,h€ State News . nuchigan Wednesday, November 28, 1973 Volume 66 Number 75 Michigan State University East Lansing, Michigan 48824 Senate OKs Ford unenthusiastic about Ford's conservative House ex views but that nothing was turned up by House panels, answering detailed about his financial dealings, handling of questions his Rules Committee to require rejection. But campaign funds and philosophy and winning Sen. Gaylord Nelson, D ■ Wis., congressional praise for openness and to give a opposed the nomination, saying "I don't candor. believe he can provide the type of Members of both the Senate and House inspirational leadership we need if he stressed that the proceeding were should become president." He cited Ford's for nominatio votes against civil rights measures and for especially important because of the start of preliminary impeachment proceedings Vietnam War policy. FROM WIRE SERVICES in the House against President Nixon. Besides Nelson, others voting The nomination of against Rep. Gerald R. Ford Ford were Sens. Thomas F. The House as vice Eagleton, D - Judiciary Committee, which president will go to the House after Mo., and William Hathaway, D - Maine. woundup its hearing Monday, is expected its overwhelming approval to vote on the by the Senate Sen. Philip A. Hart, D ■ Mich., said that nomination Thursday. Tuesday. Ford would make "a steady, decent and Action by the full House is scheduled House approval of Ford, expected next believable President," before Dec. 6. adding "There is week, would complete congressional nothing the country needs more." Sen. Howard H. Baker Jr., R confirmation as required by the 25th In what members said was • Tenn., Amendment. probably the senior Republican on the Senate Watergate most searching scrutiny of any presidential committee, said the approval of Ford The vote was 92 to 3 in favor of the nominee in history, Senate and House could help restore "the confidence of the Michigan Republican. All opponents were committees sent hundreds of Democrats. investigators American people in the ability and looking into Ford's background and willingness of the federal government to During brief debate, Sen. Howard W. studied 2,000 pages of raw FBI files. Cannon, D Nev., said he was Ford spent six days before Senate and effectively deal with the pressing issues of the day." REPS ANGRY OVER ROSE BOWL Law school By MAUREEN McDONALD punch him in the nose for the way he Fanning the controversial flames is Rep. State News Staff Writer voted." Rep. Hal Zeigler, R - Jackson, Bill Plush accommodations The decision to send Ohio State to the said. The Big Ten athletic directors went Huffman, D member of the House - Madison Heights, a Appropriations into Committee, which considers MSU's Tony Cipicchio, left, and Robert the Rose Bowl has created a national a huddle Sunday to decide which West Shaw Hall, were housed in Chambers, G34 beginning of fall term. The University has since Brouhaha and MSU's proposed law school budget. "MSU did not behave responsibly allowed tripled students to break university would go to the Rose Bowl and a study room their contracts and Athletic Director Burt Smith are toward the taxpayers of Michigan." he when residence hall management and right University of Michigan lost their rosy said. began breaking move off campus. in the middle. chance by a reported 6 4 votes. down triples that resulted from - overenrollment at State News photo by Susan Sheiner "I think the athletic director (Burt Big Ten Commissioner Wayne Duke has Considering the potential revenue loss Smith) is a horse's ass and I'd like to said the athletic directors' vote will remain to U - M, in the absence of a Rose Bowl secret; however, informed spot, Huffman said MSU should lobby the Vacated an University will remain empty source said Tuesday there was reason to Ohio legislature for law school funds. rooms believe the vote went 7 • 3, so Smith's vote makes little difference. Besides, Huffman does not believe MSU should have a law school anyway. Though Duke refuses to comment on The law school proposal will not face By BOB OURLIAN move a student from the vote, football fans one triple into one of their two occupants would be filled are ready to tie the legislature until State News Staff Writer another. He said, however, that some Smith to a goal post. February, but Rep. Residence hall rooms vacated up. Loren Anderson, R - Pontiac, cautions by Two sources had informed the State overassignment may be necessary the first His house has been egged, irate phone H students who move off campus or About 200 students have used the that legislators have quit News that triples, in their respective halls, week until residence hall assignment calls, letters and telegrams have arrived, long memories, and I school will remain empty under a current would be maintained as triples even contract release policy to move off determines the location of all the and some legislators have threatened feelings are running quite deep against spaces in to 1 residence hall procedure despite the campus since it was started Oct. 25. residence halls. vote against a law school MSU. though other rooms in the hall were appropriation for (existence of some 300 triples. known to be vacant at the start of winter Gary North, coordinator of residence MSU. "With the heated competition between Robert C. Underwood, manager of hall Underwood, anticipating some "If Western Michigan UnivMri#. MSU term. programs, said on Nov. 1 that overcrowding winter term, described the some people are looking for an and ■ residence halls, said Tuesday this action excuse to the MSU law school this will Ferris State College for a law school, the One woman said there are seven triples overcrowding should be finished by the contract release policy and the alleviation ax ■ would start Saturday in anticipation of on one floor in her hall and even first week into winter term. provide them with an opportunity," Rep. football decision could be a catalyst," though a of overcrowding as ■ some overassignment winter term. room will be vacated winter term "going real well." Dennis Cawthorne, R ■ Manistee, said. Anderson said, reminding the reporter that However, a source, requesting by a he personally was not student moving off campus, none of the carrying a vendetta. onymity, said that the vacant room triples will be broken down. Fuel ordered for Defense Rep. Bill Copeland, R seven I procedure has been in effect three to four - Wyandotte, the Dept; "I can understand how people can be chairman of the appropriations committee ■ weeks already. upset," Underwood said, "but you have to which reviews the law school And Peter Eckel, asst. proposals, manager of iook at it as a numbers game. said he will not permit I residence hall operations, denied on Nov. game hostility to ■ 5 that the University was | vacant rooms. Underwood said one reason vacant maintaining "We're damned either way," he said. Though Underwood said that rooms not many will be held vacant, rooms vacated would remain empty in the event of public gas supply may drop 30% invade an appropriations operate on the merits of each bill and respond to no pressure groups." disucssion. "I ■rooms are being maintained in the WASHINGTON But he's doing his best to light of overcrowding winter term. (AP) - The be running out of fuel. vapors escape from cans even in cold discourage jtriples is that the halls do not want to However, he said that vacated government tapped civilian and domestic In its first use of the 23-year-old weather and can explode. legislators from voting in favor of the MSU rooms by law school. "I've always been supplies Tuesday to assure adequate fuel Defense Production Act, the government Gasoline should never be stored in a opposed to for the Defense Dept. commandeered 825.9 million gallons of it," he said. "It's not a good idea because room with hot water heating equipment. Sources said consumer gasoline of its impact on ecology. MSU is a land supplies gasoline and other fuels. The Pentagon In other energy-related developments: ■Clash looms on may soon be reduced by up to 30 per cent. The cutback would be twice that estimates the fuel is sufficient for about one month. •The regulations White House prohibiting issued electric power final grant college and that is the job it should do." While the legislative quarterbacking By invoking the Production Act, the plants that burn coal from switching to goes announced by President Nixon Defense Dept. authorizes oil companies to on, an injunction to prevent Ohio State Sunday oil. night. break delivery contracts with civilian from playing in the Rose Bowl was asked ro ease fuel Nixon's Emergency Group, which met Tuesday, was Energy Action customers. Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger •John F. Schaefer, of Love's Policy Office, told subcommittee a that Energy Senate small business the current fuel in federal court graduate student. Tuesday by a U - M Gerald E. Faye filed the class action suit reportedly considering rationing gasoline indicated in a briefing with Nixon and 22 By TOM HAROLDSON conservation measures proposed are in U.S. District Court or imposing a supplemental tax of 30 to senators and House members that the sufficient to deal with against the Big Ten, State News Staff Writer 40 cents. shortages caused by J There is nothing like a crisis to get the Analysis Meanwhile, Nixon signed a bill requiring Arab oil embargo is unlikely to end until progress emerges from Mideast peace talks the Arab oil embargo. charging the conference vote was illegal and arbitrary. wheels of government in motion, and that him to carry out mandatory allocation of which begin Dec. 18. p what is happening in Lansing this week is state officials try to come to grips with There is also essential among legislators and the governor over disagreement what powers the central agency will have. all petroleum products within 30 The law, is designed to assure days. adequate One conservation proposal reportedly advanced by the Treasury Dept. would Students face Ihe energy crisis. supplies of fuel for all parts of the All sides agree that the agency should have impose a gasoline tax of 30 to 40 cents. It I Most of the action surrounds getting country. ■nick legislation that will establish the the power to force disclosure of the supply and demand figures of oil The White House also proposed could be coupled with a weekly allowance of 10 to 15 gallons of gasoline, free of the cost of tickets Administrative channels for coordinating companies and distributors. regulations Tuesday that would require added tax. he state's home owners who use oil for heat to lower the nation. attempts to survive the serious "Coordination of energy supply and Year round Daylight Saving Time was By JOHN TINGWALL Situation. their thermostats six degrees below last approved by a vote of 311 to 88 in the A 5 per cent general air fare increase demand can be accomplished by providing MSU students planning to fly home for 1 Gov. Milliken would like to have vested year's settings. The regulations do not House. approved by the Civil Aeronautics Board the Public Service Commission the Christmas face a sharp increase in air fares p his office the power to cut highway provide an enforcement mechanism, and With the reported increases in gasoline effective Saturday plus a reduction in authority to require wholesalers, and a gradual cutback in available Weds and to curtail outdoor advertising. the penalty for failing to cooperate would flights student fare discounts on the same date distributors and agents in the oil business hoarding, people are warned that gasoline as the energy shortage tightens its grip on Jle is also working on setting up the state's to furnish supply and demand information means that the average student will pay 16 Jnergy ' crisis coordination, though his as are rumored to be and provide necessary authority to enforce per cent more to get home this year than slightly different last. these information requirements," Milliken m some legislative preferences. said in his Monday night message to the A standard ticket costing $100 would I In the legislature, most of the crisis have cost the student $83 last legislature. year. The Veparation consists of legislating power The Fitzgerald bill not only specifies same ticket this year will cost him $96.60. f% to one agency to coordinate the disclosure as a requirement of such The student traveling on standby will be Wssive efforts that will be needed to deal the first to suffer from the companies but also dictates that they be gradual Iffectively with the crisis. This may come licensed by the state. This is one of cutback in flights between major cities F the form of which has taken place since October when legislation sponsored by the main differences now. rP William Fitzgerald, D-Detroit, the energy crisis first Some legislators would prefer to let the began to affect air Rinnan of the joint legislative committee travel. 111 the federal government handle licensing. They energy crisis. Paul H. Elmen, city feel that the state could be too punitive in manager for United J But "J rs Milliken and energy have different opinions about legislative doing this. Fitzgerald thinks otherwise. Air Lines in Lansing, said, "The student is "This measure is not meant to be going to have more trouble this year the center of the coordination because he's not going to have the Pould lie. teurdssnvnt towards the oil interests but variety of flights to choose from." 1 Fitzgerald rather an information point for us," would prefer to place most Elmen said that only a few Fitzgerald said. flights to I' the power in the hands of the Public Some legislators are also trying to and from Lansing have been cut. Commission. That power would Locally, both United Air Lines and prevent a future crisis from catching the Insist of total coordination of energy state off guard, as the energy crisis has. North Central Airlines said that seats were Pformation, action and final decision State Sen. Carl Pursell, R-Plymouth, has still available on many flights leaving Pking. with the legislature providing Lansing during the weekend of Dec. 7 sponsored legislation which establishes a IP^ks and balances. crisis council to prepare and protect the through 9 when the student migration is It is difficult to assess exactly where expected to reach its peak. state from situations similar to the present Piken would like the power to be, but Those purchasing or one. reserving seats for Tes have indicated he would prefer to see flights after Saturday will have to pay the It is supported by Milliken, and Pursell r Power diffused among the Public expects its passage soon, possibly by early higher air fares, Elmen said. Student fare r'Ce Commission, his own office and discounts will be eliminated ksk force on fuel supply, which has next year. entirely by r June 1974. NN much of the Legislators are predicting that most preliminary action in energy crisis legislation will be on fa™g with the state's crisis so far. Milliken's desk by January, as top priority This house on the Oregon coast near Coos I lis will further articulates his position is Bay is warms air which is sent to the house's rooms. The Collingwood being given to all energy legislation. heated primarily by the sun. Water house requires about $48 worth of . . . Kalamazoo Crescent piped through . . . ** week as aides have said he is currently They will not speculate, though, on how the 81 • foot - long panel on the roof is electricity for — all roads where planners try to meet (^Paring substitute legislation for the differences of opinion will be worked out heated by auxiliary heating