VOLUME 169 NUMBER 96 WEDNESDAY. JUNEH.^TS MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY EAST LANSING, MICHIGAN 48.24 iretapping without By AP and STATE NEWS IsHINGTON (AP) — The government Sre,VSrnduCt,n« hearings on a bill contained in a letter to Sen. Edward M. warrants surveillance, Levi said, "It is the position of revealed u domestic wiretaps directed survpni# i°W placement of electronic Kennedy, D-Mass., whose judiciary sub¬ the Dept. of Justice that the executive the question of whether the warrant policy that "the personal approval of the C 148 persons for national security So T without ,cesof inat private homes committee is investigating the frequency of the consent least one of the conduct electronic surveillance may in the requirement applies to electronic surveil¬ attorney general is required before any L in 1974 without obtaining war- warrantless surveillance. lance conducted for national people whose conversations interests of national security and nonconsensual electrical surveillance would be The Justice Dept. made the letter security and foreign foreign intelligence purposes." be instituted within the United States may |Atty. Gen. Edward H. Levi said monitored. The bill is aimed toward heroin public. "These figures do not, of course, indicate intelligence, and in aid of his conduct of the His letter made mention dealers. nation." no of the without a judicial warrant." The the number of persons whose conversations Appeals Court decision. policy Use of nonconsensual does not apply to surveillance conducted | number was more than in any of the bugging equipment The Supreme Court ruled in 1973 that Levi said it is the Ford Administration's is five years. is now prohibited in Michigan. were intercepted, but rather only the federal law requires that (continued on page 6) number of subjects to whom the surveil¬ government to Levi's statistical obtain court warrants to Ity two persons were the target of summary of government lance was directed," Levi wrote. tap or bug wiretaps without court warrants domestic groups in criminal Iment microphone surveillance, com- was Discussing the legal authority for such investigations. Levi said the court ■known as bugging, during the same "expressly left open 1 Levi said. The number was slightly En for the previous year. ■ attorney general made the report L after a U.S. Court of Appeals Ex-MSU leader that a national security claim does hstify tapping the telephones of tic organizations without a warrant, ■while, the National Wiretap Com- I has learned that several wiretap hunts solutions Icturers are selling bugging equip- To police agencies in several states, ig Michigan, where such equipment |ently the Michigan House Judiciary to hunger crisis By WIRE SERVICES AND STATE NEWS opened the session amid hopes that it ROME—John A. Hannah, director of would be free of the labyrinthine bureau¬ udes thrive the World Food Council and former president, said Monday at the first MSU cratic structure that has been accused of crippling the effectiveness of some of the meeting of the World Food Council that UN agencies. there were over 400 million starving or A UN report to the council estimated, seriously malnourished people Michigan on earth. "over the next few years there is little "If there is to be peace in the world, there must be enough food to alleviate hunger everywhere," Hannah said. He said that the creation of the council bspite clime to followup the resolutions of last 's World Food Conference was a Novem- step towards finding effective solutions for major I By WILLIAM J. HOLSTEIN world hunger. President of MSU during KAN AC (UPI) — Nudism, a way of life its years of phenomenal expansion, Han¬ ly associated with sunny beaches and nah retired in 1969 after 28 years in is thriving on a 45 - acre enclave MSU's top administrative position. In Is and trees just 20 miles east of his years here, enrollment multiplied nt Ford's hometown, seven times and the physical campus at the heavily wooded Forest Hills burgeoned. I the emphasis is on wholesomeness Shortly after his retirement, President nily togetherness rather than frolic Nixon appointed him director of the $1.5 ides that blend smoothly with the billion-a-year, 18,000-man Agency for In¬ land political conservatism that has ternational Development Te associated with Grand Rapids and He resigned from that spot in Septem¬ ■irons. ber 1973, saying he just wanted to "spend Je misconception is that you go to a some time at my farms in Goodhart and ■park and you have a sex orgy," said Dansville and enjoy my days as they ■Horner, a club official who invited come, not worry about things as I have lers to tour the club during its annual for the last 50 years." "We turn it around and make it But last year, at 72, he accepted HANNAH traight." responsibility for organizing the World ■club, which was started in 1954 by 10 m now boasts a membership of 120, Hunting children. Membership increa- nery year. RA system questioned Food Conference, held in Rome in Novem¬ ber. Though the good grain harvests this prospect of a rapid reduction of the numbers of severely malnourished ple." peo¬ year at first glance would seem to assuage re are five nudist clubs in Michigan the problem of food supply for The most ut developing important tasks before the 25,000 to 30,000 members of the countries, Hannah reported that "consi¬ council, sources said, were setting up a that he feels RAs may beoutmoded in n Sunbathers Assn., the leading ■organization. One way Forest Hills Huff sugg cases. many would mean providing only freshmen and sophomores with RAs while the more dering the deteriorated financial condition of these countries, more food aid rather world food security system, reaching 10 million tons annually in food aid and lins "I've watched the RA system its "straight" reputation is by develop campus - wise juniors and seniors did than less will be needed." getting firm pledges for a proposed the years reorganization here and it.was good in the Kthe number of singles who may over join without," Huff said. Hannah said the council was entrusted billion-dollar fund to help poor countries nortion to families. There '60s," Huff said. "But times have changed may be one with the task of providing "the grow more food. male and one single female for and there are no longer early closing hours Huff said that by his calculations over political every will, the guidance, the coordination and ■amilies. in the dorms, and alcohol is allowed $800,000 could be gained by the University By BRUCE RAY WALKER freely in the decisive leadership" that could trans¬ A system of international grain banks ■the visitor or newcomer, taking part the rooms, and boys and girls live on the if the 323 RAs were State News Staff Writer completely done away form the resolutions taken by the World proposed in November by Secretary of 1st activities for the first time is not same floors and are with and their rooms made into doubles. Trustee Warren Huff, D - Plymouth, says legally adults for the Food Conference into solutions to the State Henry A. Kissinger as a hedge ■umatic as it might seem to an most part. These things have eroded away he hopes the lone "no" vote he cast at against insecure supplies has met opposi¬ |r In fact, he would draw more much of the use for the RA "Now, I'm not saying anything against problems of malnutrition and starvation. Friday's board of trustees meeting against system." Ministers and tion from the Common Market, which our RAs, because I feel they are a fine i ambassadors represent¬ ■by leaving his clothes on. raising residence hall rates will "sensitize" He said that as the use for the RAs bunch of people. The people who run our wants agreement on the pricing and size iher lesson for the newcomer is that ing 36-member nations of the council of food stocks. The Market fears that the the University to what he sees as a problem dissipated and the financial dormitories do a hell of a job," Huff said. pinch became gathered in the Plenary Hall of the ople aren't all that exciting. They in the resident assistant (RA) system at worse he began to think even more about "But I'm also considering the poor kid modern headquarters of the sudden release of millions of tons of grain lout the United weather, sports and their MSU. the possibilities of reorganizing the RA who is dropping out because he spent his Nations Food and Agriculture Organiza¬ in a food emergency could wreak havoc Huff, who had suggested at Friday's system in some way that would save last $5," he said. "I just don't think the with prices. tion for the first session of the council, r. a Lansing businessman who is meeting that a reorganization could be students money. possibilities have been looked into an¬ which will end Friday. ce president of the Midwtst Sun- made in the RA system to cut down on the Another 24 Another problem has been Soviet and "I didn't suggest that we completely alytically enough." nations sent observers. Chinese reluctance to disclose the size of p Assn., said he finds nudism a amount of the increases, said that times abolish the system but maybe study it Gary North, coordinator of resident halls, The council, which reports directly to their grain stores. (continued on page 12) have changed so much in the last few years analytically and reorganize it. Perhaps this said, though, that his office came out with a the United Nations General Assembly, (continued on page 6) comprehensive report three years ago detailing the effectiveness and utility of RAs. He felt that this report had satisfied