. .. the michigan Volume 65 Number 97 East Lansing, Michigan Michigan State University Monday, February 5, 1973 iducation official disputes iid plan enactment date By MICHAEL FOX - though he has requested changes in million how the money is to $5 billion. Education aid and support services. „ate News Staff Writer spent. The President L seeks to dismantle most federal revenue sharing would comprise half Until Nixon's education revenue Michigan fans top education "" official this yo $5 billion budget, ending sharing bill is presented , , . wi» uiiuuu ouugtfi, ending the tut: to Congress, doubts President Nixon u can ^ n secondary education present system where details of how the change will alter fo^orai programs and money J is given tn Dromr&ms r.„ the .. . _i radical changes in federal and replace them rpn arp hom ...iiii with $2.5 k. : . . * * to states and communities . - billion in educational revenue solely for existing programs cannot be ,»ion financing which Nixon In the area of sharing. specific purposes designated by the determined. Porter said. sed in his $268.7 billion budget higher education, federal government. Last year, Congress ignored Nixon's Nixon proposes a »last week.- new $1 billion With education recommendation for program of basic opportunity grants, revenue sharing, educational m's call for a new program in money would be returned to the states revenue sharing and never debated the Uonal revenue sharing to replace ....... but wants an end to two existing and communities in five categories: financial aid programs - the National concept. This year, however, Nixon is traditional funding methods disadvantaged children, handicapped expected to push his program harder, e» ^effectively implemented by ?efen» Education Act loans and the children, vocational education, impact Porter said. L10, for i rf. the 1974 fiscal year, state Supplemental thp 1974 fiscal year, state Opportunity Grant Program. The government • guaranteed lintendent of public instruction, an interview ^nk loan program would be n W Porter, said in " expanded. Education revenue sharing will give . * | more authority over its use of m0nies but it requires a _ > The basic to 1.5 opportunity grants would million needy students, providing up to $1,400 a year for Oakland Dem L.hip Enable transition transm period," Porter £ , college costs minus what the student and his oarenti could conHhnta an^ his Parents could contibute. ieept ■Federal "Congress should adopt the now, and make it effective in for "Many students will not be eligible assistance who received federal wins state party also the fact that no federal federal and state chairman reduce kaucratic red tape by eliminating suggested for Tri'ministrative expenses," Porter construction of college buildings, for Rut we can't expect it to 1'branes, teacher training, or operating By CAROL THOMAS seat anv state school funding." subsidies without earmarks to chairman of the state Democratic State News Staff Writer iverall, Nixon has not universities. party for the next year. DETROIT — Michigan Democrats Some union members, immended a reduction in the The main federal agency involved in backers of stayed with the old party line Sunday Gov. George Wallace and other nt of fedferal education funding education, the U.S. Office of as they elected jposed to total $13.8 billion Education, is budgeted to rise $100 Morley Winograd, past conservatives failed in their efforts to leader of Oakland County Democrats, get the convention to adopt an anti - busing resolution, as had been planned earlier. I WATERGATE AFFAIR Busing opponents either opted not to press for the resolution in favor of party unity or were outmanuvered by the convention, which sidestepped the issue and forwarded controversial 973 igent contacts hinted WASHINGTON STAR - NEWS against Democratic candidates during resolutions to the state Central Committee for further consideration. Winograd was supported by most union and conservative groups within Dept. probe of the Watergate affair. lASHINGTON, Feb. 4 the recent election campaign. Among the allegations and the party. His opponent Mitchell, who managed M. Robert Robert Center on women jmment officials say Watergate The sources say that there is suspicions confirmed by the sources Carr's campaign for Congress in the (dints E. Howard Hunt Jr. and G. evidence which thev emphasize is not - were the following: 6th District, conceded the Debbie, a young woman who says she has left her home, is one in liddy may have been giving •Segretti, a California attorney, of many women to take conclusive - that Hunt and Liddy were chairmanship election after second advantage of the Women's Center at Jotf/on obtained in one aspect of at one point giving reported to and was apparently hired ballot tallies showed Winograd had a 5471/2 East Grand River Ave. Watergate operation to Donald H. Segretti by Dwight C'hapln, whose resignation recently. information they had obtained from a (continued on page 11) State News photo by i, the man most frequently young student they had hired to as appointments secretary to the Nancy Stuart is an agent in an alleged infiltrate the primary campaigns of President was announced last week kiblican espionage - sabotage amid reports that he had been forced Sens. George S. MkCovern, D. —S.D., faign. V remark in came as official sources detail, certain aspects of and Edmund S. Muskie, D.- Me. The sources agreed to discuss the out because of his involvement with Segretti. •Segretti was paid about $35,000 in Women's Center fate hinges I has been described unofficially as situation now that the Watergate trial money raised for President Nixon's ■oad campaign of political is over, on the condition that they not re - elction campaign, and the money Inage and sabotage conceived by ■White House and carried out be identified. However, their remarks are based on knowledge of the Justice was given to Segretti by Herbert W. Kalmbach, a lawyer practicing' in California who handles some of the President's personal matters and who on city council fund decision By SHARON HANKS lS..-Chfna trade was one of the original fund raisers for the re - election campaign. For two years the Women's Center has grown slowly and steadily in an effort to meet the needs of local News Analysis daughter counseling, self ■ a day health collective and The city Human Relations a care center, telephone. •It appears that Liddy and Hunt Ireseen lASHINGTON (AP) - A hefty two in co were deeply involved in some kind of political intelligence operation stemming from the time when both women who say they have no place to go to discuss their problems. But whether the Women's Center in support of it and vice Underlying all the logic and facts, - versa. Commissions, which endorsed the center's request, said in its appraisal of the center that rape and abortion - way trade total for 1973 however, was the much more subtle kg order for American cotton has suggested by Secretary of State were White House consultants even continues to expand will depend on a counseling are "two services which are question of whether women in the city crucial to the East Lansing residents." led prospects for a substantial William P. Rogers in mid - January. before Liddy, then counsel to the city council decision expected needed a service agency specifically I in U.S. • China trade beyond In 1971, before the February 1972 Committee for the Re - election of the Tuesday on the center's request for oriented to their needs or whether Rous forecasts for this year, city funding. Another serious, but less summit opening between the two President, was assigned by the these services could be incorporated apparent committee superiors in late December criticism of the center concerns the lurel C. Meade, the nations, U.S. • Chinese commerce The center located at 5 47 Mi E. into another established agency. Agriculture of 1971 to obtain what he said center's image among more established I's general sales manager, said he amounted to only $5 million. was Grand River Ave., has asked the city information residents. confirmation from a Texas firm - Trade is among topics expected to on possible campaign for $225 a month to pay rent, electric Throughout the controversy, the Pains Cotton Cooperative Assn. be on Henry A. Kissinger's agenda violence. and phone bills and most common criticism of the center - buy supplies. If Some residents have complained ■400,000 bale cotton sale to the • when he calls on Peking leaders next It appears that this funded, the center would be evaluated has been that it duplicates services that the operation _ center's policy is sexist The deal had been rumored in week. That and expanding cultural already offered by other agencies, such | circles. exchanges come under his trip's eventually blossomed, with^money from the Committee for the Re-elction a8ain »" June to determine how much as pregnancy counseling at the because it discriminates against men. * Progress was made. Women at the center argue, transaction, estimated here at announced purpose to "further the of the President, given to Catholic Social Service Center, the Liddy for however, that a service for men rap Pillion, tops total U.S. exports to normalization of relations" between ostensibly Controversy has surrounded the Drug Education Center, Listening Ear - legitimate purposes, into Women's Center issue since the sessions - has been offered, but few wnd China in 1972 the two countries. the and Planned Parenthood. of about $60 bugging of Democratic men have shown an interest. Postwar Vietnam arrangements proposal was brought before the headquarters. council in June. The issue came to a fcether with loom as Kissinger's most pressing item Almost all of these points have been The center presently offers rape, Other residents contend that Boeing's sale of its with Premier Chou En lai. China is climax at a pubMc hearing jan. i6, abortion and pregnancy counseling, a center represents the raised ■jets to Peking specialists and other items, now figure American one of the 13 parties • going to the Feb. before, some of them last October, and more recently in a as early as when some 150 people turned out to music and film collective and weekly only the "women's liberation type" women in the 26 confernece on guaranteeing an hear supporters and opponents of the discussions. But women at the center city. letter — made public on Tr'°Cnh'na P>-$400 million. in 1973 could climb Indochina peace. from Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D. — Thursday — proposal heatedly debate the issue, criticism also. dispute this por each argument against the With city funding, the center would T18 weU lb°ve the $200 million (continued on page 11) (continued on page 11) center, a counter argument was made include a newsletter, mother - (continued on page 11) Local man plant By MIKE LaNOVE owned with utility to become public State News Staff Writer environmental enemy number one," Jones said Thursday. A Lansing man's efforts to rid his He said the Eckert plant has been neighborhood of air, water and noise the top contributor of sulphur oxide pollution has resulted in the planned pollutants and particulate pollution of reduction of the sulphur oxide the Grand River, and has been a particulates coming from a municipal headache to all those citizens affected utility by 1975. by its noise pollution. But he insists that is not fast Jones met with the air pollution enough. commission and explained the Howard L. Jones, 426 W. Barnes existing environmental conditions in Ave., is complaining about pollution his neighborhood. The result was an near his home that he air quality agreement between the says is caused by the Otto E. Eckert Municipal Power commission and the board to reduce Plant, which is owned by the Board of the particulates emitted from the Water and Light. power plant. "Although the Board of Water and "Amount of sulphur in fuels used in Light has greatly increased the the Otto Eckert plant must be cut to electrical generating capacity at the 1.5 per cent by July 1, 1975 and to 1 Power pol Otto Eckert plant during the last 10 years, its board of directors and per cent by July 1, 1977," said John Soet, chairman of the air pollution tevwidrhM general manager have failed to commission. charged that the Otto E. Eckert comply with Dept. of Natural Resources regulations. safeguard the public health, and in Soet added that these standards will [ M Power Plant if a major city polluter and has failed to State ftdws photo by C.L. Michaels fact have permitted this publicly (continued on page 11) Monday, Febru; 2 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Truce teams SAIGON (AP) — Field teams of the International Vietnam, and the Viet ready to Cong met for three hours for the move Fighting across South Vietnam continued to kkk summary second consecutive day to work out details of the prisoner Saigon military command claimed 102 cease*'nre " T Commission for Control and Supervision prepared Sunday "iolatj - to fan out across South Vietnam today and begin during the 24 ■ hour period ending at 6 operations to observe the cease - fire after nearly a week's ^WhikTthis prisoner subcommission of the four - party lowest number reported since the truce officially^be^'" Hp. Wr delay. Joint Military Commission was meeting, the chief delegates Seven prisoner recovery teams were standing by at met for an hour with the control commission and later for Reporting on prisoner exchanges, Ambassador u Saigon's i Tan Son Nhut Air Base ready to move anywhere four hours among themselves. Gauvin of Canada, acting chairman 0f the in Indochina to supervise the start of the repatriation of Five U.S. CI 30 transports flew more than 220 North commission, told newsmen: "I believe arrangem ^ ■ iiiiiiiiiiiiKiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiihiiiiiiiiiiniiiii POWs, including 562 American servicemen and 23 Vietnamese support personnel and their equipment from being made for the release of prisoners of war w " American civilians held in North and South Vietnam and Hanoi to Saigon to join the North Vietnamese delegation to next week, probably by the middle of the week " Laos. the Joint Military Commission, headquartered at Tan Son He described the one - hour meeting hetw commission and the Joint Military The head of the control commission, which is the Nhut. Summing up these developments, one U.S. official said, the most constructive steps that have Commission as"6" ^ "I opposed to the idea international peacekeeping body, said the first prisoner been tai °ne' am releases could be expected around midweek. "It's encouraging. Hopefully, things will keep going week." ken 1 of a youth caucus. People are Representatives of the United States, North and South rapidly." In a prepared statement read at the attempting to use the youth meeting, Gauv' movement as a base of power the senior military representatives of the United cl'0'l North and South Vietnam, and the Viet Cone for themselves." COGS HEAD CRITICAL first contact at the level of heads of delegation • that't Richard Conlin important occasion." ls Ingham County commissioner He formally Informed the military commission that tJ control commission would deploy its field teams Best's re-elect to regional headquarters and urged the military commisd* J join them. 011 ■ "It is our hope," he told the meeting, "that th# t ■ By DANIEL DENVER party Joint Military Commission will also be able soL Academic Senate meetings. any attempt to challenge representative...he does not State News Staff Writer have the respect of the deploy its teams to the regional sites and we look fo Menson pointed out that the vote. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiili|lllilllllllil,llllim Robert Menson, president Best's term in office expired faculty or the students that to working together with you because without1! Tom O'Shea, he claims to have," Chazen cooperation our mandate cannot be effectively dischJM of the Council of Graduate The 20 man control teams will be Students (COGS), Sunday Dec. 31, 1971 and he was representative from COGS said. - setting up in Hue ir Da Nang in the northern quarter, Pleiku in Cyprus terrorism continues blasted the re. - election of no longer a member of the and Best's only opponent in "But it is just not worth highlands, Phan Thiet on the central coast, Bien HoainSf the cental council or the Steering Tuesday's election, said he Clyde Best, East Lansing Committee when the the trouble to go through Saigon region and My Tho and Can Tho in the MekoJ The Cypriot underground of Gen. George felt a challenge would only senior, as the student election was held. the process of challenging Delta. Each team is composed of five alienate the students on the representatives • Grivas, which opposes Cyprus President Makarios, representative to the the election," he asserted. from Ginada, Poland, Hungary and Indonesia. 