field, the has lost twice in dual encounters lid well turn into one of those And the mile should be a fine John Mock will continue to be gave the Spartans a come - from home of the Chicago Cubs. but has triple-leaped 48-11. ford-breaking carnivals where race as well. Ken Popejoy won a key man for the Spartans and - behind relay win over Purdue During the 1970 season, they e races and superlative the dual last year in 4:07.0 but will last week might not be made a run at have his chance a a fast MSU is far and away better in getting Dyche ts dominate the action, Stadium at Northwestern the Spartan sophomore is ready half-mile, with Indiana's Doug duplicated, but Cassleman has the hurdles than the Hoosiers, t could be this, if only University, but the Big Ten for faster than that this time Chokey, a 1:52.2 man, there to shown enough times this year with Morrison, Dave Martin, i the Spartans and the turned them down. around and will attempt to battle him. Bob Cassleman will that he'll go as fast as he has to Howard ■s are probably the two get Doughty and Hartwick nearer that elusive four minute make his debut in the 660 and go to win a race. all entered t track teams in the Big Ten against the Hoosiers' will CLASS NOTES COPIED mile. likely go against a man he Keeler. I will be gunning for any sort beat easily .Indoors at 600, Although Indiana is much Lowest prices best copies Spartans Dave Dieters and Kim stronger than the Spartans in the - (advantage they can get this Hartman have been improving Hoosier Glenn Close. field events, not all of them In the three mile, Randy Free Estimates lekend with a win over the rapidly in workouts and should Kilpatrick and Doug Kurtis will Cassleman will again be should be runaways for Indiana. duel THE COPY SHOPPE a Hoosier trio of Bob Starting time is 1 p.m. on the jck, with field events going be ready for fast times as well. They'll need them, because anchoring the mile relay, which Perhaps the best confrontation will likely have Tom Spuller, there will come in the triple Legge, Steve Kelley and Pat Mandera. 543 E. Grand River Open 8 - 6, Sat. 9 337-1300 - 12 DISC SHOP-HIFI BUYS BUYS DISC SHOP HIFI BUYS DISC SHOP HIFI BUYS DISC )f an hour earlier at.) 12;30, t feel this is an excellent Greenwich Village Days kortunity for our guys to ■w what they can do against he conference 4 o y a P aVutt lorite," assistant coach Jim Abard said. "We're entering Bple only in the events that p'reo going to run in at the Big TODAY TOMORROW & doubling like in the past While in the area, | weeks." K'e're aiming at the et and this is another chance Big Ten Complete art dept. l/ outdicuiAtitcj, cuit osi e^Uulut. at pine Iowa City, L suci n a Spartans are traditonally strong dual meet team, Campus Book Store MaJze I/awl Selection, cuul . . . hough they have dumped 131 E. Grand River Across from the Union 0 State and Purdue in dual Ion this year. Indiana has let fcady toppled two of the Pon's track powerhouses, custom frame it M.A.C. ^consin and Tennessee, in dual Friday and Choose frame from hundreds styles, simple to of »re will re important be than the final elaborate, with the help of AND the individual ■ties that imaginative and skilled B'd-°n clashes between ■erstar sprinters that will be waged, Only! personnel. that You superior know, too, craftsmen ' THE ALLE' could ■termine the conference trained in the latest fitting, Tjupionship. matting, coloring and Fe key figures here number mounting techniques will be 319 E. Grand River J< with three others going in working for you. East Lansing, Mich. This Shag is rea IW ■porting roles on the 440 T[>P LaRuequartets. Herb Washington Butchee will face SANDAL Jana's speedy tro of Larry Features: Ptough, Mike Goodrich and Te Miller in the 100 tand 220 Ju flashes. ■Je Washington-Goodrich *The longer look X I pnt®tion 'n the century and ^odrich-Butchee I «0 could be two of the battle in or 71 |'ana it's anticipated that the * ,,records of 9.6 and 21.3 J" be easily erased. ■hh ingt.on wi» K ,8y 'n the International also compete Paints - acrylics, oils, SALE * Built-in height— K!°,nLGames in Philadelphia waters never goes flat ltt A??'yard dash a8ainst two 4 Id wrYhamp Ivory Crockett Brushes - all types UP TO 30% OFF Lmi 60-yard indoor T^PJim Green. ORIGINAL PRICE $19.95 « 1 f J4°nrelay shou,d be no Canvas - primed MYSTIC PANTY HOSE SPECIAL 2/$1.00 I ii ?tballer Mike H°lt Eelv r J°hn Morrison will and unprimed . Ll Wash'ngton and u Sale Priced »t ,i u'"8 the Hooslers in J Should he a classic relay Stretcher strips FRI. & SAT. only team' wh,ch the R-5 bZ i )°ining Highbaugh, has Gesso, Flex-tex, (Reg. $24.95) Shag it lkt0Odrich' won at the ilethv?e Re,aVs 'n 40.2 Modeling paste ly ttartans were second, I three-tenths of a second 541 E. Grand River Hours: fcf* spr,nts>other rCi.'u1"Ldhurdle8> c,re 10 the Student Book Store DOWNSTAIRS Paramount Ntw» Open Wed. & Thurs. tite* until 9 p.i •yne Haru, , where 421 E. GRAND RIVER 332-3341 ■■« V.