Campus booze intake reported on increase By SUE AGER occasionally a lot, or those who drink State News Staff Writer occasionally but always a lot. Half of these, Zucker says, or 1 of Chuck used to go out to the bars once or twice a week and have a every 10 students, may be potential couple beers with friends. problem drinkers who drink to cover Now, after breaking up with his up or escape a deeper problem running girlfriend, he hits the bottle at 8 each through his life. night in his room and usually passes Zucker bases his estimates on out by 4 a.m. national survey data collected in Fortunately, this term Chuck has California. all afternoon classes, and manages to trudge through his studies despite his State News staff writers Sue But statistical evidence of the use nightly escapes. Ager, left, and Irene Evans have of alcohol by students in scarce. As the drug mystique takes a new pulled together a comprehensive turn, alcohol in greater quantities look at a growing drug abuse Lansing and East Lansing alcohol seems to be treatment sliding more easily down problem — alcoholism. This agencies agree with Bob the throats of an increasing number of Hammond, executive director of the students. week, the State News offers a Michigan Council on Alcohol series of articles on alcoholism Problems, that the number of students Though most residence hall both directors and graduate advisers report on campus and in the seeking treatment is "pretty nil." But county. this, they say, is a poor measure of no problem and no increase in alcohol actual student involvement in the usage, individual resident assistants resurrected pasttime. who live in closer proximity to MSU students can be classified heavy students disagree. They say that for drinkers — those who drink often and (continued on page 6) many of the students on their floors, drinking is the "big and the only weekend activity." Others, they say, are beer-sippers More youths Solitary d who finish studying each night. off a six-pack while Robert Zucker, associate professor pre jjng out to §l'l ones. and more students are turning to the bottle as drugs lose their attraction. Rather than bars, many students stay home with cards, a few close friends, and more than a few State News photo by Dale Atkins of psychology adolescent who has alcohol usage at Rutgers Center for Alcoholism Studies and at studied in grip of a MSU, estimates that 20 per cent of By IRENE EVANS the Michigan Dept. of Health, said, State News Staff Writer "we just have better and more exact Old Man Booze is still alive in figures to work with." Michigan, and there are an estimated Alcoholism is a disease which the 469,797 alcoholics in the state to prove it. In the tri-county area, which knows no social limits. It affects the rich, the poor, blacks, whites, women, michigan includes Clinton, Eaton and Ingham counties, there are an estimated 7,195 alcoholics. men, the young and the old "Not all alcoholics businessmen," Bob are middle-aged Hammond, "Though these figures are higher executive director of the Michigan Volume 65 Number 144 Michigan State University East Lansing, Michigan Monday, April 30, 1973 than last year," John McConnell. chief Council on Alcoholism, said. of the Alcoholism Control Section in Some treatment centers used to say that a person 35 to 40-years-old had no drinking problem because they were too young, Hammond said. itudents form campus "But now those same centers are By NANCY CRANE state's first campus wide on Kellogg the unionization Center attempt of the Student Employees commission will determine if group exists at a specific Kellogg Center to be labor unit. If this it would be the first job unit goal is accomplished, all-student student associations Kellogg group. modeled after the finding alcoholism working in the factory. in younger and younger people," Hammond said. For example, at one major factory in Lansing, alcoholism is a problem the employe may have before he begins Assn. organized into a collective bargaining employe labor union in Michigan. Jim Chapim, investigator for the employe association was Tim Cain, president of the Kellogg The Kellogg student employes' unit. Other attempts have been blocked by alcohol detection program at the Id Saturday at a student labor association, said the best strategy for The definition of collective University administrators or died from Oldsmobile Division of General Motors e sponsored by the Kellogg request for separate bargaining will be a informal student groups is "Play the ft Student Employe Assn. reviewed at a Wednesday meeting bargaining group would be followed student apathy. in Lansing, said the people his The bureaucrats off against each other." works with are as young as betwewi the Michigan Employment by a vote of the student employes.. Kellogg group made the company )MSlT Student Employe Assn., Relations Commission and As the Kellogg group continues its request for a separate bargaining unit "The management didn't get 19-years-old. I main goal is the complete unionization attempts, the group is because Kellogg Center is a hotel together to fight us (the Kellogg "A lot of these people actually i of student employes at representatives of the board of trustees. At the also pressing for an all-campus student which does not provide services to association) until we began talking started drinking between the ages of lull bas»> its strategy for next fall meeting, the state students. union." he said. "We had the Kellogg 14 and 16," Chapim said. "But instead The MSU association hopes to keep management petrified every time we of getting better, the problem gets the student employe issue alive on had a conference with the vice progressively worse." • ides ask The worsening of drinking habits is Nixo campus until September. president or the student employment The association will do this by office." one of the symptoms of the disease i encouraging students to form informal (continued on page 7) (continued on page 6) faff linked to bugging persons is one of the few steps open to such a move, citing former President ISlllNGTON (AP) - President ■ is being strongly urged by White the President, who spent the week end Calvin Coolidge's appointment of a in guarded seclusion. speial prosecutor in the Teapot Dome |I a'outdes alljust below the top level to Sen. Charles H. Percy, R-Ill., scandals of the 1920's. those involved in the ■ale scandal, according to announced that he will introduce Meserve was in Washington for a a staff today a resolution calling