F riday MICHIGAN DIVERSITY STATE TATE NEWS , 64 Number 91 East Laming, Michigan Friday, January 21, 1972 Jixon asks Congress o SHINGTON (AP) - unite President Nixon "These on recommendations will be vital issues opposes any national sales tax. need to proceed with new weapons nned a Democratic Congress revolutionary," Nixon said. Nixon's 4,000 word address to a joint ° "But they will be rooted in one - systems. t0 join him in election • year session of Congress, broadcast and televised He did not say how big the increase will fundamental principle with which there iiD and pass, despite "the intense nationally, was accompanied by a 15,000 - be but did detail $3.7 billion in additional L" of a White House campaign, an can be no compromise: local boards must word written message outlining in more defense spending to be included in his have control over local schools." stalled administration proposals, a detail his requests of Congress and his budget next Monday. That drew burst of applause. . defense budget and a "new a assessment of the State of the Union. As predictable as the Democratic Speculation in that area has centered on logy program" to promote research a value added tax, a form of national sales Sen. Edmund S. Muskie of Maine, criticism was the Republican praise of iate jobs. tax leading contender among Nixon's Nixon's speech. Sen. Robert P. Griffin of t us join in making sure that imposed at each stage of production Democratic challengers, called the address and delivery, as the most Michigan called it "an inspiring message of ion the nation needs does not likely proposal "an empty spe«.t ' ..." hope and challenge." House Republican ; hostage to the political interest for a new tax source to of lighten the load on Sen. Hub rt H. Humphrey of Leader Gerald R. Ford of Michigan said it person," the President property owners. rty or any Nixon said only that his Minnesota, campaigning for a 1972 was "statesmanlike . . . apolitical . . . a State of the Union message that presidential rematch with Nixon, said realistic." recommendations would relieve the burden «ed the House and Senate to act in Nixon had delivered "a frontal assault on A panel of Senate and House Democrats of property taxes while "providing both n more than 90 proposals he already fair and adequate Congress without giving credit for some will present their version of the State of t to Capitol Hill. financing for our very constructive work." the Union Friday in a 55-minute television children's education." new technology plan, with the Sen. Henry M. Jackson of Washington and radio broadcast on the major Such a proposal would due later, would feature a $700 increase in civilian research and become a major issue in the inevitably campaign said Nixon had delivered "a platform instead of a program that will political networks. The Democrats were granted free broadcast time for their response to IjUW of the land anient spending. ahead, but there is little chance Congress Nixon's nationally televised 30-minute Members of the Supreme Court sit together in the House chamber would act on it. Senate Republican Leader help those in distress all over America." on did not say exactly how much In his written message, Nixon recited address. Thursday as they await the arrival of President Nixon and the delivery his defense budget would be, but he Hugh Scott said a value added tax "has a the administration record of In foreign policy, Nixon said, the United of his State of the Union address. From top are: Associate Justices great deal of appeal" but probably could troop $3.7 billion in increases, including withdrawals from South Vietnam, saying States will maintain an adequate nuclear not be acted on this year. Senate William H. Rehnquist, Lewis F. Powell Jr., Harry A. Blackmun, in more for the Navy, $900 million that by May 1, he will have cut forces deterrent, defend its interests wherever Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield said he by Thurgcod Marshall, Byron R. White, Potter Stewart, William J. Brennan irove the sea - based U.S. nuclear 87 per cent. they are threatened, limit its role where «nt force, and $838 million in favors relief for the property taxpayer but "It is my hope that we can end this they are not. Jr., William O. Douglas and Chief Justice Warren E. Burger. id up research and development (Please turn to page 13) tragic conflict through negotiation," he AP Wirephoto ig. said. "If we cannot, then we will end it leftover agenda war topped by his through Vietnamization. But end it we sals for welfare reform, federal shall — in a way which fulfills our sharing with the cities and states, nization of the executive branch and health insurance program. In the rea, he also proposed that Congress commitment to the people of South Vietnam and which gives them the chance for which they have already sacrificed so much — the chance to choose their own Nixon orders je the $5.80 monthly fee now future." id for medicare insurance for doctor's Nixon also said he is confident that by is have our debates," the President said. the middle of 1973 "we can achieve our goal of reducing draft calls to zero." He cautioned Congress and the nation in building nuclear subs shave honest differences. But not to expect "too much too quickly" keeping the national interest from his forthcoming visits to Peking and WASHINGTON (AP) - President Nixon reported strong Russian efforts to build up Although Nixon stopped short of saying Moscow. disclosed Thursday he has ordered the their nuclear striking power, including a he has ordered actual construction of the that, applause sounded through a "My visits will mean not that our Pentagon to accelerate development of a fleet of-missile • firing submarines which new ULMS, his intent was indicated by his chamber crowded with the leaders differences have new ckhK of nuclear-powered submarines defense officials disappeared or vtill say may. surpass this statement that "I recently directed the i government. disappear in the near future," he said. "... "carrying a new and far more effective country's Polaris submarine force by next Dept. of Defense to develop a program to the important thing is that we talk about missile." year. build additional missile launching message concentrated on the these differences rather than fight about "Even as we seek with the greatest His move could affect the course of the submarines" with much more effective hed agenda before Congress, but them." urgency stable controls on armaments," Strategic Arms Limitation Talks in Vienna, weapons. id the promise of a major new The President guaranteed a major fight Nixon told Congress, "we cannot ignore where the Russians and the Americans are The ULMS missile would be too large to later In the year, a measure in the Senate with his the fact that others are going forward with reported at odds. mount on the present Polaris boats. President Nixon stresses a point in his State proposal for id to ease the burden of local increased defense spending. He said it will major increases in their own arms In his State of the Union report, Nixon Nixon said his new budget will also carry ty taxes in of the Union address Thursday as Vice financing the public be required by rising research and programs. said his new defense budget will contain further programs to equip 31 of the Polaris President Agnew listens in the background This was an obvious reference more than $900 million "to improve our submarines with the multiwar'.iead development costs, pay to sea ■ based deterrent force." Poseidon missile, to replace older land - This is nearly a nine • fold increase in based intercontinental ballistic missiles funds for an Undersea Launched Missile with the multiple warhead Minuteir.an III System (ULMS), which eventually could and to deploy the Safeguard antimissile U' to present pay list plan cost as much as $15 billion. It involves design of a huge new type of submarine which would eventually mount missiles with a range of up to about 6,000 miles, roughly twice the reach of present system. "an The president told Congress tl v will be year, increase in defense spending" next but did not provide a figure. By MICHAEL FOX administration would need to consult with the conditions for which an out - of - state issue. One such question is whether out • of U.S. Polaris and Poseidon missiles. State News Staff Writer trustees prior to the formal meeting today student can acquire Michigan residency - state students should be required to Navy strategists say the additional range Application? remain out of school for six months or 12 will vastly widen the water area in which Students interested in representing the to develop the exact text of its status for tuition payment purposes. recommendation. The crucial issue at stake Robert Perrin, vice president for University months to establish in • state status for U.S. missile - firing submarines can hide College of Human Ecology in the University administration remained Is to what extent information will be made tuition purposes. while able to strike the Russian and Academic Council should turn in their relations, issued a short statement in Thursday afternoon regarding On the salary information issue, the Communist Chinese heartland. It will applications and today in 7 public beyond the high, low, median and indicating that the administration would resumes lecifics of a recommendation on the average salaries of each academic rank in not be prepared with a revised administration is expected to consult with complicate Soviet antisubmarine warfare Human Ecology building. The election is of faculty salary information each department, school and center. the trustees in closed session sometime problems enormously. scheduled for Jan. 28. that it recommendation until a later date. ut before the trustees at In another action, the administration before today's 10 a.m. meeting. Five of the 10 a.m. Perrin cited unresolved questions of Thursday afternoon removed from today's finances and impact which motivated the eight members of the board have publicly vost John E. Cantlon said the agenda a set of new recommendations on University to delay consideration of the advocated full disclosure of salary SECTIONS DROPPED information, a stand which the administration previously rejected. While the hard specifics of the administration's proposal are unclear, fireworks are expected in debate over the issue. Debate may include Robert F. U' meets funds cut by slashing classes Repas, professor of labor and industrial relations, who was censured by the Academic Council for unauthorized release of salary information along with Trustee many low-enrollment course sections. This Clair A. White, D - Bay City. will work some hardships on individual In addition to faculty salary students whose academic plans may be information, the trustees will be asked to The iitv dependent upon taking a specific course a approve a new assistant vice president for announced Thursday that it had met a $1.5 certain term, but it has permitted the vast personnel and employe relations. The million cutback in its 1971-72 state majority of our students to escape a direct administration will also submit a appropriation by cancelling many impact on their program," Wharton said. recommendation for the individual to fill low-enrollment course sections. "The longer range effects of the In effect, the University administration the new post which is part of President reduction will have a far greater impact if Wharton's restructuring of the central has activated enrollment controls which such midyear budget reductions are not administration. have been available since 1965. The repeated. This is the second consecutive To celebrate the opening of a The new assistant vice president will detailed control system eliminates class year in which University funds have been probably pull together the personnel sections with less than 15 students and reduced after appropriations had been new local police barracks these structure on campus. Presently the various provides for conditions under which made. The consequences are particularly members of the greater Rio de sections will be cancelled, consolidated or employe areas are handled by several acute in the noninstructional areas which Janeiro State Police form a different and often uncoordinated offered only certain terms or certain years. absorbed the bulk of the reduction again symetrical pattern of lines during departments. The state-imposed 2 per cent cutback in this year in the form of deferring an exercise exhibition recently in A new dean for the College of MSU's $76 million appropriation for the expenditures for updating and maintaining Education will be recommended to the current fiscal year was made by Gov. the University's physical plant." the Brazilian capital. trustees. William B. Hawlev, professor of Milliken in an attempt to balance the "The governor's budget request for AP Wirephoto state's budget by cutting all appropriations education, has been acting dean of the MSU for 1972-73, if enacted in its entirety, college since April 1.1971. uniformly. would help restore equity in the areas Other trustee matters will include "We feel that we have managed to which have been cut." approval of an architect to design a new- absorb the reduction with a minimum of Provost John E. Cantlon outlined the University ice arena scheduled for the start disruption in our instructional, research procedures for enrollment controls in a of construction in September and and service programs because of Jan. 14 memorandum to deans, directors completion by winter, 1974. contingency planning," President Wharton and department chairman. The TTie campus dog ordinance issue is not said. administration's efforts for "more on this month's agenda. Internal savings to offiset the $1.5 economical instructional models" was million reduction were approved by the approved by the University Curriculum trustees last fall when the likelihood of an Committee on Dec. 2. 1971, and is Warmer . . . appropriation cut loomed. The public effective spring term. announcement of the cutback procedures It is believed that the enrollment with a 30 per cent chance of was not made until Thursday, however, as ... controls have already been unofficially rain or snow. High in the upper Milliken had not sized the cutback at 2 per applied for the current term. Under its cent until earlier this month. provisions, the enrollment in all courses "The most obvious short-range will be evaluated each spring term and all curtailments have been the cancellation of low enrollments will require justification. 2 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, Januilary 2i. news Stote By C. RAY ANDERSON II State News Staff Writer budget tied to economy .. , avoided entirely. - .l. Although the governor has k«. substantial increases in public services initutoH initiated "to help remained constant from the pr»— « PresentU "It is absolutely essential that the 1972 - 73 summary From th« wfrei of AP ind UPI. Gov. Milllken's $4.6 billion budget proposal for fiscal year 1972 • 73 relies almost entirely on existing rates of taxation," the governor s budget 0cularly those |n greatest need," he admits budget be confined to resources available from ^ much of thoge increases are being absorbed skyrocketing welfare and education costs government was placed at figure was arrived at after computing] cent pay Increase of state employ!* i1 a continuing upswing in Michigan's economy to proposal states, so Michigan's economy can haye mQre than doubied the state budget retirement and the inflated cost of pay for the 11 per cent increase over the 1971 - return to normal following the devastating purchases. ® during the past flve years, 72 budget, as he insists that tax increases will be effects of 1970 - 71 "Virtually all available resources are Only $6 million of the proposed burt J allocated," by the proposal and the strict "new programs." Of this, Milliken JT.I "These recommendations will be revolutionary, but they will be Michigan Sena spending controls imposed during the present year will have to provide for emergencies not included In the budget. The largest increases made by the governor $4.3 million to match local federal - crime control grants. crime - control are scheduled to $26 million. government ExpendhUl e rooted in one fundamental this year are for social services (welfare) up Federal subsides to regional principle with which there can be planning, no compromise: Local school boards must have control over weakened bi nearly $75 million to bring the state and federal total to $1.2 billion. In the state are also granted "new program" funds. $7500M*J| ' *■ local schools." Education costs increased as significantly, The remaining $1 million is By RANDY GARTON pay "just compensation" to divided - President Nixon State News Staff Writer funds that the federal going up $81.7 million to bring the total of state dozen state agencies and programs. m persons who have signs government was prepared to dollars to $1.6 billion. Legislators have expressed skepticism J The w, u- o * rp,. ^ roadways which would become Mich^anSenateThursday illegal under the new law. 8 L.u :e ^ .t.i. /t;<4 djd nQt "In the rurr „In the current year, the system will spend the governor's plans for a balanced huHJ come up with legislation that nearly $2.8 billion to provide educational view of his dependence on economic exuJ House-passed billboard control would and many feel tax increases will restrictions range from budget message states. The number of students be n« bill- somewhere in the fiscal year. Allende's Cabinet quits j The bill, intended to meet t $100 to $1,000. Sen patrick McCollough, federal standards to qualify for j).E)earl)orn, tried unsuccessfully President Salvador Allende's Cabinet resigned highway beautification funds, Thursday in Santiago, Chile to let him restructure the passed the upper chamber 20-11. tQ retain a House provision that would a„ow municipalities to 10 HOST POLICE FORUM The Senate amended the bill government in the wake of defeats in two special pass tougher billboard legislation to prohibit local governments to deal with local problems, congressional elections. from enacting stiffer local A two- paragraph resignation statement signed by all 15 ministers climaxed a week of meetings among Allende, his Cabinet and political leaders in the leftist billboard ordinances. The bill will be sent back to the House for concurrence. "If a city wants stricter regulations, it ought to haye the right to enact them," he said. MSU granted $33,000 coalition government. Allende promised Under the bill's standards, McCollough's pleas were in last week he would make billboards in counties of under vain, however, as a voice vote A $33,000 grant has been awarded to MSU by New Detroit, a Green said the project will be a joint