SMI/ tracking do the trustees at that time. North himself cannot see any way that RAs could be done away without severely Ingham judge upholds hurting the University and said that administrative work now done by RAs >ught illegally w would have to be turned over to hired workers. "If we cut down on the number of RAs, we would not generate DNR drilling denial any additional I By BRUCE RAY WALKER paper and duplicating supplies made by ex - the supplies were being used by the revenue because we would have to pay out By JEFF MERRELL Tanner said that a hydrocarbon resource State News Staff Writer I State News Staff Writer ASMSU President Tim Cain on the day he Student Workers Union (SWU). wages for student workers to perform the services RAs now perform," North said. Dept. of Natural Resources (DNR) offi¬ development plan devised by the DNR and , jSU business office is attempting left office. She said that no written Cain and O'Connor are SWU organizers. cials are facing the same old representatives from Shell, Amoco and J down $139 worth of supplies approval was given for the May 1 requisi¬ "Back in January and February, we had He also noted that he felt it impossible to pitcher, but this Northern Michigan Exploration, all of which cut down on the number of RAs because he time they have a brand new bat. jy requisitioned i stores with illegally from MSU tion by either her or the office manager of made similar requisitions without getting considers them over assigned now. Howard Tanner, director of the DNR, said hold mineral rights in the Pigeon River area, an ASMSU acccount the business office, Lucille Leonard, as will be modified prior approval and they had not com¬ a decision by now because of Judge required by the ASMSU Code of Opera¬ He said he could see no way an RA could Ingham County Circuit Court Brown's decision. ■ Paulus, ASMSU plained," Cain said. "Barb Paulus told me care for two or three houses at the same Judge Thomas Brown to comptroller, said tions. uphold a DNR The plan has yet to be recently that as long as a requisition was time because it is necessary for an RA to denial of a permit to drill for oil has finally approved or Xls 10 the conducting an internal investi- Doyle O'Connor, former Labor Relations under $100 we did not need approval." given the rejected by the State Natural Resources requisition for 60 reams of live on the hall and know all the individuals agency a bolstered "negotiating position" in cabinet director, is also involved in the Paulus said that ASMSU regulations Commission (NRC). there to be effective. determining how oil companies may develop investigation since he was the one that called for approval for all money spent the "We're going to go another round with all Huffs suggestion that a referendum of Pigeon River area in northwest Michi¬ the people involved," Tanner said. "It (the accepted receipt of the supplies. "even if it was only five dollars." the students would show a majority of them gan. ASMSU president Brian Raymond said Cain said there might very well be an plan) will either be changed or greatly not only are they concerned about the fact ASMSU regulation requiring written ap¬ against the RA system was scoffed at by But the Michigan Oil Co., which filed the modified." North when he said, "I don't think this is that the supplies were paid for out of an proval from the comptroller "buried in the case, has said it will appeal the decision, and The development plan called for something that can be determined by a coopera¬ ASMSU account without approval of the some officials from other oil (ASMSU) Code of Operations, but it is not a referendum. It's hard to put qualitative companies with tion in exploration between the three ASMSU business office, but they are also common practice to use it." interests in the Pigeon River area are figures on the work an RA does. You have participating companies — a unique feature wondering just where the $139 worth of Paulus said the investigation is an hopeful of a reversal of the decision. in oil development — and then planning to formulate evaluations to really judge supplies have gone to. internal affair so far and no decision has Michigan Oil had leased the mineral rights drilling sites and pipline routes around their effectiveness." to a portion of the Pigeon River "I've looked all over the ASMSU offices been made on what to do if they feel Cain Country fragile forest areas. and there is no sign of the supplies they or O'Connor illegally requisitioned the He admitted that getting rid of RAs State Park and contended that the lease Carl Johnson, chairman of the NRC, said picked up," Raymond said. "They just supplies. would relieve a lot of the triples problem, guaranteed them the right to drill. the commission will most likely reject the disappeared." She said there are many-alternatives for But Judge Brown determined that the but said tripling was a small price to pay for development plan. Cain said that he had no idea where the action if they feel either of the two are DNR's denial of a drilling permit to Michigan the service the RAs provide for the "Basically we're rejecting that plan and supplies were and suggested that maybe guilty. She said that billing them for the University community. Oil was valid under the Oil Conservation Act requesting specific information (from oil they had gotten lost in the shuffle after the supplies or referring them for judicial of 1939, which allows the agency to deny companies) as to where the oil wells are ASMSU Labor Relations cabinet director action are two possibilities. "I don't expect anything to be done right permits if drilling would cause undue going to be," Johnson said. post changed hands on May 1. Raymond has drafted a letter in which he away," Huff replied confidently. "But environmental damage. Johnson also said the Michigan Oil case Cain said he remembers that the supplies asks O'Connor to pay the $139 by July 18 questions will continue to be raised and The Pigeon River Country State Forest is strengthened the DNR's oil development were just another requisition for the Labor or be referred for judicial action. maybe, just maybe, in a year or two they'll home for the only elk herd east of the Relations cabinet. He denied accusations O'Conner could not be reached for come to the board with a plan to revise the regulating position. Mississippi River, in addition to supporting "The case gave us a legal O'CONNOR made by some involved in the matter that comment. system." bear and bobcat. (continued on page 6) authority to Michigan State News. East Lansing, Michigan Wednesday, June 25, J President vetoes housing bil WASHINGTON (AP) - pearance in the White House The President said he was home owner, stimulate home Besides President Ford announced per¬ voicing a general homes press center. releasing immediately $2 bil¬ building and provide more complaint of and sonally today his veto of a $1.2 The President also called on lion in mortgage purchase jobs for the building trade*. inflationary pres would anil J billion housing bill but coupled Congress to "move as rapidly authority available to the Gov¬ Under the mortgage pro¬ sures erate, this spending might gen Ford specifically chall SrnmentpaymenNl 5250 a month for tw„ Ban on weather change sought it with an announcement that he wants an extra $9.75 billion as possible" to enact a mort¬ ernment National Mortgage gram, the agency purchases enged a claim by proponents gage payment relief loan pro¬ Assn. In addition, he asked both conventional and federally of the bill that it would made available for government gram designed to ward off Congress to extend the mort¬ insured mortgages carrying promote the construction of The United States and the Soviet Union have reached purchase of home mortgages. foreclosures against properties program for an extra interest rates below current gage 400,000 new homes virtual agreement on the draft of an accord to outlaw "This action will immediate¬ being purchased by recession year, to July 1, 1976, and to market levels. In effect, it three separate through ly make more money available victims. The vetoed measure subsidy pro¬ techniques for changing the weather for military purposes, pump an additional $7.75 bill¬ pumps more money into mort¬ grams. to home buyers," Ford told also aimed at helping those creates would American officials said Monday. reporters during brief ap¬ who face foreclosure. ion into it. gage markets and presumably Ford said the subsidies and producf!!j makes it easier for people to W. "fl a Describing the vetoed bill as The language of the document was worked out in would range from $3,000 to unnecessary federal discussions held in Geneva last week and is now being inflationary and contributing obtain home loans. $6,500 for each home buyer but bureaucracy I •^eTh,® needlessly to the federal bur¬ The vetoed bill, Ford said, submitted to both governments for further study before final contended (he number of new ., Senate sent the bill White House agreement can be announced. One senior official said that eaucracy, Ford described his would have increased by more housing starts they would « by e,11 some minor disagreement remained. approach as the best way to than $1 billion the federal generate would number be¬ a 72-24 vote f House had It is uncertain whether the agreement will be made meet the problems of housing deficit in the fiscal year that tween 50,000 and 80.000 approved it J public at the present time. ra 55. well short starts July 1 and would add ther than 400,000. of the J at the summer