Michigan State University East Lansing, Michigan 48824 Nixon responds to subpena to submit partial transcripts FROM WIRE SERVICES participate in a subsequent coverup. In releasing them to the committee His action, Nixon accurate. WASHINGTON - President Nixon said, would quash and the public, Nixon said, he is the "vague general "Every day lost to Watergate is a day will respond to a House impression of massive breaching the principle of presidential lost to the subpena today wrongdoing" in the nation's highest world," Nixon said, adding by making public 1,200 pages of office. confidentiality, but considers it necessary that, "In giving you these records, to do so to clear transcript from presidental conversations. Nixon said he has nothing to hide, and up the Watergate case. blemishes and all, I am placing my trust In a 35-minute televised The President also said he does not in the American people." speech the tapes will show it. Monday night, Nixon said he would send know how the celebrated 18'/4-minute "As for myself, I intend to go forward The chief executive gap the partial transcripts to the House acknowledged that in one tape recording, from June 20, to the best of my ability for the work portions of the conversations are 1972, could have occurred. But he said he Judiciary Committee today and permit ambiguous because they are recordings of you elected me to do," Nixon said. two ranking members of the committee is certain it was not done individuals "just thinking out loud." purposely by to visit the White House to listen his secretary, Rose Mary Woods. "I personally had no knowledge of the to the "Never before have records so Nixon said again that he knew break-in before it occurred, I had no tapes to certify their authenticity. private nothing Nixon went on television at 9 p.m. been made public," he said, adding that of Watergate involvement or coverup knowledge of the coverup until March 21, he until Dean told him about it on March I never offered clemency," Nixon said. Monday in an effort to blunt was placing his trust "in the basic "The facts are there, the record of action impeachment moves, but his strategy fairness of the American 21,1973. people." is there." provoked critical comments from Nixon said he is making public more Nixon said Dean's disclosures on March 21, 1973, were "a Before Nixon went on the three congressional leaders. 1,200 pages of transcripts of private sharp surprise" to him. The President said he asked more networks, which serve 614 television Turning to stacks of notebooks at his conversations he held between Sept. 16, side, a somber President Nixon said the 1972, and April 27, 1973, with regard to than 150 questions of Dean. He stations, House Speaker Carl Albert quoted material "will tell it all" about his denials Watergate. Dean as saying at the time he could tell questioned the propriety of the President of any role in the Nixon had no knowledge of the case. taking his case to the public before he Watergate coverup. He said responded to the committee. Sharply attacking the Senate they include all relevant In Senate testimony, Dean had said testimony of his former counsel and chief portions of all subpenaed conversations. that at a meeting on the "Is the President to have access to The President said he would morning of make March 21, Nixon said he was national television for any Watergate accuser, John W. "Dean* impressed purpose Nixon traced for a national audience his HI, public not only these transcripts, but also with Dean's whatsoever?" Albert asked. knowledge of the Watergate activities in the Watergate transcripts covering tape recordings of 19 case and its ramifications, "but he did not Immediate reaction of judiciary controversy. other conversations, and more than 700 seem committee members was divided over He said he was waiving the precedent White House particularly concerned with their documents, which already whether Nixon's formula for response of executive privilege to make public the implications..." have been delivered to the would be acceptable. Rodino had said House In saying that he would make transcripts of dozeiys of private committee and the earlier that the committee wanted the presidential conversations. Watergate special transcripts available to the House prosecutor. committee weighing his impeachment, tapes of 42 subpened conversations and But he said such disclosure was would not accept partial Nixon acknowledged there are Nixon said the senior transcripts. necessary to prove to the public he committee ambiguities in the transcripts, and that However, Hutchinson said: "If it personally had no knowledge of the members, Rep. Peter Rodino, D-N.J., and they include material that will be represents the complete record of Edward Hutchinson, R-Mich., need Watergate break-in and did not only Watergate... then I think it would be embarrassing to him and to his aides. satisfy themselves that the transcripts are adequate." Potted I Marijuana plants are growing in residence hall windows across campus, and on - campus marijuana violations are up 72 per cent Inadequate financial I over 1973, according to campus police. Many students are growing victim of I their own to beat the increased marijuana prices, which have jumped [ from approximately $15 to $20 during the year. State News photo by Dale Atkins First of a four-par' series million short this year. "It is concluded that Michigan now college costs increasing the financial aid office to determine a "What middle America is saying is that student's eligibility for aid, calculated we are not going to sacrifice. We are not By DIANE SILVER faces an extensive dollar deficiency in from either the Parent's Confidential State News Staff Writer student aid," the Michigan Dept. of going to give up all the things we now Statement or Student's Financial have," Porter said. "Therefore, it is damn Another tuition increase threatens MSU Education said in a December 1973 Rising arrests Statement by the College Scholarship hard to find any additional income to as just one more step in the trend that report. "This problem is likely to grow to Service. Need is determined by calculating finance a college education." may soon price many students out of a even larger proportions unless prompt how much a student or his family will be corrective action is taken. The unmet need Dykema said that he had hoped that a college education. able to contribute to the cost of college. law passed this month to make students At MSU and across the nation, students will constantly grow due to inflationary "We have some major problems in the from middle • income families are caught between continually rising costs factors alone, even if all else remains whole aid area," Dykema said. "What we automatically eligible for [fail to reduce a Guaranteed and a financial aid system that is static." need is a general overhaul of the whole currently Student Loan would lessen the financial inadequate and can offer no guarantee of Though financial aid funds are federal financial aid system. problems of middle - income families. The keeping pace with soaring tuition and inadequate to cover current needs, is there "We've had many students who have law, introduced by Rep. James O'Hara, D - room and board costs. any hope that they can keep up with rising had difficulty proving that they have high Utica, affects students from families with In nine years, MSU's annual tuition has costs in the future? need for financial aid or proving that they risen $400 for in • state students and $700 "I don't think there is any guarantee of adjusted gross incomes of $15,000, which have any need at all," Dykema continued. is between $18,000 and $20,000 real growing of pot for out - of - state students. that," Henry Dykema, director of MSU's University "Many of the parents of these students income. officials are predicting that tuition as well financial aid office said. "At MSU our have fixed obligations to meet, like paying The Guaranteed Student Loan is a as room and board will probably be administration and trustees are concerned for a home or car. With the cost of living federal program in which commercial increased again in the fall. with aid and will do everything in their continually going up, many are hard • banks loan money to students in return power to make certain it does not suffer. pressed to pay for their children's college for the federal government's guarantee of The United States Office of "As to what will happen with state and Two student pot farmers, whose current education." repayment. Education predicts that average costs for federal programs, I'm not sure I can say residence hall crop numbers about 10 "There is truth to the middle - income Dykema now fears the law will prove four years at a public JOE KIRBY plants, said they are growing marijuana university could they will be able to keep pace unless there complaint," John Porter, State useless under the current economic increase 33 per cent by 1978 and 80 is a decided rearranging of national State News Staff Writers just because they wanted to see what it per Superintendent of Public Instruction, said. situation. The prime lending rate has looks like. cent by 1983. priorities." "It is obvious that the needs analysis used recently risen so high that banks lend first Traditionally, hard - pressed students Some educators feel adequate funding by the federal government has caused to institutions from whom they can ■ Campus drug arrests have mushroomed "Why wouldn't a person do it, unless he have sought relief from soaring costs with of aid programs would make it possible for afraid of getting caught?" one of the problems." receive high return on their loan. The ■js year, but students from that fact hasn't deterred was two said. "Hie seeds are everywhere." financial aid. However, today the refuge of every student who needs financial aid to For example, a fully employed auto banks a cultivating their financial aid appears to have become receive funds. However, others say that are unwilling to participate in the Kj })rand of marijuana in their theHishome ■"fence hall rooms. roommate said the two hope to use woefully inadequate. even full funding of worker makes too much money for his son relatively unprofitable student loan - grown plants to beat the high programs can never or daughter to qualify for several aid program, Dykema said. Thus, students are prices of "commercial" pot. Michigan's colleges and universities help all needy students because the system programs. BCampus police have recorded 93 The campus police say they realize that estimated that for the 1972 of needs analysis bars some middle increasingly unable to get loans. - 73 school - However, Porter said he believes that "cotics violations so far this •osed to 54 for the year as people are growing pot plants but they lack year they were $40 million short of funds income students from being eligible for middle - income families have the financial The philosophical controversies surrounding same period in the manpower to stop it. to fill all students' financial needs. aid. They resources to finance their children's the creation of a new financing system for higher |'d, an increase of 72 per cent. Even though the police are not looking estimated that they would be about $30 The needs analysis serves as the basis for college education. education will be discussed Wednesday. for plant growers, three students have ■^P'- Adam J. Zutaut, head of the been charged with having plants in their Hp- of Public Safety, said there has been possession in the last two weeks, the latest ■Kir l° Crack down on narcotics Eh. E* arrest occurring Sunday when officers llp ^parpntly was not aware spotted plants in a Holmes Hall window. an Increase until he recently Zutaut said arrests for pot cultivation in State energy chief tries to insure ■H*,™ fig^s for a reporter. residence halls usually are a result of an "finitely don't go looking for it," officer serving warrants or answering ■nut said. |H«, unrelated complaints and noticing the added that about 95 per cent of the plants in the room. lice I coincidental, occuring when an "But a person is asking for a visit from * adequate gas supplies for needy officer if he's growing pot plants in the By R. D. CAMPBELL The Emergency Energy Act, approved by the legislature in window," Zutaut said. State News Staff Writer January, provided $571,200 for setting up the Energy Office but IT,; ™"<' 1969 . 70 fiscal year \ K .arrests-for 1970 71 there • A student two weeks ago reported seeing what he thought might have been A czar named William bailed out a priest named week in the eastern Upper Peninsula. Anthony last the office is authorized only through June 30. Archer is optimistic that the legislature will continue the life of two plainclothes policemen who were fKS' and for 1971 • 72 ^ere looking in windows at Holmes Hall. The student said he heard the two talking The Rev. Anthony Gateville, had been running low Polkosky, pastor of St. Stanislaus parish in on gas supplies. The only filling the office. In the a 69 - page report to lawmakers on the success of Energy Office last week, the Public Service Commission (PSC) station in Ithis'wu0" " camPus drug raid thus about which rooms had marijuana plants allocation. town made short work of Father Polkosky said he was borrowing draining its monthly said it was "absolutely vital" to continue projects of the office ft whLar iuppened at ® am- 00 APril in them and that they were taking notes of gas from already underway and to develop long - term energy conservation | when three MSU students were what they saw. farmers in his parish who had their own pumps. strategy. tiiu" and charged with the sale of But Zutaut said the campus police do Then he found out about a giant cache of gas — 3 percent of With higher gas prices and the lifting of the Arab oil embargo, E?'co?lneand LSD. not use undercover police for that purpose Michigan's monthly total — that is reserved for allocation at the Lj wh:S„a|'tl l[je Tri ■ County Metro V ie? enforces state dru8 '«ws and that the student was probably discretion of the new Energy Office within the state Public Archer does not think gas rationing will occur, but nevertheless he envisions a return to the contemplative off - the - road life. mistaken. Service Commission. Last week William Archer, chief of the Men and 1?!!eeie<' those arrests in Marijuana possession on campus "It's time for Americans to slow down. We're always trying to Energy Office who hates being thought of as czar "because you lice assi<;tinrt ihalls'with the camPus prosecuted as a state violation, rather than know what happens to czars," sent 300 gallons of gas to Fr. get an edge on everybody," he said. "Beat 'em to this and beat •WlSSn! aPPrehension of the a violation of the more liberal East Lansing pot ordinance. Hie East Lansing Polkosky. 'em to that. It's not good for people," Archer said. Since February Archer and his Energy Office staff have been He maintains that the "height of affluence" has been passed ordinance specifies a penalty of $5 for i!which K,rt tu curb the rising cost of possession of less than two ounces, while a trying to insure adequate gas supplies to farmers, police, firemen and that it is time for a new era of conservation and recycling to KJ11 abouttest iik . founts fcoun" has"as Tn< increased similar infraction of the state law can and others affected by the gas shortage. replace the "society of waste." I year m! $2° Per ounce in the result in a one - year sentence and/or a, Hardship gasoline allocations for last week totaled 786,960 flilons, rind m2y st.udents have taken to $1,000 fine. plus 114,400 gallons of diesel fuel and 127,255 gallons of fuel oil. Even though Michigan is an energy • dependent state with only ms n)uana "i their residence hall However, city police are not required to During each of the last three months the Energy Office has 4 percent of supplies coming from in - state resources. Archer said use the city law, and MSU police cannot that Michigan is dealing more effectively with energy • related allocated approximately 10 million gallons of gasoline to meet use it. |a|?leWee7S97rvey, P in them of four residence J ',ndows which had The state law is under attack by a citizens' group which is collecting petition temporary shortages. "We have gone from a gas crisis to a gas problem," said the problems than any of its sister states. Innovative plans to prevent summer motorists from becoming F c°unteH ^ ,twn#y resembling pot signatures to put the decriminalizationof sandy • haired energy chief. "I think the public should still be stranded on gas - deficient weekends are also being developed. aware that we have a problem so that we don't move back to P *indow« ^ the pla"ts in upper ij marijuana on the November ballot. The crisis stage." the Archer hints. n°ibeen * marijuana. P^itively group needs to collect 300,000 voter I uul could have Archer's administrative assistant said many drivers who no signatures by July 1 to get its wish. But what happens to czars? longer have to wait in long gas lines think that the problem is "The last one in Russia was executed, but don't quote me on ARCHER: "... time for Americans over. that," Archer said. to slow down." 2 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Tuesday, April 30, ^Michigan S Tough Watergate WASHINGTON - A New York federal court jury has provided cases prosecutors-a few weeks earlier at the trial of former presidential Chapin ahead was convicted on two of the four charges ■ In the Mitchell Stans trial, the government dramatic proof of what many lawyers in the special prosecutor's aide Dwight L Chapin. • the jury that either Cabinet member failed tn I office knew all along: None of the Watergate cases is going to be The Chapin case was much simpler than the Mitchell - Stans Intervened ill(Jli?