HEBERT VOWS FIGHT iems oust 2 chairmen By WIRE SERVICES against new members. It would have been difficult to take an 5 voted to depose two powerful House committee active role on the committee, Carr said, if Hebert was still the i Thursday and one, Armed Services Chairman F. chairman. I Hebert. vowed to carry an unprecedented fight to save Carr predicted that Melvin Price, D • 111., would be selected as to the House floor. the new chairman of the Armed Services Committee. I major assault on the House seniority system, the Hebert said his chairmanship should be put to the public vote in I rejected Hebert's renomination 152 to 133 and that of the House, not taken away by the secret Democratic caucus vote. f8 riculturc Chairman W. R. Poage by a vote of 144 to 141. Asked if he was not setting up a split by trying to get House lsfter rejecting two chairmen, they also rejected a Republicans to help him overturn his rejection by the Democrats, Lendation from the steering committee that two other Hebert replied: n be dumped: Wayne L. Hays of the Administration "I'm setting up a fight to leave me in the position I'm in in the tee and Wright Patman of the Banking Committee. defense of this country. L 73, from Ix>uisiana. said he was the victim of "a "This was an intimidating influence by a lobby organization Jjnda show" engineered by Common Cause, a Washington trying to run Congress. Let the full House ... let the American Eizens lobby, and said he would carry his fight to the full people see what is going on." Poage, 75, from Texas, said he will not fight the Democrats' lobert Carr. Michigan 6th District representative and a action to remove him as chairman of the Agriculture Committee. Ar of the Armed Services Committee, called the State News "The caucus has worked its will," Poage said. "I accept its 1.10 say he heartily approved of the unseating. decision." ■called Hebert a "very arbitrary chairman" who had a bias (continued on page 16) COMMITTEE CHAIRMEN VOLUME 169 NUMBER 9 FRIDAY, JANUARY 17,1975 MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY EAST LANSING, MICHIGAN 48824 eshmen reflect conser By NEW YORK TIMES point of view. Some of the changes are A smaller portion of the nation's 1.67 million freshmen called smallest drop in the past three years. In [ANGELES The college freshman slight by comparison with earlier year, in themselves 'liberal', while there was no decline at all 1971 the survey found that 42.2 per cent of "It would appear that the vigorous effort is more conservative politically and some cases differences of only 1 or 2 per in those to recruit black students, which resulted in llined all freshmen agreed that women should than any of his immediate cent, but they reflect reversals of trends considering themselves "conservative" and the number of the increases observed during the last sors to favor legalization of mari- which had been moving in the "middle of- the ■ roaders"was the stay at home rather than work outside. 1960s and early 1970s have simply not been opposite ■ highest in the history of the That figure dropped to 37 per cent in 1972 r job equality for women, the direction until this year. nine sustained during the last few years," Astin The most startling response, the - year survey. and 30.4 per cent in 1973. j] Council on Education said in a survey's observed. director, Alexander W. Astin, said, was the This year, 29.8 per cent of the freshmen cently released. The class of 1978 has changed in other i, the number of blacks enter- decline in the students favoring legalization agreed with the question, a drop of just 0.6 ways. Though legal and medical careers had I nation's colleges has continued to of marijuana, which, based on the servative" and the number of "middle-of- per cent. Declines were also noted in the been favored responses Another trend that reversed itself con¬ number of students who believe the by entering freshmen in ■after reaching a peak in 1972. This of 190,000 freshmen at 364 the readers" was the highest in the growing numbers for the last six years, this colleges and history cerned the number of freshmen pirollment of black students was 15 universities, showed a drop from 48.2 per of the nine-year survey. favoring job government is not doing enough to protect year interest in the two professions K below those registering in 1972, cent in 1973 to 46.7 per equality for women. That figure rose from the consumer (from 78 to 75.1 per cent) or cent last year, a "The biggest surprise was the changes of 87.8 per cent of the freshmen in 1971 to 91.9 registered small drops. to curb pollution (from 88.1 to 82.6). a private coordinating associa reversal of a six-year trend. political attitudes. There is very little But interest in nursing, farming, forest¬ per cent in 1973, according to the council, Students who said there Hhigher education, said. Similarly, a smaller portion of the evidence of a liberalizing trend on most but this year it declines to 91.5 per cent. were too many ry, business and the applied biological ■ surprising number of areas, the nation's 1.67-million freshmen called them¬ issues. The marijuana trend is a clear rights for criminals increased from 50.1 to sciences remain consistently high, while the In a related finding, the number of 51.5. ■found attitudinal changes among selves "liberal" while there was no decline reversal of a very sharp trend," said Astin, humanities, English, mathematics, history students who said women's activities were |n reflecting a more conservative at all in those a UCLA social and political science continued to suffer the considering themselves "con psychologist. best confined to home registered the One exception to the conservative trend was an increase in the number of students popularity declines of earlier years. In par¬ favoring open admissions at the nation's ticular, interest in teaching as a career colleges and universities, suffered one of the sharpest drops, reaching up from 35 per ibrary unable to prevent thefts an all-time low. 7.7 cent in 1978 to 40 per cent last year. per cent of the freshman class this year, compared with a high of 21.7 Astin's UCLA staff, which completed the per cent in 1966. survey for the education council, found that For the first time in the survey, the black enrollment dropped from 8.7 percent number of students who said finances were of the freshman class in 1972 to 7.4 By PETE DALY cent. percent of "major concern" to them declined while MSU used an electronic alarm system to U-M has a slightly larger theft rate from in 1974. This so surprised staff workers that State News Staff Writer Albright said assigning the loss a dollar deter book thefts in 1968, but the unper- those who said aid was of "no concern" their undergraduate library than MSU, they double-checked the figures with a value would be difficult because the books increased. One theory offered for this was fected system registered a very high with U-M at 2 per cent and MSU at about a easy to escape from the MSU are second-hand and a fairly small percent¬ majority of the responding colleges and the start last year of the Federal Basir number of false alarms and was finally 1.5 to 1.8 per cent. I with stolen books, and it is. But universities and confirmed the decline. Educational Opportunity Grants, which is age of them are replaced. A title is replaced abandoned. Most of the bugs have been Checkers at the MSU Library said 1 officials say to make it more About 124,000 members of this year's currently received by quarter of all only if it is frequently used by students and worked out lately, however, and libraries students here don't generally like to be a ■would not be worth it - even if freshman class are black, Astin said. they there are not enough duplicate copies still in are gradually replacing their flesh and bothered by them, either, but they stoicly college freshmen. ■ord it. the Library. blood checkers with electronic ones. continue peering into backpacks and brief lWbright, asst. director of the MSU He said the average cost of a new book is 1 siid 2,200 volumes were stolen around $10, and that the value of stolen "The type of electronic security system cases. I MSU Undergraduate Library last ■ still expects around 400 of them to Tr before the end of this school books would be around $20,000 for the undergraduate library, although the Li¬ (ESS) that we have looked at would cost $28,000 per year for the first five years," Albright said. "The students we employ at "If somebody is going to rip off a book, they'll do it and there is nothing you can do about it," said Ruth Myer, 256 Campbell Few students eligible year, brary does not spend that much in replace¬ |that loss rate for 1973-74 1.5 per ment. the doors of the library cost a total of Hal), as she opened and closed an endless $10,000 for Ford tax rebate per year." number of book covers. About 30 people left "The ESS would be more effective than the Library at her door in 10 minutes on a the human checkers, but the cost wouldn't recent Friday afternoon. About two-thirds be worth it at this time. Besides, our door of them carried parcels that could have con¬ checks seem to be reasonably effective," tained books. By WIRE SERVICES AND STATE NEWS he wanted to do and what he wanted Albright said. Small science books and general maga¬ President Ford's tax proposals may Congress to do." Much of the advantage of an ESS over zines are the most easily stolen items, with eventually help some lower and middle- "I think Ford is definitely better than the checkers is the culprit often slipping the loot into a income people, but most students appar Nixon but I'm wondering if he's doing the purely convenience for the Library patrons. The University of Michi¬ large notebook or underneath a jacket. ently won't reap any benefits. right things," said Mark Roerecke, gan recently converted to an expensive Library employes cannot search a sus¬ Only five of 35 students interviewed sophomore, 567 E. Holmes Hall. "I don't ESS largely because of student irritation pected book thief or hold him until police Thursday said they were eligible for a rebate think it is as simple as he's trying to make it with the slowness of the uniformed arrive, and when an unproperly checked-out under the plan first announced in Ford's seem." security company that university used as checkers, book is found, the student is politely asked Monday night address and repeated in the "I don't understand it," said Mark to have it processed at the checkout desk. State of the Union speech. Deacon, senior. 519 S. Case Hall. according to Rose-Grace Faucher, head of "It the U-M No other action of any kind is taken. The main stumbling block for students Undergraduate Library. actually hurts the middle-income group and seems to be that they are listed on their doesn't hurt the upper class at all." "Everyone gets mad at people looking Though Myer and the other checkers parents' income tax forms as dependants Mike Kipina, freshman, 139 Abbot Hall, through their brief cases, and having to appear to hold an aggressive and suspicious and earned too little in 1974 to pay taxes this said he didn't agree with Ford's energy- wait in long lines makes them mad, too." type of job, they are actually at the mercy year. of the temperament of Library saving proposals. she said. patrons. Students who are independent, however, "I don't think home heating is a luxury- Faucher said she wasn't sure of the They cannot force a person to open a and earned less than $2,100 last year are item," Kipina said. "The little people still briefcase, nor can they stop a person who eligible to receive an $80 rebate under the money saved by the ESS replacing the need heat for their house." guard service, but feels the system may pay simply refuses to stop at their desk, plan. For those who earned more than for itself within a couple of years. However, (continued on page 20> $2,100 in 1974, whether independent or not, the tax will be reduced according to a tax schedule prepared by Ford's economic aides. The Treasury Dept. on Wednesday Taxpayers will fill out their 1974 tax forms released tax schedules that would Library seeks aid from according to the present schedule. If Ford's tax plan is approved by Congress, taxpayers will be mailed a check for the difference apply if Congress approves the decreases in tax rates proposed by President Ford to begin this year. between the tax they paid and the lower rate proposed by the President. The first column in the schedule payments tor lost books For example, a single student who made $2,000 in 1974 and is not claimed by anyone lists taxable income, or the amount of income that is taxable after all else for income tax purposes, will simply get exemptions and deductions ^ave been By PAUL J. PARKER The Dept. of Public Safety collects thou a rebate of $80. But a student who earned subtracted. The second column lists State News Staff Writer sands of dollars of fines each year but they $2,600 last year owes the government $70 in the amount of tax at present, and the Unless fines for lost books - which have don't receive that money, even though taxes according to the present schedule for third lists the amount that would totaled over $10,000 since mid-1973 — are they'd like to. single taxpayers and only $35 according to apply if the decreases are approved. paid to the MSU Library instead of to the "What am I going to say to the Dept. of Ford's proposal. That student stands to get University's general fund, replacements for Public Safety if I say yes to the Library?" $35 back. Schedule X single taxpayers not the lost I woks may never be purchased, Chapin stressed that he does not want all Most students interviewed had trouble qualifying for other schedules. officials at the financially troubled fine returned to the Library's Library money understanding the criteria that determined say. account, but only that paid for lost books. eligibility. But many were lukewarm on the Taxable Amount of Tax Though Library Director Richard Chapin Students are socked $15 for a lost book and tax rebate proposal itself. Income Present Proposed admits that "it doesn't make sense to fine $20 for a lost periodical, though they are "The $80 back bit I thought was sorta students to run the Library," he still asserts given the option of replacing the lost item. stupid." said Dana Weber, freshman. 198 W. % o $ o $ o the money students pay for the books Library officials prefer the replacement Wilson Hall. they 500 70 35 lose should be returned to the Library. option. If the student chooses to pay the "$80 is nice to have, but that's not a lot of 1,000 145 80 But, says Steve Terry, asst. vice president fine, the Library gets no part of it, and money," said Paul Crockett, senior, 405 E. 135 1,500 225 of finance. Library fines are no different typically can not afford the average $12 Holden Hall. Crockett said the rebate should 2,000 310 200 than any other fines and revenues collected replacement cost for an American-made have been larger. 3,000 500 360 SN photo/Craig Porter by the University, much of that at hardcover book. There were mixed reactions to Ford's 4,000 690 540 registration when student finds a hold card Chapin said that some of the money MSU State of the Union Address and his economic 6,000 1,110 940 ft —e all I ih ~ "7'"ry en»P»oye, checks a patron's briefcase preventing him from registering. receives from foundations for research proposals. I tos fellow JTL are ProP«rly checked out. Schenck "The registrar's office brings in $70,000 grants ought to be earmarked for Library "I thought it was pretty good," said a 8,000 10.000 1,590 2,090 1,400 1,900 the tk*e^P e ine theft hundreds of book covers a day to each year from the sale of schedule books but acquisition, since the Library is a primary student who did not want to be identified. "I of books. they don't receive that money," Terry said. of research information. source thought he came out pretty clear with what Michigan State News. East Lansing, Michigan Friday, Janua BUSINESSMEN PREDICT (ocus: NATION Government says GNP down again Dealers Assn. of By Associated Press already declining traffic growth and also add to inflationary Michigan, said any higher tax w« u» J Americans battling inflation and recession got more bad news on pressures on the economy." fires of inflation" by boosting gasoline pump prices -a"! Ford program renewal seen both fronts Thursday. Businessmen said President Ford's energy Edward E. Carlson, president of United Airlines, said the to the energy problem must take into account the fi proposals will mean higher prices for many consumer goods and suggested $3 - a - barrel tax on imported crude oil would make it the product out of reach is no solution at all," said si,- the government 'necessary to increase passenger fares and freight rates The administration has estimated that The Justice Dept. may recommend to President Ford a reported the Gross National Product (GNP) went Ford' brief extension in the Jan. 31 deadline of the clemency down again. substantially to compensate for the added fuel costs." Robert Williams, Illinois agriculture director, said costs for designed to cut energy consumption would petroleum products about 10 cents a gallon and w ra' Henry Ford II disclosed a plan to offer buyers of 1975 small program for draft evaders and deserters, a department model Ford cars rebates of up to $500. Details of the plan, liquid nitrogen fertilizers, used in corn production, could go up $25 $250 to the average family's fuel bill. official said Thursday. designed to boost sales, will be announced soon. Chrysler Corp. a ton. from $275 to $300, because of the proposed tax increase. Treasury Secretary William E. Simon, urging Conn*. I Deputy Asst. Attorney General Kevin T. Maroney said the put a similar program into effect on Monday. Higher fertilizer costs might cause farmers to cut back production, the entire Ford economic program, said Thursdi Williams said, and lower production would mean higher consumer proposed energy taxes would add about 2 per cent decision on recommending an extension would depend on Congressional leaders meanwhile, vowed quick action on Ford's costs for grain and grain based foods. inflation rate, but added, "the cost of toLl whether the "substantial pickup" in interest in the program anti recession program, a presidential spokesman said there was ■ inaction wonwl that has developed in the last few days continues for "common ground" between Ford and his critics and there were Truck drivers, who staged shutdowns last year to protest high higher." 'I more industrial and municipal layoffs. costs for diesel fuel, said the new increases would cause them Some Democrats disagreed. another week or 10 days. Several businessmen said Ford's proposals for higher fuel taxes additional hardship. Millard Holden, president of the Independent Ford had breakfast with congressional as a means of curtailing energy consumption would simply add to Produce Haulers of America, said higher fuel costs will mean "an and Senate Democratic Whip Robert Bvrd said leaders of bobl increase in freight rates and that means increased costs for latertLl inflation by increasing prices. produce. The consumer can't stand the prices now." was a feeling among some members of his party that tli!!l Blacks protest at air base A spokesman for Delta Airlines said substantial fare boosts Charles Shipley, executive director of the Service Station taxes on inflation." crude oil would "lend additional fuel to Jl» would be necessary and said such increases. "Will further inhibit Strategic Air Command and Minot Air Force Base officials Byrd said he thought Congress might adopt a gasoliwl plan as a means of cutting energy consumption. Ford hu J were investigating the causes leading up to a disturbance standby rationing authority. at the base Thursday during which a group of black airmen locked themselves in the base dining hall. Helms: Spying i Byrd said Democratic leaders promised to n.„„ possibly within 90 days on some parts of the "iiiJL A base spokesman said the 25 black men and two black economic program. President that "as a But he *aid the Democrats matter of course there i[»J women, all enlisted personnel, * voluntarily left the base He said such involvement changes" in his proposals. dining hall about six hours after the incident began. Five of WASHINGTON (API - The ponsible and have distorted the Colby, the agency's current the airmen immediately began conferring with Col. Robert Central Intelligence Agency facts. He denied the agency director. was infrequent until in the late In testimony 1950s and early 1960s The Democratic senator said concern was (CIA) opened an office to eval¬ under his direction ever en made public there was ex,..,, Spencer, base commander, in an attempt to iron out Wednesday, Colby said the CIA "a sudden and quite granting an across the board tax rebate rather than m uate information on American gaged in any massive illegal dramatic grievances. radical groups "only when domestic spying. inserted about 12 agents into upsurge of extreme radicalism on cutting taxes for low and middle - income Americiitl Sources various "dissident" groups and in this country and abroad, an One aim of Ford's economic proposals is to get com evidence appeared of their on the Senate start spending again in order to encourage industrial involvement with subversive Armed Services intelligence created files on some 10,000 uprush of violence in our n_ The government reported Wednesday that America! Amoco, union reach settlement elements abroad," former CIA subcommittee said Helms mini¬ Americans as part of the opera tion. system of government." output dropped by 2.8 per cent in December, the largatl Director Richard Helms said mized the extent of CIA infil Generally, that violence tration of dissident groups in • The Source quoted Helms as would have been of no direct decline in nearly 16 years. Thursday. The Oil, Chemical and Atomic Workers International Helms said recent attacks side the United States to a far saying some of the penetration concern to the CIA. Helms said. On Thursday, the Commerce Dept. said the GNP J .Union announced Thursday that it had reached a new two against the agency are irres¬ greater extent than William consisted merely of sending "It became so only to the - • the nation's total output of goods and service year settlement with Amoco, the nation's third largest oil CIA employes to a rally or degree that the trouble was cent during the last three months of 1974 after at refiner. demonstration. inspired by, or coordinated Union President A. F. Grospiron said strike notices served on Texaco throughout the nation for 4 Jimmy faults with Chris, Helms and Colby testified in private. But in a prepared and with or funded by anti American subversion mech¬ inflation. Other inflation adjusted figures showed that the GNPfl time p.m. local publicly released statement. anisms abroad," he said. 2.2 per cent during all of 1974. the first time full yeuiT Thursday would remain in effect. 1958 and the sharpest since 1946 when the end of WorldM Grospiron said he was "hopeful that we will be successful bounces to Mary Jean Helms said the current contro¬ versy is endangering national "Information was developed largely by the FBI indeed output by 12 per cent. in negotiating an acceptable agreement with Texaco. security and is based on "ruin¬ and the Dept. of Justice but DETROIT (UPI) — Judy Strangis known to television viewers ous misunderstandings" by also from foreign sources as as the "Mean Mary Jean" of Plymouth auto advertisements, says some in the press. well, that the agitation here did Poll cites religious upsurge she has a new boyfriend — Tennis ace Jimmy Connors. "In normal times few in fact have some overseas "He's very, very Americans would ever come connections," he said. nice." said the 23 year - old model. within the purview of our "As the work load grew, a A "Fortunately, he travels and I travel. That way, he's not back in growing number of Americons — though still a Los Angeles feeling bad because I'm away, and neither am I." foreign intelligence opera¬ very small group within the minority — believe religion is increasing its influence on tions," Helms said. already small counterintelli¬ their society, according to the latest She said she did not know then that Connors and Chris Evert, "That happened only when gence staff was formed to Gallup Poll. The survey showed 31 per cent of the world's top ranked woman player, had broken their evidence appeared of their analyze the information devel¬ respondents believe the influence of religion is engagement. involvement with subversive oped here and to give guidance growing, while 56 per cent "It took until the fourth date to find out," Miss believe its effect is waning. me Strangis said. elements abroad," he added. to our facilities abroad," he said. 