session of the Geneva conference of the thirds needed to override 1 Ford spoke of his housing more than $2 billion to total Sponsors said the measure Committee on Disarmament, where a ban on environmental actions and recommendations federal outlays during the life would facilitate Today was the deadliJ financing of a warfare is on the agenda. The disarmament conference reconvened Tuesday. as a program to protect the of the program. construction of 400,000 new presidential ther to decision sign or veto the on J bir Ford won't use Gandhi loses vote, still chief open thursday & friday evenings until nine foreign affairs A Supreme Court justice ruled Tuesday that Prime Minister Indira Gandhi con continue to head the Indian government in 76 campaign until the full court decides her appeal of a conviction for illegal practices in her 1971 campaign for Parliament. But the 57-year-old leader suffered a voting in Parliament. Iyer, who significant political setback when Justice V. R. Krishna Iyer barred her from was recommendation of the Gandhi government in 1973, ruled appointed on ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) - Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger said Tuesday that President Ford will not make foreign policy a partisan issue in dfrnmb that she could only participate in his 1976 election campaign. MISS J PANT COATS, parliamentary debate as "I know he considers the head of the government. Under India's parliamentary system, the prime minister national security of the United RAINCOATS and JACKETS States beyond partisan poli¬ and her cabinet colleagues must all hold elected seats in tics." Kissinger said at a news Parliament. This marks the first time in 28 years of independence that any restrictions have been imposed on an conference. *17 to $48 "I am convinced — in fact, I Indian prime minister, and it is likely to spur opposition know — that he will conduct his demands for her resignation during the office for the best interests of processing of the Important savings appeal, which is expected to take at least two months. the country and that in our on polyester/poplin, vinyl relationship we will not discuss and cotton coats and jackets that look what helps him as a candidate as but what helps the nation." Independencia de Mocambique great as they feel! Perfect to toss over Kissinger's remarks rame at anything, in raindrops the end of a brief trip or under clear skies The East African territory of Mozambique became an here in independent nation Tuesday at midnight after nearly five which he made a major foreign .Jackets that jog, sail, bike or go back¬ centuries of Portuguese colonial rule. policy address warning U.S. More than 50,000 exuberant Mozambicans at Machava allies not to use treaty arrange¬ packing. Toppers that go just the right ments as "means of pressure." football stadium watched as the red and length to complement green flag of your pants and skirts. Portugal was lowered for the last time. It was replaced by Kissinger said the admonition "was intended as a general the national flag of Mozambique whose green, white, black observation toward all of our and yellow stripes and red triangle African night under the glare of powerful hung limp in the sultry floodlights. allies and was not directed at any particular country." He f J ydivofo Mozambique, the 43rd independent state in Africa since said the purpose of the visit, and colonial flags first began to fall, will be others he has made to the officially known as the People's Republic of nation's "heartland" was to help Mozambique, reflecting the revolutionary socialism of the country's new leadership. ally "strong public support on a Samora Moises Machel, the bearded 41-year-old revolu¬ tionary leader of this nation of 8V2 million, will be officially sWorn in as president Wednesday morning. bipartisan basis" for U.S. eign policy. "I do not consider — nor does the President — foreign for¬ policy Jacabsou's to be a partisan issue," Kissin¬ ger said. "We have no intention MACHEL of making it a partisan issue." Don't be mislead Open Thursday and Friday 'til 9 by its simplicity One-hundred die in New York An Eastern Airlines 727 jetliner crashed and burned while approaching Kennedy International Airport in a heavy rainstorm Tuesday, and first reports listed at least 100 dead among the 115 passengers and seven crewmen aboard. The plane, Flight 66, was arriving from New Orleans when it faltered and went down about one-half mile short of the runway in the Jamaica Bay area that adjoins Kennedy to the west. * "It looked like napalm going up," said Robert Hill, an airport employe. "There was a big stream of fire." "We heard a big noise and the windows almost broke in pieces," said James Moschatos, at a boat manufacturing company nearby on Rockaway Boulevard. "I looked out and saw black smoke in the sky." Meany says Ford callous AFL-CIO President George Meany Tuesday characterized the Ford Administration's economic program as a callous disregard for the millions of unemployed. At Hi-Fi Buys, we understand that many listeners seeking Meany complained that, despite pronouncements high specification audio equipment are comforted by the sight Administration by economists about the end of the of an.array of knobs and levers, topped off by an impressive recession, "the recession of unemployment" will last through the counterba lance. remainder of the decade unless strong action is taken now. The labor leader took issue with remarks by President Ford's chief economic advisor, Alan We know that such Greenspan, who said an arrangement can hamper earlier this week the recession had smooth ended even though performance. joblessness would remain high. Greenspan, he said, showed little or no concern for what this would mean for the nation's social So. we offered products like the Beogram 3000 with many of Men's ('lot h i n * fabric. "The attitude of Greenspan and the these technical functtons out of sight Bang and Olufsen made Administration adds up to a callous disregard for the suffering and misery of the them automatic as well Anti-skating, for instance, is con¬ SALE unemployed," Meany added. trolled by a ball-bearing system within the tone arm SI ITS. SPORT COATS. SLACKS assembly It' fully automatic because they created their own Food stamp revamp planned cartridge and tone arm to form a single system. An outstand i Twelve ng select Ion of men's Republican senators and more than 55 House members Monday introduced a measure that would Bang and Olufsen made it all quite simple for this simple suits, vested suits, spdrt fundamentally change the food stamp program, increase reason: Since youfcan't hear knobs and levers, why should coats, sport coat benefits to the needy by 29 per cent and save an combinations and estimated $2 you see them? (or bother with them?) What you will hear is billion a year. the uncompromising dress slacks. reproduction of sound. . .all at excellent Principal authors of the bill are Sen. James L. C-R-N.Y., and Rep. Robert H. Michel, P III. Buckley, savings. Included arc solid color*. So far, the 41-point measure has seven Democratic stripes, plaids co-sponsors in the and checks for House. for the Critical Listener! Immediate The bill would and yenr-around sharply cut participation in the program by wenr. gearing eligibility to gross income and assets, rather than HI-FI Disc Shop net income A selected group of MK.VS I*''OOT WK A after a complicated series of itemized H deductions. 1101 E Grand River, East Lansing also at The only deduction that would remain, Buckley and Michel outstanding saving** said at a news conference, would be a 3371767 $25-a-month item for the elderly. > 4810 W SAGINAW. LANSING That allotment and i 4844589 Jaeobson's price system was invalidated earlier this month by a federal court here, which ordered the Agriculture Dept. to devise a new system within 120 days. * Michigan State News. East Lansing, Michigan Wednesday, June 25, 1975 3 Concerts prompt council to examine noise issue By JEFF MERRELL certs is through a noise ordi¬ used for four hours and that State News Staff Writer at Valley Court. nance. concerts can only be held at the A move to keep blaring rock "I would still like us to have a "They turn it on so damn loud same city park that it goes clear down to the concerts from every other disturbing East noise ordinance that would set week. Lansing residents may lead the a limit on the level of Bailey street area," Polomsky amplifica¬ Polomsky said his intention said. "They are going to have city into the complicated noise tion. Without some kind of was to reduce the amount of ordinance issue. noise ordinance, you can't en¬ to use their amplified music in a Councilman John amplification, because of sever¬ sensible manner." Polomsky, force that," Brookover said. al complaints about noise levels spurred by The city council recently numerous "My guess is that this is the [Taking a page from Loretta Young, the city of SN photo/Bob Kaye complaints about the noise from direction well take." received a letter from Marlies feast Lansing decided a face lift would improve one, the owners of the property — First State rock concerts at Valley Court City Kronegger, 351 Oakhill Ave., Manager John lite looks of the vacant lot next to Dooley'g. Savings Assn. of East Lansing and Musselman Park, requested that City At¬ Patriarche, however, said that Proposal tries objecting to the continuation of ■Taking $1,500, a red, white and blue floral motif Realty Co. say they hope the city realizes its — torney Dennis McGinty look