>nvinctl easy. trial. Chapin, former appointments secretary to President Nixon, investigation of the activites of financier Robert I v 111 "I One problem for the prosecutors is the credibility of their was indicted on four counts of lying to a grand jury about the had contributed $200,000 to President Nixon's re i Court rules on censoring mail witnesses, especially John W. Dean III. political espionage activities of Donald H. Segretti. campaign. ' elec'ioi Another is the problem of convincing a jury that But the case proved more complicated than a simple matter of Both Mitchell, the former attorney general and St ■ Prison* officials may censor inmates' mail only to administration officials deliberately broke the law during the former commerte secretary, admitted that preserve order, security or rehabilitation within the 1972 campaign. demonstrating that what Chapin told the grand jury was not true. Chapin's lawyer, Jacob Stein, made the point that his client may they had discus^ institution, the Supreme Court held unanimously The acquittal of former Cabinet members Maurice H. Stans and have been mistaken in what he told the grand jury, but it was a John N. Mitchell only underscored the jolt received by the case of faulty memory — not of deliberate lying. Monday. It was the court's first pronouncement on prison regulations that restrict freedom of speech The justices struck down California prison' mail censorship regulations, saying they went too far in the direction of Chrysler quarter Securities and But Exchange Commission probe of Vesco' they denied they ever crossed the line separating J i! from an attempt to influence the case. ®1! ■ unjustified restrictions. In attempting to prove they did cross that line, the govom I The decision said: "Prison inmate officials may not censor correspondence simply to eliminate unflattering auto maker to raise depended heavily on the testimony of Dean and G Cook, a former SEC counsel and later chairman. Both men had severe credibility problems. or unwelcome opinions or factually inaccurate Cook had admitted he lied three times to a statements." DETROIT grand jury and (AP) - Chrysler million, down from last year's The beleaguered U.S. auto before August "to recover only to two congressional committees about the Vesco ci ™ In other major actions, the court rejected a bid by Corp., reporting its first record $89.8 million. Per • industry, affected by soaring a portion of the unrecovered Dean's credibility has been under attack ever sine .■ four large power companies for a review of the quarter profits dropped 98 per share earnings were three inflation and the energy crises' cost increases which have been appeared before the Senate Watergate committee last cent from last year, announced cents, off from $1.71 for impact on big car sales since accumulating since the start of accused President Nixon of Jmj M Environmental Protection Agency's authority to impose Monday that prices of its 1974 January' ■ March 1973, the firm December, has watched car the 1974 model production having had knowledge of hJI air pollution controls. model and trucks will go Watergate coverup. ""H cars said. sales during the quarter fall 27 run." Renuhiwl - The White House, principally through Senate The justices also refused to entertain objections of up an average $99 on The announcement of per cent from last year's record The latest increase is the leader Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania, has said that the presidrntyl environmentalists to the government's proposed New Wednesday. Chrysler's earnings decrease levels. third this model year for the tapes show that Dean lied to the Watergate committee The company said retail came three days after General Stock market analysts have company, which boosted prices I Melones Dam in California. But any evidence that Dean lied has yet to prices likely will go up Motors reported its first predicted the Big Three an average $183 last December prosecutor's office, which has some of the tapes in surface. The sdmuI The court did agree to decide next term whether again before July 31. quarter profits plummeted 85 collectively will report their and then tacked on a $28 said they do not contradict Dean. questional ■ President Nixon acted within statutory powers in Citing "world gasoline per cent from last year. The worst first quarter profit increase in February. Chrysler Thoses tapes are certain to be part of the withholding $9 billion appropriated by'Congress for shortages, inflation and fears of auto giant's per ■ share earnings returns in more than a decade. also has raised shipping at the Watergate coverup trial in which Mitchell is evidence introduced! a recession," the auto maker of 41 cents represented its oneof JII water pollution control. Ford will report its first charges $25 to $29 since defendants. ■ reported earnings of $1.6 lowest return since 1948. quarter earnings Tuesday. February. The court also declined to review conflicting. lo'wer With worldwide vehicle sales Two weeks ago, Chrysler Peter Fleming Jr., Mitchell's lawyer, also Dean's credibility during the New York trial when he effectively attackedl court decisions on whether a convicted defendant's off 14 per cent, and U.S. car President John Riccardo told a the fact that the former White House counsel had brcnhto^l rights are prejudiced if his attorney is not present at his sales down 20.3 per cent from stockholders' pleaded'guilty! sentencing. Police say drivers 197 3, Chrysler reported quarterly revenues of $2.7 1975 prices meeting that will go up "substantially" because costs to obstruction of justice and that he was government witness would help him avoid a prison sentence. hoping his role J\ Zebra deaths, others connected? billion, compared with $2.9 are soaring at a record pace. billion last year. Even with the latest price Mayor Joseph L. Alioto said Monday he believes the Zebra street killings of 12 whites by black gunmen in San Francisco may be related to 80 California murders obeying speed limit The company however, that sales from its overseas subsidiaries added, totaled increases, Townsend said, "total unrecovered costs from the start of the model year to The State News is jublished by the students of University Mondays, Wednesday, and Fridays during Summer Term, and a , Welcome Week edition is published in September. Michitan Sm. every class day during Fall, Winter and Spring school Subscription termi ' f 1 I UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL $800.3 million, the present time amount to since 1971. a 14.6 per cent "We're Michigan State Police reported Monday that for the first time increase from the record $177 per vehicle." dealing with folks .who have made 18 motorists have come to accept the 55 mile an hour speed limit $698.6 million reported during Like GM and Ford, Chrysler Lansing, Michinan, 48824. murderous assaults on San Franciscans and, in my first quarter 1973. has trimmed costs through which went into effect in early March and are obeying it. PHONES opinion. 80 murderous assaults on Californians - "By and large, it's being obeyed by citizens and this is our first Shortly after the auto maker production cutbacks and News/Editorial 35 5-8252 principally the East Bay area and the Los Angeles area - indication of that." said Lt. Col. Forrest Jacob, state police released its earnings statement, massive worker layoffs, but the Classified Ads 3S5-8255 . Chairman Lynn Townsend said auto maker said it still can't they're all documented cases," he told a news deputy director. Display Advertising 353*6400 Jacob said a preliminary hand count indicated that the average retail prices on cars, trucks and keep up with skyrocketing Business Office 355-3447 conference. options each will be hiked an overhead. Photographic 355-83U But later, when Alioto was asked if he was certain speed on the highways now is 55.3 m.p.h., down from a statewide average of 62 m.p.h. at this time last year. average 2.9 per cent. about the connection, the mayor said. "1 can't say that "It means that citizen respect for the 55 is there," Jacob said. And he warned another positively." However, he said there were never "any flagrant violations in increase probably will come "There have been 80 murders with n similar pattern - significant numbers." Jacob denied reports of a state police crackdown over the namely random killings of whites in circumstances where there is no motive involved. I didn't say they were connected at all." weekend on motorists traveling at speeds greater than 55 saying there was "no special emphasis" on speeders. The 55 m.p.h. limit was imposed March 3 in an effort to m.p.h., QUARTS OF COKE conserve gasoline chewed Syria, Israel duel over Mt. Hermon up by higher speeds. Jacob said state police; \yere checking reports that trucks are in a big cone - shaped container not obeying the new speed limit as Syrian and lsras^ypfanes battled Monday in swirling conscientiously and are . dogfights over Mt.^Hermon in the Golan Heights while "running cars off the road" on highways such as 1-94. ONLY A QUARTER... - He said that police would rely for that information on special Henry Kissinger flew to the Middle East to seek an end counting mechanisms the state Dept. of Highways has installed to the fighting. next to most roads in the state to measure speeds. The fierce air clashes at the time of Kissinger's fifth Middle East peace mission underlined the high value OFFER GOOD TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY ONLY each side places on the 9.200 -.foot mountain. Syria said two Israeli F4 Phantoms and two Syrian MIG21s were knocked out by air to air missiles in the Graduation That's right 25£ gets you a whole quart of coke to enhance your Domino's pizza battle. Israel said all four downed jets were Syrian. The Tel Aviv command called Monday's dogfight over Mt. Hermon the biggest since the October war. Announcements U.S. keeps relations with Portugal The State Dept. told Portugal's new military regime are now - 351-7100 Monday that it considers diplomatic relations to be continued without interruption. available DOMINO'S PIZZA Portuguese Ambassador Joao Themido delivered a note Sunday to the State Dept. announcing the establishment of the Junta of National Salvation. (Across from the Wells Stabler, acting assistant secretary for Europe, summoned Themido MSU Union) 332 0877 CAMPUS BOOKSTORE 966 Trowbridge Rd. Hot, Fast, Free Delivery Monday to acknowledge the note "marking the continuation of relations with Portugal without interruption," press officer Paul Hare told a news conference. The Portuguese note affirmed the junta's intentions to respect Portugal's international commitments. Hare Customize You said. with components and accessories U.S. oil executive reported freed NOW AIPWEAMNG from Velocipede Peddler American oil executive Victor E. Samuelson, for whom a record SI4.2 million ransom was paid more than a month ago, was released Monday by his guerrilla kidnapers and whisked out of Argentina on a flight to the United States, informed sources said. Esso Argentina, for which Samuelson The Ugly Ducklings managed a refinery, said it had no information "officially or unofficially" about the 36 - year - old executive's reported release. Police also said they had no information. The newspaper Cronica said it received a communique BINGO signed by the People's Revolutionary Army saying that Samuelson was dropped off in the Buenos Aires suburb Sunday 8 PM DR||\]K SPECIAL of Acassuso. Members of the revolutionary group abducted Samuelson Dec. 6. The ransom was paid March 11. Tuesday A medical student who lives in the Acassuso suburb said Samuelson came to his house and that he drove the Kenny's Monkey American to a downtown Buenos Aires hotel. Hawaiian Sunrise Detroit murders hit record high -|- ^ ■ Tires and tubes. Choose from ups. high pressure clinchers and a wide assortment of sew FRIDAY With two Deraillerus. Top quality brands in all days still remaining in the month, Detroit prive ranges. has already capped its previous monthly homicide lr 3 to 6 Saddles. Good prices on every style. record with 81 slayings. Bicycle Tools. Get a FREE tool bag with $12 purchase of tools. The previous monthly record of 76 was set last Velocipede's got innovative ideas for improving your bike's performance. Check September when a record 751 homicides were reported in the Motor City in 1973. Four slayings Sunday and one Monday pushed the jji viCQluD A S4I E. GRAND RIVER DOWNSTAlMl 1974 total to 255 the end of April last year. 29 ahead of the 226 recorded by A velocipede ACROSS FROM NEXT TO BERKKY HAU P PARAMOUNT NEWS shot April's 81st victim was Byrd Robinson, 20, who was early Monday in the lobby of the Fisher YMCA when he jumped over a counter and lunged at a guard. <••••••• Peddler MON-THURS 10:00 a.m. FRI. A SAT. 10 AM-6PM t ompiled by M:ty Ann Chick and Deni Martin lichigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Tuesday, April 30, 10743 Panel to study new IM facilities By LARRY MORGAN The motion stated that Frank ASMSU recognizes Beeman, director of "There has been a change in Beeman said it will take State News Staff Writer and intramural sports and supports the need for new co people's lifestyles," Beeman student support to make the recreative services, in a said. "People are more active facilities a reality and that a Methods to research - recreational intramural presentation outlining the need now, and there are more self - imposed student tax financing and construction of facilities and recommends that for more intramural facilities, new intramural facilities at this expansion be given high faculty members involved." would be necessary. cited the increase of woman The electronics workshop '\ MSU the were set for study with creation of a priority by the administration and the board of trustees. participants. He said that in He indicated that students was formally closed in other special 1963, 2,000 women registered earn a total of $126,000 a year business by the ASMSU board. ASMSU committee Sunday in informal intramural from jobs created by The ninth session had night. This committee activities was formed — excluding team intramurals programs such as recommended this action due because students, activities - and that in 1973 The committee was formed faculty and lifeguards, officials and to the problems encountered alumni will finance most of the number had risen to as the result of a motion by supervisors. He added that with due to the lack of a full - time Greg Corona, Interfraternity the expansion. It will report $150,000. new facilities even more jobs director and the lack of funds Council president, and will back to the ASMSU Board of will be available for students. to hire one. work in conjunction with the Directors within three weeks The present men's and intramural director and the after appointment of the women's intramural buildings Student committee members open thursday and friday until nine - Faculty Intramural by were constructed in 1958 and Advisory Committee. ASMSU President Tim Cain. 1959, respectively. NOW. . .THE BOWMAR'BRAIN COGS views plans AT JACOBSON'S on health care, golf By LARRY MORGAN Once that is done, graduate The new policy, effective State News Staff Writer students may phone the course Sept. 15, 1974, through Sept. to reserve a tee-off time rather 15, 1976, is basically the same Graduate students will now than having to show appear in student policy used" this year, be able to phone Forest Akers but with person. enriched maternity golf course for tee-off time Burke worked out this benefits. reservations, Pete Burke, arrangement with the Athletic Council of Graduate Students In a straw Council and Athletic Director poll nobody treasurer, said at Monday Burt Smith. The council gave opposed the new policy, which night's COGS meeting. its approval of the idea will cost the same as the Monday without voting on it. present one ($46 for a single A three-week trial period student and $95 for a student will begin as soon as a and spouse) with the same However, Burke emphasized ""S. Rol-O-Dex file, to be purchased by COGS, can be the importance of students not abusing this privilege, which benefits. placed at the golf course. has only been reserved for However, two major New resi Graduate students must faculty and alumni time. up to this changes include deferred payments for married students A Northern Michigan University project has brought wolves back to Michigan. The wolves, then go to the course to fill out and maternity options in which above, are tranquilized and put in pens, given vitamins and turned loose in the Upper a file card with pertinent Continental Casualty will pay information such "They (Athletic Council) between 85 and 95 per cent of Peninsula, where they must fend for themselves. Some of the wolves have had trouble in their their as address, phone number, are not overly excited about maternity costs at Mxioo 179.95 new environment and have headed cross • country for their native state of Minnesota. name, the idea. We can't abuse this, a Lansing class standing and student hospital. because if it fails it'll be a long the scientific Brain.. .sophisticated, 20- number. AP time before anything like this The increased maternity function hand-held electronic calculator Wirephoto can be implemented again," benefits will cost an additional with memory bank and omni-constant Burke said. $225, but Jan Brashler, vice Features; 13 scientific functions, radians line new editors named Sunday He said as soon as the file is purchased and is at the course president for graduate welfare, said the company isn't too enthusiastic about the idea. and degrees notations, extra large LED eight-digit display, full floating decimal, students may fill out full algebraic operation, full memory and registration cards. "Continental omni-constant with register exchangers. Casualty isn't jy State News editor-in-chief elect COGS also put its mark of approval policy on the new insurance developed mutually too happy to offer the added benefits, but they will because they have had such good Rechargeable NiCad battery operation... AC adapter/charger, vinyl carry pouch and instructions included. 