169 NUMBER 7 TUESDAY, JANUARY 14, 1975 MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY EAST LANSING, MICHIGAN 48824 ord seeks $16 billion income tax cut WASHINGTON (AP) — Declaring that "We mean business. We intend to act," Americans must put "our domestic house in Albert told a news conference where a order," President Ford announced Democratic task force unveiled its urgent Monday night he would seek a $16 billion federal economic relief package. income tax cut. It could result in individual He said he assured Ford that "we will tax payers receiving cash rebates of up to cooperate wherever we could." $1,000 on their 1974 tax payments. . It had been expected that Ford would Ford's announcement of his economic announce his economic program in his State plan came hours after House Democratic of the Union address to leaders set out economic relief Congress policies with Wednesday. priority on a tax cut and more jobs. White House Deputy Press The Ford tax cut Secretary was a cornerstone of the John Hushen denied that Ford's speech was package of economic and energy proposals set up to beat out congressional Democrats the President unveiled in a their economic proposal. nationally on broadcast address from the White House. In addition to the tax cut and Other major elements of the more public package: jobs for unemployed, the proposed pro¬ • An immediate tariff on foreign crude grams include standby authority for limited oil, beginning at $1 a barrel and going to $3 wage and price controls, lower interest a barrel in three months, coupled with a rates, more help for the depressed request that Congress place what he called housing industry and energy conservation. "energy taxes" on domestic oil and natural Albert said Ford's apparent proposal for gas. an across the board rebate on 1974 taxes • An unspecified method of returning the had not been explored by the task force. $30 billion in "energy tax revenues" to the Rep. Jim Wright, D - Tex., chairman of economy "in the form of additional pay¬ the task force, said energy conservation ments and credits to individuals, business proposals include some clearly unpopular and state and local governments." options but he said a combination of some • An increase in the investment tax would be needed to cut down credit to 12 per cent for one year in an effort consumption. The proposals include gasoline AP wirephoto to spur industrial rationing, plant expansion and the mandatory allocation of gas and oil. restric¬ resident Ford sits in the White House Monday as he works on creation of more jobs. ting the sale, of gasoline on certain days, AP wirephoto nationwide television speech. Ford delivered the speech, "We must wage a simultaneous three • s higher taxes on pleasure craft and big cars Speaker of the House Carl Albert outlines the Democrats front campaign against recession, inflation lealing with economic and energy problems, Monday night. and energy dependence. We have no — but nothing about import taxes on oil or economic program during a Capitol Hill news conference gas, as Ford was reported considering. choice," Ford told Americans from the Monday. White House library in the nationally broadcast preview of his Wednesday State ?x courses limited of the Union message to Congress. City slap Dooley's Ford outlined the tax cut plan, saying: "Twelve billion dollars, or three fourths of the total of this cut, should • go to the may medical students individual taxpayers in the form of a cash rebate amounting to 12 per cent of their 1974 tax payments — up to a $1,000 rebate. with If Congress acts by April 1, you will crowding charge get By DEM M ARTIN a lot of things they are teaching us in the your first check for half of the rebate in May State News SUM Writer program." and the rest in September." s your doctor know enough about Irwin Kappy. first year medical student Ford said the rest of the cut — about $4 in the College of Human Medicine, said he is billion — would go to businessmen and it study released by the World interested in taking the human biology and farmers through the increase in the 1 Organization noted that many By RALPH FRAMMOLINO Foltz said he doubts whether there were 200 patrons over the kl and nursing schools fail to provide behavior class because he knows he will be investment tax credit to 12 per cent for one State News SuH Writer legal limit Saturday night. He also said he will continue to do his encountering people with problems related year. At present, the tax credit is 7 per cent Only days after a second criminal complaint w as filed against the best to comply with the law. but he questions whether officials are (sexuality courses for their students. to sexuality. for all industries except public utilities, AUe-Ey, East Lansing city officials are considering also starting correctly interpreting the law JMSl. medical students can study "I definitely belive it should be which have a 4 per cent investment tax court action against Dooley's for overcrowding. I sexuality only on a limited basis. part of the credit, curriculum, he added. East Lansing attorney Dennis McGinty said it is likely a criminal "Obviously, we're hoping like hell that we don't get a citation," J World Health ■the situation Organization study "What w< need most urgently today is complaint will be sought against Dooley's for violating building Foltz said. unfortunate, especially Howard Stoudt, chairman of the Dept. of mor«' spending money in your pockets code infractions Saturday night. A Foltz also said that the outcome of the case T midst of report by fire officials has been against the AUe-Ey a growing number of Community Medicine, said preliminary rather than in the Treasury in presented to him charging the bar with having 199 people over will set important precedents for other area bars in determining ts from patients, medical students planning on a human sexuality curriculum is Washington." Ford said, acknowledging their 357 patron limit. patron limits. fceral practitioners that training in being done with the Dept. of Family lhat his new economic program is far Gary Foltz. owner-manager of Dooley's. said his manager told "I'm hopeful that we get this Alle-Ey thing over with so " ea of medicine has been different than the one he proposed last neglected. Medicine. him patrons who normally wait outside were allowed in to everyone knows where he stands." Foltz said. "tSU's College of Human October. protect ■ne study human "This is a new medical college," Stoudt them from high winds and cold temperatures. "I'don't think the police are acting like kids," Foltz said. He sexuality for two said. "There is a lot of pressure to Speaker Carl Albert said he expected 1 in an interdisciplinary class on get does not think that the police were House action within 60 days on legislation I've seen it crowded, but not to that extent," said East Lansing maliciously or intentionally I biology and behavior. The several things into the college. understating the capacity* of area bars. Dept. of to cut taxes from between $10 billion and Fire Dept. Inspector Walter Dixon. Dixon, along with Fire "I would be reasonably certain that there ^iniiy Medicine, which is part of the $20 billion for low and moderate income Marshal Berman Prether and two East Lansing police officers, Fire Chief Phillip Patriarche said that the area bars have been f would be much more material covered in Osteopathic Medicine, offers persons. counted the number of people at Dooley's after a patron complaint given repeated warnings and that the fire department tries to seek the future. We have some intent in the e professor called a "one shot" All legislation will be analyzed for its alerted them to the situation. cooperation rather than file complaints on the first instance of to second future of offering a course." year medical students impact on unemployment and speedy "We ordered them to shut the doors down until the crowd building code violations. ' to study the topic, Roy Simon, asst. director for the School of consideration will be given bills to create thinned out to capacity." Prether said. Prether said the bar "We try to get their cooperation first," Patriarche said, "rather jail Sher teaches the class on human (continued on page 6) new jobs, he said. owners have been warned repeatedly about the situation. than leave a nasty taste in someone's mouth." | and behavior where students spend r sequence on the subject of ■ sexuality. 1 Unphear. r asst. director for the Human Medicine, said the reason '"pii' is taught I hat way is because partment believes it should be Students finding bullet n context with other areas of By ELLEN SPONSELLER things. No shopping sprees for me," said said the economy has drastically affected tainment. and money. Sue McLain. 1300 Grand River Ave. her entertainment "I just stay at home and have Perage of human sexuality budget. my own "I use my car mostly on weekends, for Donna J. Ellis, senior. 417 Grove, has adequate private entertainment," Gregg said. shopping and running around," Gregg said. "'is and does it meet three part time jobs to help with school "I can't go drinking with my friends Steven W. Deutsch. graduate student, P of medical students? expenses. Kissmer has a laundry list of student MSU students are bullet biting by the anymore. I can't blow my money. I used to 621 E. Greenlawn, Lansing, said he fre J- .an ass°ciate professor of Medical dozen in an effort to combat the inflation "If the economy wasn't so bad I wouldn't write checks all over town, any time I saw economic savings tips. f and Development, said some quents second hand stores for buys in »»want more which is gripping the nation and their be working three jobs. I don't have time to something I liked. Now I have to keep track furniture and clothing. "I don't buy records, I don't go to the opportunities to study of all those dimes." Brown said. ■ sextialit v. pocket books. do a lot of things," Ellis said. movies, I don't drive my car and I'm a little Students, though not going hungry, are Kissmer and Gregg said they are not isfied with the clothes I have," is just Amy L. Brown, senior, 325 Mason Hall, finding the place and planning their budgets more carefully in Gregg says he also saves on enter¬ using their cars as often in order to save gas Kissn r said. Jp' she said. order to stretch their dollars to meet the ltt|i°Uld ^ m of the program," hcrnnliv.,(sophomore in the daily cost of living. "Before we shop for food we make a list Nursing. "It's more relevant than and budget everything," said Claudia Centers, senior, 145 Collingwood Drive. "Then when we go to the store we compare |sk force prices and find the best buys. We've got to be frugal." Centers' roommate. Gail Evans, a junior, said that she and her 3 roommates eat 3,ries texts together and used to spend about $7 on food. a week "However, inflation has forced us to increase our food spending to $8.25 a wr .-k," sex b ias Evans said. Other students are buying less meat and IpNGtaskIUPI) A 111 . state Board of cheaper cuts of meat. force "We cut out about everything don't IhiMn :\""r ",vesl'gating sexism *"ul uul auuui we sc"ools says widespread sex neo(*- We buy a lot of hamburger, chicken LI ' K'rls a"d placing boys under to0 eXft'' excel. and turke>' le*s ~ turkt,-v le*s are Kreat ~ and we buy day old bread," said William F. ■velv am,. rev®aled in a report Gregg, a senior. 2399 Abbot Road. Christine E. Kissmer, doctoral student, I'20 worn I. S:*turday by the task jomen and thrpe mpnin 654 Abbott Road, said it is cheaper for her Michigan schools to buy from a meat supplier rather than a grocery store. ■report "v,s' Marv Kiley. senior, 208 Cedar St., said its whWas bitterly opposed by anti she *nd her roommates hardly have meat at Against Sai(l ttl' tas'i 'orce was a"' not are tie roJrtrvinK trad'tional male b-v the economic crunch. !rs of w°men, including "I don't think we feel the pinch as much ,ie recom ' "1 jSS °f Womanhood Inc., as a family would," she said. "I feel a lot 9 demri"^ L,ions lo e"d sexism safer here •» a student than I would if I was j ,,u> r«les of wife and working." ■dinK ii„. . Nonessential expenditures are being cut ■ely Sparss, ln floral contain an from student budgets. Entertainment rates J1"'1" worn.r< en' pr,'sontat'on of books 'ow °n student lists of necessities. So do Particularly women of furniture, cars and clothing. MSU senior Moria Morris, like all smart River Avenue. Many students find it difficult to match Continued on n t> "We don't out at we Just st*y home shoppers, carefully prices to **r ' and play cards and do other inexpensive compares prices of margarine at Larry's Shop-Rite on Grand their budgets. 2 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Tuesday, January u NOTE SENT TO GUARANTORS locus: ATION U.S. protests Hanoi troop movemeni By ASSOCIATED PRESS — level of s»aciialti*»« the UttJ anH de¬ casualties and Ha. that I! that 9! <»;. U.S. aircraft werfffc_ The United States formally struction back up to what it was Black cabinet member named charged Hanoi Monday with grave violations of the Vietnam before the cease fire accords were 1973. signed in Paris in January awsraS he note was unaware ofjTj President Ford intends to nominate attorney William T. peace agreement and warned "The United Sutes deplores coming The South from}{'% Coleman Jr. of Philadelphia as secretary of transportation, that it "must accept the full consequences of its actions." the Democratic Republic of U>rps command said VirtnJJ ilI Vietnam's turning from the hour, 100-mission succeeding the resigned Claude Brinegar, a White House In a protest note to the gua¬ truck convoy «JJ official said Monday. rantors of the Paris agreement path of negotiation to that of destrZi war. not only because it is a 200 Soviet Deputy White House Press Secretary John Hushen made the United States accused trucks and killed built mJ the disclosure in confirming a Time Magazine North Vietnam of illegally grave violation of a solemn in¬ lfljS report that ternational agreement, but also Vietnamese troops, Coleman would become the second black cabinet member sending more than 160,000 ] because of the cruel price it is The command in the nation's history. troops, 400 vehicles and artil¬ __ siid J ^ Coleman, 54, is lery and anti-aircraft weaponry imposing on thfe people of South , Vietnamese bombers JJ a former president of the NAACP Legal Vietnam," the United States scores of trucks into the South. ci Defense and Educational Fund, a Harvard Law School said. Meanwhile, South Vietnam graduate and a Republican. claimed its warplanes, flying "The Democratic Republic of a North Vietnamest Only one other black has held Cabinet rank — Robert one of their biggest missions of Vietnam must accept the full which the command u, Weaver, secretary of Housing and Urban Development the war on Monday, wrecked a consequences of its action." to be used to attack Ki under President Lyndon B. Johnson from 1966 to 1968. 