in the winter months. automobile traffic loads. See ■%'rald bill. sunrays, collected in a basement storage tank and pages 6 and in so short a time. AP Wirephoto 2 Wednesday, November Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan 28, |q7j news Watergate tape buzzes, hums roundup WASHINGTON (AP) - One of the famed "What the hell does that show you?" a voice chairman Howard H. Baker, Jr., R-Tenn., Gerald L. Warren, deputy White H attributed the delay to witnesses who have failed White House tapes was played in public for the like the President's said once. "I'd like a little of to appear under committee subpena, secretary, told reporters Nixon T first time Tuesday but the only question it that consomme today." A voice sounding like White available "complete informal settled is that there is indeed a humdinger of a the President said again, House refusal to turn over some documents and personal finances" finances but would woul not compiled by our national desk hum. There was some whistling, but tune and an admission by the staff that it wasn't ready to actual tax forms would be part of ih. My if It lasted, as the White House said. 18 minutes whistler were unidentified, proceed. The tape, of a meeting in operation. and 15 seconds. Then the long buzz, loud at first, then little The two senators left open the possibility that Nixon's Fv Arab leaders weigh rival claims To straining ears in U.S. District Judge John J. lower and then loud again. a the panel would go out of existence on Feb. 28, Office Building suite on June 20 Sirica's crowded courtroom, it sounded like 1974, without holding farther hearings. played as the President's secretary' RnJV* Rival Jordanian and guerrilla claims took precedence Meanwhile, the Senate Watergate committee Woods, was on the stand. ^a1 electric clippers in a barber shop. Here and there, Committee chief counsel Samuel Dash said, at Tuesday's session of an Arab summit meeting in acknowledged that its investigations of the mil^ before and after the hum, the voices of President fund and the Hughes-Rebozo money were rift however, there will be further hearings before the It was the 10th day of a hearing Algiers. The explosive issue, Arab leaders feel, must be Nixon and aides John D. Ehrlichman and H. R. panel is phased out. But Dash also said in an an inquiry into two subpenaed resolved so a united front can be presented in an going well and postponed further hearings at interview that the staff soon will begin trimming the White House WatergZ! Haldeman could be heard in snatches of conversation. least until January. Chairman Sam J. Ervin Jr., D-N.C., and vice both clerical and investigative personnel in changed in said were nonexistent character after the White upcoming Dec. 18 peace conference with Israel in h preparation for the Feb. 28 shut-down. disclosure last week- that .. ."ou* Geneva. President Nixon was pictured by the White conversation missing the 18-minute Kings and presidents from 16 countries met in closed session to hear Egyptian and Syrian reports on the conduct of fighting during the October Mideast war. Expert By STEVE REPKO restrictive policy will drag fears anticipation of worse things to House Tuesday as being undecided about making public some of his federal income tax returns .though one Democratic senator, who met with Special Watergate prosecution force |am say that the part obliterated was about the Watergate break - in that ronVe segment" The Jordanian - Palestinian dispute is over King down the economy about six come." Kreinin said. Nixon, said that the President had promised such occurred™ three days before the conversation Hussein's fears that a Palestinian government in exile The United States is due for months later, as it is now." He added that the stock market is not the best indicator was record*} an economic recession in 1974 may be formed that will claim to represent all which the energy crisis will Kreinin cited the tight of the state of the economy. Palestinians, who form a majority of Jordan's only make worse, Mordechai money policy of the Federal "Consumer anticipation, Reserve Board and resulting investment population. Hussein remained in his capital, but Yadir plans (collected and Campui Kreinin, Afa professor of Arafat and other Palestinian guerrilla leaders came to economics, said Tuesday. high bank interest rates as released by the Dept. of "The current restrictive policies on Commerce), purchase orders Algiers. Arafat was reported willing to reconcile with U.S. would have the economy. and backlogs are much better suffered a recession in the Hussein if guerrillas, crushed in a bloody 1970 civil war, He also said that high economic indicators than the are allowed back into Jordan with full rights and consumer sector due to interest rates make investors stock market. presents government monetary policies, freedom of operation against Israel. interest rates and consumer switch from stocks to bonds, "I would have expected Arab foreign ministers approved a Saudi Arabian and that the present drop in investments, inventories and demands in any case," Kreinin the stock market was proposal to lift all oil restrictions against Japan and all European Common Market nations except the said. "The energy crisis will carry it into other sectors of predictable. "The recent drop of stock exports to remain strong and confine the consumer recession sector. With to the the GREAT GIFTS the economy." Netherlands, sources said, but made no move to lift the Kreinin said in a telephone averages was due both to the energy crisis these will now be for embargo against the United States. The move was to interview that Michigan will energy crisis and an affected," Kreinin said. reward Japan and European nations for policy tilts more favorable to the Arabs. suffer heavily during the recession because of the auto ate t every New* is p ublished by (he students of Michigan State class day during Kail, Winter and Spring school terms. GIVING GETTING industry's reliance on a steady Wednesday, and Fridays during Summer Term, and a special flow of gas and oil. Week edition is published in September. Subscription rate is Canada may curtail investors Kreinin said that he had I class postage paid at East Lansing. Mich. Editorial and predicted a recession long offices at 345 Student Services Bldg.. Michigan State before the current energy V. East Lansing. Michigan, 48824. Canada's door to foreign investors, once wide open, crisis. has slowly begun to close. The House of Commons in Ottawa approved a bill imposing strict controls for the first time on a broad range of foreign investment in Canada. Senate passage is "There is a six month lag initiation of a fiscal or monetary government - to nine • between the policy by the and a $329 expected. determination of its effects on The bill is a response by Canadian nationalists to the the economy," he said. "A huge share of the countryi's economy controlled by foreigners - especially Americans. Private U.S. investment in Canada is now estimated at $35 billion. Americans control half of Canada's manufacturing, LEAVING We're BETTE MIDLER including almost 100 per cent of the Canadian auto and TOWN? rubber industries. Under the bill to establish any new a foreigner must get Cabinet approval business in Canada, regardless of We can help you SPOILED ROTTEN size, or to take over any existing company valued at more than $250,000, or which has over S3 million in annual revenues. ENJOY your break Ulatch torus. $329 Hijackers snubbed, seek refuge Three Palestinian gunmen who hijacked a Dutch COLLEGE TRAVEL jumbo jet over Iraq Sunday continued to hopscotch TIIK J.(;kiimi\\I> around the Middle East Tuesday in search of a haven. 