5"x3"xiy2" experiences with MSU with 1 year warranty on parts with ASMSU. students," Brashler said. and labor. I Nine individuals were named assignment reporter. has also done desk. general lunday to fill State News Atkins, 24, was photo editor assignment reporting for the After working three terms as Iditorial positions for 1974 • of the Grand Rapids Junior Royal Oak Tribune. a copy editor and three terms 1 Those named by Susan Ager, College newspaper and has Payton, 19, currently an as night editor, Rypma, 19, tditor in • chief elect, were: • k.D. Campbell, Paging done work for professional papers before starting, at the editorial writer, has done general assignment campus will assume her position as copy chief in September. • TRANSCENDENTAL fditor; Diane Silver, campus lor; Gary Korreck, city State News in March 1973. Currently an editorial and reporting and worked on the national desk since joining the All other new editors will begin their jobs this week. ! MEDITATION Bditor; Chris Danielson, column writer, Danielson, 21. staff in March 1973. G As taught by ■pinion page editor; Dale has done environmental and Delano, 24, worked for the # Maharishi Mahesh Yogi fctkins, photo editor; Melissa ONLY fM general assignment reporting State News for two terms in Jay ton, national editor; Btein, sports editor; June Telano, entertainment editor, Steve since joining the staff in January 1973. 1968, returned last term, as a reviewer and is currently t INTRODUCTORY Stein, 20, has nine terms of GRANDMA • Ind Judy Rypma, copy chief. I Campbell, 20, will also act as experience covering sports, and reporting labor, business and consumer affairs for the city LECTURES USED TO llitor in chief this summer : TOMORROW ■ - ■hile Ager works for the FEED YOU Detroit Free Press. He has been ■nth the State News since fall BETTER THAN * |973 as a lent county and state reporter. He has WE DO AT WEDNESDAY, MAY 1 llited the Grand Rapids Junior 4 and 7:30-217 DESSEY MX55 69.95 Tollege student newspaper and Iritten for the Lowell ■d the Grand Rapids Press. Ledger BELL'S • # LIFE SHOULD BE ENJOYED through TM, full in every field of life is made available. Maximum in life potential# the percentage-wise Brain with % key for automatic mark-ups and discounts, omni- may® [Silver, 22, has covered Punterculture, faculty and fcademic governance and PIZZA II others. COME SEEq constant and algebraic logic. A 5-function hand-held calculator featuring: extra large LED 8-digit display, full floating decimal ■niversity administration since *rting at the State News and rechargeable NiCad battery operation. in Piuary 1973. Complete with adapter/charger, instruction I Korreck, 24, has covered book and vinyl carrying pouch. 5'/2"x3"x1" 7°rts- student life and police with 1 year warranty on parts and labor. « since September 1971 * is currently a city general MX75 99.95 this Brain remembers. .a 5-function . hand-held electronic calculator with memory storage and recall, % key and omni-constanL Featuring: extra large LED 8-digit display, full floating deci¬ mal and rechargeable NiCad battery operation. AC adapter/charger, vinyl carrying pouch and instruction book included. 5"x3"x1VJ" with 1 year warranty on parts and labor. Jaeobsoris MIKE FOX OPINION PAGE Megaversity strikes "Payment must be received in 110 ceremoniously dumped on the table behind a identity and thus my ego in this uncertain last blow MSU and shifting from one living SitUa« Admin Bldg by 3:30 p.m. May 6, or there the reception desk where it is massaged world. to another I began to reali® William IV. Whiting Editor-in-chief Michael J. Fox Managing editor will be a financial hold card placed against and soothed. Into those boxes - symbols I should not be surprised if there are propensity to save things, such as h ^ Beth Ann Masatkoski.. Advertising Manager Lynn Henning Sports editor you at registration." of our existence - the mail is sorted. The suicides among the anguished, mail - less Gerald H. Cov General Manager John W. Lindstrom Campus editor The stark summons for $16 from the sign - often merely a makeshift paper souls in Canada- victims of a current mail magazines and newspapers, mobile society. So conflict R.D.Campbell .. .. Staff representative Kathy Niezurav/ski Copy chief MSU computerized bureaucracy sets my a now I * Jim Bush City editor Craig Porter Photo editor poster or sometimes an elegant engraved strike. newspapers. I delight in takinJT bottles to recycling centers mind wandering on alazy Saturday morning. What do I care about some financial plastic creation - is displayed, informing the world: 'The Mail Is In." However, one —to extend this academic must ask: What more besides (I've Jf*! treastise - drinking a lot of wine so I have? hold card at registration? Assuming the School of Journalism Awe. Splendor. Happiness. Joy. Status. These are the emotions flowing from the mail has resulted from attendance at MSU? bottles to recycle). I am an thrilled opportunity presents itself to «» when? cooperates in my June escape bid, the arrival of the daily mail. For those I would say that another area of out" a little garbage from our University will never have to hassle again insecure individuals like myself, the price As for academic apartment development in my academic career has matters. I have been!, EDITORIALS with 564393 at registration. For that matter, 564393 will never have to hassle of a subscription to a daily newspaper has been my insurance that each day at least been my fiendish obession with taking out the trash, perhaps because I was raised in involved in those uncomfortable during the past four years, but such situate!! again with the University at registration. piece of mail arrives with my name atypical family situation: my family topic as academics should not be Have you ever wondered why the State one an talkJ Open meetings attached - a ritual which boosts my never moved. Anyways, upon arrival at about in a family newspaper. News capitalizes the word "University" when refering to MSU? As one beginning reporter here once explained, one capitalizes University for the same reason to allay public one capitalizes the word God. Actually, I am impressed by the flexibility' of the University these days. A recent survey by the areas, public confidence is going to The invoice letters used to specify a 5 p.m. University of Michigan Center for plummet to a new low that will deadline, but this latest (and, alas, last) "Statement" cites 3:30 p.m. as the magic Political Studies indicates undoubtedly show up in election hour. Someone apparently told the Americans distrust their results. computer that most MSU office employes government by a 2-1 margin. In recent weeks, lobbyists for take off and suspend bureaucracy in limbo Yet. even in the face of this government agencies, local boards for the day at about 10 minutes before 5 startling statistic. Michigan and educational institutions have p.m. Anyways, I think it was swell of the legislators are dragging their feet pressured the legislature to water University to send me a piece of mail. I am and threatening to severely weaken down the open meeting bill, arguing especially impressed that the statement ethics legislation that is essential to that its provisions would arrived before the due date has come and restoring faith in government. unnecessarily hamstring and gone. The legislature has stalled on The receipt of mail has certainly been a possibly penalize efforts made by central theme in my University career, of every significant reform bill being officials in good faith. which I am now entering the last few proposed, and this inaction now Such opinions are self - serving at precious weeks. In the residence halls, the threatens to postpone serious arrival of mail has always carried more best and decidedly counter consideration until August as importance than one's classes. productive to efforts aimed at For each member of the huddled MSU legislators become embroiled in restoring public confidence in masses looks to the U.S. Postal Service as budget deliberations. government. sensual opiate: teasing and taunting as the Last week Republicans and dirty white canvas mail bag is dragged liberal Democrats joined forces to Clearly, a greater responsibility is vote down a controversial campaign imposed on government in holding from the red, white and blue truck to be N6E, VHfRe DID THIS COME FPONlf" financing bill crippled by closed meetings than open ones. Citizens and the press have an COMMENTARY debilitating floor and ceiling loopholes. inherent right to witness Recently. Rep. Perry Bullard, D - government actions unless there is .Ann Arbor, warned that proposed open meeting legislation provides too many loopholes for public an overrriding public concern. The bill currently before the House fails to make that clear. Students question justice in U.S. officials to make deals and conduct The open meeting bill should know current evidence to support it. public business behind closed have more teeth and the legislature young man with the mustache just for to why he should trust his Those west Texans, for instance, who doors. should act now to shore up waning asking the question about government government? Particularly when the CHARLESTON, W.VA. - West Virginia voted for Nixon with enthusiasm because corruption. political experience of the Vietnamese war Unless the legislature moves public faith in government by State College scheduled a 19 • minute And in Dawson County, Tex., which showed how difficult it is for even strong George McGovern's tax, defense and social quickly and decisively to enact passing this and other reform convocation Friday on "Justice in went heavily for Richard Nixon in 1972, expressions of widespread public policies scared them, are vehemently measures. America," and several hundred students certain that Richard Nixon couldn't cam' strong legislation in these crucial one west Texas Nixon voter remarked sentiment to make themselves felt by an and faculty forsook brilliant spring their county under any circumstances recently, "I stuck with him until he fired unresponsive government. sunshine, budding trees and lynch to hear that Cox." To which another Nixon voter There are nevertheless only two today. Candidates everywhere, feeling the Landlords and question a couple of imported speakers in an overheated auditorium. Midway through the proceedings, a replied, "Why'd you stay that long?" and the general climate of skepticism and disdain for politics and politicians was well v assumptions that can be made. One is that the people of a democracy are so heat of public disdain, are making exceptional financial disclosures - or painfully trying to explain why they Landlords in East Lansing have a demanding full refunds of security hopelessly vulnerable to demagogic young man with a mustache rose to say it won't. The primary reason Nixon will be generally bad image among students deposits. expressed by a reporter for a conservative manipulation and to the power of the seemed to him that what the speakers had Texas newspaper, who said of that state's interests that own the politicians that impeached, moreover, is that an -and in some cases, deservedly so. One of the most common to say about justice pointed straight, to Governor Dolph Brisco: "He's just like nothing can be done; politics will always impeachment vote is the best way for an . High rents and poor quality problems occurs when subletting the government; but how could anyone Nixon. You got to push him against the be corrupt and deceiving; government can incumbent Rebublican to show that he housing in "student ghetto"areas have faith in government programs and not a politician but a statesman who can tenants pay their security deposit wall to get anything out of him, and then never be for the benefit the people. If reinforce the policies, he asked, when the evidence rise above party. The people's disdain for image. And the to the old tenant instead of the suggested that "our leaders are corrupt?" the kind of politics disclosed by laxness of enforcement of the new landlord. When they leave they ask Anybody with the gall to get up before From California to Massachusetts, in recent weeks, Watergate, in short, is already having its housing code has not generated for the deposit, but the landlord an audience in America today had better effect in the 1976 elections. much hope for change, either. a traveler did not have to look hard for evidences has no record of it and is. not be prepared to answer that question, or Even if that were not so, this country But beneath the surface something like it. In great numbers, the of American antipathy toward politics, American appears still to have its share of people like are obliged by law to pay it back. factors that make it impossible to Not all landlords are making a American people seem to be deeply contempt for politicians. Bob Hayes of Charleston, W. Va„ troubled by what has been disclosed in the believe that one man taking a stand can fit the landlord into a neat "bad financial killing, either. High taxes, Watergate and related cases. This is not a make a difference. Hayes pulled 16 yeas guy" category and the student mortgages, and insurance costs are partisan or ideological matter nor is it it's got an 18 - minute gap in it." that is the case, everybody might as well in prisons from coast to coast tenant into the ranks of reflected in the high price of regional — though Richard Nixon's From California to Massachusetts, in relax, stop expecting anything else, and deciding one day that enough was enough. unblemished martyrdom. welcome in Mississippi may suggest that recent weeks, a traveler did not have to grab his or her own share of the general First in California, then here in his hoi* housing as well as any profit hard for of Just as there are unscrupulous considerations. his "Southern strategy" has left him a look evidences American spoils. state, he set out to educate the public and greater residue of support in Dixie than antipathy toward politics, American The other assumption may require criminal justice professionals about the landlords, there are also tenants What must be kept in mind is elsewhere. contempt for politicians. They call it something of an act of will, but it is the ineffective and inhumane American prison who damage apartments and skip that contractual obligations work But West Virginia State is no liberal "apathy" in Texas, and it may have only one that offers any hope at all - that system. A man would hardly take on town without paying rents. Many two ways. Tenants must make sure elitist bastion; it was once an all - black translated itself into votes against Nixon's the people are the final arbiters; they lonelier or more hopeless fight, but Hayes landlords have had tenants who that they understand their lease college, but integration