ICAA linked with credit card By EDWARD L. BONDERS stite New« Sports Writer Copyright, 1976 Investigator David Berst was able to obtain information about several purchases attributed to a Master hundred Spartan players Joe Hunt and Mike Cobb. Hunt and Cobb subsequently made The source, who asked to remain unident¬ ified, revealed that "Berst came to my that he did re< I know the 'e conspiracy them from Jim Gardner, of Lansing," the spokesman commented. The State Newe Card Charge several purchases with the plate but rce, and he's telling the However, the bank official added that belonging to Spartan booster T. insisted they had stolen it from Coach company seeking information about Mr. truth." Berst did indeed have in his possession two Michael Doyle of East Doyle. I told him 'No way!' But, part of his Li the second o! • series dealing with Lansing. Berst also violated the credit Weyers' car. Doyle, a Lansing attorney, continued, receipts for items charged at Marty's men's ivestigstive procedures and practices policy of one A argument was that he had obtained the "The record Berst had East Lansing high-ranking, source with another same thing about Doyle's account with was a very thorough store. Xncaa. clothing store and failed in another attempt to national credit firm revealed to the State Master Charge from Jim Gardner, their one. They weren't just the ones (of Bill Busch, manager of Marty's East ■ploy allegedly used by a National gather information on News that Berst had obtained this informa¬ purchases) made by the MSU football Doyle's credit Lansing store, refused to answer State ILe Athletic Association (NCAA) card firm. record with a second credit tion concerning Doyle's account from the security manager," he revealed. players the NCAA was investigating. The News queries about how Berst obtained the I in his investigation of the MSU Doyle agreed with the source's findings, majority of them were purchases made by The NCAA had security manager of the Charge Card receipts of charges to Doyle's account. 1 program has been called "an charged that Doyle had Association (CCA) in Detroit. The associa¬ saying "That same person informed me that me or members of my family." given his card to asst. football coach Berst had information about several hun¬ However, Martin Busch, president of the on of privacy." Howard Weyers, who in turn had tion oversees Master Charge accounts with dred purchases involving thousands of "I've thoroughly and comprehensively clothing firm and Bill's father related given it to several banks in a three-state area. checked with our organization and I can dollars attributed to my Master Charge and Thursday that "It's definitely against our assure you that Berst did not obtain his policy to give out any information of any information from Charge Card Associa¬ kind about our customers." tion," said Leo Cooney, the president of barton to President Wharton told the State News keepMSU: CCA. that he could not comment on Bill Busch's hopes "It's not the policy of the Charge Card testimony to the University's investigative Association to release any information task force. about a customer's account to anyone," he Contacted at the NCAA's headquarters By carol klose emphasized. in Shawnee Mission, Kan. Wednesday, istate news staff writer "Jim Gardner, our security manager, did on Berst refused statement on the matter. "I receive a visit from Berst and he recalled can't comment on any specific Lident Wharton expressed pride and that Mr. Berst had two receipts from Mr. It's the organization's investigation. in MSU Thursday in his sixth annual policy not to do this." Doyle's card with him. However, when NCAA President and MSU faculty mem if the University Address that was Berst asked for specific information about ber John Fuzak had this led by a low-key but optimistic tone. the account we referred him to the Bank of opinion of the e cannot allow ourselves to be gathering of private credit data: "At times Lansing which issued the card to Mr. people's privacy has to be violated. But, I y negativism in this current time Doyle," Cooney explained. " Wharton said in his 30-minute feel the responsibility is with the credit A spokesman for Bank of j an Anthony Hall auditorium Lansing card companies in this case." corroborated Cooney's statement, "Yes. •e of predominantly administrators Mr. Berst referred Doyle is of a different opinion, blasting was to us and he did the NCAA tactics, "In Kcuity members. inquire about Mr. Doyle's account. It's not light of the facts this Irion called his tenure at msu our policy to reveal is a conspiracy on part of the NCAA in any information of this illENGING" as he recounted nature and I can assure influencing a high ranking official, Jim Problems and controversies you unequivocably Gardner, of Master Charge to give out that he gained no such data from the Bank Klgivcnity has faced recently. information." Kiitting that the ncaa investigation Ether athletic problems had taken up a »r proportion of concern than they d at an educational institution, State rep denies OKing on reminded the audience of about 450 IK scandal affected public opinion of ■spite how students and professors pel. tlie lad of the matter is that the use of envelopes by UFW i s image of integrity suffers from mely serious problems within the By RALPH FRAMMOLINO D-Detroit. They were distributed by hand ■II program." he said. State News Staff Writer to 12 media concerns [added that the University's own in- Nobody is quite Monday. Inside the sure how the Lansing envelopes were notices, written on UFW jjation into the football program is office of the United Farm Workers (UFW) stationery, of a UFW press conference that Wing and would continue until the V " SN got their hands on at least 30 of a state AU it not yj- phola/Rob«rt Kozlofl took place Wednesday. s "beyond challenge." lost, cried President Wharton Thursday attentive crowd at representative's stamped envelopes. Barton also touched the recent Anthony Hall that MSU is still Elliott denied that she or her staff ever on night from the wilderness. Wharton, in his annual a great place to learn your ABCs. The envelopes — for which the state pays gave the UFW the envelopes and said that live accreditation report on the College State of the University message, told a small but printing and postage costs — bear the she suspects they were stolen fcineering, saying that the report has return address of Rep. Daisy Elliott, by somebody from their boxes outside her office. ■thecollege's reputation. "Passing headlines about the NCAA, UFW Lansing coordinator Dan Ben- Te academic integrity of the college engineering accreditation, remedial courses ins solid, and it is in no danger of losing prediction," he said. aid other exigencies of the moment cannot obscure the tremendous assets and ac¬ FORD CALLS VOTE 'COMMENDABLE' avides said that he used the envelopes because they were in his office. He denied IS no doubt, however, that some ever using the mailing privileges stamped complishments of our University," he on the envelopes and pointed out that he can and should be strengthened." stressed. Work bill fails in Senate hand delivered these n said he anticipates a "most MSU has produced more Rhodes Scholars particular letters to ' the media. year financially, calling the than any other public university in the past s budget recommendation "un- "I've been the coordinator here since the five years, has enrolled more National Merit middle of November and I don't know Scholars than any other university in the 1 budget recommendation will place a last decade, and is the only university in the WASHINGTON where they came from," Benavides said. (AP) - passed the Senate last July 29. "Those members of the Con¬ He also added that the UFW has outdated c burden on students and nation with three distinct medical colleges, President Ford's veto of a $6.1 Friday, Ford disputed that |ts. he noted, but added that the he said, as he itemized MSU's most eminent billion public works jobs bill The margin gress who stood firm against claim. envelopes from other groups such as will continue to press the then was 65 to enormous political pressures in "The truth is that this bill Michigan I.abor for McGovern/Shriver, accomplishments. was upheld Thursday when the 28. favor of this bill deserve the laturefor more money. "Do these examples of genuine ac¬ Senate failed to muster the would do little to create jobs for churches and labor organizations. ■ the president's primary concern was The bill was intended to appreciation and gratitude of "I resent the fact that he (Benavides) complishment suggest that we are a two-thirds margin needed to the unemployed," the President can With the problems, he said, but with the create a great number of jobs at all Americans," he said. secure (fecaying, moribund institution," Wharton override. said. my envelopes without my knowl¬ Kieand spirit at msu. a time of high unemployment. In Miami Beach, Fla., an edge," Elliott said. asked with a hint of sarcasm. The vote in the Senate was "Moreover, this bill has so I we dwell on this as our winter of But the unemployment rate has AFL-CIO spokesman said: "The Elliott, who is the chairman of the House Wharton looked to MSU's future as one in 63 to 35 to override, three short many deficiencies and unde¬ ■tent''" he asked dropped since the bill's original White House may consider it a Labor committee, added that because of emphatically. "Ordo which the University will make major of the necessary margin. sirable provisions that it would lots on our strengths and continue to passage, and the White House victory but we consider it a shortage of office space, she and other strides in helping to solve the world's do more harm than good," he The Senate voted less than purfuture?" problems. In order for MSU to succeed, has argued that public works tragic loss for the people and added. "While it is represented representatives have been forced to keep lh there who have "an three hours after the House are some however, the entire University community jobs take far too long to become intend to report the results of as the solution to our boxes of their envelopes in the hall. She also al death wish," he said and "who overrode the veto by a 319-98 a reality. These were this vote to the members of the unemploy said that anyone could Is seem ready to believe and must work together, he said. thought ment problems, in fact, it is conceivably take propagate margin, 41 votes more than the to be factors in the vote to AFL-CIO for their guidance in them. ■ of the worst at msu," Wharton By the year 2000, he predicted, MSU will little more than an election year necessary two-thirds. sustain the veto. the November elections." I to answer his rhetorical have helped to solve the gap between food pork barrel." questions The failure of the Senate to White House lobbyists never Roger Tilles, executive secretary to and population, contributed to energy The spokesman called it "a Ford also contended that it Ja list of MSU's past and current ae- override was a victory for the held out much hope of success House Speaker Bobby Crim, D-Davison, ■lishments research and tamed pollution, as well as tragic loss for the unemployed would cost $25,000 for every said that Crim's office sets the rule on mail President, whose lobbyists had in the House, which had passed workers," their communities Tiling out past achievements, helped to meet the social problems of been pessimistic about chances job created by the bill. usage for the Democrats. He said that a Wharton racism and violence. the bill by a 4-1 margin. and the economy. Alternative measures were [precedents MSU has set in the fields of "MSU alone cannot provide the answers, of sustaining a veto. They concentrated their ef¬ The Democratic congression¬ filed by Republicans in the representative giving envelopes out "unless Ijtural programs, educational but we will surely play our part, hopefully a Ford picked up nine Republi¬ forts on the Senate. al leadership contended the it happens to be part of their legislative ■ashng, continuing education and House and Senate. The spon¬ business" is acting against the rules and cal assistance can votes while losing two After the vote, Ford issued abroad, in one of the leading part," hesaid. a measure would create up to sors contended they would could be punished at Crim's discretion. He loments of his speech tinged with firm [See related stories Democrats, compared to the statement calling the Senate's 800,000 public works jobs. create more jobs faster and at also added that any theft of on pages 5 and 71 vote when the bill originally vote "commendable." In his veto a envelopes could message last lower cost. be treated in court as theft of state property. Benavides said that Hb "regrets" haggling using the envelopes, even if he did not send them By IRA ELLIOTT filsSWU, V decision endeavors election which draws the largest turnout through the mails. He said that he thinks perhaps another of those organizations which donate stationery to the UFW have handed them over to the UFW instead of Elliott. may challenged by the University. Moreover, if held early in spring term over a two-week SWU rejected this proposal, too, saying State News SUM Writer the union were voted in, MSU would then will bring with it many students unconcern¬ period, with six voting locations distributed that it was nothing more than a restate¬ The Speaker-Hines and Thomas, Inc. Jj st«'!often - Of the Student Workers Union be legally bound to bargain with SWU on an ed with the entire SWU debate. These geographically across campus. In a counter¬ ment of MSU's original suggestion. printing company was contracted by the smoldering with conflict, equal footing. employes would most likely be unsym¬ proposal. the University suggested that slate to print Elliott's envelopes, along with 7*™ficomP|<'x ~ continues its slready Thus pursuing their own interests each pathetic to the possible benefits of a union Demonstration Hall be the place of voting What appears to be illuminated under the other stationery for the government. The Plot as SWU and the University has asked for a different election procedure. or would not care about a union either way. ■ »*ard during early registration while five election light of past election statistics is the fact company salesman responsible for the state establishing an election date. Do both believe that their method would Such persons would logically cast an sites be established around campus for that elections held at registration draw the sales, Douglas Bartrem, said that he does Monday conference between both actually guarantee the largest possible anti-union vote. So the larger the turnout either the first days of classes (which would most student to the the better the chances are for an anti-union participation. Both SWU and not think any of Elliott's envelopes could * Michigan Employment turnout, as they say? Or do one or both include two days of regular registration) or the University probably know this. have been lost, stolen or given Commission (MERC) ended with believe that their election proposal would decision. And since SWU merely needs a the first full week of classes. away by the (continued on page 14) company. Jropromise reached result in a small turnout? Each obviously simple majority of pro-union votes from concerning the 1., employe's and method for the upcoming believes that its proposal would best those who vote, it wants only those students who are deeply interested in a election, advance its cause. pi P and the University maintain , A random survey of student employes — union. It may be, then, that SWU is ■ fairest election would be one in attempting to both on and off campus - conducted pare down the number of voters. moat. students participate, but • The University first proposed that the Bin f con ict'ng views as to how this ■J best be reached. Analysis election take place during early and regular ■ „}r to become the official J 'some 7,000 student bargaining employes, Thursday by the State News indicated that registration with voting booths set up in Demonstration Hall. The rationale behind inside such a procedure is that since all students ■favn. r °n 'Slmple majority of votes the overwhelming majority of students Grind River Avenue beiutification recommendation stalled. i 1 tk„ < 'efore, SWU is ttlose student workers who would be more inclined to vote in an must pass through registration, all student undoubtedly election held at and during spring registra¬ employes will have an opportunity to vote. I for that election format which tion. Those polled said that an election However, SWU objected, saying that the weather 1 wi" result in a often agonizing process of registration Today's forecast calls for mostly cloudy skies with the high pro-union during registration would simply be more reaching the upper 30s. Tonight's skies again will be cloudy with a convenient than at any other time. would not allow for serious voting, that two 30 per cent chance of measurable 1 'he Still no clear-cut, definitive answer can be other elections will be held then (ASMSU precipitation. The temperature University's' official and Student Council) and that registration should dip down into the low to middle 20s. The rest of the Jmblp?6 °' "Wertivity, it would seem offered to the question of who would weekend foresees periods of mixed snow and rain with lb.!!!0 assume that il » opposed to actually benefit most from a large turnout. time is a "controlled" atmosphere with no highs But staunch SWU supporters and strong free exchange of ideas since the State News reaching the mid-30s and lows in the mid-20s. Winter seeks to 'wlTss" it3 p"t. dealinBs with the \ 1,1SWU' does not publish during registration week. prove that it is not over yet despite the nice weather last weekend. original petition asking SWU detractors will surely vote regardless authorize a student election was of the election time and place. So that Instead, SWU asked that the election be 2 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, F, House approves probe ordei WASHINGTON (AP) The "alleged actions of the said - contempt of Congress. The inquiry, but I'm not willing to "I decided," Schorr said in a House voted Thursday to order Daniel Schorr may be in con¬ resolution leaves any recom¬ join in an inquisition." public statement, "that with its Ethics Committee to inves¬ tempt of or a breach of the mendation up to members of Schorr has acknowledged he much of the contents tigate the leak of its secret already Dept. drops Helms charge Intelligence committee report privileges of this house." The resolution suggests no specific the Ethics Commitee. Democratic Leader Thomas is responsible for publication of the Intelligence committee re¬ known I could not be the one »l»o would involv. T"l and to determine whether to responsible for suppressing the Pl'ed Schorr action against the correspon P. O'Neill Jr. opposed the WASHINGTON port in two parts over the last report." with (AP) — The Justice Dept. has decided not take action against CBS corres¬ dent. 1 lake to bring investigation, saying the media two weeks by a New York The House resolution cites a1 charges against former CIA Director Richard Helms pondent Daniel Schorr for his should be allowed to handle that statement by Schorr and other intelligence officials for their role in its weekly newspaper, the Village in alleged roles in publication. But Rep. Samuel S. Stratton, their own affairs. Other mem¬ Voice. The report is still classi¬ approving a 1971 domestic break-In, Atty. Gen. Edward H. D-N.Y., who introduced the ordering the investigation of bers expressed opposition as fied as secret. circumstances Levi announced Thursday. The chamber approved 269- surrounding its resolution, suggested Schorr's well, including Rep. Bob Eck- Much of what was in the publication. 