VOLUME 169 NUMBER 95 MONDAY, JUNE 23, 1975 MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY EAST LANSING, MICHIGAN 48824 Room, board rates up 8 per cent By BRUCE RAY WALKER (RAs), and the savings passed on to the Wilkinson was quick to point out that last In other business, the trustees awarded a State News Staff Writer students. in a fabric display on the second floor of the The MSU Board of year's increase in student rates was the contract for $91,444 to a Flint firm for bpilding. Trustees brought Roger Wilkinson, vice president for lowest in the inflation closer to home state and that even after this repair of MSU's Human Ecology Building The board also appointed the new dean to Friday when they business and finance, said he felt the year's increases MSU's rates will be the that voted to approve a nearly 8 per cent University was justified in asking for the was damaged in a recent fire. the College of Veterinary Medicine after a increase in room and lowest in Michigan. board rates for increases because while the cost of long search which ended in the selection of residence hall students for the living Wilkinson also said that the projected The contract was awarded to Erickson John Welser, previously a professor of 1975 - 76 has gone up 41 per cent over the last few costs for next year academic year. actually total more than and Lindstrom Construction Co. of Flint to small animal surgery and medicine at the years residence hall rates have been the $90 per year rate increase, but said that Citing rising costs of utilities, food and r increased only 5 per cent. the difference will be absorbed through repair the damage done when fire broke out University of Georgia. personal services, the trustees increased He said the increase reflects an 8 the student rates $3" a per cent savings in operations. term, from the rise in food costs, a 40 per cent increase in One of these savings, he said, would be an present $415 a term to $445. utility costs and a rise in personal services experiment in trying to get students to bus Bar Trustee Warren Huff, D - HUFF the lone he felt costs could be cut in such as hiring fewer resident Plymouth, was dissenter in the vote, saying that other areas, assistants thaF is undertermined because the new labor contract with the maintenance work¬ ers in the residence halls has not been negotiated. yet their own tables in the residence hall cafeterias. He said if this experiment is successful then students could save from $4 not , to $6 a term in the future. When the trustees asked if the students were totally aware of the suggested of increases Wilkinson said that he had been ookers' huddle held; to at least three meetings with RHA representatives where they had discussed the increases. Eldon Nonnamaker, vice president of overcrowd student affairs, said he had met with numerous student groups and said he felt ne talks job economics they were aware of the problems the University had in meeting rising costs. "I was at one meeting where a student stood up and asked for a motion to criticize the rate hikes and he couldn't get a second Tschirhart on the motion," Nonnamaker said. ■FRANCISCO and INDIANAPOLIS Margo St. James, said the By JOHN TINGWALL determining a bar's square footage. He said name stood for Dawna, who said she began hustling at But at the April meeting of the trustees 1 Claming prostitution is victimless, one of nature's most State News Staff Writer he would prepare recommendations for the prolific creatures and 17, claims to have averaged $75 to $150 a the International Committee Against Ra¬ js and socially beneficial, prostitutes also was an acronyn for "Call Off Your Old night working out of night clubs. And if cism staged a protest in front of the An overcrowding charge against the city council before their July 1 meeting, but ■r supporters gathered at the Second Tired Ethics." her estimates are correct, she has Administration Building to Alle-Ey by the city of East Lansing has been they would not necessarily be aimed at ■Hookers Convention to protest laws grossed complain of the Actress Jane Fonda, who won an more than a rejected by East Lansing District Court imposing more stringent capacity limits. ■the world's oldest profession. quarter of a million dollars in Academy Award for her portrayal of a call the last five years. After Lyle Thorburn, asst. vice president Judge Daniel Tschirhart on grounds that "This decision wasn't exactly what we girl in "Klute," told the conventioneers that of housing and food services, explained that part of the city's building code is unconstitu¬ wanted," Patriarche said. "We'll just have |t right does the government, which But now she has no money for bail and tional. prostitution should be decriminalized or that 60 per cent of the increases would be for to be clearer about our Jovide full employment, have to limit when asked where all the money went, guidelines on laws against it should be enforced food costs and the other 40 per cent would After six months of determining these capacities." |y pleasant — or at least workable — equally she said: "I have a lot of nice clothes." , arguments and Fire Chief Philip Patriarche also express¬ fcakea living?" feminist Flo Kennedy against prostitutes and their clients. be for room costs, Trustee John Bruff, D - postponements, Tschirhart ruled Friday ler 200 persons gathered for the Women claiming to practice prostitution Like others in her line of work, Dawna Fraser, asked if the students had suggested that the charge that the basement nightclub ed doubt that the clarification of the discussed their work freely at the conven¬ misses out on the protection of any methods themselves of cutting corners had almost 150 people beyond its building code will result in tighter restric¬ unemploy¬ capacity tion. ment benefits. so that savings could be passed on to them. limits last October 25 was invalid. He cited tions on bars' capacities. ne-day event at the Hyatt Regency One said she John Coppes, director of the Indiana He was told none had been suggested but the building inspector's "unfettered and While awaiting a court decision, the city m Saturday was sponsored by enjoys her work and the Employment Security Division, said "inde¬ then Trustee Huff said that a reorganiza¬ council has been hedging on the overcrowd¬ a hookers' union. Its president, money she makes at it. "I mean as long as arbitrary" power in determining capacity I'm getting something for it... I have no pendent contractors" tion of RAs that would do