'The charter of this group According to the poll, young adults are most likely to see was specifically restricted to religion increasing its influence, with 37 per cent the foreign field." responding in that fashion. In 1970, only 14 per cent of young adults questioned felt that way. Ford nominates Silbert again it i I I II SI I II M | I I VI I IS II HS The White House has resubmitted to Congress the controversial nomination of Earl J. Silbert as U.S. | Attorney for the District of Columbia. President Ford sent the Silbert nomination to the Senate Wednesday along with nine other appointments which had been submitted but not acted on fCIIDAT ' Congress. The renomination of Silbert during the last session of came as a mild surprise. The SIJDEE 1 Washington Star-News quoted White House sources last TB November as having said that Silbert's name would not be submitted to the new Congress this month. Commerce Dept. gets OTP »-< M II % I IK ( President Ford has decided to shift the controversial Office of Telecommunications Policy (OTP) from the White MSI HOCK SAVTIUMW House to the Commerce Dept., it was learned Thursday. The move heralds on end to the stormy five • year life of the office which advises the President on electronic communications policy. vs Former President Richard M. Nixon established the office SXIiJll A* IS | in t | i. s||f in early 1970 and it made headlines when director, Clay T. Whitehead, criticized network news its original DENVER IT* II 111 I operations for "ideological plugola" and spreading "elitist gossip." I AM \l VI VI SM I MSN 640 AM LIVE COVERAGE SILNIDaVT Mill Mil I\i I- H The Mich iff an State Network WMSN WEAK WMCD M VI I I I 11 N. Viets criticize U.S. actions WBRS WKME *MII Ml VI IVI I I II HI I f\l Al V I VI I II || v\l M. il North Vietnam said Thursday the Ford Administration has proved itself the equal of the Nixon government "in IT ALL BELONGS 10 YOU! I I//V distorting facts" about U.S. involvement in Vietnam. The THE MSU UNION BUILDING IS YOUR » INI l|1 Will Kremlin also accused the United States of not Vietnam cease fire by shipping in unauthorized arms. fulfilling the III MV *l.€f - There were only scattered reports of ONE STOP RECREATION CENTER: II IS| | Hill / III MY */.<* fighting in South •BOWLING LANES Vietnam, but military sources said this should not be I •BILLIARDS ■ NOW I viewed as a general lull. Late Wednesday Viet Cong I I I I MM I I//V & GAME ROOM I gunners shelled South Vietnam's biggest military training center in suburban Saigon, killing four persons and •CAFETERIA J on Fridays & Saturdays ■ Billiards open until Midnight I II INI I \\||| y||| HV..VI. rt | wounding more than 40. •GRILL | Bowling lanes open until 1:00 a.m. | •BARBERSHOP | Union Desk open until 12 midnight I Mill VIII •BROWSING ROOM ^1 I |N| | | s! •NEWS CENTER •TICKET OFFICE •LOUNGES •POST OFFICE MSU \j,tc Cn regular winning numbers: 670 879 UNION BUILMNt jackpot numbers: 967965 41907 064 On Campus at Abbott and Grand Rl»#r car bonus numbers: 454 598 344 355-346° Commutar lockari now available BEST PROPOSALS SENT T Init lists community development ideas . By JOE KIRBY The Recreation Commission offered four Another recommendation was that [ Su„ New. Staff Writer different recommendations for the One recommendation was that the money. money be spent to expand recreation programs in the married housing areas of itv of East Lansing is getting closer Community Recreation Center fci'ne its Community Development Court Park be remodeled to K which could bring nearly $1.2 accessible to the handicapped. in Valley make it the MSU campus. This is the only recommendation that Background: |n federal funds to the city. applies directly to the MSU campus though By JOE KIRBY The citizen recommendations ranged from purchasing land State New* Stall Writer for city parks to many others will affect students. expanding health programs. J sifting through almost 50 citizen The Housing and Community Development Act, which was The citizen suggestions were studied iendations. the city's Human Rela Funk said the married housing population signed into law on August 22, 1974, replaces and combines Traffic, Recreation and Human Relations by the city's Housing, Traffic and Recreation commissions earlier federal programs such as Urban Renewal, Model commissions, which The City of East Laming it in line helped bring this money to the city and Cities, selected what they felt were the X„t what they feel are the best so Neighborhood Facilities and Open Space Land. top priority items. to receive $1,173,000 in federal funds should receive some of the benefits. These recommendations [, t0 the Planning Commission. over the next three years as part of The City of Eaat Lansing, which is classified as a central city, were then submitted to the PlanningCommission,which is organizing them into a workable the 197K A third recommendation (•eligible to receive $1,173,000 over the first three years of the plan. ■Traffic Commission »ent only one Housing and Community was that the city consider using some of the funds program. The (endation to the Planning Com Development Act. to To qualify for the money the city ia Planning Commission plan is near completion and a These articles explain the program purchase land for additional city parks. required to obtain citizen public hearing will be held on Jan. 22 to gain citizen reaction to _ that a pedestrian crossing be input in devising a program that shows the city has a need for and explore possible u>ays the the program. ss Grand River Avenue. money "Citizens have expressed pleasure with the money. will be used in the city. The plan will then be submitted to The city held five public meetings City Council, which will L gird, Traffic Commission mem the neighborhood park system," Funk said. were attended during November which hold another public hearing on Feb. 11. The city's application by 250 people who recommended ways to Id the crosswalk would have to be The final Recreation Commission the money. spend for funds must then be sent to the Tri-County Regional ■ connection with some other com- One of the main purposes of the Planning Commission for review by March 1. ■ development project. recommendation was for a study of possible Community Development The application will then be sent to the Barbara Funk, recreation commission sites for a Nature Center with Act is to provide housing for low and moderate income Dept. of Housing and possible persons Urban Development for final approval. The city could begin member, said the restrooms in the Com¬ but the money can also be used for other -ot to be tied in with some housing purchase of the land if money is available community programs. receiving funds as early as June 1975. Kment," Bird said. "Community munity Center do not meet the city code later on. Kment money ia primarily for requirements that they be accessible to handicapped persons. The Human Relations Commission offered recommendations which were somewhat unique in that an attempt was made to devise programs concerned with social services. Commission seeks funds One recommendation was for a multi¬ purpose facility which could be used as a meeting room, provide office space for various social agencies and care program. possibly a day for new elderly housing Human Relations Chairman John Kessler said By FRED NEWTON The second priority of the commission, no particular location was State News Staff Writer The recommendation for the rehabilita¬ recommended for the structure. that of code enforcement, rests on the tion loan program is to provide homeowners Money for housing code enforcement assumption that housing for the student Friday, January 17,1975 "We didn't make any specific location which would affect both landlords and loans up to $2,000 for housing repairs at group will be vastly improved through reduced interest rates. because we didn't want to tie the tenants is one of the recommendations better enforcement of the city city into that housing code. "It was originally proposed that the anything," Kessler said. the housing commission is city making for use of "We have recommended that a full or itself would buy, renovate and sell or lease Housing and Community Development Act part - time lawyer be hired to increase the the houses, but that would cost more than A second recommendation was that funds funds — but money may first be used to efficiency in handling violations." Luttrell we would thumbs down' be spent in developing a social service plan. improve housing for the elderly. presently get," Luttrell said. said. "Currently the city lawyer doesn't The loans will be available to residents of The East Lansing Kessler explained that the city Housing Commission have enough time to handle housing low and medium income owner Planning has listed three housing priorities to the violations." - - occupied Commission is concerned primarily with Planning Commission that they feel can be housing units whom the Housing structures and not the needs of The Commission feels need the money. people and helped through the community grant housing commission has been flooded so the city should consider In concluding its report the hiring someone funding. The are, in order of their priority: with complaints about inadequate enforce¬ Housing who would take into account the concerns of ment of the housing code. Commission suggested that the area east of • Housing for the elderly. If many people. • Code enforcement leading to both complaints dealing with exterior code Hagdorn Road bounded by Timberlane iven to switch enforcement, parking space regulations and Street, Burcham Drive and Grand River exterior and interior improvement of The third recommendation was that other interior code enforcements were Avenue; and Wolf Court, which is the area housing. within the triangle of Harrison Road and public areas and buildings be made • Rehabilitation loan program for home¬ taken care of by a special housing lawyer accessible to the handicapped. owners. many more of the Housing Commission's Michigan and Grand River avenues, be looked at for priority application of the Mary Luttrell, Housing Commission complaint cases could be handled. Kessler said the Human Relations Com¬ program. member, said that the decision of priorities "We have also asked that $2,880 be mission did not have time to come The Housing Commission recommenda¬ up with a was made after a month of cost estimate on this meetings to hear allocated to the Tenants Resource Center tions are far from being accepted project but felt it was community feedback on what is needed in finally. from their request for funds," Luttrell said. The Planning Commission and the »m quarters something that needed to be done. the East Lansing housing field. City "They help both the landlords and tenants Council must go over and possibly change "The most numerous requests were for understand their responsibilities better The final recommendation sought the these recommendations and those of other housing for the elderly," she said. "There through their counseling and educational commissions before a final request for purchase of a new facility for the Drug Education Center. currently is no senior citizen housing in the services." community development funds is made. ■By BRUCE RAY WALKER "I have city outside of Burcham Hills — and that is a personal feeling that the T State News Staff Writer semester system would allow a coordinated Kessler said the city could consider using too expensive." Jmpling of faculty and student calendar between the University of Michi¬ some of the houses it already owns to house Among the recommendations from the I coupled with a study underway Housing Commission is one to purchase a gan and Wayne State, thus allowing a freer the center. it March, has brought the Educa- flow between the institutions." Cantlon piece of downtown property for a senior tolicies Committee (EPC) to say citizen high - rise. said. "But if the other reports reflect the I down" on a plan to change MSU "We couldn't really get very far into "The money for construction of this negativism in the EPC report to the idea, human needs in this first draft but it's a ■uarter to a semester system, then we'll surely not consider it further." housing unit could come from matching fetter sent to Provost John Cantlon first step." Kessler said. funds from other areas," Luttrell said. fck the committee said that "the Itfit ratio is decidedly in favor of K the quarter system." "C is one of the most influential 1 committees on the Academic I pW®ft in had asked EPC to prepare their lendation last March, along with landing committees, after a consul- Rules feature speling booboo J the provost, Frederic Dutton, ■ » report dealing with the details of •e changeover. According to a three - page memo entitled General University Rules P» report considered a mixture of Governing Conduct of Employees, one type of conduct which is prohibited and 1 semesters with half semesters which is also grounds for "possible discharge" is "gross inefficiency or long semesters. It looked at the incompetency. Yes, incompetency was spelled incompetently. Py of starting classes in Late l«r early September and ending the P just before Christmas. The T would run from second early January to $50,000 to re-use refuse A Smith, chairman of EPC. said the Ingham County s war on garbage has not been dumped. The county board of commissioners Tuesday allocated $50 000 to the board ■ '•ley recommended against the of public works to continue development of the Redker the high cost and Young process for ■ reaction against a faculty and total recycling which uses controlled heat to separate various change. products from garbage then turn them into usable forms. IT. °J S°inR to another system The money will be used to build a full - sized version of the prototype hW. Smith said. "No course "rvive developed in Lansing by inventor Hon Redker. The process is expected to be in being revised to fit the new full operation by early 1976. ■ "id when you consider the thou- ^courses at MSU that would need to Tyou run mto a high cost factor." Carr labeled ■ .!?» a,systematic sampling of honest error |»J faculty ■nittee opinion was taken by members. Cliff Taylor has withdrawn his request for a recount of the results of the 6th District congressional race which he lost in November by 544 votes to member of our com- Democrat Bob Carr. ■Li! Cc 10 ^'s ronstituency and Taylor found out soon after his loss that the state has no legal provisions for E5 Smith said' "We found out a recount of U.S. congressional elections. His only recourse he found was to IS.*18 ■«udenu ver>' ™ch against it even more so." The University Health Center recently $7,000 stretcher provides mobile intensive care appeal directly to the U.S. House which will grant an appeal only on the basis I reonrT* Dutton said he had not acquired a System Survival Stretcher. The for seriously ill patients. of alleged fraud. T IJrt J* and so would not Spence Abraham Taylor s campaign manager, soys Taylor does not really jSatjrjRj think there was fraud involved — only honest error in the vote counting — and fproposai. 8 hard data »^o"t a Olin acquires ca thus will not seek a recount. By DANIEL BURKE pharmacist. The health center had been looking at survival Prof laughs last, Council best ► aunuUr dmm|stration run a The University Health Center (Olin) has taken a giant step stretchers for over four years. The system is manufactured Daniel Moran, associate professor of mathematics, told a funny story at by the Travenol Co. of Chicago. improving the treatment of cardiac victims and other The machine can be transported quite easily and will be Tuesday s Academic Council debate about the danger of dumbness mixed with ■**» ao vi»n, . consensus of seriously ill patients with the acquisition of the new Survival |ge. g rousl-v against a calen- Stretcher System. available wherever large crowds gather. Its presence at football games can reduce the number of heart attack deaths attempted dishonesty. Moran said one student hired a ringer to take his final, then apparently • Sd»W onh«e EPC rep0rt WM « The system, which provides vital services includes a heart lung resuscitator, an oxygen for survival, flow pack, a by getting aid to those in need quickly. The Survival'Stretcher System allows attendants to give forgot he had done so and hired another After the council stopped laughing, 1 decision i My th,t he d<*» defibulator. a pacemaker, electrocardioscope and an EKG continuous intensive care to a patient while he is being Moran went on to say that the topper was when the student showed up himself to take the final. "I be (electrocardiogram) writer. by thee Jj' end of said he h<>Ped The $7,000 unit provides the University with its own transported to a hospital, Feurig said. winter term. Three persons with cardiac trouble died at the Michigan - intensive care unit," said Dr. James Feurig, director of the MSU football game in 1971. health center. The machine was financed by the MSU Class of 1933, whith RA selection postponed ■ from h■ Feurig said the machine is important because it brings all contributed two thirds of the money. The MSU II Pe«therl„ recv°mmendation. r the vital services together. Development Fund donated the rest. In order to avoid "lame duck' RAs during spring term and to allow dorm The system is battery operated and can be taken almost E' and Faculty c?*® °f th® thouok Compensation anywhere. Training sessions for health center personnel in The University of Nebraska at Lincoln was the first to set up such emergency facilities for coronary attacks. Five lives staffs to spend their time planning activities instead of picking next year s RAs the RA selection process has been moved back to the last week of winter term committee if 1 at the the use of the equipment are being held. have been saved at football games over a two year period ond the first six weeks of spring term. The selections hod been made during The machine, which weighs 131 pounds, was acquired committee ». 8tudyin« the there. The University of Georgia and Harvard University winter term for the past few years, but dorm oHicials and RAs themselves through the efforts of Feurig and Patricia A. Catto, a staff have since set up similar programs. complained. Susan Agar Editor-in-chief JAMES R Maureen Beninson Advertising Manager R.D Campbell Managing Editor Ford following Congress Mike Amett City Editor Diane Silver Campus Editor Chris Donielson Opinion Page Editor Melissa Payton National Editor Steve Stein Sports Editor Friday, January 17,1975 Dale Atkins Photo Editor June Delano Entertainment Editor President Ford has not turned the They are more inclined to agree with Editorials ore the opinions of the State TomOren Copy Chief economy around with his new energy and President Giscard D'Estaing of France *JCAN*> MP a**) 60>4 ACT 1*6 "nMt' * News ! Viewpoints, columns and letters Linda Sandel Night Editor economic proposals, but at least he has who talks not of a temporary crisis, but of are personal opinions. PotNardi Staff Representative turned himself around. He was on a an "enduring crisis" involving a massive W collision course with the new Democratic redistribution of the world's resources, Congress, but they are now proceeding and a reorganization of the world's on parallel tracks in the same direction. institutions for dealing with it. EDITORIALS This tells us something about the new Looking at the inflation and economic President. He may be slow but he's not disruption in most of the industrial stuck. It says something too about the nations, they refer to the "crisis of Mad zoner force of public opinion in this country. When it faces the hard facts of a world democracy" and of the capitalist system, and wonder whether the United States, Europe and Japan have the imagination price revolution and over six million ... , . ..... unemployed, no politician or ideology can and coherence to deal with it, or have A proposed change in the city city lifestyle, even though the stand in its way. even faced the prospect of a prolonged zoning code that would, in the public has never been consulted in The n President 4 . . , period of economic and financial reform. II was obviously more long run, raise rents and restrict emailer. comfortable with his original austeritv The President's switch from austerity the housing market is about to However, the proposed change program, including the 5 per cent surtax, to a massive spending program within receive full clearance from the would not reduce rents, free up But while he did not go as far or as fast as the last 100 days, while generally East Lansing City Council. the rental market or do anything the more liberal Democrats preferred, he approved, exposed the lack of coherence The proposed change actually other than further restrict the went bey°nd what some of his own within the new administration. While cabinet members proposed. Chancellor Schmidt of West Germany entails two separate actions. One market and increase the death - and many other financial and economic is a change in the definition of grip landlords already have. Secretary of the Treasury Simon, for experts were warning last summer that family. The zoning code currently By reducing the number of example, is still appalled at the prospect recession was the major threat to the of an $80 bilb'on deficit in the next 17 defines family as a single indivi¬ allowed renters per unit, land¬ industrial nations. Ford was still insisting months, forcing him to borrow roughly $5 lords will simply spread their last year that inflation was the problem. dual or more than one inidividual billion a month over that period, and he related by blood. The change costs and profits over fewer wanted the President to cut about $25 The Administration had an energy would allow two unrelated indivi¬ tenants, thus increasing rents. billion out of his budget. In the end Ford policy, an anti - pollution policy, and And if rents increase, not only felt he could not do it. plans to restore vigor to the economy, duals to comprise a family. but there is little coordination between The other change, however, is will married couples have a Accordingly, there is now a basis for these often contradictory policies, and it one that should be vehemently rougher time of it, but the entire compromise between the Administration is still not clear that this problem has and the Congress. There will be many opposed by free thinking and renting population will suffer bitter debates over some of the been solved. community - minded people. This from the city council's inept Drawing on the historical President's proposals, particularly over Vice President Rockefeller is, how¬ p change would reduce the number economic planning. the rising cost of fuel and the suggestion from which the movement aroundtfcl ever, now turning his attention to what he of people allowed by law to live in City Hall officials have tried to of a 5 per cent limit on Social Security calls the "opportunities of the crisis." He soring, promotion and production old increases, but the outlook now is for ity entertainment on campus wi houses zoned R - 2 or R - 3 from placate the city's residents by an believes that there must be not only ted. one can see that the movement the present five and six to just saying the policy would have only accomodation before the spring. better coordination within the executive branch and between the executive and Colleague angered fied. The inclusion of blacks in d J i|_ four. The law would pertain only long term effects. But when these Whether a compromise between the the Congress, but a major reappraisal of levels of minority oriented productH* effects begin to appear, how will President's and the Democrats' programs to units that are built or zoned after the law goes into effect. officials console those facing the will deal with the magnitude of the world the attitudes of business and government toward one another. by prof's action to the success of a production andtfcl ings between all parties involved. crisis, however, is a different question. Units presently zoned R - 2 or R - even higher rents and worse The assumption back of both programs is He notes that U.S. oil policy overseas I am angered, frightened and em¬ That the Pop Entertainment bi 3 would not be affected. shortages in the rental market? that the world is passing through a was left largely to the big oil companies, barrassed by the position recently taken by rather subtle or "maybe not so subtle! The city council, with childlike serious but temporary crisis, and that which he knows something about, but a fellow faculty member. Prof. John Appei, negligence of minority participation* The only way to bring about a regarding a physically impaired student naivete, is of the view that when somehow it will absorb the soaring price that these companies were often left in eusable, though the situation ma; bcfl resolution of the deepening crisis of fuel and get back to the old days of self the unequal position of having to deal enrolled in his ATL class. The fact that a resolved now. However, when Taj ^ there is a housing shortage in is to institute rent control, some¬ sustaining growth and steadily rising alone with governments. given student has a physical handicap does black performer from California, pi East Lansing, which has the affluence. not relieve the faculty member from his or for Mariah last fall, he did in fact s* second - highest rents in the state, thing city officials have evaded Under present regulations, he her responsibilities for facilitating the like the plague for a long time, the lack of black student participatmj the best way to bring down rents Washington officials are not talking observes, it is even difficult for the teaching ■ learning procesa. The educator, show. instead of playing their chips on ~~ " much about the "blackmail" prices government to talk to more than one especially in a University required sequence is to make the shortage worse. blind faith in an illusory "free foreign oil which might "strangle" the company at a time without breaking laws course, should not have the authority to Black and other minority studentiJ This illogic is staggering. industrial nations and threaten The that were designed for a totally different determine who will be included or excluded well market." war. as professionals - need to he ;:i( The stated purpose of this bit problem remains but the rhetoric is age. He believes that the price revolu¬ relative to the convenience of the teaching in the total production of a of inverted economic theorizing is The council next meets at 8 changing. Instead they are pointing out tion has finally made both officials here process. The inclusion of the physically that is a reflection of their culture utfl to allow married couples to more that the direct loss to the major and business leaders aware of their handicapped in higher education basically attitude. This is an integral partfl p.m. Tuesday in City Hall. cultural expression and the surge importing nations, as a result of the oil mutual problems, and he will soon be require modification of the teaching easily afford such housing. Perhaps a show of opposition will price hike, averages only 2 per cent of the learning process. Standards and renewed strength and vigor r expec¬ Apparently, City Hall feels a need persuade our representatives to combined gross national product of the tations relative to content mastery should socially, economically and politically,1 to conventionalize the collective modify their proposal. big oil - consuming countries, whose not change, nor are they being requested. annual real income increase doubled that Thus, perhaps the main achievement of Adaptation of the evaluation process may be In the past many black performs] the President's turnabout is the avoid¬ become disillusioned with the maiup rate during the '60s. needed, but that too is not prohibitive. The ance of ruinous battle between the of their business affairs by white ree physically handicapped themselves are Aid must go Nevertheless, the experts at the World Bank and International Monetary fund take a more serious view of the extent President and Congress. However, the problem of organizing Congress and the excellent resources for these adaptation and modifications. In addition, at this University industries and advertising agent* have switched from one i another. In many instances the m Executive to deal with the roots of the the resources and services of the Office of and duration of the crisis and do not wider world economic crisis has not been Programs for Handicapped Students stands participation by the artists themseltJ Gov. Milliken's proposal to primary responsibility is to help believe that any of the programs now resolved and is only now beginning to be minimal, resulting in tension. The J ready to assist. In light of the above, make more the students with the greatest under discussion in Washington are likely discussed. had very little to say about the engiaf scholarships available to deal with it in the foreseeable future. willingness, openness and a little extra time to middle - class students is need — students of low income - (0 1975 New York Timet on the part of the faculty does not seem too arranging and production of their ■ families who still meet academic much to ask. Shifting companies resulted inthelar optimistic at best. Given Michi¬ of tension and increased partiripT gan's present financial situation, admission standards. 