115 a resolution The department concluded that the evidence did not meet ordering the press card could be voided or hardt, D Tex., who declared: probe and saying it appears the report already had been repor¬ Stratton said the resolution and whether the standards set by a 1945 Supreme Court decision to establish that he could be cited for "I'm willing to join in an ted by Schorr and others. focuses on Schorr because "we punished. he ijl a criminal violation of the civil rights statutes. Helms was believed to have considered he had a Schorr has said he nk,-1 right to Mpy ot the approve secrets, the break-in as part of his authority to protect CIA though the CIA is forbidden by law to conduct domestic surveillance. MPLA orders troops removal assumption it public. But when '«poru| W(J «f the aJ EPA sets mercury By ASSOCIATED PRESS ban boring countries and has called and said such actions would home and subvert the copper- address in London, said the spaas;obJ The Soviet-backed for guarantees that there will Popular undermine the MPLA's respect rich Shaba area, with MPLA Movement MPLA demanded be no attacks on interventionists have created WASHINGTON Angola. for international agreements. He said he (elt (AP) — The Environmental Protection Thursday the "immediate and The MPLA statement backing. perils for the rest of southern ap A similar agreement was have it published. Agency, citing the potential health hazards of mercury, has total withdrawal" of South South Africa has said in the Africa which could peared to outline official policy "develop Schorr said banned its use in most pesticides and in paints, a spokesman African troops from Angola to and possibly the basis of an past it would be willing to sign reached between South Africa into a terrible war, the reper¬ report by the publication J said Wednesday. prevent further bloodshed. accord with South Africa, Zaire a nonaggression treaty with and the Marxist leadership of cussions of which are unfathom¬ Village * arranged through an iZj vl Wednesday's EPA order also bans use of mercury for Japan said, meanwhile, it is and Zambia, which have all any black African state. newly independent Mozam¬ able." bique over the giant Cabora i*ryand that he does „«7H treating turf to combat fungus, an application that is ready to recognize the MPLA supported Western-backed fac¬ The MPLA's promise not to •The Soviet news agency Whether the widespread on golf greens. as ment. the legal Angolan govern tions in Angola against the attack neighboring countries Bassa dam project. The MPLA broadcast also Tass quoted the newspaper pay any newi^l money for the mol The EPA said no more of the mercury MPLA. Jornal di Angola in Luanda as compound may be also would ease tensions with If any produced for the banned uses, but that remaining on shelves The MPLA, in a Radio The MPLA broadcast also Zaire. This country fears rebel¬ clearly was an appeal for a halt saying the territory controlled money is to Schorr said, he bTj may be sold. Luanda broadcast monitored warned unnamed countries lious Katanganese troops from in aid to Western-backed fac¬ by the MPLA is "expanding that a "gentleman's unders3_ in tions still fighting a rear-guard aneeJ The EPA's "preventive measure" was Johannesburg, also said that against promoting subversive eastern Zaire now fighting with with every day" and that has been made sparked by a case in it agrees not to attack neigh activities against the MPLA the MPLA might seek to return guerill* war action in parts of "everyone of us is called upon a to turn reporters' legal iuU Alamagordo, N.M., where members of a family became northern and east central An¬ to become an active defense I blind and suffered damage to the nervous participant ganization here. 1 system after gola. in the battle to rehabilitate the Officials of the organiatj eating meat from pigs which had eaten seed contaminated by a mercury-treated pesticide. The EPA spokesman also cited deaths in Surrender of Namibia urged In related developments: •David Ennals, Britain's minister of state for foreign economy." Tass also stepped up charges that the Chinese are the Reporters Freedom of the Commitfel Pren, J Japan and Iraq of actively aiding the rival Nation¬ said they do not affairs, assailed both the South al Front FNLA in know wU people who ate food contaminated by mercury. LONDON (AP) — Britain urged South Africa Ennais said the Soviet press has served notice Angola. they will get any mow,. Africans and Cubans for send¬ on Thursday to surrender the disputed land of that the Cuban-Soviet role in Angola is only a ing thousands of regular troops Internment formally nullified Namibia, or South West Africa, within a year or face another Angola-type conflict. A Namibian stepping-stone toward the development of "liber¬ into Angola to fight for rival Th« SfoV N»wt It publi ation struggles" for the black majorities in factions in the civil war. There Frtdoyt, during Summer t« WASHINGTON (AP) — President Ford guerilla leader raised the same prospect, saying Namibia, Rhodesia and South Africa itself. Thursdoy signed a his people "reserve the are estimated 12,000 Cubans proclamation that he said should have been enacted years right" to cail for Cuban Ennals also said "it would be madness" for with the MPLA. Ennals, in an Student Services intervention. any lldg . Mkhlgon State Uni ago. nullifying the World War II order under which 112,000 British government to commit Potfmotlar: Please tend form 3579 David Ennals, minister of state for troops,to protect car# of MSU Messenger Service, to Stat# foreign the whites of Africa against the black lost Lansing. M Japanese-Americans were interned. affairs, enunciating British government policy, majority. The internment order was signed But he left open the door for a limited British by President Franklin D. also pressed Rhodesia's white minority rulers to "policing operation" in Rhodesia, provided it George Duke Roosevelt 34 years ago Thursday and was never seize "their last chance" of and really lifted. averting a racial swiftly ends its decade-long breakaway from On Dec. 31. 1946, President "bloodbath" that could draw Cuban and other Harry S. Truman declared the Britain and in the event of Cuban or Soviet Billy Cobham end of World War II hostilities, which Communist forces into the struggle. effectively nullified the intervention. Campus Music order. But some Japanese-Americans were concerned that Ennals, in a policy speech to the Royal Almost immediately after Ennals spoke, the theater the internment order Commonwealth and African Societies, said South technically remains in effect. visiting secretary of the South-West African Africa's occupation of Namibia, a former German People's Organization (SWAPO) told reporters protectorate, "is unlawful and she should the Namibian Pardon investigation defeated withdraw within a year to permit the election of Cuban people "reserve the right to invite a government under UN troops" to help free themselves from supervision." South Africa's hold on the mineral-rich WASHINGTON (AP) — A proposal to further President Ford s pardon of Richard M. Nixon was investigate defeated land. Notice: 4-3 Thursday by o House Judiciary subcommittee. The motion, offered by Rep. Elizabeth Holtzmon, D-N.Y., would hove permitted the panel's stoff to interview White House counsel Philip W Buchen and former White House OPEN HOUSE Last Day for Winter Term Books | chinf-of-stoff Alexander Halg. Rep. Holtzmon said recent articles by The Washington Post raised questions whether Ford's Beginning next week, we mittee on Oct. 17, 1974, was testimony to the subcom¬ will begin setting up books completely candid. Rep. Holtzmon said the newspaper information was not for spring quarter, 1976. CHRISTIAN given to the subcommittee when Ford appeared before it to recount the events surrounding the pardon. We'll still try to help you find your winter term book, but we suggest you don't CHILD W ™^ delay. Thanks. Monday Feb. 23 7:00 - 9:00 Location £ JDIDF University Baptist Church Birth pill for men on its way 4608 S. Hagadorn iNsu LONDON (AP) — A birth control pill for men is almost MIITCD E- Lansin£ BOOW ITOli certainly on the way but may not be ready for general use for lERTCR Phone - 332-4230 some years, an Australian doctor on Thursday told the Royal Society. Britain's top scientific organization. 'Come And Find Out More About This Dr. David de Kretser, of Prince Henry's Hospital in Melbourne, said medical groups in West Germany, the New Community Service' op«n thursdoy ond (ridgy until nine United States, Austria and Brazil were all investigating the possibilities of a pill which would combine progestogen, a component of the female pill, and hormone. The combination would androgen, the male sex stop male fertility without interfering with sex drive. Dr. de Kretser said. Already trials made for short periods on men of ages 15 TTTTTTTTTT and 50 have shown after the subjects stopped fertility returned about three months taking the pill, he said. Early trials have indicated no side effects, he said. IFIEIIIDAVy Peron won't seek re-election SUPIEIB II 1-1 I III I I II I BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP) — Argentina's embattled president. Isabel Peron, said Wednesday night she won't seek a new term but will finish her current one. The calculator pen. Her announcement on notional television weeks of pressure from national leaders for her to take an extended leave came after making way for a more dynamic resign or MFUCIW a miracle of miniaturization! l ilt — leader to wrestle with the economic disorder and violence HALF I lit I ill N The Calcu-Pen's functions in¬ gripping Argentina. 1 AM MAI I/ VI s:l I clude addition, subtraction, Peron, 45, said elections would be held before the end of this year. Her term does not expire until May 25, 1977, and multiplication, division. It there was no immediate explanation of how the interim calculates squares, powers and would be handled. "I'm not interested in re-election and for that not accept nomination," Peron soid in the reason will television SUNIDAVT percentages. It has display bright and easy to 8-digit stotement. In another M AN I i II A II MIA read - with constants and development, Peron further restricted - constitutional rights of political prisoners in intensify the fight against leftist guerillas. an effort to SHOAi floating decimal. The most "Cod War' 4-11 M. unique and useful pen in the severs relations REYKJAVIK, Iceland (UPI) — Iceland broke off diplomatic DgR 'jC* For One Night Sun. Fob. Only world.. .and it comes in an 22 relations Thursdoy with Britain in their "cod war" over attractive case with spare bat¬ fishing rights off the Icelandic coast. It was the first such THE SHOTGUN BAND break between two NATO members and tery, pen refill, instructions. threatened to touch 79.95 C* MS*. off a crisis in the North Atlantic 6-3/8"x9/16" Diameter. Alliance. The break climaxed a series of skirmishes between British vessels and Icelandic gunboats trying to prevent British ships from fishing within Iceland's self-proclaimed 200-mile limit. ajUjI •••••• Sources said the decision would not necessarily mean an immediate break in relations, but instead could an opportunity to withdraw their warships from Icelandic waters. give Britain JacobBonB 'rand River beautification . By BRAD MARTI8IU8 site News 8teff Writer j""!.d' ''Not on|y does the street need c°m!m®8ioni gets no action imbers East Lansing's Planning lijsion are tired of looking it Grand KtfSJi.V1" -* - He recommended already waited at least f'd eitiaens have four years for the road to be beautified Plans for beautifies- He figured the cost of the tree planting would not be much higher than the $66,000 survey placed the price of new curbing from Harrison Road to Bogue Street at $168,000. interim project," Meulendyke said. "But when you consider that it will be years yet that the council do budgeted two years ago. He said the cost of That means the price of curbing from the m before the Highway Dept. decides whether proposed cross-campus I1? ,1971 n the new "treet li8hta would not be high, either, People's Church to Collingwood Road would to widen Grand River Avenue, it becomes a highway was can- because the city would rent them from the be considerably less. In addition, the state " long interim. becaJme clear th,t Grand Un8'"8 Board of Water and Light would pick up part of the tab. Z volume of traffic that would be created by k. "The "f*™6 'or new curbing is the biggest question mark," he said. In the meantime, the planning commis- "And people should not have to put up sion is impatient. with the shortcomings of that street for sasvrsr- ,nd money budgeted two - year, ago streetlight,) Since then,'offlciX^very^wheTe have felt the street would have to be widened ' ,W8 ^ ^ ^ "™S b<»UtifiC',ti°n be«an ^ » a» that long." si commit, us to the present lrWS someday. He Peoples Church to Collingwood n°,rth boundar' of G™d n means tha, beautifyine Grand "But that widening won't come for at River least five or 10 years," . However, City Manager^ John P.- Avenue now could interfere'wdh widenlng Meulendyke said. e recommended that the council in the future. "And in the meantime, we're stuck with an Impending the money. ifo# But not unpleasant environment on Grand River. everybody thinks so. "We can't keep Leral things have to be considered," James Meulendyke, chairman of the making excuses while waiting for the state Highway Dept. to make up its mind." City councilman John Polomsky blamed Meond front page the state ifund policy proposed Highway Dept. for dragging its feet on the project. "We need some direction from the Highway Dept.," he said. "We have to know if and when they plan on widening the street. To put in new curbs, we have to boost tuition returns know how high the state will curbs to be." require those And, he says, that information has not Friday, February 20, 1976 been forthcoming. But City Planner Scott BLACKS SEEK PARLEY Radway said it is i-srsiSKr tuition refund policy that would A major — important that pedestrians strolling down the sidewalk have more than cars and discovery of Dow's investigation 'KKK' group nixes meet concrete to the amount of money returned to keep them company. «e is that the U.S. Plans drawn up several Dept. of Health Education years ago would ints who drop classes at the beginning mid Welfare (HEW), which controls the place trees every 25 to 30 feet along the ■ term has been drafted and will be Guaranteed Student Loan street. ■ program MSU They would also call for improved id to the MSU Board of Trustees participates in, reserves the right to lighting. Radway says that the present said Thursday night that the hooded figures' three students under "pressure not to rnoon. determine whether or not the refund lighting makes the downtown ■ Dow, a member of the Legal Services policy area look actions were precipitated by "insecurity on continue. in their cloak and is "fair and equitable." dead at . dagger night and is dangerous for the part of the white middle-class students lietofASMSU, recently completed the T, „ . , ... . pedestrians and automobiles. The appearance on campus who feel they are not 'marketable.'" Ul to replace the present University . r g J h" c»"s|dered contacting "The present lights are decorative," he Monday by three students dressed in white robes of the One of the three told the State News by Palmer said he wanted the students to come out in the fcof refunding only 50 per cent of the denuTan PrZl h h S'U" said. "But that's about all." Ku Klux Klan who cried phone Thursday night that he and his open and meet with black dudents and University officials to "talk r a class dropped during the first days. it at this time ' " " against Finally, he said said the the cost of beautifying discrimination has sparked controversy and cohorts "don't regret what did." He said face-to-face" about the allegations of Grand River Avenue would not be the 1974-75 academic year MSU e w°u'd like to work through the high mused the three to reconsider plans for they regretted only that their views had reverse discrimination and the feelings that when considered over a five or ten year further publicity for fear of violence. been "misinterpreted" and that they have have grown from those allegations over $1.5 million in tuition for °f the board of trustees," he said. period (the amount of time probably The United Blacks of Wonders had had "adverse effects " The original charges include ibsequently dropped. Less than " the? d»n t act we'll write him (the necessary before any work is done to widen originally requested that the three white Those "effects" include a tremendous alleged at was refunded to the students commissioner). discrimination against whites by af the road). students and any sympathizers attend a fear on the whites' part that they will be firmative attion programs, the admittance igh the current policy, and the remain meeting in the African Room of Wonders harmed "I'm afraid of being blown because to professional schools of blacks who are not 1912,699.56 went into the University Hall, to "try to deal with the situation on a of this," the one said Thursday. "Too many a> qualified as whites >il iund. some, and the at¬ "positive plane." people know who we are." mosphere of "favoritism" toward r» worked with Steve Terry, vice The three students, who remain Several of the black students assembled in irinorities on campus. ident of finances for MSU, in collecting anonymous to the State News, originally the Wonders Africa Room Thursday night We just wanted to express a