351-6010 1071 Trowbridge The gunmen, snubbed by Arab leaders, refueled their plane at the airport in the tiny Persian Gulf shiekdom of Dubai before heading for Aden, capital of South Yemen at the tip of the Arabian peninsula. The plane circled there for several hours before heading back to Dubai after the Aden government refused safe conduct to the hijackers. $821- c NOOM - 'J - DO fcoG DMLY tjGMfcky MEN'S vlfofW PN\ NIGHTC - MfcM ONI_Y $329 The gunmen were reported negotiating with the Turkish government for permission to land at Istanbul. Before they reached Dubai the hijackers had made december 4th four stops on their zigzag 4,600 - mile journey. At THE J GEILS BAND Malta, the stop before Dubai, 244 passengers and eight hostesses were released. An extra pilot joined the nine - \\ jfc i M eOPFb^foMltY 1& man crew and a hostage vice president of the Dutch f cjufccic tM-ro DUiZ M6W 1 airline KLM. 1 J®'"*' h Jf G,FT REG,STRY col I? special. ,fc!L tCt-Aeokt- A SPECIAL Cliff ATTENTION: Pot dealers aid boy's surgery ttJ IV\lMD ffcE-G4&SJMA6 THIS CARTON CONTAINS ONE (1) The generosity of a self - styled marijuana dealer's will enable 6 old Jody Dietrich to get a group vital heart operation. - year - I crossroads imports ALICE COOPER A woman walked into the Sterling National Bank in Davie. Fla., handed the bank president's secretary an MUSCLE OF LOVE envelope stuffed with $2,000 in large denomination bills and left. A trust fund to raise money for the boy's operation set up last week after a hospital refused to admit was him because his parents did not have either insurance or ANNUAL the $3,000 to cover the cost of the operation. The hospital claimed it did not mention a figure and only CHRISTMAS CHEESE SALE Sponsored by the Michigan State Dairy Club # asked for a deposit. Selections Available "What the hell is happening in this country when a 6 - Selection C— HOSTESS Selection D— SPARTAN year - old child needs life - saving surgery and is denied Economical VA lb package The 2 lb party please treatment because some hospital demands a down A delicious selection of Five Tantalizing varieties six cheeses payment on the inherent right he was born with to iJ? health and happiness?" said the letter accompanying the contribution, signed "Cannabis Rex for the Broward 5329 County Marijuana Dealers Assn." Nixon travels far on weekends CHECK OUR EVERYDAY •VERYDAY LOW PRICESPRICES ON ALL LP's! Talk about staying close to home during the energy crisis: President Nixon has spent only four weekends at C the White House of the 44 weekends so far in his second term in office. Twenty were spent at his Camp David, Md., retreat, eight at his waterside home in San Clemente, Calif., 11 at Key Biscayne, Fla., and one weekend he was hospitalized with viral pneumonia at Bethesda Naval Hospital. Nixon, who has urged Americans to stay at home Selection A ARISTOCRAT s8°° 5?2i2,B HE"A over the weekends to conserve fuel, made two round 3% lb. selection. A delightful ^'b. flavor montage Made Stop trips to Camp David last week, using up 300 gallons of blend of eleven of the Rpd ™s 8 co"rce feast°f gisoline to ferry the presidential party by helicopter. finest cheeses. cheese makes perfect 8 gift Sale starts Monday, Nov. 20- 8 A.M. to 6 P.M. Nixon's Air Force Boeing 707 that carries him to Reduced rates are available for direct pick-up frbm Florida uses up about 4,000 gallons of fuel one way at 122 Anthony Hall, MSU the 475 m.p.h. speed adopted this month. The trip to 353-7251 Acrosi from the Union California burns up 10,000 gallons. Please Order Early 1 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Wednesday, November 28, 1973 3 PIRGIM finds toy safety improved, but dangerous items still in stores By SUSAN BURZYNSKI PIRGIM found that one store, the Topp Village Toy Market, State News Staff Writer 3105 W. Saginaw St., carries the "Little The cute little doll Angel Suction Toy," you purchase for your sister for Christmas which has been legally banned by the safety commission. may not be as harmless as it looks. The suction toy for infants broke into several pieces after being The Public Interest Research Group In Michigan (PIRGIM) is dropped four times from a four - foot height, Tuchinsky said. now completing a toy safety report which shows that many Tiny beads which could cause choking inside the bell - shaped toy defective toys including dolls with flammable clothing are on the spilled after the toy was dropped. The bells also had sharp edges market in the East after breaking which could hurt an infant. Lansing - Lansing area. A follow up in five The six other stores included in the - Michigan cities - including Lansing - East study — J.C. Murphy and Lansing - to the 1972 PIRGIM toy safety study says that the Woolco in the Meridian Mall, Meijer Thrifty Acres in Okemos, danger of some infants' and childrens' toys, Hobby Hub in Frandor, the Knapp store in downtown Lansing of especially in the areas projectiles (dart guns), flammables (doll clothes) and and K - mart, 5625 W. Saginaw St. - carried at least pne toy electrical toys (irons), has not been which fit into the dangerous toy improved. categories, Tuchinsky said. Only one out of 10 dolls purchased by the 10 PIRGIM He said, however, only a fraction of the amount of dangerous volunteers wore clothing which was not toys found last year were available this year. He credited the flammable, Joe Tuchinsky, executive director of PIRGIM, said. None of the dolls, improvement in toy safety to pressure put on toy manufacturers, including the well - known Barbie, contained even a legislators and the safety commission by Public Interest Research about the doll's clothes, he said. warning Groups and other consumer groups across the country. Tuchinsky said though there has been a great improvement in He also linked improvement to more standard - setting done by toy safety since last year, these areas have no public standards. the safety commission, which was formed this year. Previously, Seven stores in the area were visited the Food and Drug Administration handled the banned by the volunteers, who toy list The Public Interest Research Burn, baby, burn Group in Michigan (PIRGIM) examined toy shelves for items banned by the Consumer Product Safety commission. These were items which fit general areas of and safety standards. Tuchinsky added that inspection of toys on the shelves does clothing caught fire, burned readily and blackened the doll defectiveness that are not specifically listed on the not appear to be improved. recently purchased 10 dolls and checked the dolls' banned list clothing and toys which are "If untrained volunteers like those in PIRGIM could find such for flammability. In every case, State News photos by Charlie Kidd clearly dangerous but are not under any (sequence above), the public standards yet. a great number of defective and dangerous toys, trained professionals could probably find many more," Tuchinsky said. Groups By MARK KELLY Two East Lansing citizens advisory commissions came down oppose Aesthetics Task Force met for four hours in City Hall and voted unanimously to oppose the Ingham County Road Commission's act on the recommendations of its advisory groups late this This Christmas give yourself something hard Monday night against the plan to widen the Street bridge and rechannel the Red Cedar River. Kalamazoo present plan for a $700,000 construction The East project. Lansing Traffic Commission also announced its month or early in A survey of January. 