a limit on the amount of noise concerts at Valley Court. investment may be short term. Also, downtown into changing the current ordi¬ "She thinks at this point in Lnd a couple of picnic tables, the city tidied nance allowable in a certain area is to bolster state time that it is just unbearable," up shopping patrons find the newly-leveled ground governing rock concerts extremely difficult to enforce. pie corner — where Albert Avenue and Abbott a convenient so that noise can be kept to a "You get out there with a Polomsky said. ®oad meet and transformed it into a parking spot, a situation city tourist — lini-park. There are problems of course. For officials hope to correct by installing guard rails. minimum. But Mayor Wilbur Brookover decibel meter and it measures all noise," Patriarche said. industry said the only way the city can There is no way to measure just LANSING (UPI) - Legisla¬ regulate noise levels at con- the noise level of such tion aimed at things as bolstering the musical instruments, he said. state's tourist "Ann Arbor adopted an ordi¬ industry by re¬ vamping the Michigan Tourist NATIVE AMERICANS HOPEFUL nance with a decibel they have not been able limit, but to Council is on its way to Gov. Milliken. enforce it," he said. The proposal was given final Patriarche said the noise l-M unit wants levels at rock concerts are definitely a problem and that the police department is "be¬ approval by the House Tuesday. The state's four regional tourist associations will be re¬ presented on the commission, Somebody think enough students didn't get wet yesterday because sieged with complaints every along with nine members na¬ there's a good chance of show¬ I ByG F.KORRECK their demand for Sunday afternoon there is a med a cultural fruitless negotiations with the by the governor. ers and thundershowers again lUte News Staff Writer center. but concert." Fleming said he did not one for the native The commission will be today. The temperature will Bmbers of a native Ameri- Some 30 university. want a similar situation The current ordinance on thorized to conduct travel au¬ ■ demonstrators, Barbara Smith, spokesperson to was September, 1976. The concerts re¬ be in the lower '80s. Thurs¬ group in Ann Arbor are most of them belonging to the for the group, said efforts to occur. stipulates that the city search and planning studies and day, however, things will group said it did not intend to duled to meet with U - M Native American's Student Johnson proposed that the manager must grant a permit implement have a cultural center for wait that long. to use advertising brighten up as the skies will . President for Student Assn., camped out in native American amplification equipment, be sunny and the high is a tepee on native Americans began in group esta¬ Fleming suggested the programs to market state tour¬ 8s Henry Johnson next the lawn of U blish na¬ that the equipment can only be - M President February and that no living/learning units in tive Americans share the cur¬ ist attractions. expected to reach the mid-'80s. sday, hopeful of resol- Robben progress dormitories, pointing to the Fleming's house Friday has been made. rent Trotter House with blacks [afour - month dilemma in night in protest of a series of Prior to the camp - out, the French, German and Russian units already in operation. A but Smith declined the sugges¬ Closed For group had been told it could tion, calling it "a move to divide choose a place of its own and living/learning unit is a combi¬ us and play one minority a- nation library, louse to consider the university would with the request. A list was comply meeting place and study hall that can be gainst another." A proposed meeting with designed for specific groups. Johnson was postponed Tues¬ provided and a house on Wil- However, the earliest date U Inventory mot Street - day, though negotiations are liversity strikes was named, but M could give for university officials then said establishing continuing. the dwelling was zoned as a one UNSING (UPI) - The u- - family residence and could not The proposal was authored be used as a center. l • dominated House Labor Kmittee has approved p that would allow college legis- lessors and other university by the Michigan Assn. Representatives Education of U - M officials said that even if the Wilmot Street was purchased, it needed too building MAIN STORE college loyes to strike up to 23 administrators complained that the bill is much work and a better facility could be found. Thursday 26th at 12:30 pm being ramrodded One official recalled an ex¬ b proposal, which now through the legislature and perience with Trotter House, all day Friday 27th lia vote of the full House, is that they have not had time to the first U - M black cultural ■y identical to one ap- digest the proposal or offer pd by the House last week amendments. center, which burned to the Hall Shop Open Friday ground. No one was injured hdergarten through high 35: Jul employes. ■ would allow college and Michigan Stole University t mi. Monday, lersity employes to strike Wednesday. ft 23 days — 13 with pay — p court ordered arbitra- Featuring: Poo/ began. send form 3579 to Stotc * legislature could dock Pin!)till Iniversity or college part of te aid during strikes. Foos b lidsket ball mmu Jir Hoi key very Open 7 (lays from 4p.m. client) 2S45 E. GrainI Hirer 35! 1200 COmPUTER _fA SHORTCOURSES I* % T$10.95 [pm month Tfcv i Computer Laboratory will present a series of J« L.-° 00 per „rn o non-credit shortcourses duringSummerterm, 1975. ■Free Service There is a $1 fee covering computer time and materials for each shortcourse. Registration for the I 4 ^Delivery shortcourses must be made by June 27 at the User 1 V—" // Information Center, Rm. 309 Computer Center. l*C TV RENTALS For full shortcourse descriptions, contact the User Information Center, 353-1800. Bade SPSS - an Introduction to the basics of using the Statistical Package for the Social Sciences for those new to computing. MCHANGEAND'LUBE'I •Up to 5 qt. only 89c of major brand multi-grade oil •Complete Chassis $366 lubrication Eat,drink and be merry! EXPERT BRAKE SERVICE EMISSION Foreign & American CONTROLS REMOVED (It's legal) We use Sun Infra-red equipment Better Mileage Better Performance brazier dog i (9 East Lansing Bay and shake UiJ 315 W.Grand River brazier SALE coupon Phone 351-9608 • 351-6762 U.S. Pat. Off. Am. D. Q. C. Expires Sunday June 29 J RUSSELL BAKER I Government hard to pleas The government is acting as if it wants a chucked us under the chin and showed us In either case, one gets the divorce. Signs of its disaffection have been how to recover our self - respect. impression of NATO after lih» they don't have much faith in us. Do we Germans. multiplying ever since President Nixon said Instead, we are left feeling once again dare intervene with a suggestion about this The A atlng '' in Eu^*" Peoplt we had to be treated like raid the dollar children, and like a failed partner unworthy of the business of being reliable allies, or would did there is increasing evidence since the government's respect. Soured by unem¬ this snap the government's patience with us world not throw the m "k* ^ EDITORIALS Vietnam collapse that unless we soon the shape up government is going to pack up ployment, inflation, price gouging and Vietnam, we yielded to the old passion of and trigger the walkout? And yet, assuring allies that they can still J economy gasoline. It was and our doubll? XV and move out on us, taking its talents to Arabians and the racism when the refugees arrived and we rely on us may be a hollow promise unless we saved in Shah of W t e more deserving the 1950s, people elsewhere. needed a friendly government to remind us SS Dem energy bill fails It is hard to know how to please the government these days. President Ford about decent impulses. Instead, it snarled at us. the government quits treating us like an alienated spouse. It is all very well for the this government to go around the world The government itself kind of as a whining wh has litti thst' nags us about being wastrels squandering How much longer will it put up with us? assuring allies we can be relied on, but this splendid fellow reliance vouchers that p2®W It has been a bad month for What was needed was some¬ energy on all - electric living and big cars. Henry Kissinger goes around the neigh¬ It certainly isn't happy with our yearning for a more passive foreign policy and a more is not enough. value every time one have "? of the «5'; Democrats in the U.S. House. bors hinting that we are weak - willed and Why isn't it also asking our allies whether turns out to be thing less economically disruptive active effort to put people back to work. we can rely on them? Our failure in unreliable Pltlt don't keep moral commitments. They couldn't muster enough than the Ford plan, which seeks to The government is passive on unemploy¬ Indochina did not occur because we were an And why? Because the mm*. Vital men at the Pentagon say if it came ment and active on foreign policy, and it that the party discipline to override half a answer the ruinous effects of to war the Russians would unreliable ally, though the government has unreliability of our whip us because clearly believes that if we had any sense we the rest of the dozen Ford vetoes of popular bills, possible future Arab oil embar¬ we have let the military go flabby. would quit nagging about jobs and buckle tried to shame us into taking this guilt rap. people worid ttuoktL ?! including the $5.3-billion emer¬ goes by creating the same effects