k ind other figures that are part of the slid they and a group of 30 point of supporters would said that they knew the identity of the three, view," the white group spokesman said alASMSU President Brian Raymond attend the meeting. That group, however, aid that if recriminations were in fact Thursday. "I think this is a way to make t to the trustees after this altered its plans because of fears that they planned, they already would have taken society better, and make everybody more j'j formal meeting, would come to "physical harm" and that the place. equal." He stressed his belief in the protest first part of the proposed policy meeting was set up as a "confrontation." le Id require that the University refund Black students from Wonders said ,„ JRHRJ interceded in the affair The University tactics of nonviolence. Thursday night, dreading flaring of Blacks at Wonders stressed similar prcent of the in-state portion and all of Thursday night they wished no harm to the tempers, confident beliefs also, but advanced lut-of state portion during the first five white students, however, and said that in David Palmer, Residence Halls Programs opinions that the white groups' ideas about fact they bad encouraged the three to ;s, and nothing after that period. bring South Complex area director, told the State conception of reverse discrimination u Le second proposal would simply extend supporters to protect the anonymity of the late Thursday that "he s putting the wrong. > guidelines explained in the first to aiginal protesters. ■ 10 days instead of five. The black students, though, remained Bt detailed, and ultimately most firm in their condemnation of the figures costly JrforUniversity, is the third proposal. This that appeared outside Wonders Hall Monday ■ the return of 75 per cent of the right clad in the white robes of the KKK. le portion and all of the out-of-state Keith Stallworth, Wonders' minority aide, »n for the first five class days. It also lies 25 per cent of the in-state and all of lout-of-state portions to be refunded Ithe sixth day of classes until midterm. "U" address iv has also calculated the estimated ■lie losses to the University that would It from the institution of each part of iposed policy. estimated palatable fare Sen. Brown's trial date H, the first proposal would necessi- revenue losses for set...finally li loss of $92,400 or five cents per credit I. The serond proposal would increase Swift justice does not seem to be in vogue . .. especially when it deals with state iss to $203,650 or 11 cents Like at a concert, mink coats were draped Senator Basil Brown, D-Highland Park. The hairy-faced, per credit dapper-dressing legislator over the backs of seats and was charged with possession of marijuana and hashish Jan. 8, 1975, after police programs S third proposal, again based on hecamefans. found those substances in his automobile the night before. But an overture of figures, would cost the University Unlike a concert, the cheesy Anthony Hall legalistic motions of a highly technical nature have put off the jury trial until Apri1 auditorium remained brightly lit, revealing ^812 is or 15 cents per credit hour. penned initials on the seats. 7. The last motion by Brown was instigated late last month. The trial will take place important to note, however, that in Eaton County District Court with Chester | estimates are based on the actual The Annual University Convocation, Sugierski of the Eaton County Prosecutor's Office arguing for the people. Attorney Stewort t of drop and add activity for the featuring President Clifton Wharton's State Dunnings will be d the University address, was a star- giving his pitch for Brown. p academic year, Dow told the State studded performance closely following the a possibility that a more liberal theme of University-wide optimism. The audience — one-eighth blue jeaned, seven- Coupon campaign made annual event ■ policy would result in a higher rate SN is and adds photo/Laura Fistler eighths grey-suited - crowded into the rear "Morton Salt" may once again be your passport to during the stipulated Pre-enrollment started happiness since the East Thursday morning and continues through next seats, leaving the front sparsely populated. Lansing Jaycees plan to make their "Golden Checkbook" telephone solicitation ■ this happened, the costs to the Wednesday at the Men's I.M. Don't procrastinate. Topping the bill was President Wharton campaign on annual event. •"ity would be proportionately higher, himself, who read his lines correctly, For the past two fall terms, the Jaycees have hired a private ■ said. Costs also would be treating commas like periods and vice soliciting firm to higher for temporarily locate in East Lansing and call every MSU student to ask "What is the isent as and the future due to the fee that have been instituted since LCC cable TV produces versa, to a largely unresponsive audience. Cnly one chuckle rolled across the crowd after an NCAA joke, but most hesitated to product which uses as its slogan 'when it rains it pours'?" Those who could answer this brainteoser, or even those who hove :re recorded, he said. suggested ' laugh until their neighbors did. some rather bizarre products, had the opportunity to spend $14.95 for a book of maintains that even the third The star soloist sang a tune of optimism, »l could not in coupons good at local stores. itself cause a tuition c. though it could mining a hike. be a factor in first original 'soap' serial (rooning mostly about the sunny side of the University. His soliloquy was never interrupted by The fund-raising has been lucrotive so far, according to Jaycee the format may be changed becauce the routine has become a little outworn Gary Glazier, but ■ Ms that the tuition refund In the meantime, stand by your telephone, proposal applause. There were no calls for an encore. T™ regarded as a By ELLEN SPONSELLER LCC. low-priority item by Sbmewhere, the audience had heard it all fstrators and trustees in the past State News Staff Writer No air date has been set yet, but taping before. Cat's nocturnal wailing bothers student * of the In the conference room at the "budgetary squeeze," and Lansing for a one-hour pilot begins at the Lansing "Thirty minutes of how great this Community College (LCC) Instructional Center for the Arts on March 8. Thereafter, University is - that's about all I can take in It isn't every day that you would complain about having a private concert by a Media Center in Lansing, the lights were a half-hour show will be shown every two a year," one audience member dared say famous folksinger playing in the next hotel room. But at 3 a.m.? bright and the room was crowded. People, weeks. only when applause could cover his words. Jayne Marsh, an MSU senior, recently attended a convention in Chicago where mostly high school-aged girls, milled around Director-Creator J Alison said she hopes T\vo camera operators slipped out the door TU refuses outside, filling out little cards with their names, phone numbers and acting experi- the show will eventually be syndicated state and nationwide. Alison, 22, is a before the end. "Boy, I thought it was going to last a lot she stayed in the suite adjoining that of Cat Stevens and his crew of musicians. Being in a rowdy mood on the last night of Marsh's Chicago stay, Stevens and his band decided to be their own moonshadows and played a jam session that most ence. Only a few looked relaxed. Most were graduate of MSU in Radio and Televison, longer than that," one said. "Yeah, it was short and to the point all fans would pay $12 to hear. nervous as they waited to audition for parte and is now taking film classes at LCC. But Marshand her roommates soon tired of hearing "Heat Wave" over and over right," his partner said. represent in "The Glass House," Lansing's first attempt at a regular television series. Inside the conference room, a video Alison and Anne Batchelder, an in- structor in the film department at LCC, Other starving souls crept out of the auditorium to sample the tempting array of and called the hotel desk in attempts were futile. an effort to get the musicians to quiet down. All compose the program committee for the butter cookies and hot coffee. The second pate News camera was focused on a woman and a show. Along with volunteers, they compiled "If it had been anyone else, I'm sure the hotel would have more movement of the concert began firmly enforced young girl. They said their names into a the list of characters and wrote the outline . . that the noise be kept down," Marsh said. "I didn't think I could stand one more The stage filled with the 26-member microphone and then went into the audi- of the pilot script. minute of it." tjon Basically, "The Glass House" will be University Chorale, who soothed the audience more effectively with their lilting "Honey, what's wrong?" crooned the "mother" in syrupy tones to the pretend- serious, showing the conflicts between the main characters. The show is about two voices than any speech could. The Chorale's Grog could be hazardous to your health last number "Ain't That Good News," L/S*!nt the 8tate editor- sniveling youngster. older people;, Henry and Gladys Glass who climaxed the pep rally atmosphere. „ lm0Bplle[c. One The Ingham County Health Dept. is asking anyone who ate at The Grog Shop in "Mmmm num d'nummm nm, mumbled live m a duplex and rent half of it to a young fcr unionization, <^ca] audience meng^ was „ot enthused East Lansing within the post month to come to the health department for a hepatitis gb 75 p« coat the girl, hair in her face. couple who are. as the Glasses find out m £ by tlw> the rousing „tlirih„l spiritual. test. Two employes of the restourant kitchen crew have been found to have of the State "Your fish died? Oh, honey, I'm soo the first show, living with each other. "Ain't what good news?" he grumbled. HxryF According to the character synopsis, the "The NCAA on our asses, that's good hepatitis. The disease is frequently transmitted through food. $sss3m. n * rcpraawtin^tJHr And so on. After a few minutes, a long-haired young woman said "Cut - thank you very much, young people are cynical, honest and anarchistic. Both of them have had some education at MSU and LCC. The young news?" Part three of the concert had a cast of 23 honored faculty members, with Lawrence Wharton being sought for TV spot would not ba « - ' We'll let you know." woman works for a small local paper and Boger, MSU acting Provost, as master of President Wharton has one more person after him. J* «nd that the The girl and woman, relieved, left the the young man has a job splicing films, oeremonies. The performances were Sen. Earl Nelson, D-Lansing, wants to get in touch with the MSU president to J'f.h'uuKtJqW,: , room to make way for the next auditioners. The Glaases are an older couple who met somewhat awkward, as each instructor invite him under the hot lights of WJIM Channel 6 television studio. Nelson, along »m-S UidMir i Auditions were held for over 75 would-be at a ballroom dancing class at a Fred honored was required to stand stiffly beside with Sen. Richard Allen, R-Alma, hosts an area program entitled Capitol actors and actreases to cast parts for "The Astaire dance school. They both have an equally stiff President Wharton until the Connections" which Is aired every other Sunday night from 6 to 6:30 Glass House," a "situation drama" dealing children from previous marriages in which dtation of merit was read. Hie audience p.m. Dick fe** McKeon, Nelson's aide, said that Nelson wants to ask Wharton about the effect of with life in a Lansing duplex. The show will their spouses died. They were married for MlHlken's skimpy budget on MSU, prospects for the law school and the education be aired on cable television in East Lansing practical reasons, tunately the program describing each scene in general. Nelson and Lansing. It will be in color and paid for A number of other posaible characters award winner's achievements were hopefully wants to keep the NCAA brouhaha out of the available only at the exit door. mainstream of conversation. by the Instructional Media department at (cutkmed on page 14) ©pfefetn) Fear for State News There have been smatterings of autonomy Why not addressing the board regarding authority for hiring and firing of information lately in the State them. News and various other media regarding the means our to struggles to obtain produce a quality This quite deliberate denial of staff expression, Board President Michael Orr (a according to editorial personnel be vested in the Editor. We are also subject to the explicitly bicycles? caprice of the State News man¬ newspaper for the MSU com¬ munity. student in the College of Educa¬ tion), was due to the trend toward agement with regard to our jsX? "" m "l >• Recent events, however, have more "formalized" board meet¬ departmental budget. Directors About enough tuition tow made it necessary to inform our indulge regularly in making asser¬ students through MSU for a t ings. The input of staff members tions about the conditions of the about readership directly about the one third of a may tend to trivialize and lead corporation's budget, yet feel annual profe„ controversy. discussion astray, he inferred. salary; about enough under little or no compulsion to to At issue may be the autonomy of The entire procedure was, at markedly improve the the State News newsroom itself. prove what they assert. service at any of the very best, uncivil. Thus we insist that the State ™ Pretty bring their they apparent. Were one to have hocus-pocus serves only to soon many of us will be cruising 1 h over the course of the next few bus passes or tickets and were refused rides must buy tickets beforehand! played so much down the days as one game for the late great issues. highway to Florida in our we can turi n Walter Cronkite, pick on the campus bus. They must walk in the Lansing Chevrolets, buying gas at Clark stations for State up a All-Stars football team, one was a News, or sit in class and chilly wind even though they might have Y.Chang profes¬ 55.9. When we get there we'll check into a expeciedly observe some pompous, self pro quite waited for the bus over 15 minutes 1530 F Spartan Village sional because perhaps $75 changed hands. Along with all the other '"jgj- Holiday Inn, stick on some Coppertone, buy claimed expert expound on the evils Sure they would miss their classes. already. Yet many of the All-Stars had been openly which support amateur atMo""'®V_- of and legally paid thousands in tuition, room, some critical decisions to face m - a Playboy, and hit the beach to case each capitalism. He peers over the podium other out. through thick glasses, takes a drag off his And worse, the face of the bus driver board, and books while "amateurs" at MSU. years. To solve difficult pn** . We'll eat at McDonalds and pipe, and quietly announces that socialism is better. much colder than the open air! (Some drivers were considerate and kind was Modern amateurism has room for Toerni, the Italian Olympic star, whom Gustavo thinking and careful analysts To "call things by their right ^., n IHOP's, and Acknowledgeably we nod at each ABS we'll sip tall cold Budweisers all to let the student take the bus enough Sports identified as the recipient of some crucial first step. Athletes are P> . . night long. other, sneering with bursts of and said, Some of us will call our folks on And so the scene cynicism. "Don't forget next time.") $250,000 in annual income from his sands of dollars to compete on » . Bell repeats itself. skiing telephones and go to the bar afterward. At endeavors. The excesses of the fields of this and numerousothe Russian the end of the night many of us will not be But class wears on and f doubt that it is humane to "punish" amateur hockey team are well documented. ties. Paying them a monthly ^ 0lJ sleeping where we thought we would, twitch and compare tans. ironically we students who do not have bus Far be it from me to and above board, would lay , ji or By hour end, passes or ridicule this morass; better yet not sleeping at all. confirmed with an envious glance, it occurs tickets in despair in the cold weather. the purpose here is only to note the total the petty concerns of the NCA to some of us that sneers and absence of any practical definition of an Further; it would force rhetoric don't After several tiring days of this we'll really count; that only good memories and I suggest the campus buses be equipped amateur athlete. locate and reexamine the under y need a change of pace. with a box like those in CATA buses so Maybe we'll drive to telltale tans remain. that pies of amateur athletics. Marathon or to Key West and students can drop in coins in lieu of We are told by no lesser whip out our ticket*. authorities on Garcia fishing rods and our AMC masks morality than Joe Falls and the NCAA that Were the NCAA to allow tto aP-^ for MSU acted without a little pier fishing and snorkeling. For a few buck" we can rent Hobie John It Spencer is o senior majoring In Hole/, Please note that this method will attract more passengers for its surely principle in countenanc¬ ing the gift of a leather coat to a nothing would change stand to lose is a Utile hypoed economy Cats or even Sestou'anl ond Institutional conveni¬ defensive Wonogemenf ence. As a fact, back. Yet other members many students have no idea of the Spartan secondary have been known to wear coats Mlko Murray9 Is on toil ton.tog nfumnut nt MSU. Lhigan Stole News, Ea.t Lansing, Michiann Friday, February 20, 1976 5 Lockheed Aircraft has juat developed a "The Kickback also has new supersonic Bribe that can fly two timea special naviga¬ so quiet that nobody in Congress would Japanese war criminal in Tokyo. He wants tional equipment which is so accurate it can the speed of sound. The Bribe, which took 10 land $1 million on a Swiss bank complain about the sound. It also had no his painted gold. A South American years to get off the vault with odor. The worst thing about a Bribe is that president has asked for one decorated in drawing board, ia called less than a 10-foot ceiling." it eventually smells fishy." German marks, and a member of a the Kickback 1100. Lockheed salespeople "You say it, but can Q you do it?" "That must have been a tall order for the European royal family wants his covered are claiming it is the most modern, versatile "We did the other Bribe vehicle of its kind. day. An African high research and development people." with Dutch guilders." new One of the people involved in the project government official asked us for $1 million to okay a contract for several of our air "We underestimated the cost of what it "Some senators have complained about told me in strictest confidence would take to