venture between J readjustments in the Cabinet. Overwhelming defeats for Detroit urban coalition group, to conduct a conference on police and the School of Criminal Justice. Winston A. 425,000 population would be strongly defeated the House Gibson,insttd in criminal justice, will coordinate the on government candidates by anti - Marxist opposition in limited to 1,200 square feet and provision, - community relations in the spring, Robert L. Green, director of campus confj the elections last Sunday appeared to hasten the to 6,500 square feet in largei the Center for Urban Affairs (CUA), said Thursday. scheduled for late April or early May. j TTie aim of the conference is to "focus on the reshuffle. counties. The grant will be announced at the board of trustees meeting black policeman and the problems of law plight oil A spokesman at the Interior Ministry said Allende will The bill provides that signs b today. enforcement V no closer together than 500 feet community relations," Green said. I name a new Cabinet the weekend or at the He said discusions will center the black over on expressways, 300 feet along on policeman ii| white community, the black policeman in the black commiX beginning of next week. The present Cabinet will remain main highways in nonurban and 100 feet the white policeman In the black community and the la in office temporary basis, he said. areas apart in AUSJ on a British Parliament erupts incorporated municipalities. The measure would also debating policeman in the white police power structure. The conference will also examine the issue of police community relations on a national scale. Policemen from aX urban communities who have been involved • minj 1 require sign owners to obtain a relations work will participate In the conference. in coming state permit to construct a The British Parliament erupted in a billboard and to file a bond flaming row Thursday in London after ranging in value from $50 to The owners would have to invalidate Following the conference, CUA and the School of Ci. Justice will put together a set of recommendations on whsl city of Detroit can do to "provide the black community wltkl an announcement that unemployment $2,500.to promise to comply with state and impartial law enforcement and how policemen can be had soared to a 25 - year peak. One standards. By JUDY YATES representatives-at-iarge to the night and met Thursday trained to deal with urban problems," Green said State Newi Staff Writer Academic Council. afternoon to continue legislator flung a newspaper at Prime The bill, which has been New Detroit was set up by several Detroit businessmen! Minister Edward Heath and the House opposed by many environmental « . * As of late mu j Thursday afternoon „ „ "It takes a lot of time to hear deliberation. industrialists following the 1967 Detroit race riots to cg reach a decj8|on and write conif of Commons was suspended in groups for being "too weak" the All-University Student the problems that led to the urban crisis. _ also prohibits illuminated signs . a ratlona|e »> p,t Martin, The Bylaws for Academic complete confusion. Judiciary (AUSJ) had not chairman „f £he judiciary, said Governance which outline the in areas of less than 35,000 reached a decision on an appeal The session was suspended for 15 Thursday. • s y w* accord was not in sight. progress but a final (.&\\ * \ ^izza Best "We made a little progress," Britain's defense minister, Lord Carrington, told newsmen after the second day of his Rome talks with Prime Minister Dom Mintoff. there are some very important issues which are "But OFF A 14" OR 16" PIZZA Feb. 6 • 8pm still outstanding." (1 ITEM OR MORE) OFFER MSU Auditorium GOOD THRU JANUARY 26. 1972 I Pilot escapes pursuers TICKETS S $3.50 on saleTuesdav at Union, An Air America pilot whose plane Was destroyed on ON CAMPUS - CIRCLE DRIVE 337-1631 OFF CAMPUS DELIVERY 337-1681 Campbell's & Marshall's the ground by enemy mortar fire Thursday in Vientiane, Laos outraced his North Vietnamese pursuers for two Do You miles in the jungle of northern Laos before plucked to safety by a helicopter. being BOOT BARGAINS Consider Suffering only a scratched arm, James Wallace Russell, Good 49, Odessa, Tex., described his ordeal a few hours after the rescue. His wife and three children slept in an Big Savings on Mens and Ladies Boots „, , Inves We Dj upstairs bedroom of his Vientiane apartment as he spoke. And maybe that's Ladies Boots 1000 and up Wainwright's vow pria praised from us on the phone I Circuit Court Judge John Crews said Thursday in Mens Boots 1 597 and up to help you protect Gainesville, Fla. that Florida Corrections Director Louis Wainwright might find himself in contempt if he keeps financial position. Two Locations his vow overcrowded to lock prisons. new arrivals out of the state's products. Through MSU lioolvry 225 E. Grand River Wainwright held fast, however, and his stand drew praise from Ellis MacDougall, Georgia's corrections Through our computers director. Let us show you how to plan "He's the first man in the history of American your future; you'll be pleasantly surprised' prisons who has had the guts to stand MSU Shoe Re/fair 501'A E. Grand liiver tell the courts and everyone else that problem as much as up on his two feet and his," MacDougall said. prisons are their DONALDSON & ASSOCIATES Representing Central Life / Iowa Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, January 21 1972 MYC backs primary bill By RANDY GARTON qualified, but that the delegates presidential convention but the primary. TTiis plan, MYC The MYC is in favor of State News Staff Writer shall not be elected at the Aug. would attend to state party having leaders explain, is essentially the the presidential candidates each A republican amendment to '972' br1'si"e8s- ™.« »«'■' plan they will propose to the delegate supports listed beside the presidential primary bill that ^nder Zaagman, bill, the 57^1, f„ ,7e ntSKS Democratic State Committee Saturday. Central his name on "We the ballot. understand that the precinct delegates would not convention to support the "Our proposal at this time is process of selecting delegates represent their districts at the candidate they represented of the Michigan Youth Caucus, very similar to (Sen.) Zaagman's cannot be the same for both (MYC), caucus leaders say. amendment," James R. Paquet, parties." Paquet said, "but we The amendment, introduced Mt. Morris senior and operations will fight to insure that both by Sen. Milton Zaagman, R - director of the Michigan Youth parties come up with a Grand Rapids, provides for a statewide presidential primary to be held Pay Board Politics Institute (MYPA) said. "We have questions some that technical have to be representative and equitable proposal." May 9 along with a MYC members, representing a precinct delegate contest. answered by the state bipartisan group to insure full Brush off With his handy window scraper clasped tightly, Pete windshield of his car. The off Kloosterma, Plymouth junior, cleans agam, on again weather keeps brushes, off "The amendment I have introduced provides that delegates to county conventions to study co committees of each party." Paquet, and Richard S. representation and participation by youth in the political process, will face tough opposition from scrapers and jumper elected at the 1972 delegate WASHINGTON (AP)-The Pay Boldt said he will tell the Kruch, executive director of Democratic party regulars, most 6S always ready for those students who drive. election shall serve until a Board Thursday officially board of all his decisions to give MYPA, were visiting the Capitol of whom wish to see State News photo by Don Gerstner it a chance to consider them delegates to successor is elected and granted its chairman power to Thursday to test support for the national convention chosen further, if necessary. their proposal when they heard begin working on a backlog of at the state convention. about 800 Also included are another 130 of Zaagman's amendment. pending labor Opponents to this plan argue contracts involving between "We would like to know how ICCABE VS. GREEN contracts, while still allowing labor or management to appeal 1,000 and 5,000 workers which have been reported to the board the number of delegates and their proportionality will be that continuance of this method of selection would maintain the decisions to the full board. labor controlled party The board itself has been able but which the board has not yet determined and how the machinery that the national to act only on eight labor decided definitely fall within delegates would be slated," Democratic party wishes to Busing debate planned contracts in the last two months, guidelines. Paquet said. eliminate. and Wednesday had to put off a decision on a trair contract after two da ly BARBARA PARNESS Educational Opportunity in "I think November. She has traveled having an opportunity often unstated reasons offered I State News Staff Writer around to speak directly with Ms. opposition to busing - and that i: the country speaking ft L. Green, director of McCabe on a platform that the question of race." against busing. liter for Urban Affairs Green i't be emotionally laden may He said he would like to was an expert witness lead her and others in the J[\) will debate Irene for the NAACP in the Detroit the debate moved to an ■abe leader of the National and Richmond desegregation audience to look at the campus location so that Ion Group (NAG), a leading «. The research unit of the educational issues without students could attend. ■ busing group, at 7:30 p.m., clouding the issues with Center for Urban Affairs I 3 at the Pretzel Bell emotions," Green said. provided a research analysis for laurant, 1020 Trowbridge the Detroit i He said he hopes the debate will also "help us examine the te debate is sponsored by the OUR County Republican tion, an Ingham County Xblicans group. Admission South Viets 2nd ANNIVERSARY ■be 50 cents for students and ■jrall others. |m not hopeful of changing ■ McCabe's views on busing, enemy near SAIGON (AP) - A South Vietnamese task force of II welcome the opportunity 10,000 to 15,000 men has launched an operation northwest of with her accurate Saigon to prevent any enemy offensive near the capital, Saigon f)!> information on uusing," headquarters said Thursday. said Monday. I be force of infantry, paratroopers, rangers, armored units and « my opinion that Ms. militia is sweeping a lubber plantation area 45 miles northwest of |abe lias every right to voice Saigon that once was an enemy stronghold. on the whole concept The first significant contact since the I'm of the opinion operation began Saturday occurred south of the Michelin rubber plantation. have the Rangers killed 10 enemy soldiers seven miles south of the educational data I have plantation, headquarters announced. Military sources said the ' to me showing how rangers lost one killed and four wonded. ?an be positive," Gi Third military region troops, responsible for protecting Saigon and the 11 surrounding McCabe provinces, recently withdrew from south - . gained national central Cambodia to anee as the leader of anti gain increased mobility near Saigon and in the Saigon Rivet corridor to the north. ing forces during the U.S. AinbaSsaWir TMsWbrth Bunker said, however, he believes iac school busing any enemy push will come in the 1st and 2nd military regions and ,ersy this fall. Her group, the central highlands, well north of Saigon. t spent time lobbying in "We may expect heavy fighting before n to get the Congress long in those areas," Bunker told a meeting of the Saigon American Chamber of ti busing legislation. Commerce. . McCabe testified against U.S. B52 Stratofortresses hit the central highlands. ig before the Select Senate Enemy troops are concentrating in the region where the borders of Laos, Equal Cambodia and South Vietnam join. JACOBSON S WHITE SALE Stock up on sheets BOUQUET sheets by Wamsutta, a vivid splash of bright red, gold, blue, purple and grass green on white permanent press Ultracale of Celanese® Fortrel® polyester blended with cotton. 72 x104" or twin fitted bottom 5.50 81 x104" or twin fitted bottom 6.50 90 'x 115" or queen fitted bottom 9-50 108"x1 15" 78"x80" dual king fitted bottom or . 11.50 42"x36" cases, pr. 3.80 42"x46" cases, pr. 4.50 OUR READERS' MIND MICHIGAN STATE o NEWS The student gov't. levyJ UNIVERSITY ' is there any rationale? •x)i, KEN LYNAM j \ advertising manager To the Editor: better what to do with their monev J anum\?t >$ f * As the ASMSU budget descends upon us, ASMSU does should check the StateNJ DAVE PERSON, managing editor it is once again time to ask why. One may for notices of meetings of oruaniJ 1 CHARLIE CAIN, city editor ask "Why ASMSU at all?" or "Why is the against the tax. B BILL HOLSTEIN,campus editor money spent the way it is?", but these are •MS# BARNEY WHITE, editorial editor not the crucial issues. After all, any group Libertyville, m.,. RICK GOSSELIN, sports editor Jan- 17,1m of students has the right to form an organization and call it ASMSU, or to Seven-time recipient of the Pacemaker award devote it to legal services or electronics repair. The crucial quesion to ask is "Why for outstanding journalism. does ASMSU have the right to tax Protest i|USt| gtudents?" EDITORIALS Taxing a student to pay which he is not willing to for programs support is in On Jan. 19, Professor Alan Fisher of J principle no different from extortion, History Dept. criticized the current and while taxing a student to pay for a program which he is willing to support is Soviet campaign being waged at MSuTI unnecessary. If an organization wants of the things mentioned by Prof^L Nixon hard money from students which the students are not willing to volunteer, why should Fisher was that a large number of the USSR are involved in Soviet cult J activities. However, he fails to men! Je*j the group be able to turn to ASMSU to milk the student body for them? And if an that for a Jew to enter into Soviet cultj circles, he must forsake his needs different organization such as Legal Aid or Electronics Corp is considered useful by affiliation. Next, Professor Fisher appears to| many students, why could it not be under the impression that we are d The Nixon administration is "Busting even a large number of supported on a subscription basis by those protesting the Osipov Ballet. We a.. planning a new program to combat students rather than by students who do the so called "lower level" of drug drug dealers will produce nothing "I am the Howard thy Hughes! Thou shalt not anticipate using its services? angry with the ballet performers, but] - inhuman state they represent. We 1 more than good newspaper copy have none other Howard Hugheses before me! dealers. The program, to be headed Opposition to the ASMSU tax is growing. protesting the fact that Jews in the So by Myles J. Ambrose and to be for the Nixon administration's Students who believe that they know Union are denied the right to f» administered by the new Office of anti drug program. If the heroin practice their culture. And regarding! notion of Professor Fisher that Sof Drug Enforcement, will attempt to supply is to be checked, the drug cultural events are not politic round must be prevented from entering up intermediate drug Ru2 traffickers and street pushers in the country." POINTS OF VIEW connected, he is mistaken. All cultural events are connected withj wholesale lots. Investigations and Soviet Ministry of Culture, a political oh smuggled into America in mammoth of the U.S.S.R. grand juries are to become the means The intended purpose of this protestiJ to accomplish this end. The problem with the new proportions from France and Latin America. To check this flow of drugs into ASMSU: alcohol only answer? serve as a reminder to the Soviet re# that America, and more specifically! program, though, lies in its very American Jewish community, iseonci nature. The individual drug dealer the country, the U.S. must take two about the plight of three m has had relatively little to do with steps. First, customs must become Ron Barnes, the president of our local frat rats, exemplified persecuted Soviet citizens. Please ni EDITOR'S NOTE: The following Point of View was submitted said America. Surely any humanit# the increasing use of hard drugs in even tighter than it is at the present. the childish behavior of the board. He managed to divide his America today. Heroin use has The hiring of more customs agents by Jim Bruno, McDonel Hall president; Jerry Knirk, McDonel precious time between "contributing" to the proceedings and would respond to the cry for religious J Hall vice president; Kathy Costenoble, McDonel Hall vice cultural freedom, as some non • J« reached epidemic proportions in the would help make this possible. drinking a bottle of Boones Farm which he had carefully president, and Larry Stemple, McDonel • Shaw ASMSU packaged in a paper bag. The board's 8:30 recess was apparently organizations have already started to U.S. because of two simple economic Second, the U.S. should exert as representative. well timed — several other board members had also becbme There is no logical reason that the wt factors : supply and demand. The much pressure as possible on the student body should not be enraged J thirsty. So Charlie Massoglia decided to cure that. Whether his new program will affect neither. countries where drugs are being titles of elections commissioner and director of the Legal Aid protest against this cultural genua The immature, irresponsible and inexcusable actions on the currently taking place in the Soviet l'et| Busting even a large number of produced to proverbially clean up part of many ASMSU members at their meeting in McDonel Hall Dept. aided him in his little task we do not know, but he was Throughout the past decade, we I drug dealers will produce nothing their own houses. must be brought to the attention of the student body. The State competent enough to make a booze run during the recess. With witnessed many protests for civil liber more than good newspaper copy for Busting lower level dealers will News published an incomplete version (doesn't It always?) of the plenty of refreshments, the board resumed its business(?) which where students, regardless of their relifd meeting which occured on Nov. 30, 1971, and as student by this time was quite a party. About half of the members were the Nixon administration's anti drug accomplish nothing as long as the background have joined forces, n government leaders of McDonel Hall we are concerned about the drinking. Massoglia's actions were especially repulsive. While University population should r program. If the heroin supply is to overall heroin "imports" remain at events which took place and feel that the students of this passing out ballots with one hand, he downed his booze with the stand on this most urgent matt be checked, the drug must be the present level. When one drug other. University deserve further clarification of those events. student body should place themselval prevented from entering the country. dealer is busted, others simply take THe ASMSU board had tried unsuccessfully to elect a director The unauthorized drinking that we described is in violation of both the University and McDonel Hall alcohol policies. The head the position of selective humanitarians.