'ouths right to hold office argued
By GEORGE WHITE gain voter approval in the form of Nov 6
referendum if it is to become law.
a
Rep. Josephine Hunsinger, D - Detroit, who naive
advocated a go - slow approach, enough to elect an 18 - year - old to that they have adulthood in some areas
..■e years after the adoption of the 18 The bill reminding gowmor?' he asked. "If an 18 year - old and
was referred to the Senate her colleagues of political
-
deny them adulthood in others,"
t old vote, a relating political question Judiciary Committee, gains already can put
together a campaign, put the Jondahl said.
leing debated in the state capitol:
a body with an extended to youth.
issues before the people, win the
Mtennve backlog of work. public In an attempt to dramatize the issue,
Its chairman, "Back home, they'll ask
|ld 18 • year • olds have the right to ben. Robert
Richardson, R - Saginaw, who
you how you confidence and the necessary votes - then Vaughn brought a 17 - year - old political
or all political offices in Michigan? is running for
voted," Hunsinger said in the Wednesday he deserves that office."
Congress, could not be candidate into a House session the day
Michigan House of Representatives session. "You voted before to lower the
»
reached for comment late this However there is evidence that some before the vote.
week. age of majority. Now all the kids are in the
| yes Wednesday by passing a bill that State Rep. Jackie
Vaughn III, D - bars and the 30
young people do not agree with Vaughn. Charles Willette, a high school student
Ed open the offices of governor, Detroit, said Thursday he would mobilize
•
year - olds can't get Student members of Vaughn's staff said from Traverse City, will seek a Michigan
Men ant governor, state senator and * youth and through the door." they had surveyed student opinion at MSU
student campaign before the House seat in 1976 and is protesting the
■represfntative to 18 - year - olds. people of Michigan. Hunsinger's controversial remarks were and found some students in opposition to law that tells him he is too young.
state Constitution now requires a one of several arguments the bill.
e
Vaughn, the main sponsor of the proposed to stop
jr or state representative to be 21. had no organized student
bill, or compromise the bill. The
most common .. "The few that oppose the bill say that
"I'm not awed by older people," he said
I support when he criticism questioned the after the session. "One hundred
age requirement for governor and introduced the legislation to the ability of an 18 - an 18 year - old is not qualified to be
• per cent
House old to of the people I petitioned in Traverse
■nant governor is 30. early this year ■ run the state.
governor," explained Sheila Kinney, a City
year.
t bill, which passed the House by a "I think "That was a red herring issue," Vaughn staff member and MSU student. support my right to run for a House seat."
Watergate and related political retorted afterwards. "The real issue is
"They're Rep. John F. Smeekens, R - Coldwater,
J of 79 - 25, would amend the corruption has alienated our youth from falling into the same trap that older people
fttitution to institute 18 as the government," Vaughn said. "If we
whether we are going to
deny full adults may fall for."
pointed out that youth rights advocates do
their constitutional political rights." have a precedent in
|mum age requirement for those continue to deny young Michigan political
people the right to Rep. Lynn Jondahl D - East Lansing, history to support their cause.
s. However, observers believe the bill run for
important political offices, we run ^ Vaughn contended that the voted in favor of the bill and
"qualification" supported Steven T. Mason was sworn in as
[ a much tougher trial in the state the risk of further alienation." argument was an insult to the legislation in
preliminary committee
In addition, it must eventually House opponents of the bill Michigan voters. Michigan's first governor when he was 18.
examinations.
.
included "Do "A teenager once ran
they really believe the voters are "It is inconsistent to tell Michigan, and it
young people survived," he pointed out. JACKIE VAUGHN
tate universities' efforts to lobby
onsidered friendly, helpful activity
By DIANE SILVER
State News Staff Writer
lobbying.
b some, the word carries an odor of
tr-tbe-table dealings and bought-off
Islators. It is an activity that a
political
■id be above,
institution, like a university,
they say.
■et. with more than two-thirds of the
J) operating budget funded by state
topriations, lobbying—though officials
\ it-appears to be a way of life for
k University administrators. Volume 66 Number 118
KSU spends from $5,000 Friday, March 1,1974 Michigan State University
to $6,000 on
lying activities every year, with the
liersity's chief representative at the
klaturc. Jack Breslin, spending a
jmum of 20 hours a week at the state
HitoI. The University of Michigan
tentative averages about four days a
Grand jury charges
k in Lansing and the Wayne State
lersity representative spends about one
■ week.
pbbying activites range from supplying
on officials expected
nation to legislators and the state
I agencies about the MSU budget
Jests to supplying legislators with ASSOCIATED PRESS influencing that jury with new
in services. indictments.
A jury of eight men and four women
liiversity activities center in the House
A
■ Senate appropriations committees, Watergate grand jury is expected to was chosen to try former Atty. Gen. John
return indictments today on former high Mitchell and onetime Commerce Secretary
■h consider MSU's yearly budget officials in the Nixon administration since Maurice Stans on charges of criminal
pts, and the state fiscal agencies, the jury in the Mitchell - Stans case was
conspiracy.
Ji analyze the requests. Every year the
M allocates nearly $80 million for MSU empaneled and sequestered on Thursday. With six alternates, the panel
There is also the possibility of immediately sequestered.
| thei lifelawor death of programs like the indictments springing from other grand
was
Mitchell and Stans went to trial Feb. 19,
school, depending on the
)n of lawmakers, jury investigations in the Watergate accused of trying to impede a federal
aftermath: the 1971 break in at the offices
- securities investigation of financier Robert
s important that the legislators of Daniel Ellsberg's psychiatrist; Vesco's operations, in return for the
ftrstand MSU, its programs and illegal
corporate campaign contributions; the latter's secret $200,000 contribution to
■'ions as well as its problems because
milk fund and ITT cases and violations of President Nixon's re - election campaign.
^University is supported by all the federal campaign laws.
f the state and the
fcpresentatives of the
legislators are Bill killer Special Watergate Prosecutor Leon
After the jury gained approval of
prosecution and defense, U.S. District
people," Breslin, Jaworski had predicted the three Court
Jack grand Judge Lee P. Gagliardi called a brief
ftive vice president, said, Breslin, executive vice president, influences legislative appropriations. juries would return major indictments in recess and then turned to the selection of
i. Charles Zollar, R-Benton Harbor
ie Senate Appropriations Committee its case, and MSU does that," Faverman February. six alternates.
from his constituency into MSU and the week I take a legislator and his wife to That self imposed deadline was always
ian, said. "The case for a school is
made, not in
-
Among those scheduled to take the
says "lobbying is a part of student isn't a bad student, then I should dinner." flexible, however, to allow time for the stand
kment." terms of its lobbyist, but in terms of its during the trial is John W. Dean III.
go as far as I can for them," Breslin said. Meals with legislators make up a large Mitchell Stans jury selection and who was fired as President Nixon's White
tThe universities have one programs." "I don't try to buy
-
anybody off, part of his expenses, Breslin reports. sequestration. It was a precaution to avoid House counsel.
J best lobbying organizations in the Though University activities may be though if I help a legislator get a student
I government and nothing more than explaining programs, into school I might expect that "You get things done in the political
they use them legislator
■vely," Zollar said. "The big three MSU engages in many actions that arena based on friendship with the
appear to help me the next time
around," he said. people
to fall.outside that in power positions," he continued. "It
pities
toe andhave representatives up here all
in crucial issues
area.
Services extended to legislators often
These "little services" are "just the
life is," Breslin said.
way often not based on right or
is
Petitions for SN
they involve wrong or
flumni." include temporary on-campus whether you have the better
parking "The ticket arrangement was program, but
Breslin permits for themselves and their assistants
going long whether they'll go to bat for Jack-Breslin
says he does not before I got into the picture but I think it
Deadline is 5 p.m. today for any
and when he needs help. And I think I have experience, such as clippings, and
relocating students from their was just a courtesy to the legislators." full-time MSU student to submit his or her
that rapport with the proposed programs, with some
Jn not a lobbyist," Breslin said. "All I constituency into different residence hall Legislators feel closer to an institution legislators."
petition for two top positions in State consideration of how
llarify information relevant to MSU's rooms, Breslin said. that provides these types of services, "That is what lobbying is all about. It is News management. Students interested in
new programs would
It and it's requests." Football tickets, at the student rate of be carried out. The new editor-in-chief and
Breslin said. The services help not wining or dining or even sending
$3 per ticket, University applying for the position of editor-in-chief advertising manager, to be appointed by
Faverman, asst. dean of the are supplied to legislators as officials to set up a personal relationship information down to the legislature. It is or advertising manager must submit a
•gf of Osteopathic Medicine and well the corporation board of directors on
as passes to winter sports events. with legislators. the one-to-one relationship with the guys
»!■ head of the Publications, like statistical abstracts and typewritten petition, double-spaced and April 21, will assume office for the next
legislative fiscal It is that relationship which is a vital in the power position," he said. no longer than 10 pages. The
's educational congressional district maps, also
petition school year on May 5. Petitions should be
analysis unit, agreed. are part of the University's activities, he said. However, some critics fear that should outline experience background, submitted to State News Board of
| university does not have to lobby periodically sent to legislators. "It is important to find out what these
J"s have to (Continued on page 17) including examples of newspaper Directors, 345 Student Services Bldg.
represent and explain "If a legislator wants to get a student people are thinking, so once or twice a
xidents start pickin
aftermath of Hub
By SUSAN AGER carpeting in the hallway and to clean all rooms thoroughly.
State News Staff Writer By Thursday afternoon, the smoky odor with which the floor
I'to Thursday afternoon sunlight, the soot and cinders reeked the night before was nearly gone, thanks to two green -
T bleaker and blacker than in and white squat robot - like machines called Odor Eaters,
Wednesday's twilight. •
>st residents of the 12th floor of South Hubbard Hall went
provided by Airkem Detroit, Inc., a firm specializing in removing
l<% about their labors: packing all their belongings in odors through chemical reaction.
Jardpurines,
T
boxes, washing their smoky clothing, discarding melted Places to go for the night and clothes to wear were no problem
deep gray - tinted blouses and once - treasured for the women due to lots of spontaneous generosity. Signs
covered the elevator lobbies of South Hubbard, reading: "Our
metimos they just sat, foreheads smudged. doors are open, our couches are yours!"
■ really didn't hit me when I stood outside looking up at Residents of the fourth floor opened their rooms en masse to
F°ke," one weary resident sitting under a sooty poster of the evicted 12th floor women and were busy mopping and
Ptevnolds said. "But when I got up here I just'cried." cleaning their pressing room to accept lodgers.
* and her roommate had been Dick McKinnon, hall director, said rooms in Fee, Akers, Shaw,
sleeping at 5 p.m. Wednesday
fire alarm Holmes and Hubbard halls had open spaces for women to move
sounded, sifgialing a .blaze which was to
Bjdestroy two 12th floor rooms and cause an estimated into. Twenty rooms in Hubbard Hall had been volunteered to
M,
■
0 smoke and water damage to the entire floor. accept as many as two extra roommates for the two weeks
nought it was a false alarm, but when I went into the hall remaining in the term.
T10^ was halfway to A clothing drive was begun spontaneously last night by-
my room, and the RA was yelling that
■ •80 we just forgot to close the windows or doors." residents who donated every type of clothing a woman Vould
J Women's room, 1222, resembles a bombed - out hovel. need: underwear, sweaters, T -shirts, jeans, scarves and jackets.
|dcoa' s t,le walls in the room as well the
T plastic light cover lies brown
as the bathroom. A All lay neatly piled in the sixth floor study lounge under & sign
on floor. Dirty gray reading "Twelfth floor residents: These are yours to keep!"
Jsr'H the toilet. The windowsill in the lounge was cluttered with containers of
I"1* suite's
adjoining room, 1223, however, only a faint shampoo, toothpaste, makeup, deodorant, some notebooks and
even a Good News for Modem Man.
P1 bright*"18'"8* ThC Bree" Wa"S a"d patchwork bedsPrea(l Each Hubbard Hall resident Thursday found in her mailbox a
Tidljnts
f "ubbard Hall
of that room had closed their door before leaving, brief note signed by the women of 12 South: "To all the good
management Thursday morning asked the people in Hubbard Hall, we would like to sincerely thank you for The bathroom between 1212 and 1213 S. Hubbard Hall was
I. « residents to move themselves and all their possessions totally ruined by 1200-1400 degree heat from
helping us. Donations of time, shelter and clothing were greatly the fire which raged through the two rooms
rooms to allow student and contracted workers to appreciated." Wednesday evening. The 50 residents of the floor must have their
I d repair the The Financial Aids Office also said possessions out of the rooms by the weekend, and cannot move back until
dingy floor. Thursday short • term loans spring term.
■ P'an is to
replace vinyl wall coverings, ceiling tiles and would be granted to flre victims. See related fire story, page 17. state News photo by John W. Dickson
2 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Fnday, March |
Nixon vows to bill
deputy press secretary Gerald The administration believes
WASHINGTON (AP) -
President Nixon said Thursday
that we are
and we should not
not going to have,
have,"
rationing. At a news
conference Monday night, he L. Warren said: "I will not a price rollback would make
flowed into
the I
the United States is not going Nixon said. had »aid chances were much qualify his statement." gasoline and oil scarcer.
absenteeism
mine owners renujl*1
said
to have gasoline rationing and Nixon's comments the better than 50 50 there Nixon's announcement that The President said
on •
Congress
announced he will veto the energy bill came during a half • would be no rationing, and he he will veto the energy bill was should act on proposals the „ Also' UnP«biiJ
bill passed hour speech at the opening of a had said earlier he wanted to no surprise because the White administration has had on
government statistics ,|JL1
Raw food emergency energy
prices rise 1.5 per cent by Congress.
"That bill will result in
Young Republican Leadership
Conference in Washington.
avoid rationing if possible.
Asked later at a news
House had been saying in
recent days the bill would be
Capitol Hill "now for months,
in some cases for
we"head cost
Sold,
*2ll
w'thout fedejl
years, which
Prices of raw farm products rose 1.5 per cent from longer gas lines and also would It was the most unequivocal briefing if the President meant rejected if not changed. would increase the supply of
regulation has risen Ll
Jan. 15 to Feb. 15, the Agriculture Dept. said Thursday. inevitably lead to compulsory statement yet by the President to say so flatly there would be The aspect of the bill most energy in this country."
Per cent in the last
y^l
rationing in this country, and that there will not be any no rationing, White House objected to by the White Su<"h
increases ImJ
Crop Reporting Board officials said higher prices for House would roll crude oil "By increasing the supply mean
wheat, corn, dry beans, potatoes and lettuce the price will go down, the gas hi8h" pricnl
prices back to $5.25 a barrel lines will certainly disappear
consumers, but the ,£J
contributed most to the increase. Lower prices were but would permit increases one
reported for cattle, hogs and eggs.
For consumers, the boost in farm prices points to
Vandal sprays
back up to $7.09, still lower
than some current prices.
and we can move forward as a
country with the energy that
we need," Nixon said.
to gas
government agencvj
would be a
cutback«
customers.
further rises in food costs Nixon said he would veto
as it is passed along by
the bill "not becuase I am
Normally, th. .
Meanwhile, 17,000 natural gas sold
processors, wholesalers and retailers. some
B
The department predicted on Feb. 14 that grocery
prices will go up 12 to 16 per cent this year if farmers
on Picasso's against lower prices, because I
am for lower prices; not
because I am against more gas
southern West Virginia coal
miners continued a work
t0
do not step up productions. NEW YORK (AP) A man The allep>d vandal identified history of art," wrote Stuart
for the American people; but
boycott Thursday in protest of
short gasoline supplies.
Commission.
lts
However"J
who said he
•
artist because I am for more gas and
regulations, short'.!!
Don Paarlberg, director of economics for USDA. said was an himself as Tony Shafrazi, 30. Preston in an appraisal in the sales or
oil available to the American Most mines in southeastern deliveries itaJM
wanting to "tell the truth" authorities said. New York Times »n meet
he believed the recent sharp rises in farm prices is partly
the result of worldwide inflation which has sent costs
sprayed red paint across the The painting memoralizes an "Guernica" was
1962.
first shown people at prices they can Virginia were open Thursday as
emergency
made
without
situ^J
famed "Guernica" painting by undefended Basque town that at the Paris afford to pay. emergency gasoline supplies K
Exposition of approval.
soaring for most items people need. Pablo Picasso at the Museum of was destroyed in an air raid in 1937.
The Nixon administration is counting on larger farm Modern Art in midtown April 1937.
Manhattan Thursday. "Done... in a frenzy of rage
output in 1974 to help dampen inflation as well as
bringing some relief at food stores.
A
alleged
self -
styled artist, the
vandal was
and grief, it ranks as an
apocalyptic vision in his work
Would ARMY SURPLUS
apprehended by a guard and
taken into police custody
as well as being one of the
you believe
House panel acts raises
most emotionally charged and
all insurance
on pay within moments.
In letters more than a foot
explosive paintings in the New Shipment of
high, he sprayed, "KILL LIES agents are not
The House Post Office and Civil Service Committee ALL." But the museum began alike:
voted Tuesday to veto all of President Nixon's proposed
federal pay raises if the Senate votes to kill raises for
removing the paint
immediately and said the
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Members accused Congress of playing a "cheap undamaged. SCHOOL offers July l-August 111, what you
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while allowing raises for other top federal officials.
"What we are saying is that if we are going to
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Police rebellion 117 Cunaon St. ; NML
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President Juan D. Peron met with his interior minister and
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Federal police have moved into the troubled city, but
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new
Ethiopian Emperor Haile Selassie Thursday named
prime minister and granted
following
pay raises to the army
two days of rebellion by military units.
a
9:00p.m., Sunda come to where
Selassie asked former telecommunications minister
Endalkachew Makonnen to form a new government and
promised no reprisals against the mutineers.
The emperor also said he accepted the resignation of
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FTC study blasts funeral costs
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Nation to honor Vietnam veterans
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Compiled By Steve Repko and Pit Nardi
-
Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan
Friday, March 1, ] 974 3
University may add lane to stretch
| of Kalamazoo Street before July
By CHRIS DANIELSON Baron said, there already are problems in this area during both
normal and heavy traffic periods, caused by the growth of the
State News Staff Writer
University in the last 15 years.
A two - block section of Kalamazoo Street between Harrison The new ice arena now under construction was not a
and Birch roads on campus significant factor in the decision to widen the street, Baron said,
probably will be widened from three
to four lanes before July 1, Milton since hockey traffic now flows to the
Baron, director of the Dept. of nearby Demonstration Hall.
Campus Park and Planning board Though Kalamazoo Street narrows to two lanes between
"I hope the Board of trustees will be able to approve Demonstration Hall and West Circle Drive, this stretch will not be
contractors' bids the project during their March meeting, widened because the road is bordered
on
or by parking for Jenison
certainly by April," Baron said. Fieldhouse on the northwest side and a tree belt on the southeast
He said final design plans for the side, Baron explained.
project are now being drawn
up, but noted that it is too early to speculate on the project's cost He said the All - University Traffic Committee has
approved
since asphalt prices are very uncertain now. the road - widening plan, and that the board
approved a group of
County plans to widen Kalamazoo Street west of Harrison campus upkeep and improvement plans several months ago which
Road from two to four lanes between the entrance to included the widening project.
,JSrS -""Z University
Village and Clippert Street have drawn strong criticism from local The project may affect three elm trees in front of the radio -
environmentalists and others recently. television quonset hut south of the road, but
planting of Austrian
Presently, there are two westbound lanes and one lane for pine, flowering crab and cherry and red maple trees will begin this
Wider road? eastbound traffic between the Harrison Road • Kalamazoo Street
intersection and Demonstration Hall.
spring as part of the project, Baron noted.
"No complete blockage of the street is anticipated • one side of
the road will be worked on at a time because Kalamazoo Street is
too important to close off," he added.
A sidewalk south of the road probably will be
ity bus miles to rise by 40%
realligned to
make a pedestrian crossing on Harrison Road
safer, he said.
Other campus raod projects this spring will involve
retopping
of some roads that have been wom out
by bus traffic and final
surfacing of the Collingwood Entrance which was not finished
last fall due to bad weather, Baron said.
!y LINDA SANDEL Originally CATA had including the three highly Committee's request for to the difficulties in >CATA will receive an
(State News Staff Writer planned to request that patrons successful runs that have been
Saturday service on the implementing the new Lansing estimated $3.84 million from The State News is published by the students of Michigan State
pay an additional full fare servicing East Lansing for Burcham Hagadorn, North routes, Stieber said that it University every class day during Fall, Winter and Spring school terms,
-
the project.
