State parties Bv BARBARA PARNESS State News Staff Writer In April, Donna March MSU graduate, and O'Donnohue, Waters, aide to House Speaker William Nancy _ meetings and eye a third is scheduled He pointed out that in 1966 when M Ryan, announced their candidacies as News Background shortly. Ernst said the committee is George Romney was Michigan's top k 6n Michigan's political parties hold Democrats for the MSU board. "soliciting vote getter, two Republicans won on enfions this summer, they find interest In nominations Incumbent trustee, Frank Hartman, D - Adams, distinguished University names from all available sources," with "special priority" to younger trustee posts. In 1968 when Humphrey carried the state and in 1970 Hubert Flint, announced his intention to seek professor of economics, will advise candidates and recent MSU msu Board of Trustees greater renomination in January. graduates. when U.S. Sen. Phillip Hart was top McNeeley on trustee candidates to be To "I think most of us feel a trustee it's ever been in the past. recommended to the state convention. date, no Republicans have vote getter, two Democrats won. The seats held shouldn't have a philosophy. He should the past, nominations for by Hartman and Clair The Republicans will have a similar announced candidacies for the MSU "You have to be awfully realistic White, D Bay City, must be filled in board. A committee always be free to make decisions in the about it," Roe said. •ational posts were considered by - November. The Michigan Constitution committee to advise Chairman William appointed by the best interest of the neoole as "consolation prizes" for MSU Alumni Assn. and chaired by University according t McLaughlin. to his conscience," Ernst said. An Alumni lie rejected as candidates for more requires that two trustees be elected McNeeley said in January he would former trustee candidate David Diehl s Jerry Roe, state Republican party Assn. committee identify possible Democratic trustee to Sunt elective offices such as every two years for eight - year terms. oppose the renomination of White. currently working to identify possible Republican candidates. executive director, said recently that candidates is also working. Chairman The thing is probably White claims that a group of black fHSduSonal' funds from the get really hot until not going to after the May Michigan legislators headed by Sen. Richard attorney and Ernst, Bloomfield Hills Republican chances to win the seats now held by Democrats depend on who Pat Wilson, Traverse the group has at least five City attorney, said ilature have grown tighter and presidential Coleman Young, D - Detroit, also a member of Diehl's the top vote getter in "prospective Cities have become the center of primary," James committee, said the group is now Michigan is. candidates." McNeeley state Democratic opposes him. "If Nixon wins, our chances are Wilson said the committee IrovS, , party considering good. interest in educational chairman, said. "I don't know what's going to happen between 12 and 15 possible If Nixon gets creamed, there's an open may have hearing on campus to solicit sinMichigan has grown. A committee after the May primary," White said. He Republican candidates. He said the no chaired by Walter chance of input from the MSU community on committee has already held two us getting those seats," Roe possible choices. Friday Rome . MICHIGAN r' Increasing FATE MEWS I is 2725 years old today . . . Lj jt is the ocassion for a STATE . . . cloudiness this morning national celebration in Italy. UNIVERSITY with rain likely in the afternoon. Le64 Number 143 East Lansing, Michigan Friday, April 21,1972 Strike coalition slates rally to denounce raids By DEBBIE CALKINS will continue to Demonstration Hall for Board of Trustees meeting at 10 a.m. speeches. today in the Administration Building to State News Staff Writer A spokesman for Vietnam Veterans ask the members to take a stand on the Approximately 300 persons turned Against the War (VVAW) said the strike and the U.S. out for bombings in North a rally at noon Thursday at group, joined by C. Patric Larrowe, Vietnam. VVAW and the professors will Beaumont Tower to discuss the professor of economics, and Walter be in full military uniform and will campuswide strike scheduled for today Adams, distinguished professor of to protest the escalated U.S. economics, will be attending the MSU (Please turn to page in North Vietnam. bombings 15) Besides a boycott of classes, beginning at 8 a.m., the Antiwar Strike Coalition sponsor of the strike, has tentatively planned at a noon Beaumont Tower to gather rally today students, End-the-war faculty and other interested persons together to discuss the opposition ot continued TJ.S. involvement in Southeast Asia and to make final in House s plans for the day's activities. |A group of nearly 300 students and faculty met at noon Thursday near Beaumont Tower to make The rally will probably be followed By RAY ANDERSON for Peace last October. Following a [plans for the antiwar student strike being called on Friday. state News photo by Terry Luke by a march around muster additional the campus to State News Staff Writer month subsequent long committee lay public over and support. The march hearing, the Efforts to move an antiwar resolution resolution was brought to the House from the House of Representatives floor. LViets Policy Committee for debate by the Following several hours of debate the iGON (AP) - Waves of enemy the enemy aim is to seize all of Svay attack lower Thursday chamber as were described futile by the committee's chairman Rep. Robert D. Mahoney, D - Detroit, and vicechairman James E. O'Neill Jr. D Saginaw. resolution Michigan States to was use amended to read that the legislature should "memorialize Congress of the United all necessary resources, manpower and effort to funds, Is in overpowering strength seized commander, were killed or captured, southeast of the city following a - Rieng Province in eastern Cambodia, Though both attain the mechanism and assurances 1-mile stretch of Highway 1 in the reports added. day-long, 1,600 round men support House thereby reestablishing border bases for In the battle for An Loc, - shelling Concurrent Resolution 290 that (Please turn to page 15) n Cambodia Thursday, posing enemy Wednesday. er joining the offensive in South Vietnam. troops attacked South Vietnamese Field reports said there was close originally requested Congress to potential threat to Saigon, 40 The Viet Cong has made no secret of the demand an immediate cease - fire and Idown the road. rangers and paratroopers north and combat aound an air-borne unit fire Ithe fact that the ultimate aim of the base called Hill 169, lying 2lA miles withdrawal from Indochina of all Tickets on sale same time, North Vietnamese offensive is to capture Saigon. United States ground, air and naval is and tanks struck southeast of An Loc. savagely at An The collapse of a large part of Svay forces, they indicated too many issues Tickets for the Elton John concert, to Jn a renewed attempt to seize that Military spokesmen in Saigon claimed pcial capital, 60 mj|es north of Rieng Province opened a new route for enemy forces either to threaten Saigon Dems urge 150 enemy killed by air strikes in the An Loc area. In