President Ford announces that he is down to the urgent business of jollying The failure occurred because we couldn't are unreliable. that the Americans SometinL •. rely on our allies. The unreliability of South - gency jobs measure and the strip itself. damned mad at us for succumbing to a fit of the world the mining bill. mean - spirited pique about the Vietnam Turks, Koreans, Germans and French. Messrs. Ford and Kissinger, in their zeal Vietnam and Cambodia was no anyone, including the government, which secret to We must be government d2| Last week they passed an What we got was a stack of refugees. to reassure our allies that we can still be very careful about tried to compensate for it by hese things. The making the embarrassment of an energy tax waffling proposals — mild oil A lamentable failure of human there on our part, to be sure, but a more decency relied on, are once again making commit¬ Americans twice as reliable. the end of its government patience. - import quotas, weak auto milage ments without consulting us. Is it because In recent years, too much of the It may bill, a sad relic of an alternative to sympathetic government not thinking of totally disgusted with us We rules and minor tax incentives — they th;nk of us as children, or because they reliability has come from the Americans want the President Ford's energy saving washing its hands of us would have fear that if they did consult us we might government to pick up ^ covered with the syrup of party and not enough from its allies. It was not us, would we? p a program. understood that everybody has bad days, say, no, we cannot be relied upon any more? the American people who took France out rhetoric. (C) New York Times Fearful that a stringent plan including gas taxes, taxes on Unless the Senate can pull gas-guzzling cars and oil import tariffs would upset constituents together a plan more than the House disaster and less effective VIEWPOINT: MARRIE back home, House Democrats inflationary than the President's, passed a bill offensive only to those the goal of energy self-sufficiency committed to conserving fuels. MSU will become no more than a villages offer advantages slogan. By LINDA CHARETTE prevent children from gaining entrance but each resident is only charged for I live in Spartan Village and I am quite again, with the assistance of a chair or bike long back and forth to East satisfied with the advantages it has to offer. distance charges and not the standard I am sure there are Lansing for they can climb on top. service charge of approximately $7 legitimate — My husband and I were residents for three I was very disappointed with the article per in regards to the month. Therefore, once all these conditions in the years and then elected to move off-campus. because it related only negative responses utility but one must look at the We moved to Haslett for one year and then charges are considered in the rental charge, With a little added advantages about the MSU married housing facilities. cooperation ind returned to Spartan Village; we now have the actual rent for the apartment is But on .the same token, there are many very standing between the married been back for one year. low. Also, the village residents are provided residents and the The decision advantages to living on one of the villages. University, m with maintenance service seven days a week conditions can be resolved. But effecting our return was the high cost of rent Rent is a big factor, even if the University > and utilities; the poor maintenance service until midnight and there are not very is considering a rate hike for the next many cooperation must exist. year, apartment complexes that provide that kind and the added amount of driving, which cannot lease I am not sure of the answer one a one or two bedroom of service. orthesol resulted in higher gasoline maintenance. to these problems but I do believe tl apartment, furnished off-campus for the The locale of the married housing units is Before I go any further, I would like to say must begin in the home of price now being charged: one bedroom - also unique. MSU maintains three married each mi that I felt the picture of the Waste Control housing resident, as hard as it may be $119.00, two bedroom $125.00. All utilities - station, in Friday's State News, was very such as water, electricity and heat are housing villages: University and Spartan the pressures of school, bills, etc, A distorted. The picture was not clear enough included. Villages and Cherry Lane Apartments. positive attitude toward the en that you could depict the boarded entrance From my experience of paying utilities They are all close to campus and East would definitely be a help. Thi of the recycling bin, which was also provided such as heat and lights alone, not water, the Lansing. Bus service is also provided on a negatively only breeds more disconten with a lock. So the only possible way continual basis by both MSU and CATA. average was $35 per month for the year. consequently, this unhappiness re children could obtain entrance into the bin is This gives married students the closeness back on the University. Excluded from this was the cost of my to campus needed for attendance to their They too, hi either by standing on a chair or on their contend with their priorities, rate ina RAs: costly bikes. In any case, the bin has been provided with adequate coverage to prevent entrance telephone, which, first of all, required a deposit of $45 plus the installation charge of $20- Then every month I would have a classes whether they commute by bus, bike or foot. Again, considering the locale, East and bill collectors. Therefore, be standing of their problems but at the from the ground level. service Lansing, the married housing residents are time do not neglect your c< charge plus charges for any long not required to p4y t?ffy^ax§sr^3feas, if While seven members of the impersonal university. The same holds true for the waste distance telephone calls. Linda Charette is an they lived in Lansing they would be obliged employe \ board of trustees dutifully and But three years ago, the Univer¬ load-luggers. These bins are high enough to Whereas in the MSU married expanded nutrition dept. of the CoOf housing, to do so plus the added cost of commuting Extension Service. responsibly followed the dicates of sity wasn't caught in today's rising dorm costs by approving an harsher economics, and triples increase in room and board fees, were not an annual fall term one maverick trustee decided to menace. Now Huffs huff merits Letter policy question the way things are looking into. traditionally done. His The Opinion Page welcomes all and phone number. suggestion of — a student The "weirdo" was Warren Huff, referendum on the issue may not letters. Readers should follow a Letters should be 25 Ikeso D-Plymouth, who has the temerity be wise, however, or even the best Beer the best for this campus. few rules to insure that as many and may be edited for com to believe that the worth of the can dribble letters as possible appear in print. way to gauge student sentiment. Ten years ago, I canoed down the Pine I think that this University should to fit more letters on the pa resident assistant (RA) program The option of investigate further into what other possibil¬ AU letters should be typed on needs to be evaluated at a time reducing room and River Steve Orr wrote about in the June 18 ities it has, before moving onto such an board rates may make 65-space lines and triple-spaced. No unsigned letters i when the only question about the financially- issue. Last summer I repeated the trip. extreme action, involving extreme amounts. Letters must be signed, and pressed dorm residents forget for Needless to say, the beauty of the Pine accepted. Names are wit annual rise of room and board fees a moment the has been marred by plastic bags, tennis include local address, student, from publication only for is "How much this time?" advantages of shoes and those beer cans you so I should like to propose that this resident assistants: their accessi¬ university, dealing strictly with the idea of faculty or staff standing — if any Huff figures it costs the Univer¬ poetically set adrift. building an auditorium, or theater (what¬ bility and confidentiality for stu¬ Those of us who love the beauty of the sity $800,000 a year to keep RAs in dents reluctant to seek other ever) contact a different firm. I suggest the outdoors do not appreciate your beer can their free singles with board — an help. rafts in 10 more years the Pine will look architectural firm of: the Taliesin Associat¬ Still, the University has duty - ed Architects of the Frank Hawaii have been put to better use. expense which if trimmed or to at least investigate a ways to like a sanitary land fill. An article on the beauty of that river Foundation in Scottsdale, Ariz. Lloyd Wright junket Mr. Conlin's own district, becausi eliminated, could slow the rise in reduce the costs of RAs A local paper recently reported that 9 large number of MSU students in room and board rates. — possibly would have been more appropriate than the The work of Frank Lloyd Wright is still county commissioners, including my own, high unemployment even in good tin by providing them with only part sophomoric dribble to a beer can. being carried on by those who were his thousand dollars could have been u Residence hall officials think of their room and board, were going to Hawaii for the annual by students when he was alive. Their major National Assn. of Counties' Convention. provide four