# Presently hard drugs are being his place. Absence of an individual of cabinet services during its previous meeting which lasted until dealer will have only a temporary 3 a.m., at which time a number of disgusted and battle-y/eary adviser of East McDonel warned the board to halt their assinine Marty n Adelf Benton Harbor juj board members finally decided to retire for the evening. Thus the activities and because they quickly complied they were not, effect upon his customers' supply Jan. 19, If board again faced this unpleasant task at its meeting in McDonel. fortunately for them, expelled from McDonel Hall. and no effect upon their demand. Not only were the board's actions a disgrace to their Polls The new program completely We were originally pleased to have the board meet here. Though not many residents attended the meeting, possibly because of constitutents and the University, but the hypocritical violation of LETTER POLICY an alcohol policy which some of those guilty members wrote ignores the latter side of the heroin total apathy, those who did attend were quite dismayed at the The State News welcomes all led inane activities of ASMSU. constituted a disgrace which should not be forgotten by members Recently campus Army ROTC market. The demand for heroin of the University community. It must be remembered that the They should be typed and signed witil With abounding ignorance of parliamentary procedure and a home town, student, faculty < officials proudly announced that remains unchecked. Some individuals board receives some $45,000 of our money to spend each year. complete disregard for the basic rules of civility, board members standing, and local phone freshman enrollment had increased - have not accepted the fact that Scares you, doesn't it? It is quite time for ASMSU to acquite continually spoke out of turn and otherwise infringed on the included. No unsigned letter will ■ by 4 students. Of course, overall heroin is addictive because of the the seriousness which is necessary for it to function as a speaking privileges of others. The inattentiveness of some reps accepted for publication, and no ietterB enrollment, due primarily to magnified scare stories of the past, resulted in only 5 representatives voting on a routine matter — representative body of MSU. Buckner must be more forceful in be printed without a signature except which labeled marijuana as a killer with the other 13 reps completely oblivious to the proceedings. maintaining order at the meetings. However, it may be difficult, if extreme circumstances. All letters mi sophomore defections, has dropped Buckner ("Chairman Hal") was forced to use his gavel several not impossible, for him to mold a functional, responsive student weed and LSD as a chromosome less than 300 words long for public* by 35 cadets from last year. times but his calls for order were, more often than not, futile. government out of a band of babbling idiots. without smasher. More efforts should be editing. Certainly there is no denying that Army ROTC freshmen enrollment made to educate the public about heroin use. TRB FROM WASHINGTON grew a staggering 5.7 per cent. But then it should be noted that the If the truth about heroin is accepted by all, there will be no need The freshman class increased by 14.8 per cent, going from 7,777 fall ferm 1970 to 8,872 in 1971. Ah, statistics. The ROTC tabulations just go to show that any for programs to crash down on small - time dealers. For the time being, however, a dual effort must be made not only to present Americans with By RICHARD LEE STROUT people have lost their faith think, are downright naive, but in the just come through with some new figures tax equalized matters. But today t indictment we concur. He attacks the on Income disparity. He divides the is like a sieve, and Congress haill mathematician with a modecum of the facts about hard drug abuse, but also to prevent the substances from greatest problem of America in modern families in America into "quintiles" (fifths gradually cutting other taxes with imagination can necromance his own times, the constriction of government; the to you and me). Each fifth has the same loss of approximately $50 bi shades of Perrin polls past. being smuggled into this country. It's State of the Union time again and despair and disillusion of thoughtful people number of families. Here's how the pie of revenue a year. Mr. Nixon will have to® that pink glow you see over the Capitol over the apparent incapacity to solve our American income is divided: The lowest with that, one way or another, wlWB dome next week will be presidential problems under an antiquated system, I fifth gets 3.2 per cent; the second ($3,000 gives Congress his budget message J rhetoric. I^ist year he gave us "a basic booby trapped with vetoes, pot-holed with ! to $6,000) — 10.5 per cent; the middle month. Deliberalizatiori income floor under every family with children in this nation," and the New special interests and frustrated with self-limiting divisions of power. ($6,000 to $8,600) — 17 per cent; the fourth ($8,600 to $12,000) — 24 per cent; The poor people don't pay taxes; they pay local sales taxes, and If American Revolution ("a revolution as Take the current election; it has gone on and the top fifth ($12,000 and over) a security, and invisible items like for a year, it will continue for most of the of property taxes, 'rl"," profound, as far-reaching, as exciting, as whopping 46 per cent. Oh, that lucky top because army steps that first revolution almost 200 years ago"). It will be hard to top that! He also called the welfare system "a monstrous, present year. What a waste of time; Canada has an election in six weeks. Take foreign policy. What a picture fifth, the quality quintile! They get 15 times as much as the bottom fifth. There's also the lucky top one "regressive." Veteran Leon chairman of Mr. Truman's Council Economic Progress, Washington, D C, J per cent In a progressive effort to become former method of training, enlisted consuming outrage." Well, it's still there, columnist Jack Anderson gives us of the of American families, Pechman that total state, local and federal taxes! reports, White House in the Pakistan-India war, the about $254 billion a year, or 31 per ear an all-volunteer force, the Army men will have 30 to 40 per cent still an outrage. Mr. Nixon is going to come secret and invisible President like a Grand who have incomes of $33,000 or over! exercises, three more days of back to the welfare thing again, if he can They get 6.8 per cent of the total pie. America's total income. The p# decided a year ago to make enlisted more Emir transmitting orders through his basic training, more punitive get a few minutes after his trip to Peking. Figures like these have been the people pay 50 per cent of their incon life a bit more appealing to recruits. Meanwhile he's still tinkering with the Vizier, Henry Kissinger, to the top commonplace of economists for years, says, in taxes, mostly invisible;^ This coming Feb. 14, however, the measures and added weaponry hush-hush White House action group whom prosperity machine and his quick-fix although I have rarely seen a lay audience classes pay around 30 per cent arJ military will return to its former courses. The Army feels all these economics. "The lift of a driving dream" Kissinger admonishes like coach dressing that wasn't doubtful and startled a by them top, ($50,000 or over) there's a ji down his team in the locker room after a What is new, though, is the method of making basic training as things are essential for good little hasn't got off the ground. failing of the per cent. Rep. Reuss says that at le»B Is there anybody but TRB who feels, bad first half; a team that includes the head American dream; the dream that the soldiers. Americans earning $200,000 to $1 appalling as possible. well, a little bit queasy about this sort of of CIA and the chairman of the Joint gap The liberalization move included When the "new army" went into thing? We know one who does, James Chiefs of Staff. STterft" riCh 8nd P°°r W8S geUingsmaUer- paid no taxes at all last year. We know things are wrong but f»J the installation of barracks beer MacGregor Burns, the Pulitzer Prize Or take the profound social problem of The dream existed in 1952. "We had effect, this paper heralded the seem to make government correct T machines and the removal of the historian who, in his new book, poverty in a nation where one man in 9 is brought about a virtually automatic "We have failed," says Professor innovation. If enlisted life were more black and in 11 is below the "Uncommon Sense," makes as powerful an one man redistribution of income from deal witnlj "daily dozen" — exercises done at the "because we have tried to pleasant, it was reasoned, more men indictment of the political system as we officially designated poverty line. This is well -to-do to the less the crack of dawn each morning. The would volunteer. This could solve social dynamite and Joe Pechman, well-to-do," boasted entrenched, interlocked sets of w have read in modern times. He shares the social historian Frederick Lewis previously drab dormitory - type Allen problems through sporadic, the problem of the present draft feeling so many of us have here in president of the American Finance "The Big Change." The action." barracks were divided into private gap did Washington that the structure of our Association, in his inaugural address, has narrow for a while, when the income system. Psychologically, new recruits cTHE NEW REPUBLIC cubicles and colorful curtains were government itself is at fault; that in this would not have as difficult a time DOONESBURY put up. Recruiter's impressions of the Army were heightened while adjusting to a less strict routine as eternal trading and brokerage there is "a crisis of public authority;" in short, God MAT A DUMB by Garry Trudeat<| they would to the conventional help us, if it weren't Mr. Nixon it would be ouesnourwhy, punishments were lowered. highly disciplined one. somebody else. Congress? "Congress BP..MIKB ffeALLx? wene DO/KG But now the mossbacks at the top SRBAT THINGS , TELLS N& lOU WHAT seNerrn remains an essentially 18th century have cracked down on this "new Apparently the "new army" was a institution well suited to the family and 1 1 SUPPORT THe CUROBHT U.S. VMM RIGHT Do YOU Turn US. fORTHOSe peoftt VBMOCKACYWIse INTRUSION HAS POP 6KAMPLB, ua,UA! army." After an "official" but highly How else can you account neighborhood politics of the Whig era in I DO l success. Britain." Politics? "The American party FOKBI6H poucy. * HA, questionable poll, the Army for its .fanatical rejection by that ^ ■ HA, concluded that trainees actually most hide-bound of societies, the system has hardly changed in over a century except to become more splintered, want harder, more vigorous U.S. Army brass. less collective, more personalized." exercises. (One out of five recruits Well, they cap liave it whatever The dismal thought is, as historian asked for more exercises and two out way they want. The fact remains Burns says in his arresting first sentence, that the draft must and will be that at the start of the 1970s, "most of three said training wasn't what Americans had lost faith in their political they expected. The Army views this abolished. If the Pentagon refuses to system." We say, soberly and reluctantly, as a majority wanting more work.) recognize the advent of the 20th that he may be right. Some of Burns' When the Arm>^ returns to its Century, the problem will be theirs. alternatives are impractical and some, we n State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, January 21, 1972 5 CRIMINAI JUS. POINT OF VIEW 404 Classes no place for arrests By DANIEL H. SAKS did not want to make the officer wait 45 minutes for the end of Instructor in economics conflicting obligations which must be preserved if our citizenship the class. Although the incident took about 10 minutes, the is to be meaningful. As a University employee, he surely should students and I were so disturbed that it disrupted the entire class not have been so ready to trade them in the interests of Dear President Wharton: simple period. expediency. And to what end? Arresting a student without delay An incident occurred in for 8 unpaid parking tickets! To be fair, the my Economics 390 class on Monday This is such an important incident that it demands a public University policemen which is so contrary to the ideals and interests of the must have a special understanding of the University statement from you reaffirming the principles and ideals at stake problems and community that I must tell you about it so you can take sensibilities of the community in whose protection and condemning the actions of your employes. The University they are appropriate action. has endangered itself and its members and positive action must be engaged. taken. The remedy may not be easy or simple, but the principle is As I was beginning the class, a uniformed police officer from As president of the University and as head of the clear. Policemen should not enter a classroom on official business University the University entered the room. This officer, Theodore police, I urgently request that you (a) make a full investigation of Glynn, during classes unless there is clear and present danger to life or asked if a particular student was present. Since there are 80 this incident, (b) assuming that my facts are property. Nor should professors be asked by the police, as Mr. correct, that you students, 1 said I did not know. He asked me to call forth the Bernitt indicates they regularly are, to call forth a student for strongly condemn what has happened, and (c) that you establish student so that he could arrest her or allow him to call her a policy for the University police and for all other departments arrest. According to Mr. Bernitt, I am the first professor in the forward. I said I understood he had a job to do, but I told him, which is in complete accord with all the principles enumerated history of the University to ever refuse such permission. Were this above and that you take a strong public stand in favor of these "No," that kind of thing cannot take place in a classroom unless there is true, it would be a terrible shame for all of us. Fortunately, this is an extreme emergency. I suggested that he wait outside principles. I would further hope that Officer Glynn would make and see the student after class if the factually incorrect. Carl Liedholm, chairman of the Economics an apology in University had no policy writing to the student involved and to my ciass. Mr. against arrests in its hallways. He said, "OK" and then proceeded Dept., had a similar incident last year in which he took my Bernitt has indicated that he intends to apologize for his role in to arrest the position and his wishes were respected. But the point is that the incident. girl anyway. I followed him out into the hall and certain rights are not at the discretion of the professor to bargain insisted on knowing why he had disobeyed my request. He told away. me a Lansing police officer was there to take the girl away and he A terrible wrong has been committed I realize that there is also an obligation which the members of by this University against itself. Hopefully, there is still time for action the University community have to help the police in their work, by those who value the place of a in short, to be "good citizens." I agree that such responsibilities university in a free society/ IT OF VIEW are weighty and that they are necessary if we are to preserve that thin facade of civilization under which universities and other worthwhile institutions can exist. What Officer Glynn Sailed to realize is that in our eagerness to be good citizens there are always C WEATHER VANE'S ,ttend Saturday caucus COLORED FLICKER LITES SKI SCHO ItePHEN CRANE 8 chance to make the political De atic State Central III un™, r«iH»nt more meaningful to this Commmee m ing this consideration of continuing 0f the present method of SPECIALS 9 society. Both parties have struck Saturday, Jan. 22, the MSU electing precinct delegates for of proposals have out. Union. The chief topic: what er purposes of choosing national _,e concerning primary Oh sure, there are token slots stand the State Central convention delegates is land the method of here and there designed for an Committee will take in regard to extraneous. The time is long Ultra Wood Ski J of delegates to the individual under 21, but the a Presidential Primary bill. overdue for Michigan voters to Cubco Bi.Jing . . (conventions of the two parties still look at youth and 1 urge you to attend the be given a DIRECT voice in Barrecrafte' Pole . . Special [olitical parties. The laugh, hardly aware of and meetings, which commence choosing presidential nominees, Arlberg Strap . I legislature is presently certainly not concerned with about 10:30 a.m., and lobby for Be there Saturday to lobby for . . . ling one bill which what youth really does want. a direct primary of presidential the direct presidential primary, Reg S70 ■provide for a direct But, oh yes, they want those candidates. Any discussion or it's time for a change! ■ial primary election, in "youth votes" come election ers would cast their time. r their preference of Well, for once, maybe there is |d candidates for either an opportunity for us to have Republican some input; a small chance to • Pizza Supreme Ultraglass Fiberglass Ski cuhco Binding... |ial nomination. hfclp turn things around in the Barrecrafter pole Special S90 ^K^v.iui V\J. 3 has turned in a good old states of America. A . . . I Arlberg Strap 1 performance decisively on in Republican supported bill, these calling for a direct presidential •Inside Dining Reg S105 . . . which would primary, is withering for lack of Lily reform Michigan's bipartisan cooperation in the Ipublicans n system. Neither legislature. nor The Democratic the party leadership is stalling. •Warm, Friendly Its can escape the blame hoping to find ways to sidestep I unconscienable delay, this bill, and gather support for a Atmosphere Blizzard Fan 2000 Metal Ski e hung up on the poor substitute. There will be a <;b UriflbV.'