addition, they said, six important to the state required immediate consideration. be held at 8 p.m. Thursday, May 4 in Jenison Fieldhouse will go on sale today from the west, or to push south • The resolution sponsored by iibodian officers suggested that enemy tanks were knocked out and Rep. at Marshall Music of East Lansing, eastward into the Mekong Delta. Earl E. Nelson, D - Lansing was four others fled. Campbell's Smoke Shop and the Union. The fallen Cambodian positions included Prey Phau, close to the point bill for U.S. introduced in behalf of the Veteran's Tickets will be S4 and $5. Jardsmen where Highway 1 crosses the border into South Vietnam 40 miles west of ke control Saigon The province capital of Svay Rieng, 25 miles farther west, was under withdrawal heavy enemy pressure, Cambodian officers reported. I U-Maryland Much of the Cambodian sector had been patrolled by Saigon troops WASHINGTON (AP) - Democrats described the bombing of North House Vietnam as a dangerous p) the associated press until March 30, when the North escalation of the war Thursday and Itional Guardsmen Vietnamese opened their general ordered the prompt drafting of a bill took control offensive, forcing the pullback of South calling for complete U.S. withdrawal r University of Maryland campus Vietnamese forces. ■sday, after from Indochina. three consecutive lis of violent student At Kompong Trabek, one of the The resolution, approved 144-58 protest captured towns 45 miles from the was the strongest antiwar action taken ft the renewed bombing of North border and 85 miles from Saigon, field so far by the House Democratic Jam. Per one false start in reports said only 50 Cambodian troops Caucus. which a ®ad of guardsmen escaped a frontal infantry assault In the view of supporters of the had to be backed by heavy shell fire. resolution to vote binds Democratic ■e° fr°m the university grounds, The rest of the 500-man 58th members of the House Foreign Affairs ■j>cratic Ped Gov. a state of Marvin Mandel Cambodian brigade, including its Committee to produce an end - the - emergency and war bill within 30 days so the House J soldiers onto the campus Trustees to meet can vote on it. n fed up with this Adoption of the resolution, which violence and The board of trustees will meet at 10 also denounced the North Vietnamese | on °f public and private a.m. today in the Administration Bldg. offensive, was by far the biggest I ""'ease turn to page 15) Board Room. victory yet scored by the antiwar forces in the House and is evidence of their growing strength. |°on landing Previously end-the-war have passed the Senate only buried in the House. measures to be [ter At the Pentagon, a spokesman said problems structural damage. North Vietnamese army engineers are running a vital tank and truck fuel pipeline across the demilitarized ■^.CENTER. Houston (AP) - Astronauts John W. Young nd (DMZ) into South Vietnam. zone 'ad ti, astronauls were given a Charles Duke Jr. aboard the lunar "There is no evidence of movement #>oon for thelr landing on lander Orion and Thomas K. Mattingly back across the DMZ by any of the ■than" e,ann°uncement came II aboard the command ship Casper invasion forces," said spokesman Jerry |ai! r^L°e. urs aft«r a failure in were unaware of the landing approval W. Friedheim. ■"featenprt ■"^ned the lunar »i°f the command at the time of the announcement landing. because they were behind the moon. |;iSr"a* Ke ^nter Director Young and from the command ship Duke had separated earlier in the Anoif ic Kraft "nnounced day and had been scheduled to land on Free concert lowed ° t lunar m°dule would the moon at about 3:41 p.m. EST. (g Plans! C°ntinUe ** the ,unar But during their final landing The Coalition for Human Survival will l determi Ca!tK' after tests on the approach orbit, Mattingly found he could not fire a planned rocket thrust sponsor a free rock concert in support of the $1 marijuana ordinance at 1 p.m. The senator >c5:ltheen«,neProbtem ■in the ^ an °Pen electrical with the command ship's main rocket Sunday behind Wells Hall. Severe A young banty chicken named Hawkeye was elected this week to the Saginaw Valley College power plant because of a failure in the „nn ■that Hands, the Dogs, and Omega Wild Boys Student Senate. The elections is being contested, ■ firinn .8 dr,ve mechanism however, on the basis that she is not registered at finng it wouW cause on will be among featured performers. the (Please turn to page 15) college. APWirephoto 2 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, April 7, , Panel to sift selection By S.A. SMITH Steering Committee. plans officers, e.g., the provost, the dean of the Gradual a. ■ ^summary An ad suspended work State News Staff Writer hoc committee which more on than a year ago developing procedures for the selection of principal academic officers will resume its task as soon as the six - member group can meet. The Steering Committee Wednesday discussed the status and the director of the Honors College, in of the second report with Taylor. He agreed to reconvene consultation is not otherwise provided for in the® the committee and resume work on the document. Taylor said Wharton was aware of the refmnAl Taylor told the Steering Committee that he suspended in the unfinished report and "followed them further work on the recommendations because it was possible" in the now disbanded selection whose "'commendjtL a commiB lu!""1! hi""T *25k The committee, chaired by John F. A. Taylor, professor "untimely', to present the document ot the council vice president for student affairs. ^ll of philosophy, was established by theSteering Committee to between 1969 and now. Taylor told the Steering Committee that one develop recommendations on the procedures for selecting In a March 31, 1971, letter to Cordon Guyer, Steering problems which held up the the completion nl University president and principal University officers. Committee chairman, Taylor said he would resume work on recommendations is a disagreement between The committee reported its first set of recommendations theco the report only at the request of either Wharton of Guyer. and the administration over which — the procedures for faculty consultation in choosing the Thomas Greer, Steering Committee secretary, said academic officers. positions are iT'1"'1 p University president — to the Academic Council which Taylor's letter was not discussed last spring and he found The committee has included some staff approved the document on Feb. 26, 1969. These out about the status of the Taylor committee fall term. list of positions to which the proposed positions! J procedures were used to select President Wharton. recommend t •'My moral strength is the Section 4.2 of the Bylaws for Academic Governance should apply. The second part of the committee's charge — procedures states: "The Academic Council shall collaborate with the "These (staff) offices ought to be the result of my regularly being bent for selecting the top University officers — was never premgative (J over the bathtub and beaten with president to establish the procedures for faculty line officers," Provost John E. Cantlon told the s reported out of committee to the Academic Council or the consultation in the cases of those principal academic Committee. a sewing machine belt