full-time summer jobs Huff has had a bee in his bonnet on reducing their numbers or through David W. Bouse accomplishment is a revolutionary design With so many men and women unem¬ $3 an hour instead of buying sv»" this one since he first questioned WKAR-TV film supervisor for auditoriums and theaters. elected officials. a combination of the two. Their ployed in Ingham County, it seems rather the RA system three years ago. It When rising educational costs structures have been proclaimed to be some Though Mr. Conlin's constituent inappropriate that 10th District County was generally agreed at that time of the most beautiful, the most efficient, and commissioner Richard Conlin and eight of those of his fellow junketeers may i threaten to shut more and more PAC that RAs easily justified their students out, even the most design the best accoustically existence. sounding structures in his colleagues should decide to take a trip to tanned this summer, we may confident that we will continue Hawaii at the taxpayers' expense. expense as one of the few personal¬ I should like to speak to those in charge of The burned. necessary programs must undergo the proposed $6000 being spent in this manner may be izing touches in a gigantic and scrutiny and scaling-down. Performing Arts Center, and only a very small fraction of the county's Davel any one else who is interested in achieving total operating budget, but surely it could TME MsJGELUS JUNE DE UFW struggle made real It's been a long time since I bought a head 1973, one of the most violent periods of the of California - grown lettuce. It's been an equally long time since I bought a bottle of farmworker movement, the movie offers faces and voices for an often remote recent board of trustees decision to the support boycott of non - UFW California lettuce C.lh»HCCen«.IA-.-^* success for the U*w Gallo wine. Over the years, I've stopped situation. brings the issue into all of our lives. supporters across the cou"!fl The film packs an emotional It is also a success because even thinking about these forbidden items I'd read repeatedly of the Teamster wallop which ^ injects humanity into a political - social as I wheel my squeaky cart grocery store. through the such high production entertaining in the qujW But sometimes I wish "the boycott of fictional film is entertaining. lettuce and wine in support of the United The admission price, $5, is sW Farm Workers were more UFW literature personal. The consistently describes the growers as callous, the money goes >nto ^ struggle in the vineyards and fields of but to see them, leaning on their movement, '"eluding California is so distant from my Cadillacs taunting pickcters film \s an e« daily life while tiny children labor in the service centers, and the that I practice the boycott more as an fields behind them turned shot in the arm which U*w ascetic than an activist. rhetoric into reality. should have. . Last week, however, I saw a movie which brought it all home to me. The excitement I Skeptics and outright a, ve once felt about the farmworker movement goons who attacked picketing farmworkers, UFW should also see t very least, familiarize e fdmjhtb| th(em was rejuvenated and I marched through but to actually see them in their cause. Every movement strives to be Eberhard's this past week with the enthu¬ muscular, personal, but few succeed. The UFW has who are involved in th | siastic zeal of a crusader. sneering hostility made UFW literature my blood boil. always projected a uniquely humanitarian very best, it may convince the* The film was "Fighting for Our consistently describes ideal, but its geographically far - reaching struggle has merit. Lives," a the growers as callous, but to see them full length, color documentary about the boycott hinders understanding of the cause In any event;- beautiful t - UFW's leaning on their Cadillacs taunting picke- on a primary level by those people, the struggle in California when their contracts with growers were ters while tiny children labor in the fields boycotters, who give the cause its greatest movie. It is it is emotionally artisW.^oabso demand g hoS replaced by behind them turned rhetoric into reality. "sweetheart contracts" with the Teamsters. Filmed during the spring and summer of "Fighting for Our Lives" is a film which MSU students cannot afford to miss, for the weapon. This new film, which will premier in the is ultimately sat, supporters who neeo J jr. Lansing area at 8 tonight in the Lansing renewed. I Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Wednesday, June 25, 1975 5 ■ iocs' Details of bombing raids surface after questioning 'fclaHfe Inquirer NEWS By Wire Services and the State News to the House Armed Services intelligence had on the crew •To ensure the safe with¬ Committee in response to a before the assault was launch¬ drawal of the U.S. Marine WASHINGTON (AP)-Am¬ resolution of inquiry introduced ed, the Pentagon replied that assault force from the island. erican warplanes conducted two by Rep. Michael Harrington, air reconnaissance indicated Harrington called the U.S. bombing raids over the Cambo¬ D-Mass., and 37 other House some crew members were on dian mainland military action "very hasty during the armed members. the island and some had been assault to recover the crew of The House Armed Services overapplication of force" and taken to the mainland. Rep. John L. Burton, D-Calif., Good DA Charges the freighter Mayaguez in the Committee is not conducting a "The operation was conduct¬ Surgeon in Child's Death said Congress should determine I Gulf of Thailand last month, the formal investigation into the ed under the assumption that why the military had so little Pentagon says". Mayaguez incident, though the members of the crew may have Evening \ The bombing continued after the 39-member crew was releas¬ international affairs subcom¬ •been in all three locations," the intelligence on where the crew was. mittee has. Sponsors of the formal Pentagon reply said. ed by the Cambodians to ensure On Friday, Rep. Donald W. Harrington resolution have The third location presum¬ ■The Philadelphia Evening Bulletin published its the Bulletin. Veteran AP wirephoto the safe withdrawal of the agreed not to call it up Riegle, D-Mich., accused the on the ably was the Mayaguez itself, ■first edition yesterday under its own logotype as newsmen in Philadelphia Marines that had been sent into floor as long as one of the which had been taken to Koh State Dept. of trying to under¬ say the triple flag, involving lWell as the logotypes of the strikebound competitive Koh Tang, an island off the committees is doing an investi¬ Tang after capture by the cut an investigation into the ■Inquirer and Daily News, both competitors of publications, is a first in the city. Cambodian coast, to recover the gation. Cambodians. Mayaguez incident by sending ship and crew, according to the Rep. Robert Carr, D-Mich., The Pentagon said three of the wrong man as its chief Pentagon statement. who serves on the Armed the eight helicopters witness. These details were provided carrying Services Committee, said he the first assault wave of Mar¬ "We've got the wrong wit¬ believed if the resolution was ines on to the island crashed on ness," Riegle told collegues on called up on the floor of the the beach under Cambodian fire a House international relations Shy House for a vote, it would be witness and two others were disabled. deta subcommittee after Robert H. defeated. Without giving details on how Miller, a deputy asst. secretary He said he is encouraging the the 41 servicemen killed in the of state for East Asian and Armed Services Committee to Pacific affairs, testified he had operation lost their lives, the IaSHINGTON (AP) - Slip- Rosselli, 70, has been named in administrations before his take up an investigation before Pentagon reply said most cas¬ not been involved in any Maya¬ in and out by a back published reports as one of Proxmire said the CIA has waves, which are used within the resolution is reported out of ualties were suffered in the first guez policy decisions. Miller underworld figure those involved in a 1960 panel. ay, plot to engaged in activities that can¬ the United States to transmit committee. Carr expects the hour of the five-hour assault,. repeatedly said he either had no I Rosselli Without the documents "it's gave the Senate kill Castro. Giancana, also not be justified but that 80 to 90 up to 70 per cent of long¬ resolution to be reported to the The reply gave three reasons information or would have to Iligence Committee a great quite useless for us to bring per cent of its activities have floor with a recommendation check with named in the plot, was mur¬ these witnesses before the com¬ distance telephone calls. for the 15 air strikes on the superiors before |of detail today about his dered last week in an apparent mittee — all of them are been "absolutely essential." But the computer technology that it be defeated. Cambodian mainland: answering questions. alleged Central gangland slaying. Church announced Monday needed to separate the long¬ essential, all of them have to be Carr said that the Mayaguez •To prevent the Cambodians Iligence Agency plot to kill Robert A. Maheu, a former that an arrangement had been distance telephone conversa¬ incident was the first time the In Premier Fidel Castro, _ aide to very carefully questioned," the worked out to supply the from sending planes, boats or billionaire Howard Idaho Democrat said. tions and identify the callers is 1973 Presidential War Powers ■e's camera shy," said