Wednesday Everything MICHIGAN Cloudy and warmer with STATE NEWS . a high in the STATE UNIVERSITY ie 64 Number 63 East Lansing, Michigan Wednesday, November 10, 1971 first meeting City councilmen elect Brookover as mayor By BILL WHITING lock-out, but the city building code did currently involved in plans for a tertiary State News Staff Writer specify a certain amount of floor space per filtering treatment plant to cost over $12.8 person. million. She said the city is requesting state Jr0ting lines began to be drawn at Much of the prolonged meeting centered and federal assistance for the project which Unci ay's meeting of the East Lansing City on the issue of accommodating spectators at is slated for completion by the end of 1973. funcil as two new councilmen, swept in by future council meetings as Colburn and She pointed out current overload came Lge student voter turnout, came face to Griffiths introduced motions to move the primarily from University facilities. t with a majority voting block of previous meeting place for next week's meeting to In other action by the council on motions tncil members. another hall which would handle a large from Colburn and Griffiths; Ecting quickly in the beginning of the crowd. Both motions went down to defeat The city manager was authorized to draw Xwnout organizational meeting, council by 3 to 2 votes, however, with other council up guidelines for city appointees on the Imbers elected Wilbur B. Brookover as members citing two public hearings which rights and responsibilities of the press in Ivor and newly sworn in councilman had been advertised for next week as reasons covering public meetings. lorge L. Griffiths as mayor pro for remaining at city hall. Council approved a message to area lokover's surprise nomination came from Colburn said he expected large crowds at representatives in the state capitol, voicing Iffjths after he turned down his own future meetings, particularly when the Enination by running mate George A. ■burn. Councilwoman Mary P. Sharp was council took up questions on the cross and peripheral routes. He asked that their approval of the House of Representatives drug bill stand on marijuana Swearing in campus which calls for reducing penalties to a |o nominated. discussion of the highways be placed on the Newly elected East Lansing city councilmen George Colburn, George Griffiths and Wilbur Brookover were sworn In taking his new seat as mayor, after a agenda for next Monday's meeting, at which (Please turn to page 15) into their offices Monday. The council elected Brookover as mayor. State News photo by Terry Miller -ret ballot vote, Brookover said, "I would time, he said he would introduce a motion to K> to voice my appreciation to members of rescind city support of the campus route and T council and assure the council and the ask for information on the extent of city Disputed electio )y of East Lansing that I will do my best to plans for the peripheral route, north of ve the city and all the people." Grand River Avenue. He also requested the llanv people, however, who came to the city manager to notify nearby communities leting to view the proceedings, found and the State Highway Dept. of the ■ Imselves on the outside looking in as : : constituted, and that the self-designation of «> distribution of campaign regulations regulator was proposed discussion. representing various minority groups (in the done haphazardly. |ors to the city hall were locked early in University.) The representatives-at-large the committee as judiciary of original The (second) appeal, also filed by Ms. I meeting when the crowd grew large, Griffiths also began action to initiate faction of the Academic Council was jurisdiction was a violation of the Academic Fochtman and Ms. Benn, contended that the ■presentatives of the press were allowed campaign proposals by asking City Attorney initiated by the council to ensure a Freedom Report. committee refused to allow them to have ugh, though, boosting the festive crowd Daniel C. Learned to draw up necessary The election of student The constitutional question was raised systematic representation of women and slate designation placed by their names on (high as 150. papers to impose a sewer ban in East representatives-at-large to the Academic nonwhites. because a graduate seat on the committee the ballot. Ron Kiersey of the city police Lansing. He asked that studies of the city's Council was still scheduled for today as of An appeal, filed Monday by Joni Benn, designated by the bylaws for a woman is The appeal contended that the regulations [partment, who was stationed at the front existing sewage disposal plant be requested late Tuesday night, despite four appeals Allen Park senior and Paula Fochtman, held by a man. from the city engineer, the consulting firm do not prohibit slate running and that the of the building, said 25 for an injunction against the election. jr as many as Petoskey junior, asked for an injunction The appeal further contended that the decision was made in an ex post facto Kople were waiting outside at one time. He which designed it, State Health Department Two appeals were still pending Tuesday. committee regulation against the election until the committee which makes the manner after permission was granted by the and civil and sanitary engineers at MSU. Final determination on them was to be made Jd it was "not an unusual occurrence" to could be legally constituted and pass All-University Student Judiciary the body committee. K spectators out of the building when Griffiths contended the present treatment Tuesday night by the Student Faculty campaign regulations which conflict with of appeal after the committee was Kevin Harty, Glenview, 111., junior, filed a Tubers became excessive and that there facility is greatly overloaded and said he Judiciary. neither the Academic Freedom Report nor "categorically unfair to graduate students in Id been several court cases which upheld would request the sewer ban to "prohibit Ten student representatives-at-large will the cases that could not legitimately be complaint with the Committee on the Bylaws for Academic Governance. be elected from a slate of 42 candidates. The Discrimination Nov. 1. He charged the ■action. any further construction in the city which The appeal contended that the Student heard before the undergraduate judiciary." Student Committee on Nominations with I city fireman who was at the scene, but would add to the sewer plant burden until candidates are divided into five categories Committee on Nominations was illegally The appeal contended that the discrimination against white males. He said Shed to remain anonymous, said there we can handle it." the exclusion of white males from the re no fire regulations which required the Ms. Sharp pointed out the city was student representatives-at-large seats was a racist and sexist act. Faculty council defeats and The committee reviewed the case Nov. 4 found Harty's charge was not substantial. The committee ruled that there was no violation of the Anti-Discrimination Policy proposed grievance plan and Procedures of MSU because "there are no absolute barriers to overall participation by white male students evidenced in the electoral processes for students to the amendments. A time and place will be before it is passed onto the Academic Academic Council." Council were accepted by the council. established later this week. Harty also filed a request for a hearing by An amendment proposed by Keith Groty, Groty's proposal to delete Section 3.3.3 of the Student Paculty Judiciary asking for an the grievance document was approved. acting director of the School of Labor and injunction against the election based on the Industrial Relations, to make the decisions Section 3.3.3 read: same grounds. The major philosophical argument over the proposed Interim Faculty Grievance of the Appeals Board final and binding on "Judicial Boards shall not hear appeals The Judiciary denied the hearing and Proceedure was proposed, discussed and the president was defeated by the council. concerning substantive decisions made by or recommended that the matter be raised E. Fred Carlisle, chairman of the ad hoc before the Academic Council to determine defeated in less than 15 minutes at the according to the recommendations of a committee to compose the document, Elected Faculty Council meeting Tuesday body of democratically elected peers or a (Please turn to page 15) afternoon. explained that the proposed procedure is in body appointed or procedures approved Discussion of the document was not keeping with existing policies of the according to democratically established concluded at the meeting. The council University to have presidential review over department or college laws." moved to reconvene in two weeks to finish such decisions. Several motions to amend the document "The assumption here is that a discussion and allow more time to consider democratically selected body makes decisions that are never wrong and are above review. The assumption is wrong," Groty New motion argued. "By striking 3.3.3 we do open it up to at least one appeal." ACLU asks Groty's amendment also included a clause filed in suit to delete the reference to Section 3.3.3 in to alter busin Section 3.3.2. A proposal by Hendrik Zwarensteyn, by Milliken this to be inherently unequal," local ACLU professor of business law and office GRAND RAPIDS (UPI) - Gov. Milliken By RANDYGARTON president Lynn Jondahl said. administration, to amend Section 2.5.1 of and Atty. Gen. Frank J. Kelley Tuesday State News Staff Writer Jondahl said that integration was the document to provide for unlimited filed a motion in Federal Court here, number of challenges for cause for both presently the answer to inequality in requesting judge Noel P. Fox to send back education and accused Milliken and other parties during the selection of a Judicial Gov. Milliken Tuesday received a Board was rapidly accepted by the council. to Ingham County Circuit Court, their suit state leaders of not providing leadership to resolution from the Lansing branch of the seeking to have state property tax laws held solve the education crisis. American Civil Liberties Union urging that Carlisle told the council that unconstitutional. "I think Gov. Milliken's decision to appeal Council ad he reconsider his decision to appeal Judge Stephan Roth's decision finding de jure Judge Roth's findings confuses the issue," Zwarensteyn's proposal was in no way contrary to the committee's intent and that The suit was originally filed in Ingham County Circuit Court, contending the laws Jondahl said. "It makes him look like he's on segregation in the Detroit school system and the committee, in fact, supported the favor some pupils over others, depending on IE. Fred Carlisle, chairman of the ad hoc committee to develop an interim asking Atty. Gen. Frank Jo Kelley to refuse the side of those who are dissatisfied with amendment. the wealth of a school district. I faculty grievance procedure, addressed the Elected Faculty Council to issue such an appeal. Judge Roth's decision." Three school districts named as Roth had earlier ordered the Detroit I Tuesday. Several amendments were accepted by the council and further "Our major concern is that it is obvious (Please turn to page 15) defendants, Bloomfield Hills, Dearborn and Board of Education to submit a plan within I discussion on the proposal will be held in two weeks. that Detroit schools are segregated, and that Grosse Pointe, filed a petition in federal the 1954 Supreme Court decision declared (Please turn to page seven) court here last month, asking transfer of the State News photo by Terry Miller case to federal jurisdiction. Judge Fox said he will hold a hearing on rollbacks onticipoted arguments Monday. Few wqq© Detroit attorney Robert Webster, one of the attroneys representing the three school districts, said at the time the petition was filed that Federal Court jurisdiction was ticket item he might do it," one source said. per cent, but did not set a number, the Q: What will be the effect of the rulings on freeze in anticipation of the wage boost. sought because "the case involves rather [ASHINGTON P °ard does (AP) not — The President's But the sources said that the Board fears sources said. The issue will be decided on a the present dock strikes and coal strike? Does this mean teachers may collect grave constitutional questions." expect that many A: The board has not considered any retroactive pay raises if taxes were raised T nessmen will seek rollbacks of scheduled rranagement might in some cases be reluctant case - by - case basis, taking into account all Asst. Atty. Gen. Eugene Krasicky, who is factors. For example, recent rail settlements specific cases. beforehand? to appeal for rollbacks of even inflationary representing the Governor in the matter, brm -d jfeases in existing labor agreements, call for pay raises more than double the 5.5 A: Quite possibly. "Taxes are prices," a wage increases. It was for this reason that the sources said said Tuesday the two officials are seeking a Tuesday. per cent guide, but they also follow long Q: How final is the board's policy source said. board allows rollback appeals to be statement? court order because the state legislature will Bind " .fienera' guidelines approved instituted by five or more of its own periods without any raise and eliminate Q: Why didn't the board approve labor's not adopt reform measures without being A: It has no legal force. The board meets la?iiu'gllt' a businessman may appeal members, a source said. work rules that mean extra pay. This might again at 2 p.m. Thursday to attempt to demand for retroactive payment of all lost pressured. ,.011back of scheduled wage increases This appraisal came in a background weigh in the rail unions' favor if a rollback raises? He said they are contesting federal reduce the general policies to specific, 't mg 5.5 per cent a year. He will get It if briefing on the Pay Board's policies. Under appeal is filed, a source said. legally binding directives. It is hoped many A: The sources argued that this would jurisdiction because state courts can act have been terribly unfair to landlords who Bn ay Hoard decides the raise is ground rules for the briefing the participants Q: Are fringe benefits such as pension questions now unanswered will be clarified could not collect retroactive rent increases, quickly. According to Krasicky, Milliken has icraK?,"ably inconsistent" with the mav be identified only as 'informed plans, vacation and health insurance limited to sellers who cannot get retroactive price the power to send a state case directly to the fctrapt cent "-year guideline for new sources"or "sources in a position to know. by the 5.5 per cent ceiling? then. But one source cautioned that it could increases and to lots of workers without Michigan Supreme Court but a ruling by a V* rthe < ourt refused to • Agreed to decide this term Cooperative Extension Service. whether illegitimate children are Of those colleges which select an award winner The Steering Committee conducted the selection procedure. 1 tollegel e< Because of the new selection method an aver* J to escane the draft did not win a T'T n *a t j eligible to share in the insurance every other year. Business and Education will cinalo in tho Snnrpme Pnnrt - that a South Bend, Ind., benefits of their serviceman name winners for the 1972 award series. The of 10 Distinguished Faculty Award be named yearly instead of the former six. recipients wiS Chile welcomes Castro hearing. He faces deportation szzssLsysss work until 65. ih« within 90 days-but to where? The justices turned down an A IMI PI t MEATIMfi FUEL "Welcome Fidel" signs blossomed on walls and Jolley ,now working as a news appeai bv Go v. George Wallace of "" ■ ■ fc W FWBh reporter in Tallahassee, Fla., Alabama attacking the buildings Tuesday in Santiago, Chile as Chile's leftist never applied for Canadian exemption of "superficially government prepared a hero's welcome for Prime Minister citizenship and Canada has no MSU charitable, religious, educational Fidel Castro on his first trip to South America in more than a decade. On the eve of the Cuban leader's arrival. Chile's Marxist president announced that the Chilean government has legal obligation to take him back. An Immigration and Naturalization spokesman said Canada will be Service asked to allow Jolley to live there. or scientific" organizations from the federal income tax. In other cases the court: • Ruied invalid a 1970 New By BILL HOLSTEIN ready for winter Consumers stopped the flow of MSU, said the University is going forced to curtail some servicJ jerSey welfare regulation that was decided to renogotiate its foreign debt, including $1 If Canada agrees, chief counsel designed to limit assistance to State News Staff Writer gas to MSU twice last winter for a to get just as much gas as it did during the winter months T billion owed to the United States. Charles Gordon of the families having outside income o Even though other universities total of four days in late January last winter. 