Volume 66 Number 104 Monday, February 11, 1974 East Lansing, Michigan 48824 fficials confident of truckers' settlement associated press weekend and voted to reject the federal future rate hikes to accomodate rising fuel vernment officials expressed government's proposal. The meetings, costs. consumers talk about their problems producing countries nor those attending |dence Sunday that striking involving about 600 truckers, were held at without the producers, the nine Common In further developments, federal energy In another the conference must suspect some sinister chief William E. Simon energy development, aides Market members ndcnt truckers would end their truck stops and a union hall. of the finally agreed to come. aim behind his initiative. The energy suggested Sunday- n this week following a weekend Industries hard hit by layoffs, foreign ministers gathered at the They said that the conference "should not crisis, that refiners with adequate distillate totaling State he repeatedly has said, is and remains a and more than Dept. to organize the agenda and serve to institutionalize a new residual fuel supplies increase 100,000 during the height of procedure for the framework basic problem for the entire international their eV(,r, the truckers' groups, voting the strike, prepared to call their energy conference. of international cooperation." gasoline production, employes The sessions, community and "no single country is back to work. proposed Jan. 10 by Some refiners already have shifted proposal that would allow freight Nixon, will open today with a statement Kissinger has said that neither the oil • capable of solving it by itself." to more gasoline creases to offset higher fuel costs, President Nixon's labor relations production, Simon said. by Secretary of State serwht Imingly reject it, according to trouble - shooter, W.J. Usery Jr., said Henry Kissinger summarizing the energy situation and spokesman. Sunday "apparently this settlement is nwhilr. leaders of 13 major oil - explaining the U.S. concept of a working.' cooperative solution. c jng nations met in Washington "Trucks are beginning to roll and there Attending are the United y. in preparation for today's and Canada, Japan, Norway, andStates, are more more reports of plants g of a two • day conference on getting ready to reopen," he said. nine countries of the at the foreign ministers' level. In Pennsylvania, one of the hardest hit Market: France, West European Common Transportation Secretary Claude S. areas, authorities reported truck traffic Germany, The ar said Saturday that compiled was "near normal." National Netherlands, Great Britain, Italy, Guardsmen Denmark, Ireland, Luxembourg and ment reports showed truck traffic on duty were reduced from 3,500 to Belgium. igan, Illinois and Indiana was about 1,500 and only a handful of incidents of The invitations called for per cent of normal, trouble were reported overnight. economic and "intensifying jiets of resistance among driver A settlement reached monetary policy 1 - Thursday^ cooperation to deal with the wanting to hold out for a rollback affecting Washington, D.C., independent of the present consequences situation." -| prices remained, but leaders of truckers guaranteed truck drivers all the The European reaction was cool. ependents urged them to return to fue1 they need and provided for Warned by Arab oil Sunday • producing countries fuel sales. It also allows them to that charge "ganging up" of the major consumers ad hoc groups of independent more for the cargo they would poison the carry to compensate met in Michigan for past diesel price increases and atmosphere and told by rs during the promises France that nothing good can come out if SMSU votes to extend ection petition deadline By JOHN LINDSTROM for the presidency. There were no including the Public Interest Research State News Staff Writer petitions taken out for the College of Group In Michigan (PIRGIM), Great ^nts interested in running Engineering position, and only one Issues, a ASMSU cabinet office, and the for petition taken out the College of Two Crossroads Imports employes say their layoffs the ASMSU presidency or the Residence Hall Assn. were due to unionization activity. Education. ' board now have until 5 p.m. Feb. Parker Pennington, Students majoring in those fields and representing [turn in their candidacy petitions PIRGIM, told board members that ng of an ASMSU vote the petitions deadline, on Sunday interested in running may still take out petitions to be returned Wednesday. The election for board members and PIRGIM was also asking the Justin Morrill, Lyman Briggs, James Madison Two students say layoffs unfair; and Social Science colleges to join in original deadline for submitting the president will be held during spring sponsoring Nader's speech. today but Crossroads owner denies claim was Charles term registration. Write-in candidates will i, board member "The more organizations and money from be permitted during the election. us council, asked for the In other business, the board we can get to help sponsor the speech the after approved a less we will have to i only one petition had motion donating $350 towards the costs charge students to 'med in by Friday, of bringing consumer advocate attend," Pennington said. "Hopefully, By R. D. CAMPBELL Ralph we'd be able to let students in without Cindy Weitekamp, full-time clothing the average student wage was $2 an hour. ly 30 to 40 petitions for the Nader on campus Feb. 24, to speak. State News Staff Writer supervisor, said that the morning after the board had been taken out and charge." The starting wage at Crossroads was The Nader speech will be sponsored by Two student employes of Crossroads initial layoffs, store three or four had been taken out Board members also heard from Tim manager Carol Lewis $1.60 with a dime raise after one month. several organizations along with ASMSU Imports, an East Lansing specialty shop, told her she would have to stop working Askew also said that before the Carp and Steve Benedict who defended the Student Electronic charged Sunday that they and three other until her attitude changed. Workshop which students laid off Wednesday and employes asked for $2 an hour they were were Weitelcamp said that she told Lewis she refused a request to examine Belaski's ners in Britain strike; was closed on Jan. 29 because of inefficient management. There are two Thursday because of union activity. But John Belaski, owner of the store at was sympathetic with the students who had been laid off and wanted to see the books. bills before the board to both close the Belaski said, however, that it had been 210 Abbott Road, said the store's books so she could determine for workshop permanently and to move the layoffs his store's policy to allow employes to do o-day work week seen resulted from the present economic herself whether there was sufficient office of Pop Entertainment to the just that, until one employe in the slump in the community and had been in money to pay for raises. downstairs bike workshop office. Both will be decided on the offing for several months. She charged the union was the real shop, which isn't at the next board meeting on Feb. 24. involved in the present problems, allowed He maintained that the reason for her release. ;D0N (AP) Britain's coal miners Carp said that, despite claims the proximity of some of those figures to get into the • reduced to three days of work a week the layoffs to the visit at the store on Jan. Bolaski. who recently garnered y walked off the workshop lost money in 1972, it had hands of competitors. job Sunday in a because miners refused to work overtime. 28 of a union representative as well as the publicity for donating 20 bicycles to the that added venom to a bitter actually gone in the black by $800 He added that a store Coal powers the manufacture of 70 per manager offered employes' subsequent signing of union City of East Lansing for community use, to let battle and further crippled the cent of Britain's electricity, and the refusal because materials that were repaired in cards was "an unfortunate coincidence." said when contacted late Weitekamp go through the books. 1972 were not picked Sunday night The union representative came from ;sstaggering economy, to work overtime ban has reduced up until early Belaski said the layoffs had been that he thought r walkout marked a direct supplies 1973. But the money paid for the Weitekamp had been the Retail Clerks and Employes challenge drastically. recommended by his accountant but that fired outright and not laid off. The e Minister repaired items went into the 1972 International Union. All the students who Edward Heath's attempt Heath called the election Thursday, he had thought he could avoid them reason, he said, was because she said she intain his anti budget. by were subsequently laid off had signed - inflation wage more than a year before his full five • getting a bank loan which, however, was not willing to give a "100 per cent year union cards, but other full-time s Industrialists say it will reduce term expires, setting a vote for Feb. 28. Carp also said that it would take about commitment" to employes $618 to replace equipment that had been subsequently fell through last Tuesday. the store which, he who signed were not laid off. .anufacturing industries to a two • The miners rejected his plea to postpone Connie Askew, a store manager until claimed, was necessary to get the business Reta Roberts, a part-timer laid off stolen from the workshop and that with pen a one • day work week, 't effective management the shop could be January, said that she and three other through the economic slump. Wednesday, said she was in no position to industries already have been From (Continued on p e 12) part-timers were told when they came a survey they did of East Lansing determine whether she was laid off for run and could make money. into work Wednesday that student employers, the eight students they were legitimate reasons t>r because of union being laid off. working at Crossroads determined that activities. Governinq By bobourlian, MIKE galatola W that the alliance has not become the most / units I ally, and powerful piston in the University machine, (3) prevent the dissolution of the four faculty and four alumni DIANA buchanan it has not, say student government leaders, Graduate Council. advisers, creating a 12 - member board to sit with State News Staff dissolved. The student governments also planned eight trustees. Writers to get the Student Instructional Rating Mf'h i" eight-part series "People talk about the "coalition," said Many people, including MSU Trustee former COGS president Beth Andrus, System forms published and available to students to use in Warren Huff, have assailed the "but there's planning schedules. And proposal as always hears the comment really no 'grand coalition'per too weak to do any by se. It's matter of one of the biggest and so far most good, and COGS, as a ' MSU student government that a visiting the other body, has voted down the proposal. controversial projects has been the ever gets done. person's office, having lunch with them, The alliance has been Faculty council members also squashed talking over problems common to both working on five The three proposed student concept of students on the board of n|%government members, though, orgainzations and keeping it in mind." projects. Two of these have failed, putting amendments to the ad hoc report would: trustees. a student attempt to prevent the ad hoc demonstrate in rebuttal that a strain on the relationship between the Two of these efforts have committee from cutting the 10 guaranteed do run, tasks ASMSU President Ed Grafton said three organizations. Three of the (1) reinstate four guaranteed student already died. at - large are completed, recent events "aren't going to break up the five minority seats. (2) allow ASMSU and The faculty members of the Academic minority seats to six. If this reached. projects deal with objections to the ad student amendment had COGS to control student appointments to Council, unwilling to let students have an passed, 42 y Probably lies somewhere in the relationship because I'm not going to let hoc committee report and two are students would sit on the " all them break it the University Student Affairs Committee. it\side track to the trustees, slipped the proposed • depends on how "do up." students' rights principles. council instead of the recommended 38. lnB is defined. proposal a possibly fatal overdose of Set done; how Things most The Elected Student Council has armed much the student itself with "fiits, though, is nearly 3,000 student signatures open to serious on petitions supporting student access to faculty evaluations. Representatives think ^Would student government wish this show of support will sway faculty to get solidly behind them so vote for the student amendment to the can progress in the struggle for Educational Policies Committee 1 Stl|dents, when the record report . which the Academic Council will W|sh that consider student government this Tuesday. "something that they could get "hind. Since the council rejected on Feb-5. the "words, which came first, the ad hoc committee's proposal that J ORB? No one is certain, only council members sit on standing committees, student members think they sti.j ls one of ma"y currently ""dents involved in have a good chance of keeping the ASMSU student 1 and COGS seats on the Student Affairs academic governance, ■mm actions thus far in the Committee. year, one could almost be Retention of the Graduate Council is u l<> believe that student one fight in which students are not all H is currently moving alone. A good number of the 0 solid student support. faculty members on the Academic Council have ■ the three primary student shown support for the s on policy making campus - ASMSU, graduate council. n, E|wted Student Council But student representatives will have to ■J "-"Joying an alliance never overcome the weaknesses that have u, ^ student government. Efface hindered them this year if they are to evidence suggests Beth Andrus of COGS and Ed Grafton of ASMSU formed a coalition of student groups plagued by absenteeism (Continued on page 11) 2 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Monday, Febru; laryn,i9j news State slates probe roundup compiled by our national desk in try to save rails UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL He said the federal plan would have The state will conduct its own study of "devastating and disastrous" effects on Michigan, Soviets to ask Michigan's railroad needs to counter particularly the northern out • state regions. Syria for POW list plan calling for the abandonment of 37 a federal per cent "The proposed federal curtailments of railroad of the state's existing rails. service represent a severe blow to the Israel announced Sunday that the Soviet Union will The state Interagency Task Force on Railroads development of a diversified and balanced try to persuade Syria to release lists of Israeli prisoners Friday decided to launch a six - month, $60,000 economy in Michigan," Ralls said. The federal plan would abandon all service of war and allow the International Red Cross to visit study to prove that Michigan's rail system should be improved, not cut down. north of the Manistee • Bay City line, the single them. The U.S. Dept. of Transportation has exception of a line from Bay City to Cheboygan. Israel has said it will not negotiate with Syria until proposed eliminating virtually all service in the Existing Amtrak service between Detroit and these two conditions are fulfilled. northern half of the Lower Peninsula and Chicago and between Port Huron and Chicago It was the first time Israel has attributed an active would be abandoned unless a buyer for the downgrading the present service between Detroit role to Moscow in efforts to