26 engineering and environmental experts conducted by the environmental task force and read at the you've never seen The eight • member East Lansing Environmental Quality and opposition to the proposal after a lengthy no way we could meeting. "There's just accept this plan," traffic commissioner Charles meeting Monday found general agreement that the bridge project would disrupt the environmental balance in a before. Massoglia commented. surrounding 46 - Give yourself 16 years in the word. The objects are first The County Road Commission acre woodlot. Egypt about 14 centuries rate, the choice is already has indicated it would Some of the experts polled said that construction would alter before Christ. That's when extraordinary for its range and drop the plan if both East Lansing and a group of MSU experts breeding habits of some 44 bird species living in the area and ruin Akhenaten, the rebel Pharaoh, representation from Wjjjosed^hyjjanJjh^a^Lansing City Council is expected to plant life for several miles downstream. Environmental task force members also questioned whether and N efertiti his legendary Queen commanded their eminent museums and private collections around the world." there was a real need for the project. people to worship only one From 9:30 a.m. to 5.30 The new bridge was proposed to avert traffic god, The Aten . . . God of the p.m. Tuesday through Sunday. disruptions Sun. Beginning Jan. 8, Tuesday during flood periods in the Red Cedar, but task force members And it was not only evenings until 9 p.m. questioned whether either the flooding or the traffic flow on religious beliefs that changed Admission $1.50; students Kalamazoo was heavy enough to justify the project. with during Akhenaten's rule. ID 75c; Founders Asst. city engineer Gordon Melvin asserted that the In art, stylized portrayals of members, children under 12 rechanneling phase of the proposed project was not really afterlife gave way to with adults, senior citizens - proposed as a flood control measure, but rather to make the expressions of joyful earthly free. bridge reconstruction itself more convenient. life. Art became intimate. EGYPT Mark Scherer, curator of the Fenner Arboretum, told the task Realistic. Sometimes AS YOU'VE force, "If we destroy this area and others like it, we are grotesque. Always fascinating. NEVER SEEN IT Come see these unique objects BEFORE destroying an experience of future generations and the knowledge in the exhibition The New THE DETROIT INSTITUTE they might have gained from such discoveries." York Times calls " ... a OF ARTS See related articles, page 6 and 7. blockbuster in every sense of December 19-February 28 open thursday and friday nights until nine FAMILY GIFT IDEAS Miss J checks in for the holidays and tropical travel in If you're looking for a store that's got gifts white/green sure to please any age wool/nylon blend tattersall separates Surprise your family with t-shirts, mugs and glasses that proudly display the "State" seal textured acrylic sleeveless sweatervests (Look for the Store's name in tomorrow's paper!) and long sleeve acrylic knit tailored shirts. . .crisply done by Junior House Checks in 5 Wednesday's; to 13 sizes; shirts in sizes 7 to 15; sweatervests sized S-M-L. A. Lined blazer, $46 Hip-stitched pleated skirt, $24 Solid lemon shirt, $15 Houndstooth check sweatervest, $14 B Short sleeve cropped jacket, $32 Front-zip pants, $26 Dotted shirt, $15 Cabled sweatervest, $13 • • • is a Christmas shopper's Miss J's leather $ delight. You get regular sling with swing. 125 our . . that is, to look great with those dinner, which includes swingy 3 pieces of chicken, mashed pleated skirts and dresses. All leather. Regular . from rounded toe and potatoes and gravy, cole slaw open back to $|*5 Value platform sole and stacked heel. In and hot biscuits all for *1.25. black or navy, sizes 614-10 Narrow and 5-10 Medium. $17. ^Wank goodness for the goodness of Jomt/s Recfie FRIED CHICKEN 1900 East Kalamazoo 4500 South Cedar 3007 N. East St. (U.S. 27 North) ^IJacobSoriB Stale News William W Whiting Beth Ann Masalkoski Gerald H. Coy Editor in chief - - Advertising Manager General Manager Andrea Austin Staff representative Opinion Page Jim Bus* City editor Michael J. Fox Managing editor LynnHenning Sports editor Jonathan S. Kaufman National editor John W. lindstrom Campus editor Editorials raflact tha opinion of the majority of tha Stata Nawi Kathy Mezurawski Copy chief Bob Sovosad Opinion Page editor •dltors. Staff columns, commentaries, point* of viaw and letters to tta Craig Porter Photo editor •drtor are tha pMrtonal opinion of tha individual wrttar*. EDITORIALS East Lansing needs but University unw Last summer East Lansing MSU has a transit fleet of 23 Lansing. approached the University with a buses. Between three and 10 of This could mean buses run less BUT IF EVERYONE PULLS HIS WEIGHT, I'M SURE WE'LL GET THROUGH THE CRISIS request that MSU extend its bus these buses are available only for often on campus, but this is a'small OK« service into the city. The University charter each term. This is a great price to pay for a mass transit quietly demurred, and nothing luxury in the East Lansing area, system for the entire area. further has been done on the where mass transit is limited. In this MSU officials fear the bus system The Doctor's Bag y» matter. age of an energy shortage, perhaps will lose money if it is expanded off Now that East Lansing has had luxuries like charter buses must be campus. However, no matter how trouble setting up its mass transit given less importance. many buses were run off campus system with the Capitol Area The University is not an ivory by the University, the city of East By ARNOLD WERNER MD Transit Authority, the need for tower; it has a responsibility to help Lansing would still have to pay for increased University cooperation the community of which it is a the service. with Hast Lansing for the part. Perhaps MSU should cut its If MSU did extend its services, Letters may be addressed to Dr. Werner at MSU Health Center. Individual sleep requirements are a mysterious matter Names need not be included unless a personal reply is requested. About development of a mass transit charter fleet or extend some of its there is a chance it could get state 90 per cent of people usually need between six and nine hours of When I stopped breast feeding my baby, my breasts became sleep to function well. There are a few people who function well system must be reexamined. present bus routes into East and federal mass transportation smaller than they were before I became pregnant. Is this usually on a continual basis with less than six hours funds through the auspices of the sleep and there an more common among women who breast feed, or is it some unusual people who require more than nine just a hours sleem city. natural occurrence for anyone who has a baby? Once the breasts night. H Legal problems surrounding the become smaller, is there any way to regain the original size? I Sleepiness during the day is often a matter of how involved* extension of MSU's bus service are would not be so concerned but now that my husband knows person is with what they are doing and boring activities tend to increase drowsiness. It is not for people to feel entirely unclear. Apparently the what he is missing, he feels a tittle gypped. uncommon vm University has never asked Leland Breasts do change with pregnancy. Early in the sleepy after eating as well. You are, however, the only person 1 pregnancy have heard of who complains of falling asleep Carr, University attorney, for an breasts become larger and Tinner. This effect is due to hormones ' during sex. which are preparing the breast to produce milk Usually people feel sleepy or contented or relaxed after opinion on the matter because it following delivery intercourse but are too involved to fall asleep during intercourse of the baby. Following childbirth, "if the woman breast feeds the has never seriously considered There is a condition know as narcolepsy in which a person his infant, the breasts remain enlarged and firm. If the woman does extending its service. not breast feed, or when the breast episodic uncontrollable sleepiness which can occur anytime feeding stops, firmness and including during intercourse. Such a condition