on Nixon to speech today. take the case out of the hands of his A similar proposal made by J aides jn private, and major . was ■lican office holders in appointees in the Justice Dept. and to Sargent Shriver, the 1972 Democratic public, vice place it with a politically independent presidential candidate, who said |i that the quick removal of such special prosecutor of irreproachable that five former Supreme Court reputation and "impeccable" integrity. justices should be asked by the Percy said, however, that he hopes President to appoint a special Nixon will seize the initiative by prosecutor with jurisdiction over "every fA official making a full statement on the case and by firing all those members of his staff who have lost public confidence. aspect" of the affiar. Sen. Lowell P. Weicker Jr., [take over Robert W. Meserve, of Boston, president of the American Bar Assn., R-Conn., said the White House may be putting out a deliberately false impression by implying that L. Patrick proposals for a special 1st at endorsed prosecutor in the Watergate Gray III was forced out of his job as FBI investigation. Stressing that he was acting FBI director. The source on the White House speaking personally and not as the bar association's president, Meserve told staff said that those aides who are IsHINGTON (AP) - William D. newsmen that there is precedent for Vshaus p|ans to take QVer as (continued on page 7) J FBI director today with the Jon of pursuing all leads turned I , t>rand jury investigating the ||*te aide bugging raid, an aide said. Jack Conmy told a RHA fee p °ver the weekend that Pshaus is not simply going to be |sl;er director," although he told ■J11 Nixon that he ■ mpofarily . would observe perhaps for two in on-compus l,w T 8 „said down run Kuckelshaus felt the all leads turned By BOB OURLIAN The amendment also has a State News Staff Writer provision for students to receive I ueJrand )Ury" 'n the Watergate refunds if they do not wish to pay. J;hlch f" 0" Friday led to of the abrupt All students living next year in residence halls will have to pay a refundable A similar referendum, minus a acting FBI rr Patrick Gray III. sum of up to $1.75 before they can refund clause was voted down last May P Kelshaus, head of the complete registration each term. by the 2,500 students who voted in This intended to replace that referendum. CK f>rotection Agency, current sum, hall dues, results from Pourc r! 10 the P°st ,ess than Gene Buckner, president of RHA, WskcH u ('ray's resignation. Thursday's referendum where on - campus students voted to amend the explained that the sum, to be »in.* Ruckelshaus would determined at a 6:30 p.m. meeting lie,,,™31 ri*sponsibility for the Residence Hall Assn. (RHA) constitution. Wednesday at McDonel Hall, will Srert lnvfstigation, fle will Conmy probably be in the neighborhood of be up to his neck The amendment passed by a 2,455 - 1,463 vote. The voters comprise 23 $1. At that meeting, representatives from each hall will determine what Ke'shaus | Prompting moved over the per cent of the 16,500 students amount, up to the maximum $1.75. reports that he presently living in residence halls. will be needed to meet the needs of all Kte k nh" U S- S®n.te in his The amendment will allow RHA to halls. Blues been i! ndiana next year. There assess up to $1.75 from each student IkeishaJ1 ri'asinR speculation that who will live in a residence hall and Another meeting is planned for Can a Radcliffe student find true happiness as a blues singer? That question was answered Peal f„ w,ou'd run against old then give each hall that amount for later this term to work out a policy for 1 mmhf m Bayh, who each student in the hall. For example, refunds. Buckner reasoned that not as affirmatively last Thursday and Friday vhen Bonnie Raitt and Little Feat appeared at Mariah a 1968 Senate if the assessment is fixed at $1 and a many students will want their hall sessions in the Wonders and Erickson kivas. See story on page 9. hall houses 300 students, it will receive State News photo by Craig Porter l^'inuerf .*■. 12j (continued on page 6) $300. 2 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Monday. Aprinn|n? J cable-TV proposal ready for council vote By MELISSA PAYTON the commission, suggested Co. franchise bid and to be aside for schools, city State News Staff Writer that a public access channel complete deliberations that buildings, sports facilities, UIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIUIIIIIIIIIIH An agreement for be provided on the FM began Dec. 13 when the hospitals, MSU and broadly expanded cable radio band system in the council first looked at the recreational centers. "Plav the bureaucrats off television in East Lansing, proposed cable agreeement. company's proposal. .Not only will such against each other. The with all its potential for "More people in this area Under the old, looser facilities be able to receive management didn t get public service and are interested in radio and East Lansing cable television educational and have receivers than own together to fight us until we entertainment, is set for ordinance, National Cable informational programs on approval at Tuesday's city TVs. Could they (the cable bagan talking union. 1 had council meeting. company) provide a station Co. now serves part of 16 channels from the cable the Kellogg mana^ment married housing on campus company's central East Lansing residents on FM for community and a small area of East distribution point, but they petrified every time we had a suggested several changes in input?" he asked. Lansing. will be able to originate conference with the vice the proposed cable National Cable Co. their own programs to be But the advantage of president or the student television agreement attorney Charles Norman sent out on the 14 between the city and replied that It was larger numbers of employment office. National Cable Co. at a technically possible. "The commercial channels additional channels in the Tim Cain, president of the idea has merit, though the available under the old reverse direction. public hearing Thursday Kellogg Center Student night at city hall. legal problems are large," he ordinance only hints at the The television services Employes Assn. The franchise agreement, said, referring to the service National Cable Co. will be required to provide the company must provide drawn up between National problems of obscenity and under its proposed See story page I if . Cable and the seven - slander. they are granted a After