^ blue and white buses when transferring buses. nearly two months. Harrison and South Harrison should become a live issue after Mondays, Wednesday, and Fridays during Summer Term, and a special
Approximately $3 million Welcome Week edition is published in September. Subscription rate is
(lumber around Lansing A deadlocked struggle routes is still under discussion. CATA settles its contracts with will come from federal sources, $16 per year.
ie even more familiar between the CATA board, Stieber said that the East the bus driver's union -
Though the East Lansing $550,000 will be drawn from
Second class postage paid at East Lansing. Mich. Editorial and
Knday. when the Capitol which supported the full Lansing Mass Transit request has taken a back seat probably next week. state coffers, and the
T Transit Authority transfer, and the Lansing City "After that we'll be able to remainder will come from local
|A) implements a revised Council, which thought it too present East Lansing with some revenues.
Irk of routes that will add expensive, was avoided when accurate cost estimates," Using part of this money, News/Editorial 355-8252
the CATA board Wednesday
J daily bus miles to the Stieber said. CATA plans to build a new Classified Ads 355-8255
■t system.
■addition to the revised
J, which will increase the
agreed to the nickel
compromise.
"The CATA board agreed to
Michigan It will then be up to East
Lansing to decide whether the
city wishes to pay the price for
garage and headquarters
facility and will also purchase
about 20 buses.
Display Advertising
Business Office
Photographic
353-6400
355-3447
355-8311
trvice miles by 40 per the transfer compromise to get
Saturday service.
EAT A will be using a new, the system on the road for the
■r fare structure.
Lit fares for most roytes,
Lansing people," said Arnold
Stieber, assistant to the CATA
of highway in
To boost the public transit
Michigan, the State Highway
boss. Commission recently approved
pding the Lansing -
i loop that runs Stieber added that the 5 expenditures totaling $21.5
The burden is on the
Michigan House of Representatives today million as the base for a $102.5
(h East Lansing, will be cent transfer fare could cause
to complete legislation lowering the speed limit on state highways million statewide public
d from 35 to 25 cents, CATA to lose an estimated to 55 m.p.h.
transportation operation and
fool children, up to age $24,000 a year. If Michigan is to avoid losing $200 million in federal
highway improvement program.
Jn ride for 20 cents, and CATA agreed to the Home of the Class "A" Pie
funds, the House today must ratify a legislative conference
f citizens will board the compromise after Lansing City committee report
recommending that no penalty points be
Multiple Sclerosis
a dime. Children under Councilman Terry McKane said DANCE FOR STRENGTH
assessed against a driver's license for
violating the new lowered MARATHON presents a weekend
Ji height will be allowed that the city council would be limit. Meridian Mall March 1 - 3
| free. willing to absorb the additional
nsfers for all routes, losses of the nickel transfer,
The six - member committee did, however, recommend that PIZZA and COKE SPECIAL
ticket fines be charged for violating the new limit, and the Senate Pledge Numbers:
Qntly tree, will cost a since the city already heavily
concurjred T^rsjtay.(,
349-0885
349-0743
. Routes that rfo not subsidizes the system. The House opted for
I downtown Lansing, like The new bus run structure
paa a points penalty version Buy a 12inch (2 item) Pizza at ont regular price of
Wednesday. ..,,, v S2.85 and receive two 16 oz. Cokes FREE.
il East Lansing routes, will increase the number of
ist 10 cents. CATA routes from 14 to OUR
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East Lansing
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JacobBon'B
POINT OF VIEW
Guidelines to ease financial plight
OPINION PAGE By ROY T. MATTHEWS the AAUP has already established document, "On Institutional
Resulting from Financial Exigency: Some
Problems Academic Tenure in
established by the
Hi„h„ „
William W. Whiting Editor-in-chief The MSU Chapter of the American
guidelines that universities should follow
in case of financial exigencies. Operating Guidelines." Colleges and the AAUP Th« Assn®VSji
Beth A nn Masalkoski.. Advertising Manager Assn. of University Professors chaired by William K.
Campus editor (AAUP) is For example, in 1972 the delegates at Ke«i
Gerald H. Coy General Manager John W. Lindstrom that problems
^*"*1
.
fully aware of the implications of the the national convention approved a Most recently, the AAUP has issued a
Susan Ager.. Staff representative Kathy Niezurawski Copy chief arising
Jim Bush City editor Bob Novosad .
Opinion Page editor current economic problems in our nation, resolution on what role the faculty ought third document on these problems, "1972 exigency can be handled
Lynda Eckert National editor Craig Porter Photo editor in our state and here at MSU. Because the to play in budgetary and salary matters. Recommended Institutional Regulations kirly only if faculty member!5 y *1
organization recognizes the possibility of Many of the resolution's suggestions have on Academic Freedom and Tenure." role in decisions about the
response to (a) fiscal crisis"
mSiJ
financial exigencies, it urges all members been fulfilled here at MSU through the The local chapter of the AAUP supports utl0»l
of the academic community to
begin now creation of the Faculty Affairs and all three statements, and, In' particular, it Having made this dec|»r,« I
commission then
to make plans for
any future Faculty Compensation Committee. endorses Section 4 • C of the resolution on
institution develop. in
recommended th?l "H
developments. The statement, however, also academic freedom and tenure which
EDITORIALS An honest examination and
MSU's goals and objectives — drawn from
study of representatives of its
body, guidelines and
faculty ,„
prowdure^_
T
the widest and most representative respect to reduction of p^onn /^l i
opinions of our University - followed by
An honest examination and study of MSU's goals and objectives drawn
used after it has been
reduce the size of the
C
prudent planning and wise utilization of faculty 2^1
Drug bills a
our resources, should result in the most
thorough and satisfactory resolution of
our problems. On the other hand, a
unilateral mechanism, relying upon
from the widest and most representative opinions of our
University followed by prudent planning and wise utilization of our
resources, should result in the most thorough and satisfactory resolution of
financial
programs."
this
exigency
Committee structures
campus to
or chang
already exk „■
only our problems. implemen
I
but
one or two
segments of our University for recommendation. An expandtd
loopholes
f ,
advice, would be the most Affairs and Faculty
Committee could serve
Cot n
unrepresentative approach to implement as
financial and budgetary policies.
A House bill that would allow takes effect than they do now. Planning for possible changes in recommends that in circumstances of recommends that institution make
organization to meet future
LJ*■
The provision to ban future should not be interpreted as a
our
financial exigency, the faculty should be
an
every effort possible to reassign a faculty
resulting from financial exigentk!
pharmacists to substitute a generic administration, the faculty and M
doomsday proclamation; it is simply an informed early and specifically about member to another suitable position student
drug for a brand - name drug when promotional claims and advertising body should nn» t.,l
admission that our nation's problems impending financial difficulties and that before that person's appointment is preparations for such
the generic drug is less expensive is comparing prescription prices is the faculty, tenured and nontenured, terminated.
compel us to confront the task before us
good in intent, but contains some poorly founded and potentially and to should participate in decisions affecting an MSU's AAUP chapter, furthermore,
begin to make decisions to solve .
Matthews is an
associate
detrimental to consumer interests. institution's academic programs. This same
potentially harmful loopholes. problems. Because contingent plans must strongly urges MSU to begin to foHow the humanities and president of the K i jL'1
The bill, sponsored by state The advertising ban is based on be laid in anticipation of future
changes, principle is upheld in another AAUP recommendations of the Commission on of the American Assn. of iLeJy lSm
Reps. H. Lynn Jondahl, D-East the finding by the state attorney
Lansing, and Joseph Forbes, D-Oak general office that promotional
Park, passed the state House of campaigns frequently involve POINT OF VIEW
Representatives Tuesday and was consumer fraud. This does not
sent to the Senate for approval. The mean all advertising is fraudulent.
intent of the bill is to provide less
expensive drugs for consumers, but
thre is some doubt that this will
materialize.
Often comparative
provides consumers with
information on which drug stores
charge less for prescriptions.
advertising
Ballenger
By C. PATRIC LARROWE v. Annunzio, 348 F. Supp. 305, U.S.
suit
permitted him to send mailings outside his
not
candidate for Congress in the 6th
In Massachusetts and Kentucky, In all the years I have been on the MSU District Court for the Northern District of district at state expense. He ha* net with U.S.
DisUkJ
A list of the 100 top - selling Rep. cfo
faculty, I have usuairy agreed with Illinois (Sept. 15,1972). The latter decision The judge disagreed, ruling that because Chamberlain's financial fat cats to
which have similar drug drugs over the the counter would was affirmed by the Court of arnm-
editorials, and I have especially enjoyed Appeals Geerlings was running for office, his
substitution laws, the cost of be required by the drug law. At some of the columns and
points of view (468F. 2d/522) in October 1972. mailings were partisan, political mailing.
for them to bankroll his
also announced he will not run
campaign. Ht3
prescription drugs went up. least this would provide consumers you have carried in recent years.
►
Geerlings was the state representative in Therefore, the judge held, to send them at apigX
Under the bill, pharmacists have with a visual comparison chart, But your editorial last Friday compels the 97th District, which was state expense was illegal and improper. He
his state Senate seat and he is
place to live in the 6th Con
looking lot]
the option of substituting a cheaper even if a pharmacist irefused to me to take issue with the
paper for the reapportioned. He sent residents in the ordered Geerlings to repay the state for District.
new district a letter the cost of the mailings.
substitute a cheaper generic drug.
first time. I do so on two counts: your telling them that he I can understand that, not
equivalent drug unless the doctor was now their state representative. The In the Annunzio case, Annunzio sent knowig
charge that my class action suit against a about the Geerlings and Annunzio i*
specifically states that no A generic substitution law is court held that sending that mailing at tax
State Sen. William Ballenger, R-Delta mass -
paid mailing into a part of a the State News might think
my suitbl
substitution should be made. needed. Contrary to the belief that taxpayer expense was legal. new congressional district created by
Township, smacks of political gimmickry gimmick. I assure you it is not. TinJ
The lack of mandatory most people are covered
by health and your statement that there is little Geerlings, having decided to run for reapportionment in which he was running
election for election. The federal court held that
someone to court is a serious
matter, ill
substitution is one of the weakest insurance anyway, those who need doubt that Ballenger's mailing was legal. jn the newly reapportioned costly, and I am paying for it outolJ
the savings most cannot afford
Your basis for assuming that Ballenger's district, then sent two additional mailings the mailing gave Annunzio an unfair own pocket. Unlike some of
points in the bill. It is up to the at taxpayer expense to residents in the
my nnkf
mailing was legal is State Senate Rule 72, advantage over his opponents and enjoined this campaign, I do not have ir
pharmacists who might make a insurance. which allows a Senator to send mailings at new district who were not his constituents him from further mailings at taxpayers'
backing me. I am running on a shoestrii^
higher profit on supplying just The drug substitution bill now state expense anywhere he wants, whether in the old district from which he was expense. I can not afford to squander m;
brand name drugs, rather than the goes to the state Senate, which the recipients are in his district or not. elected. Each carried a prominently In view of the Geerlings and Annunzio
What your reference to Rule 72
campaign funds on gimmickry or fmoloJ
consumer to determine should act to close loopholes in the displayed picture of Geerlings. decisions, the conclusion is inescapable court action. But in these days J
overlooks is the significance of my court Malisjewski, behalf of himself and that what Ballenger did was illegal. He sent
substitution. So it is unlikely that measure. But the bill, even as it now
action: that what Ballenger did was ruled
on
the taxpayers of Ottawa and Muskegon a mass tax -
paid mailing with his picture
Watergate, it is vital that public
held to public account.
offiriilslj
many drug stores will stock any stands, is a beginning of lower illegal in Malisjewski v. Geerlings, File No. counties, asked the court to order on it to residents of the 6th
Congressional
more generic drugs after the bill health care costs. C-6820, Circuit Court for the County of Geerlings to repay the state for the cost of District who live outside his senatorial iMrrowe is a professor of ccoi
the mailings. Geerlings' defense was the district. He has not yet formally
Muskegon (April 25,1973); and in Hoellen candidate for the Democratic run
the rules of the House of the 6th Congressional District.
Representatives announced, but he is nevertheless a
VOX POPULI
Release of Chicano program
To the Editor: Among the things that Sol de Aztlan When faced, however, with a progm1
Moreover, the 15 or more hours a week
A local Chicano organization, Sol de Was praised for were: program for the of Spanish programing of quality which threatens change in a
on WKAR, some of
Aztlan, recently received considerable rehabilitation of alcoholics; program to it creative that it has been requested of the older, or newer, bureaucm*
so
in
recognition from the national office of the help Spanish - speaking prisoners; one of many other parts of the country, was within the University (as such progrm
Junior Chamber of Commerce. the most innovative Spanish radio terminal* .! last year and replaced by a few must do if they are truly invoked i
A letter from the Jaycees Project programs in the country and its strong hours of University • produced programs. making change), then the above
Uplift stated: "Sol de Aztlan has been efforts to make the University's In his last address on the state of the mentioned commitment of Presider
selected as one of the country's Cooperative Extension Service provide University President Wharton stated: Wharton evaporates into the traditii*
services to all the people of the state,
outstanding self • help programs." "MSU has already assumed a leadership rhetoric of the presidential address.
Indicating that they had made the including the poor - the latter resulting in role in identifying how opportunity of
a suit of the
selection from over 900 other University. access based on equality as well as quality John MasteM
organizations, the Jaycees went on to say: Yet, the two people most responsible can be increased...''
for the success of Sol de Aztlan, Gilberto
Associate professor of Mathem
"The Board of Review, research analysts
and Project Uplift Staff were impressed Martinez and Dan Robles, were "released
with your initiative and success in bringing
positive change to the low - income
community you serve."
from their positions in the Center for
Urban Affairs because the job they were
doing was no longer necessary.
■H
SN ignores Mu
neglects student
Get SIRS ba To the Editor: student composers.
event was
Your coverage of this
typical of the attention you are
"I would likfe to congratulate you on
the fine article you ran in the State News giving the Music Dept. here at MSU"
Both the Academic Council and The above is what I would have liked to
additonal position statements on Friday, concerning the 'Premiers of New have sent you had I found an article
students must get the ball rolling the evaluation system, such as Music' concert which the New Musical
Arts Ensemble presented. I especially liked concerning the "Premiers of New Music"
and make Student Instructional
making the forms accessible to your idea of interviewing the various
concert in the paper.
Rating System (SIRS) forms students. Accordingto committee I read through Friday's paper looking
available for students to view. for the article. I read through Monday's
minutes, "After some discussion, a
At the Feb. 14 meeting of the straw vote indicated a paper and finally decided that your
strong general apathy and lack of concern had
University Educational Policies reluctance to do this at this time."
Committee, there was only the
briefest of discussions on making
Now, not later, is the time to
consider student access, artd the
Corruption been proudly exposed for all to see.
It was not enough to ignore the concert
the State Singers gave just two weeks ago.
To the Editor:
I was "a - mazed and blue" to leam that
Why can't we gel someone „
Howard Cosell or Paul Harvey or
It was not enough to disregard the last winter term's graduating class will be
the forms available to students. Livingston Seagull? But not
up
At that meeting it was brought
that perhaps the former SIRS
Educational Policies Committee
should take a leadership stand and
actively look into this possibility.
nonpartisan concert the Singing Statesmen
before going on an overseas tour. It was
offered subjected to the disgrace of having
Robben Fleming, president of Brand - X
Fleming.
We must really be having an
..
To the Editor: not even enough to neglect the concert the Dismal Swamp State Normal
subcommittee might develop
(University crisis! Couldn't Ara Parsegian drive P
To avoid the "popularity Democrats were victorious in Vice MSU Orchestra presented just recently of Michigan), address us on Sunday, March
which included solos and concertos
the day? What is Woody Hayes d°ng_
contest" stigma attached to student President Gerald Ford's home district for 10.
Look for the green and wh.t*«
the first time in 62 years. So everyone says performed by several fine musicians. But How low can we go? The
only college You will be seeing
accessibility to SIRS forms, the you had to ignore the one outlet Michigan
sodks, folks!
"We've got democrats; no more Watergate graduation we will ever have, and we have dissatisfied Spartan. Go Greerv^ g ^
Educational Policies Committee like shenanigans.'* State's composers have for the
•
got to hear Robben Fleming flap his
Limit sp
should look into revamping the
forms to reflect a clearer evaluation
I do not think corruption is partisan
it does not get the chance to choose sides.
performance of their own works.
Perhaps you were not aware of the fact
wings. Lansing graduating*"
of an instructor and a course.
Over 4,000 students signed
We the people choose it — by our apathy,
our blinders and most of all, our belief.
that the concert was being held in
Erickson Hall Kiva. I doubt it. Posters End inhumane
or lose petitions asking that SIRS forms be
made
How long did the entire nation tenaciously
defend the plumbers, even allowing it
announcing the concert had been up for
close to two weeks prior to the event.
To the Editor:
The inhumane Harp seal hunt is about
Animal Welfare has asked| a'' ^btS»
available for student because "that's politics" — meaning its Could it be you were under the notion
to begin again this March people to write the Norwega fr
Today is the deadline for the inspection. This should have had acceptable because it has been done the musicians were eccentric recluses who
front in Canada.
on the Labrador
Kg him to stop the fur company
state legislature to pass a 55 m.p.h. before. did not want public recognition? This is a killing the seals.
some effect on the Academic Approximately 120,000 baby seals will
speed limit or face the loss of Council. If it has, it is not yet Well, I do not feel the Democrats are tragic stereotype, and I am sure you do be clubbed to death
by predominately
millions otf dollars in federal visible. any purer than the Republicans (contrary not support it. Musicians, like everyone
Norwegian furriers who take the fur and
A simple note asking ^ ,a.n^
to the view of most else, like to get credit when credit is due. the hunt and the killing w
highway aid. And the Senate and liberals). I think the leave the remains to rot on the ice.
Students and their whole system stinks, I will be looking forward to your article Many trick. Please address it ^
House are fighting about it. and until it becomes seals are still conscious while
representatives should voice their on the upcoming jazz concert which will they are International Fund f°r A mifl
impractical, unprofitable and being skinned and the mothers
Point penalties or no point concerns and the Academic Council unacceptable, corruption is bound to feature the MSU Jazz Ensemble and the are often P.O. Box 9605, Cleveland, Ohi
MSU lmprovisational Ensemble. I am sure
seen nuzling the still-warm corpses of for direct delivery, write T* '
penalties, the two houses must should heed their voices. If continue, though more hidden so as to their pups.
avoid another Watergate. you will not go too far out of your way to Ambassador, Hon. S. t
v)i tilt essence. slaughter once and for all. Brian
should tell them so. Economics 105 N. Wonders Hail
Davies of the International Fund for 323S.Hut>b»td
Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan
Friday, March 1, 1974 5
Protesters picket Cunningham's
GRAPES to show support for wine boycott
By RON HEBERT pledging not to buy or drink Gallo not just Cunningham's.
products. Among the protesters was folk singer
About 50 pickets paraded in front of The protesters are supporting the Phil Ochs, appearing this weekend at the
Cunningham's Drug Store at 101 E. Grand UFW's boycott against what they feel are Stables, who promised to contribute a few
River Ave. Thursday afternoon in the poor working conditions at the Gallo
support songs to Thursday's protest effort.
of the United Farm Workers Late in the afternoon the protesters
(UFW) winery in Modesto, Calif.
boycott of Gallo wines. The UFW accuses Gallo of paying poor spread out along both sides of Grand River
"The best way to make Gallo know we wages, spraying crops while workers are in Avenue and chanted boycott slogans
mean business is to convince the field and using child labor.
people not to against Gallo.
economically support their labor The workers are urging consumers to The protesters collected their signs and
practices," said David Schopick, the boycott Gallo products at all retail outlets, ended their protest for the day at 5 p.m.
UFW's East Lansing coordinator.
The group chose the Grand River
Avenue Cunningham's for its protest
because it is on a heavily traveled route
and it is close to campus, Schopick said.
Bridge gome
"Students are the main buyers of 'pop'
wines like Gallo's and Boone's Farm
brands," he said. "Students hate to be
short of world
made aware of what goes on in order to
make those wines." The game that was going to make 17 "The other three guys who were
playing
Glenn Asiala, asst. manager of MSU students world record holders broke had been there 16 hours and were
willing
Cunningham's, said that the chain's up Wednesday after 108 hours because to continue," Hendrickson lamented.
Detroit office has made no decision yet they couldn't find a fourth for bridge. "If we only could have found a fourth
whether to remain among Michigan's "I'm pretty annoyed," said Pete for one hour," sighed Bud Petcoff, 206
largest purchasers of Gallo wines. Hendrickson, 271 Abbot Hall, one of the Abbot Hall, freshman. "We could have
Participants in Thursday's protest organizers. gone on indefinitely.
carried the UFW's eagle insignia on The game in the lobby of Abbot Hall
placards urging passersby to boycott all ended at 8:30 a.m. Wednesday
morning The MSU students were trying to break
Gallo products. because one of the players had to take an the world's record bridge game of 176
Some boycott workers also circulated exam, and no one could be found to hours set in 1971 by students at Dundee
petitions taking the names of people replace him. University in Scotland.
SN Photo/John W. Dickson
Protesters picket in front of
Cunningham Drugstore Thursday.