has given it a party in Michigan and Ohio; it has every choose their own presidents and governors thrives on it. misunderstood or deliberately before signing and that they hold majority of white day and night students incumbent running scared and every and senators, and therefore do have "It's what keeps me out of jail and violated lease clauses by keeping from middle and working class challenger proclaiming his pious intent to something important to say about the feeling like I'm worth something." he says, up their own end in the deal while communities along the Kanawha River. throw the rascals out. kind of leadership they get. That may and it's also the kind of individual pets that damage carpeting or by seeing that their landlords meet Those who came to the "Justice in So what can be said to a young man sound idealistic to many disillusioned responsibility that makes democracy leaving apartments in a mess and their obligations. America" convocation applauded the with a mustache, or to anyone who wants Americans, but there happens to be some work, sometimes. VOX POPULI New role for Prof scolds columnist To the Editor: The nearly bloodless coup in within a Portuguese of possible genetic diseases. But you slept Or by studying our evolutionary cousins, By failing to see even the relatedness of On behalf of my colleagues in the Portugal Thursday promises to have commonwealth. But a substantial through that and I'm sorry. is there hope that we might be cooperative ideas in your Nat Sci courses, I'm afraid Natural Science Dept., I want to apologize I apologize to you because you fell as well? You napped through this too and that you are not demonstrating much repercussions in Africa as well as liberalization in colonial policy will to John Tingwall for learning so little asleep in the planetarium. You might have I'm sorry. promise as a reporter. It surely is necessary the European continent. But the have to take place if Spinola is to while so many others learned so much. found out why Bruno was bumed at the But you Say you learned mitosis. that you learn to "communicate" as you welcome outcome will be What we here in Nat Sci (and University stake for suggesting that man is perhaps, said. But communicate what? You above most a keep the promise of the military Learning mitosis is like describing human junta's first proclamation: "Peace College generally) do is show how ideas of after all, not the center of the universe. beings only when they are screwing. Sex is ail should have profited greatly f'°™ change in Portugal's military role in science relate to each other and to many its three African among Portuguese of all races and Children see themselves as central, and the fun, but not what I do most of every day. your Nat Sci experience. You did not and colonies, other fields outside of science - proper. experience of finding out that they are not Wayne State must be sorry that you I'm indeed sorry for you. Portuguese Guinea, Mozambique creeds." But you were, as you said, "napping" and learned so little about modern biology and Weinshan* always proves painful. The human species Donald J. and Angola. never got to see these connections, and Progress has been made already as a whole had to go through this same so am I. Associate professor of natural science I'm sorry. You of all It was discontent in the ranks of in discovery for itself, but you slept through people should have learned loosening the reins of Caetano's I apologize to you because you missed that revolution as well and I'm sorry. that general education science shows the officers who served in the colonial regime. Press censorship has been the point of the marble lab. It was about wars that touched off the coup. And it was a book written by the coup's lifted, political prisoners released and free elections promised within natural selection and evolution, by the way, not genetics. Had you understood those little blue and white marbles, you I apologize to you for being unable to tell whether the metacarpals of your wrist are those of a human or a chimp. If, as relationship of ideas (e.g., evolution in biology and cosmology) across disciplinary boundaries. Showing the interrelationships Not 'leg leader, Gen. Antonio de Spinola, evolution suggests, we have a common of ideas and facts is the essential task of To the Editor: .. a year. that acted as a catalyst for the might be competent to judge whether ancestor with the apes, then homologies of the media in a free society. Only in this We,- the Michigan Marijuana Initu«* The Linus Pauling is right that we must not group, would like to correct some o operation. Portuguese coup may also structures might have caused you to ask way can people choose the leaders and have permit "free enterprise in love," the whether there are homologies of behavior policies which will keep the society from wrong ideas that have been circuity Spinola's view is that a military an important influence on freedom to choose one's mate irrespective about our objectives. Some of as well. Are we doomed to be aggressive? coming unstuck. victory in Africa is unrealistic and Spain, which faces many of the misinformation may have developed same problems under the the article on marijuana that appeare that Portuguese colonial policy has to be liberalized. His view found dictatorship of Generalisimo Humor missing in P the latest Counterpoint issue. Francisco Franco. Liberalization of Though the article does state o popular favor as well as support To the Editor: the inspiration for Zelinski's letter. That know, Tom, we who are descendents of first page that we do not desire from the military, though it was a colonial policy in Africa could also was a previous letter to the editor in which what historically have been peasant legalization but only decriminalization- have negative effects for white - Humor is what I believe this sad sick Rona Silverstein had protested against daring affront to the - peoples given to not only roistering but to believe the point was not bs app««' ultraconservative regime of Premier minority regimes in Rhodesia and society needs more of - but not the kind what she perceives as the University prejudice, must be doubly careful when page two. Too often the word lega Marcello Caetano. South Africa. illustrated in the letter printed April 25 administration's thoughtlessness in we deal with replying to the Rona is used when the word decriminalization headed "Fun loving Polish student fights - conducting its operation in ways which Silversteins on such serious matters as she should have been used. , The war is unpopular in Portugal, Spinola's stated refusal to grant to defeat prejudice." This was a place hardship upon Jewish students who raised. Somevery "humorless" people might It is unfortunate tlia where 40 cent of all independence to Portugal's African commentary on limitations on Polish wish to faithfully observe certain days per even say they perceived a thoughtless and misunderstanding may take place freedom to get drunk on Tuesday evenings which are holy or sacred to them. government expenditures go into colonies must dampen enthusiasm unintentional element of quasi - fascism in reader's mind, so we would like •, and to be unobstructed in enjoying For Zelinski to draw the humorous the military effort and where there for the new government. But if he freedom with loved ones over weekends. between what Silverstein your reply. I'm sure that you didn't mean the point clear. What we are asking is widespread resistance to follows through with free elections, Each of these Polish traditions, it was analogy was that and only a very up • tight minority only that criminal charges be dr°Pp. concerned with and his particular concerns conscription. it will be Portugal's first experience claimed by writer Thomas Zelinski, are group member would have that reaction. private, personal use of manjuar is as ridiculous and heavy ■ handed as it Forgive me, Tom, I could be wrong, but way are we asking for .. ^ Spinola has said he is not with parliamentary democracy in thwarted by the activities of University would be for Irish • American Carroll somehow I can't quite believe you when legalization. If passed, the law professors Hawkins to say to Rona that there should prepared to grant independence to 32 years - as well as a set - back to who schedule Wednesday be no classes, etc., on St. Patrick's Day you write at the end of your letter "Yes, give local governments junsdiction the Rrtuguese colonies, though he morning tests and assign weekend Rona, I am with you 100 per cent." assessing a fine for use in public ^ dictatorships on the continent and favors a federation of territories in Africa. homework. and that the Union should serve Harp lager Carroll Hawkins ^ Now what ruined "the fun" for me was b«er til day on the 17th of March. You Professor of political science G59 W. Shaw He" Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Tuesday, April 30, 1974 5 Death—ultimate penalty—proves itself the ultimate injustice for all By EUGENE G. WANGER "Paget," Willie Calloway and Charles human problems. As Professors Morris and Clark. How many other innocent men and 1930, 53.3 per cent have been black Michigan, by statute Hawkins said in their book, The Honest in 1846, was the women have been convicted of murder though blacks have made up only about first government in the Politician's Guide to Crime Control, "If.. 10% of the population. As the Washington English - speaking "beyond a reasonable doubt" by perjured we are to be sincere in our efforts world to abolish capital . to Research Project pointed out in The Case punishment for testimony, mistaken identification, murder and lesser crimes. or reduce violence, there is one type of Our state has even (as evidence Against Capital Punishment, the pattern is never restored it. A drive is now was produced to show in violence that we can with complete being the case of Louis particularly evident after sentencing: Even made to amend Michigan's Constitution to Gross) a "frame - up"? certainty eliminate. That is the killing of studies in Pennsylvania and New Considering how hard it is to uncover the criminals by the state. The question Jersey directly impose a mandatory death facts after conviction, let alone after is, revealed that whites were twice as likely as penalty for all first degree murder and to Will people learn tb respect life better blacks - by to have their death sentences open the door for that penalty to be execution, it is obvious that there are threat or by example? And the uniform more of these commuted; and in Ohio, over a 10 - year applied toother crimes as well. Clearly the miscarriages of justice than answer of history, comparative studies, period, 78 per cent of blacks sentenced to we know. Thomas Jefferson said, "I and experience is that man is an emulative proponents must bear the burden of death were executed, while only 51 per shall ask for the abolition of the animal ..." As Bernard Shaw put it, proving why we should enact a rule of law cent of whites were. Despite Michigan's punishment of death until I have the "Murder and capital punishment are not requiring our government to take human progress toward racial justice, it is wishful life, and in general to threaten the public infallibility of human judgmept presented opposites that cancel one another, but to me." Has thinking to assert that, "It can't happen with that taking of life, in a state which Michigan demonstrated that similars that breed their kind." here." has been without such law for 128 years. infallibility? The death penalty also makes it harder a Finally, society is amply protected by The barbarity of Capital punishment causes additional to fight crime in a number of life killing by the state is murders. These include the so ways, imprisonment. As Perry Johnson, highlighted by the fact that it is both - called particularly by obstructing that certainty director of the Michigan Dept. of useless in "suicide - murder" cases, many of them and swiftness of conviction and preventing crime and harmful to Corrections, recently pointed out, of all society: It fails to deter murder. It clinically documented of persons who punishment which is society's best convicted first degree murderers paroled - causes the death of wanted but feared to take their own lives deterrent to crime. Experience shows that innocent persons by in Michigan since the state's and committed murder so that the state parole board occasionally executing the innocent and juries often refuse to convict when the was established in 1938, not one has been would execute them. They include by inciting additional murders by penalty is death; and that where the returned to prison for committing another the mentally disturbed. It makes it harder imitative killings by the weak - minded , penalty is life imprisonment, more murder. Of the 395 who were who are incited paroled to fight crime because juries often refuse by the sensational convictions are possible with less delays. It since 1938, only 10 were returned for any to convict the guilty when the defendant's publicity of capital trials. A famous is far better that two murders go to prison, reason and five of those were for technical life is at stake. It is inflicted example is the Michigan murder by Alfred than that one be executed and the other parole violations. discriminatorily against blacks, even Hotelling in the wake of the California go free. in northern states, Hickman trial in the '20s. No one knows Revival of the death making the ultimate penalty will Eugene G. Wanger is how many murders are co chairman of the penalty the ultimate injustice. indirectly caused severely aggravate racial tension because it ■ by the moral lesson which the death Michigan Committee Against Deterrence means fewer murders. If the has been inflicted disproportionately Punishment Capital and authored the death penalty deterred murder more than , penalty teaches to many: That killing is a against the poor, and especially the black. the prohibition of death penalty included in the permissible, even desirable solution to Of all persons executed in America since 1963 life imprisonment it would show Michigan Constitution. up in the homicide rate, for with rare exceptions all homicides in America since the 1920s have been reported. Specifically, if it please, oh, Please, don't i thought praams m deterred, THIS KIND WILL ALUAYS therewould be lower homicide rate in let her call ON me i I'll school had 5een banned a 3E uJlTH US, FRANKLIN! states 5TVCV HARP TCNI6HT iF having the death penalty, the rate just, please, dont let her would go up when the penalty is abolished call on me today... and go down when it is restored, and in those localities where it is carried out there would be fewer killings near the time of well publicized executions when any deterrent effect would be greatest. However, 40 years of studies (and probably no subject in criminology has been studied more) demonstrate that none DOONESBURY of these things, happen. What by Garry Trudeau they show is that there is no correlation between the ups and downs of homicide ^ SO THAT'S WHY I'M " :l UHATCHA ASKIN1 US FER. —. HELL, NO, BP! and the presence or absence of the death HERE BOYS-IMPEACHMENT! NOW, EP?~ YEW ALWAYS BUT.. BUT. WEWASA6IN I WANT YOUR. VIEWS, VOTED ANY WAY YEW DAN9 penalty. It's Pike an automobile. If your YOU WERE IT! NEVER YOUR TH0U6HTS ON HOW PLEASED BEKRE! YEW DONE FOR. THE SAW MUCH car runs at exactly the same speed MY VOTE SHOULD 60! % VOTED FER THAT POOL WAR regardless of whether its brakes are on or ; , WAR, WEREffT SENSE IN FEREI6HT YEARS WITH¬ / YOU? off, that's pretty strong evidence that the OUT ASK1N'! J IT. brakes are not working. The logical implication is clear: If would - be murderers think of the consequences at all, they are either deterred by the prospect of life imprisonment as much as they are by the death penalty or they are planning on not getting caught. Conviction of the innocent does occur, and execution makes a miscarriage of justice irrevocable. In Michigan alone since 1910, at least nine persons are known to have been wrongfully convicted of murder. Later, for most of them years later, they were proved innocent and freed. They are Robert MacGregor, Alexander Ripan, Lloyd Prevost, Vance Hardy, Gerald Crowden, Louis Gross, PAT NARDI Why not use pr It's sad to grow up. to help sagging art on wheels that should have been the or don formal clothes, perfume and The Bible says: "When I was child, I center of attention? Where was the a good, flowers. That's worse than square — that's jsI pake put as a child . .. When I became a man old • fashioned class competition? bogue, man! If you wear anything besides away childish things" (I Corinthians Apparently MSU has too much "class" a flannel shirt XIII, 11). people stop you on the to build floats. Nothing but the best for street and ask, "Why are you so dressed Apparently that's the philosophy of this our queens (or kings). They have to ride in up?" student body. Everybody is too expensive green convertibles. Of course I don't mean to insinuate that sophisticated to do "high schoolish" Proms, too, have become sadly there is no school spirit at MSU. Perish the "lings like having a prom or building floats outdated. Frequent comments have been: thought! Many refined students can show |'of Homecoming. "They're too hokey and high schoolish." "proof' of their enthusiasm: "Look at my Last fall as I watched the banners "MSU is too big to have school spirit." school spirit, man, I paid $80 for this class P«rade around at halftime of the Yale doesn't think so. They've revived ring!" Homecoming football game, strains of a the prom this year, due to student If proms and floats are too childish for ■famous *onK came to mind: "Is that all enthusiasm. you, but green convertibles are more your ■there is?' MSU students, of course, are much too style, congratulations — you've got class! | Where were the huge, flowered works of sophisticated to dance to romantic music You're also getting old. MEET AND TALK WITH HARVARD ECONOMIST John Kenneth tomorrow, 10 am, 326 Nat. Sci. Galbraith will alsa deliver the Urban Forum lecture 1:30 pm, Fairchild OPEN TO THE PUBLIC Sponsored by the College of Urban Development', with the support of the Center for Environmental Quality, James Madison College and the College of Arts and Letters, Business, Education, and Social Science. 