1965. This means Chile is unable to keep up its present Immigration Service, said then that amounts to at least and similar institutions may be and early February, Wilson said. "You're all set. You're not schedule of repaying what it owes. Jolley will cross the border two-thirds of their needs. strapped this winter to find Even if the gas should be cut off going to have any voluntarily or be forced to go • Upheld a Georgia election law enough fuel to heat and service all this winter, MSU has a 60 day problems—unless there's some act Mandelslamm there. If Canada refuses, Gordon that requires a majority vote for their buildings, MSU is not likely supply of coal on hand and could of God that neither of us know Children get more said, "we will have to find a election to Congress. Julian to have any such problem. easily provide sufficient power about yet," DeGraaf said. videolapo aid <■ in * country that will accept him. u:„ » This is the reassurance offered for two months, Wilson said. He said there are three variables uses The court made no comment Goodwill gets by both the MSU physical plant Some universities which are as far as Consumers is The administration moved Tuesday to implement a on several claims raised by and Consumers Power Co. relying on coal have had some concerned—the weather, pipeline in 1967 law requiring states to provide free preventive Jolley's lawyers in an effort to Howard Wilson, associate trouble already this cold season, conditions and the supply of gas. teaching talk avert deportation. Their main 45-star U.S. flag director of the physical plant in Indiana University last week medical care for about seven million poor children eligible ..r„nsumers isnreoaiedforanv point was that he did not give up Allan Mandelstamni, professc for Medicaid. dated from 1 896 charge of providing utilities, said announced stringent reduction in kjnd of weather we get," he said. his citizenship voluntarily since the University is currently the use of campus utilities nomics, will show I Top priority for medical screening, diagnosis and he renounced it to avoid Army EVANSVILLE, Ind. (AP) — A burning natural gas for heating because of the dwindling coal The last time MSU had real videotape dealing with teachinl treatment goes to children under the age of six. The service. 45-star American flag? The local campus buildings. The University supply caused by a national coal difficulty with fuel for heating students via television at 2 p.nJ Friday in 214 Bessey. ' " When the news reached Jolley * " J " plans to begin burning coal as well strike, was in 1947, Wilson said. During a services are to be extended to all other eligible children branch of GoodwiU Industries under the age of 21 by July 1,1973. in Tallahassee he said he was not discovered there was one, dating as gas early in January to help One Indiana University coal strike then, the University The Communication Depfl surprised and that he doesn't back to 1896 when Vtah was take care of the coldest winter administrator said that if the was within three days of colloquium with Mandelstami| The regulation will be effective 90 days after know "'Katwhat ,0'*0, legal avenues """i" remain admitted into the Union, ' months. strike is prolonged, it may be depleting its coal supply. will include a question an] answer period following the tap« publication in the Federal Register. open. He said he wants to remain When Oklahoma achieved The University has an necessary for IU to cut off hot in the United States and he still statehood in 1907, the 45-star "interruptible" contract with water in residence halls. Also, before the construction All interested persons a of Power Plant 65, MSU was welcome. might have a chance if no country nag became obsolete D _ _. Consumers Power Co. meaning "Anybody running strictly on Nonetheless, it had an 11-year the University pays a significantly coal is in trouble," MSU's Wilson Herbert joins McGovern MOOSUSKI run. lower rate for its gas by agreeing said. i TONIGHT 7.30 p.m. The flag was donated to. / to let Consumers cut off the Eveti if Consumers cuts off gas ; Col. Anthony B. Herbert, who says he is retiring from 109 ANTHONY Goodwill by Ralph Lindley, who , .supply of gas for up to 90 days if f°r a full 90 days, Wilson insists found it in an old box he bought its supply runs too low. the University could buy enough the Army because of harassment after his charges the WIN APRIZE! at an auction. Goodwill But Wilson said "we don't coal to get MSU through the Army covered up Vietnam atrocities, will join the SEE A FILM! employes, with his approval, have anticipate their shutting off the winter-even though a coal strike FUN-FUN-FUN offered it to the state of Utah. gas." could still be in effect. presidential campaign staff of Sen. George S. McGovern, "We would have every the South Dakota Democrat announced Tuesday in expectation now that within 60 Washington. days you could get coal," Wilson HOLLYWOOD, Fla. until he takes on the unions. McGovern said in a speech prepared for a local women's said. The normal lapse between (UPI)—Housing Secretary George "In my opinion," Romney sa club that Herbert, the most decorated enlisted man in the ordering coal and receiving a Romney accused consumer "the time has come for us to cu shipment is two weeks, he said. advocate Ralph Nader Tuesday of this abuse of accumulated po Korean war, will serve "as an adviser on military matters, But Willard DeGraaf, evading a clash with the big labor used by both companies ar veterans' affaris and related problems." unions. unions. Such abuse results ■ Consumers representative to Romney, departing from wage actions that are excessive^ prepared speech to the terms of their own long ri International City Managers interests, in terms of the interesl Report ready on Dec. 1 Association Convention, first of the consumer, and in terms® began by praising Nader as a good the basic competitive position J Gov. Milliken said Monday in Grand example of what one person can the United States i Rapids his special commission on land do to aid the consumer. markets." use will present its final report Dec. 1 But the former Michigan Speaking about the ecor detailing steps to be taken to prevent governor then added, "you have situation, Romney said a n never heard him talk about the principle must be developed fll unspoiled acreage from being "devoured by roadbuilders, real estate swollen unions. wages and prices and he feels til "He (Nader) is evading dealing ultimate solution is to "curb til developers and industrialists." with this power. He is eroding the abuse" of power of boil The governor told the Michigan Farm problem of helping the consumer corporations and labor unioj Bureau Convention here wise use of and "put the consumer back! Michigan's the saddle." J farm, forest recreational lands "will continue to be one of the clearest goals of my and SENIOR an "No free nation has yet economic policy with employment that does not resuB fouij fu| administration." "We must carefully plan now how NIGKT in inflation," he said. "I hope tn^ will be the first Romney delivered nation." his prepare our land is to be used - how much we is text which outlined «'hj can afford to convert to President Nixon superhighways, how much to parks, coming congress for a "one-stop shoppij how much to industrial sites, and to tho center" for city officials seekj federal assistance. He said M importantly, how much we should leave in a state of natural beauty concept differs from the prese* situation where a city ofticiB unspoiled by man," Milliken said. Griffin to be opposed Mki WED may have to go to four separa« offices in three or more cities. - The one-stop concept win r called the department ' community development w >j will be designed to cut federa j The newly formed Conservative Party in Lansing has I\OV. tape. decided to run a candidate against Sen. Robert P. Griffin in i 972 because of his inconsistency on the busing issue, Conservative Party Chairman Robert J. Huber has TRANSCENDENTAL announced. MEDITATION The former Republican state senator said in a telephone interview Tuesday that the party definitely will oppose Griffin, but has not decided on what other offices it would seek. Huber was an unsuccessful candidate in tthe as taught by 1970 Republican U.S. Senate primary, narrowly losing to Maharishi Lenore Romney. Mahesh "Mr. Griffin has been all over the map on the busing Yogi issue," Huber said. Detroit News gets holiday Transcendental meditation 1* a natural spontaneous 1N- The Detroit News announced Tuesday it will not nlque which allows each individual to expand his mind improve his life. publish on Christmas and New Year's Day this holiday season. Introductory Lecture It will be the first time since World War II that the News voluntarily will have suspended publication on a holiday. TODAY Suspension of publication, the News said in today's 3 pm - Room 35, Union editions, "will allow a maximum number of employes in all departments and the 13,000 news carrier boys to be 7:30 pm - 106 0 Wells with their families on the two holidays." for inhumation call 351-7587 ~ n State News, East Lansing, Michigan Wednesday, i\ovember 10, 1971 10, 1971 U.S. advisers cut in Vietnam SAIGON (AP) - The U.S. advisory effort in South Vietnam is They can call for U.S. air and artillery support if the delta will be completely phased out by the end The total being sharply cut as American number of personnel in the delta they need it. of 1972. combat troops withdraw. pacification effort was slightly over 2,000 last When the military assistance "Secondly, advisers performed a liaison function There were 144 mobile advisory teams in the June 30. That number will drop to 1,330 advisory group with American units. There just aren't that many delta a year ago with a total by Dec. became the U.S. Military Assistance Command, strength of 720 men; 31 and to 975 by March 31. American units around any more, and Vietnamese now there are Vietnam or MACV in 1964, there were fewer only 80 teams with 240 men, and Tentative projections indicate a further - - units are getting more and more of their air and their role has shifted from that of combat advisers drop to than 1,000 American advisers. 502 military and civilian personnel artillery support from their own people." to advising by the end of That number soared to 10,500 Vietnamese training teams. June 1972 and 178 by the end of June 1973. during the peak Bowen says he expects that regimental - level years of U.S. involvement. The U.S. Command advisers will also be phased out by the end of the says there are now 9,700 year or soon after, leaving only small advisory - 'd 1 Facult J advisers in longer Vietnam, but many of these are no in the field. Officials say substantial cuts in the advisory effort will be made in the next eight liaison teams at the division level. Also in military region 1, a dozen of the 44 Aid cut perils lectio] months. district advisory teams operating in support of the '"mmittee The cutback pacification program have been closed out, and already has had a major effect on officials say more district teams will be phased out on tandidatj in on, the number of battalion advisory teams, district advisory teams and mobile advisory teams in the Held. in the next few months. "It's a selective process," said one pacification of S.Viets, e official. "If we feel something concrete can be The U.S. Command says that of the 125 or so blished t< accomplished in a set period of time, we'll SAIGON (AP)—A U.S. expert in recent years with virtually no South Vietnamese regular army battalions, million at the free market rate. me awj only probably leave a team in the district for that painted a bleak picture Tuesday 11 still have U.S. advisory teams. pay raises—would be less able period. for South Vietnam if Washington Of this, some 135 billion research, Some special units, such as rangers, airborne than before to absorb the impact. tributiom "But where goals have been met, or where cuts off all economic aid. The expert said that the latter piasters are generated by -entratioi units, marines and armored cavalry, still have The informant, who asked not importers' purchases funded by battalion level advisers, but the total number of - nothing specific can be accomplished by leaving a option seemed the more likely team in a district, we'll pull them out." to be identified, said its armed the United States and by South battalion advisory teams in the country has been choice of President Ngyuen Van he forces Vietnamese government taxes on college reduced to 27. In military region 4, which encompasses the 16 would have to be cut Thieu's m il i t a r y - backed nearly in half at the risk of government. these imports. Several of these are involved in the provinces of the Mekong Delta, all 36 battalions of training of three South Vietnamese army divisions operate military setbacks. If not that, newly organized tank and artillery units, and will South Vietnam's supply of Only about 50 billion piasters Parking problvm be withdrawn by the end of the year. without advisers. then the nation will have to try to ride out disastrous inflation, he ammunition and military come 10 from domestic taxes, and billion are generated by "There are two reasons why battalion advisers Pacification officials say that 17 of the 96 hardware was not jeopardized by Joining in the fight against automobile pollution, newly have been phased cut," said said. postage revenues, the national Brig. Gen. Thomas W. district advisory teams in the delta have already "I don't think they could the Senate action. Ajrmament is elected East Lansing councilman George Colburn rode to Bowen, the deputy senior adviser in northwen lottery and other services. A been phased out, with 14 more slated forpullout survive it," in either case, the provided for under the $1.9 Monday's meeting on his bike, only to find no rack to park it most military region 1. "We've worked ourselves billion military procurement sizable slice—about 40 billion between now and March 1. source said. in. Council approved the purchase of a rack later that evening. out of a job. The battalion commanders are authorization bill. piasters—is generaged by deficit State News photo by Terry Miller Only 23 of the 96 districts will need advisersJ)y He said he could not be sure any perfectly competent to operate without advisers. spending, which includes internal July 1, they say, and the district advisory effort in of the $565 million earmarked But other military for Vietnam in the foreign aid bill borrowing and printing more expenditures, like the rest of the money. rejected by the Senate would be Vietnamese economy, are heavily Chinese envoys The fiscal 1972 budget allotted precede forthcoming. The Nixon dependent on revenues generated administration is trying to make $300 million for the commercial by various facets of U.S. sure that the aid funds, as economic aid. import program and a $150 originally requested, are restored. million "economic support fund" More than half of South South Vietnam's budget for to offset dwindling revenues from Vietnam's current budget is calendar 1971 is currently withdrawing U.S. troops. financed by U.S. aid programs projected at 235 billion piasters. Piasters generated from these jelegates' arrival to UN and 65 per cent of the budget This is about $2 billion at the rate funds would be used to support goes to the military—mostly for the U.S. government buys the South Vietnamese salaries. piasters, but less than $700 government's budget. A total aid cutoff, the economic expert said, would JN1TED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) formally on UN committees and passes will be issued when names Egypt, Syria, Kuwait, Algeria, present the Saigon government 3 Ik in the available. with two difficult options: In their first appearance at the 131-nation General are Mauritania and the People's The State News, the student newspaper at * Cut 400,000 to 500,000 of Michigan State ited Nations, three members Assembly Friday. The