1 council who voted for Best. declared through leaflets Sunday it will "fight with Steering Committee, "Yet, Best was allowed to terming the election was run for the office and he courage and determination" for the union of "No one at the meeting illegal and improperly even cast the winning vote Cyprus with Greece. conducted. for himself," Menson said. seemed to be concerned Heavy fighting claims The leaflets were scattered in a village near over Best's eligibility," He said that according to "President Wharton (who O'Shea said Sunday. "The Nicosia only a few hours after masked armed men the Bylaws for Academic chairs the student meetings) vote indicated to me that raided two police stations in the capital and took Governance, Best - was should not have allowed the students did not want to 59 weapons. ineligible to run for the post strictly with the bylaws," Belfast! such an election to take go The raids and the leaflets are series of terrorist incidents, the latest of including bomb attacks a and to vote in the election. Best was re - elected last Tuesday in a 12-11 vote by place," Menson added. Menson indicated that he he added. lives of nine in against the homes of the Cyprus police chief and the student members of the will not challenge the Cory Carlson, BELFAST (AP) - British about 25, had been speeding car. Later six m shot down as they the theft of explosives and other police weapons. Academic Council. election, however, because representative from James troops claimed they killed repeatedly stabbed around were a Chinese restaurant in tej his term of office as Madison College, agreed six gunmen in a pitched the heart, shot in the head til According to the bylaws, that Best should not have and had been beaten and Antrim Road. One died. 1 president of COGS expires battle in Belfast on Sunday Hussein wants settlement the students are to elect one today. been allowed to run or vote while rival terrorist armies tortured. A noose fashioned A middle store ■ aged ij representative from their in the election. "But my feeling mowed down nearly a score from a strip of blanket was owner was shot dt ranks to serve with five Several student members is, let's live with it. We have knotted around his neck. behind his counter near tl of civilians in the streets. King Hussein of Jordan, on the eve of a trip to faculty members on the of the Academic Council been tied up with technical Two men, both believed A spokesman said the dty center by two guntna see President Nixon in Washington, has ruled out Steering Committee in echoed Menson's hassles so long, we have not to be Protestants, were shot body apparently was Shooting crackled all o3 been able to get anything the fear ridden city, fl any resumption of hositilities with Israel from his planning agendas for the disapproval of the election dead by sectarian assassins dumped in the stream soon - Academic Council and but said they will not make done," Carlson said. and at least 15 other after midnight. Police army reported troops ca territory before a new attempt is made to reach a under fire 28 times, in Middle East Political settlement. persons were wounded theorized the man was Steve Chazen, Saturday night and early murdered by sectarian in Catholic sectors. Soldiefl The 37 - year - old monarch said in a televised representative from COGS, claimed they hit at le Sunday in one of the assassins in another part of address last night in his capital at Amman that he said it is "unfortunate" that bloodiest nights in northern the city Saturday night. eight gunmen in four fieri Best was re-elected. hours of gunfire. was going to the United States in the hope of The slayings raised The Paulists are helping to build the earth. Ireland since sectarian Northern Ireland's death Six gunmen were kl engaging the Nixon administration in an effort to feuding exploded 3Mi years downtown American "Best is a very poor toll in 3V4 years of violence an army spokesman said,I reach "A peace based on justice which generations priests ago. the to 710. At least 19 persons biggest firefight of IT on the campus on the move They were hit as after us can accept and live under." have died in the past week. night in the Catholic Mj * v! telnaq Protestant1 and RotrtMv .tHK -- '■ in the parish throughout in the office North America. ps^ecycle Catholic extremists crisscrossed' the city tn The Catholic - based Irish Republican Army (HtA) Lodge quarter. That bn began soon after n" Cambbdian c'tfttfilt&h urged building bridges NEWS autos, roaring into each vowed "ruthless retaliatory when guerillas, appare belonging to the f others' territory to spray the action" after the working with info? 353-4321 Protestants' vigilante diehard Provisional i sidewalks with bullets in a The United States has put pressure on the young and old ambushed troops in tl the one - savage vendetta that seemed organization, the Ulster party government of President Lon Nol to broaden spreading the completely indiscriminate. Defense Assn., said it was darkened streets. Christian spirit, The soldiers, using ne its political base by including members of the 'There doesn't appear to no longer going to restrain opposition, it was learned Sunday. The proposed shakeup apparently is intended to MAKE AN be any reason behind the shooting beyond a fanatical assassins preying on Catholics. issued telescopic night si| reckoned to be the re accurate in military u lust to kill," an army patrol Almost immediately, a make Lon Nol's Social Republican party regime raked the gunmen i appear more representative and therefore more APPOINTMEK commander reported after the night of horror. "The vicious "eye - for - an - eye" blood feud erupted and took Northern Ireland's heavy fire in the four -1 shootout. acceptable to the Cambodian Communist gunmen have simply opened The surge of violence afl WITH OUR up on anyone and everyone. violence to a new pitch of insurgents - the Khmer Rouge - as a partner in the added dimension I discussions to end their three year - old war. It's madness." savagery. - The weekend fatality toll By the weekend, at least open warfare between rif It also was seen as a move to mute the extremists sharply rever' rose to nine when children six Catholics, three widespread discontent with the party's monopoly on power and prevent any possible outbreak of DOCTORS playing along an abandoned railroad track in Protestant - Protestants and a British soldier were dead. Dozens the gradual decline in that had marked the 1972. tei end| public outcries at a sensitive time. dominated East Belfast more were wounded. The found the mutilated body violence spiraled Saturday Security chiefs ' of naked alarmed at the consequent a man night. Ten men were cut down of the wave of attacks! spreadeagled in a shallow Response called too slow stream Sunday. and wounded in the both sides. They fear violence has strengther J Police reported the Catholic Falls Road area by the power of the extren The United States is unidentified man, aged gunmen firing from moving a groups and driven the tl too slowly in its efforts to cope ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ communities further ap^ with a developing energy Intelligence repr* crisis, the outgoing chairman indicated the new tr of the Committee congressional Joint on Defense 75c off o„, may lease also have given a on life to the U Provisionals, badly naaj Production said Sunday. medium 12" or King 16" (2 item or more). Cliff's Notes are written by by the army !«} re®| Rep. Wright Patman, scholars who know how to help Varsity Pizza. Good with this ad on Mon. & months. Catholics who ■ you study. Authors (predomi¬ Tues. Feb. 5 &6, 1973. turned their backs on ■ D-Tex., expressed this nantly Ph.D.'s) are carefully conclusion in a statement selected for their knowledge of IRA because of its bombj a particular play or novel - plus Free, Fast, Hot Delivery begins at 6:00 P.M. campaign now are b«f accompanying the ability to interpret its plot and forced to support J committee's 1972 report. characters so they will be The relevant to your literature course. guerillas as their protef VARSITY committefe reported This careful attention to quality informants said. that 49 of 56 civilian nuclear has made Cliff's Notes the most- used study aid on college power plants under campuses nationwide. Pick the construction have slipped title you need today - you'll find it holds the key to efficient behind schedule an average of of your study time. 14.3 months each. Over 200 titles 1227 E. Grand River 332-6517'; available at: Bombing of Laos continues SUNSHINE SPAIN The Pacific Military Command reported that NASSAU U.S. aircraft, including B52 bombers, continued DET NASSAU DET DET - MALAGA-DM operations over Laos Sunday at the request of the - - March 17-26 March 16-23 Laotian government. $259 From $189 No details of the bombing were disclosed. The (plus $25 tax & »rvl«j operations have continued daily since the Vietnam ALL TRIPS INCLUDE: cease - fire began. *round trip jet flight with meals and open bar in Iflight "round trip transfers and baggage handling between airport & hotel •choice of quad, triple, or double accommodations (double only in Spa' Tax hearings begin today *2 meals daily in Spain 'Welcome Party and Farewell Dinner Hie Democratic - controlled Congress today begins •all taxes, tips and gratuities formal consideration of tax reform, which the •hospitality desk in lobby party's candidates used as a major issue in the 1972 ■.. and so much more... campaign. CONTACT: MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY The House Ways and Means Committee opens MSU Union, Union Board Office hearings that are expected to last about eight 355-3355 or 353-9777 weeks and cover every aspect of the Internal Revenue Code, The last major review was in 1969. Open only to students, staff, faculty and immediate families of Michiflan There Across from Olin at State University. Per seat price is pro-rata share of total charter co was no advance outline of the kind of bill the committee may eventually produce, but 421 East Grand River subject to increase or decrease depending upon number of participants per CAB regulations. Nassau: air cost $89.15 / land cost:$99.85. Spam: a Chairman Wilbur D. Mills, D-Ark., has put a cost: $177.59/ land cost: $106.41 damper on hopes for a general tax cut. n State News, East Lansing, Michigan Monday, February 5, 1973 3 gljn/fs to delay Dem interest factions f0 state abort Bv LAURA MILLER State News Staff Writer Clergy tor Problem about clinics amount for $220, Park said. Some Detroit are charging about the same considerably less service. stir youth caucus battle JI Michigan M'n"ncv will not make abortion "We will not settle for nickel and By CAROL THOMAS should learn I'/K within the state until its dime service," she said. "We are State News Staff Writer to work Robert Carr, fomer District. In contrast, the 2nd V j it' office recommends a list of looking for clinics that offer a total The 6th District caucus together for the good of the party. congressional candidate, as While other caucuses District caucus nearby took Nancy Oeary spokeswoman for package." looked as calm as the eye of they organized their local haggled about who was six hours to elect officers in "I am opposed to the parties for Carr's next [^Lansing group, said Sunday. Comprehensive hospital back service includes a hurricane while minority factions in other districts idea of a youth caucus," election campaign. going to call the meeting to order, the 6th District their highly factionalized youthful party. Thursday, Michigan up, laboratory service, Conlin said. - , meeting stormed through elections "People are "Nobody made a fuss breezed through the lengthy services under its quality personnel, The unity of the 6th llergy and two contraceptive Information, Park said. counseling and for local party posts attempting to use the youth about much of anything," agenda in record time — and District ^ion _ Listening Ear and the Drug T icfonin movement as a base of Richard Conlin, an Ingham with a number of was most apparent Son Center, decided they would "Most importantly, we will be Saturday Democratic at Michigan's power for themselves." County commissioner from faces. smiling on the convention hall floor Uinue to make out - of - state looking at the general attitude of party "1 think that in the next Sunday afternoon, as they the convention in Detroit. East Lansing said. "Party "We had a little few voted. On other sides of the Iferrals until Detroit investigates personnel, the quality of the and the total facility Though the 6th District months the youth unity was the most disagreement over one of Bnics. package," she movement should, and will, room, in split districts, said. caucus was abnormally be important thing in our the minority reports, the sinister looking groups of absorbed within Tfarol Park, the spokeswoman for the While Investigate Detroit continues to quiet, however, a youth party so we can all work the caucus." people were divided about one faction or another Itroit Michigan Clergy, said her office Lansing services in Michigan, office of Michigan the caucus attended by MSU students and other young together," Cbnlin added. Carr's November near in victory traditional in 50-50, " Conlin said. "But we all realized that plotted how they could i a comprehensive listbutof was abortion write to Clergy will Democrats from being sabotage votes or sneak in a not area hospitals and to the MSU party members turned into Republican territory gave together was more Bcilities in the state, University Health Center to check their the 6th Congressional new impetus to Democratic resolution or two. ■r e P 3 * ® ^ ^^ make any a battleground of different District clustered around M. important than agreeing on Predictions by East services, Cleary said. interest groups. party efforts in the 6th petty details." ■commendations after only on - sight She said the Youthful Lansing Democrats from a Instigation. Lansing Michigan Clergy week ago were relatively office was not aware of any clinics parliamentarians succeeded correct as the 6th District opening in in sabotaging almost all of would like to make the area, but they had not elected Antipoverty ,.We caucus its officers done any the youth caucus' business iommendations tomorrow," Park checking. Saturday. "but right now we feel a woman "I and one candidate for state An MSU student, Claud would like to see some brave s better care out • of - state for physicians open party chairman was booed Hersh, Manasquan, N. J. amount of money as some clinics in out of the caucus for a „ost the same ; Lansing," Cleary said. sophomore, and Leslie ,e Detroit services are charging." She also indicated the office conservative speech. Lokken were elected to the to reshape hoped Youth leaders in the 6th party State Central ■Most of • state services offer a the state would make some out ruling on District, many of them MSU Committee. agency • \\ package including laboratory tests, guidelines and standards for abortion students, said they did not Bernard Schroeder, a M. lunseiing and additional care for clinics soon. like the idea of a youth Robert Carr campaign caucus because it alienated WASHINGTON (AP) people to challenge the worker, was elected 6th servants' because they're groups of people who —The nation's new District chairperson. traditional authority locked into jobs in the Florence Beier was elected antipoverty chief says his patterns of society." agency. vice has been involved chairperson; feVERNANCE PROCESS agency Lois - He said this has occurred "I think elections should too much in Disney, district secretary, trying to in the prisons, schools and mean change society. something," Phillips and Albert Jones, district even nursing homes and said. "The people have a Howard Phillips, 32, was constitutes what he treasurer. sees as right to expect that the formally appointed director an unwise "widespread President's promises should System faces review of the Office of Economic challenge to order." mean new policies." Opportunity last week, "We have been using In [Hp*1* answer to a question, replacing Phillip V. Sanchez. money in this agency to His Phillips said the dismantling assignment is to change the law to |y DANIEL DEVER committee, said his group is dismantle the agency that ... lobby... of the Office of Economic STATE NFWS The cost involves the A policy outlining the to demonstrate to late News Staff Writer the appropriate body to once was the center of ... change Opportunity was not a ruse numerous hours faculty Academic Council's rights public opinion and public to rid the Tmbers of the begin such a review. members spend in academic and former President Johnson's social action procedures for policy to draft agencies of Democrats. Jnittee on Academic The large size of the governance, exclusive of their censuring a member of the Great Society Program. ... legislation," Phillips said. mee indicated major governing bodies, classroom activity. Phillips indicated he academic community, and a "That kind of activity their ineffectiveness and the looks forward to that task. jday that the group The committee members' proposed amendment to the going on without elected The State News is published by the students of ■ probably initiate a large number of faculty and comments In the past, he said, the of the entire came during a Bylaws for Academic Office of authority is a violation of Michigan State University every class day during Fall, discussion of the possible Economic Governance to give the every citizen's civil rights," Winter and Spring school terms, ■emic governance student hours devoted to abolition of the Academic Opportunity has operated Mondays, s within the near the governance process, three residential colleges the Phillips said. Wednesdays and Fridays during Summer Term, and a Senate. individual representation on on premise "that people He said the Office of because of the were cited as reasons for "The problems of the overcome poverty special Welcome Week edition is published in the Faculty Affairs and Economic Opportunity m' s alleged such a review. Academic Senate must be collectively, not individually September. Subscription rate is $16 per year. Faculty Compensation contains "a number of ivenessand costliness. Such a review was also and that only Member Associated Press, United Press considered within a review Committee were passed by through people who were politically suggested last month by of the entire politics can you overcome active International, Inland Daily Press Assn., Michigan academic the governance committee. in the Democratic do the so called oppression of Press Assn., Associated Collegiate Press, we not start Provost John E. Cantlon governance system," Fred The censure policy came - party when this started and Michigan revifir o{ thf who said if the University the government. Collegiate Press Assn. Williams, chairman of the as a result uf a request from Second class postage paid at East lance process soon, does not initiate a review, Treating the poor Lansing, Mich. Faculty Affairs and Faculty the Academic Senate for the as a Editorial and business offices at 345 Student Services )ne else will," Gerald the-state legislature may Compensation Committee, Academic Council to class in itself is a "Marxist idea," Bldg., Michigan State University, East , professor of pnication, said. examine system the because governance of the told the governance committee Thursday. "determine its authority to interview. he said in an Petitions Michigan, 48823. Lansing, censure." lan, chairman enormous cost of the Williams had urged the The senate request was Phillips said he will try to Ihe governance system. remove politics from Petitioning is now open Phones: Committee on Academic introduced by Bob Repas, for the position of ASMSU Governance to look into the professor of labor and antipoverty programs before News/Editorial 355-8252 they are shifted to various Comptroller. Applications Classified Ads 355-8255 problems of the senate last industrial relations, after he |s plan other federal departments are available in 334 Student year. was censured in November, Display Advertising 353-6400 revoked He this spring. Services or by calling Business Office 355-3447 charged that the 1971 by the Academic It was wrong, he said, for ASMSU 355-8266. senate, which is composed Council for his action in the at Photographic 355-8311 draob of all the Office of Economic Deadline for petitioning is professors, associate release and publication of Campus Information 353-8700 Lansing By UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL professors, assistant professors, instructors and noncollege faculty, is too the faculty pay list. These items will to the Academic Council fop now go Opportunity encouraging groups such to advocacy as be the Feb. 16. OPEN THURSDAY AND FRIDAYS EVENINGS American Society of I Lansing Board of Education, in large to function effectively. approval. a