away with some limits in some instances for ed bar problem by are not entitled to city buildings as withholding the dance of the 385 RAs, who get free room and hall and pool room license for the gripes," she said. "And I love it." unemployment benefits. "unconstitutional and a denial of due Alle-Ey "I've been a hooker since 1969," another board, could bring about substantial sa¬ process, in finding the bar owners not and Dooley's, two bars that have been cited "If a prostitute's employer paid into vings. Nonnamaker told Huff his staff had for overcrowding this year. [Refunds woman said. "And I've been a school guilty. unemployment and her pimp were deter¬ concurred that the number of RAs should teacher, a college student, an office manager The Alle-Ey was, however, found guilty of Managers of both Dooley's and the mined to be an employer under the not be reduced, but instead should be and a craftswoman. I'm going to continue to blocking.its exits. The bar, located in the Alle-Ey said Sunday they were confident the ■student wishing to withdraw his or Employment Security Act, a prostitute increased. do all these things — except be a school basement of University Mall, forms its pool hall licenses would be renewed in light Vial support from the State News could file a claim if she was out of work," Trustee Don Stevens, D - Bloomfield of Tschirhart's ruling. teacher. I don't want to be a school teacher patron waiting lines in the stairwells leading lain a refund of the $1 registration Coppes said. Hills, said that "for what it costs, this is a to the entrance. Patriarche said the council may tie in some because I don't like institutions." ■the State News business office. "A deputy would probably turn the very excellent service that I do not think we new restrictions with the license renewals, A 22-year-old convicted prostitute who claim should skimp on." City Manager Jack Patriarche said |bisin 345 Student Services Building t goes by the name Dawna says her hopes down, but the claimant could Nonnamaker said he felt that a majority Sunday that a sentencing date for this such as inclusion of the bar's capacity limits open weekdays from 8 a.m. to 5 of retiring in three years are appeal." in the license. being of the students would want to maintain the violation has not yet been set. The Alle-Ey ftudents >ofof seeking the refund should dimmed by the present economic Although prostitution is illegal, pros¬ RA system, even if it meant higher rates. could be fined up to $500 for the violation, Alle-Ey manager Norm Robinson said summer term registration to entrance situation. titutes are required by law to report their Huff and its owner sentenced up to 90 days in jail. procedure was changed several less office. disagreed, though, and said later, "I months ago when the Alle-Ey case first went Serving a second 60-day term in the income and pay taxes. "The illegality of do not believe if it was put to a referendum Patriarche said the Tschirhart decisions ■newcomers to summer term, the to court in January. Marion County, (Ind.) jail just five days any activity does not preclude it being a that a majority would force the city council to clarify vague Patrons are now Pews publishes on Mondays, Wed- of the students would required to line up single file in the stairwell, after the first ended also doesn't help trade or business," said Peter Williams of v and Fridays only. support the money needed to run this sections of the building code that allow the rather than two the Social or three abreast, before much, she admits. Security office here. system." building inspector to exclude certain areas in entering. rusfees sympathetic criticism. The married housing students said there ■it the second part of a two-part series "The maintenance men do the minimum were constantly getting nosebleeds and thermostats. Wilkinson said it would discuss problems and to hold activities. is a problem with cars speeding through the amount of work they can get away with," contracting hacking coughs. probably take another year and $500,000 to Tentative plans are presently being discus¬ lth the State News has attempted to avenues of married housing, which prompt¬ No thermostats It the problems of students living in Marge Wetmore, president of Married ed them to ask the University for complete the job. sed by the University to build community Students Union, said. "They put in a good speed They complained that there were no Trustee Bruff suggested the University centers in the villages that would |d housing n in the and what the future holds four hours of work for an eight - hour day." bumps. They were told that the snow plows would have difficulty individual thermostats in most apartments look into the possibility of floating a $3 meeting, laundry and recreational facilities. provide way of upgrading of Wetmore and others complained that the raising their plows that allowed the people to adjust the heat. million bond to totally renovate married over the workers take around half an hour for their bumps and so there would be none "Our only control is to open the door and housing rather than continue to repair the Incinerator rooms installed. windows and leave them open all winter facilities in a piecemeal fashion. President coffee break, get off an hour early for lunch Wetmore said that the children and hope that cools down the apartment," University Village has found a temporary By BRUCE RAY WALKER and then wait around for an hour at the end frequent¬ Wharton said the University would check answer for a community center by utilizing State News Staff Writer of the day. ly must scatter out of the way of speeding Wetmore said. into the feasibility of such a bond issue. an old incinerator room in one of the CATA buses, but said that MSU buses village tents in married They said that the University had tried to An area that the students have worked buildings. Originally they had been given housing are still They said the workers consistently do usually "behave themselves." show them how to control the heat dampers the hardest toward is trying to find space the j'they ned about their living were granted a conditions, haphazard work, such as bringing the sand for the kids' sandboxes and then dumping it Probably the complaint that most stirred by sticking coat hangers in them and for community centers, study lounges, keys to the room to store some recreational equipment, but later discover¬ reprieve from a the trustees was residents claiming the swap 'crease by the Board of