free the more than 100 and Chicago. existing track could be found. The Dept. of Transportation plan was required The Dept. of Transportation also proposes to POWs captured in the October Mideast war. reroute freight service between Detroit and Russia severed by the Federal Rail Reorganization Act recently diplomatic relations with Israel in approved by Congress. Chicago through Indiana instead of several 1%7 when it threw its support behind the Arab cause. William R. Ralls, member of the Public Service western Michigan cities. The announcement came as Syrian and Israeli Commission and the task force, said the state's The task force, comprised of representatives rail system from several state departments, was appointed by artillery batteries blasted away at each other along the should be developed further in the event that Gov. Milliken in the spring of 1973 to study Golan Heights. The fighting lasted about 75 minutes and gasoline shortages cripple truck transportation. Michigan's railroad situation. four Israeli soldiers were wounded. Meanwhile, in Tel Aviv, the military command said Arab guerrillas crossed into Israel from Lebanon Saturday and killed an Israeli girl in a bazooka attack on a small truck. State House p The girl was the first Israeli citizen killed in more than two years. Arab guerrillas killed an American nurse in an ambush in the occupied Gaza Strip in Januarv to end fast tim 1972. UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL Upper Peninsula, whose clocks are keyed to Get floc Without one dissenting vote, the Michigan neighboring Wisconsin in the Central Time Zone. Khadafy blasts lack of Arab unity House approved legislation Friday to restore the State legislative leaders and aides to Gov. A crowd of ducks gathers under the Wells Hall bridge in search of food. After a shorth I state to Daylight Saving Time only during the Milliken have conceded that Congress may repeal the ducks disbanded to continue their quest individually. I Libyan leader Moammar Khadafy launched a savage summer. nationwide Daylight Saving Time before the law would even go into effect, thus making it a moot State News photo by Susan Shew I If the Senate approves the measure, Michigan attack Sunday on other Arab leaders who he said will be the first state to exempt itself from the action. obstruct the unity of the Arab world. He added they fast time, which was put into effect Jan. 6 as an State police statistics released this week should be swept out of power by revolutions of the energy - saving measure. It has come under criticism because of predawn accidents involving showed a 100 per cent rise in the predawn accidents involving schoolchildren. number of The CAT Welcomes You! masses. children on their way to school. There were 46 students between the ages of He did not name the leaders but said Libya was ready The measure, which must still go to the state five and 18 reported injured in accidents between 7 and 9 from Jan. 6 - when the new WITH to train and arm the fighters needed to overthrow the Senate for action, would put Michigan back on a.m. a.m. Eastern Standard Time Oct. 27. time went into effect - and Jan. 31. That governments opposed to Arab unity in Tunisia, Egypt Specifically excluded from the bill's provisions compared with 23 students injured and two es4ST\GM and Algeria. m are four counties in the western portion of the killed during the same period in 197 3. Libya has been trying to merge with other Arab countries but its attempts to merge with Egypt bogged down last year. On Jan. 12 Khadafy signed a surprise agreement with Tunisian President Habib Bourguiba for Handbook lists wrong credits for HPR classes the immediate merger of the two nations, but Bourguiba quickly reversed himself and went to Switzerland. Six Health, Physical Education and Recreation 111. thru Sat. (HPR) courses were incorrectly listed as being In addition, a supplement to the schedule of offered for zero credits in the 1974 Pravda says con artist Yuri Panchenko. a Soviet Walter sentenced Mitty, was sentenced Schedule of Courses and Academic Handbook. The following classes are being offered for one credit each: HPR 106, 107, 108, 109, 110 and spring courses, available at early enrollment and early and regular registration, should be checked by students for possible late changes in courses and sections. WW to another five years in jail, Pravda said Sunday. The 56 - year - old con artist, who has already served S total of 22 years In "prison for impersonation and Winter is Only swindling, used phony documents, a glib tongue and a fertile brain to pose as everything from a wartime [cover fri.&sat. onh fighter pilot ace to a chess whiz. Panchenko was unmasked and sentenced by a Half Over!!! people's court for swindling in Krasnodar, where he We've got the boots to get you through it. Kennys Monkey arrived as a track and field referee with a national rating. During refereeing excursions that took him all over Hawaiian Sunrise 99 the Soviet Union, Pravda said Panchenko collected daily expenses from various sports organizations and padded his expense accounts. from 12 • Cues. nite» Ford hikes small production Men's & Women's The Ford Motor Co. car plant in Wayne, has undergone a The Stables $75 million conversion, enabling it to turn out the fast - M.S.U. selling Maverick compacts at the rate of 60 an hour starting today, rather than the big Lincolns, Mercurys B00TERY SHOE REPAIR Presents and Fords that rolled off the lines for 22 years. 225 E. Grand River 501% E. Grand River The six - month conversion, which normally would (Across from the Union) Donald have been a two - year project, will help Ford meet gas (Across from Berkey) Open til 9 on Thurs., 8 on Fri. - conscious consumers' demand for small cars. Mavericks have been selling as fast as they can be produced, while the full - sized Fords are stockpiled at record levels. Ford also announced plans to introduce two new compacts in the '75 model year. The move will hike small car production to two million cent of Ford's domestic auto a year, about 80 per SchensuVs Byrd output. Cafeteria Hearst's fiance pledges not to talk in mmttiw Open: Mon - Thurs. 4:30 • 7:30 The fiance of Patricia Hearst, newspaper heiress Noon: Mon. Fri. Meridian Mall Ffi- 4:30 * 8:0°- Sat- »:'5' 8:00 kidnaped Feb. 4 in Berkeley, Calif., by a mysterious 11:15-2:00 Sun. 11:30-7:00 underground group called the Symbionese Liberation Evening 'Best Army, pledged Saturday that neither he nor his bride - to - be would testify against the kidnapers if she is returned safely. Mon. Night Special ! Tues Night Special Wed. Night Special Jazz Album I he 26 - year - old graduate student, Steven Weed, Schensul's Famous CHICKEN I BAKED CHICKEN still black and blue from the beating given him by the kidnapers as they abducted Hearst, told newsmen CHOP SUEY Includes Salad, Potato or I I & DUMPLINGS Fried Chicken Includes Salad, Potato or — Billboard Saturday: "If Patty is unharmed, neither Patty nor Vegetable, Roll. Butter, and Choice of I Includes Salad, Potato or Vegetable, Roll, Butter, Beverage and Choice of Beverage myself will be involved in the case in any way after | Viable, d Choice Roll, Butter, of Beverage that." $179 $145 $|99 Meanwhile, Randolph A. Hearst, Patricia's father, said he and his wife were at a loss to explain the long since first hearing from the terrorist group. The identified themselves as the kidnapers in a letter to a delay group Thuri. Night Special BAKED Fri. Night Special FRIED Sat. Night Special BAKED SWISS February Berkeley radio station on Thursday, saying Hearst was LASAGNA HADDOCK STEAK ll'16th Includes Salad, Potato alive and well, but demanded no ransom. or Includes Salad, Potato or Includes Salad, Potato or Vegetable, Roll, Butter, Vegetable, Roll, Butter, and Choice of Beverage and Choice of Beverage 7 die in Colorado plane crash $189 $2" Two bodies the more wreckage of a were recovered Sunday morning in T39 Sabreliner which collided with a at NKC135 Air Force jet Saturday night near Colorado Includes Salad, Potato or BAKED SALISBURY THE sum Springs, Colo., killing five Air Force crewmen and two Vagetable, Roll, Butter passengers. STEAK $)24 and Choice of Beverage An Air Force spokesman said the NKC135 jet, which suffered only "skin damage," returned safely to Kirtland Air Force Base in Albuquerque, N.M., with :r This coupon Is worth 25c off the purchase of lunch "l "...we offer alternative! none of the 18 persons aboard injured. s• or dinner at Schensuls convlently main located entrance of Meridian a better 25* Mi I he T39 was on a transportation mission when it everyday except Mall, (Imply present his Wednesday Dinner | collided with the other jet at 23,000 feet takeoff. shortly after I Expires Feb. 18, 1974 Limit - family varied me Schensuls. Don H Compiled by John Tingwall Michigan State News. East Lansing, Michigan Monday, February 11, 1974 3 PLANNING BOARD VOTES DEBATED Two counties back 12-man unit By R.D. CAMPBELL The tri - county commission would be State News Staff Writer has powers of review a one - year interim 116,000 of the 378,000 tri - over plan. meeting and said he was James Heyser is not your federal grant allocations. county population based on amazed at how grants for law The current nine — member 1970 census figures, and also normal, everyday, wild - eyed, Nine of 11 Clinton enforcement and drains were County commission includes three because the amount of money radical Ingham commissioners attending approved almost without County a representatives from each each county contributes to tri - commissioner from East Saturday morning breakfast question. On the other hand, county, two of whom are county commission operations he said, grants for agencies like Lansing. caucus of the three county But boards gave support for county commissioners and one is based on property value the Office of Economic his persistence in a citizen appointed Heyser's plan. This could put by the assessments within the county. Opportunity were met with fighting the conservative - board a As a result, the Ingham loaded Tri • County regional heavy pressure on the Eaton An 18 barrage of questions. - member board County board has paid more Planning Commission for a County board to reject another including three members from than $3 to every $2 that the restructuring based on proposal for an 18 - member each county, one from East other two counties combined representation of people rather body and go along with than on pastures and cornfields Heyser's 12 - member plan. Lansing, two from Lansing, one from the contribute. Would is a radical idea that In addition to the tri township The tri county commission you believe - may soon - association of each county and is more powerful than when it bear fruit. county board, the board of A straw vote of the Ingham commissioners from each of one representing the small cities and villages of each was originally created because it has "A 95 Review" duties all insurance County Board of the three member counties - Commissioners Committee of the Whole last week indicated must also approve any county, was approved at the commission's January meeting. which require a grant review committee of the tri - county agents are not overwhelming support for restructuring proposal for it to go into effect. However, the plan has not been commission to make alike: approved by any of the county recommendations to the Heyser's 12 - member tri • Heyser said his proposal, boards. federal government. county board proposal, which which aims to make the tri would include three » Ingham County David Hollister, D - Lansing, county commission's funding commissioners objected to the chairman of the Ingham representatives each, for allocations more responsive to plan because it gave 10 of the County Board of Ingham, Clinton and Eaton the needs of the populous 18 votes to the two rural counties and three for Commissioners, sat in on an A - Lansing. Lansing - East Lansing area, counties which contain only 95 session at the January Plate cleaner Rights party power fore Diana Ryder, as Miss Food Ecology, hands a coupon good for a free Howard L. Jones, running "We're running to present the Democratic party will on the rights party ticket for Coke to a Brody Complex resident. Those who clean their plates get for the sixth congressional voters with a viable alternative support Carr." the state board of education in the reward to discourage food waste. district seat on the Human to both major parties, not to At a meeting Thursday night 1972. State News photo Rights party slate, predicted favor either in the Union attended by Julie party," Jones said. by Jones said he was asked to Blough Sunday that he would receive about 20 people, Human resign as assistant secretary of 8,000 or more votes in the "But, certainly, if we can November election. gain 8,000 to 10,000 votes, it Rights party officials blasted state in 1968 by Democratic |ueens media for at Brody reign news "It could be may spell the difference in an ignoring Jones' Secretary of State James Hare enough to candidacy. when he backed determine the outcome of the election which usually totals Eugene Jones said he received more McCarthy instead of Hubert race between the about 70,000 votes." regular than 40,000 votes in running Humphrey for president. Democratic and Republican attempt to save food Jones said that Larrowe's ^er candidates," he said. Jones, 48, a former announced candidacy would Democratic assistant secretary not have much influence on By PATNARDI 'See, I cleaned my plate!' and of state and now a the race "because the UAW Peer Holtkamp, manager of Waverly |tate News Staff Writer they really are empty." Mason - Abbot Hall, said, school district substitute and other special interests in it of teasing goes along Tom Dutch, complex's "We've talked ecology fol- teacher, is running against a [the title "Miss Food manager, explained that all the field of candidates which " but the two Brody residence halls are "doing their years, but now, I guess the fuel includes Democratic hopefuls problem has made kids more |ex queens do not mind. a Walchak and Diana own thing" to promote the interested in it." M. Robert Carr and C. Patric ecology campaign. Larrowe and Republican Margaret Kooken, the food |both of Rather Hall, are "This is our gimmick to service manager of Shaw Hall, Clifford Taylor. ! the Brody Complex make students more aware of said she enjoys passing out the food waste," he said. Coke coupons. ike coupons to those Dutch said he chose the i ment by distributing "It gives myself and my staff they see cleaning their women because of their contact more with the t dinner. personalities and looks. He students," she said. uk, freshman, thinks mentioned that Walchak was a In Case Hall, the food ii "pretty neat." national coho salmon queen, manager, Duke Sigelko, has people who cut It' Ryder's name had been tried to measure the food but I just can't see how suggested to him by several waste. I can waste food," black students. "Before the campaign A survey taken of other started, we were wasting five Ber, a junior, said, "They residence halls shows tha|. most pounds of butter pats a day. a lot, but I think it's are hanging posters, giving out Now we're down to less than iiplishing its purpose. coupons and sponsoring two pounds." 1 will come up to me to ecology quizzes with tiffany BtnMheirj)!