testimony, city franchise under the new agreement include a member city cable community affairs channel mil Milium linn commission, is proposed to council requested the cable ordinance. with 24-hour local news; meet the requirements of a commission reexamine Bombs explode in California new cable television studio facility requirements The simple system now in use 12-channel would be special news reports ethnic minorities; live news for ordinance approved by city and the number of free replaced by a 60-channel events; sports events from Bombs carried aboard a munitions train council last September. public channels reserved in system. Thirty channels local junior high, high John Massoglia, former the proposed franchise. continued to explode Sunday, more than a day have been designated for schools and colleges; and after a series of blasts turned a rail yard into a MSU student, testified at During Tuesday's council general distribution, but programs of community- ( barbs Norman the hearing that the meeting, council members wide interest in the political most interested is centered square mile of flaming boxcars and flying shrapnel. proposed standards which will vote on whether to on the remaining channels The continued detonations of the 250 - pound were recently upgraded by approve the National Cable the cable commission for bombs, the sort dropped by American B52s in studio facilities would "put Southeast Asia, prevented Air Force and Army the public access studio bomb experts from moving into the still - smoking VC back in the 50s." Roseville yards of the Southern 15 miles northeast of Sacramento. Pacific Railroad "The franchise should be giving the best equipment available and should be S. Viets, to required to teach people Nol announced that he will three months ago. each side holds. Under The reinvestigation I SAIGON (AP) - Meir calls for self-reliance how to use equipment," he said. that Fighting ebbed across South head the newly created terms of the peace aimed at settling a whether the secoi dispJ Vietnam Sunday as the four-man political council The Saigon command agreement, the exchange over Erling Jorgensen, MSU announced it will release was to have been completed helicopter was moved T Israel conducted memorial television and radio Saigon regime and the Viet designed to calm criticism 400 civilian prisoners today Friday, but now the target the Communists in hack! Cong prepared for another from his opponents and services Sunday for the six professor, concurred with to the Viet Cong. Hate is still uncertain. their claim that the H round of civilian prisoner allies that Cambodia is million Jews killed by the Massoglia and asked for one-man rule. A 19-man team moved aircraft strayed off f channel access for exchanges. The under first phase of the Nazis, and said it would rely more i nternational truce force The into Communist territory assigned safety corridor J MSU The proposed civilian prisoner exchan^ by road to reexamine the met with an accidi on itself alone to safeguard the franchise agreement reserves began a new investigation of The Saigon command m. the fatal April 7 crash of reported 74 cease-fire began Saturda\ The Jewish people. one channel for broadcast exchange of civilian helicopter crash site and to one of its helicopters. violations across Vietnam dismantle a second Premier Golda Meir from MSU. prisoners had been delayed In Cambodia, insurgent during the 24-hour period helicopter that made a declared to the world: "You Sam Dozzi, special ended at 6 a.m. Sunday, the since the cease-fire went forces maintained pressure forced landing during the student and member of the into effect Jan. 28 in a who did nothing to save Jews around the capital city of second lowest number since same incident. ad hoc radio committee of dispute over the number in the holocaust - you shall Phnom Penh. President Lon the truce went into effect not preach to us now." In another area. Meir has' instigated policies intended to expand the civil rights of 366,000 Arab citizens to reward them for loyalty to the Jewish state in the past 25 Remember what you used years. to get for a dime? Agnew top choice in poll Vice President Spiro Agnew is the ton choice among Republican voters for the GOP presidential nomination, the Gallup Poll reported Sunday. Agnew would win the votes of 35 per cent of those Republicans questioned, followed by Gov. Ronald Reagan of California with 20 per cent and former Secretary of the Treasury John Connally with 1 5 per cent. Gov. Nelson Rockefeller of New York had 11 per cent and Sen. Charles Percy of Illinois 8 per cent. Former president surfaces Former South Vietnamese President Duong Van "Big" Minh is about to come out of political hiding as figurehead of a new force that aims for a middle role between the Communists and President Nguyen Van Thieu. political sources said Sunday. The new force also is expected to bring the militant An Quang Buddhist pagoda, which claims the largest number of adherents in South Vietnam, out into the political VAN MINH arena for the first time since 1971. Brandt visits Washington West German Chancellor Willy Brandt arrived in Washington Sunday for two days of talks with President Nixon on U. S. - European relations. The visit follows the proposal six days ago by presidential adviser Henry Kissinger that the Atlantic charter, drafted 32 years ago by President Franklin I). Roosevelt and British Prime Minister Winston Churchill, be rewritten to revitalize the partnership. The chancellor is to meet with Nixon Tuesday and Wednesday. U. S. officials believe the meetings could be especially significant since Some things you still can. Soviet Party Chief Leonid Brezhnev Is to visit Brandt in May. Dime-A-Check from East Lansing State Bank lets you write all the checks you need for just 10C per check. Mo It's later than you think service charges. No minimum balances. It may be later than you think. Sometimes progress is keeping things the way they were. Except for four counties in the Upper East Lansing State Bank, your Hometown Peninsula. Michigan switched to Daylight Savings Time at 2 a.m. Sunday. Bank. With Trust Services. Member: F.D.I.C. fcilSt Linking StcltC BtlllK The hour which student sleepers lost Sunday morning will not be recovered until Oct. 28 when the state returns to Eastern Standard Time. So il you think you can still make it to your 8 a.m. class, just make sure it's not already 9 a.m. State News, East Lansing, Michigan Michigan Monday, April 30, 1 k> ^ 3 I Isberg's