Trustees at yards away from the play areas and leaving. hanging wet towels up, but that that did shops and vending areas in the villages. ed it was a temporary answer to their s heating in the apartments in the winter is not help much. Many students remark that it is nearly meeting. Roger Wilkinson, vice president of busi¬ so erratic that it poses a severe health meeting problems. •ward, after suggestions that they Wilkinson agreed with the students that impossible to study while young children "Our first meeting was held in the ness and finance, told the trustees that the problems in problem. the apartments were not very well con¬ are running about in the small laundry where we tried to shout over the married housing problems with the maintenance men were Members of married quarters of roughly before voting on the $8 a no different than in any labor area and said housing told the structed, but said that over the last few an apartment. They feel there is a need for dryers," Wetmore said. "The next meeting board that in the winter the temperatures the board had been trying to rectify rent increase the there was not much that could be done to years small rooms away from distractions to use was out on the lawn and was rained out. It University had in the apartments had been measured at as some of the ' tabled the matter until their increase productivity. heating problems. He said that as study centers. was then I realized I had the key to one of r meeting. Trustee Warren Huff, D - Plymouth, high as 92 degrees. The heat was so the University had already spent over They also feel that there need to be areas the incinerator rooms." consistent and dry, they said, that children $500,000 attempting to install individual for married housing students to meet and John Bruff, D - Fraser, and Jack disagreed that nothing could be done to Against University wishes — "they told Alma, made motions that the solve the maintenance problem. us no — no — no" — Wetmore and others ■ty work with the Married Students Supervision "problem gathered up a few rugs and toys and put orthe next three months to come "That's a supervision problem. You can them in the incinerator room, painted a up report detailing the ^problems of get your men to work and you can get sand symbolic cockroach (a reputed regular housing and how the University put in the right place," Huff said. guest in the village) on the door and began e® and then to hold meetings. The room is rather present this report to Another big complaint was the lack of barren and has only one facsmile of a J eesarebefore ™ the October meeting. storage space for married housing students. window, in which rests a bird nest, but it is we going, in the area of When the State News was conducted on a the only thing they have. housing?" Bruff asked Thursday tour of University Village, Spartan Village e, ^ere vacancies in married and Cherry Lane, guides pointed out One answer to the combination of many : a,nd that because the conditions numerous apartments with large wooden problems in married housing and little . or ecause there is no demand? storage bins outside the doors. The guide spare money in University coffers could be L Wtkm I would like answered explained that these families had finally the Community Development Act, which like to see the University 5 given up trying to store their belongings in may provide East Lansing with as much as report for us the cramped space inside and had been answering these $400,000 in the next few weeks for aid to forced to buy huge wooden trunks for low income Informal meeting - housing, said Rich Hoehlein, an 'toon to forestall storage. employee of the Community Education raising married In front of one apartment there was a a es until at least October came Program. If the city gets aid through this e large bin, a baby bed and various other act it could receive as much as $1 million trustees met informally with items not presently being used. over the next few years and some of this 'rom married housing' Thursday No storage space could go to upgrade married housing, in"ear their"slum s as a complaints that MSU "You can see what a safety hazard that Hoehlein said. lord" and after a can become, but there is nowhere to store Wilkinson said that in the report the the stuff a family collects because the ns there St3te News Friday on University provides us no storage space Married Housing Office and the students will prepare, MSU will see how many of Jf get the complaints dealt together with with at like they do dorm residents," our guide these problems can be rectified quickly at the trustees said. an administrative level with small mone¬ rviews with the students con. During the tour, the stairwells were tary outlays. T ,y anLd health hazards in married pointed out as dangerous areas because of Trustee Stack summed up the future of well ° subjects were touched their wide - open sides. Wetmore explained SN photo/Bob Kaye problem - solving in married housing when how recently a small child had slipped One of the efforts students in married housing incinerator bin to he said, "More communication has to be use as a community center, penance men employed by the through the sides of one stairwell and fell to have made to better their conditions by their against University wishes. opened up and work has to be started in a hn.,D°lnR p UP the facilities in the concrete below, opening a fash that cooperative effort that can solve many of were own efforts is to appropriate this barren a frequent target of required 18 stitches. these problems without a lot of money." 2 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan """day.JuiK.