surprise move has Friends, the Black Panthers, UNTIL NINE Williams said the last §ded a controversial racial balance busing plan three Academic Senate the National Welfare Rights pented last June. Black leaders favoring the deposed meetings have had less than Organization "or even the Jt I Rapids. plan" promised swift suit in U.S. District Court in 7 per cent of members in Black aids Rural Housing Alliance, to take a more moderate one." > hastily called executive attendence. session, board members "We've had the avowed He added however, that Applications for black |d^Thursday night to suspend their rules of procedure ^al action on the the problems of large size >ire aide positions are available purpose of adding dollars to busing issue at the regular in the welfare costs of the and ineffectiveness also 302 Student Services leeting which followed the executive session. states," Phillips said, "and ■ board voted 6 3 in favor of beset other bodies in the Bldg. - rescinding the cluster academic adding people to the welfare governance |of■p todividing the city's elementary schools into achieve a racial balance. The process, including the Black aides are selected for each residence hall. The rolls and to encourage _ plan is to be * Academic rtcaueiiiii; Council and its i/uuiim t aides counsel black |tea at the end of this school year in June, the board standing committees. students, help in their Jr. .. "The time has come to ■amdissenting b'oard members said they were not adjustment to University no to the elimination |ook not only at the senate, life and receive free room of the busing plan, but were but at the entire governance (A to the board's method of suspension of rules of and board for their work. jure to rush the matter. Normally, such a matter system," Williams said. The Applications for the governance 1, lntroduced one week and action would be taken committee took no action positions will be available Tlowing week. on Williams' suggestion, but through Thursday. ■nrtf'"^0"' I duster one of boar<* members who voted will meet again March 2 to plan this year, expressed disgust after V because he said he discuss it further. pentary question. thought he was voting on a The committee did VALEUTWLS t)K1, it 4oe5n'f have \t> be. however, take action on two Canciw.' f favo^f1 W8S hesurPr'se(*to amove And that he had cast disapproved of. other items Thursday. It's MONDAY MADNESS AT DOMINO'S PIZZA Same speedy free delivery, YOUNG MEN'S "STAMPEDE" but pizza at special prices. is walking away with all the newest fashion raves. . .the LMliroat A 12" one item A 16" one item 5-eyelet suede casual tie oxford I I p'zza and 2 Pizza and 4 that hikes best with jeans and baggies. PePsi's only Pepsi's only Padded collar, cushioned heel, molded lug sole and heel. Maroon/blue, $2°° tax inc $300 *9 tax inc I I saddle/brown. 7 to 12 sizes. 819. 351-7100 I I I I 351-7100 No other I I Good 2/5/73 only. No other k® c°mbined with be combined with JacobSoriS Pin offe. coupons may r ^ Trowbridge lhop only. I JI this offer. Trowbridge shop only. 2IO Q66OU RD nog sar ioon-o pm C LAU6IUG, 5UU0QY UOOU'6Ptt EDITORIALS JAMES RESTON Nixon aims Nixon to wage f for President Nixon's budget war, for Vietnam has hopefully taught n this is what determined to do. the President Is go away just because you scrap some of the programs." What the President is that he can get enough counts support?1* fiscal year 1974 is a masterpiece America that global problems WASHINGTON, Jan. 30 - The secretary observed that the Heller said the administration was the country to overwT.:*111 are not solved by throwing its "Investing less in people and more in opposition on Capitol Hill of executive insolence. While President Nixon has been talking ever President was now in a position to u military might at them? since the November election about make a breakthrough on the domestic machinery," and that the President already appealed to the rL? ^ whacking more than 100 made "a fiendishly clever appeal to the head of the Congress and °I* Such misguided priorities changing the philosophy and direction front, as he did in the China and h domestic programs created under of the American government in his Soviet trips abroad in his first term. the worst instincts of the people, and his arguments well organized ^ four Democratic presidents occur in Nixon's budget down to second term, but it wasn't until his First of all, this was, Shultz couched it all in high moral tones." His major appeal is to therein Some of the President's proposals L either unconscious or the tiniest footnote. For budget was published that the capital observed, a much more experienced were good — Heller mentioned cutting comfortable majority of the wS nonexistent, it adds $4.7 billion example, he would increase really took him seriously. administration, with a better people, who gave him ^ the waste in the impacted military substantial to last year's military budget - federal aid to crime enforcement "I don't understand why so many command of its subject matter, more areas program — but he noted that assumption victory last is that Novem^u, sv? time to think about domestic matters, while despite the cease - fire, despite units by 7.5 per cent, mostly for people were surprised," Secretary of Nixon had not really tackled many of Roosevelt could cany the coumLh the recent SALT agreements, and the fight against drug abuse. At the Treasury George P. Shultz and greater confidence in its own the tough federal subsidies that had remarked. "The President has been philosophy. been built into the structure of the appealing to the poor, who weS despite Nixon's promise to move the same time, he would talking reform, and he means just Vietnam would not be the government, and he had not really majority In the thirties and forti«^! from a wartime to a peacetime guillotine a billion - dollar - a - has a different appeal to mate ^ that." preoccupation it was in the first term. addressed himself to the tax inequities different majority that is economy. The budget makes year program that, by providing Shultz explained the change this The cities were quieter, and so were that benefit the very rich. no "I" clear in hard figures that the public service jobs for the hard the colleges. Some programs had been While Heller said he had read many poor. way: over the years, the federal nation's long - awaited "peace core unemployed, may have introduced in the past almost as a kind of the President's "Ben Franklin And in addressing what he calls hi. government accumulates a lot of discouraged thousands of ghetto of bribery to keep the cities from maxims'' over the last two or three "new majority" the President reW? dividend" actually means more expensive programs, which either youths from turning to drugs in don't work or outlive their usefulness, burning. And while there would be a months, he had not expected to see a the federal government almost as if h guns and less butter. battle with Congress, many members were a third political party, if nJ " the first place. Nicon's law - and - and are kept on for political rather budget that would try to reverse so To be sure, the idea of cutting on the hill were prepared for new enemy of the people. 111 order prejudices are a classic than for economic or even social many of the gains of the past or domestic spending has much reasons. He mentioned excess military approaches to our domestic problems, remove the wage and price controls so "Do we want to turn merit. From the New Deal to the example of curing headaches and there was a new sense of local more poWw bases as a case in point. soon. Great Society, federal programs with decapitation, responsibility in the country. The question now, Heller observed, over to the bureaucrats in the hope that they will do Washington? Occasionally, however, he added, what is W whether the Democrats in have tended to expand blindly, Besid?s Pnont.es, there is a brief period when the Others, of course, take a quite different view of the new budget was Congress would get themselves well for all of the people?" he asked tl feeding bureaucrats instead of Nitons budget ranges in congressional elections are far enough Oct. 21. "Or do we want to return deficiencies from statistical Advisers, reached in Minneapolis, said enough informed and organized for public needs, and causing away and the president cannot run it was true that some programs had the coming battle. He didn't sound more power to the state and local people and to Z inflation and tax increases. chicanery to political again, when there is a chance to very confident that they would. governments, so thiii unload some of this "baggage," and not worked, but "the problems won't the people can decide what is Nixon is correct in seeking opportunism. Consider, for beau themselves?" Stf(*1 surgery for Washington's obesity, example, the proposed 8 per cent increase in social security "This country has but just as clearly, he is enough o„ , benefits and the $980 million plate in the way of huge new spentf- performing the delicate programs, social programs, thro- rise in environmental spending. operation with a butcher knife. dollars at problems," he told Both make stunning headlines, Worse, he is aiming at the wrong Horner of the Washington Star • limbs. but the increases are imaginary. on election eve. "What we n To begin with, he is chopping The first is subtly balanced by a basically Is reform of Institutions and not the destruction .... up the heart of Lyndon whopping 300 per cent rise in our tried values in this country." Johnson's War on Poverty, the Medicare costs to the elderly, Office of Economic and the second barely makes up Here then is his main theme: It f time to cut back on over* Opportunity, aiong with dozens f°r the $950 million in water commitments, advent of programs that have helped pollution control funds Nixon overseas foreign aid, and handouts of that kin provide milk for hungry children, had impounded the year before, and time to cut back too on vast soci construct pre-natal centers. Again, Nixon s budget has programs that haven't produced and financially assist college apparently halved the federal great society or won the so - called w students. As Nixon explained, deficit by $12.9 billion. At least on poverty. these programs reflect a myopic $11 billion of the saving is due to the postponing of revenue sharing No higher taxes, no more Vietni "do something, do anything" no more "coddling loafers." No to. syndrome. Perhaps this is true, payments and to the paternalism from Washington. * but their wholesale slaughter accelerated sales of U.S. course, the poor are still with us, reflects a worse disease of doing property, as Wall Street Journal the unemployment, and the crime, noted. it is still a powerful political argu~ nothing. and while the Democrats are howl'" Even when Nixon seems to What makes Nixon's Scrooge - about it, they know they have a* like attitude toward social have a point, something smells on their hands. problems especially indefensible rotten. For example, the transfer of education funds to the states is his Santa - like generosity toward the Pentagon. He would through revenue sharing, ART BUCHWALD however wise, may mean that the pour billions of tax dollars into such cost - laden projects as the federal government will no F - 14 jet fighter and destroyer systems. Billions more are earmarked for Trident longer apply pressure against de jure segregation. The federal budget went Lack of crises big crisis submarines, even though the before Congress last week, Poseidon fleet already has touching off a constitutional WASHINGTON - It is not can grab any one on the table for whittling away at congressional forget, we still have the Middle crisis between the executive and powers." air and water pollution, the flu and enough power to devastate the generally known, but whenever $1.95. As soon as the POWs have legislative branches. With typical newspapermen in Washington run out returned home, you're not going to be government credibility crisis. T world several times over. able to give away a Vietnam crisis." "It doesn't look very new," I keep selling no matter what hap Another $300 million is going to Pattonmania, Nixon has called it of things to write about they go to a "Then why should I buy one?" I the "battle of the budget." As small store a few blocks from the observed. "friendly forces" in Laos though White House known as "Charley's asked. **But where people in my b curiously enough, veterans long as Nixon insists on vetoing Crisis Shop." "Anything on Vietnam could be a "Of course it isn't new," Charley have been hurt." Charlie continr benefits are being slashed. and impounding the needs of The owner, Charley Bummer, has collector's item." said indignantly. "It's an antique. But "is when some unscrupulous de~ hungry babies to satisfy the "Frankly, Charley, I'm not looking have been pushing crises that Repeatedly, Nixon has said been peddling crises in the nation's there's a big demand now for this kind whims of military fat cats, he capital for nearly 50 years. I went to for bargains. I'd like a real 18 - carat of crisis. It had been sitting on the hold up, so now the consumer that problems are not solved by visit him the other day, as I usually do crisis for my column," I said. shelf and I hadn't had a single call for becoming wary of anything called throwing money at them. If so, clearly deserves to lose. Sheer "Well, why didn't you say so?" crisis." when things get quiet. one in 25 years. But in less than two why throw money at the defense insolence, even from the "Having a close - out sale on Charley replied. "I've got something in months I've had orders for 30, and establishment, especially after presidency, cannot be tolerated. Vietnam crises," Charley said. "You the window that's been one of the they don't care what it coats." An editorial writer came into hottest sellers in months. It's an "Who's 'they*?" store. "Charley," he said. "1 need / — Energy Crisis. Everyone has bought it crisis for my next Sunday's piece. Y — the New York Times, The "Political columnists and editorial have anything that's a little differe" Jobn Borger, editor-in-chief; Charlie Cain, classified advertising manager; Bervln Washington Post, CBS News, Time, writers. Now that the United States is managing editor; Judy Yates, editorial Johnson, photo manager; Dorothy Ross, office manager. Newsweek. I can't keep it in stock." getting out of Vietnam, the columnists "I've got a Supreme Court Crisis editor. Bill Holstein, campus .editor; Rick "That's the big crisis of the and editorial people find themselves Obscenity," Charley said. "I just got; Wilbins, city editor; Mike Cody .copy chief; Members of the board of directors: Vic month?" I asked. desperately short on crises which they fresh in this morning." Spaniolo, president; Debbie White, vice Bill Whitinp, photo editor; Gary Scharrer, president; Carolyn Stieber, secretary - "It's the best I've got. The next have to supply their readers with every "Okay, I'll take it with me, sports editor. editorial writer said. treasurer; Frank Senger, Roland Williams, most popular item is the dav." Lee Lockwood, advertising manager; Jim Tom Riordan, Michael Orr, A1 Wilke. Constitutional Crisis." Charley took Signorelli, asst. advertising manager; A1 "You want it gift wrap one out of a glass case and held it up "Would you say newspapermen are Kirleis, circulation manager. The Michigan State News i» a seven-time to the light. "Tills crisis is between having a 'Crisis Crisis'?" I asked. Charley asked. recipient of the Pacemaker Award for Congress and the. President. As you "I don't know if it's reached crisis "No, just give it to me in a outstanding journalism. brown wrapper." can see, the executive branch keeps proportions," Charley said. "Don't inconsistent play, not because In light of the fact that individuals Bank ways. Never did he acknowledge that Amnesty own the wording might be deceptive. they were outplayed by Indiana. are frequently unable to use residence Two To the Editor: Having just finished a conversation He did mention though, that I am the first person to be alarmed by this, As far as the criticism of Gary Ganakas, I just once would like to hear hall cafeteria facilities due to various physical limitations - Residence Halls To the Editor: with Richard Ridenour, vice president and that the bank would refund last the name of a player who is taller (as if Assn. urges immediate implementation of a temporary sick tray policy until As shown by your recent edi of First National Bank, I thought you month's dollar. Might I suggest that height alone makes a good basketball such on the subject, amnesty f°r time and some of my fellow State News any other persons who have player anymore than a good buikl a as a more permanent resisters is going to be an impo makes a good football player) and policy can be Implemented. question In the days ahead, one _ Cents readers might be interested in a new billing procedure the bank is "happy to advise" us about. experienced this ripoff also contact Ridenour and express their displeasure, as well as collect their better. I have been watching Ganakas play since he was a freshman and I am Residence Halls Assn. urges this affirmative action in order to aid those cannot be easily answered. Aside deciding whether amnesty shou refund? convinced he is the best ball handler students suffering inconvenience, and granted at all, it must also be Enclosed in my last month's to take a practice out of the realm of to whom the amnesty will be giv > Having done some quick research by we have. I don't think we have anyone statement was an announcement that phone, I found only one other bank in else more competent in controlling the special management dispensation and resisters and deserters as a whole, Worth my account our new had been "converted to personal checking account program 'Mini 99"'. The effect of this the area offering such a "Mini 99" type of plan without other (cheaper) play and setting the team up for baskets. Considering that we are losing put it into the realm of a standard operating procedure for students unable to residence hall cafeteria - resisters only. However, these questions ( games through our own play, control use wonderful new plan is to charge options, and even that bank, of course, indeed the question of amneay tells its customers before something we need. facilities. charging is general) ignore an import"' The State News welcomes persons with balances under $99 an Thank you. them. I will be changing my account I think our team needs our support of those who have refused to additional service charge beyond the all letters. They must be to another bank as soon as possible. whether winning or losing. We Paula M. typed on a 65 space line and normal 10 cents per check of $1 per Judith Lachman shouldn't forget past good president, Resident Fochtman, Halls Assn. Vietnam - those who havejo" double spaced. Letters must month. Persons with higher balances performances because a player has an Jan. 29,1973 prison rather than be indueteo^ have no service charges. East Lansing graduate student few have demonstrated their be signed and should Jan. 27,1973 off game. I think our team could still for their country by, Instead oi v Of course, this notice was enclosed include hometown, student, along with a charge for the previous pull some kind of winning record in to escape, remaining subject ^ the Big Ten and I wish all our plavers United States faculty or staff standing, local phone number and month and sent anything (like change too late to my account) for do Basketball To the Editor: played as well in the face of criticism and pressure as Gary Ganakas. laws of accepting the the consequences. local address. No unsigned* this one. I find this behaviour on the It would be nice if could blame Colleen Esch These men have stood by letters will be accepted, but part of the bank reprehensible for two we Grand Rapids alumna convictions as valiantly as an> the State News will reasons. Not only are customers Gary Ganakas alone for the defeats Jan. 30,1973 notified after the fact, but the tone of suffered by MSU's basketball team of the Vietnam conflict, ho*. withhold author's name in can we allow them to rema the notice as well as the tone of the recently. Unfortunately, Mike extreme cases. Letters may bars one day longer, wh®" be edited conciseness for so clarity and that more smooth - talking vice president is that somehow the bank has kindly bestowed a gift on its lucky customers. Robinson is the only starter who has shown anything like the kind of Aid f stalemate peace only they have contended all along c"nU« consistent play a winning team needs. To the Editor: letters can be When I mentioned this deceptive I think that anyone who attended the The following motion was passed Richard % accommodated. Letters will not be edited for content. wording to Ridenour, he replied that different people say things different Indiana game Jan. 22 realizes that the Spartans lost the game through their by the Residence Halls Assn. meeting of Jan. 24,1973: at the Oto«loSprtW.