when I Other considerations were involved in the was a child." deei 1 J suspend further work on the report, Taylor said eg#'J Pat Boone, entertainer FACES BUDGET CUT an anticipated negative response from the Taylor said in an interview Thursday that the board of to*? outcome of the collective bargaining question uncer? also piiVjfl part in suspending work operations. Greer said the reasons in the March 31, (See story page 10) Police unit uncertainties in the student participation collective bargaining as the reasons for The letter did not mention any 1971, lettered, question*!! stopping work anticipated reactionfr, the board of trustees, he said. The members of the ad hoc committee are: Troops quell jail riot Metro Squad operations in East Lansing may come under criticism next week when the city council studies budget patrolmen have been charged under the harsher state penalties. chairman of the Dept. of Horticulture; JohnCiJ Richard ll allocations for 1972-72, according to Councilman George Metro Squad functions are financed by area municipalities Featherstone, professor of administration and hiriJ Colburn. in which they operate. Patrolmen are taken from several local education; Charles Killingsworth, professor of labor aL Nine armed prisoners held three men hostage in departments to man the group. industrial relations; Donald J. Montgomery, Armagh Jail in Northern Ireland, but they were The controversial East Lansing police will be allocated the largest share of the chairnunJ drug control police unit which operates the Dept. of Metallurgy, Mechanics and Materials SeienJ overpowered by British troops. through the metropolitan area, has been criticized in the past general fund budget according to recommendations coming Harold Sadoff, professor of microbiology and public heii The soldiers quelled the four-hour revolt after by several student groups and District Judge Maurice from the city manager last week. Approximately 20 per cent and Taylor. A seventh member has left the of the general fund is scheduled for apartment use, University g» lobbing nausea gas grenades into t^e jail's barricaded Schoenberger. Colburn indicated he may make an effort to the original appointment. have budget appropriations for the unit's operations locally amounting to $824,835. The total proposed budget is Greer said he did not know if the Steering reception block. The hostages - a policeman and two deleted from the budget. deignated at $7,082 million. CommitJ would make any other appointments to the committee, guards - were released unharmed. f Twenty soldiers charged inside the jail after prison He said that Police Chief Charles F. Pegg has agreed to officials refused the inmates' demand for safe report on the unit's operations to the council at an upcoming conduct to the Irish border, eight miles away, in work session at City Hall. Colburn previously asked for a exchange for the hostages. meeting with Metro Squad representatives several months ago, but none has been arranged to date. State antibusing amendment Colburn said that the budget work sessions were scheduled Monday and Wednesday. A public hearing is set for May 2, Rail slowdown stopped with a deadline for approval coming on May 15. The Metro Squad is responsbile for most of the drug offense fails by close vote in House Britian's railroad unions bowed to a court ruling arrests in the Lansing metropolitan area and has come under The proposed antibusing vote was debated 51 - 48. she would not give up in her by Speaker William J Thursday night and called off a nationwide go-slow fire because they do not adhere to local ordinance amendment to the Michigan The p'T o p o s e d efforts to place the issue on Ryan, D - Detroit, said (J strike that has thrown the state-owned rail system designations of drug offenses. In the past, before state drug Constitution failed to get amendment forbade the the November ballot, irto chaos. laws were reduced, offenders arrested by Metro Squad the required two - thirds busing of school children to "We're not giving up on did not favor amendment bacause it t^| vote in the House of achieve racial balance this issue," Ms. The Symons futile gesture that wouldtl unions, representing 300,000 railroad Representatives Thursday, without the written consent Tne State News is published by the students of said, '"we're thinking of ruled unconstitutional! workers, accepted an order by the new Industrial ending for good the efforts of his or her parent or Michigan State University every class day during Fall, taking the initiatory the courts. Relations Court to resume normal working as soon Winter and Spring school terms, Mondays, Wednesdays of antibusing forces to move guardian. petition route. It would "This amendment co the bill in the legislature. While proponents of the as possible. and Fridays during Summer Term, and a special mean a lot of work for the be used by the courts I Welcome Week edition is published in September. Lawmakers voted 64 - 36 amendment expressed The unions agree, "with the greatest reluctance," people back home, but I prove that this legislatiml in favor of the measure, 10 disappointment at the to a 14-day cooling -off period for further Subscription rate is $16 per year. think we have to put this for de jure segrmtku Member Associated Press, United Press International, votes short of the 74 votes results of the vote, the chief matter on ballot." negotiations on their claim for a pay raise of 16 per needed for passage. A Ryan said. Inland Daily Press Assn., Michigan Press Assn., sponsor, Rep. Joyce The opponents of the Also opposing III cent. Associated Collegiate Press, Michigan Collegiate Press motion to reconsider the Symons, D Allen Park, said - antibusing amendment, led amendment were the bb Assn. members of the House, i| Second class postate paid at Ea#r Lansing, Mich. labelled the Nonpublic credit urged Editorial and business offices at 345 Student Services Bldg., Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan, 48823. (J-M head c ''racist'' a n d | "segregationist" bill. This was the fourth tid Phones: the legislature voted on ll President Nixon was urged Thursday to seek 5500 News/Editorial adminis 355-8252 if million a year in income tax credits for parents who make tuition payments to parochial and other Classified Ads Display Advertising 355-8255 353-6400 Nixon proposed amendment, first three times on " motion to discharge it nonpublic schools. Business Office 355-3447 ANN ARBOR, (UH) -- Nixon Administration for the discouragement," Fleming committee, and finally d This was a key feature in a 58-page report formally Photographic 355-8311 University of Michigan resumption of bombing said. the bill itself. President Robben Fleming attacks against North "To say that the invasion presented to Nixon by his four-member President's Campus Information 353-8700 Thursday lashed out at the Vietnam. justifies retaliation is to Panel on Nonpublic Education. It was Fleming's strongest say that one wrong warrants The group was set up as part of an effort to redeem f a Nixon pledge to help save troubled parochial ONE WEEK ONLY statement to date against U.S. involvement in the another. Moreover it allows North Vietnam to dictate Assistantshipl schools from potential extinction. Vietnam War. our