^ Railway union strike delay© By APandUPI Responding to a plea from railroad unions. provided for a 41 The pact per cent boost With labor and management apparently still far apart, Usery noncrisis atmosphere. In Detroit, painfully nurtured car an lines. estension of its assembly oan't aftord to |0SP • federal mediators, the railway in wages and benefits over three said he and chairman George new car sales upturn to lift the Even if bankrupt clerks union agreed Friday to Ives of the National Mediation auto railroads, years. industry out of its most particularly the Penn Central! So blame it on a coffee break postpone for 30 days its threat¬ Board would remain in touch prolonged slump since the De are exempted, the industry ened rail strike in hopes of The clerks' union contended with both sides and call for a pression could be halted by a rail would still be able to only limp reaching a settlement. that the pattern agreement resumption of negotiations/' as strike. along for a couple of weeks Federal investigators said Sunday that crime figure failed to address itself to the feel further progress soon as we Spokesmen for the four U.S. before closing the plants. Sam "Momo" Giancana was slain during a 20-minute lull in But the union's president, C. special needs of its 117,000 can be made." auto companies said Thursday "A rail strike would mh " tl surveillance of his home. L. Dennis, warned that unless members employed as office and that a total rail strike would definitely management indicates a willing¬ ticket agents. Railway clerks Usery said he was hopeful the cost us business," said John but economy out 0f J They also continued to speculate that the killing was virtually halt all auto production Hillman, assistant sales auto executives ness to compromise, "it is currently average about $5.66 mana hav thirty-day delay would permit gangland-ordered to ensure that he would not spill underworld information to federal prosecutors. difficult to see how strikes can an hour. bargaining to continue in a within a week. The industry considers the railroad auto ger at Dean Sellers Ford in Detroit. "That's business tetany interruption; " be avoided next month." we Giancana, 65, onetime boss of the Chicago syndicate's day-to-day operations, was shot seven times late Thursday Postponement of the strike night in the basement of his heavily-secured suburban Oak deadline to July 21 was request¬ Park bungalow. ed by chief federal mediator W. J. Usery Jr. following an all-night bargaining session with union leaders and repre¬ Recession over, Gurney trial prosecution rests sentatives from the major rail¬ roads. The prosecution Thursday rested its 17-week-old bribery Greenspan The Brotherhood of Railway conspiracy case against former Sen. Edward Gurney after a and Airline Clerks had planned patronage adviser swore he repeatedly warned Gurney of trouble in his fund-raising operations. U.S. Attorney Harvey Schlesinger, lead counsel for a to strike at 12:01 a.m. Monday when all legal delays under the federal labor act were to expire. WASHINGTON (AP) - The says five-member prosecuting team, told the court the Greenspan said he thinks it is During the night Dennis said recession, for all practical pur¬ about 8.5 government had concluded its case against Gurney and unlikely that there will be per cent next a the union made a serious effort uary.and to decline three others after calling 69 witnesses. poses, is over, Chairman Alan pronounced decline in unem duH to scale down the contract year to 7.5 or The last witness to testify was Tampa attorney Edward J. Greenspan of the President's ployment until the end of 7.25 per demands only to be "completely He said he V Council of Economic Advisers summer, but after that there expects thei Kohrs, a political insider and Gurney confidante who and contemptuously" rejected said Sunday. yer.V to be strong and will be a quite co¬ testified, "I left my friendship outside this courtroom." by management. perceptible ed t he most Greenspan, apearing on CBS' increase in employment. dangerous- "Face the Nation," said it is force to upend the William The announced May unem¬ H. Dempsey, the difficult to determine the exact would be excessive industry's chief negotiator and ployment level of 9.2 per cent, time for the bottoming out of the spending and large bud- Survey reduces oil estimates spokesman called the unions revised demands unreasonable recession, but he feels that as of he said, may have been the statistical peak, and he feels cits. At present, now it is over. and inflationary. unemployment crested in May data he has Greenspan The U.S. Geological Survey has sharply reduced its International economist and June. received the Friedrich Von Hayek, however, economy is in slightlyf estimates of the nation's undiscovered oil and natural gas Union negotiators, he added, Projections prepared by the condition than he had said recession is a product of ant resources reporting that energy reserves off the Atlantic continued to resist the recoirf- council, he said, indicate an ed it to be at this past inflation and a lasting cure time. coast could be 80 per cent lower than estimated mendations of a presidential average unemployment rate for He also noted previously. for inflation would require a next year of about 7.9 per cent, that' The agency has told the Federal emergency board which urged has dropped to Energy Administration period of high unemployment but said the figure will about the clerks to accept basically the drop what it was a year (FEA) that it now figures untapped oil in the Atlantic offshore perhaps as long as another year. toward the end of 1976. ago. area totals 2 to 4 billion barrels, same pattern agreement ap¬ Von Hayek compared with 10 billion to Von Hayek appeared on comment- 20 billion estimated last year. proved earlier by seven other GREENSPAN Greenspan indicated he ex steady inflation was t NBC's "Meet the Press." pects unemployment to be mary cause of recession In a report to the FEA, the Geological Survey said the new it draws labor into estimates indicate that at 1974's level of domestic oil jobs can only be maintained byj production, 3.04 billion barrels a year, U.S. oil reserves inflation. There comes a would be exhausted in 37 to 67 years. IRS investigati ng corporations he said, when growth in tion can't keep number of such workersa^ up w' result is recession and ployment. Inflation makes grea for suspected illegal donations ployment inevitable, Von ek said. He said reduction inj amount of money av: WASHINGTON (AP) - The agents in foreign countries over The IRS Internal Revenue Service (IRS) investigations are Illegal campaign donations fraud. Phillips told its stock¬ through a cutback in the past two and one - half has assigned 300 top - flight being undertaken by regular are not allowed as tax deduc¬ holders in April that the IRS the Federal Reserve Bank years. field auditors who* can call for tions. examiners to probe about 50 IRS regulations also intelligence division, which, answer to inflation, but ' A congressional source said assistance from a staff of 300 large corporations known or the report was prepared for the prohibit deduction of any pay¬ looks into criminal matters, was have the unpleasant side f veteran auditors, computer ex¬ ment to any foreign official if a of increasing unemploy- suspected to have made illegal Senate subcommittee