6 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Tuesday, April 30,19741 BULGARIAN TALKS TO AUDIENCE Pianist By EDWARD ZDROJEWSKI companies. gives dazzling placed the performer on the The idea of this concert part of the breathtaking reading u same level as the audience program was to contrast the were a few State News Reviewer Deyanova appeared Sunday wrong notes k" The latest visiting musician afternoon in recital at the because the performer was style of the early Scriabin with they were lost in the n to the Dept. of Music is Kresge Art Center. The only addressing herself directly to the later Scriabin. She played beauty of the music. 1,1 the audience. three early studies for the The audience probably the most highly word that can describe her loved « praised pianist in Bulgaria performance is dazzling. The recital began in a rather subdued tone with Pipkov's piano by the Russian composer. These were very minute of the called the red?,? today, Marta Deyanova. This There were no programs for performer back (» acclaimed artist was bom in the audience because Deyanova "Four Pictures." Pipkov is a romantic, dramatic pieces in an encore. K t0t Sofia, the capital of Bulgaria. did not arrive in East Lansing contemporary Bulgarian the style of Chopin and Liszt. Deyanova commented he ft. She graduated from the Sofia Conservatory in 1970, winning until late Saturday night. Because of the lack of composer. He has written a number of operas and They were followed by the "Sonata No. 5," a later rectal audiences that were Amert "warm ^ many prizes in international programs, Dennis Burkh, symphonies but, as Deyanova stated before playing the work, composition. It was no less but tonally more very spontaneous." audience certainly TJ, piano competition. Since then, conductor of the MSU dramatic fitted £ Deyanova has been orchestra, had to introduce her the piano is his beloved modernistic, containing a lot of description m to the audience. She instrument. dissonant sounds and reflecting Deyanova will be representing her country in ann«,i» numerous international tours announced each work before The piece itself consisted of four quiet, introspective some of the mysticism which Scriabin moved toward near the Orchestra MSU at 4 p.m. SjSX and has made a number of she played it. Somehow this Sunday s movements reflecting Bulgarian the end of his life. All of these Fairchild Theater. She will recordings for European record created a wonderful effect: It h. folk melodies and rhythms. works are nightmarishly Deyanova's interpretation of difficult, but Deyanova f""n« ,!"• c,ie| Concerto." the music was very moving, as rumbled through them as if She will also Mass' pl if she had grown up with this they were. children's practice in Ohio before give a conrcrt leaving for an kind of music. This was followed by a pieces. extended America. tour of'JSj, After growth intermission, number of pieces by Alexander a short Scriabin. Deyanova became Deyanova returned to perform the seven "Preludes, Op. 23" "A Hack Mass,"written by black scientist ■ magicians. stuck trying to find the English HAPPINESS ISA work describing the different by Sergei Rachmaninov. These STATE NEWS playwright Ameeri Baraka, will One of these scientist • include the famous "G Minor ways in which Scriabin wrote IWj CLASSIFIER. be performed at 8 and 10:30 magicians is mad and thinks he his compositions. "Style" Prelude." AD! 355-8255 tonight in 49 Auditorium. can creat the image of man The Bulgarian pianist gave Admission is free. suggested someone from the transcending time. However, audience. these beautiful preludes Directed by Pat Ford, the mad scientist, in reaching Josh back 1639A Spartan Village, senior, beyond time, creates a beast- Binr * as part of project for her an anti - man who is a creature Coming to the Stables for the seventh time is is popular and he likes to do a lot of sing - Drama 303 course, "A Black of time. DooLey's Josh White Jr., whose exhuberance and charm are alongs and hand clappers which serve to get his Mass" involves the evolution, In his attempts to always a welcome sight to people of this area. audiences into his act If you've never seen him expansion and growth of black contemplate knowledge Josh appeals to just about everyone who likes don't miss this unforgettable performer. knowledge and civilization through beyond the sphere of earth, the good singing and guitar playing. His repertoire the probes of three black mad scientist creates things like the beast of time that are undesirable. His two scientific BRITISH CROUP CHANGES LINE-UP colleagues realize that the mad scientist has become a Record confirms talent of band destructive force. But it is too late because the beast of time group's last release, "For Your Pleasure." destroys everyone. By DAVE DiMARTINO This holocaust of way - out "Stranded" doesn't have the immediate impact of "For Your State News Reviewer destruction called "A Black Pleasure." First, there is no counterpart to last labum's highlight, "Do the Strand." Nor is there anything as immediately Mass" comes complete with "Stranded," Roxy Music's newest album, is a significant step forward for the British group that continually defies description. compelling as "In Every Dream Home a Heartache," Ferry's live jazz accompaniment As the group's third album, it has reached American shores on a tenderly vocalized love song addressed to an inflatable vinyl doll provided by local jazz new record label, bringing with it news in the shape of a woman. No, the new album is a lot subtler than musicians from an assortment of significant change in Roxy's lineup. that. of area groups and also with "Street Life"and "Serenade" are the rockers of the album, eack some spacey visuals created by Gone is synthesizer whizz Brian Eno, the band's instantly beginning a respective side of the disc. They are quite good, but Art Sims, 1234 E. Grand River recognizable spaceman - in - residence. Eno has apparently left Roxy due to personality and directional conflict with fellow band more outstanding are "Amazona" and "Mother of Pearl," flowing Ave., junior, and Reggie member Bryan Ferry, the talented vocalist/composer who is the cuts that change with each listening. Roxy continually seems to Haynes. be producing music that is more oriented toward intellectualism Members of the cast include mainstay of the group. On his own in England, Eno is currently touring with a faceless rather than sheer musicality, but the majority of the Dexter Randle as Jacoub, Neal band known as the WinRies, after producing a well received solo compositions are accessible enough to be enjoyed by even the McAlpin as Nasafi, Roy album, "Here Come the Warm Jets." That record, along with his most wasted of music listeners. McMillan, Dettielle Ball as collaboration with King Crimson's Robert Fripp album "No Eulalie, Danielle Render as Sporting a cover thatMpin is «*u»Uy ambiguous (the rumor Olabumi, Yolanda Randle as . Pussyfooting," has done., remarkably well sales • wise. This mill has it that the hot, slimy, pretty young thftig posing is none indicates that Eno's fape in his homeland is widespread. Both Tiila, Mike Gordon as beast other than Andy Warholsuper find, Mr. Holly Woodlawn), albums have been releaseiil only in England; stateside demand, and Pam Henderson as the "Stranded" is a strong confirmation"of Roxy's clearly powerful dancer. along with Roxy's general popularity, hasn't been too great. talent. tarrying on in Eno's place is Eddie Jobsoh, who plays violin, Assisting Ford with directing synthesizer and keyboards in the new Roxy. Jobson, once Fans of the group are advised to be on the lookout for "These is Gerald Lemmons. Musical violinist in the now - defunct Curved Air, has not really let his Foolish Things," Ferry's solo album, soon to be released on composition is done by Tony presence be felt on the new album, thus he remains fairly Atlantic records. Closely akin to David Bowie's "Pinups" insofar Holland. inconspicuous throughout. as both are song stylizations, Ferry trudges through his own '60s Ford said production costs influences, bringing new life to Lesley Gore's "It's My Party" and have been met voluntarily and Dominating "Stranded," perhaps as it should be, is the incomparable talent of Ferry, who founded the group with Eno the Beach Boys' "Don't Worry, Baby." The instantly memorable, any donations to help meet Ferryized version of Bob Dylan's "A Hard Rain's Gonna Fall" is these expenses will be just a few yars back. Ferry is back in full force this time around after allowing Eno's own artistic statements to surface on the worth the price of the disc alone. gratefully accepted. POP ENTERTAINM presents in concert the MAY TICKETS 5450 ^ $55 (reserved sections) pm Available at in Canterbury Shop JENISON Marshall Music FIELDHOUSE MSU UNION TICKETS ON SALE Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Tuesday, April 30, 1974 7 By Spartans impressive at Drake CHARLES JOHNSON "We didn't do anything less than I expected," Dittrich said. finishes during the three • day after his victory. "In my showed visible improvement but finished third at OSU. State News Sporti Writer "In fact, I think we did real meet, which included over 120 opinion, a hundred yards is a since the Ohio State Nance, who was substituted schools. hundred yards." Relays, MSU track coach Fran well, considering this was and I think that if the for Todd Murphy at the OSU only Sprinting ace Marshall Dill Dill's 9.3 clocking was one • nittrich was very optimistic our second meet of the season improvement continues we meet, is overcoming a foot and it was against some posted a 9.3 in the 100 dash to tenth of a second off his •bout the future of his team tough win the event, running with the blazing 9.2 at the Ohio State could make a run at the Big injury which had him sidelined L watching it tum ir> some competition." aid of an 11 mile • an - hour Ten title," Dittrich said. for two weeks. The Spartans Ivrellent preformances against The Spartans came wind. Relays last weekend, but most MSU's Bob Cassleman will definitely field a different away of from the 65th the Spartans turned in many of the best track stars in annual "I don't think the wind improved bested his 51.6 first - place mile quartet in the Big Ten extravaganza with preformances over the nation over the weekend at a first place would have mattered that the OSU meet. clocking at the OSU Relays in meet, May 17 - 18. Dill and and a couple of second the 440 hurdles, Bob Cassleman are the the Drake Relays. • place much in any case," Dill said "The majority of the team registering a only 50.6 at Drake for second place. certainties according to Hie senior middle distance star Dittrich. CHIPPEWA BATTERS STRONG led the entire race at Drake, but was overtaken by Baylor's "We'll win the mile with Dill and Cassleman on relay it," Harold Porter at the Dittrich said. "The coming Pitchers face tape. shuttle The Spartans' 80 - yard hurdle relay earned a second place at Drake with a 57.8 team clocking, better weeks will determine who will fill the other two The spots." Spartans got encouragement from the 23 some By JACK \h/ALKDEN On the season than the 58.6 it ran to take top foot 7 inch performance from Knapp is 4 - 1 with an earned run of honors at the OSU meet. The State News Sports Writer 2.23. He has struck out average long jumper John Ross, who an incredible 57 batters in 44 innings. Coach Danny Litwhiler's pitching staff will face squad was composed of Dave sat out the OSU meet. The Opposing Knapp will be Spartan ace Duane Bickel, a stiffest test of the season at 1:30 p.m. today as the Spartan righthander. Bickel is 4-2 with a 1.84 ERA. junior Howard, Howard Neely, Todd distance was impressive for the Murphy and Mike Hurd. first time out, baseball team faces Central Michigan University in a doubleheader The second game will pit unbeaten Spartan lefty Rick Moore according to (5 ■ 0) against either Greg Cole (1 -1 Hurd, who also competed in Dittrich, and he expects Ross it Mount Pleasant. ) or Bob Lozen (1-0). the 120 yard high hurdles, to give the team some The Spartans, 18 • 10 • 1 on the season, will take a six game - The doubleheader against CMU will be the final tune - points in - up for failed to qualify for the finals, the conference meet at Ann winning streak into the twin bill. the Spartans before they open a crucial two game weekend Big - running a 14.7 at Drake in the Arbor. CMU stands 18 - 6 on the year. The Chippewas have posted Ten series with the University of Michigan. preliminaries. The Jackson "If Ross continues to victories over two of the nation's top 10 teams, Georgia Southern Litwhiler believes the six nonleague games played on the senior ran superb 14.0 at OSU practice and stays free of md Alabama and they've won 14 of 17 contests since returning weekend helped the Spartans. to place second behind Stan injury, I'm sure he can help from an early southern trip. The last four games we looked as good as we have all season," Druckery of the Kenosha, Wis. us," Dittrich said. The Chippewas boast a .333 team batting average and have Litwhiler said. "We looked as good as we should look. Track Club. MSU's four mile relay tight regulars hitting better than .300. "Just in fielding alone, last weekend - helped us," he continued. The distance medley team of squad also bettered its OSU Heading the Central batting corps are outfielders Terry F. We ve now played 15 or 16 games on regular turf and everyone Charles Byrd, Dane Fortney, performance, running Lynch (.367), Mark Lake (.351) and Ken Papes (.357). Lynch has begun to play grounders for bad hops." Devon Hind and Stan Mavis 16.57.6 at Drake compared to a llso leads the team with four home runs and 23 runs batted in. Catcher Dale Frietch continues to lead Si the Spartans in The infield is made up of second baseman Al Senchuk (.289), The Cincinnati junior collected 10 batting didn't finish in the money for a 16:57.6 at Ohio State. hits in 17 at bats shortstop Jeff Gahan (.316) and third baseman Dave Assmann weekend games to improve his during the the Spartans, though its The Spartans' next action average to .509. 