.v. Cubco Bindings c . . ; of partisan politics, Barrecrafter Pole op©CICll I tlatantly ignoring the ■ tieir constituents, who • Free, Fast, Hoi Delivery $3.85 Arlberg Strap Reg $110 fig have not had a direct v selection of national prdelegates. • Perfect for your MODERN WHOLESALE ELECTRIC 'n Republican and the lti< party have laid claim Th« listening Ear 117.1717 2143 W. Grand River, Okemos THSIVEATHERYANE u Michigan that their's the next date OPEN: Monday and Thurs. 9 - 4310 W. Saginaw 2283 Grand River party that 349-1220 Tues., Wed. Friday 9 ■ 6 Jisthe rights of youth; |r' would be the party RUSSIA - SCANDINAVIA V Lansing Okemos Udinsure active and full f vithin the decision 5 wks. London $350 inclusive. Departures. Small DOMINO'S ■amework of their group camping travel (ages 18 M.A.C. AVENUE fctinly, they would see - 30). Also Europe, Africa. | Ivndreds of thousands Experienced. Write: Whole Earth Expeditions Ltd., U.S. Restaurant DELIVERY people, newly Bsd (if thev would only Agents for Transit Travel THE Place for Pizza! 351-8870 Kl TO VOTE) would ■apart of the action and Ltd., Box 1497, K.C. Mo. 61141 If you've set goals for yourself in management, we have plans for you. If you are planning ahead with a strong belief in your abilities and a desire to build your future steadily and surely —maybe you belong at St. Regis. ■ We're a look-ahead company for look-ahead people. A company that has long sought out new needs and new ways to satisfy them. A far-flung natural resources company, spanning the country from Maine to California—involved in more kinds of modern packaging and paper products than the average person can dream of.. as well as in housing and construction materials, waste disposal and reclama¬ tion systems. ■ We look for people whose future we can invest in—self starters whose personal drive, and talent, THE enables them to make the most of the planned, advancement-oriented training we give them. And we help them ST/ develop as individuals, because we want individual thinkers who can spark our growth as well as their own ■ Right now we have openings for college graduates in Accounting-Engineering-Industrial Relations-Manufactur¬ ing-Marketing. ■ If we sound like your kind of company, check with your Placement Director for our campus recruiting date, or write to Mr. R. J. Higgins, Dept. CR-1. 111! ^13EGISPAPER COMPANY 633 Third Avenue New York, N.Y. 10017 \ \ new menu ^ LOW PRICES ON at' reasonable price BEER NO COVER! Sandwiches, chili d^sj SWING WITH terrific IfMAGIC THRU SAT. mixed drinks foOLD RUSH ON SUN. "An Equal Opportunity Employer, Men and Women.' Fr'day, Januaiary Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan 2| Pentacostal members speak in tongues Father McDivitt of St. John Student Parish By KAREN ZURAWSKI "I don't make it up or do it myself," Dennis Walters, an East "At first it is a novelty," he noted, "and when you first get the assessment, and explains that "it was a smallerr State News Staff Writer Lansing graduate student and group leader, said. "A person has to gift you rattle on for 45 minutes or so." Kfoupth^ want to speak in tongues, because God will not do it for him "You are aware God is there, and there is a sense of peace," he The growing pains brought up polarity, he ooi "The spirit is a-movin' all over this land," or so the song goes, otherwise." said. fact for the first few years of its existence the and with the increasing number of people flocking to pentecostal Two basic sort of functions ascribed by Walters to the gift are Walters cautioned that it was not an emotional experience for gr0UD . - permission to use the church, and met in a local resin groups today, the lyrics are becoming a reality. private prayer and public prayer. In the latter, there is often him, a sentiment that coincides with other group members' prayer meetings. etC( One of most unusual things about these groups to the casual prophesying or the relying of messages from God. feelings. The attitude has begun to change now, however on-looker is their members' ability to speak the heavenly language In a person's private prayer of praise, "he is not aware of "It was going to come, and when it did, it's for use as a tool "After its beginning five years ago, people see or to speak in tongues. content, but is aware of the general tenor of his prayer," Walters between myself and God." Walters said. the movement has done a great deal of developing with Speaking in tongues is nothing new, having early biblical said. He noted that is almost absolutely in control of it, and results," Father McDivitt said. mention, but it seems to be enjoying a revival of prominence. "Language is a vehicle of communication, even if you don't a person The past practice of tongues was limited primarily to commented "in this respect it is an awful lot like English. Many are still skeptical of these groups and th ' understand what it is. Speaking in tongues is a better way of Robert Anderson, chairman of the Dept. of Religion, pointed however, and see them as little more than emotional 61,1 theologically conservative groups. In recent years it has spread talking to God." from the pentecostal curches to mainline Protestant churches and Sometimes it is necessary to out that there have always been pentecostal groups speaking in people, where Jesus is mentioned frequently. |>W)p|. A psychologically loosen up a person sincerity and see the movement as an emotional , among the Roman Catholics, especially in campus towns. to prepare him for the gift of tongues, Walters said. tongues, but that in the last four or five years there has been an Members of the MSU Prayer Group, which was formed in 1968, outbreak in the Catholic church which started at Notre Dame. people. re||i Group members will pray with a person outloud and encourage Despite these feelings, the movement continues to do not publicize speaking in tongues a great deal, but prefer to him to speak, Walters explained. "It's not in English, but maybe East Lansing had one of the earliest groups, but it was number of people who are "one in the spirit" is emphasize the community atmosphere of their Wednesday night will be three syllables over and over again like 'la-la-la' to relax discouraged by the local church, Anderson said. increasi ' "In general, they didn't know how to handle it, and found Among some in the pentecostal movement, Ann A* prayer meetings and their relation to Jesus. the person." Between 80 and 90 people, non - Catholics as well as Catholics, According to Walters, "Any baptized Christian could speak in themselves often frowned on, and at that time not much has a thriving community of from 600 to i Q001 attend these weekly meetings at St. John Student Parish, 327 encouraged," he said. jokingly referred to as the Rome of the pentecostal mw tongues." MAC Ave., to focus on praise and thanks to the Lord. It is here that speaking in tongues plays a part. Seated in a circle around several guitarists, the group sings dissent praise to the Lord, and then with a slight hesitation, begins to whisper in barely audible voices. After several minutes, another sound begins that is very beautiful and sounds like Arabic. It is speaking in tongues — a strange sort of warbling - like sound, that some people have U.S.S.R. termed gibbersih, but which sounds too clear and musical. only against the most in Russia when Solzhenitsyn conferences and local By NICK C. STOUT this m Speaking in tongues is a gift of the Holy Spirit through which a provocative, the correspondents not, Ms. Jacoby said. Also usually the only news person is in communion with God in prayer and praise. It can also that there are three groups of said. group are the young educated variety of opinion within the and travel than serve as a sign to unbelievers. Active dissidence in the Soviet dissenters in the Soviet Union, There is also an "inside group" people who "listen to foreign ~" democratic movement," from the Moscow Union is so limited in magnitude the first of which calls itself the that is basically Marxist. They broadcasts but do nothing pointed out. He quoted one restricted. source as saying, "In the future Contacts with commi that to call it a "movement" "democratic movement." It prefer not to be called dissidents active." EDUEWOOD UiMITED will all be enemies, but now hard to UNIVERSITY would be a gross overstatement, includes Jews, reform-minded because they believe in the basic Insane asylums and labor we are make, CHURCH Soviet ideology but do camps are the meeting grounds we are friends." penalties imposed SEVENTH-DAY Washington Post correspondents religious groups and non-Russian on 469 N. Hagadorn acknowledge room for of dissidents, the correspondents The journalists cited the who talk to Anthony Astrachan and his wife nationalists protesting Russian foreigners ADVENTIST CHURCH An Ecumenical Fellowship improvement, Astrachan explained. They have set up a recently victed writer not impossible, Ms Jaco Susan Ellen Jacoby told an domination. Although a few Worship Services audience of about 75 hundred of these warrant some explained. Yevtushenko belongs network of communication, a Bukovsky being a typical She enthusiastically e! Sabbath School 9:30 to this circle, and it is this fact part of which is an underground dissenter. Working full time at how they had 9:3G & 11 a.m. Wednesday. kind of action by authorities and the job, he gathered information Worship Service 11:00 Sermon Ms. Jacoby, a 1965 MSU a few thousand rate being that enables him to be published newspaper, The Chronicle of friendship with Iked of her watched, known activists of this Current Events. The Khronika and transmitted it to foreign Russian K. G. Smith, pastor couple ; Dr. Truman A. Morrison obviously collective effort, correspondents and other aquaintance with such renowned group number only 15, "at least a excitement, almost Astrachan said, since it Russian dissidents that 149 Highland Ave. College Group Meeting literary figures as Solzhenitsyn eight of which are in prison of Munich group so to their identity. Her Call 351-8994 if you 6:30 - 8:00 and Yevtushenko. psychiatric hospitals." This is to continues to circulate despite would eventually make its way promptly cut her off" "Literature and dissent have be compared with a total Soviet the frequent imprisonment of into The Khronika. He was also Astrachan and Ms, need transportation Fbr rides call 332-0606 or 332-8693 always been linked," she said, population of 242 million. plans staging dissenters. The Khronika consists mainly to serve as a other protesters. legal adviser to the spent tow years in "Men have died and still go to Another group of dissenters is not the UN corresj includes "unofficial" painters, of the documentation of "Working as a foreign the Post while slie is ST. JOHN THE those who promote illegal of Calderon play political trials, indicating the correspondent is very frustrating an article for STUDENT CENTER EPISCOPAL COMMUNITY Saturday abstract art - scientistsand some whereabouts (prison or Astrachan said, Both ha Sunday Masses: The Munich Players will otherwise) O f fi. al rts, AT M.S.U. celebrities "who speak up on of convicts, press Washington paper since 1 327 M.A.C. rare occasions." Solzhenitsyn present Pedo Calderon de la and several other writers fall into Barca's "Play of the Mass" at 8 this group. Severe action is taken p.m., Thursday, at St. John's he Rev. Jack Student Center, 327 MAC Ave. Gospel Hilyard, Chaplain Calderon's ALL SAINTS CHURCH UNIVERSITY play is a 17th century forerunner of pop pageants like "Jesus Christ group BAPTIST CHURCH Superstar" and Leonard Bernstein's theater "Mass." Kellogg Cente 4608 South Hagadorn All of these plays externalize First Church of in Christian terms man's interior John D. Walden Pastor the Brethren - search for meaning and salvation, using, as the Greeks The Full Gospel ministry, a nondenominational For Information Community College, will be the featupd or Transportation 144 did, religious celebration as a national fellowship, will open a new chapter at at the first breakfast at 7:30 a.m.. Stt starting point for drama. Kellogg Center that could provide a meeting M.A.C.: 8:00,12:30, 4:30 Bus Schedule 332-8472 Tickets for the play, Kellogg Center's Centennial Room. place for the many small Christian prayer and The Full Gospel ministry presently fla School of Discipleship 6:45 Bible groups springing up at MSU. East: Mon. thru Thur. 9:30 P.M sponsored by the Dept. of Frank G. Basel, Lansing - area president for the monthly Saturday evening dinner i"*" Worship Sunday School Humanities, are available at the the Sveden House Restaurant, 321 10:00 AM 11:00 AM door. Full Gospel Businessmen's International, said the Road, but the meeting has become fellowship, which is "pentecostal in its UNIVERSITY CHRISTIAN they have decided to expand in Central united Methodist experience but not in doctrine," could provide a "common ground for all denominations." chapter. CHURCH CAMPUS HOUSE UNIVERSITY UNITED Across from the Capitol People gather at the Sveden He Worship Services Basel said he hoped the newchapter, which will 310 N. Hagadorn 251 W. Grand River METHODIST CHURCH meet for breakfast monthly at Kellogg Center, together and pray together in fello\ 9:45 11:00 said. Rev. Robert E. Betts preaching will attract MSU students from the numerous 1120 South Harrison The purpose of the group, fount si "That Elusive Commodity" campus religious groups. ALWAYS OPEN Phone 351-7030 Father Richard Loehrlein, director of Newman Angeles in 1953, is to inspire 'If your heart is as my heart . . . service in their churches, encouraging then give me your hand" House, the Catholic campus ministry for Lansing faith. "What Ever To Loyalty" Rev. Do ten preaching DOMINO'S special for 't /"'"W''"/ Bus Service available CHRISTIAN REFORMED CHURCH Morning Worship 9:30 and 11:00 'continues ils Church School 9:30 and 11:00 AND STUDENT CENTER Nursery Married Housing and si mien Is I icing off conifi PEOPLES CHURCH 1509 River Terrace (across from Hubbard Hall) 11 AM Mr. Floyd Eby, Gideons EAST LANSING ill I'jIISI Lansing. Offer good any night 4:30-9:00 til! Jan. Ji Visit our new Student Center - IRINITY CHURCH Call 351-7100 for fast, free, hot delivery open daily 9 a.m. - 11-p.m. Lunch Wednesday 12:30 -1:30 EAST LANSING ^JRIN 841 Timberlane Drive ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■I This coupon good at Trowbridge Shop only MORNING SERVICE 10:00 A.M. EVENING SERVICE 7:00 P.M. Stanley R. Reilly, Acting Pastor 1(1 Interdenominational East Lansing Telephone: 351-8200 University Classes••••••••••••••••••••«»» 9:45 a.rr 332-5073 SUNDAY SERVICES 9:30 and 11:00 A.M. Name 30c off price of order •Please —————— have coupon Rev. Brink preaching both services Mr. Bob Hardley presents 7:00 p.rr "deCycles" Address ———■ filled out. for transportation call 351-6360 or 882-1425 w^en driver ariivt Wednesday: Mid-week discussion & prayer 7:00 p.m. Pray Like This . . . ■ ■I FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH OF OKEMOS Dr. Julius Fischbach 4684 MARSH ROAD LUTHERAN CAMPUS MINISTRIES (near Meijers Thrifty Acres) CHURCH SCHOOL An unaffiliated church proclaiming the for Students and Faculty at for Students at Bible as THE WORD of The Living God. University Lutheran Church Martin Luther Chapel Division & Ann Streets 444 Abbott Road Sunday Services 332-2559 332-0778 Coffee Hour 9:45 A.M. Bible School Classes for all ages After Services Pastor David Kruse 11:00 A.M. Worship Service 6:00 P.M. Junior & Senior High Fellowships 7:00 P.M. Praise Service FIRST CHURCH OF 8:30 P.M. Counibus (a college university, business WORSHIP HOURS 8:15 a.m. Matins CHRIST, SCIENTIST youth rap & snak session) 9:15 a.m. Common Servit 10:30 a.m. Common Servic Winthrop E. Robinson, Rev. Phones 349-2830, 349-2533 at Collingwood Entrance East Lansing Sunday Services 10:30 a.m. SOUTH BAPTIST CHURCH Lesson ■ Sermon Subject 1518 S. Washington Sunday 7 p.m. Lansi "TRUTH" The Right To Die? Who Holds the Issues of Life & Death? Wednesday Testimonial Meeting Who Terminates Life? 9:45 A.M. Sunday Evening College Bible Class Fellowship The weekend. And you've in the fireside room. Reading Room Temporarily got a little time 8:30 p.m. to spend. Any way you want. Good times, Dr. Ted Ward. Located in Church M* ', Teacher refreshments OPEN good friends. And Coca-Cola to help Weekdays 9 ■ 5 p.m. Dr. Howard F. Sugden, Pastor Mon., Tues., Thurs., Fri., make it great. James Emery, Minister of Youth eves 7- 9p.m. 11:00 A.M. All are welcome to Itfs the real thing. Coke. "The Heart of the Matter" attend church services and visit FREE BUS SERVICE Morning and Evening and use the reading Call 482-0754 for information. ijchiga" State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday. January 21. 