S ta te P re s s ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY-TEMPE T hursday, M ay 14, 1970 FLOWER POWER - Demonstrato rs o ffer som e of th e $85 flag p o le flow er b ed flow ers to a C am pus Security officer during last w eek 's protest. M oney fo r th e rep lacem en t of th e flo w ers w a s c o lle c te d b u t n ev er tu rn ed in. Vol. 52, No. 104 k I Photo by Ray Wong1 Flow er m oney lost Funds collected, then disappear By RANDY BAILEY A sst. Cam pus Editor ■Funds collected during recent cam pus dem onstrations have been disappearing11-o r have been m isappropriated. R adical Youth M ovem ent m em bers freely adm it that money collected for Jenry Rubin’s appearance w as far m ore than the amount needed for Rubin’s travel expenses. The extra funds went for a M ay D ay celebration in Old Main Park which called for the freedom of Black Panther Bobby Seale, and to the Black Panther Party defense fund. M oney-gathered last week to replace the flow er bed destroyed around the flagpole w as never turned over to the physical plant John E llingson, director of planning and construction, said that he w as told that students w ere collecting m oney to replant the flow ers destroyed during, the flag dem onstration—but he hasn’t será the m oney. Mijs. Pam Starsky, SMC spokesm an, said that she w as aw are of a collection for the flow ers which totaled m ore than $2(K-but she added that SMC had nothing to do with the collection. At least $85 would be needed to replace the trampled flowers said E llingson. v . Another collection taken at the M all rally after the m arch through Tem pe last W ednesday to replace the broken windows in the F irst N ational Bank broken during the march—has disappeared. K’ - (Continued on page 3 1 Hr- Outlook w ritersview Cambodia Page 4 Protest group denied space Page 3 Devil track team may be spoiler Page 7 P»«e * — Thursday, May 14 Petitions are circulated to gather support for war end' amendment By MARCIA SIMONS munity, a student spokesman U niversity students who said. demonstrated in anti-Vietnam The students were previously peace marches last week, are divided on fee value of fee strike. circulating petitions on campus Hie Senate resolution calls for: this week—seeking public sup­ 1) Curtailment of funds for port for an “Amendment to End fee War” which will be in­ m ilitary activity in Vietnam after troduced into fee U.S. Senate December 1970, and withdrawal of all U;S. m ilitary personnel within fee next few weeks. If passed, fee Senate bill will from Vietnam no later than June cut off fu rth er funds Tor 3Q, 1971. Southeast Asia m ilitary activity, 2) Curtailment of funds sup­ ‘^except for fee purposes of with- porting m ilitary operati draw ing troops safely and Laos after Dec. 31, 1970. systematically, fee exchange of 3) Curtailment of funds sup­ prisoners, and asylum for Vietnam ese who m ight feel porting m ilitary activity in threatened by U.S. withdrawal,” Cambodia beginning 30 days said a letter to fee State Press after enactment of fee bill. from thé U.S Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs. The letter says: “We believe it is time Congress played fee role ~po assigned it by fee Constitution in determining our involvement in • m ilitary adventures abroad . . . Concluding P alestine Week We are shocked and grieved by activities today will be Colin D. fee tragedy feat occurred at Kent Edwards, foreign correspondent, S tate. . . We share a sense of guilt speaking on “The Middle East because of fee lack of alter­ Crisis”, a t 2:30 p.m. in the Great natives provided by the Congress Hall. of fee United States so far. We The Palestine Week Committee _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ____ hope our present effort will invites all interested persons to PROTEST PETITION — S tu d en ts sign a petition on th e M all m sunnnrf provide a m eaningful a lte r­ native.” " S S Û B S M J S H atfield-M cG overn's J . n d l n M o Twenty-one senators, including be distributed on fee Mall from u cn,na contlict. S tudents p lan to ta k e th e petitions into Phoenix. the co-aufeors of fee. “peace bill,” Sens. George McGovern, D- am‘ to 2pm^ ^ ~ 1 ' ~ Photo by Richard S.D., and Mark Hatfield, D-Ore., now fàvor fee resolution which will come to a roll call vote probably within the next 30 days. University students will be circulating petitions in the Phoenix area during the next few weeks, as part of a program to involve the community in a ‘dialogue.’ These same students , voted last Sunday to call off a strike on the University, to “shut it down,” with the purpose of bringing together, rather than alienating, the campus com- Palestine Week ends with speech NOW S TA TE PRESS is published by Arizona State University as the official campus newspaper every Tuesdey ttirouph Friday during the school year, except holidays and examination periods, and is entered as second class matter at Tempo, Arizona, IS2S1. rew flours for the Famom SMORGASBORD! 11 A.M. till 2 P.M. M onday thru Friday All T.he Pizza & Salad You Can E a t . . . for P DAISY SALE! SPECIAL . . . style cut, sh am p o o a n d set $ 7 fo r th e m onth o f M ay, except S atu rd ay s 4 iz z a 955 E. U n iv e rsity D r. I nn % Bk. E. of S co ttsd ale R d. pierce boeheim BEAUTY SALON 969-7441 Helzel I I f • I T hursday, M ay 14 - P ageJ bM L peace desk denied space here By JOHN ALDAPE By JOHN AU>APE ^ ^ w S tadent M obilization Oan aiallee members approached ■ÉK Office of Student Affairs to ask for office space the SMC but were turned : . ..¡rw Jim Rowland Rowlandand andPam Pam Rowland also said contactedare b c r e da&d fa .n ^ Jim elaela Rowland also said hehe contacted to aB the general election. Starsky, SMC members, said that ASASU President John Hnhn— The SMC leader also expressed Dr. Leon Shell, assistant dean of with a request for facilities. He _ t’s march bew ilderm ent as to the students, told them that “there is said Holman told him to ¡ny — United Press U niversity adm inistration’s not one office space in the before the Board of F uondal . involved insensitivity to students’ wants. University with a phone that’ Control today and ask for a to Mjm students. “I didn’t go to Dean George could be assigned to SMC.” “peace desk” for SMC m i * d these figures Hamm’s office to ask for matches Students for Peace. me third of the and fuel to burn down a For thisfall, Rowlandexplained, U niversity lent body and building,” he said. “I went to ask his group is asking for a room ■ toe students for office facilities. I didn’t even where “any group on campus o h : year’s ASASU ask for a typewriter. come in and use i t ” He explained th a t bUt universities have such « g fa f that were requested fay the point of an export system, will be conducted in Phoenix Tuesday, students and SMC was disap. by (the U niversity pointed that this University dM m arketing departm ent and not have such an office. Earlier he and Mrs. Sbraky Center for Executive Develop­ ment, both of the College of had approached Cecilia S o n ia-, MU director, for office_______ Business Administration. ____T__ the M MU. Rowland said said M rs. Cost of the workshop, for which *he u- Rowland registration forms ar» flvaiinhi» Scoular answered that tfacre ww e |from —- ASU’s *"*” Center - ■ for _ w Executive 200 organizations on campus Development, 965-3441, or the that there were not « w y * of­ available for aO cooperating agencies, is $5, fices organizations th a t asked for which includes the cdsts of in­ struction, m aterials and break­ space. He said he told her that all the fa st Registration will be limitoH to “groups on campus will not want insure participation by all nor need such facilities” as SMC members of the workshop, Dr. needs. SMC and the rest of the Ruch said in advising early groups on campus are con­ registration. centrating th eir efforts to publicize a national peace Editor named movement on Memorial Day. The ' B oard of Student “With all of Use students tovolved in this issue, I can’t see Publications has named David why we haven’t got a phone of ere Jensen, junior majoring in own,” he explained, fa M iy m . radio and TV, to the editorship head. “When facilities are denied of the State Press for the fall to one group on campus, fariKH— semester-1970. ' % B k. E. o f S co ttsd ale R d. Workshop takes at exports for Arizona —A .7.