*i. • Fri. ■ the Ei1^' rated ^e best ■ Across from Olin I West, will attempt to "East Lansing's Only Wig Boutiaue' 14 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan OF Mpq hid rt>e cooim^ AFRICAN DANCE BAND B B KING SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA JOHN HARTFORD ALEX TAYLOR BALLINJACK BOZ SCAGGS TAJ MAHAL JOHN B. SEBASTIAN AMBOY DUKES BEACH BOYS CANNED HEAT VOICES OF EAST HARLEM KATE TAYLOR LHULK BeKRY CHAMBERS BROTHERS BUDDY MILES ERIC BURDON COUNTRY JOE McDONALD RAVI SHANKAR DELANIE, BONNIE, & FRIENDS . WAR DIXIELAND JAZZ BAND ROLAND KIRK 30 MORE GROUPS NOW BEING CONTRACTED FLYING BURRITO BROTHERS MELANIE AMERICAN ROCK OPERA COMPANY IT'S A BEAUTIFUL DAY , MILES DAVIS PERFORMING MUSIC FROM JOHN LEE HOOKER "JESUS CHRIST SUPERSTAR" PINK FLOYD SIOEC® [OFonAtffSioi): MAIL ORDERS TO: CELEBRATION P. 0. BOX 60118, NEW ORLEANS, LA., 70113 ENCLOSE SELF ADDRESSED, STAMPED, ENVELOPE EIGHT DAY TICKETS (« $28.00 EACH THREE DAY TICKETS (« 20.00 EACH NAME ADDRESS CITY STATE ZIP mm « Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday. May 14, 1971 15 SPORTS- tickmen )[■ third i Netters powerful in meet By MIKE ABERLICH By NICK MIRON State News Sports Writer ahead of Iowa. he could advance, topping Nick Mike Smart of Purdue, 6-3, 6-2, The State News Sports Writer The three matches were the Spartans' fifth and sixth Giordano of Purdue, 6-0, 7-6. to eam him a place in the semis, men, however, didn't fare nearly Three Spartan singles' players result of a rain shortened meet Joel Ross (Michigan), Mark advanced to the semi-finals in earlier in the year. The Spartans although two spots are still as well, as Wisconsin No. 5 Scott ,e time from now, when coach Ted Swoboda and his MSU Bishop (Indiana), and Bill open. Perlstein came from behind to the first day of play in the osne team are enjoying their "glory years," they may look Big had captured five of six singles Meyers of Northwestern were nip Jim Symington, 2-6, 6-2, Ten meet in k at the later half of the '71 season as a turning point, Evanston, 111. matches but a downpour forced the other three to advance into 6-1. In other action at No. f>, Indiana's No. 4 Tom Snyder, pettier or not the lacrosse team can start a winning tradition Thursday, and one other still has the re-scheduling of the doubles the semis at No. 1. a shot at the semi-action. matches. seeded third in the meet, was Barry Maxwell of Illinois ifSU hinges somewhat on their play 2 p.m. Saturday on Old The first three MSU netters One slot is still open at No. 2 surprised by Kevin Morrey of stopped Minnesota's Grfg e Field when they meet the Chicago Lacrosse club. Mike Madura and Rick Vetter for the semis. MSU's DeArmond pulled out wins in their at No. 2 doubles topped Dave Illinois, 6-2, 6-4, to give Morrey Lappin, 6-0, 6-2. i Spartans have won two games in succession and a win Briggs got by Bob Kessler of a chance in the semis. respective quarter-final meetings Stearns and Dave Mttthews, 6-4, Spartan Jay would add sufficient evidence that MSU has not been to move Wisconsin without any trouble, Vetter topped Phil Hammond of At No. 6, Illinois' Miles Harris on in league Ing beyond its capabilities. play, while 3-6, 6-3, and the third doubles 6-0, 6-1, and was joined beat Spartan Rick Ferman, 6-2, no. 4 man, Rick Vetter, his duo of Jim Symington and Rick as Purdue, 7-6, 7-6, but still must j,e last minute 7-6 defeat of Notre Dame was particuarly won expected by Geoff Hodsdon of win another match before he 6-3, to his first match but still has another Ferman also won in two sets, can earn way in$o _)t for the Spartans, as the squad showed ample staying power Indiana and Michigan's Tim Ott. advance. Friday's semi-finals. to play before he moves t they seemed to have lacked earlier in the season. Practice has up. 6-4, 6-3, to give MSU a total of Hodsdon set down Bob The doubles matches were 53 points going into the „ hard for MSU this past week as the Spartans are aiming for league Riessen of Northwestern in two ig less than a clean sweep of their last two games. ,,^shman Val Washington pulled along side veteran Doug completed later Thursday afternoon. meet. Michigan was the leader going sets, 6-1, 6-3, and Ott got by Ohio State's Jerry Florian, 6-2, The Union Ca The Spartans went into the relage in goals with 12 for the season when he bombarded the into the meet with 59 points and 6-4. j goalie for his third hat trick of the season. Kalvelage meet in third place in the league standings, despite their 5-4 Indiana had 56. No. 1 Tom Gray made up for Only two pos.