foreign policy." Financial assistant™ Fri. 4/21/72 thru Fri. 4/28/72 "For those of use who love "We talk of 'teaching a available for ChidT our country but feel that the lesson* to the opposition by Vietnam War, which has seniors""who'"enroll Letters allowed in trial bombing, despite the graduate school. Inter been carried on by both the evidence that it does such seniors should contii no CAPITOL'S Democratic and Republican thing," Fleming added. "We Manuel Alfaro in the Cent! parties, is a disaster, a recent are preoccupied with A Superior Court judge in San Jose, Calif, ruled Capitol. massive air retaliation to for Urban Affairs If Thursday that a series of love letters from Angela the invasion of the South by military image while ignoring Chicago "students intei the steady erosion of faith in Davis to Soledad Brother North Vietnam is a cause of in summer employ! George Jackson may be the symbol which America a!st) contact Alf introduced at her profound sorrow and provided." murder-kidnap-conspiracy trial. once BIG ONES he said. But Judge Richard A. Arnason granted a defense request to prohibit introduction of a two-page sample of one of the letters typed on Ms. Davis' typewriter at the Marin County jail without her knowledge, for comparison purposes. Love tap. any record in this ad Panda pair welcomed BANG $*29 per L.P. From one beer lover to another. The two giant pandas, gift of TRAFFIC friendship from the Communist Chinese, were welcomed today by first lady Pat Nixon, who STEVE MILLER pronounced them "adorable Recall the Beginning endearing creatures." In separate air-conditioned temporary quarters behind glass walls, Ling-Ling and FLASH Hsing-Hsing appeared on the scene before a crowd of reporters and photographers, a Chinese delegation, the First Lady and officials of the Ling - Ling Washington National Zoo. Ms. Nixon expressed her pleasure to accept "the precious gift of pandas." Pope's cousin, 68, dies RASPBERRIES QUICKSILVER| Com in' Thru Msgr. Carlo Montini, a cousin of Pope Paul VI, died Thursday in the railway station here as he was 225 Ann Street, East Lansing 351-8460 boarding a train for Rome. HOURS: The 68-year - old prelate was provicar general of Daily 9:30 8:30 Sat. 9:30-6:00 Sun: Noon - 6:00 the diocese of Brescia, where Pope Paul spent his boyhood. by A doctor who when he became a heart attack. was called to aid Msgr. Montini suddenly ill said death was caused iscount records Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, April 21, 1972 3 m ASMSII FILES SUIT Auto rules challenged By JANE SEA8ERRY student, I still have certain temporary permits. Fine for State News Staff Writer suspend parking and/or rights of due process. These failure to register a vehicle is ASMSU driving privileges of students. will seek to rights that any citizen of $10 and failure to affix new 'The AUTC is not a eliminate the University's the outside community or remove old permits if $2 judiciary and should not graduated parking fine would have," Massoglia said under present regulations. have the right to system and other student ASMSU filed a suit Item suspend 10G of the anyone. The issue should be motor vehicle regulations at against the University March regulation infers that a left to the All an open meeting of the All 27, charging it with student is guilty and must - University Student Judiciary," University Traffic discrimination against prove himself innocent, students in its graduated Massoglia said. Committee, at 10:15 a.m. Massoglia charged. Hie today in the Dept. of Public parking fine system. The regulation states that fines Massoglia also asserted Safety Vehicle Office. board voted to hold the suit must be paid before the that if a proper response to Charles Massoglia, pending negotiations with student the charges is not met, goes to court. ASMSU director of Legal theTheAUTC. Massoglia said that no hold ASMSU will take Aid, cited numert graduated parking card should be issued to a appropriate action. provisions of the Student fine system charges parking student until formal Motor Vehicle Regulation violators $2 for the first notification of the violation "If we can't convince Mil liken speaks which he feels discriminate ticket, $4 for the second, and soon up to $25 for each is received by the student. them that certain parts of against students. Massoglia also seeks to the Student Motor Vehicle Milliken spoke Wednesday to a gathering of interfering in internal university affairs. "It goes subsequent violation.' along with the omit the provision making a Regulations should be Jjchigan college newspaper editors. He stated that he concept that regardless of Kenneth Smith, attorney student responsible for the changed, we will take Tjuld "go ,0 almost anv lengths" to keep from State News photo by Ken whether or not I'm a for the case, alleges that the operation of his/her vehicle. further judicial and/or legal Ferguson system is discriminatory action. Responsibility of the vehicle This could be because only students are should be maintained only through the Student - required to pay graduated in hina cases involving parking, Faculty Judiciary or the [nTIAUO, Chile (AP) — that had surrounded U.S. - a blasts 13-page statement, in built our country into fines. In addition to the elimination of the graduated system, ASMSU is seeking to eliminate sections 4G and Massoglia said. Massoglia will also challenge AUTC's right to circuit court to ask for declaratory judgement," Massoglia said. a China relations after a UNCTAD, with 5G of the Student Motor condemned U.S. Chinese, to the delegates and Socialist state. fbing raids in North ■tnam and told a President Nixon's trip in February. a nearly - full spectator gallery. This was China's first "However, imperialism and reactionaries are bound membership of 142 nations, the world's largest Vehicle Regulation involving falsification of Selection "The Chinese government international consultative information. Massoglia said Icountry UN trade and appearance at UN-CTAD to obstruct the struggle for people strongly organization with the sections should be ■ing hero Thursday it since the organization was complete independence — more to ■orts the underdeveloped |d World Countries condemn U.S. imperialism for its criminal acts of war expansion" in North formed in 1964. There was applause when he finished. waged by the developing countries," he added. members Nations than the United itself. UNCTAD conferences are held every covered by University Student the All - report t Ameriean "plunder "China is a developing Judiciary and should not be The chairman of the athletic director search and selection Vietnam, Chou said, four years to find ways to handled by AUTC. Those Profiteering." country and belongs to the "The United States of committee said Thursday that his group would report to pledging his country's reduce the widening gap measures are also covered iinese Deputy Third World," Chou said. America . . . had carried out President Wharton by May 1, but refused to comment on the "all-out support' for the between the world's rich and under falsification of jmerce Minister Chou "Since the founding of the aggression and expansion selection progress. North Vietnamese and Viet poor countries. documents in University Imin stated his country's People's