a Hughes and allegedly the liai¬ committee with photocopies of ground troops from the main¬ Asked about Church's yastly more complicated. The Act has been invoked, and there land to Koh Tang while the U.S. Jiittee spokesman, ac- son between the CIA and plaint, Press Secretary Ron com¬ raw data and documents Russians apparently have put were questions about whether assault forces were there. Wedging that Rosselli's Rosselli and Giancana, invoked gathered by the Rockefeller the intercepting method I door entrance and depar- the Fifth Nessen said at the White Commission on alleged murder into the President acted within the •To put pressure on the First? Amendment privilege House, "We don't know of any practice only recently, the Tri¬ confines of the law. Cambodians to release CAUIfiS-fiS ■vas to avoid reporters and against self-incrimination when plots. The photocopies will be bune reported. Asked what information U.S. the breach in the good relations lographers. he appeared before the commit¬ with the Church committee." taken to the committee under lank Church, D-Idaho, told tee. guard in the morning and will On Monday Sen. Barry Gold- Iters after nearly three Maheu is expected to be be returned to the White House I of closed-door testimony water, R-Ariz., said that the and locked in a safe overnight, Hey, chicken lovers- granted a limited form of CIA "took orders from the top" ■ Rosselli's account did not immunity in return for his according to Nessen. in carrying out illegal activities. 1 much from already pub- testimony. On Monday the Chicago Tri¬ Id reports of the plot. Goldwater, a member of the bune reported that the National come on over to The Other fried! Meanwhile, White House offi¬ intelligence committee, said the }urch said Rosselli had not cials deny they are delaying panel's probe will show the CIA Security Agency secretly tuned in d the committee with on a massive KGB operation delivery of key documents for did not want to do some of the which was monitoring private any other non- the committee's investigation. things it did but felt obliged to Wednesday Irnment persons involved » Church said Monday that telephone calls of Americans, follow orders. Je alleged plot for fear it delays in receiving the material including government and busi¬ Sen. William Proxmire, D- leaders. It endanger their lives. have forced postponement of ness Wis., told Goldwater that it The United States and the rmer lieutenant of Chica- appearances of high officials should be established who was Soviet Union have long had the Family Night Ickets chief Sam Giancana, from the Kennedy and Johnson responsible for CIA misdeeds. capability to intercept micro- Special 3 pieces of chicken, cole slaw, mashed potatoes and gravy, hot biscuits. Great time to discover the toucha honey Re9 difference in Famous Recipe, The Other Fried Chicken. Delicious dipped-in-honey batter, fried really crisp and all the way J'691 Now only $ 1\ OS 1900 East Kalamazoo 5 minutes from M.S.U. through. No wonder people who cross 4500 South Cedar over to The Other Fried Chicken stay there! 3007 N. East St. (U.S. 27 North) Open Mon.-Sat 9:30 - 5:30 Thursday nights til 9:00 203 E. 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EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS CALL COLLECT 1 ■ 313 ■ 353 - 5111 6 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Wednesday, June 25, lJ I Ingham judge bolsters DNR (continued from page 1) Johnson added that he did not case. have followed the case closely, cannot lease mineral rights and and that it may be difficult to BIll'S Pizza It s No Secret reject (drilling permits), but it think the fate of the Pigeon But representatives from and are hoping for a reversal of then refuse a drilling permit. gain a reversal. doesn't mean that we will have a River depended on the area Northern the decision. "It's like leasing a car. You Phister emphasized that Shell wholesale rejection," he said. outcome of the Michigan Oil Michigan Explora¬ tion, Shell and Amoco said they "In the long run, we think we would still abide by the develop¬ is sign the agreement, pay the aregoing to win on it," said Dick money and then they don't give ment plan devised by the DNR Hannah leads search for food solutions Burgess, vice president of Northern Michigan. Burgess said that the DNR you the keys to drive it out of the showroom," Burgess ex¬ plained. and the oil companies was important to and that it develop the oil resources in the Pigeon River Tostitr and RidJ (continued from page 1) what basis money will be next year-the council's goal- Burgess said the same kind of area because of economic bene¬ case occurred with offshore fits. The council is looking for a given." are expected to be taken up at minimum of 10 million tons of Practical steps to get the a separate meeting after the State prohibits leases and drilling rights, and the courts determined that Charles Craft, from the public food aid, the target set by the fund into operation by early session ends this week. affairs division of Amoco, said conference for each of the next drilling permits had to' be much more delay in developing three years. Officials said 8.9 fireworks use granted. the area could cause his com¬ million tons have already been pledged for 1975-76 — more Government wiretappings LANSING (UPI) - State Ted Phister, an attorney for Shell Oil Co., said he was "very pany problems, since its mineral leases run out in the next three mfBwfl than half by the United States Police Director George L. disappointed in the decision," years. (continued from page 1) —and the common Market is country, Halverson says "unlawful and with one party's consent, such 2nd WEEK I still to make its pledge. dangerous" fireworks are as when an undercover __ agent The report said that 113 The agricultural investment wears a tape recorder conceal- being used in some areas of Today \*a*gai persons were the targets of 123 Open 1 1 fund, proposed by the oil ed in his clothing to record Michigan, despite the fact that p.m. ^ Tw|.lli,$;oo telephone taps in 1969, dropped producing nations, would pump about $1 billion into the conversations of others. Levi said he will not approve to 90 the following year, to 87 in 1971; 102 in 1972, 116 in 1973 they are illegal. Halverson issued a "re¬ Shows 1:15 • 3:15 ■ 5:15 • 7:15*- 9:20 ^4^-00 I bLLEN 1 KRIS BURSTYN KRISTOFFERSON y^UCE fsSft'll J poor countries—nearly double minder warning" , the amount of low-interest requests for warrantless taps or bugs unless he is "satisfied and 148 in 1974. Levi said that during the first ing virtually all fireworks, say¬ Whoopee! xDOESNTUVE HERE money now culture. laid out for agri¬ A secretariat official said that the subject of the surveil- lance is either assisting a four and one-half months of 1975, "The maximum number of regardless of type and size, have been prohibited by law in Peter Sellers is back in the funniest 1 =- ANYMORE foreign Michigan for some years. nine members of the Organiza¬ tion of Petroleum exporting power or political group foreign-based or plans unlaw- telephone surveillances in oper- ation at any time was 91; the The only legal fireworks in picture of the year." IBS—, IPPGI 2:00 6:30 l:4S Twl.Ul.6i30 7 VjMW ful activity directed against Michigan are small sparklers H.Y.D»UiNtw» Countries (OPEC) have agreed a minimum was 67." Levi was foreign power or foreign-based attorney general during most of containing not more than .125 PETER SELLERS among themselves to put up pounds of burning elements. dsll half the fund, with Saudi political group." that period,having taken office CATHERINE SCHELL Those standards spelled in Feb. 7. Arabia footing the bulk of the hSp greater detail the department Microphone surveillances bill. He said the United policy stated by Levi's prede- States is to pledge about $250 million. cessor, William B. Saxbe. were reported used less often, with fourteen persons listed as m* its four for fun 1 The United States recently The statistics were the first the targets of government bugs llOnl "I 2:05 5:IS 7:15 1W| and fun for all! 1 announced its support for the government report since 1973 in 1969, 19 in 1970, 16 in 1971, TwI-lltaSill> 1 on the number of warrantless 31 in 1972, 38 in 1973 and 32 in fund, but a U.S. delegate said: taps and bugs conducted in this 1974. Hpyfl lulii' Moldiohawn ■ "As far as we know there warren bealty Jp | have been no firm pledges. 2nd Annual ~ Nor has it been determined on Wilderness Outdoor Education Workshop I 2 weeks Sept. 2-163 credits, Ed 484 Twl-Ul.t;^ j Co sponsored by In 403 irikson Hall or by cajjlng 353 71*4 Summer Circle Free Festival presents TheTrial THE TAMING OF THE SHREW Billy Jack It takes up where Billy Jack left off. SUMMER with ■^HPLUS SCHOOL Brenda Nicherson and John Schmedes IN THE LIFE AND TEACHERS TIMES Oc July 2-5 ^ sjaiiaa "private Celebrate July 4 with duty '' ■ n ( V:„ I- Kate and Petruchio .(OJLnurses'J ' '-"-v.. --fni cm Kresge Court 8:30 pm ■ starring ■ STREISAND & CAAN ■ Robert Preston Shirley Jones ■ Buddy Hackett g directed by ■ Morton De Costa ® ■ (1962) color ■ 151 minutes ■ g $1.25 at the door g COLUMBIA PICTURES and RASW present or Directors' BARBRA STREISAND JAMES CAAN Choice Series ® a .FUNNY LADY WSWK production Ticket (available ^ a HERBERT ROSS film Co Stamg 0 D BEN VEREEN CAROlf WEllS OMAR SHARIF.,Nicky II at the door; $5 as Amslen Oijnol Songs by IOHN KANDER and fRFD EBB fcttlonol Songs by BUY ROSE Diiecloi ol Photogwphy Coslumes Designed IAMESWONGHCWE.ASC RAfAGHMNandBOBW^KE Nuk *ior«)ed and Conducted by PETERMW2 Pioducion 0tvy*d by GEORGE Soanptoyby |WPRESSQNAU.ENand ARNOflSCKIMAN toy b>ARNQD SQUMW Dmciedby HERBERT ROSS Induced ENKKS for 5 punches) • by RW STARK ■ PiodutnHarry Bon Mu» * nmmo Pete Townshtnd v Bv Ken Run* Beryl Vertue Aid Christopher Sump frmiucmiH Robert SUgwood am Kin Rimell Mon. Tuei. Wed. Thuri. - 8:0< lOriqinalSoundtrack Albumai FUydor Recordsl„^,„fand lopes I umi; THUTHFS li Tin Add Ounn Fri. ft Sot, — 6:30 ■ 9:00 Sun. — 5:15 • 8:00 Also-10:30 lot* show on Frl.