three-man group, headed Among those arriving Thursday Republic of the Congo. University, is published every class day during Fall, Winter Red China's advance guard will be a correspondent for the Each of the three 1.1 million men from its armed , professo A cable from Chi by Koa Liang, was part of an wore a dark and Spring school terms, Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays Peng-fei, official New China News Agency forces, creating serious problems show Sited headquarters Tuesday to advance party of six who arrived gray Mao jacket and carried a during Summer Term, and a special Welcome Week edition acting foreign minister, said a and a photographer. They will be brief case. of dislocation, unemployment, i teachin cuss problems related to the total of 46 would arrive on two in New York on Monday to in September. Subscription rate is $16 per year. the main Peking commercial given the usual press and dissent within the military, rival of Along with the other three Member Associated Press, United Press International, flights Thursday prepare the way for the main members of the advance party, and nare imports to a fraction of Jelegation Thrusday. afternoon. These will include accreditation, the UN spokesman Inland Daily Press Association, Michigan Press Association, ion Peking delegation. said. the current $700 million a year to Dep He two-hour and 25-minute they had begun the day by eating Associated Collegiate Press, Michigan Collegiate Press Huang Hua, former ambassador No special control inflation. idelstamr sit came as a delegation of more to A UN spokesman said the security measures a hearty American-style breakfast Association. Canada, who will join the * Maintain most of its military stion in 40 took off from the Chinese had discussed are planned within the UN in the Roosevelt Hotel coffee Second class postage paid at East Lansing, Mich. Editorial group in Paris. Huang will be forces without badly needed pay tg the tap' uinland capital with q personal credentials, press facilities, buildings. The spokesman said, shop. Some had omelets and and business offices at 345 Student Services Bldg., Michigan Peking's permanent however, that a UN security sausages and the others had bacon raises and try "to hold everything State University, East rsons nd-off by Premier Chou En-lai security and other matters with Lansing, Michigan. representative at the United else together," under economic d a cheering crowd of Nations. UN officials. Passes were issued to guard will be assigned to Deputy and eggs. They paid the check the six Foreign Minister Chiao Kuan-hua with a$100 bill. conditions "that could easily go Phones: pousands. already here and to 10 The visit by the three officials as a courtesy usually accorded to John Foster, a U.S. press back to the 1966-67 region when News Ik! delegation, invited by the delegates and alternates listed in 355-8252 men of that rank. inflation was 50 to 60 per cent a en Assembly in its Oct. 25 Tufs4ay teqr«$ei}l<$ cables to UN Secretary-General U spokesman said the only Classified Ads 355-8255 fits!, ?r e. it expected to take its place time since,!950 that an official o f Thant last week. Additional The arrival of the Chinese advance group created a mild stfr American contact with the Chifiese he knew about was at year." The Vietnamese piaster would Advertising Business Office 353-6400 355-3447 at UN headquarters, where a have to be devalued steeply and Kennedy International Airport Photographic 355-8311 sizable contingent of cameramen when they arrived. He said the troops and civil servants—who have borne the brunt of inflation 50 AGAINST BUSINC and reporters had assembled to await them. The press group U.S. mission had received no formal request for help. joined the procession as the Press dispatches from Peking lions, Chinese were given a short tour of pictured a jubilant scene at the the second floor, mainly the airport when the main delegation imney rus to cui Security Council and the departed for New York. The ited pov tanies a results jxcessivei NAG has delegates' lounge. Several reporters got close enough to ask a question or two. The Chinese were friendly, but Yugoslav said news agency, several thousand Tanjug shouted slogans, sand and danced as the party boarded a Chinese airliner , Miss J is ankle-deep in long ran| declined to reply. They did chat for Shanghai. le interes with a number of delegates from The delegation planned to fly tartan plaid by College Town Capitol steps in terms* pro-Peking countries, including Air France the remainder of the position in wort on Albania, Romania, Cuba, Guinea. way, with a stopover in Paris. and loving every minute. ISRAELI CLUB, Congregation Kehilat Israel This econom long acrylic skirt lid a n and the Hillel Foundation eloped UPI)—An estimated 250 to 300 Pontiac "We are here to lobby," Irene McCabe, the NAG in assorted clan plaids el feels s rode five chartered buses to the state leader, told the group. "We are going to see our presents "curb t •pitol Tuesday to demonstrate against the busing elected representatives. Let's let them know very of bo school children to achieve racial balance in goes just about clearly that it's 620 that we want no matter what or er unio back thools. The members of the antibusing National Action they have done thus far. AHARON MEGED everywhere depending on "We will not lose our schools," she said. "Stop Mp (NAG) rallied briefly on the steps of the every elected congressman that you see, every Distinguished Israeli Writer yet fou •Pitol, then went inside to contact any how you top it. •makers they could find in their offices. Several elected representative or senator. Talk to him. Tell who will speak on with the women carried him to get on the ball." not resi signs voicing support for Also speaking to the group on the Capitol steps 5-13 sizes. $20. hope th solution 620—a I lendment introduced in 0bar proposed constitutional Congress in Washington was Rep. Loren Anderson, R-Pontiac. CULTURE AND RELIGION IN ISRAEL s prepar busing for racial purposes, "This is not a racial problem," Anderson said. ed wis THURSDAY NIGHT NOV. 11 AT8 P.M. si aski i solution Michigan legislature already has passed a calling for a constitutional convention "You cannot enhance one man's equal rights by ROOM 35 UNION "draw up a constitutional taking the equal rights of another away from him. j shoppi amendment to bar If there be mediocrity anywhere in the school lis seeki Slj g 1011620 The legislature said t can do nothing with unless Congress passes it. systems of Michigan, then let's upgrade the ALL ARE INVITED TO ATTEND mediocrity, not share it by bus." he prese y, offic ri separa pt cities, ment jnt will whi Jewelry^ vfale! j federal TwLptytfce/L ALL SIZES • ALL TYPES REGULAR $3.00 ySttfeCaesa^ J and WOUJ M.OCU i 50° Off i Yizza | ON CAMPUS DELIVERY SPECIAL OFFER THURSDAY, LIMITED TO FRIDAY 8< SATURDAY at WEDNESDAY, I a 14" (1 item or 16" pizza or more) j j 337-1681 | OFF CAMPUS/CIRCLE DRIVE We Card Shop j with coupon offer J Treat JacateoriB ! - 309 E. Grand River 332-6753 j good thru Nov. 11 | 337-1631 JACOBSON'S OPEN THURSDAY AND FRIDAY EVENINGS UNTIL NINE MICHIGAN DAVE PERSON STATE NEW! UNIVERSITY 0 Seat, seat: who gets the seat KEN LYNAM It's a fine mess we've gotten ourselves into job. How do you get at least twentv advertising manager "representing the whole of a state, district, Now this is where one may begin to this time. for ten "open for anyone" or body rather than one division or part of wonder. About half the students on this posiUoM It looks like there will be so many special it." which twelve wpIvb mint must — DAVE PERSON, managine editor CHARLES C. CAIN, city editor interest students on the Academic Council But at any rate the council went ahead and University are men. are women and obviously the rest The governing bodies are saying to and ten must meet another? -"-equaling meet one q that the council may neglect the needs of the defied Mr. Webster by adding the stipulation One answer the JOHN BORGER, campus editor the women "Don't worry sweeties, no committee knnrv common student. around was quite simple. You BARNEY WHITE, editorial editor Let's take a look at the way students are to that five of the at-large seats must be matter what those dirty old men do you still on one list until put .J, RICK GOSSELIN, sports editor be placed in student Academic Council. Out occupied by women and six must be got half of them at-large seats." But I don't you at least have names of which at least ten tw»°! occupied by nonwhites. hear anybody telling me, "Don't worry little are women of the 32 total students: This was not done without hours upon at least twelve are nonwhite Seven-time recipient of the Pacemaker award * Six are to be graduate students. No hours of debate within the council, however. fella, whatever else you may lose you can are nonwhite women. and at least ? still count on at-large representation in Then you hold for outstanding journalism. matter who is selected, they will be One year ago this month, the council went election and accept the representing graduate students. TTiis random around and around on the topic. They academic government." the top six nonwhites. If one top five women ' choice of students who have already received a report from John F. A. Taylor and Well, what the hay! You might figure it positions overlaps, you're safe If of th" this way. If there are ten at-large seats, and if none* received bachelor's degrees is commendable associates calling for ten at-large seats of five are reserved for women, and if six are them overlap, you drop the least vote** EDITORIALS because hopefully, a graduate student will be represented no matter what he or she is which six were reserved for nonwhites and two were reserved for women. The council reserved for nonwhites, and if at least five of the six nonwhites are women, we white in each group and add the who got the most votes. If all nonwhite worn the necess studying. accepted the nonwhite quota but decided to males still have a chance for four at-large requirements can be met in the top si * Sixteen will be representing colleges. let women fend for themselves and seats. nine vote getting candidates, you fill in This means that most undergraduates will eliminated their two security seats. But surprise! It doesn't work that way. rest of the at-large seats with the This rest of only have one representative out of this wording was acceptable to the Academic After the trustees determined the make-up candidates who pulled the most votes group assuming that most undergraduates Senate also but when the board of trustees of the at-large body, the council gave the But some of the committee are only in one college. meml saw the report they demanded that five seats University Student Affairs Committee the shuddered to think it would be * Ten seats are designated under the possibles be reserved for women. The council took someone who would come in job of determining the best voting Drug law: 20th inafi. "at-large" category. It is obvious that this a was a poor choice of words for the council to use since "at-large" is defined as back the report, called for another vote and behold! Five of the ten at-large seats were reserved for women. procedure. The only stipulation being that there be two candidates for each seat. As you could imagine, it wasn't an easy of 20 might be declared a winner ended up positions—divided with ten so that a "white differ, So mali would be excluded. I don't think t! became a felony punishable by a reflects what the Academic When the Senate "toughened" the Council tl Academic Senate and the board of House-passed Controlled Substances maximum of two years in jail. trusts were bargaining for. If it were, we wouldl Act of 1971, a once-judicious and Possession of hallucinogens (LSD, able to pick up our little handbooks < meaningful bill was turned back niescalin, peyote, etc.) was changed academic governance and find a section < towards the repressive and antiquated from a misdemeanor punishable by "10 students at-large, none of whom m state of Michigan's present drug laws. six months in jail to a felony carrying white males." I do believe racism exists and Both Senate and House bills would a two-year jail sentence. Narcotics use nonwhi minorities must be protected until racis consolidate all state dangerous drug, was changed to carry a 10 year has become a thing of the past. narcotic, and marijuana statutes into sentence and $ 10,000 fine or both. I do not feci women students i one comprehensive drug law. Drugs Clearly the Senate has destroyed discriminated against in academ are divided into five categories, each government at MSU. Already, eig any immediate hopes of realistic drug permanent representatives have boenchos with its own set of penalties. Both legislation in this state. Because of its from colleges and three of them arewom« bills would reduce criminal penalties rejection of the original bill and the Of the three temporary collei under existing statutes, but only the vast disparities between the Senate representatives in the council, two i House bill takes a fair and realistic and House bills, the drug issue will be women. In another month we will see he approach. many of the 16 seats reserved for specil sent to committee where legislators council college representatives will I The House version, as introduced by will try and iron out their differences. Robert Traxler, D-Bay City, occupied by women. I predict that since tl More likely than not, the proposal will makeup of the University is almost hi significantly updated old drug statues. die there or be brought out with much women and half men, so will be the count The penalites for drug use were It is the faculty portion of the stronger penalties than the House bill. council^ lenient in comparison to old, anything, that needs provisions assuring til Traxler's original drug legislation women are represented because that distinctly stifling laws. Simple offered an optimistic sign that where the greatest disproportio possession of narcotics carried a exists. maximum four-year sentence. Michigan might yet emerge from the doldrums of drug law antiquity. We I would suggest that when students gi Possession of all but narcotic drugs their voting power on the council, they wa was a misdemeanor. Simple called it "a hopeful commentary on toward the establishment of additioi the legislative process that a bill such at-large seats which are truly at-larj possession of marijuana was NOW, ABOUT YOU OTHER SMALL NATIONS. as Traxler's can come forth as a meaning they will be available for anyoj punishable by 90 days in jail rather realistic and meaningful step towards regardless of race or sex who is interested than a possible 15 years. overall policies beneficial to studen Margin satisfying the needs of contemporary faculty and staff of the University. ' The Traxler proposal, after being society." passed by large margin in the House, With the Senate's resounding then went to the Senate. Like an rejection of the original Traxler bill, The Doctor's Bag executioner drooling in anticipation "hopeful" becomes "dismal" and of its next victim, the Senate eagerly "can" becomes "cannot". killed the bill's progressive tone, What had been a cautious and throwing in heavier penalties across reasoned step forward has become a the board. Possession of marijuana deliberate leap backwards. By ARNOLDWERNER, M.D. Letters may be addressed to Dr. Werner at forms of tobacco use. The major effects of increasingly difficult to control. Snuff or I have very large breasts and nipples, n MSU Health Center. Names need not be nicotine on the human body are increased chewing tobacco is quite popular among breasts are obviously a focal point of i included unless a personal reply is requested. heart rate, increased blood pressure, central people who work with heavy machinery and body as I am otherwise quite normal subtract all I have been wondering about the effects of nervous system excitement and increased activity of the gastrointestinal tract. It appears that the first three of the previously must keep their hands free, as well with people who work with highly flammable shape and proportion. My measurements 44-21-36 and I am 5 ft. 5 in. tall. I wear a B j chewing tobacco. I recently picked up the substances. habit from a roommate, who claims there mentioned effects of nicotine account for the fact that people become so dependent Continued exposure of mucous all the time and do not wear clothes, but I am beginning to feel as if I an