1972 7 CHRISTIAN' SPIRIT Three face fe >rof backs unification local on robbery to end N. I reland strife GRAND RAPIDS (UPI) - Two Lansing brothers and the wife of one of them appeared before federal Judge Albert J. assault and murder and using a firearm in the commission of a felony. Earline bond, because of the murder provisions of the indictments. Peggy West, 35, stood Although Michigan has no Engel Wednesday afternoon on mute and a plea of innocent also I only solution to the civil strife in be of primary importance in achieving peace. charges relating to a holdup in capital punishment, federal I inland is the reunification of Ireland, a Religious discrimination has greatly affected was entered on her behalf. She is statutes still provide the death f" fr0n, Queens University in Belfast told which a bank manager was killed held under $25,000 bond on the economy, McCartney reported. penalty in any state under In Northern in East Lansing on Jan. 10. charges of aiding and abetting. certain Cast- Hall audience Wednesday night. Ireland the Protestants, who are in the majority, phases involving the The v i c t i m o f Charles is under $50,000 bond McCartney, former professor of labor receive preferential treatment in the allocation of the $20,000 slaying of a person during a bank holdup was Stanley and Julius was held without robbery. I he thinks it will be a long time - "at houses and jobs. A few jobs that Catholics do Irish, 62, manager of an East generation" - before Ireland and prosper in include catering and running pubs. Lansing branch bank. t Ireland resolve their differences. Significantly, he said, these Catholic pubs have Charles West, 32, charged been the targets of numerous •e are too many religions and too little bombings. with being an accessory after the fact, stood mute and a plea of BOWL "MIDNITE COUPLES" ■nity " McCartney stated. To account for McCartney said he was displeased with North innocent was entered on his Una! bias he explained that he was born American press coverage of the Ireland situation. behalf. His brother, Julius, 39, Every Saturday nite lie but he "thinks like a Protestant." He described news reports as "highly asked for a court appointed ■ rigidly segregated schools in Northern inaccurate," "scanty" and full of "glaring Irish sfH'tilu'r attorney and made no plea omissions." pose a major obstacle to religious James pending appointment of counsel. McCartney said. He stressed the McCartney, who teaches at Oueens University in *No average necessary He is named in a three - count Though McCartney said he is not Belfast, Northern Ireland, spoke to students and faculty ■ance of Catholics and Protestants a pessimist grand jury indictment returned on the prospect of Wednesday night in Case Hall. He gave his views on the civil ■ne 'ogether, likening the situation ot peace in Ireland, he observed by a federal jury here Tuesday, •Dollar prizes paid same nite ■ blacks and whites in Amoica. lie said he that bitterness is so deeply entrenched that strife taking place in Northern Ireland. charging bank robbery by force b desegregation of the school systems to peace will not be immediately forthcoming. State News photo by Terry Miller and violence, bank robbery with •Liquor served in lanes (our prices are competitive - lobal compare) I NANCY PARSONS News Staff Writer Technology, Internatinal Center ecology meet planned spoke in the Wednesday pollutic tremendous and made a Congress representing both will be: Educational, noted scholars and authorities Call Timber Lanes & now for reservations Lounge e the input into the Houses and both major political Informational, Social and from national and international 2900 N. U.S. 27 on goals of the conference research, than any other J four years of research and the work that has been put moreso parties, government experts and Cultural Aspects of agencies into direct contact with Inning," 1,500 delegates into its planning. country," King said. In getting ideas for the selected members of the public, Environmental Issues, MSU students and faculty. Lansing, Phone — 489-1467 »0 countries around the all to be selected by the Identification and Control of "It may not be the most Ljll invade Stockholm, conference, the committee went President in late March. Pollutants and Environmental perfect conference that ever was to the country's landgrant | this June to decide the held, but we are King said that population Aspects of Natural Resources n of worldwide ecology making a start. universities, including MSU, control will not the conference represents the specifically be Management. . . private industries and scientists. discussed at the conference first global attempt at fighting §972 UN Conference on King said that one of the because not all nations the problems we all face in the recommendations likely to be man Environment, that it is a problem. environment," King said. made will be to organize a world by Sweden at the A 27-nation preparatory "It will be considered [968 session of the monitoring system of the earth, committee, of which the United air and developmental planning being I Nations Economic and sea. degradation but the conference sponsored by the Office of States is a member, was formed "There already are the World ■Council, will meet to is too short to discuss that International Studies and to plan for the conference. The Health Organization and the ptention on the urgent aspect fully on its own," King Programs in cooperation with and social problems committee has met three times world Meteorlogical explained. the Center for Environmental and will meet again March 6 -17 Organizations all working by technology, Some of the specific headings Quality. ization and population in New York, just after the through the UN but they are not for discussion at the conference The series is recommendations of the body designed to bring enough," King said. d King, scientific adviser will be made public. The U.S. delegation to the I. international programs "The ndous conference will include high fonmentalof quality in the Science and of n this officials of the executive branch of the government, members of We've Moved To A New Lot 18 Year Olds Welcome! □ LICE BRIEF 67 Toyota Corona 4 door |KD TOLD East Lansing stolen from a room in Erikson Police said the money box 69 Fiat Spyder 850 1 she heard someone Hall between 7:40 and 10:06 left intact, but the exterior of j outside her window a.m. Wednesday. Police said they the machine had been damaged. Jiayshenight at 1:32 a.m., have no suspects. Police have no suspects. n looked, she saw a A WALLET with an estimated 70 VW Jlh his pants pulled down A COED'S COAT was stolen value of $5 was stolen I ankles standing in the from the coat racks in Phillips Wednesday from 1 allegedly masturbating, ■ed could only describe Hall grill Wednesday between a Locker Room A of the Men's IM locker in Uua week we 11:20 and 11:30 p.m. Police Building. 63 Oldsmobile 88 as a aged. The white male and incident estimated the value of the coat at $120. FREE toan* tAae ipecOxUtfpriced, in the 200 block of Jewish person |i Road. THE ICE CREAM vending NEW 69 Plymouth Valiant 2 door "GREENHOUSE" CONCERT FOR machine in Fairchild Theatre TESTA¬ LEO KOTTKE S3.59 Jl'lingDENT was arrested for at the MSU Book was broken into Wednesda' MENT BANGLA DESH night between 9:40 and 10 p.r $1095 SI0.50 ALSO |i the International Center in English, TIM VVEISBERG ON S-TRACK & 4:30 70 Toyota Hi-Lux Pickup The p.n. °/ Yiddish, L apprehended by store agents, had Wo O STUDENT DISCOUNT or Hebrew $1795 (FORMER MOTHER) S3.59 CASSETTE | worth of records. When 'nnducted an •Electric Shav Wheels Toyota "HARD ROCK. COMEDY" CHEECH & CHONG S3.59 •Engraving INFORMATION ?°cch«ler' NY n check, they found to have a forged bus •Keys Made SERVICE (Baptist) 14603 2407 E. Michigat I his possession. His case "VERY YOUNG & EARLY referred to the SONGS" ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ CAT STEVENS S2.98 |PE RECORDER value of $200 with w« a COOPERS FIXERY MERIDIAN MALL 349 1994 5 WINTER WEEKEND SUPER SPECIAL J OUR BIG 3 from your VARSITY SPECIAL LABEL SALE J for Friday and Saturday: HAS BEEN RESTOCKED! * LOTS OF J AMS AT SUPER ^ ■■■■■■■■■■icoupon LOW PRICES!!! The Mechanical Madness A Medium 12" two item Varsity Pizza with 2 Cokes Room is alive and well. ★★★ for $2.50 or A King 16" two item Varsity Pizza and Largest number of WE'VE GOT PRE-RECORDED 4 Cokes for $4.25 Valid Fri. Jan. 21 and Sat. Jan. 22 pinball machines in East STEREO 8-TR ACKS & CASSETTES TOO! with coupon. Delivery starts at 6:30 P.M. Lansing. Foosball too! JAZZ-POP CLASSICAL; MOST AT S5.77 ■ coupon • ★★★ LET GOOD OLE BARRY AND JOE SHOW YA SOME NICE STEREO STUFF YA MIGHT WANNA BUY. AND another $1.10 eff on a King 16" * fantastic 1 item (or more) Varsity Pizza it could have been he was search s SEVERAL DEMONSTRATOR MODELS 'n8 for a good bowl of Sunday Special: Valid Sunday Jan. 23 with coupon ARE ON SALE AT RIGHTEOUS soup if he | had traveled a PRICES little farther, he would Delivery Starts at 5:00 P.M. * . .. ,jVe found the best bowl of soup this Jg« ridof nread wo his Old World, at the Oldc . . AND WESERVICEWHATWESELL! anij Ale 2n m.A.C. in h«t Lansing. ji ,0day Stop in at the Olde World an(j discover what Columbus FREE, FAST, HOT DELIVERY missed HOURS 9, SAT. 9 VARSITY HOURS: DAILY 9 - 6 Monday - Thursday UeWoM BRJEAD ALE Sunday 1227 E. Grand River 5 p.m. _ 2 a.m. 332-6517 8 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Micftigan SPORTS Undefeated Tall Gophers me< to bottle St. C The MSU frosh cagers, 3 - 0 for the 70-71 campaign, will host the St. Clair Community College Skippers Saturday evening at 5:45 in Jenison Fieldhouse. The St. Clair attack features a deliberate style The Port Huron - based Skippers have a 4 - 9 - mark in this year's competition, but have faced formidable opponents each time the floor. they've taken Spartans atJeniso forecourt men will be MSU of offense and a defense alternating from a man The brunt of the SSCC task will rest on the By CRAIG REMSBURG 'r Bill who at 6-7 will yield some to n i to a shoulders of Rich Clark, 6'4" forward from River State News Sports Writer Pat Miller will play at one height'onTk forward spothJI what the situation calls for," Rouge, and 6'5" pivotman Bill Freesburg, a late Thursday it was not known wiJJ commented SSCC coach Sam Comer. "The Capac High School alumnus. The two SSCC big David took care of Goliath with a single appear opposite Miller. ™ Spartans have a definite height advantage over us. men will compete with Spartan aces Lindsay well-aimed shot in their much - publicized "Brian Breslin contacted the so we'll have to flu Mon play aggressive defense and make Hairston and Lovelle Rivers for control of the matchup some time ago. The MSU basketball he missed team practices every shot count," Comer explained. boards. Wednes. team, however, is hoping to take care of the Thursday," Ganakas reported. "He's a "giants" of Minnesota with a few more shots in a mark right now for the game." If Breslin, the team's Women's IM home Big Ten contest tomorrow night. The opening tip will be at 8 p.m. at Jenison third-leading R (behind Kilgore and Miller) doesn't Do You Fieldhouse and Ticket Manager Bill Beardsley reports there are plenty of tickets available for action, either A1 Smith, Ron Guto possible Brad Van Pelt will get the call ' the game. General admission seats are $1 and go on sale Starting in the MSU backcourt will Ganakas and the ul Wayne State. leading FRESH B The Albatross at 5:30 p.m. Saturday. Reserved tickets are priced at $2 and MSU students need orly a squad, Mike Robinson. Robinson will carry a scorer of the fti Coffeehouse validated ID to get in the Fieldhouse doors. the Gopher defense and 20-point average J Ganakas hnLl Presents Averaging just 6-1 in height per man, the able to establish an offense thai will We've got CHARLEY SMITH Spartan starters will be facing a Gopher squad that zooms to a lofty 6-6V$ for each starter. It quick sharp-shooter some freedom of mov— "We'll probably play a baseline * JEFF & JUDY TORDOFF will be size vs. quickness and speed and MSU of game," the MSU mentor said. brpakiul "We w Coach Gus Ganakas expects a lively contest. Sunday AL HOLMAN Friday "It should be an all-out, slam-bang affair," Ganakas offered. "Minnesota's height presents an get the ball up to Mike as quick a free him on the perimeters so he can shot." taketfl I immense problem but we'll just have to play a Hie Detroit sophomore tuned up [(,1 Delivery BILL KAHL & BOBCARR good offensive game." That might take some doing as the Gophers are the best defensive team in the league to date, in contest tomorrow night with a against Northwestern Tuesday night, 26-pointJ a cagers lost in overtime 76-69. the number of points allowed per game. Defense will also play a big part in th. Coll Between Minnesota has limited opponents to a mere 51 points each time out while racing to a 3-0 record a matchup the 1-2 Spartans need to win toevenfl Big Ten record. Ganakas indicated h3 in the Big Ten and a 9-3 mark overall. use a zone defense against the (jj 351-0009 Jim Brewer will Jim Hrviver "They are an accomplished zone defense team and everyone has trouble scoring on them," depending on game situations. So it will be the height of Behagen, BrewJ lead the Minnesota giants into action Ganakas said. "They even limited Marquette (the Turner against the quickness ot Saturday night against MSU at Jenison Fieldhouse. Brewer no. 2 team in the country) to under 60 points in Robinson, Ganakas and the rest of thel RHAPHARHAP] IARHARHARHAFHARHA is joined on the front line by 6-foot-9 Ron Behagen and 6-foot-8 Clyde Turner. their game played in December." Ron Behagen at 6-9, Clyde Turner at 6-8 and 6-8 Jim Brewer comprise the front three for the squad in a key game for both teams. Mini holds the edge in the series between thtl teams, 25-16. Each squad won at homeii| Gophers, a formidable wall for the Spartans to games last season. I penetrate. Bob Nix, a 6-3 guard, and 6-4 Keith Following the Gopher game, the Spartan J Young are expected to man the backcourt. will host Indiana on Saturday. Jan. 291 Asked to do battle with the big Minnesota televised Big Ten contest. Swimmers beginning at 3 p.m. In Michigan, MSU faces There should be m probably the second best team interesting races." _ in the Big Ten behind national Michigan is 3-0 in dualL powerhouse Indiana. competition this year, audi "We're going to go down there Wolverines placed second«| and do the best job that we Big Ten relays. can," said Spartan swimming Byron McDonald and J coach Dick Fetters. "We have Day lead the Michfl butterfliers, with McD owning the country's best I of 1:54.4. ft From Stu Isaac, Mike Whitakerl freshman Pat Bauer | the Pearl challenge MSU's breastroke champ, Jeff Li with Isaac and Whitakerl of Death swimming individual ml also. I Brazil's Jose Aranha and! McCullough lead the if freestyle sprinters, with I Anderson facing Spl co-captain John Thuerer 1 long freestyle events. Chris Hansen faces S backstrokers Alan Paul Fetters, while Joe CbT Dillejm takes on MSU diving wad Narcy's rapidly improving® From Terror by Night PROGRAM A PROGRAM B The Pearl of Death Terror by Night Sherlock Holmes Sherlock Holmes Faces Death and the Pursuit of Algiers Secret Weapon Tonight in Conrad Aud. The House of Fear 12:00 Tonight in Wilson Aud. 12:00 Sat. in Wilson Aud. Sat. in Conrad Aud. 12:00 $1 admission 12:00 Students, faculty , and staff only RHARHARHARHARHARHARHARHARHA ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆☆. n State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, Janu SPORTS GARY KORRECK Tracksters to go Grapplers take on after Big Ten gold f Shakespeare's sonnets includes the phrase "fortune in i?d while the connotation may be different MSU's indoor !oach Fran Dittrich's eyes have been glittering at the powerful Okla. St. Rw fiADV By GARY C/-*!_! Annrn SCHARRER State News Sports Writer assistant Coach Blubaugh. Its of a Big Ten title. MSU's wrestling reputation has reached its d a recent practice and though I stayed in the shadows, ^Oklahoma State's powerful NCAA championship and defending present heights following a decade long hnHilv harm for my lack of coverage, I noticed something wrestling team will invade rebuilding process. Peninger, in his tenth season the MSU campus this weekend for a ison Fieldhouse that 1 hadn't before, with the dual meet as MSU head coach, has won six consecutive Spartans 7:30 p.m. Saturday at the IM was an aura about the squad; not like the ubiquitous Big Ten championships and the national title in Sports Arena. Billy Graham crusade but more akin to that omniscient Both the Spartans and 1967. Oklahoma State finished sixth in 1967, the Jjesque air of winning. Cowboys are worst place that a Cowboy squad has fared in perennially ranked among the country's top jch parlayed the usual non-effacing comments for his national competition. wrestling teams, but MSU has been stymied by I'm pretty well satisfied, they look good" et al but his Oklahoma State Both the Spartans and Cowboys feature seven times in previous dual natinal champions in the lightweights. Two-time ve him away. ,as damned happy. NCAA 118-pound champion Greg Johnson will At the Midlands Tournament last month MSU wl,0 wouldn't be with a supporting cast more impressive finished second to the Cowboys fourth open the meet for the Spartans, battling OSU's it of a Cecile B. DeMille movie. place Ron Thrasher who is considered one of the landing and throughout the season Spartan Big most poetic of these are the sprinters, led by Herb wrestlers have pointed to their showdown with Eight's strongest competitors. rton, LaRue Butchee and heralded freshman Marshall Dill, Following the 118-pound action will be who gets Oklahoma State his first taste of college Yoshiro Fujita of Oklahoma State, the NCAA "It will be a competition tonight at the barnburning meet," Spartan champion at 126 pounds and considered No. 1 Coach Grady Peninger promised. Eastern Michigan Invitational in "Every match, again this year, going against Spartan freshman Ypsilanti - a meet Dittrich right up the line, will be very close." Pat Milkovich. "It will be a tough meet," Coach glibly states "does not count." Doug Spartans Conrad Calander, 10-1, and Tom The trio almost moves him to Blubaugh agreed. "And no matter how many Milkovich, 9-0, will tangle with undefeated times you figure it out on vivid emotion. paper, only at the end opponents in Mike Riley, 6-0, and Bob Stites, of the meet will there be a definite winner." "They run well together," he All kinds of predictions can be made 6-0-1 at the 134 and 142 weights respectively. says. Two-time Illinois prep champ Mark Malley, i After that such runners as Al concerning the meet but only one certainty with a 7-1-1 record, will be the Spartans 150 exists. The meet will be Henderson, Mike Holt, John standing room only. And entry and Rick Radman, 9-2, will be at 158. this should be an advantage for the Spartans. Gerald Malecke (167) has a 10-1 record with a Morrison, Bob Casselman, Mike Cowboy wrestling fans could be described as it'll I correction iMurphy, Tom Spuller and Bill fanatical, and they have a phenomenal winning team high of six pins. Freshman Greg Zindel is OjUUSt) Nance provide Dittrich with likely to wrestle at 177. tradition to be excited about. No exquisite flexibility, not to collegiate team Big Ten champs Dave Ciolek and Ben Lewis has dominated sport like Oklahoma State has 'mention their main asset: a are at 190 and heavyweight for the Spartans. wrestling. In the 41 year history of the NCAA Ciolek will wrestle two-time Michigan prep peed. The middle and meet, the Cowboys have won 27 team titles and NOW THRU SUM :*x [longer distances are well a parade of individual champion from Detroit Catholic Central, Rick 'covered, also. Ail-American Ken titlists, including Spartan Jones who is a freshman at OSU. (3) FEATURES (3) [Popejoy, Rob and Ron Cool, X RATED I.D.'j *?: Dave Dieters and Randy REQUIRED iKilpatrick take over there. KEY TO VICTORY "The sprinters will get the ■MARSHALL DILL ink," says Dittrich, "but we've 8ot other 8"ys on this team just Beyorui 1 ^ | else could as good." he say? I've named half the team and haven't AA men face pressure Love ntioned guys like shotputter Marv Roberts, working to hape after an injury last season and who could lose with a nper named Ralph Simpson? The team key is to any gymnastics its all-around men. "I expect a good meet," Ken and hurdlers, though assistant coach Jim Gibbard says Factor said, "SIU is a Coach George Szypula Evil the Randy Balhorn, Ken Factor and gymnastics oriented hopes lot ready yet, have good potential with Morrison, Chris school and for the best in this meet Al Beaudet are MSU's all-around against fn and footballer Mike Hurd, who hasn't run track since that makes for better meets." SIU. performers. There is iool but doesn't show it. name 'em all. Dittrich says they deserve it and I pressure on these men as a lot of they Another added pressure for these men are injuries. "If we do well," he said, "It 'Triumphant! Dazzling!" perform in every event and "You have to learn to