'MW Friday O lin expansion ; MICHIGAN STATI fall com pletion seen UNIVERSITY medical school and the student health serv­ April 19,1968 Construction of a two-floor addition to Vol. 60 Number 160 East Lansing, Michigan 10c Olin Memorial Health Center was approved ice. by the University’s Board of Trustees At present, however, money for the hos­ Thursday. pital is being debated in the state legisla­ The project, planned primarily to expand ture. Olin needs increased space to deal out patient services and facilities, will cost with growing student enrollment. 1331.924. Construction is scheduled to begin The 5.000 square-foot addition to Olin immediately and to be completed by the is the second addition since the center end of November. opened in 1939. Prof criticizes MSU at rally; Dr. Andrew D. Hunt, dean of the College The ground floor will provide additional of Human Medicine. Thursday called the space for the pharmacy, record storage, project a “much needed one.” and said and laboratory X-ray facilities. he endorsed it in every way. An enlarged and redesigned first floor Hunt is presently involved in planning will include a larger business office, im­ the development of a teaching hospital munization center, outpatient clinic, wait­ students mourn w ar victims ing area and four new examining offices. on the southern portion of campus within Smith of Flint- expressing the hope that Trustees approved the following low- By LEO ZAINEA the next five years. This facility would they had not died in vain. offer room for expansion of the two-year bidders for the project: Granger Construc­ and tion Co.. Lansing. $163.500: Lorne Plumb­ Before the procession, the crowd had WESTHORP stood in a windswept drizzle on the front ing and Heating Co.. Flint. $115.680; Roote State News Staff Writers Electric Co., Lansing. $37.375; and Labor­ steps of Bessey Hall and listened to brief About 250 people carrying crude white speeches by campus activists and Bob atory Furniture Co., Virginia. $15.369. crosses climaxed the Academic Days of Pardun, a national Students for a Demo­ The Lorne. Roote and Laboratory Fur­ Conscience with a silent, orderly march BaN operators cratic Society (SDS) leader. niture companies will be assigned as sub­ to Beaumont Tower Wednesday night to contractors to Granger Construction Co. Pardun expressed the SDS solidarity mourn the victims of war and white with West Germany’s student leftists in on one contract totalling $331.924. racism. Work on the addition will not curtail their fight against newspaper publisher wale out Earlier at a rally at Bessey Hall, a Axel Springer and condemned the at­ any of the services now offered in the 124- young professor of biochemistry ques­ tempted assassination of student leader bed campus clinic, according to Dr. James tioned the power of a course coordinator WASHINGTON (AP> - Some 165,000 S. Feurig. Olin director. Rudi Deutsche. to specify what can be taught in the The young assistant professor. Burke K. telephone workers walked out in a wage The trustees also approved a $74.875 con­ classroom, particularly during the two- dispute Thursday in their first nationwide tract to Reniger Construction to demolish Zimmerman, told the rally that his de­ day dialogue on the Vietnam war. partment had prohibited him from speak­ strike in 21 years, but there appeared little the south wing of Olds Hall, and a $30.904 The marchers planted the crosses in initial interruption of phone services. contract to Bosch Plumbing and Heating. ing on biological and chemical warfare neat rows to depict a military cemetery in one of his classes Wednesday. A de­ Inc. of Grand Rapids, to install an auxil­ and then heard a eulogy by Rev. Richard “The strike is on,” said Joseph A. Beir- iary ice chiller in the Ice Arena. partment spokesman said Thursday that ne, president of the AFL-CIO Com­ Zimmerman had been discouraged from munications Workers, as he urged another speaking on the topic because of a rigid 5011.000 telephone employes to refuse to time table for Biochemistry 803. A # ’ > * TW ' xddvfJ. biological^ and chemical ’ warfare wuuiu «c ex­ traneous to the objectives of the course • vmiciais oi «he'Bell Telephone System s k b o a r d E t l s w o r t h t o a In a statement to the State News Thurs­ and its parent firm, American Telephone and Telegraph Co., said they expect to day. Zimmerman challenged the power of maintain almost normal service as sup­ a course coordinator to specify what may ervisors took over many jobs. be taught or what is relevant to the gen­ t o c h e c k b o g u s b a l l o t s eral subject material of a course. "Is it not’ the assumption that anyone Management officials said there might In a statement issued Thursday