[Ilsberg: statements of Nixon's
intain grounds for impeachment
Ellsberg also pointed DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau
I Daniel itsEllsberg said Thursday President Nixon's own out that the Vietnam War is not over
have contained enough grounds for his even though U.S. soldiers are not fighting there.
Bpeachment by the House of Representatives. Asked about the continued
military support for South
ixpect impeachment on the President's own Vietnam, he said: "I'm glad we stopped bombing with our LEW, I WANT TO 600P.. WELL 160TTA
ins," Ellsberg told a group of campus and local B52s. Now we must stop paying for the bombing." THANK YOU FOR HCLPIN6 6LAD TO DO IT, 6ET 60IN6 - I'M TENDIN6
ftorters prior to his speech at 8:15p.m. in the Auditorium. Ellsberg gained national fame in 1971 when he gave copies MB WORK OUT THESE RES/6- LAP/ARB YOU AS SOON BAR T0NI6HT. WE'VE 60T A
■ Ellsberg attacked the Watergate break-in and Nixon's aides of top secret government documents, the Pentagon Papers, to NATKW SPEECHES. tM SURE 60/N6 TO SHOU/ AS THBY 3/6 PARTY OF CONVENTION
HE'LL 60 FOR. ONB OF THEM.. THEM TO HIM ARE TYPED PEOPLE C0M/N6 IN FOR ONE
>rvly. national news media.
Asked what good the whole incident had / TODAY?, OF THEIR DRINKIN6 SPREES.
e haven't seen measures as extreme as the men were done, Ellsberg
said: "The public gained a
pable of," he said. "The men would do anything for their healthy skepticism from the result
of the Pentagon
Papers and the trial."
■The Watergate scandal sprang out of the 1968 Claiming he does not believe reports that apathy is
elections,
Isbcrg said. spreading across America, Ellsberg said he has had very warm
Watergate was obviously planned when the President and receptions everywhere he goes. Approximately 3,000 people
in bad turned out to hear Ellsberg speak at the Auditorium.
ere
shape from the narrow victory they had in
I flection before"' he said.
"Something like an executive
Referring to his current lecture tour, Ellsberg said: "My
lip was narrowly missed." speeches will, hopefully, cut by half the debts I have acquired
during the trial."
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Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan
Frid^.March|,|W
Win for Labor party seen in Britaj
as Wilson re-elected to Commons
LONDON (AP) - Harold Wilson's Labor party forged into Final vote tabulations are not expected until p ,
its usual initial lead in Britain's national election Thursday
with increased margins in some electoral districts imperiling " " " '
wm. r rom a nricp nf i. 5
Labor earlier in the
Prime Minister Edward Heath's grip on power. day, the betting
K now was I ,1to
Was ^vised
Wilson was re-elected to his House of Commons seat Friday
with almost twice as many votes as his Conservative opponent.
In favor of Labor.
7^
An upsurge in support for the middle-road Liberals At Conservative party
headquarters, the monri
Rep. Gerrit "Barney"
appeared, on the basis of first results, to be hurting the ruling somber, Party agents remained silent as the first n„ !***
Hasper, D Muskegon, hangs Conservatives more than the Laborites. were analyzed. 1 IIOW°f result.
the small loans bill in effigy Both developments in the nation's emergency ballot, seen
during a committee meeting together, led the British Press Assn., British Broadcasting Corp. Trouble loomed for Heath when
to discuss the bill in the commentators and other results of
experts to forecast a major upset in urban districts ,
state Capitol Thursday. the final result. two things.
- where
counting of votes is quick!!
suicKer - f11
Hasper also distributed
hypodermic needles and
paper money to newsmen
and onlookers and said
JMC sponso were
-The Laborites not only were holding their
increasing their margin of victory Thev al g,hol(1*t
Yorkshire district of Keighley from the
strnn..,,
"This is a heroin bill. It Co»servativ«
addicts people
them."
and kills
fine arts -The Liberals were
with greatly increased votes. In
showing up second
SN photo by Craig Porter Tory districts th?
Students and faculty will demonstrations
week.
throughout the S'ToHeSUb°r Whl" Ub°rdl*"k's
put together the first annual
Justin Morrill College Fine Arts Music, video and film,
Festival, beginning Sunday and several plays, poetry readings v r—J i wim an over all mum;. •
635-member House of Commons it must
running through March 9 in
Snyder-Phillips halls.
and dance exhibits are among
the activities scheduled during 318 places. It was risky, in the
fin.sh up
early sUgesof the
J
coumin
indicate the extent of the
Barbara Ward, JMC asst. the afternoons and evenings.
A flea market will be in the voting districts were redrawn since 1970,
pro-Labor swing becauTi*!
professor of fine arts, initiated
the festival three weeks ago halls too, for all those who like
and coordinated the efforts of to browse and shop for odds
JMC and Snyder-Phillips hall and ends. CENTRAL UNITED
students and residents. Some of the faculty METHODIST UNIVERSITY
members who will perform Across from the capitol
Continuous exhibits CHRISTIAN
including photography and musically are Ward, piano; Milt Sermon Topic: CHURCH
Sadat reopens relations
visual arts and crafts will be Powell, JMC professor of
displayed in the halls, lobbies history, piano; and James L. "Tender Loving Care" 310 N. Hagadorn
and cafeteria, along with other Goatley, JMC acting dean, Roij
by Study Period 10:00ti
French horn. Dr. Howard A. Lyman
R. Glen Wright, associate Worship • 11:00 Ail
Christian unit Singspiration - 7:00p*
between Egyptians, U.S.
professor of literature, will give Worship Services
a poetry reading. Youth Meeting • 7:00-
9:45 and 11:00
slates talk here a.m.
Transportation ProvidH,
Nursery Available Call 332-5193
The MSU chapter of Campus 485-9477
FROM WIRE SERVICES Crusade for Christ will sponsor
Israeli proposals for a Syrian front disengagement before he had
a lecture by William R. Bright
CAIRO, Egypt Proclaiming "a era." President Anwar discussed them with Syrian President Hafez Assad, who he is to
F^OKEiS3
pEOplES
— new
at 9 p.m. Sunday in Erickson
Sadat announced Thursday that he is resuming full diplomatic see in Damascus
tonight. Hall kiva.
relations with the United States and invited President Nixon to FIRST BAPTIST
Israel will propose to Kissinger today in Jerusalem that a Bright is the founder and
visit Egypt.
He added that Arab oil ministers will meet this month to
decide whether to lift the oil embargo against the United States.
With Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger at his side, Sadat
demilitarized zone be established between Israeli and
lines within the enclave of
the October war, reliable Israeli sources said
Thursday.
Syrian front
Syrian territory captured by Lsrael in
president of Campus Crusade
for Christ International. He is
the author of numerous
chuRch loterdcnominat tonal
4684 MARSH RO.
9:45 a.m. Bible Study
declared to newsmen: "As long as Dr. Kissinger is handling the The demilitarized zone, under the Israeli
articles, pamphlets and two 200 W. Grand River
plan, would be books, "Revolution Now!" and
whole thing, everything is ok," manned by United Nations emergency forces. On either side of it. at Michigan 11:00 a.m. Worship
"Come Help Change the
Kissinger was in Cairo to confer with Sadat on, among other the two armies would agree to "thin out" their forces
and
332-5073
Middle East topics, efforts to arrange negotiations between Isreael World." FIRST CHURCH OF 6:00 p.m. Praise Senia
armaments. Israel also reportedly would be willing to turn over to WORSHIP SERVICE
and Syria on disengagement of their Golan Heights forces. United Nations control the two Syrian CHRIST, SCIENTIST
outposts it seized atop 9:30 and 11:00 a.m. 7:30 p.m. College
Meanwhile, the International Red Cross Committee said in
Geneva, Switzerland Thursday that it has received no request to
Mount Hermon during the October
fighting.
Sadat told newsmen he would deal with the
problem of further
UNIVERSITY (irand River "The Masters Mark" Fellowship
visit Israeli war prisoners in Syria.
A spokesman for the all - Swiss committee said its Geneva
Israeli withdrawal in the Sinai "when the time is
adding that his main immediate concern is the Syrian front.
appropriate." REFORMED at Collingwood h. ntrai.ee
Hast I,anting
by Rev. Robertson
CHURCH SCHOOL
Youth Minister:
David Daku
headquarters is in constant radio contact with all Red Cross Sadat also said Washington has agreed to aid
.Middle East representatives, including a delegation in Damascus, technical assistance in certain stages of
Egjpt "with
clearing the Suez Canal."
CHURCH 9i30 »nd 11:00 A.M.
Crls through Adults
University Students
but that it had received no confirmation of the agreement for A U.S. Army and Navy demolition team
already is in Egypt Discussion Group
visits. 11:00 A.M.
checking ways of defusing mines and unexploded ammunition in Alumni Memorial Chapel
Kissinger surprised observers by discussing with Sadat some the canal, which has been closed since 1967.
(1 block east of
Auditorium) Sun Jay School to age 20
I0:30 a.m.
9:30-Study Groups For
Adults and Sunday School
Wcdnesda y E vening Meeting EPISCOPAL CHURCH
PHIL OCHS I am trying
10:30-Coffee Hour
11:00 -Worship
For rides call 355-0155
8:00 p. m.
Reading Room
located in Church.
SERVICES
Phone 351-7160
university
seventh-day
APPEARING NOW Af THE STABLES to bribe you OPEN adventist CHURCH
after 9:00 a.m. Sunday
6:00 Weekdays V 5p.m. ALL SAINTS CHURCH
PLEASURES OF THE HARBOR with -
Evening worship Mon.. Tua. Thurs.. Fri.
evenings 7 9 p.m.
337-1430 or 882-0805
N uncertainty, Tom Stark, Pastor
Fred Herwalt, Associate Pastor
800 Abbott Road VOICE OF PROPHECY
The Rev. W. A. Eddy, rector
with BIBLE LECTURES
$J79
Kathy Lang, Staff and visit and
8:00 • Holy Communion Now In Progress
use the
danger, Associate 10:00 Morning Worship
-
Every Fri., Sat.. Sun. &
7:30 P.M.
with ALUMNI CHAPEL Speaker: Joe Melashen
defeat. UNIVERSITY
ON A & M RECORDS §§
*' Jorge
luis
HOURS: MON.-FRI. 9:30 AM- 9:00 PM
borges BAPTIST CHURCH 5:00 p.m. • Holy
That's mostly what you II Communion
SATURDAY 9:30 AM - 6:00 PM find if you commit your 4608 S. Hagadorn
SUNDAY NOON- 6:00 PM life to the millions in the
developing nations who Worship Service: 10:00 a.m.
MORNING SERVICE - 10:00 a.m.
cry out in the hunger of Sunday School: 11:15 a.m.
their hearts That and Guest Minister
for Bus Service Call :
fulfillment too...with the Clarence Boomsma
351-4144 or 351-6494
EVENING SERVICE - 7:00 p.m.
COLUMBAN John Walden, Pastor "Faith And Prayer"
iscount records FATHERS
Over 1,000 Catholic mission¬
"... for the word of God, and
the testimony of Jesus Christ."
Visit
open
Rev. Hoksbergen speaking
our new Student Center
daily 9 a.m. to 11
Lunch Wednesday
p.m.
401 E. CRAND RIVER 351-8460 ary priests at work mainly in
the developing nations. 12:30- 1:30
We've been called by many
names "foreign dogs"...
-
EAST LANSING For Transportation
"hope-makers"
ist criminals". .
... "capital¬
"hard-nosed
RINITY CHURCH Call 351-9059
realists"... or 351-6360
841 Timberlane (across from
WANTED: 11.000
If you are between the ages 9:30 Education
of 17 & 25 and are interested 351-8200 11:00 Worship Hubbard Hall)
in becoming a Catholic Mis¬ W. E. Michael 7:00 Fellowship
sionary Priest, write for: Pastor 'AND TERRACE
lA TELEPHONE
STUDENT CENTER "'VFR
TTUTT
r ±t jlh. 16-PAGE
booklet
A Tells if
BOOHS South LUTHERAN
Baptist Church
1518 S. Washington Lansing
MICHIGAN BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY in
CONTROL AUTHORITY is sponsoring a telephone book drive
and March 11.
conjunction with the WASTE
between March 1
Sunday - 7:00 p.m. Campus Ministries
Dr. Fred Brown
from Chattanooga, Tenn. MARTIN LUTHER university
TO ALL FACULTY AND STAFF: We ask
you to take your old office telephone
Columban Fathers
Speaking Nightly at 7:30 CHAPEL lutheran church
books to your central department office between March 1 and March 3 thru March 10 alc-lca
March 11. We 1 St. LCMS
also ask you to bring your old telephone books from home Columbans, Neb. 68056
and drop them off at
I I am interested in becoming a
444 Abbott Road 1020 S. Harrison
one of our on - campus
recycling stations. Fellowship 332-0778 332-2559
| Catholic Missionary Priest. Please 9:4&-A.M
and refreshments Pastor David Kruse 6 full and
TO OFF - CAMPUS AND MARRIED HOUSING STUDENTS: We
urge you to
| send me a copy of your booklet. College Bible Class
8:30 p.m.
start serving the camp
bring your old telephone books from home and drop them off at one of our I in the fireside room.
in the fireside room WORSHIP HOURS WORSHIP H0U"s
conveniently located recycling stations on I
campus.
9:00 a.m. 8:30 a.m. Worship
| Name Sunday 11:00 a.m. 1st & 3rd Sundays Communion 9:30 a.m. Education
2nd & 4th Sundays Matins 10:45 Worship
| Address
@
Dr. Fred Brown
10:00 a.m. Education Hour Special
l„City
Michigan Bell I Dr. Howard F. Sugden, Pastor James Emery,Youth Pastor 11:00 a.m. Communion
9:00 p.m. Communjpn
at appointed houft
Wednesdays
| Zip FREE BUS SERVICE Morning and Evening at University Lutheran
Call 482-0754 for information Both churches open for study
8:30 «m tn 11:00 P.m. _
Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan
Friday, March 1, 1974 7
RHA chooses two new officers
By BOB OURLIAN
The election marked the
State Newi Staff Writer end of a year in which
maintained respectability" in the RHA Both Schafer and
face of two vital issues - Schlager have been involved with RHA for a
I Residence Halls Assn. representative who actively opposed overcrowding and the mandatory $1.50 residence hall year.
Limitation of the mandatory $1.50 residence hall dues last ex •
president Gene Buckner. dues, said In other
business, a constitution ratification vote on Monday
will be held in all residence
| was elected RHA's new president Wednesday and says he ballots and a closed
session, in which the threes meal hours.
hall cafeterias during lunch and dinnerv
■favors the dues system. candidates, guests and the press were escorted out v
of the room
t|,n Schafer, 339 Abbot Hall, junior, was elected by a two •
were required to elect the new RHA officers Residence Hall residents are needed to work
Is majority of 21 representatives at the four - hour meeting, the polls at $1.50
fcafcr said Thursday that while he opposed the dues system of^streaSUrer a"d secretary of RHA will be selected by the per hour compensation.
None of the revisions in the constitution are
Ke start, he now thinks it "has done more good than harm"
Buckner pointed to said. radical, Buckner
¥ seeing it in operation and will make no effort to discontinue overassignment as an issue that RHA Don Schmidt, Asst.
should take action on in the manager of residence halls operations, told
upcoming year. Saying that RHA RHA representatives that a freeze
should be "right on top of the would be placed on guaranteed
pthy Schlager, 305 W. Shaw Hall, junior, was elected RHA's situation from the word go,"
Buckner advocates an singles from March I until March 28 in order to reserve
resident. antioverassignment policy. halls for incoming students. space in
fcproved communication with students living in halls will be Also, the new standing committee on
Jnajor project of RHA in the coming year, Schafer said. reports to vice president for student
housing options, which However, if a student wishes to move to another room or hall,
IjhalVr said other areas of RHA's juridiction are strong, but in residence halls should initiate
affairs, Eldon Nonnamaker, he will have until March 15.
"there's always room for improvement."
alternative living conditions, Buckner
flexibility and variability in So if a student's roomate moves out the
said. option to pay $50 and
have the room as a guaranteed
single is not available.
349-2698
'
IMPERIAL GARDEN
1Ian to break Featuring Gourmat
"
food from All of China.
Iso Polynesian drinks and American
Food.
Lshington star-news Chrysler.
up SPECIAL LUNCHEON $1.75
(soup, entree, tea & cookie)
FAMILY DINNER (4 course)
FOR TWO $9.00
"There was
subcommittee', which is Asher's remarks came on the aimed at restructuring the
(each additional dinner $4.50)
pSHINGTON - A special virtually currently investigating third day of congressional
is necessary, some economists
• CARRY OUT •PARTIES
e Dept. task force came unanimous agreement ... that monopoly power in the auto hearings into the size and
present auto companies into
say, in order to create new car WELCOMED^
ilmost unanimous the domestic auto
industry smaller, less concentrated firms • LUNCHEON COCKTAILS
not
was industry, with copies of the anitcompetitive power of the have been presented to manufacturing firms that
|ment in the late 1960s only structured like a internal Justice Dept. memos. would respond to public 0 Grand River, Okemos
shared major auto firms. Congress. Okemos Exit off 1-96
a suit to break up major monopoly but it desires and technological
Ahser told In earlier hearings, two plans r Meridian Mall
Jiakers should be brought performed like one," Asher Hart that he Breaking up the companies needs.
e department's antitrust told the Senate antitrust and eventully "inherited the
lion. Congress was told monopoly subcommitee, automobile file with
chaired by Sen. Philip Hart, instructions to put together a
|sday.
jt a formal case
limended
was never
to the attorney
D-Mich.
In addition, Asher said,
systhesis of all previous work
and
suit."
a recommendation of a SPORTING
tl. despite the strong staff
jort for such a move,
■ding to Thomas R. Asher,
lserved on the task force.
while approaches differed, "all
who worked on the case
recommended
This he did, Ahser said, in
1969, when he recommended a
GOODS
a major case which would result in the
■ her, in testimony structural suit" against
■red for a rongr—*wmal
country's having a minimum of
automakers, with particular six to eight comparable auto
Committee,
t
said that the
attorney general then
Barge of the anittfu&t
emphasis on General Motors,
the largest.
companies.
But Richard
ALL SKI EQUIPMENT
McClaren, who
Bon, Donald F. Turner, Turner, who had created the was by then in
charge of
1 away from authorizing
feu it, which would have
task force, did nothing with its
recommendations while at the
Justice Dept., Asher said.
antitrust, "would not even
schedule a meeting to discuss
the recommendations," Asher
NOW ON
J aimed at breaking up
Bra! Motors, Ford and Asher agreed to supply the said.
SALE -
FAMOUS MAKER
ski jackets
OUR ENTIRE STOCK MC HAS AN EXPERT SKI SHOP.
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|Bud Drinkers, can
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Balph bought
wince he
a 6-pak of Budweiser- and invited four friends over to share it. HEAD GK03 REG. $12000 NOW s69"
bought,
frien he returned he expected to have two cans to himself, but unfortunately
to the refrigerator for his second, he found it missing. So he
Dsked who took it. A1 said,"Joe drank it." Joe said,"Dan drank it." Dan said,
■ ■Joe, that's a lie!" And Bill
said, "I didn't drink it." If only one of these
HEAD C0MP REG. $19000 NOW $116"
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HEAD YANKEE REG. o
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•JJllinSjB OlUjl S83| pue 8ui)|uup
N 3j°iu juads
3abi| p|noD Xaq? 's^jed-g a.\y iqJJnoq p«M Md|BH JI :lBJ0W
ON ALL CROSS COUNT 5002 W.SAGINAW
aq pjnoM luauiojujs s.ubq X/uo uaq? aouis 'jatpjBus 'pny am si |jiy
(Just East of Lansing Mall)
»lsno!A(10 ana} 3JB sjuamaiBjs s.ujg pus s.aop uaq* P!P UBQ no^ J!
TUV
s)uauid}n}s s,uBfi pus s,|v ua4? <0of M! MUW n0i^ JI "®njl ®JB 20% Open 10
482-3211
a.m. 9 p.m. Daily
|}U3mo)B;s s,|||g pun s,ubq 'auo X"}|in9 aqi s| iv atunssc noX jj :H3MSNV 12-5 Sunday
8 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan
Frid>y'M®*i,iJ
Allison plays po
drew hoots of appreciation blues purist on
By DAVE Di MAR UNO tremendously powerful, Allison thought nothing of edge, but it
memorable show. while the mertibers of his band should be remembered that the
State News Reviewer jumping offstage during his
Beginning his set with a performance of "The Thrill is just watched on. shaking their 34-year-old guitarist is unique
"People call me the both in his
showtune-like introduction, Gone." He walked around in heads occasionally. Finally, he relatively young age
youngest black blues returned back onstage and and his ability. His
musician-and let me tell you,
Allison picked at his guitar and the audience playing several discipline,
seemed to be getting himself stunning lead breaks, while two performed the rock and roll coupled with his lack of
I'm proud to wear that
crown." set for the night's bluesy steps behind him was his road classic "Whole Lotta Shakin," musical restrictions, make him
occasion he put
his mouth
1 ~0n '
and eventually closed his show a formidable
and used h ®
manager, following with 50
his
So said Luther Allison after
mood. Noticeable at
the
once was
guitarist's skill in dynamics. feet of guitar cord in hand. In a with "Little Red Rooster."
guitarist on any
level-blues, rock or otherwise.