Republic of China, everywhere ... in a vain The committee, chaired by John A. Fuzak, is charged by Cong "in their war against regulations. Wharton with reporting the n, . s of three candidates to Jion in a speech to 3,000 U.S. aggression." the Chinese people have attempt to stamp out the ■gates attending the broken through a tight revolution of the oppressed "The Chinese people are Massoglia also hopes to Wharton. Fuzak replied "no comment" on Thursday when Wearing a dark gray make fines for failure ItAD 111 trade and blockade imposed by peoples and achieve world firmly opposed to one or two to asked if the committee had already reported to Wharton. loped conference. His Mao-style suit, the white - imperialism, withstood superpowers subjecting register a vehicle or display Wharton has been out-of-town most of the week and haired diplomat slowly read hegemony. The Un1#d a permit valid Is seraed to dim the glow terrific foreign pressure and States has all along pursued a countries of Asia, Africa, only between unavailable for comment as to whether he will release the Latin 6 p.m. and 7 a.m. and three names of athletic director candidates when he:receives policy of expansion and America and other eliminate fines for failure to them. He said recently that he still intends to recommend a plunder and profiteering at regions to aggression, affix permit and failure to new vice president for student affairs at the the expense of other subversion, control, May 19 trustee lixon aide denies countries." Chou contended that the interference and bullying." completely remove expired meeting. presence of "representatives PUBLISHERS SAY THIS BOOK IS NOT SPONSORED BY ANY POLITICAL of the puppet cliques of lid to fix ITT suits South Korea, South Vietnam and Cambodia" at UNCTAD "THIS BOOK GROUP OR ORGANIZATION ★ A POWERFUL AND UNFORGETTABLE READING EXPERIENCE * THIS BOOK ISHINCTON (AP) pential aide Peter M. Thursday denied Kpting to fix the income - in Flanigan had been named testimony as the man who arranged, at McLaren's request, a study by New That, Flanigan answered, is outside bounds set by the committee in a 12 - 1 vote 111 "is totally illegal." The Cambodians walked out during the middle of his speech, but delegates from the other two countries — IS TOO HOT TO HANDLE I IS WRITTEN IN CLEAR-CUT LANGUAGE STANDABLE FOR 200-MILLION AMERICANS ★ EXPLO¬ ★ UNDER¬ multi-million dollar Tuesday when only Sen. e York investment banker Fx!ward M. Kennedy. D - and also from the United SIVE MATERIAL ★ FACTS AND PROOF ★ HARD¬ lits pending Richard J. Ramsden which States — remained in the hall. Mass., dissented. Inst International Iphone & Telegraph McLaren testified played a major role in his change of READ HITTING * PULLS NO PUNCHES! J. (ITT) last summer. an's long - sought mind. MUST READING FOR EVERYONE! Ramsden, a friend Jarance before the le Judiciary Committee Flanigan's since 1965, asked to study the financial of was Sprechen sie Deutsch? NIXON Including 25 Million 18-21 Men-Women, Oncoming Voters ■interrupted repeatedly impact on ITT of the . Se habln Espanol? lrrangle over the range of ftions answer. i n he could i g a n , the nor possible divestiture of the Ilartford Fire Insurance Co. In the final antitrust suit, ITT was permitted to hold Parlez-vous Francaise ? WILL LOSE nistration*s chief to the $1 billion insurance fcsary to the business on operation. In whatever language punity. said his role in Flanigan gave this account n not to carry ITT of how he arranged for the you speak, fine food, J to the Supreme Court report to be prepared: ■limited to public In early May, 1971, friendly atmosphere, and one ^nt overworked r "merely assisting McLaren called Flanigan and public asked him to find Ramsden k other public servant, to do the independent great service is spelled: financial analysis. Ramsden figan testified, was had done a similar job for Il-I-2-A-R-D 'Si ' Asst. Atty. Gen. Flanigan at McLaren's 1 ard W. McLaren, request while Ramsden was a Just chief while Richard Bleindienst White House fellow in 1969. FULL PAGE ADS ARE APPEARING IN MAJOR CITIES THROUGHOUT THE COUNTRY was deputy Along with the request liey general and the ITT came a memorandum from Stop in and enjoy Spaghetti ■were pending McLaren supplied by an ITT SUNDAYS 5 - 9 p.m. committee is director which drew the dering, at his request, same ultimate conclusions as ■dienst's nomination to the final Ramsden report — a It's Convenient jorney general. Hartford divestiture would be devastating to ITT hassle over which stockholders. It's Delicious Hanigan should r stemmed from the Repeatedly, Flanigan was _ept of executive asked if he had been contacted last spring by ITT \ ALL YOU CAN EAT!!! \ Would you believe ... P-gi' and an agreement officials anxious about their COMPUTER PROGRAMMING, SPEECH WRITING, fd by the committee on antitrust cases pending in the TOecific subjects to TYPING, DRAFTING, SPECIALIZED RESEARCH be Justice Dept. and McLaren's LEGAL AND INDUSTRIAL RESEARCH reputation as a trust - busier. EDUCATIONAL MATERIALS, AND 3c PHOTOCOPYING! GET YOURS NOW! THE LAST Creative ftKAMS Research I QUESTION WE HAVE MOVED! For electronic repairs by Isaac Asirnov . . . REMEMBER • We have the ■Th . lowest repair I has^fin'1 j*! 'saac Asimov, Master of Science Fiction, WEEKEND SHOWTIMES rates around. pntrSi 'I'Wty l°the ever chan8in8 Sky Theatre.His FULL SERVICE BEAUTY SALON ■QUESTinw S story, entitled THE LAST All our work is FRI- SPECIALISTS IN FASHION CUTS ■encomna i' "ow comps to life in the mind 8:008.10:00 ■ Enter th mE °nvironment of the geodesic dome. SAT. 220 ALBERT ST. E. LANSING guaranteed. 2:30, 8:00 & 10:00 ■Hanv mirt "lncr Plan®t®rium chamber and witness the SUN. 3?? 5522 ■to take v 8nd Visual effects which have been created 4:0o TV's, stereos, ■and snaro°iUr mint*on a futuristic voyage through time DAVID SWAIN ® 332 2986 amps etc. ^ ° other dimensions of the universe. NO ADMISSION AFTER SHOWTIME OWNER Free Analysis Allowing the Friday and Saturday night | ADMISSION PRICES The Globe Jewelers We also buy and sell used stereos and televisions shows, the album NILSSON I Adults $1 AND LAPIDARY SUPPLY SCHMILLSONby MSU Students (I.D.) 75c THE ELECTRONICS JOINT . Harry Wilsson will be played. ■ Children (12and under) JEWELRY - WHOLESALE 50c LAPIDARY SUPPLIES - LESSONS 220 ALBERT OUTLET FOR LOCAL CRAFTSMEN 332-0265 call anytime MICHIGAN POIHT OF VIEW Bt'BNEWS Reasons By the AD HOC STRIKE COMMITTEE movement. individual commits of himself to a alternatives to it and other thk. I We may not be able to end the war movement, the more he has to gain the world and they will be able Sf.kl JOHN JUEL editor-in-chief The massive bombing of Vietnam but it is imperative that we work from that movement. others learn. at"eto|^| this past week has brought home to now, to make it more difficult for war There will be many opportunities •Action designed t0 many of us that the United States mib - crimes to continue. We can and must for individuals to commit themselves University cancel visits of armeTf DAVE PERSON, managing editor government will still go to any recruiters to MSU JOHN BORGER , campus editor extreme to prevent the self - make it impossible for the media to to different activities. These activities during the CHARLIE CAIN, city editor