work will help us set out sights for the New York Times veren't any bleeding feet that night and no one was account for the brunt of the Big Ten meet March 2-4." FRI. JAN. 21 (Special) the fl6or but they were working hard, with injuries," Al Beaudet team score. tched long jumpers Del Gregory and John Ross trying to stated, "and sometimes injuries UNIVERSITY AUDITORIUM 8:15 P.M. When the Spartans AA men r mark and each time Dittrich would step on the end of make it difficult to perform in face SIU Saturday night there all six $5,00 4.00 3.00 (FVi. only) events. If you are not ip and say, "you missed it again." And they'd do it will be added pressure as the Public: $6.00 5.00 4.00 careful you may injure yourself Salukis have two of the best AA hch says they'll be ready. more and be lost for the r 1 M,l*> North US 27 men in the country. on 4A2-74Q9 THIS AFTERNOON IN THE UNIV. p don't mean to give the impression he isn't excited about "I will be a little bit less #i NOW THRU TUES. Wk H. He is. Really. AUD. COMPANY REHEARSAL | could win the Big Ten title," Dittrich says, "if everything relaxed Saturday," Randy Balhorn commented, "but || (3) BIG FEATURES || THE FIRST SEX-HORROR FILM EVER MADE' I'm glad the season's starting. "We've been sometimes it is good to perform under pressure. It helps you to JULIE'S E ATERST^ 4:00 - 6.00 p.m. vay, jo-captian Ken Popejoy told me. easy on know where your strength and PAWN SHOP ^"Leii Scare i for this evening's performance _ the u guys can take it out on your opponents. weaknesses are " Jessica NOW SHOWING i Ua Death jig: <3£-lGP 2nd at 9:19 OBSERVATION ALLOWED MSU STUDENTS: FREE (I.D. AT THE DOOR) PUBLIC: $1.00 Presented with the W and the National En 355 3361 GUNFIGHT" & ACOtOP A PARAMOUNT I UP ' §§ :£ "* Johnny Cash Kirk Douglas Bond 007" A HOWARO W. KOCH HILLARD ELKINS PRODUCTION i .IAN FLEMINGS Diamonds Walter hatthau pAre Elaine Hay Forever Rudolph Valentino in Forever "flltewlM" [G] * SON OF THE SHEIK MKjEtS : Color by MOViflAB X# special permission of (he Museum of Modern Art panavision* technicolor* United Artists Tonight and Sat. in 102B Weils Son of Sheik - 8:30; House of Usher - 7, 9:40 SATURDAY AT: SUNDAY AT: TODAY AT: 2:35 4:20 - 6:05 4:20 - 6:05 7:45 9:30 7:45 - 9:30 7:50 - 9:40 'HAT CAN YOUR CHILDREN SHOW YOU ABOUT LOVE THIS IS WHAT THIS IS WHAT IMI PEOPLE ARE SAYING ABOUT OTHER PEOPLE ARE SAYING ABOUT llSABtM TIME S0ME- PING LIKE THIS WAS SHOWN!" "A LOT OF FANCY WORDS TO SHOW WHAT IS REALLY AN EROTIC MOVIE!" |TTHOUGHT IT WAS IS IMPORTANCE OF IC ' STR*SSED THE "THE POLICE SHOULD FEELING!" HAVE BEEN HERE!" lhmSTEFUlLY F>WT AND D0NE- "LIKE PICKING UP MASTERS & ENTERTAINING!" JOHNSON -1 DON'T NEED IT!" |VfRY MUCH NEEDED!" "IT'S A BIG C0ME-0N!" Nl) OUT YOURSELF . the beginning of communication - EVERYONE'S the end of ignorance! LANSiNC S CEDAR ST NEAR JOLLY RD. TALKING ABOUT- Phone 882-2429 u Friday, Januilarv 10 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan 21 j New code would end common Common law crimes include that body of precedent or crimes law crinm • The crime of possession of explosives has been News Background of former times which are not specified in the new code as actual Include the "molotov cocktail" type of incendiarv nS felonys or misdemeanors, such as cohabitation. Drafters of the possession of this device a prima facie case of intent to, i Judge Horace W. Gilmore, and included defense attorneys, judges, bill say exclusion of common law crimes merely throws out • Theft in the third degree has been expanded to in i ■ Perhaps the most ambitious piece of legislation facing the law professors, prosecutors, police, probation officers, corrections archaic infractions that are never acted upon or are clearly from a coin machine, punishable by 90 days imprisonml^l Michigan lawmakers early in the '72 session is a monstrous 250-page revision of the state's 22-year-old criminal code. officials, psychologists and several legislators. anachronisms. • A new subdivision category of loitering has h T The proposed revision was authorized by the legislature in 1964 Law professors Jerald H. Israel of the University of Michigan Other major reforms are as follows; relating to public buildings where there has been * through the creation of a special joint committee of the and B. James George, now of Wayne State, drafted proposed • The definitions of "intentionally" and "knowingly are request to leave. n* • Possession of an sections which were debated and amended during 2-day meetings expanded to assist the determination of a finder of fact relative to unregistered pistol has been re legislature and the State Bar of Michigan. Action establishing the held every month in the ensuing three years of work. The whether a result was a natural and probable consequence and class A misdemeanor (1 year maximum imprisonment! H special committee came in response to a call by the Michigan Supreme Court to redraft the state's criminal statutes. Michigan State Bar Commission then approved a final draft of a whether or not a reasonable person vsuuld have known of specific class B misdemeanor (90 days maximum imprisonment! 1 The committee was headed by Wayne County Circuit Court proposed code which was introduced into the legislature in 1968. conduct of circumstances. • A new crime of unlawful game promotion has hL J Although the Senate Judiciary Committee held open hearings in • The provisions covering the justification of using deadly covering the commercial retail market. n■ 1969, it was not until the code was reintroduced to a new physical force has been expanded to cover "place or work" as • The crime of adultery has been eliminated fro.,. RHARlHARHARHARHARt-W iner,„, legislature in January 1971 that intensive House Judiciary- well as dwelling. • New language has been added to further clarify whi Committee programming was directed towards a public and • A new section has been added to exclude from "mental > material or performance is pornographic. ^ committee study of the proposed code. disease or defect" abnormalities manifested only by repeated In its debate on the criminal code revision, Michigan h il PRESENTS The greatest impact, initially structural, of the proposed revised code is that it condenses the cumbersome 3,500 sections of criminal or antisocial conduct. • Numerous amendments have been made to change age-line the sizable majority of other states that have in undertaken comprehensive revisions of their state recalil per!fj statutory law now making up the criminal law in Michigan to a designations in accordance with "expert advice" and Eleven states have already enacted revised criminal cod* A /of tight 37 separate chapters, with a total of 347 sections spanning a recommendations of law enforcement people in the field of sex 12 others, including Michigan, have proposed codes ■ comparably terse 250 pages. offenses. Consensual sodomy as a crime has been stricken. legislative process. "■ Effort was directed towards the elimination of long-standing "AVERY^tFUNNY, loopholes, ambiguities, contradictions, archaic language and a number of poorly researched and drafted statutory language. One of the major changes the proposed code seeks is the WHARTON ADVISES TRUSTEES VERY INTELLIGENT abolishment of all common law crimes. VERY AFFECTING MOVIE!" "A MAD, MAD MOVIE. DEVASTATINGLY At Uncle John's A Women's pan FUNNY. AND COMICALLY DEVASTATING" By CINDI STEINWAY president. Pancake State News Staff Writer Ten women representatives of the group drafted a lettetl President Wharton, dated Jan. 12, informing him of the gronB President Wharton has advised the MSU Board of Trustees to Is A postpone consideration of a Women's Advisory Commission until decision to communicate directly with his office rather thanfl office of EOP. None of the 10 women could affirm th the end of the current academic year, MSU Trustee Warren M. from Wharton had been received. Work of Art Huff, D - Plymouth, announced Wednesday. Speaking before the second meeting of women interested in response "The memorandum from President Wharton is dated Jan J improving their status on this campus, Huff reviewed a stated Huff. He added that apparently the problem c> memorandum from President Wharton stating that a Women's communication between the various groups involved. Advisory Commission was being formed through the Equal "According to Wharton's memorandum, he received nc_ Opportunities Office (EOP). from Robert Perrin, vice president of community relations,! In their first meeting Jan. 6, the women's group decided not to at the Jan. 6 meeting an advisory group would function ud MURDERS" form a commission through the EOP office, but would rather to establish direct communication with the office of the EOP dealing said. with matters affecting women on campus," H Most of the women present agreed that communications^ the true intentions of the group were not reaching the presida Tonight in Conrad Aud. 7, 9:15 office. A move was made and seconded to send out another|3 to Wharton informing him of the group's intentions to ( BRAMS NOW presidential advisory council on women. Saturday in Wilson Aud. 7, 9:15 AB k j SHOWING Originally the EOP office had invited concerned women! form a unified front under their supervision, using their faciliHT This was defeated by the women concerned with improvingtJ status because it was disclosed that the EOP office acts investigative agency on cases of sexualdiscrimination. only «f PLANETARIUM Mary Sharp, asst. director of EOP, affirmed this by sUitingtJ Sunday in McDonel Kiva the office does no hiring or firing and functions in a capacity when dealing with discrimination cases. 9:30 Huff advised the group to go through the correct channels! achieve an Advisory Commission on Women and consult withj board of trustees individually. "The release of salaries by the board was a device to sm the reality of this University's discrimination," Huff said. I Beal Film Group presents TONIGHT Ct SAT. extended an invitation to any of the members of the group! ^jfesent their problems and plans for organization to the tn PROGRAM SCHEDULE ADMISSION PRICES TOSHIRO 1 W08MM MOKUAWH IBM)1 FRI 8:00 & 10:00 p.m. SAT. 2:30, 8:00, & 10:00 p. SUN 4.00 p.m. I by spacecraft controlled by 2ND WEEK! developed life forms on other The Devil* is not n film for e _ FOLLOWING 8 and 10 p.m. SHOWS Bat is a true story, carefully documented TOTAL LUNAR ECLIPSE THE ALBUM PICTURES AT historically accurate - a serious work by a distinguished | AN EXHIBITION film maker. As such it is likely to be hailed by Emerson, Lake & Palmer as a masterpiece by many. But because it is explicit WILL BE PLAYED and highly graphic in depicting the bizarre events that occurred in France in 1634, others will find it RHAkHARHARHARHARHA visually shocking and deeply disturbing. We feel a responsibility to alert you to this. PRESENTS It is our hope that only the audience that will appreciate I THE DEVILS will come to see it. Akira Kurosawa's Masteroiece THE » DONALD SUTHERLAND » GENE WILDER ORSON WELLES SAMURAI ■:u- 7 and 9:30 109 Anthony $1.00 No ID'S VANESSA REDGRAVE^OLIVER REED| - Learn this style of fighting - IN KEN RUSSELL'S FILM OF THE DEVILS — KENDO CLUB Mondays A Robert H. Solo-Ken Ruvsell v^, .» Ken Kussell J 6:30-8:00 Women's IM ir«mWarner Bros. -A Kinney LeiMi LARRY KRAMER mi MARTIN ROSEN present Starring Academy Award Winners - Melvin Douglas, Gene Hackman. Estelle Parsons ALAN BATES OLIVER REED GLENDA JACKSON JENNIE LINDEN D. H. LAWRENCES "WOMEN IN LOVE" Tonight in Wilson Aud. 7, 9:15 lTrFkM ken rus'sell Saturday in Conrad Aud. 7,9 :15 ROYBATO MARTINROSEN COLOR by OeLuxe* United Artiste Sunday in McDonel Kiva 7 Tonight in 105 S. Kedzie 7:15, 9:30 "Magnificent, a perfect film" - Judith Christ "* * * *, highest rating!" - N.Y. Daily News Students, faculty and staff only Students, faculty, and staff only "Best Picture of 1971" - Life I.D.'s required $1.00 admission I.D.'s required $1.00 admission "One of the year's ten best." - N.Y. Times, Group W Radio "Best Screenplay of the year." - Writers Guild Look Rex Reed RHARHARHARHARHARH^ RHARHARHARHARHARH/ n State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, January 21, 1972 )] The Devils'-disturbingly true film "The I highly disturbing, devastating Devils' I experience. It is definitely not the most hated man. But i of events transform him into a occasional fires burning out of control and the warm beds of of the acting, directing, set design photography and editing I for everyone. It will crush too saintly figure. passion. The blinding white walls is that they were excellent. Ken Richelieu has Grandier accused act as a cover for the lust and I many glossy worlds because it is Russel, who also directed of being in communion with the secret desires that burn "Women in Love" j recreation of a true event not (playing on m iw devil. Grandier emerges as a man throughout the city. They are campus this weekend) shows a I just another movieland fairy of principles much the same way unlocked when the authoritarian I tale. It will repulse and stun deep understanding of the Sir Thomas More did in "A Man I many because of its violence and for All Seasons." The people workings of our society and the I simply because Ken Russel the inhabits it. , who first stood strongly behind In "Women in Love" he I director, refuses to hide the ugly relationships between four Grandier rally behind the false figurehead is removed. Then and distinct types. In "Hie Devils" he | truth for the sake of decorum. By JACK EPPS JR. lies of the state and actively only then can the hidden In simple terms the film is l's relationship to State News Critic cheer on their leaders f about one man against the force passions be released. Nuns throw the the cial destruction. The state emerges off their habits and run naked in | of the I will state. Invariably, the state the winner, while the man is too the church and the people cheer His approach to the which he lives. emerge victorious, with the Grandier, expertly played subject is by human and subjected to the on the firey execution, easily 1 people being fooled and used as Oliver Reed. To conquer the exciting, frightening and chances of life, namely Death. puppets. rationalizing every move behind amusing. Though the theme city, the church must first defeat Like fools, the death of their the false security of the state. * The revolves around a religious topic, >/; J '• 4 film is set in the 17 th and destroy the man who leader, their ablest protector, The true devils in the film are it is anything but subdued. I century when church and state defends the town through the fa it iif e synonymous. The I the state was irreproachable and power of sheer power of his personality. The father is a powerful violent seals the instant destruction of their city. The film is sad and full of the people who leer and cheer the fiery execution, the people in the church who smirk behind The film has been accused of being violent, bloody and gory. t h 1 Surely, the film is highly (hi e all-encompassing. i t r ) young man capable of holding out against the strength of dispair. It ends in and white scene a bleak black that reveals the their party masks. Grandier, the one man accused of emotional and ispushed to In his effort to destroy the Richelieu and the French nation being in extremes evoking a wide range only true victor to be death, not communion with the devil is the of response from the audience, I Reed, as Father Grandier, speaks in his defense while being tried for being a member of fortifications of a small town, through his own internal the ever-present death of "The Cardinal Richelieu finds an only man who had been able to but unlike Sam Peckinpaw's |s hordes in a scene from 'The Devils," now showing at the State Theater in East Lansing. strength. Grandier stands Seventh Seal", but a more subtle truly drive out the devil in a "The Straw Dogs", violence is obstacle in his path, Father directly in Richelieu's way and competitor who ultimately holds purging ceremony of holy not used for its own sake. In forces the king's men to halt the all the high cards. destruction of the walls. matrimony. "The Devils" the realism is used Symbolically, the city is cast "The Devils" is one of the to intensify the drama and is Grandier becomes the personal in an austere, sterile white brick. finer films to be released this carefully worked into the plot to target for the religious monarch It is representative of the All that and has to be removed—but year. can truly be said disturb the audience. impersonal, unquestioned power removed legally without being of the state. No warmth is to be made into a martyr. found in the city except for The priest is anything but ■owing employers will be interviewing from Jan. 31 2. March, June and August graduates of all degree Steel Corp.; Owen Co.; Vic Chemical. - Corning Fiberglas Corp.; Swindell - Dressier saintly. He has fathered an illegitimate child and has left the mother to fare for herself. He LectuRe Eligible lo interview unless otherwise indicated. Feb. 2: Battle Creek Public Schools; Continental Illinois uses his position for his personal %> interested in an organization, please sign up in the National Bank & Trust Co. of Chicago; Hurdman Cranstoun gain. In the city he is the most ■ Bureau Monday or at least two school days in advance Viewing date. Penny & Co.; Johnson & Johnson; Mount Vernon City Schools; Mutual Benefit Life; NCR; Newport News respected, most powerful and Listening Ea 337-1717 corjceRt Shipbuilding & Dry I information is available in the Placement Bulletin Dock Co.; Ohio Dept. of Highways; Service Systems Corp.; Its h week at the Placement Bureau and in most This bulletin lists specific majors requested by the Simmons Co.; Toledo Jewish Community Center; Trane Dept. of Transportation. Co.; U.S. semes ■g organizations. e advised to interview with employers even though STARTS TODAY! it completed their military service. Many employers ALVIN d an interest in interviewing the student before and Friday & Saturday JAN. York's City1"1Center a^'wVsNngton"! with the Armed Forces, Feature Shown 21 AILEY Kennedy Center. Alley returns Hack River Farm & Ranch for Girls; Diamond 1:30-3:30-5:30-7:35-9:40 8 15 P.M. AMERICAN [Corp.; Price Waterhouse & Co. UNIV. AUD. DANCE PUBLIC $6. $5. $4. MSU impbell ■ Kwald; Eli Lilly & Co.; Indiana Farm Bureau In the great tradition of American thrillers. STUDENTS: $5. 4. 3. Assn. Inc.; Kassumba Development Co.; McGill SATURDAY THAILAND King Co. Inc.; Michigan Consolidated Gas Co.; National JAN. Thailand are" the insight's !nto°!ts age 22 8:00 P.M. world uncompMcatecH !fesl m D11 cl'y • a n d TRAVEL SERIES univ.aud. TUES. LOS INDIOS 25 TABAJARAS havenymade°nt'h ese ph^mena? 8:15 P.M. FAIRCHILD THEATRE SPECIAL $2 to'C: i3'5° MSU STUDENTS: WED. PROMISES JAN. PROMISES Sydnee Balaber. Music by Burt 26 BROADWAY 8:15 P.M. THEATRE SERIES with student id univ. aud. 4. 