„ions were filled SOMETHING-NEW-FOR- Itinued to pad his records with four points for the afternoon, early at No. 3. Spartan Mike league record. Three makeup •ing his season total to 24, over three points a game. 4he MSU defense has turned in two respectable games behind doubles matches (two of which his only regular season loss when he eliminated Iowa's Jim Esser Madura took one of them, beating Dave Matthews of SPRING' MSU won) with Minnesota Binder Fred Hartman. Hartman was stingy in the Notre Dame r, stopping 19 shots. the Spartans the chance to gave jump in two sets, 6-4, 6-4. Gray needed two match wins before Minnesota handily, 6-3, 6-2. Iowa's Craig Sandvig defeated American & uh'e Chicago club visited MSU last season and, in a game many ['the Spartans should never have lost, beat MSU by a slim 6-5 ON SATURDAY ros at Green-White Booters ploy jtograph session By CRAIG REMSBURG State News Sports Writer The MSU soccer team will from the past in action," Fuller said. The Steve Mayer Twellman are and Rudy the last few workouts, a back this year, which situation he hopes will correct to the Green - White Affairs office is Spartan coach said he should help," Fuller said. itself in the fall. Saturday's concentrating on complete five weeks of spring was not totally pleased with his "It will take a good team should game h Saturday afternoon, about to raise money for practice Saturday with an help to stir the needy prospective 1971 team, on the effort to do well in the fall adrenaline. [professional football players students. exhibition match against an all - basis of the spring practice because we don't appear to have [be at the stadium to talk to DETROIT: Jerry Rush, Tom alumni opponent. much depth," he added. Last year, the MSU team had All Dinners Served 5:00 - 7:00 P.M. and sign autographs. On Monday, May 17, $2.10 - Kutschinski, Wayne Rasmussen, Tom The contest will Complete begin at 1 "I haven't seen any real Fuller said he noticed a lack a fine season, with a record 5-1. New England Boiled Dinner Minnesota all - pro Gene Vaughn, Errol Mann, Lem Barney, p.m. and the public is invited to strength on our team as yet but of enthusiasm by the players in There were three ties. Corned Beef w/Cabbage Ellington organized the Charlie Sanders, Paul Naumoff, Earl McCullouch, Chuck Walton, Bill watch. There is no charge. The Carrots & Potatoes [graph signing session which Cottrell, Nick Eddy. soccer field is located just across Pickled Beet or Tossed Salad [begin at 1 p.m. and continue MINNESOTA: Gene Washington, the street from the outdoor this week we arc feAtuRmc, Corn Bread & Butter Deep Dish Apple Pie Bckoff at 2 p.m. Clint Jones, Oscar Reed, John tennis courts and track area. Henderson, Bobbie Bryant. Beverage Washington said that he tried Spartan Coach Payton Fuller these [get a few more but was BALTIMORE: BUI Triplett, Mike Hogan, Gordie Bowdeil. expects 15 or 16 alumni players speciAlly pmced lps On Tuesday, May 18, $2.25 Western Dinner - Complete bate in bringing in this NEW YORK (Giants): Ron to participate. Three former All k since - BBQ Lamb - Baked Potato many of the players Johnson, John Baker, Bob Lurtsema. America players, Tony Keyes, Squash - Wagon Wheel Salad [ negotiating contracts, on OAKLAND: Don Hlghsmith, BUI Laskey. Buzz Demling (from last year's Hard Roll Butter - ins, or taking graduate DENVER: Harold Phillips. team) and George Janes are Painted Desert Parfait at different college HOUSTON: George Webster. scheduled to appear for the r-.es. PHILADELPHIA: Steve Smith. alumni squad, along with Ken On Wednesday, May 19, $1.60 - Complete TORONTO: Greg Barton. ill proceeds from the Green - PITTSBURGH: John Rowser. Hammon, John McLain and Italian Dinner te game will be contributed Nick Archer, to name a few. Lasagna • Garlic Toast e Martin Luther King Jr. SAN FRANCISCO: Frank "It*s a good wind-up for our Everything Is Everything $2.98 Italienne Green Salad Pizza Figliata (Fruit & Nut jn Aid Scholarship Fund. MIAMI: Jimmy Raye. Donny Hathaway Roll) spring training and it gives some Beverage I effort is of many that SAN DIEGO: Gary Nowak. one of our new guys a chance to see n and the City Urban ATLANTA: GaU Cogdill. some of the good soccer players Donny Hathaway On Thursday, May 20, $1.90 - Complete His Second Album Hungarian Dinner Beef Goulash - Paprika Potatoes Peaceful World 323 e. Cucumber in Sour Cream or Tossed Salad Roll - Butter The Rascals M river . Cherry Torte - Beverage Real life Calls for real taste. 