revealj Last membranes to an irritating substance like spring a surprisingly version diametrically opposed in are no ill effects. What, it any, damage might progressive drug bill was passed by the - tone from the this cause to the teeth, gums or whatever upon it. tobacco causes some problems. The usual freak and wish that men would look at j original bill — by an Most people who chew tobacco actually manner of oral use of snuff is to carry it instead of my bust. Fortunately, my breaj else. I usually brush my teeth three to four Michigan House. This bill - called for overwhelming 29-2 majority last chew snuff which is powdered and tends to betwen the gum or teeth and the cheek; are high and firm; it would be awful if th Controlled Substances Act of 1971 — times daily. To be on the safe side I thought week. be less bulky than the old fashioned chewing changes indicative of a pre-cancerous state hung down to my belly button. I'd write and ask your opinion. (This letter was sent to the Senate and became so are found frequently in long time users. For Because I am so big I am concerned ab As a result of the differences was written by a man). tobacco. Snuff can be snorted as well. The mercilessly amended that it now some unknown reason dental caries between the two houses, the drug bill When tobacco is chewed, nicotine is presence of tobacco in the mouth increases salivation tremendously and the novice (cavities) are less frequent among tobacco breast cancer. Do large breasts havemorej represents nothing more than a token will almost certainly be sent to a small a cancer rate than tiny breasts? absorbed through the mucous membranes of chewer can find himself in a very chewers. Most of the men and women I have to drug reform. House-Senate conference committee. the cheeks and mouth in doses similar to uncomfortable situation, especially if he is met who use snuff or chewing tobacco are Largeness alone should not changed At first glance it would appear that most There, most probably, it will languish what is derived from smoking. Thus, the indoors. A large amount of saliva often striking because of their darkly stained probability of you developing can'"1 the Senate has merely exercised its physiologic effects from chewing tobacco mouths and their characteristic aroma when until the drug controversy has cooled. expands what seems like a small amount of However, very large breasts are r perogative to mindlessly slaughter are very similar to what occurs with other tobacco into a massive wad which becomes you get close. difficult to examine and it is conceival Then the bill will emerge, House-passed bills. However, the odd that an early cancer would be harder undoubtedly with more stringent detect. Breasts are primarily fatty tissued circumstances surrounding the bill's penalties than provided by the House >ERS' MIND are not as well supported on the cna passage in the House and its rejection bill. Or it may die as a result of a Therefore as all women age. they experien in the Senate suggests a far more House-Senate deadlock. Either way some sagging of their breasts. You coj serious legislative miscarriage. expect to have a fair amount of the legislators win, drug law reform with this. As well, fatty tissue bruises east diificuj Often, when a controversial issue loses. and this can be quite painful causing yj such as the drug question arises, the House and Senate team up. A com mom tactic is for each house to Indictment Grad assistants may get raise further problems. In reading your letter my concern ismi Such an indictment of the Michigan with the effects of being stared at,andyfl pass a bill concerned with the description of being dealt with as if yNI legislature is indeed tenuous. No controversy, but with minor To the Editor: deformed. Nature can be quite unkind in a legislator will come forth to say he assistants did not receive an increase was accruing earnings at the new rate as of July differences in the bills. The way she distributes body t'ssui was a part of the scheming. However, The Nov. 1 issue of the State News carried an because they were considered as students 1. It did not authorize increases for those legislation, in this instance, is then article which quoted Mr. rather than as employes. Fortunately, some of the things that aoij the record and the circumstances are William-Greene, employes who would normally receive look right can be corrected. Plastic surges referred to a conference committee chairman of COGS, regarding "a decision by increases effective after the beginning of the particularly damning. It seems hardly the board of trustees granting salary There seems to be some faculty freeze period. This latter perform an operation that will reduce d ei composed of members of each house communication in this area. Throughout the category included size resulting in a more no""*] plausible that the houses can share increases to University faculty while graduate assistants and a number of faculty where, more often than not, it almost directly opposite views on the discussion of salary and wage increases for proportioned body. Such an operatioJ1 excluding graduate assistants . . . ." The members on temporary appointments who not interfere with breast function and can disappears as prearranged. article implies that the University employes, stipend increases for drug question when they represent reason graduate graduate assistants were planned. When it normally would begin accruing earnings at a of major long term benefit in term I Ploy higher rate in September. basically the same constituency. was decided that salary and wage increases reducing postural abnormalities, elimi I Another ploy calls for the House to Funds to implement increases for introduce and pass a controversial bill and then have the Senate reject it as Only time will tell whether the original bill has suffered from More, more would average 7 per cent, it was planned that graduate assistant stipends would also be increased by approximately 7 per cent. ■ assistants and these being held.When the graduate faculty members are still wage and price board problems in buying clothes, and prod J general Increased sense of well women are not aware that being- I such ope 1 To the Editor: provides guidelines for "Phase," the funds planned. Both tactics allow legislators legislative underhandedness. If it has Funds to implement salary, wage and exist, since most talk centers aroU" . J Years ago we used the State News editorial will be available to implement to satisfy restless constituents back been free from such dealings, then a page mainly for lining hamster cages and/or stipend increases were held pending increases. As of now we permissible do not know what cosmetic plastic surgery pf°c' 1 home. meaningful compormise will be when we ran out of Zig-Zag papers. Then clarification from the Federal Cost of Living the rate will be what the ruling on including increasing breast size. I reached in Council. The council ruling authorized or the perfect age to have such "1 The a reasonable amount of we passed Reading 082, and began following Controlled Substances Act implementation of increases for those retroactivity will be. performed, and ought to consider 1 time. the adventures of Louie Bender and Tex Herman L. King metamorphosis could easily have been Larrowe. Now, with those worthies in employes whose salaries were scheduled for qualified plastic surgeon for his opini the result of legislative an increase on July 1 and who were thus Assistant Provost tampering. The If the drug reform's demise was semiretirement we're forced to share our Copyright 1971 Nov. 3,1971 House passed the original bill with its planned, however, it will die in morning coffee with Barney the Barfly lenient penalties by a wide margin of committee or come out of committee White and Steve Allen whom we remember I SAVE YOU THAT BlANKET 77-20. Yet when the same bill reached as a classmate in the remedial writing track. TO KEEP FOR ME ONLY ID SEE markedly similar to the Senate bill. In In the name of Horace Greeley we implore IF I C0ULP GIVE IT l/P, AMD H0U the Senate, its liberal complexion was this case the legislators will then not you: More Bender, More Larrowe! HAP IT MADE INTO A 5P0ffT COAT < utterly reversed. only have grossly viloated their Richard H. Child, Almost without exception, the responsibility to their electorate but Mt. Clemens senior Senate version increases penalties for undermined the very essence of the drug sale, use and possession. The Rollia R. Richmond Democratic system that put them in Senate Mt. Clemens senior passed the "toughened" office. Nov. 6,1971 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Wednesday. November 10. 1971 5 Former 'U' prof, 75, dies in Florida (UPI)—Harold Tukey, an internationally known horticulturist who served for 18 years as the head of theMSU Horticulture died Monday night in Boca Dept. Raton, Fla. He was 75. Cold weather prompts some He was head of the MSU Horticulture Dept. from 1945 to 1963 and prior to that served as chief of students to retire to the plant research for Cornell warmth of their and University and head of the New York experiment station in Geneva, surround themselves rooms with His research included the books, while others enjoy the the widely used herbicide preliminary work on development of 2, 4-D and discovery of the way plants snow and ice. Having a snow take in nutrients through their leaves as well as roots while studying ball during a freezing the effect on plants of fallout from nuclear explosions. afternoon Mr. Tukey represented the United are Nancy States at an international conference on peace time uses of atomic Burkholder, Detroit freshman energy in Geneva, and Neil Osoff, Detroit junior. Switzerland, and took part in a United Nations Conference on Isotopes in 1957. SN photo by Tom Gaunt At the same time, he served as Michigan State's faculty representative to the Big Ten from 1957 to 1959. Mr. Tukey received his bachelors degree from the University of i19*8 and his masters degree 1920. He received his doctorate from the from the same school in inort University of Chicago in XT r Plan links retarde By KRISTENKELCH Last spring, Cooper picked 11 in the tricounty area. They live in and interpersonal relationships. said. He said that a more success. She related State News Staff Writer individuals from an institution in a two an incident story house located in The ratio of staff to residents at significant way of detecting Coidwater, and from the Forst Clinton County. concerning a 14-year-old Woodhaven is 1 - 5Vi. progress is by observing the daily SuihI limit Woodhaven may sound like a Custer State Home and Training Ten staff members, two of Cooper said that activities of the residents. Woodhaven resident named rock concert, or a museum to School in Battle Creek, to so far, the Bobby. whom are MSU students, along project has been successful. But, "We want them to establish some, but to 24 MSU students, it become residents of Woodhaven. with 22 a "People at the institution Bill Phillips, East Lansing sophomore, Cindy Reading, volunteers from the in order to test the progress of the self identity first, then work on where he had come from had is a pilot The individuals he chose ranged Saginaw junior and Cynce Stickle, Birmingham freshman, project of Community University, work in shifts, residents, he does not depend self concept," Cooper said. never heard Bobby speak," Ms. Mental Health. in age from 11 to 40, with leave the dune buggy in the garage and take to the dunes on assisting their pupils in daily solely on I.Q. tests. Staff member Janet E. Erickson said. The project, which is funded by functional levels of 25. living activities, developing "At this low level, individual "Now, he is asking foot. The freezing temperatures on the Razor Back Sand Erickson, Saginaw junior, also questions a state grant, involves taking The residents are from families communication and social skills tests become invalid," feels that the ^and initiating dunes at Silver Lake, Michigan kept them moving. Cooper project has been a conversations- ' State News photo by Tom Gaunt severely retarded individuals from large state institutions, and putting them into a small residential situation in the Jepartments offer community. Promoters of the Woodhaven project believe that in state institutions, many patients are [utoring programs unable to develop to their full potentials. In discussing the I faring trouble with differential equations or Plato's "Republic"? project edatutor? Your best bet for aid is the department that offersthe Monday, Richard M. Cooper, director of Programs for the nisewhich is hassling you. Retarded, said that while visiting | A number of departments, including American Thought and some institutions, he found about inguage, natural science, mathematics, humanities and chemistry, 60 patients being supervised iretheir own tutoring programs. Many othersoffer help sessions. by I It nothing else, they probably have someone you can contact to only two staff members. ' Institutions encourage almost Tdp find a tutor, who may be another student or an interested total tofessor. dependence," Cooper said. "The individuals come out just I Other tutorial services are advertised in the State News or posted like children. They do things in big ^oihill bulletin board. groups. They eat in groups, sleep music fraternities and sororities offer help for music in groups, go places in 3, and minority students can obtain assistance by contacting groups, so ">e Services in the Union. they tend to lose their personal identities." jvil rights grou Ippo/nfmenf o |lASHINGTON "s (AP) - Spokesmen for civil Mitchell and Rauh were the leadoff witnesses as groups struck Tuesday at William H. the committee, after completing its questioning of ■ehnquist, one of President Nixon's Supreme the nominees, began taking testimony from about put nominees, and challenged testimony he gave 30 persons who have asked to be heard. •theSenate Judiciary Committee. The Justice Dept. meanwhile, denied that ■But they took not stand either for or against Rehnquist is or ever was a member of the ■ion's other nominee, attorney Lewis F. Powell ultraconservative John Birch Society. Committee ■lOfRichmond, Va. sources said Rehnquist would submit a sworn ■An administration spokesman defended denial later. ■Anquist against allegations of racism. Sidney Zion, a former newspaperman, laimed in ■Joseph L. Rauh Jr., counsel for the Leadership a radio interview Monday night that Rehnquist, Jnferenee on Civil Rights and a spokesman ■sericans for Democratic for while a lawyer in Phoenix, Ariz., in 1961 and 1962 Action, called had joined the Birch Society. lNuist "a laundered McCarthyite." Sen. Birch Bayh, D-Ind., a Judiciary Committee I He is a lawyer without compassion for blacks member who has expressed misgivings about Mother minorities and a lawyer who never once Rehnquist's nomination, told newsmen he knew Pspoken up for the Bill of Rights," Rauh told of no evidence at all to support Zion's allegation. •(Judiciary Committee. "And we've followed all sorts of leads," Bayh said. P*0 testifying for the conference, Clarence Troll said the nomination of Rehnquist submitted his affadavit denying Birch Rehnquist, an *tont membership to the committee late Tuesday attorney general, was "an insult ot jWicans who support civil rights." afternoon, and Bayh and Sen. Edward M. Jrogh ^tor of the Rehnquist's nomination, said Mitchell, Kennedy, D-Mass., both indicated their Washington bureau of the National acceptance of it. Nation for the Advancement of Colored But Rauh and Mitchell said his denial should not W|e, "the foot of racism is be allowed to end the matter and asked the placed in the door of Ptemple of justice." committee to look further into it. Andre Kole, America's leading illusionist, presents one of the most exciting and unique programs seen on the college campus today J^jT Don t miss it! >le has spoken in 43 countr ntinents of the world, ind - Revision in 30 countries. Tl ill probably be performing ai » jl masking the unknown" Prest I'"' M'' 1(010 g'ves t0 t,us intriguing he J!ia"on which. among other things, fourth D™ * V"S'ble demonst,,iC S""'C 0,,scrv*,'on, he made from I Nov. 14 - 8:30 P.M. Men's I.M. - $1.50 Purchase Tickets at Bagpiper, Student Book Store and at the door. SPONSORED BY CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST 6 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Wednesday, November i01 197| GREEN TELLS EDUCATORS Program hosts Busing suppor radiation By JUDY