on multi¬ questioning whether the com¬ perts, economists, engineers similar payment would have pany committed fraud in He said there is also~ campaign donations or foreign national corporations which is and others in the IRS head¬ con¬ Improving relations with Zaire payoffs, officials The tax say. investigating possible improper quarters in Washington. been illegal under U.S. This means bribes to law. foreign nection with a $495,000 slush fund. The money came political pressure short-term for more inflating cure for uner; men are seeking to payments by American defense The probes are being coordi¬ government officials can't le¬ from the company's overseas ment. uncover previously undisclosed contractors to foreign officials A former U.S. Ambassador to Zaire, Sheldon B. nated Vance, has through a special Cam¬ gally be deducted. operations. If the nation is to at arrived in Kinshasa on a mission to corporate contributions, to find in order to persuade them to paign Contribution Compliance persuade President So far the government has whether companies improperly buy equipment. stable situation, he, St., Mobutu Sense Seko that the United States had Project, which was set up in the indicted only one company, Ashland, which has admitted nothing to do claimed tax deductions on do¬ The Securities and Exchange wake of the would havetoendureape: with an alleged plot to kill him and overthrow his regime. nations or payoffs, and whether Watergate money Minnesota Mining and Manu¬ making $633,300 in illegal do¬ Commission is also currently scandals. This has recently high unemployment for; The State Dept. hopes the Vance mission, which arrived they committed criminal tax facturing Co., for tax fraud in nations over six years, disclo¬ than a year. He said une- investigating the nation's 25 been expanded to include connection with illegal cam¬ sed that it Saturday night, will be able to repair relations with Zaire, fraud in doing so. largest defense contractors for inadvertently ment could reach 13 or 1 which declined rapidly last week with the probes of overseas payoffs. paign donations. The company claimed tax deduction for A well placed source, who a cent. explusion of - possible improper payments IRS also has established re¬ and two of its former top current U.S. Ambassador Deane R. Hinton. The Zairean asked not to be identified, said both at home and abroad. $450,000 which had been hidden Von Hayek predicted" gular contact with the Securi¬ officers have pleaded innocent on the books of a Libyan government accused Hinton of having connections with the a new criminal case ued economic problems involving a Northrop Corp., the 13th ties and Exchange Commission to charges that they conspired Central Intelligence Agency and the major corporation is now being largest U.S. defense contractor, subsidiary. The company says England. Hesaidthesoltf coup preparations. readied for investigation. to claim $634,000 in political that it voluntarily told IRS that nation's economic cris a federal grand has disclosed that it once paid Asst. IRS Commissioner funds as business expenses. about this and refunded the jury. bribes totaling $450,000 for two Singleton B. Wolfe said in an complete change ii Trial is set for July. Those known to be under IRS Saudi Arabian generals in con¬ interview that the campaign underpaid taxes in 1973. policies. Other corporations have, dis¬ Kidnappings around the world investigation presently include United Brands Co., Gulf Oil nection with the firm's at¬ project focuses on corporations closed publicly that they are tempts to sell the Saudi Air whose top policy - making under investigation for tax The State News i Four Corp., and Northrop Corp., all Force its F5 jet fighter. officers have made men kidnapped the 6-year-old son and 3-year-old of which have admitted Gulf has also admitted campaign making run¬ donations. daughter of a wealthy Belgian industrialist early Sunday overseas payoffs; and Phillips ning $10.3 million slush fund after ransacking the a He said IRS is sifting through family's vacation villa and tying up the Petroleum Co. and Ashland Oil with cash hidden on the books the tax returns of these adults in the household, police said. Inc., which have admitted ma¬ of a Bahamas oil exploration top officials, usually the highest The father, Pierre Bonnet, said the king illegal U.S. campaign do¬ subsidiary. The money was kidnapers were dozen officials, to see whether members of an anti-capitalist nations. used for domestic and foreign the donations group, and the mother, came out of their Berthe, broadcast a tearful appeal for the return of her Meanwhile a classified Pen¬ donations and payoffs, inclu¬ own pockets or were reimbur¬ children, Hubert and Ingrid. tagon report said military e- ding $100,000 to Richard M. sed through phoney expense And in America, the wife of a St. Louis bank quipment manufacturers in¬ Nixon's 1972 campaign and $4 accounts, travel vouchers, president was sa¬ cluding Northrup and Gulf paid million to South Korea's ruling lary bonuses kidnaped at gunpoint from her home Thursday by two men some $200 million or other corporate to sales political parties. payments. seeking $300,000 in ransom. Handcuffed and dumped in a large cardboard carton, she crawled free and the ransom was not paid, police said. But in Argentina, a ransom of $60 million was paid Friday for the release of two Argentine executives, according to members of the left-wing Peronist Guerrillas who ' kidnapped them nine months ago. I Im> liiciHllH'Sl I lc al guitar, plus fingerpicking, soft contacts. And w« give examinations tool Auto companies Stop by Co-Optical soon and see what we have to ip now Classes begin the w. offer. Get the story on both sides of good vision. offer ad rules EYE EXAMINATIONS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY. Elderly Instruments & Folklore Center CO-OPTICAL SERVICES 541 Fast Grand River DETROIT (UPI) - Four DR. J. R. NIXON, OPTOMETRIST Fast Lansing auto companies which account Now in Brookfield Plaza 332-4331 for 80 per cent of the cars sold Mon. & Thurs. in this country have proposed a 11 AM -4 PM, 5 PM - 8:30PM set of advertising rules that could end misleading or decep¬ tive fuel economy claims in the GET YOUR TICKETS NOW MPG (Miles Per Gallon) war. The proposal to the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) Tuesday was made jointly by General Motors, Ford, Chrysler BUTTERFIELD DRIVE-IN THEATRES and as soon Volkswagen. They asked the FTC to as adopt the new rules