determination of the people of continue to ignore antiwar action. will encompass all political modes of May 1; also planning for recruiters if they are pi(j*j| BARNEY WHITE, editorial editor Southeast Asia. The Nixon administration has not asked the A strike of the MSU and East thought. It must be emphasized that no one individual can agree with all, or aUowedtoSjl RICK GOSSELIN, sports editor Lansing communities will build •A teach - in by women's permission of people of Indochina or solidarity and will make community even most, of the possible political about women and the war. group, I of the United States to proceed with education and action possible. The tactions of the strike. This must not Seven-time recipient of the Pacemaker award and escalate the acts of death and city of East Lansing and the University discourage any one from participating •Picketing of classes M * for outstanding journalism. destruction perpetuated in the name are supporting the war, and as part of in the strike. The one unifying force is business in East Lansing. '■ of the American people. The American this community, we, too, are commitment to end the war and that •vlarches possibly one people must not tolerate these crimes. must take precedence over any to responsible. In spite of continuous state Capitol. EDITORIALS The students of Michigan State will not! Silence can only be interpreted as efforts on the part of individuals and political differences. Possible strike •Demonstrations against consent. We cannot afford to remain various groups, neither the city government nor the University actions might include: campus. ROTCoJ silent. We must strike! •The development of an administration has been responsive to A student strike can be viewed as a the demands of the people. A massive organization which can grow out of •Possible leaflettine of the strike experience, created by the factories. The United desperate move. A student strike will not end the war. It is possible that changes in the political climate may unified strike will bring about the needed pressure to make both city and University administrations responsible people participating in it, which will continue to exist even after the strike •"Visiting" the state legislature. has ended. •Collecting money to a,-.. occur. We can make it more difficult to the people for their actions. This will lead to a general improvement of of petitions refugees and orphans in Indochina for the Nixon Administration and the •The circulation South Vietnam. military industrial complex to the responsiveness of the seeking to have our senators and continue this slaughter. We cannot, administration. congressmen vote in favor of antiwar Trying to influence Univenb however, afford to forget that we are Community unity will inspire bills currently before the Senate and administrators to talk to friendsj desperate. We must not continue to House. Washington about ending the w deal with the war lightly or in a personal commitment. The more one is involved in the various strike *A variety of educational Trying to have East Lansing tunN procedural way. Striking is not easy or activities, the more that personal As Vietnam sees it opportunities. People participating will into a sanctuary for draft resisteu J -- fun. It is necessary. growth is possible. The more an be able to learn about the war, long as the war continues. We are demanding that the United States government drastically reorder its priorities. The most effective demand can be made by making our priorities known. We must reorder our day to day priorities. We must strike! Over the last few years the antiwar movement has maintained opposition to the war. Various groups of people have been working hard, resulting in numerous small actions which have been ignored by the media. This has given the government administrators the chance to use the media to distract the people from the real issues of the war and United States imperialism It is necessary, then, to have a concerted effort by all people against the war so that these actions cannot be ignored by the media and the government. A national student strike is such an action because it brings the people of these different antiwar groups together for something that can be durable and massive. A student strike implies action on many levels. Participation in a national student strike can awaken people to As America sees it -- the necessity of a continuing antiwar AP NEWS ANALYSIS Viet offensive: goals political By PETER ARNETT leave. the demilitarized zone have begun Bastogne where two Hanoi n AP Special Correspondent "We keep killing them, but they pounding the city. Some 200 rounds are saving relief units attemptin| ■ QUANG TRI, Vietnam (AP) — The stay," said the commander of the slammed in on a combat base two navigate the only road into the hills I North Vietnamese tanks that burst northern region, Gen. Hoang Xuan miles north of the city Tuesday. Committed to the northern vr across the demilitarized zone (DMZ) Lam, in an interview. Another major ground attack is fighting 90 far are 12 of the 12 ed 20 nights ago have either been "They seem to like being killed, expected sometime soon by senior regiments known to have been in® knocked out or are in hiding. Militarily we are killing more of American officers. area. South Vietnamese officers il The human - wave infantry attacks them than they us." But Hanoi also has settled for are looking for the three regimentiN that saw upwards of a thousand enemy The general added, "So militarily, something less than immediate tactical the 325th Division that have mf soldiers rushing the guns of they made a mistake. But we know goals in battles past. The minimum the south from Hanoi and have not sto sandbagged government base camps this is not a military war but a political Communist planners seem to be up on intelligence charts i have ceased. one. They seek not statistics but seeking on this northern front is the Vietnam. But in other ways, the North politics." demoralization of the regular South Top American officials in the nor Vietnamese general offensive in this The North Vietnamese have sent Vietnamese divisions based here, with say Hanoi continues to push a far north region grinds on. Officially, their troops into meatgrinder the consequent collapse of security and equipment into the southj the situation is called a stalemate, but operations before. The political aim among the population and an increase know that he (Hanoi) will not kP in the context of the dramatic military this time seems to dramatically in the influence of the clandestine Viet willingly. He will have to be pn® events of past weeks, stalemate means demonstrate that President Nixon's Cong. right back," commented m only that the enemy forces have Vietnamization program has failed, Hanoi's goal of sending its American. ] stopped moving forward. To prove this on the northern infantrymen victoriously storming The problem is, who will do V They are staying in the same front, Communist command strategists Quang Tri City seems improbable if pushing? I positions they reached three days after seemed to be hoping for the capture of assessments of allied officers are valid. With other fronts opened 1 the attacks began. They hold about 10 Quang Tri City. They are still