^ Coke glasses as prizes. Bbuck 15QHQ°1ni®r f E; Saginaw near Frandor Shopping Center 1^ ■ Saginaw across from the Lansing Mall OPINION PAGE William W. Whiting Editor ■ in ■ chief Lynn Henning Sports editor Beth Ann Masalkoski . .Advertising Manager Lynda Eckert National editor Gerald H. Coy General Manager John W. Lindstrom Campus editor Susan Ager Staff representative Kathy Niezurawski Copy chief Jim Bush City editor Bob Novosad Opinion Page editor Michael J. Fox Managing editor Craig Porter Photo editor EDITORIALS House must problems wit The no - fault insurance concept with a deductible clause. that reigns supreme in Michigan at Broadened coverage is the same this time has proven to be more as regular except the deductible is inequitable than anticipated. It also paid 6y the company if the possesses a few more faults than its accident is someone else's fault. name implies. However, broadened coverage also No - fault has been in effect for costs about S14 more per $100 four months and has caused deductible than regular coverage for tremendous confusion. It is time collision. THEN FLASH THEM THE 'V' SIGN AND TELL THEM THAT THIS IS THEIR FINEST HOUR!' for the House Insurance Committee The implication is very clear: one to do a little re - evaluation on the must really have costly broadened POINT OF VIEW pluses and minuses of no - fault. collision coverage under no - fault No - fault insurance was designed to have full insurance protection. to reduce insurance rates, but this has not proven to work. While some companies did lower required* coverage rates for single males, they It is very hard to gauge the effects of because no of Proponents of no - fault on accidents the energy crisis. - fault felt that Saving time By BRYANT W. POCOCK This easy complete turn - around amounts to with computers! Greenwich. What havt- you got to say for youni raised for collision 360 degrees, which astronomers call also rates the accident rate would go down I understand Gov. Milliken has Why west? Because the sun comes up in Granddaughter: ' Nothing. Butiij degrees of, longitude. What astronomers the east and it probably has not got here coverage, making the net change because everyone would be insured recommended that President Nixon call them, however, is irrelevant. A lighter." yet. Then stick the result into your Principal: "Did you forget;1 zero. and bad drivers would be taken off reconsider the nationwide Daylight Saving grapefruit has the same number. Time issue. I have better idea. It's much computer and you have the ri^ht time. See astronomical almanar, nautical Another fault of no - fault is that the road. a So each degree is the equivalent of how simple it is? ep and computer?" it discriminates against the poor. simpler and will settle the whole thing 240.65709 seconds of time. Now all we Of course you would have to get used However, since the energy crisis, once and for all. need to have is a starting point Granddaughter: "1 ain't got nous' I Under no - fault, if a person has an to the time changing every few feet east Principal: "Do you mean totellnL motorists have slowed down to 50 Since this is the age of computers — somewhere. Let'skeepon using Greenwich, and west of you, but not north or south. accident that he is not responsible practically everybody has one - what's father is such a tightwad that he itfl m.p.h. and formed car pools. The England, since the British started the thing You could go to the North Pole, or to the to equip you with an astronojl for and does not have any form of the point in not using them? in the first place. accident rate for the last three South Pole and. as long as the time did not almanac, nautical ephemeris al collision insurance, repairs to his It takes 24 hours, 3 minutes and 56.555 Set your watch for whatever time it is in months has declined, but it is very seconds (a total of 86,636.555 seconds) Greenwich (you may have to call them up change, you would not even need a computer? What kind of a father isl car come out of his own pocket. hard to attribute it to no - fault. for the earth to make a complete turn - compass. suppose he won't even let you haveifl Under the old insurance system, on this). Then all you have to do is figure That could be mighty handy. But I can rule or a volume of 10 place logaritl • Also, because of the confusion around on its axis,.which astronomy how many degrees, minutes and seconds visualize my youngest granddaughter (age Granddaughter: "Listen. BigStuttl the person responsible for an dictates is based on a fictitious sun. of arc you are on that grapefruit west of accident would have had his surrounding no - fault, some eight), who rides a bus to school in a can't talk about my father that wq| accidents are apparently not being nearby town then being called into the up your dukes!" company pay for repairs, to bbth principal's office: reported, and this could affect the Well, I told you it would he simplcil cars. So if a person has a new car or accident statistics. VOX P0PULI Principal: "Young lady, they tell me one that is still in good shape, you kept the bus waiting over three Enough confusion and loopholes collision coverage is almost mandatory under no - fault. exist in no - fault laws to warrant Soul music n minutes this morning. This is terrible. There are three basic types of close scrutiny by the House To the Editor: that soul programing has not been collision insurance: limited, regular and covers a broadened. Limited collision persononly if the accident Insurance Committee. Committee members must move quickly to close no - fault loopholes and watch For those of you who actually believe or even read the point of view on Jan. 29 by WMS Station Manager Dave Mellor in expanded. If you were at MSU last year you could have heard us (soul DJs) for the same amount of time on any day. This Commission To the Editor: partisan! statistics closely to determine the response to an article by Lamar "Brother year, there is no additional time. investigated and granted, inflatial is someone else's fault, while I noted with interest the all • out expose trends have already boosted their cos worth of no fault legislation for Rapp" Boyd and "Sweet" John Nelson, Secondly, it was irrelevant of a regular collision pays regardless of - you should take a better look at the whole competent station manager to argue a of the Public Service Commission by your the point where they must bejii| who is at fatilt and is usually sold Michigan motorists. situation of our argument. point like Mellor did when he used me as a writer Tom Haroldson on Jan. 31. process another request. Perhaps Haroldson does not have the I am no happier than the next pa First, if you are not aware, I would like scapegoat, thus showing his incompetency. to inform you that the WMSN staff is all I never said to Mellor at the end of last staff to thoroughly investigate his own increases in my phone bill. white. This staff is all white primarily term that I would take any show for this figures. I frequently feel that we are pri because it was voted in by an all-white term. I said I would probably not come It would seem that someone who is no more and more for less and less seni^ network board. back this term because of program changes better at figuring simple percentages than heat and light and. for that n he made, pressuring my fellow soul DJs he appears to be is in a weak position when groceries, gasoline, clothes and everjB As far as WMSN programing is he criticizes the work of the Public Service else. t into bad feelings toward each other. At concerned, the network greatly influences that time, Brother Rapp and I decided to Commission and its staff. The fact that the commissioall the station manager's decisions if and only Haroldson deplores the partisanship of itself forced to grant leave. rate incitM® if he allows it. In considering the soul Finally, a point I think that should be the commission — at least twice pointing hardly be reasonably taken as eii1™ music issue in this article, we can come to out that it has only one Democratic that they are pro • utility* considered: Put yourself in the shoes of , a logical conclusion that the whites have member. We are left wondering whether anticonsumer. On the contrary it «T been Mellor, a white station manager of a doing what they want as far as soul student owned and he might regard it as less partisan if it had means that they are in touch withttj programing goes. As long as I had been - - operated radio station. two or three Democratic members. facts of the economic scene - Would you give students like there before this past fall term, which was It is probably true that the commission yourself token time as Mellor gave his soul going up. _ three years, it has been an uphill climb for does not have as much staff as it should, soul DJs and soul programing. DJs, or would you try to be considerate I found the two stones pla| In rebuttal to what Mellor stated about enough to understand the full outlook of considering the importance and extent of its responsibility. "Special Report" very in depth and objectivity. repetitive,!^ something? expanding soul programing, he only tried But the impression left by the stories in I would suggest that Haroldson to put sugar on my argument. I contend John H. Nelson Jr. 120 Abbott Hall your paper of three men unable to his new math with emphisii "thoroughly investigate all the facts and percentages and strive for more rep" figures of rate hike application," making and less editorializing. High To the Editor: grades— their decisions on some sort of basis, is both unfair and lacking in a partisan Rep. Louis K.0 The results indicated that "every 10 accuracy. Editor's note: The incorrect til In reference Ob the question of student The commission has sometimes been evaluation of instructors, I thought others percent increase in amount learned reduces a professor's rating by half a criticized for not moving fast enough figure that Crampton is r»hri| concerns a monthly gas price if might find the material cited in the point. On the other hand, if a professor because of its insistence on getting all the Western Economics Journal, March 1973, gives grades averaging 3.5 instead of 2.5, facts and figures available before taking 12.5 per cent. For a $10 bill, *| to be of interest, he improves his rating by one and a half action. Utility people have felt that this News reported that the increase aif*^ The research involved a study at the points." works a hardship on them since by the to $2.50, which is incorrect. Tt»*j University of Southern California, taking The conclusion which can be implied time a rate increase has been thoroughly figure ii $1.25. from this data is that if instructors wish to COGS the position that the single most exhibits important element in assessing the faculty's teaching would be the amount of receive high student evaluation, their object in the classroom should be to teach learning by students. A standardized form was used at the nothing and give at least two ■ thirds of the students a 4.0. Fetal viability in vetoing li beginning of the term and at the end of the term to assess learning. This was An interesting point to ponder. J.P. Miller To the Editor: of the last menstrual period.Mjl correlated with the evaluations given the associate professor, In the article "Rep's bill would ban between the 20th and The Council of Graduate faculty and the University faculty by students. School of Social Work viable fetus abortion" in the Feb. 1 State approximately a 10 Per News, fetal viability is identified as "the Students concern (COGS) proved its for protecting student administration, not the students. ASMSU and the Elected Student human stage of development." This seriously misrepresents the concept "Tot, stage of what development constitutes BjWJjl "jj interest Monday by rejecting the Council, which have not voted on of viability. The viability of a fetus is its question. However, viability proposed University Advisory the proposal yet, would be well capacity to survive outside the mother. recommend as the answer. < Council. advised to follow suit. They should That, of course, is relative to the state of the available medical technology. The University Advisory Council seriously consider the deleterious Currently, calculating from the first day 518 W$ is a battered remnant of the original effects of placing faculty and student liaison proposal to seat four alumni on a body originally created students on the board of trustees as to open channels of communication nonvoting members. The inclusion of faculty and alumni on the "compromise" council, along with between students and the board of trustees. Criticism from ASMSU officials Original liaiso M stipulations forbidding access to of COGS' decision casts doubt on To the Editor: On Monday the Council of Graduate maintain that support and imp"' trustee files and granting President council's decisions. d(,cjsio4<9 ASMSU's ability to serve student Students voted to reject the Wharton discretionary power to Advisory Council proposal. This was a University The council has made a ^jl interests. If ASMSU is to effectively is the obligation of tw . » decision made by the entire request the council to leave serve this elected purpose, it must council, not a promulgate thai decision fiat by the officers. meetings, has nullified any purpose have the insight to University community. a student liaison plan might have distinguish It was unfortunate that the State News If anyone questions o-- ^ between compromises that have article on the following day gave the served. making process or been restructured to benefit all and impression that only the officers were COGS is to be commended for involved in the debate and vote. responsibility. 1 * e()|i compromises in which substance COGS remains dedicated to the invitation to those C^ tin«. showing its determination to fight has been replaced by spirit of to attend our council mt the compromise plan which, in purely hot air. the original student - faculty liaison Regrettably, the University proposal and will work with reality, restructured the original Advisory Council is a prime similarly motivated. anyone George J. Sep"^ 1 proposal to fit the needs of the The "new" officer# have the President, « example of the latter. support of the council and will work Council of Gr^" diligently to Michigan State News, Hast Lansing, Michigan Monday, February 11, ] 974 5 Rifle association p at environment, Rw AI CMITU By AL SMITH State News Staff Writer "I am in complete compliance with the present gun laws," he said, "but the handgun freedoms limit black powder sales to 5 pounds or buisness getting into either the Vietnam or less. "You can always go back again and Israeli wars." The president of the National Rifle criminals are not. Eighty • five percent of again to buy much want," he Assn. is the guns in this as as you Commenting on the Arab — Israeli a man battling for reform within country aren't even said. his own registered. conflict, he said, "to send Henry Kissinger, organization who still ardently Gutermuth also quietly ridiculed a foreigner and a defends its opposition to any new form of "The NRA is for Jew, over there to mandatory penalties legislation to outlaw "Saturday night gun controls. for all violent crimes. Those who negotiate is deplorable. The Arabs won't commit them should be locked specials" by regulating the melting point stand for him." Since taking the helm of the 1.3 million up until trial. Sixty of steel used in such guns. - four per cent of all convicted felonies are Gutermuth thought that the Arabs and member NRA last April, C.R. — (Pink) "First of all, there's no such thing as a Jews always will fight and that there is no Gutermuth has struggled to convert it committed by persons previously released "Saturday night special," he insisted, foreseeable end to war in general, but he from a giant, unwieldy gun club to a well on bail, " he charged. "and coordinated and politically potent He called for massive federal aid secondly, some of the finest guns held out hope for an eventual end to racial for in the world are made from conflicts within the United States. local police agencies and for a light - weight environmental protection agency. complete metals which would fail to meet the "In another 100 years, the colored race Gutermuth was on campus last week for overhaul in the nation's judicial