Tuesday MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY Volume 64 Number 67 STATE STATE NEWS East Lansing, Michigan Tuesday, November 16, 1971 No prompt action planned on MSU admissions By BILL HOLSTEIN State News Staff Writer President Wharton said approval of the board of trustees. Initial press reaction to the report centered on questions concerning the improve educational programs for the disadvantaged with special attention to inner city residents, migrant workers and studystudents would have to "suffer" if the proportion of minority students were to be increased significantly, Polley said the Monday he would practicality and costs of implementing the Indians. not at this time react to the report of the report makes provisions for growth of the report's 79 recommendations and the Polley said it could be years before this entire student body. Commission on Admissions and Student effects of implementing them. idea received funding from a state or Body Composition or take specific Chitra Smith, asst. professor in James The 117-page document, which reflects federal source. It may not get underway proposals for immediate implementation. Madison College and member of the the efforts of about 30 faculty, students until the groups who stand to benefit from He did say, however, that he commission, said in response that under agreed with and administrators over 14 of months of such a consortium reach college in the "general thrust" of the the report's recommendation only the report. hearings and deliberations contains sufficient numbers to push for it, he said. Wharton told newsmen at his monthly number of students who could be recommendations concerning the size of press luncheon that he would take Polley conceded that the University at its supported by MSU would be admitted. recommendations he agreed with MSU, the number and "mix" of present level of funding would not be Thus, she said, the "open door" to the srsates through undergraduates, the accessibility of capable of implementing many of the more the appropriate channels "from time to education for members of minority and University would never become a time for quite some time." expensive recommendations. But he said he "revolving door" out of the University. ethnic groups and similar questions. has been working on requests for funds The report would admit "only as many EyebnUilia Members of the commission also hand to release and discuss the were on report with Ira Polley, director of the commission, said some of the recommendations may from the federal government and expressed confidence that in the next few years more educationally disadvantaged as we can do a |for more than three years downtown Cincinnati has been undergoing newsmen. Wharton take a very long time to implement and federal funds will be available to MSU for decent, honest job with," Ms. Smith said. Wharton, Polley and members of the m intensive face-lifting. Giving a new look to decadent brick walls are noted that some could be quite costly. recommendations call for action that he implementing the recommendations. commission also made some general lerie paint jobs, like this garage wall at Third and Race streets, where can take without consultation with the For example, Polley said, one The newsmen were also interested in the comments as to what they thought to be recommendation calls for the University to ■the cars in a parking lot are under consta.it "surveillance." In this board of trustees, others can be take the lead in establishing a consortium implications of the recommendations the importance of the reports. ■instance there is no doubt - the eyes have it. implemented administratively within the calling for more students from minority Wharton said the report and the with other state colleges and universities and disadvantaged groups. AP Wirephoto University and still others require the commission's work are important because and other interested organizations to In response to a charge that some they represent a look at all the problems that face universities today on a "total basis" and because they acknowledge the interrelatedness of those problems. Academic Senate hears reports o kinds of kinds of arguments and opinions. opinions." „hi<. in »»!.<. ■ Wharton said most other univerisities have responded to these problems on an ad hoc basic without recognizing that the problems are interrelated. personal Mm. „ able to make . a decision on ih. nn the . the faculty to "look at the document Polley said of particular significance in He added that each of the two a and bargaining question of collective bargaining. by the board of trustees. the report are the definitions of "minority units which are competing for endorsement whole" and to recognize that the 79 Jarkson told the group that minilibraries A status report on the students", "economically disadvantaged" signatures ai MSI are close to the 30 per on collective recommendations are all interrelated faculty rights and first of its two yearly meetings cent figure which is required bargaining have been set up in Wharton added that several of the responsibilities and the faculty grievance and "educationally disadvantaged for an Ktnday, the Academic Senate heard a election to decide if there should be several campus locations and that the recommendations will have to be procedure was presented briefly by E. hVed students." committee has decided not to hold any He indicated those distinctions may help pes of reports, headed by a "directional" collective bargaining at MSU, and if so, investigated further by subcommittees, rt from Herbert C. Jackson, chairman which agent, the American Assn. of Universitywide forums on the issue. He established internal units of the University (Please tum to page 13) (Please turn to page 13) I ttie ad hoc committee on collective also said a fianl report will be distributed University Professors or the MSU Faculty to the faculty by Jan. 11,1972. Associates, an affiliate of the Michigan He added that there are three possible Education Assn., will represent the faculty. ■netine In response to a question, Jackson said options for faculty members to take: piirbon told less than 100 faculty s who attended the meeting that he did not think an election would be held this year. •To continue at the status quo; faculty involvement Senators ■ committee has accumulated "probably He told the faculty that *To enter upon formal collective thought the p the available factual material on bargaining; or bargaining In higher education Id has read and or heard all conceivable Elected Faculty Council gave the committee a green light in the form of its • To elect an alternative somewhere between the status quo and formal OK cutrate final report, each faculty member will be collective bargaining. Jackson told the senate that one department has recently submitted to him a proposal for such a compromise, but the aid funding ialance-of-payments committee has not yet had time to discuss the proposal. The proposal suggests the establishment of an All-Univsrsity Professional Assn. WASHINGTON (AP) - Senate leaders agreed Monday to back cutrate foreign-aid spending until Dec. 1 while Congress works on legislation to solve the government's aid which would have an all-University policy dilemma. lits $12 billion deficit committee composed of both faculty and administrators. The committee would be empowered to act on all University After meetings at the White House and at the Senate, Sen. Allen J. Ellender, D-La., said he would convene the Senate matters, including budgetary matters, and Appropriations Committee to act on a JjASHINCiTON lance of payments (AP) The nation's deficit By one transactions measure, the official reserve its decisions would go unaltered to the resolution that would continue the aid surged to its balance, the balance - of - board of trustees. IfliKt level in history in the July - payments deficit was $12.1 billion on a spending authority that expired at Member quarter, reaching a $12-billion The proposal, Jackson said, must be midnight. But he said this extension will seasonally adjusted basis. worked out in more detail, pk by one yardstick, the government This balance, which measures especially with run only for the balance of November. closed Monday. transactions between governments only, respect to legal implications. Ellender, the chairman, said that panel The senate also heard a report from would act later this week. Approval there jnimisl) V been another massive quarterly deficit had reached a record deficit level in the Beatrice Paolucci, member of the Steering and in the Senate would send the expected, few officials had second quarter, but worsened by $6.4 loughl it would reach the magnitude billion in the third quarter. Committee, on the deliberations associated continuing resolution back to the House, Peeled in the latest with the status of librarians and the which already has approved accounting of the Hie official balance reflects in a sensitive one running cooperative extension staff. for the balance of the current 1^ international - payments account manner the outflow of dollars from the United States caused by speculation in Ms. Paolucci reviewed chronologically congressional session. Wt it could have been the developments concerning tenure and John Hannah, director of the Agency for worse, one official foreign exchange markets. job security for librarians and cooperative International Development (AID) and £President * Nixon had not 15 to protect the dollar moved on extension staff members and their former MSU President, has assured his by refusing to By another measure, the net liquidity Y out any more of the nation's gold for balance, the deficit reached $9.3 billion on participation in academic government. employes they will "be on the payroll in liar claims and the coming days" and told them to by imposing a 10 per cent a seasonally adjusted basis, a $3.6 billion In his remarks to the Academic Senate, keep Prt surcharge. adverse shift from the second quarter. President Wharton told the faculty doing business as usual. Most of the third Officials said the deficit was moderated members that the report in the President's According to an AID official, Hannah - quarter deficit came said he "would worry about where the ™!o Auj>. 15 when somewhat toward the end of the quarter. Commission on Admissions will be currency speculators money would come from." Realising disruptions in international Helping the deficit from getting any distributed to faculty today. He cautioned Despite the hiatus in spending authority, exchange markets, putting the deeper was a surplus in the nation's trade the foreign aid apparatus will tier intense pressure. balance in September. go about business as usual Tuesday, although administration spokesmen have been saying Poll workers the entire assistance program would Anyone interested in working at the polls collapse at midnight Monday for lack of the congressional authorization. at election of student That was settled even before the Senate representatives-at-large of the Academic Council Thursday should contact the (Please turn to page 13) ASMSU office. Workers will be paid. Rent deposit • Escrow accounts and whether they the exact nature of the deposit deductions find a responsible party when a large should be legislatively controlled. was listed by Hagen as another problem. ■ portion of his security deposit was kept, • Determining the criteria for normal He said, student tenants frequently wait for cleaning and damage following the The need for legislation prohibiting wear and tear. two or more months for the return of • a management's failure to make three abuses of rental deposits was stressed Determining whether a check list for deposit. separate inspection appointments. Monday afternoon as nearly 50 people normal wear and tear should be In dealing with a grievance, Hagen said, gathered In the Union Gold Room to established. OCC approaches the landlord first, then to Carver said, it took him from the August testify before members of a special The representatives listened as more than the Off Campus 24 until November 8 to get action on his Housing Office or an claim. Small claims court awarded him all committee of the Michigan House of 20 people told of their personal experience attorney who has offered to represent 6Or/fTTT Representatives studying mandatory rental with rental deposits. them. Should none of these measures but $15 and his $200 security deposit. He deposits. had notarized testimony from the Testimony was led by John Hagen, Off succeed OCC refers the tenant to the Small present Committee members present to hear Campus Council (OCC) legislative affairs claims court. tenant of his apartment stating that the testimony were chairman Rep. Earl E. director, who told the legislators that OCC He indicated the vast majority of those apartment had been clean. Nelson D-Lansing, Melvin DeStigter received over 200 rental deposit related who take their complaints to court win, R-Hudsonville and Thomas G. Sharpe Carver made a series of recommendations complaints last year. suggesting fault lies with the landlord. R-Howell. Late in the afternoon they were to the legislators that typified the P'nts of b,°°d w^e donated by 4:30 p.m. Monday as the Specific complaints that were most "It has become a practice of many u joined by Rep. Jim N. Brown R-Okemos, frequently expressed by tenants, he said, students to leave without paying the last testimony and recommendations made "stmas in November" blood drive sought to reach its 1,177 pint representative for the East Lansing district. were months rent," Hagen said, "because they throughout the afternoon: paying for wear and tear that E ,acultV and staff have been disappointing in nast years with the Nelson set the tone for the hearing by appeared normal, for unspecified are sure they won't get their rental deposits • The tenant should not be bound by Ha l ? b,00d donated by students. Shuttle service to the East Shaw restricting the testimony to four basic back." any inspection for which he is not present. processing fees, and for cleaning to include There should be clear statutory rules as II • BrnH d donation center will be provided for East Complex and guidelines. • Security deposit and its abuse. rug shampooing. Navy Lieutenant William E. Carver, an V residents every half hour from 2 to 8 p.m. today. Failure by the landlord to tell the tenant MSU student, complained of an inability to (Please turn to page 13) Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Tuesday, NovcmhPr |6 . news Faculty ratings stir criticism compiled The Slanderous Faculty Review. He termed it as both libelous and Saying his response has been almost two to one "partly an ego in favor by students and ten to one against by faculty members were ratedd Ui„ unfavorable. summary A faculty rating system originated by a James Madison College student to evaluate that trip," but said it also attempts "to give others faculty, the list gives descriptions like this one of passing through Madison a rough map of the acting dean Robert Banks: From the wires of APand UPI. pitfalls," he said. "Capable of turning out a really dry, stuffy, college's staff has drawn considerable interest The review was written in a bantering tone and formal, excruciating lecture if he is able to With his avowed intention of reneati. and controversy there. effort winter term I Mark Grebner, Kankakee, 111. sophomore, has drawn charges ranging from being slanted and prepare notes for it; object of the game is to - a review ih!. ng 'I biased to actually destroying the college. make him speak off-the-cuff, in which situations his knowledge and intelligence shine through. expanded to Include more faculty evaluations more student £°Ulcl " - there ha* k deal of criticism of the Very good in small classes (where you can drive present review g0 him off the track by constant questions). Pretty "We cannot depend international community, or even on the Support of ar bad in large lectures." Another discription reads: "Views every step -SssiSwrtsL'ss:1*' the college, a slanted view of the J?"" the countries which I visited, to away from the assigned readings as ■ dangerous potentially destructive effect Sf? *" venture into the unknown. Covers readings (quite faculty-student relationships The concept atUlty « solve our problems for us." competently) but goes no further. If you give behind creating the review t, I - Indira Gandhi Indian prime minister colled declaration him a paper — do not be creative — it only confuses him, he absolutely can't appreciate anything that he hasn't read before. If you just been challenged, comments support the idea Grebner's tactics. however in tl ** but disaJl1,1 m * summarize covered material relevant to the paper WASHINGTON (AP)-Antiwar Congress. when a federal Circuit Court has he is very easy to impress. If you can live without The idea behind congressmen are telling their While losing that argument in cjted that very appropriations making it a sian^ 1 rnllpnoriips that, a vnrp for thp colleagues that a vote for the thp the kpv key rmirt court cases decided +huc thus i.j process as conclusive evidence military appropriations bill far, the lawyers argue now that that the policy in question is creativity but need help .... material, he's pretty good." ; •• understanding course document and calling it libelous to Grebner, necessary for it to be was taken se SJ Grebner asserts that is is not the rating that has The light bantering tone helped it Tuesday without some the court interpretations place approved by the Congress." raised the commotion but the fact that escai reservations attached will pressure on legislators who have some being considered absurd, he said. amount to a declaration of war. said they oppose the war, but Rep. Michael Harrington, don't consider their votes for Viet D-Mass., sent a letter to House military appropriations as piaster devalued members Monday saying that in support for President Nixon's MANY CHINESE SPIES view of recent court decisions it war policies, South Vietnam's government announced Monday no longer is possible to separate This second point is being night in Saigon that it will drastically devalue the piaster appropriations from the argued by Harrington, Rep. in an attempt to smash the black market and limit question of authorization for the Parren Mitchell, D-Md., and Aliens sneak into U.S. Vietnam War. other antiwar congressmen. bonanza profits of some Vietnamese importers. Harrington asked support of "It no longer can be argued The devaluation also is aimed at encouraging exports the Boland-Mansfield that the appropriations process and attracting foreign investors. amendment to be offered by can be separated from the Rep. Edward P. Boland, D-Mass., WASHINGTON (AP) As many as 4,200 aliens from five years, entering this country by jumping ship in U.S p„1K1 Economics Minister Pham Kim Ngoc said the legitimacy of the war," — when the bill reaches the House Harrington said, Communist China sneak into the United States every year, by way of smuggling operations in the United States and Canad] devaluation bill will be sent to the National Assembly as floor Tuesday. ' 4 A vote for the according to secret Justice Dept. intelligence reports which say Just last week, according to the confidential the first step in implementing President Nguyen Van reports ml Recent court decisions have of the aliens are on espionage missions, and others smashed a ring engaged in Thieu's sweeping program of economic reforms. held that by consistently appropriation —absent Congressman Boland's some are involved in narcotics traffic. ftom Vancouver, smuggling Chinese British Columbia, into the United States ailoP J appropriating funds for the war amendment—is a vote to provide Only one in 10 of these illegal aliens is caught and deported, the Nellingham and Blaine, Wash., at $1,000 a head. 1 and providing a draft to man it, the indispensable reports say. Among those identified by the government, many The operation was broken up after the U.S. legislative Border Patrl Congress, has given the approval required by the have ,been to the Hon8 KonS Seamans Union, an caught one group of the aliens as they crossed the border on foJ British to meet standard constitutional equivalent of a Constitution for the war to organization said by the FBI rr>1 to be K" engaged —— in espionage. Other a mile east of Blaine. A second group made it to the New Yol declaration of Chinese aliens taken into custody have been carrying narcotics Antiwar war. lawyers had asked the continue. "The argument that policy shipments destined for U.S. contacts. metropolitan area. Three of them were arrested last Wednesday Newark, N.J., and told authorities they made their first if ■ Two major British companies said Monday in London courts to declare the war matters ought not to be According to a source in the Immigration and Naturalization with the smugglers in Hong Kong. unconstitutional because it has determined in an appropriations Service, (INS) the Justice Dept. section responsible for capturing Earlier this year, U.S. and Canadian authorities shut they have developed a system to clean automobile not been illegal aliens, the mainland Chinese have been coming for about down exhaust to the rigorous standards to be introduced by formally declared by bill can hardly be relied upon large Chinese smuggling ring operating between Montreal « New York City. However, the intelligence the U.S. government for 1976 models. reports say there evidence that the Montreal operation has reopened, and A spokesman for Imperial Chemical Industries said the another ring is operating out of Windsor, Ontario. system, worked out in collaboration with the British Leyland Motor Corp., Britain's biggest auto The State News, the student newspaper at Michigan State University, is published every class day during Fall, Winter Milliken According to INS sources, as many as 2,500 mainland Chiu are smuggled into the United States each year. Another 1,7( jump foreign-flag vessels U.S. ports. The intelligence reports manufacturer, used catalyst materials which changed the and Spring school terms, Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays 5,640 entered that way between 1965 and 1970. chemical form 0f noxious gases and rendered them during Summer Term, and a special Welcome Week edition Chinese seamen among the flood of illegal aliens have 1 harmless. The spokesman said that up to now major American in September. Subscription rate is $16 per year. Member Associated Press, United Press International, Inland Daily Press Association, Michigan Press Association, totol busiog traced by the FBI to the Hong Kong Seamans Union. An FBI intelligence