400-truck North Vietnamese convoy carrying men and sup¬ plies for an offensive against the central highlands city of "The United States deplores the NAACP to pick woman head Kontum. Demw In Cambodia, Republic of Vietnam's turning from the The National Association government troops fought insurgents on the negotiation to that of mar, not only because it] for the Advancement of a grave violation Colored People was expect¬ west bank of the Mekong River of a solemn internal opposite Neak Luong, a major agreement, but also because of the cruel ed Monday to elect its first navl base 35 miles southeast of pi it is imposing on the people of South black woman board chair¬ Phnom Penh. Rebel gunners ViefnoiS man. shelled the town itself, report¬ Margaret Bush Wilson, a edly killing 10 civilians. lawyer from St. Louis, was The U.S. protest follows 260 miles north of expected to defeat three expressions of concern by This warning was not Siiga I other candidates to head President Ford. elaborated in the note and There was no immediaX the 400,000-member civil State Department spokesman Anderson turned a- roboration of the 2nd J side newsmen's questions. He headquarters claim. rights organization. spokesman Robert Anderson stressed that the U.S. object¬ Cambodian said the Ford Administration She would be the second ive is to resume negotiations reinforcements chairman. "obviously intends to abide by arrived Monday woman Mary the legislation on the books" between the Saigon in NeikjJ White Ovington, a white MARGARET WILSON government and the Viet Cong now the temporary In prohibiting combat activity by to establish a national council to 20.000 woman who was a founder of the NAACP, served as acting U.S. military forces in North refugees chairman and then chairman from 1917 to 1932. Vietnam, Laos or Cambodia. organize elections for a new surrounding villages. Wilson was the leading contender for the post and had government for South Vietnam. been hit by more thai The protest note was the backing of the powerful "Bishops Caucus." That group addressed to the Soviet Union, The talks in Paris collapsed last rounds of high expiosival April. since the dry-season of developed within the NAACP s 64-member board under the People's Republic of China. The idea is to take the prob¬ began New Year's Di, Stephen G. Spottswood, who died last month. He had Britain. France, Hungary. Po¬ lem out of the battlefield and Rebel forces control lij served as chairman since 1961. land, Indonesia, Iran and U.N. put it into a room and start of river bank along tbtuT Secretary General Kurt Wald- stretch of river between J heim, talking," Anderson said. as guarantors of the 1973 The White House. Pentagon Vietnam and Paris agreement under which Phnom M Pentagon choses YF16 jet U.S. troops were withdrawn and State Dept. all rebuffed Neak Luong lies at theaf from Southeast Asia. questions dealing with reports point on the river's east bJ The Pentagon Monday chose General Dynamics Corp.'s Tensions heightened last YF16 jet as the Air Force's new supersonic air combat week with the fall of the pro¬ Th« Stat* N«i*vs It published by tm student fighter, making its production potentially one of the biggest AP wirephoto vincial capital of Phouc Binh to Stat* University #v«fy cum day during Fall, wini school tirmi, Monday, Wadnasday, and Frldayi. d military aircraft programs in history. The blood-soaked body of a rocket attack victim is carried to a jeep North Vietnamese-Viet Cong Tarm, and < special Walcoma Weak adltlon Is After more than six months of Saptambar. Subscription rata l» »20 par yaar. competitive flight testing, commandeered for use as an ambulance following a recent assault on forces. The note said an Sacond class postage paid at East Lansing, M"- the General Dynamics single-engine YF16 won over Phnom Penh, Cambodia, by Khmer Rouge insurgents. escalation of fighting since Northrop Corp.'s twin-engine YF17 for a contract which early December has brought POSTMASTER: Plaasa sand Form 3579 to Stata N«w ultimately may be worth up to $15 billion to $20 billion in Studant Sarvlcas Building In cara o» MSU Massanger Sarvlc worldwide sales. Lansing, Ml 4S824. GERALD M. COY, QINKRAL MANAGER Full-scale development and then production of the plane are expected to generate thousands of jobs. new Tenants take landlords to court Display Advertising 13 arrested at Boston school Two persons, including a police officer, were injured and in dispute over broken furnace thirteen students were arrested Monday as the result of a disturbance at Hyde Park High School. By FBED NEWTON in the civil suit, was supposed Reisig did tell the tenants, The trial, which will be held The police officer and a 32-year-old woman, who was State News Staff Writer identified as a youth activities worker, were taken to hospitals. A landlord that - tenant dispute began more than two years to be fixed as soon as some late rents were turned in. "Later, the landlord told us that they could sue the landlord for a rebate of rent and other Wednesday in East Lansing District Court, will be what is Shalom Center damages. called a tort action, in which the The disruption occurred ago over a broken gas furnace they preferred to tear the place All tenants had moved as students were seven tenants will try to recover changing will be the focus of a jury trial down so it would not be worth classes. Police said it started as a out by the middle of January damages for the violation of a shoving match and scheduled to begin this it to fix the furnace," Ipcar said. evolved into scattered fights between black and white 1973, but three decided to take duty imposed by a state and students. Wednesday. "They never did fix it." the complaint further. The case began on Oct. 17, city law. Mrs. Ziegler at that time Since early 1973, Ipcar and The landlords, Bozzo said, 1972 when the gas furnace in claimed that no back rent was the two other plaintiffs in the are in violation of a city the house at 923 Burcham paid to her and that "we're case, Michael Wilson of Jackson ordinance and a state statute Drive broke. The house has trying to close the place down and Claire von Buchwald of that says landlords must pro¬ Antifreeze shortage not since been torn down. seen The tenants are seeking re¬ but no one wants to move." In November 1972 the City of Lansing, have been planning for their day in court. vide heat for their tenants. The amount that the plain¬ fl new drop-in, Dow Chemical Co., in Midland, Mich., stitutio from their landlord for East Lansing and the tenants says the supply of Phil Bozzo, attorney for the tiffs will be rewarded will be rap, study and antifreeze should be adequate for future winters becouse the three months when the took the case to Circuit Court in tenants, said the basic premise solely up to the jury, provided market conditions, which made a key house they were renting re¬ ingredient hard to Lansing. of the trial is "to prove that the they find some violation by the ceived no heat. come by this winter have shifted. An antifreeze shortage lost foil more than doubled the The tenants, all student age, were on a verbll lease with "Judge Donald L. ruled at that time that there Reisig owners of a rental not property did comply with the law." landlords. The damages in question will be those incon¬ coffee place was not enough evidence to The significance of the trial is 1973 price of antifreeze. Manufacturers blamed the veniences suffered by the three for the campus shortage on the Middle East oil embargo. Antifreeze manufacturers had been predicting a similar their landlords, Mr. and Mrs. George Ziegler. The furnace, according to Charles Ipcar, a force the landlord to provide heat since the terms of the lease were so short and parts ■to see "whether a jury will approve of landlord violations of both state and city housing plaintiffs during the three month period in which they had heat. Jewtsh| Community no shortage for the fall of 1975. A spokesman at Dow, one of tenant and one of the plaintiffs were verbal," Ipcar said. laws," he said: Both the the nation's major antifreeze manufactures, said no Zieglers and their big attorney, John Stump, refused increase in production will be needed to meet next winter's demand. Academic Council to make any comment con¬ cerning the trial. Now open: 10-5 Bozzo said he admired the (Tlon. thru Thurs. of the tenants who took rights courage Located Former radical gets sentence of document the complaint to court. "It's not too common for across over Campus Bookstore from Berkey Hall | tenants to sustain the burden of Former radical leftist Jane L. Alpert was sentenced Any misunderstanding as to The proposed new language student could retain examina¬ who owns term states that examinations and tion questions would be left to taking a case like this as far as Monday in New York to 27 months in prison for taking part papers, in a 1969 terrorist examination questions or test other assignments submitted the instructor. they have," he said. plot to bomb banks, office buildings and papers could be cleared up at for grading during the term government structures. Term papers and other com¬ today's Academic Council should be returned as promptly U.S. District Court Judge Milton Pollack dismissed a parable projects would be the meeting. as possible to the student. suggestion she be assigned some sort of public service The Educational Policies property of the students who commitment instead of jail and said, dissent with bombs. . . "conspiracy to express is intolerable and must be treated Committee (EPC) has approved a revision of the Code of Unclaimed final examinations would have to be retained by the professor for at least one prepare them, but instructors could retain a copy for their NOTICE files. accordingly." Teaching Responsibility which term so they could be reviewed after Alpert, 27, had jumped bail and vanished for 4'/i years pleading guilty to conspiracy in 1970. She reappeared specifically spells out the rights of ownership documents. of these by students who desire to do so. The council will meet at 3:15 p.m. in the Con Con Room of STUDENT HOCKEY FANS The decision as to whether the International Center. suddenly last Nov. 14, renouncing her days as a militant. a IMPORTANT DATES FOR COUPON EXCHANGE: SU Sailing COUPONS FOR ALL GAMES (REMAINDER Of SEASON) Club WILL BE EXCHANGED: Introductory meeting: Tues. Jan. 14 7:30 PM Rm. 215 Men's IM TUESDAY JANUARY 14, 1975 PURCHASE OF STUDENT TICKETS, ADJACENT Terrorists fire at Israeli jet SEATING, Two terrorists drove into AND ALL OTHER TRANSACTIONS DEGIN: Orly Airport in Paris with bazookas Monday and fired armor-piercing rockets, apparently aiming at an Israeli airliner taxiing for take-off to New York with scores of Americans aboard, WEDNESDAY JANUARY IS, 1975 police said. The rockets shot past the El Al Boeing 707 and struck a HOURS: 8:30am-4:30pm parked Yugoslav jetliner and the airport administration building. JENISON FIELDHOUSE TICKET OFFICE i Three persons were injured, a Yugoslav steward, a policeman and a baggage handler, but damage was slight. .MONDAY TUESDAYI- COUPON EXCHAHGE Ojj 1 ■Michigan State News. East Lansing, Michigan Tuesday, January 14, 1975 3 he 50s: be-bops depict leceptive view of decade By MARY ANN CHICK ■. Sute Newt Staff Writer "The onty American was the white, middle class male and his wife, Nowak said. Minorities, women and the lower classes were L (^pie remember the '50s for rock and roll, Elvis Presley ignored. "ail finned cars. They forget the anti communist hysteria, the A series of events in the later '50s forced the average American war and the pressures to conform that were also part of the to reassess his goals and values. Scandals then, too talalgia is a very selective process - people remember what The quiz shows were exposed, the racial tension of Little Rock, i want to remember," said Douglas Miller, associate professor Ark., the Sputnik launching, the discovery of bribery in the Eisenhower Administration and the America started the stoning of Nixon in Latin questioning. The 50s created the background for Watergate by creating the „||er and Marion Nowak of East Unsing have spent the past emotionality of the times." Nowak said. I years researching and writing a book on the social and People could accept what Nixon did, she said. It was not such a Lai history of the '50s. They are teaching a history seminar big surprise after the discovery of bribery in the Eisenhower Ton their findings this term. Administration. ie'50s are often referred to as a time of peace and tranquility, By the early '60s, juvenile delinquency was rising, the beat factually they were tense times. Miller said. movement was growing, Americans were buying Volkswagens ■he weapons arms race, international tensions, anti instead of Ply mouths and students had started to protest. ■munist hysteria and a pressure to conform were present," he Seeds of women's lib The women's liberation movement had its seeds in the '50s. One [ebreakupof communities and families, nuclear testing, sexism of the women s magazines ran a story about a housewife who ran ■ racism - the same problems of the '60s — were present in the away in the late '50s, Nowak said. 1 Nowak said. They got more letters than ever before from women who said SN photo/Bob Kaye |ut it was as if people believed that if you ignored problems, they too felt like running away," she added. Douglas Miller, associate professor of history, 1950s that is currently being offered through went away," she said. "Things changed very rapidly for students, too. One said he was gestures in his office in Morrill Hall. Miller the History Dept. Suburbia beckons a moderate in '58, a liberal in '59 and a radical in '60," she said. instructs a class about the nostalgia of the lf popularity of the city declined as people moved to the When people look back, they are not likely to remember the _rbs. ideas or problems of a period, Nowak said. I'rban renewal didn't help the cities," Miller said. "In New "The things that were played up in the media then are Unit same within three years, it cut the housing for the ■aterial possessions took on new meaning. poor by half." remembered now," she said. The perfect housewife, the rising junior executive and the will aid day | became important to people to own their own piece of turf, teen-agers at the soda shop were the only type of people publicized ^ own home and car. Miller said. by the media. By DAVE GLZN1CZAK The office was created by the . people spent more time watching television than America has always been youth oriented. This has a lot to do Ingham County Board of Com¬ State News Staff Writer missioners last December after a King for pay," he said. with the nostalgia crazes, Miller said. study by MSU graduate. Kath- Married students unable to get special services for their ryn Cole showed that some type of coordinating agency was lere were no alternative lifestyles in the '50s. One wore a "As a generation gets older, they prize the past more." he said. children from local day care centers will get help when the Office needed for the several day care centers and homes in >d coat, worked in business and had a wife and kids. Miller "It's a Way of looking back and reliving the past." Ingham for Young Children begins operating sometime this spring. County. At present, there are 21 day care centers in Ingham County, with 16 of them located in the greater Lansing area. The agency will act as a liaison between all day care facilities in the county in ! ummer employment hopes that they can merge services at reduced costs. their efforts to obtain One area where costs could be reduced is food necessary purchasing. Cole estimated that money could be saved if centers pooled their Ky MARY ANN CHICK of Placement Services. energies and obtained their food through bulk purchases instead of Anderson said. Students can "It is impossible to tell what them is "Check to if kt.tr New* Staff Writer The auto industry and a good way to earn see they are independent buying. re count on lated industries will not earning at least mini or where these jobs will be until money, he said. rehiring," Anderson said. Another objective of the agency is to act as an information office pth the wind blowing and be mum wages. Employers usually June," he said. "There are certain Next, hiring jobs that use your friends to see providing assistance in locating the qualified workers and services everywhere, it is hard many students. The jobs . pay an hourly or weekly wage Officials from the still must be done no matter if they know about any that Michigan jobs, he required for children with special needs. |think about getting a are open there will go to and provide room and board. Employment Security Com¬ what the economy is." he said. said. »r job. But. if you want the sons and daughters of Most camp and resort owners mission iMESC), said they "Students need to decide now Students should also check Married students with handicapped children would better start employes particularly is year, you already working, will be contacting Placement could not predict how many the student employment office benefit since the agency could refer them to a Anderson said. exactly what they are going to day care unit that Services within the next four total jobs would be available for do this summer," Anderson for listings of employers. could meet their children's needs. t businesses and in- Michigan students have a months. Susanne Franzini. director of the Married Students Activities students. said. "Work or go to school." After making a list of em ps will be hiring few better chance at getting a job in Students who are hoping to One spokesperson for MESC plovers, contact each Unit, said the campus day care unit cannot enroll its this The a resort or a They should try to figure out of them handicapped summer. camp because get a federal job will find their how much money they need to children because it lacks staff members with the for painted a gloomy picture for personally. required exper¬ tition government Michigan is a resort state. chances slim. "Write, them tise. Franzini said the agency could locate centers for these prospective jobhunters. earn and what they