«»-n^1 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Monday, February 5, 1973 5 by Garry Trudeau i ieflH. see, i think IT'S ABOUT TIME SOMEONE PUT T06ETHEJ? A STUDY Of AU. THE Posrr/ve reasons for OUR. INVOC VeMtNT. ADMNISTRfi ^ir>hl\ 7HE nnikir HOW L0N6 THOO PAGES SHOUCP Rep to introduce bills BE EN0V6H. for veterans' bonuses By RICHARD GIETLER for noncombat veterans. Veterans State Rep. Edward Mahalak, D - Romulus, is going to school, including planning to MSU veterans would recive $500 for introduce several veterans' bonus and educational benefits up to four years under this proposal. bills that could provide MSU veterans with $500 per year Mahalak's second proposal would not include r "ig- for up to four special years of college education. allowances for veterans going to school. Mahalak said he was override the defeat of introducing the proposals to ''DEAR FRlENPS, I ACCEPT YOUR Proposal E in November. Passage of The final proposal is designed to give the same benefits as INVITATION TO ATTENP THE Proposal E would have allowed the state to borrow World War II and Korean veterans received, $15 for every million to provide bonuses and $266 testimonial pinner for ,mr. prown educational benefits to month served overseas or $10 for every month served to M IWAL FEE F0R51CH AFFAIRS 15 veterans in the state. veterans who served just in the United States. ONE HUNCKEP POLLAfo' " The "With the Vietnam War over maximum a veteran could receive people are now going to be on this type of bill is willing to do more for the veteran,"said Mahalak, chairman $500. of the House Committee To qualify for such a bonus He said that three on Military and Veteran Affairs. a veteran needs an honorable •• r pieces of legislation for veteran discharge and either the Vietnam Service Medal or the bonuses are in the Armed Forces Expeditionary Medal. making. The first proposal, like Proposal E, would pay a lump "There were many reasons sum of $500 to combat veterans why Proposal E was and a maximum of $360 defeated," Mahalak said, "but the main reason was that people were violently opposed to taxes. Gov. Milliken is 'omen's reducing state taxes by $370 million because of a surplus. It by LAURA MILLER no In a moderate approach that "does not mean action," Rothman said, she will official all talk and closely with such groups as the Black Women's Caucus and was out of this bonuses, surplus the state of Michigan could have financed the veteran bonus." "With this surplus of money in the state to finance veteran we wouldn't have to go to the people for the investigate women's the Alliance to End Sex Discrimination in money. State News Staff Writer concerns by "doing her homework, developing a reasonable investigating women's concerns. "A raise before the election in the G. I. K Rothman, the new director of women's affairs creative program and then Bill, which gave selling it." "Since these groups have federal aid to veterans for ^Dept of Human Relations, describes herself as a The Dept. of Human Relations was created this fall, and and defined the already done the homework the defeat of Proposal education, was another cause for E," Mahalak added. ■if moderate with a long-range commitment to the women's affairs program is a office within that three years problems we will not have to spend two or "I don't want to wait till 1974 to Brine the status of women at MSU. department. defining the same problems," Rothman said. "We will be able to get passed," he said. "Veterans are going to be geared get this legislation £ *oa] is to make women's concerns equal in priority One of her first priorities is sounding out the grievances action." right to some alternatives and the legislation will pass this time." up and (her University concerns. of women's groups, Rothman said. Her office will work Rothman said the more input the women's groups give her office, the sooner they can work on the problem areas. MEDULED FOR JULY 4 According to an unofficial timetable, her office will spend the next two months investigating priorities with the help of the women's groups. In three months, a list of U-M hikes priorities will be presented to the board of trustees. Rothman expects these priorities to be in the for areas of Bike Day plans begin day care, health care, staff training, clerical technical concerns and inequities in Her approach to hiring, promotions and salaries. tackling problems in these areas, Rothman said, will be to first define the Students at University of Michigan will the room, lower cost John housing. DNATHAN KAUFMAN Palmer Lane, a member of problem, Feldkamp, miles had been completed. investigate alternatives and sources of help, design a plan be paying the highest university housing director, the Bike Day committee The committee, which is and then to make recommendations to ■ate News Staff Writer the administration. residence hall rates for the attributes the increased rate and of the East Lansing seeking sponsorship from For example, she fewest services of any Big 4ns for a repeat of last This year's Bike Day is businesses said, "If the day care center is in to growing costs in food and K East Lansing Bike Planning Commission, as they did last financial trouble, we would ask how they see the problem. Ten school, according to a the decentralization of which scheduled for July 4 so it designed East year, plans to give specially - Then, we would find out the University's lave begun early. Lansing's bike path system, will not conflict with other designed Bike Day patches the problem. Then, we relationship to survey done by the student housing units. events in the Lansing area, might gather data from the business newspaper, the Michigan to entrants in the race or Je Day. set for July 4, lature "easy rider" said the cycling event was Czarnecki said. Because the the easy rider event, prizes office or investigate programs at other schools. Daily. T an an East attempt to overcome Lansing's lack of holiday falls on a to the race winners, a "The alternatives may be simple," Rothman said, "like v A $60 hike in room and Adams to hold along residential hiring a business administrator or applying for a federal Board rates was announced I and a 25 • mile summer community Wednesday this year, drawing for prizes in the grant." by the university last week Etitive race. There will activities. residents who will not be easy rider event and Rothman did admit, though, that ultimately her office raising the $1, 234 rate last seminar, visit le working and who will not certificates to easy riders had only the power of recommendation. year to $1, 298 beginning in games and music in | Court Park and an Czarnecki said the committee had met last be able to get away from town take part in who complete 10 or 25 "I am part of a bureaucracy," she said, "but I am September. residence hall can miles of pedaling. This fee does not include [fashioned soap box for week with East Lansing City events, he added. convinced that the administration has a basic commitment Walter Adams, professor jians to address their Manager John Patriarche "Last to the concerns of women." breakfasts or linen service. Kituents before the "Our year we started Rothman said she is optimistic about her office's The survey revealed that of economics and former and Police Chief Stephen D. big problem now is only six weeks before the to affect change. ability MSU president, will be the |l primaries. Naert to get "tentative manpower — we need judges events and it was real only Northwestern and a "We will Ohio State charge higher guest • in - residence at Czarnecki, 1133 approval" of the routes, and marshals for the sc r a m b l%* ###* ^§1^ questions, consult sources of expertise and Snyder Phillips Hall today i events," Czarnecki said, t1"y dll tHfe Alternatives until we find the answer," she said. rates but both include - though final approval must everything. So this year, To investigate women's concerns in the breakfast meals and the through Wednesday. adding that entry in either we're getting started early," areas of hiring still come from the city and recruiting, a new team of four Ohio State also has maid event is free. professionals, two Interested students are council. Czarnecki said. | Berman, clericals and several graduate students have been assigned to and linen service. U - M has a dormitory invited to have lunch or promote the university's affirmative action dinner with Adams in the Last year's Bike Day on policy, return rate of only 34 ? of ex-SN July 23 drew about 160 Rothman said. residence hall cafeteria. people for the "easy rider" Film writer These people will be calling departments to locate faculty vacancies. Then, they will look for percent, rates of all one of the lowest Big Ten schools, Adams will also hold a seminar at 8:30 Lager, dies event competitive and about race, 70 to which to fill these vacancies, she said. The Women's Affairs Office will also women qualified according to the Students who survey. live in Tuesday where he in the p.m. cafeteria depend on women's will lead a started with competitors Blda Berman, wife of J State News general ■erLouis Berman, died running Valley for their bicycles at Court Park and after heart groups to inform them of areas where women are not adequately represented, she said. university housing their freshman year later decide to discussion on the political and economic destiny of the move off campus to United States. leart attack Saturday racing around a roughly circular street route until 25 Robert O. Blunt Sr., Lansing since 1965, Blunt is her home in writer and director in the survived by his wife Ball. She was 66. film production unit of the Caroline, a daughter, lids may call at the Instructional Media Center, Caroline, and five sons: I Funeral Home in Indian holiday, died Friday night. He was Robert Jr., Christopher, BIS Services are 51 - years - old. Thomas, Peter and John. The funeral service will for 10 a.m. tuition measures Blunt was at the Men's be private and the family Id a y at the Intramural Building when requests that no flowers be Tgational Church in offered in House kail. he was stricken by a heart sent. The family will be attack. He died at Edward home to N\ receive visitors ■ Berman was named Legislation to set aside W. Sparrow hospital. Monday afternoon at 626 1 manager of the State the fourth Friday in Kensington in East Lansing. ■in 1961 and helped September each year as Born in Richwoods, Michigan Indian Day was "McDonald's Quarter-Pounder. Or Quarter-Pounder 1 'he struggling •per into one of the 1 prosperous college submitted in Thursday by Rep. Michael the House Missouri, Blunt attended both the University of Missouri and MSU. He was a with Cheese. Just right for a big appetite." J McDonald s 234 W. GRAND RIVER I in the country. He Dively, R - Traverse City. career officer in the U.S. Air in June, 1972. A similar bill making the Force until his retirement in STATE NEWSI 1024 E GRAND RIVER date a legal holiday was 1965. ■jvors Ter.nan in include addition to introduced by Rep. Jackie two Vaughn, D - Detroit. Both A resident of East Kenneth, Stevensville measures were sent to the V. Honolulu, State Affairs Committee. Hawaii; daughters, ■McClean. Briar 1 N Y., Mrs. Martin Mrs. Cliff bill Vaughn also introduced a providing free tuition to all Indians at any Michigan Honeywell A Kalamazoo and ff"a< a MSU student. college or university Preview supported by public money. Projector TUESDAY NITE l/f.—\ fZ \ OUR GENUINE f#f||M I HIM * " 7I 31.39 RIB-EYE STEAK FOR ONLY The Honeywell Preview Series combines all three most asked for features In one projector. The preview Is an Important aid to creating smooth slide pi This feature and the round tray, straight tray or stack capability plus the Instant self - focus feature mj Preview Series unique. Honeywell Preview Projectors are available in four models, starting at $91.20 Stop in for a demonstration /r y \ / WITH HEARTHSTONE TOAST \ BAKED POTATO ' \ TOSSED SALAD & DRESSING pur. Knot yu ,' Saflinaw rodnarfraen ^mvtiac'otttrom tha Lansing M Monday, Febrm £ Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan 197] 'Sorrow, By BILL MECHANIC jtate News Reviewer yet always fascinating study of not only a historical Pity' dwarfs all other judges. He ascertain, by forces us means to of resistance probes uncover — and Ophuls prods, pushes the truth. Though to subjects, officers, the the German resistance fighters, the collaborators, collaboration government of Marshal Petain. Imprisoned for six years for what it was like to be alive at the time, films audience is given a feeling of of what it was face moral and until Thursday Theater, if another film the at h. y0^ 6,St*h J'' period, but also the very examining and evaluating "dissertion," when In fact like to year, take the tim Marcel Ophuls' "The of history itself. material from both primary the viewer makes the final the bougeois merchants and ethical decisions. this one. If Sorrow and the Pity," a essence innskeepers. the victims and he was going to join the you his and secondary sources, the choice, Ophuls is there at One sees how some Ophuls presents he retells his documentary of occupied France's collaboration with documentary in direct "truth" of the times. every turn, scrutinizing his the victimizers. Old men and women resistance, escape from prison. people bow to the times, |t, it least youU leam refutation of the theory Using every conceivable subjects for some indication Instead of remembering while others rise above the Nazis during World War of what is going on behind remember generally what the struggles and that history is determined approach — newsreels, his fear at the time, he them — II, is a film which dwarfs all newspapers, and interviews their voices. they wish, though the hypocricies, the dignity others by comparison. It is by immutable laws. with the people involved in The stars of the film, sometimes only what they recalls overhearing a and the humiliation of living 6 MSU Instead he employs the discussion between , an overpowering, the collaboration and then, are his interview are forced to. Their exasperating, exhausting, audience as a body of memories are cluttered couple, arguing whether to in France during the war. with poignancy, humor, enjoy a moment of pleasure. 