report described the union this way: and "HKSU has voiced vehement opposition to United States European auto companies had maintained the Associated Collegiate Press, Michigan Collegiate Press (UPI)—Gov. Milliken said the Michigan Legislature this dissuades seamen from serving aboard ships carrying strat American standards could not be met. Association. Monday he opposes any attempt fall- materials to Vietnam. Conversely, the HKSU encourages searm „ Second class postage paid at East Lansing, Mich. Editorial to write into the Federal "Busing is a tool to help, to sail on ships bound for North Vietnam. KSU has approved and business offices at 345 Student Services Bldg., Michigan Constitution a total ban on among many other things, policy of placing Communist seamen on Western ships for tl State University, East Lansing, Michigan. achieve what I believe most » Meany repeats attacks .busing of school children to achieve integration. '• people want in this country-an purpose of sabotage or capture in the event of fi-ture hostility "Chinese seamen recruited in Hong Kong serve on ships callit Phones: In revealing his stand, he put integrated society," Milliken, at major world ports, thus providing an opportunity for cour AFL-CIO President George Meany accused President News 355-8252 himself on the opposite side of who will become chairman of service and intelligence collection." Classified Ads 355-8255 the issue from Michigan the Republican Governors The FBI report said tl Nixon on Monday in Miami Beach, Fla. of making Chinese shipjumpers in the United States had arrived in v overtures to world Communist leaders in an effort to Advertising 353-6400 Republican Sen. Robert Griffin, Conference this week, told an Business Office 355-3447 a prime sponsor of a movement interviewer, flying Liberian, Norwegian, British, Panamanian, Dutch, I: Swedish and Danish flags. open new trade markets for American corporation that Photographic 355-8311 for such an amendment in "I do not believe that it would Smugglers bringing aliens into the country charge from $100 would subject U.S. workers to cut-throat wage Congress. A resolution calling serve a useful purpose to $1,000 per person, authorities say. tj competition. for such an amendment passed prohibit this entirely," the governor said. "Therefore, I'm Dlustrative of the lucrative Montreal to New York smugglii - - Meany also repeated his attack on new wage controls not in favor of a constitutional operation is the case of Cheng Siu Shiu, a 30-year-old native imposed over labor's objections by Nixon's Pay Board, amendment to the federal Foochow, who deserted the Ship Pacific Princess in Montreal and said, "I don't see anyone around here or anywhere constitution which would do 1969 and lived in New York for more than a year before beii A big love affair. around the labor movement who is ready to buy the this." apprehended by the INS. swindle they're trying to impose on us in Washington." The governor said in discussing Making arrangements through a contact provided by a felloj busing, "which is a very crewman, Cheng agreed to pay $500 to be driven from Montre emotional area, we've got to to New York. The trip began at midnight when a Caucasian mi move rationally, unemotionally. whom he did not know appeared at the door of his hotel ai Bill to fight cancer We've got to do what we think escorted Cheng to a waiting automobile. to be right. We've got to Cheng arrived in New York City at 9 a.m. that morning recognize that busing can be a went to an address in Manhattan's Greenwich Village that The House voted 350 - 5 Monday in Washington for a very counterproductive thing, been provided by an acquaintance in Hong Kong. $1.6 billion bill to wage a For Cheng, the end result of his $500 investment was discovc three-year war on cancer but that within limitations it despite the American Cancer have uses." and deportation. Others have paid more dearly for even less. Society's intense campaign may for a Senate-passed rival measure. Passage by the House came after Republican leaders said President Nixon - who had endorsed the Senate version - now approves the House bill. This leaves it up to a Senate-House conference committee to settle on a compromise Haskell Shanks dies ALPHA LAMBDA DELTA Plant security guard Haskell Shanks, OFFERS who received a partial mechanical heart in an Aug. 11 operation, died THE MARIA LEONARD FELLOWSHIP Sunday at Sinai Hospital in Detroit of what doctors called "kidney failure THE ALICE CROCKER LLOYD FELLOWSHIP and problems related to it." The 63-year-old Shanks had been THE ADELE HAGNER STAMP FELLOWSHIP released from the hospital Sept. 18 and had been able to resume some of his normal routine such as short walks THE KATHRYN SISSON PHILLIPS FELLOWSHIP! and visits with friends. He returned to the hospital Oct. 4. HIE CHRISTINE YERGES CONWAY FELLOWSIIIl] Sinai Hospital spokesmen said death AND came to the suburban Warren man three months and three days after the THE MAY AUGUSTA BRUNSON FELLOWSHIP operation. The said the mechanical heart "continued to perform normally FOR GRADUATE STUDY right up until the very end." 1972-1973 The National Council of Alpha Lambda Delta announces that the fellowships for Miller to introduce bill graduate study listed above will be awarded for use The amount of each during the 1972-73 academic year. fellowship is $2000. Applicants will be judged on academic record, recommendations submitted,the soundness of the proposed project and State Rep. Marjorie Miller, D-Madison, said she would purpose, and need. introduce a women's rights bill in the Wisconsin Any member of Alpha Lambda Delta Assembly when the legislature resumes next January. cumulative average of graduating in 1969, 1970, or 1971 with a Ms. Miller will put the bill in at the Alpha Lambda Delta initiation standard is eligible. Graduating request of the 2nd seniors may apply if they have achieved this average at the end of the first semester (or Congressional District Women's Political Caucus, she first quarter) of this year. Attendance at a school which has a said. Lambda Delta is chapter of Alpha encouraged. The measure was expected to be similar to a national bill that passed the U.S. House of Application blanks may be obtained from the Associate Dean of Students office 155 Representatives last month. If that bill passes the U.S. Senate, it would pave Stroh's...From one beer lover to another. THBNTHOH HRPWSRY COMPANY OUT IK Student Services and submitted to the Building. The application must be filled out by the applicant Executive Secretary by January 5,1972. A complete transcript herself the way for an amendment to the U.S. Constitution of undergraduate and graduate work must be provided. giving women "equal protection of the law." Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Tuesday, November 16, 1971 Buckner hints at 5% fund limit Several items may be coming out of the ASMSU policy yrjC-TT*/ ' committee, including the motion that no organization or cabinet department may receive more than 5 per cent of the ASMSU ii budget during any fiscal year, Harold Buckner, ASMSU chairman said Tuesday. The 5 per cent issue is considered a good motion by some members and a bad one by others. Buckner feels that it has the potential of being a big issue if it comes before today's 7 p.ra. meeting in Holden Hall cafeteria. A motion to delete Section 12 in the Code of Operations was referred to the All-University Student Judiciary for interpretation. The motion may be discussed at the policy committee meeting and be brought up again at Tuesday's meeting. Section 12 states that ASMSU will not endorse a political candidate or a political party. The board will not contribute financially to any partisan political campaign either. However, ASMSU may endorse a political issue. A motion was also made at the Nov. 2 meeting suggesting Bottoms up adding Article 3 to Section 12. The article would read: "TTiis title shall not apply to registered student organizations whose primary function is that of student publication." This was also sent to policy committee. Autumn ^ oppurtunity for calisthenics proved too tempting for this workman he couldn't resist- a toe One motion concerning this issue may involve Shadows converge on this bridge near I touch while battling an uncooperative snow fence near the Adminstration Building. amending the constitution. If this is the case, the proposed amendment would east campus, hinting that sunny fall days will soon be State News photo by Jim Klein replaced by bleak winter afternoons. have to go before the student body for a vote. State News photo by Greg CAIkins uto price hikes need ■ASHINGTON (AP)—The clear their price boosts with the price increases of major companies could have increased itself and eliminated policy economic program, a committee \ of Livin8 Council wiped government in advance. companies before they go into prices without getting advance a ruling that companies suffering, of the Cost of Living Council funds and real estate investment trusts will be excluded from the stock is held by 500 or more i earlier exemption The council thus agreed with a effect. Price Commission clearance. people. Also subject to the losses could increase prices adopted guidelines to bring uu.y and ruled that request made Saturday night by If the exemption by restraints. standard are companies which granted late The council on Friday sufficient amounts to break about 10,000 companies under Xnobile companies and other Price Commission Chairman C. last week had been allowed to exempted from advance The committee said the 4 per must report under the 1934 lie firms paying newly Jackson Grayson, Jr., who said even. voluntary dividend restraints in cent standard will apply to any securities Exchange act or ■ stand, the automobile makers clearance procedures companies As the nation entered the 1972. Most dividend payments > wage increases must his panel wants a look at all and handfull company with total assets of insurance companies with capital a of other which have to pay new wage second day of Nixon's Phase 2 will be covered, although mutual more than $1 million and whose stock. increases between Nov. 14 and Jan. 1. The exemption had been Lompus BLFI granted because wage hikes were exempted from advance clearance procedures. REVISIONS DROPPED The automobile industry and a small number of other lonfunding fro companies fell into the category of firms contracts go that had new wage into effect after the Book sale rates upheld freeze and before New Year's Bookstore with the bookstore tnen I By WANDA HERNDON 1970 the BLFI had attended feasible. a to fund BL^I activities, BLFI day. reselling the texts for 75 per cent of its board of trustees "Last year's earnings report indicated | State News Staff Writer meeting will not cease to function on Nixon told the council that his original price. The Business Affairs that the bookstore actually operated at a Liberation Front demanding that the Center for campus because we have a program had reached a proper TTie year-and-a-half debate over revising Committee had recommended in May that ; Urban Affairs be given $1.5 commitment to black the MSU Bookstore's used book slight loss," Robert Little, chairman of the people balance buy-back the buy-back percentage be increased from lernational (BLFI) charges million. It had also taken over and intend to continue between too much Business Affairs Committee, said. assisting control and too little. "We have policy appears finished following a 50 to 60 per cent of a book's original price. "The bookstore's JJSU with a violation of the the African Studies center and them," Karega said. recommendation last week from the The change was to have been philosophy of ended up exactly on the right |dent code in that BLFI Wilson Hall demanding that "The BLFI has been operating Business Affairs Committee that the status implemented Sept. 1 but was postponed by operation is for neither loss nor gain. nbers are forced to pay their course," the President said. Therefore, it would not be feasible for the racism be ended. for over a year and a half Its to ASMSU, but the BLFI The board, by narrow votes, quo be maintained. the wage-price freeze and a request for a committee to recommend a change that "Because of these activities without our own tax dollars that The committee received a financial hearing in October by the East Lansing knot recieve any funds from BLFI came to be considered one previously has rejected would produce a loss," he said. ft student government," Chui the University makes BLFI retroactive wage report on the MSU Bookstore last commercial bookstore owners. of the most militant groups on payment in Detroit senior and members pay to ASMSU during Thursday from the administration which An earlier recommendation that books The committee rescinded its addition, the board is expected May er of information for the campus," Karfcga sitd. " ' registration and the present to decide whether teachers indicated that there are not any surplus be purchased at 50 per cent and resold at recommendation and informed the "During spring term 1970 ASMSU board has not made an should receive back funds to finance an increase in the 65 per cent was made in February, 1970. [Flsaid Monday. pay and how administration that it no longer feels BLFI supported the attempt to straighten out the merit percentage paid to the students selling back The State Attorney General ruled on the ja stated that the BLFI pay increases should be students can be offered 60 per cent for campus-wide student strike. blunder of the former board by treated. used textbooks. I to operate with its own legality of that recommendation stating used books. Student nonvoting members of Because of our stand on the allocating funds to the Currently, students are paid 50 per cent that the University could establish Is without the benefit of BLFI," The Price Commission reversed the committee Monday concured with the strike and our uncompromising Karega contended. of the original book price by the MSU whatever rates it deemed ly that is paid by them to financially decision. attitude with the MSU "The BLFI is not trying to Msu. community there was a intimidate anyone," Karega said. rega said ASMSU does not Sport BLFI activities even conspiracy within the former ASMSU board and a few "We're just trying to make the lugh it is a representative ' nt organization on University workers which MSU community aware of the campus I is supposed to receive aid produced a new black student facts," he added. In the student government. organization," Karega said. After the formation of this e present Sizes that the BLFI is alive ASMSU board new organization the Black United Front, the ASMSU took Qive 1 representing black people " w se it gave our organization space last week, but it still away the ALFI funds and funded new organization, Karega EAR. s ga said. to allocate us funds," said. "Even though ASMSU refuses AMM fcfaining the reasons for the f of financial support from Only I more ftSU, Karega said that during Save! Save! Save! Rent Your Television "SENIOR NIGHT" special Free Delivery Q50 CoKb Free Service Free Pick-up U per mo. Weekender Suits University TV Rentals for Miss J WEDNESDAY, NOV. 17 8 p.m. - 2 a 351-7900 gifts - contests - drink specials s50 ond $60 These great on-the-go threesomes CVftWirlt- of jacket, skirt and pant specially priced to give are you versatility at savings. Choose LANSING MALL MERIDIAN MALL from six styles in brown-tone solids; blue, green or brown Presents for Your Dining Pleasure tweeds; and navy/blue psday night special $1.57 Sizes 5-13. Wednesday night special $1.35 Nrsday night special $1.69 nay night special $1.59 rjURDAY Sirloin NIGHT SPECIAL of Beef w/Noodles _ $1.67 i open sunday 11:30 o.m. to 7:00 p.m. Jwnina Specials include roll, butter and beverage ami a choice of two of the JacdbBoriB owing: salad, potato, vegetable, dessert. JACOBSON'S OPEN THURSDAY AND FRIDAY EVENINGS UNTIL NINE MICHIGAN lichi ART BUCHWALD STATE NEWS o UNIVERSITY ln-riching times: JOHN JUEL editor-in-chief servant's memoirs KEN LYNAM Min°ri advertising manager irolln" WASHINGTON — The story concerning outsider DAVE PERSON, managing editor Aristotle Onassis' 170-cIause marriage looking in on a world CHARLES C. CAIN, city editor get to see. We're asking $100 00n !'1 There contract with the former Jacqueline °' JOHN BORGER, campus editor Kennedy, es described by Onassis' chief bf!g'Vemeyouranswer'in24jlW After the agent levant'1 BARNEY WHITE, editorial editor RICK GOSSELIN, sports editor steward, and denied by Ms. Onassis' "I've got owe of hung up he Rockefeller's turnip eport dmiss'1 secretary, points up the hazard that only the maids writing a book rich must deal with. And that is: on what 114 m Rockefeller s basement when wenu liberal Seven.time recipient of the Pacemaker award "How does one find a faithful butler who Han* for outstanding Albany. And I have a ghostw ^*' journalism. has no desire to write his memoirs?" By accident, I happened to be in the office with Henry Ford's titled 'What Christina ex-ctS^0' Ford DMZ a of a literary agent the other u phone didn't stop ringing. day, and his Ford When He Got a Better "That should sell. You Idea^" ,ughtei iimp°s seem tn h EDITORIALS This is some of what I heard. "Hello, yes, Jim, I was going to call you market for the ex-employes of von/ iecial i people," I said. ^ r aractP this morning. No, I couldn't find any one else on the Onassis yacht who had "We have a saying in thp n..ki: L ' The ^ j' anything business: 'In every ex-butler theS 1!!« Monetary to add to the chief steward's memoirs, but memoir would you be interested in a book written screaming to get out." The phone rang again. imissio by Elizabeth Taylor's former hairdresser. "Hello, ah illegeA yes. Mr. McMurtrv It's got some very juicy chapters in it. He was Souffle Chef at ♦Thee Employment Agency told present when Liz cut Richard Burton's ear stu disaster you would call. You worked ,te Our national forests in danger. fo lobe with her diamong ring. Right, I'll send you over the manuscript." The agent hung up and the phone rang Kennedy as a cook? How long1) Th weeks? That's marvelous. for p What have got? She served red wine with fish atadii lminat< pee use * MSI'. The are for as long as man is here to use them. again. "Doubleday? George, thanks for she gave for Andy Williams? How soon Covering one-tenth of the nation's The national forests by law are returning my call. Remember the gardener I you get over here? Good, and embei told you about who worked for Frank don't tal area, these preserves have long been supposed to fulfill six functions: anybody about this." Sinatra? Yeh, the guy who was fired when "I guess there's a lot of considered limitless. But the recreation, watershed maintainance, money inbei they found him in a tree at midnight looking servant these days," I said. „hed: " country's biggest single reservoir of wildlife preservation, timber into Sinatra's bedroom. Well he's just "If you work for the lissecti material and recreational resources is written book titled 'A Tree Grows at right person at reryone production, grazing and mining. But a right time, there Is a fortune to be made I now being threatened by both as the Times investigation showed, Midnight.' It's told from the viewpoint of an sold Putnam the used biography of the main physical abuse and imbalanced some of these functions such as to clean Bebe Rebozo's swinim national policy. recreation or wildlife preservation pool. It's titled 'Backwash at Key Biscay Much of the crisis in our forests have been impaired or compromised AP NEWS ANALYSIS "I'd buy that." "I also have a deal stems from poor management by the cooking with oi by the present administration's high ex-President Johnson's ranch hands Forest Service Bureau of the Dept. of priorities towards timber production, kept a diary of what happened during Agriculture. Its preoccupation with the forests' commercial roles has grazing and mining-the commercial functions. Economic reform in S.Vietnam opening of the Johnson Library in Aust "Juicy?" "It's going to shake up a lot of librariai severely impaired their development By CARLD. ROBINSON The phone rang again. "Hello for public uses. As a result of this driving interest in ... yeh 235-million piaster budget comes from such the commercial aspects of the forests' Associated Press Writer yeh. You were? Can you prove it?... In a six-month investigation into the funds, and all of that 60 per cent goes to pay SAIGON (AP) — Years of war and billions President Nixon's you're willing to talk about it? You problem, reported by the New York management, timber cutting foreign aid bill. the 1.1 - million - man army. Equipment and I'm interested. I'll see you at five." ... of American aid dollars have given South The Senateactionmight goad the National Times, the Forest Services was operations have become increasingly Vietnam an Alice - in - Wonderland economy military hardware are granted under the "Who was that?" I asked. Assembly into accepting Thieu's proposals. foreign aid and military procurement bills. indicted for its gross environmental abusive. For example, in order to "It's the gal who used to work for Mai leaving President Nguyen Van Thieu a Conversely, Thieu's program could persuade South Vietnam's plunge into a consumer Mitchell's answering service." neglect. The inquiry revealed that: satisfy timber demand, excessive choice between austerity and chaos. Washington congressmen to reconsider $565 economy started during the U.S. military He has apparently decided to make million in aid to Vietnam. Copyright 1971, Los Angeles Times 'disad • Bulldozers and tractors are boring cutting is done in one tract to balance buildup in 1965 when luxury items were consumers tighten their belts. Sources close In any event, reform would come none too ndiscrim into the last remnants of virgin the low levels of cutting in another imported by the shipload to soak up to the Economics Ministry predict Thieu soon in a consumer - oriented wilderness. tract. will propose radical reforms including a economy where the piaster's value fluctuates wildly, rampant inflation. LETTER POLICY • Economists are now having second Clear-cutting-the process of devaluation of the piaster. imports exceed exports nearly 50 to 1 and stidenti The administration has argued that The informants said Wednesday that thoughts. They are seeking to draw surplus The State News welcomes all let It too completely stripping forest production is near a standstill. money into savings accounts, investment They must be typed (preferably t tracts-has left thousands of bald without more timber from the Thieu will recommend a flat rate of 400 Although the