17-11-70 Live On Friday, May 21, $1.85 Complete Elton John open Indian Dinner - For the taste of your life-Coca-Cola. His Latest Album 9-9 Curried Turkey on Rice Choice of Eight Condiments sat. Salad - Roll - Butter ^^^j^uii^Cup^SherbetJ3everag^^^^ 9-6 ***** don't popqet to check our R.xck | which Always feAtuRes At leAst 90 lp s discounted 40% & moRe, PHONE 351-5380 Looking for the perfect Graduation gift? COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. OF MICH. The fabulous female form. Only the Swedes (HXeXR^E)® INTRODUCING THE could make it more exciting. HERMES 10 ELECTRIC For the 1971 season, the internationally famous designer, Hans Heitsch, has come up with another totally uninhibited It's ideal for the June graduate. For people in small offices. collection of beautiful beach For people who do a lot of typing at home, who have sons and swimwear that will bring the bold look of Sweden to beaches learning to type, daughters typing school notes. For the all over the world. whole family. For people everywhere who need to speed up their work load without paying more than they have to. For these people there finally is a sturdy, reliable, electric machine able to do all the standard things well. BIKINIS IF YOU ONLY WANT TO BUY A TYPEWRITER ONCE, BUY A HERMES. COME IN FOR A FREE DEMONSTRATION. By Jer-Sea from our salesman and repairman, of Sweden ■* ^v Mr. Louis E. May - over 40 years experience. 2283 Grand River - Okemos 131 E. Grand River (W[3<4 Across from the Union 16 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan _Fr'day, May | State news *Tate news classified The Best Bargains Ever Are In Today's Classified Ads. CLASSIF|EO 355-8255 The State News does not Automotive frankly speaking . by Phil Frank, Scooters & Cycles A uto Service & Parts permit racial or religious FALCON 1966. One CYCLE INSURANCE. Central AT MEL'S repair all foreign and discrimination in- its Excellent owner. we WAITRESSES advertising columns. The condition. 882-6114. 3-5-18 4 door. Michigan's Largest cycle, any rate. LLOYD'S of insurer. Any American cars. If we can't fix it, It can't be fixed. Call 332-3265. O B° Summer. 1 block from p.m. 351-0077. 2-5-14 W115.1 • 2 bedroom, 2 - 4 ■"is, furnished, balcony, FOUR MAN house to sublet for ■ conditioning, study summer. Fully furnished and ^LUCJU *04 R'ver SUMMER carpeted. 5 minutes from Berkey. 332-3795. 5-5-17 ■r- St., Apt. K^84or332-0255. GIRLS. SUMMER or fall. Near tlARD APARTMENTS. campus. Furnished. Parking. man. Close «• Call to 332-8903.5-5-24 351-8238, main! 332-2920. per ONE BEDROOM in house. $60 monthly with house privileges. 484-1542 after 6 p.m. 3-5-17 Sir or Madam, whichever!? THREE BEDROOM FACULTY p. 332 3844 3-5-12 . TWO GIRLS for summer term, New home. June 15, 1971 - September Cedar Village. Call 353-6178. 15, 1972. Family only. 351-4397. |LiLW° Par,y ,urnished 3-5-17 3-8-17 Join the Mob at... ■Z" r conditioned, close —————— ■"mpus. $135 ONE PERSON $55 plus utilities. You'll mm i summer fill-0 GIRL NEEDED for Cedar Village. " 484-0585 484-1328 ' Next year full time. 353-1214. 3-5-17 Own room. Duplex. 574 Gunson. 332-8734.2-5-14 never have parking f idea in student living Spacious living and summer problems like this at We now famous APARTMENTS brought it all together! For MINI-BUS. Free openers, there's the Bachelor Apts. rides to and from I Sha Featuring: Enc,°sed Pool Sauna fun for the young at heart. • • • Olympic pool / Club Color TV I Exercise Room Saunas / Pool Tables Colliitgtooob campus 5 times a day. Goodbye to tardiness, park¬ ing meters, and gas money. Say "Hello" to the Campus Hill Mob who enjoy the romantic social area. Picnic tables, Bar-B-Q pits, acres of grass along the banks of the Purple Cedar. Wow! Brand Upartincnts /n | a9*tra Carpet (new) Snack Bar • Volleyball new swimming pool. All together for Storage E^tra Rooms for Guest - Juke Box One bdr. apts. from $155. Tw" bdr. apts. from $190. ■saf-" per person. ■ Central Air a mere Conditioning ■ All Utilities included $52.50 e R°om (Pool Table Ping Pong) - Three bdr. apts. from $220. (formerly Northwind Apts.) except electricity ■ Carpeting Throughout ■ Drapes ■ Completely Furnished ■ MODELS OPEN DAILY "UNLIMITED PARKING "DISHWASHERS Balcony or Patio Units P.r'°e $129 for one - $139 for two 11 A.M.-7 P.M. ♦SHAG CARPETING "BALCONIES ■ Study Area with drop lite ■ Walk thru Kitchen featuring ■ Refrigerator ■ Range ■ Disposer ■ Dishwasher ■ Dron ln paid except telephone "AIR CONDITIONING Laundry facilities ■ Storage and and talk to our leasing agent today. meadowbrook Fall leases now being accepted, "AND MUCH MORE $200/2 man ■ Unlimited Parking. ■ Party Room TRACE halstead 444 management Out 496 East to Jolly Rd. exit, then to corner of Dunckel and Jolly $210/3 man $220/4 man On Grand River West of Okemos Rd 349-3530 I Open 9 a.m. Michigan Avenue Call 351-8282 2771 Northwind Dr. (behind Yankee Store) ^East Lansing Phone: 351 7910 393-0210 18 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friduy, May |, Peanuts Personal Service Service SIGMA KAPPA SIS Nanc and BIG BRUZ Tom - Love you both - 2001. 