system, requirements." will elevate itself and the difference will a meeting of the MSU Outdoor Education "including the Supreme Court, which is Gutermuth said that even a total ban on Project, an activity which the NRA has constantly protecting individual rights gradually disappear," he said; "The races as manufacture of hand guns would not will remain separate but helped finance for the last 18 years. opposed to the rights of society as equal and the a eliminate their use for crime. "The blacks eventually may outnumber the whole." guns His decision to recommend would simDlv go underground," he said. whites. doubling his "If the breakdown in the legal system organization's contribution to the MSU "Wewouldn'tlive to see the day that they "It will be a hell of a long time before educational program this year is continues," Gutermuth said, "people are went out of existence." the blacks achieve mental part of his going to have to resort to carrying He equality, personal drive to change the NRA's public guns also defended NRA shooting though. I don't believe there is any illegally to protect themselves." programs for millions of adults and young image as a wild — shooting band of He also attacked the red inherent difference, but it will take reactionaries. tape involved people as an "indispensable contribution generations for them to catch up in present gun registration procedures. "I to the nation's defense." To this end, Gutermuth also has had to fill out a separate form and pay a culturally." pushed "Good marksmanship requires firm and cajoled his organization's 75 — fee for each of the 14 Despite NRA's call for stronger police guns I own," he discipline of the and emotions," he and member board of directors and complained. senses judicial power and its own police its "all commented. "Our competitive shooting combat programs which train hundreds of powerful" 20 — man executive council Gutermuth blaimed ambitious and ^ hunter safety thousands of policemen in politicians who have responded to the programs teach marksmanship, change the bylaws to permit wildlife wholesome values which build character." clamor of the press" for the Gutermuth believes that the fundamental management programs and to present drive He lamented that ROTC purchase, only last week, 37,000 to ban hand programs "had constitutional right of citizens to acres in guns entirely and cited Sens. gone down to the detriment of the keep New Mexico for Edward Kennedy, D — Mass., and Birch arms is to "protect themselves against high an environmental research counrtv as a whole. This center. Bayh, D - Ind., as arch foes of the NRA. training was - handed government. a tremendous benefit to "Of course, Kennedy has those who had to "To let police officers have guns and But Gutermuth shares his every right in go to war. not citizens is organization's the world to advocate fundamentally wrong," belief that the right to own firearms is gun control with Frosty coat indispensable symbol of personal freedom and a necessary protection against both an two brothers same time he's a killed," he said. "But at the political animal. And "I would rather send my fully prepared than unprepared," he added. boy to war asserted. "I don't believe there come a time when we would be to defend ourselves i t required |\l| across campus Friday trees were covered by heavy layers of frost criminals and the overbearing price power Kennedy and Bayh are very close friends, He blamed the unpopularity of the it is a symbol of pers< agair . . )s temperatures fell below zero. This tree near Wells Hall of government. you know." ■ . "n whii.. got its coat Vietnam War for this general decline in makes our country sal Guthmuth derided Bayh's recent bill to Tbearii^ In the morning before temperatures climbed to the 20s in the "The problem in this country is not a RO"" ' jrt and said, "We had no government." firearms problem but a crime Jfternoon. he asserted problem," State News photo by Dean repeatedly in a three — hour Lyons interview with the State News. Academic Council will consider Itudent use of faculty evaluations DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau e State News publishes a weekly list an open forum public hearing on the Board Room, Administration Building. IT FOLLOWS THAT TUB k Monday of scheduled goyernment development of a mll, let's face it, comprehensive The possibility of intergrating the 5H0RTA6E HAS BECOME PART |tings. nonmotorized route plan for the county at University bus system with the SCRIBE-ONE CAN'T _ OF THE STATUS QUO-THE e contact the reporter assigned to 7:30 p.m. Monday, East Lansing City Hall. OM?! 7s Really call it a \ WAY TH/N6S NORMALLY ARE1 r area or the managing editor to metropolitan system will be discussed. crisis ANYMORE. I Tuesday City planning commission, 8 p.m., rue £tieR6l > ER60, THE CRISIS PER SE- lude items here. Nongovernment Hie Academic Council will meet at 3:15 MBAN, EVERYONE'S ).' TO UJIT, THE ACTUAL Council Chambers. Public USED TO IT, R/6HT? ■ngs should be sent to It's What's p.m. in the International Center's Con Con hearing on the STATE Of ALARM- /W Capital Improvements Program. — <5 NO L0N6ER pming. Please clip and save this list for Room. The council will consider the Thursday OPERATIVE! question of student access to the printed Today The Business Affairs Committee will faculty evaluations according to the e Elected Student Council will meet Student Instructional Rating meet at 3 p.m. in the Board System. Room, 4 to 5 p.m. in C216 Wells Hall. Administration Building. The Zoning Board of Appeals, 8 p.m., 201 University First State Savings and Loan bus question will also be discussed here. nvironmental Building, 303 Quality and Aesthetics Abbott Road. Building Board of Appeals, 7:30 p.m., I Force, 7:15 p.m., Council Chambers, The Ingham 201 First State County Board of Savings and Loan Bldg. I Hall, 410 Abbott Road. Discussion of Commissioners will hold its monthly ■tral School overpass and Whitehills meeting at 7:30 in the Commissioners Friday ■cr proposals. Room of the county courthouse in Mason. ' Ingham County Nonmotorized The Wednesday a.m. The board of trustees will meet at in the Board Room on the fourth 10 WOMEN u Building, Lands and Planning ■sportation Advisory Group will hold Committee will meet at 10:15 a.m. in the floor of the Administration Building. CHEERLEADERS > BARNES FLORAL a of East Lansing > telepraph tl< - SKILLED IN - DANCE, MOUNTS a world wide' FOA tueonc POMPOM ROUTINES > to * Performance D Tioweil Opportunity* 3320871 Don't Wet Lj ORDER HER VALENTINE FLOWERS EARLY Call - 646 • 6709 Immediately Give X" A GIANT l»EAP FOR Ait MANKIND: Gift /°' MCOONAMTS LARGE OiOCH Of FRENCH FRIES. You don t have to go back to the counter to get some more you 0lWrJ - to ■ , OPen Cen- 234 W. GRAND RIVER int*1mat 1024 E. GRAND RIVER Lthe 2040 E. GRAND RIVER Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Monday, FebrUi lar*!l .nJ Ex-student gives up space By JUNE DELANO initial stimulation and ground work for his dancing career, choreographers," he explained. concepts of movement and space, but Uriau When Vic Stornant was an art major at MSU, he decided to Stornant said. He particularly credits Dixie Durr, asst. professor Stornant went to New York after graduation to audition forte. Humor runs through all her choreoeranhv^ #L broaden his experience in the arts by taking a modern dance class. of dance, for the enthusiasm and dedication she gives to Orchesis. with the Alwin Nikolais Dance Company. Phyllis Lamhut saw "We all have wit. That's one of the this company. Of course, it's different reasons w'J I explWl The class did more than broaden his interests — when he "Dixie is incredible," he said. "Her encouragement and him audition and asked him to dance in a large group piece she kinds of 1 returned to East Lansing this month, it was as a professional personal friendship were what I needed at that time. My years at had choreographed. wacky. Phyllis is wacky," he said. ' dancer with the Phyllis Lamhut Dance Company. MSU weren't easy and dancing was my saving grace, the one On the basis of their work together in that piece, Lamhut as All the dancers in the company are encouraeed in many areas of dance as they can, so Stornant, T Stornant, 26, graduated from MSU in 1971 with a degree in positive thing in my life." asked him to join her company permanently, he said. Wli art, but in his sophomore year his interest had turned to dancing. He also credits the Orchesis group for the many MSU dancers "The Lamhut company is the smoothest group I've worked Berkley Institute in Brooklyn and dances with mi, B,ti "The transition to dance wasn't difficult," he said. "I went who have gone on to professional careers, despite the lack of a with. We're all tuned into one another and we don't argue." choreographs. ' Pr from painting on canvas to painting in space. 1 took one dance formal dance program here. Stornant said. "We're often complimented on our ensemble work, He has two concerts of his choreograph; j I class after another and then started performing." "There are at least half a dozen male dancers from MSU on how well we move together." February at the Choreographers Theater j„ New V i ■ Orchesis, the modern dance company on campus, provided the dancing professionally, 'and three are with avant garde Lamhut is an innovator, not only because she uses new working on a large group piece to be performed in th, ™ Stornant says that though going to New choice a dancer must make, the area has York j. I New York is the dance many advantl. capital of the world> Choreography highlights comic show incredible dance audience," he said. "At one time I ^ said, without any hesitation, that a dancer But there are other places to go now." ' must So Jw "1*1 '"I The Lamhut company was in East Lansing for,t. By JUNE DELANO Lansing High School. The Lamhut choreography intriguing pattern and The entire company, clad in residency as part of the Artists ■ in - Schools The company danced in start This style was evident in Program ,2 . gay, evoked images of children again. "Opening," in which dancers red, white and blue sequined concept which introduces elementary school *11 A colorful, zany flamboyant costumes, filling playing, particularly when The choreography for the huddled together and shuffled leotards, danced through crazy movement. Ild,e» i performance by the Phyllis the stage with unexpected and Lamhut herself danced. She company as a whole followed back and forth across the stage war games, giving salutes and This program not only offers a chance for children to Lamhut Dance Company unusual movement. Lamhut's would start a movement and the same style, with groups of their own bodies, but, if it continues, it in noisy movement. marching to music by Sousa. will build n marked the end of their two • reputation as a comedienne elaborate on it until her whole dancers developing patterns of If there was a flaw in this audience, Stornant said. Throughout the first half of week residency in the East "If was fulfilled as she mixed body was jerking and movement into elaborate the program a dancer in work fun evening, it was the music. understanding'of movement and dance is Lansing Artists - in • Schools dance with visual gags and twitching. Then she would mosaics and then dissolving boots, coveralls and a In several pieces the music did appreciation will follow," he said. program Saturday night at East slapstick. stop, only to find another them to start again. not seem to be integrated with motorcycle helmet paraded among the dancers, to the the dance, and it detracted from the program as a "Women are beginning to move into delight of the many children in whole. traditionally n, fields - sculpture, painting, choreographs the audience. And in Act I, However, an entertaining and that in"2 Paper Chase—traumas of college allows men into dancing, a traditionally female Lamhut, wrapped in a sheet exception to this flaw was area," he said. ■ and wearing a floppy black hat, "Act II." Three pairs of He also sees the barrier between classical and modem 4. cracked up the audience with dancers aped grotesquely at the beginning to break down. "Dancers are getting bored with classical. It's still By EDD RUD2ATS all and numerous others. Yet in work for anyone unaware of has sensitive direction and is her antics. front of the stage while others there's only so much you can do with it. There beautifmJ State News Reviewer a way, by its sheer realism, the pressures that students face suffused with fine But the comic nature of the sat in slowly collapsing are inmJ working with traZj dance did not lessen its quality, inflatable chairs at the back, all instances of avant garde choreographers At Harvard law school the "The Paper Chase" suffers, for and endure within the period performances, its ultimate and that is Lamhut's forte. Her to the sound track of an companies," he explained. academic year is just beginning the film seems to last as long as they are in school. It's quite impact is muted. The problem well done and finely is that what it is company danced in unison like advertisement for religious as James Bridges' film "The an academic year and is acted with trying to say is not few companies can, moving reading material. Paper Chase" opens. By the decidedly lacking as John Houseman turning in an sufficiently developed for ar tan Twin Westl time this fine film is award the final result it attempts to almost as one through Alwin The Lamhut company may —- finished, entertainment. - winning, riveting NOW SHOWING achieve Yet the way the film Nikolais ■ based not have been breathtaking, Bucif.. - has captured the feel of It ceases to be a film about performance as the . presents the college milieu will choreographies. but the large audience mUlWWIUN ROOCRIREDfORD university* life from the one person's problems and intimidating, overbearing pressures of competition, the becomes a representation of Kingsfield. Timothy Bottoms probably interest and even Though the first half of the chuckled, giggled and guffawed cramming, the all - night study the turmoils that are a direct of "La *. Picture Show" fame fascinate those not directly in program dragged a little, throughout. marathons, to the attempts to plays Hart, eliciting both the same situation themselves. partially because of two long part of what going to a solo dances by Lamhut, the OPEN AT 6:45 PM organize a study group to help empathic and sympathetic To those in it, it may prove a university means. But after all, second half was exciting. And LAST TWO DAYS AT 7:00 - 9:00 make it through the difficult who wants to reactions from the audience bit too close for comfort, and, pay to see subjects successfully. But more something that they could just simultaneously in a well therefore, not much fun. the "Finale" was truly a finale. "VANISHING importantly, "The Paper as easily see by stepping out of , realized portrayal. WILDERNESS" *' Chase" deals with the inability their room or going to Though "The Paper Chase" to cope with the mounting GLADMER theatre dormitory situation? pressures of getting those all - A further problem with ■STEVE Dusnn I important grades. mcQUEEn hoffhI "The Paper Chase," and Though "The Paper Chase" perhaps its biggest, is that the accurately depjcts the traumas ending is such a let • down, 8P.MKON" of an academic year, it is bordering on being a cop - out. SAT. & SUN. almost too accurate to provide Hart's final act has not been 2:15-5:15 PHPILLOn anyone who is currently in that sufficiently motivated to be same situation with any credible. It's much too enjoyment. It's the type of superficial; thus, the whole film that parents of college impact of the film is dulled. students should see, for it Yet the film is an excellent covers almost every aspect of the college existence. What director Bridges has done is take the milieu of the university and make it come alive on screen. All