YATES State News Staff Writer immediately overcome if school children are taught racial equality. Green said Gov. Milliken succumbed to he He said that when he was was a child in Detroit bused past several white high schools The "Distinguished Scientist Series," expert| a guest lectu pressure when he issued his statement to attend black schools. program sponsored by the departments mathematics and chemistry, recently hosted a promin.; of phvsi^ "White people have been busing their Robert L. Green, director of the Center appealing Judge Stephen Roth's decision. §: scientist in the field of radiation studies. nt children to schools for many years," he said. for Urban Affairs, called on educators to Roth ruled that the State of Michigan and William L. Jolly, a chemist from the Lawrence "If the question were not racial, people Radiatin the Detroit Public School system were Laboratory of the University of California, lectured to speak out in favor of busing in particular, guilty of maintaining "de jure," or legal, would not mind busing." " and integration in general, in a speech group of faculty and students Monday on "x.R ' ' delivered to members of Phi Delta Xappa segregation. Green also charged that the Michigan |:j: Pohotelectron Spectroscopy (XPS)." " iy Green said he was disappointed that no Tuesday. Green told members of Phi Delta major educator in the state has spoken in Education Assn. has teachers' rights for too been focusing on $ Jolly discussed the applications of XPS to the problems chemical structure and chemical bonding. He also I Kappa, a long and should look describ«i favor of busing. at students' rights. various methods for predicting chemical shifts in professional society for men studying Cor "We can not leave the crisis in our schools electron binding energies. education, that racial inequities can be Green said teacher training should deal up to politicians," Green said. S In the XPS system, x-rays bombard the sample with poverty and health care in education. (which ma Green said the only hope for school Clinic will give integration is through metropolitan school He further recommended that class S be a solid or a gas). If the rays have enough force the ejection of core electrons. power, they ' ca*^ n actions be brought against school districts in districts.. $ The ejected electrons travel through a magnetic field said In which teachers being trained are not taught Jolly. By the movement in fields, a question and answer session following an x-ray photoelectron free shots today the lecture, J.C. Williams, Lansing graduate about racial problems. spectrum emerges. student, argued that as a black child in a white community he had had trouble Green said that if schools are not Ij: Using the method, when the x-ray's energy of the electron are known, the energy and the kinetic I The Ingham County Health Department integrated in the major cities, white people binding energy 0f the will open an Immunization Clinic from 1 to finding his identity. electron can be determined, Jolly said. ' will continue their exodus to the suburbs S 3 p.m. today at Okemos Community Green answered that integration would and total segregation will become a reality. Knowing the blinding energes for different elements allows Church, 4734 N. Okemos Road. teach the black child to cope with the white chemists to detennine the molecular structure of Green said white people are leaving the big the Free shots for infants two months old work world. :•: elements, he said. cities for the suburbs and taking job through adults will be given for diptheria, Williams tried to argue further with Green, opportunities with them. * Jolly is currently a professor of chemistry at the University of California at Berkeley. He is also a principle I whooping cough, and tetanus. but his comments were cut off by the master investigator of Immunization free of charge will also be1 Green cited statistics in the the Research Division in California. ' given for polio, smallpox, rubella, measles of ceremonies. such as Detroit and Gary, larger cities $ "Intermediates in the Hydrolysis of Borohydride Ind., to support Diborane" will be the topic of a lecture a™ and typhoid. The health departments will also Green noted that blacks in the south have been bused past white schools for many his statement that the black population is $ p.m. Thursday in 138 Chemistry Bldg. Jolly will giveaU I' administer free TB tests at the clinic. increasing in the larger cities and the white •$ years. population is decreasing. :j£. JETIIRO ML in FLINT End race bias, speaker says "Racil discrimination, sex discrimination and national origin orignially designed to allow children to work on farms at han TONIGHT discrimination must be abolished in the United State of America," time. Cohen said. Cohen also advised removal of the IMA Auditorium He described some of the steps he feels society must take in 1971. teaching certifies! Elimination of racial discrimination would increase the national requirement to make it easier for minority members to teach. "A committment must be made that the federal government will From 1956 to 1961 Cohen was professor of income by 15 to 20 billion a year, according to Wilbur J. Cohen. public welfal finance the welfare system 100 per cent. administration at U-M. He was chainnan of President Reserved Seating $4.00, 5.00,6.00 Cohen, dean of the school of education at the University of "Two major problems in this country are hunger and obesity. We Kennedy! NOW AVAILABLE Michigan and former U.S. Secretary of Health, Education and should attack these simultaneously. task force on health and social securtiy in recommended medicare, federal aid for medical education ai I960, whij Welfare, delivered the keynote address at the Michigan League for IMA Aud. Box Office "We need better programs for alcoholism, drug abuse and child other health and social security proposals. Flint Human Services annual conference Tuesday. AT Morley Brothers Dept. Store - Saginaw Formerly the Michigan Welfare League, the group is a statewide neglect. "And let's close the loopholes in federal and state tax structures," Cohen told the audience of about 1,000 that "there is no re Music Center Bay City - coalition of citizens representing all areas of Michigan and all he said. why any person in the United States should be without heatl insurance coverage from the day he's born to the day he dies." Marshall Music E. Lansing - segments of the population. Members and office holders include Cohen said he did not think any state could provide adequate | A GOLDEN STAR PRODUCTION professionals students, civic leaders, retired people and consumers of social services without a graduated income tax and protested He noted that 40 million people in the U.S. have no healll services from all walks of life. insurance coverage whatsoever and another 60 million hal revenue sharing. inadequate coverage. "Why should we give money for Ohio, for instance, through Cohen also attacked the employment insurance situation. federal revenue sharing while they still have no state income tax," After a large recession, he said, insurance agencies still have he said. billion they have not given out to the unemployed. $l| Cohen said property taxes on homes as a means to support "A colleague of mine calls this tainted money," he said. "TaiJ elementary and secondary education "may have been a good source yours, taint mine and taint going to be used to help tH 200 years ago but its absolutely outdated in 1971." unemployed." NEXT TO CAMPUS THEATER Property taxes must be eliminated in the state of Michigan, he said. '.'When we have engineers, chemistg and physicists with Ph,D| Besides attacking the means of school financing, Cohen attacked , unti^yeTHrVg) to$$>TO WMwen't \kl feU what is taught in the schools. explored," he said. "School must be made relevant to the needs and aspirations of "I still believe that when 1976, the 200th anniversary of thl young people," he said. "Today's schools are modeled on the country, comes around, well have the best social system in til principles of 1900." world and it will be in a democratic, participatory democracy!! As an example Cohen used the 180-day school year, which was Cohen said. \z~ AFL-CIO leaders ltttr E Final Week! flay wage rules, Anniversary MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP)—AFL-CIO leaders voiced mounting criticism Tuesday of "We have introduced a resolution for the AFL-CIO convention opening Nov. 18, to future pay hikes. The five labor members of the Pay Board, including Meany, decisions on wage hikes I available. The three council memlj new federal wage controls in take whatever action is necessary, were outvoted 10 to 5 by the who contended labor c reactions ranging from caution to including a national work industry and public members in better argue its case from wi a call for a general protest strike the decision which also ruled out the Board were Presidents stoppage or general strike," said of the labor federation's nearly the executive board of the most retroactive pay for the Fosco of the 600,000-meitl 14 million members. 500,000 member Amalgamated current 90-day wage-price freeze Laborers Union, MaurJ Meat Cutters Union. and indicated some scheduled Hutcheson c MOOSUSKI The Meat Cutters and several pay hikes could be rolled back. 900,000-member Carpenters,! construction union leaders urged "If President Meany wants to S. Frank Raftery of ■ TONIGHT 7:30 PM AFL-CIO President George resign from the Pay Board, he has 135,000-member Painters Unfl 109 ANTHONY Meany to quit President Nixon's my support," said President But Raftery charged that* MORE DOOR PRIZES! 15-man labor-industry public Pay Edward J. Carlough of the Pay Board was "stacked" agal Board, which Monday ordered a 150,000 member Sneet Metal labor, and President John LyB GREAT SKI FL'CK! general 5.5 per cent limit on Workers. of the Iron Workers, ano* But some other construction member of the top AFMl union chiefs, including three on Executive Council, sa'dB decisions of the board continiB Perfect the policy-making 35-man on a 10-5 vote against labor AFL-CIO Executive Council, would not make much sense tor J harmony of cautioned against a labor walkout from the Pay Board at least until on the board. The vote mign| well be 10 to notning." scoop up tremendous precision more details and specific % savings fashions on current status in . . . and beauty TISSOT S3 SPORTSWEAR-DRESSES- Built into each Tissot is Design Students!! more than 100 years of Projects are coming COATS-LINGERIE watchmaking skill ... as¬ due suring dependability and shortly. long life. Its beauty is more than "skin deep" See our complete art because behind each Tis¬ sot is one of Switzer¬ cellar for all your land's most modern watch factories, manned supplies. by dedicated craftsmen. Name brand Save LJjd To and top quality A) Self-winding Seastar. Viso- date dial. Yellow top, steel supplies give back case $75 'your project that better 50% _ look. Campus Bunk Stnre ,, -131 E. Grand River-^-f^l!^ OPEN WENESDAY NIGHT UNTIL 9:00 P.M. Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Wednesday, November 10, 1971 7 , ACLU BACKS BUSING 1 Milliken app ■ t|,e munchies attack, only when a final order has been made." (Continued from r*i, no better weapon than page one) Jondahl said the resolution, which received the unanimous (lk right off the grill. Cooks approval of the Lansing ACLU's executive board, was sent to U.S. L McDonel Hall prepare a "There is nothing in Judge Roth's order that includes Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Michigan, U.S. Rep. Charles Chamberlain, |L|( barbeque for students to Jondahl said, "it would be hard to appeal at this point." busing," R-Michigan, Sen. Phillip O. Pittenger, R-Lansing, Rep. James N. Lthtl.eir hunger pains. Jondahl said that Gov. Mil liken's decision to Brown, R-Okemos, Rep. Earl E. Nelson, D-Lansing and Rep. appeal "legitimized" Fredrick L. Stackable, R-Lansing. rsN photo by Greg Calkins the action of parents in Pontiac, who have been keeping children out of school to protect The resolution, Jondahl said, reaffirms the ACLU's busing in that city. position that Jondahl said the Lansing ACLU is in order to insure the equal protection guaranteed hoping that Atty. Gen. Kelley by the will refuse to appeal the decision until there is a "bona fide Constitution "all branches of government should take all necessary legal action to bring about full integration for all American citizens." basis" for it. Jondahl said the Lansing branch of the ACLU Kelley recently signed a statement, along with ten other supports all decisions which "further integration" in the state, prominent Michigan Democrats, supporting busing as an "including if "imperfect" answer to segregation in inner city schools. necessary, cross-district busing." "As far as I know," Jondahl He said that to his knowledge neither the national or state ACLU said, "the attorney general, under Michigan law, would determine whether there is some basis for an organizations had taken a stand on Gcv. Milliken's decision to appeal. We're hoping he will recognize his responsibility to appeal appeal Judge Roth's findings. iampaign battle begins for Nixon troops ■WASHINGTON (AP) — With election day precisely 52 weeks talked ^bo^dlv^nf"nn^oQc^ °f ®em°?:ratlc Presidential hopefuls, get the most votes. If you win, you're in - it doesn't matter if it's by The interviews disclosed that the Nixon campaign likely will be v marching orders have been passed to the foot soldiers in the i!'jgn to re-elect Richard Nixons president. The message: fnr^ci ^JL L ^ V!Cut°ry for Nlxon next year- Some even one vote or 10 million votes." built around a dual theme, peace and prosperity. One presidential kL going to run like we've never run before." in 1964 dslldesuch astheonerolleduPby Lyndon B. Johnson Another longtime GOP adviser said of White House aides: "Some of them adviser even suggested that Nixon may revive the "Peace, are pretty heady. But I'm sure their optimism will ebb and Tsixon has not ^ Pu^^c'y that wi" a new term and landslide » I-4"" V 1 1UUK lur lluw 111 year aneaa. mere will be times when j Prosperity, Progress" slogan used by President Dwight D. Lbablv wan'1 before next year. But the ever -widening « . one Wveteran , , political planner said. "All I want to do is somewhat pinched and perplexed and a bit alarmed. Eisenhower when he easily won re-election in 1956. Lparaiions for campaign battle would not be under way without Js consent. ■Tiiesday the President's schedule included visits to New York and ago for appearances at Republican fund - raising dinners. His jcheswerc to b? beamed via closed-circuit television to 18other ,iers. At $500 - a • plate, the GOP hoped to raise $5 million as a Kbstantial down payment on the 1972 campaign. ■Aside from such brief forays, Nixon is expected to maintain a low lilitical profile in the months ahead by concentrating all his Twieson being President, his advisers said, pl've heard him say a number of times that the best way for an ibent to get re-elected is to do a good job in office," one of i's longtime advisers said. "Then the election will take care of L["But the Nixon camp isn't letting campaign preparations take Ceof themselves. ■"The word is to forget about the power of the incumbency, to fcnizo and build from the bottom up, to take nothing for Cited." one worker who has been active in past Nixon campaigns ■Sillundecided, sources said, is the timing of Nixon's re-election ■inouncement. The deadline for entering the New Hampshire ■bury is Jan. 6, and some sources predicted a presidential Iteraent shortly before then. ■Some advisers are urging that Nixon rule out the use of stand-in Tididates in primaries in New Hampshire and elsewhere. "He's Cverused a stand-in before," one said. "Why should he now?" ■Interviews with key officials in the Nixon camp disclosed a prions blend of caution and confidence about 1972. Some aides, frof predicts po/, price fce President's Phase 2 program of pay and price boards will not b pt more than six months, an MSU professor of economics tedicted recently. ■Liwrence H Officer said that if the pay board does not meet ■bor'sexpectations for wage increases, its members will walkout, (labor's demands are met, Officer added, there will be even more on and the boards will collapse. ■Officer said the President's actions may curb inflation but will ■pavate the unemployment problem ■Officer outlined his own proposals for boosting the economy. He Tid he would first institute a unilateral