should be Jack Breslin. executive vice size decrease. The bre&sts do not become smaller than investigated by a physician experienced in dealing with these president, said: "To my knowledge they were before the things; this is usually a neurologist. there has been very little work done pregnancy but there may be a loss of firmness. Thus, they may Several weeks ago my boyfriend and I engaged in anal sex. droop or lie flatter against the chest walls than they did by MSU or the City of East Lansing Since then I have had a bad case of constipation. Drug previously and give the appearance of reduced size. There may be on the problems of extending laxatives seem to have no effect I a somewhat greater loss of tone in women who breast feed, but on me. was wondering if service." this is highly variable. experience of a couple of weeks ago could possibly be related The University, at least, should Breast changes following pregnancy tend to be fairly my present difficulties as I have never been greatly constipated begin to work a little harder. permanent but, in many ways, only represent the occurrence of before. the inevitable since most women's breasts tend to droop and sag Anal intercourse can result in a tearing of the skin that lines as they age. While no solution, temporary respite from the the anal sphincter which would result in painful defecation until such tears are healed up. Painful defecation almost inevitably condition will more than likely occur with the next pregnancy. leads to constipation. On the other hand, anxiety can wort Get tenants9 bills What causes sleepiness besides simple physical exhaustion? I often become sleepy in class, while reading and even while wonders in producing constipation and lasts a great deal longei than it takes for a superficial skin tear to heal. participating in sex. It does not seam to be related to the amount Anal intercourse without the use of a condom carries with it i There are four bitts in the state cent interest rate per leverage in dealing with landlords in year on of sleep I had the night before. Sometimes I feel good all day very real risk of urethral infection in the man; serious vaginal House Committee $(1 Urban Affairs tenants' security deposits. This qisputes, a power sorely lacking bladder infections in the woman can occur if genital intercourse after four hours of sleep, while other times I am sleepy after eight that could offer much relief to would be an especially helpful way under current laws. follows under these circumstances. hours. tenants in rental units, when and for students to earn money on their Elliott's bill is very similiar to if they ever get out of committee deposits. Since the money belongs Bullard's, but not as detailed. It and on the floor. to the renter and not the landlord, calls for recognition of tenants' POINT OF VIEW As it now stands, no action is it makes sense to have the money unions in landlord - tenant disputes, scheduled to be taken these bills setting of negotiation Workers strike for decent life on working for the renter's benefit. up until next year. It seems the urban committees and allowing tenants to affairs committee has a whole The other bill in Bullard's take their cases to circuit courts if bookful of bills on its calendar. package would permit tenants to negotiations fail. By WILFRED SKUBI ever received Farah's retirement benefit of employes who walked out as "filth, form collective bargaining units to However, it really $20 per month. As soon as a woman saying that the plants would be does not Seattle, Wash., graduate student Rep. Perry Bullard, D - Ann negotiate with landlords. This bill matter which bill is more detailed if approaches retirement age, or can no cohesive without them. Using scabs, man For 18 months more than 3,000 Arbor, and Rep. Daisy Elliott, D - also would allow longer meet the outrageous production brought from across the Mexican bordt tenants to both sit in committee. The track Mexican American workers have been on • in buses driven for the company by " Detroit, are two representatives strike against the Farah Manufacturing quotas demanded by the company, she is participate in a protected rent record of the legislature on tenants' fired or harassed into quitting. Paso police, the company was able sponsoring the bills. Bullard's bill is strike. This basically means a tenant Co., a giant maker of men's pants with a little more comprehensive, but rights is already blotted with the resume production. plants in Texas and New Mexico. They are group could pay rent into a special passage last April of a watered - involved in an epic struggle to win a both are worthy of consideration, if The Amalgamated Clothing Worke bank account instead of a down security deposit "Farah workers had no job the legislature ever gets to them. bill. This decent life for themselves and their AFL • CIO stepped in with aid for tl landlord's until differences are record will not be improved if this families. security: they were fired at the will One of Bullard's bills would strikers and a call for a national boycott settled. much needed legislation is allowed - The issues are basic. Farah has been of a foreman, and in 50 years of Farah pants to bring the company require landlords to pay a 5 per This could fighting unionization with all the power at give tenants some to languish in committee. operation not one worker has ever terms with its unfair labor practic the command of the company - including the use of vicious police dogs, mass arrests received Farah's retirement benefit (violations of federal labor relations so that an election, a free election, mig of strikers at night on trumped - up of $20 per month. As soon as a SUSAN A6ER charges and the firing of workers for union woman approaches retirement age, determine whether Farah workers the union to represent them. activity, actions which are in violation of or can no longer meet the A falling leaf, cr the human and legal rights of the strikers. The Catholic bishop of El Paso, Sydney outrageous production quotas demanded by the company, she is Unions, religious groups, civic and rights groups and students have Metzaer. who investigated the grievances to the call for the boycott of Farah pan! tell you where of th^ strikers strike and the average and endorsed both the boycott, found that the take - home pay for Farah workers fired or harassed into quitting. " In response to community request hundreds of major stores across tl country have agreed to stop selling Fan was $69 per week, while unionized Because of the atmosphere of fear and pants for the duration of the boycott. Eastern Airlines, the Wings of Man, is now offering to flutter But clothing workers in El Paso received an intimidation created by the company, and maybe any half • intelligent person could save himself $1, around inside your head and tell you exactly where you want to average of $H)2 per week. Bishop Metzger the long list of grievances neglected and save the world some computer energy and make those decisions concluded that the strikers had not been unresolved, a spontaneous walkout At Michigan State University, go- himself. Committee to Aid the Farah Strikers For a $1 fee, they will feed your secret fantasies and dreams to receiving a living wage. jumped from one Farah plant to another Sure, it's easy the Eastern way. One need not think, plan or seeking broad support for educational i their computer, which they claim is chock - full of the thousands early in May of 1972. Soon workers in all feel excited. One must simply wait 10 days for the computer to Farah workers had no job security: they the plants were out on strike. boycott activity both on and off of vacation experiences which Eastern offers. sift through its wealth of experiences and voila, the vacation is were fired at the will of a campus. foreman, and in