nation was supposed to anmissii projects and into government hands through 65-space line and triple - spaced, dated, ivstallizt national forests, lumber prices would piasters to the dollar, a clampdown on the achieve self - sufficiency in rice this year, patches in the forests, some of which black market in currency and goods, a U.S. economists say it will again have to heavier taxation. signed with the hometown, stud soar and crimp the administration's may never grow back. revamped tax structure, measures to faculty or staff standing and local ph import American rice to make do between Foreign investment is seen by Vietnamese S • Archaic laws and regulations are housing program. President Nixon,.in increase exports and decrease imports, apd number included. No unsigned letter crops. Now : they predict agricultural economists ' fact, has asked that national forest reform of current laws to encourage foreign as an Important factor in be accepted for publication, and no li allowing choice expanses of forests to maturity next year. stabilizing the economy and lessening will be printed witnout a signature ex be gouged and scarred by mining timber production be increased 50 per investment. South Vietnam maintains its army, police dependence on foreign aid. A bill passed last in highly unusual circumstances. Le cent by 1978-primarily to helpmeet He is expected to present the austerity and civilian bureaucracy mostly from funds operations. year by the National Assembly is too should be addressed to The Editor, £ • projected needs for housing timber. package Monday to South Vietnam's generated by the U.S. aid program. restrictive, they feel, and new reforms are Nearly half the forests' forage legislators, many of whom awoke to their More than 60 per cent of the country's News, 345 Student Services Bldg., V. The timber needs could largely be needed to encourage such investment. East Lansing, Mich. 48823. areas have been overgrazed or otherwise rendered substandard. met, however, simply by reducing • Pressures for increased timber timber exports, which now are dividual production have led to extensive running about 5 billion board-feet a STEVER ALLEN aedential violations of spirit, if not the letter, of year. But the Administration, liability, laws intended to preserve the forests ironically refuses to consider that alternative. MISPLACED MEMO To: McDonald's Clearly, if our national forests are to be saved from eventual destruction, the Administration must properly So good, even when straight Re: Your balance its priorities towards the "savings experience" forests' commercial and Dear Jon Landau of "Rolling Stone" put the outstanding component's of NRPS's Pragmatists — noncommercial functions. sound. The groups themselves have also gotten The West Coast groups are not the ■ current rock music situation into a very Subgroups and solo efforts allow better. CSN&Y's "Four Way Street" totally Environmental precaution must be ones getting their sound together. ChicJ proper perspective . Something may be Individual members of a group to seek out We are more than pleased with the balanced reasonably with fiscal justified the Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young live four album set shows that the grou# wro.ig with the rock scene, but it certainly different directions for their talents. extra change for our dollar. We concept: do your own thing, but let's all get learned to jam. Apparently, they no lor demands. If the wholesale destruction isn't the music. Over the past few months Working on one's own means an end to together once and a while and play our guts duplicate their records on stage as the, deserved a break someday. of our national forests is not stopped, rock has finally decided to make some conforming to the demands of other out. Side TTiree of "Four Way Street" is a group at the Open Air Celebration on cam* Americans may someday find forward movement again. members. This individual experimentation pure delight; it alone is worth the price of year and a half ago. They have fw In essence what has happened is that has been most effective in the cases of David - Ronald McDonald Fan Club themselves unable to see the forest for the record. The acoustic performances of, established themselves as something be" everyone has given up on looking to the Crosby and Neil Young who, through their yes, Crosby and Young provide some of the the concrete. Beatles for musical wisdom. The Liverpool solo albums, have totally transcended album's other better moments. a poor man's BS&T, which is exactljl four's passing from the scene is no longer anything CSN&Y will ever hope to do as a way they started out. The original BS&l Jefferson Airplane's "Bark" has more bite being moumed. Instead it is being endured. group. The two instrumental tracks of had some personnel changes. Their 1 than many critics are willing to admit. For effort "BS&T 4" is nearly as good Groups have finally decided in order for the Crosby's solo albums constitute the most the first time the Airplane do not as| rock stagnation of 1970 to end, the groups original work of the year. On the surface literally first album and approaches their clP Fed inv themselves experiementation. will have to conduct the they sound like infantile easy listening music. But there is much more in the grab you by your out as in the past on throat and turn you inside (how couldn't you get off "Volunteers"?). On "Bark" you must second album. They are BS&T David Clayton-Thomas' back-up Thank goodness. againj |— underlying piano, percussion and guitar meet the Airplane halfway. The first cut Rock is in good shape once a A key factor in the termination of rock's exchanges. Young's dramatic style has "When the Earth Moves dark age (which we can say started after become more mature, as evidenced by Again" is the best take my word for it, however. Run o™ Kantner composition ever, but one of the record shops and buy "Abbey Road" got old) you'll never y°ujT 'Schoee'-ly was the concept of "Don't Let It Bring You Down" and "I realize this until you stack of the new stuff, put it on your si the great American band. Group boundary Believe in You" on his "After the Gold really listen. TTiisisthe best Airplane album since "After and listen-the proof of the rock lines have become less stringent. The last Rush" album. Baxter's". Bathing at revivw| Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young studio album record. It's even good when you res "P had John Sebastian, late of the Lovin The fourth estate and President individual Nixon have been at odds throughout reporter by the Nixon Spoonful, and Jerry Garcia of the Dead as OUR READERS' MIND administration. Granted the President sidemen. Hie new Band album has Van the past decade. The "You won't have has every right to joust with the press Morrison doing one of the vocals. More Nixon to kick around anymore" speech, the battle over the Pentagon Papers, and the scourging attacks in an atmosphere of open debate. Nixon takes enough criticism from the nation's news media to be fully people are playing with each other and learning from each other's strengths and weaknesses. So many people are playing Rape: To the Editor: women must police to defend and protect us against fight back if it is sheathed and visible. against the press of Nixon's faithful entitled to return the favor from time together than one can almost think of there Your paper has reported two rapes at sexual crimes. A recent series in the Detroit ^ma"y°.J being only one group: Crosby, Stills, Nash, Free visibly armed, and ready to * sidekick Spiro have marked low knifepoint in Sanford Woodlot in the last Press publicized the tremendous to time. Garcia, bsh, Kantner, Slick, Kaukonen, ourselves, the rapist who is looking 1 points of this relationship. Casady, Sebastian, Santana, Rolie, FYieberg, two weeks. Both show the same mode of difficulty a woman will face if she attempts passive victim will be foiled; M Nonetheless, there is a distinct to bring a rapist to The nadir however most Hopkins, Robertson, Dylan, Morrison, King, operation: a woman walking alone is court; convictions are becomes much more serious. I* assuredly difference between pawing at the almost impossible to obtain Taylor, and Young. approached by a man who threatens her (though the attacked, sister, become angry. 1 occurred last week with the FBI entire press in public and seeking to with a knife, rapes her in the woods, and chances improve if there is evidence that the Defend yourself! You are fighting no J investigation of Daniel Schorr, CBS discredit individual reporters. Schorr Subgroups of name groups have also threatens to kill her if she reports the crime. woman has struggled against the aggressor.) for yourself but for other women w News White House foruied. While Marty Balin was As a result, women are afraid to walk We cannot depend on male correspondent. and Nixon's relationship in the past justice to protect man may attack later. Schorr's contemplating his future with the Airplane, alone. Culturally, women are afraid to or defend women against sexual crimes. neighbors and colleagues indicates the highest White House were questioned by FBI agents last post the President would have offered Jorma Kaukonen and Jack Casady got tired defend themselves. This fear, and the fear of We women can depend only on ourselves; The self-perpetuating r0"1'"! of waiting around and went out and formed physical harm, contribute to the passive role we must be our own strength and defense. I aggression and passivity hast0.s:. ?„,< week. When the this Hot Tuna, a blues oriented group which has news of this newsman would have been in of the woman in rape and ultimately help propose that all women concerned about the now, with the determination ot investigation broke, the White House janitorial duties in the basement. The plowed some new rows in the area of guitar create the total emotional climate in which prospect of forcible rape begin to openly be victimized no more! responded by claiming Schorr was White House has still not mentioned exchange patterns. Also Paul Kantner and forcible rape is an outlet chosen by a man to carry weapons such as a hat pin in a coat being examined for a post high within the job for which Schorr was being Grace Slick have been doing a great deal of vent his aggressive sexual feelings. lapel or a sheathed knife on a purse strap. I Ridgewood,N.J-«f Nov. 11.1 work on their own—spreading revolution understand it is legal to carry a sheath knife the Nixon Obviously women cannot depend on male administration, making considered. Schorr himself doesn't from inside a Rolls, but laying down some such an examination routine, even know. good music in the balance. even The most outstanding I'VE BROKEN THE BLANKET THAT'5 THE 5CR6AMIN6 Al necessary. of all the subgroups This explanation President Nixon clearly lowered himself and his office by conducting yet to appear is the New Riders of the Purple HABIT! I MADE iTTHRotASH AND I DID IT SHOUTING AND PJJjg rapidly became THE UEEKENP UlTHOl/T Sage. Those who saw the Grateful Dead in THE 6(?0yNPANP*N6Al^ the fashionable joke of the week within Washington circles. However, the Schorr investigation. The President can promote his political concert last March at Jenison can testify to the quiet, deliberate effectiveness of this blanket! i DID IT! i DIP IT! MY wavJ! oirr of voufcSELf ww- lraP( such harassment of reporters is no future much more easily and group's pure country sound. The quality of \u~. JI Reside laughing matter. The Schorr their debut album compares favorably with Admissi effectively by taking affirmative ^nth. investigation marks the first clear action in national and international Dylan's masterpiece "Nashville Skyline". instance of John Dawson's songwriting and Jerry "lake f j intimidation of an affairs than by harassing his critics. Garcia's banjo and steel guitar are the most Ljchigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Tuesday, November 16, 1971 Admissions report a.. By mHMRfinr.fB JOHNBORGER ' ■ covers vital issues State News Staff Writer „ritv admissions . . . male • female News Analysis I.P0 Lent ratios . . .the educational role of inadequately represented in institutions of recommends. "As soon as a special student h . the impact of community higher education. has maintained K transfer students. Once these areas had been a grade point average of 2.0 I" s js no lack of importance or commisson went on to defined, the or better for three consecutive terms, he develop detailed should enter regular status." u u«nce to the subjects covered by the procedures which the r 0f the Presidential Commission on with students in these University could use Financial aid should continue after categories. admission to regular status, the commission I? issions and Student Body Composition. recommends. 114 months of commission hearings and To widen access to the University, the The commission urges increased "We're talking about improving what we Liberations, discussion of these and related commission recommends the use of admissions categories: a two recruitment and admission of economically have and doing it better. Right now, we're regular admissions disadvantaged students, in a number l'Ttie bewilderment and bitter frustration category for most students, who qualify for probably further ahead in these areas than L Detroit businessman who found his aHmkcifin „~T~ViT' 'dependent upon the resources available to most other universities. MSU is well along abi lity as measured '^ University f„, their adequate L chter rejected from MSU because of an by acnievement tests and While some freshmen in this category would support.'; the way to becoming a pluralistic tflLosing academic record, but who saw high school records; and a special admissions be admitted, the commission urges that institution. We should not convey the K admission granted to a youth he category for those who are admitted r primarily emphasis be placed on the admission of impression that we 're about to begin. " ctcri/cd as a "black revolutionary." on evidence of academic potential f» rather economically disadvantaged juniors and President Wharton, addressing sometimes pleading, sometimes than - The on the basis of previously graduate students, reasoning that Landing requests of community college demonstrated performance. the final meeting of the Commission Students likely to be accorded community colleges can play a similar role 5 to have MSU grant automatic special on the freshman level. on Admissions and Student Body ■mission to any holder of a community admissions status are not EL Associate of Arts degree. necessarily minority students, nor are they necessarily This emphasis upon having special Composition, July 23,1971 admissions contingent upon available Kiphe quiet disillusionment of the out - of - urban, nor are they necessarily poor, but financial resources is conceived not so lite students who asked the University to they are educationally disadvantaged," the much as a way of tainate the "snow job" publicity barrage commission notes. keeping students out as a method for insuring the success of those f used to recruit National Merit Scholars who are admitted. As the The commission recommends commission Imsu. that the notes admission of early in its report: "Entrance to the |« The dry attempt at humor of the educationally disadvantaged University for students be any student becomes a cruel Ifinber of the commission's drafting University's ability contingent upon the joke unless the University is structured to Tmmittee who, in presenting the section of to provide them with adequate financial aid and support services. meet his needs and maximize the chances n students to the full commission, for his academic success." Under the commission's : "What we should have done is leave guidelines, a The commission recommends increased student who is admitted under the Bisection blank and attach a pencil and let admissions program would in effect special recruitment of minority students on the Lryone write it for him or herself." into a contract with the enter freshman junior and graduate level. But upper division of a- four-year institution ■ There is little of the Tire of the testimony Unversity. the report establishes no rigid quotas for clearly where the responsibility for documents. The University would commit itself should have the same chance for admission resent in the commission's final report. In to minority enrollments. The commission implementation of the various Since the report is advisory to the providing the student with all the financial to that upper division as a student who flmparison with testimony ana discussion, aid needed to supplement his own urges that admissions criteria for minority recommendations lies, from the president to president, Wharton is now free to do with JL report itself seems almost bland. This is and a full range of academic earnings students (as opposed to minority students spends his first two years of college at the senior institution, provided he has the same the academic departments to the state the report as he wishes. He will decide which trhaps to be expected, for the final report services needed to and support who may also be educationally or legislature. recommendations involve major policy L to satisfy a commission whose members develop the academic economically disadvantaged) be no different academic qualifications. Nevertheless, the future of the document decisions which must be brought to the potential he is deemed to have. "Judgments will need to be made about L(jbeen deliberately chosen to reflect every from those of all other regular admittances. rests almost exclusively with President board of trustees for approval, which may be "Support services must be directed to the comparability of courses and of the ujor conceivable segment of students, Given the current pressing need for Wharton. implemented on his own authority and jcuity,alumni and the general public. developing in specially - admitted students levels of achievement they represent," the Wharton has already had a great deal of which will be the abilities developing an educational plan in the area of quietly shunted aside and Ilhe unemotional tone of the report is a necessary to deal effectively with the same range of minority/disadvantaged students, it is not report acknowledges. "The systematic influence on the report. He and Provost ignored. V| factor in its effectiveness, however. One programs available to collection of data on the educational John E. Cantlon attended nearly all surprising that the commission devoted so Use of a broadly representative M the major questions which it examines is regularly admitted students," the report much time and effort to this study. It is achievement of transfer students from given commission meetings, though they carefully commission to produce an admission report L of the admission of minority and/or stresses. "There is no place in the institutions should in time improve the basis University unfortunate, however, that time limitations avoided direct involvement in the places Wharton in a position of strength no for such judgments, and thus serve the best advantaged students, a subject which has commission's decisions. And the matter what his implementation decisions interests of prospective transfer students." io often been discussed primarily with commission utilized several of Wharton's may be. For those segments he chooses to .notions based on prejudices of all kinds. Meanwhile, the commission stresses that speeches on the role of education as resource the University has "an implied contract with (Please turn to page 6) IToo frequently in discussions of this sort, The commission recommends increased its lower lerms like "black" and "minority" and recruitment of minority students on the - division students which guarantees them access to upper - division Jdisadvantaged" have been used freshman, junior and graduate level. But the status if they meet the prescribed criteria." "A reasonable projection of MSU's role idiscriminately and interchangeably. This report establishes no rigid quotas for minority "Satisfactory performance at the lower - for the 1970s and beyond suggests that it is served only to cloud the issue, for enrollment. The commission urges that division level and completion of University - will continue a strong undergraduate >ugh the categories may overlap, thf re are admissions criteria for minority students (as wide requirements ought to guarantee to a program with an increasing emphasis at the Jot identical. student the opportunity to enter some I It took more than a year for the opposed to minority students who may also be upper division. A larger proportion of its to both realize this fact and to upper - division program," the report says. n educationally or economically disadvantaged) This program, however, would not resources will be utilized in graduate and stallize the distinctions. But the time was be no different from those of all other regular necessarily be the student's first or even graduate - professional education, and a til spent, for the following definitions admittances. second preference. significantly larger base of support will lomprise what is probably the most need to be found to provide the necessary contribution the report has to Community colleges and minority/disadvantaged students receive a major share of attention in the commission's financial resources. Coincidental with this •"Educationally disadvantaged — Those for 'soft' courses or programs with courtesy kept the commission from treating other report. But there is more, much more, to it emphasis on graduate and graduate - idividuals who have academic potential, grades." professional education will be a special and often - neglected types of than that. Jrttwho, because of their economic, cultural ■(educational The speciplly admitted student would in students as carefully. The report, for example, strongly favors continuation and enlargement of research background or environment, turn explicitly commit himself to reduced Women students, for example, are dealt retention of academic activities as an essential means of keeping pill be unable to realize that potential credit loads and long-range academic plans flexibility. with only in two rather innocuous Irithout special support services." "Flexibility should be protected by a such programs abreast of new based, provisionally on 15 to 18 quarters, recommendations which urge no continuation, of the no-preference option [• "Economically disadvantaged — Those accompanied by developmental work that discrimination on the basis of sex and equal and by freedom to change majors in spite of developments