*° w uubop. Development designed to assist —---- find p en etrate the rig h t foreign for their products in­ to of, or in addition to, ex•®ng UJS. m arkets, through ! ®f the jet plane as the focal Flowers —iContinued from page l) — A bank official who asked not to be Identified said th at the damage from the demonstrators ! nearly |aoo, but no money * i received to pay for the Fked Reish, assistant dean, a d d Oak the University has no ( a d d over the funds of campus orgaa h ations—donations o r ^ m Rowland, SMC member, *" students malting coni to bis group’s planned l Celebration are assured lit SUN SAND SURF TODAY a t BIG SURF law ard Surfing a n d o th er com petition for all interested sign u p in South Hall 235 ASU N a iad s / Jr. Ah You's Polynesian Review ASASU & M en's Intram ural A w ards In au g u ratio n o f 1970-71 ASASU Officers FREE F O O D $2.00 p e r person / $3.50 p e r couple / S H 219, 221, 235 * sunningswimmingdanci'ngsandsculptingbeachballbatV''<'< ^ P»9* 4 — Thursday, May 14 Kent State excuses resemble MyLai By ROGER MORRIS Pm sure that somewhere in the It is unfortunate but apropos that the academic files there aré studies of the Kent State slayings coincided with the .rationale behind excuse-making or alibi­ awarding of the Pulitzer Prize for making. But I’ve arrived a t my own reporting to Seymour Hersh of the system based on observation of con­ Dispatch News Service for his revealing servative apologists over the past decade. the My Lai m assacre. Using My Lai as an example, it goes like Not that the two were so similar in themselves, but rather because the ex­ this: cuses for both happening are s tr ikingly Step One: The defenders say that an similar. event actually didn’t happen. This was the first reaction, of course, to My Lai. The apologists assured us that there were no killings; zealous newsmen simply'made up the incident on a slow news day. Step Two: Alright, something might have happened, but it was a mistake. True, this has occurred in Vietnam to an extent perhaps unknown in other American wars. When civilians and irregular troops are mingled (and all look the same) innocent people are killed. And it’s too much trouble W « ▼4 ■ w •T 1 5 0 .0 0 0 by D ickie ’s dilem m a m Step Three: Sure, they did it — but they were provoked. The provocation a t My Lai (see Hersh’s brilliant reporting piece in this month’s Harper’s) was prim a rily that of the people being Vietcong supporters, which might indeed be frustrating. Using that criterion, however, the m ilitary could wipe out every ham let in South Vietnam with a certain m easure of justification. Step Four: This is war — the people, got in the way; they were killed; that’s tough. This is the ultimate and most disturbing step. Sure, people get killed in war. But to carry this type of absolutist philosophy to its logical end would be absurd. Does a girl who loses her virginity become a prostitute? Does a philosopher who admits to no absolute truths then deny the idea of truth as a goal rather than an end? The . point, is that not every killing can be justified just because there is some killing, Yet, there are people who advocate this, which is again ironic in that we are willing to kill the people we intend to convert. And so it was at Kent State. A student of mine insisted when he first saw the sto ry ' on the AP wire that the guardsmen must have been the fatalities, and not the students. (The first bulletin didn’t say.) ■ And so he continued — an accident; a I provocation; finally — they deserved it. The same people, it would seem, say that the ¿lain students deserved it because they broke a law. I wonder, by the same token, if they would seek an equally harsh death penalty should the guardsmen responsible be found guilty. Probably not. Whether it be in regard to student violence (born largely of despair) or state (police, National Guard, arm y) violence, too many people are content to cluck their tongues and forget the blame. Perhaps there are