reduction of all U.S. tariffs, lis would force American industries to compete in an open lirket. ■fiiisintum wouldcause a shift in employment as noncompetitive Tories, such as textiles, were phased out in favor of those more bapetitive, such as aircraft. ■He said he would next pursue vigorous antitrust policies. This THild include breaking up large corporations like General Motors, kiting advertising by monopolies and prohibiting mergers, except •improve efficiency. ■At the same time, the power of labor unions should be limited by Pjtrust ■Officerlaws similar to those restraining industry, Officer said. suggested a consumer's union be formed to provide the fffc with more information. He said it is the government's ■jponsibility to sort out misleading propaganda. ■Officer noted that his proposals are the theorist's answer and may be completely possible. But, he said, theorists must "hammer to make small changes. ■* added, the ultimate control of the economy must remain in T.fnds of government and in the present situation, he said, the "went should have a final veto power. Sorority Winter Sign-Up Nov. 8-1 2th. 5-7pm at Holder) Gilchrist f Holmes Wilson Hubbard Yakeley or from |8 anri-12pm, lpm-5pmj LcJ in Student Services ill h Wednesday, Novemhorin 8 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan , 'Damn Yankees': shaky but promising enormously difficult to carry off convincingly. Weak plots are often made up for by good songs and choreography, and tjhls Is, and Conductor Monte Long needs greater control over his orchestra and some life should be added to his sometimes dragging tempo. Stanley Gill, whose low-keyed performance devil was marvelous, was the show's best asset as the Others °fVenv°rN should be the case with "Damn Yankees." Steven Friedman, the baseball fiend who changes from mild Joe Owne Anderson as Rocky and Brenda Friedman as Meg Th0teWere The book by George Abbott and Douglas Wallop is concerned Boyd to dynamic Joe Hardy has a loud and rich voice, though Lola, however, needs much more work to be convincinc role°f What the various student theater groups on campus have with a small town baseball fiend who is so obsessed with the marred by an evident vibrato, and displayed talents which As this Is the first production of a new group there L demonstrated over the past few years is that there is an avid desire Washington Senators that he sells his soul to the devil in frequently overwhelmed his partners. A little more teamwork is but the cast and more Importantly the audience sJlmJStakes> for theater at MSU and that you don't have to be affiliated with the disguise-Mr. Applegate-to become a great baseball player and help needed in this production. enjoying themselves, and this is one of major functions of th'0 Performing Arts Company to be pjlrt of it. Regardless of the quality his beloved Senators beat those damn Yankees and win the pennant ] of performance, it is healthy and exciting that students have taken and World Series. This was a sound notion for a musical comedy the initiative to present what they feel is enjoyable to a back in the days when the Yankees were great and the Senators contemporary college audience. .... The newest of these groups is The Company, which is currently were in Washington, and the show takes us back to those peaceful fifties, but whether an evening of this is worth your while is a matter VERDEHR, VOTAPEK involved with the musical comedy "Damn Yankees" as their initial of personal choice. venture. Although opening night was sometimes shaky, and several in the show. Remember Two music profs give There are several strong numbers times it occurred to me that "Damn Yankees was rather too "Whatever Lola Wants Lola Gets" and "You Gotta Have ambitious for a first presentation, The Company hopefully can Heart?"-these are the showstoppers, but unfortunately only the evolve into a major theater group, much like Gary Klinsky s New latter comes near success in The Company's version. Players were last year. There are also some fine one-liners, but the show gets murky Musical comedy seems to be what The Company is interested in, when bogged down in drippy sentimentality, such as in the song and this particular genre has great audience appeal but is which goes on about how a man doesn't realize what he has until he loses it - meaning the love, warmth and security of a family situation in place of fame, fortune and wealth. "Damn Yankees" was directed by Linda Eccles and rare controlled tone piano-violin and beautiful unity which involved the melody which was lyrical J choreographed by Ms. Eccles and Sandy Mansfield. What these By D. N. SCHLEGA phrasing. Votapek was at hisbest audience in its excitement and flowing I'm sure yet perfectly Franck controlj people should realize is that MSU's kivas are not prosenium stages with brilliant tone, stunning intensity. m been pleased to v ' would hi* and in order not to alienate a good part of the audience enough Walter Verdehr, violinist, and passagework and exquisitely k The piece de resistance, hear his Senate] attention should be paid in order to show the people sitting at the Ralph Votapek, pianist, gave a turned phrases. however, was the Cesar Franck ^ y a lzed extremes of the semicircle the faces of the actors, and not their moving recital Tuesday night in The program prograi opened with Sonate in which violin and piano backsides. Shows done in the kivas should be blocked as for a thrust matched the best and which Illiterates ' the Music Auditorium. Their Beethoven's Sonata in G, Op. 30., e to use stage in order to include the entire audience. performance was a rare one, in No. 3 whose second movement, proved the superb musicianship which the two musicians the "Tempo di Menuetto" was of the duo. The first movement 'wfliSDer vofpt' transcended their own virtuosity music of crrpnt to create music* played simply and beautifully. _ «"»« very was »»rv lyricIvrie and and slightly slichtlv " ei great honntu beauty m. m i The Wonder Music of Violin and uuiin on si melancholy, yet played with PORT MORESBY. New GuiJ intensity, and to pjano (1971) by Jere Hutcheson, depth and sensitivity, with no (AP) — "Whisper votes" asst. professor of music, trace of the triteness sometimes pictures of candidates are w■ audience which in turn responded exploited the sheer technical close to the surface in used jn npxt , "I with complete enthusiasm and potential of both instruments, Romanticism. In the second and Assembly eeneral el »• especially the piano. This work third movements the controlled illiterate villagers will be " called the two men back for four was followed by Kir QnhuKort'c turbulence and (hp Schubert's Hirhiilonnp the rising and t.hp rising flnH the pojnt to thp _ . . D'«l curtain calls and an encore. Rondeau Brilliante, in which falling of the piano was a perfect canc|jdate and whisper to I The musicians, both asst. piano and violin combined into a counterpart for the violin's official that he is his choice. professors of music, were in excellent form and played with Speaker tells objectives ease and grace. Verdehr's playing had a liquid, flowing, yet •••••••• FOREIGN FILMS • of community health care James Bond lives!!! "The Tenth Victim" Emphasis on health care of today is the objective medical profession. With the growing feeling thl Italian, Eng. titles of various community groups working to develop health care Is a person's right, health ca| Tonight, 7:30. Wells comprehensive community health care, the administrators are seeking to optimize resourcl Hall. 102B. $1.25 for the best medical care at minimal costs. director of the Office of Health Service Education "Health care must progress towards the goal 1 Sat. 8:30, 107 S. Kedzie and Research (OHSER), said Tuesday. "Carnival in Flanders" Sidney Katz, also professor of medicine, made meeting the comprehensive health needs of tf Bawdy French Classic. his remarks before about 50 members of the community," Katz said. Eng. ti The challenge of doing this involves the needfl University Club. Besides this objective the group aims at a few more adequate information on these needs, f said. Also necessary is breaking through tL major developments in health care practices. Among these are the growth and acceptance of jargons of the various factors of comprehensil NOW SHOWING! 7 BIG DAYS! group practice and the institutionalization of health care to facilitate communication. At the University level, this requires t EXCLUSIVE DRIVE IN PROGRAM health care. Private, public and governmental health care has grown to become almost universal, integration of the personnel concerned with hcalfl ELECTRIC IN-CAR HEATERS Katz said. care needs through joint appointments a These changes hold many Implicatjonf'for tfo »«aearch projects »n various departments, hra Charity) ARE YOU COMING TO THE 1 1 1 1 1 PROGRAM INFORMATION 482 3905 | MICHIGAN ORGY? 1 Theatre • Lansinq Fri. Nov. 19, 12 p.m. and U—S. WASHINGTON-DOWNTOWN Doors open Sat. Nov. 20,12 p.m. BETTY BOOP, / 1 PROGRAM INFORMATION 332-6944 the cartoon vamp f 7 ("ftl Shows at IN 3D IN 3D IN 3D IN 3D IN 3D IN 3D IN 3D IN 3D IN 3D IN 3D IN 3D IN 3D IN 3D IN 1:05-3:05- 5:05-7:05- 9:10 p.m. Vj? A. nr^zrTwfR.anwNTnwN Box office (Jpens 12:45 jliiiii n l ffl KB Continuous from 1:10 ACT.n 3D CLINTEAmjOOO IN 1:15-3:15-5:20-7:25-9:30 9. 3D The IN WHERE ARE YOU AMERICA? .Ctt 3D . WE LOOKED EVERYWHERE FOR VOU H BETTY BOOP IN 3D IN EASY RIDER.. MM IN ..N-O-W! BILLY JACK FIGHTS fiygjUi 3D THE ESTABLISHMENT FOR YOU! 4 ? INTERGALACTIC IN CARTOON FESTIVAL Once you see t\ WfJ; 3D BILLY JACK I! STAR RI IMG MISS BETTY BOOP IN KOKO the CLOWN 3D and BIMBO IN with special guest star GRAMPY 3D you'll not forget him. TOM LAUGHLIN IS BILLY AND DELORES TAYLOR W| IS THE GIRLB "Ten of the very best BETTY BOOP cartoons IN from the 1930's. They're racy, campy, and 3D • IN COLOR -- RATED "CP" jS outrageously funny." IN "PLAY MISTY FOR ME" ...an Invitation to terror... Laurence Olivier, "DANCE OF DEATH" - STEVEN HENRY 3D Washington Chronicle IN 3D PLUS IN 3D Abrams Planetarium presents •* IN A.R.C. 71 EVER READY 3D IN 3D E THE LIGHT SHOWS VISUAL MAGIC DIDAM JAU2IV 8 WOH2 THOIJ 3HT IE TRIPPY SOUND OF JAKE JONES ; TOGETHER TO TAKE 83HOL-3XAI 30 OHU02 YSStHT 3* AT OT 338 3HTU fl3HT300T 0MIMW 3Y| IN /IIND ON A in 3D FAN^^^^^ ^ ^ °'T^T BURIED TREASURE A VERY X CARTOON an underground classic, made after hours by the animators who produced CRAZY CAT, EVER READY is the wildest cartoon ever created. EVER READY was never intended for theatrical distribution, but was made solely for the "In the gruesome division, this is really very good." amusement of the animators and their friends. It is an I.OSANGHI.ES TIMES absolutely unique film. There will be a short intermission between BETTY and EVER READY to permit parents to take their children out of the auditorium. SHOWTIMES 7:00,8:15,9:30,10:45 Admission $1.00 111 OLDS 7:00, 8:45, 10:30 Admission $1.00 (includes glasses) Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Wednesday, November 10, 1971 9 Froggie' leaps to the By CINDY STEINWAY only to emerge a few seconds later as, "Captain Froggie." The varjpus sequences of battling evil feature Captain Froggie rescue technical advisor for the film. Pete Fedigan, Rochester enacts the various villains, assisted by sophomore, State News Staff Writer Terry Horigan, Detroit junior. defending the Red Cedar ducks from molesters, rescuing a forsaken Jan Mack, also a Detroit junior, plays "Daniel Boone" and Evil villians lady bound to the local railroad tracks, and tangling with the everywhere, beware! "Colonel Sanders", featured heroes in the story. Chris Daugherty, The University community has been Varsity Pizza Gang, those terrorists of the bicycle world. invaded by the infamous Sister Lakes freshman, plays the role of the Captain Froggie" in his never ending battle lady in distress tied to against evil and crime. Anderson, a Birmingham sophomore, is aided in his adventures as the railroad tracks. Currently being filmed in color at various locations around "Captain Froggie" by John Kassner, Detroit junior, who is the "We began filming it this term using Super 8mm film to keep the campus, "The Adventures of Captain Froggie versus the Forces of cost down to about $40," Kelley said. All those involved work on it Evil," is a total fantasy amateur film directed by Ron about one day a week in their spare time, he added. Kelley, Warren senior. "As a low-keyed comedy, this film is not extremely in depth, Historical s He described the costumes as mostly "Halloween garb" with a lot of innovative ideas added by the actors' and actresses' own wardrobes. since everyone contributes what they want to each "As one of said. He described it as an adventure scene," Kelley our last 'fun' films, it should be ready for audience story, with the old theme of good triumphing over evil in the end. cites Eustace viewing next term, possibly in Case Hall," Kelley said. When released, it will be shown free of charge, he added. For each scene, the format is preconceived and the location is Eustace Hall at MSU has been placed on the National chosen, he explained. "The acting is spontaneous and we like to Register of Historic Places, Samuel A. Milstein, state liaison officer for historic incorporate strangers into the action," he added. J- — . LAST DAY ... At As each sequence opens, preservation, announced recently. "The listing gives the hall a distinction beside other 'V, I ^ :I 1 30-3:30-5:30-7:30-9:30 "Mild-mannered Dirk Anderson," played as himself, is seen strolling about the community holding a black umbrella and sporting a black overcoat. When an evil being preserved for their historic value throughout the country," Milstein said. properties «jHBapS3SEt "KING KONG" OPEN AT 1:15 p.m. happening sends him into action, he heads for the nearest restroom Eustace Hall was selected for the National the nation's first laboratory building set up Register because it was specifically for the THURSDAY at 1:30-3:30-5:30 7:30-9:30 for 5th dimension study of horticulture. The hall was designed by Liberty Hyde Bailey, professor and world-renowned horticulturist .the at what was then Michigan Agricultural College. Eustace Hall is a two-story, red brick Ticket check building with a plain gabled roof. It looks fortress-like, with one gabled tower on its frontal suggested exterior. In the front of the building, brick of a bus brighter shade forms a variegated pattern. The windows are all of plain trim and there is a i While no counterfeit tickets for The 5th Friday in Jenison genuine, there will be Dimension concert at 8 layerIf there is no colored a colored of paper on the inside. layer Taylor concert on Oct. 8. fire regulations," Webster said. Seating for the concert, which "This is appreciated has been sold out since last committee and is helpful for the by the large, round arch leading to the main entrance. is inside the tickets, Blatt (Wdhouse have been discovered, said, they Wednesday, will be in the round, continuation of concerts." Joo can tell for yourself whether are probably counterfeit, since Blatt said. The stage will be Blatt, added that only the south ■ourtickets are real. ■ Barry Blatt, Pop Entertainment the counterfeiters have no to this special stock of paper. access placed in the center of the end of the Fieldhouse would Fieldhouse and will be used to be WKA600PMM gain entrance to the Ibiinnan, suggested Tuesday that An estimate of 100 to 1,000 surrounded by seats, he said. concert. The doors will open at 7 CHARIIEKOHW" indents tear a small corner of counterfeit tickets were The sound system will be heir tickets. If the tickets are circulated prior to the James suspended from the ceiling, so all PWWTS MUSICAL seats will offer an unobstructed MSU BROADWAY THEATRE SERIES view of the performers, Blatt said. FRIDAY NOV 19 8:15 PM 'enter to Since Tartan Turf has been installed in the Fieldhouse, it is • "DAMN YANKEES" • UNIVERSITY AUDITORIUM TICKETS ON SALE NOW AT THE UNION even students more imperative that obey the fire : 99c • 4.00 3.50 3.00 MSU Students $3.00 $2.50 $2.00 355-3361 \our African regulations, Randolph W. Webster Jr., faculty adviser of student activities said. The floor • Nov. 11th, 13th & 14th 8PM J IN CAR HEATERS J fiie African Studies Center is presenting four films from Ghana, will be covered with plywood, ■Nigeria and Guiana at 7:30 p.m. In 106B Wells Hall Monday. but students should still refrain « WONDERS KIVA • I TTie films are: "Panoply of Ghana," "Durbar Day", "Ghana from smoking. • By • ■Danc«s"and "Les Ballet Africain." "There has been