trying, The official reading of the situation is around the country, particuW miles south of the DMZ, and they and newly emplaced 130mm artillery that most North Vietnamese units are around An Loc, and potentially ml don't look ike they are ready to pieces hidden in the southern part of too bloodied to launch anything but a Central Highlands, the SiW token attempt. government is known to be relucfl But while this maximum goal may to push a counter offensive in 1 OUR READER'S MIND be unreachable, the North Vietnamese sector. Saigon does not want ■ remain in a strong position to achieve fully committed to a push m ¥ the minimum goal of demoralization. north, and then to find another e As Nixon sees it -- The campus The green South Vietnamese 3rd Division literally ran from its dozen front opening somewhere else. This accounts for the painfullyn fire bases and encampments along the rate of progress here. The ma]ru1^ J a time to talk DMZ when Hanoi's forces attacked March 30. As many as 2,000 men were killed or are missing. Two regiments rangers are pushing only over the barren hills on amileo ■ either ■ Highway 1 that snakes up fromnwj To the Editor: the war in Vietnam. We will not accept are unsteadily still on line, but the embattled Dong Ha. brunt of the defense and the gingerly It is important, as we are building a f"xon'8 mfnnlnS th'K countV ln the Helicopter pilots have see tracks leading into villages «wil strike against the war, in particular the 'nterests of corporations, probing of enemy lines is being handled by Vietnamese Marines and recent escalation, that we see the war The str'ke ,s a t"(ne '° f °ff coast but nothing yet has bee as an integral part of imperialism and camPus ,nJL° cor™lt!es }° 1^}° Rangers. about it. The government policy at home. workers- ,We must .^,nKto bm,d a Vietnamese 1st Division, We must not let ourselves be movement, now with a base among deployed to the south of Quang Tri and around the old Hanoi's forces overnight Havel deluded into thinking that the election workers minority peoples and others imperial capital of back the territory painstaking y . of an antiwar liberal will attack the to end the war and change the basisof Hue, is still bruised from the disastrous out of the mountains and in H foreign policy that caused the war. It »<**y ™s is what we have learned foray into Laos a year ago. Observers over the years by American "j who have been might not end the war and it certainly rom thef ^ort term success and the watching the unit's and Marines. won't stop the efforts of Congress and r * ,on« run ^ mnvpmpnt movement nf t?KSU8t?i"a of striko Pei3na1n«"t thp strike the r»f 1970 of 1Q7f) performance in recent weeks say its commanders are much more cautious The real test of ViettJ be whether t ... . .. . . , Nixon to make the people pay for the seems to war by wage and "price" controls, against the invasion of Cambodia. than in the past. The 1st Division once Vietnamese forces can 1 which they all support. We need a Randy Cowen was called Saigon's best. territory back. The battle to b'MJ International Socialists The only direct pressure on the serious movement, that is not an about has not even begun, ano j April 19, 1972 outfit has come from around Fire Base electoral pressure group and won't government casualties have stop with an end to the war, but go on DOONESBURY to attack imperialism, racism, class by GarryTni oppression and their social effects. The JUST H£Y,6rirte alityin E OF BUSINESS Jjr I un . 8S lon8 as 61 ou,r ^'sources are Iter n 8 defpnse budget a „majm ! CHICAGO MUSICAL COLLEGE ■erstanj " d 8 e 1); we lis8 11 niinorlties be nnl" wi" continue BACHELOR OF GENERAL iancMP" ^ d as 'on8 as ire« and ^PPort the BTt" I ■ we men ■iceu/n' unrt° »f "onwhite countries; trSUnd that not women, as Sunday 3-8pm—HP • d recently sent a reauest to responsibility "I see it the licensing of physicians' returning military corpsmen the Department of Housing, and member of the "From a sociological put on corpsman or a nurse. doctors. assistants (PA), becomes and nurses. As the program Education and Welfare The whole issue has been committee studying the standpoint, what is involved Another limiting the', has progressed over the past issue, said. "The PA motion is a re - examination of question being development law, prehuman medicine asking for funds to reveiw seriously questioned by asked is, what effect could of m have another several years the general doesn't confuse the nurses' roles," Howell said. "As you students will option besides medical trend in students has shifted the issue. nurses who presumably be taking orders from PAs. will position any more. introduce a new health care such a program have on the ™ an JS?1* ""■"••Hi MI) program andw school. from former corpsmen to If the funds are One of the major questions John C. Howell, associate role you have to examine all proposed MSU medical tnem in a Pa b students without military the other roles s o that you school? Howell said. Under the bill, a PA will appropriated the committee is, how will the PA fit in dean in the College of Social be a licensed paramedic who training. will try to identify a PA has graduated from an program that would be approved program and will perform medical services The proposed program will also be open to students appropriate for MSU. The committee expects a reply SOCIALIST VIEWS AIRED under the supervision of a who have undergraduate to their reauest May 1. licensed physician. training in human medicine Western Michigan The PA will work in areas such as normal and will not be able to go on to medical school. University (WMU) is planning a PA program scheduled to go into effect next fall. Because the Popular government urged By BECKIE HANES " control i . to it the people,' 1- * > rtAitAdnmnnt government under frime unWnr Minister Edward Heath. He Primo ' * T Thell B tWO two achievements during this 1major more efficient However, they and <* program is just in the State News Staff Writer Manley said. werek. planning stages the "Capitalism has failed said that the socialist period were the off course by a m.1 nationalization of a number University does not know LONDON, England bo midably. We need government came to Great crises," he said *** The Britain beginning in 1945. of industries and and how large the program will only hope for locally controlled initiative. socialist programs. Then as be or what kind of democracy is to challenge it constantly and turn 1 want to see a society based 'Clement Attlee of the things began to go badly, "We should devalued and we hJ curriculum they will have. on people who get what Labor party was elected the people turned to the didn't J A spokesman from WMU government control over to they earn," Manley said, overwhelmingly. A ruthless pound was God. i the people, a British Labor and Conservative party. nationalization was not said that there are many advocating the end of all highly competent man, party member said here he answer for applicants for the program. capital. brought with him a socialism." recently. "Socialism is a difficult bloody minded, colorful, "England was being Addressing 40 MSU word to define. It's a broad enthusiastic Parliament. rejected by the European 8:15 P.M. The students studying with the word which emotes