'l SWGr OP AJsB> -TW6 WAN ...V —VlRSdJS A.EMEID Though one would hope that prejudice the artists' part. one can only speculate on where Milliken's proposal sounds would diminish with higher education and increased enlightenment, the evidence in Furthermore, this is another is the additional funds necessary for good, but is impractical when you this case seems to support the contrary. I business and thereby desirous to J such a program will come from — consider Michigan's fiscal paraly¬ ties. Minorities should be given thtfl Milliken's own salary, the sea, the sis. might suggest that the University look at some of their hiring procedures regarding tunity to get into the field on all 1m sky? individuals with set attitudes of exclusion or established white organizations, fi. Milliken is responding to under¬ Details of the proposal are still agencies. Black and other r at least make known their expectations standable pressure from outraged being worked out with the legis¬ relative to the role of educator. ducers are few, subjugating the suf to exploitation. The few must nr lature, but great care should be parents of financially ineligible the many. exercised to prevent political Carol Ann Peterson students, and his intentions are Assistant professor of health, good. The middle class has been pressure from taking funds away Ebony Productions is a step infrj from the students who need them physical education and recreation direction. Let us jump on this opp«C hit particularly hard by inflation, to change the existing situation,,r most. Steps should also be taken and find themselves with the to insure that applications and gain the skills to P™ the standards for peculiar problem of earning too AD show proficiently. We are looking WJ much money for their children to financial need are continually rapped very rewarding and successful receive a scholarship. adjusted to meet rising inflation. A great tions from Ebony Productions to tijj deal has been said about the re¬ Chicano and foreign student comr" Though part of the American Until more money is available, cent problems experienced by the basketball well as to the at-large community I Dream is to send your children to or the economy takes an team. Students have criticized the players, upward rabble rousers have labeled the incident college, the middle class must swing, Milliken's proposal should Position realize that scholarships can't be be shelved to allow the legislature racial and of course coach Gus Ganakas re¬ Office of Black T ceived his share of the blame. handed out as rewards, and good to concentrate on more pressing I do not condone the actions of the players. grades aren't the only criteria for economic problems. There is no At no time should the players dictate to the a scholarship. Since there is only a justification for taking money coach who should or shouldn't play. They Yea chief set amount of money available to from the were just, however, in their criticism of the needy to give to students Athletic Dept. In all the letters I have read be appropriated, the state's who need it less. about the basketball team and their actions, We, the members of the HubbiH Committee on Intelligent DrinWf not once did anyone point the accusing finger support East Lansing Fire Chie at the real culprit. Patriarche's decision to pr°*» PIRGIM REPORTS: Last spring a group of students on the soccer team decided owners of the Alle-Ey for their they didn't want Payton for client safety in that busine« Fuller as their coach. Mr. Fuller was an overcrowded facility. As mem ^ AU-American soccer player at MSU. When student organization eonri'rnfd plant cost outweighs gain he took over the head Power had a losing season. However, our coaching job he never esteemed athletic director took it upon himself to fire Mr. Fuller be¬ aspects of alcohol consumption bo« off the MSU campus, we hope m action will turn the heads of otheroj bar owners to more responsible cause of what the white players said. Aa if to policies. By RICHARD CONLIN construction cutbacks would have to answer •What are the benefits to society of the tures to discourage our present compound the insult another coach replaced PIRGIM STAFF such diverse questions as: •How many cases of lung disease will be elimination of wasteful energy use? Would conservation provide cheaper, more avail¬ growth and encourage conservation. This week, PIRGIM is intervening for the Mr. Fuller without the benefit of ever coach ing the sport anywhere. The point is clear, a We view the overcrowding reflection of a more general situitjj Recently the Michigan Public Service prevented by having less of the air pollution able energy for our real needs? How much second time in a utility rate case, this time a elaboration is not necessary. the attitudes of too many are* *1 Commissirn, the State agency which regu¬ which power plants generate along with would it save society? gas price increase requested by Consumers MSU has always been a power in the They often exhibit an overal w»j lates utilities, issued a staff report called, "Economic Analysis of Reductions in Power electricity? How much tax money will be These are just a few of the more Power. Again, we will propose rates that country as well as the Big Ten, but now our cern for the health and safety I saved by not paying disability payments to quantifiable costs that a complete economic Plant Construction in Michigan." This workers who contract lung disease, and how will promote conservation while saving the neighbor University of Michigan has all but patrons. Many bar owners J analysis would have to examine. Many more average consumer money, yet allow reason run away from us. their crowds to safe proportions,"! report looked at recently announced cut¬ much money for medical care will be saved? factors could be added to the list without U-M has backs in utility plant construction plans and able profits and growth to the utility an athletic director who is a they exercise discretion in refuse I How much will the society benefit by touching unmeasurable costs as the businessman, and is loyal to his coaches. It tried to measure their economic impact. The even company, obviously intoxicated persons. J allowing these workers to continue doing value of clean air to the quality of human life. does not matter what the sport, the athletic to pay seems to be the majorJ report concluded that such cutbacks are bad productive work instead of being disabled? Whether such rates will be adopted and director must support his coaches. in that they result in a loss of future jobs and •How much capital is freed for other We have assumed that growth is desirable used is in the hands of the Public Service As long as our current athletic which governs admission a" L tax revenues. and an end in itself for too long. In so doing, director these bars. Their purposes »PF 1 purposes by not being tied up in power plant Commission. We hope they will take a more we have given a false picture of what ia stays in that position the program is going to minded indeed! construction? How many jobs could be careful look at costs and benefits than their continue to have This type of incomplete analysis is typical useful to the society and what is not. It ia problems. Players of the way economic problems are treated in created by using this capital for other time we recognized that some growth ia staff did in their so-called "economic going to walk out again. are CID believes that a merchant IJ purposes? What other useful tasks could analysis." In order to become a winner real obligation to regard the our society. It is assumed that growth is good, some is bad, and that unrestrained you must first this capita) perform (such as housing act the part. I certainly safety of his or her clientele at good, and that the production of new goods construction)? growth is as bad for society aa it is for a {PIRGIM REPORTS is a column provided to n|BV((r,' hope the basketball \"~T* ~~r- »■»«««.! business. All too often k»sl . and services is, ipso facto, a benefit for •How much agricultural production will human body. In the body, it is called campus newspapers hy the Public Interest ?! „ 4 lesson. Perhaps they owners do not show these « society. Costs of growth are not considered. be lost by strip mining farmland to obtain "cancer." Research Group in Michigan, containing re- Pj, fo"owwl th« soccer players and applaud efforts such as Mr r Value is placed on activity, not on results or coal to fuel power plants? What is the PIRGIM has been working to promote a ports for PIRGIM's student constituency on the asked for Gu8' j°b- After *11. the precedent hold them to those response1 the good of society. effects of PIRGIM's work, information from the WM 8Ct by Burt Smith. long-range tax revenue outlook for farmland conservation ethic and a rational cost Capitol acquired by the PIRGIM professional Anyone who really wanted to examine the as opposed to stripped land? What is the analysis in electric utility rates. We have staff.and current issues PIRGIM is researching Ernest W. Burkeen TomGooJ* consequences of power plant cost of reclamation? proposed adopting "disincentive" rate struc- or working on.) J911 Cherry Lane Hubbard Hall^ Intellip" ™ VIEWPOINT: HANDICAPPED Intact suffer in shunning others By ARNOLD WERNER Handicapped people have unmistakably made their presence known in our academic community. After years of having been closed out of educational and vocational opportunities, handicapped people have become less inclined to accept their lot and have begun to come forward to enjoy the rights and privileges that belong to all people. The barriers are many, physical and capped are a reminder to us. They remind us otherwise, and their place in society is still of our own vulnerabilities. opportunity to know a fuller dimension of an uncomfortable one. But Usually they are what life is about. In not knowing the it is not only the afflicted through no fault of their own. A few handicapped that are made uncomfortable, seconds loss of oxygen at birth handicapped, we do not have the chance to may be all feel fond of them to dislike them, to it is apparently the or nonhandicapped as well. that separates the person with cerebral Who has not experienced the combined appreciate their assets or to recognize their palsy from anyone else. A few millimeters limitations. Thus, we do not know them as compulsion to stare and the fear to look can be the difference between a minor when we the people, we know them only as part - people, see disfigured and the wound and permanent paralysis. handicapped? This mixed reaction would usually neuter and hopefully to be avoided. 1974 be awe were it not for the discomfort that it produces. profound The handi The handicapped also remind us that the world is not as pure and simple as we would like it to be. Not everyone is attractive, We are relieved of the responsibility to be patient, to listen more attentively, to be inconvenienced or to be imaginative in articulate and graceful. Those who are not helping another person. We are also cannot be counted on to stay in deprived of the opportunity to look beyond CHRIS DANIELSON spare us hiding to the discomfort of seeing them. Or ourselves and to expand as humans. This seems to me to be too worse, of having to talk to them or listen to heavy a price to pay to them. avoid some discomfort. In particular, it seems that the handi¬ Recycling madne Meeting the educational needs of the capped who are affected in a way which handicapped in an institution of higher produces distortion of facial features and learning should not be difficult. I suspect expressions or which produces inarticulate that most of us see ourselves as being guided speech are the ones most likely to be by traditional humanistic values. For us, it minded shunned. Perhaps it is our guilt over being ■a nightmare tonight. Many people optimism of the bill's supporters to $300,000 annually," glows another scrap paper." a front page headline reads. The should be easy to recognize intellect and intact which makes us anxious and prevents ■rdered what it would be like to read nearly woke me up. As if any legislator will of newspaper. My cereal bowl already is story relates how student volunteers will creativity and to foster its development from looking and listening and talking Tnext year's or next century's — vote for the people in the face of a lobbyist buried. recycle newsprint on campus, I discover us back. Often, we inadvertantly assume they even in those who are deprived of the more Imagine, one might even run across throwing around words like "dislocation," "It would be criminal to bury paper, thanks to an Evelyn Wood usual forms of expression. All we need do is speed reading are limited intellectually because of their |n obituary buried at the bottom of "unemployment" and "profit cut." authority director says in dismissing ski minilesson. The Integrator falls. My doom is remember that the handicapped college ■ Such clairvoyance has provided the On page four a screaming editorial handicap, another device which keeps us student has only lost certain abilities to be slope proposal," my flustered eyes read. sealed. from dealing with them on an equal basis. ■more than one "B" movie. headline reads "Kalamazoo Street bridge "Director says experts predict used expressed verbally or physically, or has lost paper It was at this point that I woke mine was not a run-of-the-mill project neither welcome nor warranted." up use of a sense such as sight. But he or she has prices to remain at or above current levels tomorrow. The dream had dazed me; I was nothing "B" about it. Oh. it Marking this dismissal of the now defunct until 1980," states another Keeping the handicapped hidden has not lost the ability to think or to dream. paragraph. really spaced out. I think I'll have to sleep it caused them harm emotionally, socially and lout innocently enough. I am project as one of the rare instances that can "MSU president recycles millionth pound of off. When I wake up I over a bowl of soggy Froot Loops, be construed as "power of the press," my eye yesterday I might be economically. But the hiding has also hurt .Arnold Werner is an associate professor of newspaper," shouts still another dropping. better. the nonhandicapped who are robbed of the Ine what happened to the Quaker wanders in the general direction of the Whole newspapers are coming down now. psychiatry. I bottom of the page and a half-empty glass of perusing the Jan. 18. 1974, State The authority is still in the news, however. s, 1974. Apparently I am being grape juice. Just as my interest is captured Words like "bigger" and "better" are CAP HAS THIS NipKT J06 :'m afraip to 60 td sleep WOU NEED [ H0U) ,.ih a rerun of an old breakfast. by a letter titled "Kalamazoo analysis good" popping up all over. "Save the trees" is a SEE.ANDHEMESVT 6ETH0ME 1.18, 1974. I was the State News which begins "Congratulations to Chr "a WTlL TUI0 IN THE M0RNIN6 WHILE I'M ALONE IN the SOMEONE T( / AS0UTA .. frequent refrain. Interspersed here and H00SE SO I'VE BEEN SfTTlN6 $TAf U>lTH (UMCH-BEMLE? Lnrnial reporter. Having been funny thing happens. I am caught in a there are reports of out-of state convention U? UATCHIN6 TV F to watch the thermometer and newsprint shower. trips, news conferences, liaison plans, , polluted ducks eight months breaming that I am scanning the old Little squares of newspaper are floating promotions and pay raises. TH down on me. polluting the milk in my cereal V the most anachronistic news on the "Authority quietly ending campus news¬ bowl and sinking the two remaining Froot oss-rampus speedway is not paper revcycling. Ecological activists urge Loops. The printing on one piece says "If volunteer recycling group to replace unit you recycle the paper you are reading it that went way of "Animal Farm" pigs. Old DOONESBURY |n Jan. 18, 1974, the speedway has may end up as part of your Rice Krispies box State News inundate campus; janitors by Garry Trudeau ce been officially declared dead, and a month from now." The sentences go on to strike; publication suspended; editors laid 1 decree of apathy suitable for the describe the desperate situation of the off" read the papers now up to my neck, > yup- made a list yes, sfi-tuv. the ■rtion is a long way off. However, cereal box manufacturers who are willing to macarthjk. mr harris wye coming in on the oct any przyvus 60yern0p though I am standing up. v ' he& is my ueumm- 60!SOME PLANE! I'LL 6VE YOU ■County's hunt for a sanitary landfill do anything to get their hands political locked up a couple on old ' gq/ernor he'll be hewing "Why can't the authority recycle papers at SWEEPIN6 A QUICK RUN-DOWN prisoners, wt10ning monmtf |iite dead, though a page nine story newspapers. me implement some of my WORMS, ' I) RELEASE ALL fV- upcarowr? sopporjers he tots ts the search to the pursuit of the $10 per ton, when they've done it for $6" sweeping reform, programs' StR* \UnCAL PRISONERS' nonster. Another square begins "The MSI' Waste reads a weighty letter. "Box maker says \ £ huwhrey man Control Authority is expected to save the Fill up Spartan Stadium — we need all the tide on page five concerning a. pubi^c i;«wr«silff at UmMW in WW, Theae paper we. can get,'" an article states. |on a state bill to ban nonreturnable and otbettigtiTM fly past one after another, I'm suffocating. Only one small patch of that a sprinkling of spewing out of authority reports coming up light over my eyes and nose saves me from h opposition was scattered through to.SjWWAo throw together. "MSI hat. the oblivion. A paper is now streaming down, ladly based public support «if roftd largest and best organized recycling pro¬ heading right for my porthole to the world. I, environmentalists and school chil gram on any U. S. campus, authority Surprisingly, it is not a State News, but the ■the hearing. My guffaws — between director says" reads one report. "Director Nov. 19, 1974, Clarkson College Integrator | Froot Loops — over the simple- estimates revenue will balloon 1,000 per cent from Potsdam, N. Y. "Dorms to recycle ~ ' ' "UTS OF A' i|i2TPi v* >*>✓ w- ' Kv.Y'V;'. ao _ &/.y i ** * "*-v.vu,o t .•. Position sui science and fjits-. 1 language majors Office of Black chief At NSA, our success depends on yours. ,y iui v..v» ■ that business ■ As menibifll nizauon concerned *1 hoi consumption boUJ —pus, we h0l*j" heads of othtf'J •e responsible s rcrowding si'"® nore general P" omany t an overall la«!fc y- i- la -wnsiis#* 1th and safety J ,r owners *#• *T Te proportions. * -ion in refusing"* w d persons. 'I*T e the major H i often h*8' ihow those con uch as Mr. P» '' S^-8%6 NATIONAL SECURITY AGENCY ,c respond'11"* \okk- ' Tom Ciood. "Xoow - ubb'ard HdlWjjl G,?A/x» . Intcll'K® | 6 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan UNIVERSITY CHRISTIAN CHURCH LANSING DAY WITH THE ARTS OPENS SATURDAY 310 N. Ilagadom Koad Study Period - 10:00a.m. 'Art is Worship - 11:00a.m. magic' show to cast its spell H! Smgspiration- 7:00p.m. h*D' IVa importation Provided 9 Or By FRANK FOX Over 1,200 amateur and pro¬ Statesmen, The MSU with Philip Gannon, president student art work, to give plained. 11 00a„, 1 fessional performers, craftsmen students a chance to exhibit." The list of performers, crafts State News Reviewer Repertory Dance Company, the of Lansing Community College. CALL 332 5193 Nur*ry Avyi and others will donate their added that in men and others participating is Magicians, dancers, crafts¬ Spartan Gymnasts, the MSU "I think this is a very Reinert men, singers, astrologers, pup - time and talents to the two - Performing Arts Company and wonderful thing that is taking keeping with the Day With The huge — enough to fill a 32 page peteers and a superabundance day extravaganza, said Allan others. The East Lansing place in the Lansing commun Art's theme of "Art is Magic," catalog. UNIVERSITY of other talented people will Marr, chairman of the "Day String Orchestra will give a ity," Mrs. Wharton said. "The the student art work will be Among the performers and REFORMED appear in the many splen- with the Arts." concert and participate in an displayed in a star • shaped exhibitors who will hold court people who have repeatedly CHURCH dored "Lansing Day With the Many individuals and groups audience sing along. gallery. in both the upper and lower brought the Day With The Arts Arts," Saturday and Sunday at from MSU will participate in In addition. Delores Wharton to the public should be highly The student display is but levels of the Civic Center will Alumni Memorial Chapel the Lansing Civic Center. the two day festivities, Marr - will present the visual arts and commended for their efforts ... one of a number of displays in be Damon the magician, who (1 block Mst of Auditorium) Admission is free. said, including The Singing literature ("limerick") awards and I am proud to stand among the visual arts exhibition. will present "Magic of The 9:30 • Study Groups for them." The MSU Museum will also Mind;" gourmet cooks offering Adults and Sunday School Cochairmen for the visual present an exhibit. "spellbinding specialties from 10 30 Coff* Hour arts portion of the Day With "We have taken their theme. ethnic kitchens;" jewelry Superstar' good; stars bad The Arts are two MSU master of fine arts candidates, Ronald Reynolds and James Reinert. "Art is own Magic," and added our sub theme for this exhibit, which is Changing the makers, glass blowers, experts on the occult, theatrical performers and artists and 9:30 & 11:00 Worship Services a.m. For rides call 355 - 0155 By DARRYL GRANT tive staging. The audience is tion provided by the gifted "This is probably the best everyday into the enchanting,'" craftsmen of every description. after 9:00 a.m. Sunday State News Reviewer confronted with orchestra. Val Berrvman, The "Lansing Day with the University never a visual arts exhibit ever to be explained 6:00 - Evening Worship The Boarshead Players of jumbled mass of bodies. In "Jesus Christ Superstar" is held in the Lansing Museum curator of historical Arts" will run from 7 to 10:30 area," Marr Grand Ledge are currently Saturday and from 1 to 6 presenting a talented and stead, they are given a visually stimulating arrangement of an imaginative show. ever, with all due regards to How¬ said. artifacts. p.m. Sunday. The first hour of Tom Stark. Pastor Lutheran hJ Reinert said the emphasis in Berryman said the Museum p.m. Fred Herwaldt, spirited production of "Jesus Christ Superstar." The cast people that is pleasantly well defined. director Peakes' admirable the visual arts exhibition this had selected everyday items like chairs and walking sticks Saturday's program will be broadcast live on WKAR TV, Associate Pastor SUM— f staging, his talents should have year was different than in past - Sunday Worship 8 3C 4 J possesses an enormous amount The chorus was especially flowed to his selection of for display, but had chosen channel 23, Marr said. Kathy Lang, Staff years. of energy which has at its core a memorable in such numbers as Thornton and Donakowski as Our main emphasis is on examples which were highly rewarding quality of supple- "What's the Buzz," "Hosanna" Jesus and Mary. student art work from LCC and decorated with carving or and "Superstar." Much credit "Superstar," in its final week¬ MSU," Reinert said. "That has paintings. This zestful flexibility is es pecially attractive in lieu of the - also goes to Dorothy Jones for her fine end, will be presented at 8 been a shift from before when "Through the application of UNIVERSITY choreography in tonight through Sunday at the they had wholly professional art to the object they have actor and actress who "Simon Zealots." Credit is also Jesus and Mary. Matthew J. portray deserving to the musical anima Boarshead Playhouse. 