a noticeable J "TTiese films, most of which were made under the auspices of jAfrican governments, show a greater awareness of African society willingness to cooperate with the J The (7o//i/xih vj 4TH WEEK - GREAT! DON'T MISS IT! llrom the viewpoint of Africans themselves," Alfred Opubor, "A masterpiece. Incredibly beautiful, a visual and aural feast. ■director of the center, said. Infused with magical drama and sinister excitement." - S.K. Oberbeak, Newsweek Magazine | "They are more understanding and sympathetic in their view of in life," he added, comparing them to films made by "It is a trip much worth taking. Not since '2001' has a movie so mere about Africa. cannily invented consciousness and altered audience perception. " - Jay Cocks, Time Magazine "Will glue you to your chair and fill you with awe. The photography is a miracle ofartistry. The sound track is super." - Liz Smith, Cosmopolitan Magazine j$0 the ' HELLSTROM CHRONICLE Carnal Knowledge' i have experienced only three or RHARHARHARHARHARHAj four movies that I was Presents genuinely sorry to see 2 Mil«» North on 0S-27 482-74 end. I was sorry to see EXCLUSIVE SHOWING! CAR HEATERS IQ'Carnal Knowledge'end!" ^ —Vincent Canby, N. Y. Times —aty 1 RHARHARHARHARHARhH The Great Wars PRESENTS most explosive PRESENTS Rome. moment! Michelangelo Antonioni's Before Christ. After Fellini. BLOW THE MIRISCH CORPORATION PRESENIS JULIE ANDREWS MAXVONSYDOW min,, Michael York • Elke Sommer FIRST AT 7:22 -PLUST THE "MORE TERRIFYING THAN COLLECTOR UP RICHARD HARRIS HITCHCOCK'S 'PSYCHO'!" SunTS An ALBERTO GRIMALDI Production in THE GEORGE ROY Hill WAITER MIRISCH PRODUCTION ol Til till ill" "FELLINI HAWAII JAMES A MICHENERS PANAVISION* C010R by Oelu.e Starring Samantha Eggar and SATYRICOlf Terrance Stamp COLORbyDetuxe* FKNAVISION- Starring David Hemmings, |r] United Artists Vanessa Redgrave and Sarah Miles COMING Tonight in Williams Hall Cafeteria 7 THIS and 108 B Wells 9:30 Tonight in Brody Tonight in 108B Wells 7 and Southwest Dining WEEKEND ALSO Williams Hall Cafeteria 9:30 Hall 7, 9:30 From the creators of "One Million Years B.C.", their most gigantic spectacle... Students, faculty, and staff only Students, faculty, and staff only Students, faculty, and staff only 'WHEN DINOSAURS ^ s ^ I.D.'s required $1.00 admission required $1.00 admission I D's required $100 admission RULED THE EARTH" VICTORIA VEIRI Technicolor- kHARHARHARHAFHARhM 3RD AT 11:12 RHAPHARHAfl -ITJ-tARK" Wednesday, November m, 10 Michigan State News, East Lansing. Michigan o-,, Groups deliver funds to Gandhi Jag Mohan Mundhra, president of MSU's India Club Drespnt^ i $1,000 which was raised by the foreign students on VanmucT Indira Gandhi, prime minister of India, last week in Washington The money was raised by the foreign students'cultural mi,ci > "Someday Well Be Together" presented Oct. 24 as part statewide International Week as proclaimed by Gov. Milliken of ' 8 Mundhra presented the money to Ms. Gandhi Thursday night at I reception given for the visiting prime minister by LK. Jha, India'/ ambassador to the U.S. The Emergency Relief Committee, a nationwide organization t I raise funds for the East Pakistani refugees, presented Ms GanHi! I with $100,000 at the reception. ™ I Ms. Gandhi was in the U.S. as part of a four-nation tour to raise I money for the 9 million refugees which have flooded India's borders since the civil war in Pakistan. I P Ms. Gandhi conferred with President Nixon during her stay in the 1 capital. She addressed crowds in the Washington Cathedral and Columbia University in New York CSty. I The prime minister said the purpose of her tour was not only to I raise money for the refugees but to make the people of the world I aware of the current situation in India and seek possible solutions I for the problems of feeding and caring for the homeless Pakistanis I State jobless decreases DETROIT (UPI) - Unemployment in Michigan dropped to 6 5 I per cent during October with 232,000 persons jobless, the Michigan I Employment Security Commission (MESC) says. The jobless rate for October, the MESC said in a report issued I Monday, is two-tenths of 1 per cent less than during September when 241,000 persons were out of work. I The dip paralled a national drop in unemployment. However, the Michigan unemployment rate remained higher than I the national average of 5.8 per cent. In Wayne, Oakland and I Macomb counties the October unemployment rate was 6.7 per I cent, almost a full percentage point higher than the national I average. s The October figure for the state represents a decline from the 6.71 per cent —or 241,000 persons-who were out of work in October,! 1970, when the state recorded its highest October unemployment! rate in nine years. SOME 350 MICHIGAN BUSINESSMEN are expected to attends one-day " Aircade" conference Thursday at Olds Plaza. |j The conference, hosted by Michigan's Chamber of Commerce, will center on national and international implications of President I | Nixon's wage-price freeze. MICHIGAN'S TWO MAJOR teacher unions announced Tuesday! they will meet jointly for the first time this Thursday in Detroit discuss mutual collective bargaining problems. to! ■ The Michigan Education Assn. (MEA) and the Michipl Federation of Teachers (MFT) called the joint meetingi unprecedented in the history of both organizations. 1 Representatives from nearly 100 teacher bargaining units in the! Wayne-Oakland-Macomb areas are expected to attend thesessionl which is titled "Crisis Action for Teacher Bargaining." 1 Scheduled speakers include Mary Ellen Riordan, president of thel Detroit Federation of Teachers, and Pennsylvania State Sen. Henry I SAVl 20% to 25% C. Messinger, author of that state's law which gives teachers the| right to strike. •Hats with gloves * THE STATE SENATE unanimously passed a bill Monday night! Hats with mittens giving the state more control over deer processing plants and! lockers, in hopes the measure will become law before the deer! WAGNER 3 CHOICES REG. OR LO CAL $2.57 - $3.57 LADIES WEAR DEPT. hunting season opens Monday. The Agriculture Dept. now has virtually no power to inspector! demand improvements in many of the state's locker and processing^ plants where hunters bring deer for dressing out and butchering. 1 BREAKFAST 0RINK 39C AJAX = DETERGENT SMOOTH or CRUNCilY PEANUT 8UTTER AHIMINUM TOIl I9/< MILE NORTHI SELLI 351-0236 after 5:30 p.m. OLDSMOBILE "88" 1964.All power, - LANSING OR East Lansing. One OF JOLLY RD. ON 9# &2*/£. MlOi. sales publication. 3-11-10 low mileage, excellent condition. people, sell serviceable bedroom furnished. Large, airy OKEMPS ROAD 355-5722.3-11-12 products, full or part time basis, Cancellations/Corrections limited wholesale available. $400 rooms. Air conditioned. let, J CEDAR GREENS sub - 12 noon one class day Beautifully maintained. Suitable • before publication. 1969 OPEL Deluxe coupe. Excellent condition. Automotive Aviation per week possible at start. Call 371-3282 for appointment. for faculty, grad students, business bedroom, close, furnishsL Radio, four good carpeted, balcony. 35M»J CHEVROLET 1954, 4 door, stick, people, married couples. Lease. "snows." Ziebarted, 30-37 mpg. 1969 Squareback, 3-11-12 332-3135 882-6549. O 2-11-10 " PHONE new paint, snow tires. Good 349 -1734 after 5 p.m. 3-11 -12 VOLKSWAGEN LEARN TO FLY! Complete flight or reliable transportation. Best offer. 36,000 miles, snow tires, excellent training. AH 355-8255 cond it ion. 355-3033.5-11-15 courses are PRESENTABLE WOMAN to assist NEEDED, ONE man for four n 332-4241.3-11-11 OPEL 1969. Radial ply tires. 1900cc, government and VA certified. with group babysitting. Tuesday, 711 East Apartments immediately. Water RATES i 0 wore 1 mlnln .um $850 or best offer. 355-5968. FRANCIS AVIATION, Airport noon - 3 p.m.; Wednesday, noon - 3 332-4971. 3-11-11 VOLKSWAGEN 1967. Needs some Road. Call 484-1324. C No. DAYS CORSA 1965. 4 speed, clean, good 5-11-12 p.m.; Thursday, 9 a.m. - 3 p.m. 711 Burcham. Large deluxe 1 No. work, but only $600. Call condition, best offer. 484-3494. 5-1 Transportation necessary. $2.00 bedroom, well furnished VACANT FOUR man apartmJ WORDS 1 3 5 10 PEUGEOT 1963. Must sell, best offer. 351-1614, after 5. 2-11-10 5-1-10 Chris per hour. Marvelanes. Mr. Bertrand, apartment. Suitable for 2 or 3 Close to campus. $240 / 32 mpg. Rebuilt. 332-8940. 337-1383.1-11-10 10 1.50 4.00 6.50 13.00 VOLKSWAGEN 1970. Red fastback, people. Call 337-7328. 332-5322. 5-11-15 12 1.80 4.80 7.80 15.60 CUTLASS SUPREME 1971. Air, vinyl roof. Excellent $3,025. Evenings, 1-11-10 PLYMOUTH ROADRUNNER. 1970. whitewalls, radio, rear speaker. Sharpl 355-2123 or 1-585-2581. BAHAMAS COOK WANTED - lunch and dinner 1 and 2 bedroom furnished. 15 2.25 6.00 9.75 19.50 332-8050.3-11-11 Perfect condition. $2250. 332-5186. Warranty, $99 Includes 5 full days, round trip hours. TJ's Red Coach Lounge. 465 N. Cedar. 196, Mason Interchange. HALSTEAD MANAGEMENT. 351-7910. O-11-16 3-1^ 1-12 VOLKSWAGEN SEDAN, 19G4, 676-2627. 5-11-16 HALF RENT to marned couple] PONTIAC 20,000 miles on rebuilt engine. transportation between Detroit two girls, for little domi 18 2.70 7.20 11.70 23.40 CATALINA 1964. Fair PERRY. MODERN 2 bedroom and Freeport, departing Dec. 13. condition, new battery, new Excellent transportation. CALIFORNIA CORPORATION apartment. Newly decorated, shag 332-5977.5-11-15 Accommodations at Holiday Inn. 20 3.00 8.00 13.00 26.00 starter, $200 or best offer. After 6 882-9954. 2-11-10 seeking full or part time help in Transfers between airport and carpet, drapes, garbage disposal. GIRL NEEDED winter and sprfl p.m. call 353-8227.3-11-10 hotel. Plus taxes and Lansing area. Call 351-6818. Call 625-3366 after 6 p.m. 3-11-12 3.75 10.00 16.25 32.50 VOLKSWAGEN 1964. New paint, gratuities. Near Berkey. $71.25 c 372-7631.4-11-12 Hawaii, complete deluxe 351-2683. 3-11-10 347 Student Servic es Bldg. FALCON 1970V2 Model, 6cylinders, 2 TOYOTA CORONA 1968. 4 door, 4 rebuilt engine, radio. $475. Phone ONE BEDROOM, furnished. One package, $299. Call door, 15,000 miles. Leaving speed, air, "snows". 669-9689. 339-2209. 1 11-10 LIZARJ'S. HELP wanted. block off campus. Frank Buck, 351-2286 $150 / monthly. GIRL WANTED for i All student ads must be aboard. 355-5948.5-11-15 5-11-16 Bartenders, kitchen help and 332-3937.5-11-16 Dave Buck, 353-0011 apartment. Winter, possibly sprfl ANTIQUE 1933 Chevrolet $1050, waitresses. 224 Abbott Road. prepaid FIAT 1968. 124 TR4 1963 with 1964 engine. Extra Excellent condition. All orijjiftaJi O-2-11-10 337-0468.3-11-10 sport spider WANTED: ROOMMATE for 3 man. The State News convertible. Great condition. Call body parts and 1963 engine. Body 351-7397.2-11-11 Winter / spring. 731 Apartments. will be 337-1238. 3-11-12 fair, needs work. $400. 489-6419 Auto Service & Parts NATIONAL COMPANY looking for 351-3305. 5-11-16 FANTASTIC APARTMENT. J responsible only for the after7p.m. 5-11-15 men and women. Comfortable name it, it's got it! After 6 J first day's incorrect FIAT 1968, 850 Scooters & Cycles MASON BODY SHOP, 812 East inside work, no outside canvassing, 351-9066. 3-11-10 Spider, good REDUCED RENT. 2 girls needed. insertion. VOLKSWAGEN Butle 1968. New Kalamazoo Street Since 1940. sales experience necessary .must condition, $800, best offer. . .. no Winter, spring. River Street. 485-5356 after 5:30 p.m. 3-11-12 engine and brakes. $900. Phone 1970 SUZUKI 500. Excellent Complete auto painting and have good phone voice. Full time 2 GIRL needed. Twyckinghj 351-3853. 1-11-10 351-3711. 3-11-11 condition. 4500 miles, $650. Ken, collision service. IV 5-0256. C and part time positions. Selary, Winter / spring. Gladys 3320(1 332-5039.3-11-12 $100-$200 / week, depending on after 5:30. 3-11-10 FIAT 1968, 124 spider, 5 speed, Automotive excellent KING'S FOREIGN CAR SERVICE. ability, 2 weeks paid training condition, extra sharp! $1350.882-3459. 3-11-12 1971 HONDA CB-175. with helmet. Will store for winter, $450. Repair and service on Volkswagen, program. Contact Dick Vance: SUBLEASE, DECEMBER winter. 3 man luxury apartn 1st | AH Triumph MG and most other 393-5460 for interview. 633 East SPRITE, 1968, 33,000 miles, 351-3253.3-11-12 ROOMMATE WANTED for winter I'm desperate! 351-5141 aft great condition, extras, 337-1721. foreign makes. 320 S. Charles, just Jolly Road, Equal Opportunity FORD 1963 Falcon Van. Windows all VOLKSWAGEN SOUAREBACK and spring. Water's Edge PM. 5-11-10 Scott. 5-11-12 off East Kalamazoo. Phone Employer. O around, one owner, 55,000 actual 1969. Rebuilt engine, newtires YAMAHA TRAIL 1971, 175cc. 372-8130. 6-11-12 apartments. Call 337-2257. miles. Good mechanical condition, call 353-2084."3-11-12 Enduro Model, excellent DENTAL ASSISTANT, full or part 5-11-16 NEEDED. ONE man for 2 BUICK ELECTRA 1961. Mint condition. Power everything, $550. needs body work. Best bid will be condition, $450. 339-2462. 3-11-11 VW RANDY'S GUARANTEED MOBIL. repair. I-96 at time with Orthodontic. APARTMENTS AVAILABLE for Burcham Woods, call 351-1fi| accepted. Phone 484-4541 VOLKSWAGEN, 1959,. Sun - roof, Experience, downtown. Call 6-11-12 Call Harv, 349-1049. 3-11-11 December occupancy. Furnished. 5-11-12 blue, low mileage, clean, reliable. Okemos Road. 349-9620. C 482-9695 days, 484-0702 evenings. 372-8015.3-11-11 University Terrace, across from ONE GIRL needed for Cedar Vi CHARGER R-T. 1968, 383, Hemi 5-11-11 Williams Hall. Roommate service. apartment. Winter and sp FORD COBRA, 1971. Automatic, drivetrain, four speed. 351-5571 VOLKSWAGEN 1959. Good body, NURSES - RN, LPN. ROSELAWN Phone HALSTEAD 351-4124.3-11-12 after 6 p.m. 3-11-10 17,000 actual miles. Power runs well, $250. 351-4531 after 5 B.S.A 1968, 650 Firebird Scrambler. MANOR. Skilled nursing home, MANAGEMENT, 351-7910 or steering, power brakes. $2,795 at Excellent CHRYSLER NEW Yorker, 1968. All CROSBY'S PONTI AC -BUICK P.m. 3-11-12 condition. Must sell. TIRES, PAIR, G78-14, (825-14) 707 Armstrong Road. Have manager, 332-1822. O-10-11-19 GIRL TO sublet winter. Acrossfr| SALES 351-7376.3-11-10 positions available on 3-11 p.m. campus. 351-2457 after 9 p| accessories. Excellent condition. in Portland. IV2-9776. Belted, whitewalls, never mounted, shift. Opportunity for ONE AND 2 bedroom apartments 3-11-11 VOLKSWAGEN SUPER Beetle 1971 $40. 351-6345.3-11-11 3-11-12 $1450.332-5186.3-11-12 from $145. 10 minutes from convertible. Warranty, rust - NOTHING LASTS advancement, excellent salaries, foreverl So for benefits. Apply in person or call, MSU. Children permitted. EAGLE ONE GIRL needed, winter CHEVROLET 1964 Wagon, runs proofed, save $700. 626-6880. new or newer household good f 393-5680, Miss Lehmann, Director CREST NORTH, 694-8975, 4330 term, walking distance tc good, good tires. $100. 882-6564. check today's Want Ads! of Nursing. 5-11-11 Keller Road, Holt. C $50. 351-1099.5 11 11 3-11-12 ATTRACTIVE FIVE completely furnished, "4 Due to some We Have 1 Left... campus, utilities paid. $150 pi small responsibility. MarrB couple only. Approximately mi A four-man apartment December References. to mid • Apl 332-1746. X-3-11' circumstan next to campus 19 [HP □aa IP *9 USE YOUR CROSSWORD A \A N V 6 1 Nl ®topcfungf)am CALL 332-4432 MASTER CHARGE AT THE STATE NEWS PUZZLE ACROSS .30. French pastry \c OR Pr IT P IT|I ra Jj LYiWH Lj Is A1 I r! n 1. Tolerate 32. Bill of fare o R E L ■ a it I 0 fi. Confront 33. Possessive is v i ImIy i will 5ah E C S 12. Poison adjective LW, @1 QtaA £tudenti, Mc ■H A i x 13. Run off the 34. New: comb. F tracks • form M AN 1 A I Hie mr 36. Celtic Neptune A R 1 P■ FAS!U rl 14. Mystery three and cuo£ fyaculM 16. Man's nickname 37. Bitter 39. Wager R T t c E AS S PVIE1SJ am 17. Cliqufe 41 Fragment 18. Apparel 44. Appetizer DOWN 6. Hypothetical force 20. Wither 46. Revere 1. The birds apartmen Is CAUGHT IN THE HOUSING 22. Cockboat 7X White lie 26. Storytellers 48. George Sand novel 49. Noisier 2. 3. 4. Bridegroom Monogram Boxer 7 8 Oceanic Beseech *9. Scull , 5. 10. Title a 28. Supernatural SO. Canasta plays Lady Hamilton al the end of II EnRlish cityH SQUEEZE? rail 15. Kliee light 19. Scepter 21 23. Epoch Energetic I f - 6 and 9 mon Take your troubles to 24 person Fearless 25. Stinger r L p: m 26. Flower wre« will PARK WEST 27. Hones! 29. Short foraL certain lac® P % 31. Female ru« available. Call APARTMENTS 35. Grampus 37. Sour 38. Ointment L 40. Reception* F I 5530 West Michigan Ave. 1 41 Chum M'll 42. Form of - (Etopckmcrtam at Saginaw Contact Mrs. Louch Esperanto! 41 Ratite b|r"B 45. By birth | 4620 S. Hagadorn 484-4640 ■BSP. - 47 syllable oil hesitati"11! Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Wednesday, November 10, 197 J 15 for Rent For Sale For Sale Personal Recreation has 2 Faculty grievance plan .