1-5-14 BIG BROTHER GARY. Charlotte's PAINTING estimates. up your 349 4817. C EXTERIOR. ~F7ee Grad house students, experienced, references. Brighten for spring ANN BROWN: Typing and multilith offset printing. Complete service for dissertations, theses, Land The ownership dispute trouble started several was abandoned. He lived with gain is my loss! You've been (Continued from page one) demanded, successfully, a 18 STEREO AND TV service. Most years ago when the state Vernon until last year. face-to-face meeting with Forest behind the Mr, studying too hard' Love, Cathy. TYPIST, EXPERIENCED. abandoned the acre 1-5-14 major brands. THE STEREO The trial originally had been as a site of a The Forest Service claims the Service officials. neighbors have bonnS* SHOP (next Dissertations, theses, etc. Mary schoolhouse. Cannon says he land to Paramount News) Ann Lance, 626-6542. 0-5-14 scheduled for District Court in as part of the Pisgah Vernon McCall is to live there C-5-5-20 owns the land by virtue of having National Forest. Transylvania County, but claimed and settled on it when it until the ownership is settled. The Forest Service said it sent Snyder succeeded in having it The CONGRATULATIONS PHI Tau PROTECT YOUR DEPOSIT1 PORCELITE DAMAGE expertly PROFESSION*! TMESIS moved to Asheville, 30 miles to several notices to Cannon telling him to give up the property, but Community Balsam Club, Grove rented in °f the thiturca near thewjjll repairs chipped PREPARATION the north. another trailer for Vernon and North little brothers sister I b-14 pledges. Your big porcelain plumbing fixtures and appliances. Hile declines comment on Crafts s he refused. Vernon McCall wasn't home placed it a few feet from where Usual amount withheld: $40-$50. the charges by the mountain his old trailer stood. Average Porcelite repair: $15-$20. folk. when the bulldozing occurred Donald McCall, Real Estate Discounts for multiple orders. starts to Feb. 22. cousin" of a "distant Vernon's and PAST LANSING. Open House 328 Free estimates. Call now! Phone 372-5882 after 5 p.m. 1-5-14 Ctmpliti Professional Thesis Service Mlltlr'i tni Oactaral Cindiditu Fret fer Who's University artists Neighbors said they asked the and rangers to wait but that the president of the community when they got run out chasing the kino's of- Oak hill Avenue. Saturday, 2 - 6 Irtckirt and CtRiiltaliai. Please Call craftsmen will be selling and rangers club, said the whole community Cliff and Paula Haiifkty 337 1S27 er 127 TIM broke a padlock, says Donald McCall PIANO LESSONS, p.m. 3 bedrooms, fireplace. summer term. displaying their wares in the removed some food and some Remodeled kitchen Call Barb for and information TYPING TERM papers and theses. second annual Outdoor Arts and furniture from the trailer, then Indian education - bathroom 2 car garage By owner. 355-7114. 7-5-21 Crafts Electric typewriter, fast service. Joan Guilford, Green Show today and flattened it and buried it. 332 3892. 2 5-14 Bay, Wis., YOUR PLACE or mine. Volkswagen Call 349-1904. 18-6-4 sophomore to Kenneth Fischer, Saturday. "If I had a gun up there on LAST LANSING, Best buy in town. repair service. 485-6500 after 5 Roseville sophomore, Phi Mu Alpha. Booths, where student-made that hill," Vernon McCall said Very nice 3 bedroom Colonial p.m. 3-5-14 BARBI MEL: Typing, multilithing. items will be for sale, will bo later, "It might have been (Continued from page one) No job too large or too small Barbara Taylor, Westland senior. Phi only those subjects whirl, sa'fbox. In fine neighborhood. open from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. different." interested in their people, G.it age, Block off campus. 332-3255. C Mu to Dan Scherrer, Detroit, senior. making money. fireplace, studio. By between the Union and the Balsam Grove residents raised Therefore, he said, Indians who owner. $29,000. 647 Sunset Lane. Typing Service PROFESSIONAL TYPIST seeks term Evans Scholar. Human Ecology Bldg. money, hired lawyers and come to college should study law. 351 0098 3 5-14 Recreation COMPLETE THESES Discount printing. IBM service. typing and papers, theses. Best rates, service. 351 4619, 19-6-4 speedy Ann Armbruster, Grosse junior, Alpha Delta Pi to Tony Gaertner, Saginaw junior, Tau Delta Pointe M 'JSrx&'T# having to accept cani' binding of theses, resumes, After living under tribj ')> i ICIAL PASSPORT photos publications. Across from campus, corner MAC and Grand River, Transportation he s not used to So as not to be it." — job application photos in 15 minutes. below Style Shop. Call bothered PHOTOGRAPHY BY PAUL COPYGRAPH SERVICES TWO STUDENTS destination California, finals need ride, Wanted capitalism, he said, should be left alone J 3516262. 