Lettuce group ell$ of break-in affidavit, based on the at 2 more A inR ANGELES (AP) information from the EUsberg's doctor, will tell the judge ®'It has confirmed about the break - in. By LINDA SANOEL working conditions and Kay said that the ? office was broken The doctor told State News Staff Writer basic right to fair wages. committee has a force of 1th, summer of 1971 Ellsberg The They hope that a about 45 people who picket t including those °n fwere ransacked, a that in the summer of 1971 he found someone had Boycott Lansing Committee Lettuce has boycott will force lettuce growers to bargain with the stores regularly on extended its rotating shifts, but added for Ellsberg said entered his office and picketing United Farm Workers that an additional 250 forced open file cabinets, against the sale of lettuce pickers over issues such as not grown by the United people are available for including some which wages, working and living back-up work. contained Mlsberg's records, Farm Workers to include all conditions and protection "For the third straight the spokesman said. The A&P stores located ir. the from dangerous pesticides. week-end we have emptied doctor reported that some Lansing-East Lansing area. Tom Kay, organizer for the files were thrown around Members of the boycott parking lot at the Lansing boycott Brookfield Plaza with our the office, but that organization are now nothing committee, said that pickets," Kay said. We will appeared to have been voicing their concerns to picketers started work in continue to picket until we taken. shoppers at A&P stores the beginning of January by win this fight." located at Hagadorn Road "We have and handing out leaflets to Alejandro Ramirez, head no way of East Grand River people shopping in area of the boycott knowing what might have Avenue in Brookfield Plaza, committee, "iU declining to identify been copied," Sachs said. 305 N. Clippert St. near stores, urging them not to said that he personally talks chiatrist by name, He said that Frandor and 312 W. Willow buy any non-United Farm about 4 or 5 of every 10 Zt's spokesman, attorneys Workers lettuce. for Ellsberg and people into leaving and jg, Sachs, said the codefendant Anthony Boycotters picketed the A secondary boycott, refusing to shop at the £ 5 ,eam will Me a Russo were meeting Sunday stores Saturday between 10 aimed at affecting the entire store. affidavit with the to decide what a.m. and 2 p.m., and plan to store and not just the sale of motions jn the trial this they will file with the court continue to do so on future a particular product, was The committee hopes to He said the kcked off a month ago, Kay mobilize its today. Sachs added they Saturdays. forces for said. were seriously considering Boycotters future door-to-door are protesting He said the committee another motion to dismiss the sale of lettuce not campaigns and possible the began its campaign by boycotts against smaller indictment on picked by members of the boycotting the A&P in the retailers in the area. odav is the deadline for espionage, conspiracy and AFL-CIO, United Farm Brookfield Plaza, but two A&P officials refused S on the MSU theft charges. Workers union. They asking shoppers to purchase are weeks ago it extended its comment on the to •ent payroll to file Previous motions for Saturday boycotts to the effectiveness of the boycott only lettuce bearing the ption certificates with dismissal have been denied, United Farm Workers label. remaining stores. when contacted Sunday. mvtoII division. (350 and Ellsberg has said he Picketers and supporters Wtration Bldg.). for does not want to move for a of the boycott believe that l-y's payroll. Graduate mistrial because of the the Teamsters and other line for the May 15 possibility the government r BECAUSE OF grower's unions have Petitions for positions on lis May 7. could try him and Russo Definite ignored the lettuce pickers, the 1973-74 senior council nv single student again. are now YOU¬ being accepted. THS 6OH DON'T ^ less than $2,050, or U.S. Dist. Court Judge Arturo Vazquez, MSU senior from Anyone who will be a senior Itied students filing Matt Byrne warned parties California, (right) says that the picketing which in the 1973-74 school SET... has gone on at the Brookfield Plaza year and earning less than in the case Friday that if the A&P for the last five Saturdays has had a definite is eligible for a CAT TMF. FWVSCR*) tyo. may ^''e ^or impact on prospective of M position. Liddy - Hunt theft occured, customers the store. He and Kathy Dahlin (left) are Estate news Deadline for applications is I THE RA>|N AIN'T Option from it could indicate a "taint ( I members of the Lansing Lettuce Boycott Group. May 11 and applications are vjfrr... jholding of federal evidence" in the four State News photo by Susan Sheiner available in 307 - Student [ C at rne BRtweax) month - old trial. Services Bldg. VES. (OLLEGI FACULTIES It's MONDAY MADNESS .. AT Women still minority DOMINO'S :LAURA MILLER year, it is doubtful those comprise 36.4 per cent of the report indicated. teNews Staff Writer n faculty at MSU figures Perrin said. will be reached, the 17.1 assistant per professors, cent of the HEW also reported that the proportion of women PIZZA let universities across University administrators Sitry will again be far say a low turnover rate in associate professors and faculty has changed little in Same speedy free delivery, 36.8 per cent of instructors. the past 10 years, rising ,:;d by men this the job market has The sharpest rise in the from 19 per cent in 1962 li report issued by a hampered their efforts in proportion of women has but pizza at special prices. men! agency revealed increasing women faculty. been at the instructor Ifevel, '"l Perrin said the Dept. of Health, administration has made a The State News is published by the students of A 12' I I A 16 item and Welfare good faith effort and one item one Michigan State University every class day during Fall, j)reported women will progress is being only 22.5 per cent made. Winter and Spring school terms, Mondays, Pizza and 2 Pizza and 4 The women's programs nation's full ■ time Wednesdays and Fridays during Summer Term, and a office and the provost's je and university office will continue to special Welcome Week edition is published in Pepsi s only Pepsi's only I Women will also September. Subscription rate is $16 per ear. monitor women faculty Member Associated Press, average salaries that I $2,500 less than interviewing and hiring, he Jnited International, Inland