-Sot. ( 11 Spartan Twin East J1 I ■ ■ HMOM 1H0PHKC '351.0030 t Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Wednesday, June 25, 1975 7 Michigan doctors' By SUE McMILLIN State News Staff Writer -mm commerce department. d.p.,t„,en, ..u ^ in the . report have resulted in response," Dively said. We'vc strike unlikely ' Directors' Choice Film Series. the establishment of a Because of this, he cooperative efforts of Dive'y and Daniel medical seen states solu¬ for doctorj answering an e- made to develop injury pre¬ Demlow. overreact, I think, tions where neither the doc¬ have made the possibil- malpractice insurance fund mergency call in a hospital, vention programs. 0f a doctors' strike in the !^!„infurance compiled a commissioner, report, and the introduction of several and give doctors too much." Legislators, consumers, law¬ tors or the patients had to and one that would require The need for a comprehen¬ of Michigan very unlike- Medical bills now sacrifice their rights have doctors to complete 50 hours a e Malpractice in Michigan, which pending in the legis¬ yers, doctors and government been suggested. sive solution to the malprac¬ it this point, Michael Dive- was sent to lature. year of continuing education. tice problem stems from the the governor in officials ha,ve all been involved deputy director of the "I think the state of Michi- Among the bills nearing Though cooperation and re¬ Wednesday evenings February. Recommendations in the attempt to find solu¬ final legislative action is one complexity of the situation, of film comedy at i can be very proud of its cent legislation seem to have tions to the problem, he said. that would jjiuviue Dively said. There is no Fairchild Theater! —MV "W"iu provide 1immunity provided a temporary solution single cause and no single to the malpractice problem, solution. raditional Series Tickets ($5 Dively stressed the need to Dively said that, though the for all 6 films) are MSU look for alternative solutions. "We've got to find a range answer to the problem," he said. long- problem has been around for several years, the economic situation present probably helped to bring it more rapidly available now at the Union Bldg. Ticket Office. He suggested a compensa¬ evived after to the public attention. Series TicHfits are tion-type approach as one pos¬ He also stressed that the 7-year absence good for 5 punches. sible alternative. Victims of present public awareness of (5 evenings for 1 malpractice would receive reg¬ the problem is apt to bring person, 5 people ular compensation payments for 1 evening, 2!4 more malpractice suits into MARTIN SOMERNESS in a system similar to work¬ the courts. people for 2, etc.) State News Staff Writer u #wo?ls with money donated by MSU alumni." even the counting of Spartan the section at the beginning of man's compensation. Many people were not aware points with the bell." really nice to take our card Dively said that one of the that a physician could be sued, Single admission uffy Daugherty, Rose Bowl Miller said the basic the football season, since our section out to Pasadena is $1.25 (at the the "Eat 'em up" cheer the card section would design of The card section would sit in first three home games — I'd recommendations made in the he said. The percentage of , be a the south endzone happen like to see card section mem¬ report was very important in door only). a green and white block S block white S on a green seats, Miller before school really gets under bers getting priority on tickets potential malpractice suits section are all traditions of background, which would be said, as the formations there way." finding long-range solutions. that are heard about is very we could go out there and — could be seen from almost all It suggests that studies be small. *-n football. formed by card section Miller, who received the go- show up USC's and UCLA's mem¬ -b Miller, vicerpresident of bers parts of the stadium. As the ahead to set up the card section V wearing colored bibs. years progress, the card sections." Inter-fraternity Council, Other formations would sec¬ from Athletic Director Burt Miller said that donations result tion's seats would ts to reinstate the block S from the members of improve as Smith, said the Athletic Council section that vanished from tion holding the sec¬ do regular student seats. recently approved the idea and from alumni would be used to GET YOUR TICKETS NOW up cards measur- "A volunteer would rent a public address system rtan Stadium after the 1967 two feet by two go out that ASMSU President Brian for the card section leader, The Music Man feet. and buy his ticket and then turn ball season. Which card the members Raymond could see no reason would it in to his row leader," said print instruction cards and June 25 don't see why we can't get hold up would not to approve the plan. depend upon Miller. "That way, all of "the secure meeting places for the 7:00 & 9:35pm going again," Miller said, where the person sits and what "We've gotten some of our tickets can be turned in for a group. Members would be get the formation plans for this card section from TODD sure we can was being made. chosen on a first-come, first- starring block of seats. I don't know if the sary volunteers. The card We d like to ones run by Purdue and serve basis, with alternate Robert Preston coordinate we'll have the section an ion will have 1,200 mem- some of the section's formations ready for USC, though our card section list of about 10 per cent of the Shirley Jones the Ohio State or Miami of Ohio in 30 rows of 40 people, hope to use some of the erials left over from the old with the cheerleaders marching band," he wouldn't be too hard to do and the said. "It games next year, but it's ful that we'll be ready hope¬ by the would be a little bigger than Purdue's," Miller said. "It'd be total serve membership kept in for emergencies. re¬ RUNDGREN5 Buddy Hackett directed by Morton De Costa section and buy new something like the State spell- out, the Eat 'em up cheer or North Carolina game. We'll be ready at the latest by the U-M game. It'll be hard starting up UTOPIA (1962) color 151 minutes nants center eds workers Gary's Campus he Tenants Resource Cen- needs volunteers who will willing to work two to four ts a week as trained hous- counselors. A training Beauty Salon fV Finian's Rainbow ~am will be held at the For the best in July 2 ter, 855 Grove Street, on 7:00 & 9:30 pm Summer hair care ay and Saturday, June 27 - stop in or call starring Fred Astaire Gary's today Petula Clark 549 E. Grand River Keenan Wynn Ave. directed by Across from Berkey ^ 351-6511 Ford Coppola (1968) color 140 minutes "IT IS A JOY!" -Judith Crilt, Ntw York Mogotint BOARSHEAD PROCBAM INFORMATION 485 6485 Op»nlJ:« You're a Big PLAYERS LEDGES PLAYHOUSE ■Til 'i l 1 il today. TICKETS S4& S5 AVAILABLE AT THE MSUMMN Boy Now July 9 htigvMpark grind ledge JULY 14 8PM n. washington-downtown SIlOWS Ot 7:00 & 10:30 pm OFESSIONAl THEATRE 1:00 3:00 5:00 7:00 - - - - 9:00 p.m. JESUS FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE, WE starring Julie Harris CHRIST HAVE SCHEDULED DAILY MATINEES Peter Kastner 1 Elizabeth Hartman SUPERSTAR FOR "BAMBI directed by HELD OVER I Bubbling with LAUGHTER! Francis lid. thru Sun ; thru 6 They met at the funeral of a perfect stranger. July tiab/se Buzzing with FUN! Ford Coppola r»*»r« 627-7805 From then on, things got perfectly stranger and stranger. (1967) color Paramount Pictures Presents Walt Disntgte 97 minutes HAROLD and MAUDE Bambi double feature Technicolor" films Color by A Paramount Picture bgny^ilm TECHNICOLOR" Forty Carats ^ July 9 8:40pm only TONIGHT 104 B Walls 7:30 & 9:30 Admission $1.25 starring Liv Ulltnan StorvbvFEUXSALTEN Rtrilni.ilb,BUE ■ BUEM VISTA Distribution Co. Inc. * Edward Albert Gene Kelly EXTRA ADDto 28 min. featurette tnd inolhtr WALT DISNEY DELIGHT directed by Milton si A milted up pup and his thievin' pal! Katselas || EKDODBto TECHNICOLOR* RACCOON | tw.lt Dim. (1973) 110 minutes color From now until eternity the best Th*r« is o movie ever made on the subject. diff#r»nc#!ll Starts Friday.. .All New! WIMIUTION '0# The Awful What happens when youte a N.Y cop Truth MttT -»«. .sent to France to bust July 16 7:00 & 9:00pm Mr i""" SffldlclMM a dope ring and... starring IMT Voluminous homo Cary Grant ltw»v mitiniti Irene Dunne vRE Coo"* Ait «ri directed by ,M1. C9*«"tlv W>tM Leo McCarey WW (1936) b&w 92 minutes Mlf WiMlfuM •' Ml no Ingmar Bergman's MM SCENES FROM When: June 24 & 25 RWt A MARRIAGE®. Place: Union Ballroom Cover Girl July 23 7:00 & 9:00pm UT1MBMK starring LIV ULLMANN Time: 7p.m. only starring The Year's Most Honored Film, Rita Hayworth _ fame Gene Kelly iMintiMi Today Er Thursday Open 7:30 p.m. Price: $1.00 directed by Charles Vidor INFORMATION 3325817 Feature 7:45 Only! (1944) b&w A JOHN FRANKENHEIMER FILM Friday Open 6:45 p.m. AIR CONDITIONED! 107 minutes Feature 7:00 - 9:50 |l'll W. Tw MHt M. „ FERNANDO REY Bernard fresson Sat. Er Sun. Open 12:45 p.m. COLOR BY DELUXE* JtSAMOTHIO.- DOWNTOWN Feature 1:00 - 3:45 - 6:40 - 9:30 T ~STPTRTl 1HILJLER HI-J i.vnj^vfni