'The Sorrow and the pass screen^ sadness, bitterness, "I admired his persistence, Pity" is a long, uncomfortable film, yet at NOTED COMPOSER FEATURED disillusionment sometimes dreams of what and but wondered about her virtue at such a time." the same time, it is an w/n intervii'ew Escaping to England, the overwhelming experience. Talented might have been. Ophuls' achievement is graduates from then When one man is asked man also recalled being across nation will intensely comprehensive. In Band what he remembers about interviewed by De Gaulle. to give the things now, period, he replies that are vague to him though he recalls "the "He overpowering." was Through these interviews simply making us uncomfortable, he succeeds in in immersing us history, in making us a opportunity first steps into theater annual "to through the L National UnS ffe I profeJ?1 sorrow — and the pity." and others, particularly part of it. Auditions of the UnH MSU's Symphonic Band Another recalls his those with a family of "The Sorrow and the Resident Theater Assn will add multimedia effects resistance farmers, the Pity" may only be playing and a rock band for its persecution under the winter concert at 8:15 p.m. Wednesday,'in the zriASrsi recently J Clarinetist performs Auditorium. screened The concert, open to the fcr ee(Vegional MSU students who win cent, public without charge, will the U.S. Air Force Band. seen, heard and interview "Symphonic Dance No. 3, Included will be slides and feature guest conductor in 'Fiesta'," and "The motion pictures. Chicago over t Clifton Williams, a noted The four - movement weekend of FebruJ Sinfonians." Kenneth "Apothesis" is three with grace, openness a - composer for band and movement work which, work is based on hymn include Julie Nesbitt A Bloomquist, MSU's director chairman of the Theory and of bands, noted that Husa says, musically tunes and, Bloomquist says, Mane Wright, Spata. and 'jJ Composition Dept. of the "it delightfully integrates plus gradu Williams writes music "that describes the formation of bees. University of Miami's (Fla.) is exciting to listen the earth and its gradual two musical styles into one By DAVID M. BURGE The piece made use of students David CarsSn ft School of Music. to as State News Reviewer the effects of double stops, But, the evening ended Piegonski and Earl Strina well as perform." destruction by man. The composition." The flutter tonguing and muting joyfully with a performance Other National auditions Williams will conduct two final movement, performance will also If one was to describe the of the instrument, to build by Ludewig Verdehr and being held in Los AnJ of his most popular works, include narrator Jim - and Washington, D.C The mutimedia lighting "Postscript," describes earth a — larinet recital given Renner of the "Sonata in c up a connecting thread that Winners effects will be used during as a dead planet and asks Barry, Roseville senior. Thursday by associate enabled it to succeed. E-Flat Major, Op. 120. No. are 0f( the performance of the question "Why have we opportunities in produd professor of music, Elsa The interpretation given 2," by Brahms that organizations rangine fa "Apothesis of this Earth" let it happen?" Ludewig - Verdehr, the best the work was just right, captured the grace, power, summer festivals and sta by the Pulitzer Prize The Symphonic Band will Show slated word would be "suave." with Ludewig - Verdehr lilt and passion of the work companies to residi winning composer, Karel be joined by four music Listening to the first giving the listener both the to a tee and sent everyone repertory and departmen Husa. The effects, students who are also home satisfied. staffs. piece, an "Allegro in lyricism and nervousness of Bloomquist explained, who will conduct the work, will professional rock musicians in a performance of by Yugoslav Flat Major for Clarinet and the piece. Ludewig String Quartet" by Mozart, Verdehr also displayed her be provided by personnel "Sinfonia Sacra" by Floyd entertainers one was struck not just by suavity when she calmly from Abrams Planetarium. E. Werle, the arranger for The colorful singing and dancing heritage of the Ludewig technical polish of Verdehr's stood up after coming on without her mute, MSI/ radio HELD OVER 7th WEEK Yugoslavia will be presented playing, but by the way she and the quartet, consisting announced what happened and went back to had by the Singers and Dancers of Ljubljana at 8:15 p.m. of violinists Walter Verdeher and James Niblock, violist get it. The next piece, "Rondo Wharton Thursday in the Lyman Bodman and cellist Brillante" by assistant Auditorium. Louis Potter, Jr., brought a professor of music Jere A program in which students may direct questiontj The widely acclaimed President Wharton, will be broadcast each week by | folk dance memorable grace and Hutcheson, was written group was MSU radio network (WMSN) beginning Thursday. founded in 1948 by Marolt. openness to the work. especially for the Verdehr • Entitled "Ask Dr. Wharton," the prerecorded proa The next selection, Renner Trio. Carrying out the original "Variants for Solo Clarinet" will be aired at 7:30 p.m. Thursdays and repeated at M aim of authentically The trio, consisting of a.m. Fridays over the six radio stations which broadQ reproducing the little - by W.O. Smith, an Ludewig ■ Verdehr, violinist American composer and Walter Verdehr and pianist through University residence halls. known dances of Yugoslavia, the group clarinetist who has studied David Renner, gave the Wharton will respond to questions which have b| performs dances from all with Darius Milhaud and piece a performance that submitted to WMSN, according to Phil Porter, ij Roger Sessions, was the sort director of the network. over the country, including caught the drive and menace of modern work that should of the piece. Porter said students may send questions in advina the remote sections. be performed .nore often. WMSN in 8, Student Services Bldg., or call ta| Yet, the piece, because it is written with virtuoso 353-4414 between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. weekdays. performers in mind, dealt "We hope to increase the accessibility of Whartoal mostly in technical display providing students with another channel | passages that ended up communication," Porter said. sounding like a swarm of He added that the president will try to ans of broadcast interest within the limitations of time and| number of questions submitted. SUMMER JOBS "The network will try to answer all the question^ National Parks some way," Porter said. "Some we may answer in sp Dude Ranches reports on our newscasts. Others we may answer perso roughout the n when a person calls in," he said. The MSU network stations which will broadcast I program are WMSN, WBRS, WEAK, WFEE, WKME.I WMCD. Student to offer chamber concert Two chamber music comprising violinist P groups from the classes of Knoblock, violist Nf Louis A. Potter Jr., Jarrell Koski, cellist Ricl professor of music, will Mattson, bassist Lir present a recital at 8:15 Bodwin and pianist B p.m. Tuesday in the Music Williams will play I Auditorium. "Quintet in A Major,! One group, a string 114, " subtitled T quartet consisting of Trout" by Schubert. I violinists Bruce Dike and The public is invited Karen O'Brien, violist attend without charge, I Norman Charles and cellist Bonnie Beuthien will play the "Quartet in D Major, Op. 64, No. 5," subtitled "The Lark," by Haydn. The second group p.m. SPECIAL 0F| WEEK. "Carols." J Renoir's play abouti Gestapo's hunt for > M French resistance "11 Stars Leslie Caron anffl Ferrer. WKAR, chanMT SItVff Dflt. GOT PlWiO SO (IMH Mr 5&{yy%5S,.AwN is there sex after death? "FUNNY! FUNNY!" BLUE, '• 19« Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Monday, February 5, 1973 7 Changing HPR outlook By LINNEA SLATER State News Staff Writer Now about students enroll each term, and 400 to 500 more have 3,000 rearrange their methods of distributing subsidies. "It almost destroyed our the increase in publicity for women's athletic programs and a new attitude on the cited b-- Until two years ago the to be turned away because graduate program," he said. part of women major complaint of most generally, the department is unable to "Only rarely can we give Mikles said. freshmen was that they M.A. students any help — were fit them in the scheduled required to take three the aid goes to the doctoral The most popular course credits of courses in the sections. candidates." among women is dance, Dept. of Health, Physical The courses offered, This also has a "drastic especially modern and Education and Recreation however, the ones for are effect" on the selection of interpretive dancing, he (HPR). which student demand is doctoral students because said, geven or eight sections The University's abolition highest and the students most of are offered each term. them used to be of the who do get in are enrolled requirement in 1971 drawn from the masters has radically changed both because they want to be. The combative sports the HPR students, he said. department and This makes them much attract men almost the perspectives of students. more fun to teach, Mikles The maintenance of the exclusively, especially "It's better all the said. HRP program for wrestling and hockey. way nonmajors around now," Gale E. used to be the Students get expert top priority The department tries to Mikles, acting chairman of of the department and took the department teaching in each course now a lot of offer as many coed sections says. whereas before the HPR administrative time While the and effort. Now it is third of courses requirement as possible was still in requirement was abolished or fourth on the because of the effect, about social many teaching assistants list, making 9,000 students it less benefits for the students. It were had to be used to cope with costly for the Busy butter enrolled in HPR courses the large numbers of department. gives women and men an Jogging 102? each term. The He said that opportunity to I paddleball is becoming an increasingly popular sport had to offer sections in department students. it doesn't each other and what appreciate Though there is no class look like the they specifically for jogging I now that students are taking HPR courses for fun every sport whether or not The department lost a lot University or the HPR department will be can do, Mikles explained. enthusiasts, the HPR department has expanded its of money when it lost the I and recreation. ■ the students wanted making Tennis, golf, skiing and courses and improved personnel since State News photo by Tom Dolan them, requirement, Mikles said. any significant requirements to handle these numbers. changes in the bowling remain among the were dropped. This forced them to program in the near future. courses students want most. State News photo by Tom Dolan "We've settled into the irvair findings format we're probably to live with and we going don't find that Sexual assault victims too objectionable," Mikles Nader said. disputes The bane of a freshman's Washington (UPi) - claim, a spokesman for the safety agency's engineers tests exisence, HPR 105, has been completely thrown out. It was an "intellectualize attempt to physical . asked to give testimony occupants" would roll Iph Nader Saturday agency said: "Our report stands on its own feet. If withheld key test data "to over on turns. - education," Mikles said, a Reused government achieve the objective of The engineers "scrapped survey course that related Kneers of "rigging" road Nader wants to challenge it, exonerating General the lightly loaded Corvair exercise to conditioning and Three victims of sexual of breaking and entering. back to 55th District Court. T to disprove his claim Motors." physical disorders. assaults on campus late in let him take it to the tests, and conducted A preliminary exam is J General Motor's (GM) courts." According to Nader, the stability tests with Corvairs A more specialized course January will be required to John Shrank, Gaines' held to determine whether Bvair car was dangerously engineers found that lightly in testify in the preliminary court there is sufficient evidence General Motors, which which were heavily loaded training and development - appointed attorney, Jtable. - loaded Corvairs "as they - with test weights and is now offered for students examination of Paul said the victims will be to hold a jury trial. ■n a long - running stopped manufacturing the would be with who are dissatisfied with the Cleveland Gaines, who was asked to repeat under oath A date for the exam has car in 1969, said it had one or two equipment, Nader said. ■troversy over the safety no shape they are in. Women arrested Jan. 26 for the claims made to police in not been set yet. Gaines is immediate Bhe rear engine compact - Nader charge. comment on the rTir are especially responding to allegedly assaulting the the charges. Shrank said he being held at Ingham ■ Nader charged that the this prescriptive approach. women. hopes to have the County Jail on $20,000 Kional Highway Traffic In a letter to Sen. Warren Nonmajors, most of them Gaines stood mute Friday preliminary exam remanded bond. G. Magnuson, chairman of Nety Administration's men, make up about 90 per at his arraignment in Hineers withheld "or the Senate Commerce cent of the students Lansing Circuit Court on Iressed data" on 1960 Committee, D taking two - Wash., HPR classes. But women are charges of assault with ■Corvairs to protect GM. Nader urged Congress to intent to commit enrolling more often with gross Responding investigate the safety campus POLICE REPORTED an East lo hold rally to Nader's agency, terming it "a national disgrace" that improper tests were was bitten by a squirrel early Sunday morning while the squirrel peanuts on the Hall. The man was given a tetanus Lansing resident sidewalk behind West McDonel feeding shot at University Health indecency, and one charge LECTURE |ainst court conducted on the Corvair. The controversy over the Corvair was triggered by a Center and then released. A NONSTUDENT FROM Okemos, arrested Saturday morning for drunk and disorderly conduct near Snyder '©1 1 SIERIES book Nader wrote in Hall, was also charged with violation of the Controlled 1964, lortion rule titled "Unsafe At Any Substances Act when police discovered a bottle alledgedly (toUNITED PRESS Speed." Nader claimed the containing marijuana while searching him as he was taken TERNATIOftAL Corvarr was prone to into custody. 300 persons turnover on sharp turns. * * * Meridian 4 Theatres Lansing Mall Theatre at michigan state university GM denied the charges, A VARSITY PIZZA delivery man reported that five Okemos 5628 W. Saginaw Jted freezing pizzas and four bottles of pop, with a total value of leratures and strong contending that the Corvair were stolen from his vehicle while he $12.80, Daily: 6:00 and 8:30 Daily: 5:00, 7:20, 9:30 was not any more unstable was making a delivery Js Saturday to protest than any other small, rear early Saturday morning at Snyder Hall. ■U.S. Supreme Court - THE SINGERS AND DANCERS ■on that struck down engine car. A 22 - YEAR - OLD Ann Arbor nonstudent was arrested At Nader's request, the |ctive abortion laws at the Ice Arena OF LJUBLJANA as Michigan's, Transportation Dept. agreed to conduct an and Friday during a hockey disorderly conduct. In the process of being taken into game for drunk table for two •man Catholic Bishop investigation of the Corvair. In custody he resisted arrest, police said, and was taken to THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 8:15 PM Sullivan of the July, Ingham County jail and charged with being drunk and )g diocese labeled the 1972, the government Put A Ion "murdering of the announced that it found the disorderly and resisting arrest. He was later released on his University Auditorium own recognizance. n." He urged those Corvair not to was unstable, but did require basically * * * AN MSU GRADUATE student reported that a watch Little write their ■ressmen to the driver to exercise some valued at $80 and $3 in currency had been taken from the urge Ition or amendment to steering precautions in student's locker in the Women's IM between 1:30 and 2:15 Love In Constitution to nulify making sharp turns. P.M. Saturday. The student also reported an earlier theft Vcision. Nader told Magnuson in Jan. 28 of $70 in currency during the same time period. Your J. E. Graves of the the letter Saturday that the The student said the lockers had been locked in both cases. ■Zion Baptist Church, Life B said themurder" Jig,"legalized Supreme in On ■ming state laws that ■lit abortions. IF YOU HAVE AN ANALYTICAL MIND, | rally was held on the valentines day i°>the state capitol. ANALYZE THE FOLLOWING CAREERS Jnced that sponsors an all - AT ./ETNA. ■"gil would be held in ■T nex' week, W* by a major rally in ■Is Kennedy Square, Plentv of FREE EVENING Parking ■ PECIAL OF 'Carola." We're looking for securities analysts. LBU COMPUTER SERVICES Earner's Actuaries. Accountants. Computer pro¬ ,l8y about grammers. And people who like the chal¬ lunt for a y lenge of figures, finance and money. sistance "1 Rut we're also looking for people who >Caron anc have a bit more than analytical skills to AR, chanw offer. Because though we're a big company, we've made quite a few departures from the "big company" way of doing things. For one thing, we've made action our * KEY PUNCHIN SERVICE byword. Not only action in terms of our W^VA Rl H E-and- relations with the public, but also action in recognizing and promoting talent within our own company, * BLOCK TIME you under- AVAILABLE m The Singers and Dancers of Ljubljana combine ixwms They two outstanding Yugoslav performing ensembles; It spells out how /Etna works, and the many the France Marolt specific opportunities we have for people of Dancers and Tone Tomsic jSjrolTy all talents. Then think about what you want from * CUSTOM Choir. Their care in reproducing little-known colorful Slovene dances in their original form has "mten'by a career. If it's something more than the them acclaim as being the purest folklore SSLJ! average, After think about iEtna. all, we're not your average in¬ PROGRAMMING won group in Europe. ,h,n H[«SS«* surance company. HU IP' * CONSULTATION A tradition of more Yugoslav cultural heritage than 1,000 years of *Nl ""KL'n- FAST, DEPENDABLE, INEXPENSIVE SERVICE Tickets are available at the MSU Union, CALL 489-5767 8:15-4:30, PUBLIC: $5.00, 4.00. 3.00/MSU STU¬ weekdays, LOCATED IN DOWNTOWN LANSING DENTS: $2.50, 2.00, 1.50, and University Series ACROSS FROM CAPITOL Season Tickets. EASY ACCESS FROM UNIVERSITY Monday, Febru;•ary 5, 9 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Robinson terrorizes sparks cagers to 94-89 win l By GARY KORRECK victory," Spartan coach Gus points and In rebounds. matched Smith 20 couldn't minutes and we just stop him after just two, while was tearing the State News Sport* Writer Ganakas said. "The front that." apart. ' line really hustled and when "Our front line really Saturday was Mike blended together in the Schultz said Kunnert Robinson day at Jenison Kilgore was on the bench, Robinson's ri second half," Ganakas played his worst game of Fieldhouse. Allen (Smith) played with at guard, (larv r6'?! commented. the year and that the squad Every Saturday is Mike Robinson day, in fact, as the slender MSU junior abandon." Kilgore, who fouled out with 36 seconds to play, The first half belonged to Iowa as the Hawks broke moved better when 6 foot 8 inch Jim Collins played the foPSSm0,i"«^ made eight of nine field goal open a tight game with a post. the entire Iowa proves each time he steps on club the court — he scored 33 attempts and scored 20 pair of six point splurges, "Williams' shot points — playing most of leading by as much as 10 on MSU's points against Iowa this occasions. Williams selection in the second half next garn.. time, 24 in the second half, the game in foul and sitting out much of the trouble two canned 11 of 17 field goal was not as good," Schultz against South Notre C and paced the Spartans to a said. "He was getting tired Bend, Wednei come - from - behind 94 - second half. attempts to keep the lead and forcing his shots." night, before the Satm. 89 win over the Hawkeyes. Smith scored just nine away from MSU and the meeting at U m. 1 Ganakas said he told his . Spartans had to rally to Big Ten action Wiscnrn Robby hit on 11 of 14 points, but he ripped off 10 come within six, 49 43 at club not tft worry about second half attempts in the rebounds and kept Iowa's 7 the buzzer. - Williams' first • half dumped Ohio State,H half and gained game foot 1 inch Kevin Kunnert Robinson had just nine showing. tripped U creamed - m, i2 scoring honors from the from getting 'easy baskets. Northwesterni Hawks' Rick Williams who Because of him, Kunnert, points, four of them coming "He usually has one bad Minnesota ripped in the last 48 seconds. half and one good one in Purduel canned 26 in the opening 20 who came into the game minutes and ended with 30. making 66 per cent of his "We played bad defense in the second half," Iowa each game," Ganakas In the Spartan's 5 foot 8 inch JVmJ The win brought MSU up shots, could hit on just 7 of explained. "I toldthe team I Benny W coach Dick Schultz didn't expect him to be as sunk 49 points, a iu_ to sixth place in conference 16. All eyes standings with a 3 • 4 mark, The other member