10:06.5 time bettered its OSU will be Friday at Notre Dame (.325) with Dan Griesbaum (.394) and Dave Lewis (.214) Freshman Al Weston also tops MSU with six homers and 25 in a dual meet. The event will itemating at first base. runs batted in. performance by more than six seconds. be the trackmen's final tune - The squad's designated hitter is also the team's top relief In the mile up before the Big Ten meet. Marshall litcher. Senior Dean Wallin is batting .323 with four homers and relay, the [5 RBI's in the designated hitter role. The first game promises to be one of the season's top pitching' Women's Softba Spartans identically were with clocked its OSU luels. CMU righthander Chris Knapp, a junior college transfer, performance in 3:14.8. Hie fill take a string of 32 straight scoreless innings into the contest, starts home squad, composed of Bill Nance, Charles Davis, Chris Cassleman PIZZA & BEER he 6 • 4, 190 • pounder hasn't allowed an earned run since the After a disappointing comes to East Lansing and Bob Cassleman, didn't Jhippewas' return from the South. weekend on the road, MSU's women's softball team returns Thursday to face the Spartan squad. qualify for the finals at Drake, SPECIAL to action today, There will be starting a admission Dwner seeks to resell '2" buys a 12" no series of home games. charge for either game. The Spartans are hoping that The Spartans dropped their the familiar grounds will pull 1 item Varsity Pizza Aontreal football team them out of their slump and record to 6 - 6 last weekend when they lost three out of I MONTREAL (UPI) before the House of put them back road. on the winning four games to Western Illinois and 48 oz. pitcher and Illinois State. pontreal Alouettes Commons, already has touched MSU will play Calvin College Berger, miffed over off WFL raids on some of his at 4 p.m. today in the field in Iroposed Canadian federal costliest American imports. front of Demonstration Hall. ■ovemment curbs on World MSU has defeated Calvin once football League entry into Women's unit sails this season and is heavily With this ad pnada, Monday offered to sell favored in today's match. Monday and Tuesday only. s franchise back to the Wayne State University to win meet at OSU jnadian Football league. I Berger said the legislation. MSU's women's sailing team took first place at the Midwest The Collegiate Sailing Assn. meet Entries for golf held last weekend State University. at Ohio Varsity Inn lue Wednesday Marilyn Tripp, with Lauri 1227 E. Grand River Gabrielson crewing, took low I The deadline for entries in point honors in the "A" 332-6517 mixed team golf division. Sailing in the "B" lournament to be held Sunday division for MSU, were Jill Free Delivery on Tiorning at Forest Akers east Gore (skippering) and Janeen Pizzas and Subs Jolf course has been extended lo Wednesday. Gore (crewing.) Folk Entertainment MSU will now represent the Evenings Mon - Thurs I Entries will be accepted in Midwest at the women's H)3 Women's Intramural Bldg. national collegiate m 8 a.m. to noon and from championships in Newport I p.m. to 5 p.m. Beach, Calif., in June. It had been a long standing project of Fellini's to adapt Petronius' Satvricon a chronicle of what the author had observed at the court of Nero before he fell out of the emperor's favor, written as evi¬ dence for future blackmail. From the fantasy of "Juliet of the Spirits" Fellini has moved to the stage of allegory and history. "Fellini Satyricon" is a universe filled by albino hermaphrodites, hairy dwarfs, elephantine prostitutes, lascivious matrons, beautiful nymphomaniacs, and homosexual youths. The director seeks and achieves, no less than to re¬ create the myth according to his own specifications, one which represents his vision of man's unending attempt to rationalize his existence in the face of the mystery of life. Tuesday, April 30 at 7:00 & 9:15 p.m. in Fairchild Theatre FEDERICO FELLINI Presented by Lecture-Concert Series DIRECTOR'S CHOICE L\UNf,PfcuD lovfsroRY MARSHA MASON and 1*2 .t 5:30 8:00 h.,.„ ELI WALLAC^, Adult» $1.25 8 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Tuesday, April 30, 19741 ASS members sit pretty on 'nothing' By MARGARET GOSSETT organization or not. We're apathetic, I guess," Noreus State News Staff Writer added. are the people wh° !- ■ belong m ASS. After all The founders said ASS The campus is passive in this they care to protest thev would like to incorporate era of student solitude where people who feel this way and not apathetic." Those who do F|oray ! the individual has pulled out of not care bring out the latent apathy in about politics and into his own everyone. us are already 1 movement. private world.Gone are the days "It would be in our best of student activism and "There is interests to get other unlimjUH I rebellion. movements to join us, to potential for the organization's ' Interest in politics and volunteering among students broaden the scope of our growth, for there is apathy in the unlin^ world," apathetic ideas, but we don't Flora has dropped as students seek want to use activist tactics to All three founders said thev more private and personal broaden our movement," Flora were too ! interests. apathetic to devou said. time and energy to There is One organization on organize "In the river of society, we members. campus, however, for the are an island," he explained. nonactivist student: the Apathetic Students Society "We're the middle of the , "W* Johnson there, kknow said.th^y're out | middle of the road." (ASS). "Ours is sort of an Archie It all started over a few pitchers of beer when Jim Bunker type of apathy," Today set aside | Johnson added. "We appear to Flora, 446 E. Holden Hall; be extreme to portray extreme for humiliation, Gary Johnson, 445 E. Holden, and John Noreus, 431 E. apathy." Holden, gathered at Beggar's Flora said they are unlike other movements in that ASS fasting, prayer Big dip Banquet for lack of anything better to do. "The idea just sorta popped does not force its values and opinions on others. Instead, Today is a National Day of I Humiliation, Fasting and I Joanne out of our heads," Flora said. the group recognizes the Prayer. I Lilak, right, tries a taste of ice cream - that icy stuff they put in cones (above.) Parlors in East Lansing are "I'm tired of hearing thousands of apathetic The U.S. Senate and 32 state I doing brisk business now that the weather is starting to criticisms by activist students individuals on campus and legislatures resolutions haw approved I warm people up. that most students are throughout the country as a designating today V apathetic, that most students vital part of ASS. as a day "to confess our I should get involved in their "The only people who have national sins and to pray for I State News photos by Susan Sheiner organization, " Noreus said. enough gumption to protest clemency and forgiveness." "Daimed right I'm apathetic. I enjoy it." "We started this movement Leather Hand Bags Here's the scoop on ice cream: to organize apathetic students against activists and to emphasize apathy," Noreus from Mexico added. ASS holds no meetings, elects no officers distributes from kings to MSU researchers no propoganda and elicits no members. ASS simply exists. Any person who feels apathetic about anything to any degree is automatically a Starting Roman emperor Nero in the cream cone made its first with Australia, New Zealand research, too. The MSU Dept. member of ASS, whether he is first century. A. D. and Sweden right behind. Over of Food Sciences and Human aware of the organization or appearance at the Louisiana Nutrition, began producing and not, Flora said. Marco Polo is credited with Purchase Exposition in St. 750 million gallons are s13.00 On warm spring days bringing the recipe for milk Louis in 1921. produced in thi-s country doing research on ice cream "Most of our members just nothing seems to hit the spot ices, which were said to have One of the most important annually. again at the beginning of this don't know they are members. All hand painted & hand tooled. better than the cooi, sweet been eaten in Asia for advances in the development of Michigan is one of the year. By our definition of apathy, CLIP 4 MAIL - CLIP i MAIL CLIP 4 MAIL taste of a dip of your favorite centuries, to the Western world the ice cream industry, next to leading manufacturers of ice which is total noninvolvment, "We are not selling a lot of Please send me information 011 ice cream. in the 13 th century. Ice cream hot fudge, was the invention of cream along with New York, they're already in the society. But the next time you reach ice cream,it is just part of our We don't recruit members, for MEXICAN HANDBAGS was probably introduced in the continuous freezer in 1925. Pennsylvania, California, Ohio, into your freezer or run down America Illinois, Massachusetts, Texas, program to provide students that would be contrary to our CHRYSALIS CO. by the early English Previously ice cream had been to the corner ice cream parlor, with training and experience in basic doctrine of apathy. We colonists in the 1600s. The made in small batches — one Indiana and Minnesota. About P.O. BOX 1591 remember that ice crwm is first ice batch at a time. 95 plants produced 34 million ipe cream produ^QQ." said can't be active about apathy," EAST LANSING, Ml 48823 cream parlors appeared than Theodore Hedrick, professor of Flora said. more something to whet in the United States at the end The continuous gallons of ice cream, lO'/Si Food Science and Human "Actually, we couldn't your taste buds — it is a of the 1700s and the invention allows the homogenized ice minion gallons of ice milk, 2 care million gallons of sherbet and Nutrition. less if anyone knows about the booming industry with a past of the hand ■ cranked freezer in cream mix to be fed that dates beyond the Romans. 1846 enabled more people to continuously into one end of less than one - half million Some people liken ice cream make ice cream at home. the machinery while the frozen gallons of water ices in this to a treat fit for kings. And in The first ice cream factory state in 1972. product is continuously ancient days ice cream was a was established in 1851 in Vanilla, chocolate and discharged at the other end. treat that kings enjoyed. It is known that wines and fruit Baltimore, Md. This led the way for the invention of the Today ice cream is a big business. The United States is strawberry are still the top flavors with nut and fruit ice IS YOUR CAR juices were cooled with ice and ice cream soda in 1879 and the the leading producer and creams coming next. snow at the court of the Eskimo Pie in 1921. The ice consumer of the cool treat Ice cream is important in SMASHED? FOR THE Visit FINEST VAUGHN 2-day public symposiu PICTURE MILLERS' AUTO BOOT FRAMING SHOP. Free Estimates to study world peasa "Lansing's most up to date shop." 119 S. Larch Lansing - 489 3450 and A symposium on peasant movements will be held Wednesday Thursday at Erickson Hall kiva. It is open to the analysis of each paper. The symposium is being sponsored by the Center for SUPER LOW public. International Programs which includes the study centers of Asia, The symposium will begin with a brief address by President Wharton at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday. That day_will be Africa and Latin America. Also providing funds are the NO-FAULT departments of Anthropology, Geography and Sociology. devoted to the presentation of papers on Europe, Asia and Latin America. The second day will begin with a presentation on Africa. Then Stanley Brandes, asst. professor of anthropology, said that RATES peasant movements have political impact in countries beyond Richard N. Adams, professor of anthropology at the University of those in which Call Jeff Williams they occur. Texas, will analyze and interpret the presentations. (MSU '68) at 332-1838 Other specialists at the symposium will include: Charles Tilly "Peasants comprise the rural components of the great literate and John Broomfield from the University of Michigan, specialists on Europe and Asia, respectively; John Saul, University of or complex civilizations, which include Asia, Europe, Latin America and the Middle East," Brandes said. jLSENTRY Toronto, on Africa, and Friedrich Katz, University of Chicago, on Latin America. tTinsurance * MAOflO 0*01 RI0H YOU Participants will be drawn from the MSU faculty to aid in the 710 Gainsborough Drive Phone day or evening.| HORNY BULLS ARE NOT ENRAGED AT RED. BUT THEY HAVE BEEN KNOWN JOHNSON TIRE CENTER 3940 No. Grand River appearing TO GIGGLE AT PURPLE. 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Over ice. n •LAY-A-WAYS WELCOME (SAVE NOW) It's sensational, and that's no bull. 1 LUU J I j/\ •Tlrw c laid (ltd blanilsh only bacauta of appaaranca and will not affact safaty ©1974 80 Proof tequila Barton Distillers Import Co, New York New York ■Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Tuesday, April 30, 1974 9 Red tape annoys student tenant By MARY ANNE FLOOD Last week Rayez explained his case to the East Lansing Before Rayez and Owens got together, Rayez was wishing he State News Staff Writer Housing Commission only to find that it could not really help had the money to go to court for damages and Owens was him obtain the A flooded apartment compensation he now seeks. contemplating evicting him because he had not paid two months' recently led one student tenant to "When we studied the need for a discover that no one in the vast housing ordinance in East rent. But depths of bureaucratic red tape they managed to settle the dispute. Rayez will pay had the authority to Lansing, problems like Rayez's were what concerned us, not back rent minus what he considers fair damage compensation. help him with his problems but his landlord. tandem (auto) parking," said Dolores After asking four different Bender, member of the "The moral seems to be that tenants should take more time to agencies to help him find a dry, commission. "And Mr. Rayez is here now and we can't do a clean apartment and thing understand their landlord's side of the problems as well as to compensation for flood damages, Tito for him!" Rayez, graduate student, 131 Haslett consistently bug them about repairs," Rayez said. '"Hiere is no his landlord Road, finally sat down with "You people talk about cellars and recently and settled the disputes. parking, but you're not help for a tenant in the city's bureaucracy if he stalls off a real "We need more teeth really helping people," Rayez told the c discussion with his landlord." someplace," Rayez said. "I have a feeling others are being ripped off regularly and have no place to take their complaints." When Rayez's apartment was first severely flooded first week of March, he called the was told to withhold during the Tenants Resource Center and his rent until the situation was Case against area corrected by his landlord. Because of an apparent shift in the apartment wall, water seeped into drainage tile behind the Rayez's living room in early in test of Meridian's March and kept the carpet damp for the last 1V4 months he lived A twice in the apartment. The • delayed court test to get the case dismissed, one a arbitrarily discriminates against The manager of the Crest, dampness permeated the apartment, of Meridian causing mold, mildew and rust on his personal Township's technical motion and the other drive - in theaters. Randall Posorek, a former belongings. Rayez withheld his rent for March and April, but that did not antipornography ordinance - a constitutional question. in which the Crest Drive Semerly asserted that if the MSU student, was arrested get him a suitable apartment. in Selection of a six member • - objective of the ordinance was three times last year on charges has been charged with Next he called the East illegally jury begins today in Mason to prohibit "obscene" movies, of showing obscene movies. Lansing Building and Zoning Dept., showing X - rated films like District Court. and Jerry Nash came to then indoor flims should also The current stems from inspect his apartment. "Love Camp Seven" and "The case El After the visit, Nash wrote to the Brookport landlord Marge Owens, owner of Apartments, 1308 Haslett Road informing her that Rayez's apartment was uninhabitable. Owens then offered Toy Box" — Monday, but little got under way was Semerly, who took case after the attorney was suspended from over Crest's the first be banned. "Does have the the establishment right to prohibit th«T one its of those arrestee Meridian Township enacted antipornography ordinance Rayez another basement apartment which had accomplished. practicing law, argued before showing of a movie film which last August following a June vacated also due to recently been Crest defense attorney Judge Robert Holmes Bell that some people — demonstrated flooding. Rayez found it unsatisfactory U.S. Supreme Court ruling that because it was not George Semerly lost two bids the township's ordinance by their attendance - want to local communities could set adequately cleaned after being repaired. He had a similar complaint about an see?" Semerly asked. their upstairs apartment that he was own obscenity offered. It was over a month before I was offered an apartment Mental hospital termed MONEY SPENT standards. without mildew or other IN GOOD damage," Rayez said. ADVERTISING During that month Rayez called Nash again because of poor condition of the apartments Owens had offered "I don't want to knock the him. the place to 'store helpless' -IS MONEY EARNED IN RESULTS. Building and Zoning Dept., because they did more for me than anyone else," Rayez said. "But DETROIT (UPI) — Poor persons who show eccentric behavior 355-8255 just walked on my wet carpet and I had to they are more sleep on it!" Rayez likely to be forced into mental hospitals than those spent over a week living with friends when his who can afford private damp apartment legal aid, the director of a psychiatric unit Union ActivitiesBoard became unbearable. at a major Detroit hospital said Monday. "For the most part, our mental Flights office "They have no power to make the landlord do anything," he hospitals are just places to store Low-cost said. "Nobody seems to have that power. If the poor and helpless," said Dr. only I were rich Joseph E. Lenzo, director of the Metro Center for Problems in Flights from