200 E. River St. in Grand Ledge. people — the last few years at least. Our goal was to show become something out of the ordinary," Berryman ex BAPTIST CHURCH Thornton and Judith Donakowski seem to do all they can to bore and frustrate the audie'ice. Thornton endows his role with a look of mock piety that in tht long run ceases to be disturbing and is merely comical. Donakowski was obviously chosen for her physical beauty: it certainly wasn't for her acting and singing abilities. She whines her way through her numbers with a thin voice, causing the audience disap¬ pointment and pain. But these roles are over¬ powered by the dynamics of the chorus. The singers all possess beautiful strong voices. They are led by Eric Riley, who plays Judas. His voice is rich and satisfying. His manner is expressive and convincing. His very movements bespeak talent. His fellow cast members are equally talented. They exude vitality and animation to make the most of their roles, as they scamper about, shouting taunts and cajolements. Indeed, the very size of the chorus, which numbers 23, is handled admir¬ ably. Director John Peakes has an imaginative flair for distinc¬ THE STABLES !H! I CD RIVER EAST LANSING One of the newest dining seafood buffet, featuring MIOMS SHSTOSSE FIS UWUl HTHUAIHMEKT stops in the Lansing area is crablegs, several dishes of Alex's Restaurant (not to be shrimp, lobster newburg, confused with Alice's Restau¬ oysters and a salad bar is the rant) located at 321 East house's specialty, Vanis says xrow mm Michigan Ave. The building which stood the number one best seller is roast prime rib of beef. for 22 years under the name of Prices range from moderate mm Dines, was purchased in to expensive. every night beginning at 7 clinging around their necks, And as an added u September of 1973 by Alex Dancing is another attrac¬ p.m. and highlights of past football ience to its patrons, Alex's BARB BAILEY Vanis, and after some orating and remodeling the redec¬ tion at Alex's, to what the owner calls "supper club one aspect of The Point After that makes it different games are adorned walls in framed pictures. on the accepts credit cards as well as a house card for music" which than most bars is its dress regular place was turned into a one - can only make smsan stop entertainment center. an evening complete. code. It is not uncommon to customers. T.J.'s Saloon is open Aside from the plush sur¬ But if you still haven't had see men in leisure suits, every JACK HAMILTON roundings in the dining room, your share of entertainment sportcoats and ties in long dresses since and day except Sunday, catering to the older crowd. Lunch So with the 275 that can fill the dining room, persons Alex's also harbors a swanky for the night you only need to women and drinks are the house's bar the Point After, and walk upstairs to engulf your¬ jeans won't get you past the plus the 225 that can comfort T.J.'s Saloon. self in the chic atmosphere of front door. AH in all it makes specialty. ably party at the Point, with CHRISTIAN COMING NEXT WEEK The dining room — open for The Point After. The Point After, appro¬ for one of the more dapper bar crowds you'll ever see. To avoid the confusion of another 285 enjoying the banquet and private REFORMED lunch and dinner every rooms — MUDDY WATERS Monday through Friday, with dinner only on Saturday, priately named for its football fashion decor, is one of the Friday is T.G. time with rock bands spinning off the finding a parking place down town, (it's only a block to the not to mention the 125 or so employees of Alex's, it's no CHURCH SUPER BUJES BAND serves a wide variety of classier bars in the city. top 40 hits on the charts, with capitol) Alex's offers valet wonder that "You can do American food. Over 30 Managed by Tony Conti — play beginning at 4 p.m. parking to all its customers anything you want ... at different items are listed on former captain of the To keep with the football starting at 8 p.m. If you come Alex's Restaurant." Michigan State football team spirit, waitresses are garbed for lunch you can mhksb & Although customers may with All - American honors, in black and white referee car yourself in the park your huge lot "Or The Point offers dancing uniforms with whistles just about anything,' claim that Friday night's adjacent to the building. grins Vanis. THE DINING GUIDE IS SPONSORED BY: SMSA* PERCH FRY. $2.00 the east Room The D evening SERVI^ 6:00 pm. tSATSBBAar MICHIGAN'S SHOWCASE RR RESTAURANT BBQ CHICKEN COMPLETE DINNERS, SPECIALIZING IN 12.50 JacobBoriS SEAFOOD - STEAKS - CHOPS 1203 S. WASHINGTON, LANSING THE state" Room Student Ce"1 The I 30 P ™ 12 30 ious dining in Breakfast Lunch a nostalgic campus atmosphere. Mon. Sal. Mon -Saf. 7 AM • 10 AM 11:30 AM-2 PM ighwheder & Sat 5:30 PM 8 PM (••taurant loungt n Slate News. East Lansing, Michigan Friday, January 17,1975 7 pard-pickin' BvG F KORRKCK Kristofferson, the recalcitrant is not sure whether to chuckle Prine PIANO & ORGAN SALE! KUtr New* Reviewer Prine has made a momentous or sigh. Emiehtseehim sometime dent in the musical style of the Like the great blues musi¬ I ,|one at the bar his current decade. cians. Prine has mastered the ■wrapped around a half - I class of flat beer and an His "Hello in There," the finest representation perhaps ability to step outside his music BALDWIN ^ of the and draw listeners in. Still, in Ision that says his soul is lives of old people in recent there else. memory, was grabbed up by other songs like "Souvenirs" and "Six O'Clock News" he PIANOS & ORGANS | name i» John Prine. a Bette Midler for her "Divine accepts the spotlight without I picking, beer drinking Miss M" album and his I squat of a man with a Smile" was the title "Illegal song for abusing the him. attention it gives 20%-40% OFF kf an untuned Bulck and the ill fated "Texas Wheelers" - For all he ia, Prine ia •hi into life that moat television series. decidely likeable. His concerts often end ^cultivate. Prine might have appre¬ up in drunken shadow boxing K,e will appear at the ciated the fate of the Wheeler's. matches with himself, but his LARGE SELECTION ■ IM Arena tonight in one It ia that attitude of melancholy offstage demeanor is retkent. „Se concerts people are he worka with beat, refining it His humor is subtle and glib pt to it miss. noticed in a beatup t« a sharp edge and keeping it that way with a combination of and he goes to the marrow of life to pick out his songs. "Sam USED PIANOS jo coffee house by Kria lyrical understatement, re¬ Stone," a song about a return¬ freshing wit and musical taste. ing Vietnam war veteran with a Instrel Such noteables Bromberg and Steve Goodman have joined Prine in as David drug habit, features the refrain "There's a hole in daddy's arm recording where all the money goes; sessions, as well as his brother Jesus Christ died for nothing, I Itertains Dave, also a highly competent musician. But the trademark is suppose." It serves as much an indict¬ clearly one of the chubby ment of the military system fingered fellow who is contin that held Stone as it is on Stone j Fairchild ually mystified by human existence and who continually breaks down the barriers of for not being able to kick his habit. I of the most popular The one element that comes iday troubadours of the understanding it. across in all his music, though, He questions the need of a Aisles is coming to MSU. is a curious head - tilted look at coal company to strip mine the Lfb Martin Best and he Ufe - the blue - collar worker area he grew up in in "Para¬ ■pear in a Chamber Music with a couple of years of T program Lr at Fairchild Friday night at 8:15. dise." yet seems paradoxically willing to accept fate in "Pretty who sees his college destiny in the bottom of the glass but, MAC LAUGHUN'S every ■ has revived the art of Good:" once in awhile, rises above the lay, widespread in "Pretty good grim existence to dream. PIANO & ORGAN MART Not bad Prine does it as well as when the traveling I can't complain was not only an enter- anyone and the only way to 1606 E MICHIGAN AVE But actually everything it „ut an important mes- really get to know that he does I and intelligence agent. jvut about the tame." is to listen. It will be a time well LANSING. Ml 487 5995 1., painstaking research- Unrequited love gets a new spent. ■ accumulated a repertoire twist from Prine as well. "Sour Tickets for the concert are on pnges from 12th century Grapes." one of his few solo sale at the Union ticket office val folk songs to Stravin- recordings, features his in¬ and Elderly Instruments until Folk artist John Prine will make ■Included of his imitably hard picking style 2:30 p.m. today and will be sold a one night stand at the Men's are some balanced against seemingly soft Intramural Building tonight. Bttings of songs of various again when the IM doors open ■ tribes of the Western lyrics, the result being that one at 7. SAVES$$SAVE$SSSAVESS$SAVE S$SS AVESSSSA VESSSSA VESSSSAVESSSSAVE SSSS AVESSS SHEPARD'S FANTASTIC GIGANTIC SEMI-ANN! Al. SHOE SALE! THOUSANDS of Famous Brand Shoes Now At Super Saving Prices! SHOES for WOMEN Discontinued Patterns, Odds A. Ends Dress, Casual, and Campus Values to S25 NOW AS LOW AS. DOWNTOWN and EAST LANSING $997 SHOES for MEN SHOES for CHILDREN $597 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Fridav, JanUj lar?ii| 'Inferno' a slick A ByEDDRUDZATS State News Reviewer seafaring New Year's Eve "The Towering Inferno" is the result of the joint efforts of two major film companies, 20th of Hollywood filmmaking and business wheeling and dealing at its peak. range Jennifer from Fred Astaire and Jones to Blakely and 0. J. Simpson. Susan swinging staircase, but the film screeches to a dead halt with Paul Newman's speech to through one too many rescue operations before reaching the drippy climax. Candle Party can be cited as the actual As result, "The builder William Holden about Far too long. "The Towering Century Fox and Warner Produced by the man re¬ a once cause for the fire that rages in Brothers. These companies sponsible for "The Poseidon Towering Inferno" starts to murder. Inferno" remains, however, a that mammoth skyscraper in Though the rest of the film sterling example of Hollywood "The Towering Inferno". From pooled their resources after they had purchased separate Adventure," Irwin Allen, the film is slick, glossy and chock blaze, it inevitably catches its audience and carries them for a Sunday Night Special] the topsy - turvy world that books, "The Tower" by Richard full of big box office names. tension - laden ride. But the "The tension comes out of the situation and not Roast Chicken emerged from "The Poseidon Martin Stern and "The Glass With Paul Newman as the tension comes out of the situa Adventure" comes a similar Inferno" by Thomas N. Scortia earnest architect and Steve tion and not the depth of the depth of characterization, for as in most Each dinner includes a tossed predicament high in the sky. and Frank M. Robingson, that McQueen the courageous fire characterization, for, in most salad And this predicament is right as as overpopulated films, none of the characters has and buttered peas. had virtually identical story¬ chief, it is a winner. Not to overpopulated films, none of more than an inch of depth." up there in the celestial lines. With two companies at mention that Faye Dunaway the characters has more than heavens, what with all the stars that abound. work, 'The Towering Inferno" emerges as a striking example plays Paul Newman's girlfriend and that other disaster victims an inch of depth. In fact, they even call each other architect, filmmaking at its peak. Like s3." fire chief, senator or son - in manages several superbly Selections from the regular dinner mem executed technical scenes, it "The Sting," this is a slickly law, emerging as more con cerned with their status than bogs down in its length. Its packaged product geared for will be available also. mass consumption, a product Acclaimed weak points appear as lines of bluegrass group their humanity. The situation grows hot the unveiling of the 138 with floor dialog like "Golly, that's some fire you got there," and mani¬ fest themselves with increas¬ made with considerable skill, care and a great deal of technical know how. It's not a Sunday hours 4pm - lOpm glass skyscraper a month to play at Lansing restaurant before ments all the safety require have been "Towering Inferno" then moves set. ingly regularity. The first two thirds of the film steadily builds suspense to bad product, if you don't get too much of it. and 2V« hours is a bit much. On the corner of Abbott Rd. & Grand River Phono 351 -7076 for reservations bands in the country," said Bob swiftly and skillfully toward a an excruciating level but "The Towering Inferno" is Larry Sparks and The "His mandolin player, Wendy warm, suspenseful glow. The ultimately the film overextends Lonesome Ramblers, one of the Mainfort of The Bluegrass Miller, and his banjo player, currently playing at the film builds in intensity as itself. Paul Newman starts Meridian Four Theaters. better known traditional blue- Extension Service. Mike Lilly, both have solo explosions occur, glass looking like Steve McQueen in grass bands, will perform at albums and are acknowledged The appearance at Bzurpy's shatters, characters are his execution of feats of 9:30 p.m. tonight at Bzurpy's will be the band's third Lansing as among the best performers restaurant at Fairview Avenue trapped and rescue operations derring do, Fayc Dunaway on their respective instru¬ and appearance, Mainfort said. begin. Several pulse pounding retains fresh make up after Michigan Avenue in ments." incidents occur, like Jennifer hours of stress and smoke and Lansing. "Sparks is particularly well - Cover charge is 50 cents. Jones' descent down a twisted the whole thing drags on known as one of the best "Sparks and his band have, in singers and guitar players in the last couple of years, gained bluegrass," Mainfort said. "He acclaim as one of the several has a very bluesy flavor to both very best traditional bluegrass his voice and guitar stylings. SNEAK PREVIEW FRIDAY 9 PM spectacle — CAnema des Artistes I An outstanding collec¬ tion of award winning short films, some ani¬ mated, some abstract, and rarely a second wasted. Fri. ft Sat. 7:30 *9:30 $1.00 104 Wells A GREAT M IWfO>MtTiQN 33? PLACE TO 6W I Come at 7 PM or 9 PM and see both the SNEAK PREVIEW I and "THE MAN WITH THE GOLDEN GUN" for one price. PRESENTS Vincent Canby of the New York Times says: "An exquisite Swedish film! Max Held Over 'THE BEST AND THE MOST ORIGINAL Von Sydow and Liv Ullmann AMERICAN COMEDY OF 1972. are outstanding!" For A As startling in its way — Judith Crist, New York as was 'The Graduate!" UA bursting, resonant film, The Second Big Week "One of the Emigrants' has reverberations." — The New Yorker year's best films!' ALAN BATES 1 'What do y PIERRE BRASSEUR JEAN-CLAUDE BRIALY a naked GENEVIEVE BUJOLD adolfo c£li FRANCOlSE CHRlSTOPHE A FILM BY ALLEN FUNT JULIEN ©UlOMAR His First Hidden Camera Feature MlCHELlNE PRESLF MICHEL SERRAULT Max von Sydow Liv Ullmann King of Hearts has had 2 previous engagements Plus The Emigrants on this campus. At the end of each Ruth Gordon & George performance the audience has applauded enthusiastically. We have never Segj The Heartbreak Kid experienced such positive audience reaction to any other film. King of Hearts is a totally In An Elaine May Film Screenplay by Jan Troel and Bengt Forslund From a novel by iCharlesGrodin Cy bill Shepherd. Kelly" Jeannie Berlin Audra Lndiey ViMm Moberg Produced by Bengt Forslund Directed by Jan Troel engrossing, compelling film. «nd Eddie Albert i rom«t,, BrU Technicolor* English subtitles A Svensk FJmmdustri Production From Where'sPoppo : "•! r '.fit . Warner Bros, A Warner Communications Company U&[pq| A Naked Lady" - 7:00 & 10:00 Fri. Conrad 7:30 & 9:30 "Where's Pappa" • 8:30 Fri. Wilson 7:00 & 9:30 Fri. 100 Sat. Wilson 7:30 & 9:30 $125 $125 Eng. 7:30 & 9:30 Fri. 109 Sat. 109 Anthony 7:30 & 9:45 Sat. 100 Eng. 7:30 & 9:30 $125 Anthony Sun. Conrad 9:30 Sun. Conrad 7:00 Sat. Conrad Sun. Wilson Coming Next Weekend ROGER CORMA* mtstats« WW MXtlO PM 20th Century fo« Presents FANTASTIC Cjnderelki j| HI (pctiS ****** PLANET »ei Liberty ^ "frJEkk ¥ Unit m***** r . 8 !5p n. Admission: '2.25 WINNER Due to increasing harassement of hard cof« rnlRCHILO BOX orrice 3S5-0H8 RATED X pictures, all patrons will be required to W proof of age. There can be no exceptions. n State News. East Lansing, Michigan Friday, January 17,1975 1 1 RA declares end to Last, Northern Ireland The Irish Republican ■iRA) declared an end to The deciaion tion from to end the truce brought immediate condemna Northern Ireland A statement iasued in Dublin by the provisional IRA's ruling Military Council blamed the end Ireland. Amnesty demand The IRA had demanded 25-day cease-fire Northern Ireland and a formal declaration from the British Jan. 2 to give the British chance to respond. a the United Kingdom as more than 50 they did we can take any further action, Bjv old cease fire at mid politicians, both Protestant and of the cease-fire a government that it would On Tuesday, Rees years ago when we will have to look at the Roman Catholic, and mainly on what general amnesty for persons promised Ireland Thursday, claiming that expres it called inadequate concessions convicted or suspected of being eventually withdraw from the that the British military pre¬ was partitioned. Cardinal stunned statement and think very 1 had not responded sions of alarm from church from Merlyn Rees, Britain's province. The truce began at sence in Ulster could be deeply about it." leaders. involved in the IRA's campaign quickly William Cardinal Conway, Jtely to guerilla demands. administrator for midnight Dec. 22 and was wound down if the IRA's cease¬ Northern to force the Britiah out of extended for another 14 archbishop of Armagh Weakens IRA days on fire developed into a and permanent Roman Catholic prelate of all John Hume, a deputy leader end of violence. The IRAcam- Ireland, said he was "deeply of the Catholic-based Social MSU SCIENTISTS CONTINUE RESEARCH paign is aimed at ousting the British and merging the disturbed and stunned by the Democratic and Labor party, mainly news" of the end of the truce. said: "This is very bad news. It Protestant province with the Cardinal Conway was attending flies in the face of everything predominantly Catholic Irish a conference in Dundalk in the the people of Northern Ireland iNA, republic to the south. Irish republic when the IRA want." He said the IRA had lost cancer diagnosis linked Release suspects announcement was made. ground among the Catholic Rees also released about 40 of Also at the conference was population when a previous the 500 IRA suspects who have Dr. Jack Weir, clerk of the truce broke down in 1972 after been interned without trial, but surface membranes of tumor Presbyterian Assembly and one lasting only 12 days. This will discovery by four MSU ing cells. would made no public response to IRA of four Protestant clerics who weaken them even further," he Jehers may lead to producing cells. normally provoke a res¬ Details of Rosenberg's demands for ponse from the immune system a general amnesty negotiated the original truce said. In contrast, all normal cells research will be released in Led chemical control and The scientists believe the that would and for a statement of British with the IRA. "I Vcurate and earlier diag- tested, except lymphocytes surface DNA may be an destroy them. March in a scientific paper. intent to withdraw am very impor¬ from distressed," he told reporters. (blood cells involved in the Until then, he refuses further ftf cancer. tant clue to the mechanism of "If this is true Northern Ireland. "But before deciding whether immune system) do not show we may soon be comment. Such a statement would have cancer growth. able to ■research team, composed the presence of surface DNA. develop drugs that "It's a scientific sin to release angered the Protestant major Elder Aggarwal, associate Rosenberg speculated that specifically attack surface DNA. while leaving the rest of the cell such information to the public ity in Ulster. Most of them have Tor of zoology; Barnett "Platinum blues" the appearance of the surface before one's scientific peers are shown in repeated elections untouched," Rosenberg said. ierg, professor of bio- DNA may be the necessary made aware of it," he explained. their intention to stay within By applying "platinum blues." Anti-cancer activity |Pamela McAllister, doc- event that turns the cells V zoology, and Richard a special platinum drug devel¬ Rosenberg said new platinum L research associate in malignant. formulations oped in Rosenberg's laboratory, may eliminate or the reduce the normal cell (nistry, discovered that researchers are able to Masked chemicals toxicity problem and increase the anti¬ TONICHT & SATURDAY ■ the genetic material of recognize the surface DNA Surface DNA may mask losomes, also exists in the charactriBtic of cancer produc¬ chemicals in the tumor cells that cancer activity without damag ing the normal cells. "A UNIQUE TOMORROW NIGHT (SAT.) ANU OFTEN STUNNING SPECIAL PREVIEW OPENat 6:45 Todav MIDNIGHT SHOW SPECTACLE! DEMONIAC MAS¬ TWO BIG HITS LeSH gordon is a frisky, feisty takeoffl it's all QUES AND BLASPHEMOUS ORGIES... "SONNY" at 7:00-Late "LADY" at 8:45 Onlv NYTimes AS A GLIMPSE OF HELL. IT IS SUPERB¬ - cam pi It's funl It's laughs! * YOU LEARN A LOT IN THE STREETS. - Bob Salmaggi, WINS Radio Sonny Carson grew up in a black ghetto. ANDY WARHOL'S LY FRIGHTENIN6LY EFFECTIVE." But the things he had to learn are the things everyone has to know to survive. "KEN RUSSELL'S TURBULENT MOVIE 0N- SLAUGHT HE HAS BREWED HIS OWN 'RUSSELL'S INFERNO'. BRILLIANCE IS THERE WITH HARROWING EFFECT." MA HOWLING BRUTE OF A FILM!" Sat.-Sun. —He*Yor * Times The education of S, sonny carson r irony dan ten don »ordon pauf benjamin «-w- -Co-Hit- DIANA ROSS in 'LADY SINGS VANESSA REDGRAVE^OLIVER REED IN KEN RUSSELL'S I II M OF THE BLUES' MOJO THE DEVILS Color SHOWPLACE: 102 B Wells BOOGIE SHOWTIME: 7 & 9:15 ADMISSION: $1.25 starring IU>I> CANDY HOLLY JACKIE % PROGRAM INfOWMIION 4K 3905 DARLING WOOD LAWN CURTIS 9th Week lite Weekend Friday & Saturday B108 Wells 7:30 t 9:30 p.m. Admission $1.25 A Karma Film Presentation (3 ICHIGAN Theatre Lansing• ;H ING TON • DOWNTOWN Saturday ■ Sunday MOOIAH mrOWMTIOH I3?M*4 IT'S 1:00 - 3:05-5:05 7:15-9:25 P.M. Lizard's TONIGHT OPEN 6:45 SURVIVAL Feature 7:00 & Late OF THE ►224 Abbot M FIERCEST. ANDTHE THE SHOWBAR ROGER MOORE « JAMES BOND 007 "THE LONGEST 0 ,#i YARD" is a movie that cracks a lot of: okas. aJot All! t HM>n I »,N I G H T , MMtC [g «*<*•» ttCHNWXCW* ANknAMUUNT «cn»i he Pricey 1 2 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday.Janm'"JIM MSU icers out to break Pioneer jinx MSU is one of the hottest than that," asst. coach Alex lead the nation By STEVE STEIN overall, are suffering through in * State News Sports Writer their worse season ever. teams in the league, as coach Terpay said Thursday. "It's 25 goals and 32 aWll Home sweet home. Denver has never finished low Amo Bessone's squad has won nice to get home and have total points in Msir.il er than sixth in the league, but eight of its last nine games. somebody cheer you." tests s<» far this 1 After playing seven straight seiw MSU is 13-4 1 in the WCHA "Denver is a controlled hoc Terpay's junior V|r°.| games on the road, MSU's coming into the contests against the Spartans, the and 15-6-1 overall. key team. They usually don't will take on St. (Wl hockey team returns to Munn beat themselves. You have to "I've only been home three Arena this weekend as the Pioneers are locked in a days the last 3'/» weeks and the beat them." jy College Munn Arena.at The 3 p.ra. J Spartans play host to the seventh Dame. place tie with Notre team hasn't been home more Tom Ross continues to are 50 on the vear^ SpJ Denver Pioneers tonight and Saturday night. Faceoff time is 7:30 p.m. both nights. MSU has not played in Munn MEN, WOMEN COMPETE Arena for over a month (its last game here was against Bowling Green Dec. 13), but Denver has that record beaten badly. an The Pioneers have not made appearance in East Lansing Gymnasts feature since Dec. 12. 