of the admitted. "We had done everything we could to hot in the second half." Williams took only six varsity record, as he mates clobbered and! .029 percentage points Spartans' front line, Lindsay \ (31) tries to move around a pick by the Spartan's Lindsay stop Robinson in the first shots after half time, making Ford 110 MSU's Mike Robinson better than Ohio State and Hairston, tossed in 22 Hairston (45) in Saturday's action against Iowa. Robinson scored 33 points and just one - half game behind Hairston 22 as MSU dumped the Hawks 94-89 and moved closer to the Big Ten first faltering U - M, a team the division. State News ... ,, photo by Milt Horst Spartans play Saturday. "I'm thankful for a Hawkeyes spol AT WMU, TORONTO, SEATTLE • wrestlers rally! tough By PAT FARNAN Trackmen look Pole vaulters Jim Eastern Michigan grabbed In five words State News Sports Writer or less, MSU wrestling coach Gi Peninger made it quite apparent that his team's 19-19] with Big Ten rival Iowa Saturday, was a tough verdict By CHARLES JOHNSON finishes came on a 23 foot - Stevenson and Tom Wilson the mile relay, easily swallow. State News Sports Writer 10 inch leap by Del Gregory in the long jump and a close captured fourth and fifth defeating the Spartans with "It is a rotten shame," Peninger remarked. The MSU track team, a time of 3:15.4. The tie obliterated a weekend sweep over two formid working without several of first place wire finish by the places respectively for the Rob Cool turned in a its top runners who were MSU shuttle hurdle relay Spartans, both clearing the Big Ten squads after the Spartans slipped by Minix team of Paul Zolinsky, bar at 14-6. Larry Robards respectable 9:19.2 time Friday, 18-15. participating in other meets, gaining him fifth place in traveled to Kalamazoo last Luray Cooper, Mike Hurd of the Ann Arbor Track "It's very disappointing to come back the way we] took first with a 15-6 vault. the two mile run. Terry and then end up deadlocked," Peninger continued, weekend to take part in the and John Morrison. Furst of EMU took the top kids know we should have won it. We just made a cou| Western Michigan Relays MSU's Steve Kemp was a The Spartan's sprint medley relay team suffered spot. costly mistakes." and again registered a surprise second in the long The Spartans sent a close loss to Western The Spartans were on top only once in the entire respectable showing. jump with a distance of 22 representatives in two Tom Milkovich's second period pin boosted MSU toil Lacking some of the zest feet - 10 inches. Michigan, which took first with a 3:28.4 time. MSU's invitational meets over the 10-6 advantage. After the senior's heroics, it was they displayed last week at Hurd took a third place weekend who left a pretty battle right down to the final match when heavyi Michigan, the Spartans in the 60 - yard high hurdles squad comprised of Bill with 7.5 clocking, Nance, James Porter, Todd good impression of the MSU Larry Avery scored a three - point decision to salvage! captured only two first a track team. places, but demonstrated finishing behind Corey Murphy, and Dane Fortney At the Maple Leaf *Last chance' Larry draw. placed second, coming in Peninger's lightweight corps got off to a sluggish much improvement among Bouyer of the Golden Invitational in Toronto last some of the lesser - light with a 3:30.1 clocking. Heavyweight Larry Avery, undefeated in dual meets spotting the Hawkeyes a 6-0 lead. Randy Miller wasl Triangle Track Club. Friday, Bob Cassleman performers. High jumper Ralph The triple jump saw Don this year, clinched a win and a tie for MSU against first of five Spartans to bite the dust. Jim B "This meet the last Rencher of the Philadelphia placed third in the 600 - Minnesota and Iowa this weekend, with a pair of do - similiar route succumbing to Tim Cyewski fJ-1. was Simpson of MSU was sixth Track Club surpass MSU's yard dash with a time of die decisions. Conrad Calander brought the Spartans within twjj tune - up before next week's in the event with .a 6-4 1:11.3 behind winner or - of the Hawks with an 8-7 decision, his first since tl Michigan State Relays," effort. Garrard Pettus of Gregory on his last jump to State News photo by Craig Porter. take the event with a 50-1' i Martin McGrady from the opener with Ohio.University. His opponent, asst. track coach Jim Bibbs Eastern Michigan took first California Track Club, who was charged with an unsportsmanlike conduct !o said. place honors with a 6-8 leap. Gregory placed second 1:10.9 time. at 47-4V4. ran a additional team point. The Spartan's first place jump. Former Washington Spartan equalled Herb the Indiana topples Milkovich, competing for the final time before an crowd, pinned Mike Bostwick at 6:11 ofthematchu With our New Burgers & Steaks world mark he set last year in the 50 - yard dash with a 5.0 clocking to take top stack. "When I went out there I was trying my damnest him," Milkovich said of Bostwick who was unde Wemakeyour honors. meet In the Seattle Invitational last Saturday, Ken Spartan tankers The Indiana swimming year's Big Ten before Saturday's encounter. "I was trying to run him for a pin. But he resisted me on that side so I just too the other way." Popejoy registered a third championships. Leading 10-6, the bottom fell out from hunger happy. team ran its dual meet place in the mile run, Winfield's winning time Spartans. Steve Rodriguez and Rick Greene were recording an impressive winning streak to 83 decisioned. The crusher came when Iowa's Jan Saw straight with an easy 83-40 was 1:53.21, the same as 4:04.2 time. Jim Johnson of pinned Bruce Zindel with a body press at 4:53 victory over MSU Saturday Alsfelder's. Washington placed first With match. The Hawks led 19-10. time of 4:01.7. before a near capacity Wright's victory in the 50 a "That's a really tough thing for Bruce to crowd of 1,653 at the Men's freestyle was another close Peninger said. "That guy wouldn't have pinned him a) IM Pool. ■* finish. He nosed out John a million years, and I doubt he would beat him." The win also moved Murphy of Indiana with a Brother Jeff Zindel got the Spartans back on the Indiana's record this season final time of : 21.79. track with a 5-2 decision over Dan Wageman. Zindel hi to a perfect 7-0, while Cook was the only diver Iowa opponent in fall position twice but couldn't kee dropping the Spartans to there. 4-3. to place for MSU. He took a first with 311.40 points on Then it was Scott Wickard's turn. The vastly imi Michigan State came up with three first place the 1 - meter board and junior maintained a slim two • point edge over Fredl took a third on the 3 - for a 6-4 decision, and the Spartans were still in busina finishes in the meet. Ken meter board. Faced with the decisive match for the second sti Winfield in the 200 - time in his last two starts, heavyweight Larry Avery butterfly, Mike Cook in the Fred Tyler of Indiana was up eight points on Jim Washeck while holding the Hav 1 - meter diving and Bruce the only three event winner of the meet. Tyler took first opponent to just two escape points. Wright in the 50 - freestyle took firsts for MSU. in the 200 freestyle, 500 ,v» '^e *tnew w^at we had to do," Avery said. "I I Winfield's performance freestyle and as part of the both Jeff (Zindel) and Scott (Wickard) would win was probably one of the 400 freestyle relay team. would be up to me." Minnesota, who entered East Lansing wit most pleasing of the meet as One of the toughest unblemished 13-0 record, found the Spartan s heavywl he took the victory from Indiana's Bob Alsfelder in a defeats of the MSU tankers equally tough. Milkovich, Rodriguez and Bruce Zinde dead - heat finish. Alsfelder was that of the 400 medley the Spartan's only claim to victory after eight matches finished second in the relay team. The team made With MSU trailing by a three point deficit, Wickard event to Mark Spitz in last up of Alan Dilley, Ken Avery put on their last ditch effort once again, and Holmes, Ken Winfield and that, ditched the Gophers and their spotless record. Wright lost out to the "These guys just did one heckuva job for Indiana team by just .27 of weekend," Peninger said. "They've got to be consider® PIZZA FEAST J a second. prospects in the Big Ten " I: UNION BOARD tonight from 6-2 a.m. Faulty circu THIEVES' in the show bar. triggers fin 1 large Pepperoni Pizza and a pitcher MARKET on riverboc of Beer-Such ^ artsUnion - crafts - gift items Ballroom CINCINNATI (A Fire triggered by deal! 1 WEDNESDAY, FEB. circuit in wiring c» a 7^^^ estimated $2'3°°( 7-10 PM IB Sunday to the Del" the nation's only overnight P , riverboat, officials The fire occui UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS Despite our name, we can't the officers' qutfWJj promise romance. But we top deck of the can provide introductions injuries were repoi to interesting compatible people. GRADUATE STUDENTS and FACULTY MEMBERS Our charge, a modest $5 for at THE ASSOCIATION OF PRIVATE CAMPS least 5 introductions. Interested? . . . comprising ISO outdanding Boy«. Glrlt. Brothor Biitor Then write: •nd Co-Ed Campi. located throughout tho How England, Mid- dla Atlantic Statu and Canada. Writ., Phon*, or Call «" Ptrton Association of Prlvato Camps - D«p». C Mamll M. Alo.oadar, *Olfdm, •9 Wo.t 42nd Stroot, OX S-74S*, Now York 36, N. Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Monday, February 5, 1973 9 WE'LL SAVE YOU $$$ \\ pW IN SECOND PLACE leers sweep I By STEVE STEIN Wisconsin series this p Michigan Coliseum State News Sports Writer weekend." season, repeated the this feat 307 E. GRAND RIVER ~ Injuries continued to Another Plague the MSU hockey top Spartan with two tallies in the NEXT TO CARD SHOP defenseman, Norm Barnes, opening period. team over the weekend was also out of Friday's Mon. Sat. 9 6 the Spartans as contest because of his game Mark Calder also scored Wed. Thurs. 9 9 whipped arch - twice, each member of the rival Michigan twice, beating misconduct against Notre JOHNSON & JOHNSON PEARL freshman line, Ross, John U-M 8-5 Saturday in Ann Arbor after pulling out a 6-5 decision Friday Dame, and thus MSU's all - American defenseman candidate, Bob Boyd, St urges Moroney scored and Brendon and Frank MAGI- TOTTUfT DROPS at DeMarco added the other Demonstration late goals. The hard Hall on two fought played the final 30 minutes of the game without a rest. MSU suffered a scare Spartan marker. "We skated much better, tonight," Bessone said after CUBES TOOTH POLISH SWABS victories moved the icers early in the Saturday game $*|23 69' i up the game. 1.70 400's a notch in the WCHA when winger "Michigan went * .5 oz Denny after us in the second REG 1.49 standings into second place, Olmstead went crashing into period REG 1.09 and the kids three points in back of the boards behind Ron kept their LIMIT 1 heads and played the Denver. Wisconsin Clark head first and was way (Coupon) dropped they should." Expires Feb. 11, 1973 out of the second slot after knocked unconscious. Darl Barnes returned to action Ejst Lansing Store Only East Lansing Store Only 4. losing both games of an eight - point series with Bolton on replaced Olmstead the line and gained an Saturday strong game. and played a Michigan Tech. Defenseman Chris Murfey suffered a severe charley assist. Olmstead had a headache after the game but Bessone well "Our defensemen played and Barnes played ALKA- REVLON Open net fcpartan winger Mark Calder fires his second goal of horse midway Friday's contest and missed the game in Ann Arbor. "We lost one of our through said he should be this weekend. ready for Defenseman Paul Pavelich and center Tom Ross both exceptionally Bessone commented. In one of the wildest games played at Dem Hall in well," SELTZER 12's FOIL FLEX SHAMPOO $-|67 17 Past Michigan goalie Robbie Moore and 44° oz ■he ga^6 recent years, MSU scored WRAPPED steadiest defensemen," played well on bad ankles, Into an open net in the Spartans 8-5 victory over the two times in the final REG 2.50 Spartan coach Amo Bessone the latter getting a goal and REG .69 iVolverines Saturday in Ann Arbor. commented. "We have to two assists Saturday. minute and a half Friday to LIMIT 1 State News photo by Bruce Remington take a 6-5 victory away get him ready for the Penalties played a major (Coupon) role in both games, with from U-M. Expires Feb. 11, 1973 East Lansing Store Only U-M complaining bitterly on MSU took a 3-2 several calls by the officials. advantage in the last stanza ligh point effort foiled EATONS but found themselves down Twenty - three penalties were called Friday, 5-4 with just over one ULTRA CORRASABLE BOND minute remaining. The including nine in the final flurry of penalities had SHEEN 10 minutes of the contest, Is g-men finish second six against the Wolverines. After just squeaking by the Wolverines Friday, the given the Spartans several power play opportunities and the icers finally cashed in with 1:16 left TYPEWRITING PAPER HAIR DRESS AND CONDITIONER 49< Spartans regained their as Steve 55 SHEETS 2 oz By BILL COSTABILE performance of Van Wie in the all - around. touch Saturday, taking an Colp flipped one over fallen REG .79 us! State News Sports Writer when a coach looks at his team's A freshman, Van Wie scored 49.5, just missing the coveted 50 point mark for all - around men. 8-2 lead after two periods before the Wolverines scored three quick goals in Michigan Just 19 goalie Moore to tie the game. Robbie (Coupon) Expires Feb. 11, 1973 REG 1.09 LIMIT 1 (Coupon) IT and smiles with contentment, is the final stanza. seconds later, East Lansing Store Only Etly the moment when he finds out that "I was really impressed with Indiana Captain Bill Sipola, who Colp fed Calder on a »s finished second. State," Szypula explained. "I figured that scored two goals the first breakaway and the high - Every week we improve our score, and j week we meet a team on the they would score high, but 163 points is just outstanding. From what I've seen of Indiana State here, I'd have to rate them as time he played in the scoring Spartan winger beat Moore for the winner. MURINE SYLVANIA ling," MSU coach George Szypula said, a very serious contender for the NCAA f re not discouraged by the fact that it to some of the top teams in the fttry. We'd like to win as many dual title." The meet with Illinois State was another Fencers' FOR YOUR EYES SUN-LAMP KIT Ts as possible during the regular season, $087 cliff hanger, with MSU down .05 going into issued hhr REG 12.95 by o.6 oz |for us, the Big Ten meet in March the last event, the horizontal bar. Randy REG 1.00 WWU psour season." Balhorn and Glenn Hime paced MSU with scores of 9.1 each and a fine LIMIT 1 Indiana State performance LIMIT 1 University by Bernie Van Wie, with a score of 8.95, The MSU fencers suffered Ten (Coupon) (Coupon) rday night, the Spartan gymnastics their first defeat of the champions, but Expires Feb. 11, 1373 Expires Feb. 11, 1973 made MSU a winner. continued its winning ways East Lansing Store Only East Lansing Store Only I scored its highest point total of the 1973 season at the hands of by puncturing Chicago, mi,but bowed to ISU 163.3-158.15. Illinois Saturday, but also Leading the way in the all - around for 21-6, and dashing Tri - I night MSU swept both of its ts, beating Western Michigan MSU were Balhorn and Ken Factor. Balhorn and Factor took first and second chalked up wins Chicago (Illinois) and Tri - over State, 16-11. The Spartan unit now holds an 8-1 . ALBUM SPECIALS fcrsity 156.3-142.5 and Illinois State place meet honors with scores of 52.85 and State in the quadrangular season record. JAMES TAYLOR $319 meet at the Men's IM. irsity 156.3-155.45. 49.4, respectively. In the Illinois contest, MSU downed, 17-10, ONE MAN DOG was MSU lost foil and epee, but "I gainst Indiana State, MSU was unable was performance pleased this with our team's by Illinois, last year's Big won saber. ;e an event, either by individual or weekend," Szypula I score. However, Balhorn did take commented. "I'm still concerned with our MARVIN GAYE $319 |honors in the all - around with a score performance on the side horse and the parallel bars. If we can start hitting on le bright spot for the Spartans was the those two events we should be able to hit the 160 point mark." TROUBLE MAN DUANE ALLMAN pnkers take easy victory The new AN ANTHOLOGY $g39 lom Central women, 80-33 (Coupon) Expires Feb. 11, 1973 East Lansing Store Only MSU Jming team, taking nine J place honors and bating every event, an over easy women's 80-33 Central "The co Waldie and contribute team," Barch are almost - a captains Jane Cheryl Solomon lot to the said. "They always the big team The women's gymnastics showing also made a over the weekend when it took second place in a quadrangular meet held in fine Hobie's CLEARASIL CREAM VICKS FORMULA 44 KLEER-VU REPORT - point winners." Pennsylvania. Clarion an wyone University, swam Sophomores Becky (Penn.), Central Michigan University, Eastern COVERS |in this _ coach meet," Joan of very the Lunsford and Campbell were also first Connie Michigan University and MSU participated in the 65 °z REG .98 R8C UU 3'4 oz. REG. 1.09 67c REG .19 JAs swimming team place winners. Lunsford meet. LIMIT 1 LIMIT 1 LIMIT 3 ■ I was took first place in the 50 (Coupon) (Coupon) very pleased Expires Feb. 11, 1973 Expires Feb. 11, 1973 (Coupon) Expires Feb. 11, 1973 ^victory." freestyle with and a time of 27.7 East Lansing Store Only East Lansing Store Only East Lansing Store Only phomores Cheryl Campbell took first ln and Jane Waldie place in the one meter r°P P°int winners for diving event with 178.9 JUIIES BIC JlSU squad. Solomon KRt plac* in the 50 points. WELLA DALSAM jhety 100 ■ the 200 with a time fly with of 105.7 individual NEED MONEY? CONDITIONER PENS FINE PT. » with 229.2. Waldie IIrst P'ace in the 50 with 35.3 and in with SEE JULIE! WE LOAN MONEY ON ANYTHING OF VALUE 8 oz. REG. 1.50 LIMIT 1 99< BLUE REG .49 LIMIT 6 19° (Coupon) (Coupon) Expires Feb. 11, 1973 Expires Feb. 11, 1973 East Lansing Store Only East Lansing Store Only OPAQUE ULTRA-BRITE KNEE-HI TOOTHPASTE WUVIA] EG 1.25 67° 6.75 oz REG 1.09 59c Kv/TSI LIMIT 1 LIMIT 1 *fr~ (Coupon) (Coupon) Expires Feb. 11, 1973 Expires Feb. 11, 1973 l East Lansing Store Only East Lansing Store Only OPAQUE PANTYHOSE 29' 125's ONE SIZE linC REG .39 S part tin The Sandwich People REG 1.39 03 Shopping Center - Trowbridge at Harri LIMIT 1 LIMIT 2 (Coupon) (Coupon) Expires Feb. 11, 1973 Expires Feb. 11, 1973 East Lansing Store Only East Lansing Store Only Monday. February 5 10 Michigan State News. East Lansing. Michigan "FRANKLY SPEAKING' by pKil ftanjj Rooms j M«>bile Hon GUY NEEDED for private room GUITARS GUIBSON SG electric, $220; Blue Ridge, CORVETTE 1971 - 350, 4 VW 1968 -Excellent running in East Lansing. Furnished, condition, sun roof. clean, carpeted, free parking. $250; EB-0, $110. 355-6822. 489-3177, after 5 pm. $75 per month for 6 month 5-2-7 ™""7'v • X-3-2-7 lease, $70 for 12 month DATSON 1972 -521 pickup. lease. All utilities included. Radio, camper top, step VW BEETLE 1964 - Good Call Dave at 351-0473 after PHONE 355-8255 bumper. $1,700. 