Flooding apartment enough to afford a lawyer, maybe I could do something." Rayez figures there was close to $200 damage to his personal here. Living at Metropolitan Hospital Szj5? I This apartment at Brookport Apts. formerly rented by , belongings due to the flooding and resulting mold and mildew. I Tito Rayez, MSU graduate student, developed flooding He also called the Ingham County Health Dept. for help and I I problems, and though Rayez sought legal advice, action came only after he talked to his landlord, Marge Owens, found that it could only help him if the seepage was raw sewage. Wed. May 1/Law Day U.S.A. Call Is I who finally moved him to a dry apartment over* month For An I after his first complaint 'tt' APPOINTMENT State News phote by Bob Kaye WILLIAM 0. NOW! TRIVIA NIGHT—MON & WED Let us get your hair in shape finners picked 9:00 DOUGLAS Flight lists available now for spring. We have 4 stylists to serve you. with application BLUEGRASS EXTENSION—THUR5 In eco-art contest 8:00 Open to general public No admission charge forms. Destinations: London, Madrid, Gary's Campus Frankfurt, Bei- SMITH BROTHERS— TUES I Darcy Brown, a staff member of the MSU Institutional Grade, Budapest. Vienna, Amsterdam Beauty Salon n Jontestsponsored I The contest was the Service, won first prize Monday in the Ecological Art by the Waste Control Authority. final leg of National Collegiate pitch - in 220 S.Howard 8:30 371-1752 MSII AUDITORIUM 8" UAB OFFICE 2nd floor union Presented by MSU and ASMSU 353-9777 549 E. Grand River ■eek, sponsored locally by the authority in an effort to 1-5 M-F publicize (Across From Berkey) jtempts to maintain a clean environment. won a 10 -ftpeed bicycle from Crossroads Imports for fc miniature house constructed of trash. ■ Second place was awarded to Gaylord Ward, 325 N. fcnsylvania Ave., Lansing, for his homemade smoking machine lade from the body and components of a car radio. Ward, a loiogy major at MSU, won a $50 gift certificate from Green's. ■ Third prize went to o entered a ■aser's prize was a set of five albums Marlynn Fraser, 1107 University Village, pig family constructed of melted styrofoam. TENDER, LEAN PORK STEAK 77°, from Discount Records. ■ Other winners include: iDave Schmier, 635 Abbott Road; Dave ■rcham Drive; Sandra and Barbara Soloman, 1550 FRESH MEATY SPARE RIBS 98° Singer; Mathew Spiro, 128 ■chard St., and Catherine Gribler, 164 Kedzie Drive. ■ Area businesses, ■)ss and the MSU including Stanger's, Jacobson's, Redwood and Bootety, contributed prizes. CENTER CUT RIB PORK CHOPS T ■ The judging took Sliced 9-11 chops place in the Union Monday. The judges were: •bert Summitt of the Metallurgy, Mechanics and Materials BPt.: •ster, Ralph Skinner, asst. an Art Dept. graduate assistant, and Tom professor of Human Environment and Design. 1/4 PORK LOIN PORK CHOPS 77° Country style LEAN BONELESS PORK ROAST 88c, ujheiews^y' 8 pack - 16 oz. - returnable COCA-COLA JONATHON APPLES 59° HAWAIIAN PUNCH Bush's 28 oz. GROVE BUTTER Pint RED 28* BAKED BEANS CHERRY TOMATOES 49° Mrs. Smith's 20 oz. V* w/bacon Gold Medal 2 lb. bag 69° 115 ct. LEMONS BOSTON CREAM PIE 69° FLOUR 38« America Seven Seas 16 oz. Spartan -16 oz. on a shoestring VIVA ITALIAN 1 ' 1 (Show this ad to your folks.) li'« at ways DRESSING 44° SOFT MARGARINE GOODRICH'S ... to spend your summer. Without worrying le of MSU at 910 Trowbr c,i j'-i"""d Amenpassgives you unlimited travel throughout 4 pack, 10 riday Friday, 9-9, Saturc 44° • " oz. ■ ",||l'and$220for2months). Andthisinvaluableguide ptnp An slt'('pln0 accommodations along the way. Plan your *roli,'■ Anytime, Sleep cheap. Then hop aboard another bus. CARNATION LARRY'S rban n '' jr " ' '' you can bring your bike along too. We'll carry it in own ' ' Partmentat wheels, no extra cost. You can do some extra explor- SLENDER 48° l's..'' '"'K ■ d thumbs itown on your travel plans 'Ins summer, Bo Gr(. 1Sl''"ly to ro°Pen discussion. ■ ™ to VALUABLE COUPON VALUABLE COUPON " A!len!. Tel: 332 - 2813, 308 W. Grand River Spartan 20 oz. Grade A Medium Electrasol 33 oz. ler-Pasmo ■ -v Publishing York, |M. Y. Corp. 10011 WHITE BREAD EGGS COTTAGE CHEESE DISHWASHER DETERGENT . , / ,v ' ' t •' '"Hi Amenpass. Please send me a postage'paid 11 / USA" at the special reduced price ol $i.7b. •01 dor is enclosed made 2/4? 44c* , payable to 11,1 Publishing Corp. (Save 29c on 2) (Save 15c) (Save 20c) (Save 27c) Limit 2 please with coupon and Limit 1 please with coupon and Limit 1 please with coupon and Limit 1 please with coupon and $5 purchase. Good only at $5 purchase. Good only at $5 purchase. Good only at $5 purchase. Good only at Goodrich & Larry's Shoprite. Goodrich & Larry's Shoprite. Goodrich & Larry's Shoprite. Goodrich & Larry's Shoprite. Expires 54-74 10 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Tuesday. April 30 1974| PEOPLE who like motorcycling are regular readers and users of Classified. They know that's where all sizes and models of motorcycles are bought and sold. Call Now—355-8255 FFIANKLY SPEAKING... by phil frank M [ Far Rant [ Apartments ](V) (^Jpalmaiis f COUGAR 1969. Automatic, vinyl, SHELBY COBRA 1968, GT 350. TWO BEDROOM furnished mobile TWO tilt steering, console, 17 351-5 6 84 RENT A GARDENI 12 x 12 plots MAN, ,urnit. I power Convertible, or and bigger. Call 694-3798 homes. $25 - $35/week. Ten apartments. 129 Burcham n I mpg, small V-8, runs great, good 373-8340. SP-5-5-1 between 6:30 - 8:30 p.m. minutes to campus. Quiet and $140. 124 Cedar SueeTfc I tires, highway miles, $800. Call 355-5855. SP-5-5-2 TEMPEST 1968. Full power, good SP-5-5-1 peaceful 0-4-30 on a lake. 641-6601. 135 Kedzie Drive. F0r * I serious, graduate or V PHONE 355-8255 mileage, mechanically excellent. Asking $500. 882 9940, after 5 Apartments ^ 711 EAST APARTMENTS students. Leases starting £* I 4874J« I CUTLASS S 1973 - power, air, Deptember. Call 347 Student Services Bidtt. 56 weekdays 9-4:30 pm. 12 noon one class day 10a.m. 355-4011. 10-5-13 HONDA 1969 CD175 - good Aviation 5-5-6 after 5 p.m. SP-5-5-1 371-2400 days, 489-7822 other. OKEMOS: ONE bedroom I condition, $300. Call 351-0146 5-5-3 apartment. Close to bus. Metiers, I before publications. or 349-4037. SP-5-4-30 SUBLEASE SUMMER, excellent MERCEDES-BENZ 1970 - 220D. Mall. $125/month, plus gas, I Excellent condition $4,750. Call LEARN TO fly free part - time location! Call 351-2242 after SU/MIEf? RENTALS electricity. Call Steve or Robin, I The State News will be TRIUMPH CHOPPER 650cc - very 5pm. $185. SP-5-4-30 349-4330. SP-5-5-1 after 5pm 349-4153. SP-5-4-30 airport attendent needed1 to (FILLED FOR FALL) sharp. Molded frame, Springer responsible only for the work in exchange for free blind TAXf DRIVERS wanted full and and hardtail. $1750. 489-9529. APARTMENTS AVAILABLE, one 2 BEDROOM APARTMENTS first day's incorrect MERCEDES 190 SL Roadster. 5-5-6 and flight instructions. Call Don part time. Must have good or two bedroom. Call 482-6968 LANSING EAST side. 2 man. 21 $2,000 or trade. Prefer antique Frank 676-4860 Jewett Airport. 2 PEOPLE Bedroom, furnished, apartm insertion. driving record. 122 Woodmere, or 482-2555. 10-5-1 $150 per month. Available May | auto. Phone after 4 p.m. 5-5-2 East Lansing. 1-4-30 $150 MONTH SUZUKI 1974 750cc. 1000 are due 7 days from 625-3582. SP-5-5-2 - 15, 1974. Year lease r( miles, must sell. Make offer. Btechwood 1130 Beech St. SOMETHING to Take your American giving full details to Camp Office, 225 East Pleai Employment, Lansing General Offic of APARTMENTS " ¥ 12 % 1st Editions and Americana . 337-9337.3-5-2 $34,000, call after 5pm. offset printing. Complete service Student Services Bldg. 355-5505. 3-5-2 351-8141. SP-5-5-1 349-4153. SP-4-5-30 for ITUDENT DUPLEX. I Over 25,000 Books in Stock dissertations, theses, Private, OFFSET PRINTING press, TWO KLH 38 speakers. Call after 1967 QETROITER. 12' x 56', 2 manuscripts, general typing. IBM modern, 2 bedrooms, furnished. Mu Itilith 4-5 BEDROOM Model 80 with HOME near - 24 years experience. 349-0850 sponsoring a table from 10 a.m. to 2, 3, or 4 persons. Ample 6pm James Long 351-0100. bedrooms, unfurnished. Skirting, 2 p.m. today in the International supplies. $65. 349-0552. 5-5-6 campus. Hardwood floors C-4-30 parking. Available 6-15, 1 year TUE-FRI1-6, 7-9 2-5-1 stove, and refrigerator included. Center with information on the $24,900. 351-0997, SP-5-5-2 lease, No pets. $260. Phone Must be moved from lot. $2700. Hard to Please Businessman? You'll situation in the Sahel. Stop by and RALEIGH 3 SPEED, boy's bike. 484-4014. 5-5-3 SAT 12-5 8-TRACK AM/FM Craig stereo Phone 646-6543, after 6 p.m. learn what is happening and what 2354". 3 years old. 351-7583 new, $85 or best. 372-2453. SP-5-4-30 Recreation IB like the results you get with kind of contributions can be made. after 5pm. 2-5-1 Classified Advertising. Call UMMER SUBLEASE 124% W. Grand River Furnished, 5 bedroom, 2 blocks - __3-5-2 1967 PARKWOOD. 12' x 52'. 355-8255 to place your Ad The Students' International LADIES. 3-speed bicycle. 1974, TWO WHITEWALL General tires, today. Meditation Society from campus. $70. 355-0395. Furnished, skirted, $3,700, must Resents two SP-5-4-30 ^ UPSTAIRS f ridden only 485-5664. 5 5-6 twice! $45. polyester B-78-13, used 3 months. 353-2036, after 5 p.m. sell. SP-5-5-1 675-5586 / 393-4191. CROSSROADS CYCLE THESES, PAPERS, general typing. transcendental meditation as taught Guaranteed work. Call Carolyn by Maharishi Mahesh Yogi. The 10 • SPEED Columbia bicycle. Very SP 5-4-30 :URNISHED HOUSE for 5 men. STEREO ZENITH solid state, 332-5574. SP-5-5-2 meetings are at 4 and 7:30 p.m. good condition, $70. 482-9474. - 1968 RICHARDSON 12'x55' with \ 210 ABBOTT RD Available June 15. One year excellent Wednesday in 217 Bessey Hall. condition, includes lease P.m. Dial SP-5-4-30 332-4076, after 2 3-5-2 earphones, jacks, speakers, dust cover, stand, $175. 355-1698 VAN'S One speed bicycle with lock. Cheap. Call Stew, utility shed. Best offer. King Arthur's Court. 482-9432. 5-5-6 ^ EAST LANSING *15 Makes PURPLE VICKI - fast, accurate, inexpensive typing. Very near TWO GOOD tires for Pontiac 337-2549. 3-4-30 weedays. 882-0164 evenings. ft from around the world campus. 337-7260. 10-5-10 LeMans, $25 for both. Call CASTLE 1968 - 12 ' x 52'. Close OKEMOS SCHOOL District. Large SP-5-5-2 MANURE VERY dti. Perfect for I 'adult bicycles 2 351-2193. 1-4-30 - to campus, excellent condition. College Republicans will meet at bedroom i*10- speeds THESES, RESUMES, typing-and country duplex. garden. Delivered / pick up. 351-3389, after 5 p.m. 5-5-6 7 p.m. Wednesday in the Captain's il *free repair classes Carpeted, self cleaning oven, PSYCHOLOGY TODAY BOOK 651-6438. SP-5-5-1 printing. Reasonable prices. Room, Union. GIRL'S 5-speed Schwinn. Baskets, refrigerator - freezer, $225. CLUB purchases, like new, 54 COMME RICAL PRINTING 349-0295, evenings. SP-5-5-2 ,£ED 3 girls for odometer, light, $70. After 5, 349-0629. 3-5-2 price. 332-4432. SP-5-4-30 ANTIQUES & UNIQUES. Buy and sell. 220 Albert Street, under Lost & Found ]g] //« J M - W, Fri., 9:30 - 5:30 Thurs., 9:30 Sa 351-4116. C-4-30 John Kenneth Galbraith, Harvard economist, will meet informally with students at 10 a.m. Wednesday beautiful house. GUNS. RIFLES, and handguns of Lums. 0-4-30 • EXPERIENCED IBM typing. Summer only! Close. 349-2507 EMPIRE 598 Manual turntable Sun.. 12-5 in 326 Natural S.ience Bldg. He all kinds. Buy, Trade, and Sell. Dissertations, (Pica Elite). with Shure V15-II cartridge • FIND SOMETHING - will also deliver the Urban Forum 3-5-2 EUROPE SUMMER Flights. From ](§ BEST year round prices in FAY ANN 439-0358. C-4-30 $175 firm. Call 351-4198, after Southern Michigan. BOB'S GUN Animals IF You've found a pet or article of $259. Advanced booking only, lecture at 1:30 a.m. Wednesday in Fairchild Theater. wmmer house for 6 5 p.m. 3-5-2 value, we want to help you return people on SHOP, 2412 South Cedar. Call it. Just youth fares, rail passes. COMPLETE THESES - Service. Virginia Avenue. RENT come into the State News 371-2244. 0-5-4-30 Guaranteed scheduled airlines. Discount printing, IBM typing The MSU Sailing Club will show AKC REGISTERED Dalmatians, Classified Department and tell us negotiable. 332-1786 GUILD - 212 XL. Perfect TRAVEL BY HARRINGTON, anci binding of these, Ihe "MSU Club Sports" film, at SP-5-5-1 male pups, 6 months old. you want,to place an ad in EAST resumes, condition, incredible sound, KOSS ESP6 Headphones like 351-8800. 0-27-5-31 7:30 tonight in 208 Men's - Excellent blood line! Only $50. LANSING STATE BANK'S found publications. Across from $375 with hard case. 349-0799. Intramural Bldg. Good deal of n?w. $60 or best offer. campus corner M.A.C. and IEED ONE girl, own'r^Tn evenings after 6. 1-4-30 351-0146. SP-5-4-30 627-6807, after 10 am. 3-4-30 column. As a public service EAST Grand River. Below Jones sailing shown. Basic sailing shore house, $44 per month. Summer only. 489-7172. SP-5-5-1 MOVING SALE. Rose davenport, FREE PUPPY for anyone who'll LANSING STATE BANK will run the ad at no cost to you! FUTURE CPA'S Stationery Shop. Call school will meet at 8:30 p.m. WILLIAMSTON FLEA MARKET. COPYGRAPH SERVICES, love him, 5 weeks old. EAST LANSING sewing machine, typewriter, fur Tuesday, Saturday 10-6. Grand Learnislow About the 337-1666. C-4-30 wblet half of house. June 1. coat, charcoal grill, and 351-5688, call betwene 12-9 STATE BANK River, Williamston. SP-5-5-2 CPA Exam. furnished, 2% bedrooms. $165, miscellaneous.. 485-7483. 3-5-2 C-4-30 TYPING DONE in my home. 50c Pre - dents The Preprofessional Becker CPA Review Course - jo 332-5445. utilities. Near Gebles. HASLETT LUMBER LOST: KEYS in blue leather key per page up to 10 pages. 40c per Club meeting is at 7:30 tonight in 104 Bessey Hall. We are trying to 5-5-1 SINGER PORTABLE Sewing FREE KITTENS. 7 weeks old, 4 page over 10 pages. 489-2128. case - decorative dots, between organize dent society BEDROOM HOUSE in Lanting. machine. Perfect condition $40. Hoover sweeper - $14. COMPANY males, SP-5-5-2 1 female. 332-8224. Brody - Wells. 355-4303. 3-5-2 DETROIT 313-884-0128 0-4-30 faU. a pre - next east side, being remodelled. 393-1510. C-1-4-30 IRENc ORR - Theses, term papers, Central Co - op Nursery cordially 349-0672. 5-5-6 LOST: 2 cassette tapes, typed OUR SUCCESSFUL STUDENTS REPRESENT general typing. Formerly with AFFECTIONATE BLACK kitten invites the general public to its AR - FM Stereo Receiver. Roberts transcript in Union No. 38, noon Ann Brown. Call 482-7487 WEN needs home 489-1596 after Open House from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. SUMMER, Shelving Monday, April 22. Please call 1/4 OF USA - fall option. 808D~8 track recorder. Mcintosh 5:30. 3-5-2 C-4-30 on Tuesday and Wednesday. The *58/month, includes MA5100 Pre-emp - amp. Boards - plywood 353-5012, 337-7161. 3-4-30 purpose of this is to acquaint the ^utilities. 351-3045. 1-4-30 Mcintosh MQ102 Equalizer. Cement Blocks - brick NEEDED [COURSES BEGIN JUNE 1st DEC 1st | people of the community with our lNE OR two KLH 23 speakers. Pioneer Brackets Southland paints black or IMMEDIATELY: AKC brindle Great Dane stud FOUND: LARGE Female puppy. Cream color. Tamarisk * facilities. Contact Dorthy Copeland if you wish any info. or ,#M females for house. 337-9308. 3-5-2 SX990 AM/FM receiver. Sony TC 260 portable reel type stereo for black 337-7218. 4-5-30 bitch. Stud fee. Lansing Road area. 351-1617. - Lake I Service ^ GIRL NEEDS PLACE to live fall "PITTSBURG PAINT C-3-4-30 WTVR - a student - organized recorder. Several Antique term 1974 only. 355-4842 39,S°^TH Magnolia Street. Large Cameras. PLUS Guitars, Jewelry, ON SALE 20% OFF" FOUND: NAVY Blue notebook FOR THE BEST service on sterao SP-5-5-2 radio station in the Union begins broadcasting today from the fourth pi,„, ' V room of furnished house. Camera and Movie equipment, Stain and Varnish with Colorado State equipment see the STEREO floor of the Union. parking. Close to Typewriters, Scuba gear, Rifles University SHOPPE, 543 East Grand River. TWO WOMEN to -share Reject doors ($3 81 up) trucking 2* f bus. ideal for P'« deposit and 4 and shot gum, Tools. MUCH Water bed frames REGISTERED TENNESSEE on front. Claim Department of The State News in Classified C-4-30 expenses to Kentucky Durby. Petitions may be picked up in 334 Student Services Bldg. for utihtie,. 484-8131. MOREII WILCOX 351-0449.355-4035.3-5-2 Walkers, show and pleasure. 3 3-4-30 ASMSU ci SP-5-5-2 SECONDHAND STORE. BABYSITTING IN stallions at public stud. - my EE0 ONE 485-4391. C-1-4-30 JENVEY'S WALKING HORSE LOST: LONG-haired black female licensed home, Franklin Street SMALL HOUSE (1-2) bedroom man fall STEREO RECEIVER cassette $85/mont& FARM. 676-1343. SP-5-5-1 cat, some white, orange yarn in Haslett. 339-8412. 5-5-3 East Lansing or Lake Lanisng, m, close. recorder, leakers, turntable, 332-5656. FIRST QUALITY Materials and collar, near Auditorium. Rick (prefer country) Young couple 110 Anthony Hall. asking $160, Jeff. 484-4284. Workmanship. OPTICAL 351-1325. 3-5-2 (ex USN) Responsible. SP-5-5-1 HORSES, Weddings, Portraits. Attend DISCOUNT. 