many Economic Community and Manley said the answer interveij Christian Reformed Church University College reactions," he said, noting "This impressive and there was a good deal of was instead! public scandal going on with antionalization, 1509 River Terrace from Hubbard J Christian Council J humanities program - social science in London, Roy that socialism is in Great Britain, but not respectable unique^ team of people believed nationalization the Christine Keeler case," the urging of into i'nd a«,'| Somebody Cares move across ^ ^ Manley espoused the benefit always acceptable in the would produce a socialist Manley said. an sponsored by the Geneva Forum of the British socialist United States. nation," Manley continued. provide the employment,taj Student Organization ~ non-denominational J government. He has stood in Describing the history of "They took control of the 'Then Harold Wilson of land develo'pJ two general elections as a Great Britain "state coal" *-J—J industry and *trains »-- the Labor party came in on projects, emphasizing J ^group meeting candidate for Parliament. capitalism," Manley said as during that period. The the white heat of the welfare programs J w Wednesdays at w moving towards "Before the demise of that Englishmen consider National Health Service and technology ticket. a #7:00 p.m. in the % capitalian, participation is the comprehensive educatia Edgcwood United ffe Black Culture Room A £at Williams Hall ^ needed. Get government socialism persued as by the policies the present was voted in because people thought it would be system. 469 North Hagadorn Church 332-0606 An Ecumenical Fellowship ••••••••• Liberal policies abortion reform, n< sudl mon by Dr. Truman A. Morrison UNIVERSITY SEVENTH-DAY Official cautions bike riders punishment, and divorce law introduced, Manley saiil a. were"! ADVENTIST CHURCH New Liturgy 10 a.m. added that near the (all 149 Highland Avenue Wilson's administmtioi about traveling 6 8:30 p East Lansing bus loop niversity Group Dinner and program - consensus governuj near 337-1430 seemed to be e Saturday Services: consensus government I type of compromise ii( Group Bible Study 9:30 AM Bus drivers have had mainly concerned for the Lane near the bus terminal main concern is that the two parties m several near accidents with safety of students when frequently interfere with bus "somebody doesn't get EAST LANSING IRINITY CHURCH Worship 11:00 AM bicycle riders in the Shaw loading and unloading the drivers at key intersections. hurt." together in terms of iitj programs and philoso Wednesday: bus loop as traffic congestion buses." "We've had several rear "We hope that students are Stanley R. Reilly, Iff ■ 841 Timberlane Drive Discussion and Praver Groups there continues to mount, The Shaw bus loop is end encroachments," Neiles smart enough to avoid that Acting Pastor || I East Lansing 7:30 PM according to Max A. Neiles, marked and reserved for bus said, "where bikes obstruct area by themselves," Zutaut "I was glad to seel 10 I Telephone: 351-8200 manager of Automotive traffic and bus drivers either said, "because we don't want primary candidates whl Call 882-6580 or aboi traffic only. Bicycle riders Interdenominational Services. bump into, nudge or damage to write tickets." He said consensus politicians {ST number if you need "We have already had sev¬ using the loop as a shortcut bikes." He said that if the situation does not the boot," he said, no serious transportation create traffic congestion . eral near accidents by Lot S correct itself in the near where bicycle riders come problems and are a hazard to ">jurte« hKaveubee" ™P<>rted future, officers will Summarizing the el Evening Service "The Peril of Partiality" 7 p.r ST. JOHN zipping by the parked pedestrians. bu,1 h* has, had stveral complaints from irate definitely start issuing very of the Labor pai Mid-Week discussion & prayer Wednesday, 7:00 p.m. buses," Neiles said. "We're Neiles pointed out that students about collisions tickets to bicycle riders. socialist programs in Specinl Tape <£ Movie on Missionary work in Columbia STUDENT assigned bicycle paths near with buses, The Michigan Motor Britain, Manley stated the sidewalks or in the streets Capt. Adam J. Zutaut of Vehicle Code requires that »me people feel »r CENTER Central United Methodist are routed around the the Dept. of Public Safety bicycles be operated as if has eroded individ terminal area, but said that urges all bicycle riders to they were motor vehicles, freedom and indeper Sunday Masses: Across from the Capitol students still seem to avoid the Shaw bus loop and This includes obeying all and given gifts to 327 M.A.C. disregard them. He said bike to use designated bike paths traffic control signs and unemployed, making riders traveling on Shaw on the streets. Zutaut said his devices. lazy. 8:30 6:00p.m. 9:45 9:00o.m. 11:15 UNIVERSITY BAPTIST Saturday 7:00 p.m. Rev. Charles Grt CHURCH St. John East (Across preaching 4608 South Hagadorn from Hubbard) John D. Walden - Pastor 9:45,11:15 For Information «, ,, ., J5 1 4 1 44 Daily Masses' - POLICE REPORT THAT eight more bikes estimated at $94.65, and said theyhm| _ or Transportation were stolen Wednesday with a total value of suspects. M.A.C. UNIVERSITY Bus Schedule : 332-8472, $670.38. Three of the bikes were taken from CHRISTIAN School of the racks by Case Hall, and the others from AN ADVISER IN South Campbell! 8:00, 12:30, 4:30 Discipleship 6:45 told police that her wallet and currency J CHURCH Holmes, Abbot, Snyder and Landon halls, East: 310 N. Worship Sunday School including one from Spartan Village. stolen from her apartment between 101 Hagadorn 10:00 AM 11:00 AM 11:10 p.m. Wednesday. PoliceestimaWi Mon.thru Thur. 9:30 P.M Bible Study 9:45 a.n loss at $39 and said the door to theroom| Worship 10:45 a.n A STUDENT WAS arrested for drunk closed but not locked. FIRST CHURCH OF OKEMOS driving at about 1:28 a.m. Thursday on MORNING SERVICE - 10:00 a. CHRIST, SCIENTIST FIRST BAPTIST Trowbridge by Harrison Road. Police said an $50 WORTH OF currency and d Grand River 4684 Marsh Road officer observed the student leaving the was stolen between 5 and 8 p.m. Wednei Rev. Brink at Collingwood Entrance 332-5193 332-3035 campus Mobil gas station and going the from the Cherry Lane Apts. preaching (Near Meijer's Thrifty Acres) East Lansing Free Transportation wrong way down Trowbridge Road. Police building. Police said there was $10 dai EVENING SERVICE 7:00 p.i - Sunday Services 10:30 a.m. Esoecially for collegians said the student blew a .12 on the to the door of the building and said 4j A Lesson Sermon Subject have ■ ALL SAINTS Breathalyzer test, and said he was placed in no suspects. Rev. Brink, preaching 8:30 PM Sunday the Ingham County jail until he sobered up. EPISCOPAL CHURCH "PROBATION "Counibus " TWO PINBALL MACHINES werebio Visit our new Student Center 800 Abbott Road AFTER DEATH" into between 2:30 and 8:30 a.m. Wedne* open daily 9 a.m. to 11 p.m. 8 a.m. Holy Communion (Christian interaction) TWO VENDING MACHINES were in the basement of Owen Hall. Polk*1 Lunch Wednesday 12:30 -1:30 10 a.m. Morning Prayer broken into prior to 6 a.m. Wednesday in Wednesday Testimonial and Sermon East Akers Hall. Police said damage and loss there is an unknown amount ofdamaj'J Meeting nursery care