1971. MSU beat Hammonds on pommel horse Glenn Himeon Denver that night, 6-3 but since By ANN WILLIAMSON agrees with Wettstone that the double-dual meet should help and Bob Holland on the still also turn out highbirj then, the Pioneers have won After a hard week of work¬ rings. Jim Tuerk and Craig strong] eight straight games from outs and preparation, the MSU gymnastics increase in popu mances for MSI'. " MSU, including two Western men's gymnastics team is ready larity. MacLean on vault, Nelson Penn State will I* ^ for Saturday's historic meet Gaines on parallel bars and on the high bar Collegiate Hockey Assn. "It's not that people around evenM (WCHA) playoff games. against Penn State. here don't know about gym¬ Denver has had great sue The meet will feature a "double-dual" format, created nastics," Holland explained. cess against the Spartans since the teams first met in 1951. The Pioneers have won 42 of the 50 games played between the two by Penn State coach Wettstone, in which men and women gymnasts perform their Gene "It's just that they've never been exposed to quality gym nasties. This meet will be good Big weekendahej Spartan left winger Brendon Moronev heads into this weekend's hockey clubs. MSU has never won a routines simultaneously. exposure for both our men's clashes with Denver and women's teams." having scored in nine of the last 10 games. The competition begins at women'sfeaj weekend series against Denver, Either. But coach Murray 1:30 p.m. in Jenison Fieldhouse, where admission is (1 for adults Spartan men's coach George for and 50 cents for students and Szypula feels that his young Armstrong's Denver team has team will have to turn out some Gophers host Spartans had problems this year. The Pioneers, with a 6-11 1 WCHA record and an 8-12-1 mark children. There is no charge for MSU students with an ID card. MSU ringman Bob Holland fine routines State, rated against one Penn of the top gymnastic teams in the coun¬ Bv ROBIN McINTOSH State News Sports Writer A busy weekend schedule is on tap for MSU's women's J three squads will see action for the first time this winter try. j now sport a 3-2 Big Ten record MSU has disposed of Ohio State, The women's swimming and diving team will start offtU By CHARLESJOHNSON 88-84, and Michigan, 86-78, after when it faces the University of Waterloo in a dual meet State News Sports Writer and a 10-3 overall mark. MSU is "The team knows they'll be begJ MSU's basketball team will travel to Minnesota this week¬ currently 2-2 in the conference and 8-3 on the year. losing previously to the top- ranked Hoosiers and Purdue. Swimmers re-enact competing against best one of the teams around," Szypula 1 p. m. today in the Women's Intramural Building pool. TbeJ hoping to avenge a loss it suffered last year to Waterloo] end to take on the Gophers in Musselman, in his fourth year Much of the Spartans' recent The meet should also prove to be a warmup for the Spirm said. "Well just have to put out what could be a revenge match asGophercoach, is enthusiastic success has come through the next weekend against Indiana and U-M. MSU coach Jenni a fantastic team effort in the for the Spartans. Game time is about his team's chances this superb offensive efforts of for¬ hopes to use everyone on both the varsity and second lei meet and I'm sure we'll be able 9:05 Saturday. It p.m. was Lansing time Bill Mussleman's season as it seems his is every year. Though Minnesota's current ward Terry Furlow and center Lindsay Hairston. Furlow, following his 33 point rivalry with U-M to learn a lot from this one." Like the Spartans, Penn meet against Waterloo. "Though this is called a "meet," to me it will be mni experiment to try out people in different events," she w chumpy Gopher team which unit is a youthful flock of lads. performance last Saturday State's men's gymnastics team "What we're really trying to do is work for next w< came into East Lansing last Musselman is hopeful it will be against Michigan, has risen to By DAN SPICKLER Last week against highly- is young. But four of the Lion's because that one will be our big one." added to his list of successful the peak of the Big Ten scoring State News Sports Writer rated Wisconsin, Michigan lost Parks will also be lookingior improvement within thetea* season to face the Spartans and top all around performers are snuck away with a 56-50 Big Ten teams since joining the Gopher leaders with a hefty 24.0 aver¬ MSU men's swimming c<»ach at home to the Badgers 66 57, freshmen and sophomores, giv "In general, I'll be looking for improvements in a few pe staff. age. Hairston is third in the Dick Fetters, squeezed his preceeding the Spartans haven't had a meet in about a month and I'll be lookingto*| victory that began MSU's tail- ing Penn State the depth Minnesota Big Ten listings with a 22.0 point aver¬ thumb and forefinger together has any bearing on the team's performance as a spin out of the conference race. was impressive fight against necessary to cope with the new as close as he possibly could. MSU lost four of its last five Big champ in 1972 and missed out on age after leading last week. Wisconsin. MSU lost to the NCAA gymnastics rule change. MSU's women gymnasts are facing Penn Stale Satari Ten games after the Minnesota the title by one game to Indiana OSU's Bill Andreas is second is "That's how close it's going to Badgers, 69 54. Jenison Fieldhouse. According to the change, two of loss for a final 8-6 record, while in 1973. The Gophers dipped to at 22.3. be between us and Michigan if With MSU carrying the host the top four scores counted in The Spartan women's indoor track team will round! the Gophers finished 6-8. 6-8 last year. Spartan guard Bill Glover is they swim well and we swim each event must come from weekend competition when they travel to Indiana to rai advantage, the meet between This season the Gophers got One of the Gophers' two Big the league's leading assist man, well," he said. the intrastate rivals should be all-around performers. Indiana Federation Championships Saturday. This is thefiB off to a fine start, going 7-1 in Ten losses this year came at the dropping off an average of 7.7 The Spartans, 2-1 in dual close and full of excitement. of competition for the squad. hands of No. 1 ranked Indiana dimes a game. meets, host the Wolverines (3-1) "Penn State has the depth The year should be a good one, with the squad primarily! early nonconference play. They on Michigan sports a triple super Monday night. Ganakas will go with a start at 2 p. m. Saturday in the Men's threat to the which we lack on our team," of returnees Irom last spring's outstanding outdoor squid Spartans in swim Last Saturday, Minnesota ing lineup of Furlow (6-5) and Intramural Building pool. mer* Gordon Downey, Tom Szypula said. "Our all-arounder The team is coached by Nell Jackson, asst. athletic dir Swordsmen travel Jeff Rudolph is going to have a- was upset by Ohio State. JeffTropf(6-7)at the forwards, Fetters has yet to win a dual Szuba and diver Don Crane. charge of women's athletics. Balanced scoring was the kej Gus Ganakas' Spartans not Pete Da vis (6-1) and Glover (6-2) meet against Michigan. Satur¬ terrific responsibility Saturday team's success last spring along with a sprinkling of $ to Indiana meets only have the remembrance of at guards and Hairston (6-7) at day will mark the coach's sixth Downey, a junior from New since all his scores will really performers. what the loss to Minnesota did center. try for victory. York, is setting water on fire in count for the team." The people to watch in the squad include Shiri Hoh< MSU's fencers will put their to their season last year, but Minnesota will be led by its the freestyle events. He has top middle and long distance runner who is a big point gette "Michigan has always been a The 2 - 0 record on the line this also have added incentive for lone senior, 6-5 guard Dennis traditionally strong power in Wolverine marks for the season Spartans' top Visser, an all purpose performer. weekend when they go up Saturday's contest because of a Shaffer, who gives the Gophers swimming," he said of last in the 100, 200 and 1,000 - yard performers in the meet are against John Hopkins today current mild hot streak of their a lot of backcourt strength. The year's third-place Big Ten team. freestyle events. expected to be Jeff Rudolph and Cleveland State and and Joe Shepherd in all-around; own. other Gopher guard spot will be While the praises for Michi¬ Indiana Saturday in a trimeet, MSU has apparently recov¬ MSU hopes to stop Downey Jay Shore. John Short and handled by 6-0 sophomore Phil both at Angola. Ind. ered completely from the Saunders. Mark Landsberger gan from the MSU coach come out easily, he strongly believes with Jim Dauw in the 1,000 and Bruce Wright and Bill Hall in Mike Simon on floor exercise: Spartan sports action Coach Charlie Schmitter calls walkout, suspension and ulti¬ Dave Rosengren and Paul (6-8) and Mark Olberding (6-8) this year may mark only the Here is the upcoming weekend the meet with heavily balanced mate reinstatement of 10 mem¬ the sprints. schedule for the Sp will start at forward and 6-10 fifth win ever against the men's and women's teams: Johns Hopkins a "moment of bers of the team early this Michael Thompson will start at Wolverines in 52 dual meets Szuba, well remembered as a truth" for his team. month. In successive outings Hockey the post. between the two schools. top Michigan high school per¬ Today and Saturday: Home against Denver. 7:30 p.m., former three years ago, is the IM NOTES Arena. Wolves' most versatile tanker. Basketball The junior from Dearborn is the Saturday: At Minnesota, 9:05 NEW NCAA P main man to watch in the Despite the winter weather, p.m. Men's and Women's Gymnastics butterfly and individual medley the platform tennis courts at Saturday: Home against Penn State, 1:30 p.m.. Ji events. the East intramural field are Fieldhouse. Fuzak sizes up tasks MSU's John Apsley and Mike Rado, both freshmen, will lead the Spartans' attempt to stop open for play daily. A broom is located at the courts to clear off the snow. There will be no swimming in Fencing Today: At Angola. Ind. against Johns Hopkins Saturday: At Angola, Ind. against Cleveland Indiana. Suttfl Szuba. the Women's Intramural Build John Fuzak, chairman of MSU's athletic council and the school's Men's Swimming such action. For instance, how many credits an athlete is carrying ing between 11:30 a.m. and Junior Don Crane is Michi¬ Saturday: Home against Michigan, 2 faculty representative to the Big Ten, was elected president of the and in what curriculum. This must be stressed continually. 2:30 p.m. today because of the p.m., Men's IMpK National Collegiate Athletic Assn. (NCAA) last week. gan's top diver. He has been Wrestling There have been violations in the past at MSU but we have made women's swimming meet. It is a two-year term. winning in both the three meter Today: At Oklahoma. some changes. and one meter events The deadline for entry in the Fuzak in academic life is associate dean of the College of by as Saturday: At Oklahoma State. "Part of this responsibility rests with the athlete. He must much as 30 points. women's intramural paddleball Education and director of the school of advanced studies. convince himself of the importance Barry Women's Swimming of academics. Only a small VanAmberg, Tom Benson and singles and doubles ladder He is chairman of the Big Ten conference, chairman of the Rose Today: Waterloo (Ontario), 1 p.m., Women's IM pool. percentage of college athletes make it to pro sports and large bonus Jesse Griffin will all be counted tournament is 10 p.m. today. Bowl arrangements committee and a member of the conference Women's Track contracts. Even if an athlete does accept such a contract he must Entries will be taken in 201 on to gain points in diving Saturday: At Indiana Federation Championships. agenda and eligibilty and rules committees. realize the importance of academics and he should try to complete events for MSU. Men's Intramural Bldg. his education. In the NCAA, he has been vice president of District 4 and "I think at MSU our athletes have more recognition of the chairman of the long range planning committee and District 4 importance of education now. This is true of athletes everywhere. scholarship committee. He has also been a member of the NCAA Minorities used to lack genuine concern insofar as education. An committees on amateurism, recruitment of foreign athletes, education often didn't increase their chance of employment after women's sports and high school liasion. State News sports writers Steve Stein and Pat Farnan talked graduation and that wasn't long ago. But the entire image of the with Fuzak in this first of a series of interviews with prominent "jock" is changing. If an athlete isn't genuinely interested in an education he shouldn't be here. We have to continue to study this sports personalities: picture of affairs and stay on top of what's happening. This is a What are some of your duties as NCAA president? chance for social mobility for minority athletes and all athletes who "I preside at meetings of the NCAA Council, which is made up of were formerly exploited. Athletes no longer lack awareness." eight district vice presidents and eight vice presidents elected at What about recruiting violations? large to represent the three divisions of the NCAA. I also preside at "There are some pretty bad recruiting practices going on the meetings of the executive committee, which is an primarily because of the competitiveness in college sports. administrative body dealing with the budget, and I preside at the Unfortunately, neither the NCAA nor the various athletic annual conventions." conferences have had the personnel to enforce policy. But the What will be the major issues confronting the NCAA during your NCAA has authorized eight staff members (one for each district) to term? get closer to the situation. In the past the NCAA has offered "The matter of the financial plight of colleges and universities and amendments, like forbidding contact with a prep athlete before his the matter of women's sports are front and center. They have to be junior year, and these attempts have born some fruit. faced and dealt with." "Many of the stories regarding recruiting violations are blown What about women's sports? out of proportion. The problem is that there is a big difference "All of us favor the development and expansion of competitive between knowledge of such activity and proof of it. But there's been opportunities for women. But the question is how will they be a good deal of progress in this respect, too. I think the situation can financed. The NCAA has been told by our legal counsel that it is be paralleled to Wategate in that the offense is not considered vulnerable unless it offers equal competitive opportunities for serious until the offender is caught." women at the national level. On the other hand, women think we're What about the current Big Ten-Pac Eight bowl policy? trying to take over. We will develop a plan with the AIAW (Assn. of I would say that it is unlikely that the Big Ten would make a Intercollegiate Athletics for Women) which will be circulated to the change unilaterally. There are still some possibilities." membership in hopes of moving ahead towards expansion of pilot Do you foresee any restrictions being placed on representatives of programs." major bowls who pick teams for their bowl prior to the conclusion of You and other Big Ten faculty representatives were criticized by Duffy Daugherty in his new book "Duffy" for having too much "The resolution was adopted just recently (there were power. What is your opinion about that? representatives of the major bowls present) which specified that no "The conference operates on faculty control of athletics. It is only team could accept a bowl bid before 6:30 p. m. on the third Saturday natural that a coach would like to have no restrictions. I can of November. understand that. On the other hand, my role is to try to keep things What do you hope to acheive in your term aa NCAA president? in an appropriate educational perspective. I don't think that we "I hope that we can resolve problems of recruiting and SN photo Cr< (Duffy and Fuzak) had anything which could be called a run-in." enforcement. I also hope that we can get some recommendations Newly - elected NCAA President John Fuzak What about exploitation of athletes? "The only way to guard against exploitation of athletes is to see that will take some of the pressure off coaches. I hope that we can get together to resolve the problem facing women's sports and that sits at his desk in Erickson Hall where he confronting Fuzak in his two year president include women's sports a" tej"l serves as associate dean of that each athlete is making legitimate progress toward a college MSU's College of wili be able to handle the financial problems in that area. I would current financial plight of NCAA institut* we degree. The coaches like to play the best player so consequently a Education and director of the like to see more varsity sports available to students and in general, school for Fuzak is also MSU problem can result. We have to take preventive measures against broadening of participaton goal of the NCAA. too. advanced studies. Some of the faculty repre«nUtiv«l a — that's a major issues the Big Ten Conference. ■III!''" Slate News. East Lansing, Michigan Friday, January 17,1975 1 3 RUGGED ROAD TRIP irestlers clash with Ipatfarnan Oklahoma in Norman today and Oklahoma State deceiving. The Sooners Callard (167), who won the Big Eight and sixth place finisher in No SparUn team in Sport. Writer Saturday in dropped a 26 • 13 decision to Eight and placed second nation¬ the nationals in 1974 at 158 and history Stillwater. Both matches has made it through Oklahoma Isl' wrestling squad begin Oklahoma State but lost three ally last year. Callard is 11-1 John Jackson 1158), who I cowboy country this at 7:30 p.m. (9:30 p.m. in East solo matches by a placed with a pair of wins. hairbreadth. 1 with five falls this year. sixth in the NCAA and second "A lot of people think fan.) >f l"s,"r-v rePeLaU Lansing). Both teams Their other loss came against Down the road in Stillwater, in the Big Eight last year at Oklahoma and Oklahoma State hitting K wj|| be anything but are ranked in the Iowa (No. 1), a 28 8 shellack¬ the Oklahoma State - Cowboys, 7 167. back top 10. Oklahoma State was to back is the ■he range. ing, but the Sooners had 1, are a threat for the NCAA In addition, the - - toughest T liable to get a ranked No. 1 and Oklahoma No. wrestled Cowboys thing going," Peninger said. Michigan in the crown. They finished third in have senior Rick Jones, who "But then you may have to cooking whe 2 in preseason polls. ' home morning and then took on Iowa the Midlands tournament. has been relegated to the 190 "We wrestle some of their ;e it or not." SparUn are going out there later in the day. Their only loss in dual meets people pound frame after winning two several times on one day at a iv Peninger quipped- expecting to win," Peninger At the Penn State Invita¬ came against Portland State successive are two excellent said. "But you never know tional, the Sooners won the Big Eight titles at tournament. At least here we'll but that match was their fifth in (Oklahoma and what's going to get a night's rest." „jms happen out team title with four first place as many days and coach Tommy I* State) and we're there. It'll just be a question of finishers and four second place Chessbro called his team "flat." if our hands full." mind over matter. If we don't finishers. The Cowboys' top wrestlers landled its weekend easily last mind paying matter." the price, it won't Their big guns are Brian Beatson (11 1 -1), who finished are finished Billy Martin (126), who second to Pat Four ushered ■East Lansing. Two Oklahoma. 9 2 in dual meets, third in the Big Eight and sixth Milkovich in the NCAA finals 1, in Oklahoma, how is basically a young team with in the NCAA last year at 142 - last year; Steve Randall football three veterans who placed in (142), ■h teams branded the the NCAA finals last year. Their two losses are rather pounds: Rod Kilgore (13 - 1), who won the Big Eight and second place finisher in the Eight and NCAA last year; Ron Big pro | Spartans oppose NCAA at 158 last year and Jeff Rey (167), runnerup in the Big CANTON, OHIO (UPI) - the AAFC in receiving as a George Connor, an All-Pro at rookie and was All-Pro for two three different positions during years, playing in three Pro fomen's cage game cut short his eight year career with the Chicago Bears, heads a list of four 1975 enshrinees announced Bowls. Brown, an obscure 27th- round draft pick in 1953, became by the Pro Football Hall of the Giants' starting right tackle women's team. Js'NATI ■ direct confrontation (UPI) - "It "I think the But Thacker said not to get was a lot more exciting than the Fame. as a rookie and held the job for university dis¬ him wrong - he thinks the men's game," said Thacker. The To be honored with Connor 13 years, being selected All Pro (male chauvinism and played very bad sportsmanship women were discriminated Cincinnati men's team beat Aug. 2 are Dante Lavelli of the for eight straight years and lamented Tom ' in not allowing us to finish the playing in nine Pro Bowls. against. Southern Methodist University Cleveland Browns, Roosevelt • And unfortunately. game," Thacker said Thursday. "I was caught in the middle," in a 106-74 Brown of the New York Giants Moore, a college star at Penn "After all, we're a varsity team runaway. |ivinism won. he said. "There was the and Lenny Moore of the State and a first-round draft Thacker says he's been con¬ ned Elaine Heiber: too." associate athletic director who pick, Rookie of the Year in verted fully to women's lib. Baltimore Colts. was ,men's athletics back Heiber, coach of the Miami helped hire me saying to call the "This was an eye opener," he Connor, a star for the Bears 1956 and was honored as All-Pro A real slap in the TODAY team, waged a stormy protest to game. I protested and said we said. "Sooner or later the from 1948 until 1955, was five times, appearing in seven university officials, who should be allowed to finish, but honored as an All-Pro defensive Pro Bowls as both a flanker and women are going to succeed, frhacker and Heiber stopped the game, and com¬ the official word was 'no.' " and I'm joining the bandwagon. tackle in 1952, as an offensive running back. .1 about was the plained that Thacker only When the hard-fought "I'm an advocate of women's tackle in 1953 and as a line¬ game ■collision of men's and mildly protested. 1 collegiate basketball "I think if the Cincinnati coach was halted, Cincinnati had a 53-50 lead. Thacker rights been now. I see what they've backer in 1953 and 1955. Jan. 17, is the last day nesdav night. arsity game had been a woman she would have argued right alongside game completed. eventually hopes the can be up against all along. Things like this never hit you until you're associated with it," Lavelli, an 11-year star with the Browns in the All-America Football Conference and the ALL for complete refunds on §Miami of Ohio and the me," she said. "As it turned out, our game Thacker said. National Football League, led of Cincinnati was i pizzas |'4U short of completion > varsity teams to winter term books. ■he court and warmup are lr. e an All America who Cincy men's team | VARSITY INN alike Sales slip must IA titles in 1961 and < I making his debut as Happy Hours 2-5 except one accompany all returns. ■ch of the Cincinnati Mon.-Fri. BELL'S Mill ALL DRINKS Vo off! 225 MAC 332 • 5027 BOOK STORE OPEN 11 AM EVERYDAY FREE DELIVERY Footlong Coney Dogs 50c Alan Fr, 11? 