Daily Press Asst., Michigan Press s2°° «■«. sooo w tax inc. said. Press Assn., Associated Collegiate Press, Michigan Mlecounterparts, the I I 'tilted. "There are those who Collegiate Press Assn. 351-7100 351-7100 think we are not going fast Second class postage paid at East Lansing, Mich. le exact 1972 ■ 73 for MSU will not be enough," Perrin said, "but Editorial and business offices at 345 Student Services Good4/30/73 only. I No other Good4/30/73 only. No other some of those who take that ,l»ble until July, Bldg., Michigan State University, East Lansing, coupons may be combined with I coupons may be combined with stand are not aware of all administrators Michigan, 48823. this offer. Trowbridge shop only. this offer. the factors." Trowbridge shop only. that MSU will reflect The HEW report also said "al statistics. Phones: that the national average Perrin. vice News/Editorial 355-8252 tot of salary of women faculty is Classified Ads 355-8255 University $2,500 less than their male open thnrsday and friday i said MSU had Display Advertising 353-6400 21 per cent women counterparts. Preliminary Business Office 355-3447 evenings until nine figures indicated that of the tot year, and that Photographic 355-8311 197.633 men and 57,297 Campus Information 353-8700 j® for this year women on full time J* close to the contracts, male faculty earn an average of $14,352, , year, the average while women receive ,s of men with $11,865. »* »t *ere a'so MSU, at all The survey also revealed iVo More Fl higher than that only 9.7 per cent of all ®f women at the same female faculty members in ''most all instances. the country have achieved «"ment figures may the rank of professor % higher than those compared with 25.5 per j because le8es statistics cent of all males. Women with entirely II 'acuity were RENT A STEREO 1969. tenured women comprised 10.5 per Jhe faculty at MSU. w°men - -*Mt 12.2 faculty per cent NEJAC TV RENTALS iniversity faculty, of 14.6 337-1 300 " per »t for next **★*★★★★*★★★ Pocket size flash from !!?*a & Coke * Kollei makes flash bulk* Miss J's leather Special } obsolete! ★ 2(H) flu*h<'* on two accessories for action. are revved .in-jean-ious * . ® delivers Alkaline AA ballerit'M bag and belt get the casual look V*iJrS °* fcj a 3r medium medil,r" (12") (12") 1 item ^ ★ ASA .">() all together and head for where it's happening. L*rge <16 o*-> Cokes - aKin9"6"> item Soft envelope shoulder bag has adjustable strap, valiidd Wjt^uand Rollei E15B Flash wjth th!"J 4 Larfle _ (16 oz.) Cokes lots of compartments. Tan or black, 9*914", $20. *M30 1 is ad on Monday & Tuesday n». Onlv $2396 3°andMayl(1973 Multi-color hand-painted belt has cartoon motif and big brass buckle, sizes M and L. 114'' wide, $10. ijA&ofp* VARSITY! E.G"»"Kive, ****★★★★★★★★ 332-6517 } 524 E. Michigan 484-7414 JacdbSoriS s EDITORIALS v POINT OF VIEW [ Oil companies Who defends C in energy By VIRGINIA E. ROSS the majority of votes. Hie margin is As to the employes who suddenly self-improvement in ,h , Vice president close, but the final decision will not be on a Sunday afternoon proceeding the employment, who are willing to sh Today's "triumph over companies, though, have few MSU Employes Assn. reached until the Michigan second election, became supervisors, experience and education with J* adversity" award goes to the 13 complaints. Employment Relations Commission most do not qualify as supervisors employes. This does not make th Some matters regarding the counts all the ballots. Then, and only under the state definition. They are supervisors. Most do not h major American oil companies While the message does end a clerical-technical position and election authority to hire, fire, nc who have weathered the energy then, will a unit be certified and employes with years of service, as well on campus need clarification. reprimand - all they do'is si quota system on oil imports, it More than five years ago, a group of recognized, as voluntary education for crisis so well that their first - are classified and offers a generous consolation concerned clerical-technical employes pain quarter profits have jumped 10 ^ clerical-technical employes if prize to companies fearing the started holding meetings. Object: truth, they were supervisore, it to 58 per cent. influx of "cheap foreign oil." Organization, and recognition by the mcr&tiq. but: xpowhuihk:-**ma*/" been MSU administration, as the bargaining never recognized' Texaco Inc. reported a 14.8 Offshore lands available for remunerative manner unit. Nights and lunch hours were per cent rise in net income on a exploration and exploitation will spent contacting other concerned reclassification of they are employment°Th' entitled to vote, have th rise in revenue to about $2.5 be tripled and new tax employes - finally forming the nucleus vote count, and to make billion. Exxon their wish Corp., one of the deductions on well-building will of an organization. More meetings, and known. biggest international oil be set. eventually a constitution and by • laws The board of companies, reported a 43.1 per were drafted, revised, rewritten, and directors, elected Not concerned clerical-technical surprisingly, Nixon's finally accepted by those interested en.plov- cent increase in its quarterly net have been "wooed but not message has caught criticism enough to come to meetings, to won" figures. And oil company contribute mentally, physically and representatives of the employ from environmentalists and federation. executives expect the financially, to what evolved as the They sent in their '« lawmakers. They claim it only MSU Employes Assn. guns" seeking a merge. We, as escalating trend to continue. vo superficially deals with the need Aha! A larger and more affluent representatives, would have L- to conserve energy and rejects "parent - type" organization - the traitors had we done other than Such success must be refu American Federation of Labor cast We were offered choice comforting news to the less more research on energy sources. - tidbits, b longing eyes on the group and started stood fast by our convictions • fortunate Society of However the heated recruiting for their own organization. yours! The people currently serving All sorts of goodies were offered as the board of directors have Independent Gasoline Marketers controversy ends, the costs of integri inducements, financed by dues paid by and are vitally interested in the of America, which recently the changes to be made in welfa hard working "members" of locals of the clerical-technical