Then, lo and behold, they will tell you where you want to go set. 50 years of operation not one worker has Willie Farah, the president of the Until then, "Viva La Huelga," (sup? (and, of course, how much it will coit). Not where you THINK There are some risks, however. company, described the thousands of his the strike!) - don't buy Farah p«n you want to go, but where your innermost self has Eastern does not guarantee its perfect vacations. There is no always yearned to go for true peace and contentment. pink - and • white coupon reading: "If your inner self is not Eastern's questionnaire, which wrings your mind of its totally satisfied with your perfect vacation, we will gladly refund fantasies and idiosyncracies, was stuffed in the $6,542 you spent on it. We reserve the right, however, to Saturday editions of the Detroit News and is also available "at your travel keep the $1 fed our computer." agent's." "What sounds like you?" it asks. Pictured are a trumpet, a Another note of caution - Eastern, according to the reliable falling leaf, crashing waves and a fierce lion. Yellow Pages, flies to 105 American cities, Canada, Mexico, This presents a problem for the Eastern computer. Is a latent Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, Bermuda, the Bahamas and leaf sent to New England in the autumn to be with other leaves, Jamaica. or to tropical Tahiti to feel unique among the jungle flora? Is a potential trumpet sent to Bourbon Street, New Orleans, or to an Note that Eastern does not fly to Moscow, Cairo, Belfast, empty Shea Stadium where he can fully express his inner self? Calcutta, Tokyo, Rome, Madagascar, Sicily or Sydney, Australia. Another question, which remarkably resembles those posed to Thus, your perfect vacation will never occur in any of those Miss America candidates, asks "Which animal would spots. Even if you indicate that you hate hot weather, would like you like to be?" to be a polar bear, would enjoy living in a commune and hate to Eastern's computer also demands that you rate the follow the crowd, they will not send you to Siberia or Reykjavik, degree to which you are a PTA parent, a permissive Iceland. parent, a pennypincher, a paranoiac, a hypochondriac, a loner, a miser, a dedicated dieter, Perfect vacations boozer just do not happen in such places. a ("happiness is a double martini at the end of the day" - A more perfect solution to the growing crisis of mediocre strongly agree, tend to agree, etc.), a Ben Franklin fan, allergic to vacations lies in establishing a rent - a - vacation agency, the sunshine, allergic to work, allergic to humidity, allergic to hot weather and allergic to seafood. American Vacation Invention Service (AVIS). Its supercomputer Perhaps the six pages of honest responses, when considered by - storing not thousands but millions of vacation experiences a competent computer, do reveal something about a person which offered by all airlines, bus lines, train tracks, taxi routes and bike he coulN?! LEAGUES, WE HAVE TEAM5, AND Over a year ago, we asked our mass DON'T 3E SO STUP.D! $TANDlN6$ AND Ai/JARD5 AND transportation systems. Those plant engineers to establish an energy r-TT SPECIAL FIELDS...iJE EVEN programs include the design ofbuses, HAVE A NEWSLETTER! conservation program to cut waste, new methods for the efficient opera¬ improve utilization and generally tion ofbuses on reserved or exclusive increase the effective use of our lanes into and through downtown energy resources. areas or central business districts, DOONESBURY In our plants we're instituting and the automated control of rubber- by Garry Trudeau programs to salvage oil and other tired transit vehicles on special NOW REMEMBER IT'S VERY IMPORTANT THAT YOU MAKE TELL HIM ALL combustible materials that were guideways. Long; range plans for HEY, BOSS! M 60T LEFT A 600D IMPRESSION TRY once thought to be waste mass transportation developed by TO BB POLITE, SMILE A SENATOR. ARE THREE materials TVNNEY ON HLLA6E ELDERS of the manufacturing process. Then GM were displayed in LOT, AND DON'T 6ET INTO ANY ARGUMENTS. THE PHONE f AND A WAR Washington we're using those former waste mate- at Transpo 72. A j ORPHAN! rialsto fire boilers in some plants and In addition to in others we're building standard cleaning the oil and rail commuter diesel electromotives, selling it to local power generating we have initiated efforts to stations. It's a method that has been produce locomotives powered only by elec¬ ^ried and tested. It works. It's even tricity. GM, over many years, has economical. done creative research which A system developed by General has been utilized by government CAN YOU DO IT? Motors engineers for "scrubbing" the agencies and transit operators in sulfur dioxide out of coal smoke is improving public transit. As urban IN THE WHOLE WORLD THERE ARE ONLY A moving at an accelerated pace. As transportation systems are designed FEW THOUSAND AVIATORS WHO OPERATE the technology is proved out, we're and approved by the various levels FROM THE DECKS OF SHIPS AT SEA. making it available to anyone who of government, GM will be ready to can use it. There are large deposits build the hardware. AND THEY ARE ALL NAVY TRAINED. of coal in the United States that will become immediate substitutes for oil Energy can also be conserved IF YOU THINK YOU CAN HACK IT SEE LT RANDY by the more efficient use of the cars when we can make HOTTON AND THE AVIATION INFORMATION sulfur-bearing and trucks now on the road. It is in coal an environmentally acceptable everyone's interest to get maximum TEAM AT THE PLACEMENT CENTER AND AT THE fuel. gas mileage by maintaining cars and NAVY RECRUITING STATION ON GRAND RIVER We are working toward trucks in good order, improv¬ avoiding exces¬ ACROSS FROM THE RED BARN TODAY. ing the gas mileage in the cars we sive speeds and quick starts, and by design and build. Wind tunnel experi¬ sharing the ride whenever conve¬ ments, weight reduction programs nient and practical. For instance, driv¬ and major programs for the ing at 50 mph rather than at 70 mph develop¬ ment of more efficient could increase gas mileage engines are by about all being pushed ahead. 20%. We are taking steps to remind our customers of these And we are preparing ourselves good driving to practices. satisfy any increased future con¬ sumer demand for smaller, more energy-efficient engines and cars. GM is determined to do its full Properly utilized, mass transpor¬ share in the resolution of the energy tation systems are also highly effi¬ problem. cient users of energy. GM is engaged We also pledge our in major research and product devel¬ complete support for all reasonable govern¬ opment programs to improve bus ment efforts to increase available transportation, the most flexible, energy and maintain maximum con¬ easiest and quickest to implement of sumer choice. General Motors Transportation ' OC IA'kHf 1it iflii mm li slirt ! i flHl lilil K!i l-i 'hif-pr i o ® c lt;* t]is :lijo l'.i HU' fji«;|li!»mk til 1nis iiifi ifpi 1liM «•i| iij sP jP! !tli' !fi ii 1 !I J .Q "O J_ i J Wednesday, November 28, 1973 Bridge plan praised, criticized By CHRIS OANIELSON State News Staff Writer One year from now plans for The University Building, Lands and Planning Committee has not yet made a final committee that the desirable because project it was would curtail the annual the $700,000 Kalamazoo recommendation on the project spring flood Street closings of the road and reduce road construction to the board, and several the danger of the project will be in the hands of committee members have bridge either the contractor washing out, as well as or the questioned some aspects of the facilitate the steadily increasing trash collector. preliminary plans during open traffic flow. Proponents of the project hearings on the proposal. However, Steven Doud, Last touches say