and of contributing to the Individuals who possess acceptable academic would round out his academic schedule to a applicaton of admissions criteria to men and the administrative complexities and the cost quality of instruction. A significant pedentials but who, because of financial full work load each quarter. women, with no set quotas to determine the to the University," the report states. increase will also doubtless occur in applied disability, are inadequately represented in This course load would be accompanied proportion of men and women students. The report strongly endorses research as research and public service, conceived of in Institutions of higher education." by regular use of developmental services as Physically handicapped students, older an educational tool, which "should new and broader ways. Public •Minority students — Those individuals determined in consultation with his students, honors students, foreign students problem - influence and invigorate the teaching and rbopossess acceptable academic credentials academic adviser. and out of state students are also given a solving, like research, is contingent upon - • public service functions." |but who, because of prejudice and "All terms of special admission status symbolic pat on the hand and quickly It advocates maintaining an undergraduate finding the necessary resources. Above all, discrimination on account of their race, should be explicitly defined as temporiiry brushed aside. if the University is to meet its challenges student body "at least as large as the present Icolor or national origin, have been and contingent," the commission The only area which receives treatment one." effectively, its goals and priorities must be comparable to that given It recommends no fixed ceilings for total articulated and understood; its resources minority/disadvantaged students is that of University enrollment, but says the size of must be managed. Some the role of community colleges and programs which academic units with the University should are either no longer essential or four-year college admission of community be determined by: the availability of needlessly college transfer students. educational opportunities elsewhere in the duplicate those elsewhere in the state will The commission urges the University to state; the availability of resources and have to be eliminated so that these place much of the responsibility for facilities on campus; societal needs and resources may be redistributed. This is a two-year programs and early education of employment opportunities; student interest crucial point; indeed, if Michigan State economically disadvantaged students upon in specific programs and the conscious the community colleges; consequently, it is allocation of University is truly to exercise educational resources on the basis of concerned that graduates of community predetermined priorities. leadership, it must demonstrate the colleges be assured of an opportunity to It urges that radically new instructional capability to terminate programs that are continue their education. methods be tried and evaluated. no longer relevant. Leadership in the years "A single institution cannot (guarantee a It recommends a comprehensive and ahead will depend on the ability to say / ♦ place for all community college graduates), coordinated support services program. It "no" or "no longer" rather than simply 4~; but the commission considered this a goal urges fuller use of the summer quarter. "yes," and the willingness to turn over to which might well be achieved by some It recommends rewarding good academic "I cooperative arrangement among educational institutions," the report says. "A student who attends a community advising as well as good teaching. And it urges the University to "take immediate steps to strengthen its others repsonsibility for programs that they are best equipped to handle, so that energies and attention can be redirected." as college and completes an academic program which qualifies him for admision to the contributions to life-long education." - Report of the Presidential Commission on A chart at the end of the report shows Admissions and Student Body Composition FOR PROPOSED PROGRAMS Panel studied fin commission's own study), but on the whole requires a simultaneous reduction in out and encouraged to continue their the University must expect a fairly stable another." education. The needed support (financial, economic situation and plan accordingly. •"The University should not offer personal and academic) should be provided. Throughout the report of the Presidential Thus the report is filled with statements of two-year programs in areas where Each institution must interpret its Commission on Admissions and Student responsibilities towards the disadvantaged in general principle and specific community colleges can and should meet Body Composition, there is a deep concern recommendations like: emerging needs." accordance with the totality of its with money. •"Resources are and will continue to be a educational roles and resources." The commission's recommendations — •"Many of the recommendations ... are paramount concern." contingent upon the availability of financial which give much attention to minority •"The commission urges that no new •"The recommendations of this report resources." students, community college transfer graduate-professional program be accepted But the concern with costs does not essentially place two sorts of demands on students and students who are economically — whatever the demonstrable social need - deveolve into simple nay-saying. There are financial resources. First, the University or educationally disadvantaged — are both until institutional support for the entire priority areas which, the commission says, should assume roles that will complement experimental and costly. University is adjusted to meet current fiscal must be adequately funded: those of other public institutions, roles And because they are costly, the realities and until the University has been •"The University has an obligation to which imply more upper-division commission frequently considers the assured that the necessary resources will be support research from its own funds instruction, more graduate instruction, and problem of where the money will come made available for the new program." (particularly in the arts and humanities, more life-long education. from. •"The University should exercise great where outside funds are virtually "Second, the University should make its Its answer echoes the sentiments of Commission President Wharton's 1971 State of the caution in embracing new and expensive research programs until sufficient financial non-existent). . . The commission asks only that (research) be carried on in a manner programs more widely accessible to the people of the state by admitting many types University address: Funds for important support is provided to sustain such programs I J "**> over '"Hey, executive director of the commission, and President Wharton new areas of educational experimentation on a continuing basis." absolutely consistent with the other major announced functions and priorities of the of students previously excluded or underrepresented. Should tht.se students be an early meeting of the Presidential Commission on must be found by reordering priorities with •"The always difficult question of how to I University." educationally deficient, this commitment fissions and Student Body Composition. The Commission finished 14 the University itself. allocate new resources becomes the far more "The failure to educate students of implies large expenditures for extensive JJfti k« of deliberations this summer, but it took another four months to Outside funds are available to (a grant from the Rockefeller Foundation, some extent difficult one of how to reallocate existing ftinds." low-income families, whatever their race or academic support services; thould they be s* <» — ~ '« Bangla Desh is the name East Pakistan Parliament on the first day of its back, he said, but Indian forces consequent influx of refugees to adopted bv five-week winter session. province's rebels did not cross the border. India. She has in the past called for create fighting R.H.A. Presents: "Let us continue to conduct The spokesman said he was pressure form outside powers to an independent state central Pakistani ourselves with quiet confidence not aware of a statement made encourage a political settlement dominated by governiii in ourselves so that the world in Parliament earlier by Defense She said she found more in East Pakistan that would Moslems, West Pakistan on the Director's should see and know that India Minister Jagjivan Ram which awareness of the situation other return the estimated 9 million of India. cannot be browbeaten or lulled contradicted his version of the into a false sense of security." Shikarpur battle. Later, a Defense Ministry Ram told Parliament that milar t< spokesman charged Pakistani Indian forces have instructions Series forces with provocations a score of over along India's eastern and military to engage any Pakistani armed the weekend western personnel who cross into India but said the Pakistanis so far MSU admissions report niversil (resident ist Li borders. have not had the courage to INGMAR BERGMAN'S important issues He also said an estimated 135 Pakistani troops were killed, a crossover. Ram also asserted that since covers number taken wounded prisoner and when several mid-October almost four military might of Pakistan has the entire (Continued from page 5) report notes, l\A! Pakistani battalions launched an been report, one thing is certain:! deployed along India's implement or recommend to the "Experimentation in the not long remain a dry report. attack on a border outpost last frontiers in operational trustees for implementation, he pursuit of knowledge fully Friday about northeast of Calcutta. 140 miles readiness, He added that since then can cite a broad base of support, With those segments he ignores, justifies such endeavors; it The emotional commission took concerns r. of m< The spokesman said provides the needed direction and fighting frequent border fights have Wharton need only point out that sense of purpose without which educational community flared around the outpost near erupted between security forces the report, by its own admission, condensed and crystallized t they stand but little chance for Shikarpur, about two miles and Pakistani troops. Battles is nothing more than a guideline The into as objective a repor inside the Indian success. desire for border, nearly broke out this weekend along for experimentation. educational anyone has a right to exp excellence should India's eastern border areas in When the recommendations carry with it a willingness to be Itudent the states of Assam, Tripura and implemented, their effects wi To wrong; and excellence can best be theduled northern West Bengal, he said. maxim ize the return on the felt on a day - to - achieved when efforts to achieve day.subje* As ol But details on all the reported University s investment, its |t are conceived of as An Integral level, and the emotion will ret clashes were sketchy because the expenditure of human and foyder-I of the University's entire latest r spokesman said, "We don't have financial resources, this The effects of the report educational program." Indents the reports yet." experimental framework must be both lauded and condemned, whatever is done with the to even Ms. Gandhi said her kept constantly in mind, the they will be difficult to ignore The l Another extraordinary double feature bout 50 from Beat Film Group FRANCOIS TRUFFAUT'S tefugee 1 Prostitutes solicit truce ia residi it dinnei SHOOT THE fWNO Percent! "Trulfaut's Film Busts Out All Over" -a r, PJAYER at 7 and 10:55 in firecracker, ink battl FIUGGI, Italy (AP) Nestore Evangelisti said Sunday — Builder Some said they couldn't children out to play. let p at otl ollows: The landmark he has reached a compromise with prostitutes he had bombed Evangelisti blamed the girls his trouble in filling apartm 4e< with ink and firecrackers from a vacancies in the development low flying helicopter to shoo them away from his plush apartment complex. villas, apartments and a nine l golf course southeast of Rome Sov "I think the war is over," said Twice, on Wednesday and ag ox F ( Evangelisti, 42, p.fter peace talks on Friday, Evangelisti flew AP)—So with the girls. "The girls have his helicopter over 10 girls ply tndreevi agreed to stay at least 200 meters their trade outside the comple irector < from the gate of the complex." gates. When he got within ran limed at Masterpie is the only word to describe this motion picture." Many residents complained to he dumped gallons of black if the H-t TIMES, LONDON Evangelisti about the prostitutes, and handfuls of delayed act us suff. 'Best Film of the Year" firecrackers. Word Pauline Knel On Friday, the senior prostit were told r MICHELANGELO ANTONIONI'S made a "surrender" sign as' The 62 the Soviet and her companions fi md Lenin dropping ink. Then Evangel and the girls met for peacemak make talks. Merton Cc Admission to both of these outstanding motion pictures is $1.50. ID is not required for this program. Tonight in Conrad Aud. 7:30 Students, faculty, and staff only •IF WE GET THROUGH THIS BLOODY BUSINESS WE CAN THANK ALL THE GODS THERE ARE PLUS THE SUPREME BEING, AND MAKA KALI, MOTHER OF ALL. WHAT ARE WE HERE FOR IF NOT TO ENJOY LIFE ETERNAL, SOLVE WHAT PROBLEMS WE CAN,GIVE LIGHT.PEACE AND JOY TO OUR I.D.'s required FELLOW MAN AND LEAVE THIS DEAR. MESSED UP PLANET A LITTLE HEALTHIER THAN WHEN WE WERE BORN ."HENRY MILLER THE HENRY MILLER ODYSSEY Both films for only i"a film portrait of a diabolically truthful man " $1.50 UNIVERSITY AUDITORIUM WEDNESDAY NOV. 17 7:30 and 9:30 P.M. ■MSU STUDENTS $1.00 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan iuesday, November 16, 1971 7 Illusionist gives KA*EN ZURAWSKI Show signs of life. State News Staff Writer which covers the trends and After a brief intermission, Cole Cole, who at 12 was called makes educated guesses as to the " J* «-=- 'church-anity' but Christianity, a Strains of Aquarius drifted "the world's greatest spoke to the audience about his personal relationship." junior future, he said. He reminded the Men's IM Arena magician," also amazed the discovery of CampusLife, where IffiHats audSenw that they would not be the iiphasis is "not on Referring to 27 signs in the Sunday night announcing the audience with his feat of Bible which fAiuiti; r impressed if they remembered signify the coming appearance of Andre Cole, billed extrasensory perception. Five as "America's the failu as well as the ,of Christ, Cole said they were all leading illusionist" members of the audience in a puff of smoke. successe uccesses. Jeanne Dixon Texas city picks present and picked out five for brought up objects for Cole to Russia" would bTthe Cole, sponsored by Campus identify, changed the position of predicted official flower to closer scrutiny. According to f,rst to land on the moon :- Cole, famine, war and Crusade, delighted a MSU colored scarfs on a rack or wrote 1968, he noted. She also said the honor war dead audience ot audience of nearlj earthquakes are increasing just as nearly 500, just as a word on a card. Vietnam War would end in PORT ARTHUR, Te the Bible predicted 2,000 years 1'; • * • •' *'''''' he has Perf°rmed before many Cole, with half dollars covering 1965, 1966 and 1967, he said. (AP)—The Oleander has been ago. More importantly, he fry \' 1 _ people all over the f "" 'in world, his eyes and" tape ' over that, He also involved the audience named this city's official flower, stressed the establishment of th< person and on television. identified the watch, coke bottle The city council adopted it The traditional tricks were all by having a volunteer willing to state of Israel, and its possession and ring, in addition to choosing use the Chinese guillotine and after a chamber of commerce of Jerusalem as signs of the there: a woman sawed in half, the right colored scarf and committee pointed out that card and scarf tricks and conjured up the ghost of Edgar coming of Christ. jokes guessing the word, Allen Poe and other spirits; a Oleanders on Port Arthur's such as the one about a Chinese For those who disbelieved his Seawall Drive, planted in 1932, bottle of spirits. He also magician called Tom, who came ability, he remarked "if it was a are a memorial to local presented one the tricks from his from Peiping and was referred to trick, at least it was servicemen who lost their lives in a pretty show "World of Illusion" where as Peiping Tom. good trick." The audience a living Statue of Liberty military actions. The crazy lady also made an agreed, appeared in a puff of smoke NOW SHOWING appearance. In a trick similar to '' I don't claim any from revolving globe. Taming a rillfo the sawed lady, a woman is supernatural powers that any placed in an upright box, plates eight-year-old couldn't do with put through her, and then a wide 15 years of practice," Cole said, ELEC. HEATERS Warner Bros, presents I The ivy grows in mysterious ways at Abrams Planetarium a Getty and Fromkess - ironically, it never seems to section of the mid-drift production Cole expressed concern about | completely cover the nameplate prominently displayed near the building entrance. swung _ apart from the rest of the body, people taken in by future seers, NOW THRU TUES. State News photo By Donald Sak while the two extremities still They belong to a prediction set, EXCLUSIVE! Zeppelin from business leader ELEC. HEATERS ■ MiH White's plan draws criticism UUCDCCI MAM " ■ Living S¥ THE ^ | n A By LINDA WERFELMAN Chamber of Commerce, said State News Staff Writer backing, maybe we could raise meeting to East No than 39 customers Dead encourage more Monday. our wages." Lansing businesses to adopt were in the restaurant at any one I East Lansing businessmen do Westgate called the suggestion Lums manager Edward C. wage scales comparable to that time after Saturday's football ALL THE YOUTHFUL They keep coming bach in a >t have the funds needed to made by Trustee Clair White, Rouillard agreed that "it would °f the University. game, according to C. Patric BEAUTY OF EUROPE ENSLAVED bloodthirsty lust for jy student employes salaries D-Bay City, that East Lansing probably be all right if we were As part of an effort to provide Larrowe, professor of economics FOR THE PLEASURE OF HUMAN FLESH! . . Imilar to those offered by the merchants meet University wage subsidized by the state." information on the dispute and and advisor to the union. Weld THE 3RD REICH ■University, Thomas Westgate, rates "the biggest mistake the White announced Sunday that to "work for the community," X IN EASTMAN COLOR X agreed that "they haven't served Evident of the president of the man could have made." He he would introduce a proposal at the Chamber of Commerce sent more than 100 people since Twice at 7:35- 11:15 -Plus- Rist Lansing-Meridian Area added that "if we had state Friday's Board of Trustees members copies of two Thursday night." statements issued last week by Lums management, Westgate Rouillard said business sa'(^- Saturday had been about 25 MSU fast gains support; per The statements included the management's description of the cent Qf the normal amount, PLEASURE closed union shop as an attempt to "cram the union down an Despite the union's earlier PLANTATION] (money employe's throat." request that other unions honor EASTMAN COLOR to help refugees x William Weld, financial the picket lines, Lums has had Once At 9:45 secretary-treasurer and business "no trouble with deliveries," I A University-wide fast to Akers, 1 per cent; Brody, 2 per hall reception desks by Friday. agent of the Hotel-Restaurant Rouillard said, adding that a Tenllect money to aid 10 million it Pakistan refugees exiled in cent; Campbell, 3 per cent; Case, Direct donations will 2 per cent; Gilchrist-Hakeley, 2 accepted, he said, also be Employes and Bartenders Union, Local 235, has denounced the system of "tailgate deliveries" had been allowed Lums workers We took our cameras to Copenhagen dia is beginning to gain management's reasoning, arguing rather than unionized truck ident support. The fast is per cent; Holden, 1 per cent; The money collected Holmes, 3 per cent; Hubbard, 1 given to the national will be Refugee that union "chaos" would exist if and nonunion members drivers to unload supplies, and meticulously filmed an incredible beduled for Dec. 1. per cent; Landon, 3 per cent; Relief Fund. This, in turn, will employed in the documentary. were |As of 4 p.m. Monday, Mayo, 1 per cent; McDonel, 2 be distributed to various restaurant. same The delivery of supplies has FOR PERSONS OVER 18YRS.OF AGE. myder-Phillips Hall had the per cent; Mason Abbott, 0 per organizations such as the Red Business at Lums has been not interfered with the (latest number (4 per cent) of cent; Shaw, 1 per cent; Wilson 1 Cross, the Catholic Relief Fund Students signed up to forfeit per cent; and Wonders 1 per and others. considerably below normal since effectiveness of the picketing ■theirevening meat that day. cent. Otto stressed that this drive is picketing began last Thursday, because few customers have I The University will donate management and union entered the restaurant, Larrowe A MIND-BOGGLING DISPLAY! A spokesman for the relief in no way connected with the About 50 cents to the Pakistan committee said some residence Bengali (East Pakistan) Defense representatives agreed. said. ■Refugee Fund for every student hall managers did not inform League, p a residence hall who does not students of the fast as yet. "This is being done strictly for -S F CHRONICLE Jeatdinner. I Ken Otto, a member of the humanitarian reasons," he said. Percentages of students signed committee said students who He said the refugees need ■up at other dormitories are as wish to participate in the fast immediate help. A MAN'S (follows: must sign up at their residence As of Sept. 15, 49 nations, some United Nations agencies and many voluntary agencies A MAN had contributed to the relief IHeorf attack fund. "We hope that 60 to 70 per cent of the students will fast," [SoWef Otto said. "This is the quickest 10XFORD, England expert's Christopher Watson, a senior way to get money." MAP)—Soviet physicist Lev academic of the college, said the Andreevich Artsimovich, a Russian-recognized advocate of director of a Moscow project scientific exchange between East timed at harnessing the energy an^ West—still hoped to visit Jof the H-bomb for peaceful uses, Oxford but could not fix a date. Jiiis suffered a hei»rt attack, ■Oxford University authorities ■were told recently. "The 62-year-old member of "e Soviet Academy of Sciences id I^nin Prize winner was due « make a visit to Oxford's Now the amazing experiment from Denmark, where there is no censorship. Filmed entirely on location at and during Denmark's most controversial Sex Fair. ■jjwtoniCollege. This statement cannot be made by any other motion picture. Tare you coming came • •In October of 1969. Copenhagen be¬ the lirst city in the world to present an exposition of pornography. It was called Sex "\ow, after several ing editing, ivninths of painstak- our film is c omplclcd. It is the lirst film of its kind, and we are proud of it. '69. and it attracted tens of thousands of Kvery incredible scene is authentic. Nothing to the tourists. More than 400 thcre. And we were there. newsmen were is faked, and nothing is c oncealetl. "We have presented s ocial conditions in "We Hew to Copenhagen with our cam¬ Denmark as they really ; »re —without coin- orgy? eras and a crew of professional lilmmakci s. 1 or sex en long days and nights we shot film. promise, without ficti on. We have been honest. "We spent many hours at the exposition. We invite vou to see our film if the sub We visited bookstores, theatres and private ject matter is of interest to you. However, if sex clubs. We saw the making of pornog vou have am reservatio ns about seeing it. raphy, the sale, distribution and the exhi¬ then don't.