337 1666. C week "Gamut" will present "The Art of The Alternative Coffeehouse will to - Anything 355-8877, 355-0452. "Baha'u'llah is Now" will be the the photographed anywhere. 21-6-4 3 5-18 Karate," a program that will be open from 9 p.m. to midnight theme for the Baha'i Club things they need SAVE SAVE SAVE COMPANION today at 4930 Hagadorn Road, across youth themselves. NEEDED to share investigate the origin and background conference Xerox copying - offset printing - of karate at 10:30 a.m. Saturday on from Hubbard Hall, featuring folk Saturday. Programs will house with widow. 332-6125. UNION BOARD PRESENTS Wanted Channel 12 WMSB. Students rock, be held at 1:30 and 7:30 p.m. in G-8 "Living together will best quality at reasonable prices. 10-5-24 will dialog, expression, friend* and Holden Hall. possible when the uropean flights: Detroit to London. THE COPY SHOPPE, 541 East demonstrate and talk about the Jesus Christ. white 6/15 9/3, $229; 6/24 - 8/24, YOUNG COUPLE karate tournament following (he stops trying to assimilate Grand River. Phone 332-4222. wants to live in a' WANTED: 5 or 10 speed bike The Come one, come all to the second Indian into the white $229; 6/25 - 9/11, $209; 6/27 C-5-14 home this summer and next year program. Society for Creative ci 9/7, $229; 393-1818. Call after 9 p.m. 3-5-14 Anachronisms will hold an exhibition annual outdoor arts and crafts show he said. 8/9 - 9/14, $199. "Horizons1' will present "Vietnam tournament from 11 and sale from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Detroit a.m. to 3 p.m. Cil to Frankfurt, 8/1 - 9/1, TYPING, THESES and letters, etc. maintenance, etc. 351-9295. today and Saturday between the DeMeyere, Air $219. BLOOD DONORS needed. Veterans' Rehabilitation." a program Saturday at Old College Field. All Caledonia Airlines. Call $7.50 for 353 9777. C 5-14 Rapid accurate service. 3-5-17 all positive. A featuring the problems of the fighters and others are requested to Union and Human Ecology Building. sophomore, and At negative, B negative Experienced. 393-4075. O and AB returning veteran, at 5:30 p.m. anend. The evening meeting will not The show will feature work by local DeMeyen\ Algonac frc1 TWO FEMALE GRADS negative, $10.00. O Saturday on WKAR AM. be held. artists and craftsmen - students and are want negative, $12.00. part Chippewt SUMMER FLIGHTS TO Europe. MICHIGAN Resettlement and readjustment to faculty at the University. For entry TERM PAPERS quickly accurately summer sublease close. Call COMMUNITY BLOOD CENTER, information, contact David Swain at Potawatomi. They said $165 round trip jet ■ air. Call 353-4793 or 351-3707 after 5 family and job will be two of the done. Convenient location. Call 507'/? East Grand topics discussed. the information booth. have had no special Frank Buck, 351-8604. 15-5-27 p.m. 3-5-14 River, East 337-2737. 1-5-14 Lansing. Agove the new Campus A public open night will be held since coming to MSU. Book Store. Hours: 9 "Baha'u'llah" will be the i .pic fo, The Badminton Club invites all a.m. to 3:30 from 8:30 to 11 p.m. Saturday at the "We didn't live SUPPORT YOUR business with TYPING SERVICE IN COUPLE SEEKS summer sublet for the Baha'i Club fireside at people to slap the bird around from 6 my East p.m., Monday, Thursday and Observatory. Children under age 13 reservation boost from Want Ads. Advert! Lansing home. Phone 332-3306. $100. Call Barb Clark, 353-3481. Friday. Tuesday and Wednesday 1 Sunday at 614 N. Hagador should be accompanied by an adult to 9 p.m. today in the Women's though," services there. Dial 355-8255. 0-5-14 2-5-13 with at least one adult for each three Intramural Building lower gym. DeMeyre said. "I think it P.m. to 6:30 p.m. 337-7183. C be children. harder on an Indian Delta Sigma Theta will hold a comes to college just cabaret from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. reservation." Saturday in the Brody multi - purpose rooms. The event is a part of De Meyere said that SUMMER STARTER SPECIALS for the Delta weekend. Admission charge is $1.25. Music will be provided by the Indians become disenc with the educational Green - Mosley Complex. j. when all they study in scho r r i » w% Delta sponsor a Sigma Theta sorority will carnival from 5 to 8 p.m. Sunday in Union Parlors A and B. the whites who settled country. "Rather than studying! OUTSIDERS Proceeds will be donated to a local which tribe lived in what charity. The public is invited. he said, "Indians are fore- Come to SUNday - talk, discuss learn about the white and interact with fellow students and East Lansing residents. SUNday is for Many resent this." understanding and TTiey said that they tolerance, sympathy and insight of opinions and satisfied with the education attitudes. Bring a picnic lunch are