can do to a letter or if |. be stiff. The students "The summer employment of "Eor some jobs, there are 50 "There are people knocking earn it. possible, visit them in person." children where they would be helped. work this summer will be camps and resorts is usually I viorkintj in resorts, camps consistent people applying for the one on employer's doors everyday "Some students should de¬ Anderson said. Franzini said the agency could also compile a list of volunteers no matter what the position," Anderson said. asking for jobs, but the em cide if they are willing to leave Keep a list of where you have so the unit could find help quickly when needed. f themselves. economy is," Anderson said. Most of tb^federal, programs been and what you have heard student who m-ts The student will not make , ployurs are nut hiring until they their hometown area this Cole said the $51,990 coordination program would serve the c a job a are run by the school districts needed them and goto wherever the from each place so you always needs of all the children in the county. She said the I he the who starts yesterday," he summer agency would one great deal of money at a camp who know usually hire high school said. job is," Anderson said. where you stand. probably begin operating sometime in March or April when the ■lint; leads now," said or resort, but it is a pleasant students. Anderson said. Students should not overlook Each student should decide applications for federal funds for its financing would be processed. Is Anderson, asst. director way to spend the summer, "Last year, there were about self employment, Anderson what skills they have and what 800 federally funded jobs and said. kind of job they can do. After [of put on probation they afl went to high school students," said Jim Stewart, asst. director of Tri County "Painting homes, grass or washing cars turn into a good paying cutting could job." making these decisions, stu¬ dents should start a well ordered job campaign. They open thursday and friday nights until n Regional Manpower Admini Anderson said. should start making contacts. [r not filing income tax stration. When Ingham County had 45 positions for college students Contracting yourself out others to do certain services for to A good place to begin is with your former efhployers. ) MSU professor who misdemeanor while the other is last summer, it had over 500 ped no contest to a charge a felony. applicants, Stewart said. plfully failing to file income "You would have to ask Getting a job in the Lansing NOTICE TO ALL STUDENTS *as sentenced Jan. Congress that question. They area will be hard. The factories ix months of |ation. unsupervised wrote the law." he said. who have laid off people will have to hire them back before SPRING - 1975 Kei said thei t.hev can hire new employes. re R. Burnett, computer Anderson said there should LONDON, ENGLAND ;e professor, was charged be about 100 jobs in the I failing to file tax returns Lansing area this summer. 1969 and 1970. He COMBINED HUMANITIES/ 'fuutw*a»ip vtruuwtwWKttii! d*y- * "JpMional scientific testimony that «'ommitlL J* News Viewpoints, columns and letters Linda Sandel Night Editor build an oil port and refinery on the New the aerosol cans, flurocarbons, orj personal opinions. PatNardi Staff Representative Hampshire coast last year, much of the local the ozone layer some If, may ?* resistance centered on the beautiful little earth, with potentially miles !% town of Durham. At one point the Onassis devasuti^P agent on the scene. Constantine Gratsos, on life. Ozone filters the sunftf EDITORIALS wrote to a woman in Durham: "My family background, academic educa rays, which would otherwise cancer and worse. A spokesman for manufacturer, M tion and personal inclinations would all gas argued against any ban, whichl!W Jobless make me the last person on earth who stude would like to desecrate a beautiful land scape... unfortunately, the evolution of the would "cause tremendous tion. particularly in the short asked for time to do econormttT rt world will inevitably result in the more reseat I One must wonder if all levels of . . . MSU students, though in real¬ government have departments for elimination of all that you and I and many ozone danger. That is fair enough that the effects of !L ity if not officially unemployed other people cherish. Humanity has flurocarbonj !fl the Initiation and Perpetuation of and in need of assistance, will be reached the point (where) we shall have to atmosphere would go on for at J Myths. bypassed. Students don't need choose between existence and beauty .. years after a ban. If the turn the feared result and are out?! One that seems quite popular at money. Gratsos put a familiar argument in par the year 1998, they would not ban^I the present is the myth that What is ironic about this situa¬ ticularly chilling form - the argument of reduce tl* J students working their way tion is the behavior of city necessity. It failed in New Hampshire. layer by a third - perhaps troy all life on earth. enourt J' Durham and the roast remain as they were. through school don't need money. officials. The funds were partly Elsewhere it has worked. We look to government Bantry Bay. immediate against the At a city council meeting last sent because of the unemployed Ireland was once a wonder of the world, government is desperately short of J distant,"fcl week, City Manager John students, but since students are green and lovely, rich with the creatures of the sea. Now,after an "accident" in unload with the training and the vision Patriarche announced that the barred from federal aid, the grant uJ such judgments. The President federal government is sending ing a supertanker, Bantry Bay reeks of oil d« was actually a misallocation. The and death. even have a scientific adviser on hit nearly $500,000 in aid to the un- federal government actually allo- Beauty was a value at risk in Durham. But the problem goes deeper than ik. employed in East Lansing. More cated only $170,000 for the unem¬ But Gratsos, for all his tone of brutal The institutions of Washington, Dj than half of that sum was awarded candor, was not really accurate in stating almost entirely committed to the jfa ployed nonstudents of East Lan- to the city because of the large the issue. As Bantry Bay shows, and as growth - of industrial and — sing, yet city officials are going to Singapore now knows, those who succumb expansion - as the answer to MtietvJ number of unemployed students, take the $250,000 of misallocated But students won't get a penny money and spend it elsewhere, in- to the argument of necessity may lose more It is an article of faith that we BM J of it, because federal law prohibits than beauty and tranquility; they may lose with the postwar pattern of growtil stead of returning it to the federal sustaining elements of life. on the intensive use of cheap enerp J student use of the unemployment In a thousand ways, the industrialized the statement of that proposition it government. Apparently, the city fafl funds. fathers and mothers are concern- world now faces basic decisions about its future course of development. refutation. For energy is no and will not be. To go on expat kmgetT The reasoning behind that law And the ed about the misuse of money in crucial choice is not between existence and have would require putting n was stated quite clearly by a some places, but not in others, beauty. It is between two views of exis¬ regulations that would make them install strip mining bill that would have made investments into new energy wurtttl spokeswoman in the East Lansing The tragedy of the entire tence: the short term and the long term. "scrubbers" to clean the smoke of high- them repair the surface afterward. dubious economic benefits and di city manager's office: students situation, of course, is the pre- The conflict over strip mining of coal is a sulphur coal. Instead they want to strip the It is perfectly logical for a power com¬ damage to the biosphere. don't need the aid as much as dicament of unemployed students current example. The electric power com¬ soil of Wyoming and Montana to get at the pany to want to maximize its short-term The curious thing is that people J panies want to keep their costs down. They low sulphur coal underneath. They per¬ profits and socially appealing to keep the government, many of them, sen other people do. The same myth facing rising rents, food costs, have fought frantically against federal suaded President Ford to veto a modest price of power down. But there is a heavy are entering a new time, with ch has been advanced by the federal tuition and general living costs, long-term cost, and it is not only the beauty complicated than to grow or die. 1 government itself. who have so many agencies work¬ lost to the great plains of the West. Land Dahrendorf, the former Common Hi Nonetheless, the funds are go¬ ing against them and so few work- needed to feed a hungry world would be official who now heads the LondonSd turned to waste. Economics, said recently that ing to come to East Lansing and ing for them, a da One of the great difficulties in our society theme" of Western society "appeanil will then be sent to the Tri-Coun- It's a wonder that a techno- today is that we do not have adequate spent." That is the theme of lineu J ty Manpower Consortium, which structure that depends so highly mechanisms for weighing long-term inter¬ as progress, of will consumption and qa use the funds to create on higher education degrees for ests against the immediate. Our system tive expansion as ultimate goods. community service jobs for the its survival does so little to pre- grew on the principle of the market, the "Growth must become a question il unemployed. serve its own belief that millions of individual decisions ter rather than more." Dahrendorf J stability. Editorial bruhaha >pubik.j>oi<*,. That is easily said but not s produce the greatest benefit for the whole. Cassandra Spratling The market ideal has given us wealth and arranged. How do we assure em| The real "bizarre bruhaha" related to New A420 Bailey Hall ed board Jan. 4th's unfortunate basketball incident was the State News editorial response, not much freedom. But its emphasis is neces sarily on immediate gain. How can a power company be expected to weigh its desire for in this Those new are the world, and individual ai tion, and political leadership, and 1 questions ahead. the incident itself. Gov. Milliken's Commission on schools in the state, while the pre¬ cheap coal today against the country's need |c) 1975 New York Time* Higher Education has finally come sent Board of Education would I admit to not knowing exactly what Raccoon supported issues led to the suspension of 10 of MSU's up with a possible means of continue to direct kindergarten finest athletes, but whatever would prompt Dear Joe Raccoon: solving the problemr of Mickey through 12th grade. them to such action before one of their Since you can't write I will help you let Mouse diploma factories that This additional board has sever¬ biggest games could not have been as trivial the readers know of the responses received don't properly prepare students al advantages over the present as you made it seem. You stated that the incident "threatened regarding the letter in Thursday's State for changes in future job markets. system. The members of the News on the death of your sister Josie. A the credibility of the entire Spartan sports The commission, in a proposed board would be appointed rather program." I think that whatever issues re¬ few trappers called and thought you had amendment to the state Constitu¬ than elected. This would insure sulted in the incident threatened and per¬ resorted to emotionalism. Since you are an tion which the legislature has that they were not opportunists haps still threaten the credibility of Spartan animal, I presume this is bad. But I think been asked to put on the 1976 sports, not the incident itself. they just don't want to hear about your looking for a stepping stone. Furthermore, if problems do exist in our pain, maybe it hurts their conscience. They ballot, has recommended a long The board could also keep a Athletic Dept., I certainly do not wish to also keep referring to the overpopulation of needed postsecondary Board of closer watch on changes in the job see them "hastily forgotten." I hope, animals without having traps to control the Education to help coordinate market than the present system however, that the problems — whatever situation. We won't dwell on that because I must tell you'about the biggest statewide higher education pro- can offer. The higher education they were — that prompted the team to percentage take the action they took will be solved to of my telephone calls. grams. This separate board, if boom of the 1950s is receding, and Most of my conversations wese with the best interest of everyone involved. finally approved, could improve the market for a social science or And to Bob Murphy, who stated in his tople iike P«op»e like myself myself who who are interested in the the ability of colleges and univer¬ liberal arts degree is already Jan. 9 letter that there are good players on welfare of the animals. They know when sities to more accurately antici¬ flooded. With increasing costs and this campus who would give an arm and a they quit paying the trapper for your beau ;■ - pate and respond to changing future enrollment declines pre¬ leg to play varsity basketball no matter s*'ns an" take tbe bounty off the career demands. The legislature dicted, it is what the conditions, if there are players amma'S' a11 those PeoPle who are so inter- VIEWPOINT: SOCIAL SECURITY more important than good enough to play without an arm and a *sted ,n controlling your population will must resist expected pressures by ever that up-to-date information ""continue trapping. In this so-called ferepr/sofl leg. I frankly don't see why they'd settle for the State Board of Education, whose members may see the be kept available to students. The commission has made its college ball. I really don't think there is anybody so hung up on playing varsity sophisticated culture of ours some intelli- '"dividual will develop a method far Objector move as a threat to its power. recommendations. It will be the basketball that they'd play no matter what removed from the present medievalism, To the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) by deliberately refusing to compel The the conditions. Have a B°°d day and stay away from and the Social Security administration, this proposed nine-member responsibility of first the legisla- individuals to participate. All of thl board would coordinate the edu¬ Last of all, I don't think the team is a traps, letter serves notice that I am morally 0f which I i aware involve self " etn| ture and then the voters in 1976 to opposed to any coercive "social insurance cation programs of all universi¬ maligned group of players at all. Nor do I . . ^ones individuals. It is absurd to think dl approve the amendment and set feel that Lindsay Hairston, or anybody else administrative asst. program." I cannot morally accept any would be illegal for me to be fxen|lB ties, junior colleges and vocational benefits • makeL- payments *to such the proper wheels in motion. involved for that matter, owes the student Dept. of Campus Park & Planning a Social Security simply because I IP project. Beginning Jan. 1,1975,1 affirm that I will employe. never seek benefits from Social Security. I am compelled to this action rl TOM W In addition, I will make no further contribu¬ tions to Social Security. To date, I have conscience. I have resigned mysfB total loss of my present social » _ _ J received no benefits. All of my Social Security contributions made up to the end contributions. May'others benefit of 1974 shall be regarded by me as an outright, total loss. Despite the moral and legalritfhw^ American justice inequitable I am fearful of the lib j To my employers, this letter serves of my action, notice to stop withholding Social Security though the IRS may consent to my from my paychecks and to consider all of tion from Social Security, I'm Ml my compensation as exempt wages when cat singled out for special attention culating the "employer's share" of Social cisin* "V ri8hts- My mea|fer WASHINGTON - Herbert Kalmbach, morrow's lecture tour or best seller; old Security payments. may be illegally taken from me. ®Jl to a felony and a misdemeanor, as well as radicals like Jim Grant and T.J. Reddy get This action of mine, natty in a three-piece suit, told a news con¬ testifying against former colleagues, actu¬ 25 and 20 years in North Carolina on arson felonies can found new careers, as witness compelled by my tives- friends and assocla,es £ J ference he had "renewed appreciation and conscience, is both constitutional and legal Ject to harassment, and I may "I ally "strengthened the pillars of justice." that busy entrepreneur, Spiro Agnew. charges by witnesses paid thousands of for the reasons I note below. uously persecuted (without ieg*> confidence in the essential fairness of But first, he and the Watergate gang came It is true enough that all these men ulti¬ dollars by the federal government? What is America's justice" and even hoped that his •Formerly, the U. S. government coerced the mammoth bureaucracy, as close as anyone has to pulling down those it when Martin Sostre spends five of his mately helped the government crack the into military service "actions have served to strengthen the pillars. seven years in four New York prisons in Watergate case and convict the other cul¬ men through the draft. The fear of crushed bv!, „ However, on religious grounds, some men 1RS aKents has led me l? |nd pillars of justice." prits; but it also is true that they could have Jeb Magruder was welcomed home with As for Magruder's neighbors, their solitary confinement for refusing to knuckle hlrtwn blown thpthe whiat whistle p at at anv t Rut (^onwient'ious objSrsf J 7 were exempt from . precautionary measures, generosity toward a good family and com¬ under to prison rites like mail seizures and any time. But mo .... the draft. yellow ribbons round the old oak tree — did until faced with the necessity to save who persecutes me in violati munity man does them credit. Such gener¬ rectal searches? •The U. S. actually a cherry — in his suburban yard. osity is virtually nonexistent, however, It is being suggested, of course, that as in their skins as best they could. Supreme Court has ruled that revenue laws will be sued in conscientious objection to the draft could with Scction 7214 of the lntef, Neighbors gathered to greet him with a when the ordinary convict shuffles out of the case of Richard Nixon, who goes free on In the cases of Dean and Kalmbach, bar not constitutionally be restricted to solely Code. Federal courts have » _ friendly banner. the prison gate in a state suit with a few $55,000 a year, the loss of high office and associations could levy harsher penalties Mrs. John Dean said it was a great way to than the law has by barring them from religious grounds. people the right to sue Federal ap ■ legal start the new year and that her husband practice. But to the millions of low-income, •Section 1402 paragraph (e) of the deprive them of their civil lihcrtiw-B Internal Revenue Code Additionally, copies of th» ""J had been "sufficiently punished." disadvantaged, unskilled and uneducated recognizes the right of religious persons to How easily is the world turned upside Yesterday's scandal is tomorrow's lecture tour or best seller; Americans, so many of whom have good c„rllrifv .#l opt out of Social ■ going to various members of (<*1 . , ; several newspapers, down! With pen, John Sirica an — unexpected stroke of his the old "hanging judge" old felonies can found new careers, as witness that busy reason to view the law with fear and dis- trust, the whole episode is likely to be oddoI oppostion onoj Jn theT"86 or on th .C0nscientl0U8 basis of religious r princi- opinion will cause IRS agenti 01 himself, the scourge of Watergate — turned entrepreneur, Spiro Agnew. another demonstration that there is one pies. from violating my rights. •It is a logical extension of loose three of the major participants in the kind of justice for them, and another for three points that courts the preceding If for some reason not IRS believes that I must be w H know"j| biggest political scandal in American his¬ affluent, educated persons with good law¬ would determine that conscientious tory, one being seen by more and more yers and "standing1 in their communities. objection to Social violate my moral code by continue^ people as having threatened the very grudging state dollars in his pocket and no political power, as well as public humiliation The rest of us. without further recrimin Security could not be constitutionally ment in Social Security, the course Rather than underhanded tnc • W foundations of democratic government. job, little ability to get one and no yellow makes up for soft prison terms (seven ations on Dean, Magruder or Kalmbach," ®stncted to sole|y fel|gious persons. Any Kalmbach's response was worthy of a ribbon round the stunted splinter that may months for Magruder). Aside from the fact might take time to ask ourselves what a IT, a consistent moral philosophy should place the matter before Kafka story. He got off with six months, pass for a tree in his ghetto neighborhood. that anyone who goes to prison, whether for serious crime really is. A street mugging is IS °PP°sed to coercive social insurance If this affair goes to the ' four months at Fort Holabird or 10 years at abhorrent, establish an escrow fu"'1 mostly in quarters for government wit¬ And if four months of minimum security a break in demands severe i the con,titutional <»»d legal nesses, and as a result his confidence in the confinement for John Dean is sufficient San Quentin, suffers humiliation and the punishment; but are betrayals of public « ,° dec ,.e a refusal to accept Social portion and the employer s shar * "fairness of American justice" is renewed. punishment for a man prosecutors say was loss of his job and family associations, the trust and subversion of the laws by officials beneflt8 and to cease making con Security payments. My f0Uf matter is to act morally and co Some people spend more time in jail the key man in the prosecution, what is it outlook for clever, educated, well groomed sworn to uphold them really to be trib"t,ons to Social Security, merely awaiting trial on minor larceny when a high school dropout gets 15 years in and facile men like these three is quite good considered lesser crimes, on the practical * onlytdo 1 think this step is a logical . ly. It is hoped that thcIRS"'lld0 charges. Kalmbach, who sold an ambassa¬ New York for possessing more than an in a celebrity conscious and success-orient¬ scale of the penalties that result? extension of recognized rights, but appar dorship, fancies that his having pled guilty ounce of marijuana? What is it when black ed society. Yesterday's scandal is to- |C11975 New York Time. ent|y »10 d°e» the IRS. The IRS has con Patrick A-J sented to exempt conscientious objectors Tuesday, January 14, 1975 5 PoicT spell 14 Education task force ' "* [ontinues , ■ i criticizes textbooks Midwest 1 continued from page 1) Stereotyping takes its toll not only on Bv ASSOCIATED PRESS girls, but on young boys by presenting AND STATE NEWS minority background, even in fields in which have distinguished them¬ "exaggerated, super heroic ideas of what I Arctic temperatures kept a (frip women selves," the task force report said. is expected of them." londav on the MidwHt recovering J " vicious weekend blizzard. "In certain curricular areas, notably the "A boy is more often shown rescuing someone from an alligator, a hurricane or a vocational, students Kile snow, rain and cold belted Tex- are officially excluded fire than crying, which is a real, human lid much of the East, Northwest or some are strongly discouraged from taking courses the basis of sex," the activity necessary for the emotional well - Id tornado battered Southeast. report added. on being of males," the report said. | The high Monday in the Lansing La was a biting 16 degrees with the Textbooks minimize the capabilities and Sexual stereotyping is further reinforced frit's low expected at 5 degrees achievements of women and girls, the in Mighigan schools through separate t, zero. Eighteen mph winds report said, while exaggerating those of courses for boys and girls, athletic bias and Cped across the state from the males. career counseling that discourages boys and Kuthwest causing the wind-chill fac "Girls and women are omitted entirely girls from pursuing a job currently C to register at minus 10 degrees. from story after story, especially those with dominated by members of the opposite sex, ■ Occasional snow is expected for to daringly adventuresome themes, in chil¬ the report continued. 1 v wilh a predicted high of 20 de¬ dren's readers," the report said. "Two out If the report and its recommendations are fies Tonight's low is expected to be of seven stories about children center accepted by the board, all sex bias will be Approximately five to 10 degrees The Minnesota Patrol Sunday marked the completely buried the vehicle. At least nine around girls. Women are featured only in prohibited in Michigan schools. Rove zero. location of a car abandoned in a one in four fictional stories about adults, ■ The storms took the lives of 54 ditch off 1-35 persons died in the weekend blizzard which and in only one in seven biographies." Specific recommendations include: Trsons in the Midwest, including two near Eilendale, Minn., in case drifting snow virtually immobilized the state. • Mandatory courses for teachers in anti [ Michigan, between Friday and Boys do exciting, creative things, while sexist teaching methods. Monday- Another person was killed ta, 13 in Nebraska, eight each in Iowa, girls do mundane chores like sewing and • Equal access to boys and girls to all were submerged. In a Fargo, N.D. hospital, frost¬ Lday by a tornado in Panama City. North and South Dakota, and one each in Illinois and Wisconsin. Among those killed by the storm bitten James Locy told how he spent housecleaning, the report said. courses, such as home economics and shop. were six members of a South Dakota 30 hours in his stalled auto after mis¬ According to the task force, women in • Career counseling that encourages ■ Reports Monday also showed loss Michigan officials estimated storm family, foUnd dead Sunday apparent¬ textbooks are generally portrayed as youngsters to pursue jobs dominated by the ft hundreds of cattle, possibly thous related damage at $1 million. Two sing a highway ramp turnoff. "I tried mothers, teachers ly of asphyxiation. Authorities said to keep my faith and or nurses. opposite sex. A farm extension agent in unoccupied cottages in Manatee my mental facil¬ "But even the role of housewife is made i, they apparently inhaled sewer gas ities," he said. He took his shoes off, • Equal or similar funding for girl's ithwestern Minnesota estimated County, Mich., were reported to have fumes when a sewer exhaust became dimension'less and unreal," the task force athletics. ,ut 500 head were lost in his county been washed into Lake Michigan by wrapped his feet in his suit coat and concluded. "Mothers do not paint walls, • The clogged with ice and snow. Three opening of nonathletic clubs to both -one from the bitter cold. high waves, but officials could not other family members were in serious massaged them until early Sunday build bookshelves, refinish furniture, play sexes. when he felt the circulation gone in I Thirteen persons died in Minneso- verify that because all nearby roads condition. the piano or engage in independent pursuits • Use of nonsexist textbooks. his toes. as they do in reality." • Standardized testing for boys and girls. DNR POLICY Q i fate reviews Bv JEFF MERRELL fines act as an effective deterrent to Sute New* Staff Writer negligence. Diesenbasck said the federal government follows the policy that le plague of oil spills is not confined to coastal states. all pollution violators must be fined, by issuing a civil penalty. Bichigan. with over 700 accidental discharges last year, nearly Fines for civil penalties rang;e DOONESBURY in lakes and streams, has set out to review its oil spill policy. up to $5,000, but can be written off corporate income taxes or diverted to by Garry Trudeau ■ four member review commission has undertaken the task of company subsidiaries. ■rmining whether the Dept. of Natural Resources'*DNR) cur ^ Criminal penalties, however, cannot be avoided or Criminal fines in Michigan range from $25,000 for a first offense diverted. to I" policy is effective in reducing accidental spills. $50,000 for repeated violations, Alpert said. yes,yes, duke- i what? yes, duke, he t after the commission's first two meetings, the move toward hello7 oh, hi, 6me 70nkbr your knows ioo have to "But it's damned awful easy to Monday e policy has reached a stalemate, morning quarterback," i duke! what's message 'as have an answer developing into a said Charles Harris, review commission member and chief of up now? soon as he le between the DNR's policy of cooperation wit', industry and today — he's dou/n resource management for the DNR. came home ' talking to the ttorney general's criminal penalty attitude, Harris said the attorney' general's office does not realize the dean rght here's an obvious difference in philosophy between the DNR difficulties the DNR has trying to stop a spill and gather evidence this mo- he attorney general's office," said William Turnev, a member for a criminal case at the same time. mem' e review commission and chief of the water management "We try to find the source first, clean it up, then gather iu of the DNR. evidence. We don't have the staff to do it ail at once," Harris said. ve used criminal referrals to the attorney general's office DNR water mangement chief Turney said the department ly because you can get more done cooperating with munici should take companies responsible for repeated spills to court, but es and industry," he said, that the department must also realize that there are always going juck Alpert, asst. attorney general and member of the review to be spills. pission, disagrees. "Since there are only three oil companies in Michigan, those e attorney general thinks that water pollution laws are three would be in court regularly," Turney said, simply because ngless if there are no fines. We advocate criminal penalties those companies have the greatest chance of oil I violators," Alpert said. spills, But Turney emphasized that the DNR will prosecute if a rt said the attorney general's office has the authority to company is "very negligent." leuteon its own, but does not have enough staff to gather the The last case where a criminal fine was levied involved the in a pollution case, so it must depend upon the DNR American Oil Co.'s 200,000 gallon spill in the Saginaw River in 1971. The company w as fined $15,000. I 1974, no criminal fines were collected from industries Turney also said the Western Crude Oil Co. came close to being ■nsible for oil spills. prosecuted for 37 breaks and spills along a 10-mile length of •I Diesenbasck, an Environmental Protection Agency pipeline. II official who appeared recently before the commission, said "They nearly exhausted our patience," Turney said. I Interested in Summer Resort (ash X Carry Specials Wednesday Jan. /;>. 