possible so 1976 - TODD STARLfTE I LANSiNG model advertising that begins in two months will be informative more RUNX3REN5 to car buyers. The key element in the industry proposal is the use of UTOPIA city and highway test results Tin tforj they were liraMtotolkto* the Environmental Protection bMomy the motto 11 Agency obtains during emis¬ they cult stop Ulkinj ^ sion certification tests. Most of the fuel economy advertising now contains just the higher highway figure. The new rules would force inclusion of city results in advertising. A MOVIE WHOSE TIME IS NOW Glasses create an Create your new image image HARLES BRONSOfJ • 0 this summer at... in mftrm 0 RaM Wallace Opticians DR. R.C. JONES [delivery DR. W.C. JENSEN TICKETS S4& 85 AVAILABLE ATTHEMSUMON DR. R.J.SPAGNUOLO Vine at Clipper! NEJAC TV RENTALS-J 107 N.Washington IV21175 (Opposite Sears) 332-8628 JUIYI4 8PH 337-1010 KKilSTI RI I) OITOMIIRIsrS We welcome Bank Americard and Mastercharqe I Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Monday, June 23, 1975 olloce must show I ARNOLD i nKAWISI.AK SAWISLAK WSHINGTON (UPI) - Good (and the national interest a 1972 , continued therapy as the gunshot wounds a result of suffered in braces. In general, Roosevelt's political opponents avoided re¬ could repeatedly stump the physical ability with these by maintaining * assassination attempt. an dition, he has been hopping remained on his feet at the I seem to collide when the ferring to his handicap and in country in bone- wearying intensely active schedule that around the country |nal lives of political fig- hea,tk " 8 iS Whether Pr°Pe'- matter for hi* those pretelevision days some whistle-stop political cam¬ •made him seem as athletic as rtiaking personal appearances, and in rostrum for 45 minutes without ■ ^ paigns obviously help¬ apparent discomfort while for 5 fun | become the subject of open discussion in a future youngsters, such as this writer, ed squelch comments about his anyone in his touch football several key instances has given speaking to delegates from |c discussion. presidential campaign. grew up only vaguely aware playing inner circle. speeches while standing. ^ Wednesday evenings physical condition. Wallace appears to be deal¬ across the nation and the of film |v. George C. Wallace's This is not a new problem that the country had a crippled John F. Kennedy's health did One was his third term concentration of national news comedy at ing with open and whispered ■ Fairchild Theater! leal condition is in that Franklin D. Roosevelt also President. inaugural as governor of Ala¬ was get a lot of scrutiny. There ■ory. He is paralyzed Paralyzed, and like Wallace That Roosevelt was other¬ were comments about his health in bama, and another was his ■ t the waist and requires could stand wise in robust repeated references to his much the same Series Tickets ($5 only with the aid of good health until chronic back problems and way as the men recent appearance before the Wallace has said that except for all 6 films) are the last year of his life and previously mentioned. Ever National Federation of for the loss of his _ physical ailments, but he dealt since doctors stabilized his Inde- , ability to available now at con¬ pendent Business, when he walk, he is in good health. He 0 the Union Bldg. has produced doctors' state¬ Ticket Office. ments that he is able to function ■ art dismisses Wallace effectively. And he has, at once, reminded reporters that least his handicap is the same as that of FDR, who served three full terms and part of a fourth. ■ m 0 Seriei Tickets (5 evenings for 1 person, are good for 5 punches, 5 people for 1 evening, 2% But outsiders still question people for 2, etc.) is IaSHINGTON ISHINCTON (AP) Democratic candidate (AP) — - Sen. Sen, Wall,™ Wallace i... has little chance in , has convinced Wallace's ability to withstand the burden of a national cam¬ paign and the modern pace presidency. of the ■ Single admission is $1.25 (at the door only). flj) Hart, D - Mich., long - people he is not the man for the White Senate next year. Hart added Reporters who talked at the recent national to him ■supporter of liberal causes Wallace won House. Wallace symbolized racism and Gover¬ heavily in Mich¬ lipitnl Hill on behalf of his igan in the 1972 Democratic "He (Wallace) would flunk a the notion of white supremacy. nors Conference thought he Tgan constituency, thinks primary, but Hart thinks high school history test," said appeared weak and listless and idential hopeful George Wallaces conduct since Hart, who recently said he "His understanding of the attached significance to the fact then would not that while he attended all the run for the U.S. forces at work in the world are so limited," Hart said of sessions, he did not speak once. The same reporters who Wallace, also a Democrat. "He saw him week later at the Inde¬ fovernor of is a symbolism of division" a because "he believes that God pendent Business group's meet¬ din't really create us ing were surprised at the starring equal and that his white vitality and endurance he dis¬ Robert Preston minrity in the world is superior to played. Shirley Jones GOP everyone In another context. Abraham jys w else." Hart said Wallace was a Lincoln once said if he did his job badly, " 10 angels swearing Buddy Hackett directed by Morton De Costa JnSING (upi) - Divisiv- week, told newsmen that while the strong presidential candidate in I was right would make no ■should not be conservative view¬ difference." In Wallace's case, if a problem a third-party movement "would point would be 1972, but added, "his victories out of order or Republicans next year as be a disaster" for the GOP, he cause any significant prob¬ are probably less likely now he can compete successfully ■dent Ford seeks election doubts that conservatives will than in 1972 because against others who are not lems." more I own right, says Missouri break from party ranks. Of Ford's election people understand him and may handicapped in the punishing ■Christopher S. Bond, "The Republican prospects, not be comfortable with primaries and general election Party has a the first-term GOP a ■d, prime speaker at a broad enough spectrum to governor president who has to be told campaign, he will need neither rep¬ said, "I think he is 10 angels nor 1,000 doctors to ■ couple fundraiser for resent the broadest points of growing where countries are and whose ■tive Republicans stronger all the time." He side we should have been on in say he is fit for the job. last view," he said. "I don't think added that he would support World War II." Finian's Vice President Nelson A. Rock¬ Hart's comments about Rainbow efeller as Ford's 1976 running Wallace were partially based on J/allace mate. July 2 the transcript of an interview anticipates Of prospective Democratic challengers, Bond said, "I have last March between Wallace and foreign journalists. 