\ovv it svour turn to be honest." bition of it. We interviewed people, and we — \lex dcKcn/y observed a free society. We meticulously re corded everything on film. Alex deRenzy's \v| u 'CensorshipinDenmark: \ a new approach. Admission $1.50 RATED X TONIGHT 108B Wells Showtimes 7:00 8:15-9:30- 10:30 Please note:because Censorship in Denmark totally transcends anything we have previously shown, the age restriction will be stringently enforced. Those without ID will not be admitted. If your MSU ID is duted 1953, you must bring an ID that shows your birthdate. Dorm meal passes are not acceptable. YOU MUST BE 18 OR OVER. NO EXCEPTIONS. ® Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Tuesday, No.en.be, u SHOP-RITE STORES' Catalog provides 10 buying, selling aid A catalog, "Community Market", filled with Items produced by cooperative type communities throughout the United States recently began circulating in the East Lansing Area. det Printed locally by the East Lansing Chapter of North American Judge Student Cooperative Organization (NASCO), the catalog is hat I* described as "an advertising and selling aid to cooperatives, egregi intentional communities and communes, who need to market the lied, products they make for their livelihood," James R. Jones, executive ppeals secretary of Intercooperative Council (ICC) and East Lansing's Friendliest NASCO representative said. Jones explained, the Judg< he f catalog was primarily created to serve egreg Food Stores. .. Try Us! 'mutually owned non-profit democratcally controlled economic organization," which go by a variety of names. He added, it also inofflc iut he includes the work of individuals striving to lessen the restrictions uling- of capitalism. Both GOODRICH'S: 910 Trowbridge Rd. Many of the suppliers to "Community Market" small and Open find it difficult to are jo, » — Mon. — Fri. 9 to 9, Sat. 9-6 prosper without the base of economic support oday. it provides, lie said. A nui The supporters of the cooperative movement, Jones indicated, be Del hope the catalog will build a common bond between consumers od Gt and producers for an alternative economy based on cooperative bey «' principles. The catalog not only contains items from throughout the nation, but also includes information on where to obtain organic foods, how to maintain a commune, and publications of I yet' participating groups. A spt Some of the more unusual items offered Market" include rope hammocks, pure New England suede and leather goods, and by "Community Maple syrup, Pumpkin pla Yank J ould toys, all of which are produced by sked tc Stranger things have probably emerged from campus drains, but this pumpkin plant cooperative communities. growi ir the S a The catalog is available for $1 in the ICC office at 317 Student Soujh next Wonders Hall drain may prove to be the most profitable, if residents there can wait til Michai M.S.U. Services Bldg., or Community Market, 437 Abbott Road, East Thanksgiving for their slice of the pie. beboai Lansing, Mich., 48823. State News photo be boa by Milton H ecision Students-Faculty-Staff Roth' Use this ad as your grocery EXPERT LISTS BENEFITS shopping list... you'll save! lath Grade A Young Hen Drawbacks of Turkey, 12-14 lb. avg. 431 By GORDON SHIREY and mice. Michigan has placed rigid a major problem is that researchers may find that DDT Guyer said. By the early 1950s, questions had begun to arise mosquito control in the n state parks, as well as ir ' controls on the use of DDT since substitutes, such as phosphates regarding the poisonous residue production. Fresh Lean Pork A MSU pesticide expert said recently that June 27, 1969, when all banning the registrations and carbamates, are as harmful as found in treated commodities, he He said that DDT residue ii GOV. to law on products DDT, Guyer said. He said continued. state's Coho salmon foci Steak 591 controversial pesticide DDT would not be in the interest of public health in many cases. containing DDT were cancelled. Limited registration is now phosphates are more toxic than DDT to applicators of the It was not until the early 1960s that more sophisticated attention on the problem. An the amounts detected increi opay th available to government agencies landen Brink Semi-Boneless Turkey Gordon E. Guyer, chairman of and the Dept. of by professional structural Entomology and pest control operators for indoor pesticide, and carbamates endanger bees and some other beneficial insects. techniques of measurement brought to light the higher rate of residues which so did public concern. That concern has taken director of the Pesticide Research concern scientists worldwide proportions as Ham, whole 69' 18-22 pest control. Though Guyer expressed some today, Guyer said. battle continues betw 49i Center, based his judgment on the satisfaction with the present Guyer explained that Michigan environmentalists and pro-I benefits DDT has provided for Group to show results of many DDT substitutes, has made early of DDT for forces. Peschke Flavor Seal Sliced lbs. people in the United States and throughout the world. he said he feels much research remains to be accomplished. use In a recent hearing held by Environmental Protect Guyer said he feels banning the pesticide in many countries McCarthy film He added that there has been Drama set Bacon, 1 lb. pkg. 69c would produce consequences The Auburn Film Group will some recent indication that problems previously avoided by Agency, that agency refused the second time to order more dangerous than use of the chemical itself. show the film "Point of Order - The Army McCarthy using DDT in growing fruit in in Spanish immediate ban on DDT, declj Hearings", Michigan are not being checked a need for future study, a Guyer said he believes what is Chunk style 6V2 oz the story of Sen. Starkist Tuna McCarthy's QQc now needed in Michigan is "careful, controlled use, under final hearings (before the eyes of with the substitutes. DDT came into extensive use "Nuestro Fin de Semana," a modern social drama by to a New York Times report, hearings are still continuing., (Kings 1 biontrc limit'4 cans 00 careful supervision" so that DDT is used only when no 20 million transfixed American TV viewers in 1954. The film following its development during World War II, but by the late Argentine Playwright Roberto Cossa will be presented in Spanish Environmentalists contmi itheatr federal adequate shows at 7, 8:45, and 10:20 1940s resistance to the pesticide at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the Union oppose further postponeme substitute is available, as in Editions p.m. Thursday, Friday and had already started to develop Ballroom. a DDT ban, citing the relatioi Mario Olives Stuffed Manz thrown, 7 oz. 71 combatting head lice, rats, bats Saturday in 104B Wells Hall. among the insects it affected. The student production is being sponsored by MSU's Dept. of Romance and Classical Languages and Literature and the Latin between DDT and cance laboratory animals. They also point to d; Hearing follows: Hill in F Park PI toman Oish Detergents. 18' M.A.A.B IS HERE! American Studies Center. General admission tickets are 50 cents and may be purchased at the door. wildlife, and that DDT I animals eventually bec< involved chain. in the human State Off ind in thi building and on E 1 Hotel in bearings Thank You Tomato Marantz 4:30 p.m. Juice 32 oz., limit 6 bottles 24f Audio A STUDENT SLEEPING in the pine trees south of Demonstration Hall reported to police Monday morning that his Birdseye Awake S3 24° boots, valued at $20, had been A TAPE DECK and tapes- Analysis stolen during the night, while he stolen from a car parked inL 5 was asleep. Saturday evening. Theequipr THREE DETROIT was estimated to be worth $ VISITORS to campus were and police said a vent window Pillsbury Crescent Fresh Crisp Pascal Celery 29c arrested outside of Mason Hall at forced open to gain entry to Program 3:11 a.m. Sunday when a coed car. Rolls, 8oz.wt. 3/ 1 .stalk living in Mason Hall reported to police that three suspects were apparently stealing three bicycles ANOTHER TAPE removed from a car par DECK from the racks. Police arrested outside Gilchrist Hall Thuri the suspects when they arrived to night. Police said the car d< Blue Bonnet Sweet California 00 TODAY find the suspects still in the process of removing the bicycles were unlocked at the time, owner of the car had left his a Margarine, 3/$1 Red Emperor Grapes Jo from the racks. 11:30 p.m., when he returne 11:40 p.m., the deck was miss t: HEADPHONES WITH AN and estimated value of $50 were he told police. reported stolen to police Sunday BICYCLES WITH A total v Oven-Fresh fi TOMORROW of $57 have been stolen University racks since Thura Brown & Serve Renefitz Bicycle number F3946 wasta 0 /$1 Fresh, Plump Cranberries and from West McDonel ri ROllS, 15 ounce w/ I Noon to 9p.m. Bagel Thursday, while a bicyclewiu permit was taken from outsif 1 lb. bag 29C MOBILE TESTING SYSTEM Cherry Lane apartment. Bring in your receiver, amplifier Yes Seniors, It's the First or pre-amplifier for checkout a . . . SENIOR FREE CHECKOUT INCLUDES: NIGHT ALL BRANDS CHECKED FREE SEE AND COMPARE * Frequency Response Test * Distortion Analysis *Free Graph of the results TOMORROW NIGHT. 8 Dm - 2 am STEREO SHOPPE 543 E. Grand River East Ski-Wear Fashion Show All t.ie beer you can drink - Lansing - 337-1300 SPONSORED BY THE SENIOR CLASS COUNCIL^ V % Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Tuesday, November 16, 1971 Moth's bus II iled, faces I DETROIT (UIW-U.S. District segregation (segregation by official inaction or L doe Stephen J. Roth's ruling c'*"ted action) Planes used by the Winged that Detroit's schools are racially an uproar official and unofficial in both Spartans line up before a trial KIregated has been formally circles air run over an open field ■lied opening channels for especially when he said he would consider a motion to near Mason. llneals of the decision. children between Detroit and 85 bus ■ Judge Roth ruled Sept. 27 that Ih„ public schools were Suburban districts as one legated by official and solution. Knofflcial state and clty action- Kut |,e did not file a formal ■ A |0) Kotii's ruling was filed 10 days but not reported until number of parties, including Grolier policy under investigation Bv By NAT NAT ABBATE ARRATF last week. he Detroit Board of Education State News Staff Writer L ,Smith'attorney for to ?■». at the lowest prices the promotion, Clark said. offer include d Gov. Milliken, have said illegal merchandise, product at a cheaper price and insurance, food, house trailers, Grolier will refund double the BheV would appeal the decision Of all sales promotions used on Pr^n ,fhe general distrust of the complaint a student filed with a™.. • » . , , If a student does stay, the motorcycles (although it can difference in prices, he said, fc soon as the legal avenues for students by companies in this hnrh harbor. "uHe said it,most students him about Grolier, because the RnPOifi„c peop,e w'th the buying service is explained in full, provide motor scooters), building n appeal were open. These area, the one which seems to the fact that Grolier may be due to once sold matter is still under investigation K? **'d' company Program, Clark representatives he said. Not only will the materials, private brands and Clark said that most fcvenues were opened Nov. 5, but receive the most negative salesman explain what the service X yet no appeal has been filed. feedback is that of the Consumer only books, and people may still "The facts aren't in about cal. students- mostly juniors and products requiring custom participants in the program win d0) but he will also reveal | a spokesman for Atty. Gen. Buying and Educational Services stereotype the company as Grolier, and I'm not willing to say and offer them a free gift what it is unable to provide and installation or labor at a local achieve savings of around $1,000 high-pressure encyclopedia that 'J level, Clark said. per year. Link J- Kelley said that Kelley of the Grolier Society, Inc. salesmen. any hesaid. laws have been broken," !?ey come to the office at 541 E. Grand River E. OanH Rii«» Ave. a.,« why Clark said Kould appeal the decision if ASMSU Legal Aid is currently He said that Grolier The company provides a to do so by either Milliken investigating complaints against always He did advise students to He also explained Grolier's offers potential customers three shop When a student comes into the Clark said Grolier if able to guarantee that the products XrtheState Board of Education. Grolier which a narrassed student days to change their minds after around before making major office, he is given a choice offer the service because it is not a bought through the service are at "combination cooperative offer » which gives a person the ■ Michael Deeb, a member of filed recently. signing a con tract, and said that it purchases and urged them not to between a certificate enabling retail store and consequently has the lowest prices possible, he Ihe board, said today he will ask Don Clark, office sign any contracts without them to have 16 black and white high overhead to pay. What opportunity to belong to the manager of is possible to drop out of the added. Ik board to appeal the Roth the local branch of knowing exactly what is involved, overhead it does have is buying service and also offers a Grolier, program and still get a refund, portraits taken at a local number of Grolier reference ■jecision. explained the company's tactics photographer's, or a bottle of Payed by the annual dues of $60 provided the decision is made If a person buys something books, and techniques in an Clark said that the Consumer | Roth's ruling of de jure interview within three days after signing. perfume which retails at $20, he (P|us a $15 bookkeeping fee) through the service and then finds Buying and Educational Service is said. which each participant is it at a cheaper price at a regular "It's about $1,000 worth of a program whereby participating expected to pay, he said, people are able to buy most Students are under no store, all he has to do is send in a books and services at a cost of consumer goods, from pantyhose obligation to remain to listen to signed statement by the owner of only $48.10 a year for 10 years," Products the service cannot the store which offers the hesaid. Capitay Ckpsules 7d j u } »)\ ■■ ■ GOV. MILLIKEN has signed Anyone unable to appear in places for furthermeetingswili be |t0 law a bill requiring retailers person may submit a written announced later, the executive |o pay the amount of deposits on IF YOU THINK EUROPE statement prior to Dec. 16 to office said. >r and carbonated beverage John C. Soet, chairman, Air js bottles when those bottles Pollution Control Commission, jiereturned to them. Michigan Dept. of Public Health, I The bill applies to glass bottles WAS CHEAP THIS SUMMER, 3500 North Logan St. Lansing, MICHIGAN'S 1972 passenger Irhose contents are for 48914. car license tabs are now on sale at lonsumption off the premises the Dept. of State's license plate Because some retailers have THE FIRST in Gov. Milliken's branch offices throughout the Reclined to return the amount of wit on such bottles or to store im when they are returned. series of statewide public meetings on education will be held Dec. 1 in Grand Rapids, the state, Secretary of State Richard H. Austin announced Monday. Austin said motorists may also YOU SHOULD SEE IT THIS WINTER. governor announced Monday. obtain license tabs by mail for the | FIVE PUBLIC HEARINGS On Nov. 3, Milliken announced first time this year. To mail order ire been scheduled in December that he would conduct a number rj the Michigan Air Pollution tabs, applicants are asked to fill of statewide meetings at which out the application mailed to |Control Commission. The the public would have the them by the department and $190 tarings will deal with a proposal opportunity to submit questions loiontrol certain contaminants return it with a check to: and suggestions on education to Id the atmosphere as required by him personally. Secretary of state, P.O. Box federal law, and proposed 1000, Lansing. "It is imperative that we have ddltions to state regulations. action on a number of my "We have anticipated a sale of J Hearing sessions are planned as education reform proposals in about one-half million tabs by 1972 including property tax [follows: "ill in on Dec. 13, at the City mail," Austin said. "But I'm told River Rouge and at the relief," the governor said. |Firk Place Motor Hotel in Among the matters to be by those handling the sale that if For your next holiday you can be in London for $190. Rome $199. Paris the mail requests continue at Traverse City; on Dec. 15 at the discussed by Milliken at the ISbte Office Building in Escanaba meetings will be his petition drive their present rate, we will be $200. Or Greece $268. Bind in the seven story state office for property tax relief, cost and slightly below that figure by the These are just some of TWA's low round trip fares for youths between the Dec. 31 deadline." nbuilding auditorium In Lansing; ' Dec. revenue projections for education ages of 12 and 25. n 16, at the Pantlind financing and the distribution Who knows how much longer they'll be in effect, so for more details call Austin indicated [Hotel in Grand Rapids. The ' formula for school aid. that the TWA. irlngs will be held from 2 to Further details on the Grand department was receiving about ■<:30p.m.and from 7 to 9 p.m. Rapids meeting, and dates and I,500 requests per day. And to help you save money when you're on vacation, send for TWA's new Getaway* Kit. It's free and it will tell you where you can get... BED, BREAKFAST AND SIGHTSEEING FOR ONLY $4.30 A DAY. Only TWA offers you the Stutelpass* It is a book of vouchers you can buy g All for 10,15, 20,25, etc. days for just $4.30 a day. 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And then take up to two years to pay. about financing a new "love affair" at low credit union rates. Now what's even easier than getting away for the holidays, is getting a If you'll check with us first, you can arrange financing Getaway Kit. in advance and get trade-in and dealer cost information to help Just use the coupon. you get the best possible deal. Your loan will be protected with life and permanent dis¬ ability insurance at no additional cost. f"TWA, P.O. Box 402, Farmingdale, N.Y. 11735 Send all the information you have on bargain Best of all, you can repay your loan the convenient credit I vacations in Europe and the U.S.A. to: union way — by payroll deduction. Your credit union - it should be your only source of credit. If you're not already a member, join today. | Name — plan V|ew now to Meeting vacation in at 7:30 p.m. Spain next Thurs., March 20-28 or 21-29 There'll be a Pre- Oe^^^our^redjt union building j Address— — MSU EMPLOYEES ^City- State Zip Code 600 E. Crescent Dr. • Open 9:30 5:30 Monday thru Friday • Phone 353 2280 10 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan SPORTS- Thompson leads icers Thompson already holds the was displeased with to wins There's si tECK mplicity By CRIAG REMSBURG some points Calder and Chaurest were also more work on defense." job," Bessone said. "But they record for most goals in one game of the two games and State News Sports Writer hopes for instrumental in the victories. Coming up with an effective need to backcheck better." for MSU, scoring five times improvement in his icers as they Calder scored three goals, two in If Don Thompson's weekend third line has been the biggest DeMarco and Jakinovich got in against Michigan in the 1969-70 prepare for a weekend set with the Saturday game, and Chaurest the icera In the scoring column for cross performance against Bowling season. But he joined some select Green State is any indication of company with his four-goal Minnesota at home this weekend, "We have to work on added a pair to the MSU scoring problem for Bessone thus far in the season. Left wing Frank the first time this season with two A few weeks ago at the Spartan country some total. DeMarco, center Bill Sipola and first period goals. Designated as a Invitational cross things to come, the Spartan outburst as well. things, like breaking out of out "Both Calder a man with a microphone came up to me. county J hockey team may be in for a and Chaurest right wing Larry Jakinovich did a checking line, the trio may be on Only Weldv Olson, John Mayes, zone and working the box It is generally surprising that banner season. played well," Bessone said, credible job for the Spartans the verge of breaking out into a anyone would come ..n, James Ward, Tom Mikkola, Doug defense," he said. "We looked "Calder is at a cross country meet, let alone someone seeking The senior center and first-team Volmar one of our steadier againstBGSU. scoring unit. It would certainly "What 4,101 a (three times) and Randy good in spots but bad in others, players. Chaurest did alright you doing here?" he asked are all-American scored five goals to Sokoll have turned the trick for "They scored a couple of goals help the Spartans' effort this Our performance wasn't too bad offensively but he needs a little for us and they did a pretty good By his looks he was neither a sage or lead the icers to 5-2 and 8-3 MSU in the last 20 years. ypar philosopher «, i» ,1 for the first games of