355-1179 condition. $220. 676-5800. 5pm. 0-2-2-8 347 Student Services Bid?. after 5 pm. 3-2-7 5-2-8 THREE PAIR Bobby Brooks MEN - CLOSE to MSU. Clean, slacks, size 7 • 9. Fashionable, •AUTOMOTIVE DODGE DART, 1967, 2 door, VW 1969 - Out of state car, quiet rooms. Cooking. Phone wool. 655-1611.3-2-5 Scooters & Cycles automatic, red with black body brakes etc. Good. Must 485-8836. 0-2-28 PALACE 19S. condition. 8-,i. top, good condition. sell. $800 or best offer. 20 GALLON aquarium with Behind rj Parts & Service Party Store, Ski,,* ™ $700. 349-0437.6-2-9 353-0900. 6-2-9 ROOM IN house for girl, wrought iron stand, hood, Aviation $60, no lee filter, $50. 332-6056 after 351-9519.3.2.6 •EMPLOYMENT DODGE VAN 1966 - VW 1971 Squareback, good 3-2-6 5pm. 3-2-5 MUST SELL. •TOR RENT Paneled, automatic, runs body and mechanics, $1595. a" 12'x53~y good. $750. Phone 353-2814. 484-3560, 484-3855. 5-2-8 MEN, SINGLE rooms, kitchen FISHER 202 stereo receiver, co"ditioned, vmKtf I Apartments 4-2-7 privileges, $75 monthly. 131 warranty, $195; Sony dryer, 10 minutes from J Houses Rooms Motorcycles « ]\fo\ Bogue. 337-9091. 5-2-8 TC-127 cassette player, $115. 332-4504. 3-2-5 Make Offer. Phone88Jjj •FOR SALE ROOM IN quiet house, s work, YAMAHA, BMW, TRIUMPH, - 3pm or look EXCEPTIONALLY* Animals Mobile Homes 3-V-6 RICKMAN. Now is the time 353-6720, 12 over after 7:30pm, 648 ATTENTION: ,ivin0 a< aneXceP,ioniM to buy. Be ready for the Virginia. 5-2-7 BIOLOGY Price, only $2,150 a " •Lost & Found • FORD WAGON - 1970. Best warm weather. Custom Vou a 1969 Superior ff •PERSONAL offer. 371-2888, 9am - 5pm, accessories, parts and service. PHYSICAL SCIENCE mob'le home LANSING EMPLOYED student located in Monday Friday. 2-2-5 SHEP'S MOTOR SPORTS, •PEANUTS PERSONAL - INC. 2460 North Cedar, male. Kitchen privileges, GENERAL SCIENCE 1U x12 l« . ao>(,| •REAL EoTATE share study room and bath storage FORD VAN 1972, big 6 Holt. Just South of I-96 MAJORS included. Built indc •RECREATION - Post Office Bo* 1523 East Lansing, Michigan 48823 with one. Bed linen - 3-speed. Best cash offer or overpass. Phone 694-6621. furnished. References. Close storage area. Call Bob I •SERVICE will finance balance. C-5-29 4 89-3039, to bus. Call 489-0583. 3-2-6 ev„ Instruction Typing Service Excellent shape, 372-2072. Service / | Employment Apartments GIRL TO share 2 bedroom BUTTERFIELD 484-7403. 2-2 5 RE; •TRANSPORTATION house. South side. $90/ FORD FAIRLANE 500-1959, SALESGIRLS AND parts girls CASA DEL SOL, East Lansing. programs In Biology, IDEAL FOR month plus security deposit. Physical Science, and struggling^ •WANTED excellent body. $45 without QUARTZ IODINE driving - in - needed full and part time. Now available, 1 bedroom Rivals Parisian No pets. Phone 393-5148. General Science should note garret ■ motor. 694-9057. 3-2-7 fog lights by Cibie, 30% off, HASLETT MOTOR unfurnished apartments. Call the following dates. negotiable in doll, 5-2-5 limited supply at SPORTS, 1605 Haslett RoaJ, francs. Call 351-9M FORD FAIRLANE 1969, CHEQUERED FLAG, 2605 Deadline to submit 372-5731 after Haslett, Michigan. 3-2-7 CAPITOL CLUB. Men, women, 5pm.« SUBLEASE 3 girls Spring completed applications for East Kalamazoo Street, 1 and/or summer term. Near singles. $12 up. Lansing, Spring Term 1973-wlll be DROS mile West of PART TIME salesmen with car. campus. 484 4422. 0-2-28 February 23, 1973. Lost & Found 3 i 487-5055. C-2-28 Leads furnished. Work any 4 campus. Phone 332-2912 Notification of action will after 5pm. 5-2-6 be mailed by March 9, 1973, tM QQJ um bee 5-2-9 h ou rs per day, h gh In time for early registration. Disc Brake Special m nm QQ3 ffiSI SSI GREMLIN 1972 - 232 cubic commission. Call 882-6317 between 1 - 5pm. 20-2-26 SUBLET TWO bedroom FIND If you've found SOMETHING?! a pet or inch engine. 6 cylinder, 3 'Replace front disc pads apartment. Spring, Abbott SCIENCE & of value, w speed floor shift, manual ♦Inspect 4 adjust rear shoes Road, parking. 332-1127 TACS - C.C.M. Excellent FULL TIME, part time sales return it. Just come irt_ mm transmission. Deluxe interior, ♦Repack front outer wheel bearings opportunity. Leads. Train ng. after 5pm. 10-2-15 condition. Size 10V4 $50. MATHEMATICS State News Classified | wheels, 12,000 miles. 23 20 ^3 5SD BSD deluxe $1,900. 484-5808. 3-2-6 •Inspect all lines and hoses and top Good income. 351-1560. GIRL FOR immediate Hockey pads also. 355-6864. 5-2-5 TEACHING CENTER and tell us you want to 5-2-5 an ad in EAST LAN, Fn wn HE? EUS EBB3 up master cylinder occupancy, own room on E-37 McDonel Hall Charles. $75. 351-4765. 2-2-5 STATE BANK'S f] KARMANN GHIA 1968 - Red BABYSITTER AND FIREPLACE WOOD - seasoned 355 1725 column. As a public J DEADLINE convertible, 4 speed. Good only $25.95 foreign cars housekeeper, 12 - 5:30pm EAST LANSINGS AIRPORT NEAR 1 bedroom oak. Delivered. Call 482-1002 1 P.M. one class day condition. Radio. $975. weekdays, must have - BANK will upper, appliances furnished, after 5pm. 5-2-7 NEW ACOUSTIC 360B, $400; run the 372-2072. 1-2-5 transportation. Call 353-8730 before publication. \RECSSI0N or 339-8305. 4-2-7 $33 weekly. 482-5774. 4-2-6 TREASURE CHEST Fender precision bass, $200. extra cost to you. EAST LANSING _ I Cancellations/Cor¬ MERCURY COMET 1966, good condition, automatic, $375. I IMPORTS NEED HOME decorator part GIRL TO share 2 bedroom Electro - 371-4385. 10-2-9 voice mike, $50. STATE BANK f rections — 12 noon one furnished apartment. SECONDHAND STORE Call Jan, 332-6103, X-5-2-7 1206 OAKLAND time to give in-home class day before counseling to customers. 482-3778 after 5pm. 4-2-6 ALL KINDS OF STEREO TURNTABLE dual FOUND: CONTACT a Call IV 4-4411 FURNITURE publications. MGB - GT 1971, AM/FM radio, Afternoons, 5 days a week or 10-90SK, wood base, dust lens, West McDori or IV 2-4444 arranged. Involves some CAPITOL 12 blocks - modern excellent, $95. Pair restaurant. 332-4103. J The State News will be excellent condition, call after cover, for appointment showroom sales work. Salary brick duplex. 3 bedrooms, 5pm, 482-8638. 3-2-5 speakers, ALTEC, Lansing, responsible only for the open. Write Box C-3 State appliances, garage, basement. Santanas, $300. 372-3671. BLACK MINIATURE! first day's incorrect COMPLETE IMPORT car Students or family. AMP AA-15 100 watts R.M.S. poodle a MGB 1964. Must sell. G.I. News. 3-2-7 3-2-7 service including ignition, Excellent condition. Call "M andy." insertion- owner leaving for Germany. 485-4576. Call after 4pm. chassis, brakes and'electrical 5-2-8 355-6864. 5-2-5 3492368, 355-9582./J Sharp, top shape PART TIME employment with VIVITAR LENSES T-4, 135 All students aas must be available at ROBERT'S Tom. 3-2-6 mechanically, wire wheels, multi - manufacturer mm, $55. New. Must sell I l prepaid AUTOMOTIVE CENTER. distributor. Automobile CHRISTIAN GIRL wants to G.E. SELF CLEANING range, new tires and exhaust. 4980 Park Lake Road, necessary. 15-20 hours per sub-let Immediately, close, excellent condition, white, 355-0525. 1-2-5 LOST: GOl-D neck!**, f 882-5500. 4-2-7 Okemos. Phone 351-8088 for charms, SBS | week. 351-5800. 0-1-2-5 $61/ month. 351-1002. 3-2-6 $200. Kenmore 3 cycle appointment 0-2-28 WASHER, electric DRYER, HEAD 360, Look Reiker men's 355-6312. 3 2 5 PONTIAC LEMANS 1972 - 8, ski rack, poles, must sell. white, excellent condition, CAMARO CONVERTIBLE - GT, 350, 2 barrel, 3 speed on the floor, 8,000 actual miles, tires still like new. Asking MASON BODY SHOP. 812 East Kalamazoo Street since 1940. c For Rent m TWO BEDROOM apartment, fireplace, $140, utilities paid, no cats. 1011 East Hazel $165. 349-9310. 5-2-5 Telecaster guitar. 371-4582. FOUND: FULL near Grand grownup Rive Complete auto painting and SPEAKERS - SANSUI Sp-30. Stoddard. Orange. 3 1969, white with orange $2,600. 393-3975. 5-2-5 TV RENTALS $9.50 per (South Pennsylvania). BUILD A better body, barbells, collision service. 485-0256. , Excellent Condition. $100 C-3-2-5 stripes, best offer. 882-2707. month, $23 per term, free 484-6728 after 5pm. 3-2-6 dumbbells, extra weights. C-2-28 for the pair. 355-6864. 5-2-5 3-2-5 TOYOTA CORONA 1968, delivery, service and pick-up. 339-9383. 3-2-6 34,000 miles, AM/FM, VW GUARANTEED repair. No deposit, New stereos APARTMENT FOR 1 man. CAMARO CONVERTIBLE - excellent condition. Phone available at rates. Call Three blocks from campus. IBERTY COIN SHOP RANDY'S MOBIL, I -96 and same SCUBA GEAR - Complete 1969, V-8, 4 speed, radio. 355-5856. X-5-2-8 Okemos Road. 349-9620. NEJAC, 337-1300. C-2-28 $55 per month. No car. Call outfit, good condition, must DREAMED OF B« Runs like new. $1,595. C-2-28 Plumb Line Maintenance, sell I 339-9383. 3-2-6 372-2072. 1-2-5 TRIUMPH GT-6 - 1969, radio, PARKING SPACE close to 349-3799, leave name and SKINNY'Eat fitllyllj low mileage. Must sell! Good MUFFLER SHOP, UNION 76, campus. $5 per month. phone number. Will call lose fasti The "S| CAMARO 1968 radio. - 327 V-8, gold, Runs like a top. $850. condition. 1-2-5 $1,492. 372-2072. Michigan and Grand River. Low cost, expert exhaust 351-8233. 0-3-2-7 evenings. 5-2-5 CEDAR VILLAGE apartment. 4 pays 34% and up c Secret." S4.79 Box 5233, Station Hollywood. AV| 4,1 Calif 371-2072. 1-2-5 VOLKSWAGEN 1968 -Excellent repair. Custom work. Pipe Apartments for silver coins 91604. 10-2-13 condition, AM/FM radio. bender. FREE ESTIMATES. man. Sublease spring term. MUST SELL Quarter horse CHEVY 1963, clean, good $800. 332-0864 or 339-9144. 332-2927. C-2-28 337-2117. 5-2-5 Gelding and V4 Arab mare. 3-2-5 NEED 1 2 for $300 each negotiable. English running condition, best offer or beautifully saddles, $50. 1-589-8400. of $80. 353-3592 353-3879. 2-2-3 or VOLKSWAGEN BUS, 1969, rebuilt motor, radial tires, Aviation furnished apartment MSU. 351-1896. 5-2-7 near L * NIKON SUPER-8 movie camera. Crown Graphic 4x5 view 3-2-5 new paint. 489-9523, LEARN TO FLYI Over 30 years camera. TEAC A-4010-SL CHRYSLER NEWPORT 1962, 8. 5-2-7 GIRL NEEDED to share 2 man STUDENTS LARGE clean 6 AKC REGISTERED Saint experience in all types of stereo tape deck. Sony half your life. 4 door sedan, power steering, apartment, 1 bedroom. rooms, carpeted, furnished, TC228 8-track Bernard puppies for sale. $75 Don't let ball y< flight training. Approved for 351-0174. 3-2-7 $220/ month. 482-4678 stereo brakes and windows. Good VOLKSWAGEN LOVEBUG and $100. 655-3722. 2-2-6 slip away without la veterans. FRANCIS recorder. 1000 used 8-track condition. $275. 625-3893, 1969, good condition, phone before 5pm. 349-3258 after the excitement ol " AVIATION, Airport Road. MICHIGAN AVENUE tapes, $2 each. 500 used STATE NEWS ask for John 3-2-7 393-8297. 1-2-5 near 5pm. 5-2-6 STANDARD POODLES 8 Call 484-1324. C-2-28 stereo albums. USED stereo Ads. It's fun and < Sparrow Hospital. Efficiency weeks old. Dame and Sire equipment, used zoom lenses, an opportunity to 9 apartment, private entrance, TWO BEDROOM house, registered. Torchlight line of good buys. Turn tit Employment ii parking, utilities, male furnished, carpeted, 5 minute binoculars, TV sets, typewriters, adding machines, Champions. 332-6774. preferred. Phone 332-0322. drive from campus, clock radios, tapestries. Used X-3-2-5 STEREO RENTALS. S! 1-2-5 349-0649. 5-2-6 month, $23 per » STUDENTS PART time snow skiis and boots, $5 up classified X service J employment, earn $50 - $100 WILCOX delivery, LARGE TWO bedroom SECOND HAND Mobile Homes week- Arranging FACULTY MEMBERS - No deposit. TV's! per STORE, 509 East Michigan, interviews, pay is apartment, Washington furnished home, security Lansing. 485-4391. 8 - 5:30 same rates. Call J commensurate with ability. Heights, Apartment I-9, deposit required and 337-1300. C 2-28 p.m. Monday - Saturday, 9 Call 393-2229, or 332-4152. 10-2-7 Okemos. 349-9228. 5-2-9 references. TU2-1267. 3-2-5 B an k Americard, Master INDY 1970, 3 bedrooms, fully carpeted, fireplace, outside PREGNANT? WE u 9 LARGE 1 bedroom, spacious Charge, trades, terms, 9 VALENTINE SPECIALS * KEYLINE for - PASTE-UP person advertising agency. closets, carpeted, 7 minute drive to campus. Close to WANTED: house. 3,4,or MSU 5 bedroom vicinity. layaways. C-2-28 shed, porch. $400 down and take over payments. Phone Call us. COUNSELING. •' PREGfl 393-6848. 5-2-9 0-2-28 2 337-1010, 351-0042. 5-2-9 POCKET TAPE recorder. expressway and downtown, Experience necessary. $150. 371-4218, 371-2891. Books. 1 835-1 950. 484-1443. 8-2-9 1-2-5 EAST LANSING -1750 Photocopy machine. Music * OUR APPLICATIONS ARE Coolidge Road. New 3 records, 1930 - 1960. Other t now being accepted for part ti ONE BEDROOM carpeted, bedroom Families, deluxe duplex. pets. Available items. 489-7255. 3-2-6 CROSSWORD * help. $300/ monthly to st 489-3494. C-2-28 utilities campus. paid, 5 minute to Close to expressway, March 5-2-9 no 1st. Phone 372-5920 1957 STRATOCASTER, Peavy 250. (R.M.S.) with 6 12" PUZZLE 4 $130. 1-2-5 371-4218, 371-2891. speakers. 332-3495. 3-2-6 ACROSS 1 PERSON FOR 4 28. Dissolve fr 4 FEMALE GRADUATE student house. Private bedroom. Call person ELECTRIC GUITAR, Tone 1. 5. Sacred chest Mrs. Ninon 29. Nurse shark 31. Silkworm independent retarded adult 489-5960. 5-2-9 Master amplifier. Good for » girls, evenings and weekends. wanted to share furnished 8. Gigantic 33. Candlenut tree AD-TAKERS: <1 Home is newly constructed apartment. B-2-2-6 Call 337-9675. FARM HOUSE, prefer married beginners. $120, or offer 882-5029. 5-2-8 11. 12. Well-behaved Herb of grace 34. Bitter 36. Love god I and completely furnished. couple. $125/ month plus 13. Flightless bird 38. Baking dish GUNS, RIFLES, and pistols of 1 monthly Room & board & utilities. Deposit and Tammy@Butterfield Mon. & Wed. 6-9 p.m. salary. Contact Richard reference. Available February all makes and calibers. Over - Nancy @ VVondersTues. & Thurs. 4:30-7:30p.nvJ .m| Cooper, 393-7477. 3-2-7 12th. 676-1558, Mason. 3-2-6 600 guns in stock. For best lp Pat @ Shaw Tues. & Thurs. 6-9 p.m.< _ MCDONALDS, 234 West Grand CLOSE TO campus, own room, price in Southern Michigan see BOB'S GUN SHOP, '/, AVicki @ Yakeley Tues. & Thurs. 6-9 p.in.^ River is hiring for full time furnished, utilities paid. block south of Post office ^Michelle @ Hubbard Tues. & Thurs. 6-9 p.m.^ and part time employment. SUBLEASE 4 for 4-man, spring Co-ed. 351-8231. 3-2-6 annex, at 2412 South Cedar W Kathy @ Mason Tues. & Thurs. 6-9 p.m.W Hours available, 11-1 pm, term, near campus. EAST LANSING 3 bedroom Call 371-2244. Sundays. 15-2-12 Closed 5-close, weekdays and 351-3097. 5-2-9 - weeknights. Apply before 10 suburban house. Completely !w. . . will help you with your "Cupid Greeting'^ am or 2-4:30 pm, Monday - FEMALE NEEDED to share 4 furnished, carpeted. GUITAR, FENDER amplifier, ifor Feb. 14th in the lobby of each dorm Friday. BL-2-2-6 woman apartment. Cedar 351-1995. 2-2-5 Leslie cabinet, excellent condition, all accessories Village. Spring term. March $400. 1-834-2364. 1-2-5 rent paid. 332-2458. 1-2-5 THREE BEDROOMS, two Come to 347 Student Services Building baths, with furniture. TRUMPET Northeast CONN TWO GIRLS for 4-man, Lansing, 1720 Constellation. Excellent immediately-June 15. Across David, $175. Also, 417 North condition. from campus, Francis, $150. 485-4917. Selling at half $70. 351-8994. price. 355-2567. 3-2-7 1" verse - *3.00 5-2-9 3-2-6 ALL KINDS of knitted and CAMPUS NEAR, furnished, 2" peem - *5.00 living room, bedroom, Rooms crocheted items. Low prices 694-9057. 5-2-9 Use Your kitchen, bath. $120. 3" sonnet - s7.00 332-5374. 5-2-7 SINGLE, DOUBLE In Co-ed OPEN 9-5:30 daily. Closed MASTER CHARGE house. Nicely furnished, Saturday. OPTICAL GIRL NEEDED rest of winter utilities, kitchen, parking, TV DISCOUNT, 2615 East At The STATE NEWS term. $60/ month. 337-9433 lounge, free laundry. Very Michigan, Lansing 372-740Q after 5pm. 3-2-5 closa. 332-8965. 0-3-2-5 C-5-2-9 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Monday, February 5, 1973 11 t, personal j FOR STATE AUTO INSURANCE Art, films Court to review no-fault law all A week nickelodeon, a thieves market and a photography The court said its exhibit all add up to a variety of low cost BEAR - an opinion on the of insurance benefits to decision meets, on a limited The trial lawyers contend entertainment during Union Board Week this week in .rsarv <° mv Svv*eti#l The Michigan Supreme constitutionality of the law accident victims by the law is unconstitutional the Union. basis, the request of Gov. or the Court said Friday it will Milliken and the state concept of no - fault eliminating the concept of because it discriminates Beginning today, graphic arts students will have insurance in general. fault and thereby ■Recreation ion ]y issue the an advisory opinion on legality of parts of Senate for an advisory opinion on the One of the main features out long court cases and lawyer fees. cutting big against the poor and could boost premiums by as much photographic works on display on the first floor. From 2 3 p.m. on Tuesday, ombudsman James D. - Michigan's new no - fault as $500 million a Rust, will participate in an informal coffee hour with constitutionality of the law of the law the court will year. l,G BREAK with UNION IarD FLIGHTS. Spain. auto insurance law and set March 9 as the date for oral which is due to go into effect Oct.l. review centers around the At a preliminary hearing students in the grill. Old movie buffs will be interested in attending phrases "serious impairment in January, the Michigan KNassau, $189. Contact Supporters of the new Nickelodeon Night from 7 to 9 p.m. arguments. The court will not issue of body function" and Trial Lawyers Association Tuesday. "The Lost EondaV ,hr0Uflh„F;'o577 "permanent serious asked the Supreme Court to law said lawyers were trying World" a silent classic made in 1925 depicting or phone 353-9/77. to undermine the law so prehistoric monsters, will be shown in the Union 1g"bREAK in sunny Women's Center future disfigurement." Those conditions are the two push the effective date of the new law back six months from Oct. 1 to April that they could continue reaping huge fees for their Ballroom. Admission is, of course, a nickel. At noon, Thursday Buster Keaton starring in "The (continued from the legislature services in disputed accident Silent Partner" will be shown. Admission is 25 Ipuicol Eight grfcat days at page 1) exempted from provisions 1,1974. cents. fcsiDENTE' hotell $249 "k. lo* °f ■** professional women, married, wear bras of the no - fault act. In and don t hate men said Jacqueline other words, persons who E ASMSU Travel at Brown, an instructor Lansing Community College. C0659. suffer such serious injuries ■•6047. 