Pk-k notes, a | , mK>l
appearance Wednesday It was refreshing to see that Allison's accessibility is indeed
As he played he continually somewhat amusing manner, be||evi> I
night at the Brewery. Allison Allison was capable of a bit to his ate (h •
reset his contrpls from a deep Allison seemed tQ be a strolling advantage.
played razor-sharp, electric
blues to a considerably small,
mellow bass sound to a troubador of the blues, as he more than a constant 12 bar Two numbers were
played
stri"K" Allison
*ceived by the
i "
whining high-pitched treble spun about, unmiked. singing
blues. No doubt his from Allison's newest ,
enthusiastic crowd that night, album, audience.
that sounded remotely like the and reacting with the audience. showmanship and "tolerance" which was released last week
all the while tearing the place
B.B. King of old, as did Rushing back and jumping for other musical forms are on Motown's Gordy records. Wednesday's ,h _
apart with the sheer power of
Allison's picking on occasion. the Brewery bar, Allison enough to set the standard Called "Luther's Blues," the
*h.own '^1 Luther ii*
his blues guitar. The lack of on Went will ,ake him fw
Allison's ability to switch
people present did little to
deter Allison and his band from a screaming blues lead
'Serpico' explosive, superb film;
from run to an extremely soft,
putting on a
melodic solo passage kept the
audience on its toes for the
entire night.
Pacino deserves award for
actingI
The band behind Allison
Luther blue was, unfortunately, not up to
par with the guitarist himself,
Luther though organist Paul White put
Allison, a fine
in few
these hearings and to his ultimate resignation from the fore,
bluesman
a
occasionally
at the age of 34, "Serpico" begins with an intense close up of th
interesting solos. Bassist Jeff character's blood
took a small Brewery crowd soaked face
Aldrich and drummer Bob Hard - hitting, brutal, but expertly done, director Sidney
• as he is
being rushed t„l
hospital. Quite quickly the audience learns that the
by surprise Wednesday Richie were certainly Lumet's latest film "Serpico"comes straight from the headlines have been done by members of the police force
shootjj
evening with a couple of fine competent, but nowhere near of New York City. Just a few years ago. New York City detective themselves J
sets of ratsy blues. as exciting as the main Serpico's popularity was at low ebb by this time In flaikH
man Frank Serpico became page one news when he appeared as the
form, Lumet then takes the audience to the
State News photo
himself. chief witness in the Knapp Commission hearings on corruption man's career, from his graduation from the
beginnings ofdl
And the main man was within the polic force. What Lumet's film does is intelligently tell police academy tol
transfers to the Bureau of Criminal
by John Harrington something to see. the story of the events which led to Serpico's participation in Intelligence, plainctaj
detail and finally the narcotics division.
to
niroughout,Serpico|!l
uphold and actually live the idealistic vision of a rap's lift J
he has, a vision in which honesty and
integrity
Ochs'new ofsong full
cornerstones. But as he quickly learns from one of
"Let's face it, who can trust a cop who doesn't take
what Serpico finds is a system full of graft and
reaches the highest levels of law enforcement.
his pirtj
moneyed
corruption J
By JUNE DELANO Everywhere he goes, Serpico runs into a brick wall of cau—
State News Reviewer lieutenants, inspectors and commissioners who give him"3
Phil Ochs, appearing at the Stables tonight and Saturday, feeble excuse after another and refuse to act on his inform)
released a new single Tueidav, which reaffirms him as the best of Finally, having developed a bad reputation as "an honest u.
the political satirists in folk music. Serpico reveals all he knows to the New York Times nhinH
behind the collection *u_
the company ,
began Alice Baber and a Thursday the collection contains flower
and highly
A 17th
popular portraits. Hl At \ 1
lecture here by painter Elaine still lifes and the orderly work
-
century Italian
•
woman, Artemisia Gentileschi, ROY ROGERS-DALE EVANS
de Kooning. a viewer might hastily brand HOPALONG CASSIDY
Barbara Braathen, instructor painted a beautiful, but
of 20th century art history,
"exclusively feminine." vicious, "Judith Beheading BUSTER CRABBE and FUZZY
"But no one has painted
and Baber will discuss the show Holofernes," typical of TEXAS RANGERS
more delicate flowers than the women's art.
and the new role of big
post - Impressionist Odilon
corporations as art patrons on Redon
Representing many artistic Saturday • march 2
(a man) or more styles of the past 20 years,
WKAR-TV. ordered designs than Piet artists in the CIBA
CARTOON NOSTALGIA I
Channel 23 will broadcast ■ GEIGY
the discussion at 10 p.m.
Mondrian," she adds. exhibition include Jehan
Saturday and 8:30 Shahly, Alice Mason, March
at p.m.
Avery, Imogen Cunningham, POPEYE
Sunday. PORKY PIG
"It's good that business Netherlands group Louise Bourgeois, Joan
Mitchell, Charmoin von. DAFFY DUCK
corporations are becoming art BUGS BUNNY
in concert Wiegand, Betty Parsons and
collectors and
sense of
taking some tonight Linda Lindeberg. ROADRUNNER
responsibility for WOODY WOODPECKER
culture," Braathen points out. Witherspoon Gallery at the
The Netherlands Wind University of North Carolina TWEETYand SYLVESTER
"The church used to Ensemble will YOSEMITE SAM
be heard in will be the o
patronize the arts, then the only other location
state, but since about 1800
concert at 8:15 tonight at the where the collection will be PEPE LePEW &
Auditorium. This concert is displayed before it is returned
there have been no patrons
presented as part of the to corporation
except private collectors." headquarters.
Lecture-Concert Series. Kresge gallery hours are 9
The Baber • Braathen dialog The ensemble is made
up of a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through
will also touch on the role of 17 young musicians from shows: 8:00 & 10:30 - union ballroom
the woman's Friday, 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday
liberation various orchestras in the and 1 to 4 tickets: one night-75C two nights-$1.00
movement in making it easier p.m. Saturday and
Netherlands. It is under the Sunday. available now at uab office or at door
for women to exhibit their art uab 2nd floor /students
direction of Edo de Waart. union-355-3355
and to become leaders in art
They will play selections by sign up now for
movements.
Gounod, Mozart, Dvorak and spring craft lessons!!!
Represented in the CIBA -,
D'Indy.
GEIGY exhibition are 43
Tickets are availabe at the
artists ranging in age from their
MSU Union Ticket Office.
Artist in motion NOW
I Alice Baber, New York abstractionist painter, has some of her work on SHOWING
display at the Kresge
■ gallery. The exhibit is sponsored by the CIBA-GEIGY Pharmaceutical Corp. She will discuss
■ the new role of corporations as art patrons on WKAR-TV
Saturday and Sunday. The Kresge
I show opens Saturday. (See article for details).
State News photo by Dale
Harpers , &
bsFiy a
=nc$unter Kite
VISIT
OUR NEW
FED€RJCO
FELLINI
ADULT BOOK-
v
STORE LOCATED
AT THE
THEATRE In the world of film, Federico Fellini is recog¬
WE CARRY A nized as a master craftsman. One of the few di¬
VAST SELECTION rectors who lets his camera ipeak for him Fel-
OF MAGAZINES, Rni manages to create a never-ending kaleidoi-
BOOKS, FILMS, scope of mood, symbol, and imagery - imagery
AND NOVELTIES as distinctive as Fellini's special feeling for
OF ALL KINDS. beauty in a desolate human landscape. The
world seen in Fellings films is a highly personal
ITS THE BEST
one, one in which fantasy and reality, self and
IN ADULT
ADVEN¬ spectacle exist in an interchangeable form. A
fondness for grotesque faces, vivid explorations
TURE. into *the subconscious, and recurring baroque
designs within a circus-like atmosphere are the
| BOX OFFICE OPENS AT 6 30 SHOW STARTS DUSKI
ADULTS
ADMISSION
$5.00 Couple
unmistakable elements that characterize the
FRANKie 'ANNeire' ONLY
$3.00 Person &
style of Federico Fellini.
$2.00 with
AV31QN- FUNICGIK) RATED X Student I.D. March 28 1952 186 minutes!
WHITE SHEIK
fACH PARTY
SHOWTIMES
12 NOON TO MIDNIGHT SUN.-THURS
SPECIAL MIDNIGHT SHOW FRI.-SAT. April 2 1954 (107 minutes)
aSss1 LA ST11ADA
April 5 1957 (110 minutes)
NIGHTS
OF CA1H1UA
BLUE! April 10 1963 1135 minutes)
[PROGRAM INFORMATION 332-6944
TODAY OPEN 6 PM First time in America «>/2
Shows 7:00 & 9:40 17 Players from Holland's Major Orchetras April 16 1965 i137 minutes)
Sat. Sun. Wed. shows
1:30-4:15-7:00-9:30 NETHERLANDS JULIET OF
WIND ENSEMBLE THE SPIRITS
April 30 1969 (127 minutes)
FELLINI
SATYllICON
May 2 1971 (90 minutes)
THE CLOWNS
DIRECTOR'S
PROGRAM
GOUNOD Petite Symphonie
CHOICE
MOZART Serenade No. 12, K. 388 SPRING '74
D'INDY Chanson et Danses
Featuring the Films of Fellini
DVORAK Serenade in D minor Series tickets are on sale now
FRIDAY, MARCH 1 at 8:15 P.M. at the Union Ticket Office
WllllAM PETER BLATTyS in the University Auditorium $5.00 for 7 films
1
THE EXORCIST
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Tickets For Friday & Saturday Eve. On Sale in advance!
10 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan f1"day. March |
Limited iAIUHUAY.MARCHT
Engagement!
Queen of TV comedies
ends 23 years of series Jeremiah
Johnson"
A SYDNEY POLLACK FILM
By KATHY ESSELMAN to get out of the house, she summed up the frustration many
State News Reviewer women felt when they were forcibly thrust back into the home
Lucy is leaving. Lucille Ball, first lady of TV comedy, has
after World War II. The man
starred on the CBS television network for 23 years. "1 Love Ball and Arnaz retired "I Love Lucy" as a regular series but
periodically updated it with specials until their divorce. The who \
Lucy" premiered in 1951.
At the end of this season, she will retire her latest series original series has been in syndication ever since.
"Here's Lucy." This will end the longest run in television history In 1962, Ball premiered in "The Lucy Show," a solo effort,
for this star of three series. portraying a widow ill - adapted for survival in the modern wilds.
She is the last of the great comedians nurtured by Bill Paley, In 1968, she changed format and added her two children, Luci The film
chairman of CBS television, since the early days of radio. Edgar Arnaz and Desi Arnaz Jr.
Bergen and Charlie McCarthy, Jack Benny. Red Skelton, Eve
Desi Arnaz Jr. has since left the series. Ball herself decided she destined to be a
wanted time to promote her new film "Mame." According to Les ST. JOHN STUDENT CENTER 327
Arden in "Our Miss Brooks," Freeman Gosden and Charles M.A C
Correll in "Amos and Andy"-all represented CBS in the ratings Brown of the New York Times, she will continue to do specials classic! FREE COFFEE & SOME
MUNCHIES
for CBS, and may do a new series after a while. SPONSORED BY ST. JOHN'S
STUDENT CENTEo
race. This incomparable array of clowns and comedians $1.00
guaranteed CBS ratings supremacy in the Golden Age of radio
Brown said Ball was to CBS what Milton Berle was to NBC UN.ON ACTIVITIES RnLT*
and the early days of television. during the early 1950s. She is credited with winning an audience STARTS TUESDAY
for CBS and making that network competive with NBC when "THE LAST DETAIL"
More clown than comedienne, Ball dominated"I Love Lucy"
Berle was at the height of his popularity.
with her genius for wacky httmor. She epitomized the war
between the sexes as week after week Lucy and Ethel waged war Tonight at 7:15 and 9:20
After purchasing Arnaz's shares in Desilu, their production Saturday and Sunday:
against Richy and Fred, their respective spouses. Desi Arnaz 1:00, 3:0S, S: 10. 7:15
company, Ball succeeded him as president. Under her aegis.
supported, but never overpowered her as her hapless Cuban Desilu sold such programs as "Mission: Impossible," "Mannix"
and 9:20
spouse, Ricky Ricardo. and "Star Trek." In 1967, Charles Bluhdorn acquired Desilu for
With her sidekick Ethel, played by Vivian Vance, Lucy his Gulf & Western Industries and merged it with Paramount
laid waste to her husband's nightclub, destroyed her stomach and
a chocolate factory in an effort to get a job outside her home and
Pictures, situated on a neighboring lot. Ball personally realized
approximately $10 million worth of Gulf & Western stock from
played havoc with the lives of guest celebrities. Lucy epitomized the transaction. It was the end of an era, when individuals For consenting
the flaky female who wreaked havoc and hilarity.
schooled and involved in the creation of television series ceased to
Ball created Lucy to be a woman in need of a keeper. Lucy got
"a adults only!
shut in shower stalls, barricaded out of her kitchen and produce them. unique // v/
imprisoned anywhere. Her boss deserved a Purple Heart for Her sale of Desilu marked the
employing her, and in "I Love Lucy" her husband deserved same businessmen and lawyers figured
beginning of a long period when and often stunning 2 special denmark showings
the odds. Series were created by
for living with her. Omniverous, addlepated and impecunious.
Lucy was to women what Jack Benny's comic character was to
computers and accountants to comform to the needs of specific spectacle! demoniac mas¬ at a special offer -
demographic groups.
skinflint millionaires.
Ball wrung out of reality what was funny and raised it to the
Not until Bud Yorkin and Norman Lear came
with "All in the Family" was the importance of
on the scene
ques and blasphemous orgies- Two for the price of one.
level of the ridiculous. She epitomized a time, the '50s, and a the individual
place in time, when the role of women was changing fester than
creator ■
producer given adequate recognition as an essential asa gumpse of hell, it is superb¬
people could absorb that change. While Amanda Blake played a
elemeht in the creation of a TV series. Today Only!
woman as she could be in "Gunsmoke," Ball played a woman as
Ball has impressed her image upon the television industry as a ly frighteningly effective."
she was in the early '50s- pushed md pinioned by society. performer and an executive. She is one of the immortals. Like the
Party Girls
In "I Love Lucy," Ball portrayed a housewife, ill - prepared to last of the dinosaurs, she is the last of the great comics who and Rear Entry
established CBS as a network of entertainers. "ken russell's turbulent movie on¬
efficiently run a house, helpless outside it. In her hapless forays Starts tomorrow
slaught-he has brewed his own Saturday,March 2
'russell's inferno: brilliance Young In Love
MSU orchestra sets ^.ASSOCIATION OF BLACK SOCIAL WORKERS^ is there with harrowing and Two In Love
effect."--
CUl MACAllNl
Daily: 9 am - 4 am Sun: 9 am -12 midnite
2400 N. East Street
concert for Sunday
372-7080
The MSU Symphony Orchestra will present its winter-term
concert at 4 p.m. Sunday in Fairchild Theater.
The orchestra will be conducted by guest conductor Redentor
Romero, the director of the national philharmonic orchestra of
the Philippines.
The orchestra will play selections by Rossini. Mozart and
Tchaikovsky. Douglas Cambell will perform Mozart's "French
Hom Concerto No. 2."
The free concert is open td the public
at
JGRI6/
nvcNgan (lata university
FIRST EASTERN TOUR
Denver
Symphony
Orchestra
BRIAN PR IESTM AN, Conducting
STEPHEN MANES, Pianist
The Denver Symphony Orchestra, under the
innovative leadership of the pre-eminent Bri-
tish\conductor, Brian Priestman, has created
a musical renaissance in the midst of the Colo¬
rado Rockies. This MSU debut is presented
just prior to debut appearances at the Ken¬
nedy Center and Carnegie Hall in the Festival
of International Orchestras.
PROGRAM
WAGNER Prelude to "Die Wleistersinger"
SCHUMANN Piano Concerto in A minor
VAUGHAN WILLIAMS Symphony No. 8
R.STRAUSS "Don Juan"
Wednesday, March 6, at 8:15 p.m.
inthe University Auditorium
Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan
Friday, March 1, 1974
SMALL THINGS MAR PERFORMANCE
Love fully explored by Camelot
By KATHY ESSELMAN
State News Reviewer
finest scores, "Camelot" has
shining moments as one of the
love destroys the Round Table.
Lancelot, Roddy McDowall interpreted Lancelot as an
cast
the last act, but he encouraged
The evil manifested in
last of the serious musicals. played Mordred. The part of ungainly, unworldly innocent Raitt and Fodor to prowl too
A shining moment riven Mordred's manipulation of the Arthur was tailored for Burton,
Lerner and Loewe's reach who falls victim to much in their
Ljth darkness, "Camelot,"
exceeded their grasp in this
circumstances provides a brilliant Shakespearean
temptation
in the form of Guinevere. A
opening
numbers.
■presented Wednesday in the complex work. Arthur,
material for this powerful
performer. He had to carry the charming portrayal, it seemed The lighting plan and set were
■Auditorium as part of the Guinevere and
work.
last act single - handed. He was in
[lecture concert series, Lancelot, the The original
more spirit with White's adequate, but the costumes
•
most famous Broadway superb and lit up the stage with Lancelot than the plastic
Intended the limits of the
literature,
triangle in English
appear here fully
production was dogged by a pyrotechnic
display of acting. prettiness embodied by Goulet
were shoddy.
This proves again that an
■musical theater. It represents misfortune, and had an John Raitt, who played in the original
rounded. The devotion and stage version.
I Alan Jay Lerner and Frederick love Lancelot and Guinevere
unfinished look. Richard Arthur in Wednesday's
interesting book and a fine
■ Loewe's most ambitious work. Burton playfed Arthur, Julie
Christopher Hewitt directed musical score can survive
I Based upon T. H. White's feel for Arthur and his love for production, is an excellent with some
intelligence, but his almost anything.
Andrews played Guinevere, musical comedy performer. He
them is fully explored as this interpretation relied heavily on
■adaptation of the Arthurian Robert Uoulet played has performed credibly in such Moss Hart's original
vcle "The Once and Future
IKmg." it concentrates upon
works as "Pajama Game" and
"Annie Get Your Gun,"
did very well with
staging. He
staging in (The Original^
basic contradiction
civil law and
creating the lead role in Shaw Hall
ween
^individual need.
"Pajama Game" and playing Recitals set
modern legalistic
opposite Mary Martin in the
televised version of "Annie Get
Coffeehouse
rpretation replaces Ypur Gun." He also created on weekend
iMallory's Christian approach to the role of Billy Bigelow in Sat. March 2 8:00 p.m.
■the Arthurian cycle and
■Tennyson's" social idealistic
"Carousel," for which he won
the New York Drama Critics
Pianist Deborah S. Thrane
will appear in a recital 2
p.m.
Outstanding Local Talent
OPEN
24 hrs.
GRAND OPENING !
■approach. Award as best actor. His Saturday in the Music Building
I The clarity and sharp
■poignancy of the ideas put in
singing in "Camelot" was auditorium. She will play
selections by Bach, Beethoven
Free Refreshments.
ZODIAC 2000
excellent, however, he could
■ "Camelot" a resiliency that
■makes it the most interesting
not sustain the demands on his
acting. The second act puts
and Ravel.
Tenor Charles S. Fickeau ADULT THEATRE
■of their works. It should will appear in a senior recital 4
superhuman demands upon a The finest in Adult Entertainment"
■outlast the surface elegance of performer, and Raitt was not p.m. Saturday in the Music
I"My Fair Lady" and the Building auditorium. He will
nexpert "Paint Your Wagon."
equal to these demands.
Joleen Fodor, Guinevere, sing pieces by Richard Strauss, 3 Big Adult Hits
[incorporating one of their performed credibly, but she Schubert, Brahms, Vaughn,
hewed a bit too close to Williams and Britten. 1. 69 SUNSET STRIP
Andrew's phrasing in musical Clarinetist Anne Lofgren 2. THE GIGOLO AND THE MAID
will perform in a graduate
numbers. She and the director 3 LIVE FLOOR SHOW
recital at 2 p.m. Sunday in the
apparently gave little thought
to an individual approach to Music Building auditorium. She
will play works by Mozart, UNION 3-7-9-11-1
the role.
Penderecki, Poulenc and ACTIVITIES BOARD "Never Fear, the Entrance is in the Rear."