develop a new Kickback the dangers of the Kickback particularly as the Kickback bases. He gave us the name and the number by 1100 can carry a $40 million." it's related to the ozone level. Are you payload of up to $10 million of a Swiss bank account. The to any Kickback 1100 "How did you get the certain the new Lockheed Bribe can stand lit corrupt official in the world. took off from Nassau and landed in Geneva money to make up for the overrun?" an environmental study?" I asked. "Northrop Corp. doesn't have anything to in a safe at three o'clock the supersonic compare with it," he said proudly. "How does it differ from the Bribe vehicles of the past?" The African official was so next morning. pleased he ordered another Kickback for his brother." "We took several Pentagon to our explained the problem." duck people from the hunting club and "I'm certain of it. We tested our Bribes against those of France and England and many other foreign aviation companies. My informant who had too many drinks "That was good thinking. It's hard for a Not only were our Kickbacks larger and "Speed for one thing," he said. "We can or he never would have talked so much said, ■mMM now Bribe an Italian general in three and a guy in a duck blind to say no to someone more comfortable but we have a five-year Kickback "The old defense Bribes were too half hours, whereas it took us seven noisy. who has an overrun." guarantee behind them. You don't have to hours Everyone heard about them. We told our to get the bag to him in the past." "Anyhow, we now have all the bugs out of take my word for it. Ask any Arab prince in engineers to completely redesign the Bribe the Kickback 1100 and we the Middle East." "Boy, what will you space people think of so no one would recognize it. We wanted a predict it will be next?" I said. the Bribe of the future. model that would be smooth, fast, safe and Everyone wants one. We have an order for three from a The Los Angeles Times 1 POINT: FRISBEE TEAM politicians render lip-service to the Consti- majority of the city council will decide in tution, professing reverence and admiration favor of the Constitution — both the First for this great document, in reality many of and Fourteenth Amendments are being them hold it in contempt, except of course violated now — so that all points of view I let those discs fly those parts which directly secure their property rights. In their secret hearts they fear and may be distributed freely to the public during these crucial times. Perhaps the words of James Madison distrust the Constitution. This was perhaps would be appropriate here: By the close of the play I would willingly have repaid the admission in order to hear e forcefully demonstrated locally "I believe there ai Bj ERIC SIMON we could use plenty more. (We're also one than when the "sign ordinance" of the smallest teams in the the entire three hours of it once more. abridgment of the freedom >f the people \.y |t 1 editor: state). introduced some time ago. The "sign gradual and silent encroachments of those ysu Ultimate Frisbee team de- The Wggest insult came when members Prof. Milton Powell ordinance," in power than by violent and sudden Justin Morrill College as applied to newspapers, is recognition. The team was started of the Mid-American Frisbee Conference nothing but a euphemism for censorship. usurpation." rplember and has already been decided which college would have the honor The First Amendment to the Constitu¬ Michael T.Ballard jti as one of the best teams in the of hosting the regional tion expressly and unqualifiedly forbids championships. The 531 Ann St. [yet how many people realize that the vote ended in a tie between MSU and Press "abridging the freedom of speech, of the I exists? Or that the team — v~l Kalamazoo 1| College, *but then * it was pointed freedom press." or feated at home this fall? out that MSU received almost no media Frisbee team was two weeks old coverage while not only did campus papers 'Misalliance' The First Amendment to the United Supreme Court decisions have repeatedly confirmed the provisions of the First Sloshing they played its first game and upset * ' at Kalamazoo cover that team, but so did States Constitution states: "Congress shall Amendment whenever attempts were le team in the state (Kalama- their local papers. "For my part," wrote the critic, Corno di make no law respecting an establishment of In response to Frank M. Fos s Febru- made to circumvent them through ambig¬ only to lose its only game of the Bassetto, "I have struck too many blows at religion, or prohibiting the free exercise ary 11 Letter to the Editor: In the meantime, with uously phrased legalistic proposals. _ a rematch at K. College by one no coverage, little the well-made play without immediate thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, Your employer will know that you earned The Weekly People's staff produces a support, and an undersized team (from the of the press; or your 180 college credits as soon as you quit |d overtime. second largest school in the country), effect, to suppose that it is my strength and or the right of the people newspaper that is a little different. The a, at that point, had only three not its own weaknesses that has enabled peaceably to assemble, and to petition the sloshing around in verbal and political we'er still favored to win the me Weekly People presents political and socio¬ teshmrn 122 per cent female) and had regional to dcuble it up government for a redress of grievances." cliches and start attending to the business championships (at Kalamazoo College, April this time." economic material which the "important" id itself as "the team to beat" in It seems that while the capitalist class at jiand 9-11) and qualify for the national champion¬ My concern, however, is for theater¬ news sources would probably not allow you oming spring season, yet has gone goers who, having read Darryl Grant's and their Bicentennial spokespersons and to be exposed to. Let's hope that at least a i virtually everyone on campus. ship, to be held in Amherst, Mass. We review of the Boarshead Players' practice every Monday night, 10 to 12 p.m. produc¬ Buded in our roster (of less than 18 in the Men's IM (the only time available to tion of "The Misalliance," might decide not i a member of the world champion to see it. us), and we'll be testing out our new Though it is not the best of Shaw's a World Class Frisbee Master plays, it is still worth any two of Simon's. members next month with two exhibition tnized by the International Frisbee As to the production, 11 found the acting , an alumnus from the high games against Grand Valley State College. skillful, convincing and well-balanced, the nvented the game, and a starter timing superb and the rich dialogue Eric Simon Is caploln ol Ihe MSU Frisbee Team 's U.S. High School Champion- delivered with such elan that one believed and president of the Mid-American Frisbee Con¬ I'e've developed some excellent ference He has Informed fbo Stole News thot in the characters even when they chose to ■alert, but being less than 18 players, the team ploys a match tomorrow. sit still and listen to one another's lines. SICK HUMOR EXPOSED!! EDITOR 108 B Wells 8 pm CHRIS MILLER Monday FOR THE JAZZ LOVER Feb. 23 Chris Miller, in a rare MSU appearance ON A BUDGET lays bare the titillating details in his THE GREAT Iudents W/ID 50* penetrating inquiry as to the nature of IMPULSE LABEL SALE CONTINUES comedy. III Others $1.00 AT THE DISC SHOP WHATEVER YOUR TASTE IN JAZZ WE THINK THE IMPULSE LABEL HAS SOMETHING TO SATISFY YOU FOR EXAMPLE SWING EARL HINES COLEMAN HAWKINS SOUL SHIRLEY SCOTT SONNY CRISS BEBOP ART BLAKEY DIZZY GILLESPIE AVANT-GARDE ALBERT AYLER ALL SINGLE MSU IMPULSE LPs PHAROH SANDERS BOOTERY ONLY PLUS MANY RECORDINGS BY ONE OF THE MASTERS OF JAZZ offers $^99 1 0% OFF I SO FOR MORE PLEASURE AT LESS COST JOHN COLTRANE ALL FOOTWEAR I with this coupon I ITS IMPULSE RECORDS AND THE DISC SHOP (•xdudlng zols lt»m« and Fry® boot.) I axplro. Sat., Feb. 21,1976 -J Disc Shop 323 E. Grand River 351 - 538» 6 Michigon Stole News, Eost Lansing, Michigan If you only see one play this year Hamlet' is visually striking 'Camelot' is definitely not the By DARRYL GRANT State News Reviewer The Players Gallery produc¬ budget for elaborate sets, but why not use a simpler set, rather than trying too hard the song "If Ever I Would Leave You" was feeble and flat. Leslie one off-key and untalented. The audience, as usual with but By DARRYL GRANT dramatically inconsisten oquies are underplayed to the play. Case also has an unavoid¬ Page as Morgan Le these formula productions, just able tion of "Camelot" is a joyless with gaudy materials. Fey was trite and unprofes¬ loved every tacky minute. Isn't State News Reviewer point of obviousness. One can problem with his Mid¬ and totally amateurish effort The Performing Arts Com¬ tell something important is western accent, which sticks D) The costumes are garish sional. Why must Page attempt this what middle-class Ameri¬ about to happen when Hutson out like a sore thumb amidst that is so hackneyed that is is and ill-made, some of them to dance in every Players cans seem to be trained for? pany production of Shake¬ begins to lower his voice. This the splendor of Elsinore. embarrassing to watch. The appearing to be made out of old Gallery production? Her danc¬ Their narrow education, closed speare's "Hamlet" is a visually striking show, but one that is is a problem of technique, but Jack Welc and David production tries ever so pa¬ curtains. ing is technically and aesthe¬ minds and anti-intellectual at¬ Kropp dramatically inconsistent. The one that is incongruous with thetically to maintain a profes¬ E) Finally, there is unin¬ tically displeasing and formless. titudes are ripe for the theatri¬ as Rosencrantz and Guilden- sional and theatrical front. The Paul Kanter Merlin and production has its successful the rest of Hutson's perfor¬ spired and strange chore¬ as cal insult that the Player's stern are effective but not moments, but they are infre¬ mance which is less fussy. results of this attempt, how- ography, poorly danced by Les¬ Matthew Isbell as Sir Dinidan Gallery production of "Came¬ memorable. David C. Palmer is lie Page and a band of awkward quently seen amidst a maze of Hutson also colors his perfor¬ are totally useless. They don't lot" gleefully produces for amusing as Osric. He displays a problems. mance with too many manner¬ Hnw can the production suc¬ fine comic flair. Stephen Cha- nymphets wearing deer ant¬ act. They simply move around them. ceed considering the following: lers! The direction by Jon Baisch isms, too much sawing of the on stage and deliver their lines "Camelot" continues its run pellie as Fortinbras is too AI There is direction. without emotion. is solid and traditional, strong air, ad* Hamlet says at the rushed to be effective. no Luckily, two excellent per at 8:15 in the Union Ballroom Carol Rosenblaum seems mere¬ formances somewhat mollify The less said about the other Feb. 19,20 and 21. Admission is at times but weak at others. beginning of Act III, Scene II. The pace of the play is the most These flowery gestures are Katherine Arrington as ly to have tacked her name on the absurdity. Stan Gill as actors and actresses, the bet¬ $2.50 for general admission and the program and left all at¬ Arthur displays a surprising ter. The orchestra was equally $1.50 for students. notably inconsistent aspect of unnecessary and superfluous. Ophelia is rather awful. The the play. It begins slowly, then Laertes is given a sharp and tempts at careful and intelli¬ wealth of sensitivity and pro¬ gent direction fly to the wind. fessionalism. gets faster, then it slows down clear portrayal by J. Lockwood Hi The acting is quite atro¬ Mark Kidzus as King Pelli- again, only to get slow towards Beam. His performance is cious. There is a wealth of bad the end again. bright and mercurial. He is also nore proves to be a comic Then there is the problem of noteworthy for his clear dic¬ acting, with only two good delight with his role, showing flair and talent for comedy as the acting. Out of the six main tion. Clear diction is important performances. But more about well as dramatic nuance. roles only half of them are in performing Shakespeare. Susan Checkaway as Guine¬ enjoyable. Joseph Shaw, guest Unfortunately, Earl J. Fisher CI Wretched sets look false vere has the artist from the Stratford as Horatio pays no heed to it, requisite golden- and sickly in their frail at¬ haired beauty that the role calls Shakespeare Festival, is excel¬ for he mumbles his lines from lent as Claudius. Forceful, dra¬ the moment he steps on stage. tempts to provide the appropri¬ for, but she can't act her way ate atmosphere. The audience of matic and smooth, Shaw brings Nan Burling as Queen Ger¬ out a paper bag. Her move¬ is exposed to cardboard walls ments are heavy and strained. great skill and polish to his role trude is surprisingly weak, and towers sprayed with the of the evil king. with no obvious efforts to Checkaway's performance is a William Hutson as Hamlet strengthen her portrayal. The cheapest of metallic blue and perfect example of method silver paint. Tacky banners and offers the audience a younger, bedroom scene where Polonius acting. This is a pity because more sensitive Hamlet than has is killed (Act III, Scene IV) is shields are hung with the she really has a nice voice. fleurs-de-lis upside down. Trees Timothy Thatcher is nervous generally been seen before. In particularly awful. Where is the that are so obviously made of and technically ill-equipped for Hutson's hands Hamlet is vul¬ strength that Burling has dis¬ cardboard his role as Lancelot. He does, nerable and humane. This is an played in the past? are embarrassing to however, have the right air of interpretation that is quite Tom Case as Polonius is weak that the Players noble humility for the part. refreshing. Yet Hutson's por¬ and artificial, bringing a rather not have the Thatcher's weak warbling of trayal is not as successful as it unnecessary element of farce, should be. The important solil¬ rather than humor into the Leo Kottke scheduled Various organizations for next Mariah show Oregon, the very talented quartet that plays indescribable assist in Kottke show music, will appear tonight and tomorrow at 8 and 10:30 p.m. in Mariah is bringing Leo Kottke to campus, thanks to the Student Leo Kottke, of this recorded "Power Failure" the Erikson Hall kiva as a part of Showcase Jazz Productions. one on Media Appropriations Board (SMAB). his newest album. The group, which features from left to right, Collin Walcott, country's finest guitarists, will The folk and blues segment of ASMSU Pop Entertainment was SN photo Robert' With that kinship about Glen Moore, Paul McCandless and Ralph Towner, has appear at 8 and 10:30 p.m., his temporarily suspended last week because the cabinet's reserve Bill Hutson recorded four albums for Vanguard records, including their as Hamlet Sunday, Feb. 29, at Erickson only concession to rock and roll, fund had reached a "dangerously low level." Hal! kiva in a special Mariah Kottke is one of the few latest, "Oregon In Concert." Tom Campion, the Mariah coordinator, and the Mariah board concert production. American performers who has The group's music is a peculiar fusion of Western and met and decided to attempt to secure funds to follow Eastern music that approaches jazz, with hints of the through with Tickets are $4 and are on sale managed to reach the large- the planned Kottke performance. at the MSU Union ticket office. scale masses without losing the Euro-classical tradition. The quartet began more or less SMAB has come through with those funds and Kottke will within the confines of the Paul Winter Consort, and has since Kottke's newest album, slightest bit of artistic in perform for MSU students on Feb. 29 in Erikson Hall kiva. become highly regarded both in America and Europe. Both djChewing^ine," is his litest in tegrity. After Mariah obtained backing for the performance, the budget Towner and Walcott have released albujp# on Manfred a series Of superb releases for With such an excellent track hadlahaapproved hy.iha ASMSU president and comptroller, and record, Kottke's performance Eieher's ECM label, bath which have bean highly successful. nSpitol Records. Since signing Also that approval lias been given. with the company several years on campus next Sunday should appearing with Oregon will be Horizon recording artist Dave Liebman and Richard Beirach. Tickets for the Campion said that Mariah also appreciated the assistance they (NO LIMIT) ago, the guitarist has risen in be one of the more inspiring received from the Union Activities Board, as well as an offer for musical events of the school show cost $3 for MSU students and are being sold at the MSU status from a talented but assistance from ASMSU Great Issues. Union ticket office. Tickets will also be sold at the door. HOT & COLD ITALIAN SUBS NOW commercially minor artist to year. The Abbey Press also helped out with various printing needs. one of that label's top sellers. AVAILABLE AT 9:45 o.m. Kottke tours fairly consis¬ College Class tently and in his travels has Worship Service Little Caesars Pirn struck Prneol an unlikely alliance with Harum. Kottke 10:50 a.m. 1ST ASSEMBLY OF GOD « 6 p.m. df 12031. Gd. River JAZZ IS ON THE ap¬ peared with the group on stage Divisions Ann, E. L. more than once and has, in fact, Coll 409-3203 for rid*. CENTRAL UNITED UNIVERSITY THAD JONES METHODIST CHRISTIAN DAVE BRUBECK & Across from the capital & MEL LEWIS DAVID LIEBMAN Sermon Topic: CHURCH PAUL DESMOND Suite For Pops Sweet Hands 1975: The Duets When Mountains Are No Longer Obstacles'' by Dr. Lyman Transportalu Provided Worship Services 9:45 & 11:00 a.m. Nursery Available 485-9477 the future pEOplES 11975: THE DUETS BRUBECKI belongs Memorial Chapel chuRch Interdenominational 200 W. Grand River to you! at Michigan Abraham & Straus has been in business for Auditorium I 332-5073 over a century and has always been recep¬ y-study Groups For «S> MH TO 4,s* tive to innovation and "new thinking Per¬ Adults and Sunday School The greatest big band in the A rising star of instrumental Their first duet album in haps this explains how A&S came to be 1 ()::{!) Coffee Hour - world in a musical tribure to over music. His reeds accompanies 20 years of performing togethei 9:30 & 11:00 a.m.