the details are there: the pizza runs, the late hours kept studying, getting drunk for no reason at PASSPORT & APPLICATION /ERIE/ PORTRAITS ONE PERFORMANCE ONL Y 1-HR\ SERVICE of a VERY, VERY, FUNNY SHOW 72-HRJAVA1LA even for people who like music but don't know why Also- • Wedding(specialty) THE INTIMATE •Creative & studio Portraits 351-1477 B P B RD.Q.BACH Michigan State News, East Lansing. Michigan Monday, February 11, 1974 7 Fans disappointed with By MIKE LaNOUE State News Reviewer Reviewers are always accused Bromberg by irate readers of being horn players. They weren't sure where they were going." up to group his level of performing. Sheffer, Keyser and Burdick the Toetappers did enough energy for not provide a warm up unobjective, biased and of generally giving a one - dimensional Bromberg knew how to agreed that the energy just was band and that there was not view of whatever it is they are handle his audience, Sheffer not there and Keyser aptly put reviewing. enough "dynamism" in the For the most part, this is true. Reviewers said, but still the show was it "They knew they weren't group. their own educated are subjective, give unplanned and too impromptu. kicking ass." Sheffer said he was "kind of opinion about things and their criticism is always, Sheffer said that Bromberg, Mixed reactions the or hopefully so, none other than their own. came on bored" with the Toetappers. As entertainment editor of the unlike his group, came off like New Deal State News I would never want Toetappers. He had seen them before, any of my reviewers to attempt a professional showman with a Keyser described this group prac ticing at Elderly but criticism must objectivity in reviewing an event, lot of control. always be substantiated and fair comment is a as "living room pickers" who Instruments, and was surprised must. But that is all. Though Sheffer likes are "sincere" and "amateur." He to see the group playing before Upon seeing David Bromberg and group at the Mariah Folk and Bromberg and is familiar with enjoyed the group's the Mariah audience. Blues Coffeehouse his recordings, he agreed with authenticity. So there you have it from Thursday, I decided to try a somewhat objective approach to my review so I asked a few members of the others that Bromberg was not Keyser and Burdick felt that the audience. audience how they perceived the show. Jak Keyser and Glenn Burdick, both of 238 Oakhill Ave., collaborated and came up with the following statement after careful scrutiny. MSU Students, Faculty "Despite numerous attempts at salvage," they "David Bromberg could not focus the formulated, and Alumni delivery of his supporting musicians. They lacked the spirit of dynamic development one would usually expect of a professional performance. "However dispersed Bromberg's personal energy may have Honolulu, Hawa i i - been by the struggle for musical integrity, the simple charm of - March 19 ~ March 26 329 the Mariah experience complemented his usual course of charm." Waikiki Beach Hotel - Keyser went on to say that he would rather see a Mariah then a Jenison success. flop Mark Sheffer, 1509 Melrose Ave., also and is a regular at "I expected him nearly all MSU shows. attended the concert (Bromberg) to play a lot of things," Sheffer osmsu travel said. "I know he's got a lot better stuff than he played." ASMSU 353-0659 Sheffer expressed disappointment with Bromberg's band and the general sloppiness the members displayed. 353-8857 "I like to see everybody knowing what they're doing," he Spartan Travel 351-0384 said. I would have liked to see a more continuous sound from the I David Bromberg made continuous efforts I to bring together his group which never I quite reached snuff before a full house in poised and humorous, Bromberg offered an uninspired performance to the Mariah crowd. r-QjsfHH • INCLUDES: Free Beverages fcB FOR TWO Hot Feb.10 • I Erickson Hall Kiva Thursday. Though Fudge Cake State News photo by Bob Kaye for Dessert • Choice of Potato THRU • Salad Marlene NEW COURSE FOR SPRING (NOT MENTIONED IN CATALOG) TERM!! • Hot Bread Feb.16 BIO ECOLOGY OF HEALTH in (N.S. 127 4 credits Spring Term 1974) In the course, we will examine the THREE LANSING LOCATIONS: ways in which man's rapidly evolving bio - cultural 2287 Grand River Ave., Okemos environment has acted to eliminate earlier health problems, while at the same time Tfee 5919 S. Cedar St., Lansing creating new ones. West Saginaw - Next to K-Mart We will ask these questions: AMERICAS STEAK EXPERT OPEN 11 A.M.'TIL 10 P.M. DAILY 1. As our environment becomes Blue ftRgei be expected to arise? increasingly technological, what 2. Will the methods used to combat contemporary health problems work ones? new health problems can against future ' a masterpiece 3. Could we best manage these new problems style? 4. Would it be by rebuilding man, or rebuilding his life - Notice: possible to design health Utopia? from Beal. a Offered by Last Week for Winter Quarter Books The Department of Natural Science Showtime 700 Only University College Starting Feb. 18. we will be making our final Designed for anyone interested in gaining a broad perspective on the meaning of health. Science background, not required. Cannot be used to returns to Book Publishers for those Uinter Quarter Showplace 109 satisfy Natural Science general Anthony education requirement. Books that are not going to be used Admission sl°° Section 1 MWF 10:20 • 11:10 + 1 hr. arr. Spring Quarter. We Section 2 TWTh 12:40 1:30 + 1 hr. arr. will also be changing our location of books in order to ■ make sure you have the books you will still need for Winter Quarter. How to Break Into Banking Tonight - Feb. 11 at 8:30 Michael Cooney ' Thank you, Probably one of the most enjoyable folksingers you 'II ever see lie plays banjo, guitar, 12 string and concertina; $100 ELDER LYinstruments 541 EAST GRAND RIVER EAST LANSING 3J2-433I MSU Open 730 to IBOOKITORB WALKING h TALL Every so often there's a movie MB fajtw (UlfaHp that people relate to in ^special kind of way The Paper Chase is such a movie. IS BACK 30 - 8:00, Twilite hr. 5:00 - 5:30 AT DOMINO'S Same fast, friendly Where u/ere you in "62? delivery , but pizza at Talk to us. Continental Bank. The inventive bank. Where banking services is becoming making new breakthroughs in special prices. a tradition. Continental is a bank that moves. We didn't get to be "one of the world's fastest-growing financial service in mahogany paneled boardrooms. We're involved in national Banking, and a lot in between. We can't afford organizations by closeting ourselves everything from Real Estate to Inter¬ to be stuffy —and we're not. 351-7100 Continental is a composite of many individual and vigorous departments, each organized to give maximum incentive to its people. When you do well at Continental, you will be recognized — and rewarded. Because we intend to maintain our position of progressive leadership, you'll SJ5® delivers a large (16") double-dough, "If'shitertertainimnt, find us receptive to your new ideas. cheese pizza and 2 quarts of Coke, am; maybe -«en memorable entprtainmttf". . If you want to really break into banking, talk to us. See your placement director to set interview. Or, write the College Relations Manager, Room 2047, at Continental Bank. up an (additional items extra.) Call 351-7100 ^ Tonight at: 5:30 - 8:0071 Twilite hr. 5:00 Good every Monday thru ■ 5:30| e ll Be Interviewing on Campus March Adults $1.25 I February 20 & 21,1974 on: CONTINENTAL BANK 4, 1974. No other coupons may be combined with this offer. Trowbridge shop only. Please have coupon filled out ll opportunity employer when driver arrives. 8 Michigan State.News. East Lansing, Michigan Monday, February ||, Dill sets a new world record; highlights 51st Spartan Relays By JACK WALKDEN "Bob (Cassleman) has been fighting a cold and a virus for meet record broken during the relays. His lean of io, State News Sports Writer about a month now," Dittrich explained. "He's just now getting back into top physical condition." inches broke the mark of 49 Pat Onyango In 1972. feet, 8'3 inches L J S *l bV [' MSU speedster Marshall Dill wrote another chapter into the Other Spartans to place were Stan Mavis, second in the mile Eastern Michigan put forth a good showing Spartan track record book Saturday night as he broke his own events and „• run. Herb Lindsay, fourth in the two - mile run, John Schlueter, placing in many others. ""'I world record in the 300 yard dash to highlight the 51st running • fourth in the 60 • yard dash, Paul Zolynsky, fourth in the high Nick Ellis won the three - mile run with of the annual Spartan Relays here. a , hurdles, and MSU's shuttle hurdle relay team, third place. while Clarence Chapman's 6.1 was Dill was clocked at :29.3 for the 300, breaking his mark of "I thought did a great job," Dittrich said. "We won four regular running of the 60 • yard dash. good enough ? ' :29.5 set at the Spartan Relays two years ago. we wi» events and in that type of competition, it's pretty good. I don't Bill Rea of Pittsburgh was the Dill was obviously pleased about the record, but also somewhat only defendin. how could've done much better." champion to successfully defend surprised. see we his title as h«> « 1 "I didn't think I had broken the record," Dill said after Triple jumper Larry Gray ot' Missouri collected the only other jump. e Won U* accepting his award. "I had talked to one of the timers after the event and he had clocked me at :29.7. "I'm pretty pleased about the record," he continued. "That's Cagers meet Ohio State what the people came here to see. I'm just glad that I hadn't run a :29.6 or a :29.7. Then I would've had to think that with a little extra effort that I could'w broken the record." Dill was pleased about the record for one other particular reason. tonight without "My mother was here and whenever she watches me, I get inspired," he said. After breaking the record, Dill was far from finished for the evening, however. He raced against former MSU star Herb Washington in a special running of the 60 - yard dash and gave his former teammate his toughest test this year. By CHARLES JOHNSON Dill ran the 60 in 6.0,the fastest time of his career. He couldn't State News Sports Writer bea^ Washington, though, who came within a split second of Spartan scoring ace Mike equalling his world record of 5.8 seconds. Robinson will sit out his first Washington's official winning time in the 60 was 5.9, but a game since coming to MSU couple of stopwatches gave him a record • tying 5.8. when the cagers take on Ohio The special running of the 60 had been added to the relay State tonight at Columbus. program to match Washington against Olympians Gerald Tinker Robinson sprained his ankle of Kent State and Hasely Crawford of Eastern Michigan along in practice Thursday and was with Dill. Tinker and Crawford were unable to run due to released from University injuries. Health Center Saturday. Dill made one final trip to the track for the evening's final Athletic team physician James event, the mile - relay, and he sent the 4,200 fans attending the Feurig advised MSU coach Gus meet home happy. He anchored the relay team to a meet and Ganakas that it would be best fieldhouse record victory in 3:13.4. Dill took the baton for the for Robinson to not play, final leg with the Spartans trailing by about five yards and had though limited action would be built a one second lead by the time he was finished. Bill Nance, • possible if necessary. Mike Holt and Bob Cassleman teammed with Dill in the event. "I'm not going to play," Though no team scores were kept in the 20 - event meet, MSU Robinson said about tonight's took the most titles with four. MIKE ROBINSON BILL ANDREAS Buckeye clash. "I don't want Mike Hurd, who is a receiver on MSU's football team in the to take any chances on longer than Robinson. The Ohio State, in losing to fall, used his powerful chest to edge out Western Michigan's Al completely messing it up. We Buckeyes, who lost 83 — 75 to Baker in the 70 yard high hurdles. Both were clocked at 8.5 • can handle Ohio State and I'm the Spartans earlier in the Michigan Saturday, 91 - 68, seconds. dropped further into the Big prepared to sit the game out season, may be in for big Ten cellar with a 1 — 7 record. Sign of victory One other Spartan narrowly missed adding a victory to the totals. Casslemen failed in his bid to win an unprecedented fourth and get the ankle back at 100 trouble because Andreas It has been a dismal season for per cent for the rest of the carried virtually the entire Marshall Dill raises his happy hand to the crowd in a consecutive 600 - yard dash championship. Cassleman, who holds Buckeye coach Fred Taylor, season." rebounding load for them. who has just about exhausted victory salute after setting a world record in the 300 - yard the American record in the event, lost to Michigan's Dave Ohio State's big 6 — 7 center Ganakas will probably start all the variations possible with dash Saturday at the Spartan Relays. Dill's winning time of Williams at the wire. Both came in at 1:10.5. Bill Andreas sustained a similar 6 - 1 guard Pete Davis in place his personnel. :29.3 bettered his old mark of :29.5 set two years ago at Spartan coach Fran Dittrich said there was a reason behing ankle injury in a game of Robinson, with 5 • 8 Benny- the Cassleman's time, which was more than two seconds off his Taylor didn't play any of his relays. Saturday against Michigan, but White expected to see some seniors Saturday, with the State News photo by Dave Schmier record time of a year ago. he is expected to be out much action. exception of guard Gary The other Spartan positions Repella, and it's anybody's will be filled by Brian Breslin guess who he will go with and Terry Furlow at the against MSU. leers gain split with Irish forwards, Lindsay Hairston at centei and Bill Glover at the other guard. It will be the first game for MSU since its loss last Monday night against third - rated By STEVE STEIN 'It was nice to walk out of WCHA record, is still three been 18 3 without superb winning tally late.in the second U-M - State News Sports Writer the locker room and hear the Spurred on contingent of MSU hockey by a large fight song," Bessone said. "The players knew they weren't alone and that there was points behind the Gophers. Because of the tightness of the race, a Spartan loss Saturday could have dropped goal tending. But the second night was a world of difference. Our defense played period. The Irish scored a goal in both the second and third periods. rips matm fans, the Spartan icers real well." somebody there with them. them as far Daryl Rice scored twice and first into tie for Saturday came through with an defeat as a Defensemani Paul Pavelich Tom Ross added the other goal important 4 - 2 victory over "They really enjoyed it. You eighth place. returned to the lineup in Friday's loss to the Irish. Notre Dame in South Bend to could just see the kids pick up. "I told them before the I know thev appreciated it Saturday after sitting out Freshman Jeff Addley gain the split of the weekend game Saturday that our backs Friday's game because of a By PAT FARNAN because they all talked about it- to the wall -the game was joined the Spartans second line series. were after the game." fighting penalty he received with Ross and Sturges and State News Sports Writer The Irish rolled the a real must game for both For Grady Peninger's shellshocked MSU wrestlers, it against Michigan Tech last Bessone said he played"very may be a bit clearer why the University The Blue Line Club clubs. The kids got together Spartans, 8 - 3 Friday. week. well" and was one of the few Michigan is the top ranked unit in the country. "The fans gave our kids a sponsored a trip down to and played a tremendous "He helped us," Bessone The powerful Wolverines unleashed a fusillade of South Bend while a group of bright spots in Friday's game. weaponry