3. <" THEATRE and DINNER fri. CTH /I OSIPOV FEB. concfuctor 'V*c *0^0ub'rov sky9 he ft Sundays at The Tin Lizzie. BALALAIKA very essence of Russian national yj BEST ACTOR Doors open at 5:00 p.m. 8:45 P.M. ORCHESTRA So,"op^an^r ^ ^ OF THE YEAR! univ.aud. SERIES A Gene Hack man -New York Film Critics SUNDAYS AT Tickets for all reserved seating even ts^available at the Union, World Travel THE niENCffl CONNECTION THE TIN LIZZIE Beal Film Group Presents TONIGHT and SAT. in 104B Wells r=-i —• GENE HACKMAN FEBNAN00 REV R0V SCHEIDER TON* 10 BIANCO MARCEL BC FOR RESERVATIONS, TELEPHONE 351 2450 Beal Film Group presents Friday and Sat. 106 B Wells ADDED (Fun Cartoon 8c Novelty) CATACLYSMIC VIOLENCE TODAY: 7:00 & 9:00 OPEN AT 1:00 P.M. y 1 PROGRAM INFORMATION 485-6485 Sat.&Sun. Continuous \ its own horrendous way, "I Drink Your Blood" 1:30-3:30-5:30-7:30-9:30 5th Week At 1:30 • 3:30 7:25 9:30 P.M. . - .. 5:25 frtHSBa absolutely fascinating - |eal Film Group presents TONIGHT & Sat. - I DRINK YOUR BLOOD Henri Georges Clouzot's 111 Olds Detective Harry Callahan. (a horror film for adults) ^Diabolique. Diabcliqtc Ister/y thriller! A shocker!" I'ses explode like shotgun blasts!" NY Times |f foreign film of the year!" NY Film Critics Diabolique plays at 8:30 only PLUS m* _ MARCEL ■ CAMUS'| BLACK ORpHEUS Impyr |r»ofthe An absolutely 1st rate horror film, strictly'for FtANCOIS TIUFFAUT-S ■ DRacula adults. a real gusher. Balrog Review Clint Eastwood . . "An absolutely unique adult horror film. Unbelievably violent, non-stop action from 1st frame ST ASKING JUUS^JiM JCANNf V to last. Pa"d 10:20 Dirty Harry CLINT EASTWOOD in 0 TECHNICOLOR Admission $1.00 jn 106B Wells Bernard Rose Adults only - no Tonight and Sat. Thi» Mm « Showtimes 7:00,8:30. 10:00 persons under 18 yr. 104B Wells $1.50 both films No I D. 12 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan F"day. STATE NEWS CLASSIFIED It Is January Clearance Time. Sell "Don't Needs" Fast With A CLASSIFIED Ad. 355-8255 rXctioi Auto Service & Parts FRANKLYSPEAKING lyPhilRank For Sale Personal The State News does not permit racial or, religious PORTRAITS, COLOR Candid MASON BODY iHOP, 812~ E*t Weddings, passports and discrimination In its Kalamazoo Street . . . Since 1940. identification, Commercial r 129 Eas asl r 9 *Vm 8nd advertising columns. The Complete auto painting and collision service. IV5-0256. C-1-31 cameras, $1 $5. 8mm and super - photography. Evenings Call • AUTOMOTIVE State News will not accept 3552751, MILLER 8 movie projectors. Used slide Scoottn & Cycto advertising which PHOTOGRAPHICS. S-5 1 21 VW-GUARANTEED repair. projectors, $5 up. Binocular Auto Parts ft S*rvict discriminates against religion, RANDY'S MOBIL. I-96 at close-out. Sale on 30 pair skiis, $5 east Aviation race, sex, color or national Okemos Road. 349 9620. C-1-31 up. 30 pair ski boots, $3 - $15. Lansing FAMILY OF MAN choose your » ■ • EMPLOYMENT Used ice skates, reduced prices. Insulated boots. Snowshoes. 500 HAS MOVED b*«hs, family • FOR RENT Apartments Employment shot-guns and rifles, new and used. Big selection electric heaters. Come to 549 E. Grand River Portable and electric typewriters, for your whole wheat bread, Houses GOOD JOB opportunities: Male and female students needed. Apply, $15 up. Used stereo, amps, tuners, granola, grains, and herbs. Rooms Automotive 4980 Northwind Drive, Wolverine receivers, changers, tape recorders, • FOR SALE decks, speakers, records, tapes. GOSPEL MEETINGS. 7:30 p.m. Employment Office. 5-1-21 Animals MUSTANG 1965, runs well. New Color TV sets, Police band radios, every night except Saturday. Mobile Homes battery and transmission. 3 - tapestries. WILCOX Carriage Hill Gospel f-tell, 2960 HAVE A need for an ex speed, 6 - cylinder, custom SECONDHAND STORE. 509 East Lake Lansing Road. 6-1-28 •Lost ft Found month? Part time. Call interior, need money. $395. Michigan, 8 • 5:30 PM. Monday — • PERSONAL after 5 p.m. 3-1-21 351-4354. 3-1-24 Saturday. 485-4391. • PEANUTS PERSONAL NIGHT BARTENDER wanted BankAmericard, Master Charge, • REAL ESTATE NOVA 1970. six cylinder, standard. Layaways, terms, trades. C Tuesdays through Saturdays. L.S.A.T. — April e • RECREATION Experienced only. WALT'S RESTAURANT, Williamston. Call GUITAR, GIBSON. Nylon strings, •SERVICE for appointment, 655-2175. classical with case. $100. D.A.T. - April exi Typing Service 5-1-26 351-9362. 2-1-21 M.C.A.T. PONTIAC 1969 Firebird, 19,000 - April ( •TRANSPORTATION SCUBA GEAR, tank with backpac, miles, brand new tires, AM/FM THIRD OR ' accounting • WANTED radio, air - conditioning. $2100 or best offer. Must sell. Cal major to set - up books for the RHA general fund, and the RHA 'ceop ho!' regulator, safety 484-4152 evenings. 2 est. 21 Phone DEADLINE 339-9268. 3-1-21 movie account. Salary will be $75 1 P.M. one class day before BED-S20. Chest - $12. Round Oak EYE CATCHER / term. 5-6 hours / week, will be table $70. Refrigerator $30. Most business cards rate publication. PORSCHE 91 IT 1971. 5- speed required. Driving privileges transmission. Aluminum alloy available. Call 5-8285. 2-1-21 Stoves $15-$75. LONG'S USED only a glance, but not when Cancellations/Corrections FURNITURE, 300 S. Clippert. 2 wheels. Michelin tires. Complete For Rent they come from Ed Jacques - 12 noon one class day gauges. 337-1534 after 3 p.m. OVERSEAS JOBS for students. For Rent blocks south of Frandor. Tuesday of Runyan's Jewelers, before publication. 3-1-21 Australia, Europe, South America, through Saturday, 12-6, Monday, Vancouver, Wash. Each of his Africa, etc. All professions and Houses 12-9. 882-7940. 3-1-24 cards carries PHONE 355-8255 TOYOTA COROLLA 1200 1970. occupations, $700 to $3000 Apartments If a tiny diamond. monthly. Expenses paid, overtime, AMPEX STEREO cassette recorder. you want your 347 Student Services Bldg. 21,000 miles. Red, racing stripe, sightseeing. Free information. RENT FREE for rest of January. $90. 60 and 90 minute pre advertising to rate more than reasonable. Call 482-5388. 4-1-26 a second glance, RATES »v Write, JOBS OVERSEAS, Dept. One girl, close to campus. $55 etely furnished, $300 / put it where TRIUMPH SPITFIRE MRK III 1969 8A, Box 15071, San Diego, month. Winter, spring. 351-8425. , utilities included. Students Call 355-5537. BL 1-21 people go looking for your Good condition. |British racing California 92115. 10-1-31 3-1-24 * 393-3068 after 6.10-2- message . . . STATE News Service MOVING - VENUS TV, « Classified Ads. Good green. Call Mark at 351-2799 NEED ONE girl for two - man after 5 p.m. 3-1-21 NURSES, R.N. - L.P.N; GRADUATE STUDENT to manage businessmen know it's the MANOR SKILLED apartment, sublet winter / spring. Ftve Strifin Banj' J ROSELAWN completely furnished four low • cost way of Close to campus. 351-4932. >unchbowl. 1-1-21 advertising SCRUGGS VOLKSWAGEN CAMPER 1969. NURSING HOME, 707 Armstrong bedroom home. Call 372-4032 that attracts new customers. STYLEJ Pop-up top, 30,000 miles, Road has positions available. 11 - 2-1-21 with references. 5-1-26 Dial 355-8255 double-thumbing very FURS for an Ad 7:30 shift and 3:00 - 11:30 shift, - BIG selection of old coats. good condition. $2200. Call Representative today full or part time. Excellent salaries DUPLEX, 2 bedroom, fireplace, Call 393-8043, Rabbit, Seal, 482-9768. 5-1-21 and benefits. Apply in person or MARRIED STUDENTS carpet, finished basement. Horse. Old capes tool call Mrs. Swan. 393-5680, & FACULTY Unfurnished. No lease. Near VOLKSWAGEN 1966. 55,000 miles. Personnel. 5-1-21 Gables. 351-3229 after 5 p.m. Like new tires, battery, exhaust. 3-1-21 SCOTT STEREOMASTER 386, Excellent for winter driving. I WANTED: TOPLESS Go-Go Girls. 1, 2, & 3 bedroom apts. PE-2035, accustiflox 17s and 6s 5 351-3026. 2-1-21 some with $7.50 per hour. Call 487-0603 or study ROOMMATE WANTED for log VOLKSWAGEN VAN. Excellent 372-9221 after 6 PM. 10-1-27 house on lake. Fully furnished, offer ov*r $600* 351 2396 All student ads must be carpeted, fireplace, waterbed. X5 1-26 prepaid UNIVERSITY 2621 East VOLKSWAGEV Kalamazoo Street. For Rent from '145 per mo. Near school. 339-2310. 5-1-24 COATS - ARMY trench coats The State News will 6-1-28 Rooms be TV AND STEREO rental, satisfaction guaranteed. Free UNFURNISHED i, $20 Cal 1^332-01 72. 1 responsible only for the VOLKWAGWEN BUG 1966. Green, delivery, service and pick up. No children welcome first day's incorrect tires and MALE TO share room in Co-ed COLE'S BAKERY new battery, good deposit. Call NEJAC, 337-1300. C GUAPA BARGER - TE ADORO insertion. condition. $300. Must sell. please, no pets Co-op, $225 / term includes room FINE BAKERY food for all meals. COMO UNA DULCE FLOR DE 393-9507.7-1-31 and board. 332-3574. 2-1 24 Open Sundays. MEIJER'S TV RENTALS - StudBnts only. Low PRIMAVERA. MOLTO PAZZO THRIFTY ACRES Okemas, S. monthly and term rates. Call KNOB KILL - PINOCCHIO. Y TU71-1 20 VOLKSWAGEN 1970. Orange 351-7900. UNIVERSITY TV SINGLE. SMALL comfdrtabl^'. Fdr , Pennsylvania, W. Sagirtaw. Automotive fastback. AM-FM radio, air - RENTALS. C-1-31 woman. Private home. Near KROGER - Frandor, Logan BARBI. GOOD luck next week. Win BARRACUDA Clean, 1964. 39,000 miles. new battery, new tires. conditioning. 38,000 $1850. Call 351-6814.2-1-21 miles. TV RENTALS. Color, $1950 per month. Black and white, $9.50 APARTMENTS campus. No cooking. $45 / month. Call 332-0343. X-2-1-24 Center, 4001 W. Saginaw, 1 721 N. Grand River. C-1-1-21 or lose, you're still Your Farmhouse brothers. 1-1-21 our Queen. Visit RABORN'SRifl I EDGE EAST! $400. Call 625-3893 anytime. VOLKSWAGEN 1967 Squareback! per month. MARSHALL MUSIC, 349-4700 MSU, NEAR. 1 or 2. Girl preferred. 147 LESLIE speaker cabinet, $500 SNOOPY I LOVE YOU WILL YOU 3-1-25 Excellent condition inside and 351-7830. C-1-1-21 OPEN Monday Available February 1st. Furnished, Hair Styles for J out. AM/FM radio. Cyclone Friday MARRY ME? THE RED clean, parking. Phone 337-0322 exhaust system. Many extras. 9 a.m. • 6 p.m. 2-1-24 BARON. 1-1-21 2828'/? E. Grand! COMPACT Saturday 12-5 $1150. Call 349-0917 after 5:30 p.m. 2-1-21 REGRIGERATOR RENTALS LOCATED V4 MILE NORTH p.m. ROOMS NEAR campus. Free TV and 37 1 45701 UNITED RENT-ALL. 2790 East on, $150. 393-2909. toot.o* ARE YOU PAYING Grand River. 351-5652. Best rates OF JOLLY RD. ON parking. All utilities, phone Animals FOR QUALITY s 5-1-27 to ro» now. 0-1-21 OKEMOS ROAD included. No lease. $105/month. TV's and record TOO MUCH FOR 351-5500. 6-1-21 POODLE PUPPY-AKC, silver SHOPPF 337 1300 C-1 AUTO INSURANCE? gray . CORVETTE 1967 Gold Convertible. PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE, South. miniature male. Best offer. Phone CONGRATULATIONS "BOB. Why not give me a call? 427 cu. in., 435 hp, 4 speed, Welcome to AK Psi. Have a great AM/FM radio. Best offer. Must Don Apartments Furnished studio, utilities paid, private entrance, $115 / month MEN - CLEAN, quiet rooms. Cooking. Close to campus. 337 0520. 3-1-21 term. Big Brother Steve. PS. Typing Ser^ sell. 694-2865 after 5:30 p.m. Sakowski plus deposit. Phone 627-5454. SIAMESE KITTENS, 2 females, box Think Snowl 1-1-21 485-8836, 487-5753. O PROFESSIONAL 2-1-21 SENTRY INS. 676-1930 HOLMES SOUTH near Sparrow trained. Phone 482-4: Hospital, two room efficiency, 4-1;21 JERK, WE hope you have a Happy 1-224-2156. 3-1-21 furnished, utilities included. No ONE Gl RL to share 3 girl apartment. ROOMS, SINGLES and doubles. DODGE DART convertible, 1963. Birthday and a jollv weekend. Scooters & Cooking facilities. Utilities paid. - Nice car, 6, automatic. $275. Runs good. Call 625-3893 Cycles pets, deposit. $100 / month. 351-3969. O Sub - lease. Capitol Villa. Rent negotiable. 351-1578 after 5 p.m. Call 372-8077. C-1-31 Mama and Horton. 1-1-21 anytime. 3-1-25 5-1-24 1968 SKI-DOO, 300cc, electric start, CASA BELSOL - For Sale Recreation 15" track, 16 hp. Clean, low SAMOYEDS, AKC. One 10 week old FORD COUNTRY Wagon 1966, 9 female, 2 females 2 years old, 1 - time, 337-9321. 2-1-21 HI-FLEX Skiis, 210cm, SPRING BREAK passenger with luggage carrier Models open. Luxury , - Acapulco, $189, publications, on brand new, never used, $100. spayed. Had all shots and X-rayed. top. Phone 489-3529. 5-1-27 living with Hotpoint appliances. Call Bahamas, $159; Hawaii, $269. corner M.A.i Terms available. 339-8587. 3-1-21 Aviation Carpeting and drapes. Individual 482-5887 after 6 p.m. 3-1-24 Call today! " STUDENTOURS. 129 below Jones Station^ f ' ' FORD FALCON Futura V-8 1963. heat and air - conditioning. 351-2650. C COPYGRAPH LEARN TO FLYI Complete flight USED FURNITURE Flea Fair: 314 337-1666. C-1-31 Runs good. Tires OK, plus snows. Security and laundry East Michigan. Dishes, books, Mobile Homes SPRING IBREAK 332-1863. 3-1-25 training. All courses are conveniences. From $170 Houses government and VA certified. coins, antiques, rockers, junk. BAHAMAS $189 (includes heat). Shown by 1969 AMHERST 12' FRANCIS x 60', good SPAIN $229 JAVELIN, 1968 V-8. Previously AVIATION, Airport ACRE OF land complete with 2 Bargain Hunters Paradise. Open Road. Call 484-1324. C-1-31 Tuesday. Rental office open bedroom house on Aurelius Road Saturday and Sunday. Furniture ACAPULCO $189 and appliances open all week, 10 skirted, located King Arthur's 4 - speed. New clutch. Red. Wednesday through Sunday, 1-6 in South Lansing. $140. Phone CALL 1 am - 6 pm. Phone 371-2843. Court. 484-2231 after 6 p.m. 355-8870. 3-1-21 p.m. 129 Highland Ave., East 393-1313. X-5-1-27 5-1-25 Frank Buck at 351 2286 C-1-31 Lansing. Phone 332-1174 or or 332 5211 MERCURY COMET 1967, a 372-4303. 6-1 -28 ONE TO share 4 bedroom house. NEW TRAILER COURT - Adults transmission, 6 cylinder, $500 c Auto Service & Parts SONY TC - 8W 8- track tape negotiable. 351-9349 after 6 p.rr TWO GIRLS for beautiful three - recorder. One year old, good 2-1-21 ILEMISHED TIRES GUARANTEED. Most sizes and - man. rent Winter / spring. $70. January free. Immediate openings. condition. Best offer. Call 351-4687.2-1-21 CROSSWORD WHATEVER YOU you want to bui there's a good chance you'll find types. 30% OFF! TOM'S TIRE, 4114 South Cedar. 882 6666. 349-3775. 1-1-21 JULIE'S PUZZLE PERFECT FOR young family. 2 ACROSS 27. Women's party in the Want Ads. Check now! TWO BEDROOM luxury apartment in Burcham Woods, $189/month PAWN SHOP bedroom Detroiter. Furnished, 29. Ir it way includes heat, water. Call carpeted, washer hookup. $2600. 31. Selective 623-6914 after 6 p.m. B 1-1 21 Service 351-3118. If no answer call 484-4014. 5-1-21 underground 35. Oriental STORY FURNISHED 2 bedroom house on 10. Clergyman temple ONE Mifflin Street to sublet starting Lost & Found 11. Famous 38. Bleak BEDROOM, furnished Mobile February 1. $180. 489-7994. caravel 40. Variable star home. $25 - $30 / week. Quiet 5-1-27 A.F. ROTCers - OFFICER'S LOST: LAST Saturday, January 15, 13. Roger and peaceful. 10 minutes to 41.Recedes dress. Complete, just cleaned, silver - rimmed round child's 14 Sporting dog 43. Egyptian campus. 641-6601. Q-20-2-14 DATSUN SALES 311 MILFORD. Four bedroom, furnished, available immediately. glasses. Vicinity of Grand River and Evergreen. $5 reward. 16. Criticize 18. Card game cotton 45. Sesame* 3165 E. MICHIGAN 351-1943. 2-1-24 882-4767 after 5 p.. or weekends. 19. Forefather 46. Liftoff 2-1-24 20. Winglike One Block From Campus 49. Achieve VAN ATTA Road. 9 room COLE'S BAKERY 1 OR 2 girls: sublet fine 4 - man. 22. Thickened 50. Active 1. Acid 14 acres. Deposit and SURPLUS BAKERY foods at Great location, no deposit. Call required. Rent plus utilities. Call reduced prices, 1/3 to 1/2 off at Personal grape juice 51. Clothes moth neutralize! 351-2072. 6-1-26 24. Sward 53. Discover 482-0258 after 4 p.m. 2-1-24 retail prices; great eating, great 2. About PREGNANT? PANICKY? 25. Mauve 54. Contemplate 3. Misjudge WANTED: ROOMMATE for 4 man, economy I Surplus store, 640 Consider South Waverly, immediately the alternatives. T~ two bedroom, 2 bath. LANSING. 3 bedroom house Pregnancy 1 3 M 6 0 9 Meadowbrook Trace. Vacancy available February 15 or sooner. Call 489-0752. 3-1-21 North C-3-1-21 of 1-496 Expressway. counseling. 372-1560. O P TT~ r — 11 now. 882-2694.3-1-24 POETRY WANTED for anthology. BASEMENT SALE: Housewares, Include stamped envelope I3~ «r 15 appliances, TV, bunk - beds, high - IDLEWILD PRESS, 1807 East jmwm chair, clothing. Much more. 364 Olympia, Los Angeles, California 16 ie~ *- 1972 % TON DATSUN PICK-UP University Drive, East Lansing. 90021. 16-1-26 55" 71 IT P 351-6289. 2-1-21 3% ■ Te~ I* W m9 LARGEST SELECTION FREE PARKING at your convenience. rear of store for OPTICAL ■n n it IN TOWN Your car caught cold? DISCOUNT, 2615 East Michigan Avenue. 372-7409. C-5-1-21 wmMmwammwm 9t 38 jp MO *1998 Kramer has everything to fix It. STEIN ERICKSON Northland Skit. HI Ml1 HF MM w Service, too. 200cm, Saloman bindings. Used 2 16 years. Good deal for beginner - 17 w M9~ We Stock Over a Million Parts intermediate. 337-2635. 3-1-21 5T sr * USE YOUR KRAMER AUTO PARTS FENDER 1970 twin reverb, 5T 5T 800 E. Kalamazoo St. 484-1303 GIBSON ES-330. Will take acoustic In trade. 372-6338 after 5 p.m. MASTER CHARGE AT THE STATE NEWS I% 5-1-24 Lhigan State News, Hast Lansing, Michigan Friday, January 21, 1972 13 U.S. asks N.Viets enients must be for received in the tupp9, about missing men ,s office, 345 Student services at 10 a.m. Saturday. Sunday PARIS by I p.m. at least two supper and speaker will feature (AP) —'The United contact* seize control of all Indochina. before publication. No "Cities of the Seventies." „ts will be accepted by bv chanpntfFna wmham', repPTng ™assaa°r Wi,,lam J- Porter who ls ln the He also complained that the United States was using new announcements will be HmoII to f Gay Liberation Movement will provide United States, told the North for events outside the meet at 3 p.m. Sunday in the military techniques and nggrea. Stefanoff Lounge, Student Services Bldg. Call airmen They are have landed alive in North beltved'to Vietnamesc dele«ate. Thuy : scientific achievements "for the 3 S 3-9795 for more "Regarding prisoners of war, purpose of barbarous human line f°r submitting information. Vietnam in the years 1965 to I you stUI refuse to honor y°ur exiermination " \ rcsumcs for Academic 1969 but never have been listed moral and le8al obl'gations. You rescntative for Human Ca|, 353.979$ for more „j,y. Return material to information on the Gay Liberation [ilogy Bldg. dance at 8 p.m. Saturday. SyS"m,"C"ly,totate"• Co. will present The sisters of the Archonion Club • ■ agilnBt V S.cft.72SE! It Arts :k Drama at 8:15 tonight of Ze„ ph, BcU sororWy w„, ,ponsor miwinn mL 1 "0ne of your m°st serious assembly for peace in Indochina, with an additional which withholding of information on 11-13. :na Theater. classrooms. ^ said all the Me men 6,i969' officers of our m'ssin8 and captured men." isham asked tne u.b. Thuy to explain I The organizers of the assembly egun for member ollege of Natural Rishon, the cultural Jewish Navy or Air Force, missing rrom the list of 339 were the contradiction between the Hanoi list and the 14 absent I said they had received a French government go-ahead despite the Hot and advisory Council, Sunday School, will hold classes from prisoners published by Hanoi in Members of the MSU Outing Club extinguish a fire with snowballs on a recent hike names and added: "There can be protest. They were expecting to the Rose Lake Experimental Station. Even e in 103 Natural 10 a.m. to noon Sunday in the MSU Cooperative Nursery School. For ,DnSr 1970' 88 complete no excuse for purposely * 000 delegates from 50 to see the flames go. though the temperature was -8 degrees, they don't seem sorry information on countries, including the United • further information, contact Ms. .. Each of the 14 names IL | withholding Isham prisoners you hold and on States. men State News photo by William Remington Messe, 1921 Riviera Drive. ut on the table was you know to be dead." accompanied by a detailed There was no immediate Parlor B. Call e d le for description of the circumstances reply from Thuy, who has ignored of capture, for Creative Room including the date and place. Some of the men previous similar appeals from the U.S. delegation. CALLS ARREST 'UNFORTUNATE' hold a birthday were injured, others reported by Porter was absent from the Free U radio they were unhurt before n. Sunday in the classes meeting this four-hour session for the first Intramural Bldg. weekend: Friday • Yoga - 7 a.m., IF/I. 9 TV/ I time s,nce he took over the U.S. Wharton Union Green Room; Skiing - call fv tlo s rr llosc delegation last September. 