estimated that about 1,000 of its employes. America's gluttonous style of under the "protective umbrella" of the 2 1,000 member stations energy consumption will American Federation of Labor. Alas - The employes association can nationwide have already shut they could not - and did not secure anything any organization can do, inevitably put the burden for down, victims of dwindling enough signed authorizations to can do it better. They can bet change on the consumer. He will petition an election. The successful represent the employes gasoline supplies at refineries. - because it have to give up on his gas buggy efforts of the employes group brought the clerical-technical employes. It in favor of more it to fruition, and the American not ruled by outsiders nor ii Some energy experts are Federation of energy-economical means of State, County and necessary to send vast sums of mo already predicting the end of the Municipal Employes rode our coat to maintain state, national transportation such as mass That first independent along with cut rate transit. tails as the intervenor. international offices and employ- election proved that clerical-technical « gasoline. employes do want representation Now, there is an even larger job Certainly President Nixon's Eventually, the oil companies, The second (run-off) election was be done, and we need help from recent message on the energy in turn, will have to stop gloating not won by the employes federation as clerical-technical employes. An ai the distinguished C. Patric Larrowe meeting is in the offing and remetti crisis which is not expected to about profits and start thinking would lead you to believe. At this this is your organization. Offer yo nave a significant effect for at seriously about questions more point, the employes association has assistance. We need you!. least three years, holds few hopes pressing to society than the for either the independents or condition of their next quarterly budget-conscious consumers. Oil statement. PWi JAMES RESTON Laying Litter is a constant flutter of limit recycling program and is another (c) 1973 NEW YORK TIMES Corrupting U.S. politics of the burglary and bugging of the Republican fund-raisers, or the calls in distributed suggesting all kinds NEWS SERVICE Democratic headquarters, and see that the night, the dirty tricks and the immoral relationships by ti pain to the esthetic beauty of the convenient way for the The forgotten factor in the Democratic candidates, the people who broke the law, who sabotage against Muskie, McGovern University campus and it's good community to combat litter. Watergate case is that it is only the most committed perjury, or who obstructed and Humphrey. apparently been accepted by m< The Waste Control dramatic part of a much wider to see -the Waste Control justice be punished. people as the normal corruption Authority's campaign of the past political conspiracy. Everybody seems But this is one of those complicated So, if there is now to be a total American politics. "Everybody do Authority doing something to to be concentrating now on punishing disclosure of the corruption in the last clean up the mess. weekend is an effective prelude problems where the people who it!" the people who planned, financed or presidential campaign, it will not be to the massive spring dredging of actually hroke the law may have done Specially - marked litter boxes approved the illegal espionage of the less good enough to deal only with the So now there is a brutal i damage than the people who were placed in buildings across the Red Cedar River. Students Democrats at the Watergate, but very problem of espionage at the Watergate. conspicuous corruption in Americl little attention is being paid to the merely evaded the law. Maybe the It will have to go campus last Friday for students and faculty members could do espionage by Liddy, McCord, and the beyond the politics, a moral apathy and spiritij MSU and the environment a people who organized the disruption other convicted conspirators - though espionage, the burglary and the bewilderment in the land, and t| to use as refuse containers. and the sabotage of the Democrats in it clear violation of the law bugging in Washington, to the sabotage chances are that it won't be removj "Litter is Ugly" bumper stickers favor by taking part in the the presidential campaign. was a - was of the Democratic candidates, and the not as disruptive of the American by indicting the culprits were also given out to promote a cleanup, and help make the Red Everybody now seems to be corruption of how money was raised, Watergate affair or by cleaning out tj political process as the money deep - seated hate for paper and Cedar a prettier river to look at. saying that we have to get at the facts corruption by Stans and the other concealed, and finally diverted to White House staff. finance not only espionage but also plastic and metal garbage. sabotage. This is not primarily a legal, li Students can also rescue the rather a philosophic problem, and enl You don't have to break the law a human tragedy. State News each day from the like these Watergate burglars to fiery depths of an incinerator influence presidential elections. You Henry Kissinger said in New Yd and instead recycle the paper for can merely organize a Dept. of Dirty the other day that after all i future issues. Boxes in residence Tricks on the side. You can call up tragedies of the Watergate an voters in New Hampshire and ask them halls are designated after justice is done, "Then \ for the to vote for Ed Muskie because he have to ask ourselves whether we d wants to give blacks a home in the afford an orgy of recrimination,! state, or because he favors busing or whether we should not keep in ml John Borger, editor - in - chief; Charlie abortion. It is dirty but legal. Cain, managing editor; Michael Fox, that the United States will be t' editorial editor. You can get your young guys to longer than any'particular crisis..." Bill Holstein, campus editor; Mike Cody, volunteer in opposition headquarters, copy chief; Bill Whiting, photo editor; Gary to Scharrer, sports editor; Jim Bush, staff pass on the opposing candidate's Well, nobody wants an "orgyl association representative. schedule and the advance text of his recrimination," nor would anyd Beth Ann Masalkoski, advertising speech, to arrange for people to heckle deny the need for compassion, but I manager; Lee Lockwood, asst. advertising manager; John Greening, asst. advertising him, and to tell