the year, but meant what was I doing at the meet. took itl victories, with four of those "Don had a real good weekend we got too many penalties." "I don't know" is usually tallies coming in the second my pat answer for a 11 for us," Coach Amo Bessone Penalties could have hurt the this time I thought I should think about it question, fl contest Saturday night. agreed. But the Spartan mentor Spartans, as they received 22 I am never sure why I go to a cross country meet <5». J minutes in the first game, on 11 supposed to cover them, but I had been a basketball minors, and 18 minutes in the junior college for 30 games without second contest, all of them minor Before I had time to consider attending one Wnter# Spartan infractions. But BGSU had trouble penetrating the MSU defense while enjoying the man question. "What do you think of cross "I don't know," I answered. country?" a reply he asked m* ue ar>o( .., win state advantage. Spartan defenseman Bob Boyd, the MSU leader in penalty My answer was certainly void of misinterpretation brief parley he stuck his mike back into and walked off in search of another off the case he was « „ minutes last with the cuff - - intelilh'.1 The MSU weightlifting club won the Michigan AAU state began the 1971-72 season season 88, with Later, I began to think about his questions. "I didn't seem to be enough of an answer. S?" powerlifting championship Sunday in Highland Park. three, two-minute minors in each I tried to think of good reasons for MSU's 21 points bettered by seven points the score of its closest I honestly thought of a sport the man having been there and J game, to lead the Spartans in that competitor. Points were distributed on a five-for-first, department. the runners." called "too J winfl demand three-for-second, and one-for-third ration. MSU had three first "We just got too many I could come up with place finishers and one second placer. The Spartan club had entries only the usual run of the - in all categories with the exception of the penalties and we let them adjectives: courage, guts, desire, discipline and on ad super-heavyweight class. intimidate None of them distinguished the infinitum. MSU took eleven lifters to the us," Bessone said, sport for me, nor gave m«J championships as opposed to only hoping to correct the situation. reason to think about it. B me« three last year. Even though there were a few Gary Wandell took first place in the 132-pound class, lifting for 1,065 pounds. Wandell's bench lift of 265 set the Michigan AAU rough spots in the icers' record. performance against the Falcons, Howard Wandell took first place in the there were some positive aspects 165-pound class, lifting as well. for 1,050 pounds. Dave Burke, at the 242-pound class, took the "Our power final first place medal with a lift of 1,500 total play was good — tJrl pounds. Edwin Clayton, lifting in the we were pleased with it," the 123-pound class, set a Michigan AAU record by bench pressing 230 pounds. Spartan mentor commented. "We All of MSU's eleven lifters scored four goals with it placed in the top five of each weight class entered. Saturday. And Jim Watt, Mark Calder and Michael Chaurest all played well." Go in the Snow Watt kept the Spartans alive in the early going of each game. He stopped 11 shots in the first SALE period of the initial game before giving up a Falcon goal with five seconds left in the period. Watt Productive Electronic Engine Diagnosis also handcuffed BGSU in the second game after the Falcons MSU center iceman Don "Zipper" Thompson (7) is starting off this season just as ended last season. had blitzed the MSU The Toronto, Ont. icer scored four goals in the second game with Bowling Green Saturday, only squad for And Tune-up two goals within the first three minutes of the contest. one mark short of his MSU single game record of five set against Michigan two years ago. State News photo by Bruce Remington Includes: I tig Ten Chum/pious 1. Delco points & condenser 2. Champion spark plugs ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ 3. All Labor TOMORROW IS * * Karate club goal I liked watching Ken Popejoy, a 120 pound made me feel like Dick Butkus. I liked behemoth, l 28s5 (8 cyl.) 2495 fct 6(cyl.) SENIOR NIGHT t watching from between the trees and into the final run. And Randy Kilpatrick, with tape on his him comej leg, grimacing as Snow Tires 8 p.m.-2 a.m. is collegiate title tried to gain one more place in the standings. ALL ECIRPiV • Ski-Wear Fashion Show i MSU's karate club, recognized as one of the best in the Midwest I enjoyed watching crew-cut Dave meet. Dieters, who made m like Rasputin, as he stood and posed with his parents after I P These • All the beer you can drink * will host the 1971 collegiate team championships 1 p.m. Sunday Nov. 21 in the Men's IM And the Cool twins, Rob and Ron. And Steve Rockey, J fully guaranteed tires — made are new Sports Arena. by Lee (Excludes truck & camper tires.) Music * Teams competing for the strides that reminded me of a Latvian kid I used to know in J • by Magic' championship are University of school who could outrun anybody without a minute of practl * Michigan, Western Michigan, Central Michigan, Macomb County I even liked Paul Kurtis who, week after week, busted his I Community College and MSU. ROBERTS at the * Besidesr the team championship, individual women's and whose only satisfaction was finishing the race. There was coach Jim Gibbard, leaping off his golf cart i with| Automotive Center * championships will will be demonstrated. be awarded. Board breaking and self-defense less than Jim Ryun legs and chasing after his runners w I Park Lake Rd. at Grand River Ph. 351-8062 * Last week in the state championship, Margaret Salmon won the encouragement as they ran through the hollow. It was even fun watching assistant coach Jim Bibbs fire women s championship, and Ron Wilse took second in green belt starter's gun. | competition. In black belt team competition, MSU wassecond Detroit semi-pro team. The MSU team to a That was all I could think of, I liked it. consisted of Robert Parsons The excitement came from inside; wondering how soon, oi Bruce Henderson, Jack Porter, Steve Ember and Art Campbell. long, it would take to win or lose. It was so simple, I could not help but like it. I didn't have! Ravi Shankar. H kind of a statem second guess quarterbacks, or wonder about strategies, or wof . about costly mistakes. a friend and teach* All I had to do was watch it. And say who won and by hi mucn and whether or not Gibbard and his team were satisfied. I iolinist, Yehudi Me I probably wouldn't have been there if I hadn't had to be, biT was there and didn't mind it. I remember the looks on the faces of the guys when they w the Invitational, too. Maybe I didn't care, but they did and tlf "IF EAST HASTO MEET WEST, THEN FEW MUSICIANS HAVE enthusiasm was a pleasing thing to see. Last Saturday they won the Big Ten title and threw J Gibbard in the pool, clothes and all. It reminded me of 1 i ACHIEVED IT WITH SUCH OPEN JOY AS RAVI SHANKAR: sculling races when the winners dumped their coach in the drifl Simple. But I like It. That's what Edward Greenfield said in England's venerable Man¬ For chester Guardian. But we think you'll find Shankar's First Sitar Con¬ Thos certo more than a meeting of two geographical places. We think you'll find it a refreshing and different new blend of musical "iSpecial spirits. fiThe premiere recording is now available. It's played by Ravi Shankar, with SEE US A Andre Previn conducting his London Symphony Orchestra. TROPHIES & PLAQUES | A joyful II new i offering from Angel Records. ^ , FOR AIL OCCASIONS "Large selection in stock 'Expert Engraving Usually 24 hr. service I *Free parking - Park A Shop Plan SENIORS! PARKER JEWELRY 111 S.Washington PI Lansing^ union tnsn '/2 PRICE COLOR PRINTS?I wants to remind you that if you're graduating December 4th you should SAVE ON SLIDES MOVIES B ft W PRINTS, - T00| - This low price saves you up to 50% over usual "drug store rushes high quality color prints back to your door in just a lew u rent your Cap & Gown ■ the film service used on many mid-west and southern campuses. ■ NOW! All you have to do is go to the 4th SO EASY, SO CONVENIENT .just use your own envelope andI the .. W■ below. Fill in name and address, write name on roll or cartnage, floor of the Union ^ ■ coupon and remittance. Or, use the coupon to get Mm mailers i Building between 8:30 count coupons; order film and flashes at low prices .a better oe | "free" film. Savings and processing quality guaranteed. and 5:30 pm the week November 29th. : YOUR ORDER MUST INCLUDE THIS COUPON - For only $6.00 you can look as great as the "$1 Union Man in his Cap & Gown. Music Co. 402 S.Washington, Lansing 245 Ann St. E. Lansing [p Customer Parking ncwricn Merest! Q 20 «»p. p ?0 tip BImK > > SlidM ot r;G.i-M7-M3 MAIL TO: SPE-D-PICS • Box 2M ■ Cincinnati. 45214 • 0«P« * >••••••••« Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Tuesday, November 16, 1971 -SPORTS- S'defense still consistent; offense finally getspraise By GARY SCHARRER traditional rugged Spartan style, a great football player," Perles State News Sports Writer And, with the exception of the praised. "He's going to make a An interesting phenomenon Wisconsin game, the defense has hell of a football coach." has occurred since Coach performed well enough for MSU Duffy Other consistent defensive Daugherty implemented the to be undefeated. players are defensive ends Ralph wishbone offense in the Spartan Who is responsible for the Wieleba and Doug Halliday, attack. defensive strength?Sing!e players defensive tackle Ron Joseph, In the past five really cannot be singled out since years not too Mark Niesen, Paul Hayner and much publicity has been given to team pursuit if a consistent Ray Nester. But Niesen, Hayner I MSU were offensive teams. Probably because Spartans offenses sporadic at best and usually characteristic of green and white jerseys stopping opposing attacks. Players like Brad and Nester are only sophomores and will make names for MSU in the next two years. non-existent at worst. In the VanPelt, Ron Curl, Gail Clark, VanPelt, who anchors the crying times of those tiring years Ken Alderson and Ernie Spartan defense from his safety the Spartan defense often picked Hamilton are familiar names, but position, will be lost to MSU up where the offense couldn't, there are others who are sports for at least eight weeks and won some games for the team, underrated and deserve mention, possibly longer. and made MSU Senior Bill Dawson, a a respectable steady The Owosso junior suffered a squad. performer with three seasons of severe shoulder separation that But in the last five games talk varsity ball behind him was required surgery Sunday, on radio and television sports rewarded Monday the coaches as VanPelt, who is second to Clark reports and print in newspapers team tackles, will miss the has focused on the new-found ason's finale against ability of the MSU offense. The season with a knee injury after Northwestern and will be lost Spartans are rolling along on the starting his first two years and indefinitely to Coach Gus crest of a four game started slowly this season but has Ganakas' cagers. winning streak and have averaged over 30 come on strong in recent games. points per contest in the last five "In the first part of early fall it looked like his knee was MMW: billings. Almost overshadowed with the around, but then he hurt himself coming Men's IM offensive explosiveness of Mike again," defensive line coach (ioal line stand Rasmussen, Eric Allen and Co. is George Perles said. "After a week The Men's Intramural touch football championships will take the still consistent performance rest he I Defensive lineman Bill Dawson (96) putsa stopper on Minnesota's Bob Morgan (17) of the Soartan of the Spartan defense. now he's came back, was ready, place this week on the IM football I goal in Saturday's game. Dawson, who playing consistent ball fields. missed all of last Except for a breakdown against for us and is like the Bill Dawson season with an Fraternity and residence hall ^ "Spartan of the Week" this week for his play against the Golden Gophers. , State News photo honored as Wisconsin, when the Badgers put 31 points on the board, MSU's of old. "He and Ron Curl are like two finals in team badminton will be held today at 6 p.m. in Gym II at by Tom Gaunt defense has played in the peas in a pod," Perles said. "They the Men's IM building. are five-year seniors who have the November 26 is the deadline for enthusiasm of sophomores. They entering the gymnastics iraised for hustle and desire are team great leaders, tremendous players and usually are the championships, which will begin at 7 p.m. November 30 on the first on the field for practice and third floor of Jenison Fieldhouse. the last to leave." This meet is pending sufficient Frosh work almost Dawson is of Indian and entries. Mexican heritage and sometimes The fencing deadline has been Oil I for over gets kidded about his Tuscon, Ariz, homeland, but Perles extended to 12 November 19. Beginning on noon on MSU defensive back Brad rear VanPelt (10), who Duffy By STEVE STEIN emphasized that both Indians and November 22 in the Fencing Daugherty described Saturday as "the best safetyman in the The frosh coach said that in his over 100 Mexicans can be proud of Room on the fourth floor of country," will be lost to the team for the remainder of State News Sports Writer games as a coach the 49-7 the loss to Michigan was the worst his team had ever suffered. Dawson. Jenison are the Foil Fencing season with a shoulder separation. MSU's freshman football team, finishing its short season with a "He's -2 record, will complete its work by helping the varsity Spartan? Despite the two lopsided losses, Rutherford praised the hustle a perfect gentleman, and Championships. State News photo by Milt Horst and desire that his squad showed repare for their season finale against Northwestern. during the year. "I have never seen Coach Ed Rutherford, whose team was handed a 49-7 pounding y the University of Michigan freshman last weekend, praised the olverines for having "a fine football team that deserved to win. Rutherford used several players at two positions so that these men "would have chance to develop *hey simply outplayed us and outhit us." themselves", and he also tried S-T-R-E-T-C-H & SEW" FABRICS a Rutherford also mentioned that the Spartan offensive line to use as many players for as much time as he could in game just conditions. suldn't keep the Wolverine defense in check. The freshman coach Bptaed that last year MSU recruited many backs, but only a It will be hard to determine how many of the present freshman mited amount of linemen. Many Spartan linemen went both players make the varsity next season, or even how many of them ways break into the starting lineup, as did Mike pinst U-M, while the Michigan squad showed balance in running Holt, Mark Niesen, Paul (tbiiMHinomen. Hay ner, Ray Nester, and Bill Chada did this season. Rutherford was quite impressed with the Coach Rutherford explained that running of fullback Joe depending on how the varsity hold, who led the Spartans' rushing attack against the Wolverines lineup goes next season, and who is playing in front of a sophomore ritb48yards on nine rushes. will determine the chances of one of this year's frosh getting an Arnold Morgado, the season loading frosh runner, was held to starting nod, or at least seeing some playing time next year. Dly 24 yards, well short of the 90 and 80 yard totals the Hawaiian For instance, it will be quite tough to break into next year's impiled in his first two games. However, Morgado was still Spartan offensive line, according to Rutherford. iffering from a back injury suffered in the Notre Damegame, and The frosh coach mentioned miot operating at top Morgado, offensive and defensive efficiency. linemen Bob Witsberger and Max Myers, and the versatile Mike Every freshman Spartan saw some action against Michigan, Jones as being good varsity prospects. Several other frosh could be dping each of them prepare for spring practice next May. mentioned, but only time will tell as to whether there could be a lutherford called U-M and Notre Dame "very physical" teams, future all-American among this year's freshman e Spartans crop. topped Michigan in its first game, 20-18, and lost to otreDame, 38-14 earlier this fall. uggersA' team A New ffPjenguins lies by W at your campus bookstore LEARN TO SEW CLOTHES The MSU rugby club's A-squad won its fourth game in seven starts y whitewashing the University of Toledo, 37-0, ALCHEMY: Science of the Cosmos, Science of the Soul. at Old College Wd Saturday. Titus Burckhardt. A revealing book that aims to destroy The Spartans dominated most «y and kept a aspects of the game as they scored modern vast and misconceptions about alchemy, and to open unexpected spiritual horizons. $1.45 HE'LL LOVE TO WEAR steady scoring rate throughout the contest. Tom allace started the ECOLOGY OF DEVASTATION: INDOCHINA. John onslaught by carrying the ball 20 yards and Wing into the end zone for four points. Minutes later Rob Moss Lewallen. A detailed account of how the war has affected the ecology of Indochina, particularly Vietnam. Plus a [walled to Kiwi Christeller who lunged over for the try. Christeller Padded the two point conversion. startling forecast of what will happen to the area's Christeller struck again shortly thereafter by booting a 30-yard ecology if the war continues. $1.95 S-T-R-E-T-C-H & SEW fabrics are a natural choice for mens wear that looks «yg°al. Then, running against the grain of the Toledo defense, FOR THE LIBERATION OF BRAZIL. Carlos Marighela. good, fits comfortably and makes a man feel great Make him a pair of popular Translated by John Butt and Rosemary Sheen. With an doubleknit slacks. So much in fashion today, knit slacks stay neat and wrinkle- 7>y °e" made a long gainer for four points, near the end introduction by Richard Gott. A collection of writings — of the half, fullback Ron Fobes took a deep kick and free all day long, even with roughest wear Do something nice for your man — by a leading opponent of the repressive Brazilian re¬ edo i yards only to be stopped five yards short of the goal, gime — showing how the guerilla struggle has devel¬ and your clothes budget. Sign up for a S-T-R-E-T-C-H & SEW class and learn immediately kicked the ball again only to see Fobes repeat oped since the death of Che Guevara. $1.45 to make the slacks, shirts, ties, sweaters and casual he'll Performance—but this time for a score. wear prefer Wng into the second half with a 23-0 lead, the Spartans THE PENGUIN BOOK OF LATIN AMERICAN VERSE. onued to Edited by Enrique Caraccioli-Trejo. With an introduc¬ • keep the pressure on Toledo. Dave Cangelosi picked loose ball and bulled his tion by Henry Gilford. A bilingual anthology of the best pack of forwards way just short of the goal where an poetry from fourteen Central and South American na¬ MEN'S KNIT SLACK CLINIC $5.00 pushed him over for the try. Cangelosi kicked tions. $2.95 "conversion. Thursday, December 2, 6:30 - 9:30 p.m. Yblfr^°"owed boJl!) "J.es in for theby takingToa short score- Toledo kick and followed finish the scoring, Bob Moglia MAGIC AND MYSTERY IN TIBET. Alexandra David- Neel. An objective account of supernatural experiences Saturday, December 4, 10 a.m. & 1 p.m. 484-23 tJuott tall to Smith who dove over the goal line. in a remote and mysterious land. $1.45 Friday, December 10, 9:30 a.m. - 12:30 p.m. B-squad did not play on Saturday. DICKENS: THE CHRISTMAS BOOKS. Edited by Michael Slater. All of Dickens' Christmas stories in two volumes, with the original illustrations. Volume 1: A Christmas Carol and The Chimes. Volume 2: The Cricket MEN'S CASUAL JACKET & SHIRT CLINIC $5.00 on the Hearth, The Battle of Life, and The Haunted Man. Friday, November 19, 9:30 a.m. - 1 p.m. $2.95 each Saturday, December 11,1 - 4 p.m. THE PENGUIN BOOK OF COMICS (Revised Edition). George Perry and Alan Aldridge. Published in a big, 8V2" x 11" format, with a colorful vinyl-coated cover, — Previous Knit Sewing Experience Suggested — this richly illustrated book provides a delightful history of the comics since comics began ... the artists who created the characters .. . and the characters who took charge of their creators. $4.95 Tuesday Night SALAD & SPAGHETTI GORGE S-T-R-£-T-C-H & SEW (All You Can Eat) PENGUIN BOOKS INC FABRICS 7II0 Ambossodor Rd Boltimore. Md 21207 $1.95 Penguin Books are now available Wine Special in the Paperback Room of Wednesday Night 4960 Northwind Dr., East Lansing PITCHER NIGHT Just off E. Grand River, adjacent to Yankee Plaza (pspooK^tte ( dirt cheap) 332-0879 Monday-Friday — 9 a.m. 9 p.m. Saturday — 10 a.m.-5 p.m. 131 E. Grand River across from the Union 1 2 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan STATE NEWS CLASSIFIED 3558255 a good time to smile! The State Automotive franklyspeaiqng fay Phil hank For Rent GET Action WITH A News does Employment not permit racial 01 ForRent Want Ad religious discrimination in its advertising 1970 MUSTANG. owner, Sharp, V-8, 372-6906 after 5 p.m. power steering, automatic, new tires. Call PHOTOGRAPHERS, white and color BLACK dark and room APARTMENTS AVAILABLE for December occupancy. Furnished. PINE CREST vacancies Townhousesnoi* technicians and models. New suitable for columns. The State University Terrace, across from AUTOMOTIVE fTb.7,! » News will not corporation forming in Lansing Williams Hall. Roommate service. Scooters & Cycles accept area dealing in all aspects of Phone HALSTEAD advertising which OLDSMOBIL2 442, 1 965 appliances, dishwasher, Auto Parts & Service photography and graphic arts. MANAGEMENT, 351-7910 or discriminates against convertible, full - power, excellent Aviation Models; for advertising and manager, 332-1822. O-10-11-19 condition. $650. 626-6700 after 5 $217.50 includes religion, race, sex, color or industry, experience preferred but utilitie * EMPLOYMENT p.m. 3-11-16 ROOMMATE '1^351-7194.0 national not necessary. Ample opportunity WANTED for winter ♦ FOR RENT origin. for right people, fringe benefits and spring. Water's Edge ONE MAN for 4 OLDSMOBILE ■ SHARP. 1969 man. MeadowhrnB include profit sharing. For apartments. Call 337-2257. Trace, Apartments Holiday Tudor, full power, vinyl $ 6 5 882-2691 interview call prior to November 5-11 16 Immediately. 3 11-18 ^Houses top. 887-4928. 5-11-17 19th. Interviews will be held on Rooms Automotive November 19th 1 OLDSMOBILE 1962. Good engine, 2 - 20th. Call and 2 bedroom furnished. URGENT. NEEDED (.11 . FOR SALE snow tires. Offer $100. 393-3524. 5-11-19 HALSTEAD MANAGEMENT roommate for winter 482-1303. term Animals 1970 CUTLASS Supreme Oldsmobile. 