7:00 & starring 9:30pm Ivolvement in 1976 not seen any The transcript formidable candi depicted Fred Astaire dates." Wallace as extremely patroni¬ Petula Clark zing of nonwhite nations and Keenan Wynn "The Democrats have a great showed Wallace suggesting the directed by ISHINGTON ' (UPI) - "i do intend to make a more chance to win the presidency United States fought against Francis but will mess it |unaGeorge C. Wallace of said last week he formal announcement." Wallace said, but repeated, "i will be up through their nominee," he added. the "wrong" countries in World War II. Ford Coppola Jed to be "involved" in the involved to carry (1968) color the message." presidential campaign, but Bt formally announce that fuld be a candidate for the kratic presidential nomi- j "IT IS A JOY!" p.f- I ■ ■ am intention at this time is going to be involved ■6," said Wallace, standing "IZZ HAROLD MffiJ ft nearly 1,000 delegates to and Invention of the National lation of Independent MAUDE' J COMING WEDNESDAY * uab/se double feature films bonus film Forty Carats ^ starring B Robert Preston starring Li* Ullman Shirley Jones ® Edward Albert Gene Kelly Buddy Hackett ^ directed by directed by Morton De Costa ■ Open ot6:45p.m. HURRY ...LAST 2 DAYS At 7:25 -9:25 p.m. (1962) color ■ KIRK DOUGLAS 151 minutes "POSSE" si ■ Start* Wed. "BAMBI" June 25 ■ ■ Cary Grant Irene Dunne 7:00 & 9:35pm _ ■ directed by Leo McCarey ■ An American International Release Fairchild Theater (1936) b&rn ■ P"EST TUCKER 0.1 j. MccutiocH • MAX BAER mm 92 minutes $1.25 at the door _ flDCARRADINE, or Directors' MM! Choice Series Ticket (available ■ Cover Girl July 23 When: June 24 & 25 7:00 & 9:00pm Place: Union Ballroom at the door; $5 ®_ starring V Rita Hayworth Ingmar Bergman's for 5 punches) Gene Kelly Time: 7p.m. only "SCENES FROM directed by , Charles Vidor A MARRIAGE" Starring UV UllMANN m (PC) 8 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan y> June 23t Boarshead's lacks theatrical power By DAVE STERN been needed all State News Reviewer along), and the crucifixi™ The history of "Jesus Christ, Superstar" is a curious one. This was flowing. u«nxion scene the e|, Curiously, these are the most so called rock opera (actually an oratorio, as originally written), music for the crucifixion difficult which started out as a studio recording project where many of the scene Ligeti's choral pieces, written for is a tnn 326 S. Washington A**^ 600 N. Homer at E. Saginaw Open Tomorrow 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. ♦o5:30p- • STUDENT BOOK STORES Use your Bank Americard or Master Charge near Frandor Shopping Center Ask us save$$$save$$$save$$$save$$$save$$$save$$$save$$$$save$$$$save$$$$savessssave$$$$sav i ** 1 Z> Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Monday, June 23, 1975 9 HOW TO Shingleton book INCREASE YOUR ..MET looks at tennis S3& philit VALUE 211 E. Grand Rivet Next to the Sjiortsmeistf By BRAD MARTISIUS Mon, Tu#j, Fri, S»» 9-6 State N«w« Sports Writer W.d Thur 9-9 An old teaching trick espoused closed by many good professors is using sun A Simplified Guide to Better Tennis humor to make a point so students will better Jack Shingleton and Phil Frank have taken that remember it. trick and applied it to tennis in their latest book, "How to Increase Your Net Value." CIGARETTES _. , . _ Shingleton is director of placement services at MSU and Frank, an MSU alumnus, draws the nationally syndicated cartoon LIMIT 2 2/pk./7Q« II "Frankly Speaking." They have combined their talents to produce 197$ a how too book that is Eost Lansing Stor. Only - unforgettably funny. At the same time, the book explains the sometimes confusing basics of tennis in terms 0 even the most hopeless of double - faulters, home run hitters and - 10% OFF OUR PRICE ON ALL KODAK FILM net knockers can understand. PROCESSING & DEVELOPING In addition to the clear, tightly - worded text NO LIMIT and Frank's cartoons, excellent photographs are provided (using the author's (coupon] Expires June 29. 1975 sons, Tom and Brad Shingleton, as models) as a guide to the proper East Laming Store Only 1 way to execute most of the strokes in tennis. Shingleton apparently wrote the book to help the beginning tennis player and he mercifully avoids the tennis jargon that has VISINE CORICIDIN CHEER confused beginners for years. EYE DROPS The book covers a multitude of sins committed COLD TABLETS DETERGENT by beginners. Shingleton starts off by explaining the basic "shake hands" '/> oz. 1 and proceeds from there to explain everything you always wanted grip O O 25 s P Oc 20 oz. r Q

°29. 1975 goes sour — something almost everyone goes East Lansing Store Only East Lansing Store Only East Lansing Store Only through, but for which remedies are seldom, if ever, given. Shingleton has been playing the game for 40 years and has DIAL competed at Forest Hills. His understanding of the game is STAYFREE SUN -IN thorough, but he never forgets how to communicate with the VERY DRY MINI PADS HAIR LIGHTENER beginning player as he takes the novice on a step - by - step guided ANTI-PERSPIRANT tour through the pitfalls and pratfalls of tennis. "How to Increase Your Net Value" avoids the books on tennis to be too technical and tendency of some 1.19 £..» 