some Old Testament vestiges wandering in my head, but I can’t let people off that easily. We can modify the crim e, but we cannot justify it. People kill in passion; sociological considerations m ust be weighed; mercy must be ten­ dered. But we cannot simply write things off. There is a final point. Newsmen are professionals. Soldiers are professionsls. Police are professionals. All have written or implied codes of ethics and behavior. A reporter can’t be excused for writing a slanted news story. A policemen can’t be excused for beating a demonstrator who seems repulsive to him. A village can’t be wiped out because troops are frustrated. This is the real breakdown of order, the beginning of repression, and the end of reason. Nixon war policy viewed as ’Cambodia madness President Nixon m ay have made the greatest political m istake of his presidential career when he sent Am erican forces into Cambodia. Certainly that is true as far as much of this coun­ try s youth is concerned, and it is they who will be By FENWICK ANDERSON selecting Am erican leadership in the next few years Here’s to you, Richard We suspect, m oreover, that a significant proportion Nixon, df the older citizens of the United States is becoming Heaven holds a place for those who slay. increasingly dissatisfied with N ixon’s war policy. This Hey, hey, hey. . country is very war-weary. During the 1968 campaign, a . . Perhaps Nixon is also beginning to see the result of psychiatrist booked to appear his policies. Certainly, he is making a big show of withon one of Richard Nixon’s drawmg a few troops and attem pts to “com m unicate” citizen TV panels was hastily with students. rem oved on orders from But that- is not enough j above. The reason was that psychiatrists (or less politely, All troops in Cambodia m ust be w ithdraw n_at “shrinks”, made Ifixon ner­ once, not som e tim e in the indefinite future. And the vous. Vietnam ization and withdrawal of troops from South One senator has called the Vietnam must also be pushed rapidly forward There is A m erican offensive in no more tim e for excuses. Cambodia m adness, and fia t’s hitting close to die When A m erica’s youth see that the leadership of m ark. The President may not this country is truly responsive to the feelings of the be insane by m edical citizens, then the protests will stop. Then there w ill once definition, but his Cambodian again be peace on cam puses and students can once more P speech provided alarm ing indications that he has lost his turn to education and inquiry. grip on reality regarding the If those in governm ent who are attem pting to make war in Southeast Asia. The this com e about are hot successful, then the protests will hope that hitting the North continue and increase in intensity. to ask questions. (They’re sympathizers anyway, is the reply. V ietnam ese h ard er would make them capitulate was a favorite fantasy of President Johnson and Gen. William Westmoreland. After a while, Johnson’s claims that he could see light at the bottom of this quicksand became ludicrous, though his attem pt at humor cost thousands of lives. For Nixon to believe a t this late date that escalation will prove effective is an in­ credibly ignorant assessment of the w ar’s history, to put it charitably. Nevertheless, the President has tried hard to outdo his Cambodian folly with inane pronouncem ents on the campus dissent aroused by his own policies. In an Agnewish mood at a Pentagon briefing he criticized “these bums Mowing up the campuses,” and dismissed student con­ cern about the war as phony with an assertion that if it (the war) ended, students would only rally to a new cause. A sobbing father of one of the Kent State victim s alluded to Nixon’s comments when he asked if his daughter was a bum who deserved a bloody death for daring to question her government’s policies. The P resid en t’s first statem ent on the tragedy \ indirectly answered yes by I saying that “when dissent i turns to violence it invites ! tragedy.” Not only did he | ignore his own responsibility I in the m atter for refusing to be 1 moved by peaceful