2615 East Reference. We'll sign lease a discussion at 8:30 $80 ,,, ~ tumm,r $65, fall Michigan, Lansing. 372-7403. Passport, Application photos. tonight in 35 Union if you are REFRIGERATOR. LARGE 2-door LOST: ORANGE male cat with starting June - 351-0729. 5-5-6 &*5.3 622 °n'V 57 C-1-4-30 Norge, $50 . 355-7819 or Compara. LUKE collar. Albert Street. 332-2643. EXCELLENT CHILD care for one interested in meditation sponsored by Divine Meditation Society. • PHOTOGRAPHY, 351-6690. child In my licensed Frandor 40W AMPLIFIER ilO, Fisher 882-9808. SP-b-5-1 C-4-30 2-4-30 NEEDED: QUALITY slow pitch Am«n~i°LWN f00m in 'urnl«had 2 speaker $50, new Polaroid 4 PIECE drum set. Excellent FOUND: BLACK cat with white. -area home. Full time. Reference. 485-4752. 3-5-3 Softball players for Lansing Major League team. 489-2096, The Potters Guild is holding its annual spring sale from 10 a.m. to S houMn°ad Camera $15.3M Copier $15,18" condition. Call Jerry, leave after 5 p.m. 3-5-2 p.m. Friday and Saturday at the All color TV $225. Call 349-2628. Spartan Village claim or give GROUP Saints Church 800 Abbott Rd. message at 337-1041.3-4-30 AND team pictures. , 3-5-1 away. 355-3112. C-3-4-30 Natural outdoor portraits. NEEDED: TOP Rate, experienced ACM National Lecturer, Ben Passport and application photos. Softball players to play in 2 bsdm*6191"mim c°ndftfon, HAIG ULTRAS, like new, FOUND: SMALL puppy, 332 Remember the year in pictures! Lansing's Major Leagues Shneiderman, will speak at 7:45 tonight in 402 Computer Center. m0nth" complete aat with bag. $350. M.A.C. Call and identify Photography by John W. Tryouts. Saturdr 351-2012 His talk is titled "An .Hi ^ \ . . 351-5845. 3-5-1 337-9031. C-2-4-30 Dickson. 351-2226. 5-5-2 5-4-30 Structure,! 12 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Tuesday, April 30,1974 Wars agony contin * MI. I. .<>«• tS. Of IMS UWTtO suns m;mihnwtsomtvErSirSeBi Committees work to - -;i keep public aware on situation of men missing in action By G. F. KORRECK the terms of releasing information on lab and is aided bv a PUky I State News Staff Writer MIAs. communications network "where a natiw 1 The Vietnam War was, and is, as costly One hope the league and families of MIAs have rides with the success of a might just walk in with something,"^* as it was unpopular. Ignoring some federal House bill proposed by Sen. At the lab, a series of tests obvious intangibles, it could be said the are run war was good for the economy. But for Edward Gurney, D - Fla. The bill, if before the remains are sent back to the the people who put in their time it was, passes, would deny trade credits to Russia U.S. for certification. Kaine cited Ann Defense Dept. statistics that showed in many ways, disastrous. and the People's Republic of China until the MIAs are accounted for. Americans still unaccounted March U 1 029 I Some 1,300 Americans are still unaccounted for even though U.S. Another hope is Hanoi's possible been listed as POWs. ' approval of a joint congressional "Of the 1,029 missing we have involvement supposedly stopped more n delegation to Hanoi headed by Sen. evidence they are dead," Kaine said. than a year ago. A treaty has been signed but William Fulbright, D • Ark. Fulbright has "But there doesn't appear to be everything, except the presence of an agrei American armed force, is the same sent a letter to Hanoi and is presently probability that they are prisoners." awaiting approval of the trip which is including the status of the missing. Public interest groups such as VIVA intended to find out the status of the The Committee's investigation! I (Voices in Vital America) and the National missing. continue but they are slow, the search area, and often depending on f From the American government's point hampered One League of Families have continued to team was ambushed in December • despite I publicize the plight of the missing despite of view, Hanoi is all that keeps word of Four the fact that team members are clearly I of high government claims that all the men are back. Tlie Vietnam situation is far greater U.S. MIAs from being released. James Treaty ignored identified ■ and the committee does have access to many places it suspects it not I These four members of the U.S. Armed Forces, including Walter Estes Jr., of Williamston, lower right, are in personal impact than Korea, which was Col. Kaine, a Defense Dept. would find MIAs. a war with the clearly defined purpose of spokesman, said Hanoi has frequently among the 1,000 servicemen listed as Missing in Action. Estes' plane went down over Haiphong in 1967, and ignored the 1972 treaty including word on Little hope he has not been heard from since. stemming the Red tide and more State News photo by John W. Dickson confusing at its declared conclusion than the status of MIAs. When the cease fire first Frank State Sieverts, an aide to Secretary of I at its outset. • was Henry Kissinger, maintains that the I TTiis irony is increased after 20 years by announced, the Four Party Joint Military government has the same stake in the I the fact that several French prisoners Commission comprised of the U.S., the location of MIAs do the families of the I circumstances abandon our POWs or as We sliall under no remain unaccounted for and that after 14 North Vietnamese, the South Vietnamese missing. Milts wherever Ihev are. When I use me word abandon. I months of declared peace, America has and the Viet Cong was formed. It was the made few inroads into learning the duty of the commission to monitor the "There has been very little increase in I • fire, troop removal and the release hope since last year," he admitted, though I speak ouile deimeralel*. Thai means thai we cannol leave whereabouts of its missing personnel. cease In January 1973, the cease • fire was of POWs. he pointed to an April 5 deadline for the I From this commission, the Four Party formation of a coalition with Laos as their lale lo the goodwill ol the enemy." signed and followed by an announcement that American POWs would be released. Joint Military Team was formed to follow possible stepping stone. ncttrtMMM* Meier it. Hie plight of the MIA was largely ignored up on prisoner releases The team meets Alice Meyer, chairman of the POWs of I during the excitement and the speeches, twice weekly, but the discussion has been Dear Don Sparks; Michigan group, said public awareness is I and the MIAs main arm, the National fruitless, according to Kaine. essential in holding both the U.S. and I League of Families, had to wait another "I suppose it's typical of other Hanoi responsible for the accountability I year before it could make its case heard. historical meetings; the other side has been Wherever you are, we want of the missing. In February, the league met with the using the team as a forum for raising you to know that many Amer¬ Senate Foreign Relations Committee in collateral issues," Kaine said. "They have In Michigan, 48 men are still listed as Washington and fired questions at refused to get down to brass tacks." icans have not forgotten you. MIAs, and Meyer is hopeful a program I senators asking reasons for the delay in The process of tracking down leads on started in St. Paul, Minn., will help. I Posters such as this have Your parents received the letter accounting for the missing men. MIAs is a difficult one and only two major Headlined Youth Concerned for the 1,300 I helped Americans keep aware of Maureen Dunn, acting national breakthroughs have been made since last Missing in Action, the objective is to I you wrote from a Viet Cong U.S. personnel unaccounted for in coordinator for the league, told senators: January, Kaine said."Thefirst came in May gather a million signatures to be | Southeast Asia. Voices in Vital prison camp in 1970. Unfor "Our problem has been Watergated, of '73 when U.S. officials were authorized distributed in eight to 10 foreign countries I Agnewed, Richardsotied, energy • crisised, two visits to View grave sites of 23 people America (VIVA) is the main tunately, they have not heard who had died in captivity," he said. "Ttien in the summer by 25 young people. and Mideasted practically out nt publicity - producing organization any news of you since. existence" and she accused them of failing in March of this year, out of a clear blue Meyer said the deadline for sending in I for the MIA POW sky the other side turned over what they - cause. to act forcefully on the issue. claimed to be the remains of 22 of the petitions is May 1 but that directors of the I Your fate, and the fate of Disappointment men." program expect to receive signatures I Executive League Director Scott throughout the month. Kaine added that no progress has been over 1200 other Americans Albright expressed the (fisappointment that made in the south. "families feel over the apparent While the delays continue, the patience I has been left to the goodwill of abandonment of our men." Most of the work done in trying to of families grows thin. Meyer said there is I locate MIAs is handled by the Joint the enemy, and the enemy has "Although we have heard the President an undeniable feeling of frustration and I repeatedly comment that all our prisoners Casualty Resolution Committee, a 160 • Sieverts said "It is a slow process." shown no goodwill. • of • war are home, we have yet to hear man team of specialists which has been involved in searches for MIAs since the him even hint that the accounting for our Because 95 per cent of the war zone it I isamssim missing has come apart at the the seams," cease - fire began. Data collected off limits to U.S. personnel, the only | Albrigit said. information the government has r Located at Akhon Phnom Air Force Recently, Albright and several members prisoner status comes from debriefing I Base in Thailand, the committee is mainly of the league traveled to Seattle, Wash., for a meeting to discuss the lack of solid a field operation unit which collects data sessions with POWs. Most of the returning | NOW IT'S UP TO prisoners know only when they s progress of the MIA movement. pertaining to all missing U.S. personnel. certain men last, or where the men went I THE AMERICAN PEOPLE "Hie most frustrating thing we have to One of the problems the committee down. deal with is the lack of public awareness," has, according to Kaine, is that it cannot Albright said. gain permission to enter 95 per cent of the "It is difficult for the POWs to talk I YOU CAN HELP! Albright, who retired from the U.S. Air areas where men might be, or might have about it," said Bertha Estes of | Force after 31 years last July, spent two been, held. Through the end of March, the Williamston. Her son, Walt Jr., has been «n I years in Vietnam and agrees with State committee has been able to recover the remains of 15 U.S. personnel. MIA since 1967, and she said it is | Dept. arguments that the North Vietnamese have refused to negotiate on Hie committee is supported by its own understandable that a former prisoner | would keep his feelings hidden. Mother of pilot mis determined to know fate of her son By G. F. KORRECK the experience of waiting. "Hie first year I in Troy. They also travel to national One other problem Mrs. Estes has had State News Staff Writer was not very realistic about it but I am chapter meetings across the country, and to face was the possibility that her son now." Mrs. Estes has made several trips to would be reclassified "a presumptive WILLIAMSTON- A woman sits by Estes was shot down over Haiphong Washington on her own to meet with dead" by the Defense Dept. Two years the sliding glass door in her living room with another pilot, Lt. Jack Teague, in senators. ago, the Defense Dept. started and watches the Red Cedar River twist 1967. Mrs. Estes first heard that her son "I met with JavitsfSen. Jacob, D — New reclassifying POWs and MIAs that had through a small park. She gets up and was missing when she received a call from York) and he started telling me he was been missing more than five years under opens it wide enough to feed a the Detroit News; a reporter had spotted working with the families in New York," this heading to clear up insurance benefit graham cracker to a squirrel. The sounds her son's identification photo in a French she said. "I told him, "You're my senator difficulties. of a stereo, reminiscent of Muzak, filters Newspaper and called her. as much as everyone else's so don't give It was a move, Mrs. Estes said, that into the room. She sits down again. "I called the Navy and they said they me that guff." people did not appreciate. The woman has grey hair. She will be didn't know a thing about it," Mrs. Estes "Five families started class action suit Though she is disappointed in a 65 soon. One might think she is living out said. "We sent them a copy of the that stopped all reclassification," she said. government response to the plight of the her years - that she has nothing left. But newspaper and they reclassified him." "Hiree New York judges ruled that the MIA's, she has not given up on her that is not so. The lack of official notification Defense Dept. could not reclassify POWs government's ability to help. The woman is Bertha Estes, the mother bothered her and though she has access to "Don't misunderstand me, I'm still very unless they called the families first, and of Walt Estes Jr., who has been missing her son's files at the Pentagon she said not much an American," she said. "I just think only if the family were represented by a for seven years. Walt is just one of 1,300 much has been done with it. lawyer. It's not the best answer but it something more can be done." ' Americans still unaccounted for since the She blames the unresponsiveness of the Part of the something more she talks helps." 1973 declaration of peace with North Hanoi government and lack of pressure on about concerns U.S. trade relations with Though she remains as optimistic as the Vietnam. Mrs. Estes is just one - half of the part of the U.S. as the causes for the Russia and China. Mrs. Estes wonders trickle of information from government 1,300 families who wait. delay. She represented Michigan when the aloud if holding out privileged nation sources permits, Mrs. Estes does not deny But she does not wait quietly. After League of Families met with the Senate preference on these countries would other families the right to take action. recovering from the initial shock that her Foreign Relations Committee in February expedite the recovery process of MIAs. "I don't blame young women for having son, who will be 35 in June, was missing, in hopes of putting more pressure on the She has also learned that there their husbands reclassified as KIA (killed are no gods Mrs. Estes has been an active member in American government. in in action) and I don't know of any parents Washington. the National League of Families and an "Hiey (congressmen) say they are "latere was a time I wouldn't have who resent what their daughters ■ in - law active individual campaigner for an interested but they haven't done have done," she said. "These women are thought of speaking to the President or accounting of missing Americans. anything," she said. Dr. Kissinger but now I don't hold any young and they have to live." "1,300 families don't have peace with She also was able to meet with man above me. I have a right to talk to Mrs. Estes said she knows of only two honor," she said. "It took the President a Secretary of State Henry Kissinger them and they have an obligation to see people who have had their son reclassified year to stop saying that all the men were inFebruary and asked to know South me," she said. KIA. home." Vietnam's response to some 80 files Not much has come from her several In the meantime, she waits. She calls on It hurt her to hear that the executive head of her government would publicly Kissinger had taken to Le Due Tho on a recent visit. meetings in Washington, but she is encouraged by a proposal forwarded by the patience she observed for nearly 40 years as a school teacher, though there is Mother ignore the missing men but it did not "Nothing," was his reply. Sen. William Fulbright, D • Ark., to visit much more at stake this time. Bertha Estes of Williamston refuses to believe her son is dead. Since dissuade her in her efforts to leam of her "Time is against me," she admitted. son's whereabouts. Her husband, Walt Sr., is chairman of the area National League of Families Hanoi and discusf the release of, or information regarding, MIAs. Supposedly, "How much longer can I wait? Five years. 1967, when her son Walter's plane went down in Vietnam, she n "I've got to know; I've got to know," chapter, and the couple attends monthly Ful blight's junket is dependent on Tten years? They (Hanoi) can account for been trying to locate him through high U.S. diplomats and foreign she said with a determination tempered by governments. meetings at the organization's home base approval from Hanoi. Walt this very minute. I know they can." State Newl photo by John W. Dickson