- Louis Armstrong. the largest division of the most profitable "The Builder," by his group, Lookout Farm Worship Service department store group in the country For rides call 355-0155 by Dr. Wallace Robertson Federated Department Stores, Inc. after 9:0(1 a.m. Sunday SONNY FORTUNE College Discussion Group JIM HALL ■ Evening worship - 11:00 Awakening Live! To keep pace with our continuous growth, Tom Stark, Pastor a.m. Church School One of the important reed side- "LIVE" for the first time: the we are seeking college graduates with Asso¬ Fred Herwalt, Associate Pastoi men makes his debut ciate, Bachelor, or Master's degrees in sub¬ as a great st of his recent 9:30 and 11:00 a.m. leader. performances. Kathy Lang. Staff lAssociate jects ranging from Liberal Arts to Business ^^^Oil^hrouglMdujt^^ Administration. Here at A&S you will find a broad spectrum Sonny Fortune Awakening I of career opportunities in merchandising and management. For individuals with good LP's Now Only scholastic records, energy, ambition, and fear of hard work, the rewards are rapid $3" no and many. A JAZZ SERIES Tapes Now Only! ON To get you off to a good start, we have the $ 4" AAM RECORDS industry's finest Executive Training Pro¬ gram that is supported by every 016101)0' o TAPES our management team. Upon completion o Fellowship this program, the doors are open lo an enctf 9,:45a.m. and refreshments' ing career In merchandising, administration, College Bible Class, Discount Records proudly presents allA&M's Horizon labels on sale or financial management. 8:30p.m. in honor of these appearances: in thefireside room. n the fireside room For lull intormation about yourci'ee""^, 401 E. Grand River 1 David Liebman A&S, see our Campus Interviewer Sunday 11:00 a.m. MON.-TUES. MARCH 1-2 Dr. John Balgo 351-8460 Tonight & Tomorrow or send resume to: „ Erickson Kiva Director ot Executive Recruiting Grand Rapids Bopflsf Bible College & Seminary ABRAHAM 6f STRAUS MSU Bible Study 335 UB Wed. 9 p.m. Tkad Jones & Mel Louis FREE BUS SERVICE Morning and Evening Sun, Feb. 29 Call 482-0754 for information ■420 Fulton Street Silver Dollar Saloon Dr. Howard F. Sugden, Pastor James E. Brooklyn, New York 11201 Emery College Pastor An Equal Opportunily Employ"' M/F Lchigon Stole Newt, Eost Lonslng, Michigan Friday, February 20, 1976 7 tate of 'IT: beset by trials... 1 following Is •» abridged to allocate our resources based University continues to be per¬ L ol President Wharton', upon strictest priorities. sonally rewarding. reality and perceptions, even it has been to sully the reputation anathema to our board of i the University ad- Modern techniques these are an exaggeration. Of „| combined I of a very fine ■ entitled "MSU: Footer- with resourceful am proud to be a part of this I am certain: If athletics college. trustees and to me as I am sure faculty and Michigan Stote University. I On the financial side, It must it is to the students and their Jjjii tnd 2000 A.D." " staff have improved our effi¬ ciency in delivering am prood of our past and did not assume a somewhat come as no shock to anyone that families. SALE PRICES jj t|,e sixth time that I our ser¬ larger than life eminence in the we again anticipate We are, however, in vices to the current educational, research a most the DOWN PARKAS- '39" delivered my "State of the people of the State and public service minds of many, we would not difficult year. The Governor earliest stages of the DOWN JACKETS RIPSTOP '42" Jljty" address to mem- of Michigan. We have made accomplish¬ need a 281-page NCAA rule- has given his budget dramatic savings in ments in Michigan and national¬ budget recom¬ process. We will carry our ROYAL BLUE 60-40 -'55" ■of the Michigan Stote energy use, ly and Internationally. I am book defining amateur sports. mendation to the State story to the legislature and do thanks to the efforts of Legisla¬ JACKETS W/HOOD Bnity community. faculty, proud of the faculty and staff It is interesting to note that ture. His proposal for MSU is at everything we can in the years LADIES SKI JACKETS Koch of these occasions, I staff and students. well for the This bodes who have helped us meet even at the national level a level we find totally unsatis¬ ahead to restore equity and to (Med. si»s) • '39" ASSORTED LIGHTWEIGHT JACKETS • '24" Attempted to give a candid for future, as well as challenge and every who have con¬ President Ford has called for a factory and insufficient to main¬ curb the fiscal deterioration Lent of where the Uni- meeting the immediate tributed commission to look at the tain and upgrade that threatens SKI VIST! •21" t stood at the time - its problem. so much to the basic general quality educa¬ our economic subject. And how tion. viability. From a personal strength and Integrity of the ,, assets and future point of "amateur" were the just- As I noted when the As alio • specials on down pillows, comforters, view, these years have been, to University. Each of you should concluded recom¬ previously announced, the sleeping bags lions. be equally proud. Olympic Games, for mendation was announced, it short- and Lmes, I confess, my put it mildly, example, a competition sup¬ long-run budgetary challenging. It is I would be remiss if I did not seems calculated to place a planning process for the re¬ Jtions of the future were only appropriate that univer¬ comment on some of the posed to be the epitome of non- greater economic burden on shaping of our academic goals Isccurate.For example, in sity administrators continue to specif¬ professionalism? students and their parents — a and priorities is underway. It is ic difficulties that have Tt such address in Febru- be educated, been In recent weeks, public atten¬ along with others plaguing the University in prospect that is as much an (continued on page 8) in the academic tion also has been called, in Jyjl, I said the financial community. cent months. re¬ Lnc'y then facing the Uni- Unquestionably, we learned a great deal as we have all The athletic investigation has adverse fashion, to an impor¬ tant academic , MS "not likely to pass area of the been, of course, a matter com¬ , year or two" and that grapple with matters that not University, focusing on an un¬ Ebacks that year were long before were totally alien to manding considerable time and dergraduate accreditation re¬ preoccupation. port on the College of engineer¬ | symptoms of a more is. Yet, we must deal with both L long-term illness." Despite periodic brushes ing. The result, unfortunately. with situations Elgin State University, ranging from | some institutions, has calamity to cataclysm, my asso¬ umbed to this problem ciation with Michigan Stote Biodom response and dis- ■in fact, in the perverse ut one sometimes reacts usity, it can be shown jr University is today rind more sure of itself t ways than it was ■have learned better how 5 transportation, lodging 6 doys lift tlckots *3I»- MSU Ski Club 353-5199 8 Michigan State News, East lonsing, Michigan CHICKEN^ ...still beckons brightly DINNER (continued from p*f« 7) budding from the unit level back to central adminiatration nation's tell our foremost educators, graduates that in his judgment, MSU and UCLA had department chairman and di¬ rectors alone, nor the faculty ethnic and racial divisions while respecting and appreciating our the answers is open to us, challenging us. Michigan State ment address, predicted to the graduates that when they re¬ $}79 alone, nor the students and differences all the while University alone cannot pro¬ turn to the and the board of truatees — a moved the farthest and the — campus in the year Saturday and Sunday alumni alone, nor our publica¬ vide the answers, but we process which lodges the criti¬ fastest as research universities remembering our essential 2000, they will find Michigan tions and research alone — nor unity as human beings. cal decisions where the profes¬ since World War II. will surely play our part, hope¬ State University even more «-9p.m, the board of trustees alone — •We will have discovered 2B20 E. Grand River sional academic competence fully a leading part. Judging by eminent than it is today. But if Dr. Kerr added that he but all of us and everything better methods for meeting the our demonstrated capabilities, we are to fulfill that prediction OPEN lies. considered MSU to be the most Sun. thru Thurt Frl. and Sat A The dialouge on the adequacy together. For it is the collectiv¬ needs for all citizens — rich and each of us alone can make some and our proper role, we must 6 a.m. to 4 a.nO dynamic 5e.m,toll p.m. of our academic mission and its university in the ity that provides the thrust and poor — domestic and foreign - contribution, but together we hold fast to a positive view, a 487 • 3761 . nation and the most flavor of our progress. open to in a world of limited resources, can be a major force for clear-eyed recognition of our methods is continuing in the change. There is so much to do and a world where the division of progress. But we cannot do so if Academic Council — the issues It is this ability to establish we have so much to offer. Let's accomplishments to date and a the world's riches lies at the we allow ourselves to be steadfast belief in our abilities . of grade inflation, course dupli¬ tradition without cation, teaching responsibility, becoming speculate a bit and have bold root of so many controversies. trapped by negativism in this to achieve even greater heights traditional that is a basic •We will have found new current time of testing. in the future. Together we can remedial course credit, ade¬ strength of Michigan State sBy the year 2000 we will ways of widening the apprecia Dr. Kerr, in his commence¬ do it. Together we shall do it. quacy of course information and University. have helped to answer the tion of .the arts and letters curriculum balance are all Any objective view and eval¬ by matters within the purview of continuing race between food all citizens. uation of our extensive and and population. Sluttrt, musicians, dancers, •We will have mcknlclsas, [Please Rip Us Off.! this central academic policy varied academic accomplish¬ •We will have contributed helped to . , . conquer once and for all the body and its standing com¬ ments portrays a vital campus, toward solving the problems of 6S£arsrKe»j?fsS», L cancer of random violence mittees. And while their filled not only with past accom¬ energy dependence. which strains the fabric of I deliberations may seem too Tear out this ad, Open only lo raglstarsd collage plishment, out successful cur¬ We will have tamed our human society. bring it along, | aludan, and g,Mu„lng I slow for some, I am confident that their recommendations rent performance and great promise for the future. technologies so they deliver pollutants and other no longer The list of goals is far easier to make than the answers are J and we'll admit you for M00 anytime. | AUDITION AND INTERVIEW Pittsburgh, Pi.—Frl., Feb. 2T, itTI SCHEDULE Indianapolis. IM _r "* will strengthen the primary Prof. Madison Kuhn recently undesirable side effects to our to formulate, hut the search for | Featuring 3 Spectacular Hits ! EnVr01'1 mission of our University. Thus, there are seemingly observed that when he pleted his history of MSU for com¬ environment. •We will have J l.fWRIT LUST I TochInterviews4:00 Audition.5:00 Cincinnati, O.—Sun., Feb. 2S, 1S7S TechInlw,!,",^ . I continuous, serious problems our Centennial in 1955, little did techniques for meeting the pioneered new I 1. NIS LOVING DAUGHTIR I Oalrall Mid, n. 111 3. SIX PROBLIM facing the University he dream of where MSU would as - in the past. A full address today be in 1976, some twenty years lifelong educational needs of our citizens — those caught in J Inch Interviews 3:00 Audi,Ion. S:00 ^h ln"."'^'^."Pl | '• * might be devoted to each topic. later. the Sandusky, O.—Sat., u„ grinding gears of changing Cadar Point . But my primary concern this "When the book was pub¬ occupational and personal evening is one of attitude and lished, there was a promise that needs in our ever-dynamic Tad, ln!arvlewe~a:00""Audltlons3:00 f2ch*nl»rvlIwV!'o spirit within the University. MSU would become a major society. Uva Entertainment, Cedar Point, Sandusky Onto ujro What should be our attitude ■ university, but it hadn't hap¬ •We will have found new toward these problems? Do we dwell on this as our winter of pened yet. I really never thought it would get to the patterns for accommodating to CEDM POINT discontent? Or do we focus state it is at on today." (MSU our strengths and continue to Alumni Bulletin, Jan/Feb. build our future? 1976, p. 17) Too often we let ourselves be The self-same comment mired in the morass of prob¬ might be made by today's lems to the point where we lose sight of the countless assets institutional historian. Do dare we Tonight Friday Feb. 20 I indulge in speculation on that represent the real where MSU will be twenty or 8:30 p.m. strengths of Michigan State twenty-five years hence? Whi University. will MSU be like in the year I would add that the Barry O'Neil pace 2000? Who will write our future with which Michigan State history? University has moved into the The true fact of the matter is front ranks of American educa¬ that you will — no, we will. All tion is not just a matter of local of us will determine the future Barry sings traditional British, Canadian pride or bias. Those of you who course of Michigan State Uni¬ American songs and ami I attended fall term commence¬ ment in December heard Dr. versity. Not the president guitar, and English concertina. accompanies himself on I alone, nor the provost alone, Clark Kerr, certainly one of the nor the deans alone, nor the Teri cPotind Tiddk ClliCMD FCC if f SEASCN *rAn exceedingly elegant looking n BUT H1TI IT B4BU IN A film ol with feeling, tact arwl intelligence. The c- a singular kind of appreciation. The c; TIUIC SHSNG UTTNUIN6 with reflections of reality.** "QBetcniim. w»ty and Ironic The Romantic Enqllth woman' ru t TIHE I IM S I IN to a pteasura to wale*. A formidable display of stylish direction. Rptaodldfy t ontreied end doffly arttadatad performances. DRIVE-IN ENTERTAINMENT! II to eo beautiful, wN* sumptuously photographed handsome interiors end forfous totemetlonN tocalee-and so baauWudy made." IIw Joffrey- VWAirCTi TEE CUE AlSMy is a lime forjoy. STARTS TOD AY.. .Open 6 45 p.m Shows 7:00, 9:05 Sat. 4 Sun. 1:00.3:05,5:05,7:10.9:15p.m. ROBERT REDFORD/FAYE DUNAWAY CLIFF ROBERTSON/MAX VON SYDOW GLENDA (/CKSON MICHAEL CAINE HELMUT BERCER The Romantic Englishwoman 'T'.ilfiM 2nd WEEK! JOHNHOUSEMAM. Tonight Open 6:30 Shows 7:00, 9:15 |R] RESTRICTED <£»] SAT. S SUN. 1:45,4:10,6:40,9:10 *CM*COIOM / A paramount REt OPEN AT 6:45 P.M. STARTS TODAY PROGRAM INFORMATION 485-6485 CUCKCOXNBT FEATURE 7:00 & 9:40 P.M. Winner of 9 SAT. & SUN. AT 1:20 academy award nominations: Best 4:10. 7:00, 9:40 P.M. picture, best director, best actor a best actress. ONE TINY SPARK BECOMES ANIGHT OF I The music, the dancing and the sheer joy of it all are just what you need. Right now! Otte of the world's great ballet companies, The dance styles with inventive Joffrey performs in a wide variety of Ashton and choreography by Gerald Arpino, Jerome Robbins, Frederick Twyla 7 harp. Romantic ballets that will touch ballets that will bend your heart. Contemporary your mind. The Paul company of 40 dancers includes Christian Holder, Gary Chryst, Dermot Burke, Sutherland, I rancesca Corkle, Denise Jackson and Sara symphony orchestra, vocal soloists and a jazz Yarlorough. A full group will be featured Lively Arts Series Art WILLIAM TUESDAY, FEBRUARY24 of Dance Series HOLDEN "Viva Vivaldi!" WF.DNESDA Y, FEBRVARY 25 FAYE "Remembrances" "Parade" DUNAWAY "Interplay" IbiD&iNG "As Time Goes "Trinity" By" TWO GREAT EVENINGS IN "Drums, Dreams and Banjos" FRED INFERNO SUSAN PG Tickets on sale NOW at THE the Union. UNIVERSITY AUDITORIUM al 8:15 p.m. RICHARD M Public: $8.50, 7.50, 4.00 ASTA1RE BLAKEUf CHAMBERLAIN JXKI JENMFER MSU Students: JONES O.J. ROBERT ROBERT This engagement of the City 14.25, 3.75, 2.00 SfrtPSON VAUGHN WAGNER Center Joffrey Ballet has beer, made Stew as a» sank "TV. Taissr possible in part, * RICHARD MMTM 5TMN mi Eedem Government. f°< ^ - agency of the fel! I Mirhiaon Stole Ntwi, East Lontlng, Michloon he turns presents Fridoy, February 20, 1976 THE TAMING OF THE SHREW ELIZABETH TAYLOR RICHARD BURTON in CINEMASCOPE ! ^ Showings Fnday and Saturday - ' JoCL 109 Anthony Emission: • n t U 1.25, v|» ^fth. ' V Sunday "A 15 So. t ^ £ ... Union D , Parlors :h Idren, 50c . RI-tflRJ-tRR14A.RHR.RHfl. FyHft'|^HAJ^4flJ^-lARt4RRJ-iA.RJdRRI-(ARJ-lRRHARHR PRESENTS The international stage triumph that won the Tony Award and the New York Drama Critics Circle Award HIT US...the crew is dead... help us, please, please help us!" as"Best Musical Of The Year"- On The Screen! mm M HM WMMwii IHiyiHAUISIJI SUSANCIW IB Will EM AUK rats RCIM (Oil Mmi AUCUSIASUMMfRlANfl FRI. 100 ENR 7:30 ft 9:45 I The overwhelming response from our audiences warrants extra per¬ SAT. WILSON 7:30 ft 9:45 formances of this exciting show. So the cast and crew of Camelot ■ invite all of you who have not attended to take . . . SUN. CONRAD 9:30 ?1" advantage of this op- Iportunify of extra shows, Feb. 27 & 28 at 8:15 p.m. ■ JACK LWARNER h PETER H HUNT mzr* CHARLIE CHAPLIN'S FRI. WILSON 7:15 ft 9:45 Tonight ft Saturday SAT. CONRAD 7:15 & 9:45 CLASSIC COMEDY "IF YOU HAVEN'T SEEN A PORNO MOVIE BEFORE, OR IF YOU SUN. CONRAD 7:00 $!« HAVE ONLY ONE EROTIC MOVIE TO CATCH THIS YEAR - THIS IS THE ONE." -Al Goldstein Would you want your daughter to marry these men? THE LIFE & TIMES OF XAVIERA HOLLANDER MODERNTIMES with Paulette Goddard written, directed and see ied dy Charles Chaplin FRI I08B WELLS SAT. 100 ENR 7:30 ft 9:45 Columbia Pictures presents A Mike Nichols Film n rbc films presentation lack Wiiien Nicholson COMING NIXT WEEKEND Bcatty introducing samantha McLaren as xavieha Great Waldo Pepper Produced and Directed by Larry G. Spangler IN COLOR / ADULTS ONLY Co-starring IIOCkaidOMBinlnQ Executive Hrouucer Hank Moonjeon ||l , Tonight A Saturday WittenbuAdrienJouce-MusicAdoptedbuDorridShire-ProductionDesignbgRichardSglbert Rl/frh CoSSl'dv & Reduced bg M*e Nichols and Don Deviin Directed bg Mike Nichok imn,8!&,o#' 7,3°' RATED X • ftsnavisiori'lPGlS^SIF ' l|W, 10t30,13)00 This Is a hardcore motion picture FRI. CONRAD 7:30 ft 9:45 Sundance Kid Ir^P'oct) 'iilon, '*» 100B Walla oil patrons must be 18 yrs of SAT. SUN. I08B WELLS WILSON 7:30 ft 9:45 t_„ fdnnta. —oral age or over 9:15 1 * * * ************** * * t 1 Q Michigan Stat* News, Host Lontlng, Michigan ■MAIWMtm TNI UNION •V A WARM-UP BEFORE CLASSED Mini Breakfast one egg, bacon itoait.. 8partan Special j«M«.too.t*i,ny Dally Specials Mon.-French TooM/Syrup jq, I;. Tuei. • Egg MuHln. egg and bocon.. 