antiwar | p rotest and thereby en- I couraging violence, but he also im m ediately assum ed | that the four deaths were the | fault of protestors. The facts are making that position in­ creasingly untenable. P ar(Continued on page f ) f Thursday, May 14 Student nurse awarded title The U niversity’s student n u rse of th e y ear w illn a v e com pleted h a lf of h e r r e ig n w hen school lets out for the sum m er. K aren Heun, ju n io r nursing m a jo r, re p re s e n ts th e A rizo n a A sso c ia tio n of S tudent N urses D istrict No. 5 a fte r being selected fo r h e r « activ ity in th e association, know ledge of c u rre n t nursing issues and on poise. . * . As student nurse of the year she recrui ts prospective • D u rin g one of her recru itin g trip s, M iss Heun re c a lls w atching the faces o f about 75 boys betw een tfife ages of 14 and 15 discover th a t they w ere going to g et in­ form ation about becom ing a nurse. viewing careers as male nurses most memorable m ru itin g session “ I ’ll never forget th at d a y ,” she said, “ The 230-pound m ale licensed p rac tic a l n u rse th a t talked to them convinced som e of them th a t th ere w as a place for m en in n u rsin g .” Karen practices for preobstetrical surgery by readying a needle fo r the e x p ectan t m other. W hile p a rt of her experience com es from sim u­ lated delivery "run -th ro u g h s"—in class, th e bulk A ccording to M iss Heun, o f - h er experience com es from direct people con- th e m o st in te re s tin g a n d t a c t a t t h e c o u n ty c lin ic p e rs o n a lly re w a rd in g e x ­ p erience of h e r “ in-train in g ” days a t the County clinic w as _______ visiting w ith a p atien t and h e r j fam ily before going to th e I —* > ^ hospital for a tonsillectom y. I X . Photo by Ray Wong NEWEST STYLES COLORS PATTERNS & FABRICS \ l R eg u lar Stock \erc. . W e’ve J u s t G ot Too M any P an ts! IßouTtoue tataa citer S u s w e * m e r e h a m o *& V N tv e s & m * Q é f/y /r 7 PñnTS J\JA l v e s T his Is O ur SALE ENDS SATURDAY. MAY 16 OOFF to SO r YOUNG ADULT & JUNIOR APPAREL DRESSES & SPORTSWEAR • BONUS DRESS RACK ON E PR IC E O N LY V A LU ES TO $35 IBfiukffñftlfáti A C H j* U 3 o i> T i q u t £ A S T \(S/VIUC/*S/ p u a \l A tj A ut A y 9:30 - 4:00 \ùP£lU : it// 1*0 JM S 710 FO R EST - T EM PE 966-1043 CASUAL TO CANDLELIGHT FASHIONS OXFORD SQUARE ¿ ¡Ê 6 — Thursday, May Id Weather Report Pepsi announces $1500 in grants Without endorsing any soft drink in preference to another, Dr. Glenn D. Overman, dean of the College of Business Ad­ ministration might well be ex­ cused if he does feel that Pepsi does, indeed, “beats the others cold,” at least in term s of a solid, effective working relationship between a rep resentative of industry and university graduate students. High clouds and a light freeze in the afternoon with little change in tem perature is predicted for the Valley today. The tem perature should be near 95. Yesterday’s high was 98 accompanied by mild winds and approximately 11 per cent humidity. SMC sets rally plans The ^Student M obilization Committee will set up workshops this week to plan for the national Memorial Day antiway rally, according to an SMC member. The workshops will concern various topics related to the war including: racism and the war, antiw ar perspectives (Which Way for the Movement?) and the relationships of high school students kl the war and their rights in organizing against it. “Memorial Day has previously been used to celebrate pro-war activ ities but we are counterposing with mass antiwar dem onstrations, rally s and speakers to say no to the war machine,” said Jim Rowland, chairman of the SMC. SMC meetings are planned for the upper level of Murdock Hall each Monday a t 7:30 p.m. Rand auditions University students interested in auditioning for the ASU M arching Band next season should sign up in Gammage Auditorium, room 311, this week. Applicants will audition for the director of the 144 member band. Cambodia (Continued from page 4)M ississippi V alley Stat’e' College in Itta Bena, Miss., was broken in February with