that it is necessary to representing the MSU married improve traffic flow and Students Union, says that the contend that it will not "How the University can long construction closing would probably Collingwood entrance environment' ^ <" outweigh 50 Kalamazoo project °/ ">< The years of flood closings. Was reopened Tuesday with Critics of the proposed plan because He adds that raising a dip in a new look. Work, which argue that traffic flow on of rare flooding. .while the road near the Kalamazoo Street - located . bridge could began Oct. 16 and which ignoring the problem of eliminate the flooding between U.S. 127 and Harrison construction workers had railroad crossings at problem. Road - is minimal hoped to complete by No*. compared Answering critics of the to Grand River and Michigan (other) roads that cut off 15, resulted in the project who minimized the avenues, and that the harm to everyone south of them reconstruction of the the flooding problem, Schaeffer environment and the from essential emergency says spring logjams caused by intersection to resemble the esthetic appeal of the area services. . .is a mystery to the present bridge's inadequate boulevard - like Abbott outweigh what they call the water passage us." capacity could Road entrance. questionable traffic ASMSU position paper eventually produce a much improvement - State News photo resulting from bigger problem than the the project. by David Schmier The Ingham current one. County Road Even if the concept of the "If the bridge ever washes Commission's project which — project is eventually endorsed out due to a back-up of water has been in the planning stages by the city and MSU, final and debris, Kalamazoo Street since 1970 - would be plans will have to be drawn up would be closed for a lot more primarily funded through the and approved in their turn. than the few days flooding Federal Aid Secondary During an informational stops traffic now," he _ Program, and the federal meeting held recently by the explains. Proposed rechanneling of the Red Cedar River generates opposition. deadline for letting contracts committee, Robert Schaeffer, Some people have Possible loss of the buffer on the project is July 1, 1974. chief engineer of the road Baron adds that the questioned the priorities zone between University But before bids can be taken University has recently commission, said that several ivolved in selecting for the construction work, it is Village and commerical purchased 52.8 acres in Holt aspects of the tentative plan — Kalamazoo Street for road establishments to the west is necessary for the board of for ecological studies, including a controversial construction. another drawback of the trustees and the East supplementing land already Lansing proposal to rechannel a Part of a statement project cited by both Doud City Council to approve the 600-foot segment of the Red owned by the University. concerning the ASMSU and Anderson. Thinking of a Party ? plans, since the project involves city right - of - way and the Cedar River — are being reconsidered by commission position on the project Robert Victor, representing However, several natural sciences students and faculty GUITAR presented at the committee the Lansing Audubon Society, Red Cedar Natural members say that the Red Area, part engineers. Archy Tarpoffs of the MSU campus. He also conceded that a meeting read: University can "How the be in favor of that society members are unanimously opposed to even Cedar Natural Area is unique in SALE Advisory committees of supplementary environmental the Kalamazoo project because the some respects, and is the only these two units have been concept of the project. area of its kind convenient to studying preliminary plans for impact statement on the entire project probably will have to of rare flooding that cuts off essential services, while However, Milton Baron, classes and individual students Marshall's Early Reservations are suggested for your the project director of the Campus Park 245 Ann St. Annual Christmas and during the last two be drawn up. ignoring the problem of and Planning Dept., says that campus. Holiday Parties, also months. The original statement, railroad crossings at Hagadorn, Kalamazoo Street is a major Bowling Banquets, Wedding Receptions, and The East Lansing dated April 2, 1971, -which Farm Lane and Harrison roads CHANGING CURRICULUM? east-west artery between private functions. Accommodations up to 200 Environmental Quality and declared there was that cut off everyone south of no ■ Aesthetics Task Force and the Lansing and MSU, adding that GRADUATES IN ART . . . ADVERTISING quests. significant environmental them from essential police, fire the traffic flow may increase . . . city traffic commission both and ambulance services each MARKETING LIBERAL ARTS impact — was written four . . . " further due to future recommended At Pearson's. a lively, wQrking agency compliments your work that council months before stringent and every day, is a mystery to reject the project Monday development. study programs. The only way to test your skills development guidelines for impact "The Red Cedar Natural is in the field. TRY IT wat< Large and small parties welcome. Catering . on night, minimizing chances that statements went into effect, Several groups say that Enroll now for Winter Term i Area is not virgin land by any ... or off premises. At the construction work will your home, office or ever and has been strongly attacked project would damage the be undertaken as means," Baron added, referring elsewhere. Open Luncheons and Dinners. currently by local environmentalists. esthetics of the area. to a 1938 Public Works proposed. Schaeffer told the "Widening of the roadway Administration rechanneling ould bring about the project south of Kalamazoo SUPER LOW r welcoming capable loss of the Street. nearson Archy's canopy effect few years after the produced by overhanging construction is completed the SCHOOL OF PRODUCTION NO-FAIILI trees," James Anderson, same wild tangle n fy COMMUNICATION ARTS ««ti AJpn RATES • Phone <17-3759 Call Jeff Williams (MSU'68) at 332-1838 ^ | For the Unique Christmas Gift Give . . PUTTING jL-SENTRY T| INSURANCE I Ji■Kf Terrariums TWO PAPERS TOGETHER TO ROLL W»DI tOORDlRIORYOU ' mWj Now on sale in ONE SMOKE! 710 Gainsborough Drive East Lansing the lobby of the Horticulture Bid. $3.50 and up For Information e-x'^et V THE ORIGINAL Call 5-4902 DOUBLE WIDTH sponsored by CIGARETTE PAPER / Available for Students, Floriculture Employees, & Faculty Forum Mtmm The weekend And you've got a little time to spend. Any way you want. Good race come! Starting Sunday Eve., Dec. 3 thru Saturday Dec. 8 times, good friends. And Coca-Cola to m from 7 P.M. to 1 A.M. the coffee is on the house at help make it great. both of our Campus Locations. It's the least we can do for you during exam week. ; It's the real thing. Coke. er the authority of The Coca ■ McDonalds • Cola te Coca-Cola Bottling Com 234 W. GRAND RIVER 1024 E. GRAND RIVER 2042 E. GRAND RIVER Beat the holiday rush at home.... 8 Michigan State News, Hast Lansing, Michigan Wednesday. November '973 Guess Who cancels out; sponsors to give refund Refunds will be given to Robert Klein, a comedian Stanley said still have a students*^ people who decided not to currently appearing at the good time destS w » attend a concert sponsored by Pop Entertainment because the top-billed Guess Who canceled at the last minute due to Stables, was to fill in. Paul Stanley, chairman of the cancellation. Three of the five „ of the Guess Who while member! be<,■ame j|| I playing through' $1 * illness. The time and place of Pop Entertainment, said, and rain at an open air rone* refund has not been released "Nobody feels worse about in Ontario. Word of th* by concert promoters. this than us. We worked very reached Pop Entertainment