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Nelson, a Lansing Democrat, comes to the Jondahl, David Hollister and Tom HoUj Nelson will work to start Senate with four years of experience in the office buildings already planned construction!! House, joined by several colleagues who also moved from one end of the Capitol to the other. Capitol. I Nelson said the state rents One question not exactly on Nelson's list but 800,000 • B of office space in Lansing and which has definitely caught his eye is the million, but all owns »Tj possibility of ending the autonomy of Michigan's recent building has universities. secondary complex in Eaton County. Additional housing is also ™ "I am interested and I want to find out why needed V we shouldn't be discussing a university system, added. "We would not be losing as opposed to each individual university being an works program," he said. "We'd be anything with, J empire unto itaelf," Nelson said. coi Nelson said he wants to see if the California or unemployment and dealing with a cr like housing at the same time" New York systems would make more sense for REDUCED SPEED ON Michigan by ending budget battles between each A local problem Nelson would like tom J school shallowness and pollution of Uke said he thinks a case can be made for LansJI "We have three individual boards elected by rj the people. Obviously they become provincial," since Ingham County's nearly 300.000 r«s_ Citizens object to safety plan he said. "The provincialism sometimes works somehow got cheated out of a bountifoJ contrary to what is good for the total growth of wonderland. the state." On a far grander scale is Nelson's i Admitting he could be wrong. Nelson said he career education, a concept which could i By JEFF MERRELL residents. ficiently reduce the danger on is a matter of enforcement," completed and the pressure on wants to gather recommendations and studies Michigan's entire school system. Nelsott, SUte News Staff Writer About 60 citizens who at¬ Saginaw to motorists and Morgan said. "The highway Saginaw is relieved, according and will ask the Big Three university presidents sored a bill last year creating a comma, A State department has no power study this and said he is working with tkf, Highways and tended a public hearing held by pedestrians. there. to Morgan. ' $5.5 million fund for their arguments pro and con. and hoping to get a report by I Transportation Dept. safety the highway department on the Two 14-year-old students At the top of Nelson's 1975 list is reorganiza February plan for Saginaw Road is not plan Wednesday night felt the were killed last year in sepe- Morgan also said that the The state safety plan was tion of state departments, especially in the He described the idea this way: It is much of a safety plan, according creation of an additional lane rate accidents between Abbott additional lane would not in¬ spurred by the high number of human services area, to better tell citizens how a start in kindergarten orienting < to a number of East Lansing for left turns would not suf- Road and Alton Street, where crease speed. accidents on Saginaw, and im¬ large amount of their money is spent and that directly toward the world people are goi the widening will take place. Frightening experience plemented through a $5.5 mil¬ services are delivered to those in need. in. It is not a tracking system, and it canbifl Saginaw Road is now being Other residents in lion fund tagged specifically for "We need more of a concept of management so incidentally. r used as a temporary route for attendence told the highway safety projects. process," he said. "We need somehow to build in 'They're learning about the world, J Jobless march 1-69. Reduce speed officials that driving on Sagi naw during rush hours can be a The $300,000 lane addition, which has preliminary accep incentives so staff will be turned on about doing what it is they're supposed to do, as opposed to learning about what talents they h»] getting a chance to fool around with it Nearly all the citizens in attendence at the hearing fa¬ frightening experience. A rep¬ resentative from the Michigan tance from the city, is expected to reduce accidents by 50 per being locked into cases, it almost takes a situation, where, in many an act of God to get a they even leave high school they have what they're good at." a:^ vored adding a reduced speed Education Assn. which has an seek benefits cent. person out of a job." This might help avoid "no pref sti to limit to the state safety plan. "The residents should be able office on Saginaw, employes are "deathly afraid" said "We feel confident that five lanes on Saginaw will have the Related to this is Nelson's continuing support of the superagency concept — a combination of sitting around college two or three vein J they don't know about the world or wl to decide what kind of speed of going out onto the same results as previous five- the present Mental Health, Public Health and can do, Nelson said. Bv STEVE ORR limit they would like to live Saginaw-Abbott intersection. lane experiences, cutting rear- Social Services departments. Nelson expects to State News Staff Writer with," said Zolton Homeowners also said that end collisions in half," said Ken An unsuccessful bill Nelson cosponsordB Ferency, work closely with the controversial issue as a The state dissatisfied Capitol, long the logical convergence place for MSU professor of criminal jus¬ coming onto Saginaw from a Robertson, traffic and safety member of the Appropriations Committee sub¬ year will probably be reintroduced by Nelson said the security and privacy -« if Michiganders, is the scheduled location of a tice and East Lansing resident. residential street is extremely Wednesday, Feb. 19 march to "demand emergency legislation" engineer for the state. committee on social services and said he has would regulate the amount and kind of ink that would ease the burden on the state's unemployed workers. "What we're interested in is dangerous during busy hours. "Over 50 per cent of the invited comments from various state organiia tion placed into computer data centers, that you treat the street as a Some additional complaints, accidents on Saginaw are head- tions. The march was originally sponsored by an American Federation by government, police, credit bureaus orii residential street, not as a such as noise and truck traffic, on and rear end while making a "1 know there is a need for some reorganiza of Teachers (AFT) local and a United Auto Workers (UAW) local will be eliminated once 1-69 is The bill which Nelson called r ,. J highway," Ferency said. left turn," Robertson said. tion," he said. "I know do better." in Detroit. Planners are predicting a turnout of 10,000 to 20,000 Jim Neve, district traffic and we can also allow individuals to inspect files abwsjl people. Bill Sacks, chairman of the unemployment committee in the safety engineer for the state, said he would restudy traffic Sadat: Israel must withdraw AFT local, said the rally's ranks may be joined by members of various UAW and American Federation of State, County and speed on Saginaw to determine if the current 50 mph limit can Municipal Employes locals and some student groups. This may be reduced. include members of UAW Local 1618, representing the Lansing Olds Plant. The executive board of that local is still Speed limits are established considering By Associated Press lines he would seek resumption endorsement of the rally. by the state highway depart¬ Metulla for the first time in a startled hotel guests, but vacuum. ment by compiling data on daily Egyptian President Anwar of the stalled Geneva peace year and Palestinian guerillas caused no injuries. Faisal was Sacks said Gov. Milliken and key legislators will be informed of However, a Foreign MM traffic and setting the limit at Sadat was quoted Thursday as talks, the paper said. claimed they beat back two the march. His AFT local has drafted a list of proposals to be staying in a guest mansion source in Cairo, c< the speed under which 85 saying that unless Israel with¬ Kissinger's step - by step Israeli tank assaults on the several blocks away. presented to them. The proposals are: - Sadat's statement, said: f percent of traffic travels, to the draws within three months approach is an effort to work southern Lebanese village of • "Useful" jobs for all, at union scale. • Egypt announced that is not an iron clad p# nearest 5 mph. from some of the Egyptian. gradually toward peace before Kfar Chouba. The Lebanese Sadat and his wife would visit • At least $150 in unemployment insurance for everyone now Think of it as t out of work, to last as long as they remain unemployed. No guarantee Syrian and Jordanian territory a resumption of the Geneva Defense Ministry said the 20 France Jan. 27 to 29 at the Which we want to proc«4B Neve said, though, he could it occupies he will abandon talks, held under UN auspices minute pounding in Metulla invitation of French President • A moratorium on payment of debts and mortgages during a are committed to the not guarantee the speed limit Secretary of State Henry A. and cochaired by the United was in retaliation for attacks on person's unemployment, with no evictions of the jobless. Valery Giscard D'Estaing. It step approach to peace MT would be lowered. Kissinger's step - by • step States and the Soviet Union. Kfar Chouba. now in the sixth will be Sadat's first visit to a • Increased funding for education, mandatory reduction of class "The highway department peace efforts. Kissinger straight day. in Cairo the accent >| size and work loads for public school teachers and a shortened opposes a quick Western country since he movement." does not contend that this plan "I will accept nothing less return to Geneva because the • A bomb exploded under a became president in 1970. work week for all workers. Western diplomats a will solve all the problems," than an Israeli move on all divisive Palestinian issue is car near the Damascus hotel Sadat's interview with An • Full protection of the right of all workers to strike, said Sadat, a master tif said Jack Morgan, an official three fronts within three sure to surface and dissolve the where delegation of Saudi Nahar clearly was a signal to particularly for teachers. newspaper interviews t< from the state agency. months," Sadat said in an talks in bitter wrangling. Arabians accompanying King Israel that any agreement on "We're going to let the state government know we're mobilizing interview in the Beirut news¬ In other Middle East devel¬ Faisal on his state visit to out signals, used the As! to win these things," Sacks said. "We need them." Morgan said the speed prob¬ Syria further troop separation in interview to keep pressr Sacks said the organizers anticipate government response to the lem does not originate with paper An Nahar. He added if opments: were staying. The bomb dam Sinai would have to be tied to Israel and to back a«?l speed limits. there was no progress toward a • Lebanese artillery pounded aged the car, which belonged to demand because of the projected large turnout. settlement along Kissinger's the Israeli border village of movement on other Arab fronts previous statements ttoB "Solving the speed problem a Syrian businessman, and and could not take place in a be interpreted as ONLY 280 LEFT!! That's right! There are only about 280job openings left at Camp Tamarack, in Michigan's Lower Peninsula. Camp Tamarack is the summer camping program sponsored by the Detroit Jewish Radio Fee Refund COmPUTER frame M community, and we have three campsites in Michigan and one in Wawa. Ontario. We've got openings lor counselors, specialists [in waterfront, arts Undergraduate students living on campus who do not wish to use the services provided by the Michigan State SHORTCOURSES and crafts, nature campcraft, dramatics, dance, etc.], super ■ Network and its stations, WMSN, WBRS, WEAK, WMCD, visors, drivers, cooks, and nurses, as well as for specialists in The Computer Loborotory will present a series of non-credit shortcourses WKME may receive a refund of their $1.00 radio fee by during outdoor camping puppetry, and programs for emotionally dis - Winter term, 1975. There is a 11 f*« covering computer tin* ond materials for turbed youngsters. Contract season will run from about June 15 going to room 8 Student Services Bldg. between 1 - 5 p.m. each short course. Registration for the shortcourses must be made by January to fiugust 27, depending on the position. Mon. Jan. 13 thru Fri. Jan. 17. Please bring fee receipt and 17 at the User Information Center. Rm. 309 Computer Center for full Our recruiters will be interviewing for these jobs at the Student ID cards to obtain refund. shortcourse descriptions, contoct the User Information Center, 353-1800. Employment Office on January 20 at the Student Services Building. Applications can be picked up at the desk. LAST DAYI GRADER - a progrom designated to relieve the drudgery of groding for Interested in Summer Resort instructors of (Section li lorge and medium enrollment courses. January 23, 7 - 9 p.m.; Section 2: Februory 19, 3 • 5 p.m.) s l«tre*Kterf Or^hla - use n* * -—.on* pen plotter and the Tektronix Work the Grand Canyon? We've Remodeled I at grophics terminol. CllLt" (Jonuary 27, 29 & 31; 3 - ■ J™ There's a big job to do this summer at our resort on the south rim of Grand to help us do it. Canyon National Park. We'd like you CAPITOL ST**' wd SYMVU - Horvord three dimensional perspective graphics. - University programs for spatial analysis and (January 21, 23, & 28; 7 - 9 p.m.) Now we're bigger and our new enlarW The work is hard, the pay is nominal. You may work a 50 hour week with 2 days off. You will also have to sign a SOUNDS Syitemetk Projremmlnj - a systematic approach to programming using the working area includes machine shop Pi contract which guarantees you will work for a minimum of 90 days. We require a $50 deposit which will be returned PASCAL language for CPS 110 level programmers. department and front end alignment macni»| FRIDAY t SATURDAY NIGHTS, NO COVIRI (Februory 3, 5, 10, 12, 17, & 19,- 7 - 9 p.m.) which enables to you at the end of your contractual obligation, with $50 us to better meet your needs I more. ■wit SPSS - an introduction to the basics of using the Statistical the Social Sciences for those new to Packoge for Now the MONDAYS AND WEDNESDAYS computing. good part. You will work with people your own age from all over the country. Room and board are (Section 1: January 27, 29, 4 31, 7 - 9 p.m.; Section 2; 1, 3 • 5 p.m.) Februarys 5 1 Alto we feature provided free. Uniforms, when necessary, are furnished free. Many recreational facilities will be made available to PIZZA CLUB Advanced SPSS the odvonced features of the Statistical # blaupuh you for free or at a special employee discount. And - Packoge for the Radial & Bias then, 12" PIZZA FOR 12^+Hmii Social Sciences including permanent file and magnetic tape usage. of course, there's the unexcelled natural canyon beauty of the ASK FOR DETAILS AT THE BAR. (Februory 18 & 20; 7 - 9 p.m.) Ply Tires We CBJRI - the Statistical Packoge of the Computer Institute for Social Science are looking for responsible people to fill these posi¬ tions: Research. EVERY TUESDAY Desk Clerks (NCR 4200) (February 4 & 6; 7 - 9 p.m.) Cooks Cashiers Waiters/Waitresses Housemen/Maids Janitors Dishwashers TACO NIGHT NPAR - the Nonparametric Statistical system that has been CISSR2 system. (Februory 10 i 12, 3 - 5 p.m.) odded to the German Bus People Clerks (Misc.) Service Station Attendants Bus Drivers IAz. class 4) Line Servers Bar Attendants iBRASS HAT - the MSU STAT system with programs for distributional anolvsis correlation, onolysis of voriance, and least squares anolvsis (February 3, 5,1 7, 7 - 9 p.m.) ' Automotive Sign up at tha Placement Office Campus Interviews Conducted Tuesday, Jan., 21, 1975 MOIVKEY HAT TRANS eae FITCH - dato transformation in the MSU STAT the FORTRAN user system supplied subroutines that all*, °W PORSCHE 235 $. Homer AUDI V* 332-5025 (februory 11 & 13, 3 - 5 p.m.) We are an equal opportunity employer 1 block touth of Frandor 10% off on VW parts told ovr the rnttoy, January 17,1975 1 - fo< tjf Class! iffied Ads is filling the needs oif all Kinds of neoole' ■ pVWif 1 v • 1 ^ir? *1/ W\ * jfr T* \ j 1 I FRANKLY SPEAKING, by phil frank 1 Apartments )(» PINTO, 1974, dark green, auto¬ REAL ESTATE Salesman needed Houses IB L Rooms P matic, radio, carpeted, 9,700 mile*, ♦or THINK SPRING, Garden! Short new Lansing office to promote THREE BEDROOM duplex, $265 $2275. Phone 482 3688 61-20 PRIVATE ROOM in six girl house. recreational property If you have drive, great advantages Spa¬ per month. 3 students, $88.33 Good location. Rent negotiable. a real estate license, let us train cious, furnished. $160 351 3809 each. 1 year old, 5 minutes from PINTO 1971. New cam. tow. Call 351 1820 you to make 337-9791. 4-1-17 or 332-1263. 4-1-17 high earnings in [ONE 355 8255 paint. Stereo. $1000 firm. spare time. Call 394-2825 Ask for your campus. 3494956.8-1-17 487-1508, after 6pm. 3-1-17 EAST LANSING APARTMENTS. SLEEPING ROOMS Rtudenl S»rvic»i Bldfl. TWO near campus, Mr. White. 5-1-17 Close to campus. One bedroom BEDROOM, carpeted, air non-smokers. (tomotive PLYMOUTH BELVEDERE, 1964, four new tires, 2 snows, guaran¬ furnished or unfurnished from conditioned, duplex. drapes, washer, dryer, dish¬ Indues 484-7002 or For interview call 332-3360. 3-1-17 rs & CyclM ATTENTION - SALEMEN 131 for $150. Two bedrooms furnished L & Service teed. Great heater, realiable trans¬ from $200 washer, carport, spacious yard. SENIOR TO grad well established company Leads Phone 351-7910. - quiet conser¬ portation, 1200. 349-1395. 2-1-20 $195/month. No pets. 835 East vative 13-1-31 girl, home near campus, Ltion furnished, peid on the job training Grand River, Williamston. Phone 349 9143 or 332-5497 5-1-21 fcLOYMENT program. Must have own trans¬ 655-2873 5-1-22 THUNDERBIRD, 1972 • like new. MALE ROOMMATE wanted. portation. Home improvement JIftmentJ RENT tape system, best offer 349-4977. 5-1-17 items sales to I Home owners. Large, furnished, $85. 351-2354. 3-1-17 next to campus. ALBERT STREET. One room in house for 1 or 2. Share rent. 251 FEMALE GRAD, private bedroom, share super furnished house, Call 487 3505 for interview. 5-1-17 Gunson 337-9227 3-1-20 utilities, $80. 351-3809,337-9791 TRIUMPH SPITFIRE 1972. ONE GIRL. Near MSU to share 4-1-17 Ex¬ cellent condition, 30 mpg, 27,000 WANTED: NO experience small one bedroom furnished a- EASTSIDE - NEAR bus line and p sale miles. Best offer required. Cashiers, projectionists, hospital. Clean 1 and 2 bedroom JOIN THE 351-5390. partment. $67.50. 489-5922. Co-ops! There are still unfurnished. Rent includes util¬ [mals 3-1-20 dancers and usherettes. Apply in 4-1-17 ities. Call after 6 pm. 482-9531 openings in three co-op houses. Call 355-8313 or stop by our office, kjjle Homes person only. CINEMA X 5-1-22 |t& found TRIUMPH 1970 GT-6. Low"mile¬ THEATRE AND ADULT BOOK OKEMOS 1 efficiency, $135. 1 311-B Student Services Building age, good condition, good rubber. STORE. 1000 West Jolly Road, bedroom, $150 each, furnished FEMALE FOR own room. Cute for more information. 5-1-20 isonal $1496. 393-7659. 5-1-21 Lake-side cottage. 5 minutes to Lansing. 10-1-24 and heated. Call Mr Bates, iNUTS PERSONAL campus. $53/month. 339-8493. ROOM FOR rent, male with 3494157. 5-1-20 ML ESTATE TRIUMPH 1970 GT-6. Low mile¬ age, good condition, good rubber ATTENTION: EXCELLENT oppor *soH?f. tn useaci a t*ofour 3-1-21 kitchen privileges. 485 3428. 5-1-21 $65/month. KREATION tunity for married couple inter¬ $1495 393-7669. 5-1-21 ested in mental health field- AllMVDRNER6 HAVE PhDi !' ROOMMATE NEEDED for two - FOURTH GIRL needed winter, fc VICE needed to One MALE OR female for Tralfama- supervise 6 mildly € COLLEGE MEDIA SERVICES-BOX 9411-BERKEL>.Y CA man. block/campus. Fur¬ spring. Near campus. Large bed¬ ■ruction TRIUMPH, 1973, Red TR-6. mentally handicapped women. 94705 dore Co-op. 501 M.A.C. About $56 nished, $110/month. 351-6786 rooms. $80. 332-2771. 10-1-24 Excellent gas mileage AM-FM. Room, Board AND salary inclu¬ per month. Phone 332-2517. Ling Service Good condition. 4-1-17 5-1-21 Importation Inted 10-1-27 Call 484-2780 ded. Extremely rewarding work. If interested please contact Irma Zuckerberg or Kim Braman, Pro¬ [ Apartments ^ Apartments ^ 5020 Delray Drive. Upper TWO BEDROOM! five minutes campus, pets O.K., $165 month, EAST LANSING - 428 Grove. apart¬ plus utilities. 332-2724. 3-1-17 Furnished room, kitchen priv¬ r pool TOYOTA CELICA, 1973, automa¬ grams for the Mentally Retarded, FURNISHED, ONE bedroom, 731 BURCHAM. One needed for ment in a duplex. Two bedrooms, 487-6500. 5-1 123 ileges. $75 includes utilities. tic, air, AM-FM stereo, vinyl top. $150/month. deposit $76. Utilities 3-man, walk to appliances, and carpeting. $155 SHARE LARGER older house with EQUITY VEST, 351-8150. No fee. campus. $76/ '•RATES" Mags, radials, 22,000 miles. $3200 1 other, plenty of word minimum or best offer. Phone 669 3964 PART TIME babysitter for 7 4^-4789*1-2? 9 month. 351-8987. 5-1-17 month plus utilities. 485 1365 5-1-20 393-9182 or dark room access, room, possible 4 miles to 5-1-22 after 4 p.m. 6-1-24 month old. Winter/spring. campus. $80/half utilities. SINGLE ROOM for 353-0951 after 3 p.m. 1-1-17 SUBLEASE FURNISHED two NEEDED IMMEDIATELY to sublet 339-3169. 3-1-17 gentleman WANT A nice place to live? Short with references. Clean, quiet, TOYOTA CORONA 1969. In good bedroom. Clean, quiet, campus 2 bedroom apartment. Close to NO DAYS comfortable. $15 week. shape. Runs good! Price negoti¬ WANTED: FEMALE adult to care two blocks. Oakhill Avenue. MSU. Call 349-4064 Gail. 6-1-17 on money? Let us help you! Short NEED TWO, preferably female, to term leases 482-8304. 3-1-17 able. 351-4437, evenings. 5-1-21 for 3% year old. Approximately 339-2100. 3-1-17 available. Mason Hills share half of house, winter or 13 5 10 1 H days per week. Own transpor¬ Apartments - from $145 a month. whatever. Rent LOVELY, MODERN 2 bedroom New one and two bedroom apart negotiable. MEN'S SINGLE room plus board, 15.60 TOYOTA COROLLA 1972. Fan¬ tation. Phone 372-3117. 3-1-21 IMMEDIATELY FEMALE for two 332 5445 3-1-17 4.80 7.80 nice living area tastic condition. Radials, vinyf person, furnished, close, $82.50, apartments from $160. ments - with all appliances, car¬ Living room. 9.70 19.50 Phone 337-2381. 2-1-17 6.00 top, 36 mpg, many extras, $1300. sublease, 351 9415, good room¬ Furnishings available. 10 minutes peting, and drapes. Pets allowed HOUSEMATE NEEDED-own EROTIC DANCERS wanted 7.20 11.70 23.40 361 1852 or 332-2517. 2-1-17 mate. 3-1-17 Located at 495 North Okemos in nice old house. $62.50 paying up to $12.50 an hour. to campus. 349-3604. 372-6852 room ROOMS FOR rent Two blocks Road, in Mason. 10 minutes from 8.00 13.00 26.00 0-5-1-17 plus. Pets O.K. 487-2092 after 9 CINEMA X THEATRE AND MSU. Furnished model open from campus. 337-9964. 10-1-20 16.25 32.50 VW VAN, 1968. $560. 487 5424 ROOMMATE NEEDED. Share p.m. 3-1-17 10.00 ADULT BOOK STORE. 1000 West large apartment with two grad Monday through Friday, 12-6, and after 5 pm. 5-1-20 ONE MAN NEEDED FOR 4 MAN Jolly Road, Lansing. Apply in students. Own room. Okemos. Saturday 11-3. Call Model at NEED MALE OWN BEDROOM. Country set lEADLINE 676-4874. Other times call manager - downtown Lansing, person only! 10-1-24 $71.50. 353 3246, 349 0129 3-1-17 Capital Villa. Cable TV. 351-3933 ting. Pets welcome. $70, January 1 p.n1. one class VOLKSWAGEN CAMPER at 676-4291 or EAST LANSING own bedroom, $53.50 per month s or 882 9830 5-1-17 free 882 4818. 5-1-17 ■before publication. 1972 with pop top and tent. REALTY AND DEVELOPMENT at plus utilities, no deposit, near bus, AVON NO SELLING STUDENTS $3200 356 9773. 5-1-17 EAST 332-4128. 14-1-24 489-7123. 5-1-20 EXPERIENCE NECESSARY As a FACULTY. STAFF LANSING - attractive 2 CLEAN QUIET comfortable. Representative you can sell quality bedroom duplex, newly redecor¬ Graduate male student, $15 week. VOLKSWAGEN, 1973, good con- TWO CUTE 1 bedroom apart¬ products part time. Call 3 BEDROOM, 11/2 BATH ated arid carpeted. 489-2575. TWO MALE Roommates for ED2-1354. 5-1-20 tion, 13,000 miles, radio, $1895. 482 6893 ments, furnished, carpeted, $125 20 2-3 UNFURNISHED APT'S 5-1-17 furnished house. Own rooms, $70 339-9522. Evenings. 349-1549 $130, evenings-weekends 482 plus utilities. 487-9046, 882 7631 ROOM FOR rent, spring term, 5-1-23 5450.7-1-20 p is ordered it cannot GO-GO Gals wanted - start imme¬ SUBLET 2-3 man, 1 block, 2 bed¬ 5-1-20 from onth share kitchen. Lilac Avenue, celled r or changed first insertion, VOLKSWAGEN 1968 Rebuilt en diately, good salary. ($100 - $150/ •215 per m room, 3-1-17 parking. $200. 351-0132. WOMEN NEEDED to share apart 337-9362 10-1-21 gine. Must JeH week.) Call 371 4464, ask for Etoy ment for two. Own room Block LAKE LANSING, near Two bed¬ is led 2 days before ordered & 393 3834 a quickl^l^p, Call. or'^ary.'$-1-20 9« »•»« * f»Ur) ABBOTT ROAD for sturt«nts or from' Morrill. $86 337-0203. room houses. $120-$160. Avail¬ PENNSYLVANIA SOUTH near Call 332 0011. 5-1-22 able now. Phone 351-8920 5-1-20 VOLKSWAGEN 1971. faculty members. One bedroom Michigan Avenue. Quiet for Excellent KNOB HILL condition. $1500 or MARRIED COUPLES fight in¬ luxury apartments, air condition¬ student, near bus line. $65 month best offer. UNBELIEVABLE THREE bedroom NEAR CAMPUS. 3-6 bedroom flation APARTMENTS ed, balcony, etc. Location and plus deposit 484 9458 days, 393-7061 evenings. - part time income oppor 627-5454 7-1-17 parking facilities. Expensive. Call apartment, 2 miles from MSU. house, rent negotiable. 607 5-1-22 tunity, call 694 0829 evenings, 349 4700 371 4158. 5-1-21 $165.332 3787 10-1-23 F|\ Virginia. Shown 5-6 pm. olNGLE,- large - carpeted - weekends. 5-1-20 Community atmosphere 337-7809. 4-1-17 $18 week each, one block VW 1969, AM-FM radio, sun roof S miles from campus DOWNTOWN LANSING, near oU 351-3098 10-1-20 Good condition, $725. 694-0156 after 5:30. 5-1-22 TAX necessary, PREPARER, experience Schedule C infor¬ % mile north of Jolly Road 1,2 and 3 bedroom well-maintain- ed apartments. Reasonable rents, ' Houses * MICHIGAN AVENUE - MSU 2 miles Two bedroom, Stove, ! News will be mation helpful - not mandatory, GIRL FOR 4 person Twyckingham students welcome, pets allowed. HOLMES ROAD, two bedroom, refrigerator. $150 plus utilities. for Sale |sibie only for the first hours 7:30 am 4:30 pm. Call Call 371-4158. 5-1-21 □e 489-1287. 3-1-20 - Lease. ;t insertion. 489 7574 for appointment. 7 124 apartment. Call 332-0167 or garage. $180 a month, deposit; 332-1693 immediately after 1 p.m. lease. Call mornings or nights. PINE LAKE APARTMENTS WOMAN NEEDED, own room, MARANTZ - 100 amp. Imperial 5 7-1-27 351-2509. 