unprecedented federal help. The Law Enforcem ent Assistance Administration of the Justice D epartm ent provided funds, advisers (the troops will come later) and equipm ent to help the Mississippi state government and the college administration gather an all-Black posse of lawmen to end the boycott. The move succeeded when this collection of Uncle Toms arrested 894 students — the largest mass arrest of college students in American history. Thus not only has Nixon succumbed to the generals and blamed the Kent tragedy on the victims rather than the killers, but his administration doesn’t intend to perm it peaceful dissent either, if it threatens to be effective. ticularly enlightening was the CBS screening of a National Guard training film which explained how, by virtue of their training and rationality, guardsmen should be able to control hostile crowds which greatly outnumber them. Nixon’s statem ent paid hom age to the rig h t of peaceful dissent — which was hypocritical since his ad­ ministration was the first in the nation’s history to plan and equip a mass arrest of college dissenters. A peaceful class boycott a t all-Black In addition to a “professional asso ciate” program involving m aste r’s and doctoral management degree candidates working with the Pepsi-Cola Management Institute virtually since the Institute opened its international training facility in Phoenix, Dean Overman has new cause to extend a hearty “well done” and “thank you” to John P. Sullivan, executive director of the Pepsi-Cola M anagem ent In stitu te on N orth C entral Avenue. Sullivan has just announced the creation of a new Pepsi-Cola Management Institute Fellowship fund of up to $1,500 annually for as many as three students who have completed their course work for the doctoral degree in management a t ASU and who are interested in sub­ mitting approved dissertations on a subject area of management within the soft drink industry. Persons who qualify in the Wwt Pe Ywl G- year. It doesn’t look too indirectly determine the meet 73%, but it’s a different type of promising though, and they may have to battle New Mexico from winner. contest in conference-wide relegating them to fourth place. The University of Utah in Salt competition. lak e City is the site, which could The Devils are sending a 21Leading the way for ASU are giYe the defending champion man squad to try to improve on their trio of record-breakers. Mark Murro is conceded the Javelin and Barry Shepard is a favorite in the high jump. LaBenz í a M u r r o ,La Benz, Shepard I is favored in the mile and will also compete in the 880 and threemile, completing a rugged triple. Other Devil stand-outs are the sprint crew of Mike Roberts, Doug Hawken, Mike Brunson and John Holbrook, long jum per Steve Holden, distance man Bob Boglione and weightmen John Barber, Chuy Ortiz and Winston Landes. TO P W AC P E R F O R M A N C E S 100-yard dash 3000-meter steeplechase 1— H arrington Jackson ( U T E P ) 9.2; 2— « Br een ( U T E p ) 9:04.4; 2—R a u l n l i i f i u i ra ™ iU T E E >'* ' 4; 3— Jesse Johnson ,U°LA ) 9:11.1; 3— H in d ley (B Y U ) ( U N M ) . D oug H a w k e n (A S U ) , C ly d e 9 '4.7; 4— Bob W a lcza k ( U T E P ) 9:15 0; 5— Glosson ( U T E P ) 9.S. ' Pete Span (A S U ) 9:24.5. ^ 220-yard dash , Shot put 1— J a c k s o n (U T E P ) 21.0; 2— Jo h n 1— V .nce M o n a ri ( U T E P ) 61-5V2; 2— F re d H olbrook (A S U ), P a u l Gibson ( U T E P ) 21 1; f i ^ ? aL d '..< U TEP ) 3 _ John B arber 0— M ik e Brunson (A S U ) 21.2; 5—M ik e (A S U ) 59-4Vj; 4— M ik e Wood (W YO ) 57-5 ■ Ro berts (A SU ) 21.3. 5— E r v in Ja ro s (U N M ) 56 )0'/. 440-yard dash , _ Discus J V T E P ) 47.2; 2— Ralph M ann 1— D e B en a rdi ( U T E P ) 188 0, 2— Steve ( B Y U ) , U lt N ilsson (U N M ) 47.5; 4—A rb la S ™ * *1 (.HPfA ) '« * ■ 3— Ja ro s (U N M ) iw Jones (W Y O ), W ayne B radshaw (U ofA ) 8/3■ 4—W inston La n des ( A s m um .iV ' . .. ' ' ' Jesus O rtiz (A S) 179 2r _ 880-y_ard run , Long jump ¡T-G reg Jones ( U T E P ) 1:50.4; 2— K e rry 1:50.6; 3 - C h u c k L a B e n i P o u T f (lBvY Uu) 24-73/.; ^ ,■ P a u l G ib so n ( U T E P ) 13.8; 3— Don F ren ch ( B Y U ) 13 .9 ; 5 - A I ^ ' i u 4^ ,0^ ; " 6" ‘ “ «»A, 2 ^ £ - D a n Redfearn f B V U ) U.4),-5—Roosevelt W illia m s T U N M ) 14.1. 