70' •: Wed. • Poncoket/Syrup £Qt Thuri. Continental • Breakfast donut. cerol. milk Frl. 4j. ■ • WoHlei/Syrop 60' The Union Grill Mohi Uvel oi Union Building Ru x n Ri<: I j( ;i n ()|{( ;i ii ;sn{\i/l TED NUGENT pretty things ■Maan State Newt, East lansing, Michigan Friday, February 20, 1976 11 JIM continues battle in court MICHAEL ROUSE -flews Staff Writer WJIM's troubles summer of 1973 when began in the chise. for license a local This last Another allegation to be in¬ Gross labeled Green a radical case of Lansing televi- group called Citizens United for charge involved vestigated at the upcoming and a troublemaker, but said instance, received frequent cov¬ it for the network." "It will be a hear and one half JIM'S contested Federal Better Broadcasting Lansing Councilman Harold erage. The WJIM hearings will con¬ ed about complain¬ Moore who in 1968 worked hearings is the blackout Gross that he only questioned Green's Some 7,000 documented in¬ before we can expect a decision unications Commission the station's lack of the National Cable Co. for supposedly ordered against tinue through March 19. They from the judge," Shulman said, children's shows, the This was appearance in news broadcasts stances of "clipping" in the past license will resume Mon- Robert Green, dean of the MSU will investigate the blackouts "but we are confident that we quality of in itself a conflict of and did not order a blackout. six years and other technical the State Bar Assn. news and public affairs presen¬ interest, and the subordination of since his College of Urban Development. Miscellaneous other charges public will eventually win this case. tations, sexist company's parent firm Green charges will be discussed in interest to Gross' personal advertising and was competing with Gross for was nevertheless cover¬ include an order to the WJIM June when the gain. "This means that Gross will again, the halls will not inadequate minority hiring ed by reporters staff not to do stories case moves to The hearings will continue in lose his license and there will be with fervent cries for practices. the cable franchise. during a con¬ on Washington, D.C. Clipping is At the reopened troversy involving black stu¬ certain businesses that had Lansing between April 26 and a new station in Lansing. of speech or the pub- In November of hearings on the practice of that year, dents at Wilson Hall and when overdue advertising accounts. substituting May 21 before moving to Wash¬ Lansing will never be without a •Jit to know, but with the FCC delayed the Monday, Gross will respond to Green attacked the Big Ten on local commercials for those ington, which means that the renewal of Companies which paid large TV station, but if worst comes seesawing interroga- Gross's allegations made by dictated by the network and will not be settled without broadcasting license un¬ ers that he first offered ex-report¬ grounds of racism. bills, Meijer's Thrifty Acres for case to worst, Gross will be allowed ,s the American Civil til an investigation could be Moore a pocketing the money received a great deal of time and tedious to operate one job at WJIM, but then from both. temporarily," jes Union (ACLU) at- conducted. This investigation barred BSPA deliberation. Shulman said. now to prove that station- was ordered on Feb. 1,1974 and coverage of Moore and the rest of the open to undergrads The case against WJIM calls Harold Gross is guilty of the ACLU city councilmen because into question one of the basic stepped in with an they opposed granting Gross The Black Student illegal wiretapping, informal complaint to the FCC the franchise. chology Assn., formerly an Psy¬ As part of its services, the group offers help with course tenets of the FCC. Since there Angola speech set for tonight blackouts and a list of two weeks later. "He indicated to me all-graduate student organiza¬ is a limited number of channels that selections as well Harvey Shulman, an attor¬ certain members of the tion, is opening its ranks to as self-help possible on the crowded air¬ Oumi Martz, political affairs will speak on the Popular ney with the Media Access council tutorial programs. One of the were undergraduate blacks who are waves, stations are granted secretary of the South African Movement's (MPLA) victory in opposing him. and he main concerns of the Project in Washington, D.C., didn't want to see them on interested in psychology. BSPA is to licenses with the restriction Student's organization in the Angola and the liberation of has been the get more black students inter¬ that they serve the U.S.S.R., will speak on "South arification allegations asserting the ACLU's that certain public air," William Applegate, a According to Gregory Price, ested in psychology. interest. public Africa and the People's Repub¬ Mozambique as it relates to South African former WJIM reporter, said. a graduate coordinator of the "apartheid" officials were denied A lic of Angola" tonight in 336 coverage A memo from Gross to BSPA, the membership drive meeting will be held Mon¬ "Gross has an obligation to government. article in Wednesday's (blacked out), the station's Brad¬ Union at 7:30 p.m. pub¬ ley Bate, news director in at MSU is part of a national day at 7 p.m. in 304 Olds Hall the public," Shulman lews incorrectly stated lic broadcast license was for any students who are inter¬ Martz is a law student in used campaign to recruit i The talk is being sponsored SMSU Legal Service for Gross's personal 1969-70, said: "Why is it you said. "The public owns the Moscow who is on a gain and bers. ested in joining BSPA. station and Gross just operates speaking by the Southern African Liber¬ tor Jon Botsford is free color televisions were persist in putting Harold Moore tour of the United States. He of¬ on our six ation Committee. j by the Birch and fered to some o'clock news when he Firm, Lansing City is our enemy?" -w Council members to persuade si works in the office them to vote for Gross Tele¬ Nevertheless, the council redited MSU class, awarded the casting Inc. as the recipient of Lansing city cable franchise to Continental Cable- paid position. Lansing's cable television fran¬ vision of Boston, Mass. _ mm X)ooLey$ gj You may have dined at The Grapevine before, but now it's time to return for a second look, or perhaps your first. Because the Grapevine, at 2758 E. Gr. River, is under all new management, and the changes that have been made, and are still being planned, just have to be experienced first hand. The pleasant French country atmosphere is still prevalent, complete with a crackling fireplace, antique wooden beams, stained glass windows, and a lush color scheme of french blue, red and ivory. But here the similarities end, and the new Grapevine takes over with an all new menu, at prices everyone can afford. The French theme is still maintained, but somewhat ..Americanized now, for easier menu reading, and ordering. Sixteen entrees are offered, among them such dishes as Chicken Kiev, Almond Fried Shrimp, Cordon Bleu, Prime Ribs, Roast Pork Loin. Specialties of the house include: Steak Diane, Peppered Steak, (both prepared at your table) or Tournedos a la Rossini. You will delight in the dinners for two, either Rack of Lamb, or Chateaubriand, served with appetizer, five different vegetables, a full bottle of wine, and dessert. If a lighter dinner is to your liking, The Grapevine offers Prime Rib sandwich, Strip Steak sandwich, or Frog Legs, in smaller portions. Daily specials are also offered Monday thru Thursday, which are regular menu items at reduced prices. To complete your meal, you must try "French Fried Ice Cream", a treat your sweet tooth won't believe. Complimenting an elegant dinner with the right wine is not a difficult task at The Grapevine. Just ask for the wine book, which offers a wine listing complete with labels, phonetic spelling, story of the wine, flavor explanation, and even the bin number, to simplify your wine ordering and enhance your meal. In the near future, there will be a wine of the day at special prices. To end a perfect meal, each customer receives a home made chocolate covered ^ cherry with the check I y Besides delicious dinners, lunches are all new too, being ' served 11:30 2:30, - Monday - Friday. Try the Olde English * Crab Grill for something different. In the coctail lounge, Happy Hour from 4 7 Mon. - - Fri. serves all cocktails at reduced prices. Live entertainment currently by Dennis Byrum is offered Tues. - Sat., from 9 1 a.m., and also Thurs. and Fri. from 5 - - 7. There is a new late night supper menu, and don't forget The Sunday Buffet, mg your record from 3 9 p.m.- to changer or turntable Hi-Fi Buys (E. Lansing store only) free SPONSORED By: changer and cartridge clinic and have it checked out. The performance of your turntable will be charted, your stylus Kenwood KP 1022 9122 Af MIUA Manual Turntable Special during our clinic week "Dine in candlelight and enjoy your favorite cocktail" ☆ Trade in accepted THE STATE ROOfTl EVENING OF - IMPERIAL GARDEN ft $10.00 trade Kellogg Center - in value, towards the SURREALISM Gracious dining in a nostalgic campus atmosphere. purchase of any $50.00 cartridge AN ANDALUSIAN DOG - 349 - 2698 during clinic, Bunvel/Dali 1926 2080 W. Gr. Rv. Okemos ft THE GOLDEN AGE Bunvel 1930 Plenty of free parking THE BLOOD OF A POET - - Cocteau The Grapevine Hi-fi BUYS DiscShop Feb. 20, 21 7:00 4 9:30 1932 (Located across 12 E GRAND RIVER from Olde World J'01 E. Grand River EAST VISING B 104 WELLS ADMISSION: $1.50 E.L Village Mall) 337-1787 Presented by 332-21 HI Partially Funded Afterimage by SMAB 1 2 Michigon Stole News, East Lansing, Michigoi FrldaV. FebrU0(yJ( ■cMgonStoto ini in town as Furlow nears record By EDWARD L. BONDERS concentrating about 28 minutes letting loose with the shot." of Ralph Simpson's season scor¬ State News The Sports Writer "Big C" has arrived in a game," Payne noted. One of the benefits of the The soft-spoken takes the entire game Furlow in stride, ing mark of 667 points. He also 71 markers away from is American honors appreciation type are J-, J Terry career at Furlow's MSU. basketball "Big C" enables the 6-foot-5 Flint native to recognize defen¬ though, saying, "I constantly work at my game becoming the all-time career said. "They're not that Jice bjjj and try to scoring leader at MSU. Former important," 1 Last season. Furlow had the sive deficiencies in the opposi improve all facets." Spartan Mike Robinson cur¬ "Big C" for only 14 to 28 tion. The immediate goal for Fur¬ phase minutes per contest. However, rently holds that honor with "Furlow now realizes when Saturday nigh this year the Spartan he goes up against a smaller, low and the Spartans it "to win the next five games. That just 1,717 points. visits Jenison fora7 wheo !j captain has maintained this element for quicker player in a pick," Payne might give us a shot at a In addition, Furlow is cur¬ js?L rently third in the nation in MSU clubbed nearly the entire 40 minutes of commented. "He reacts by put¬ tournament bid," said Furlow. then,: J scoring and is well on his way to Jan. 24 at each games' action. The ting the ball over this type of Although the tournament bid capturing his second consecu¬ The Champaip^l "Big C"is concentration player. Then, when he's con¬ might prove elusive, various tive Big Ten Spartans ai and, according to MSU assis fronted by a taller but slower scoring title with a nesting in fifth scoring records will be 30.1 average. ■ tant basketball coach Vern opposition, he recognizes the established in the Spartans' The barrage of records will conference with a 74 ,!*,■ Payne, it's one of the most need to put the ball on the floor 11-11 overall important facets of the sport. for a couple of dribbles before final games. undoubtedly bring post-season one notch back at while ffij "Concentration in basketball Furlow is but five points shy accolades to Furlow. "All- for the season. 7-6 ufl is the ability to recognize and react to what is happening on the basketball court. You must put any distractions not con nected with the game out of your mind," explained. entirely Payne Gymnasts face the besl By ANN WILLIAMSON to be bad During the 1974-75 season. State Newa Sports Writer — they're scoring around 213 points this Win or lose, there'll be no rest for the yew- Payne noticed that Furlow was concentrating for about 14 min This weekend is being billed as "the greatest in MSU's Saturday's double-dual against Illinois. The men Spartans when tiin J gymnastics history" — and rightfully so. No. 3 in the nation, and the MSU women's Salukis ire MSU's star forward Terry Furlow utes of each game. "I sat Fieldhouse. Furlow is the Big Ten Terry Anyone who hungers for a good look at some of the top team will haven down and explained the situa bigger foe to tackle against SIU's women's will need a hot hand Saturday lor the scoring leader with a game average tion to him. He understood and gymnasts in the country need look no further than MSU's own currently national champions. team, tJ| I Spartans to take their Big Ten home of 30.1 points. Jenison Fieldhouse. First, the men's gymnastics team will take on The Salukis have a small team, but worked on the problem and women match against Illinois in Jenison the end of the season he was by Big Ten champion University of Michigan tonight at 7:30 p.m. and of gymnasts with the talent they don't nidi will then join the women's gymnastics team they have already produced. T Saturday to face what "I can only describe Southern Illinois fantastic." said J could well be the best competition to come to MSU for a as long time Barb McKenzie, who competed on SIU's — Southern Illinois University. gymnastics team hen FOUR SENIORS FACE FINALE FOR MSU Admission for either tonight's or "The five girls they have competing for them are Saturday's double-dual clash is of women gymnasts." among tit J SI for adults, 50 cents for students and children and MSU | students "Southern Illinois is good and free with an ID. said. "We've been improving with everybody knows it," Lisa BnL Though Southern Illinois' men's team is considered better than every meet, and it would bt Oklahoma in to test grapplers U-M in national standings, coach should find the Wolverines much more their bout against the Salukis George Szypula and company devastating tonight than for everyone to hit so we could see how we in the country." Pat Murphy added to Hypnar's comments, can do saying, "I thinksj Saturday. got a chance against SIU if we hit — but we'll have to doom For one thing, the Wolverines have a By GREG SCHREINER Steve monopoly on Big Ten best against them." Rodriguez and Jeff Her- Oklahoma Sooners, 21 12 win¬ Big Ten Tournament and the individual champions. Four of six event champions are Wolverines, State News Sports Writer sha, want to go out winners. One of the top performers for SIU for the mi ners over defending national NCAA meet, as well as Satur¬ including Chuck Stillerman on floor exercise, Bob Darden on the all-arounder Kim Wall, rated among the top five in the A long and grueling season The underclassmen on the team champion Iowa, come into town day's contest, to accomplish high bar, Richard Bigras on the vault and Pierre Leclerc on the who usually scores about 53 nitial draws to an end Saturday for want to finish the season with a for a 4 p.m. wrestling meet this feat. parallel bars, topped by all-around champion Harley Danner. If points a meet. The Salukis men'i coach Grady Peninger's 76 win. The whole team wants to is averaging around 205 points this season, while Saturday in Jenison Field- that isn't the high for His opponent will be Mike enough, U-M also boasts the nation's No. 2 still ring this year has been 198.35, which leads Spartan grapplers. And with maintain a winning season. house. The defeat by Oklahoma Chinn of the Sooners. Chinn performer — Joe Neuenswander— who missed becoming national Szypula to belitvtl the season finale go the cus¬ Standing in their could snapped a 35-meet win streak Saturday's meet could be a close one. 1 way scored a draw with Iowa power champion by a mere .1. "It should be a doozie if we really hit - it'll be a lot tomary emotions and incentive. The seniors of the team, be their most formidable op¬ ponent of the season. The for Iowa. house Tim Cysweski last week¬ The Wolverines, headed by coach Newt Loken, won the Big Ten than against U-M," Szypula said. closer J Coach Peninger. though, end. Championships last year for the 12th time in the past 15 years and Randy Miller. Pat Milkovich, fourth-ranked University of What both the men and women are most feels his team is ready for the Steve Rodriguez at 150 finished sixth in the NCAA Nationals. Even so, Loken doesn't let hoping for however, is a large audience. Last year's double-dual meet tough Sooners. "We've got a pounds, 106 this year and 34-32 the Wolverines come to East Lansing too overconfident. Pcnn State produced a record-breaking attendance crowd oil! ip fighting chance to put them on his career, and Hersha, 9-9 "I'm fully aware that George Szypula will have his team primed while this year's dual meet against Illinois away," he said. "In fact, I know o»the for brought i season and 2334-2 with ^ our annually tough meet," Loken said. "He always seems to get [ Weekend beat them." spectators. we can tha Spartahs a>e both top performances from bis team when they meet us. With this In Action J Again, as last week, the Spartan's competition will come to win their matches. expected mind, we've got our work cut out for us tonight. It should be a meet." good "We're all really hoping for a "You'd be surprised how much big crowds big turnout," Brian Sturrockjl really help the tea On the opposite end of the off a Friday night meet against The Spartans are also aware of the Sporting a flashy 13-3 record, coach Charles Schmitter's spectrum from the seniors are strength of the Wolverines, another rated team. Oklahoma and nobody appears too confident that U-M will the two Spartan freshmen who come to tonight's swordsmen travel to Columbus, Ohio this weekend to face their faces fifth-ranked Wisconsin to¬ meet unprepared. toughest double dual meet of the season. have maintained their night before making the jour¬ position "We're going to be trying to break 200 Ohio State and Notre Dame are the on the team and have made an points tonight," Szypula competition as the fencers ney to East Lansing. said. "If we can do that and they make mistakes, we could start a road trip that will take them through the season. As far as individual confron¬ impression on Peninger. Dave pull off an upset. But we're Last year, the Irish and the Buckeyes came to East Rodriguez at 142 pounds is going to have to be very good and they'll have Lansing, tations for Saturday's meet, it where they dealt the Spartans 20-7 and 19 8 losses expected to have little trouble respectively. In is ironically the seniors who with his opponent. the overall series with the two teams, MSU is 10-29 against Notre Rodriguez is Dame and 14-33 against Ohio State. must face the Sooners' best. Randy