10-1-17 |b due 7 days from the SEE THE Fantastic new TRIUMPH VISTA VOLUNTEERS: the tri- HASLETT furnished, fireplace, $75. Close speakers. Thorens 150 MKZ turn¬ n date If not county treatment program is now 351-6463 Call 8-10 p.m. 5-1-21 1-2-3 man, short Short on Cash? Maybe we can MSU FACULTY club near, new 3 table 676-4736 after 6 pm. 5-1-20 Motorcycles at SHEP'S. 2460 term leases |f the due date, a 50t recruiting locally recruited available. Close, work something out. One bed¬ bedroom duplex, 1 V4 baths, appli¬ North Cedar. Holt. C-5-1-17 VISTAS as caseworkers in its after reasonable. :e charge will be room apartments with shag car¬ 349 1141. 3-1-21 ances, fully carpeted, garage NORTHLAND SKIS 190 cm care program. If interested please peting, drapes and appliances. phone 627-6018. 5-1-23 Rooms /* - contacat Carmine Girl's ski boots (7H) poles, ladarola, $150 per month plus utilities. 10 ONE QUIET female Mi Son ][/] 372-8270 PART TIME 5-1 22 Twyckingham apartment, winter spring. 351-8551 5-1-23 to sublease minutes from MSU. Located at 6076 Marsh Road, Just north of ONE BEDROOM, semi-country house, Okemos, share with one ROOM AND board in nice country home in Holt area. Space avail¬ carrying cases. $]20. Gail, 355-8903 New condition 2-1-17 sales. Cosmetics, kotive ++ COMPLETE EXHAUST systems jewelry, gifts. Direct sales or party Lake Lansing Road. Call Manager, 339-8192 or EAST LANSING, Big yard, love animals, no lease, able for horses. $120 a month. CONFLICT SIM games, 15+ for most imported cars in stock. FEMALE ROOMMATE or bus line. $70, share utilities Most new, SPI, Avalon plan. Write LA RU COSMETICS, persons REALTY 332-4128. 13-1-31 Hill, 349-3792. 2-1-20 694-1639. 5-1-20 Also rebuilt starters and generators 225 North Street in care of Post to sublease large 1 bedroom 355-6116 3-1-20 in stock. CHEQUERED FLAG Office Box 546, Southhaven, apartment, Spring/summer, near MSU AREA, Okemos. One and 2 SHARE ROOMY house with three FOREIGN CAR PARTS, 2605 East campus, 332-5281. 5-1-23 WOMEN NEEDED for co-ed GUNS. RIFLES and hand guns of Michigan. 49090. or phone (616) bedroom. Furnished and unfur¬ Kalamazoo, one mile west of 637-3758. 5-1-21 grad men. Private room. Parking, house, all kinds. Buy, trade and sell own room, $85 per month. 1967. Good condition. NEED 2 men. Four bedroom nished, air conditioning, carpeted, $55,489-3174. 1-1-17 BEST year round prices in - campus. 487-5055. C-10-1-17 Call after 5 pm 351-6818 5-1-20 | engine 60,000 miles, PEACE CORPS Vista. January furnished apartment. Close to modern. $150 - $185 Heat in¬ Southern Michigan. BOB'S GUN w 355-2803. 3-1-17 campus. $80/month. 332-0079. cluded. Call 349-2580. 8-1-23 EXCITING NEW home for respon¬ SHOP, 2412 South Cedar 20-23, Placement Center. Sign up THE WAY Station has 2 doubles 5-1-23 sible working girl. Own bedroom. 371-2244 0-1-31 for interviews. 3-1-17 available for immeidate occupan¬ PENNSYLVANIA NORTH Large Call Lyz at 353-4420 weekdays. cy. We can get you out of your MARRIED COUPLE-2 bedroom, upstairs. Furnished apartment. 1 3-1-21 ROYALE PORTABLE manual SELL THE jewelry of Miss Amer dorm contract. $45ar«iing, rent negotiable lease 351 J6 % Ji % Jz $70. 351 9279 2-1-17 %% % no - part-time portions available on the ment, $205 Call 393-0766 or pancy. block. Furnished, sharpl $185 0765^3-^20 337-7438. negotiable. 332 1946 4-1-17 BASEMENT WOMB with water Si 3f 3? afternoon and midnight shifts. 4-JU17 CAMPUS NEAR furnished living bed. Confrontation with 7 others Minimum starting salaries $4.82 EAST, 1 bedroom apartment, room, bedroom, kitchen, bath FEMALE NEEDED Winter. Haslett 11 V8 44 per hour plus differential. ; Im¬ mediate opening#. Pleaae contact partially furnished, $140 plus utili ties. 339 9522. Evenings. 349 1549. $120 plus 5-1-22 utilities. 332 5374 Arms Rent negotiable. Free Park ing. 351 2312. 3-1-17 in living room, bathroom, kitchen Barb, 351-8231 after 5 p.m. % v//< 4 % 4i ya «6 Lansing General Hoapital. 2800 5-1-23 2 1 20 "ft % i% AVAILABLE FEBRUARY l one ONE BEDROOM. (Albert Street) Devonshire, Lansing. 48909, DUPLEX, EAST Lansing. Avail (Sc*1 ■^8210 nights, "#o«« 5-1-21 37241220, extenaion267. Equal SPRING TERM. Two girls wanted bedroom furnished near Frandor Single person or couple $150 Immediate occupancy, 1 block able now with rent bonus. Call H9 Go to sublease River's Edge from campus. $135 482 3487 Dave or Charlie 3514140 Opportunity Employer. 7-1-17 3614306 5-1-23 484 9058,882 0744 7-1-24 31-17 351 7873. 3-1-21 1 6Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, JanUiiary 17, fori*]® ](§ [mTmh gems oust 2 House cliairiiiei) 25%OFF SALE in Music. Buy WATERBED WANTED. Queen DESPERATELY LOOKING for _ LOST-ONE standardized-testing EXPERIENCED IBM typing Do- size with heater. Will pay reason temporary 4 month home for my device. (Peabody Individual used, save bucks. Gibson, Harmony, West, Marshall Epiphone, able price. Phone 646-0662. 1-1-17 collie - all expenses paid, loves Achievement Test) last week of SSSVStJi"'' FAVANN< <».IM fn>» The caucus, with an 'I infuaion members«. re.»lt ol Demo cratic victories in last Novem vote to of entrenched strip other and Kustom to name a few. A-1 people and children. 353-0207. class fall term in back seat of car The caucus rhairme. HEAD 240 Skiis, 200 cm. Boots 3-1-20 which picked up lady hitchhiking ANN BROWN typing and multilith 0f more liberal, younger bers elections, could, in fact, already » stereo and equipment. Mamya/Sekor 35mm Canon Peilix 9%, $85 or 353-6733. 3-1-21 best offer. John M. from Park Lake Road to night offset printing. Complete service for dissertations, theses, manu¬ the program of broad rt^ IRISH SETTER female pup class. Call 337-0070.10-1-21 parliamentary an(j cameras. Yashica, Bell and Champion bloodlines, AKC, shots scripts, general typing. IBM. 25 « I • ■ ship structures of the Howell, Kodak, and Katimar Electric Zoom reflex 86, movie SKI BOOTS, Hanson experimen¬ tal, used one season, fits size 9-12, new bladders, retail $225, best and wormed, 2-1-17 $90. FOUND: SEVEN keys on ring, (one dorm). Leather patch/sun Call 355-0788. C-3-1-21 3,9 0860 Area drug unit Common Cause had' cameras. Check out this iceboat. report this week offer above $80. 332-6315. 5-1-23 COMPLETE THESES Service Dis oi Check us out! See the prices. count Printing. IBM typing and ■ chairmen that was pwf I I • I harsh on Hebert. Come DEAL, 487 3886. on down to DICKER & 1701 C-5-1-17 South Cedar. TEAC reverse, 4010S tape deck, auto $250. Stereo headphones with 15' extenstion. $15. 371-5917. WEIMARANERS, MALE female, two years old, AKC, for or [ P«soul ](7) binding of dissertations and pub- lications Across from campus, corner M.A.C. and Grand River. HPH VlvWIW S III nil D60D 6 V tion called his defeat "the final The - and? 3-1-21 Below Jones Stationery Shop. health, pups, hunt, show. 351-5974. EDGAR CAYCE study groups demolition that briB BL-2-1-20 forming in Lansing area. Those 9-5, Monday - Friday. Call seniority system r Cash for COPYGRAPH SERVICES. BELL'N'HOWELL Super and interested call 489-3666. 5-1 -22 By ELLEN SPONSELLER down." standard 8mm auto-load projec¬ 337 1666. C-20-1-31 State News Staff Writer STAMPS I COINS BASENJI PUPS, AKC, 8 weeks, tor. Six classic comedies. shots, red and white, 332-0040 The Common Buy - Sell - Trade 351-9109. 2-1-20 after 6. 5-1-23 summer ifss than THESES, RESUMES, typing and The Drug Education Center in East Lansing does more than deal Cause full line of supplies charged that Hebert printing! Reasonable prices. in drugs and drug-related problems. MID - MICHIGAN STAMP & COIN 60% OR MORE off musical in¬ BLONDE COCKER Spaniel pup. ineurope a/q COMMERCIAL PRINTING, The center, at 405 Grove St., provides several different services chairmanship power to *800 Hoslett Rd 332-4300 strument amps 8nd cabinets, new AKC, 6 weeks, Big brown eyes. CHARTERS \ I JL 351-4116. C-20-1-31 to Lansing-area residents. Besides giving drug information and people who agree with1' and used. Warehouse Clearance. $85,355-0974. 3-1-21 "iitoti drug analyses, the center has a part time paid staff that coordinates military views. The NEW GITANE track bike, excellent WEST LABS, Phone 487-3558. [ID REG FARE JUDITH CARMAN experienced educational programs, works with Michigan Social Services in accused Poage of not f- dissertation typist, term papers, youth counseling and gives referral aid. House Democrats' condition, top suede seamless 5-1-17 polj- BOARD EXAM TUTORING seat, 24 V4" frame. $100. 353-6269. 5-1-20 STANLEY H.KAPLAN 1CM^27 di8Serta,'0nS jn addition, DEC operates a free medical clinic three days a week Veteran House mem; CURIOUS USED FULLY COATED male Afghan TUTORING COURSES which is staffed by 20 area part-time doctors. Hebert's floor fight r FUR COAT, genuine Muscrat, Hound. Light apricot. Fully house- Now being formed for the up¬ EXPERIENCED, TYPING term "We are really a people center," said Bill Oberlin. speaker bureau the first in memory. medium size, $75 or best offer. BMKSHOP broken. Winner of 5 blue ribbons. coming MCAT, DAT, LSAT, papers, theses etc. Rapid, accurate coordinator for DEC. "We will help anyone who comes to us — only Must sell. Extremely reasonable. ATGSB, GRE board exams. For service. 394-2512. C-20-1-31 30 per cent of the problems we handle have to do with drugs." Call 627-7390. 5-1-23 1-845-6087. 5-1-23 information call 1-313-354-0085. The center is funded by the City of East Lansing. Ingham County Deposing of the com 0-1-1-17 IRENE ORR-Theses, Term papers. chairmen, along with WATERBED, CUSTOM frame, and Michigan Pub|ic Health Services. It is staffed with three ments from the last O heater, liner. Must be seen. Jim, D general typing Fownerty with Ann psychologists, a clinic director and a nurse as well as other part-time PAPERBACKS Mobile Homes - WOULD ANGIE who did house- left only eight of the 21 485-2384. 5-1-23 COMIC BOOKS __ _ _ __ -J- paid staff, but many of the workers are volunteers trained by the chairmen returning t SCIENCE FICTION cleaning on Wardcliff Drive please PLAYBOY MAGAZINES PURPLE VICKI-Fast accurate, center. powerful seats. PHOTO STUDIO lighting outfit, call Mary Ann after 5:30 at BASEBALL CARDS FOR RENT: 2bedrooms, fur¬ inexpensive typing. Very near .... , „ includes lights with stands and FOOTBALL PROGRAMS refletasol. Like new, $70. and MUCH. MUCH nished, $150/month and up. 332-6460. 4-1-17 campus. 337-7260. C-1-31 Oberlin said DEC constantly needs more volunteers. Our The chairmen are the MORE volunteers are trained extensively in listening skills, overdose aid, of the seniority system 355-9895. 3-1-21 Deposit required. Near Gables on 307 E. Grand River ~ |[j5~| 10 **in"Me drug formatito ogive n and probl em information solving. We tryabout our volandunteers togetdrugs has come under ROSS, AM-FM stereo cassette recorder with speakers. $100 or Op*nl!:)0-«PM 1320112 bus 5-1-20 route. Phone 332-2437. PeawrtshrsowllLffij [~Transportatioa ||wj subjects instead of the out junk real most people get from other sources," he other the last two congresses. heavy at best offer. 351-7207. 1-1-17 JUDY PI, Happy Birthday and said. Until the MOVING SALE. Avocado tree, STARR 10x50. 2 bedroom, air, TWO NEED ride to Mexico or now chairnm king-size bed, 5-speed Raleigh. watch out for the Sunday morning Southwestern U.S. and return. New volunteer training programs begin Saturday at 11 a.m. and been elected solely b< Saturday. 351-5036. 3-1-17 shed, close to campus, excellent hangover. Love A.C. 1-1-17 Monday at 7 p.m. in 30 Union. having the longest st Spring break. Tim, 351-7701. ' GIBSON'S N condition, furnished, $3000. After 5-1-17 Oberlin would like more people to become aware of DEC and its committees. That has put six, 351-7523. 5-1-20 programs. "We have some really good programs, but what you in position to influer Real Estate « BOCK BEGINNING SKIERS! San Marco boots, size 10, $20. Marker bind¬ COSTA RICA! Leaving January have to remember is that all the programs are just aspects of DEC" he said. "What really matters is that anyone can come to us and get shape of legislation th« Mobile Home, Baron, 10'x55\ two 25, need riders to share expenses. through Congress. ADDIC ings, $10. Call Dave, 332-4995. 5-1-17 bedroom, furnished. Real nice FOR SALE by owner, 3 I 372-0127. 3-1-17 help. That's what we're here for." condition. $1700. East Lansing, ranch. Garage, central air, etc. 5 minutes to campus, easy terms! Used Text AMPEG GUITAR amp. VT22 with 351-4965. 5-1-20 351 8948. 3-1-17 12" SRO Speakers. 15'' Jenson Wanted and speakers. 355-0944. x3-1-17 8x36 TRAILER, 10x10 shed. Close to MSU and shopping. PAYING TWO times face value for 332 8009. 5-1-17 Reference HP-35 CALCULATOR. Excellent Stereo Review's Stereo Directory condition. Sacrifice at $195. Call and Buying Guide, for years EUROPE FLIGHTS, Toronto to Books 351-5229. 3-1-17 EXCELLENT 12x60 Mobile home. 5x12 tipout. London, Amsterdam, from $259. 1967-1972. Greg, 485-4391. Announcements for It's What's There will be an Observatory Central air. New TRAVEL BY HARRINGTON. C-1-31 Happening must be received in the openhouse from 7 to 9 p.m. 25%-75% PAYING TWO times face value for carpeting. Utility shed. Appoint¬ 351-8800. C-1-1-17 State News office, 341 Student Saturday at the Observatory ments please. 372-6804. 5-1-17 EMPLOYERS ARE calling us for Services Bldg., by 1 p.m. at least Weather OFF Stereo Reviews Stereo Directory * and PAN AM our trainees. We need students to two class days before publication permitting, the 24 - inch reflecting telescope will be used 128 W.Grand River Buying Guide. For years SKYLINE, 10x50. Close to fill this demand. Call 393-8615, No announcements will be 1967-1972. for observing current objects of Greg, 485-4391. CHARTER FLIGHT \ campus. rent/option to buy. SPARTAN KEY "UNCH ACAD¬ accepted by phone. WKAR radio II 1 Block W. of Union / interest. X-1-31 Many extras. 351-0975. 3-1-20 EMY for information. 5-1-21 TO LONDON Women who want to help staff three hours of folk rnus* Petro - dollars: "Money and Sunday: "Folk Festival US:' FIVE PIECE, burnt orange couch Open to oil MSU students, TUTOR NEEDED for 2 students, the Women's Center this term will Politics in the Mid - East,'' a talk by p.m., "A British Tradition; USED MARANTZ 1060 Stereo set. Mediterranean style. $125. faculty, staff and their AFA 201-202. Will pay. Call be meeting at 12:30 p.m. Monday Economist Harry Veryser, will be p.m. and "The American 663-8858. 5-1-23 amplifier. Teac A20 Cassette families. 351-2645. 3-1-21 at the Women's Center in the presented at 4 p.m. Sunday in the tion" at 3:30 p.m. deck. SonyTC 121 cassette deck. TRAVELO 12x60 with expando, Union. Union tower Room by the MSU 2 BASS REFLEX speakers system, Several 8-track FM car decks. partially furnished. Call 351-3466 Departing July 4 Libertarian Alternative. Badminton is availai $50. Garrard turntable, $25. Call New Robyn CB equipment. Used or 351-1194. 5-1-21 Detroit to London Car Pool Interested students are wel¬ noon to 2 p.m. this Sund Sam, 489-3403 evenings. 3-1-17 IBM typewriter . Yashica Electro Returning August 22 come to interview for positions in Find out what the Middle Ages as from 7 to 10 tonight 35cc range finder camera. Topcon Peace Corps and VISTA from 10x50. Carpeted, furnished, air, London to Detroit were really like. Attend the upper gym of Women s I AKAI x 1800 SD reel-reel, 8-track Dl SLR camera with accessories. close to campus. $1500. Call Driving Monday through Thursday at the meeting of the Society for Building. Sign up for tour,i cartridge stereo tape recorder. Rolleiflex twin lens reflex camera. collect, 1-616-946-6082. 5-1-23 Only $348.00 Round Trip Placement Center in the Student Creative Anachronism from 8:30 in the main office of the Services Building. to 11 p.m. Intramural Building. Cross - field head, auto - stop. Antique Kodak Fingerprint For more Information contact FROM MT. PLEASANT to Com¬ Saturday in the Union Like new,$450.Call 484-0148, after $145 PER MONTH-2 bedroom Tower Room. Everyone is camera. Many movie cameras and the Office of Overseas Study muter Lot. Leaving 9am, returning The MENSA 5 pm. 3-1-20 mobile home. Carpeted, furnished, Singles Bash will welcome. Polaroids. Used Fender telecaster. 2:30-3pm. 517-773-7415. 3-1-17 be tonight at 8 at Lois Dyer's, 1000 close. 1-616-946-6082 5-1-23 353-8921 Gibson L6S. New Traynor PA Hein Ave., Lansing, contact her The Holy Eucharist TEAC A-4010 SL Stereo tape Ever wanted to help someone deck. Auto - reverse, automatic andguitar amps. Many used before you arrive. BYO. but were afraid to ask? Then con¬ celebrated by the Share Driving jW shut - off, pushbutton control. Like new in original carton. $550. flutes. MUCH MORE. WILCOX SECOND HAND STORE, 509 East Lost & Found i|C^j Service rl "Lesbians and Alcoholism," a tact Will Summers at the New Way In Halfway House, MSU community at 5 p.m day jn the Alumni chapel discussion led by two women Kresge Art Center! Di" Call 484-0148, after 5 pm. 3-1-20 Michigan Avenue, Lansing. FIND SOMETHING FROM GRAND RAPIDS to MSU Volunteer Programs. competent in dealing with this follow at Chaplain's House, Phone 485-4391. c-1-31 If TYPEWRITERS, AIR cleaned, you've found a pet or article of campus. Leaving 7:30 a.m., return¬ subject, will be held at 5:30 p.m. Harrison Road. Rides fr MEERSCHAUM PIPES. Sale!!! value, we want to help you return oiled and adjusted. Portables Ken Riopelle of Grand Rapids 50°eOff retail cost. $35 for elegant¬ ing 4-5 p.m. 353-1710 days. Sunday at United Ministries in will speak on "Death is an chapel at 6 p.m. all weir it. Just come into the State News $7.50. Manuals $10. Electric 616-453-7202 evenings. 3-1-21 BROWN 4' refrigerator, hot plate, Higher Education, 1118 S. Harri¬ ly carved pipes. Call 694-3623. Classified Department and tell us $12.50. One day service, free pick Adviser" at 10:30 a.m. Sunday at dressers, desk, waterbed frame son Road. the Unitarian Universalist Church, The MSU Tennis Club 3-1-17 you want to place an ad in EAST up and delivery. 25 years exper¬ and liner. 351-8545. 3-1-17 FROM JACKSON to Lansing Y its first meeting, at 7 p.m LANSING STATE BANK'S Found ience. 393-9774.0-20-1-31 855 Grove St. Lot. Leaving 8 am, returning 4 Open recreation for married The Table Tennis Club will be in 208 Men's Intramural Column. As a public service EAST HYDE SKATES REMINGTON 700 Rifle, good con¬ dition with kit, $125. 210 South LANSING STATE BANK will run the ad at no cost to you! LOVELY, DECORATED all - pm. Wednesday 787-5034. 5-1-22 - Friday. housing adults in available from 7 to 9:30 p.m. every Friday at Red meeting from 9 to 10 p.m. every Thursday in Gym One of the Activities and schedule term will be detailed. occasion and novelty cakes, done Cedar School and Spartan Village Pennsylvania, Lansing. Apartment EAST LANSING in my home. Phone 676-2252. Men's Intramural Building. For Figure & Hockey FROM HIGHLAND to MSU, School gyms. Volleyball, table Abrams Planetarium »4. Weekends preferred or STATE BANK more information call Dan Dudley 12-1-31 Tuesday, Thursday 7:30 am games, half - court basketball, or Craig Burton. outdoor viewing sessions Thursday evening after 5 p.m. 5-1-21 returning Tuesday 10 pm, badminton. Call Community of the planetarium 6 to 6: LOST: Monday, Silver filigree EXPERIENCED SEAMSTRESS. Thursday 5 pm. 313-887-3143, Education office for more informa- Basic Gestatt and nightly through Jan. 25. E" bracelet, of sentimental value Close to campus: Dressmaking, body WATERBED-KING size, almost Monday, Wednesday, Friday any¬ evening staff members only. Large reward. 355-7774. buttonholes, monogramming. Call time. 5-1-22 awareness workshop is sponsored new! In very good conditon. $100. out winter constellations by United Ministries In Higher 8AUR - Hockey Evenings, 351-8428. 5-1-21 5-1-21 Karen, 351-1193. 3-1-17 Volunteers are needed to do Education. If interested, call to four planets currently vr nwn'i I FROM CHARLOTTE to MSU research for anti-trust cases in the will provide telescopic v: boy i FOR THE BEST Service on stereo Commuter Lot. Leaving 8am, re¬ register by 5 p.m. today. attorney general's office. If you moon, Jupiter, Saturn a: STEREO SPEAKER systems-cus- FOUND:IMMATURE female equipment, see the STEREO s24" & up torn built. Great sound-you save calico cat. white paws, 1-9-75, turning time flexible. 517 543-6488 are interested, please contact Did you know that this is Inter¬ celestial objects. SHOPPE, 555 East Grand River. after 5pm. 3-1-17 Tony at the Volunteer Bureau. money! Call 484 8038. 3-1-17 355-0475. C-3-1-20 C-20-1-31 national Women's Year? Hear about it on WKAR-AM (870) at Marilyn Frye, prof FROM LANSING Mall to Dairy Students interested in public 4:30 p.m. Sunday on the Women's philosophy, will speak on FIREPLACE WOOD - face cord - MAN'S OMEGA stainless steel EDITING, PROOFREADING, dis¬ Plant. Leaving 6:45am, returning relations are invited to attend a PR Media Collective program. ingfulness," 8 tonight, dry/split, $20 delivered. Call after vvatch and a™band. Lost sertations, theses, research pro¬ 4pm. 372-4686. 3-1-17 miniconference and luncheon at Agriculture Hall. 5 645-7422. 5-1-22 January 9 around 11 am. jects, manuscripts. Anne Cauley, 9:30 a.m. Saturday at the Kellogg Live coverage of the MSU- 337-0605. 7 1-24 Center. 337-1591. 5-1-17 Representatives from Denver hockey series will begin at Volunteer training for L American Airlines and General Education Center begins FANTASTIC SAVINGS! 20% off 7:25 both tonight and Saturday Motors will speak and answer interested Larry Cushion new guitars and equipment plus LOST:BLACK and white Siberian Husky, male, 4 months old near PUT YOUR questions. Sign up in the night on the Michigan State Net day. If one you are of these meetings: used Fender Strat, Telecaster, work, 640 AM. Sporting Goods Grand River, across Grog Shop, Advertising Office. Saturday or 7 p.m. Mondayj JOJOVIiwSt 3J2 16*7 Gibson Model L6S, SG, Stereo, Eb3 Bass, used Gibson Mastertone January 11.351 8525. 3-1-17 WHERE Artist Spotlight, on MSN 640 out if it is your kind of pi: One Block North of Michigan PHOTOGRAPHY-ALL varieties, The MSU Deluxe Banjo. Many new and used Science Fiction AM, will feature Billy Preston at finest quality, reasonably priced. West of Sears Society will hold its first meeting Plenty of Free Parking acoustic guitars, MUCH MORE! LOST: MEDIUM sized cat, black/ white/brown grey mottles. M8y be BOYNTON PHOTOGRAPHY WANTERS of the term at 7 tonight in 34 7:30 p.m. Sunday along with rock n-roll news and review of The MSU Tolkein will hold its usual non- WILCOX MUSIC, 509 East 482-5712. C-1-31 new OPEN DAILY'TIL 6 Union. We will discuss arrange¬ stolen or strayed from near on ennorology, since there MONDAY and FRIDAY TIL8 Michigan Avenue, Lansing. Phone 485-4391. C-1-31 Gables. 351-6917. Reward. 3-1-17 ARE!!! ments for rides to the Ann Arbor to be nothing better to do. convention, Delany's new novel, The Wounded Knee body would really like10 Instruction Call Now "Dhalgren," and these vague Support committee will have a literature they will have tr u"""' rumblings about putting out a table set up from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. themselves. How 355-8255 to form your own car pool PIANO LESSONS in my Lansing home. Beginning, inter¬ East fanzine. today in the Union lobby. Michelle Hike with the campus mediate advanced. 337-2364. The MSU Bahai Club is spon¬ As a public service at no or Are you self-assured, for sure? Youth Hostels Club at charge, the State News will provide a free classified 3-1-17 soring a fireside in order to intro¬ advertisement for those Campus Crusade for Christ Arboretum 1:30 P m' " people who would like to set up or join a car pool. duce individuals to the Bahai faith. welcomes you to one hour of talk the north side of the Ai YOGA; EGYPTIAN folk and belly It will be at 8 tonight in the Mason and music at 8:30 p.m. Sunday in tion Building. Call John a Drivinn?_ >r Riding? . dance. Taught by native Egyptian. Riding Hall library. Essex Underground, Wilson Hall. reservations. Body conditioning. 351-4291. From 6-1-22 Shofar, the Jewish radio Free University energy relation¬ Why is di— FROM SPARTAN magazine, can be heard at 4 p.m. ships class will meet at 2:30 p.m. Ecology? Dr. LeveiHe will Leaving ' PRIVATE GUITAR Village to Returning instrution. every Sunday on 870 AM with and Nutrition _ Lansing Community College or Sunday in the north end of the the Foods Folk, rock, classical, all styles. $3 news, interviews and music. Phone Time? downtown Lansing. Leaving 8:40 Union main lounge. All interested 7:30 p.m. Monday in Si per lesson. Inquire at MARSHALL a.m. Tuesday-Friday. Returning ASMSU people are welcome. The State News will not accept MUSIC, 351-7830. C-1-1-17 2-3 p.m. Tuesday-Friday. 355-1198 petitioning for elec¬ Student Housing responsibility for arrangements or conduct of tions commissioner, representa¬ participants. after 4 p.m. 3-1-21 The Criminal Justice Club, Membership meeting at tive for College of Agriculture and in 35 Union. Discussion The information requested below must be supplied in order for ad to appear. i Typieg Service ](j|| FROM BRANDYWINE Creek to nominating today. committee closes Alpha Phi Sigma, will hold its first meeting of the winter term at 7:30 community purchase, co> forums and more. All are Full Name MSU. Leaving 10-11:30 a.m., ASMSU Sunday in 35 Union. All petitioning is now memoers are urgea to attend. returning after 4 p.m. 351-9013 opened for board representatives after 4p.m. 3-1-21 Need an alternative to Address and board president. Pick up peti¬ _ tions in 334 There will be a Mortar Board landlords? Crowded, o PROFESSIONAL TYPER will type Student Services munchie party at dorms? Several student 1 p.m. Saturday City thesis, at Barb Stonewater's house, 1225 co-ops have winter open resumes, manuscripts, FROM PERRY to MSU. Leaving term papers and others. Call 8-9:30 am returning (flexible.) Marigold St. Bring 25 cents and us at B 311 Student Setv ASMSU board meets at 5:15 •Thi. coupon may be brought in or mailed to: Car Pool 694 3406, after 5 p.m. 10-1-30 625-7887, after 8 pm. 5-1-22 your own drinks. Munchies Classified., 347 Student tonight in 328 Student Services Food Day 1975 T"° Services Building. No phone calls accepted. Bldg. / provided. MISCELLANEOUS TYPINGJBM, FROM ST. JOHNS to East Fee from the University °t experienced, reasonable rates New American Movement Campus scouts will meet at 7:30 will talk about the world 351-8118. 