on Spartans Friday night,1" hell of a lift," coach Amo game," Bessone said. said. Another freshman, John them 23 • 10 and demonstrating to an overflow crowd of 8,011 in Jenison Fieldhouse just why Bessone said. "It was a great students and other supporters The two goals allowed by Steve Colp tallied twice Muscari, saw action on defense are No. 1 boost." made the journey. Spartan goalie Gary Carr Saturday to lead the Spartans, "I can't say my kids gave up," Peninger said, "We've got In addition to cheering from The Spartans solidified their Friday, but didn't play a good team. Every match, Saturday represented the giving the sophomore 31 goals Saturday because of illness. the score, was a bitter fight." the stands, the fans also hold on fifth place and stayed lowest total in WCHA play on the season, only four Only Pat Milkovich and heavyweight Larry Avery could squeeze a decision out of the stinffj. within two points of fourth - MSU, with four more regular formed a passageway between recorded by MSU this season. behind his record set last year. M season games remaining in its squad. Scott Wickard and Rick Greene managed a draw but everything else was downhill. periods leading from the place Wisconsin, which tied "The first night our defense John Sturges and Brendon third battle to finish in the league's "They may have been more ready for us then we were for them," Peninger admitted. "TJ*| Spartans dressing room to the - place Minnesota twice. just wasn't there," Bessone one fine wrestling team and there can be no doubt about that. Of MSU, with 11 12 Moroney also scored for MSU, top four, faces Minnesota - course, whether or not they'* an - • 1 commented. "It could have Moroney getting the eventual Duluth this weekend at home. No. 1 team is yet to be seen. That'll be decided at the NCAA." The crowd, the biggest in the history of amateur wrest Michigan, drew what was perhaps Peninger's only f>( WEEKEND comment on the match. "It was the most gratifying thin|» history as a coach," Peninger commented. "It wasagn ' ACTION for wrestling in the state of Michigan." The Wolverines controlled the contest from the outset*. Brown slid by Spartan 118 - pounder Randy Miller. Mil Spartan swimmers triumph then outclassed Rick MSU's swimming team captured eight Beanie Goldschmidt led the Spartans with 14 points, while Linda Stoick added Valley at 126 for an 11 -1 Spartans didn't get another point until Greene's 1 • 1 stanOT triumjjJ\.i firsts, including a one - two finish in three 12. 158. events, to roll to a 68 - 55 dual meet victory MSU got back on the winning track Ohio State here over Saturday. Saturday, bombing Northern. Michigan by "U - M's really powerful," Milkovich claimed. "Some ofc, MSU, now 5 4 on the season, collected 60 -18 score. didn't even wrestle, though. We made a lot of - firsts from Glen Disosway (50 - yard a stupid m Goldschmidt again paced the women don't believe how flat we were." freestyle), Mark Outwater (200 individual with 11 markers, while Diane (Stretch) medley), Paul Fetters (200 - yard Phillips, Stoick and Pat Woods chipped in Then U - M got a spark of momentum going at 134 • backstroke), Bruce Wright (100 • yard with nine apice. Davids surprised Conrad Calander for a 17 • 9 dec'S'°"- freestyle), Ken Holmes (200 • yard Fencers split again surged to an early lead and Calander had to spend tn breaststroke) and diver Dave Burgeringon the match catching up. He barely evaded a four - poin the three meter board. Both Spartan relay • For the second week in a row the teams also won. Spartan fencing team traveled out of state "That was a bitter disappointment," Peninger and returned with a split against its "Conrad just didn't wrestle up to his potential." Women tankers tops again opponents. The women's swimming team had little The fencers traveled to Kenosha, Wis., Coach Rick Bay's squad, winners in 25 straight BARNES FLORAL ride in the emergency vehicles and assist the paramedics for a ^ "Wc of East Lansing Reg. 1.09 58* w U 14 oz. Reg. 2.29 ^I 1 • £Q >7 Reg. 1.69 73* ' V/ field training. telegraph flo Limit 1 Limit 1 Limit 1 SOB COOK Dr. John Wiegenstein, director of Tri • County J world wide1' (coupon) Expires Feb 17, 1974 (coupon) Expires Feb 17, 1974 (coupon) Expires Feb 17. 1974 > East Lansing Store Only East Lansing Store Only East Lansing Store Only for Real Emergency Service Council, told the commissioners after 0 215 Ann St. East iMnsing liowei VITAMIN C Isfafe the demonstration that Ingham > 332-0871 BAYER NYQUIL County and Lansing have J ORDER HER VALENTINE FLOWERS EARLY 500 MG. NIGHT-TIME MEDICINE qualified for a site visit from a ■nvesfmenf QQ* 100's Reg. 1.79 7 7 ioos Reg. 1.09 58* W \J 6o*. Reg. 1.59 $ l 07 1 %\J # Limit 1 NEW COURSE (coupon) Expires Feb 17, 1974 Limit 1 (coupon) Limit 1 (coupon) Expires Feb 17, 1974 Expires Feb 17. 1974 e pleased to announce that Robert E. Cook is now East Lansing Store Only SPRING TERM '74 East Lansing Store Only East Lansing Store Only Issociated with our Investment and Residential " departments. (NOT DESCRIBED IN CATALOG) LENSINE 20% OFF ob, for the past seven years has been Iroducer" for Investors Diversified Services a "Million Dollar VALENTINE CARDS in the Lansing POLLUTION OF THE $1 Limit 3 19 (coupon) Expires Feb 17, 1974 Reg. 1.79 1 • 1 X East Lansing Store Only e and his wife reside at 2807 Still Valley Drivfe, East ENVIRONMENT. Limit 1 (coupon) ■or a Professional and Confidential discussion of your Real Causes and Cures Expires Feb 17, 1974 East Lansing Store Only FLANNEL SHIRTS $3" Reg. 7.98 Limit 3 ■state Investment opportunities, call Bob Cook at: This PEPSI (coupon) Expires Feb 17, 1974 course be used elective East Lansing Store Only ICQ may as an 8 PACK NO RETURN WAITER NELLER CO. or as part of Environmental complement. LEISURE C\ 7 carpetBd tsmen jja 34 7 Student Services Bidy. .A™'®*4!6*"-" one mile west of campqs. Equalizer Used 8 , J «.7L0a,"d, -J1?'. J __ MARK FIVE 1960 Town 487-5°55Lc-11-2-15 $190/ mon,h' 1100 ,,curi,V «"«• fluted AM/FM - 27,000 miles. New tires, divider car. deposit, no lease. 351 7233, receivers $30 S75 j 'AUTOMOTIVE MASON BODY SHOP - 812 East window, twin air. $3500. Kalamazoo Street since 1940. ONE GIRL for 4-girl. Capitol Villa. a,,#r 6 p m" 3'2'13 ' 900d selection 0f Scooters & Cycles $43/month. 332 8924. 5-2-15 Parts & Service 372-4330. 5-2-13 Complete auto painting-and MALE OR female needed to share equipment. 200 "ul,arB new 13 collision service. 485-0256. ^ "apartment s Aviation MAVERICK 1971, 20 m.p.g., C-2-28 CEDAR GREENS to J0"" in 0k8™« accessories Martin D35S •EMPLOYMENT green, power steering, V-8, sublet spring term. Luxury, 34^,7^0 „ "om#n- Call case. WILCOX SECONoJil •FOR RENT 20,000 miles, must sell. 485-8010 between 10 5 WANTED: USED Volkswagens. pool, call 351 3625. 5 2 15 STORE. 509 East Lansing. Mid9 a.m. Best price in Lansing. IMPORT SUBLEASE ONE bedroom FEMALE, OWN room. $80 per layaways, bank 4 8 5 4 391 rj" Apartments p.m. 5-2-13 AUTO PARTS & REPAIRS. furnished, - $180. Call before "?put Mornings, 5 30 p.m. cards V,. 485-2047.0-2-2-11 C-5-2-11 Houses MERCURY 1963. Good condition. 11 30 or after 5 p.m. 337 0367. 355-7640. 3-2-13 SPECIAL Rooms $200 or best offer. 489-5605. VOLKSWAGEN REPAIR. Our 5 2 15 HASLETT 2 bedroom, furnished VALENTINE sail - the GYPSY •FOR SALE 5-2-13 price is right. See us first, WAGON mJL IMPORT AUTO REPAIR. COZY ONE bedroom apartment except utilities. $160/ month, antiques, dothes, lewelrv J Animals MUSTANG 1966. 31,000 miles, power steering and air condition, 485- 2047. 0-2-2-11 '(VEIL, MUST BE KXRWIS spring and summer. $175. Call 332-0942. 5-2-15 Small pets welcome. 6288 Marsh Roacl- lncH offer. 349-1184. 5-2-15 Babysitter, Tuesday and every 393 0470, after 5 p.m. 5-2-12 4.30 p.m. Monday LCC AREA - needed 1 girl to furnished, no pets, to share with other weekend, my home. From CORTINA (FORD) 1970 • 2 door, 2:30 11:30 p.m., 489-2179. share 4 bedroom house. Call student. 339-8427 after 3 FIREWOOD SPLIT, stacked a.m. ■ 12 p.m. Saturday. Dlf 1241 Roth 0" 33,000 miles, 25 m.p.g. Good shape, fm / stereo / tape player, Motorcycles fo 3-2-12 after 5 p.m., 485 1103. 5-2-12 489-2833, 1-313-282-5422. 10-2 21 p.m. 52-12 delivered. Discount on large STORAGE, South Cedar at I-96 694-fflJ ONE VACANCY orders. 6253577, 625-3871 4 speed, snow tires. Price to sell - $60/month. 0-3-2-13 PEOPLE INTERESTED in selling 6-2-12 BUY THAT SUBLEASE ONE bedroom Includes utilities. In East - $850. Mark, 351-4428. 5-2-14 SPRING CAPITOL AREA near LCC, 3 or buying Stanley Products, call - MOTORCYCLE NOW! 1974's in stock. Yamaha, BMW, New Edith, 353-6838. 5-2 14 rooms, furnished, carpeted, apartment. Pool, newly furnished. Commuter bus - MSU. Lansing. 351-3783.5-2-12 TAPE RECORDER - Roberts FIFTEEN STAMP DEALERS^ DODGE MONACO 1966 - Power utilities paid, $145. Girls or display and sell tt Triumph, and Rickman. 337-0682. 8-2-15 MALE TO share 3 man house $65 771-X, self contained, amp / Lansing Mall on February I steering and brakes, air X-RAY TECHNICIAN married couple. No children or Complete line of per month, utilities included.' speakers. Good condition. Most arc interested in h conditioning. Only 54,000 parts *>d RT registered, weekends only. pets. Phone 489-1276. 5-2-12 MAN AND woman need Call Dave 332-6601. 5-2-12 collections of stamps, actual miles. Good condition, accessories. SHEP'S MOTOR Sinclair, 484-7773. Night shift. Contact Personnel roommates to share expenses on 10-2-21 $700. 482-1681 or 482-6503. SPORTS. INC. 2460 North SHARE APARTMENT, spring, no or old mail. 52-15 department, Sparrow Hospital, furnished 4/man. Joe 332-3465 3-2-12 Cedar, Holt. Just south of 1-96 lease $75, utilities included. Call TENNIS RACKET - Davis interior. 1215 East Michigan Avenue, or 332-3810. See Clare overpass. Phone 694-6621. 337-2657. 5-2-13 Friday 4 5/8 medium, nylon strings. Lansing. 487-6111, through Monday, 139 C-5-28 351 3292. 2-2-12 FIAT 1969 - 1 24 Spider 5-2-12 FEMALE NEEDED for spacious e, Apartment 3. 5-2-12 with fireplace. Livingroom with convertible. New tires, AM-FM. HONDA 750 1972. 13" over Americana apartment, now fireplace. Formal dining room. 393-1838. 5-2-13 SUBLET SPACIOUS, close, one springer, raked, custom tank and through summer. 351-3620. Carpeted, stove, refrigerator. seat, low bedroom furnished apartment, Arched doors, leaded windows. UadI FIAT, 1972 - 128 sedan. 27,000 372-4330.5-2-12 mileage. $2000. 3-2-11 spring term. 337-0635. 5-2-12 2 car drive through garage. Not CROSSWORD oseMo miles, no rust. Very sharp! $1695 or best offer 393-0180 SCHOOL BUS Drivers needed by MAN NEEDED to share TWO GIRLS for 3 girl. $67.50. Call for students. EIPPER REALTY, Ed Furner, 372-9730. After 5 PUZZLE XlURpA YAMAHA, TRIUMPH, BMW, Lansing School District. Must downstairs, 413 Stoddard. Full 5-2-11 349-3086, after 7 p.m. RICKMAN. Many 74s in stock, possess excellent driving record basement, large back yard and p.m. - 372 7384. 3-2-12 X-10-2-18 Um' 1973s and excellent health record. some at reduced prices. garden, garage. Call Gary 29. Tim FORD CUSTOM, 1965 - 6 - Minimum four hours per day. 977-5066, keep trying. 5-2-13 EAST LANSING. 5 person house. Leathers, helmets, accessories, SUBLEASE EFFICIENCY 1 Theory 31. Dare 489 5719. 2-2-12 Two baths, rec-room, partially cylinder, automatic parts and service. SHEP'S apartment spring term. All 4 Distress signal furnished, 32. Alternative transmission, radio, heater, MOTOR SPORTS, INC. 2460 utilities included. Call 351-1451, parking for 5. 7 Spank 33 Beau white walls. Near campus. $185. North Cedar, Holt. Just south of CHURCH SECRETARY. Full time, ONE FRIENDLY female to sublet 351-8920. 5-2-11 11 Yarn measure after 6 p.m. 5-2-11 34 Underneath Call after 5:30 pm. 351-6830. I-96 over pass. Phone 694-6621 call 8:30 a.m. • 5 p.m. 332-2559. spring term. $70. Close. 12. Imitate 38, Search 3-2-12 10-2-22 I. 3-2-11 ONE PERSON for 2 bedroom. C-5-2-15 ONE FRIENDLY girl needed for 13. Ponder Downtown 39 Culture Twyckingham four woman. Lansing, after 5 p.m. r 351-3148.5-2-14 485 5980. 5-2-13 14. Knowledge medium' 15 Remiss 40 Male turkey 16. Unicorn fish How to form NEED SINGLE or couple to share 41 Coniferous your own car pool GIRL NEEDED FOR large luxury 4-Girl. Spring. Close. 337-2029. farm. Fireplace, pets ok. 10 miles from campus. 646-6453. 17 19. Western State Harmonium tree 44. Vocalued 1. Kind 2. Bishopric 6 Gender 7 Goad 3-2-11 As a public service 7-2-14 20 Skittish 45. Embei/le 3. Free Irom 8. M"1* at no charge, the State News will provide a free classified advertisement for those 22. At home 46. Grape slavery 9. Divas , people who would like to set up or join a car pool. NEED ONE girl spring term. MALE SUBLEASE, spring / 23. Entrance 47. Whirlpool 4 Dish of greens spetOT 1 Americana Apartments. 332-4161. 10-2-13 summer. Own room in new 24. Refrigerator 48. Confusion 5. Bright colored 10I Drivinp?_ or Riding? . duplex. 337-1041. 5-2-12 18 r i 1 N I 4 From OUR VOLVO 142 SUITS " % n 15 19 20 United p'lch Returning _ FIVE.VERY COMFORTABLY. % iS YA i i ?1 CyprinoidW^ Wrath t p.m. •M 22 1 Phone _ Time? ROfTM. TDWNHOUSES With five people up front, there's % 17 % 16 w 24 Pell 25. Arcadia % * The State News I not accept Convenient to M3U v responsibility for arrangements or conduct of rpom for six two-suiters in 26 Piqu»nl and shopping 20 ii participants. back. And like the passengers, % %% 21 21 Triton The information requested below must be supplied in order for ad to appear. ♦Air conditioning ♦Carpeted they sit side by side, not % 20 27 28 CeteaU"15 30 This mmu" I ■ Full Name ♦ Pull basements one on top of another. % 3i 33. OW * Clubhouse and play areas Service & Parts 5T % 34 lo* 35 Minted11" I .. | %%% Address _ Now taking applications Open Sat. 9 to 3 36 Goashore r 37 rt 37. Carousa' City % ''4 38 Head •This coupon may be brought in or mailed to: Car Pool Classifieds 347 Student 351-0460 Sr .StessJtesKiyJsii §0 w % w- ft Ml M6 MZ 40 coven11! syllabi' ^Serv Services Building. No phone calls a Equal Housing Opportunity // Marsl"1*1 J A 11 «7 42 A.M.-6P.M..M0N.-FRI. w MV % 'H. 482-6226 -SAT. " 43 Bleak •Family applications only Service & Parts Ooen Sat. 9 U Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Monday, February 11, 1974 11 Mobile Homes Personal !/) [ Typing Service_Jl!g Continued student governments improvements uncertain [Y INTERNATIONAL. One PARKWOOD. 3 bedrooms, 12' x SINGLE? MINGLE! Come & old. Excellent condition. 65 . All built-in*, carpeted, to the TYPING DONE in my home 50< Singles Party, Wednesday, 7-11 Rnpagnolo component!. furnished completely. $6800 pm. at the Canterbury House. per page up to 10 pages. 40< per *2690 Pi 2-16 675-6596.5-2-11 page over 10 pages. 489-2128. (Continued from page 1) When student members presented the amendment to Just north of Jolly, off Take Glenburne Boulevard Waverly! 0202-28 succeed in these three remaining efforts. the preserve IrAS NIKON F, motor USED MOBILE homes west. minority at - large seats. Smith said a faculty member caught already set Dance Games One of the problems common to student government them $375; FTN $419; half Snax. $1.00. COMPLETE unaware by asking if this meant they were asking an - ,, up on lots! Located • THESES Service, just 10 M' pen FT $100; Yaahice 1 The Uncoupled Club. 5-2 15 Discount printing. IBM typing organizations is r epresentative attendance. ASMSU, fall quarter, increase of the proposed 38 student seats to 42. The students campus. Call ■t 124 with telephoto lens MICHIGAN MOBILE and binding of theses, resumes, dropped its quorum requirement from 10 representatives to eight. replied, quite startled, that, yes, they guessed they were asking HOMES |g LUKE PHOTOGRAPHY. 372-2580.0-15-2-28 MONTY'S BAR publications. Across from Three representatives have quit the 1973 board, one out of lack for an increase. 