-T Townhouse* now JBL LANCER 77 speakers two AKC SAMOYED $100; purebred „s suitable for student months old, cost $400, will sell for BOARD EXAM TUTORING Kaplan CH RISTMAS, HOLIDAY with «'or professors. 2 bedrooms, $295,355-6416. 1 11 10 Samoyed, $30. Nice with kids. Tutoring Courses for the Studentours - Nassau $169, f.ths 'ul,V carpeted, 694-0501.10-11-15 December LSAT and January Jamaica $219, Acapulco $219 " « dishwasher, basement, ANSCO. 36 mm, K fnm, with flaih Europe $189. Specials on Hawaii,' (Continued from members to be drawn by lot from unrevised Section 1.3 ZENITH PORTABLE stereo, solid DAT board exams are being page one) which u playground, pool. $35 655 3256.2 11-11 formed. Call collect (313) Puerto Rico, Spain, Aruba. FREE the faculty. The drawing will be specifically included part-time 1 % n I to u,ilitia» •""P1 state, diamond needle. Excellent 851-6077 for enrollment. brochures. 351-2650.5-11-16 The revised Section 2.5.1 conducted by the Faculty Affairs Sv.3617194.0 '/« CARAT Orange Blossom wedding condition. Best offer. 351 2008. 4-11-12 Q-25 11-12 states: "A Judicial Board shall and Faculty Compensation employes in the definition of faculty. ring set, size 7 baths, brick colonial Michigan. Dishes, books, in outstanding condition with all publications. Across from campus, Happening must be received in the "Sweet Charity" at 8 p.m. Thursday - American Musical Theatre - 7 p.m., coins, antiques, rockers, junk. corner M.A.C. and Grand River, state News office> 34s Student Sunday 18-20 in the Union Ballroom. 216 Bessey Hall; Auto - mechanics - the extras. Walking distance: Bargain Hunters Paradise. Open below Jones Stationery Shop. Call Service* by 1 P-™-at 'east,wo Tickets are available at the Union 7:30 p.m., 301 Bessey Hall; Blues Saturday and Sunday. Furniture Mobile Homes schools, campus, Frandor and class days before publici ticket office. Harmonica - 7:30 p.m. Snyder Hall buslines. $43,500. 332-0292. and appliances open all week, 10 lited to 25 ' rds. No 3-11-11 lobby; The Book of Mormon - 7 p.m., am - 6 pm/Phone 371-2R4.1 C MARLETTE 1970. 12'X 60'with 7'X announcements epted by The MSU Fisheries and Wildlife Club 317 Bessey Hall; Chess and other 21' Expando. Unfurnished TYPING THESES and letters, etc. phone. No ann will be will meet at 7 p.m. today in 183 except HAMMOND STREET 2 bedroom Games - 7 p.m. 218A Berkey Hall; For Sale FREE PARKING at rear of store, for carpeting and draperies. Phone - Bungalow, ideal for newlyweds Rapid accurate service. accepted forever ide the greater Natural Resources Bldg. There will be Educational Reform and Firesign or your convenience. OPTICAL 393-8294 after 8:30 p.m. 5-11-12 Experienced. 393-4075. C Theater 8 retirees. Close to schools and - p.m. 102 Bessey Hall; CTROVOICE SPEAKERS, new DISCOUNT. 2615 East Michigan Poetry - 8 p.m. 215 Bessey Hall; shopping. FHA or VA terms or BARBI MEL: Typing, multilithing. If you tad prices, liberal trades. Used Avenue, 372-7409. C-5-11-12 "OWOSSO". 10' x 55', fully carpeted, are of draft age, help is Fiction Writing - 7 p.m. 214 Berkey equity out. For appointment call No job too large or too small. Block furnished, 2 bedrooms, air available from the East Lansing Draft Students interested in tui80OAM/FM stereo receiver. Mrs. Robinson, 372-7610 or spring and Hall. off campus. 332-3255,0 Information Center, 855 Grove St. 150 MKII stereo APPLES, PEARS, sweet cider. Apple conditioner, on lot near campus. residence, 485-3045, ADVANCE summer humanities courses in London e. Used wood. And Gift packages shipped 337-2197 evenings. 5-11-12 REALTY CO., REALTORS. (upstairs). Call 351-5283 from I to 4 will meet at 7:30 p.m. today in 108 SDS will hold an East Complex STEREO, TERM PAPERS and theses typed by by United Parcel. BLOSSOM p.m. or 6 to 8 p.m. Monday through Bessey Hall. Faculty and studentswho "nps, receivers, changers, 3-11-11 meeting at 7:30 p.m. today in the iers and decks, cassette ORCHARDS, 2 miles North of VINDALE 10' x 50'. Furnished, experts, 50c a page. Call W.O.W. have been there will answer questions. South Hubbard lounge to discuss the Leslieon Hull Road. (Old U.S. 127) completely carpeted, Inc. 332-1800. 5-11-10 Nov. 12 demonstration against the Kl 8 tracks players, used 8 track shed, 10 MINUTES TO CAMPUS. The ASMSU « S2 / each. TV sets. Police 1-589-8251 9-5 p.m. Closed skirting, air conditioned, on lot Legal Aid Dept. will The, Undergraduate Anthropology Iran Project. Convenient for faculty and d rad o, Mondays. O near campus. $3200. 351-3779. ANN BROWN: Typing and multilith have a lawyer available from 9 a.m. to Assn. will meet at 7 p.m. today in 321 typewriters,imported 5-11-12 students. Lots of storage, large offset printing. Complete service noon every Wednesday and from 1 to Baker Hall. Joseph Chartkoff. asst. tapestries, All equipment fenced - in yard, 3 bedrooms, 1J4 The MSU Golf Club will meet at for dissertations, theses, 5 p.m. every Wednesday and Thursday professor of i and guaranteed. WILCOX STEREO PORTABLE, excellent anthropology, will 7:30 p.m. Thursday in 137 Women's LAKE VIEW lots available now, 8', baths, finished rec room, 3 manuscripts, general typing. IBM. during the fall term. Those wishing an attend. COND HAND STORE, 509 East condition, used very little. Intramural Bldg. Faculty and students 10', 12' wide. 10 minutes to fireplaces, newly carpeted. 22 years experience. 349-0850. C appointment are asked to check with rtigan. 4854391. 8-5:30 PM. 351-1070after 5p.m. 3-11-10 $26,900. 485-4973. 1-11-10 are welcome to attend instruction and campus. PARK LAKE MOBILE the ASMSU business office, 307B Justice Thomas Brennan, member of Nay through Saturday. Bank films. HOME COURT. 641-6601. O PROFESSIONAL TYPIST. Term Student Services Bldg.. or call the Michigan Supreme Court, will ""icard, Master Charge, 529 REGENT ST. 3 bedrooms, just papers, theses. Best rates. Call 353-0659. There will be a nominal speak on "Law and Society" at a ways, terms, trades. IC The National Student Speech and remodeled, new furnace, new 351-4619. O charge for this service. 8-11-12 meeting of the MSU Pre-Law Club at STEWART GARDNER, 1969 12' x siding, wall to wall carpeting living 7:30 p.m. Thursday in 118 Eppley Hearing Assn. will meet at 7:30 p.m. COLE'S BAKERY 60'. (3) 7' x 12' expandos, 2 room / dining room, FHA TYPING TERM papers and theses. Akers Hall Thursday in the Captain's Room of UJS BAKE RY foods at WATERBEDS $26.50, any size. Ecology Symposium Center. The public is invited. reduced bedroom furnished with many plus appraised at $17,600. 676-2627. Electric typewriter. Fast service. the Union. Certification requirements to 1/2 off at retail Units, $60. Mattress, liner, foam presents Leighton Leighty, associate features. Reasonable. 371-3667. 5-11-16 and procedures will be discussed. 349-1904.20-12-1 professor of development. The sating, great economy I pad and frame. UL listed waterbed resource Spartan Bowmen will meet at 7 "P'w Store, 640 South heaters. REBIRTH, 309 North p.m. today in the Archery Room of Waverly, DUPLEX, 1614 Bailey. Just Legislation" at 7:30 today inthe the Women's Intramural Bldg. Bring "ediately North of 1-496 Washington, Lansing. 489-6168. C p.m. The MSU Promenaders will hold remodeled, new furnace, new SAVE SAVE SAVE your own equipment of check it out Pressway. C-11-12 tryouts from 7 to 8:15 tonight in 34 Lost & Found siding, wall to wall carpeting, XEROX COPYING- offset - best from the Intramural Building before Women's Intramural Bldg. furnished apartments. Appraised, quality at reasonable prices. THE Alternatives Resource Center OMADE FURNITURE $17,600. Income $260 monthly. COPY SHOPPE, 54 East Grand , LOST: MALE Collie, looks like Lassie, (formerly Vocations for Social Change ne The South Collegiate Fellowship Crafted, high quality, SKI IS, HEAD 360's, with Salamon answers to "Prince". Family pet. 676-2627. 5-11-16 River. Phone 332-4222. C in the Placement Bureau) is now The Coalition for Human Survival P-off prices. THE will meet at 9 tonight in the Alumni ' SEVEN bindings, $120. Call 332-8950. Reward. Call, 332-3044. 3-11-10 located in the Albatross, 547V4 E. will meet at 3 p.m. today at 343 Albert S, 349 4817. C-5-11-16 Chapel to discuss "Prayer." 5-11-12 TERM PAPERS typed by Grand River Ave., from 1 to 4:30 p.m. St. to discuss how to keep local elected experienced typist. Near campus. Tuesday through Friday. officials responsive and other STEAM hair curler. Dutch ELEGANT HAND beaded wedding Recreation Phone 484-1874.20-12-2 The Soaring Club will meet at 7:30 wig,dark brown. Dark p.m. today in 30 Union. A talk on green gown, train and floorlength veil. All - University Student Judiciary aerial photography techniques will be J locking,3,never "•355-289 9-2 worn. Best 351-7264after 5 p.m. 3-1J-10 Transportation office hours are from 3 to 5 p.m. The MSU Ski Club will meet at 7:30 given. p.m. 3-11-12 LOST: DOG in East Lansing area. STUDENTOURS Monday through Friday in 331 p.m. today in 109 Anthony Hall. 100 USED vacuum cleaners. Tanks, 26" girl's bike. canisters and uprights. Guaranteed Redish brown and white. Beagle - &2I TRAVEL CENTER WANTED: RIDE to Denver, Colorado Student Services Bldg. Movies will he shown and door prizes The Gay Men's Rap Group will meet $20 Irish Setter male. Goes by "Zani". awarded. New memberships will be hc«ll anytime after Nov. 24. Call at 7:30 p.m. today. Call 353-9795 for 332-0153.3-11-12 one full year. $7.88 and up. Reward. 332-0258. 3-11-10 Nassau $169, Europe $189, The Management Club will meet at taken. information. DENNIS DISTRIBUTING 351-1273.5-11-16 Jamaica $219, Acapulco $219 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the Teak COMPANY, 316 North Cedar. me"H"~DREN'S snow boots. OppositeCity Market. C-11-11 LOST: BROWN oval glasses. Anthony Room, Eppley Center. Guest speaker Petiti The MSU Rodeo Club will practice 'Vi°nr10prices- Phone Hall near Farm Lane. 337-1413. Wanted will be the vice - president of large representative to the College of at 7 p.m. today in the Judging Pavilion SEWING MACHINE Clearance Sale, 3-11-11 (Plus) + special on CypherneticsCorp. Natural Science Student Advisory followed by a meeting at 9 p.m. Puerto Rico, Aruba, Council. Petitions are due by 5 p.m. WANTED SKI IMAPrLE Chei t",; mirror"njght $49.95. $5 brand new portables Hawaii, Spain ... Nov. 24. The Mortar Board will meet at 7 term. Leave for Colorado °x springs / per month. Large selection of We fill your travel mattress. reconditioned used machines. needs at DISCOUNT prices. December 10. Call Carla, Wanted The Israeli Club will present Israeli p.m. today at 4967 Campus Hill, apt. ,p°°' tat>'e, like new. Singers, Whites, Necchis, New Stop by or call today 332-0821.3-11-12 203B. For directions phone 349-1081. 'A J. ,lb fowling ball. 21" Home & "Many Others", $19.95 to 129 E.Grand River LIVE MODELS, male or female, no writer "Culture and Aharon Meged speaking on puret°be L "Vhi,e TV Need* $39.95. Terms. EDWARDS Personal (under Campus Bookstore) 351-2650 FEMALE STUDENT desires renumeration. For interesting class p.m. Religion in Israel" at 8 Thursday in 35 Union. The 3-1VI2""BS ' weekends- DISTRIBUTING COMPANY. 1115 N. Washington, 489-6448. HAVE YOUR passport and l.d. THANKSGIVING SPECIAL: roommate. 4-11-15 Phone 882-8447. project. Call 351-5165 between public is invited. 9-10 a.m. Ask for Dorian Blair. C-11-11 pictures taken at VAN DYKE Freeport, Bahamas. Deluxe 12 gauge, BLOOD DONORS needed.$7.50 for 1-11-10 The Chess Club will meet at 7 p.m. automatic, STUDIO of PHOTOGRAPHY. accommodations, $199 complete. LIBRARY BOOKS used. 25,000. 10c today in the Shaw Hall west meeting ..Reming,on' Model 35 calibre, You'll be glad you did. Next to STUDENTOURS, 351-2650. all positive. A negative, B negative room. Everyone is welcome. Please this - ' 14. 651-5867. each. Open Sat. - Pun., 10 - 5 p.m. Brother Gambit's in the Abbott 5-11-10 and AB negative, $10.00 O 669-9311.4 11 12 negative, $12.00. MICHIGAN bring a set if possible. Students International Meditation Building. 332-8889.0-11-10 COMMUNITY BLOOD CENTER, Society will give an introductory 507'A East TWO GIRLS need single rooms The Dept. of Romance Languages lecture on Transcendental Meditation Grand River, East ©HONG KONG MONTAJ CUSTOM TAILORS Lansing. Above the new Campus Book Store. Hours, 9 am to 3:30 pm Monday, Thursday, and immediately. Chris 351-3911. Judy, 332-2012. 3-11-11 presents "The Tenth Victim," an Italian science fiction film at 7:30 p.m. today in I02B Wells Hall. at 3 and 7 p.m. 106B Wells Hall. today in 35 Union and In East Lansing Friday. Tuesday and Wednesday 1 will EXTENDED SALE FOR MSU Circle Honorary will meet at 9:30 pm to 6:30 pm. 337-7183. C present Andre Kole, illusionist, at Don't miss this opportunity. Nov. 10, 11, 12, 13. tonight in Old College Hall, Union. All 8:30 p.m. Sunday ill the Men's members are asked to attend this first Intramural Building. . Get custom measure for your meeting. For rides call 489 5173 shirts, formal wear. Select from irlcs, English woolens, Scottish GERMAN MOTORS 355-3632. or There will be a meeting of the (WTON ^ TENT SALE! TIRE Any suit '86.40 VW - PORSCHE SPECIALIZING VW & PORSCHE IN Free tonight in 21 U Bldg. As a beg r Ddern I Zoology Advisory Committee p.m. today in 404 Natural Science Bldg. Herman Slatis, professor of at 7 Package deal: 1 suit, 1 sport jacket, Complete Engine Overhaul zoology, will be guest speaker. }} AU TIRES 1 pair slacks, 1 shirt. $162.40 All Minor Repairs The MSU Bicycling Club will meet at Member 3-13 Money back guarantee if not 100% satisfied. (We will be on hand to make alterations NEW OR REBUILT p.m. Off Campus Council will meet at 4 today in the Stefanoff Lounge, 7:30 Intramural p.m. today in 203 Men's Bldg. Orders will be taken . after delivery.) ^"'Saginaw " Air Mail and Duty included PARTS FOR SALE Licensed German Mechanics Student Services Bldg. Everyone is welcome. for club jerseys. Call George Jake, 351-5500 Room Marshall 107 /. Gd. River Okemos 349-3330 The Pre-Vet Club will meet at 7 p.m. hlgjp Bankard University Inn 1100 Trowbridge Rd. SDS will hold a south Complex Thursday in 104B Welis Hall. John Fast Lansing meeting at 7:30 p.m. today in the Newman, asst. dean of the College of "We take pride in our work " North Case lounge. Vetinary Medicine, will speak. 16 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Wednesday, November in i WIN A PLYMOUTH CRICKET PLAY THEM VS. US ONE GIVEN AWAY Here's how to play the (erne! EACH WEEK FOR 5t guess the pric (Wrigley) The person who comes closest to guessing I THE NEXT all there WEEKS is to it The groceries are on display now at Wrigley and each w< guess & win So. come in, fill out your entry blank (sorry, only one entry p. when you've won. Contest ends November 23. 1971 ,GRAND PRIZES; One 1972 Plymouth Cricket per week. 2 more to be giv< y SECOND PRIZES 10 Wrigley Gitt Certi I ot $ 10 each per week total ot 40 equals $400 HERE ARE THE COMPLETE D :WRIGLEY b USDA CHOICE BEEF at ECONOMY BEEF PRICES Price* Good thru Tuesday November COUNTRY CUT 3 Hindquarters. W whale Bo KENT Corned Beef Loaf CREAMETTES Elbow Macaroni c1: 38c 4^ lZ SHEERLIFE Amplon Panty Hose FOR PANCAKES Aunt Jamima Flour CAMELOT STRAINEDOR WHOLE . . . 2^44" ECC Fits'AM 5)0 E, 10s Michigan U.S. ft I Red Delicious Apples 49c Sliced Peaches e? 25° Cranberry Sauce . ,..'S25C CAMELOT QUALITY ASSORTED VARIETIES 39c Meadowdale Fresh Ouncan Nines **. Mushrooms 89° 17' 15' 8 Assoi Margarine... Yogurt. .vr Cake Mi> v29 WITH CRUSHED PINEAPPLE J||e EDON ASSORTED COLORS M MEADOWDALE FROZEN This Week's GENUINE Special! TRANSLUCENT IMPORTED ENUINE TRANSLI R0|| ORC Sweet Potatoes c™'l O Bathroom Tissue ....■I w Sliced Strawberries. .. ^ 22° GRAPE DRINK 35 LIVER OR BEEF 4 Ac CAMELOT FRESH 51:87* Porcelain Welchade oTn Vets Dog Food ,5£rlll Homogenized Milk Complete Your Set c FOR DISHWASHERS Electrasol 77 CAMELOT REGULAR OR CRINKLE CUT French Fried Potatoes . ,6 oz * 19 f}c MARGARINE-LARGE BOWL Soft Imperial... 39e Completer units priced far below those ot depart ment store*. build o It's eosy to complete service. China Coffee Cup 29 EACH With Each $3.00 Purchase (2 with *6 00, Etc) FROZEN ASSORTED pure vegetable FRESH MEL-O-CRUST BLUE RIBBON FRESH GRADE A Banquet Crisco White Large Soda Dinners Shortening Bread Eggs Pop 29 77 Dozen Carton 6c Each ►5400 South Cedar *5621 West Saginaw *600 Frandor *2010 East Grand River SOUTH OF JOLLY RD. across from lansing MALI in the fandor in okemos neXt to NEXT TO k MART DEPARTMENT STORE NEXT to k mart dept. storf • pi,,nq r k mart department store