William Covington,
Brahms. FLIGHTS OFFICE
3214 N. EAST ST.
MON.-FRI. 1-5 P.M. Phone 3714464
ALSO AVAILABLE
INTERNATIONAL ID'S
YOUTH HOSTEL CARDS
12 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, Mar •
1974
Records certain to be broken ENERGY
a
& 1||(
symDoiium
here in conference track meet LIVE AT KELLOG
AND TELECAST ON
CLOSED CIRCUIT
AUDITORIUM
CHANNEL 2
FRIDAY, MARCH 1
"If everybody has conceded
the triple jump in anticipation Jim Green. Durkin has run times of 4:00.7
By GARYSCHARRER us the title, I'll take it and
of a record jump by Illinois Purdue's Jeff Bolin has and 8:39.3, respectively, this
State News Sports Writer won't even come," Bell
freshman Charlton Ehizuelen. registered a long jump of 25' The meet marks are
Several meet records are
almost certain to be broken
The Spartan pit had
extended only 54 feet and
11 1/4" this season and could
pass the 25' 7" jump of
year.
4:01.5 and 8:43.2.
TTie Spartans premier sprinter
laughed a few days before the
meet's opening. "I think we Program
have better team balance than
Ehizuelen has already soared Indiana's Greg Bell. That meet Marshall Dill has already won 9:00
today and Saturday as Big Ten any other team, but team
a.m. Auditorium, Kellogg Center
teams converge here for the 53' 11 3/4" this season. The standard is the oldest in the Big two consecutive Big Ten 300 •
balance sometimes doesn't
64th annual indoor track and former Nigerian national Ten book. yard dash titles and is favored show up as much in the Big Presiding: Dr. Anne C. Garrison
field meet. champion is a cinch to break Illinois, along with for a third. Dill broke his own Business Law and Office
Ten meet as in a dual meet.
Six performances earlier this the record of 52 feet Wisconsin and MSU will world record at the Spartan Administration
"I think there is some
season have passed the existing established in the 1972 meet provide the major competition Relays this season with a:29.3 ADDRESS:
for the meet's favorite and awfully good talent around the Energy, Ecology and Economics
Big Ten meet marks and some by Wisconsin's Pat Onyango. clocking and could erase his
Kim Scott of Wisconsin has defending champion, Indiana. :29.6 meet record in league, a lot of teams have Dr. Herman E. Koenig
duplications of these feats are super individuals but lack
vaulted 16 feet, 3 inches in the The Illini will have ace distance Saturday's finals. Electrical Engineering and Systems Science
expected. depth across the board," Bell
Officials of the Jenison pole vault and the meet record man Mike Durkin to challenge Dill's best time this year is a
added.
Fieldhouse track have moved is an inch less than that set the meet records In both the full second better than
Illinois has probably the best ADDITIONAL speakers for the
back the take - off board for three years ago by Ohio State's mile and two - mile runs. Purdue's sprinter Larry Burton. morning
"Burton will talent, but Bell said the Illini session include:
give Dill all he do not have enough to upend
wants in the 60 if he runsj the Hoosiers. Illinois has the Dr. James H. Fisher
though," MSU asst. track No. 1 ranking performances of Geology
Women out to ge
coach Jim Gibbard said.
Both Dill and Burton have
the season in Ave of the 16
events in the meet. Dr. Bill A. Stout
run 6.0 60s this season. The MARSHALL DILL
two juniors tied for the league Friday's opening session in Agricultural Engineering
The Hoosiers, who are also Jenison Fieldhouse with
60 ■ yard dash championship at
as winning "I think we've been
swim last year's meet.
Bob Cassleman of the
closing in on another Big Ten
basketball title and their 14th
preliminaries in eight events
and finals in the two mile and
Dr. William E. Cooper
Zoology
By PAM WARD winning freestyle and poses a serious consecutive league swimming long jump will start at 4:30
State News Sports Writer because have the Spartans will be the only
we depth," challenge to opponents in the trophy, are expected to shake p.m. Admission is $1. The
The women's swimming performer to seek a fourth Mr. Gerald L. Decker
Cheryl Solomon, team event. Bemadine Kenny and consecutive indoor title. The off all challenges to dominate finals will be staged Saturday
team thinks that a Midwest member, said. "We won the sophomore Vicki Riebeling afternoon, beginning at 12:30 Utilities Manager
Grand Rapids senior has won the conference track circuit for
championship title would be a Big Ten because we were able have also qualified for the with the pole vault Dow Chemical
to take 21
the 600 - yard run in each of the second year in a row. p.m. Company
perfect ending to a near - girls." nationals. They have captured
the past three years but will get Despite being tagged the competition. The first running
perfect season. several second - and third •
stiff favorites, Indiana track coach event will get underway at
That's what it will be going Coach Jennifer Parks competition from
place honors for the Spartans. Sam Bell is only cautiously 1:50 p.m. All seats for the
for this weekend at Chicago continually points out that the University of Michigan's Dave
Williams. optimistic. finals are reserved for $2.
State in the Midwest regional squad has no super stars, and Another freshman, Barbara
that its victories are a result of 2:00 p.m. Auditorium,
championship meet. Harding, has emerged in the Kellogg Center
The Spartans this season a total team effort. last two meets as the top
have posted a 3 - 0 record, "Actually, we don't get contender in the diving events. PRESIDING: Dr. John E. Cantlon
captured first place at the many first places," Parks Harding won both the one - Provost
Indiana Invitationals and won explained. "But we have the
NOT ALL STEREO IS HI Fl
meter and three - meter events
the Big Ten championship title. depth. We can take the second at the Indiana Invitationals last
Once again the Spartans are or third places in every event,
ADDRESS: The Social Implications of the
week. She took third - place
favored going into the meet, and that gives us our points." honors on both boards at the Energy Crisis
and few surprises are expected. Several freshmen have Dr. John F. A.
Big Ten championship meet. BUT WE CAN MAKE MOST STEREOS HIFI Taylor
The tankers are in good shape emerged as top contenders and
and will be at full strength. point • getters. Lucy Johnson
Philosophy
BY REPLACING YOUR PRESENT SPEAKERS WITH
Depth has been the squad's has qualified for the national
Additional speakers for the afternoon session include:
major strong point. championships in the 50 - yard ACOUSTIC SOUND DECOR SPEAKERS ($18 per side)
Dr. Sylvan H. Wittwer
JGOODMAN SCHOOL BINGO 332 2355 I
Agricultural Experiment Station
| 220 M.A.C.
Saturdays 1 - 5 jrr WALKER NICHOLS CO. 1035 Robbl
E. Lansing f Dr. John L. Hazard
Marketing and Transportation
Dr. Mordechai Kreinin
BLOW OUT A SPEAKER??
Economics
Dr. Donald Montgomery
Metallurgy, Mechanics, and
WE HAVE OVER 500 HIGH FIDELITY REPLACEMENT Materials Science, and Physics
SPEAKERS IN STOCK:
WOOFERS MIDRANGE TWEETERS
(WHEN YOU NE D SPEAKERS, LO K FOR US IN
4:00 p.m. Auditorium, Kellogg Centei
THE YELLOW PAGES WE ARE LISTED UNDER
PRESIDING: Dr. Milton E. Muelder
STEREO, SOUND and SPEAKERS Vice President
ADDRESS: Michigan's Present Situation and
Walker Nichols Co. 332-2355 Immediate Prospects
The Honorable James H. Brickley
Lieutenant Governor of Michigan
6:15 Big Ten Room, Kellogg Center
PRESIDING: Dr. Herbert J. Oyer, President
Alpha Chapter, Phi Kappa Phi
INTRODUCTION: Dr. Clifton R. Wharton, Jr.
MSU Employees Credit Union President
ADDRESS: Growth of Quality of Life
Aumai
The Honorable Dr. Russell W. Peterson
Chairman, Council of Environmental Quality
PHIL OCHS Former Governor of Delaware
The sungs of
MON.,MARCH 4th
Pliil Ochs are songs
about the new
Paranoia police brutality,
the escape into drugs,
Meciil
Richard Nixon (sic)
thoughts of suicide
MSU AUDITORIUM Live broadcasts of the program may be
viewed in any classroom equipped with a
and finally, the refusal
closed - circuit television receiver on
to succumb to apathy. • Annual Business Meeting • Election Results channel 2.
Don t miss Phil Ochs.
• Family Entertainment • Door Prize Drawing
Classrooms available at specific times are:
Doors open at 6:10 p.m. • You mult be registered by 8 p.m. to be eligible for door prize drawing
TONITE 9 a.m. -12 noon 31 Hubbard
224 Erickson
THRU GRAND DOOR PRIZE:
2 p.m. 5 p.m. 111 Bessey
SATURDAY, -
1974 Chevy Vega 208 Bessey
MARCH 2nd
7 p.m. - 9 p.m. 112 Wells
113 Wells
Brody Aud.
Students are also invited to attend the
NIW MEMBERS WELCOME! |oin the credit union by 3p.m. March 4 - then join the festivities!
THE STABLES
presentations in the Kellogg Center
Auditorium.
MSU EMPLOYEES CREDIT UNION
600 E. Crescent Rd. • 9:30to 5:30Mon. thru Fri.
"...we offer a better alternative!"
Michigan State News. East Lansing, Michigan
Friday, March 1, 1974 13
IEW SEASON' STARTS
cers meet
Bv
By STEVE STEIN
U-M with home playoff on line
State News Sports Writer The top four teams in the "
WCHA gain the
the first-round advantage of playing At Michigan, MSU dropped 7-6 contest, then the
Lartan defenseman Uve Drews stated it succinctly after a playoff games on home ice. That will take a
Spartans
next Tuesday and place won, 7-6, the next night here as the icers scored twice in the last
■[ice session earlier this week: A new season starts tonight for Sunday.
Wednesday. The finals are Saturday and 43 seconds of
regulation time then won on a tally by
l|Sl) hockey team. The Spartans enter the with just 10 seconds to Daryl Rice
go in overtime.
len though the Spartans have played 26 WCHA games since fourth at 27 points.
weekend tied with Wisconsin for
"All you can say about
■ second weekend of November, what MSU does against Michigan is in sixth with 25 points. a MSU-Michigan series is that it'll be
Ihird-place Denver has 30 points. tough," Bessone said. "Michigan is always a tough game and they
Ijgan this weekend will actually determine whether the icers There are a lot of "ifs"
involved this weekend. But if the
have been
improving every weekend."
■gain that first-round home playoff spot, the first step on the Spartans can sweep the series,
1 to Boston and the NCAA championships. because even if Wisconsin
they will own at least fourth place In the national
rankings, the Spartans are rated in a tie for
he arch-rival Wolverines come here to face the Spartans sweeps against Notre Dame, the sixth with the
opartans have the Badgers, while Michigan is 10th. In fact of
(ht at 7:30. The game was announced as a sellout Tuesday advantage because they beat the Badgers in the the top 10 were from the
WCHA.
seven
seasonal series.
Steve Colp's individual league scoring title is on the
I is the final regular season game to be played at the The Wolverines must
line, also.
lonstration Hall Ice Arena. home playoff.
sweep to gain any chance of getting a
8 8
The MSU
sophomore center has accumulated 64
points on 27
■KAR-TV, channel 23, will telecast the contest. goals (tops in the WCHA) and 37
The confusion assists, just one point better
really arises if the series is than Colorado
purday the teams will travel to Ann Arbor to complete the depends upon the Wisconsin-Notre Dame set in split. Then, much College's DougPalazzari.
Tom Ross continues to
Har campaign at the renovated Yost Fieldhouse arena. Faceoff Madison. occupy third with 57 points on 25
Tonight's home game is vitally important to the goals and 32 assists.
■ is also 7:30 p.m. Msu Spartans. An
victory combined with a Wisconsin defeat Daryl Rice is sixth at 45 points, and Norm
icers a home
would give the
playoff. is the Barnes, in seventh
"We've got to win this highest scoring defenseman in the
league bv far with 39
/omen cagers rout one," MSU coach Amo Bessone
emphasized. "We have to get them at home
chance of
staying home for the playoffs."
because it means a
assists and 44 total
league.
points. Palazzari has 40 assists to lead the
The Spartans and With the new arena due to open next
Wolverines staged two of the most •ail to gain a season, if the Spartans
contests of the season when exciting home playoff,
IU, look to state the teams first met earlier
this year, played at the "old ice house."
tonight could be the last game ever
?n's basketball team made its final
tuneup for the
j tournament a successful one, routing Central
Michigan,
||, Wednesday at Mount Pleasant.
Jhe Spartans finished the regular season portion of their
Bdule with a 12-1 record and will begin their quest for the state
Tipionship at noon today against the winner of the Michigan
let game held Thursday. -
}t Woods I ed the MSU attack with 15
double
points and was the only
i figures. Joey Spano and Connie Bunch each
(d seven.
m Kolka started in place of the injured Beanie
Goldschmidt
■scored six points. The team's top scorer, Linda
Stoick, was
■ to five points, but she pulled down 15
rebounds.
licept for Goldschmidt, MSU is healthy for the
beginning of
\ourney.
Beanie (Goldschmidt) has a sore back," MSU coach Mikki
J said. "She should be able to play some over the weekend,
hot much."
file believes that the experience MSU gained in the tight
ps this season will be beneficial for the tournament.
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|U,n|<"M Block PH0NE Mon.-Fri. 12-9 Pennsylvania, Michigan, and Ohio
T^.joh„r 489-9°4° Sat. 10-5:30
14 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan
MSU cagers, tough Wisconsin team
to clash this weekend at Madison
By CHARLES JOHNSON third in the Big Ten rebounding contest with an 10.8 per game incentive for this game also because they still have a chance to
State News Sports Writer average. His twin brother, Kerry, who is the same heighth, gives finish as high as fourth in the conference," Ganakas said.
If recent history- holds true, the MSU cagers will have a Wisconsin the biggest front line in the conference. A victory for MSU would assure the Spartans a better record
guard Gary Anderson is Wisconsin's leading scorer with than the 13-11 marks they registered the past two seasons.
difficult time with Wisconsin Saturday when the two teams clash Senior
in Madison. a 14.8 average. Currently the Spartans are 13-9 with two games remaining.
This season has been a major disappointment for the Badgers MSU's two time Big Ten scoring champ Mike Robinson is
The Spartans haven't beaten a Badger cage squad in Madison
since 1963 and though Wisconsin, under coach John Powless, after being considered one of the Big Ten title favorites in the closing in on the conference scoring lead after posting two
currently sports a disappointing 5-6 conference record, the game preseason polls. straight 27 - point performances last weekend against
Northwestern and Indiana. Robinson is second with a 21.4 average
promises to be a tough hump for the Spartans to overcome. "I don't have any way of knowing what's been Wisconsin's
behind Michigan's Campy Russell, who flaunts a 22.7 average.
"Wisconsin is definitely the biggest team in the conference." problem this season," Ganakas said. "But, I'm inclined to think
MSU coach Gus Ganakas said. "Their overall size is no doubt the that maybe their overall size has been ineffective against most of Lindsay Hairston, the Spartans 6-7 center, continues to lead
the other teams which have a lot of speed and quickness." the conference in rebounding with a 14.6 average. Michigan's C.J.
biggest asset they have. But we're used to playing against bigger JOHN POWLESS GARY
teams, and. hopefully, our quickness and agility will prevail." "This game is an important one for us, obviously, and it's going Kupec and Russell hold down the number two and four spots ANDERSON
The Badgers are led by 6-11 senior center Kim Hughes, who is to be tough up there in Madison. They (the Badgers) have some respectively.
CROSSROADS
Spartan wrestle WEEKEND
CYCLE
& SPORT
chance for Big ACTION „ . ,
BIO ABBOTT
BABT LANBINQ
■
M), 118; Pat Milkovich Special 33a-«oBi
By PAT FARNAN year, as the Wolverines nearly
(MSU), 126; Bill Davids (U - prices on
State News Sports Writer ran away with the affair, "If the kids are consistent,
M0, 134; Rick Lawinger (Wis.),
n s swimming Ed Haughn, with a 32-10 mark, SPRING overhauls
breaking the Spartans' string of MSU's defending Big Ten have largely accounted for then we have a good chance of
The Big Ten wrestling seven consecutive titles. 142; Jerry Hubbard (U - M), from 84.25
championship is on the line for 150; Dan Holm (Iowa), 158; champion freestylers, Bruce MSU's 8-8 dual meet record winning. Indiana State has
Coach this season. The presence of more depth and experience.
the Spartan grapplers today Grady Peninger's Jan Sanderson (Iowa), 167; Wright and Glen Disosway, will or
squad dragged in fifth. clash with Indiana the two gives the Spartans as The majority of our team
and Saturday in Evanston, 111. Rob Huzienga (U - M) or Jeff
Once again the No. 1 Zindel (MSU), 177; Scott s u p e r• fresh man Jim fine a one-two saber punch as consists of freshmen or
All things considered,
ranked, undefeated U - M Wickard (MSU) or DaveCurby Montgomery in the Big Ten there is in the country. sophomores who are out for consider a
however, it looks like the
powerful University of contingent is the odds - on (U - M), 190; and Larry Avery
swimming championships the team for the first time," complete choice
favorite. Iowa. Wisonsin and Women's gymnastics McKenzie said.
Michigan Wolverines will cook
MSU are given an outside
(MSU), heavyweight. running tonight and Saturday
at the University of Wisconsin. McKenzie indicated that
of adult bicycles |
the rest of the Big Ten in the Interestingly enough, the The women's gymnastics for
chance to emerge victorious. Wright and Disosway, both Ann Weaver, Raeanne Miller
60th renewal of the annual four teams that are expected to team puts its 7-0 record on the
The favorites for the two sophomores, were surprise and Andrea Schwartz will once recreation
classic. -
vie for top honors have line Saturday when it goes
That's what happened last day toumey are: Jim Brown (U contributed all the individual winners in the 100-and 50-yard again carry the brunt of the exercise
against third-ranked Indiana
freestyle events, respectively, a load and compete in all four
favorites. Most likely, however, State at Indiana. racing
year ago and will again be The team will be in the best events. She also tabbed Susan
the title will go to the team
underdogs in this meet. Bissonnette as one of the most
commuting
which can land the most shape physically since the start touring
Big Ten meet next places. Michigan's superior
depth should evince itself.
No Big Ten team came close
Montgomery, who won five
gold medals at the world
swimming championships in
of the season, according to
coach Barb McKenzie.
improved competitors and
key in future meets.
a
to the Wolverines in regular Yugoslavia last summer, has
for MSU gymnasts action. The Spartans
outlasted 23 • 9, and
turned in better times in the
two events this year than the
Wisconsin lost, 23 • 10. Spartan champions.
The men's gymnastics team will compete in its biggest meet of "It's always a different ball
the season this weekend as it travels to Iowa City. Iowa, for the Fencing
game in the tournaments," Fred
Big Ten championship meet. Royce, one of the
The gymnasts' aim will be to improve on last year's fifth place
Peninger said, alluding to the favorites to win the Big Ten
case of Conrad Calander. "He
finish. saber title, will lead the MSU
had a horrible year all last
The Spartans originally planned to face Illinois on Saturday
season and wound up second in
fencing squad into the Big Ten
but the schedule was changed. First place position will be a battle
the conference and sixth in the
championship meet Saturday
between the University of Michigan, Iowa State University and at Ohio State.
nation (all - American)."
the University of Minnesota. Michigan, the defending Big Ten
The Spartans will need such
Royce, with a 35-4 season
champion, has consistently scored in the 160.00 range this record, and fellow saber star
a performance from Calander.
who is expected to give U - M's
Spartans Jim Tuerk and Glenn Hime have a good chance for Davids a run for his money at
individual honors. Tuerk finished sixth in the vaulting event last 134. Jeff Zindel and Scott
year as a freshman. Hime has been doing well on the horizontal Wickard could also play key
bar.
roles in the Spartans' title
Bernie Van Wie is the Spartans' all-around leader and has also
hopes. Both will be seeded first
emerged as a top contender in the horizontal bar event. or second.
The Big Ten meet will close the Spartans' season.
THE
WEATHEMNE
Shop for all szosons
Layaway Your
RALE/&H
Red Roses 6 for S2.99
12 for S4.99
Carnations 8 for S3.99
809 E. Michigan 97
Lots of parking in front of our new store!
485-7271 I
| /jfGreyhou
V A change for theb
Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan
Houses £
FORD - 1966. GALAXIE 500. 2
HONDA 1973, 350 - 4
door, auto 289. Good condition. FREE MONTH'S rent! Furnished, 3-4 PERSONS TO sublet spacious
CYLINDER. Low mileage. FIVE PERSON house - 2 baths,
Moving, must sell. $400 or best Excellent shape. 627-6301
one or two bedrooms. 635 apartment, spring term. One finished rec room, partially
offer. 332-1318 after 5 pm Abbott. Mike, 489-6197, block off campus. 332-3413
3-3-1
evenings. 4-3-1 furnished, ample parking, near
evenings. 7-3-4 after 4:00. 3-3-1 bus. Available now! 351-8920.