5-11-22 351-7910.0-11-16 355-1672.2-11-17 OVERSEAS JOBS for students. Mobile Homes All power, air, stereo, 30 options. Australia, Europe, South HUGE, FURNISHED one bedroom. GIRL WANTED to sublease *Lost & Found List, $4500, balance $2700. $200 OLDSMOBILE 88, 1963. All power, wJ America , Africa, etc. All Dishwasher, balcony, shag carpet. and spring terms, close 351 or cash, take over payments. low mileage. Excellent condition. ► PERSONAL professions and occupations, $700 $185,351-8816.5-11-18 3-11 18 485-4298. 5-11-16 Best offer. 355-8203. 3-11-17 to $3000 monthly. Expenses paid, » PEANUTS PERSONAL DODGE VAN 1967. Very good PORSCHE 1966. 912, excellent body overtime, sightseeing. Free GIRL FOR 4 man. Meadowbrook ONE BEDROOM furnished ► REAL ESTATE information Write: Jobs Overseas, , he running condition. Call 339-8409. and mechanical, $2750. 349-9402 - Trace, $65. Immediately. apartment $155 / month d ► RECREATION 4-11-19 after 6 p.m. 4-11-19 Dept. 8A, Box 15071, San Diego, 882-8493,882-2694.3-11-16 349-1586.4 1119 'SERVICE California, 92115.5-1119 TOYOTA ONE GIRL needed winter and / or LANSING. 410 South Pint Typing Service CORONNA 1969. Very ura TRANSPORTATION economical transportation. Very NATIONAL COMPANY looking for spring. Cedar Village 351-3314 3-11-16 area. older home. Partially Excellent condit] good condition. 482-2589. 3-11-18 men and women. Comfortable furnished, ideal 1 WANTED DODGE, 1969 Super Bee. New paint OF NAMLM- PROBABLY JUST iHONEV!' inside work, no outside canvassing, ONE AND 2 bedroom apartments groups. Ample from campus via parking. 10minJ no sales experience necessary,must and tires, perfect condition. Cheap, TOYOTA CORONA 1968 4 door, 4 from $145. 10 minutes from expressway (f DEADLINE Mr. make offer. 627-9213. 3-11-17 speed, air, "snows". 669 9689 have good phone voice. Full time MSU. Children permitted. EAGLE Alben, 337-2510 6-8 p.m. 4-11-19 weekj 1 P.M. and part time positions. Salary, one class day before 5-11-16 CREST NORTH, 694-8975, 4330 DYNAMIC 88, $100-$200 / week, depending on publication. 1963, €> Way #&*/*&/ 9# K2*>/£. Keller Road, Holt. C power, service records, $275. 549 UHS/Nf, MM. ability, 2 weeks paid training WOMEN: ONE vacancy in71 TR6 1969, navy, good condition. Cancellations/Corrections Grove. East Lansing. Phone program. Contact Dick Vance: apartment, available December 1 $2000. Must sell. 332-0041. 12 noon one class day 332-2094.5-11-18 x-2-11-16 393-5460 for interview. 633 East MARRIED STUDENTS One block from camp before publication. Jolly Road, Equal Opportunity & FACULTY Completely furnished, utilities™ Auto Service & Parts parking included, $65 PhJ PHONE FAIRLANE 1966, four door, V-8, automatic, power steering, radio. Employment Employer. O 349-9609.0-5-11-22 Excellent shape, $490. 355-3150 DOMESTIC AND foreign auto 1, 2, & 3 bedroom apts. 355-8255 MASON BODY SHOP, 812 East ASSISTANT MANAGER for gas some with ONE GIRL needed to 5-7 p.m. 3-11-17 Kalamazoo Street mechanics. New business forming study VOLKSWAGEN 1967. Sharp, gas - . . . Since 1940. station needed. Must be married, in Lansing area. Only experienced Americana Apartments, i RATES 10 word minimum heater, AM/FM, much more Complete auto painting and over 25 years, and have recent FORD FALCON, 1965. 2 collision service. IV 5-0256. C need apply. Must have own tools. spring. 337-2084.3-11-11 No. DAYS - door, 6 accessories. Evenings, 485-1866. station experience. Hours are 12 ^ORDS cylinder automatic, new tires, special of the week, $395. See Ray 5-11-22 TIMS AUTO REPAIR- 5011 p.m. - and 7 10 a.m. p.m., - 1 Monday p.m., - Friday Saturday. Ample opportunity for the right profit sharing. For interview from *145 per mo. EAST LANSING. 1 bedroom, mJ at 372-0975.3-11-17 VOLKSWAGEN VAN, low mileage, Pleasant Grove Phone 393-0418.4-11-18 appointment. Call 393-3524. furnished, walking distaiT very good condition. Can be seen at Rd„ 393-4085. Major and minor Lansing. tune - 10-11-26 UNFURNISHED parking, $165 / mon FORD 3 quarter ton 4.W.D. Six man January 1. Phone 332-1183 aftJ University Big Boy. Trowbridge ups. Minor engine repair. Free HAVE BUSINESS idea, looking for children welcome p.m. 5-11-22 cab. Winch Michelin's, new engine, Road. 351-5132. 3-11-18 estimates. 24 hour road service. those interested in establishing For Rent please, transmission, many extras Tim Gage, Proprietor. 10-11-24 financial independence over next 5 no pets NEED GIRL to sublet winter ts 372-7058.2-11-17 VOLKSWAGEN BEETLE, 1970, JUST IN, shipment, compact years. Small amount of capital is new Riverhouse Apart men 25,000 miles. Air - conditioned, VW GUARANTEED FOR J GALAXIE 500 1966, V-8. automatic, power steering, clean, $1 700 Call 646-6207 after 5:30 p.m. 4-11-19 RANDY'S MOBfL. Okemos Road. 349-9620. C repair. I-96 at necessary. Write Box 264, Okemos. 3-11-17 refrigerators, freezers. Also dishwashers. ESCHTRUTH KNOB HILL 3-11 18 20 3.00 8.00 13.00 26.00 RESIDENT MANAGER position in ELECTRIC, 315 Bridge, Grand 3.75 10.00 16.25 32.50 $525.489 3096.3-11-18 GALAXIE VW 1969. Deluxe, 2 door, one 24,000 miles, excellent condition. owner, KING'S FOREIGN CAR SERVICE. Repair and service on Volkswagen, East Lansing area. Married couple only. Pay is commensurate with Ledge, 627-2191. O ONLY $9.00/ month. Free deliveries. APARTMENTS 500, 1964. Good duties. 347 Student Services Bldg. condition, automatic, 289, $450. $1400. 349-4061.3 11-17 Triumph, MG and most other Phone 332-5322 for SELCO COMMUNICATIONS TV 349-4700 interview. 7-11-23 HARRISON ROAD a All student ads must be Larry, 351-5141. 5-11f22 foreign makes. 320 South Charles, RENTAL. 372-4948. O OPEN Monday Friday VOLVO 122S - 1964. Is winterized, just off East Kalamazoo. Phone 9 a.m. • 5 p.m. Cherry Lane Apartments. Lai| prepaid 372 8130. 0-12-3 COOK WANTED - lunch and dinner • furnished, 2 bedroom a snow tires, radio, good condition. $395. 393-3311.3-11-18 hours. TJ's Red Coach Lounge. 465 TV AND Stereo rental, satisfaction Saturday 12-5 p.m. available December 15. 332 441 The State News will be N. Cedar. 196, Mason guaranteed. Free delivery, service . 3. liter, 1961 Jaguar engine, Interchange. LOCATED V* MILE NORTH and pick up. No desposit. Call respondble only for the G.T.O. 1965, 4 - speed, 389-325 Scooters & :omplete for parts. 1964 676-2627.5-11-16 OF JOLLY RD. ON Cycles _ first day's incorrect horsepower. One owner. $750. Volkswagen engine, 36 NEJAC, 337-1300. C OKEMOS ROAD GIRL FOR four man, spring. Cel WAITRESSES - NEAT, dependable Winterized. Deal! 351-6763. horsepower, complete for parts. Village. No deposit. 351-501 insertion. and experienced girls, 18 and over TV RENTALS Students only. Low 5-11-17 Also other miscellaneous parts and - GIRL 3-11-18 35 1971 Suzuki 500 s, still in their needed for NEEDED for four man noons and full time monthly and term rates. Call crates, $795. Call Val, 353-1865. accessories. Call 393-4085 shifts. No Sundays or holidays. Call apartment next to campus. 351-7900. UNIVERSITY TV CLOSE TO MSU / Frandor. I MERCURY COMET 1965. 3-11-18 10-11-24 332 6246.5-11-19 Good 489-1196, JIM'S TIFFANY RENTALS. C 1 bedroom, unfurnished, carpet® condition. $400 or best offer PLACE, 116 East Michigan, drapes, balcony, air 349-1798.3-11-18 HONDA 175, 1971 Road bike, 890 SNOW TIRES, Rims. Goodyear downtown Lansing. A nice place to Automotive miles, $550. Call 663-3339 695-14, fits GM. 351-2697 after Laundry, parking. Call 332-17^ work. 5-11-22 3-11-18 MERCURY MONTEREY 1966. 5-11-19 9:00 p.m.3-11-16 :HEVELLE, 1965, 4-door, 6 - Automatic, power steering, good 2 BEDROOM MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIST - duplex, furnished, East cylinder. Standard RENT-RENT shift. $300. rubber, 4 door, automatic rear Lansing. Call 332-4211 after 6 p.m. WANTED: ONE or 2 girls, winter| 485 1681.5-11-22 window, new battery, snow tires. Employment A.S.C.P. to work evening shift, 3 to 11:30 p.m., part time. Hospital SEWING MACHINES, exercise equipment, TV sets, toboggans, ski 2-11-16 /or spring. Capitol Villa. 3-11-18 35ME 115,000 miles. $275. Telephone CHEVY II 1966; air conditioning, 351 -3823 evenings. S THREE NEAT young men, one full experience required. Excellent racks. UNITED RENT-ALL, East TWO MAN apartment. All utilities power steering, power brakes plus KAWASAKI salaryend benefits. Apply Personnel Lansing, 351-5652. 0-11-17 ONE GIRL needed for 2 n 1969, 650, custom, time, one college student, 1 part paid, $139 / month. Jim, two mounted snow tires. $400. MGB 1966. Parts, car, or will run with pipes, paint. $550. Call Mark! Department. St. Lawrence apartment. Cedar GreeB time man, for new subsidiary of 332-3013.3-11-17 355-2003 or 355-2011.5-11-16 new head. Best offer. 351-0577 351-0009 4-11-16 Alcoa Aluminum just Hospital. 2-11-17 Immediately. Spring. Jeaiw opening new 3-11-18 office in Lansing, Car necessary. PART TIME Apartments NEEDED. ONE man for 2 man. 351-6573. 3-11-18 < f>tVY NOVA 1967. V-8, 17 For appointment call 351-7319. C phone work and mpg, Burcham Woods, call 351-1649. very reliable, excellent condition MGB 1963. Good engine. Needsother Aviation receptionist. Must be 21 and have LANSING OR East Lansing. One x-6-11-16 332 2089. 3-11-18 work. Best offer. 332-2180 own dependable transportation. bedroom furnished. Large, airy WANTED: PERSONS 18-25 for Hours 5-9 p.m. Call Miss Erdman, 3-11-18 LEARN TO FLYI promotional rooms. Air conditioned. Complete flight' advertising. Ability 372-7347 for an interview. CHRYSLER 1962 "Electric Church". training. All dictates Beautifully maintained. Suitable MUSTANG courses are earnings. An equal 0-1-11-16 for Not perfect but 1968, 30,000 miles. government and VA faculty, grad students, business interesting certified. opportunity employer. Call 351 9366. 3-11-17 Radio, new tires. Economical. FRANCIS 37 1-3280 people, married couples. Lease. NEED ONE man sublet winter term 351-6650 evenings. 1-11-16 AVIATION, Airport between 9-1 for Road. Call 484-1324. C interview appointment. 10-11-26 332-3135 or 882-6549. O and break. Cedar Village. 332-6814. 3-11-17 2 BEDROOM apartment needs 1 man (own room) beginning Dec. After 6 We Have 1 Left... NEWLY DECORATED, furnished, 2 Ctopcfcmgftam p.m. Tony, 339-9468. x-2-11-16 bedroom extra large apartment for USE YOUR 3-4 men. Storage, den, parking. NEEDED: ONE girl winter term $240 / month MASTER CHARGE I A four-man apartment only. University Terrace. $61.50. 351-9518.3-11-16 includes utilities. Deposit required. 393-1179 after 5 AT THE STATE iNEWj p.m. 5-11-17 will 5evah next to campus CROSSWORD PUZZLE three and four CALL 332-4432 GIRL WANTED to sublet Americana apartment. $80. 482-9540 after 6 p.m. 5-11-19 ACROSS I. Headland Endure Cow barn 33. Therefore 5. Weep 35. Function 8. Allied 36. Brim II. Indigo 38. Varnish apartments Qtad ^tudgMid., Ma 12. State 14. policeman Raw recruit 40. ingredient Turmeric 42. Taro 44. Neuter pronoun a*u£ 16. Federation at the end faculty 45. Disgust of 17. Gr. letter 18. Self-satisfied 47. Brown . . . 20. Belgian Bohemian commune vesuvianite 50. Peace officer month CAUGHT IN THE HOUSING 21. Ital. hamlet 5. Stalk 6 and 9 23. Flu injection 25. Indian mulberry 26. Biological 52. Overrule 53. Average 54. Appointed time 2. Irregularity 3. Holy 6. Gold i" heraldry Afresh 7. Limb factor 4. Deer Sedative SQUEEZE? 8. . 1 3 4 T- T- a ' 7 to 9. Gas of the a,r I will " 1 ... IS 10. 13. 15. Sea birds Forward Capri Take your troubles to •4 * % 16 19. Consume' available. Call YA 17 10 20 21. 27. 24. Hired car Seasoned Hautboy PARK WEST Is" 24 21 25 22 2i %27 ie %1 29 27. 29. Necessity Arouse j % Mythical la"cB ®topcfungf)am 30. is 32. Farm niacnm^ APARTMENTS 3i 33 34 % » 58 %39 34. Rum 37. Frosty % 4A 39 /\jr raid sign® - 4620 S. Hagadorn 5530 West Michigan Ave. 45 41 % 42 43 47 % 4a % 49 40 Grate 41. Heb. measure W MANA CEMENT EXCL USIVEL Y B Y; at Saginaw So % sr si 43. Challenge F 46. Eng. Ie',er L ,)S sttt*riM*l Contact Mrs. Louch Alee Management Company Si" 94 ss 49 This minute ■ 484 4640 % 51. Singing syllable I State News, East Lansing, Michigan Tuesday, November 16, 1971 13 For Sale For Sale Recreation O sublet Lg,2,f.er five. 3-1 MS winter term. ELECTROVOICE SPEAKERS, reduced prices, liberal trades. Used Sansu. 800 AM/FM new stereo receiver ONE KITTEN, two very affectionate. cats with shots, 351-4255. LONDON Rent deposit 2-111 fi Thorens 150 MKII stereo 8 Days 7 Nights turntable. Used PISH AQUARIUM STEREO, 5-55gallons. Also '199 speakers, amps, receivers, urged at changers, variety of fish. New complete campus hearing tape recorders and Super 8 movie camera outfit. Must decks, cassette and 8 tracks players, used 8 track Dec. 22 to 30 tapes $2 / each. TV COMPLETE DELUXE PACKAGES sets. Police band radio, typewriters.imported WE ARE ALSO PLANNING wall tapestries. All equipment Mobile Homes TRIPS TO Houses tested and ACAPULCO AND ASPEN (Continued from page one) the guaranteed. WILCOX manager and received no of premises be held at the time for SECOND HAND STORE, 509 HOMETTE front to what constitutes normal wear help, but when speaking with inspecting their apartment." Ec WITH option. Brand new East - kitchen, shed, on of occupancy and again when Hammond said, "Only 20 per Michigan. 485-4391. 8-5:30 PM. lot or off. Williamston. Must sell and tear. someone in the office of I " „e 4 bedroom, ell carpeted, 2J4 the parties leave. The inspectors cent took advantage of the Monday through Saturday. Bank immediately. 655 2073.5-11-19 * There should be limit Halstead family room with fireplace, CHRISTMAS HOLIDAY WITH some Management she was would sign an agreement with Americard. Master Charge. placed on the landlords right to able to get a portion of the sum opportunity." ■Ihen with all built - ini, 2 car Layaways, terms, trades. IC 8' x 35' DETROITER, completely STUDENTOURS. Nassau $169, make indiscriminate the lessor. She further Kp $375 / month. 332-1859. furnished. Phone 351-7376 or Jamaica $219, Acapulco $219, charges for back. items not expressed in the lease. recommended restriction be •16 Europe $189. Specials on Hawaii, East Lansing resident, Ron BROWNING, 1-616-983-3754 collect. ' 5-11-18 placed on the amount that a H i 2 gi''1*. Immediate 12 gauge, lighweight. Remington, 35 calibre, automatic, Puerto Rico, Spain, Aruba. Free brochures. 351-2650.4-11-16 He was particularly concerned Peters, addressed his testimony with the amount of time it to the question of making landlord could charge for a Traffic pump, Model 14 specific service. A 30 day limit ■cupancv- $5° ' month- 651 5867 Lost & Found requires to obtain action for monument . 5-11-16 escrow accounts and rental on the return of the *9242,355-9235. 3-11-18 VARIETY TOURS legitimate grievances security and he deposits interest bearing, deposit was also advocated by t LANSING: 3 bedroom, ' .iaIIV furnished. Phone WATERBEDS $26.50, Units, $60. Mattress, liner, foam any size. LOST. ELKHOUND male. 7 chain State collar, near Police post. East months, Lansing ACAPULCO Dec. 28-Jan. 4 concluded his recommendations with a board of arbitration that He recommended interest payment on escrow accounts be Ms. Dalquist. East Lansing Realtor Nathan has ROME (AP)—Suddenly, Pisa competition: there's now a ) or 332-1363. 2-11-17 pad and frame. UL listed waterbed Reward. could review the grievance. made law. His argument was that Hammond said, 30 days was "leaning tower of Rome." heaters. REBIRTH, 309 351-3969. 0-11-16 Carver continued that much of One of the capital's 19 North if public utilities can pay interest LIVING. 3 - bedroom, Washington, Lansing. 489^168. C LOST: IRISH Setter, 1V4, female. Includes: $219. his problem was caused failure on the part of the by i i deposits so can landlords and perfectly feasible, and indicated the apartments he manages have obelisks—a 20-foot pillar in the square facing the ancient 2 kitchens, 2 baths, APPLES, PEARS, Scarred rental agencies, their deposits back and sweet cider. Apple on right side - Y - shaped •Round-trip jet air paper Pantheon—has tilted noticeably. KTand yard. 351-7292 after wood. And Gift scar *7 management to delegate proper Julie Dalquist, president of work finished within 20 days. packages shipped on hip. Hagadorn, Haslett Nights - First class hotel The obelisk was brought from ToVlS by United Parcel. BLOSSOM Road area. Call 351-4850 or •Transfers authority. Though the resident OCC, strengthened Hagen's He blamed the tenants for ORCHARDS, 2 miles North of 337-1335. Reward. 2-11-17 •Cocktail Party manager may sign the lease, he original arguments for rental much of the problem. Hammond Heliopolis, Egypt, and erected t fOB two girls. House on Park Leslieon Hull Road. (Old U.S. 127) •Guaranteed Sun may not have the authority to deposit legislation. She said the has initiated many of the here in 1711 under Pope Clement F Winter term only. $55 / 1-589-8251 9-5 p.m. Closed LOST: BLACK white striped „ Terry 393-4357 return the damage XI. - cat. Call Carol 882-2632 deposit, he number of grievances received recommendations made at the White feet. 332-0846 The Rome newspaper II Tempo L,h each. Call 351-7559. Mondays. 0 Collingwood Now Shirley 351-8732 said. by OCC were only a small Drive. 1-11-6 testimony and said that students said the tilt was caused by the Don 351-8126 Finding someone who does portion of the total, fail to take advantage of the ALLIED TAPE DECK, cost $25a SKI IN French Alps Christmas was described by many who Off Campus Housing Office rumbling of heavy traffic around JmEN, senior or grad students. Yours for $150. Call 351-5156 Personal $289, testified as the biggest opportunities. the obelisk. It called upon the complete package. problem, receives an additional 300 "We told our tenants three |.r campus. Available now. 3-11-16 Leslie Ann Frink, provincial STUDENTOURS. 351-2650 Huntington deposit related complaints per weeks in advance that they superintendency of ngand references. IV2-8932. TUTORIAL HELP by Ph.D.'s. All 10-11-17 Woods graduate student, year she said, and those monuments to correct the tilt fc house 3-11-18 8 - TRACK TAPES: $4.49. Excellent sciences, including math, physics should schedule appointments before it becomes dangerous. selection. Waterbeds, head and Christmas Break explained Halstead Management represent apartments rather than computers. Call 351-8629 supplies, stereo 0-1-11-16 Company had subtracted $65 individual living in them, which equipment and more "simple pleasures." 217 Ann. BAHAMAS from a security deposit she and can be anywhere from one to (Under The Out look.) 4-11 -18 HOT COMBS, brushes, tonics and sprays, UNION BLDG. shampoos, *99 her roommates had made. She said, she took the complaint to five. She suggested, joint inspection Cutrate foreign aid IlLENT, NEAR campus room CAMERA FOR sale. Mamiya C-220 BARBER SHOP. C-11-16 Includes 5 full days, round trip K male graduate student. Call with 135mm lens. Call WHRT'B 484-0085. transportation between Detroit ■7-2592 2-1 1-16 3-11-17 Tingling Toothbrush and Freeport, departing Dec. 13. ini gets senators' OK A Cal firm Accommodations at Holiday Inn. IV 3 bedroom duplex, dining SLIGHTLY USED Evette clarinet. . offers a Transfers between airport and n, 1'/; baths, range and Very good condition. Call child's toothbrush that hotel. Plus taxes and gratuities. lerator. Private yard. 5810 332-0408, after 6 p.m. 3-11-17 (Continued from page one) makes a tingling sound, Hawaii, complete deluxe ,rd Court. 882-1526. 5-11-16 but package, $299. Call leadership agreed on its terms for a temporary settlement of the WANTERBED KIT, king size deluxe. only when being used with aid snarl. the Frank Buck, 351-2286 Rooms Upper and lower vinyl padded proper up and down Dave Buck But the price of approval by Ellender and other Democratic frames. Thermostat motion. , 353-0011 Announcements for It's What's The MSU Packaging Society will control leaders who had been opposed to a continuing resolution will be a Happening must be received in the meet at 7:30 p.m. today in the Con heater, 5 - year guarantee. $150. And your telephone will SUPPORT YOUR business with a ^NTION: ROOMS for rent. Phone 351-7024 make State News office, 345 Student Con Room, International Center. new cut in the temporary spending authority, to a rate equal to after 6 a tingling sound when boost from Want Ads. Advertise Services Bldg., by 1 p.m. at least two Jmpletely furnished. Cooking. 3 11-17 p.m. about $2.6 billion a year. class days before publication. No |l 372-807 7. C you use STATE services there. Dial 355-8255 announcements will Interchange, an exchange of That is the aid spending approved by the Senate in two bills it be accepted by resources, is in need of help. There will NewsClassified Ads to sell the Christmas Break 8 TRACK TAPES phone. Items are limited to 25 words. be a planning session at 4 p.m. today in passed to supplant the $2.9 billion authorizing measure rejected E. FURNISHED. Resaonable. good things you no longer No announcements will be LONDON accepted 329 Student Services Bldg. or call on Oct. 29. I, quiet, near campus, NEW, FULLY guaranteed, fantastic need. A small Want Ad will $149, for events outside the greater Lansing 351-8760. The State (king. 332-3094. 3-11-18 selection, $3.98, Asgard, JAMAICA $199 Dept., which oversees AID, and other administration 351 631 7.5-11-18 bring far reachinp results and Free U classes agencies have been issuing statements of alarm since the Senate cash dollars SPAIN $249 meeting today: too. Dial killed the $2.9 billion foreign-aid program more than two weeks (iNGS FOR men in Hedrick SANSUI 2000 receiver, KLH 17 355-8255 and try it today! ACAPULCO $199 The ASMSU have Legai Aid Dept. will Sexism and Sexuality - 8 p.m., Mural « Coop for winter / spring a lawyer available from 9 a.m. to Room, Union: Macrame - 7 p.m., 117 ago. Call 332-0844 anytime. speakers, Garrard 72B turntable. Call Rank Buck, 351-2286 noon every Wednesday and from 1 to Since j. VAN DYKE STUDIOS CHRISTMAS 5 p.m. every Wednesday and Bessey Hall; Basic Pottery - 8 p.m. Congress would be unable to come up with a new Excellent combination, $540 new, Thursday Kresge Sculpture Bldg.; Auto - SPECIAL. Bring this ad for $5 off during the fall term. Those wishing an program before the expiration of the old one, the official line $380, 353-8299. 5-11-18 Mechanics - 7:30 p.m., 210 Bessey went, a resolution continuing the system at last year's level was the price of any portrait package. appointment are asked to check with For Sale HIDE - A - BED WITH printed slip - Titian color, silver- tone, bronze - Service the ASMSU business office 307 B Hall; Access to Alternative Life Styles and Vocations - 7:30 p.m., 458 the only way to keep AID operating. Student Services Bldg., or call There would be no money to pay the 12,400 AID tone or oil coloring. We do group cover. $75. Brown Colonial chair 353-0659. There will be a nominal fee Evergreen St. employes portraits in our studio or your PAINTING INTERIOR. Brighten up here and overseas and no funds to process the assistance Marlin-Carbine, new $15. Metal step stool $2. 