1975 |Work at the Grand Canyon? There's a big job to do this summer at our resort on the south rim of Grand 3" POTTED BEGONIAS Canyon National P8rk. We'd like you help FOLIAGE PLANTS We don't promise anything to do it. us RE<5. $1.00 eo. I The work is hard, the pay is nominal. You may work a 50 !N j I hour week with 2 I contract which days off. You will also have to sign a NOW 60c ea. 2-/4" POTS ...but Opportunities guarantees you will work for a minimum of I 90 days We require a $50 deposit which will be returned I tovou at the end of your contractual I more. obligation, with $50 FOLIAGE PLANTS IN Reg. 75' ea. I Now the good part You will work with people your own 3" POTS NOW 40c ea. I age from all over REG. $1.50 the country. Room and board are ea. eSCHEFFLERA I rr I ree. Manyf'ee ^ni'orms' when necessary, recreational facilities will be are furnished NOW 754 90. eASPARAGUS PLUMASAS made available to If you think you've completed your education I T or ,,ee or al a special employee discount. And then. • YUCCA •DRACAENA DRACO 1 you're wrong. Sure you've obtained a good foundation I rjwC°UrSe ,here s ,he I canyon,. u"excelled natural beauty of the esCHEFFLERA eARALIA SIEBOLDI to begin a career with, but you still have to apply all the I We ai looking for responsible people OPEN M0N THRU SAT I A M 5 30 P M expertise that you've strived to learn to fill these posi Desk Clerks (NCR 42001 I Cooks Allis Chalmers has what it takes to stimulate your Janitors Dishwashers career. We can promise you a growth oriented professional Waiters/Waitresses Housemen, Maids environment in which you can develop your career and Service Station Attendants satisfy your thirst for knowledge and experience, because I Bus People I Clerks I Misc.) Line Servers what you will find at Allis Chalmers is a thinking staff Bar Attendants Bus Drivers (Az. class 41 of professionals who are always open to new ideas Sign up ot the Placement Office and challenges. Jmpu« ,n,*™Jewi Conducted Tuesday, Jan., 21, 1975 iployer We have openings in Manufacturing and Engineering for industrial and mechanical engineers and openings in Accounting and Finance for accounting maiors. Attention: Residents of the East Lansing Area Stay close to you phone. You may be called next about the Contact your Placement Office today for an East Lansing Jaycee Golden Check Book and receive over interview appointment. Allis-Chalmers needs professionals., $150.00 in yifts, services, and merchandise for only $14.95. and the world needs Allis Chalmers. THAT'S RIGHT! Over $150.00 value for only $14.95. The East Lansing Jaycees Golden Checks are sponsored by these merchants: "•mucky Fried Chicken Dominos Pizza Gullivers State Drugs AUJS-CHALMERS Burger Chef Dunkin Donuts An Mr Mikes Pizza Equal Opportunity Employer M/F °lan Mills F.W. Woolworth Singer Co. Studios Bur*r King Fox Jewelers King Klean Coin • Op Laundry R#d Barn K. Mart Auto Center Barbara Box Hair Stylist' International House of Pancakes Kirby Co. JX' tay Lanes y#nderform Merle Norman Studios Lansing Karate Universal Health Spa °,W Values art in Food. Auto Services, Beauty Services, Qofekifl Checks (or only $14.9811 Amusements, and many others. Stay clott to your phone. "A Real . Budgtt Stretcher" You may be called next! Tuesday, janu.lar.v Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan 14 J Economic By JIM KEEGSTRA weakened businesses threaten uncertainty faces shove the onus of tax increases Crim (D Davison). The proposed programs package voters. A $1.1 billion mass legislature can be resubmitted to similarly depressed commercial building industry. Opposition to effect starl, „ SUte News Staff Writer to further cut into sales tax and onto the Democrats, they could Creation of new jobs by at would: transit proposal was rejected at may come from Republicans Initial reaction personal and corporate income regain some seats in the House. tracting new industry or ex toiLj •Add $400 million to housing who have traditionally avoided The hoopla and ballyhoo that tax receipts. Over $78 million Solutions to the revenue loss panding existing business could the polls last Nov. 5. portationbo„dsfr bonds now issued by the Mich Chances for legislative ap bonding for this purpose. not encoura^ini, Criml began the state's governmental has already been hacked from and Michigan's economic ills come from a Milliken-proposed However, at least four local smaller program year are over and past, but the state expenditures for educa have been discussed ever since job development authority able igan State Housing Develop¬ proval of the borrowings are might ment Authority. mixed. The Housing Develop¬ Democratic lawmakers will deteriorating economy tion, construction and execu¬ the Nov. 5 election, but the t'o grant low-cost loans to en remains. ment Authority already exists strongly support any state mended placing , tive departments. speculation cannot end, nor the courage building of new indus •Provide $230 million for building done in this area. proposals become specific and trial plants. He suggested the state building projects, now and it is difficult to deny the I^tnsing Reps. Lynn Jondahl, complete before voters billion-dollar?® The New Year's Day inaugu¬ receive action, until February. same idea last year but the constructed on a pay as you go need for more living units or David Hollister, Tom Holcomb tion year. now, in. J| ration of state officials, the the standstill condition of the ** The legislature is recessed legislature failed to follow basis. and Sen. Earl Nelson have home building industry. swearing-in of the new legisla¬ until Jan. 27 to allow recounts through. ture •Make an interim $175 million Evidence in favor of the state already begun studying means complete with leadership of two House elections. It stands a better chance in speeches and the governor's 1975 since Crim and Fitzgerald start in transportation im¬ construction borrowing is the Milliken, now taking a week's annual State of the State mess¬ Legislators of Milliken's own vacation in the Virgin Islands, have also embraced the devel provements until a complete age have come and gone, leav¬ party join Democrats in prom is expected to present his opment authority concept. RICHIE ing behind a residue of specula¬ ising him an excrutiating exam¬ recommended budget early More immediate help could tion and proposals framed in ination of next fiscal year's next month. come from three major bonding HAVENS I generalities. budget. His request for a programs proposed by Several major suggestions to personal income tax increase to Milliken. These programs, Now, almost 2'/i months offset the $200 million loss is keep Michigan from sinking along with the $205 veterans' MONDAY after voters lifted sales taxes challenged by Republicans who along with the auto industry bonus bonding already in pro JAN. 20 from food, there is still no have surfaced so far, but reac¬ say the sales tax repeal was a gress, raise the prospect of consensus on how to make mandate for lowered spending, tion and criticism remain in over $1 billion being pumped adjustments for the estimated and by Democrats who want to general terms until details be¬ into the state and filtering annual $200 million loss in state look at alternatives such as cor¬ come available. down to individual paychecks. revenue. porate and nuisance taxes and Development of plans to possibly a switch to a graduat solve the state's immediate The same election swept ed personal income tax. problems might be done by a Democrats to a commanding The Republican challenge to council of economic advisors majority in both houses of the Milliken's leadership may seem drawn from among decision legislature — the first time in a odd, but it has been said that makers in business, labor, gov¬ decade — and left Republican Democrats are the moderate ernment and academia as pro Gov. Milliken standing alone in governor's greatest friends. posed by Democratic legislative top state government. Also, looking to the 1976 elec¬ leaders Sen. William Fitzgerald Record unemployment and tions, if the minority party can (D Detroit> and Rep. Bobby Sex courses limited for med students CheHrt I continued from page Nursing, said human sexuality 1) Grummon said one study done in the 1960s showed that senior medical students had of the current textbooks inaccurate, but that the amount of misinformation had been are -softe- minslrel is discussed as supplementary collected a great deal of misin¬ reduced over the last 20 years. information when it relates to formation about sexuality. In "The situation is changing the area being studied. another study done within the quite rapidly," he said. Students can take courses in 8:15 pm Friday, January 17 last three years it was found Grummon teaches the other departments at the Uni¬ that textbooks for gynecology popular Psychology 290 course versity, Simon said, if they used in the 1950s contained on human sexuality that has Martin Best, songs with lute and guitar. want to study human sexuality. misinformation about female been taught in the past by BBOPCSON, Assisted by Edward Flower. Lite & gun, of Donald Grummon, professor psychology, said doctors and sexuality. Grummon said that studies also showed that some Andrew Barclay. Barclay is currently on sabbatical. "DEATH WISH"! WW 1:00 *W J OS Martin Best. A classical guitarist who sir gs. nurses need to be more BLUE [own THUWSOAY, FW1 DAY. SOT UWPAV a SUNDAY - ( Not only is he the world's leading iv nstrei knowledgeable about human but also a troubadour who researches i r doWNSlAiliS 8:30 to 10 ^ SPPvj* showtime*: 7:00,8:30, 10:00 WINNER showplace: III Oldi admission: $2.25 V SSi livE music NiTEly A BIAl HIM ■Michigan State News. East Lansing, Michigan Tuesday, January 14,1975 7 Dramatic agility gives concerns the emotional evolu -BvDARRVi- GRANT tion of a once glorious vanity. These ex • teammates lusions and juvenile decisions. I amazingly fresh and immediate. Through many small actions, he ■'Scale Newt Reviewer high view the world through a As a political opponent says of has given him two things — a script. The weakness of Jason school basketball team. Each Phil Romano is the successor establishes and reinforces his v |,(,nor and respect are prepossessing filter that allows nervous condition and a well Miller's dialogue lies in its year four members of the team George, "He's too dumb to be to his father's business. He is Principal themes examined them a nervous, joyless state of character's identity. His worn suit. Paul Van Antwerp blatancy. Nothing is left to the JL ,\rena Theater produc- gather with their coach to corrupt." Sikowski is brilliantly wealthy, good looking and success in the part lies with his existence. This shabby filter is gives a convincing and talented viewers imagination - celebrate the portrayed by John Schmedes. every¬ f, -That Championship victory of the affixed to the peculiar Ameri¬ His portrayal is taut, controlled sexually active. Phil is caught dramatic hair splitting of the portrayal of the Job - like thing is spelled out. Sex, alco¬ between making money and ln Director Robert state championship. can notion ^"winning is every¬ and role. citizen. holism, lack of self - respect, Ln has injected dramatic They represent the too Ire completely believable. leading a dissipated life that James Daley is the junior Tom - thing." Schmedes' offers no reciprocity. Daley is the town tension, old age and homo¬ performance Jv into Jason Miller's often quent maladies of the modern day American male medi There is George Sikowski. chock full of exciting facial is He is admirably played by high school principal be¬ leaguered by his bills, his chil¬ drunk. Skeptical and per sexuality are all there. ■ heavy script. - the town's mayor — shallow, ceptive, he is the alcohol - It is to Robert Klassen's ocrity, prejudice and false expressions, gestures and Bill Hutson with a dren and his students. His ■hat Championship season comic and full of political de mannerisms, all of which strength and soaked observer. Brian Car¬ credit that he elicits dramatic are subtlety that is rewarding. sacrificial attitude towards life penter gives a rather uneven distinction over the emotional portrayal of this delicate role. belaborment of Miller's Tom is very much the shadowy script. This theatrical triumph is well an's Slow Motion' radiates observer, whose observations worth the price of admission. vitality are tinged with cynical and "That Championship Season" humorous outbursts. Unfor¬ will be performed at 8:15 tunately, Carpenter never tonight through Saturday. reaches an equilibrium; he is Tickets are available at the By DAVE DiMARTINO cents. ture all State News Reviewer played important roles Leonard rejoined the faltering either too silent (as in the first Fairchild box office. Admission At the time of "Revelation," in these line up alterations. The Welsh rock scene is Man after a brief solo career. act) or too audible. Tighter is $1.50. Man consisted of Roger "Deke" Each were Welsh alive and living in the form of compatriots Along with Leonard came direction might have sharpened Leonard, Clive John, Ray Will¬ of Man, and each contributed to Malcolm Morley and Ken Man, the island's most inter¬ Carpenter's effect on the esting and reputable rock and iams, Mike Jones and Jeff a Welsh rock climate compar Whaley, both members of the action. One of his main Local pianist Jones. Since that time, the able to the San Fransiscan defunct Welsh group, problems is his over concern roll band. band has if on a smaller scale. Help undergone scene, With the release of "Slow motion," the group's fifth Am approximately eight personnel Members from all of these Yourself. And it is this version of the band that currently with the accuracy drunk. of playing a plays original changes. bands drifted from group to stands as Man almost, that Ed Laughlin is the messianic erican album. Man has — stabilized as a tight, four-piece finally English rock groups such as Help Yourself, Wild Turkey, group, almost interchangeably, and more often than not, Man is, for after working oin one coach — narrowminded, pro¬ vincial and unintelligent. His score tonight unit that no longer needs a bi¬ album, "Rhinos, Winos and Pete Brown's Piblokto, and was involved in such changes. monthly personnel change to Lunatics," Morely split, leaving character is a shining study of Ralph Votapek, pianist and Dave Edmund's Love Sculp- In the midst of these trans the prejudiced elder. Unfor¬ associate the group as it is today - a professor of music, ensure peak creativity. The formations Man released five will perform tonight at 8:15 in new Man band, if not the most strong foursome consisting of tunately, his lines smack too adventurous, is certainly the Guest organist albums in Great Britain with Leonard, Jones, Williams and much of television's Archie the Music Building auditorium. their seventh finally seeing Bunker rather than the coach He will play Bach's "Toccata tightest ensemble working un¬ Whaley. American release. Titled "Be Leonard, a die-hard rock and living in the moral decay of in G Minor," Debussy's der the "Man" monicker since to give recital Good To Yourself At Least "Preludes, Book II" and the the group's inception in 1968. roller, dominates most of "Slow present day society. Indeed, Once A Day,"it was a refresh Motion." Laughlin seems to be aware of "Bacarolle, Op. 60" and Surprisingly, American rock Guest organist Herbert making much of the Burtis will perform tonight at ing musical highlight of 1973. material sound like his own solo this fact and his performance is "Scherzo in B-Flat Minor" by culture has played a dominant role in Man's musical or 8:15 in Hart Recital Hall in work demonstrated on his al characterized by a struggle for Chopin. The featured work will Much has happened since the be a new work "Fantaisie ientation. The band claims the Music Building. bums "Iceberg" right emphasis — Archie - then, including a live album Bunker on one hand and dis¬ Impromptu" by Jere Hutche- that its musical heritage lies in Burtis is the director of music Kamikaze." The wandering in¬ that incorporated the services associate those territories explored by and fine arts at the United- strumentals are out, no doubt illusioned leader on the other. son, an professor of of guitarist Tweke Lewis from music. gone with the newly-formed The appeal and strength of Quicksilver during their Methodist Church in Red Bank, Wild Turkey along with the Neutrons. In their place we are the production is the actors' This recital is free and open "Happy Trails" period. Long, N.J. He is originally from only original members Mike treatment of overblown to the public. Michigan and a graduate of Col¬ presented with eight an acid-inspired instrumentals not Jones and Clive John and later umbia well-structured, concise songs totally dissimilar to the "Who University. additions Terry Williams, Phil of the kind that The were always Do You Love" style have in¬ program will include Ryan and Will Youatt. deed surfaced with regularity pieces by Krenek, Brahms, lacking in Man's earlier impro- Returning to the fold. Deke visational work. on most of Man's recorded "Schumann, Ives and work. Not so, however, with Schoenberg. "Slow Motion." This recital is free and open The reason for the group's to the public. sudden stylistic change is apparent when the band and its ever - changing lineup is looked at in perspective. 7 films by Man's first album, .Francois "Revelation," was released in this country by Philips records in the late '60s. Due to the existence of a talentless leke Leonard is a member of the veteran American rights name. to group the that Philips unimaginatively had group Truffaut lelsh band. Man. Man's new album, "Slow altered the group's name to Winner of last year's Academy Award for ■otion". is the culmination of innumerable "Manpower." The disc is, inci¬ Beit Foreign Film, Francois Truffaut is considered the founder of the French New dentally, currently thriving in lersonnel changes and years of development neighborhood bargain bins, Wave movement and the auteur theory in ir the four-piece band. selling at a maximum of 47 cinema. From his critically-acclaimed first feature film THE 400 BLOWS to his recent Oscar winner. Truffaut has established himself as one of today's most exciting film directors. The films range in mood from the free-wheeling exuberance found iPelivery jpfaveps' in SHOOT THE PIANO PLAYER to the bittersweet nostalgia of JULES AND JIM NEJAC TV RENTALS' and the coolly-sophisticated suspense of apGallm; W OPEN ANNOUNCES BRIDE WORE BLACK and artistic. Francois Truffaut is unquestionably a Autobiography! filmmaker who communicates. AUDITIONS THE BROADWAY m MUSICAL MU! January 16 ten Wanted: Jules& Jim January 28 enthe1 MBA's The 400 Blows (1959) 98 minutes. B&W. subtitled. 