5-2-9 355-4560, Members of the center include students, secretaries, college high school instructors, a cab driver and colleee a will still be able to sue for damages in auto negligence State Dems elect chairman carpenter, and an auto mechanic. (continued from page 1) ■leal Estate fti Another question raised concerns the number of cases. solid majority. Voting for the chairman was concluded at 7 p.m. with women The two vice chairman yet to be elected and several involved in the center and how court said it will many women Mitchell's youthful supporters chanted "No, no" and came to it for controversial resolutions yet to be considered. The I OR South side. Builder It help. decide whether those danced in front of television cameras carrying Mitchell signs convention adjourned shortly after Tous to take trades. In About 30 to 40 women are active in phrases are sufficiently as he arose to make his concession Winograd's election the center, including speech. He had hastily passing the resolutions |rn Mn move you into a about 25 counselors. precise for legal previously tried to concede but had waited until several for action. to the state central committee T home without dealy. In a nine month period last interpretation. year, at least 200 women large delegations registered vote changes before approaching The convention elected Olivia Maynard and Kenneth iv to select from. Call were counseled and referred the the New York In the podium for his speech. re • v ,ver, 694-2775. abortion addition, the court has Hylton as vice - chairman. centers, according to a prepared statement from asked the attorney general's In his concession speech, Mitchell, who was considered a The convention earlier had debated a U 28 the center to the city council. office proposal by a small to file both liberal candidate, called for his followers to support group of minority group members to increase At least 1,500 affirmative minority women have also and negative Winograd for the sake of a party unity. I Service ~]S information, the statement said. Regardless of the city council's decision,the center will stopped bv for briefs by Feb. 28 on other legal questions: two 'Morely Winograd »' 1 1has the majoritys support," Mitchell said. "This has been a hell of a fight and and he has my representation on the .. ~ Rules . and Resolutions Committee. The convention, which debated them argued the issue for about 2 hours, sent the proposal to the State Central ■ ox COPIES 4/. continue, center organizers say. If the center is refused I lost." Committee for further consideration. city • Whether the act T.YGRAPH SERVICES, funding, women at the center say they will either find an First ballot results showed Winograd about 30 votes office with lower rent, continue as before and embraces more than one short of the Simple majority of 2,460 l.C. snd Grand River of their time raising funds, or spend most object in violation of the delegates. V Jones Stationery Shop. assign a small committee to Shortly before Mitchell's concession speech, a third i6. C-2-28 the fund raising taks. state constitution. • Whether a section of candidate Paul Donahue, who directed Sen. Hubert Humphrey's presidential campaign in the State released his Trade jump foreseen (quality service on the act violates a supporters. His action, accompanied by agitation on the (continued from page 1) .o equipment, see the constitutional requirement part of young Mitchell supporters, caused a flurry of vote IrEO SHOPPE, 543 East U.S. trade mission in Peking is among the future that "no law shall be changes. lid River. C-2-28 Vivian Shaner, of Ann Arbor, a fourth candidate for the possibilities being considered here pending full diplomatic revised, altered or amended . . relations, a step rated as still years away because of by reference to its title chairmanship ,earlier had cast her support to Mitchell. She Washington - Peking differences over Nationalist China. only. The section received only a tiny percentage of the vote. U.S. - Chinese trade spurted toward the end of 1972. sections of the act altered or Mitchells concession speech cut short the lenthy U.S. officials say more orders may grow out of the visits by ABIdg.incements for It's amended shall be re balloting and saved the party quite a bit of money. The some 150 American businessmen to the Canton ■STRING banjo lessons, - What's Happening must be Free U classes meeting today: enacted and published at Democrats had reserved Cobo Hall in Detroit until 6 p.m. spring and grass and old-time received in the State News Yoga - 7 a.m., Union Green but did not Banjo's available. office, 341 Student Services Room; Beginning Hebrew length." begin the convention session until 1 p.m. 1972 almost all in farm 7:30 - According to several party leaders the Democrats had to were goods [€151.5-2-9 bldg., by 1 p.m. at least two class days before publication. p.m., Intermediate Hebrew 319 Hillcrest St.; - 6 p.m., No fault legislation is pay twice Cobo's daytime rental fee for each hour of the — wheat, corn and some soybean oil. 319 Hillcrest St. Free U needs designed to speed payment For 1973, U.S. specialists expect another $80 - $90 No announcements ■GRADS; WE'VE GOT will be unexpected evening session. million in grain exports plus the cotton shipments and accepted by phone. people. Call 353-0660 between flETHING BETTER, The MSU chapter of Sigma 1 and 4 p.m. daily. about half the $150 million Boeing transaction. - er to the World Issues it the Experiment's Delta Chi will hold a dinner at They anticipate around $8 million in sales of electronic Agent contacts hinted in bugging The Marketing Club will host for International 6:15 p.m. Tuesday in the Gold gear, much of it in connection with China's linking into the Room of the Union. Frank two account executives ■ling. Limited enrollment from international telecommunications satellite system. And Angelo, associate executive Leo Burnett who will discuss , multi - cultural editor of the Detroit Free Press the they say many other deals are likely during the year. product development and it; experiential mudular will be the featured speaker. promotional (continued from Estimating a surge of U.S. exports to China to $250 - Iwtration on population, Reservations may be made strategy behind page 1) turned up indications that end" of December, 1971, $300 million in 1973, the specialists calculate that up to two successful ad isi ronment, through today by calling either campaigns, at Mass., to Sen. James O. Hunt was taking Committee for the Re - $100 million more could be added if the Chinese buy U.S. 7:30 p.m. tonight in the Teak io of the four Charlie Cain or Carol Thomas at Eastland, D. — Miss., information from Gregory election of the President industrial products their economy seems to need. Examples stsabroad; Bachelor of 355-8252. Room, Eppley Center. revealing partial results of a on, say, a Muskie speech, officials allotted Liddy cited included machine tools and mining equipment. Jwtional Studies Degree. The Block and win meet at 7:30 p.m. Bridle Club Kennedy subcommittee and turning it over to some $250,000, primarily Meanwhile, Chinese exports to the United States are (World Issues, Room 10, in 110 Anthony Hall. Tuesday Entries for the Block and investigation into the Segretti, whd Woutd use this to gather Intelligence on expected to perhaps double during the coming year while International Bridle Horse Show will be taken alleged espionage - sabotage information to formulate potential campaign violence. Hmg, Brattleboro, VT. from 9 a.m. to noon and 3 to 5 remaining well below the trade in the other direction. Tl. 3-2-7 p.m. today in the Judging operation. embarrassing questions in Chinese goods bought by Americans in 1972 totaled Pavilion. Any full time student Now advances. The prosecution also Typing Service they have been some $30 million. The products ranged from pig bristles is invited to participate. The feel introduced 1, FLUTE and DRUM confirmed by sources sources some evidence and canned food to handicraft items, jewelry and textiles. pSONS. Private familiar with the questions remain about the showing that Hunt The cotton sale is unlikely to boost American available. White House role. prices as PROFESSIONAL IBM The Michigan Botanical Club government investigation, attempted to recruit an old did the Soviet Union's giant $1 - billion order for American iSHALL MUSIC. will feature Irving Knobloch^ which included interviews The government CIA buddy, Jack Bauman, dissertation typing. BA, MA wheat last year. Officials said U.S. cotton is in |830. C-2-5 speaking on "The Beauty of for some kind of campaign plentiful degrees. Marty North, Plant Structure" at 7:30 p.m. of Segretti, Chapin and investigation failed to supply. 351-3487. 24-2-28 Kalmbach by prosecutors, determine exactly how security job, and that about The 400,000 bales could come to about 10 percent of 19 Service Tuesday in 204 Horticulture the FBI, and in some cases Hunt was drawn into the Dec. 28, 1971, Hunt and estimated U.S. cotton exports worldwide in the building. coming PROFESSIONAL IBM typing - the grand jury. Watergate affair. Testimony Liddy met Bauman in year. Rumors of a further Peking purchase of 100,000 theses, term papers. (Pica - Testimony at the trial showed that "towards the Florida. could not be confirmed. |SSI0NAL THESES Elite). Sandi, 339-8934. Sign-up now in the Union showed that in early 1972, I, experienced in all X-25-2-28 Board office for the Union Hunt recruited Thomas J. 1 IBM Selectric II. Board Thieves Market to be held •on Vliet, 627-2936. from 7 to 10 p.m. Wednesday in Gregory, a student at TYPING IN my home. 15 years the Union Ballroom. Brigham Young University, |SSI0NAL TYPIST, experience. Efficient service, reasonable rates. 484-5902. 5-2-8 The MSU Scots Highlanders will meet at 7 p.m. today at 403 to volunteer for work at the primary campaign Local man charges plant with pollution t typewriter, located headquarters of Muskie, Lexington St., East Lansing, for JtoMSU. Call 349-1773 TYPING TERM papers, theses, an ^ening of highland piping then considered the (continued from page 1) litre of water, weekends. and dancing. Democratic front runner. Bohunsky said. This amounted to about 182 etc. Electric, Experienced. apply to all power plants in the state of Michigan.. tons a day. JEAN MASSEY, 393-4075. Last April, when it He said the need for installing new equipment was Foreign Students - the MSU the C-2-28 appeared that McGovern, reason the new plan is not slated to |NCED " TYPIST. ars. theses, IBM, Income Tax Service is now was getting the upper hand, begin until 1975. "After the installation of the dikes a sample was taken that showed 190 milligrams of suspended solids resumes, taking appointments for those Jomes feels that the dates set in the agreement between per litre of ANN BROWN. Typing and _ Pts, etc. JEANINE needing help. Gregory switched his the air pollution commission and the board are too far in water that indicated considerable improvement," he said. multilith offset printing. Call 353-4400. f, 339-9714. B-1-2-5 operation to the McGovern the future to meet the needs of the But he added "that 190 must be reduced to 25 Complete service for community and he Hear federal district attorney headquarters, according to proposes that implementation for maximal sulphur level milligrams." - DISSERTATIONS, dissertations, theses, trial testimony. John Malinowski speak on civil standards should go into effect immediately. manuscripts, general typing, | Papers, experienced, IBM. 23 years experience. rights, ecology and other issues Gregory testified that it Stench and smoke fill the air in the southwest Lansing Bohunsky said the condition of the Grand River is page. 332-2987. at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in 118 349-0850. C-2-28 was his job to provide Hunt improving and that fish life has not been hindered by the Eppley Center. neighborhood and the water on the Grand River is with such information as pollutants in the river. noticably dark. ■ nV home. COMPLETE THESES campaign schedules and the "By putting the solids in the river, the fish food supply , "I think stricter standards should be imposed on these Jtitions, term papers, SERVICE. Discount multilith participating in an experimental topics of the candidates' may have been cut. but there still are quite a few fish in the ■ "•asonable rates printing. IBM typing and elementary education course upcoming speeches, and companies — either they meet the standards or we shut river," Bohunsky said. 152.3-2-5 binding of theses, resumes, integrating Math 201 and Ed that he was paid $175 a them down," Jones said. • 325E spring term will meet at publication. Across from week by Hunt. Testimony Another complaint Jones has with the Otto Eckert plant Turning to noise pollution, Jones said that sound decible 4:30 p.m. today in 136 Akers l^CED IBM typing, campus, corner Grand M.A.C. and Hall. also showed Liddy working concerns the pollution of the Grand River. readings have been made around the power plant and noise * term papers, (Pica River, below Jones with Hunt levels exceed what is considered detrimental to hearing and - Stationery Shop. on Gregory's Jones said that in March 1971 the Board of Water and E"1 F«V»nn. 489-0358 Call Circle K and the Union Board operation. psychological well being. COPYGRAPH SERVICES, will feature Ombudsman James Light was supposed to have removed thousands of tons of 337-1666. C-2-28 Rust at an informal coffee hour The government sources Jones said the company could easily install acoustical fly ash and some temporary dikes used in collection of materials in the coal shoots and the water coolers that from 2 to 3 p.m. Tuesday in Old say that early in 1972, at solids that otherwise would be dumped into the river. The College Hall, Union Grill. the same time Gregory was could abosrb much of the noise. pt prices on TYPING THESES papers. Electric and term beginning his undercover order to remove this matter came from the Dept. of Natural typewriter. The MSU Folklore Society Resources. d Ads in our Experienced. Diane. will meet at 8:30 p.m. operations, Hunt and Liddy Ophaug says the board is working on the noise problems today in but that Jones' proposal is not feasible and "there 372-7600. 0-2-28 115 Bessey Hall. Round robin somehow came in contact just is John Bohunsky, regional engineer for the Dept. of Sights & singing will be featured. All are with Segretti. not room for it." Natural Resources, said the board requested to build the welcome. The full extent of "Anytime the board is involved in rendering service to Ptofldition Feb. m The Married Student Union Segretti's activities was not determined dikes in the river but there was some confusion about the permanency of the dikes. industry they jump at it. But to improve conditions for the people in the community, that's a very low priority," Jones of MSU will meet at 7:30 p.m. by the j Call us now! DON'T FORGET blood comes today in 1645M Spartan Village investigation into But Robert Hicks, legal consultant for Public Interest said. I 355-8255 only from people to discuss nominations, medical care and other topics. theWatergate affair, the Research Group in Michigan, said Bohunsky knew the dikes He referred to a new electrical transmission wire that the Professional donors officials said, but the compensated. MICHIGAN were illegal and that the Board of Water and Light was in power company recently installed for the Oldsmobile James Madison College investigators did learn that violation. Motor Division and also to the fact that citizens in the COMMUNITY BLOOD commuters - lockers are at the very least Segretti was CENTER. 337-7183. Hours available by the South Case community have petitioned the utility to improve street Monday, Thursday and appearing at Democratic He said the dikes were only legally supposed to be in the vending machines. Bring your rallies lighting for many years with no action. to heckle and ask river until March 1971 and the Dept. of Natural Resources Friday 9 - 4:30. Tuesday and Wednesday 11 - 6:30. C-2-28 questions he knew would be is therefore violating the law by allowing the dikes to remain "The electrical line to Oldsmobile was in planning for 10 embarrassing to the on the Grand River. to 15 candidates. years," Ophaug said. He said that Jones probably had FEMALE PhD. desires tennis, Radical and Marxist literature Again emphasizing that The no knowledge of the planning. dining, movie-going is available from 1 to 3 p.m. Dept. of Natural Resources has a voluntary In addition to Jones, other citizens who live near the companion. Call 351-7809 Tuesday through Friday in the they have no conclusive agreement with the public utility that pollutants and the Otto Eckert power station have been discomforted by the laterish. 5-2-9 main lobby, Union. proof, the sources say they dikes will be removed by Dec. 31 this year. noise, air and water pollution. Jones maintains that these operations should be llfcAKANCE USAC complete by no later than July 31 this year. While the Dept. of Natural Resources, the air pollution £ commission and the Board of Water and . NEW \ Undergraduate Student Advisory Roger Ophaug, asst. director of engineering for the situation as improving and becoming less polluted, the Light see the .J972 COLTS C0"1W| 4 \ Committee to Chemistry board, says Jones' proposal is out of the question because his company can not get the equipment to dredge immediate evidence of these improvements is not evident to Jones and his neighbors. rjoo,, mw„, the river by the date Jones will conduct an open meeting He emphasized that the work of the designated. "Residents of this area have had to abruptly terminate utility is strictly volunteer and that no order has brought about the river outdoor activities such as tennis, football, basketball, iw:: 'Mil - today, February 5, at 7:30 p.m., action. softball, walking and even lounging in the sun because the fN Daii V "Whita Wa"1 • Finance sulphur oxides from the Otto Eckert plant have caused "We'll get the work done \f A pM - MON & THUR 'TIL 4 in 136 Chemistry Bldg. as fast as we can," Ophaug said. extreme breathing difficulties," Jones says. SfJTAl In August of 1970, the Mich. Dept. of Natural Resources Prolonged irritation and aggravation to the membranes of DODGE Ph 361 1i THE PUBLIC IS INVITED. took samples of river water near the Eckert showed as much as 2,680 milligrams of suspended solids plant that per the nose and throat have resulted from this pollution, he said. Monday. FebiuanM ^ ] 2 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan ^ Royal Rock Campbell's Tomato Soup Turkeys Mar Boneless All Dark Meat f Cottage AO* Turkey Cheese... dm%3 Roast JffRA LOW/ 2^TOM{flUI^TflMPS M 11 I | » $*38 1 Regular Price $1.69 Lb^ ^ ' Discount Xtra Lo* \ f Whole Sliced Free Pork Loin Serve-N-Save «<»■ Wieners 3"- II Giant White Bread Kroger Dinner 3 89 u Feb. 11. 1973 "88 Farmer Peet HjH Boneless Bonanza Hams X \ Xtra Low DlSCOUflt I Sale Price | Macaroni & Cheese Serve N Save COV Chunk Libby Corn or Peas 5 ° $l Braunschweiger. Herrud Bulk ...41 Fleec* ■h mm ■ Jumbo _ Ring Bologna 'I r.. Zo Fillets Paper Towels Missy Lemon Red Snapper. ..•••»] U.S. No. 1 Vine Ripe Liquid Delergent ii4 *1 Tomatoes 8 "51 Kroger Coffee ^7 Lb Bag Everyday Xtra Low Discount Prices