1.09 reg 2 50 ] .55 yet it tells the reader what LIMIT 1 LIMIT 1 he needs to know to LIMIT 1 play well. It is a valuable and funny book for every beginning and moderately advanced player. f«pir.iC°uM M 1975 ^ ^ (c®uP°n29 ^75 Expires June 29, 1975 Eait Laming Store Only East Lansing The book is the second Store Only East Lansing Store Only by Shingleton and Frank, following their first book about trout fishing. "Net Value" is available in many local book stores and sells for $6.95 in hardcover edition. ALL OUR SINGLE LP'S INCLUDING latch race all set, MSU gridders on tube, RECENT RELEASES ARE Time is running out for all two games aired in fall jffian vs. Foolish the budding tennis superstars |\V YORK (UPI) The two legs, the Acorn and the who want to prove their worth. Tuesday is the deadline entries in the intramural stu¬ dent for MSU football fans who don't want to battle the crowds will be able to view two of the on ABC - TV's NCAA Game of the Week series. The Oct. 11 3.99 - - faculty singles tennis MSU - Michigan battle will be 0 match race between Mother Goose. After winning tournament. Play will begin on Spartans home games on net¬ beamed to a national audience. Kten Ruffian and Ken- the Kentucky Derby, Foolish Thursday. Each contestant will work television this fall. This will be the first time EVERYDAY LOW PRICE! | Derby winner Foolish Pleasure was second in both be required to bring one new The September 27 game a- since 1972 that MSU will make will be televised live the Preakness and the Bel¬ can of tennis balls to the match. gainst North Carolina State will two TV appearances in one WALDORF on Sunday, July 6, mont stakes. Winner of the match will ad¬ be televised on a regional basis season. CLAIROL | Belmont, the network vance with the unused can of id last week. The New York balls. BABY OIL SEA&SKI FROST & TIP Racing Assn. is putting up the tpfrl purse, LOTION OR OIL I time of the one hoi#* with a prize of JMC BICENTENNIAL KIT $22jPD0 goi*g 16 oz. MISSISSIPPI RIVER PROJECT f (t pi has not been confirmed to the winner of the match ut a CBS spokesman said race and $125,000 to the loser. a unique field study experience for foil term, 1975 reg 99 Q / reg1'175 1 .28 reg 5.75 3.98 kid be either from 5:30 CBS Featuring LIMIT 1 LIMIT 1 - reportedly paid over *o multi-disciplinary study of the Mississippi region. (coupon | 1 coupon; LIMIT 1 p.m. EDT or 6 to 7 p.m. $300,000 for the rights to •travelling at least 1500 miles down the Mississippi River for 6 weeks by *a physically and cano Expires Jon. 29, 1975 East Expires June 29. 1975 Expires June 29, 1975 Lansing Stor. Only East televise the race. emotionally demanding opportunity leading to gret Lansing Store Only e will be over a mile lone quarter and under 1 weight conditions, Fool- DESERT FLOWER 30% OFF ■Pleasure will carry 126 HAND & BODY LOTION ds to 121 for Ruffian. Only 4 openings are left. RETAIL PRICE 8 oz. For further information ill the JMC Field Study Ol reg. 1.39 uu ON ALL Iffian, a 3-year-old filly, East 1975 Lansing Store Only ply collected her 10th SUNGLASSES rv by winning the Coach- Klub American Oaks, the HEAD & SHOULDERS Expires*JunoV 1 leg of ■n. the filly Triple She also won the first Learn 40Z- LOTION East Lonsing Store 1975 Only LIMIT 1 /LOC re9 "89 Exp9 25. Egyptian cobra Only a few left I Roommate Service summer rent — from $45 and Make apartment living free and easyl Enjoy a & transaxles. k) % 2l y4 ii 26. Place of security % — twelve month lease at 27. Salty JJr conditioned Call or come in Burcham Woods where IS A v; Pshwaslier 1% carpeting RIVERS EDGE they will pay all those bothersome bills. You Free wrecker repairs - local service areas. with City bus % 26 %% 28. Issue 29. Treacherous %% 27 2S service to our front door. person ■""limited parking HALSTEAD AND just pay one bill, once a 30 3i SY 30. Opponent JPjushe'furniture month! % 32. Black buck d We buy and sell VW's Open Daily MANAGEMENT WATERS EDGE S3 3M 34. Demeanor 444 Michigan SUMMER RATES 485-2047 485-9229 3A 37 % 35. It is so 37. Pompadour Ave One Bedroom East Lansing APARTMENTS Two Bedroom $174 $154 8-6 Monday - Friday, 9-2 Saturday # v4 lib foundation 38. Stupid person ;d0ld World Plaxa 1050 Watercedge Dr. li 40. Theater ticket I °n*ne river I) % The Professor (9) David Susskind by Post BOOK SALE ■liberty Line (50) Addams Family NOW in PROGRESS ■Valley Today 4:30 (2) Mike Douglas |Jack LaLanne 9:55 13) Merv Griffin (4) George Pierrot fare's Carol Duvall (6) Flintstones . 10:00 m Spin-Off (7) Movie 1-10) Celebrity Sweepstakes (8) Hogan's Heroes Monday. June 23,1975 Jon Ami (9) Andy Griffith responsible for his conviction. ■teame Street (10) Mickey Mouse Club ■Romper Room (12) Voyage To The Bottom Of 8:00 PM 9:30 iDetroit Today The Sea (CBS) Gunsmoke (CBS) Rhoda I 10:15 (13) Lucy "Larkin" (R) Newly O'Brien (R) Something between Joe and (25-50) Munsters finds himself in liendly Giant a strange Rhoda is creating problems for J 10:30 (41) Virginian alliance with a professional Joe. ■'25) Gambit EVENING killer. ■mi Wheel Of Fortune 5:00 P.M. 10:00 letroit With Dennis Wholey (6-8) Ironside (NBC) World Of Joe Garagiola (CBS) Medical Center "Crown Of Thorns" (R) Dr. PROFESSOR PHUMBLE Dressup (9) Mickey Mouse Club ■Lucy (10) Truth Or Consequences (ABC) The Rookies Gannon falls in love with a by Bill Yates ■toney Maze (13) That GirJ "Solomon's Dilemma" (R) A beautiful patient. Waw Zoo Revue (23) Mister Rogers young child is taken from his P1" For Women Only (25) Lucy mother in the presence of (ABC) Caribe (41) Man From U.N.C.L.E. witnesses. "Murder In Paradise" (R) Ben 11:00 "Onahue (50) Lost in Space and Mark are called in to Y£ap OF 8:15 investigate the murder of Tattletales 5:30 an OOP- VOFV (NBC) Major League Baseball ■I0) We 30 High Rollers (4) Bowling For Dollar* (9) Partridge Family 9:00 11:30 V Money Maze (10) Beverly Hillbillies (CBS) Maude (NBC) Tonight Show Wassword (12-13) News (R) Arthur Harmon invites six Jerry Lewis is guest host. Plias, Voga & You (23) Villa Alegre couples over for dinner. Zoo Revue (25) Hogan's Heroes (ABC) Wide World: Mystery J, 11:30 5:55 (ABC) S.W.A.T. "Planet Earth" John Saxon, ■l°w Of Life (41) News 'Coven Of Killers" (R) An Diana Muldaur. American Hollywood Squares 6:00 escaped mass murderer plans the astronaut is captured by a (*-/* i'34') Blankety Blanks (2-3-4 5-6-7- executions of all parties female dominated society. FRANK & ERNEST by Bob Thaves [nuts Sponsored by: friz TRY To JOE 5HLA60TNlK,Mf/FAVORITE BAlLPlAVK, HAS BEEN MAPE UNDERSTAND, MR. MANAGER OF THE WAFFLETDWN 5W«I HOW ABOUT THAT?) ItgoNK, THAT YOU • can't Plead StLf- OtftfiSt FoR A BAWK Robbery r THAm le/is 1 4 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Mondaj Late Book Shipments Are Now Arriving Stop in today and pick up those books you haven't had time to get or couldn't find. All sales are guaranteed, refunds will be given thru July 1 with receipt and in saleable condition iBooiifTonn And while you're buying books and other supplies for class take advantage of our Inventory Main store will be closed at 12:30 p.m. Appreciation Sale Thursday 26th and all day Friday, 27th. We appreciate your bjsiness Many items are going at reduced prices before the store closes. We have purchased a large supply of remainder books from Outlet Book Company Inc. These books are priced at substantial savings to you. Please come in and browse Summer Hours Start June 30, 1975 Supply Limited 7:45 am- 5:00pm V