Miller at 118 pounds, 16-5-1 on the season and 35-26-3 5-4 on the season. Shawn Whitcomb, however, MSU hockey team could once again find himself on his career, will face defend¬ Nobody needs Jimmy the Greek to quote odds on the MSU men swim team's meet against the torpedoes of Indiana this Saturday ing NCAA champion Shawn Garel. with the key match of the as he has the night, past two weeks. visits Notre Dame at 2 p.m. in Bloomington. They'd be as lopsided as the chances of Whitcomb, 8-10 in the 190- Milkovich nears his brother MSU's hockey team, now second in the WCHA with Broderick Crawford being chosen as a centerfold for pound weight class, faces Mark a 16-106 Cosmopolitan Tom's record as all-time win- Neumann of Oklahoma. Neu¬ record, will hope on the bus to South Bend, Ind. magazine. today for a ningest Spartan. Pat, whose scored weekend series against the Irish of Notre Dame. Big Ten champions the last 15 years, the Hoosier tank team held season record at the mann a one point upset performance records by conference undergraduate students in 15 134-pound victory over his man at Iowa. The Spartan's trail first-place Michigan Tech by six points and slot is 22 1 and whose career of 17 events going into this season. Indiana The Spartans, now ranked any hopes of catching the high-flying Huskies ride on the results of swimmers held the record is now 81-7-4. needs first five positions in 13 of those events. just number 14 on the national this weekend's matchups. Tech takes on lowly North Dakota this 12 wins to tie his brother's polls, The Indiana will tune up for the weekend in Houghton. swimming statistics book indicates that the record of 93. Pat still has the Big Ten Hoosiers have never lost in meet in Iowa Notre Dame has been Royer Pool since its completion in on Feb. 28 and 29. doing well lately, splitting with Tech last 1961. Eighty opponents have been weekend in South Bend and depth-charged in those 15 years nearly winning both games. and a win against MSU will MSU also split last weekend against North Dakota but give Indiana its 121st straight dual the meet and a 9-0 record for the Spartans are hoping that their road game will provide the season. needed to sweep the series from the Irish. MSU's magic Weekend outlook been outstanding this season as the away record has Spartans have won 10 of 13 It's very possible that the only thing standing between the MSU games in enemy territory. women's swim team's fourth The "luck of the Irish" has been straight Big Ten title is the U-M Friday virtually nonexistent against Wolverines. Men's gymnastics: U-M, 7:30 the Spartans in recent years with MSU p.m., Jenison Fieldhouse coming out on top 10 of the The last 12 times the teams have Spartans began the preliminaries of the Big Ten Saturday played. Of the remaining two, one Men and women's gymnastics: was a 4-4 overtime tie played last season at Munn Championships Thursday at Ann Arbor's Matt Mann pool and will Southern Illinois, no< Arena. continue to fight off the nine conference rivals Jenison Fieldhouse Faceoff time for Friday and today and Saturday. Saturday's games is 7:30 p.m. at The Spartans ended their Wrestling: Oklahoma, 4 p.m., Jenison Fieldhouse Notre Dame's Athletic and Convocation Center. regular season last Thursday with a Both games are pair of wins over Oakland University and Lake Forest Men's basketball: Illinois, 7:35 scheduled for broadcast by radio stations WKAR College to p.m., Jenison Fieldhouse 90.5 FM and close with a 91 record, with the The men's hockey, indoor track WMSN, the Michigan State Network, 640 AM. single loss of the year coming from and swimming teams a the Wolverines. away this weekend as is the women's The Spartans will need a little GLAND (Good Luck at swimming team. Notre SN photo/to Dame) this weekend. All-arounder Jell Rudolph VAN HEUSEN T.O.I.F. Varsity 53ual DOG DRESS SHIRT AND SPORT SHIRT FOOD 4 BOOZE DAY! ...wear it Foot-long Chili-dog your way! 60* Here's at a your chance Van Heusen Happy Hours! first. A one-piece, no-seam convert¬ HAI AIH S Vs off all drinks Both from 2:00 - 5:00 ible collar shirt. One smooth-flow¬ K I VI i \i n ing collar. No 2 pm Cot Into neckband. No in¬ 2 am Ray Lilly bringing real banjo-pickin' bluegrass clear terruption to the pattern or solid of Beer Special til 8pm from Arkansas. cover. Ray will be pickin' and playin' for your pleasure every Friday nighf this term. Starts at 9:00, your choice. Open or closed, it will do things for you. See MBSW for yourself VARSITY INN ! — on 1227 E. Grand River yourself. Ph. 332-6519 n Stale New». East Laming, Michigan 13 Develop The Want Ad Reading Habit [Automotive FRANKLY SPEAKING 1 Cycle! miles. Excellent condition. One South Logan. 882-7841. 12-3-5 able rent. Call immediately 351- room8 available for spring and house $90/month, 332-6441. 6-2-23 great location. 6259. 2-2-23 forts ® Service owner. Stored for winter. 372- ~ summer terms. Male or female. Aviation 7094, or 485-1397. 5-2-23 2 WOMEN needed Call 332-8641. 7-2-27 EAST LANSING, male students in spring term, )pl0yment CHEVY MONZA 1975, 2 + 2, low $77.50/month, Twyckingham. OWN ROOM, woman, new du- single rooms. 332-5791. 6-2-24 Call after 5:30, |r rent mileage, steel belted radials, 4 REACH THE campus marketl 351-9346 near MSU, Bus. 4-2-25 p|ex furnjshed, parking, $90, ask jrfments speed. Best offer. 351-7336. 5-2-25 Advertise your used car parts and fof Anne 332.5491. 2-2-20 Rouses auto services 355-8255. today. Call Gary. NEED 1 girl, Cedar View Apart- ; For Sale V Rooms CUTLASS 1968. See "at" Tux Campus 51mn^Pcn-,8nfm' $65' 8 m°nth' 451 -4960. b-4-4/ FEMALE PREFERRED. Own room (R SALE Shop, $495 or best offer. in comfortable house. Two blocks. NEED CASH? Find a buyer for 351-6330; after 5 VOLKSWAGEN BUG exhaust ■Animals p.m. 482 4214 systems complete ONE MAN needed to sublease 0ne momh lease available your sellable items. Call Randy, 5-226 only $24.95 at „ CHEQUERED FLAG FOREIGN townhouse. Spring term $60/ 2/28/76.351-3816. S-5-2-25 State News Classified, 355-8255. ■Mobile Homet month plus utilities. 882-8143. st « found CUTLASS SUPREME 1973. Excel¬ CAR PARTS, 2605 East Kalama¬ 8.3_1 H TWO ROOMMATES wanted. S-M0:2!2! lent condition. Must see to zoo Street. One mile West of SANSUI AU-555A stereo amplifi¬ jrsonal ciate. $2695 or best offer. appre¬ campus. C-7-2-27 Large Lansing house. Fireplace, er, Dual 1215S with Shure high JanUTS personal 0179. 4-2-24 393- PENNSYLVANIA ™S AVENUE Prefer someone into classical mu- sic- Ca" 3'223 track cartridge, Torado folk guitar. IAL ESTATE WE WRITE all forms of in s studio paid, $125/month plus deposit. U,Hides All excellent condition, must sell. ^creation CUTLASS SUPREME, 1974, ex¬ at low rates plus an easy payment Phone 627-5454. 5-2-25 (- -w Mick, 394-2537. 3-2-20 Brvice cellent condition 18,000 best offer. 353-9023; miles, plan. Call UNION UNDERWRITER INSURANCE AGENCY. 485-4317. ... Dqq|u$ |/^| ■ instruction after 6 " _ TERRIFIC DEAL, furnished con¬ COME ON down to DICKER Er 351 1164. 6 2 24 0-20-2-27 IT'S ONLY A PAPER dominium. Need male, sublease DEAL. Component stereos under ■ Typing HAMG'MG OVER A cARbBOARD SEA*, OPENING FOR one woman. Tral- $1qo. Sansui receiver spring. Prefer mature. See to 2000, ■ansportation DATSUN B210 1974. Excellent M-78 BODY SHOP. Rustproofing believe. 339-3657 persistantly. 6-2- famadore Co - op. 501 M.A.C. $189.99. Pioneer turntable, belt ■anted shape, extras, low mileage. Price specialists. Most cars rustproofed ©College Medio Servi Avenue. 332-2517. 5-2-20 er day for GREMLIN 1974. Rustproof, en¬ gine, body excellent. Levis interior, standard. Linda 353-9700; even¬ Cedar. 485 2047, 4859229. Mas- terCharge and Bank Americard. C-20-2-27 Pennsylvania 17402. 1-2-20 NEAT, MATURE person for at- • I GRAND LEDGE 9 Now featuring on Wednesday* • • NORTH LARCH Street, 1026. Three bedroom house, carpeted, redecorated. Immediate occupan¬ The Is Personal ads must tendent to attorney • night the super bluegrass® $165/month plus utilities. 351- Creative Corner of slight build cy. ings-weekends 485-5980. 1-2-20 in wheelchair. Evenings and morn¬ • sounds of the New Friends.® 7283. 1-2-20 | State News wftt be (risible only for the first MERCEDES 450SL 1973 Coupe Roadster. All options including | Employment !!jii ings, lifting involved. Attendent free 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Compen¬ • Dance Thurs. ® sounds of EZ - Living. Sat. to the® ^ ROOM IN house. $80/month, sation includes full basement utilities included, unfurnished. | incorrect- -nsertion. alloy wheels and Michelins. Phone OVERSEAS JOBS-temporary or Campus close. 332-0969. 3-2-20 apartment and limited use of car. Mr. Kay, 339 3400. C-1-2-20 permanent. Europe, Australia, References 484-9657. 5-2-23 due 7 days from the South America, Africa, etc. All COUNTRY LIVING, own bedroom Ipiration date. If not MGC 1968 GT. Radio, automatic, •••••••••••••••• paid fields. $500-$1200 monthly. Ex¬ MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIST Lan¬ in 5 bedroom house, 10 minutes low mileage. Good condition. fe due date, a 5W: late penses paid, sightseeing. Free sing Regional RED CROSS ONE and TWO bedroom furnished south of campus, utilities paid. p charge will be due. $1,095. 372-8130. 8 3 1 information write: INTERNATION¬ BLOOD Program has immediate mobile homes. $25-$40 per week. $93/month. 394-1168. 5-2-24 AL JOB CENTER, Dept. ME, Box openings for qualified Medical On the lake, 10 minutes to OLDS CUTLASS 1970, V-8. Very 4490, Berkeley, California, 94704. Technologists, day and evening campus. Clean, peaceful and PERSON NEEDED. Nice home. Iund Town] good condition. Best offer. 351- 18-2-27 shifts. Progressive laboratory with quiet. 641-6601. 0-20-2-27 Half mile from University Club. 4715, evenings. 6-2-20 excellent benefits and educational $70+ utilities. 393-6773. 6-2-25 CUSTODIAN, downtown church. opportunities. For further informa¬ OLDSMOBILE 98 1971. 4 door. NORTH POINTE APARTMENTS, OWN ROOM for 2 Married couple preferred. Apart¬ tion call the Lansing RED CROSS or 4 in duplex. Power steering, brakes, windows, Jfaslett Road, East Lansing. Effi¬ ment plus salary. Send resume at 484-7461 weekdays, 8:30-5 p.m. Spring, summer. Washer, dryer, seats, radial tires, AM/FM, stereo - with references to box A-4, ciency, one and two bedroom appliances. 351-3492. 4-2-23 6-2-24 from $155 per month. Unfurnish¬ 8 track. Excellent condition, State News. 6 2-24 $1,595. 489-0385. 3-2-23 ed. Children considered. On bus NEED ONE female for Twycking¬ BRAND NEW three nicely fur¬ line. Call 332-6354 or 372-7986. PART TIME employment tor MSU ham apartment. Spring term. nished rooms. $76/month plus OLDS WAGON 1965 85,000 miles. 0-11-2-27 students. 12 20 hours per week. $68.75. March rent paid. 337-1841. utilities. Available June. 393-7190. New exhaust system, tires, $295. 6-226 Automobile required. 339-9600. 4-2-25 NEED THREE women. Nice apart¬ 355-9873 after 6 p.m. X3-2-23 C-11-2-27 ment. Near campus. Spring and/ FURNISHED EFFICIENCY until or summer. 337-2397. 5-2-20 OWN ROOM in house. Frandor PLYMOUTH FURY 1969. Power Available immediately. No WANTED NIGHT auditor and September 15th. Close to campus. area. steering, brakes, automatic, air, cocktail waitresses, work nights One or two person, $175, summer lease. 371-2473 after 5:30 p.m. AMERICANA APARTMENTS: radio, snows, $750. 349-0472 after $145. 487-4451. 1-2-20 1-2-20 and ski daytimes. Good salary, Need girl for nice apartment. Good 5 p.m. 3-2-20 contact Mrs. Payne, PETOSKY people. Next to campus. Call HOLIDAY INN, (616) 347^041. TWO BEDROOM furnished apart¬ LIVE IN co-op, spring term, open¬ 1-224-8126. 5-2-20 PONTIAC CATALINA 1967, runs ext. 535. 10-3-2 ment for sublet. $190/month - ing for male, female, inexpensive, well. $300, 60,000 miles, 484-9935. close. Debbie. 332 0844. 3 2-24 negotiable. Quiet neighborhood. FEMALE NEEDED for three Needs some body work. 4-2-20 wom¬ SECRETARY AND clerk typista Snyder Road. 337-0947 or 332- an, spring term. Close, pool, $78. OWN ROOM, large house, behind positions available in busy East 0959. 6-2-27 PONTIAC 1968 runs good. Excel¬ Twyckingham, 351-2508. 3-2-20 Dooley's. Immediate occupancy, lent transportation, $450. Call after Lansing Association headquarters. General secretarial skills and good CEDAR VILLAGE. One or two $79. 136 Linden. 351-4108. 3-5-24 4:30 p.m. 485-3394. 3-2-20 SPRING TERM. Woman wanted typing essential. For more infor¬ girls needed spring term. Andrea, to sublet two bedroom apartment. mation call 332-6544, EOE. 7-2-27 Diane, 332-4151. 3-2-24 NORTHEAST LANSING near Own room. After 3 p.m. 484-3938. SUPER BEETLE 1973. New engine MSU. Clean, carpeted, two bed¬ 10-3-2 with 0 miles. Brakes and tires only TELEPHONE SOLICITOR, salary room. $170 plus utilities. 332-1027. 6 months old. Asking $2200. After 1-2-20 plus bonus, 4-5 hours/day. Call NEAR CAMPUS 13TDj - one or two men 2 p.m., 337-9411. 6-2-26 487-3505 for interview. 3-2-23 needed, own room. 337-0501 WANT MORE room, fresh air, TV AND stereo rentals. $25/term. mornings, evenings. 3-2-20 spring term? Sublease new du¬ TOYOTA CORONA MKII 1972 $10.95/month. Call NEJAC, 337- HOUSEHOLD HELP and child plex. $280, separate bedrooms for automatic, 46,000, $1,700, snows, 1010. C-20-2-Z7 care, part time. Mother recuperat¬ CUTE TWO bedroom. Furnished, four! 5 minutes by car. Evenings, 70Z2—"FRIENDSHIP FAN" is 7037-LACY JACKET OR VEST, radio, new battery. 353-3366. 3-2- ing from surgery. 351-6860. 3-2-23 carpeted, $225, parking, close to 393 3072. 6-2-24 a truly beautiful quilt. Col¬ Crcchet of ten strands bed¬ WANTED: CIGARETTE sampler. | Apartweits ||y| MSU - LCC. No children, pets. Evenings, 482-5450. 5-2-24 NICELY FURNISHED room for lect scraps from everyone - they'll create a dramatic all- over design. Simple - just spread cotton or a single strand of sport yarn. Top day VEGA, 1972 Hatchback GT. Auto¬ Part time job. 20 hours per week. rent. $84 plus utilities. Available or dinner skirts, dresses, 3 patch pattern pieces. Direc¬ pants - ideal for vacation, matic, 34,000 miles. Sharp. Call 10 week period. $3. per hour. CALL CAROL to fill your apart¬ KING'S POINTE East Apartments, immediately. Close. 355-3236. 4-2- tions. patch pattern pieces, travel. Directions for Misses' evenings, 482-2455. 6-2-27 Personal car needed. $.15 per mile ment vacancy nowl STATE Abbott and Saginaw, one girl yardage charts included. Sites 10-16 included. mileege. Contact Mr. Conner at NEWS CLASSIFIED. 355-8256. needed spring term only, own VEGA GT 1972,37,000 miles. New 694-0454 Monday and Tuesday, 18-2-27 bedroom, deluxe furnished, pool. DUPLEX FOR rent, furnished. 3 or 23rd and 24th after 5. 4-2-24 $102.50/month. 332-6852 after 4 persons. Call 669-9939, immedi¬ engine, some rust. $950. Call 485-5979. 5-2-20 ROOMMATE NEEDED immedi 5:30 p.m. 3-2-20 ate occupancy. 14-3-5 BABYSITTER FOR 2 preschool¬ ately for 4-man Twyckingham Alice Brooks ers, in our home. Monday, Wed¬ Apartments. Call 351-6666. 3-2-24 FURNISHED ONE bedroom sub¬ FURNISHED ONE bedroom cot¬ Needlecralt Dept. VEGA 1974 11,000 miles, 4 speed, nesday 8:30-4 and/or Tuesday, lease available immediately. Next tage in quiet location, married stu¬ air, radio. Call after 5 p.m., Thursday 12-4. 485 1288.32-23 CLEMENS 517 North, 3 furnished to MSU. Cedar Greens. 351-8631. dents preferred. $150. 332-8913. Michigan State News,126 for graduate couple, lease. 5-2-24 Box 163, Old Chelsea Sto. 332-4559. 4-2-23 rooms 5-2-20 RECEPTIONIST WANTED for $140. Call 484-7253. 8-3-2 New York, NY 10011. dental practice. Experience pre¬ CEDAR VILLAGE, 1 person need¬ TWO ROOMS, co-ed house, Print Name, Address.ZIp, VOLKSWAGEN BEETLE 1972, ferred. Starting salary $130 per FURNISHED. OVERSIZED one ed, available immediately, $50. No close, fireplace, new stove, carpet, Pattern Number. red. Low mileage, radio. Call week. Please send resume to: Box bedroom apartment. One block nerds need apply. 351-9075.4-2-20 325 Division. 351-6368. 4-2-20 More than ever Before! 200 designs plus 3 tree printed... 351-9205. 4-2-20 A - 3„ State News. 5-2-20 from campus. Phone 332-0111. side NEW 1976 NEEDLECRAFT CATALOG. Has everything! 75«. 0-6-2-27 NOW LEASING one, two, and THREE BEDROOM duplex, family New! Crochet with Squares 51.00 ESCORTS, $10.00 per hour. Flexi¬ ... three bedroom apartments, excel¬ room, dishwasher, garage. 487- New! Crochet a Wardrobe VW RABBIT 1975. Radial tires, . 51.00 ble schedule. Phone 489-1215. ADVANCED GRADUATE student lent location. 332-5420. 5-2-23 1614 or 489-0057. 5-2-20 Nitty Titty Quilts 51.00 quartz crystal clock, 4 - speed 20-3-8 to live on entire upper level of Ripple Crochet 5100 transmission, rust - proofed, house close to campus. No lease, FEMALE ROOMMATE to sub¬ IDEAL LOCATION for four stu¬ Sew + Knit Book - has Basic Tissue Pattern J1.25 11,000 miles, $3,500. Phone 351- AVON $115 plus utilities. Spacious, 1 dents 2 bedroom. Call anytime Needlepoint Book . 51.00 lease spring term. Very close, . 3587 after 6 p.m. 6-2-23 Flower Crochet Book 5100 parking, dog ok. 351-4572. after 5 p.m., 485-6196. 4-2-20 Spring into the world of cosme¬ _ . acre, furnished apartment. Chris, 332- . Hairpin Crochet Book . 51.00 1-2-20 . _ tics fragrances. Flexible hours. . 0733.3-2-19 Instant Crochet Book . . . SI .00 482 6893. X18-2-Z7 .. Instant Macrame Book ■ marina 1974. AM/FM VOLVO STATION wagon 1972. SI .00 c . ONE BEDROOM. 1 or 2 persons. NEED FEMALE grad, senior. Four instant Money Book Air, automatic, FM radio, new $90 each. Very close to MSU. Rooms . $1.00 988 tires, low mileage. Excellent condi¬ SECURITY OFFICER part time. women apartment. Adjacent cam¬ Complete Gilt Book SI .00 Apply Meridian Mall, Manager's 332-3966 or 482-9849. 3-2-24 pus, spring $65. 351-9426. 6-2-26 Complete Afghans f14 $1 00 tion, $3000. 349-0291. 1-2-20 .... FREE ROOM for housekeeper. Off t2 Prire Afghans +12 .office, Okemos, Michigan. 6-2-25 5(le FEMALE LAKE LANSING, lakefront living. Abbott. Nicely furnished. Cleaning Book of 16 Guilts 41 ROOMMATE needed, 50< fc-JV POO c®. Very good condi- 1973. Power WANTED USED car. 1970's mo¬ dels, will pay cash. Box A-1, State MASSEUSES per WANfED. $1000 hour, tall 489-1215 at any own month. room, own phone. $105/ 332-3740 after 5 p.m. Deluxe one bedroom, all appli¬ ances laundry, no pets/children. house, dishes, etc. Kitchen privi- ladges. No parkinq. 372 6853, Museum Quilt Book 42 15 Oulfts for Today ."3 Book of 16 I .:, Rugs 5 Or 5fle Call 5%. 351-2017. 5-2-24 News. 3-2-23 time. 20-3-6 3-2-24 332 1800. 0-2-27 ... 14 Michigon Stole News, Eost lonsing, Michigan Friday.f.brU("">31, J For Sale If^j For Sale|J^| Parana! ~lfZl Ghandi 100 USED VACUUM cleaners. Tanks, cannisters, and uprights. Guaranteed one full year. $7.88 FLUTE. ARMSTRONG. tone. Excellent condition. best offer. 351-7220. 