■phone 355 8255 FORD, 1969 10 MILFORD STREET, 126. 2-man,
6-3-8
-
passenger ONE MALE for four man, spring.
|7 student services Bidq. Galaxie 500 wagon,
factory air, $180 per month. Two blocks Near campus. $65. 337-0764. ROOMMATE
disc WANTED - male,
brakes, good rubber, good from campus, deluxe, furnished, 3-3-1
MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE own bedroom! Spring term
shape, $700. 625-3863. 3-3-4 air conditioned. 351-2647,
AUTOMOTIVE CHECK OUR low ratesl Call through August. 484-4141 after
484-8494. 10-3- 7 LARGE LUXURY furnished
LLOYD'S of Lansing at 6 pm. 3-3-5
Jcooters & Cycles HONDA CIVIC 1973 -
Automatic.
Must sell I Take over payments.
332-5335 or 482-5585. 0-6-3-8
RENT FREE (114 months). Girl to
apartment, close. Three for four
■arts & Service man. Two bedroom, spring, MAGNOLIA STREET - 1
394-0719. 5-3-6 sublet. Available March 1,
Mviation BMW'S 1974's AT SHEP'S. Your
$67.50. 351-4062 after 3 p.m.
parking. $85. 332-4351. 3-3-1 bedroom, possible 3, furnished,
full service dealer for garage, room for garden. $150 /
imployment JEEP 1968 COMMANDO Station -
Yamahas, 3-3-1
NEED GIRL now for Duplex, own
Wagon. 4-wheel drive, V-6, Cash Triumphs, BMWs and Rickmans. month, with $100 security
■or rent Large stock of leathers, helmets, room, $75. 355-8319, 332-3258. deposit. 351-7233 after 6 p.m.
deal, $1075. Callll 351-7275 RIVERS EDGE, need one man 3-3-1
Epartments 3j3-5
custom accessories and parts. anytime beginning spring break
or weekends. 1-3-1
SHEP'S MOTOR SPORTS, INC.
houses for 4 man apartment. Reduced FRIENDLY GIRL needed for
MAVERICK 1970. EXCELLENT 2460 North Cedar, Holt. Just FEMALE, OWN room, one block
looms rates. 332-5852. 3-3-4 Twyckingham, spring term,
condition, low-mileage. Call south of 1-96 overpass. Phone to Berkey, spring term.
reduced rent. 351-3148. 5-3-5
■or sale after 5:00, 351-8930. 5-3-1 694-6621. C-1-3-1 TWO MAN
337-0983. 3-3-5
furnished, block from
Imimals MAVERICK T970. 6 campus. $160 / month. $80 NEEDED 1 MALE for 4 man foi 5 6
CYLINDER, MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE -
down. Security. 381-0318 after
- - or 7 MAN HOUSE. Summer
Mobile Homes straight stick, new parts. $975! New low rates. FIEDLER 5 to see. Saturday. 2-3-1 '
spring term. Campus Hil and Fall. Furnished, parking.
676-2586. 5-3-5 Apartments, 349-1609. 3-3-1
JoST
■ersonal
& found INSURANCE. Phone 676-2449
0-1-3-1 GIRLS WANTED to share peaceful
Very close. 484-9774. 0^-3-8
MERCURY MONTEGO 1969 -
GIRL. SUBLEASE spring (options: EASTIDE NEAR Pennsylvania and
farm, own huge room. Utilities,
■eanutspersonal 44,000 miles, excellent
Auto Service Summer, Fall). Old Cedar Freeway. 4 bedrooms, carpeted,
|ealestate condition, good mileage! $600
393-0862. 5-3-1
][/| $75. Julie, 8 8 2-8505. Also
horses boarded. 3-3-4
Village. 332-0497. 8-3-8 furnished partly, garage, large
&rd. $225. 351-7497. 0-6-3-8
iecreation CRAGER MAGS SUBLEASE
ONE MAN to share large af
MGB 1968 BLACK, wires, radio - 2 unmounted, SPRING, summer, spring term. Own bedroom.
jrvice
-
2
LAINGSBURG NEAR, Country
furnished,
.
/ heater. 2 tops, good mounted on 750-14 tires. carpeted, air 332-0319, after 6 p.m. 3-3-1
condition, tiome. 3 bedrooms, needs
■istruction 29 mpg. Call Days, 484-7416 $150,484-6536.6-3-8 conditioned, two man, borders
campus, balcony facing pool, ONE MAN
handyman, 3 acres $150.
for 4-man. Free rent
■yping Service Nights 371-1357. 9-3-8
FOUR TIRES, L78X15, mounted,
DAY! 351-8609 / 351-1565. 10-3-1 Twyckingham. Call 332-2170. Riverside West Apartment, $65.
/ brakes, automatic, new 3-3-5 337-0669, after 6 p.m. 1-3-1
r0s 7-3-8
carburetor, radiator. 355-1079 337-1451.5-3-7
1 3 5 4-3-1
ROOMMATE, OWN room in
10 WANT TO BE wined and dined and OWN ROOM -
Furnished, 1 girl.
furnished apartment. $78 per LOVELY FURNISHED efficiency NEED GIRL for
make money at the same time? Americanj
1 50 4.00 6.50 13.00 month. 393-8038. 2-3-1 Immediately. No lease. Close.
Call 372-0567 between the apartment, 915 Lilac. $130 plus 4-person. Close, furnished. $80 337-0202. 3-3-5
MUSTANG 1966 EXCELLENT
1.80 4.80 / HO 15.60
hours of 12 -11 pm. 0-6-3-8 electricity. 349-3604, 372-6852. 337-0659. 2-3-4
condition, $350 or Best offer. 301 SOUTH HOLMES near
2.25 6.00 9.75 19.50
-
5-3-6
351-3625. 4-3-1 SHARE ROOM $200 per term,
Sparrow Hospital. Upstairs, 1
-
2.70 7.20 11.70 23.40 MASSEUSES WANTED. For health SUBLEASE FURNISHED one
utilities included. Board awail&le.
room
efficiency, gentlemen, SUBLEASE APARTMENT. 4 bedroom apartment, spring / Two blocks from campus.
8.00 13.00 26.00 MUSTANG 1970 8 spa. $7/hour. Call 372-0567 share
3.00 cylinder, bath, includes utilities. persons needed. Spring / summer. $195. Sandy, 355-013E
automatic, power steering / between hours of 12-11 pm. $70. 351-7497. 0-7-2-28 351-5687. 6-3-8
3.75 10.00 16.25 32.50 summer. Across from campus.
0-6-3-8 or 351-1073. 5-3-7
brakes, air. $1,300. 482-5866, $280 / month. Todd. 332-2486.
d eadline 5-9 pm. *3-7 GIRL NEEDED for 3 WANTED, ONE man to sublet half
woman,
■P.M. one class
day join the revolution spring term. Capitol Villa. Homes £ house. $100 / months, utilities
NOVA 1971, 6 cylinder 351-5162. 5-3-4 FREE RENT until April - fourth included. Air conditioning, close
■ore publication. - excellent
condition. 10,000+ miles, girl needed for luxury
to campus. Call Neal, 332-0584.
489-51 29, after 5 p.m. ONE BEDROOM, 3 level ROOMMATE WANTED, own 3-3-5
Idealistic, money oriented apartment apartment, spring. 337-2029.
■eanuts Personal ads cars
weekdays. 5-3-1 people. Work part-time on your in Holt. $160 / month. 5-3-6 bedroom, furnished, $55/month,
EAST LANSING house has open
1 must be pre paid. LOCATED AT THE own hours. Car helpful. Phone
694-1867, evenings. 8-3-8 close. 489-9470. 3-3-4
OLDSMOBILE 1968 - your leader. 351-1560 room, single or couple. $56 I
CORNER OF JOLLY FURNISHED EFFICIENCY.
air. $390. Good & OKEMOS RD CAPITOL L.C.C. Nice upper HOUSE FOR RENT, Southwest person. Spring or spring and
condition. - Private parking. 220 Reo
■cellations/ Corrections 349- 3196 WAITRESS ATTRACTIVE girls summer. 614 Hagadorn.
Phone 355-8192. 1-3-1 -
furnished, 2 bedrooms, carpeted. Avenue. $120. 482-1777 Lansing. 4 bedroom ranch, bath
351-7974. 8-3-8
J2 noon one class day
6DAY A WEEK TOWING
OPEN 6 DAYS
wanted to work days. Call Utilities paid. DODGE evenings. 5-3-6 *
and a half, finished basement,
lore publications. OLDSMOBILE 1969 DELTA 88 7 AM 9 PM BUT SUNDAY
JAY'S CHALET, 484-9431, or REALITY, phone 482-5909. $240 I month. Call 372-1215.
-
Stop in, 1515 Center, Lansinj. 4-3-1 3-3-4 1. 2 or 3 PERSONS, FURNISHED,
4-ddor, power steertng, brakes, CLEMENS. 517 North. Graduate
free washer and dryer, garden
automatic. AM/FM radio, air, VW GUARANTEED couple
p State News will be - or upperclassmen. Five
EAST LANSING, MSU walking space, nice. $60 per person.
vinyl top. Excellent condition. REPAIR. RANDY'S MOBILE, MSU AREA - Okemos. 1 and 2 rooms, 2 bedroom, partly
(wnsible only for the ATTRACTIVE GIRLS to model bedrooms, furnished and distance. 6 bedrooms, 2 baths, 651-6419. 5-3-5
Leaving U.S.A., must sell. $550. Okemos Road and 1-96, furnished, parking, separate
footwear. Must wear size 4, 5 or
y's incorrect 353-0952 after 5 p.m. X7-3-8 349-9620. C-6-3-8 unfurnished, air conditioned, utilities, immediate occupancy! $85 each. Utilities, deposit,
6B. See Ms. Ann Adams, TWO BEDROOM house, 411
carpeted and modern. $160 - 484-7253. 5-3-6 references. 372-1585. 3-3-4
(rtion. Mezzanine Floor, Olds Plaza Shepard Street. $190 plus
OLDS 442 1968 -
automatic, air, VOLKSWAGEN / FOREIGN car $165, heat included. Call
ue 7 days from Hotel, Lansing on Saturday HOUSE utilities. 337-2193. 7-3-8
electric, AM/FM tape, clean, repair. Mechanical and body. 349-2174. 5-3-4 FEMALE OWN room, close to - 208 South Howard
March 16, between 1-4 pm. Street, Near MSU. Call anytime,
many extras, sharp! 355-2683. Buy, sell and trade. IMPORT campus. Pets welcome. Call
6-3-8 GREAT HOUSE spring summer.
5-3-6 AUTO PARTS AND REPAIR, 2-PERSON, furnished, air 351-5979. 3-3-1 484-9366. 7-3-8 -
Own room, pets welcome, $75.
485 2047. 0 2-3-4 conditioning, carpeting, parking,
Okemos. 349-1778. 3-3-4
PLYMOUTH FURY II, 1969 - attention!! close to campus. Call 351-1989. NEED ONE girl to sublet spring FOUR BEDROOM house, partly
Excellent condition, 47,000 liberal art graduates 5-3-1 term. Furnished, own furnished. Close to campus!
room,
FEMALE:
miles, warrantee available, power If $76/month. 351-4575. 4-3-4 $225 / month, plus utilities.
Paneled, private.
ROOM to sublet.
steering, brakes, automatic, air Action Vista / Peace Corps on 332-0914. 5-3-6 Open spring
Campus March 4 LEASING NEED 1 MALE for Twyckingham
term. 351-5995. 3-3-4*
conditioning. $1100 or best PART-TIME secretarial
- 7th
offer. 332-3880. 5-3-7
work, Placement Office 9 a.m. - 5 FOR M.A.C. block from campus.
four man $72.50 / month. one
3
including scientifio typing, P.m. Student Services Building
Need
BEDROOM, 1'/, BATH, large
SUMMER & FALL Spring term. 332-d449. 3-3-1 one for house. Own
financial lovely duplex. Available now.
J PINTO 1971, luggage rack, PONTIAC T-37 1971, automatic,
record
purchasing. Apply room 125,
keeping, and
RN STARTS
bedroom, kitchen privileges,
Family or singles. Ride to
s deck, snow tires, good 26,000 miles, $1,900 or best
- LPN'S, 3-11 p.m., 11 p.m. • 7 IMMEDIATE dishwasher, washing machine,
OCCUPANCY. 1
n. Reasonable. Physics Astronomy Building, a.m., full time and part time campus available. 489-1841.
1-5891 after 5 p.m. 5-3-4
offer. 484-6536. 6-3-8
353-2047. 3-3-4 positions open. New hospital.
TODAY bedroom, furnished, close to $80. Utilities paid, parking. Call
2 bedroom apts. $75-$78-$80 campus. $160/month. Call Tom, 332-5710. 2-3-1
PONTIAC 1966. Good rubber. Phone 485-3271 or come in
351-8238 1-5 pm. 4-3-1
GIRLS WANTED Part time, per person
f LASABRE 1966. Excellent Excellent condition. Great -
person to 1226 East Michigan ONE OR two men needed for
1. AM/FM radio / tape transportation! Cheap. nights, weekends. Counter work, Avenue. X-4-3-6 4-man. $70/month
Vinyl top. $400 355-9051. 5-3-6 experience needed. Apply at CEDAR 1, 2 GIRLS
Immediately
FOR 3 girl.
332-8946. 3-3-4
each.
btiable. 351-9254.3-3-1 LEVI'S DELI, between 11 am •
through spring.
For Rent VILLAGE 351-9454. 5-3-5
»LAC
ft.
1962. Good engine,
Needs $180 work. $95.
PORSCflE 911 - 5SPEED 1968.
$3,950. Jaguar 3.8S Sedan 1965
$2,850. Both cars both in
1 pm weekdays. 2-3-4
ATTENTION SENIORS
Apartments
315 Bogue Street 331-5180
AVAILABLE MARCH 15. One
THREE SINGLES, S70 - S90
includes utilities. Comfortable
house.
$ NOTICES
vacancy in four man. Cedar Okemos, 349-1216,
■3171.3-3-1 California and in beautiful All persons that returned the Peace
SPARROW, NEAR - large nicely Village. $78, will deal. Stan afternoons. 2-2-9
condition. Please call for more Corps, Vista interest cards to the decorated 1-bedroom, 351-3651. 3-3-1 all student ads
■R0, 1969 - 2-28, excellent 332-8823; Detroit office please contact Action unfurnished. Utilities paid, GIRL, OWN room in house. Two
must be prepaid
Tuition, lots of extras! $1600. 332-01 S. 4-3-1 representatives on campus March 4, $130. 372-2639. 3-3-5 NEED ONE girl spring term for blocks from campus. $70 plus
■0926 before GIRL NEEDED spring term for
4 p.m. 5-3-7 5, 6, 7, in the Placement office for 2 woman, 711 Burcham. $97.50 utilities. 351-3995. 2-3-1
three - person. Call Elise,
SUPER BEETLE 1972 with air more detailed program information. MUST SUBLET! / month. 351-9366. 5-3-H Now
349-2833. 3-3-1 2, 3 man near OWN ROOM for woman in duplex. through the
JO
■ nder, - 1972, LIGHT green, 6
automatic, power
conditioning, AM/FM radio. 4-3-6 campus, shopping center. Air Spring. Call Linda, 351-6803. end of the term.
33,000 miles. Excellent conditioning. 337-0956. 3-3-5 TWYCKINGHAM APARTMENTS
radio. Snow tires. FEMALE FOR Capitol Villa 3-3-5
'
condition. $2,350. Call LPN OR RN - Physician office. has one two bedroom apartment
"14-2016 or 393-1920. 1-589-8813. 5-3-4 foursome. Spring / summer.
8-6 pm. No weekends. Weekdays SPRING TERM. Share room, 5 available immeidately! Call
$45/month. 332-2906. 3-3-1 MALE - ROOM in friendly house
call 393-0720. 3-3-5 351-7166. 18-3-8
VEGA HATCHBACK 1971 -
person,
Next to
2 bedroom apartment.
campus. $65/month.
bus line, carpeted. $55 347 student services
3-speed manual, 40,000 miles, NEED ROOMMATE for 4-woman FEMALE TO sublease apartment monthly. 337-0611. 1-3-1
WAITRESSES NEEDED 5 days a 351-18,59. 3-3-5
studded tires. in Cedar Village, spring term.
new snow
week, 10:30 3 with same from now until
- p.m.
Call 337-2394. 3-3-1
Averages 22 m.p.g. Good Transportation necessary. Apply ONE MAN for four man, spring. 1 September. 485-9415 and
condition. 394-2666 after 6:30. in person, $67.50 / month. Riverside East. evenings 489-0305. 5-3-4
University Club, 3435
[V SPORT Van 1968 - stove, 5-3-5 Forest Road between 9-5 p.m.
LOGAN ARMS Apartment -
332-0631. B-3-1
.
sink, stereo, pop Southwest side of Lansing. Ideal GIRL NEEDED for Haslet Arms, 4
into bed, tent hook - 3-3-1
VEGA HATCHBACK 1973. Still in for married couples or graduate
GIRL NEEDED 4-girl apartment on person. Immediately or for
$1500. 332-8272. sutdents. 2 bedroom apartments
Factory air,
,
warranty. FEMALE SINGER needed to cut Collingwood, spacious. Call spring. 351-3816. 3-3-1
automatic, radio, defogger. from $170. Resident manager
folk rock demo. Call 351-3783. 351-0870. 5-3-7
' Snowtires with rims, extras. 394-0733, or call THE WALTER ONE GIRL needed to sublease
1965, Air, 3-3-4
Tape deck, $2700. 351-8948. 3-3-5 N E L L E R COMPANY.
I offer over $100.
.
ONE WOMAN sublet four women
Spring Term. Cedar Village
SINGER - COMPOSER needs 489-6561. 8-3-8 Apartment. 332-3727. 3-3-1
1-8618. 2-3-1 VEGA HATCHBACK 1974. Three talented Band for recording
apartment, spring, near campus.
332-8353. 5-3-7
speed, four cylinder. Must sell, GRADUATING, NEED male for FEMALE
J*
■•age.
VEGA FT 1973
excellent
- Good
condition.
$2400. Call John at Disc Shop
purposes. Call 351-5849. 5-3-1
large apartment. Two baths, GIRL NEEDED. Spring and or
ROOMMATE
immediately and spring. Capitol
needed
after 4 pm. 351-5380.6-3-8 NEED PART TIME WORK? patio, close. Call 337-2301.
351-8810, ask for Dave.
3-3-4
summer. Spacious Americana . Villa. $62.50. 351-8773. 3-3-1
Work from our office taking picket
VEGA
apjrtment. 351-3620. 3-3-5 TWO GIRLS
197 2 -
HATCHBACK, orders for civil organizations. Hours
-
Capitol Villa, spring
turbohydromatlc, radio, low 6-9 p.m. Monday thorugh Friday, THIRD GIRL for one bedroom and/or summer. Pool.
■sLER IMPERIAL 1968. BOGUE, NEAR campus. Senior or
mileage. Phone P?rry, 625-7320. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday. $1.60 apartment, spring. $70 / month. $55/month. 332-4514. 4-3-1
►•'lent condition, power graduate woman. Share
5-3-6 March rent paid. 351-2768, after
■vthing. Runi great Moving - per hour. Long hairs welcome. 18 bedroom. $68 per month.
5 p.m. 5-3-7 SUBLET -
SPRING, summer. 1
$1275. Call 355-0699. years old or older. For interview, 332-4425. 3-3-5
VOLKSWAGEN SUPER Beetle 3-5 p.m. only, see Mr. Dillon, 405 bedroom, furnished, block from
1973 - 11,000 miles. Radio, air Bauch Building, 115 West Allegan. campus, carpeted, air
SUBLET: CEDAR Greens. 1 — —
conditioned. 332-4241.5-3-6 conditioning, parking. $160. —
IJN 1972 1200. Excellent
3-3-1
bedroom, furnished, carpet, 337-7978. 5-3-4 r 5- sr r- 7- 8~ 9 lo- "
pool, balcony, air, beautiful!
■ «i/J*,exc6llent flas mile»9e- TEACHERS' AIDES Substitutes - SUBLET SPRING. Collingwood 13-
E-
-
$160. 351-8796
| WOOO in lot, $1500 here. times: 7:30 am - 1 pm, i2 - 5 Apartments. Four person, 2
or 355-1826. ARLINGTON APARTMENTS. One
|Ma*. at 332-5848. 5-3-1 pm, 2-6 pm. Phone 394-X)500. bedrooms, dishwasher.
6-3-7 and two bedroom, furnished or
VW 1964 - DELUXE Bus. For 3-3-1
unfurnished, from $150. 10 L
^WINDOW Van 1966 NEED ROOMMATES, male or minutes from
F~ 17 ifl-
Slx. automatic
radio. 627-5271.
-
restoration or parts. $115. John,
332-6663. 8-3-8 TYPISTS NEEDED now through QUIET, CLOSE. One woman /
female, liberal, but clean / quiet
on weekdays. 351-2681 after 6
882-5950. 5-3-4
campus.