3SS-6264; Saturday: Aquarium • I mmunity Circle p.m., Indians 37 • Union; 3 p.m., 37 North American Union; Beginning ENGAGEMENTS In Washington, the State Department said Porter had visited Washington for a day or answ Photography - 4 p.m., Phillips Sharon Davsman, Grand Rapi two early this week before Lounge; Yoga • 9 a.m., Green Room, senior going to Kenneth R. Kucinsl to his home. Officials added, By BOB NOVOSAD I have met with Prof. Saks, Union; Sunday • Beginning Dark Detroit junior, lota Beta and condemning the actions of that the university will use such Room • 8 p.m., 200 S. Hayford Ave.; Sigma. however, that they did not know State New* Staff Writer whose classroom was involved, your employes." Saks had also attendance as a method of Telepathy - 8:30 p.m., classroom C, who he met or what he talked and I have discussed it told Wharton in his letter that he trapment for any purpose. >e presented to the Snyder Hall; Yoga • 3 p.m., Green about but said he would return President Wharton has thoroughly with Richard believes the university has Also, Saks said there'is the right 1 7:30 p.m. Sunday Room, Union. n Road. acknowledged a letter of Bernitt, the Director of Public endangered itself and its of the student not to be subject complaint from Daniel H. Saks, Safety." members, and called for positive in class to the humiliation SAC - Mathematics will meet at , Dearborn Heights „ The Communist delegates Instructor in economics, over the "Mr- Bernitt has publicly action to be taken. associated with public arrest. 7:30 p.m. Monday in 138A Wells senior,Phi Muto'curt Lamar, Berkley stuck largely to their familiar arrest Monday of a coed at the expressed his regret over the Saks enumerated certain Saks has also asked that the senior Hall. The meeting will be open. rhetoric. The Viet Cong beginning of Saks'class for eight incident, and he will propose a rights in his letter that are not at sting officer make an o negotiator, Nguyen Van Tien, outstanding parking violations, specific new policy to the the discretion of the professor to apology In writing to the coed The MSU Golf Club will offer the again blamed the United States Wharton said Thursday: "The Committee on University Public bargain away. Included in these involved and to his class, but to second of a series of instructional for the deadlock and said Porter unfortunate Incident ln which a Safety which will spell out the are the right of the student to date no 0 such r sessions at 12:30 p.m. Saturday ln apologies have been "is becoming more and more I Service member of the MSU Dept. of sanctity of the classroom setting, attend class without the fear received, arrogant and more and more Public Safety entered a and the responsibility of his provocative." classroom to assist a Lansing police officers in this regard." fingSereice a New Age" at 7 p.m. Sunday in the Thuy accused the Nixon administration of planning to police officer In making an arrest has been called to my attention, "I believe these actions should clearly establish WRITTEN, ACTED, AND RhESES and lettari, ate. west conference room, Owen Hall. university policy and prevent Produced by former recurrence," Wharton said. lead. 393-4075. C-1-31 meet The at MSU 8 Tolkien tonight Society will in the South Nixon seeks unity In his letter of complaint, Saks had asked Wharton for a San Quentin inmates* THE CAGE ■VE SAVE SAVE Hubbard lower lounge. public statement "reaffirming tcopyinq. Offset, best (Continued from page one) "It is now for the Congress to _lt reasonable prices. THE A" ScoP# volunteeri "We the principles and ideals at stake ShoppE, 54 East Grand 7:30 P-m- Monday will not intervene decide whether this agenda Presented by Bureau. Participants are urged militarily ln such situations," he represents the beginning of new said, "but ASMSU GREAT ISSUES KSES typing (Including Influence to prevent war,." He said it would progrwi *>r America - or simply another false start. RENT MONDAY JANUARY 24 this weekend - "Under the pressures of an Charlie Smith ,nd J#rf und Jud> dangerous 4 error to conclude that election year, It would be easy YOUR TV . . . 8 pm Auditorium Tordoff from 8:30 p.m.; Saturday - he United States should to look upon the legislative Bill Kahl and Bob Carr. The withdraw from international Tickets Available at the Union program merely as political BY THE TERM Albatross is located at S47 E. Grand responsibilities. device and not serious River Ave. (TIONS, THESES, •t typist with degree term Nixon also said he agenda," the President said. "We '23.00 A talk confident Inflation will be must resist this temptation 1. IBM 351-8961. 0-1-24 by three students who have , . . visited mainland China will be broken In 1972 but said that Is "Our progress depends on a BY THE MONTH the not good 3c each. Lowest presented at 1 p.m., In Chinese, and enough while continuing spirit of partnership irog '9.50 - [town I CRS Copy Center, at 7 p.m., In English, Sunday In unemployment is at six per cent, between the President and the Fri. & Sat. ' t Road, Room 210. Union Parlor A. Nixon said his budget, which Is expected to total nearly $247 Congress, between the House Qhop and the Senate, between Free Service other nights 'til 11 p.m Girls Interested in helping in the billion, will help meet that goal. Free Delivery bridal program "Woman Is," phone Republicans and Democrats." He said the new budget will have Free Pick-up Nixon said there was ample ruportation 30601 or 30392. a deficit, but not an FREE MUG OF precedent in an election year for irresponsible one. The red Ink President to present a huge list i/Greek symbolL^H1149. Round trip airfare The Alternative Coffeehouse will a NEJAC TV RENTALS 351-4619. 0-KM^H be open from 9 to midnight tonight forec^ over Is,. ®xpected t0 bewe11 $20 billion. of new Proposals, knowing they could not be enacted. 337-1300 "GROG" SOUP RANK BUCK P351-228B! on Hagadorn Road, across from THESES^H Nixon called for action on when you purchase any ' LETt Hubbard Hall. of our welfare reform, on a program of ding of federal revenue sharing with the S149. Round trip airfare There will be a Bible Study from 9 "OLD TOWNE" MARYLAND DELICIOUS to 11 p.m. Saturday at the states, on the reorganization of er M.A.C. and CLAM BAKE! Alternative Coffeehouse. the executive branch w Jones Stationtq^H 'ink Buck, 351-2288! ln four PYGRAPH departments with responsibilities offer good thru our January Grand Opening Applications for the Sigma Delta 1666. C-1-31 grouped by function and on Chi Mark of Excellence Contest are health insurance. • WHOLE LOBSTER Wanted available from Barney White and are How Does That 1ROWN It Typing printing. due Feb 10. "In all, some 90 pieces of major legislation which I have • SHRIMP • CHERRY STONE CLAMS • CORNON-TH ECOB Grog You? »LE COED needs single The Full Gospel Businessmen's recommended to the Congress uscripts, /ears aciierall^^B experience 0r apartment close 1 summer term through Fellowship International will be held at 7:30 a.m. Saturday in Breakfast still await action," Nixon said. Every Friday and Saturday! 6 to 10:00 P.M. 2755 E. Grand River 31 K*11353-0368. 5-1-25 the Centenial Room. Kellogg Center. Steamed and uniquely served in o wire bosket directly to 1st Light E. of Hagadorn Place Your Enrollment your table! TOSSED SALAD — CORN BREAD DRAWN BUTTER PEOPLE REACHER WANT AD decreases Your Favorite Mixed Drinks Available, too! The registrar's office reported Call for More Information. Today ... Just clip, complete, mail along with your Thursday that winter term check or money order enrollment stands at 39,700 compared with fall term's BILL'S enrollment of 41,649 students. RESTAURANT A BAR A breakdown of the current 718 E. GRAND RIVER Address term's enrollment by class level _ PHONE IV 2-6100 City and source is not yet available (Lh= due to some difficulties in processing the statistics, a spokesman said. He added that Consecutive Dates to Run_ there are no unusual trends in this winter term's enrollment. Appearing Sunday Classification The winter term figure is 95.3 per cent of fall term's at tlw (tables enrollment. Show liar . . . Dept. of Health will offer free shots at clinic and The State Dept. Medicine are the College of Health of Human sponsoring an 1776 Immunization clinic from 11 Peanuts Personals 15 words - $2.00 prepaid. a.m. to 3 p.m. this Saturday. No Cover The clinic will be located in Lds Or Less: 1 day - $2.70 5 days 11.25 7 days-15.75 P Words Add: 25c per word 1.00 per word 1.40 per word the Church of God and Christ on Logan Street and St. Joseph GET IT OUT Street. □ □ □ Immunization shots for Ma" to. Michigan State News Classified measles, smallpox, polio, - 347 Student Services Bldg. tetanus, diptheria and other 9 at the MSU East Lansing, Mich. 48823 diseases will be given free. 0 Persons needing to be £ immunized should bring any records of their medical history, m 14 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Frid°y. wJ 1ST SHOP IN LANSING Pawnbroker loans 'on valui looped over his left pinkie back wall. As far as security story department - pawn store in balls," "mv „ ■ By STEVE RADDOCK finger, is quick to assert: "We measures go, all of the front Mexico City. "spout." Ail paJ^l State News Staff Writer Forbidden by state law to loan money on anything of windows are veined with are thumbn *■ For the last 15 years, Lansing's value." "Anything of value" telephone alarm wires and an receive goods from minors and transactions are ft'1® only known pawns were of the generally includes clothing, infrared alarm juts out of a Inebriated individuals, pawn x II yellow 0.7°1* type that are pushed around the diamonds, watches, radios, swivel head bolted into the shops have been given such periodically insnjJl chess tables of the Moose Lodge musical instruments, sporting ceiling. euphemisms as "sign of the three police ^■ and Pottervllle Recreation goods, luggage, tools, fishing Center. The concept, however, Propped - up by the has been given added dimension tackle and cameras. Collateral is the core of the showroom's metal shelves and Educators pawnbrokering process. A tables are an array of items over the formica - topped, wood paneled counter of Julie's Pawn person who borrows money on a which include: Puritan toilet Shop and Sales. The only one of its kind in this piece of merchandise has the option of redeeming it within 30 seats ($2.98); fake scuba diving sets ($3.95); rosaries ($2); a 4 social actigroj<1 market since the days of the Bat foot salesmanship trophy days for the amount of the loan Educators for Human Growth Masterson Show, Julie's is the through Social plus interest and storage charges. ($39.95); imported yellow taper Ghana offspring of another pawnshop After 30 days, all unclaimed candles, a video tape recorder organization at MSU this year which may provide a Wo, that in Flint. The manager of the goods are slapped on the retail and camera ($995); a replica of outlet for people interested in social change. The local group is an offspring of the 1971 r 1023 South Washington St. A customer at Julie's Pawn Shop in Lansing makes hit selection. There is a wide selection of shelves and tables, or gently Dr. Doolittle and his Pushmi convent concern is Drake Serges, who, American Personnel and Guidance Assn., a merchadise to buy and the opportunity to sell items at the newly opened store. tossed into the open access Pullyu ($1.79); and a book nation, with a diamond buckle ring counseling associations. State News photo by Terry Luke drawers, bins and window entitled "Sex and What I know Tony Lush, the group's founder, said he sees the oranbJ display units that are set aside About It", which when opened for orphaned items. According contains nothing inside (49c). a "constructivist group" and "a resource distributor 3 information that would help us as people in to Serges, however, over 80 per deillB ourselves and the institutions around theT® head Julie's layout is structured to make IFC us retrac cent of all pawned goods are claimed. around one of two types of feel necessary for our survival, happiness and social Lush said the organization is a sharing medium peace" pawn shop patterns. There's the and "a Julie's itself is a combination large showroom hock shop and, work if people share and contribute their own concml hock shop - thrifty mart. Its conversely, there's the large ideas." He said he hopes to get students, educators c*L retail showroom hogs much of backroom hock shop, Julie's and administrators involved in the nonprofit organization! bl f can share their ideas with each other. ousting the store's well ordered interior - being modeled after the former. on while the pawning counter is Of course there are deviants to pretty much pinned against the this trend, as is the case of a five For details about the organization people may write toll PO Box 108, Finance Station, East Lansing. By ANITA PYZIK slanderous." brought to the fraternities The power of charter granting State News Staff Writer Last fall term Barnes said Phi involved," he said. rests with the board of trustees Ron Barnes, president of Beta Sigma, Omega Psi Phi, Barnes corrected himself by upon recommendation from Interfraternity Council (IFC), Kappa Alpha Psi and Alpha Phi saying a motion had been passed advisory groups, the dean of Wednesday retracted his Alpha had been expelled from iaS£ term to bring any houses students and the University statement that four black IFC because of lack of delinquent in IFC dues before president. fraternities had been expelled participation and failure to pay the judicial board. So far no from IFC because of delinquent dues and comply with rules actjon has been taken because "IFC doesn't have life and dues, after complaints from prohibiting the hazing of new Barnes has neglected to make death control over fraternities," Alpha Phi Alpha, one of the fraternity members. appointments to fill two empty Reuling said, "they only control fraternities involved, that the "I regret any harm that the seats on the board, their own activities." statement was "false and statement I made last term Members of Alpha Phi Alpha clearance! denied owning back dues because their house had withdrawn from IFC in 1969. They have paid IFC dues for COMPLETE Funding of schools winter term to particpate in IFC al spor coordinated rush programs. and AUDIO untrimmed fashion coats illegal, judge rules Alpha Phi Alpha withdrew two years ago because they felt IFC SERVICE for the Serious Audiophile $38 and $58 JERSEY CITY, N.J. (UPI) - against pupils in districts with Itnnm^nI"»nH •Qualified Technicians A Superior Court Judge ruled low real property wealth, and it • Prompt Service regularly $60-$85 Wednesday that the state's discriminates against taxpayers IT • Full Test Facilities The season's most popular looks at outstanding reductions. Plaids. I public school system by imposing unequal burdens for the ^unity, according to • 90 Day Warranty Parts "discriminates against pupils in a wuimuu state»iate purpose," uuruuse, the me .. . ™ ™ » 8t Labor - solids, tapestries from regular stock. Good color array. Misses' and | districts with low real property judge wrote at the conclusion of wealth" and therefore the his 77 - page opinion, ^„^ren ummer, e roi juniors' sizes. Convenient Location at The other three fraternities method of financing schools Gov. William T. Cahill said in The Stereo Shoppe through property taxes is Trenton the decision "will unconstitutional. involved refused comment on Barnes' retraction and their 543 E. Grand River Ave. fur* trimmed coat buys probably be appealed to the Hours: 9-5:45 It was the third such decision supreme court of New Jersey." present standing in IFC. in recent months. State courts in California and Texas already Education Commissioner Carl L. Marburger said the decision "is Edwin students, IFC Reuling, dean of said membership in wasn't necessary for a Sat: 9-5 $99 have ruled such a system of school financing is obviously subject to appeal." fraternity to obtain a charter. regularly $120-$180 unconstitutional. Those decisions, and the most ^______ STEREO SHOPPE Luxurious solid and tweed fabrics. Fox* •all Imported fur* labeled or mink* trims. Misses' sizes. as to country of origin | recent one in New Jersey, are expected to have far-reaching TOTE-HOME SPECIAL! Down/own • implications for the eventual quality of education in the nation's public schools if they novelty pant coats are upheld by federal courts. Generally, observers believe the decisions, if upheld, will result in $18 $28 $38 regularly $40-$6| an upward equalization of the Wools, tapestries,velours in many styles colors. Misses', juniors' quality of public education. In Michigan, Gov. Milliken Pastrami Special Costs, second floor Downtown and Meridian Mall and Atty. Gen. Frank J. Kelley INCLUDES: Grilled Pastrami, Swiss Cheese, have initiated a similar suit, Onion and Tomato Slices Served on Toasted Rye which is pending in the Michigan Supreme Court. The court on Jan. 5 ordered the Ingham County Circuit Court to hold fact-finding hearings on the pros and cons within 90 days. New Jersey Superior Court Judge Theodore I. Botter ruled that the current method is discriminatory but said it could stand until Jan. 1, 1974 to "allow ':me for legislative action," u iess by next Jan. 1 there is a failure to enact a non - H'Z/K Si