35 January 30 mm looking for JAN. 15 & 16 CALL-BACKS Stolen Kisses 7SOO PM AT 9 ,5 THE 2nd NIGHT 11969) 90 minutes, color, subtitled IN THE REHEARSAL February 6 options. HALL -- ath FLOOR Bed and Board. (19711 97 minutes, color, subtitled STUDENT UNION INFORMATION 355-3355 BLDG. Chase Bank wants MBA's who February 11 need more than one way to grow. Shoot the We offer diverse and flexible careers in financial management. Piano Player (1960) 84 minutes. B & W, subtitled, 35 mm And we aim to develop managers whose career options broaden as they progress with us. February 27 To find out more about Chase— Bride Vfore Black and to let us find out about you— ' 1968) 107 minutes, color, subtitled check our career literature in your Placement Office and sign March 6 up for an interview. ft* Campus interviews January 21 Two English Girls 11972) 108 minutes, color, subtitled, 35 mm -V If you can't make it to an inter¬ view, write to Linda Verhoff at the address below. All films shown twice 7:00 81 915 p.m. in Fairchild Theater Series tickets are now on sals. GARY BURTON QUINTET $5 for 7 films. (Each series ticket is good for 7 punches which may be used to admit one person to 7 films, 7 people to one film, etc. CHASE MANHATTAN 1 Chase Manhattan Pla?a. New York, N Y. 10015 BANKO An Equal Opportunity Employer Tuesday, Janu,lary hi 8 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Steeler dynasty ahead! 34 carries for 158 yards, both Dolphins, winner NEW ORLEANS (UPI) - victory could have been much Super Bowl records, is only 24 two Super of J The Pittsburgh Steelers are on greater. and shows signs of becoming Bowls \ top of the pro football world, And what should be worry the dominant running back in "Everybody SPe ■ have and by all indications they could ing NFL opponents even more pro football. Terry Bradshaw, you when you y„ur p,„b| | be there for quite a while. is the fact that the Steelers are who has battled five years of wm.hes^l Noll said. "Hul The Steelers, making their one of the youngest teams in criticism since his selection as true. ihltfj the league. There first championship game The defensive front four, the No. 1 draft pick from the team on are new J appearance in their 42 year Louisiana Tech, is top ha, which set a Super Bowl record only 26, an problems from the history, wrapped up the age when many quarterbacks bottom, but they te^l National Football League title by allowing the Vikings only 17 are only just beginning to find Sunday with a 16 6 victory yards rushing, consists of Joe just the same. themselves. "We'll find „m over the Minnesota Vikings in Greene and L. C. Greenwood, B , both 28, Ernie Holmes, 26 and The Steelers also own four of what those Super Bowl IX. the speediest wide receivers in problems The 10 Dwight White, 25. Only Andy The Steelers, point margin of the league. Lynn Swann and to J victory failed to demonstrate Russell, at 33, can be con John Stallworth are rookies, credited their four for awesoJ the Steelers' utter domination sidered a veteran in a line- winningthetitkl while veterans Frank Lewis hounded. of the Vikings, who became the backing corps which includes harassed T Jack Ham, 25, and rookie and Ron Shankland are 27. first team ever to lose three Super Bowls. sensation Jack Lambert, only Coach Chuck Noll, who re Fran^TTarkenton rran '"4I" all built the Steelers from a 1 • 13 choked off Pittsburgh outplayed Minne¬ 22. travesty in his rookie year of Minnesota'sT sota in every facet of the game The defensive secondary game. I 1969 to the World Champions, and were it not for costly averages less than 25 years of was wary of predicting what Viking managed only star Chuck fJ penalties, some questionable age. i» vanjj officiating and a slippery field And the youth movement many around the league are carries and Dave f early in the game at Tulane continues on offense. Franco forecasting: A new dominant carried eight times 1 team in the mold of the Miami almost Stadium, their margin of Harris, the game's MVP with unMi.-v.ible yard. Tarkenton hit 27 passes for 102 vardsJ three interceptions. \ "Joe Greene plavedj MSU g-men experience playoff series better ijX defensive tackle i hijl seen play the name/'Xffl AP wirephoto "In fact. i think -J probably was the be* J high, low points in meet Pittsburgh Steeler quarterback Terry Brad¬ the Steelers plane. Bradshaw led the Steelers defensive lineman I'vil shaw and his girlfriend, Diane Murchison of to a 16-6 victory Sunday over the Minnesota San Francisco, were all smiles Monday morn¬ Vikings in Super Bowl IX. ing as they got ready to leave New Orleans on By ANN WILLIAMSTON Pleasures and disappointments. representative in the still ring finals. The Spartans turned in a handsome showing in Players That's the way coach George Szypula des the vaulting event. Rudolph, MacLean and Short Tigers to telecast vaulted their way to scores of 8.3.8.6 and 8.75 in cribed the performances of his MSU men's gymnastics team following the Eastern Division the optionals competition and junior Jim Tuerk renewal clol Big Ten Invitational last weekend in Ann Arbor. narrowly missed finishing third. There were the bright moments. After long, "I've never gotten nervous during a gym¬ tough competition in compulsories Friday night nastics meet so I can't blame that for not doing as grievance si Sunday home tilts There will be a women's intramural corecreational basketball and individual optionals Saturday, nine Spartan gymnasts found themselves eligible for the final competition. well as I could have done." Tuerk said. "I just chickened out on my second vault and missed it." Nelson Gaines represented MSU in the finals NEW YORK lUPlii Major League 1'layerj J clinic required for all team representatives and persons interested But then there were the dark moments. MSU on the parallel bars but again it was in the has withdrawn Tiger television fans in the to be played in Tiger Stadium suit against baseball in officiating or scorekeeping at 7 p.m. Wednesday in 106 Women's was not to be seen when the awards were handed optionals competition, not the finals, where the Detroit viewing area are get will be televised by Detroit Intramural Bldg. Persons interested in officiating must bring their out. more successful parallel bar routines were to be contesting the validitil ting a bonus this year. station WWJ-TV (channel 41, renewal clause of if social security numbers. "Overall, we did better in the compulsories found. Gaines scored a 7.85 and Craig MacLean a Six Sunday afternoon games which is the new originating The men's intramural paddleball doubles ladder tournament will than we've ever done in a long time but we just 7.2. while all arounder Rudolph showed signs of uniform player contrail station for the club's telecasts. learned Monda begin at 5 p.m. Wednesday. Teams should call the intramural didn't put it together in the finals," Szypula said. becoming a welcome addition to the parallel bar Club Sports This will be a first in Tiger television history. office for their first week's pairings. "But I feel we're better off than last year not team. Bobby Tola n of the Sal The deadline for entry in the men's IM volleyball tournament Glenn Hime and Shepherd on high Padres, who ;>i.iyV the due date, a 50t ATTENTION: EXCELLENT op¬ bedroom duplex, newly redecor 10 MINUTES TO MSU - 1 and 2 4-1-17 Close to MSU Available imme¬ charge will be bedroom, unfurnished, attractively ated and carpeted. 489-2575 diately. $145. 332-2495 5-1-16 EAST LANSING- large 3 bedroom portunity for married couple in¬ remodeled. Convenient 5020 Delray Drive. 5-1-17 to major Upper apart¬ terested in mental health field - duplex, 1 Vi baths, basement, buslines. Carpeting,air, lighted off ment in a duplex. Two bedrooms, needed to supervise 6 mildly FEMALE, SHARE one bedroom appliances, unfurnished, available street parking. No pets or children. ONE OR two male roommates appliances, and carpeting. $155 apartment $65, or couple to now, 351-8920. 5-1-14 mentally handicapped women. $130 and $155. 489-3476 after 6 month plus utilities. 393-9182 sublease $140. 351-4894 3-1-14 motive Room, Board AND Salary in¬ needed. Across from campus. pm. 5-1-15 or $80 351-4583 10-1-24 485-1365. 5-1-20 REDECORATED 4-5 bedrooms, cluded. Extremely rewarding TWO MEN needed for spring - work. If interested please contact PENNSYLVANIA NORTH. Large lease deposit, rent negotiable. term. Chalet Apartments: Call ■-LE 1972. FM stereo tape, Irma Zuckerberg or Kim Braman, GIRL NEEDED spring, Grove upstairs. Furnished apartment. 1 NORTHEAST, 2 bedroom, Clean, Fireplace, garage, large 1 miles plus maintenance 337-7017. 5-1-16 Programs for the Mentally Re Street apartments. Call for de bedroom, carpeting. Share util¬ partially furnished, carpeted, $115 porch, antique bathtub. A groovy 1 337-7997 3-1-16 tarded, 487-6500. 5-1-15 tails. 351-7459. 5-1 18 ities. Adults only. No dogs. $115. place. 351-3212, after 7 pm for plus gas. 351-0997 after 5. 3-1-16 DIVISION STREET. Room 351-7497 0-1-31 appointment. x5-1-15 $95 . available in apartment ■°ET 1971 St8tjon U REPAIR AUTO Service REGISTERED NURSES full and WATERS EDGE - female room¬ FOURTH GIRL needed imme- WOMAN NEEDED to share apart includes utilities Ask for Fitz. I full power, many extrasl Center offers you tools, equip¬ part-time positions available on the needed winter 332 4768.3 1-14 mate - spring, oiately. Close to campus. ment for 2. One block from TWO WOMEN: Excellent roomy londition, $1850, 482-1364 ment, and instructions to do your afternoon and midnight shifts. $82.50. Immediately! 337-9292. $57.50/month. 3324748. 5-1-14 Campus. $90. Call 337-0203 house. $70. Visit 5-10 I 2-1-14 nightly. auto repairs. 5311 South Pennsyl¬ Minimum starting salaries $4.82 4-1-15 3-1-15 1029 West Grand River. 5-1-20 vania. 882 8742. 10 8 weekdays, per hour plus differential. Im¬ MSU AREA, Okemos. One and 2 ■ IMPAIA, i969 10-6 Saturday. 20-1-31 mediate openings. Please contact ROOMMATE NEEDED. Male or Single bedroom. Furnished and unfur¬ NEED WOMAN for 4-person. SHOP! Automatic, 339-2158 power 5 1 14 steering Lansing General Hospital, 2800 Devonshire, Lansing. 48909, female-to live with two others. Own room, luxurious, inexpensive nished, air conditioning, carpeted, Near campus. Immediate occu¬ CROSSWORD [HOME 372-8220, extension267 Equal Call 394 0966.3-1-14 modern. cluded. $150 • Call 349-2580 $185. Heat in¬ 8-1-23 pancy. $70. 351-9279. 5-1-14 PUZZLE IKIRIDIUMU f h. N £ ■ 1966 Good tires. Needs uncommomising ' Opportunity Employer. 7-1-17 ACROSS .E.N'a'R.YH 1'Osgood. $200 Call NURSES T 3-1-16 JEWELRY FASHION leaders 1 - Epochs WN 24021971 1206 (AST OAKLAND LANSING MICH 4MOt PHONI: SIT 417 1714 needed p8rt time, Qualifications: a need for extra money, and like LOW RENT UN'S - LPN'S 5. Resort 8. Alfonso's CAROBlv a Nj Automatic, ■'oom condition, must sac meeting people. Call Carol, RN with experience queen 11. Speech defect 31. Amen-Ra's* [PFglMETER ■ Below wholesale, $2500 ■ Howell, 517 546-6461. MASON BODY SHOP 812 East Kalamzoo Street since 1940. 646 6972. 5-1-15 APARTMENTS needed in following areas: HEMODIALYSIS Evenings 12. Inconsistency 14. Greek leather 32. King REYE R I EMWAV'E Complete auto painting and OPERATING ROOM flask collision service. American and For Rent CHECK OUT Evenings 15. Enter rudely |C°LT 1972 Good condi- ?Jfes'L new exhaust Foreign C 20-1-31 Cars. 485 0256. OPPORTUNITIES on all 16. Counter melody ,60() m best offer. 332- TV AND STEREO rentals term. $10.95 per month. Free same $25 per WESTBROOK APARTMENTS shifts. Full or part time. 1. Electrical AMERICAN. GERMAN and day delivery and service. Call force ®S9 850 Spyder convertible FOREIGN CAR REPAIR and also NEJAC, 337 1010. C-20-1-31 IN WIUIAMSTON The.PN must have complet¬ ed 2. Ve« BODY. 20%DISCOUNT to a Pharmacology Course or 3 Vipers (less than 15 minutes from campus) have experience in passing lcSon'988 saveri students and faculty on all cash'n' GARAGE FOR rent: car, motor medications. Qualifted LPN's r- T- r 6 7 8 19 to carry VW service parts. IMPORT AUTO PARTS, 500 East Kalamzoo cycle, bikes. Terms negotiable 10 STUDIOS: *109 are needed on all shifts " i ii % •s §»• Oklahoma car - no , and Cedar. 485-2047, 48^9229 minutes from campus. 351-1756. 5-1-14 Call well EXCELLENT SALARY fringe benefit plan as * 1 15 v//, as a Trr-^000^. I 355 0944 5-1-20 Mastercharge and Bank that includes eight paid holi . Americard. C-17-31 Hmt** ||y] ONE BEDROOM: >139 days, sick leave, life insur ance, health insurance, and 17 <6 ft 1$ id il Peveni m'les' $185°. 2 OR 3 persons to sublet apart¬ (NINE HIGHER! liberal paid vacation plan after the first year. VA % V/, 24 %a & % J6 r evenings 5.).14 ment, $205. Call 393-0766 or Apply at the Personnel 27 16 % V/ 1 WANTED PROGRAMMERS half 337 7438. 4-1-17 liV^ 302^,; CARPETING ALL APPLIANCES - Department or call for ap time. $2.50 $2.75 /hour, CPS 312 DRAPES II TENNIS COURTS VA V/, - concurrently. 353-8669 5-1-17 BEAUTIFULLY FURNISHED, AIR/COND PICNIC PAVILION pomtment at 517-487-6111, ext 353 51 YA % u i n EROTIC DANCERS wanted dishwasher, balcony over woods, pool. 3-1 16 3516699 or 351-8738. IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY 1147 W. GRAND RIVER AT WILLIAMSTON CITY LIMITS SPARROW HOSPITAL % 38 to P«ying up to $12.50 an hour CINEMA X THEATRE AND 1215 EAST MICHIGAN. HI ADULT BOOK STORE. 1000 West FOURTH MALE needed winter 655-2642 LANSING MICHIGAN. 48912 *5 M4 I er 6 5-1-20 Jolly Road, Lansing. person only) 10-1-24 Apply in Cedar Village, edge of campus, $75/month. Flip, 332-2136. 3-1-16 * Equal Opportunity Employer Ya % 1 O^ichigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Tuesday, January J L Hms« Jffi Rooms For Sale FirSih ||51 SOUTH MAGNOLIA. One bed¬ FIND SOMETHING INCOME TAX: Complete service, CEDAR STREET. Excellent MSU 24' MOTOR HOME. $4,900 or 25%OFF SALE in Music. Buy room, partly furnished, $125. If you've found a pet or article of Eugene Brown, 339-9196.20 1-31 location. Good price. All utilities best offer. Can be seen at ED'S used, save bucks. Epiphone value, we want to help you return 485-3884. 7:30 - 9am or 616- paid. Call 351-0761. 3-1-16 REFINERY, Mason. 4 1-15 Gibson, Harmony, West, Marshall FOR THE BEST Service on stereo it Just come into the State News 345-5934 late pm. 3-1-15 and Kustom to name a few. A-1 equipment, see the STEREO ; Classified Department and tell us FEMALE GRAD, private bedroom, NORTHLAND SKIS 190 cm. stereo equipment. Canon Pelli* you want to place an ad in EAST SHOPPE, 555 East Grand River. NEED A pad? Girl's ski boots (7%), poles, C 20-1 31 Announcements for It's What's LANSING STATE BANK'S Found Big 2 story, 4 share super furnished house, carrying New condition, and Mamya/Sekor 35mm Happening must be received in the ftthe Organisational mensa fcj bedroom, shag carpet, new utilities, $80. 351-3809, 337-9791 cases. cameras. Yashica, Bell and Column As a public service EAST State News office 343 Student Mtl*® kitchen, furnished, $200/month. That's only $50 each for 4 4-1-17 $120. Gail, 355-8903 3 1-14 Howell, Kodak, and Kalimar Electric Zoom reflex 86, movie LANSING STATF BANK will run the ad at no cost to you! EDITING, PROOFREADING, dis¬ sertations, theses, research pro¬ Services Bldg., by 1 p.m. at least «*30i»Wlal We discus, uj two class days before publication. Cash for EAST LANSING jects, manuscripts. Anne Cauley, meetings students. 655-3568, after 6. JOIN THE Co-opsl There are still will 3-1-15 openings in three co-op houses. STAMPS I COINS cameras. Check out this icebo.it Check us outl See the prices STATE BANK 337 1591. 5-1-17 No announcements accepted by phone. be philosophy Contact Roy s or^|l Call 355-8313 or stop by our office, Come on down to DICKER ft information *■ 311-B Student Services Building Buy - Sell - Trade LOST: HIGH school class nng and PHOTOGRAPHY-ALL varieties, Abrams Planetarium will hold NEED ONE. Own room in three DEAL, 1701 South Cedar full line of supplies finest quality, reasonably priced. bedroom house. $80/month, util¬ for more information. 