7A
VW - 1964, NEW tires, battery.
March 7. Work resumes
25. Three nights per week 4 p.m.
March 4-woman. Sublease spring,
$62.50. Annette, 332-3422.
p.m. B-1-3-1 EAST LANSING -
Sublease, one
bedroom. $170 Available March
w/Mwmmwmmmm
33 2M *-
u TT w
I.GALAXIE 1969 air -
AM/FM. Clean. $550. Evenings,
655-1880. 3-3-1
-
10 p.m. 70 w.p.m. Apply in 3-3-4 301 SOUTH HOLMES - Near 15. 351-5016. 5-3-4
w
%
it
Jjroomng,
■ '"9' «wo
automatic, power
snow tires. $750.
person 427H
5 p.m. w
Albert between 3 -
NEED ONE girl in Cedar Village
Sparrow Hospital. Upstairs, 1
1 MAN
n 3T~
room efficiency, gentlemen, NEEDED for 4 man w1
f "65. 5-3-5 WE BUY used Volkswagens.
|FALCON, 1964 - Great for
IMPORT AUTO PARTS AND
REPAIR, 485 2047. 0-2-3-4
MODELS NEEDED for art studio.
Call 372-0567 between the
spring. $78/month. 332-8030.
2-3-1
(hare bath, includes utilities.
$70. 351-7497. 06-3-8
immadiataly. Close. $70.
351-0830. 3-3-1 P V WW i §r
~ _
'own, $200 firm. Call
_
hours of 12-11 pm. 0- -6-3-8 GIRL NEEDED for Twyckingham, WOMAN NEEDED for 2 man, ONE OR two women needed for H2 S3
*032. 5-3-5
1 965 GOOD
( Motorcycles ][^c] NEEDED PART time help for
Spring. Very low rates. Call
351-4852. 7-3-8
spring tarm.
351-0336. 3-3-5
Close, Call 4 woman across
$70. 332-6246. 6-3-8
from campus.
5T
r
-
postering in local area and
■'Portation, new tires, interviewing veterans for ONE GIRL immediately, $66.25. TWO WOMEN, sublet four woman TWO MAN - $200 per term. Board
tar
i,s' 3-3-1
0830. oxhauit. $125. educational benefits. Phone Pool, free busses to campus. apartment, spring, near campus. Available. Two Blocks from 22
484 Wf) R-3-8 349-3163. 3-3-4 351-3649. 5-3-7 campus. 351-5687. 6-3-8
16 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Frid«y. March I I
Houses
m Rooms For Sale
{§] Pen
■ it's what's happening.
ROOMMATE NEEDED, large
IF YOU know how good a foot Hlllel: Shabbat services and
ROOM, BOARD, spring term. OLD PIANO rolls, in good BOARDING - 6 MILES from Announcements for It's What's
stomping dance can make you dinner at 6 p.m. (to give us time to
house, own bedroom, near $235. Nexus Co-op. 351-0100. condition. Approximately 60. campus on 32 acres. Boxed stalls Happening must be received in the
feel, how about helping those greet the Netherland's Wind "> the board of
campus. $63. 371-3520. 3-3-1 10-3-7 313-878-6527. 5-3-1 $50. loose barn - $40. State News office, 341 Student fice s»»,
that never will I Meridian Mall -
Services Bldg., by I p.m. at least
Knsemble at 7:45 p.m. at the
655-3062 before 4 p.m. 7-3-8
ROOM AVAILABLE in 6 man FEMALE - PARTIALLY YAMAHA FG-500 Acoustic guitar. Multiple Sclerosis Dance two class days before publication. Auditorium) and will continue at 10 Informal!!!'
I nfoi "ni(>n: CoJ^ I
furnished, 2 mites from campus, Marathon. 1-3-1 No announcements will be accepted a.m. Saturday. Deli this week Referral Offid"! C°mP|tilM I
house. Spring and summer Excellent condition. $225. SHEPHERD COLLIE St. features
$10/week. 353-6261.3-3-1
- -
by phone. Joseph Konvitz, asst. Volunteers art a|„ 'Vt »oi I
terms. $75 month, utilities. 489-1718. 5-3-4 Bernard puppies. Wormed, professor of history, speaking on
„
351-0225. 3-3-1 weeks. $10. 372-9362. 3-3-4
8
French Jewry and Zionism, Rubbi
Time Movie 8 ,
51
. ROOM .FOR rent in three bedroom
AUTO 8-track player with FM
MONTY'S BAR There will be an all - Company
Kagan will hold class on mysticism
"Cowboy Mania"1 **9 L
OWN ROOM pleasant house,
apartment. $50/month. Call stereo. 1% years old. $110. new. meeting at 5 p.m. Sunday in at 7:30 p.m. Monday at Hillel.
P.m. Friday, "Cart,ion u #:>0 I
-
351-1809. 4-3-5
SHELTIES - TOY collie, AKC. 12
AND RESTAURANT McDonel Hall's east lower lounge.
at 8 and 10: Jo
nm Q. ^ii" I
across Brody. $78/month. Best offer. 337-0940, after
3-3-4
weeks. Sable and white. Reared
Women's Center: "Herstory -
"The Wild One"
~
at'j I
332-6478 evenings. 3-3-1
;h0;„dj* I
noon. outdoors. Great with children. Sundj>-
p.m. suntla ah «,
HELP! ROOMMATE needed for The MSU Folksong Society will Woman's Place in History" at 7:30 Union balln
627-9316. 5-2-6 Pitcher Night (M-Th)
two bedroom house, spring. meet at 8 p.m. Sunday in 34 Union. p.m. Sunday. Organizational
COUNTRY DUPLEX. Two large FENDER BASEMAN amp - $200,
$80/ Luncheon special - $1.50 This evening's program will be an meeting at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday
bedrooms, fully carpeted, full
month, rent negotiable! must sell! Call 353-9340, GERMAN SHEPHERD puppies - easy instrument workshop. for the Women's Spring Festival
So cte | y
for - I
basement, appliances furnished,
351-9274. 5-3-6
482-9476, 393-4652. 3-3-5 Pool Table Anachronism I
unusual long coated, guaranteed scheduled for ApriH9, 20 and 2 Will m...
will . , lt-°rder r0B1M I
dishwasher, air conditioned. sound pets and watchdogs. West The Greater Lansing Killifish
meet at J ».m. .""I I
If you can staff the women's l
ROOM IN house, $80/month.
Couple only. $190 plus utilities. STEREO COMPONENT system - Coast show blood - line*. Bring your ID Assn. will meet at 6:30 p.m. for a couple of hours next
882-8779 or 882-7410. 5-3-5 Campus close, car space. Pioneer amp, BSR turntable. Saturday in the Community Room give us call. Programs take place
663-3705. 5-3-6 a
337-0090. 5-3-6 Custom speakers. $200.
(3 cards proof of age) of the Lansing Mall. Topics include at the Women's Center, 547W 547Vi E. "Winter North Wood t *
the American Killifish Asan and the
TWO GIRLS for large house, 484-6536. 6-3-8 NORWEGIAN ELK hound mixed Orand River Ave. Open from 2 to 9 Saturday with uUA." ' "V L
available after March 10, own EAST LANSING, close - in. Room
puppies, $20. Cute, lovable pets. 2359 E. Gd. River, Okemos Michigan Killifish Ass. Sunday through Thursday, Fair from >) lm evellls: &lfl I
I
"
with cooking privileges. Female 882-7410 Union Captain's
rooms, $75/month. Call TYPEWRITER - Smith Corona. or 882-8779. 5-3-5
351-1885.5-3-4 only, $65. Phone 332-5988, Fully electric 12" carriage, one
Stephen Tyler, professor at Rice
University, to speak at 3 p.m.
from 12:30 p.m t» I
EAST SIDE. Two bedroom
after 6 p.m. 2-3-1 year old. (New $220) $135.
393-8654. 1-3-1
LEASE A horse. $35/month. I feed
him, you ride him and give him
Peanuts Personal jjj Wednesday at 321 Baker Hall.
Topic: "A Point of Order: Jati and
The Pre - Vet Club will have firs.
dessert -Si
unfurnished house, stove and ROOM FOR male student, across
loving care. 882-8779 or Pharma."
refrigerator. 349-1540. 4-3-1 from Union. 211 % Grand River, 882-7410. 5-3-5
SMITH CORONA, "Sterling" blue, L.G. PEOPLE pass through your
upstairs. $48 per month. 5-3-5 manual typwvriter with case. life like clowns in a parade, Alan McPherron, professor at Students for Gene Varndell will Free U: Mind ci
ROOMMATE NEEDED. Excellent condition. $35 or best. University of Pittsburgh, will speak meet at 10:30 p.m. Wednesday at mind games at 7
SUMMER: SINGLES and doubles. GERMAN SHEPHERD. Free, 1 laughing, loving, frowning and p
$50/month plus utilities. Call at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the 4839 Dunckel St., Lansing, to 36C Unic
Call 351-5495. 3-3-5 year, shots, needs space. caring. But there are times
Furnished utilities, kitchen, TV
AHSafm'^!Sj II
484-6221 after 9:30 pm. 5-3-4 Museum lecture room. Topic: "The discuss his ASMSU
3536257. 1-3-1 someone smiles in such a way as
campaign. Sunday at
lounge, laundry, parking, close. Transition to Neolithic Society in Church. Art a,sS
E|L E C T R I C TYPEWRITER to make you forget the past and Southeastern Europe: Issues in offered
1 PERSON needed for house. Own
room, 1% blocks from campus.
$60 - $80. 332-5722. 0-6-3-8
(Olivetti) 3 months old - cheap!
($165 new) 353-9156. 5-3-7
Mobile Homes to cherish the sharing of the Archaeological Method and
The Shaw Hall Club is presenting
a coffeehouse at .8
p.m. Saturday in
Si
present. You do this to me, and Theory." the Shaw Hall cafeteria.
$78. Call 332-8867. 5-3-4
STUDENTS OR working ig g group. j4
,"2 (*» j® ANTIQUES & UNIQUES. Buy and
LOTS AVAILABLE near MSU
I hope we can experience much
more of life together. J.B. 1-3-1
will
The Freak Chess Confederation
hold its spring tournament
Do you want to
interesting people'.' Come to the
meet some must call before .mmu."
sell. 220 Albert Street, under
bedrooms, unfurnished, sd, 2 ! baths, DYNACO PAT4, Stereo 120, and on bus route, by Coral Gables. April $, 6 and 7 in the Union Gold (jay liberation office from 9 a.m. to
Lums. C-6-3-8 Lansing Area Lesbian Fi
carpeted throughout, lots of speakers, EV Decoder. $250 or 10' x 50' and smaller. $58 a Room. Prizes will he awarded. If 9 p.m. in 309 student services bldg.
will have a
offer. 353-1723. 3-3-4 month and interested contact the Gaton at 138 meeting at
parking, $245/ month. up. At MOBILE Sunday at the
Linden St. A coffeehouse featuring Johnny Women', tW I
675-5252. 5-3-1 HOME MANOR, 2756 East
and Kathye, Edward Barcher and
Discussion Willi be
"Dealing Z' I
CORONADO MINI - Washer, used Grand River. Phone 332-2437.
Wally Can will be held at 7:30 p.m.
Straight Women."
Midwest Lesbian
jnJ pla„„?
Rooms only dozen times. Sacrifice, $85. USED CAMERAS, SLR
5-36
Historical Society" will Sunday at the Unitarian Music Festival held here in
Confer^,Z§
355-8158, after noon. 3-3-5 7:30 Universalis! Church, 8SS Grove St. Miv
Rangefinder, Kodak's, twin lens, MARLETTE 1972 - 12' x 63'. p.m. Wednesday at the (More IWH on
3 SPACES TO ski Utah open spring page u|
miscellaneous. 349-1715 after 6
Excellent condition, many
Lansing Public Library Gallery
break. $246.27 total. Call Rooms. Program: Railroading at
SPRING TERM rooms. Montie pm. CV6-3-8 extras. Priced right. 485-4563.
I*board"exam tutoring !
TRAVEL BY HARRINGTON. the Soo.
House Co-op - $225 room and 3-3-1
351-8800. 0-2-31
board. 332-8641. 5-3-4 CANED CHAIRS - $17.50 - $25. Music coffeehouse style at 8:30
1
•
Set of 4/$70. Caning done.
PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE South - 393-3681. 3-3-5
MARLETTE, 1972. Terrific buy!
Three bedrooms with expando
BOAC JETS to Europe From $239. p.m. Saturday
Student Parish.
at Saint John's
Janeti Herdliska, I STANLEY H. KAPLAN
©SPcEDE
Guaranteed; advanced booking
near Michigan Avenue. Quiet for and tip • out Skirted with shed Utrich, Caulkins and munchies.
-
only. TRAVEL BY
student. Near bus line. $15/week
plus deposit. 627-5454. 5-3-4 earth cruising machines
MAJOR STATE stereo for
Good condition. Call 355-2981.
2-3-4
$30. super sharp! Take over balance,
625-7157 - Perry. 3-3-1
HARRINGTON, 351-8800.
0-1-3-1
Social science majors: A
presentation on the masters
!f EDUCATIONAL CENTER
Classes are now being formed in
INTRODUCTION OFFER program in labor and industrial
FALL: SINGLES and doubles.
Furnished, utilities, kitchen, TV, SEKINE SHS-270 GOOD USED Armstrong flute.
VALIANT, 1965 - 12X57, 2
Service relations at MSU will be given by | preparation for the upcoming:
bedroom, in quiet cove 10 Michael Moore, associate professor 4 "MCAT -LSAT
lounge, laundry, parking. Close. $125. Will bargain. Call Linda. and associate director of academic- ®
W/ ALLOY DOUBLE-BUTTED minutes from campus, $50 per 'DAT *ATGSB
$70 $100. 332-5722. 0-6-3-8 351-6803. 3-3-5 *GRE
FRAME month. Lot rent, new programs for LfR, at 4 p.m.
skirting
BOARD EXAM TUTORING Wednesday in 310 Agriculture Hall. V Bor-d Exams
PRIVATE ROOM - furnished, s198.°° 12 STRING GIBSON guitar, 6
TV antenna, furnished, super
STANLEY H. KAPLAN
clean, only $4,495. MICHIGAN For more information call (313)354-0085
house, spring, spring - summer, VELOCIPEDE string Hollowbody Gibson MOBILE HOMES. 372-2580. TUTORING COURSES
Intermediary presents
Invasion at 8 and 10 p.m. tonight
Media |
male. $65 / month, near. PEDDLER custom. Fender percision base, Now being formed for the
0-5-3-7 and Saturday and at 2:30 and 4
489-5960. 3-3-5 Gibson EB3 base, Fender PA
upcoming MCAT, DAT, LSAT. p.m. Sunday at Abram:
system. Acoustic 105B top and ATGSB, GRE Board Exams. For Planetarium. It's electric threater.
USED MOBILE homes already set
ROOMS, FEMALES - males; room bottom. Ludwig drums, information call 1-313354-0085. This weekend only.
up on lots! Loceted just 10
and board, utilties included. saxophone, horns and more.
SALE: FRIDAY, Saturday, minutes from campus. Call C-6-38
$250 / term. Hedrick House Sony, Panasonic portable TV's.
Sunday, March 1. 2, 3. Studio MICHIGAN MOBILE HOMES.
Co-op. Close. 332-0846. 3-3-5 Stereo components, records, reading/presentation will be at 7
Divan $35, antique furniture,
tapes, furniture, guns and more.
372-2580. 0-5-3-7 IflHng p.m. Monday in McDonel Hall east
jewelry, and collectables. 319 lounge.
STUDENT FOR HOUSE near All merchandise guaranteed. We
West Knight Street, Eaton 10X50 ATLAS 2 BEDROOM,
Cod/U-UMi
-
campus. Own room, carpeted, have servicing for any of your
Rapids. 2-3-1 furnished., skirted, enclosed TYPING DONE in my Home.
The Center for Peace and
air - conditioned, share fireplace, electronic repair needs. We buy,
porch, 10X7 shed, large lot. Conflict Resolution is sponsorini
utilities. $70. 332-3824. 1-3-1 sell and trade. MASTER Charge 504 per page up to 10 pages. 40*
GARAGE SALE: Sunday, Monday. $2,250. Call 675-7287. 10-3-5 an information table at the Union
and Bank Americard accepted. per page over 10 pages. on the 200.000 political prisoner
ROOM FOR March 3, 4. If you need anything r*--: --C- i V-
spring term, male. DICKER & DEAL 489-2128. 04 3-8 in South Vietnamese prisons which
for your house, come to 3906 SKYLINE 10' x 55'. Two bedroom
$15/week. Call 332-1354, SECONDHAND STORE, 1701 is in direct violation uf the Parit
Private. 3-3-1 Richmond, Lansing, (colonial deluxe, aluminum skirting, shed, EXPERIENCED TYPIST, Okemoa.
South Cedar. Lansing. 487-3386.
townhouse). 2-3-1 and storm windows. FurftliNfctl
Open 9-9 Monday. Wednesday IBM (pica or elite type.) January, 1973.
or unfurnished, $3,200 if 3736726 weekdays or 349-1778
and Friday. Other nights until 6 ■
SONY MX 16 portable mixer. furnished. 677-5062, evenings or
pm. C-1-3-1 evenings and weekends. 0-2-34 Action/Vista/Peace Corps will b<
337-9247. 5-3-5 Excellent condition! Ask for
Mark, 337-0779. 3-3-4
weekends. 5-3- 4
at placement services interviewing Announcements Fine Furnishings
LAYFAYETTE STEREO amp TYPING, ELECTRIC machine. for "Action" positions from March
Where The Action Is receiver, brand new, 100 watts. Lost & Found Fast, accurate, experienced. 4 to 7. Sign up for an interview.
CHINA - CRYSTAL
LLOYD'S AM-FM stereo receiver, v 372-4746. 15-38 BRETT'S PRINTING
$200, must sacrifice! 3556299. STERLING
THOMPSON'S turntable, speakers, $90. Phone The MSU Go Club will hold th« SERVICE
-
3-3-5 l.ike
FRANDOR 332-8728. 3-3-1 FIND SOMETHING TYPING TERM papers and theses. second round of its first
kyu, 243S SOUTH RUNDLE
new, Hardly usei
If you've found a pet or article of IBM typewriter fast service.
tournament at 7:30 tonight in 3! (Divorce/
JEWELERS EYE GLASSES at Large Savings. Union. 489-2687 Wedgcwood China,
SKI BOOTS size 10. Excellent value, we want to help you return Call 349-1904. 24-38
REMODELING SALE! Why Pay More? OPTICAL 'Traditional Orrefors crystal, Lull
condition steal for $35. and Customized
-
it. Just come into the State News
DISCOUNT, 2615 East Having problems with housing' invitations. Sterling.
351-2794.3-3-1 Classified Department and tell us PURPLE VICKI - fart, accurate,
Gold is up Silver is up Michigan, Lansing. 372-7409.
-
The East Lansing Tenants Resource •One day service available.
C-6-3-8 you want to place an ad in EAST dependable. Tired of one finger Center has a staff of trained
But our prices are down UHER REPORT 4000L Portable
LANSING STATE BANK'S found typing? CAII 337-7260 for rates, people to assist you. Contact U!
tape recorder, in good condition,
MID - MICHIGAN'S Largest audio column. As a public service EAST services. 5-3-4 between I and S p.m. Monday Bridal Shops Jewelry
good value. 355-8132. 5-3-5 LANSING STATE BANK will run through Friday or during our new
retailer with the finest in stereo
the ad at no cost to you I TYPING - TERM papers, theses, evening hours, 7 to 9 p.m. Monday
products and electronic repairs. through Thursday. Phone us ot
KITCHEN SET Solid Oak - 6 EAST LANSING ate. IBM' Selectric II. THE COMPLETE
pendants, lockets, crosses NOW
chairs. Girl's 24" bicycle.
Shop the sotre with straight drop by our office at 501 MAC Ave Jacobson's
40% off
645-7552. 3-3-1
stereo answers. MARSHALL STATE BANK Experienced. 489-1058. 5-31
An
WEDDING SERVICE |
•Loose colored stones '/s off MUSIC, 245 Ann Street. The Case Hall coffeehouse will outstanding selection DIAMONDS: 3y
Transportatior lj § gK
*
Bracelets & pins mostly Vi off C-1-3-1 9 p.m. Monday in the Olse of gowns, from ORANGE BLOSSOM
*
Gifts: Silver, lighters, pens PINK AND white spring formal, FOUND: WHITE and beige puppy Hall grill. traditional to avante
i garde. GOLD FASHION
20% off only worn once. Size 7-8. Call February 21 in Frandor.