receiving at MSU. LET'S 60 TROPHIES & PLAQUES OVER 1000 TROPHP.S ON DISPLAY NO WAI7US /MA1:0fAff OEllVfRY Capital City Aviation I "*■ Learn to fly in a FAA Sunday Court to the Fast Lansing Valley Park (behind the bus depot) and get involved. SUNday will be "John (Winchester) baf really good to u»,'DfrJ" said. "This Prices tor and VA approved school held from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. University is it can." On The Quentii/ Purcha—i Reasonable Rates 489-5000 attend the annual mathematics Red Cedar "Weather Make convocation at 7 p.m. Monday in 104B Wells Hall. Dr. Masterson will speak on "Faculty and Academic Drugs Mon. thru Fri. 2-12 p.m. Perm itting" Outdoor Living Government." Refreshments will be served. (Continued from page in style! Sat. and Sun. 12 - 12 p.m. The Place Where The Rain or Shine PhoM Fun Hindu Assn. wil! meet at 7:30 while about average prices on campus for this areao 3020 VINE ST. p.m. today in the Union Sun Porch. All Seasons Man Shops GREEN MEADOWS 332 1667 Mr. Aple, organizer of Hindu Vishwa country, they still yield 70c per Hour 2283 E. Grand River GOLF CENTER Larry Cushion Sporting Goods Golf At Panshad, will talk with members on salient points in Hindu philosophy. profits. He said it is difficult to I UK. N Of MICH.-WEST OF SEARS South Side of Bessey Hall 349-9494 Heated, Covered "LANSING'S HOUSE Of TROPHIES" Highland Petitior chairman and two the positions of members - at where pushers on campus their drugs, since students Driving Range - WHITE BIRCH GOIF DRIVING RANGE Pro Shop WESTERN SHOP Golf Co large on the University Radio Board are available in 8 Student Services bring them back with them Golf Club Rentals all over the country at Beer, Wine, Cocktails Bldg. and should be returned by May Hay Rides for beginning of the term. UNION BOARD Stop in and See MINIATURE GOLF Pool Room 18 holes Spring and Fall and Food 26. Metro Squad is aware of ro East Alward Road presents the complete line of 1935 S. Meridian Road 20 dope houses in the Ui Watered Fairways DeWitt Reservations for the Flea Market EUROPEAN FLIGHTS SUZUKI FAIRWAY GOLF RANGE Public Invited Mason 677-0071 669-9873 are now being taken in the Union area, he said. 4722 W. Grand River Board office. Registration fee is $3, Swerdfeger, Zutaut and J payable upon sigu-up. The Flea agreed that Jones and lxims Detroit - London Motorcycles and Parts 485-7237 Tennis Anyone? 6/14-9/3 $229 SUZUKI OF LANSING 1410 Grand River Okemos BOB'S GUN SHOP Market is open to students, faculty, staff and their families and students organizations, and will be registered not as far from being caug they would believe. 0/24-8/24 $229 A few minutes east held from I to 6 p.m. May 23. "Even the pusher who ' ,'25-9/11 I. 27-9/7 $209 $229 2400 N. U.S. 27 372-3908 of MSU 349-2850 in Lansing A version of Sartre's play "No only to friends is not Julian said. "The proble 8 9-9/14 Exit" happens at 8 p.m. $199 today, has Colts, Smith & Saturday and Sunday in Brody Hall you may sell to a friend, Detroit - Frankfurt SAGINAW COLLEGE TRAVEL Wesson hand guns. then your friend may want Most all models. to sell to a friend of his, 8/1-9/1 $219 SPORTSLAND catered to OFFICE Remington, Winchester, The fifth annual open karate may turn out to be Caledonia Airlines and Weatherby rifles. by V/. tournament will be held Saturday in Informer." 130 West Grand River Ave. Driving Range the Men's Intramural Bldg. sports Call 353-9777 Browning and Remington 2 18 hole Miniature 351-6010 shotguns. WEATHERVANE arena. Eliminations will be held at Golf Courses Leather goods Rackets, nets, visors noon, and finals and demonstrations will be held at 7:30 p.m. Historical u MSU SKI CLUB Many Collectors Items shorts, shirts, balls has canoes acquired additional for Memorial Day 3 Baseball Pitching Machines Pinball Room 2 miles west of 1-96 Famous Names in 2412 S. Cedar 371-2244 2283 E. Grand River 3499494 Attention all residence halls and fraternities. Use your imagination admits U pr Weekend. on M-43 t & ARCHERY EQUIPMENT CLIP & SAVE and muscle! Enter the pyramid contest, which will be held Alpha Delta Pi Few Remaining Spaces 627-6607 frifissMil Arcbtry lnstrvetlH at 5 p.m. May 22 at the ATO house. Russel Nye, distingu 3 days of canoeing & WILLOWS RECREATION GOLF CENTER professor of English, was MAR • CARTON • HOVT member of the Am • The Soviet film "The Great Battle a • ROSERTS • WING camping. For Year Round Fun of the Volga (Stalingrad)" will be Antiquarian Society, 20 YARD INDOOR HANOI Fantastic Food EQUESTRIjfl Driving Range 18 hole Minialure Golf (Tuesday, children under shown at 7:30 p.m. Wells Hall. Monday in I04B oldest historical society ENTERPR Unlimited Uncola $ 18 Friday - Monday "A OIVI BSIFIjrpTf CalLVI 882-0088 10 years accompanied by parents