off the television Watergate characters are not really main thing. The people who raised I | manager; AI Kirleis, circulation manager. people in advance, so that the confrontation makes good pictures for money and concealed its source, f Members of the board of directors; Vic the network news shows. the people who organized the saboti Spaniolo, president; Debbie White, vice president; Carolyn Stieber, secretary - of the American political process,! treasurer; Frank Senger; Roland Williams; The possibilities of this kind of probably more to blame than f Tom Riordan; Al Wilke; Michael Orr. political corruption are endless. burglars at the Watergate, Letters were sent out in the Florida somehow they are getting away « The Michigan State News is a seven - time primary last year under Muskie's name it, which is the final irony of I recipient of the Pacemaker Award for outstanding journalism. proposing policies which were highly whole tragedy. The Watergate and! unpopular to Florida voters. courts are not the end of all this, J 'ANYONE WANT TO TAKE THE MARTHA CALL?' Anonymously printed "flyers" were rather only the beginning. Two Did University per To the Editor: him innocent. In instructions. This juror then flippantly talking to one of the John Royal, former MSU student, jurors after the trial we discovered that added that "John won't serve time Cents was found guilty of "obstructing an officer" on April 19 in Ingham County Circuit court. A jury of 10 women and many of the jurors had been undecided as to his guilt. They felt anyway." But the jury isn't the villain in this there were too many contradictions in case, it was merely a pawn. Given the 2 men did the deed after receiving both the prosecution and defense jurors' white middle-class instructions from Judge Marvin J. Worth Salmon. These instructions specified that if the jury had reasonable doubt testimonies to make a decision, so they decided in favor of the police and the university, which clear-cut middle-aged background, it is not surprising that they chose to believe the police and not Royal and other as to Royal's guilt they were to find was contrary to the judge's eyewitnesses. LETTER POLICY MSU had clearly decided to get The State News welcomes all letters. Letters Abortions Royal on some charge and make an example of him. Royal was arrested by to the editor should be typed double space with 65 space counts on each line. To the Editor: Hasn't anybody told the "Students As a legal medical operation, abortion services should be available at a plain-clothes MSU cop, who was also a student at the time. The point of all this is that Boiling To the Editor: that one mad had not been cleaned \ United for Life" and their vocal leader all licensed, registered hospitals. The Last Friday's blow-up of a soldered 1969. Does it take property daw Letters must be signed and President Wharton will make that the U.S. Supreme Court ruled 7 - University Health Center qualifies as include hometown, student, 2 that abortions are now legal? statements-as he did last spring-that joint on the hot water heater located and near-personal injuryin the (as r«I such and therefore should — offer between 1404 and 1405 Spartan Village police officers who were faculty or staff standing, Somehow this small handful of he is opposed to the war and that local phone number and students have completely ignored the complete medical service. If a medical legitimate protest will be allowed, but and the prior boiling of water when the joint blew) to P <1 local address. No unsigned procedure is both legal and safe, wl.y highlights the dangers which result married housing into taking P1 when those protests begin to have a letters will be accepted, but legality of this issue and concentrated must people go to another city or state when safety precautions are neglected care of their heating units? I concrete effect on war recruiting or only on their own view of morality. for their health care? To deny that the State News will The University policy, the University will and worn out parts are not replaced. I suggest married l|0llsl "I withhold author's name in morality of abortion is a personal choice to the majority would seem The responsibility for this mishap lies immediately to have a P" 1 harass and arrest people in hopes of matter which each individual must unconstitutional, given the present extreme cases Letters may decide for him or herself. We hope stifling protest and diverting them with Married Student Housing. inspector check the units at le 1 Supreme Court ruling. i wonder when 1 be edited for clarity and that the board of trustees knows that a Gail Wingard Sciamanna from opposing the war. plumbing was inspector the last time checked the a a year so preventativ | conciseness so more letters required, can take place. small group of vocal mothers picketing East Lansing graduate student Cheryl Scott numerous boiler rooms to inspect the be can accommodated. Letters will not be edited the health center with their "wanted and two other* functioning of the units as well as the Jon Z"Pj for content. children" does not represent the entire David S, Sciamanna Political Defense Committee safety devices' conditions. i know, New York graduate stul MSU student body. East Lansing osteopathic student April 23,1973 from writing on the blown heater, that April 2A, f State News, East Lansing, Michigan Michigan Monday. April 30, 1973 5 UNANIMOUS ASMSU OK OBA funds released By MIKE LaNOUE The vote came after a Since the State News only over the hiring of the State News Staff Writer recent finding by the entire became independent of the general manager, the Without much discussion ASMSU Board that OBA University in July 1971, editor-in-chief and the or hesitation the policy was not in violation of questions about the advertising manager- committee of ASMSU voted student rights in the Conrad newspaper's affiliation with The $1 fee is a unanimously Thursday, to incident. the University, corporate substantial part of the total take a freeze off Office of Charles Massoglia, status and the student fee budget of the State News, Black Affairs (OBA) funds chairman of the committee, have been questioned, but Borger said, adding however that has been imposed on said that ASMSU still has only recently has ASMSU that the majority of revenue the organization since last control over how monies felt the need for the State News to have a comes November because of the allocated to the OBA are hearing on State News' from advertising. Conrad