440-yard inf. hurdles 1— R a lp h M ann ( B Y U ) 49.4; 2—M ik e h Jotw s (U N M ) 51.8; 3—W illia m s (U N M ) 52.6; , ...... M ile relay 4— R o n Rondeau ( U T E P ) 52.7; s—Ron Classen ( U T E P ) 52.9. - i R c^k47 « ir & s- 4 - ^ j? ijirs iu tS T f7 .7 BVW3!,Mi Bring it on home, and save some extra bread doing it. Either of two ways. You can get a confirmed reservation, and still use a Frontier Youth Card to get a 20% discount. Or, you can use the card to fly stand­ by, and save a full 40%, in some markets. The card itself costs three dollars, arid it's good until you're twenty-twb. You can use it on other airlines. Hit us up for 20% to 40% every time you fly. Get acardat any Frontier Airlines counter. It’s good for a lot of trips. a b e t t e r w a y t o fly r# Haircuts, shaves appear New look' for protestors indicates move to straight' Tltf antiw antiwar nflvnnairni m ay have 1___ - a new -look as _ The ar campaign ■ a y Am erican college students have their hair cut Rhode Island, Rhode Island College and Rhode Island School of Design with a charge of 50 cents , , length. An Associated Press going towards the Strike fund. fla t the move to the shorter hair and no Hair cuts have not been the only change to the Wlllll>l. ltlJ a *° l>elp improve the image of the antiw ar| protestors. Many of the students have 38 V * protestors, begin to take their protest door to door. ' an™ tte ? 016 °W blue ieans 311(1^ sWlJs for coats ^ _ ^ ? * ? xiinafely 50 students a t San Jose State ^ a p p e a r e d in Congress this week to had their hair and beards cut for free by lobby agarnst the war dressed as neatly as their refe m o n a l barbers. “The move to turning ijfd dressed them for Sunday School. ■mfread is to avoid offending people as we take our One student who had impeared earlier in the pretest off campus and start mobilizing people ” year in tattered jean?, tousled hair and a week-old said a San Jose student. 1 beard appeared last week in a sport coat and wellThe shears are also being used at the Dartmouth sImvct^ SlaCkS ^ b8“ - ^ ii^om bed and clean ean p ra m Hannover, N.H. as the. students there ■w e their locks shorn. One student, from San Fernando Valley State Girls from Pembroke College are offering a £ f r C“l S i S 016 trend toward shorter 1 do« t think our students would do that- it barber service for members of Brown, University of would be too revolutionary.” ’ Pr2 H j? J i2! M p fm m la w students •» * . Twenty Hard-year law students will work Car variuns state a id local agencies in solving “legal problem s of th e poor” , this summer as p art of the Law School’s Internship P ro g r a m according tn law professor Autliw LaFrance. L aFranee believes the Program, wla li operates yearround, is hr—n»Lj tn both the students and the y A . wjj0 participate. “We __ educational get soi power,” a two way are inter they,can; give the ah perience.” Agencies « m m e r’s program a re the F ederal Public D efender, M aricopa County Public D a n d e r, Legal Aid Society, M«P®rt Opportunity Program, me Phoenix city attorney’s office and die attorney general’s office. Forty-five law students applied .■* ®e » jobs that were offered this sum m er. S A L E Now On - Lasts thru Sat., YSA to hear Dr. Starsky on w id e selection Disarder b, for failing to became mvoived in German labor uavtie& “lid s same a n t applies today to what we cad ahra lefts,” M ld Pam ela S tarshy, YSA organizer. “These people cut themselves off from the m asses. •M e YSA feels the o n ly way to change is to educate society on the need Car d o n ee.” 708 t f femWnmt It I n t a a f M “ S . , 966-6031 .Here It Is . . .Cerne And Cet te L , a^ . " iSh SS ! f , - “ é w lS oom Where the life style is unique The greatest tlhrng geln g — pizca out o f «Me m W A SU SPE C IA L Large Pitcher 75c H Forest, Tem pe . H eated pool . . . . Color television m \ vv YAKS 1127 Ne- SCO TTSD A LE BO. 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