FREE!) 2 Baseball Pitching Machines Pinball/Game Roorr United States. Founded in low- society's purpose is tne Information Call 351-8647 Eldorado Golf Course WMTGRO Full Line of Golf Clubs and Related Golf Equipment SPECIAL RATE WITH THIS COUPON England) will perform today, and Joe Janeti will perform Saturday. The and American preservation o> past Albatross will be open from 8 p.m. to collection and public#» 3750 W. Howell American historical m 2 a.m. and is located at 547 Rd., Mason E. Grand STUDENT RATES River Ave. Cover charge is $1. Membership is the society's by in*JUt council weekdays Trails & Track The Student BOWL to the RED PIN Duplicate Bridge annual meeting. Driving Range DUFFERS' HAVEN Club will hold a Swiss Rental Clubs Carts at WESTLAWN LANES FEATURING the PATHFINDER 2 p.m. Team of Four Sunday In East Akers Hall Nye is also a member Golf Equipment 3514 3 I'M. It's Easy to Win a lower lounge. Everyone is welcome. American Historica • the Michigan Historical So For More Information Call 676-2854 ^te Kd. east Lansing GOLF RANGE FREE GAME at A tea hour with Wu-Chi Liu, WESTLAWN LANES professor of Chinese language and literature at Indiana University, will TERRACE GOLF & KIDDIELAND Vs mile south of Holt Road be held from 3 to 5 on Cedar Street Easy to Operate the Union Green Room. p.m. Monday in Muslim gr° 18 Hole Miniature Golf 7 rides The College of Social Science It's the 351-4054 351-0160 Now Lessons Available BETTER MACHINE announces on petitioning for five seats its Student Advisory Committee. Petitions may be picked up from 8 plans meeti starting Group Lessons AND NOW IS THE TIME a.m. to noon and I to 5 p.m. OPEN DAILY & SUNDAY IN FRANDOR today FOR A BETTER DEAL through Wednesday In office, 203 Berkey Hall. the dean's The Muslim SW* Group Rates 694-9259 will meet at 7 p.m 1730 S. Cedar HARLEY DAVIDSON FAMILY FUN FOR ALL Holt Sales & Service 2510 W. Main 6430 Lansing Road 646-5621 or 485-1915 1 Mile West of I-96 on U.S. 27 - M 78 10 Minutes from Campus by The concert of will be given at 8 Russian Chorus' liturgical and folk music spring p.m. Tuesday at Un'°}rri» ESS 484-5565 Expressway People's Church, East Lansing. No admission charge. Organizations, State News, East Lansing, Michigan THE ULTIMATE IN SPORT CARS 240—Z 120Q FAST BACK $1866 P.O.E. 1200 SEDAN $1736 P.O.E. 96 HORSE-POWER OVER 100 OVER HEAD-CAM $3596 P.O.E TO CHOOSE FROM OVER 28 510 — 2 DOOR MILES PER $1,990 P.O.E. GALLON 36 MONTHS TO PAY STUDENT FINANCING AVAILABLE WAGON $2350 P.O.E LATEST IN FOREIGN- CAR STYLING 20 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Phil Frank By JUDY YATES State News Staff Writer explains departure! Frank said car makers stopped doing quality work in 1937. He said they make cars that are only built to go fast on super as much as cartooning," he said. Frank said his first cartoon was "so bad it His style has changed a great deal since highways. he st,*!?"1 Phil Frank, the moustached cartoonist who has kept State News "I like the idea of owning a car that you drive slow enough to Speaking" in 1969. His early cartoons show with short, straight, clean-cut lines. readers chuckling since he started cartooning in 1961, is leaving enjoy the scenery and aren't afraid to take off the road," he said. famous for their rounded characters with Todav m cters ^ for San Francisco in August. Frank plans to sell the Model A before he leaves. He said the bie now* c,rto°i»i Frank, creator of "Frankly Speaking," plans to set up a farm on the ocean with a large studio. He and three or four free lance greatest value of the car is its sentimentality. "But when you buy a Model A and sell it three years later you "The change was just a natural purpose, he said. thing i^dn,f 0n 1 „ 1 do it 1 artists will do art work and graphic and national newspapers. designs for San Francisco area make money," he said. Frank attributes the change to his ability to work "I have better control now than I did then " 1 Frank will retain his syndication in 60 college papers, including he Frank doesnt like other people to "1 am going to do something I've always dreamt about doing," the State News and 10 metropolitan papers. In fact, he says he interpret Z a _ I he said. hopes to enlarge his syndication to 300 papers in 10 languages. feels cartoonists should have a message neonl* a , 1*1 Frank hopes to devote some time to antique sports cars. He has "You've got to think big," he said. message intended by the cartoonist, not o^°Uidwl driven a 1931 Model A every day since he was 16 and he also own Frank got his start when he answered an advertisement in the interpreted for themselves. ^ey ij a 1946 right-hand-drive MG. Frank says he gets his ideas from State News for a cartoonist. He was a freshman at the time. reading a lot