incident. spent. But he added that status student paper. as a Borger told the The group also talked at any money the organization Massoglia made it clear committee that the State raises on its own will be out some length about State that the action of ASMSU News profits from last year, News operations. of the jurisdiction of the State News was by on which amounted to about The Conrad ASMSU. no means incident binding or official $40,000 were put into two involved the banning of all Following the OBA but was simply a hearing to areas. non blacks from attending decision, the board held a gain input on a matter Half of the money was an address by Stokley lengthy discussion of the brought to the committee's put into a State News State News Carmichael, which was corporate attention. John Borger. reserve fund, which is aimed sponsored by the OBA. structure and $1 fee, which editor-in-chief of the State at having a reserve of one The had recently come under News controversy described the year's operating funds for fire by various groups in the Thin air h surrounded the legality of this move and resulted in community. corporate structure newspaper of the emergency use, and the rest of the money was given to including the the subsequent withdrawal Complaints have been board of directors and their the Committee Four canvas straps can provide a lot of fun when coordination, of ASMSU funds to the made that the State News is of function at the request of Alternative Voices, for they are tied to trees and used to test balance and State News photo by Susan Sheiner organization. not a student newspaper the committee. papers to be used at the and that it is not He said that the board of a Alternative Voices' nonprofit corporation. directors exercises control discretion. IKS 2-DISTRICT VOTERS GOP to study lyJANET SHUBITOWSKI - Abbot residence halls. The committee has image. Sneeringer said that if In Meridian Township it being closely examined in ■ State News Staff Writer just was hoped something would East Lansing precinct 16. ■ East Lansing voting completed a study of two someone was found to have be found to upset the The study will be made Meridian Township voted in two districts, he Ijcinct 16 will face review county commissioner's race by volunteers checking L the Ingham County precincts which revealed would be used as an in which Republican voting records for the names Kpublican party to that no one from either example of what would incumbent Charles White of those who voted in the Btermint' if there were any precinct had voted in happen to anyone who was lost to Democrat John 1972 election, followed by different districts. caught. Hopefully, the pug irregularities in the Veenstra, Sneeringer said. phone calls to those people 2 election. Sneeringer, apparently Republicans could then Sneeringer would not say to insure that they cast their not satisified with the prosecute, he said. | Eidon Sneeringer, results, asked the party to which elective office was ballots in only one district. ■uirman of the study pnittee, said there was approve the study . I particular reason that Jim Pocock, who ran net t 16 that it was is chosen heavily unsucessfully against II Lynn Jondahl for state representative from East Milliken names group jtnocratic. ■ Precinct 16 includes Lansing, protested to review role of GOP s Snyder and Mason continuing the study. He said the committee should be content with the results Election from the two Meridian Gov. Milliken has The 18 member the - committee, said that precincts. Republican appointed a committee to Revision and 1972 had been a highly ■M workers arc needed "It's just a waste of time the role of the review Development Committee successful year for the > the PIRGIM Board of to continue this study," he will attempt to answer such Ilcpublican party in the Republicans. election on said. "Our activities should 1970's with a view towards questions as what the "However," he said, "we day. Workers will work be directed in a more modernization and securing Republican party is, where need to revise the base of I a.m. to 5 p.m. and positive direction." It Is goifig, what it is ' more support. th« Ingham 111 lie paid $1.70 an hour. trying the party in Michigan to "Continuing this study County Republicans to do. and how it can best allow for more participation I*further information call will just give us (the announced the be done. at April of youth and minorities." |U266. Republican party) a poor meeting Thursday. Milliken, in appointing Jeff Pillon, cochairman )NESBURY of the East Lansing by Garry Trudeau Republican Committee, saw the change as a step forward I'M sofwy, oeAP, for the party. I Mmp you've I mm „ uejuiT cant « «temM HUH7 RffOPO QtNUen I • 5 3 D. UiHfn 90 MyvoRE ym "Any group," he said, 1 • "• yoo M£W mTHER. S/)/S "especially a political party, •m HOMC IT'S A should be open to change. It's really important that we look and see how we are running and responding to the public. "We're a good party, but we want to be even better." The revision committee will hold open hearings at Human sculpture 7:30 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday in Capital Rooms The Gazebo Street Theater Company at Western Michigan University built human A and B in the Olds Plaza, sculpture during their performance at Snyder Phillips Hall Friday night. FINE. PAT7V.,.Uh...C0UlP 10U Lansing. State News photo by David Schmier HOLD THE LINE A MiNlTE ? I The Ingham County THINK SOMEONE'S AT THE PCCK.. Republicans are also concerned over the many members who have not paid this year's dues. Julie Abraham, membership chairman, said that dues collections are far behind last year's rate. With TWA it pays to be young. Armed with just your Stutelpass. and a pack on your back, you can got a lot more for a lot less with TWA. _ Here are some ways we help. Stutelpass. Kor a rneiv $5.20 a night you'll lv iranteed student hotel accommodations Kettle the least" without reservations in European cities. That includes breakfast, I Combination tips, service charges and. believe it or not. even some sightseeing Pick Stutelpass Coupon Hooks at up your any TWA of lie* or- see your Campus Rep. I A cilP of hot and hearty soup Destination Europe Pack. r°m our kettles and A free pack lull of everything you need to know about getting around when you asmall version don't know the language well enough to °* the "olde world" sandwich ask. Student flights, student touts, Kurail pass application. 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