*
JUST ARRIVED - NEW Spring G0LDMASTER
Watch bands values to $20 Maria, 355^590. 3-3-1 339-2680 The Everywoman's Center wil
NOW $5
Fashion jewelry. Buy an af^ar 5 p.m. c-1-3-1 DESTINATION: SOUTHERN present two films about women and
American
WEDDING RINGS: By
*
Watch traps, values to $7.50, Greeting Card to go Minneapolis vicinity. Ride* $25. welfare at 8 tonight at 1118 S
FOUND: WHITE female puppy. ART CARVED
NOW $2 ROD, LEATHER upholstered with. GULLIVER STATE
Leaving 3/6, returning 3/10. Call Harrison Road. The films: "Th<
* Chandler end Clark roads. ORANGE BLOSSOM
Grab bag $1 Fur rings $2 armchair, extra large upholstered DRUGS, 1105 East Grand River. 484-2345. 334 Life of Monie Wax" and "Janie'!
*
Pierced earrings, 14K gold Return on description. Jane." GOLD FASHION
highback captain's chair. $75. 332-5171. 0-1-3-1
NOW 1/3 off 337-9509 after 9:15 pm. or 332-3827. C-3-3-1
Thursday - Firday mornings. Mcintosh stereo system.
Wanted Hear James Horvath, member ol
FOUND: LADY'S watch in Burger the National Executive Committer
5-3-1 MC 2105 power amplif», C 26
of the Socialist Labor party, speak
THOMPSONS' FRANDOR pre ■ amplifier. MQ 101 King Lot, February 26. on "The Capitalist Crisis" at 7:30 •
3530981. C-334 EAST LANSING Merchant with tvtNlNU;>.
JEWELERS' BAND BROKE up: Must sell - equalizer. ML-1C speakers. Teac p.m. Wednesday in 31 Union.
220 cassette deck. AN 60 Dolby wife, child and dog would like to
3220 Mall Court, Frandor Fender Bandmaster Amp he$d.
unit. WILCOX SECONDHAND FOUND: FEMALE puppy, mixed rent a clean, 3 bedroom home in All
Fender announcements printed in
Bassman amp head,
breed. About 5 weeks old. East Lansing, Okemos, or "It's What's Happening" are read
West Fillmore Bass amp head, STORE, 509 East Michigan,
351-7677 after 5:00. C-335 Haslett area. Call 351-6230 or daily on WMSN - 640 AM camput jewtlH* snd '
West 115-H speaker cabinet, Lansing. 485-4391. Trades, ANT CENTER
Open Monday • Friday, 9 til 9
Saturday 9 til 6.
Phone 332-1385 for
Ovation 100 watt P.A. head.
394-2167 before 6 p.m. 7-3-8
layaways, bank cards. 9 am -
5:30 pm. C-6-3-8 FOUND: BLACK and white puppy
after 6 p.m. call 349-0954. 334 radio, as one of WMSN's many
services to the students of MSU. LETT'S TELEPHONE
319 E. Grand
337-1314
River Avl-
near Warren's Restaurant. FEMALE VOLUNTEERS needed
East Lansing, Michigan
Custom Work MAGNAVOX PORTABLE Stereo.
FULL SIZE r s and springs.
$50 or best offer. 355-3092.
February 23rd. Deb, 351-4762.
C-335
for
sensual
research on
response
increasing
through
Thre will be a rally foi
Awareness Day at 3 p.m. BRIDAL
Nobody beats our prices Harmony Electric guitar •with hypnosis. Experiment will take
Wednesday at Beaumont Tower
This constitutes awareness for
Jacobsons
on Quality jewelry ttye
amplifier. Call 353-8160. X3-3-1 FOUND: NEAR Cherry Lane pair
of black gloves. To identify call
fifteen hours during a three
month period. Subjects must be
plight of Israeli POW's in Syria.
Kaddish will be said and petition) SHOPPE Precious Stones
Beautifully Set mi
L ** 355-8158. C-335 at least 18. Call 351-8977 will be passed around that will be Bands for bride i j
WATER'S EDGE ENGLISH SPRINGER Spaniel r 12
(Olashansky) or 339-9650
(Allison Stern). BI-1-3-1
sent to Kurt Waldheim at the UN in
New York.
•gowns-fabulous
selection for the entire
wedding perty.
Joift the 'wide range of
Student sizes
and
and
Pups. AKC, 2 males, 3 -females. Car Pool Boycbtt committees at II a.m.
Lansing
*""°p,eces«l veils
Liver / white. $125. 694-6171. TAPE LECTURE course: DR. •accessories
5-3-4 LEONARD PEIKOFF'S Saturday in front of Wrigleys and
Frandor and help UFW maintain its
personalized service Tux Rentals
RIVER'S EDGE AKC - OLD English
puppies. Reasonable. 353-5262:
sheepdog
Introduction
mentioned in the AYN RAND
to
letter. To enroll contact Paul
Logic,
| Start union in the grape fields.
Auditions for the play "RIP - L
LETT'SBRIDALSHOPPE
901 West Ottawa
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a.m., returning 6 p.m. Tuesday 484-5134
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Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan
Friday, March I, 1974 17
Latest
By GARY HOFFMAN
■ in this era of food and gas shortages, MSU students face
P.m..
shortage:
he *aM, "but th, phot*,
ke,p until .bout *30D, Ptulo the M the olh„ Is the
paddleba
still „ „ university aware of the severe shortage of this important
It's almost impossible to
■other crisis: the'greatest paddleball court shortage in
■At 6 p.m. on a recent evening, nearly 70 students and
history
faculty
„et through on the telephone,,
.h^^Uh^o^""""" faC""ieS """"" " resource, the paddleball court? Di Paulo thinks officials are aware
of it.
fcmbers waited patiently in the Men's Intramural there „ Cghls between people
"I heard a rumor that
they are going to build some into the
Building
B nightly ration of paddleball courts for the
following day.
for
can
Al M(£onneU, a
do as a social
Lansing s^ho^re said "It's something you
t
»«rts,» he said, new ice arena," he said.
■in the middle of the line, which stretched completely the' event, and it's cheap,"
Kgth of the largest gymnasium, freshman Joseph Falls said the McConnell, who was about 50th in
line, said he probably
Khtlv vigil was necessary because "There just isn't that much wouldn't get a court that
night.
K to do during the winter." Di Paulo said some inconsiderate
people hoard the paddleball
courts just as they hoard other
■ Reservation clerk Mike Di Paulo said the 70-man line was scarce resources.
"iru-r than usual. "The courts usually are all gone
by 6:20 "Sometimes one player will reserve a court for one
hour, and
then his partner will reserve the court for another hour," he said.
"It's illegal, but it's hard to
stop."
lill may change
He also said that he
suspected many paddleball court users
weren t students. "We check the
IDs of those who sign up or
check out equipment, but we can't check their
partners out."
itatus of guides
Di Paulo said there are only 141 reservations that can be
out per
given
day for all 40,000 students plus faculty and staff. He
estimated that only about half of the
people who try to reserve a
court for the
I State Capitol tour guides are not commenting on a proposal following day are successful.
Harris F. Beeman, director of the intramural
■at would change the status 'of their jobs from civil service program, said
different methods of rationing the
Isitions to political patronage jobs. paddleball courts have been
tried but this is the most successful.
■ Several of the seven tour guides, most of whom are MSU
Judcnts. said they preferred not to comment on a bill introduced
■st week in the Michigan Senate that would make them
"We used to let people call in
during the day to make
reservations, but that put faculty members at an advantage," he
lislative employes appointed by the lawmakers. said. "They used to have their secretaries start
dialing at 8 a.m.
and keep on dialing
| However, the supervisor of the tour guides said this week that until they got through."
Tesently the employes are instructed to remain nonpolitical in
Beeman also said facilities at the Men's Intramural
Building are
Jeir tours of the Capitol.
■ ••If you go into patronage jobs you could
^
more crowded now because more women are
using them and
because there are more students
get political," said using the facilities than ever
lands P. Kelly of the buildings management section of the state before.
|pt. of Administration. "The I-M building was built in 1958 for
■ The bill to change the status of the jobs was introduced an MSU enrollment of
by two 20,000 students," he said. "Five
late senators, John McCauley, D-Grosse III, and John T. years later, the enrollment was
up to 30,000.
Iwman, D-Roseville, who arranged a patronage job earlier this
■Dnth for a bartender friend. Beeman said the winter quarter is the time
of the greatest
■James Kent, 61, an out • of - work bartender
known'by many shortage of paddleball courts.
■ the senators, was appointed assistant sergeant • at • arms of the McConnell said handball and paddleball are
In ate, a $9,200 per year job. He started work this week. popular because Getting a paddleball court at the Men's Intramural Building is getting harder due to increased interest in the sport.
couples can play.
Sn Photo/Dave Olds
Tope
■ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) - House because he did not want
to be "controled" (sic) by his
the
reveals
plane into the target, which
is the white house."
and made available to ,the "I don't feel too badly. I felt
plot
At least not right now.
Maybe Japanese during the Banzai
to d
puel Joseph Byck, a man Associated Press. .
jittefy before, you know, later I will be. I think
brother's keeper?' And the
charges. And it must also, uh
. .
o said he was government, put a gun to his Byck also expressed his would
outraged by "I should have been better months ago and even weeks sometimes
.. answer have to be
■ government, sat in his head in the cockpit of a Delta distaste of the government in it must be good a relief to get souped up with positively,
...
in
.
car
prepared, but, unfortunately, ago just thinking of it. yes. For we are all
1 airport parking lot and to have the backing of . .
Airlines plane at Baltimore - identical letters mailed Friday I'm not. This tape seems to be
...
drugs, too, but here I'm cool, brothers and if anyone of us is
Itated "Maybe it was true what .of a ./. fanatic group, you calm, collected and (yawn)
into a
tape recorder Washington International to three newspapers — the spinning awfully fast. I'm Thoreau said when he said we
.
hurting, then we all stand to
^ "moral to this madness." Airport last Friday after killing know, where everyone says go tired, sitting in a little drizzle get hurt.
Philadelphia Daily News, the wondering if I did something have nothing to fear but fear.
)
couple of hours, he a
security guard and the get them, get them,you can do waiting for another hour, hour "I've never owned a pistol or
Philadelphia Inquirer and the wrong. "I don't know if I'm afraid, it. And they all get
luld be dead. Not by copilot. Detroit Free Press. hopped and a half to tick off. even fired a pistol. It's rather
design, "It's starting to .drizzle but I don't seem
paps, but by his own hand Byck left his final thoughts
. . ....
jittery. up, you know, like the strange. I'm not possessed by
■ertheless. He in a tape "Now is the time for the
now. According to my time "It's a quarter to 6 and I'll
may have recording found in his now, it is 20 minutes to 6. be moving toward the
guns. I think there're weapons
■sed the car by
airport police. independent • minded citizens
. .
airport to kill and it's
outcome,
Ike into the spinning tape of
as h?
In an earlier tape - recorded to take back their government
.Ill.. .less than two hours.
"I've got ... all my
Student faculty in about...
"If there is
one hour.
moral to this
realize it, that killing and
only when I
being
Ting and being killed." message that Byck sent t6 before the government takes a killed may have to be done
identification out of here
lamuel Joseph columnist Jack Anderson, the complete control of all," madness, I suspect it may be before men
Byck, 44, a us begin to respect
|l who picketed the White onetime tire salesman
described the hijack scheme he
Bycl^wrote.
live in a
"I for one will not
controled (sic) society
except . . . except
don't have any identification
. . . well I
postponed due the expression, 'Am I my other men."
had planned for more than a and I would rather die as a
on me.
"I don't know if I should be A Student Faculty
-
Judiciary hearing between the men of 4 A
^ lYS WHAT'S _ ^VCVWV
month. free man." Armstrong Hall and the residence halls management scheduled
HAPPENING -
parked here in the expensive
Lottery
■ The regular weekly
"By guise, threats or What follows is the parking lot but since I'm not Wednesday was postponed when Robert C. Underwood, residence
trickery, I hope to force the halls manager, and Gary
North, residence halls cooordinator, were
limbers in the Michigan transcript of the tape police going to pay, it doesn't make
pilot to buzz the White House found in Byck's car. It much difference. Maybe I
unable to attend due to the Hubbard Hall fire.
Ittery drawing this week —
I mean, sort of dive towards
should be
In this case, the men of
Armstrong Hall are disputing the
662 and 835. The the White House. When the apparently ran out before Byck parked in that other section of the residence halls contract
which allows collective The research
earch diving manuals
■cond chance numbers stopped speaking. Ellipses place. Oh, it all depends on how m will Southern Afric Africa Liberation
-
plane is in this position, I will indicate pauses. soon they find the car. I'd like billing for damage done to common areas of residence halls. be in during finals v Committee will meet at 7:30
»re: 088 and 616. shoot the pilot and then, in the The hearing has not yet been Dale Atkins on March p.m.
The tape was obtained by the car to stay hidden for rescheduled, but attempts Monday at United Ministries in
last few minutes, try to steer are
awhile. being made to reschedule it before the end of winter terto. Higher Education. Everyone
the Annapolis Evening Capital Women e
icing separation welcome.
If you're headed somewhere for
feelings and i
spring break and have room for
rap group meeting from 7:30 to (itiers. call Hubbard Information
9:30 p.m. Sunday at the Center, third floor .of the Library.
MSU
Everywomen's Center.
lobbying
We're open from 10 a.m. to 10
p.m.
Gay liberation meeting
te
at 3 p.m. Monday through Friday.
Sunday on the Union sunporch. We
will discuss tl : gaystate Truckers
' -
meeting of the Mid
Michigan Vans Assn. at 7:30 p.m.
Spartan Wives will meet at 7:30
Sunday and the first Sundav of
p.m. Monday al Peoples Church, each month at Rocky's Teakvvood
(Continued from Grace Lang f om the Ingham
page 1) Lounge in Lansing. Anyone
keep their wives while keeping up with their duties." interested may come.
bying activities often go beyond explaining programs or even "MSU never did anything crooked," Faverman said.
that lobbyists have a certain amount of power.
Jsonal friendships to buying off legislators,
line MSU vice Buying a legislator dinner is really only renting his time for an "Anything that gives a lobbyist greater access to legislators
than the ordinary citizen contributes to his Dower." Bullard said.
Ukranian High Mass at 7 p.m.
president said past actions by school lobbyists hour, not buying him off, he continued. The MSU Science Fiction Saturday at St. John's Student
■ch he was aware of included Parish. Celebrants and excellent
payment of a man's vacation trip Breslin states: "I just will not do some of the Over time a lobbyist
Society meets at 6:30 p.m. Friday
■ allowing a legislator to sue the things that some develops technical knowledge, as well as in 34 Union. Science fiction in choir coming from Detroit.
lobbyist's charge account. people do in other schools." personal friendships with state officials and legislators, that
■Sure, I can tell you horror stories about lobbying, but I don't enables him to influence the
movies and TV will be discussed.
The
■k those guys have made legislative process, Bullard said, Dept. of Philosophy-
any difference," Faverman said. "It is Faverman said that 95 out of 100 schools use honest methods. "In the end a lobbyist has to be Symposium on women's studies announces a colloquim at 8
p.m.
persuasive to win and he can't
ljy a question of how you fight, and you can't buy enough
J. so you don't
The corruption does not really exist because the honest
way is overcome popular sentiment on highly visible issues," Bullard
courses to be offered spring term
and plans for other courses from
tonight
Alan
in 312 Agriculture Hall.
White of the University of
even try." still the best, he said. said. "But he can develop a basis for behind the Hull, England, will address the
■Besides, the powerful are too busy to be on the take," he Rep. Perry Bullard, D-Ann Arbor, agrees that universities '
scenes changes in 2:30 to 5 p.m. Monday in 31 Union.
low visibility issues, and the colloquium on "One Can't Always
T "Most of these guys got enough to do with just seldom engage in questionable appropriations process that the Do What One Ought." The public is
trying to lobbying practices but he noted universities are most involved in has The first Monday Human
pretty low visibility." Relations Film Group, a vehicle for
invited.
interested faculty and staff
members
Phi Gamma Nu business soroi
to meet on the first
will sponsor a blood drive from
Monday of each month to preview- 7 p.m. Monday at
Fire officials films on women and minorities, will Wondt Hall
investigate meet from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m.
Monday in 118 Eppley Center to
preview "Where is Prejudice,"
"51%" and "Portrait of the Inner
north lower lounge.
Volunteers
Supplemental Security Income
are
Project Alert. Volunteers will be
needed for
of Hubbard blaze City." seeking people who are blind,
cause The National Organization
disabled or elderly and who light
qualify for additional i
fo Women will sponsor a visual through Social Security. Foi
East Lansing Fire Chief Arthur Patriarche presentation and discussion on sex information call Pam Fries
By SUSAN AGER disct» mination in education at 7:30 American Red. Cross.
State News Staff Writer said Thursday that temperatures inside the
p.m. Tuesday at the YWCA,
room probably reached 1,200 to 1,400 degrees. Townsend Street, one block south MSU Simulalic
il^jns Society will
Questions on the actual cause of The heat was initially limited to the room, of the Capitol, ) s p.m. Sunday in
Wednesday's South Hubbard Hall fire may Patriarche said, until firemen opened the door. the Union Mural Roo
remain unanswered until late next week, fire Heat and smoke then "boiled right out into the
The Greater Lansing Aquarium
officials said Thursday. Society will present a slide show on
hallway," charring the walls and melting ceiling aquarium show and an iuviiuii
>>IW„ > 'he MSU
marshall division, said samples of carpeting and Most rooms on the floor suffered severe i.m. Saturday in the Communitv Symphony Orch—*— 1
other remains from room 1212, where the blaze loom of th« Lansing Mall. Sunday in 'n Fairchild Thea
smoke and water damage.
began, are being tested in a laboratory. Results If the fire is traced to the heater, the The Organization of Arab
of the tests .will not be available until next Softball
University could technically file a claim against Students is sponsoring an Arabian tryouts will be at
week, he said. its owner, freshman Margo Night - food, music, folk dances, p.m. Monday in the N
Gowens, who said fashions and handicrafts, at 7:30 Intramural building turf are
Investigators and University fire officials she often felt cold in her end room.
Space have a prior medical
p.m. Saturday at the International exam.
sifted through the rubble in the bumed - out heaters are prohibited from rooms
by the (More IWH on page 16)
room until 1 a.m. Thursday. The fire, which residence hall contract.
gutted two rooms and caused an estimated Robert Lockhart, asst. comptroller, said the
$100,000 damage to the floor, is believed by University has successfully filed claims against
some fire officials to have started near an
electric space heater left on while the room was
students who left lit candles in
rooms,
unoccupied
causing fire damage. These claims were
GUILD GUITARS
unoccupied. typically covered by the residents' homeowners AMONG THE FINEST MADE
Sam Gingrich, University fire safety official, insurance and in no way approached the W HAVE IN STOCK:
said investigators learned after interviewing the estimated damage of the Hubbard fire.
room's residents that the heater was not under "When you're talking about a $700 candle F-40 Blond F-40Mikc
the bed, as earlier believed, but about two feet fire there's no doubt what the decision would ihocj<1Ilij
away from it. Neither said the heater exploded, be (as regards MSU filing claims)," Lockhart, D-44 D-25
he said. who handles MSU's
casualty insurance, said. F"«30r
"We have ideas on the cause but nothing "But a $100,000 claim is different, and if we AND OTHER FINE NEW « USED GUILD,
concrete yet," Gingrich said Thursday. "We had
Insurance some questions we couldn't answer."
find the space heater was the cause, the case
will be referred to the administration for a
MARTIN
r
& GIBSON suitahs, AT IOWISI
■9
Derragon, Gingrich would not say what the questions decision." nCDIV wtswwl,t[
°°r
a claim representative for Michigan Claim Service Inc., inspects
°f Hubbard Hall
damage on the were, but Franks said the room's residents Lockhart said the University has no liability
LLULrSLT instruments
where two rooms were gutted Wednesday evening. claimed their carpeting was noncombustible for the property of others unless 541 E GRAND RIVER
damages are
State Newt photo by John W.Dickson though large areas had bumed. caused by University or employe negligence. EAST LANSING - M F >0 7 &t til 6
18 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, March ]
D, Pickets blast welfare fund cut
□ OR By JOE KIRBY
Members of the Welfare Rights
the Michigan State Dept. of Social
Organization (WRO) picketed
Services Thursday morning at
Organization was made in behalf of Beverly Buthman 26 «n
MSU sophomore whose ADC (Aid to Dependent Children)
payments were cut $26 a month after she moved into Spartan
of four to $6,500.
"Mr Houston, you are a prime mover for
would like you to endorse the $6,500
her message.
this h„,
figure " u„
'
IWcr,cy *»I
liuthma" said fc■
a hearing for an MSU student whose child support payments were
Village on Jan. 18. "With this figure people can live with
decency and diunit
old daughter, had her monthly
>,
cut because she moved into Spartan Village. Buthman, who has a 4 • year - Buthman, majoring in sociology and planning »
Peod(.e $254 to $228 because she doesn t have to pay
,
Half a dozen members of the Ingham County chapter of WRO payment cut from community organizing, said she also receives S7 PIONEER' CT-4141
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