10.0-1*28 campus, corner M.A.C. and of constituents to represent. ___ Presently, eight of 10 college Twenty minutes later the council voted against the VALIANT, 1965 Grand River, below Jones representatives feel they represent identifiable constituencies. r,VI stereo MARTIN D-12-20, 12 - 12X57 2 AND RESTAURANT amendment. bedroom, in quiet cove 10 Stationery Shop. Call Erratic attendance has also held back the Elected Student Kg * Hard shell case. Excellent minutes from campus, $50 COPYGRAPH SERVICES. But even if student representatives show up in full force and $300. 484-5635. per Council. It has failed to reach quorums at its last two meetings ,d,rUfd 'Vnthii® month. Lot rent, new skirting Pitcher Night (M-Th) 337-1666. C-2-28 and was thus unable to take action on the turn in leak - proof amendments, they have little recourse if the ; ,en ^\T TV antenna, Luncheon special question of student faculty members do not appreciate a student - oriented proposal. supe^ $1.50 . , furnished, Z ReducedT AM/Fy 8 J clean, only $4,495. MICHIGAN - PROFESSIONAL IBM dissertation access to faculty evaluations and the student affairs committee The 85 faculty members outnumber the 34 students and 3U ts S30 - «S^ JlETURNED from Nepal. Art MOBILE HOMES. 372 2580 Pool Table typing. MA English degree. proposal. administrative members, combined, so the ■sale (cheap!) 562 Stoddard. 0-15-2-28 MARTY NORTH, 351-3487. But lack of preparation in drafting amendments and proposals legislative route is selectic 1.2243.6-2-12 blocked. Some representatives, like Hester Cain of Justin Morrill Bring your ID has probably hurt the student council more than poor College, have suggested using publicity, but that method assumes LiCA GS automatic MARLETTE. 1972 - 3 bedroom (3 cards proof of age) EXPERIENCED attendance, Paul Smith, COGS representative, said. the MSU students will rise from their with IBM typing. apathy and protest till the expando laefinder with auxiliary lens, and tip out. Dissertations, (Pica - Elite). faculty reconsider. $100. 349-1715 Skirted, $9,000. 625-7157 2359 E. Gd. flash. FAYANN, 489 0358. Irt WHATi. ^ ■ 3-2-12 River, Okemos C-2-28 But, as several representatives have said, this is not an activist |r6pm. 0-2-2-11 University. Unless students take up the burden of self - governing Qgn BABYSITTING THESES, RESUMES, typing and HALLMARK, 1969 - IN my licensed with their representatives, the j EB 3 Base and Casino - 12'X60'. printing. Reasonable prices. faculty will continue to run the partly furnished. $3,900. Must home, Groesbeck area, fenced Academic Council. yard, hot breakfasts COMMERCIAL PRINTING, sell! Call 676-2662. 3-2-12 - lunches. But there is a common axiom which asserts MSU 337-0712. C-2-28 students do 489-1314. 10-2-22 not care and do not know about student 8X43 GOOD government and CONDITION. IRENE ORR Theses, term academic governance. Statistics tend to support this belief. - I ES330 Electric Semi Furnished, carpeted. 2 | ACCESS CENTER I papers, general typing. Formerly In last bedrooms. Close. spring's ASMSU'Elected Student Council election, v body guitar. Hardshell 351-2646. 3-2-11 $995 , for ? with Ann Brown. Call 482-7487. Announcements for It's What's Happening must be received in the The winter general meeting of substantially less than 20 per cent of the student body voted. Best offer. 351-0868. C-2-28 the Ingham County Probate Court | Human Reproduction Health | State News office, 341 Student Foster Parents will be held That number was considered a remarkable turnout over I at 7:30 past offers i Services Bldg., by 1 p.m. at least Wednesday at Edgewood United elections. ■.ITOH 'en speed, Shimano | Lost & Found v [Abortion-Cnntraceptirn Services East ' Transportation gJL two class days before No announcements will be publication. accepted Church, 469 N. Hagadorn Road. The topic will be "Foster Parents In three special ASMSU elections held during the current dual hand brakes. 7 FINDSOMETHING Michigan 485-3; j by phone. and the Abused Child." Featured academic year, only .77 per cent of potential voters turned out at s old, $95. Colleen, the polls. If you've found speaker will be Ray Heifer, MSU. 18953.3-2-11 a pet or article of ltly licensed foster parents ASMSU observers, including members of the value, we want to help you return The Women's Center: If board, say it you are would be more favorable with students and more |lCON RECEIVER. Cost it. Just come into the State News Peanuts Personal interested in learning more about effective with 9, asking $80 or best offer. Classified Department and tell us , jjj your bodies, call the Women's administrators if it were more outspoken and took more stands on more issues. |-8548. 3 2-11 you want to place an ad in EAST Center and join our self - help being a foster family. * AUTOCHORD organ, 6 LANSING STATE BANK'S found column. As a public service EAST TRI-DELTA WELCOMES Wanted % group that meets weekly. If you are interested in a rap or study Who is Guru Marharaj Ji? Find But Grafton takes a different view of ASMSU. "N'o one at our group MSU is willing to give," he said. "This Inths old, barely used, LANSING STATE BANK will run beautiful pledges Sue, Debbie, come at 7 p.m. Wednesday to the out at 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday in 34 University needs to get Kris, Robi, Karen, Connie and DESPERATELY NEEDED: Slides center. Spend Valentine's Union. This meeting (satsang) is together to work as a whole. You'll never accomplish your goals it buy. 351-9056. 3-2-11 the ad at no cost to you! Day with your sisters, at 8 p.m. sponsored by Divine Light Mission. unless you're willing to compromise, and EAST LANSING Jean.1-2-11 on controversial issues - female Thursday at compromise just doesn't the center. At 7:30 ■JOTS Garmont size 9, Rieker STATE BANK sexuality,, homosexuality, race. p.m. Sunday happen anywhere anymore." the Women's Center is English Majors: The deadline for BY Phone 355-3091, after 6 CONGRADULATIONS TO our Call Paula, 355-0081.3-2-13 sponsoring Grafton C-2-28 "Divorce and What it Means to a applying for spring term enrollment says cooperation with the rest of the University 1.3-2-11 new initiates Sharon, Karen and Woman - Legally, Socially and in English - Education is community is what is needed at MSU. "It doesn't take any guts Debbie. Your Tri LIVE-IN student as babysitter I to stand up and say 'this is what I stand FOUND: AFAGAN on Campus - Delta Sisters. Financially." All women welcome. Wednesday. Application forms are for' and mouth off and housekeeper for / board. Want [ONENT 1 Tyrolia bindings, Henke 8B STEREO $75, Call 339-9680 early evenings room Prefer older children. 337-0415. the to know what is going community for women such as, on in available in 212 Morrill Hall. All last term not be willing to give." He said ASMSU has made an effort to 5-8pm. C-3-2-11 - sophomores desiring foster cooperation. 2-2-12 films, sports, lectures etc? The upper level English Education (K , poles, $65. 353-0989. - coding) "It's fine to sit with Wharton and FOUND: NEAR Auditorium. Real Estate information. Call are required to complete this form and attend a meeting at 4 say 'let's compromise and work this out'," said Tim Cain, head of ASMSU's labor ROCK, SOUL and pop bands or stop in, 547'/! relations Glasses black metal E. Grand River Ave. Hours from frames, needed for bookings in are p.m. Thursday in 35 Union. department. "What they don't realize is that Wharton's better at ICON RECEIVER 80 watt brown tinted lens. Call and Central Michigan area. Call Lansing 2 to 9 p.m. Sunday through Questions may be directed to xcellent condition, EAST LANSING Duplex. Brick, it than they are. He's been 351-2231. C-3-2-11 351-9268 after 6 p.m. 5-2-15 Thursday, Tuesday morning and Katherine Sprandel. doing it for a much longer time." n, 353-7655. 5-2-14 two large bedrooms, garage each Friday and Saturday afternoons. With elections coming up at spring registration, the direction of side. Close to campus. $43,900. Seminar from 10 to 11:30 ASMSU could do anything from change FOUND: NEGATIVES AND 5x7. a.m. radically to remain JAG machine, $30. Kenmore Between Beaumont Tower and 332-1600.5-2-12 DON'T FORGET Bbod comes only At Hillel: Israel Aliyah Shaliach Tuesday in 31 Union, featuring exactly the same. It all depends on how students vote. ■table washer, $80. 627-7370, from people. Professional donors Wesley Burr speaking on "Family Union, 337-0679. C-3-2-11 Gidon Biran will be here from 11 But Grafton said ASMSU is now Tnings. 3-2-12 PIZZA AND Sandwich Shop. compensated. MICHIGAN Theory - Current Status and organizationally prepared to a.m. to 3 p.m. today to meet with Application." take on new projects and efforts. When Grafton assumed the FOUND ALBERT Street $2000 moves you in! Excellent COMMUNITY BLOOD students interested in short or long post - Bailey last spring ASMSU was said to be I STEREO cassette - corder lease terms for qualified CENTER. 337-7183. Hours: suffering from organizational area. Pocket calculator, identify. buyers. term stays in Israel. Rabbi Kagan is Interested competitive trap Jl30. Great shape - $75. Call 351-5762. C-3-2-12 484-5983. 10-2-14 Monday, Thursday, and Friday, back! All faithful mystics are ufged and skeet sh „ anemia caused when a relatively mild leader. Ron Wahula. .took ■•8713 evenings. 3-2-12 9 - 4:30 p.m.; Tuesday and to attend Rabbi Kagan's monthly meeting of the Shotgun Club at charge after a strong, charismatic leader, Hal Buckner. FOUND: ASSORTMENT of Keys Wednesday, 12 - 6:30 p.m. session on the perennial question of 7:30 Wednesday in 215 Men's COGS, much unlike ASMSU. has a relatively self evident I OF EIP 202's, Kenwood Recreation C-2-28 existentialism and man's eternal Intramural Bldg. or call Kim constituency. COGS President - elect George Seperich says ■7001. Miracord No. 50HII, on ring in front of Mason Hall. qq quest for the solution to being and Colgate after 5 p.m. 355-9405. C-3-2-12 graduate needs and concerns are more obvious and easier to act |c 3300-10, pair of OHM F's FLY TO Europe from $179. Anna OUR GROUP (Subud - Lansing) The Foods and Nutrition Club on than undergraduate concerns. FOUND: IN Spartan Village, white needs a house or large space to will be having a meeting at 7:30 For instance, the COGS action on a dispute between all. Bob, Munnich. 355-7846, 5-7 pm. taxing of n 351-0042; rent 2 nights week. Will do dog with spots. Call 355-1037. 0-17-2-26 a Monday in 9 Human Ecology Bldg. research assistants and teaching assistants is In, 337-9719. 5-2-13 C-3-2-12 Kathy Soley, a dietitian from the approaching SIRS Petitions Please return resolution. The Internal Revenue Service and University officials SPRING BREAK Jamaica, Freeport - Michigan Dairy Council, will speak luES & UNIQUES. Buy and petitions to 104 Linton Hall. ' on opportunities in her job field. have agreed to tax teaching assistants no more than the IRS FOUND: WATCH gold Edox in from $199. Debbie I 220 Albert Street, uncler Pierce, must receive them today! ' would tax a nonstudent teaching assistant hired by the front of International Center. 332-1156. 5-7 p.m. 3-2-12 \ C-20-2-28 Mensa game night will be at 8:30 University. Call Ed, 351-2225. C-3-2-12 WANT TO tune pianos. No tonight In the Union Oak Room. charge. of Notre Dame COGS has also achieved a settlement on its I RIFLES, and handguns of I Spring Break-MSU Packages^I 1-616-749-9026 after 6 p.m. .aw School has been rescheduled Mensa information available from library case. Thd FOUND: SWISS Army Knife. | Roy Saper. library committee has agreed to suspend library privileges of pinds. Buy, trade and sell, reserve this week Florida $199* 5-2-11 o speak before the Pre - Law Club year 'round prices in South end of Campus. Identify. . Bahamas $279* . ■ Acapulco $329* Ski Utah $257 ■ it 8 tonight in 11 8 Eppley Center. faculty members who refuse to return books requested by 2063 Hamilton, Okemos. Tom Foreigh students! Free income students, and to publish a "black list" of all such faculty em Michigan. BOB'S GUN ■ 'Plus 10% taxes (Includes air, I JOB WITH tax assistance C-3-2-11 commercial band.- now available I)P 2412 South Cedar, Call I hotel & extras) stop by or call " members. 1 TRAVEL BY Experienced Hammond organist / through the MSU Volunteer Bureau §2244.0-10-2-14 FOUND: | 351-8800 HARRINGTON] corner Ann/MAC, I with own transportation and PA it 8 from 6 to 9 p.m. Monday through Seperich says COGS will continue to fight to retain the PAIR of gold wire rim Graduate Council, though Thursday in the Student Services the outcome probably will not be glasses on bridge behind Library. g next MarshallII Music Music | wants to play weekends. Forest Apartments at Harrison and Building by appointment only. For known until next year. I Animals 353-6320. C-3-2-11 351-3284. w Saginaw roads. Ira Polley, asst. an appointment or additional Students, both graduate and undergraduate, are disillusioned provost, will be guest of the group information, call the Volunteer Service a N SHEPHERD puppies LOST: BLACK long - haired male ^ FEMALE VOLUNTEERS needed for research on and discuss minority student admissions and recruitment. Bureau. with the present student government organization. But waiting for changes has sent some minority student - cat in Okemos area. 351-6838. increasing groups to find their 1 month old liveable, Another exciting edition of - 3-2-13 sensual response through own solutions by approaching faculty and University Justin Morrill fathan, 355-9390. 102-22 FOR THE BEST service hypnosis. Experiment will take The Ingham County available for your course descriptions is administrators themselves. on stereo fifteen hours during a three Nonmotorized Transportation pickup in room I house - DARLING orange male trained and loveable. Personal l/i equipment see the STEREO SHOPPE, 543 East Grand River. month period. Subjects must be at least 18. Call 351-8977 Advisory Group seeks citizen input on a nonmotorized transportation 11 courses. Synder Hall. descriptions of all spring term JMC Classes Detailed small in size and Minority groups on campus act as their own separate government and they will often receive complaints that should, DON'T GET Caught in the C-2-28 plan for Ingham County, at 7:30 are by definition, have been heard by COGS or ASMSU. The 1-7168. 3-2-13 (Oleshansky) or 339-9650 tonight in the East Lansing City they are all graded on the P - N doghouse on Valentine's Day! (Allison Stern). B-1-2-8 Council Chambers. Open to the minority groups find that a Chicano. Black or American Indian Doghouse insurance - not ALTERATIONS and REPAIRS. would rather go to them than use the usual administrative routes. lile Homes w guaranteed to keep you out of Ladies and mens apparel. Call WANTED FLAT response P.A., Interested in caving, climbing, A common complaint is. "How can we talk to these people the doghouse, but every little bit 484-8616 between 4-8pm. - Beat the post mid - term blues! cross - country skiing, backpacking when our own numbers on the student mikes and stands. Also quality or any outdoor government groups are helps. Sample policies include 0-202-28 Jewish student rap groups will be activity? The MSU IERINE MOBILE HOME for small or nonexistent?" said student minority leaders. Fanny Farmer hearts, cards, and stereo speakers. 482-8219. meeting at 9 tonight in Wilson Hall Outing Club meets at 7 p.m. "Student groups as a whole tend to be ineffective because of |. Sharp in lot 10X46 2 bedroom. exotic colognes. GULLIVER 3-2-12 classroom I and at 9 p.m. Tuesday Tuesday in 118 Physics - the lack of funding and lack of facilities to now at $55 month. in Abbot Hall's Government Room. Astronomy Bldg. A slide program get things done for STATE DRUG, 1105 East < $1850. Call 882-0245, on climbing in Mexico will be yourself." George Cornell, chairman of the North American Grand River, 332-5171, shown. Everyone welcome. Pings 694-0581. 5-2-15 332-2011. 