5-1-20 Virgin Island pendant, in Men's outdoor sky viewing sessions from There MID - MICHIGAN STAMP & COIN 487 3886. C-5-1-17 I.M. 19-7R Reward. BOYNTON PHOTOGRAPHY, 6 to 6:30 nightly through Jan 26. leers meet ingfcJ ities included. Lake Lansing Road, 1880 ltd 332 4302 Each clear evening staff members interested FEMALE NEEDED. Own room. 337-7177. 3-1-16 in East Lansing. 332-6607, after TEAC 4070 G Tape deck - auto will point out winter constellations 6:30 pm. 2-1-14 Very close. $62.50. Beautiful and the four planets currently matic reverse, push button con Services B FEMALE NEEDED to share house house. 337:7191. 5-1-14 MARANTZ ■ 100 amp. Imperial 5 speakers. Thorens 150 MKZ turn¬ trol. Includes remote control, dust cover, echo. Excellent sound HEY MUSIC mandolin. Call Bill. 394 Lover I have your 1744. p.m. ( listroctiod }[&] Israeli table. 676-4736 after 6 pm. 5-1-20 3-1 14 Attention all tutors: Foreign Dancing with 3 others. Well maintained. $850 new, sell EMPLOYERS ARE calling for our Women's Intrant 1 Campus 1 block. students cards will be available 3-1-15 $450 Call 355-5879. 3-1-15 FOUND: LADIES watch before trainees. We need students to full Wednes jt'3 NEED MALE downtown WEST LABS, Phone 487-3558 Christmas. 355 0824 3-1-15 Center (he (jn|Qn m - Lansing, ethnic belly dance at 8:30 p.m. campus. 351-0909. 351-3921. pm. # E336 Owen Center. 2-1-15 ANN BROWN typing and multilith own bedroom, $53.50 per month 5-1-17 3-1-15 offset printing. Complete service Wednesday in the Union tower All Head Stan va., plus utilities, no deposit, near bus, FOUND: PEN. Fifth floor room. No experience necessary for dissertations, theses, manu CORNET, CLEVELAND, like new, last term or anyone IL 489-7123. 5-1-20 GRAD OR working girl. Own CURIOUS USED $65 best offer, must sell, Computer Center, Thursday 1/9. scripts, general typing. IBM 25 volunteering in a head s'n $78.75. Evenings, 351-9302. Identify 353 7428. Mike C 3 1-15 years experience. 349-0850. Rainbows. DeMolays. Jobies. should plan tu RESPONSIBLE WOMAN to share room, 5-1-14 BOOKSHOP 337 1028. 5-1 14 C 20-1-31 MSU DeMolay Club meets at 8:30 room meeting a' 6:30 p.m. wX j house. $53/month plus utilities. FOUND: GREY white husky with tonight in Union sunporch. in 33 Union Votunftl UP TO 1/3 and more savings. COMPLETE THESES Service Dis¬ scheduled for the te Lease. 484-6434, evenings. 3-1-16 WANTED: TENANT, own room, a collar. Dog is fine. Call Comparison welcomed. OPTICAL count Printing. IBM typing and Complete black b white dark time. If you can t an™ nicely furnished house. $25 week 355 1407. C-3-1 15 binding of dissertations and pub room facilities available to all MSU TWO MALE Roommates for Call for details. 372-3956 5-1-14 DISCOUNT 2615 East Michigan lications Across from campus, students, faculty and staff. East contact Bureau Becky at the J furnished house. Own rooms, $70 SCIfNCF FICTION Lansing. 372 7409 C-5-1-17 LOST: SILVER ring with green corner M A C. and Grand River Complex Photo Club offers you plus utilities. 487-9046, 882-7631. NEED ONE female. Own room in PIAYBOV MAGAZINES stone in or near Dooley's. Below Jones Stationery Shop. access to darkroom in North 5-1-20 duplex, furnished, $75. Ann St. base8au CARDS FOOTBALL PROGRAMS NEW SKIS, Head HRP Comps, Sentimental value only. Reward. 9 5. Monday Friday. Call Hubbard Hall. For more informa¬ Iceboating? what it's about MSUSjL Come J 351-9223. 2-1-15 ard MUCH MUCH 178 cm, Geze bindings and Lange 351 5127. 5-1 15 COPYGRAPH SERVICES tion contact Jim Gilmore or Sherry meets at 7:30 tonight in Jl LAKE LANSING, near. Two bed¬ boots, size 8. $190 or best offer 337 1666. C-20-1 31 Tibus. Intramural Bldg CLEAN QUIET comfortable. 351-0372. 3-1-16 LOST ONE room houses. $120-$ 160. Avail¬ , - standardized-testing Graduate male student, $15/week. device. The Socialist Labor party will able now. Phone 351-8920 5-1-20 (Peabody Individual THESES. RESUMES, typing and MSU Sailing Club J ED2-1354. 5-1-20 Achievement Test) last week of have its first study class of the SONY TA-1130 integrated ampli¬ printing. Reasonable prices. an open social n NEW GITANE track bike, excellent class fall term in back seat of COMMERCIAL PRINTING. year at 7 p.m. Thursday in the refreshments, disc NEAR CAMPUS. 3-6 bedroom fier $325, queen water bed - frame car Union oak room. house, rent negotiable. 607 ROOM FOR rent, spring term, condition, top suede seamless pedestal, $80. 351 1868. which picked up lady hitchhiking 351 4116. C 20-1-31 activities, at 7 30 ton^l share kitchen. Lilac Avenue, seat, 24 V4" frame. $100. from Park Lake Road to Men's Intramural Bldg ■ Virginia. Shown 5-6 pm. xl-1-14 night MSU Zoology Club will present 337-7809 4-1-17 337 9362. 10-1-21 353-6269 5-1-20 class. Call 337-0070.10-1-21 JUDITH CARMAN experienced Dr. Hensley and his slide - talk on quired for admittance to J dissertation typist, term papers, AMPEG GUITAR amp. VTZZ. the flora and fauna of the Sonoran Brown Bag Lunch si SHARE HOUSE, own room, $67 SEWING MACHINE Clearance theses dissertations. 393-4672 Desert. Meet at 7 tonight in 404 ONE ROOM available, two blocks with 12" SRO Speakers. 15" for women returning *1 month plus utilities. East side Sale! Brand new portables $49.95. Jenson Personal 10-1-27 Natural Science Bldg from campus on M.A.C. 351-9274. 2-1-15 $80, Lansing 489-4595. 5-1-14 $5 per month. Large selection of 3-1-15 speakers. 355-0944 after several years of full] ployment. reconditioned used machines. Students applying for a major in motherhood. Guest m UNDERGRADUATES MAY pick the school of social work for OWN ROOM in house, 5 minutes PENNSYLVANIA SOUTH near Singers, Whites, Necchi's, New SKI EQUIPMENT never used, skis, be Dr. Imogene BowmI up their S.M.A.B tax refund spring term must have their appli¬ west of campus. $55 plus deposit. Michigan Avenue. Quiet for Home and "many others." $19.95 poles, bindings, boots - mens size during the first ten days of class cations in to 254 Baker Hall by topic: "Counselingfort^ 487-9340. 5-1-15 student, near bus line, $65/month to $3§.95. Terms. EDWARDS 8. $125. 655-3106 after 5. x3-1 16 WILL DO typing in my home, ing Woman in 334 Student Services Building. Jan 20. Please see of the plus deposit. 627-5454. 7-1-17 DISTRIBUTING COMPANY, 1115 x5-1-15 reasonable rates, call 882 6856 academic advisers. one Wednesday in 6 StudwJ MSU FACULTY club near, new 3 North Washington, 489-6448. MAGNAVOX COMPONENT ■vl-15 Bldg FIV* bedroom duplex, 1 % baths, appli¬ oINGL^.- large - carpeted - c-3-1-16 stereo, 2-way speakers, automatic UNDERGRADUATES MAY pick There will be an open recruit¬ The MSU $18 week each, one block EXPERIENCED, TYPING term ances, fully carpeted, garage, changer. $200. 882 1440, after 5 ment meeting for those interested ^U. 351-3098 10-1-20 up their A.S.M.S.U. tax refund papers, theses etc. Rapid, accurate Racquetball Club will tw phone 627-6018. 5-1-15 PAYING TWO times face value for pm. 3-1-16 in doing recreational volunteer during the first ten days of classes service. 394-2512. C-20-1-31 meeting of w Stereo Reviews Stereo Directory' in 334 Student Services Building. work at Michigan School for the Men's Intrami ROOM IN large house, fireplace. and FANTASTIC SAVINGS! 28% off Blind in 6 Student Services Bldg. For Sale Buying Guide. For years *6-1-16 IRENE ORR-Theses, Term papers, one, regardless of i $60/month plus utilities. 489-3177. 1967-1972. new guitars and equipment plus at 6 tonight. Skiers and lifeguards Greg, 485-4391 used Fender Strat, Telecaster, general typing. Formerly with Ann 7-1-16 X-1-31 Brown.Call482 7487 C 1-31 are also needed. Gibson Model L6S, SG, Stereo, FREE . . A lesson in complexion MOVING SALE-furniture, art Eb3 Bass, used Gibson Mastertone care. Call 484-4519 East Michigan Petitioning i PURPLE VICKI Fast accurate, The New Way in Halfway need NOW AVAILABLE. Large airy works, bike; plants, handmade USED MARANTZ 1060 Stereo Deluxe Banjo. Many new and used 485-7197 representative or Lansing Mall. MERLE inexpensive typing. Very volunteers. Criminal justice, social room, ideal for two. Attractive jewelry, 351 5036.5-1-14 amplifier. Teac A20 Cassette acoustic guitars, MUCH MORE! NORMAN COSMETIC STUDIO. near Agriculture campus. 337-7260. C-1-31 work and other behavioral science modern house. $150 or best offer deck. Sony TC 121 cassette deck. WILCOX MUSIC, 509 East Resources. Petition I C-3-1-16 majors are preferred For inquiry Includes utilities. Off Brookfield, BAND BREAKS up. must sell: Several 8-track FM car decks. Michigan Avenue. Lansing. Phone picked up in 334 Studertfl contact Will Summers. MSU see to appreciate. Roland Synthesizer SH-1000. New Robyn CB equipment. Used 485 4391 C-1-31 Roger, 337-0195. 7-1-16 Brand new,$600: Armstrong Flute, IBM typewriter. Yashica Electro 100 TYLENOL Tablets. 5 grain pain reliever $2.03 and Lec-l-thin Traisportatioi & Volunteer programs. ASMSU Petitioning «( $90 Ask for Doug, 351-7687. 35cc range finder camera. Topcon Dean Hilliker from North¬ EAST LANSING, 1 bedroom 5-1-15 Animals 6, $2.00 off this week only. western Law School will address for comptroller Petition® Dl SLR camera with accessories. TWO NEED ride to Mexico or furnished house and garage. $160 Rolleiflex twin lens reflex camera. GULLIVER STATE DRUGS, 1105 East Grand River. 0-1-1-14 Southwestern U.S. and return. the MSU Pre - Law Association at picked up in 334 Student if HUMANIC SKIboots, 10 '?M, $30. FREE KITTENS. 7 weeks old. 7 30 tonight in 335 A and B Case Bldg. per month and utilities. 351-7272. Antique Kodak Fingerprint Spring break. Tim, 351-7701. 210 cm Wooden skies, $10. Half Siamese. 353-3906, after 5 Hell. Persons interested are 5-1-14 camera. Many movie cameras and 5-1-17 332 5555. 5-1-15 WOULD ANGIE who did house invited. Petitioning is opened 4 Polaroids. Used Fender telecaster. pm. 351 9431. 5-1-20 Gibson L6S. New Traynor PA cleaning on Wardcliff Drive please "Lesbians and Alcoholism," a Roo looms ENGINEERS RESEARCH andguitar GENTLE, HALF Siamese cat - call Mary Ann after 5:30 at discussion led by two women amps. Many used W»le< picked up in 334 Student S| WORKERS - High Precision flutes MUCH MORE. WILCOX Spayed, declawed, needs quiet 332-6460 4-1-17 competent in dealing with this ROOM AND board in nice country calculator. Curta Model II home. 372-2533. 3-1-16 Bldg SECOND HAND STORE, 509 East subject, will be held at 5:30 p.m. home in Holt area. Space avail¬ (11x8x151 $200. Sell for $100. Sunday at United Ministries in Michigan Avenue, Lansing. able for horses. $120 a month. 332-4739. 4-1-14 Phone 485 4391. c-1-31 LABRADOR RETRIEVER Pups. AKC registered. I I PAYING TWO times face value for Stereo Review's Stereo Directory Higher Education, 1118 South Harrison Road. for Income tax the greater volunteers® East T 694-1639. 5-1-20 Shots and and MOVING MUST sell stereo wormed. 8 weeks old. 372-8672. Buying Guide, for years Lansing area Please be W SPECIAL CUT-OUT records. Past 1967-1972. console, wicker furniture, and 5-1-20 SMOOCH SENDS love, kisses, Greg, 485 4391 The MENSA Tom Terry Out to the MSU Volunteer In WOMEN NEEDED for co-ed hits and pop albums. Values up to C-1-31 miscellaneous items 351-7838. and hugs to her main man, Hon, Lunch Bunch will meet at noon training session at 61» house, own room, $85 per month. $5.98, now $1.97 per album. 5-1-16 on his 22nd birthday. 1-1-14 today in room B of the crossroads Union. For additional Hi Call after 5 pm 351-6818. 5-1-20 MARSHALL MUSIC, 245 Ann cafeteria in the International call the office of V 334 MICHIGAN AVENUE, across GUNS. RIFLES and hand guns of all kinds. Buy, trade and sell. Street. C-1-1-14 Real Estate « Car Pool ][§ Center. Contact Tom Terry for more information. Programs on campus. from Williams dorm, $85/month BEST year round prices in - EUREKA TANK sweeper Power¬ : Mobile Hones j The Russian and East Women's Studies Colloquium: including utilities. Call 332-5906. Southern Michigan. BOB'S GUN ful suction, all attachments, $15. SALE OR rent. Unfurnished, three Driving Prof. Studies program and the W SHOP, 2412 South Cedar. 393-1510. C-3-1 16 Marilyn Frye of the 3-1-16 371 2244 0-1-31 FOR RENT: 2bedrooms, fur¬ bedroom home Carpeted, full Philosophy Dept. will speak on German 8nd Russian a'etj KNEISSL nished, $150/ month and up. basement. Rent for $281/month IONIA TO MSU, Leaving "The Concept of Male Chau¬ ing the showing of the So* SKIS, and Nordica vinism" at 8:30 tonight BLIZZARD EXCLUSIVE skis, 185 until June or $3500 equity out. Tuesdays Thursdays 8 am, in 38 "Shadows MEN'S PRIVATE, quiet, clean, boots, used twice, size 7Vi, $80 Deposit required. Near Gables on with Solomon 351 8953, 7-9 pm. 5-1-15 Monday, Wednesday, Friday 9 , Union. Ancestors," at 7:30 p m Wl cm bindings, Henke bus route. Phone 332 2437. carpeted room for rent. Free 1-521-3809. 3-1 15 boots, size 11, $135. Kingston 5-1-20 am. Returning Monday - day in 100 Engineers | parking, all utilities paid, lease, United Ministries in electric guitar, $30. 351-4924. Wednesday 4 pm, Tuesday, Higher Before the film, I" Education sponsors winter term $70/month. Sue, between 5 pm 8 pm only, 351-0473. 3-1-16 - 5-1-14 18" DIAGONAL RCA black/white portable TV, with stand, $50. 337 STAHR 10x50. 2 bedroom, air, | Recreation dj Thursday, Friday 2:45 pm. weekend workshops: Basic Humesky of the Dept <*■ 0779, ask for Mark 3-1-14 shed, close to campus, excellent 527-0207, after 6 pm. 2-1-16 Gestalt and body awareness; Languages and LiteraiuK*J BEGINNING SKIERS! San Marco SKIERS, UTAH and Colorado psychodrama, values clarification, University of Michigan PRIVATE ROOM in six girl house. boots, size 10, $30. Marker condition, furnished, $3000. After EATON RAPIDS to Bridgeport. vocations workshop and death of the novel on which OLSON RUG and pad. 11x19, and spring packages from $289 Good location. Rent negotiable. six, 351-7523. 5-1-20 Leaving 7 am, returning 4 pm. and dying workshop. To register based. bindings, $15. Call Dave, ova! braided rug, 8x11. Call after TRAVEL BY HARRINGTON. Call 351-1820 or 332-1263. 4-1-17 332 4995 5-1-17 5:30 p.m., 332 8426.3 1 14 351-8800. C-1-14 633-4702, after 4 pm. 2-1-16 and for more information call Mobile Home, Baron, 10'x55', two UMHE. it Local radicals Liter*] bedroom, furnished. Real nice FROM EAST Lansing to Pontiac. you are interested in spending women's liberation, the*™" a little time with an exceptional condition. $1700. East Lansing, PAN AM liberation, and Ml How to form Leaving 7 am, returning 5 pm. child attend a Black vour own car pool 351 4965 5-1-20 CHARTER FLIGHT 351-3199 anytime. 3-1-15 meeting of special babysitters at 4 p.m. today in 33 tional socialist movent! As a public service at no TO LONDON Union. on sale by the Young^y charse, the State News will provide a free classified FROM WATERFORDarea toMSU Room and board opportunities Alliance from 10 a.m advertisement for those >)eople who would like to set 8*36 TRAILER, 10x10 shed. up or join a car pool. Open to oil MSU students, Commuter lot. Leaving 7 am, are available in exchange for odd today in the lobby of th«^ Close to MSU and shopping. faculty, staff and their returning 4 pm. 1-313-f jobs, shopping and companion tional Center Drivinn?_ 332 8009. 5-1-17 families. after 6 pm. x3-1 14 ship with elderly individuals living or Riding? _ in Lansing area Contact MSU Pre-meds and Pr8 0i From EXCELLENT 12x60 Mobile home. Departing July 4 Volunteer voiumeer office onic for details. Detroit to London —|p—. An innovative and » Share Leaving ' Returning _ 5x12 tipout. Central air. carpeting. Utility shed. Appoint¬ New Returning August 22 Drim{|Uj | Sh]r( (t meeting University Health with Dr. Center, 1 f"| London to Detroit Phone Time? ments please. 372 6804. 5 1-17 GLENBURNE/WAVERLY to Thursday in 351 Natural FROM HOLT Only $348.00 Round Trip Botany & plant pathology. to MSU. Leaving Bldg. participant^ **** for arrangements or conduct of CLEAN, TWO and three bed¬ For more Information contact Leaving 7:30 am. Returning 5:00 7:30 am, 694 0252 anytime. returning 5:30 pm. Women In Com The information requested below the Office of Overseas Study pm. 393-0274, after 6 pm. 2-1-16 3-1-15 must be supplied in order for ad to rooms. Furnished. $145 $165. Inc. invites all those mi appear. Next to expressway, North 127. 353-8921 joining WICI to an or Full Name 487 5616. 5-1 15 Williamston am, to returning 5 MSU. pm. Leaving 7:45 655-1819, I ■'<"'"8 ||e»j from 6 to 8:30 p ™ Address _ after 5 pm. 2-1-16 Tuesday in 318 Union. City 1966-10x55, 6x17 addition, washer/dryer. Close to MSU. Best Service j|^ FROM GRAND RAPIDS to East EAST LANSING Leaving 7 am, returning 5 to Charlotte. pm. Explore Delta Chi. *~M , offer. 