2-1-17 meeting at 8:30 p.m. Sunday, 37 p.m. Sunday on the Union sun at 11 to 12 p nv 1 Union. porch. Everyone welcome. Union Oak Room. DNieckwnpso OGRLANEDyT.CIF. dftspAoUNrhbiltoidvcNA 6luRS2TpEOCiAt AlO(NpiVTiyt_hJ!|q pUyiNq r >to. hoid2o(fS lCTFSWaPOOHEMRINETKG Aimericraofn"epets RReisghr—vtd EAverH—yda Video Y J piTC [)ANds mow Mtohyers, hamodsest faim¬le typoprogeafsms porjen-ncteed: cowwnverosiatrtihld aomn-cneth ieoraofl dtstchoue thmoneth's imporetawn "foruimsts"ue ithasnudueecch taheonsemy, hueanviroamdnt mpraoggzaimnes htohvewrea Usnoeiuterd faslpmncdia sgoluonbnead interorgaaioztlns tpcroom¬te bwnaioens. 1Ja9n87u5.ry WTirmesteling CBaoskleetbgl: CNaovrorslinh. StaeSSAmceekrincain Basketbl HBigohlwtelsBInasdkveiatbsl:.WestrnSOkifng (7PTB-1o2wr3luoe-4r1s) OMTuapcrsetoinnGOCrowlfnf CCBlroaowswincng GOCroowflnf TMDueacrsatoinnn (7WOW-12oid3r-lf4ed1) GOCroowlfn CBeolwblirnitgy WTirmesteling WRDHoeicntkregodyis: IYslaonrekr Atcoording seri aambnitodn Five leaaders; ruou-npd moeafni g AM 11.00 PM1:00 2:00 3:00 3:30 4:00 4:30 5:00 6:00 6:30 7:00 8:00 STATE year. new mat. are journalist most event; involve subjects rights; show pres Sta es, reports working operation the to Saturday Big (50) 10-25) (48 North Carolina (9) (9) Super World Dean Triple Red Triple (5-810) (13) (25) North (41) (4-8)(6) (2) (2) Open Sports Triple (25) (41) Big (41) (50) Newvs. "BiMoyelrs LMANiScI—hG., Mtoepylue—b¬rsic awrd-in g joPutrrneoau—liSsnt "Bnseeriwl , FRpoot"raeign S1Jatou9rndn.y, 2Cha3ne,l SUntaiveersty telvison. PthoByreeanSrs, JMoouyearsl"'w n froaviemwdrs Timamalgikzeeine. "tMlovyseors' rceheg-duullay Atmhoriceafn Moeyeivrsd fAErwomamsy ANcaotaiodnefml y Aarntsd inaoclusdeg "otultsvianodnig broahdcestfe "NSoWrtht"ewiladr (CW1oe9n5dy2l.) fturaabpnoerudts figwhaittutshre. "TNri3gshint RHSuuodcakon. baopcangke) W coaemspfuts L a n e . 5:00 8:30 351-7 0 MOVIES Farm vison's a Moyers' p.m. WKAR-TV, Michgan (4-58-10) icontued Telvison Scien s, Granger, Drama thmeianry DOMINOS PIZZA &FRIENDLY from EAST its ac laim critcs caled best observ ".encs Serving L o c a t i n s thre news In Bill with 9 "Bil the (13) L.A" WITH MOVIES 1J1a9nu75r.y "&CMAobsetolt MABuLmyb"oudut,(TB19gho5yes)flotroeakuirn.g PS"eoYpl"hoirulengy(OJ1aa9kc4ie0k.)fSlhaotwa-hmbvusieneislyfWWohaniadtreyENgelnwd. TO"TeRxan"ehtuefrn RJDoobarenrutse.n,Dtraahbmoe bfanacdseymd btacwoomchekos hhomwgerestrwad SHuLmer"oontgJNoeawnmaen,(S19aot58fry) towwnedn bdominayateltdhy CMTols"wrso. BBaorbgart,(fM1i9s4n7't)Whsupeiconly. bhswgeicisofnsd hseaetry. Sunday AM 9:00 (7) The Costelo. Egypt 11:30 (50) Tample, in Great farma NO N 12:00 (12) Dale (1952) obstacles widower the up. (50) Paul 3:30 "The Wodwar. Southern landower. "The Humphrey Stanwyck. dies remaries, ffeoarr (50) wife to FAST, D free e l i v r y Two E o a c m Servingsp f ut L Farma n e . 351-8 0 wi■ ar'smt sfTFailcgyeinsrgDthomaiesnoyn, PTWrohiptee SWNattrvie.fYinogdurnslg parpefegtnneadritgjbusawohitehty S"Wmhvisispteh.rngCRYadac"laord,AAnmdeerrsicoan.fEtoggolersdibnaruutots case. MALexicoy"erews.CHatopuhtnifntCSitapasviteesldrythwousaon Indias. cont. JCoammien fhtitnasholadsyeer contnrtiv-eposliacl (7"-H1T2earht3b-4e1)kCSChyhbpilleesrd,Toaaywoloefdjdisunategyras weding. ("DoUwns1tapir"s2tair),ThTuniderh"ser bHetawznendl BSDticok"roginaI(Sn1teg9ve6nrs.)itwpnawos tydrichatyoe whgiatneizt. Anouced SFNipsrolio"temrPDWaaagvyniede,.LCleowrbkistsdcihhaatrgrectsifbsniooetjutdagoship. "OCHeJharta"onhgfenS(H1uays9wa4nrd3.)bttthcoioegybhwsheeoan'slring NITWaorlndkh"eedLoTlborignday,(196) "BBMooweyerytB(B1oo9wy5es4r.y)laoovacfstnBibteehcloyedm,,thhweuaeisrdfe AM 1:00 1:30 11:45 AM 1:00 bio now DAnespwownhedirc:s Shtroussmesate.y h3isost9heaers.y m'iana1a il1l Former combat "Love Strange" McQuen. herself night (3) the <41) Scotland det cive vac tion, murder Rone "New (1951) United aginst war-dncig Sunday (2) Saint McMilan a author. of Kid" Grodin. mari ge tahfteer (23) "Distant trouble James. "The Muray, of super-cim break WiBel "A Geraldine Reporte atorney apointed (8) Story to (9) (25) into (41) Car ol, Girl comes out songs. find "Go Gina Franciosa. (7) (2) Monster" Seuksieng basebal itranp ed genius. mad you 37; t.i1 «»*\i 3V»' O'BToler"ohes(SA1ao9st7tifn2ry.)diwsfitdlehiceoskbrknl-ewpy TNa"*esTo"rhiseDATichnkingnsomie.s,leaeahnrdif vosvtegafitsn rEginypgta. FH"eaPrat"urrlpeley(1ADn9da4renws).bfYliaceanptykurreesd,naisret,fbowouratfr, ASdventutr"range(C1BEo9ve5ape6nnr.)s,ibnvcoolmeeds rcbayr. RTNapeso"roisyTDAicnkhngseie. aoahenrif vesvtgafiotsn amudderEginypgta. 21Ja9n47u5.ry ("PRhapsodyT.2)VTiatoyrlor,(S1a95f4y)triangle. (S1Am9le4ixth5is.)hkwmlishano Anouced RF"acAeo"nbgeertl(S1Jim9e5aon3ns.)fihoesrerpniblhoaereftrs. Anouced HTF"iHl"rhoommeePRGoepobregrtd,(S19oat60fr)yittpaoewsnondl. H"erKos-ely'sSTEaavetwllos.yd,Drcaonmer twesoalhdimfor bdeaehnsihmdy (D"owUn1stair"ps2tai)r,iTThudehser Hbeatwznednl Q"ALa'Strdnutihno.yStteuradfylife. TV SOUND 's.*n .ol. DAVID 1 :30 AM 1:00 1:30 AM 9.00 4:30 8:00 9:00 11:30 and saio (2)"The John of intoa (3-6 25) pair Roy The tapes harowing mysteriou (56) Granger, Eight Jap nes , prisoners "A Hot-rder armoed "The Thin es, letaapeds harowinginvolving mysteriou (41) Joan an (2) Friday (7) Elizabeth Gas man. love a Bogart, Softory wife. WiBel (50) Mitchum, Spoiled death BeWil (9) the (5) (7) (PT.2) Mitchum. Southern 6-25) (1970) imposible awild lines. (2-3 Clint make (23) "Distant trouble James. (2) (1956) carnival im i1im 9:30 B"Runawye lTNivehlsosn. tnhpaeoelgbbamwtalne spatreuogslle raunkmawiyaounta. PO"rBy-irdfsMRJaeanlskpher.,elipwcoilhotrt cpiumlneaodlsbrbnky. GE"lUoryn"rcertoail(AL1u9k4as.)btvooluenersNtahozesi ltvoshaevfe ostage. SSEeatt"errnlinlg(SA1ml9e5ixthis.)Noaoafcvfrydtessopritv,limb. WYBonder"luilde(T1t9ahc5e2s)W2o'arldrbftle"oomfiintcteapocsttiovne 2JJa9n37u5r.y ("RhPapsodyT.1)VTiatyorlor,(S19a54f)y OB"alBts"ulertsJG.oRabinns,(G19cr3im6de) CJ"Poseroadwafond,(1HA9ef4lin.)binevcoolmeds cae. Anouced HTFil"rhomePGReopobregrtd,(S19oat60fr)yittoapewsnodln. NL"Deadloceikeslslin,(D1Rrh9ao6mdes).ittenhsoelacwrogaesst G"Molda"cKen'sSOPhmeacraifkr.,gamoenf'ds gold. (7-12 3-41) EJohndson, 200 ibaanlnce machine astop dhuorwtlinng of and to 11:3# (2-3625) aof after daring David Taie goes a off (50) PFlaynul, crimnal haondveedr tsaoboteur French 100 AM 1:00 (41) True who an 1:30 The Hayden, story contiues artifc l "The Haris. hiostofry "bgrieratds campign. Thursday (2) Phil its AM 9:00 (7) Elizabeth Gas man. triangle. love (13) Edward Blondel. story. (50) Van ina (5) 4:30 schizopren murde WiBel "Home (PT.1) Mitchum. Southern racil aof (7) 6:30 (12) Hari about ghet o city. 9:00 (2-36-25) Gregory(S19to68r)yfluosrt and C"rosObwp"erationSPGeepporhgaiard,(T19og6ien5fts)hdteasoatvroilyyNmanztoi« MDAfaicar"Graevnin,(Mi19oa7n0)frioseupnledcdtd things. VS"taDlk"ineaeth*TMomwrn. trraeacphidosus etahersatiyyfowucautphh awconvvieots thwieveisr. OTAbdhuctefio WRoabgneertr,DaecidvBCaisthholoicptrheetd aopwefrs girl. "hoPenix"rojctPPeepracrdy,SaotailofrdyaexprnmntalBtonso-sp NOTavy-hefGHeoilrgand,SNaotvifrly FJTWv"rienoddRValestorna.bacapetisnhogne. WAilng"nd(1Ho9ld4e3n.) aactcrnetsodrs cpommunnitty,iaerorducset 97Jan5ur_y^ CJLoeasrhlin,Satboourtylifenvs,«hobalerin. JTe"ritCoy"olradl(M1Vi9arg4yno.a)bwmaahadnofjitaodillyitravnaapeey.d Anouced RRacket"berSLcizoabtet.hhWarhkeen"stocandilteihksleed,hbmowiesny. m 4.30 i:30 8:30 11:30 AM 1:00 1:30 AM 9:00 PM1:00 (7) (PTJ) Loren. guarde asigned instal o. "Berlin Katyflooaoknr countles are (12) Brian to of (4-581 ) EVdwiacrds, other to escaped kidnaped battle each try (7-12 3-41) Ane" E.GMarshl. Roman investgae miraculos 17-yearold (2-36-25) George Rodriquez. carying autombile "Wings De (193 ) train g. St car (50) Olivia Brent. "Fair Mac uray,(S19e5a3) chief (41) pirate "Young Would-be show. 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Fodavs programs by Brickman 71^ ftz&wm phone 353-6400 X ALWAYS I Video Everyday _ A|| Rights Reserved - Dickinson Newspaper Services |W£ To - 6 WJIM TV looting 7i WtYl TV Sagmow 6eT NfcfZ\/oOZ 4WWJ-TV- D« 41 WUHQ TV, Bottl. Cr»«l* 50 WKBD TV, Dolrc i WH£N Mb ,WNf«'v * 6AY£ VE' JWu.rv "-1975 (4510) How To Surviva A 5:45 AM Marriage OFAte- (7-12-13-41) Lat'i Maka A Daal 2:00 (2-3-6-25) The Guiding Light g>cC4 (4-5-8-10) Days Of Our Ltvat (7-12-1341) Tha $10,000 Jrid|y_ January J 7, 197 5 _ Pyramid 1:00 pw „ For Today 2:30 (9) 9:30 "War Kill" to Ring (2-3-6-25) Tha Ed* Of Night George (2-3-6-25) "Shaft" CAMPUS CLATTER Sponsored by: YOUr Name 6:20 Montgomery. Eddie Infante. Richard , (4-5-8-10) Tha Docton Ruundtree. (1971) A (1968) American officer leads tough (7-12-1341) Tha Big Showdown a Could Be Here! 3:00 band of Philippinos fighting street detective challenges New York's web of syndicated crime, by Larry Lewis desperately to rid their small phone 353-6400 (2) Young And Restless isltnd undertakes to free a kidnapped of oppression (3-6-26) Tha Naw Prica Is Right during World War 2. daughter of a drug trafficker, (4-6-8-10) Anothar Worid held captive by a gang. (7-12-1341) Genaral Hospital (50) "Leave Her To Heaven" 3:30 Gene Tiemey, Cornel Wilde. 11:30 (2-34-25) Match Game (1945) Jealous wife, who would (2) "The Defector" Montgomery (7 12 1341) Ona Life Ta Live stop at nothing, even murder Clift. (1966) U.S. physicist (9) Gomer Pyla visiting to monopolize the attention and Leipzig reluctantly (50) Banana Splits affection of her husband. agrees to help the CIA by 4:00 obtaining valuable information (2-3) Tattlatalas 4:00 from a Russian spy who wishes 6:45 (4) Somerset (5) "House On to defect to the West. M Edition Greenapple (5) Studio 5 Road 6:55 Christopher George, (6) Tha Attic Janet (3-615) "Village Of The m Kwr Show (7) Tha Monay Maze Leigh. The sudden disappearance of his wife, Damned" Goerge Sanders, |25) Ni (8) Gilligan's Island together with a build up Barbara Shelley. (I960) A (9) Petticoat Junction of circumstantial evidence, gripping story about (10) New Zoo Revue supernatural children in implicates a man as a murder an (12) Man Griffin suspect English village. (13) Bonanza (23) Sesame Street (50) "Blood On The Moon" SHORT RIBS Sponsored by: Your Name 7:30 4:30 (25) Yogi & Friends (7) "My Geisha" (PT.2) Shirley Robert Mitchum, Barbara Bel m Cirnivil (41) Daktari Could Be Here! Geddes. (1948) Cowboy Koto's Big Top (50) Thrae Stooges MacLaine, Yves Montand. A girl is so adept at posing as a becomes involved in a friend's by Frank Hill phone 353-6400 Geisha girl, her husband hires underhanded schemes but (3-5-10) News her to play the role of Madame reverses the action to aid girl (4) George Pierrot Presents and her father. PENALTY R9R 7f?EA90N Butterfly. (1962) IN ENGLAND IS 8% (6) To Tell Tha Truth ftXINDS (7) 4:38 Movie 1:00 AM (8 9) Partridge Family (41) "City That Never Sleeps" (10) Gilligan's Island Gig Young, Mala Powers. (1953) (25) The Munsters & Friends Policeman nearly strays off the 8:00 (50) The Little Rascals (2-3-6-25) "Battle straight and narrow because of For The Planet Of The a cafe entertainer. Apes" Roddy McDowell, Claude Akins. (1973) EVENING Man versus space revolves (2) "The 1:30 Dead 9:00 around a society dominated by Eyes Of simians and the London" Karin Baal. (1964) torments of 5:00 PM Scotland Yard investigates some cleaning up a destroyed planet (6-8) Ironside of human insurrection. gruesome insurance murders. (9) Andy Griffith (10) Truth Or Consequences (13) That Girl 1:00 AM (7) Religious Message (23) Mister (4-5-8-10) Midnight Special 3:30 Sponsored bv: RICHIE HAVENS is Show Neighborhood Rogers' (7) Rock Concert (2) News MSU SHADOWS MONDAY (25) I Love Lucy (12-13) News 3:35 (41) Afterhours Theatre (2) Message For Today (41) Man From U.N.C.L.E. (50) Religious Message by Gordon Carleton (50) Tha Flintstones 6:30 1:30 (4) Bowling For Dollars " (2) The Late Show (Tf-Religious Message SPORTS (9) Laurel & Hardy (10) Beverly Hdlbiies 2:00 (12-13) News (410) News 5:30 PM (23) Villa Alegre 2:30 (4) Bowling For Dollars (25) Hogtn's Heroes (4-7) News 7:30 ui Mmiqe (50) Basketball: Detroit Pistons (50) Gilligan's Island 3:00 (2) Mayberry RFD vs. Boston Celtics 6:00 (2-34-54-7-8- 10-12 13 2541) News (9) Bewitched (23) Consumer Experience (50) Star Trek 1:30 (34-5-6-7-10-25) News (9) I Dream Of Jeannie I ftw, Puppetry & (12) 6:30 Movie (13-41) Beverly Hillbillies Sponsored by: youf N(|me | (23) Zoom 1 9:55 h i Carol Duval! 7:00 THE FLINTSTONES Could Be Here! J 10:00 (247-8) News phone 353-6400 (3) What's My Line? by Hanna-Barbera pi Joker's Wild ® Wtbrity Sweepstakes (5) Raymond Burr Show •iM That Tune (6) Bewitched ^^TgineL ^ SI [Milan Schools (9) Beverly Hillbillies CATERING A •wpar Room (10) Andy Griffith ^EVERYTHINGN BIRTHDAY PARTY «M Street (13) Truth Or Consequences / MEET WITH FOR A THREE- VE AR- roit YOUR OLD SPARROW/ Today (23) Aviation Weather \ APPROVAL / YOU CAN'T TELL (25) The F.B.I. ME, THAT KID (41) Safari To Adventure y011 Wheel Of Fortune (50) Dealer's Ch||ca > 'f ' OH, \ ISN'T SPOILED ROTTEN/ j^i,h Dennis Wholey (2) Truth Or Consequences Ifif / EVERYTMINGS JUST GRANP- 7 r-"V UrV 1 (3) Treasure Hunt MV HUSBAND Monty Mia (4) Hollywood Squares WILL SEND YOU r* Zoo Revue (6) That Girl A CHECK, r11 for Women Onlv (7) Rainbow Sundae V TONIGHT/ . I,. ":00 (8) Let's Make A Daal IJOwonue Show (9) Room 222 Km ? You Sm h (10) Outdoors H# Rollers (13) To Tell Tha Truth (23) Off Tha Record ■J1* Money Mue (41) Be , .... Sponsored by: Your Name All Stirs (50) Basketball PROFESSOR PHUMBLE t>&Yo« too Revue 8:00 Could be Here! <*3-6-25) The Friday ,,, 11:30 Night by Bill Yates phone 353-6400 K loyi Of Life (4 56 10) Sanford And Son iSfrod Squires (7-12-1341) Kolchak: The Ey CoJ Bf,dv fiunch Night Stalker « 9) Tom Hunter Show (23) Soundstage perform Sonata for Violoncello and Piano, Op. 6, by Samuel Barber. phone 353-6400 |Tk,l«VSliow (50) Dinah |0 (2 345-876-8- 11:00 Rejto. a native Califomian, began his studies with his - Wfc'D IIIIfe 10-12-13 25) News father, cellist Gabor Rejto. He has won several important (23) Woman cello competitions and has performed throughout the United re Beftftow (41) The Protectors States as a recitalist and orchestra soloist. Rejto joined the 11: W MSU staff in 1973. ENOUGH TO 2 3 6 25 50) Movies 4 5-8-10) Tontatit Show PAY OH OUR |i&« ■ Witt MV Children (7121341) Entertainment Wide Worid Of Edith Kraft, originally from New York, holds degrees /HARE of THE from the Julliard School, where she taught prior to joining d the MSU staff in 1974. She has performed extensively in the SI 8 ,:J® East and the Midwest and has played in Europe as well. She gM national desy. waa winner of the 1974 Naumburg Competition in New , York. Friday, Janujlary 171 20 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Portugal grants Angolan independenci ALVOE, Portugal (AP) - fare in the southwest African Key paints stitutional elections are held. •During the transition the Rkheat colony Angola (FNLA), the Popular Movement for the Liberation of Jonas Savimbi. It nationalist but j, ^■ counts»] Key points of the pact are: government will be controlled Portugal surrendered its Portugal and three black libera¬ colony. of the •A transitional government •The elections will be before largest and richest colony Angola (MPLA) and the Nation¬ support from AnR0|i?J1 tion groups signed an agree¬ Nov. 11 — the day by a tripartite directorate, with al Union for the Total Indepen¬ population. ment Wednesday providing for World War I armistice — was with a Portuguese governor independence day, with voters leadership revolving among the through the agreement. It The MPLA, „hick selecting a constituent assem marked the virtual end of dence of Angola (UNITA). the independence of Angola set as independence day for the general and the retention former guerilla groups. There FNLA largest Moscow leaning outjro after 14 years of guerilla war¬ Angolans, Portuguese troops until con¬ bly that will name a president. will be 12 cabinet posts, with the Portuguese colonial rule in Angola s Communist dimJ Africa. Portuguese military experts liberation groups and Portugal the weakest each having three ministers. Submerging their differences report that Holden Roberto's militarily ! FNLA has the largest armed Portuguese analysts I •The three liberation move¬ for the time being were the strong among urban iL force. It receives strong sup CATA considers warring guerilla groups that special buses ments will contribute an equal number of men to an integrated army, and Portugal will match their total force until Angola is fought among themselves as bitterly as they battled the Portuguese. They are the port from Roberto's brother-in- law, President Joseph Mobutu in neighboring Zaire. Next in tuals of mixed race in the countryside allegiances idea logy. count but uj where J more| 1 By DAVEGUZNICZAK (CATA) administrators ratify a were chosen during Wednes¬ equipped with wide doors and National Liberation Front of strength is UNITA, led by bid to puchase eight specially hydraulic lifts to board those independent. SUte News SUff Writer day's board meeting to decide if •Protection for Angola's Area public transportation equipped buses. a bid submitted by Transcoach, people in wheelchairs or incap able of getting on regular buses 250.000 white settlers is guaran¬ may no longer be a hardship for CATA Executive Director a California bus manufacturing by the black leaders. Library unable to prevent rip-offs teed the handicapped if Capital Area Clare Loudenslager and Admin company, should be accepted. easily, would be provided Generation late Transportation Authority istrative Asst. Duane Kooyers If accepted, eight new buses, through a $200,000 grant from the State Dept. of Highways Portuguese President and Transportation. Francisco da Costa Gomes said (continued from page 1) "Most are just mistakes," Loudenslager's assistant, at the signing ceremony that the said Albert Young, of 1135 E. their peers could work hj agreement was "a generation "Checkers are not supposed to most miss very few ^1 Student interns Sandy Draggoo, said each bus can hold three people in wheel¬ chairs plus 12 others in seats. late in the currents of history." The ceremony ended six days serve as policemen," Albright said. "We don't expect them to Michigan Ave. in Lansing. Young, a checker, said the mis leaving the eels. Library with! r take is often the checkout Wheelchairs would be clamped of negotiations between the follow someone in hot pursuit." They don't alwavs find PONTIAC (UPI) Teachers future, of these student their desk's neglect to stamp the though. Ruth Myers si - one rights because classroom to the inside of the bus to keep Portuguese and the Africans at "Fortunately, most of our in the West Bloomfield school teachers could be hired to take book. three training of student teachers is them from rolling while it is this resort town. Portuguese borrowers are honest or we ycung men w„ district south of here, angered "But some people get pretty through the Librarv on our place." not covered in their contract. sources said the toughest wouldn't be in business." moving. indignant when they have to go by the bitter Crestwood school The action was called "onfair, "I feel it's a very unwise negotiations were among the All four of the checkers back and check the book out day evening wi^h their J district dispute, have refused to unprofessional and unethical" move on the teacher's part," Draggoo said Loudenslager is Africans, and there still was the interviewed said they over their arms. 1 tutor student teachers. by a spokesman for Central said Dr. Roger Garvelink, asst. expected to visit the company possibility that independence constantly find books that are again," he said. "The first two guys had J Michigan University, which had next week and no decision will not properly checked out, yet Checkers learn to recognize mugs under their coats, aojl superintendent of instruction. day would produce an armed be made until he returns. Library books at a glance, and "We don't planned to place 10 student "I suspect West Bloomfield struggle for power among the they do not consider these as third guy had a pitcher fJ want to train teachers in the district Monday. will just be the first of many Draggoo said handicapped three groups. conscientious attempts at theft. though they admit some of beer!" she said. people to take our jobs," said The student teachers have teacher unions in the state to presently pay a 10 cent bus fare. Susan Smith, president of the been sent to other districts. refuse student teachers," he She said CATA personnel have West Bloomfield Education School officials in the district said. "It's a sad situation. I not decided what rate to charge Canon Sale! Assn. "If we're fired in the said the 284 teachers are within don't know what we can do." on the new buses- NEW! Canon "Final 3 Days" FTb-N Capone's F18 50 mm lens >239 Canon Lens Sale!) $180 Telephoto 135mm f3.5 $225 Wide Angle 28mm f3.5 $111 $150] Birthday $634. >399 B-22 OMEGA ENLARGER DARKROOM SUPPLIES $427 Wide Angle 17mm f4.0 $381 Telephoto 300 mm f5.6 $264! $247! Sale. w bott*4 negative carriers • SSmmai',.!! Omejor t Af 100 * 1 jjtt Untcolor, Pat* Durst, Simon Omega, Vlvltar & others EVERYTHING YOU NEED & LOW PRICES! BRAUN ELECTRONIC PHOTO A 51788 FUSt| A1 Capone's It would be a Shop by mail and Birthday Sale? crime to miss avoid The Mob. STEREO CLEARANCE It's a well-known fact savings like these. I Our stores are sure to be mobbed I that A1 Capone loved music. Pictured below is just one I during this week-long sale. You I People still reminisce about his habit of carrying a violin of the systems on special | can avoid the crowd with this LOOK WHAT >500 BUYS! sale for this occasion. It | MONEYBACK GUARANTEE j case around all the time. He | mail-order coupon. We'll pay for | FISHER 390 stereo r< represents a deal you can V ■ delivery! $349,95 especially liked instrumen- refuse if you're holding out GARRARD SL95Bi | |~] check enclosed for S419. | tals (because hearing men for the ,Oflne.ic cortridfl. $211.90 best-sounding music | (please add your local | 2 12" 3 woy delux. jpeokert $300.00 'csing" made him nervous). system you can get for your | sales tax) | TOTAL LIST $1*1.IS Besides, Tech Hifi looks for money. Other complete sale | | | Charge to my Mastercharge | LEONARD'S SALE PRICE $500.00 any excuse to offer you I No | YOU SAVE... $361.0$ systems start as low as S139. I famous name hifi com¬ or to my BankAmericard j Birthday sale prices will I No | ponents at criminally-low be in effect all week, from sale prices. And that's the January 13 thru 18. And on NAME ■ LOOK WHAT >400 BUYS! way A1 would have wanted it. January 17,(A1 Capones birth J ADDRhSS .ZIP | date), all Tech Hifi stores - STATE Mail to: Tech Hifi, Mail Order PIONEER 5251 | We offer $0QQ OlENBURN tu will have birthday cake for LOOK WHAT 48 Teed Drive g BUYS! "protection." you. Come early if you want | MS Randolph. Mass. 02368 2 AUDIO 12" 3 woy speakers $300.00 Every recommended a piece of the action. L..... TOTAL U$T $679.45 FISHER 2051m recel $299.95 music system Tech Hifi LEONARD'S SALE PRICE $400.00 YOU SAVE 2 PIONEER R 500 »p $320.00 $279.4S sells is covered by our four¬ tech hm) D ZERO 100 turntable with teen customer satisfaction ftt cov«r ft SHURE magnetic cartridge f 26J,W guarantees. Important LOOK WHAT >300 BUYS! TOTAL LIST LEONARD'S SALE PRICE $80575 $600.00 guarantees like a one-year YOU SAVE $285.75 $149.95 speaker trial, ninety-day 100% trade-in, and a ^Quality Components at the Right Price wJ $119.95 While Quantities Last 2 AUDIO 12" 3 way $300.00 seven-day money-back TOTAL LIST $569.80 Prices in this od good thru Tuos. 1-21-75 guarantee. LEONARD'S SALE PRICE $300.00 Come in and ask for a YOU SAVE $269.80 Bank Americard i Mastercharge welcome. free copy of the 1975 Tech Hifi Buyer's Guide (usually S1.00). It has all the guar¬ FINE 14 kt. Gold Rings antees spelled out clearly. Save *106 on this DIAMONDS stereo system. come & see these plus many, many Save *106 more styles of engagement & weddding rings. on a great- sounding system featuring a Kenwood 2400 am/fm stereo receiver, two Ohm E loud¬ speakers and a Pioneer PL 10 belt-drive turntable with base, dustcover and an ADC $559.50 1/3 ct. diamond ring $279.50 $960. 1/2 ct. diamond ring $480. 90 Q induced-magnetic cartridge. This week only: $A-|Q TOTAL JEWELERS expert watch I $150. Ladies Wedding Ring $75 K EN WOOD $377. V* ct. diamond ring $186.50 $93.14ct. wedding ring $46.50 jewelry repairs, plus $177. Mens Wedding Ring $83.50 piongeti professional engraving Kiffl Store Hours: FREE Mon. t Fri. LEONARD Adjacent 619 East Grand River Ave., East Lansing / 122 East Washington St., Ann Arbor / 430 North Telegraph Rd., Dearborn 9:30 to 9 p.m. Ramp 14615 West 8 Mile Rd., Detroit / 20715 Kelly Rd„ East Detroit / 4526 North Woodward Ave., Tues., Wed., Thurs., Sat. Royal Oak fm Parking 125 Main St., Rochester / 12755 Eureka, Southgate 9:30 to Wholesale Distributors 5:30p.fti. _3Q9 N. Washington Ave. Loonar Evenings Sat.