0-1-2-11 j to Pool « Sign lessons in up for spring term craft macrame, knitting, Indian Students Organization, said. ■ RENT Typing Service needlepoint and crochet. Union The MSU Folksong presents folk artist Michael Coonev Society - new stove and CARPENTER WORK - any phase Activities Board Office, cost is $5 for five weeks. at 8:30 tonight in Elderly figerator, carpeted, partially of construction. Reasonable. 393-1283, 882-7410. 5-2-15 Riding Instruments, 541 F.. Grand Ave. Tickets at the door. River Alpha Phi Sigma, National Police Science Honorary meeting at 7:30 EXPERIENCED TYPIST, Okemos. Tickets for the MSU 5th Annual PERSONAL HAND analysis - Tarot EAST LANSING, to Walled Lake - p.m. Sunday in 35 Union. Patrol card readers IBM (pica or elite type). officers, Kathy Jones and • John Intercollegiate Rodeo to be held by Denny. Novi. Monday - Friday. Leaving February 22,23 and 24 are now on 373-6726 weekdays or 349-1773 Dailey, Ann Arbor Police Dept., flATE OCCUPANCY - This 351-8178 daily for appointment. evenings and weekends. 0-2-2-11 6-7:30 a.m., returning by 5 p.m. will speak on the role of women in sale in the MSU Judging Pavillion. John Bowman, D TP'etely furnished 12'X60' 2-2-12 353-2603 after 5 p.m. 3-2-12 Hours: 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 ATTY. GEN. FRANK - Roseville. police patrol. p.m. fcarch has Monday through Friday and 7 to would give the commission the a price tag of only Kelley will launch a "full f50h. Price includes covered BOARD EXAM TUTORING TYPING TERM papers and theses. COLONIAL VILLAGE 10 p.m. Monday through Thursday (student discount with ID for scale" statewide antitrust power to regulate the utility shed and washer / IBM typewriter - fast service. area to distribution or sale of all motor KAPLAN TUTORING COURSES Berkey Friday performance ) investigaiton of the nation's Jr C0IT>bo. An excellent buy. Call 349-1904. 24-3-8 Hall or near. Leaving c k e t Ili: xpert fuel in the state. I Pam MacLeod Now being formed for the coming 7:15 a.m., demonstrating fundamentals and majoi oil companies, he at 351-3359 returning 5 p.m. Auditions for ■ LSAT, MCAT, DAT Board exams. 482-8176 after 5:30 p.m. 3-2-12 trick shots at 2 and 6 p.m. Saturday Neil Simon's announced Friday. WALTER NELLER ANN BROWN typing and multilith Comedy "The Odd Couple" will be For information call 313-354-0085. PPANY, 332-6595. B-1-2-11 offset printing. Complete service held from 7 to 10 p.m. in McDonel 0-1-2-11 for dissertations, theses, Afterwards, will be available. personal instruction Hall east lower lounge. AFTER A COMPLAINT by CAREER manuscripts, general typing. IBM Driving Farm House will be sponsoring a St. Lawrence Hospital volunteers Ralph Nader and a Chicago • 24 years experience. 349-0850. C-2-28 GRAND RAPIDS to EAST Red Cross blood drive from 1 to 7 p.m. Wednesday and Thurdsay wanting session a ride to the training tonight are asked to call consumer Atomic group, the U.S. Energy- Commission JOB GUIDE from 11 a.m. to S p.m. Friday in Tony at the Volunteer Bureau to PROFESSIONAL IBM typing (Pica LANSING, Leaving 6:15 8.m., confirm a place in the car. Rides (AEC) announced Friday that paperback Shaw Hall lower lounge. Elite) 11 years experience. returning 5 p.m. 1-616-531-1437 will leave at 6:30 from the it will investigate a possible GET THE FACTS - SANDI, 339-8934. C-2-28 evenings. 3-2-11 Volunteer Brueau. Mike Ryan of Drew Theological violation of reporting School will be interviewing people interested in graduate seminary Union Activities Board presents requirements by Consumers TO GET A JOB course of study from 9 a.m. to 5 European summer flights from Power Co. of Jackson. in For all MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY Students, p.m. today at United Ministries in $265 to $333. International Nader and the Higher Education. Call United student IDs, Youth Hostel Cards. consumer Gender Govt. • Communications 6. I Goad Faculty and immediate family Ministries in Higher Education for TWA and American campus group charged that Consumers • t an appointment. contracts are all on the second floor Power Co. allowed radioactive • Education • Retailing „ 8, Length* Union. • Urban Planning • Finance 9. Diva's materials to leak into the air "Coler Me V foman" presents a SP"11^ L and into Lake Michigan from • Engineering • Industry JAMAICA reens talk on "Won The Center for Peace and Conflict Resolution is sponsoring a its $200 million Palisades etc ■lored lOHamm'^l Force," by Vicki Neiburg and Nancy Hammond from 7:30 to 9 dialogue with Terry Provance, 18. Buck* J nuclear plant in 1972 and p.m. Tuesday in Williams Hall north national coordinator of "Stop the B tree - 1 Bomber Campaign." He will be 1973, without informing the Includes names and ad¬ lounge. For more information 19 20 United P'tc" Montego Bay contact Beth Inman. speaking on expanding employment through peace time conversion at 3 AEC. dresses of over 500 com¬ jW- 21 C*P"»I||W| 100 p.m. Tuesday at United Ministries panies and school systems *229: The Russian and East European GOV, MILLIKEN 22, Wrath MARCH 15-22, 1974 Studies Program will present in Higher Education. 24 Pelt 25 ArcadH Alexander Rabinowitch, associate professor of history at Indiana There will be a Bible Study on Apostilic Baptism at 7 tonight in 31 APPOINTED seven members to the newly created State Elyusleaders descriptions in the otfields above 26, Piquim University, in a lecture on "The Union. Board of Ethics Friday. 27.1,1,011 „|B 8 Days 7 Nights ( During Spring Break ) Bolsheviks and the October The board will oversee the Revolution" at 3:30 p.m. Tuesday ,4 Ci"« * I • Round trip jet via Air Jamaica Party Jet in 107 S. Kedzie Hall. The MSU Tourism Assn. general new state ethics code, signed Also info on resumes meeting is at 7 Tuesday in the 30 This m|nu" V (This is a scheduled flight - not a charter) Eppley Center Teak Room. p.m. into law last month by the 33.0M • Gourmet meal service in Do you love the Lord Jesus? Let governor, which covers 55,000 and interviews. flight 34. Low . • ln-Flight Fashion Show us arrange time for regular prayer The Union Activities Board state employes and 35 Minted'111' | • Ruin bamboozles in flight and Bible sharing with a few other gubernatorial appointees. 36 Go aswe • 7 nights hotel students. Call Don Kenton, 307 N. 37. Caw9' •.Jamaican Cocktails ic Hall. At your college bookstore or 38 Head LEGISLATION TO write: N.E.A.S., Inc. • AND MORE 1 Dick Noden will descr coven"! | AUTHORIZE the Public 360 research directed toward "An oduci Zen Service Commission to take Lexington Ave.. NYC. Sing'"! - 40 N.Y. 10017 Phone: Terri Striker Explanation of Participation Rates instruction at 7 tonight in 209 East syllabi' - (517) 355-8610 in Recreational Boating." The steps to curb gouging on Bessey Hall. Zen meditation Enclose $1.50 plus 25c for 42 Mars'" et*1 I seminar will be from I to 2:30 p.m. technique. Applied, so bring pillow gasoline prices was introduced 43 Biea* Tuesday in IS2 Natural Resources or cushion to sit on. Please be •last week in the state Senate. handling. Bldg. The bill, sponsored by Sen. 12 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Monday. Februa Palm reader mirror soul of individual By ACE BURGESS Last week, there were about 15 students listening to th. 1 State News Staff Writer and theories about the palm from Graham. " ^ "Your left hand is the road map to your hf,.' ■ To be or not to be? To professional palm reader Bob Graham, Graham said. "It has all the inherited characteristics'0?'* that is not the question. ancestors. s °* W« People's lives are more predetermined than that, says "Your right active hand - if your are right. |lan(k>d Graham, who recently started teaching hand - analysis classes on one that shows how you are doing on your journey in |jfe"' Wednesday nights at the Mayflower bookstore. In order to let people know how he is doin^ on life's" m "You are what your hands say you are, and you can't change Graham has installed a 10 - foot plaster reproduction them." said the spry, but graying, Graham. ^ in his front vard in Ceresco. Standing tall and erect for a man "at the tender age of 58," He said if people could read palms, then Graham said he has been able to read palms since he was a small thev would L ■ what type of person he is from looking at the boy. His grandmother, who was a gypsy in Europe, taught his Since most people are not palm ulpture P mother and she, in turn, taught him. readers, thev h» understand him and his form of hand analy : Graham - who goes by the professional name of Robaram — part •• , said the hand mirrors the soul. and part intuition. ^ "In order to really help a person understand "The hand can show all characteristic traits, personality traits himself thtnj reader has to have a certain amount of intuition to, and the strengths and weaknesses of a given person." he said. nab| I get into the person's subconscious mind." Graham said "This helps a person to better understand himself and the people thev are dealing with in everyday life." A hand analysis begins by studying three major lines Plw| Graham wants to teach young people - especially students - all hands. I how to read their palm* so that they can avoid the pitfalls of The "headline," running across the hand, the "laughline," curving toward the thumb, indicatesintellj^ their lives. When students can understand themselves, he said, they can the "heartline," just below the fingers, symholi/,^ indicates viia|i^!F i-motion' take full advantage of their strengths and overcome any Graham said a successful reading also depends curves of all lines in the hand, the texture of the upon notivil weaknesses they might have. skin,the2S "I will go anywhere if I can help some young people better the thumb and the length and spacing of the finders. I understand the world around them," said Graham, who lives In regard to the fingers. Graham said he can tell if DM^J about 50 miles west of East Lansing in Ceresco. compatible and whether they should get married 1 He and his wife,Natasha, have been driving to East Lansing the He said, for example, long fingered men and shorl past couple of Wednesdays to conduct the classes at the women do not always make the best mates. finj I bookstore, located at 541 E. Grand River Ave. Thesessions run The long - fingered person is usually thoughtful, he said.it_ from 6 to 9 p.m. and cost about $7 for the entire three - week the short - fingered person wants to do things on the spur of d Robaram (Bob Graham) explains palmistry to a class at the Mayflower bookstore. course. The manager of the bookstore' said the classes will moment. t continue as long as the interest remains high. "If most people could read their spouse's hand bt[J marrying, then there's a good chance this could rut down J terrific divorce rate we have," Graham said. Miners walk off jobs We regret to announce that due to the energy will be cr cutting back our hours to: (Continued from page 1) destroying British democracy. a week addition to the basic they said, would depend on Chancellor Willy Brandt and Thursday and Friday for Mon., Tues., Wed., and Sat., 9:30 5:30 the strike during the campaign. The opposition Labor party, average miners' pay of $81 a unions' paying strike pay. In strikes to back demands for his cabinet met in emergency The Thurs., and Fri., 9:30 • 9:00 basic issue plugged by led by former Prime Minister week. More, he insists, would the British welfare state, men session and said they would monthly wage hikes of 15 per Sunday, 12:00-5:00 Heath's Conservative party is: Harold Wilson and based on shatter his anti - inflation have been able to strike cent. Government negotiators seek urgent new negotiations Who runs the country, the without drastic reduction in We sincerely hope this does not inconvenience yot support from the union rank program. offered 9.5 per cent when wage "to avoid serious effects on the elected government or the and file, says it would settle The miners arc holding out family incomes and without talks collapsed last week. public." Crossroads Cyde I 280,000 miners and their and get Britain back to work. for $101.50 a week average depletion of union funds. and I unions? It has disputed the basic pay. Meanwhile, in West Crossroads Imports I The debate has been widened - and embittered • by Conservative charges of "Reds under the bed" and says the Public opinion polls whow the nation's 40 million voters Germany, public service workers also began strikes for Send the FTD the Conservative claim that leftists in the miners' union, real issue is a decent living the miners. for are generally story to buy. unsure whose higher wages Sunday after nearly one million union LoveBundle and the among them Moscow aligned Heath has maintained he Conservative newspapers members voted for nationwide Communists, are • bent on cannot offer more than a $5.70 forecast Sunday that the walkouts to snarl mass transit, Extra Touch of or Conservative election garbage collection, post offices manifesto, due Monday, will seek to change the welfare and airports. Well over three quarters of • Joie de Fleur perfume. system under which strikers' the lower level unionized families are paid relief. employes of municipal, state A career in law— Payment of social benefits, and federal governments voted without law school. i/w When she's there What can you do with only a bachelor's degree? and you're here Now there is a way to bridge the gap between an and it's Valentine's Day, undergraduate education and a challenging, respon¬ sible career. The Lawyer's Assistant is able to do So Many Ways send her the FTD LoveBundle Bouquet - work traditionally done by lawyers. -tender blossoms / Three months of intensive training can give you the skills—the courses are taught by lawyers. You to Speak of Love... and a satin heart sachet with a i WHY COOK TONIGHT? choose one of the six courses offered—choose the 'v'~ city in which you want to work. Since 1970. The Institute for Paralegal Training capsule of FTD's exclusive new perfume, Joie de't, f »*. i» i$f > t i/' CHICKEN has placed more than 500 graduates in law firms, Fleur. Call or visit your ALL YOU CAN EAT! banks, and corporations in over 40 cities. FTD Florist today. He can If you are a student of high academic standing and send your flowers across the ADULTS—51" are interested in a career as a Lawyer's Assistant, street or across the country. L- J SOUP & SANDWICH SPECIALS MON FRI we'd like to meet you. We will visit your campus on DIXIELAND this Thursday FTD Member Florist sets his own prices. "Your L,It j Iouth Florist TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 26 01974 Florists' Transworld Delivery Association. Beer in Mason Jars. Messages can be casual, sincere, humorous, dra¬ The Institute for matic, light, flowery, shy, formal, traditional. Paralegal Training Whatever your style, we have Hallmark cards that speak of love the way you prefer, for Thurs¬ day, Feb. 14. Student Book Store this Valentine }s you . . . Day is different, need something beautiful something special 421 E. Grand River 351 . 4210 REDBARN Sun. 10 - 1010 E. Grand River - 332 - 10; Mon - Thurs 10-11; Fri & Sat 10 5580 - 3 a.m. the Dino Durkin - Owner and Manager a eyewinker is different, "Ilike it has what you need. Family Night atPonderosa because... ... I know that Ponderosa We feature the 20° , TRADE f serves the very best baked finest and largest selection of credit given- Idaho potato, all melty and ADULT TYPE Bring us your"** mouth-watering and steam¬ pocketbooks, magazines books and j and films in Michigan ing hot, and since the whole dinner costs only $1.25 on "We have the | FREE COKE FOR complete»» Tuesday nights, I ean skip the steak, salad and roll that When you buy Big GLASS VALENTINES DAY FREDERICKS of exotic HEAD selection ot SHOP comes with it, and just eat i a Barney, Hollywood material L""*] the potato." between lacobson's & Campus Theatre i Fries and a Coke. Potato Freak 0PEM-. MON.-SAT. 9:30-5:30 "We will NOT be undeisnld" I Coupon Expires February 28,1974 THURSDAY'S TIL 9:00 PH. OPEN daily 10:00 AM to 1^30^L, ^