evening. lots had been taken, said. "The election hired to participate in teaching a course be some initial problems with person-to- Peter Ellsworth, new ASMSU chairman, in­ was the responsibility of the third session. has sufficient maturity and competence person long-distance calls and other serv­ dicated that he would ask the board to check The candidates should not be held respon­ to decide for himself what topics are ices requiring an operator’s assistance. all the ballots cast in last Thursday's elefr- sible for this." germain*to the course content as speci­ tion. to determine if 100 bogus ballots were The text of the Ellsworth statement is as fied by the curriculum committee?" Most heavily affected Immediately counted. follows: asked Zimmerman. will be orders for new phones and trans­ Checking will probably begin this after­ 1. We have found no conclusive evi­ He also questioned the right of a depart­ fers of phones because the strikers in­ noon. dence that indicates that the 100 bogus bal- < ment chairman to regulate the topics to clude 23,000 telephone installers who work The 100 ballots are those the State News lots were counted. be discussed by a faculty member in any for the Bell manufacturing subsidiary, revealed Thursday were fraudulently ob­ 2. We will ask the board tonight to call Western Electric Co. course. tained and submitted by a student. for a check on all the ballots'to determine "Should the content of science courses Beime said telephone credit card users Allan Huss, who was Elections Commis­ whether they were included. be limited to technical aspects or should Sym bolic cem etery also will be seriously affected because sioner during the election in question, said 3. There is no evidence that the elec­ it include the social and political con­ credit calls require an operator. that he could not say whether the ballots tion was tampered with to favor one can­ sequences of the research of that field?" Vietnam war protestors placed about 250 crosses In a symmetrical were counted. didate over another. he asked. arrangement on the lawn of Beaumont Tower. A group of people 4 The fact that this question was raised Ellsworth, while admitting that the bal- "Aren't the applications to which scien- kept a vigil at the mock graveyard all Wednesday night. indicated that election procedures must State News Photo by Jim Mead be revised and made more strict. This the Iplease turn to the back page) 355-4560 fourth session will do. Choice 68 LBJ lists requirements Polling for Choice 68 will take place on campus Monday through Wednesday at 105 designated polling places. Students can vote in their residence units, sorority or fraternity houses, the for Viet peace talk site Union, Berkey and Bessey Halls, and the International Center. SAN ANTONIO. Tex. i AP {--President Johnson's announcement seemed virtual­ "A ny one of these 15 suggested locations Johnson said Thursday preliminary talks ly to slam the door on Warsaw because the would, in our opinion, offer an atmosphere Or they can wait for Choice 68’s mo­ with North Vietnam must be at a site where two principal U.S. fighting allies. South conducive to serious negotiations." What company made the Batmobile? Bruce McCormick, Hills­ bile polling unit, which will begin its other governments involved in the Vietnam Vietnam and South Korea, are not recog­ American authorities said the substance dale junior. run at about 8:30 each morning in the nized diplom atically by Poland and have ' ‘ % # l war can have representatives -- which of Secretary Rusk’s remarks, which were The Batmobile was designed by Goerge Barris, and was built commuter parking lot and will stop at seemed to rule out Warsaw. no envoys in its capital. {please turn to the back page) on an experimental chassis. It weighs 5,500 pounds and has a the Engineering Bldg. and the Farm Lane The chief executive listed this among In addition to the condition having to do 500 horsepower racing engine. The car goes up to 150 miles per bus circle. four requirements for the discussions with South Vietnamese and South Korean hour. From front to rear, the Batmobile measures 225 inches to determine whether serious peace nego­ contacts. Johnson reiterated that there and stands 48 inches high, rolling on a 129-inch wheelbase. A Roger Williams, Choice 68 coordina­ tiations can begin. The other three condi­ must be adequate and secure official com­ plexiglass bubble-top covers the two bucket seats. tor. said, “All that is necessary for stu­ munications systems: access for news cov­ Trustees okay ♦ * * * tions are similar to those set forth before dent voice to go unheeded is for enough by the United States.
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