372-0073. for this service. program home. A VAN DYKE portrait that itself, the administration claimed. |to«rap, 2 clips, 2 boxes of 3-11-16 makes a perfect Christmas gift. room for the holidays. Grad The Student Advisory Committee - le cartridges, and cleaning students, experienced, references, Beatrice Paolucci, professor of Mathematics will meet at 6 p.m. As late as Monday afternoon State Dept. spokesman Charles W. 332-8889, 209 Abbott Building. reasonable. Jere, family ecology, will discuss "Family |": Call 393-4085. 10-11-24 KASTLE SKIS: CPM-RS 205cm, 0-5-11-22 349-4817. C or Bruce, Finances and Management" at 8 Wednesday in 138A Wells Hall. Course evaluations and Natural Science Bray still was claiming AID would die at midnight, and a never used; without bindings. List continuing resolution was necessary. ) vacuum cleaners. tonight in the Married Students Tanks, $180.485 6110. 3-11-17 Activities Building, Spartan Village. But Bray retreated from earlier statements when he BOARD EXAM Tutoring. Local UPHOLSTERING - REFINISHING, s and uprights. Guaranteed lie full year. $7.88 and up. USED FURNITURE Flea Fair. 314 classes for Kaplan Tutoring courses restyling and repairing. All work Leighton Ford will rap with people acknowledged the system would be kept going on a volunteer Akers Hall Sexuality Symposium interested in basis. nowbeing formed for: guaranteed. 18 years experience. sharing Jesus at 10:30 ■ENNIS DISTRIBUTING East Michigan. Dishes, books, presents Paul Wikert speaking on a.m. today at 4606 S. Hagadorn Rd. TOLAND UPHOLSTERY, The State Dept. proved correct in one prediction: Congress did pMPANY, 316 North Cedar, coins, antiques, rockers, junk. "Different Patterns of Sex in December and 675-5318.5-11-19 Marriage" at 9:30 tonight in the west not enact legislation for a new foreign aid program. nsiteCity Market. C-11-18 Bargain Hunters Paradise. Open The MSU Promenaders, folk and square dance club, will meet at 7 p.m. The Senate has passed two measures, one for Saturday and Sunday. Furniture FREE SENIOR development and |NG MACHINE Clearance Sale. and appliances open all week, 10 PORTRAITS. Call Wednesday in 34 Women's Intramural economic assistance, the other for military aid, but the House has 353-5292. A SERVICE OF THE Tickets for the MSU Symphony Bldg. w portables - $49.95. $5 am - 6 pm/ Phone 371-2843. C Orchestra benefit performance at 8:15 not scheduled hearings on the bills. WOLVERINE. 0-11-17 f month. Large selection of tonight in Fairchild Theatre are The House, on the other hand, has passed a :onditioned used machines, COLE'S BAKERY M.C.A.T. exam - May There will be an organizational continuing available at the Union ticket office. resolution as requested by the administration. But the Senate has CERAMIC TILE meeting for all people interested in ijers, Whites, Necchis, New TUESDAY ONLY Special. 4 loaves — Painting and carpenter work. Call ballooning at 7 p.m. today in 208 not considered it and leaders there say it won't. me & "Many Others", $19.95 to Home - style white bread, $1.00 at 482-0056 The Dept. of Theater will hold open M^n's Intramural Bldg. anytime. 5-11-19 Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield of Montana said the i9.95. Terms. EDWARDS our bakery foods concession. auditions for "The Effect of Gamma Rays/Marigolds" and "A Cry of All Shaw Hall MSU Volunteers will administration has overstated the case all along. "It may be a ■STRIBUTING COMPANY. MEIJER THRIFTY ACRES WRITE IN SKIP STAM for Academic ELECTRONIC REPAIRS. Stereos, - Players" from 5 to 11 tonight in 38 have a special dinner at 5:30 p.m. temporary embarrassment," he said, but "payment will be made §15 N. Washington, 489-6448. Okemos, South Pennsylvania, West Council Section E: female. Stop radio, recorders, TV's. Dependable. Union. Wednesday in the Small Dining Room. at some time." ■11-18 Saginaw Road. KROGER — sexism. Tell your friends. 3-11-17 Reasonable. Call. 351-6680. Call 35 5-8831 for reservations. Frandor, Logan Center, 4002 West x-0-30-11-23 East Lansing Democrats will meet at Hannah gave his personal assurances that payrolls would be §ARE THE best record prices in Saginaw, 1721 North Grand River. FREE ... A lesson in complexion care. 8 tonight at the All Saints Church, 800 There will be a rap session for met, an AID source said, when he met with employes last Friday "".Not just one day specials, but C-11-16 FOR QUALITY service and stereos, N. Abbott Road. Plans for 1972 and volunteers working with children who and told them the program would go ahead. Call 484-4519, East Michigan or nt low prices. MARSHALL TV's and recorders. THE STEREO the busing question will be discussed. In fact, the AID employes are due to be paid Nov. 23 for the are a "problem" in the classroom at 4 MIC,East Lansing. C-1-11-16 485-7197, Lansing Mall. MERLE PANTSUITS, DRESSES, coats, SHOPPE. 337-1300. C Everyone is welcome. p.m. Wednesday in 27 Student two weeks that ended last Friday. This indicates the full NORMAN COSMETICS problem skirts, blouses, shoes. Size 5. Steam STUDIOS. C-11-18 Services Bldg. won't arise until the next scheduled payday, Dec. 7, which covers lENBACKER 12 - string guitar, - set curlers, used once. 332-6440. bt condition, with case. $150. A representative of Emory College the current period during which there are officially funds. fW741.3-11-18 3-11-17 Peanuts Personal Typing Service Law School will speak to the MSU Holmes Hall volunteers will have special dinner at 5:30 p.m. today in a no Pre-Law Club at 7:30 p.m. Wed nesday BLIZZARD the 1965 Room. Call 355-8831 for SUPER Epoxi Skis - in 118 Eppley Center. ' 25 5 A PROFESSIONAL TYPIST. Term tape deck, 210cm, Rosemount Fastback Boots MY WOMAN - 18 tolls your birthday papers, theses. Best ['conditioned rates. Call ns. $65. to original 351-3305. - 12, Look Nevada Gran Prix Bindings, call 353-0126.5-11-20 bells rang. Let's start No. 19 out with abang.C.R.B.Jr. 1-11-17 351-4619. O COMPLETE THESES service. There will be an important food co-op meeting at 8 tonight in the Albatross Coffeehouse. All interested All MSU Volunteers working with children who have reading problems will meet at 4 p.m. today in 6 Student Academic Senate meet people are invited. WASHING MACHINE. Kenmore, Discount printing. IBM |0SPOT", DOUBLE door, 18 portable, automatic, $45. Phone Real Estate binding of typing and theses, resumes, Members of the Gay Liberation (Continued from page one) st free, refrigerator - 351-0972. 3-11-17 publications. Across from campus, Front will hold a discussion of the Anyone interested in a class in opinionnaire conducted by the I8* $70. Toy 2 place bob sled. EAST LANSING Excellent 3 motorcycle repair, contact Free U at Faculty Affairs and Faculty - corner M.A.C. and Grand River, movement at 8 tonight in the Emmons Carlisle, chairman of the ad hoc 10.349-2482.3-11-18 YOU WON'T believe our large bedroom, 2V4 bath, colonial home. below Jones Stationery Shop. Call lounge. Everyone is invited. 484-5104. Experienced people are committee to Compensation Committee Located within walkingdistanceof needed to work with the class. develop a selection of Frame Styles. COPYGRAPH SERVICES document. concerning the release of faculty JSIZE P't. crib, folding high chair, OPTICAL DISCOUNT. 2615 East campus, schools and shopping. 337-1666. C and Rep. John Engler, R-Mt. Pleasant, John Belaski will speak on salary information will be mattress. $40 for lot. Price just reduced to $39,900. For Rep. Mike Dively, R-Traverse Provost John E. CAntlon Michigan Avenue. 372-7409. "Retailing for the Consumer" at a available this week. ►<768.3-11-18 C-5-11-19 more information call Jim Porter, City, will discuss the implications of meeting of the Retailing Club at 7 p.m. concluded the meeting with a The proposal for the creation SAVE SAVE SAVE the new age of majority at 8 p.m. 332-2778, WM. G. MARTIN today in 34 Union. rClOPEDIA BRITANNICA. XEROX COPYING- offset best Wednesday in the Emmons lounge. report on the status of several of a College of Race and Urban HARMONY GUITAR hollow body, 3 COMPANY, 372-5570. 5-11-17 - edition. Never used. Must quality at reasonable prices. THE Gershen Kaufman, asst. professor in proposals for curriculum changes Affairs is currently being pickups, Sunburst, $175, The Assn. of Recreation and Leisure will sacrifice. Reduced $200. LAKE LANSING Road. Good house COPY SHOPPE, 54 East Grand the Counseling Center, and Judith within the University, including examined by the provost's office Educators will meet at 7 p.m. negotiable. Grundig AM/FM, Krupka, asst. professor in the the proposed College of Race pi-8994. x-5-11-18 shortwave / longwave, cassette for student rental. 2 bedrooms, R'ver_Phone_332-4222^C Wednesday in 208 Men's Intramural Counseling Center, will lead a sexual and Urban Affairs, the School of and a recommendation will be living room, kitchen, full bath,and ANN BROWN: Typing and multilith Bldg. Everyone is welcome. finalized within two or three recorder, portable, $175. enrichment program for couples at 8 ■jU® SALE: Wrought iron glass 351-9487.3-11-17 garage. Priced at $16,700. Will sell offset printing. Complete service There will be an open meeting of the tonight at the Married Students Law, the four-year program of weeks. ■JW dinette $80, marble coffee e FHA or VA. Call Dorothy Adams, for dissertations, theses, Coalition for Human Survival at 6:30 Activities Building. Spartan Village. the University College, and the However, the decision for the *40.00, bedroom set $75. 339-2552. WM. G. MARTIN manuscripts, general typing. IBM. evaluation procedure of the birth of a new college, Cantlon 1w, lamps, appliances, more. p.m. today in 37 Union. There will be a rap _ COMPAN Y, 372-5570. 5-11-17 22 years experience. 349-0850. C sessionfor Animals three residential colleges. reminded the faculty, lies with p072.x-3-1i.i7 HUGHES ROAD TYPING SERVICES by an volunteers to discuss experiences at 8 tonight in the North volunteer Cant Ion also said that an the board of trustees. PMAOE FURNITURE Case Hall lounge. , GERMAN SHEPHERD puppies. 8 JUST LISTED. This two bedroom experienced, professional typist. Wanted fT"6 Crafted, high quality, weeks old. AKC registered. home with large lot and garage can Manuscripts, term papers, letters. The College of Business C^-0" prices. THE SEVEN PRFS, 349-481 7. C-5-11-16 Champion bloodlines, $100. 217 > South Williams Street, Bellevue, be bought FHA, VA or equity out. Close to shopping and schools. Reasonable rates. Call 339-9306. 5-11-19 FROM WHERE you sit, check the Undergraduate Counselor for freshmen and sophomores will hold Candidate avoids shot; Price $15,000. For appointment better jobs in today's Classified office hours from 1 to 5 p.m. every 616-763-3156 after 6 p.m. 5-11 -22 rH0NE, SELMER. Mark VI call Mrs. Robinson, ADVANCE TYPING TERM papers and theses. Ads. Tuesday and Thursday and from 1 to 3 hn»«,COndition- ,n« 372-8216.5-1 1-15 Beginners LABRADOR RETRIEVER AKC. Yellow. Excellent hunters puppies. REALTY 372-7610 x-4-11-19 or 485-3045. Electric typewriter. Fast service. 349-1904.20-12-1 p.m. everv Friday in the Marketing Dept. For information call 353-5987. boy killed in Uruguay and family pets. Phone MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay chest when a man with a small ONE BEDROOM apartment, Williamston, 655-1791.5-11-22 (AP) —Bullets fired at a knife attacked him later, at a unfurnished. Available in the Haslett area. $129.50. Phone John Phone 484-1874.20-12-2 presidential candidate's car rally. The Chess Club will meet at 7 p.m. FOSTER PARENTS wantedl Runquist,332-3534. 5-11-19 fatally wounded a boy playing TYPING THESES and letters, etc. Wednesday in Shaw Hall west meeting Beautiful, young kitten. room. Please bring a set is possible. nearby. Later a knife-wielding The attacks Rapid accurate service. BLOOD DONORS needed.$7.50 for drunk slightly wounded the brought new Housebroken, free to good home. 529 REGENT ST. 3 bedrooms, just Experienced. 393-4075. C all positive. A The Christian Science protests from supporters of the negative, B negative Call 351-6571. 3-11-17 remodeled, new furnace, new and AB negative, $10.00 O Organization will meet at 6:45 p.m. politician himself, authorities Broad Front, a coalition of BARBI MEL: today in the Alumni Chapel basement. reported Monday. siding, wall to wall carpeting living Typing, multilithing. negative, $12.00. MICHIGAN All welcome to share Communists, Socialists, Christian are healing Both incidents room / dining room, FHA No job too large or too small. Block COMMUNITY BLOOD CENTER, occurred Democrats and splinter groups appraised at $17,600. 676-2627. off campus. 332-3255.0 507V4 East Grand Sunday night in Castillos, 150 PET SALE Guppies 7c, algae eaters River, East from the traditional Colorado 6-11-16 Lansing. Above the new Campus The German Club will meet at 7:30 miles northeast of Montevideo, 29c, kissing gourami 25c, mouse - and National parties. Book Store. Hours, 9 am to 3:30 p.m. Wednesday in 34 Union to hear where Liber Sergeni, candidate of gerbil cage, includes waler bottle and wheel $2.87, 10 gal. aquarium DUPLEX, 1614 Bailey. Just Transportation pm Monday, Thursday, and Friday. Tuesday and Wednesday 1 about foreign programs. the leftist Board Front coalition, remodeled, new furnace, new was set up regular $1 2.99, sale $7.99. - siding, wall to wall carpeting, WANTED: RIDE to Denver, Colorado pm to 6:30 pm. 337-7183. C The Coalition for Human Survivia, campaigning for the Nov. 28 Special 15% discount for MSU furnished apartments, Appraised, will hold a discussion on a student elections. anytime' after Nov. 24. Call STUDENTS AND FACULTY ON PUPPIES AND AQUARIUM SET UPS. Give the gift lhat lives and $17,600. Income $260 monthly. 676 2627.5-11-16 351-1273.5-11-16 PERSONABLE MATURE GAL needs full time job during Christmas strike at 6:30 p.m. today in the Union second floor lobby. The 11-year-old boy, Osvaldo Amonte Barrios, was hit in the Admissions - WANTED break. (December 4 Alpha Phi Alpha presents the head by a bullet fired at Seregni's STUDENT to share - January 2). loves. DOCKTOR PET CENTER, General office, receptionist. Dental and the Funkadelics in car. He died in a (Continued from page one) 6 ACRES on Jolly Road near expenses of trip and tour of s hospital Monday LANSING MALL. Phone California. Leave Lansing Assistant, sales, cashier. Call concert at 10 p?m. Wednesday in the morning. Hagadorn. House, barn net $300 / Men's Intramural Building. Tickets are to clear up confusion concerning 487-5927. month. $36,500 Call 337-7252. 12/17/71, returning 1/3/72 by car. 339-8685 after 6 p.m. or Seregeni, 54, a retired army available in the Union lobby and at the the admission of these students 5-11-18 Call 351-5970. 3-11-17 weekends.S door. general suffered a scratch on his and the effects of admission. 14 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan I ucsii - -Veart*t i6 |j CAMPUS NOT SO SAFE Rape precautions told By CAROL THOMAS "We think the campus is relatively safe," A lot of nonstudents are The ca»t from"Amahl and the Zutaut said, "a girl's safety depends on the campus area . State News Staff Writer how much she wants to gamble." "P girls," Zutaut said for the purL! > Night Viiitori" rehearse their before performances If coeds use the same caution when Lt. Haywood Julian, a detective for the who is "th.-v^T, plc scenes considering a lonely late-night jaunt across Dept. of Public Safety said he thinks the some hitchhiking alone and scheduled for 8:15 p.m. isolated spot " l*i campus that they would use when thinking students an? lulled by this relative safety into a "Girts Thursday, Friday and of taking a walk down a deserted city false sense of security which causes them to act lot less hitchhiking in twov .t Saturday, and 5 p.m. Sunday street, many attacks that occur on campus without thinking in many cases. a likely to be victims attack," he continued, if S?h** in the Music Bldg. could be prevented, MSU police say. "Students extend this circle of safety hitchhike, even If , IS> Auditorium. In the two most recent rapes occurring Into the East Lansing area, and from there we warn ih V( they should go in rtouds not on campus, both victims were walking alone, late at night when they were It includes even obviously suspicious areas on campus," Julian said. zuuu. W.L. fitTA* occurring on campus is attacked, according to police reports. "We suggest that girls who are traveling "Pretty soon, woodlots, areas near nonstudents, so the mental ™'j « Jr ^ deserted buildings at night, and totally of at night go in groups," said Capt. Adam J. safety on campus is illogical.l0nallZl deserted spots on campus become part of Zutaut, chief of MSU police. this safe area to the student," Julian Zutaut explained that a criminal assailant "The same criminals you woi.ih continued, "and this is where the trouble the middle of the is obviously less likely to attack a group of wo«t starts, with people being careless. probably spend a great deal people than one women traveling alone, and that lot of the crimes that occur on At the beginning of the year, information on the MSU of ii" a given to female students in residence halls campus 8et» Henderson of the MSU campus of this nature could be prevented Included warnings from the police not to thinking you're safe because policeU by using common sense. travel alone at night or hitchhike alone. campus is asking for trouble " tti™ African Studies Center By ANNE BOOKER according to Opubor, one of the leading, most effective centers of concentrate his studies in this department would be equipped to State News Staff Writer its kind in the nation. It has been credited as being a pioneer in do that if he so desired. He would In all probability be better "Anyone who only concerns himself with response in J and cents destroys the many areas and is looked upon by other universities as a model very concept of the purpose 0i The African Studies Center has begun this fall term with a new prepared than many others in Africa working today that have not because of its success. education," Opubor explained. Blacks have a basic director of Its program. The new director, Alfred Opubor has just had the background necessary." "The program is not necessarily designed to turn out students explained, for learning how to survive in this The Center and the student must answer the question of society. recently returned to this country from Nigeria. who wish to go right to Africa and begin working." Opubor "We are beginning to respond we are Opubor is the first permanent director that the center has intellectual usefulness of training in this area of discipline, he ... working toi stated, "but we fed certain that the student who does said. meeting the demands," he stated, "our hope is to be abl employed since 1969. match those demands with constructive programs. " Opubor studied at MSU as a doctoral candidate in the Dept. of Communications. Upon the completion of his studies he taught for two years In Nigeria. Returning as director of the African Studies Center, Opubor noted many significant changes in the academic atmosphere and general policies and attitudes in the Unlveristy community. "The African Studies Center has been forced to look at what it's doing ... at Its relevance to both American and African societies." "We have begun to ask ourselves where we are and where is it that we need to go," he said. The African Studies Center has been structured to fulfill definite needs In the academic community. The first and perhaps most challenging goal of the Center is to increase awareness of the African continent. Distorted Images concerning Africa must be dispelled because in the words of Opubor, "people really don't know as much about Africa as they might think they do. Also the media plays a very definite role in promoting certain images of Africa to its audience in this country. Nobody reads about Africa until something bad happens." The Center concerns itself, too, with the facilitation of responsible studies of Africa through teaching and research. It also sees as a major goal the participation in responsible social action in black communities in the United States; he sajd. Opubor reports that he Is pleased at the response of the program toward achieving its goals so far. The MSU center is, Volunteers eligible for national award By KAREN ZURAWSKI State News Staff VWiter Because of their outstanding service to the community, the MSU volunteers are being activt.y considered for the 1971 National Volunteer Awards. Nominated by Gov. MUUken for the award, the volunteers are among the 20 per cent of those nominated who have met the preliminary screening criteria and are now eligible for the $5,000 award. In past years, between 600 and 700 persons have been nominated annually. The volunteers received a citation, a national honor, from the National Center for Voluntary Action (NCVA) which was formed in early 1970 by President Nixon, who is its honorary chairman. Before the establishment of the NCVA, Lane Bryant Inc. presented annual awards to volunteers doing exceptional community service for 22 years. Lane Bryant Inc. announced in December of 1970 that it would continue to participate in the annual awards, by making available its resources and techniques. In 1969, the MSU Volunteer Bureau received a plaque and award honoring "the volunteer action effort." The bureau itself cannot receive an award, because some of its members are paid University employes. This year's award recipients will be chosen by a four-man panel composed of Walter Hickel, former secretary of the interior, Charles Evers, mayor of Fayette, Miss., H. I. Romnes, chairman C°tyrof of the board AT & T; and Jacquelint G. Wexler, president of Hunter College, New York. Preliminary screening is performed by a faculty panel from C.W. Post College of Long Island University. A further screening by the panel evaluates the nominees on community need, program scope, use of resources and the magnitude of obstacles encountered and overcome. The National Center for Voluntary Action, a nonpolitical and nonprofit organization, Is privately funded and is established to help organize local centers, collect and classify information and assist by communication, technical assistance and recognition the volunteer movement. That's the difference between Lemon Up and products with just a little lemon fragrance or extract. That's why Up Shampoo makes hair shiny clean. That's why Facial Cleanser is far better than soap. And that's why Anti-Blemish with hexachlorophene Lotion is your best defense against oil-troubled skin.