351 5715.5-1 16 Lansing. Leaving 8 am. 337-0792, evenings. 2-1-16 for the individual TYPEWRITERS, AIR cloaned, returning •This coupon may be brought in or mailed to: 5pnr 1 616 942 1222 after 6 pm from 7:30 to 10 Car Pool Classifieds, 347 Student oiled and adjusted. Portables FROM ANN ARBOR TO MSU. Wednesday, for Services Building. No phone calls accepted. $7.50. Manuals $10. Electric ATTRACTIVE ONE bedroom, Leaving amlflexible) Tuesday and tionand rides, call us® $12.50. One day service, free pick FROM OWOSSO TO MSU7 Thursday. Returning pmlflexible) us at 101 Woodmere A* completely furnished, near MSU up and delivery. 25 years exper Leaving 9 am, returning 5 pm of Grand River Avenue campus. Call 393-4952. 5-1 15 ience. 393-9774.0-20-1-31 723 8675 after 5 Tuesday and Thursday. pm 3 1 14 1-313-663-5471. M-15 State News, East Lansing, Michigan Ihig.ii' Tuesday, January 14, 1975 11 Sponsored by: Yoilf Name THE SMALL SOCIETY Could Be Here! by Brickman [PROGRAMS I phone 353-6400 Vco-fcrNeliMESS, 10 WllX TV Jocktoi 7 WXM TV Detroit 2$ WIYI-TV Saginaw 6 WOIV Grond *opid» ♦ CKIWTV Wlndtor 12 WJRT TV Flint 13 WZZM TV Kolon 41 WUHQ-TV. Bottl. Cn 50WKBOTV Detroit AfJTWfZiTlS, EPICAL (7121341) Split Stcond glLLS _ 5:45 AM I li The Lifi (1) Mike Douglas (9) Dick Van Dyka Show HIGHLIGHTS (25) Dinah find that thty too maust pay (SO) The Lucy Show tht ttrriblt penalty for 12:55 trespassing in tht devil's place. 6:15 (5-8-10) Ntws (NBC) Adam 12 1:00 9:00 m For Today (ABC) Happy Days (CBS) Hawaii Five-0 (2) Lovt Of Lift y, M. Pr«ents (3) Accent 'Fonzie's "Computer Killtr" An accused Getting Maried" 6:20 (4) What's My Una? Fonne finds the girt of his millionairt father CAMPUS CLATTER Your Nome (5) Jackpot drtams but Richie discovers sht Could Bo Horo! (6) Martha Dixon has a scandalous past by Larry Lewis (7-12 13-41) All My Children phone 353-6400 (9 50) Movies divtrting tht guilt for tht crimt (10) Somerset away from his son. I Sunrise Simosttr 1:25 10:00 (2) Ntws 8:30 (CBS) NBA Today 1:30 All-Star Gama: East vs. Wtst. (CBS) M*A*S#H (2-3-6-25) As Tht World Turns (4-5-8-10) How To Survivt A Hawkeye has i _ with (NBC) Police Story Frank Burns which causes Frank Marriage "Htadhunttr" Starring Don (712-13-4 -13-41) Let's Make A Deal to place him under "house Murray, and Howard Duff. 2:00 arrest", confining him to Drama about the tragedy that quarters until a courts martial (2-3-6-25) Tht Guiding Light can be convened. bafalls a vattr (4-5-8 10) Days Of Our Livts (7-12-13-41) Tht $10,000 (NBC) World Premiere Movie Pyramid "The Oead Don't Oie" Starring (ABC) Marcus Welby M.D. 2:30 "Dark Fury" (PT.2)Dr. Stevtn (2-3-6-25) The Edge Of Night George Hamilton, Ray Milland. Kiley gets slapped with a Man tries to prove that his (4-5-8-10) Tht Doctors malpractice suit because of his brother was wrongfully executed (7-12-13-41) Tht Big Showdown for murder. treatment of a rapist and 3:00 Kilty's emotional involvement (2) Tht Young And Restless with the victim, a kidney (3-6-25) Tht Ntw Prict Is Right (ABC) Tutsday Movie Of Tht Wtek transplant patient. SHORT RIBS Your Nome (4-5-8-10) Anothtr World "Satan's Could Be Here! Triangle" Starring Kim (7-12-13-41) Gtntral Hospital Novak, Doug McClure. Strange 11:30 (ABC) Wide World Mystery by Frank Hill phone 353-6400 3:30 phenomena occur in this part of (2-3-6-25) Mitch Gtmt "Polict Htadquarttrs" A polict the ocean, where the one (7-12-13-41) One Life To Live lieutenant's routine Sunday (9) Gomtr Pyle woman survivor of a shioww-k afternoon is interrupted by two 7 &!(&£... "\^ 1JLST OPEHED 'JP A BiG N and har two would-ba rescuers THE ENTI«E SPANISH (50) Banana Splits dtaths. NIGHT CLUB, A TATTOO 4.00 ARMACA IS OPP OUR FWlDRANDA HAM BURGER SOUTH COAST.' STAND ON THE SOUTH COAST... (2-3) Tattle tales (5) Raymond Burr Show ...NOW, MAYBE WE \ (4) Somerset (6) Bewitched MIDNIGHT :an balance the | (5) Studio 5 (9) Beverly Hillbillies 12:00 ~bo budget/ (6) The Attic (10) Mod Squad (9) Film Ftstival (7) The Monty Mue (13) Truth Or Consequences 12:30 AM Li (8) Gilligan's Island (23) The Humanist Alternative (2-3-6-25) The Late Movie (9) Petticoat Junction (25) The F.B.I. 1:00 (10) Ntw Zoo Revue (41) Country Place (50) Mission impossible (4-5-8-10) Tomorrow (12) Merv Griffin (7-12-13) News • • -"A (13) Bonanza 7:30 (41) Afterhoun Theatre (23) Sesame Street (2) Truth Or Constqutnces (3) Treasure Hunt (50) Religious Message (25) Yogi 8> Fritnds (4) Wildlife Theatre 1:30 (41) Oaktari (7) Religious Message (50) Thret Stoogts (6) Wait Til Your Father Gets Home 2:00 MSU SHADOWS Sponsored bv: RICHIE HAVENS 4:30 IS COMING (7) Rainbow Sundae (4-10) News (2) Mikt Douglas Show (8) Hollywood Squares 3:00 (3) Ntws (4) Gtorgt Pitrrot Presents (9) Room 222 (2) Late Show by Gordon Carleton (13) To Tell The Truth 4:30 (6) To Till Tht Truth (2) News (7) 4:30 Movie (23) Assignment America (41) Super Stan Of Rock 4:35 (8 9) Partridge Family (2) Message For Today (10) Gillioan's Island 8:00 io Schools (25) The Monsters 8t Friends (2:3-25) (joodtimes ami Street (50) Little Rascals (4-5-8-10) Adam 12 M America (6) Partridge Family 8:25 (712-13-41) Happy Days ir Report EVENING (9) Swiss Family Robinson 8:30 (23) America knntl 3 Clubhouse 5:00 PM (50) Dealer's Choice (6-8) Ironsidt (9) Andy Griffith (10) Truth Or Consequences Roone Arledge — p Is Right (13) That Girl (9) House Of Pride in (23) Mister Rogers' (23) The Ascent Of Man Kingaroo The cherry - faced sandy kmtntion Neighborhood (50) Merv Griffin Show (25) I Lovt Lucy haired man who portrays 9:00 (41) Mm From U.N.C.L.E. (2-3-6-25) Hawaii Five-0 Roone Arledge, president of Sponsored by: YOUr Name I Young And Restless (50) Tht Flintstonts Tlovies 5:30 (9) News Nine a television network's THE FLINTSTONES Could Be Here! 9:30 f Mithews Show (4) Bowling For Dollars sports' division, in an Odd Indly Gimt (9) Front Page Challenge by Hanna-Barbera phone 353-6400 (9) Laurtl & Hardy (23) Consumer Survival Kit Couple'' episode won't be jMike Douglas srs' (10) Btvtrly Hillbillies 10:00 offended if you soy, Why Neighborhood (12-13) News he's actor." Because he NOWADAYS, ttletales (2-3-6-25) NBA Basketball no (23) Villa Alegrt (4-5-8-10) Police Story EVERYTHING 15 isn't an actor. He is Roone , ktning Playback (25) Hogan's Heroes SPECIALIZATION / I (7-12-13-41) Marcus Wei 9:15 450) Gilligan's Island M.D. Arledge, president of ABC prio Schools 6:00 Sports, and one of the most (9) Up Canada 1 9:" (2-3-4-5-6-7 8 9 10 liked and respected big Parous Message 12 13 25-41) News 1 9:30 wigs in all of sports. (9) Bewitched "Wide World of Sports J» You See It (23) And Justice For All Bk Check which has won five Emmy & Costelio (50) Star Trek 11:00 6:30 Awards for the program s (4-5-7-8-9-10 (3 6-4-5-7 10-25) News 12-13-23) News long - time host, Jim McKay (9) I Dream Of Jtannit (41) The Protecton has also won eight for Mr (1?) B^O Vivit (13-41) Btvtrly Hillbillits 11:30 Arledge as the executive (23) Zoom (4-5-8-10) Tht Tonight Show producer. And it should. For 7:00 (7-1213-41) Widt World " the "Wide World" concept (24-7-8) Ntws Entartainmtnt was his in the first place (3) What's My Line? (50) Late Movit and the ever - improving coverage techniques devel Sponsored by: Your Name oped for the show have set PROFESSOR PHUMBLE new and better patterns for Could be Here! camera coverage of by Bill Yates phone 353-6400 sports from pro football to Olympic figure skating. A native of Forest Hills /PAH! I coulp HA RPt-v New York, he got \r&J& • TAKF/VI/ey^ OFF his Bach elor's degree from Columbia THEM TO WATCH in 1952, got a job at a local Tte Mo\/i& television station, then was drafted into the Army for 21 Sf/zida months. On his release, he joined NBC as a stage manager, then worked up to producing a program better than its title indicated: "Hi Mom.'1 Then in 1960, he took his developed producer talents and a headful of new ideas Sponsored by: to the ABC network. And FRANK & ERNEST Your Name ABC Could Be Horo! gives Roone Arledge by Bob Thaves full credit for the rapid, and phone 353-6400 admirable growth, of its sports'department. ABC's list of Arledge X DIDN'T SfcAT innovations includes the development of slow - THE ftUiN HOUR motion and stop - oction analysis techniques, both TRAFFIC, BUT hand - held cameras and cameras mounted on THANK HfcAVfclM* panoramic cranes for foot¬ X TltD IT.' ball game coverage and the use of underwater cameras for swimming events. 1 2Michigan State News, Hast Lansing, Michigan Tuesday, J^uary^l Prof By SUE McMlLLIN seeks electricity per square centimeter of membrane. Tien estimates energy powe| State News Staff Writer that it would take .06 square miles, or an area of about the size of 25 football fields, of membrane to produce one kilowatt of electri Popeye has been pushing spinach as an energy-builder for a long city. time, but this green, leafy vegetable may someday become more In 1968 Tien's first attempts to create electricity yielded about than an energy boost for kids. It may provide a universal energy one-thousandth of a volt of electricity. An average flashlight source. H. T. Tien, professor of biophysics, has battery is 1.5 volts. begun research to find a Photosynthesis practical way of using the electricity he has generated from an ar For the last 10 years tificial membrane. The membrane contains Tien's research has been aimed at under chlorophyll extracted standing photosynthesis. Now he will be working to develop the from spinach. practical uses of this process. When this membrane is illuminated with sunlight it electricity in a process similar to the photosynthesis that takes place in green plants. If practical application for this process is produces "Solar energy, almost from every point of view, would be the most worthwhile." he said. "Utilized in this form solar energy is pollution free." /• found, it could be the first source of solar energy that could be The National Science Foundation and the National Aeronautics cheaply^ and efficiently produced. The process is fairly cheap be¬ and Space Administration (NASA), predicted in 1973 that by the cause of the inexpensive materials used. year 2020 solar energy would provide 20 per cent of the world's Silicon solar cell electricity. Presently there is only one practical device that utilizes solar Best alternative energy. The silicon solar cell is a thin film made of immoveable Tien feels that solar energy is the best alternative to our quickly parts. When the film is illuminated by sunlight it produces depleting supply of fossil fuels. electricity. If Tien's device can be developed to produce large amounts of But this process is very expensive because of the materials electricity, a storage battery will have to work in conjunction with involved, Tien said. it. Electricity could be generated during periods of sunlight and "Use of this is limited to such places as spacecraft." he said. stored for later use. "Places where money is no object." Tien is now working with James Mountz, special graduate Tien developed the artificial membrane in 1962. The basic struc¬ research assistant in physics, on the developmental research. ture of the membrane is made of fatty materials and is about Mountz's work is presently being funded by a short-term grant one-millionth of an inch thick. from the College of Natural Science. They hope to receive a grant Currently, Tien's membrane produces 25 micro amps of from the federal government to continue their work. SN photo JoJ James Mountz, special graduate research to generate electricity from an artific^l assistant in physics, checks over the apparatus membrane, County Dems approve resolution used in the research he is doing with H. T. Tien boosting Student Workers Union cott of the Teamsters Union. dent Workers Union is a Demo¬ per cent of these delegates are The Teamsters represents cratic affair," he cautioned. MSU students. growers rights in the continu¬ The Democratic party mem¬ "There was not a whole lot of The organizing efforts of the ing battle of UFW representa¬ bership evidently thought that excitement about the vote," Student Workers Union have tion. The UFW, he said, repre¬ it was in the general student Fox said. "It was a routine gotten a boost from the Ingham sents the workers. interest to have these motions vote. The Student Workers County Democratic party. The resolution supporting approved at the county level, resolution is basically to en¬ The Democratic organization the student workers' organi¬ Cain said. courage the Democratic party adopted a resolution Saturday zing drive will give the student He added that the vote on the to become involved in the union giving support to the student workers' organizing committee two motions was one of "over¬ effort." labor group. Also approved was access to the Democratic whelming support" and that it Fox said that the resolution a resolution designed to make party's experienced can¬ means that the Democratic favoring adoption of a MSU MSU adopt a policy of only pur¬ vassers. said Tim Cain, party in Ingham County thinks purchasing policy of lettuce and chasing United Farm Workers ASMSU president, chairperson that the Student Workers grapes that bear only the black products. of the county Democratic Reso¬ Union and an exclusive pur¬ Aztec eagle label of the UFW is MSU presently buys all union lutions Committee and a long - chasing policy are "good ideas." "not a statement of lettuce and grapes. However, time student labor spokes¬ The resolutions were adopt¬ conscience." Democrats at both about 90 per cent of these are person. ed during the county conven¬ the local and state' level have Teamsters Union products. Cain said that preliminary tion that is held in January of long supported the UFW boy Allan Fox, vice chairperson union work is sometimes a every odd-numbered year. The of the Ingham County Demo¬ delegates who will attend the problem, and people are needed cratic party and also director of state Democratic convention in Fox said that an adoption of to go door to door. Interested ASMSU's Legislative Relations people in the party and student Detroit on Jan. 25 and 26 will the UFW policy at the state Dept. said that adoption of an workers can now be recruited. present these motions to the convention would mean that exclusive purchasing policy by "This doesn't mean that the state party for possible state¬ other universities that have a MSU would be an actual boy wide approval and support. majority of Democrats on their organizing efforts of the Stu- The Ingham County Demo governing bodies would also be crats have about 400 to 500 requested in the future to adopt precinct delegates. About 30 an exclusive purchasing policy. CIA review shows SUPER LOW some irregularities NO FAULT WASHINGTON (AP) (CIA) Director James R. — Former Central Intelligence Agency Schlesinger said Monday that a review of INSURANCE agency activities shortly after he took over uncovered a small Call Jeff Williams number of "misdemeanors." (MSU '68) at 332-1838 Schlesinger. now secretary of defense, was interviewed by a blue - ribbon panel appointed by President Ford to investigate allegations the CIA engaged in illegal domestic spying. In its first session, the eight man panel heard in closed session it-SENTRY from CIA Director William E. Colby and two of his predecessors, fTINSURANCE * MADt !0 ODOiR (ORYOU Schlesinger and Richard Helms. 710 Gainsborough Drive Colby, who was expected to tell the panel what he learned from his own investigation of the allegations, entered the East Lansing meeting shortly after the chairman, Vice President Nelson A. Rockefeller, said, "this commission has but one purpose, we're going to get to the bottom of this problem." Schlesinger, who headed the spy agency for six months in 1973. told reporters that the panel asked him about "the effective intelligence organization and some of my necessity for an experiences in Gary's Campus it." Schlesinger became head of the CIA while the agency was under fire for its role in the Watergate scandal, and he said, "there were a number of issues that came about as a result of the review of Beauty Salon intelligence activities at the agency which was precipitated by the Watergate episode... In the course of that review certain things Now did come to light." Specializing in Afro Perms He declined to describe them in more detail but said they covered the entire history of the agency, a period of some 20 years, and "the number of misdemeanors in that period was, I think, Visit Gary's Campus Beauty Salon. quite small." 549 E. Grand River There is a difference!!! 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