5-2-19 Open $300 or CLASSIFIED DISPLAY gate at¬ tention! Box in your add For batter results advertise nowl Mar¬ Announcements for It's What's "The 1976 Down Beat resister| and up. DENNIS DISTRIBUTING COMPANY, 316 North Cedar Op¬ posite City Market. C-20-2-27 GUITARS. LARGEST selection of new and used in Lansing area. garet, 355-8256. SP-18-2-27 Happening must be received In the State News office, 341 Student Services Bldg., by 1 p.m. at least The MSU Noee-Plcklng Society will hold Its first annual Proboscis Rucking Free-For-AII, Friday the corner of M.A.C. Avenue and on Awards". Twelve jazz musicians perform the music that won them top apots In the Down Beat slated to speak Shop with confidence at MAR¬ two class days before Readers Poll, 8 p.m., Saturday, SHALL MUSIC, 245 Ann Street. GINSENG-NATURAL! publication. Ann Street, high noon. Bring your REEL TAPE recorder, Allied, ex¬ No announcements will be WKAR-TV, channel 23. cellent, $100 or offer. Head T-GM C-1-2-20 ed by phone. accept- boogies, By KATHY CHOWN skis, used 3 times, $75/offer. State News Stafl Writer Swamy i«. ■ 353-0072. 3-2-20 TRAYNOR AMP and electric Api- Anyone Interested in taking the Todey is the deadline for Star- PIRGIM State Board meeting, Subramanian Swamy, a JanSa»ghpart»ftl PIONEER CTF-2121 cassette deck, phone guitar. IBM electric type¬ writer. Best offer, 694-8829. 6-2-27 DSD SUNRISE Japanese martial art of Aikado for minion Two. Any science fiction or fantasy writers and/or artists 10:30 a.m., Feb. 28, at 590 Hollister Bldg., 106 W. Allegan St., Lans¬ member of the Upper House of the Indian Parliament, will be Worki"K resistance towte m„ ^l HEALTH FOOD AND self-defense or personal growth, with submissions should bring ing. There will be a party after¬ ""'ter Indira Dolby, new warranty, $155, was RUMMAGE SALE, miscellaneous VITAMIN STORE come to the judo room at the them to 334 Union at 7 p.m. wards. Please call the MSU office speaking on the current situa¬ rent ceil politics by $200. David-office 353-9700, home 484-7092. 6-2-25 women's clothing, brown suede Men's I.M. day or Building, Wednesday, at 9:30 Tues¬ or at 1 p.m. Friday. Also we still need letters. for details. tion in India, Sunday at 7:30 p.m. at the United Ministries of maJ°r parties joSf coat size 14-16, ladies Also Ginseng Tea. cookies, 5:45 AM MARANT2 2240 quad amp. Mar- mond watch, newly refinished gold dia¬ gum, complexion cream I Sunday. The Extant Madrigal Singers will Nancy Hardesty, author of "AH We're Meant to Be", will speak on Higher Education, 1118 Harri¬ one called the p Committee. J1* *i II, Presents buffet. 651-5755. 1-2-20 A man called Nathanaelonce meet at 6:59:59, Friday at 335 son Road. ante 2215 receiver. At tbaOM World The committee»u J Both with Union. Please don't be late. love and sexuality, part of the Indians for cabinets. Harry, 882-4904. 5-2-25 Village Mall asked, "Can anything good come colloquium on theology and sex¬ Democracy, a INFINITY 1001A speakers, Dual 1228 turntable, Shure M95E, Ken¬ out of Nazareth?" He was answer¬ ed, "Come and see." Spirit of Receiving the Holy Spirit — Is It uality. United Ministries in Higher Lansing organization, is spon¬ •T.,1975' elared an eme: c"' KING SIZE waterbed, never been Education, 7:30 p.m„ Feb. 27. soring Swamy who is visiting wood KR4400 receiver, $599, new, Christ fellowship meets at 2:30 for today? Bible Study, E-2 Owen Canada and the United States Since then, used. $45 5-2-25 or best offer. 353-4007. full warranty. 351-7789 evenings, RENT A nurse, day or night, ii p.m. Sunday, Shaw Hall Lower Ll^enri Frklay 8 p ,,,. to try and give Indians here a reportedly arr^-| your home. 24 hour phone service Sponsored by Pentecostal Stu- University United Methodist DETROITER 1969, Mobile home. weekends. 1-2-20 351-4040. 1-2-20 Church will hold a food drive Feb. 28 2 to 4 p.m. Meet at 1118 S. correct picture of the political climate in India. present 150,000 people reason. without *4 J YOU CAN learn to play banjo! MSU Primary — we've skunked Two bedroom, front kitchen, aluminum skirted, Lessons in Bluegrass and old- New Hampshire. Any student may Harrison Road. Food will go to Lansing Food Bank. man ShrikumarPoddttl for the J $2700. 351-1304. 3-2-23 must sell. timey. Low rates. Call ELDERLY Peaaats Parsmalii cast a vote for this mock primary, Campus scouts will meet Sun- to work on T-shirts, campout India,,'.jl INSTRUMENTS, 332-4331. 8-3-2 i. to 5 p.m. Friday, Union sv weekend and conference Black artists manifesto presents * am , , ^ peck I, DYNACO STEREO 120, PAT-4 and A-SO speakers list $680 sell CONGRATULATIONS TO Russ, Ken, Bob, Kevin, Tom, Ed, Mike, ZZ&ZKZ™*** Republicans. Vote! planning For details, contact Pam Pulley. New members welcome. a prelude to the black cantennial Friday at 8:15 p.m. in Williams Hall Cafeteria and Saturday at 8:15 LCC serial ".appearing off India without of their n,,, eve, families, and Jo n! John, Joe, Steve, John, Mark, the press has for $295. 482 9464. 1-2-20 Zero Population Growth be¬ (continued from page 3) Joe, Mike and John; yours is A lieves that the present Pre-meds: Plan ahead. Dr. p.m., in Wonders Hall Kiva. A beeniU Tremendous Opportunity. Greg. population James Potchen will speak at 7 tribute is given to Malcolm X. are also being cast, including Swamy is a WOULD YOU like to be able to exceeds the optimum level for the matics scholar 1-2-20 p.m. on March 1 in 334 Union on the Glass' children, the ex- and make tube socks and stocking continued well-being of its citi¬ Kibbutz authority Moshe Kerem on Indian economiu caps but can't knit? Have just the zens. Do something! To join ZPG, current topics in medicine and roommates of the young people, an bTJ present an overview of the medi¬ (Murray Weingartenl and Ameri¬ next-door neighbors, a playboy, expert on Chinese Zj thing. One board, $3. A pair, $5. GOOD LUCK tonight Kim and call Anita Wolfe, 393-0662, or and has Call 882-7367. 1-2-20 best of everything always. Love, Stuart Olshansky, 351-7206. cal specialties. cans now at Kibbutz Ein Gedi discuss the Kibbutz movement skier type who is a friend of Mr. written a yl Mark. 1-2-20 and life, music and more, from 4 to Glass and the young girl's boss economic growth " ® SKIS. SQUAW Valley and Corti¬ Jesus - No one like him ever Help Guatemala Earthquake from the paper. India. na. Brand new, 200 cm. Only $30. Victimsl Old time movie festival, 4:30 p.m. Sunday on SHOFAR, MARANTZ STEREO receiver, very lived. Study His life; 4 to 5:30 355-9401. E-5-2-23 famous model, very little used, in a I" Real Estate ,« Sundays, 342 Union. Fellowship, 7:15 p.m., Feb. 27, Unitarian Universale Church, 855 Grove WKAR-AM, 870. Batchelder said not too many older people had tried out for A warrant lor St, box, $400 originally. $200. Phone singing at 8 p.m. Wednesday, 6 rest was CANNON F1 351-1189 evenings and weekends. p.m. Sundays (including dinner). St., just south of the East Lansing Married housing adults: Here's a chance to play badminton, basket¬ the Glass parts, but even issued Indiu, however he belong] and 6-2-24 COOLIDGE ROAD. Duplex, East His House East, 4920 S. Library. $1 donations. people from as far away as St. lenses. 300mm, 28mm, Hagadorn India 135mm, ru FD tenses, lenses, etc. L,an Lansing, Veterans, no money Road. ball and volleyball for free. Meet Johns had come to seek to tour he legally and alle, J| 351-0146. r J down. Great rental area. Good your neighbors from 7 to 9:30 "break into the business." plans tor«mf ■ CDC A V CDC STEREO SPEAKERS. EPI-150. CDI.1CA 1 Rituals fr] place to live. Call Don or Eileen Smith, 646-0748. or GAY GARD¬ NER REALTY, INC. 372-6750 EXPERIENCE SILENCE: Medi- tation with B.S. TVagi, from 7 to 9 .■ in G"a«™ a' ■, - Thf* "«d m°"9? tonight at Spartan Village and Red Cedar School gyms. "I am absolutely, phenomen¬ ally amazed," Alison said of the country to continue hia J of democratic freedoms Retail $300, will sacrifice for HORSE BOARDING-close, East (490). 5-2-24 p.m. everv Monday. 336 Cass Hall. and Itghtweight clothing (smaller At Hillel this weekend: Shabbat number of auditioners. $200/pair. 489-4243. 3-2-20 Bring a blanket to sit or lie down sizesl- Take ,he clo,hin9 »™ Swamy plans t< Lansing-Okemos. Box stall, indoor services at 6 p.m. (Conservative), Alison and Batchelder hope on. No charge. moneV t0 St John 8 on M A C- the present crisis arena, 349-2094, 349-2172. 6-2-20 MERIDIAN MALL near. Well followed by dinner, etc. Two the show will prompt social THREE TWIN beds, extra long, 2 con¬ ••• Avenue, 9 Snyder Hall or the Beauty Rest, one Serta. Coldspot structed 8 unit. Excellent tax An unplanned International Center. You can do minyanim at 10 a.m. Saturday, change. itsfuture.Inarece.,i)1(W, said the avacado ice-maker frostless refri¬ PARIANI JUMPING saddle, quali¬ ty leather, slightly used, $260 Call shelter. Strong rental area. Call causes many pregnancy problems. To discuss something — if you want tol followed by lunch. Deli at 6 p.m. "We are trying to avoid opposition to will lie low until g] gerator. Odds and ends. 675-5358. Jack Ryan, 339-2753, ROGER these concerns, a group is form¬ Sunday features Prof. Harris dis¬ stereotypes," Alison said. "This this« Jill, 655-2632. 6-2-24 PAVLIK REALTY, 349-9550. 3-2- Now open: position for WMSN and, if the situation da 62-26 ing. Contact Mary Farley after 5 cussing his December trip through is not going to be like 23 station manager. Apply in 8 Stu¬ Russia. anything improve, public resist FREE LOVEABLE gray and white p.m. For more information, phone you have seen on television. ELECTRIC BASS guitar; Gibson 3550745. dent Services Bldg. between 10 Ghandi will rise and pec male cat to good home. 677-5322. EAST LANSING, BEST BUY! "It is an excellent method of a.m. and 6 p.m. Submit applica¬ People's Yellow Pages are avail¬ volunteer themselveiI EB-II, hollow body, cherry red, E-5-2-25 social 204 Maplewood, approximately tions before Feb. Z7. able in 311-B Student Services change," she said. $150. Call 339-2687 after 6 p.m. 5-2-25 1700 square feet of living area. What is God saying to His Bldg. It's a helpful guide to Out in the waiting room, arrest. This peaceful will overload the revdf GERMAN SHEPHARD puppies, people today? Hear His Word in jails si Top, top condition! 2 baths, Spirit and in truth at 7:30 p.m. New Heroesl New Villiansl New services which are available in the 7-year-old Becky Cobb from St. AKC, six weeks old, $75. Call exceptionally large bedrooms. Legends! The plot changes quick¬ Lansing-East Lansing area. Stop Johns had just tried out for a government will not be3 489-4777 evenings, weekends. 3- Saturday, corner of Ann and handle the opposition, Sd Large lot with mature trees. Price Division Streets, downstairs. All ly and the returning Argonauts will by for a copy. part. She did not have much to terms will said. RMS last tested. See for self. $190 pleasantly surprise you I are welcome. explain the latest developments at The Pigeon River committee say but her aunt, standing next oT™ 393 8722 after 5:30 GERMAN SHEPHERD puppies, Caii'vOLLMYrR^LTORS, 'toy the Society for Creative Ana¬ reminds everyone that the last to her, prompted. Indians 8:25 Vollmer, 349-2200 • evenings Help build student unity by chronism meeting at 8:30 p.m. 2 2 29 AKC. Bred for intelligence, tern public hearing on this issue is at 9 "She can twirl baton and ^ In Detroit perament. Wormed. $100. 351 337-1516. ments Shown by appoint¬ planning for a SWU election victory. Come to the weekly Saturday, Union Tower Room. a.m. Tuesday. Law Building, Lans- dance. And what are you going Swamy's after the sponsor, wasl] jan Today COMPLETE DARKROOM color only. 5-2-24 emergency da 9225. 3-2-23 Learn to play Go at the MSU Go ing. to do next week at the basket tion by Ghandi this sut ler Report black/white, everything needed to meeting at 7:30 Sunday, 328 Student Services Bldg. Participate Club meeting, 8:30 to 11 p.m. ball game?" she asked. k Morning, Michigan print. $175. Ranay, 484 1811. 3-2- Kresge Art Center Gallery will is dedicated t( FREE BEAGLE to good home, has shots. Call (6161-774-9156 after 7 p.m. 3-2-23 C s«r»i"3]§j and bring a friend. Monday, 331 Union. Anyone interested in seeing a formally open their new exhibi¬ tions, "MSU Art Faculty" and Becky shrugged her i shoul¬ ders. She said she wouldn't be of fundamental rights ill and freedom of the press.1 8:30 HRI Hospitality Association: "Young American Photograph¬ sad if she did not get a part and FOR QUALITY stereo service visit Marriott givas presentation Tues¬ documentary on "Barefoot Doc¬ ers," on Sunday. Refreshments organization has Shaklee MALE, SIAMESE. 6 months. the STEREO SHOPPE. 565 East day and Sohlite presentation is tors" and a movie on acupuncture will be served from 2 to 4 p,ig, Tlvs she was not scared in the groups in 25 major cit Food Grand River. C-20-2-27 in China, please come to 109 auditions. - U.S. . Supplomontt Shots. $20. Will neuter. 351-0629, Wednesday. Both start at 7 p.m., public is welcome. .Vitamins .Shampoo ask for South Kedzie Hall, 8 p.m., Friday. "I jnst thought it up/' she The Cosmetics Betsy. E-5-2-24 Schlitz in Big Ten Room and said. Sunday meeting is ■ . Cleaning Aids Marriott in auditorium, Kellogg Bring your own yam and nee¬ to the public. This week on Monty Python: A TNI POLLUTION SOLUTION MALE IRISH Setter, nine weeks, last of excellent litter. AKC regis¬ [Typin Service Mi Center. panel game with a purpose - dles and learn MENSA, at 8 tonight, Susan to knit with tered. 337-1145. 3-2-20 The transition from money- some very unusual Wall tall pawn to Hildebrand's, 626 Charles Street Election hassles contlnu aa yea. matrimonial tangles at a registry ANN BROWN PRINTING and knight requires only skill end the (just a five-minute walk from 3S1 ■ 3033 office and a„ unu#ua| schoo| pri„ TYPING. Dissertations, resumes, right opponents. Both can be campusl. Mobile Hrais AMPEG SVT bass amp Used ;<* general typing. Serving MSU for 26 years with complete theses obtained at medieval fighting Fender jazz and precision bass practice, at 1 p.m. Sunday, Men's Observatory Open House from 8 (continued from page 1) 1967 MARLETTE, 12x60, washer/ service. 349-0850. C-20-2-27 I.M. Turf to 10 p.m. Saturday. Weather holding an election 1 guitars. Gibson EB3 bass, Vintage dryer, shed, fully skirted. Near Arena.^ j^0 Epj^opai Community at permitting, 24-inch relecting tele¬ In last year's ASMSU and backroom of a saloon ij Danelectro Longhorri bass, used o JJL hi u MSU wl|l 9ather at 5 p.m. Sunday Student Council elections, held 1 East Lansing Fender Strat, Gibscn L6S, old MSU campus. 351-7997. 8-2-20 COMPLETE DISSERTATION and Christ Buddha. Mohammed, scope will be used for observation. Polish wedding gi tQ ce|ebrate the Holy Eucharist. Ir Rogers Gretsch Viking electric hollow resume service. Printing, IBM, Moses. Are they different? The MSU Observatory - corner of during early and regular stairs,1' Join u, t0 o(fer lhanks. Dinnaf body deluxe, used Gibson J45 PARKWOOD 12x60 located on 5 typing, binding. Printing from your Baha I faith says no. There will be College and Forest roads. registration of spring term, «n diennoe tha (o,|QWS for an ' But Steve Skowroa d plain paper originals. Corner Deha'i close to 10,000 students voted. « acoustic, 1950's Epiphone acous¬ acres, south of Mason. Negotiable director of ASMSU's llktl tic, Ovation 6 string, very old M.A.C. and Grand River. Below Campus Scouts meeting at 7:30 Six hundred of those options. 589-9394. 3-2-23 Science Fiction is the main were tions cabinet, said he bq Jones Stationary Shop, 9-5, Mon¬ p.m. Sunday, Union Oak Room. Dobro, old time banjo, much inlay. Next Alpha Phi Sigma ingredient in THE COSMIC graduate students who voted in New Martin D-35 reduced price. 1967 BELMONT day-Friday. Call COPYGRAPH meeting Bring a dark green T-shirt to the University w 12x55, 2 bed to be held at 6 p.m. Monday, 340 TRASHCANNER at 7 p.m. every silk-screen. We will be discussing the council election only. Sale prices on new Traynor guitar rooms, stove, refrigerator, and SERVICE, 337 1666. C-20-2-27 ing for the highest H Union. Plans to formalize Feb. 28 Friday, 335 Union. This week: the upcoming conference so In the 1974 elections, held at and bass amps.New some furniture. $2,600. 485-6124 Who will win the Hugos? Also, turnout. Systech EXPERIENCED IBM typing. Dis¬ outing will be discussed. the same time and place, some phase shifter and overdrive. New after 11 a.m. 6-2-25 please come. please bring TCT submissions. Yamaha guitars reduced. 40 new sertations, (pica-elite). FAYANN, 8,000 students voted. And 9,000 Asked if he though! 489-0358. C-20-2-27 Women can do Karate. Listen to and used microphones, big SCHULTZ 1973. Three bedroom, Wednesday marks the second students turned out for the was trying to stall theehT Joan Nelson, a black-belt sister, Criminal Justice students: The seminar for volunteers or interest¬ ings. Band instruments, many to have more time I® I furnished. Set-up and skirted, and students in her class talk Student Advisory Committee will ed persons involved in corrections spring of 1973 elections. factory rebuilt and guaranteed. Excellent condition, $5500. 339- TYPING DONE, my home, experi¬ about "Women in Self-Defense" meet at 6 p.m. Feb. The only time in recent years paigning, SkowronsiiliM Santa Marsala mexican button 26,340 Union. programs. Becky Hollingsworth 8310.6-2-24 enced, Monday-Friday. Reason¬ on Women's Voice, 4:30 to 5 p.m. will speak on "Active that campuswide elections have "definite possibility." style accordian. We buy, sell, or able rates. 485-6818 anytime. B-2- South Africa end the People's Listening." _ Sunday on WKAR-AM, 870. The program will be at 7 p.m. not taken place at an But speculation ii' trade. WILCOX SECONDHAND 2-20 during STORE, 509 Michigan Avenue, 485-4391. Big green building. C- j Lost tjoiidj Unitarian? Guest speaker: Republic of Angola: Significance of the Angolan Victory for the Wednesday in 6 Student Services Bldg. registration was in 1972. That and considering the a» time SWU waited foraull TYPING, FAST and accurate, 15 Marian Anderson of PIRGIM: struggle against apartheid in spring ASMSU conducted their 12-1-27 MISSING WHITE Shepard Terri¬ years "Negative Employment Effect on South Africa. Presentation by a elections in various classrooms tion from MERC to M experience. Weekend ser¬ The Extant Madriaal Singers will er, ("Tonka"). Smiles. Please call SANSUIQRX-3000 Quad receiver; 332-3955 day or night. 3-2-23 vice (Near MSUI. 882-8787. 2-2- Military Spending." 10:30 a.m. member of South African Stu¬ meet at 7:02 p.m. Saturday, in the and residence halls on campus. election, it would sees 4J Technics SL 1200 direct drive Sunday, Unitarian Universalist dents Assn. in USSR, 7:30 to¬ Rec. Room, basement of the north The State News for has had more than ■ Church, 855 Grove St. April 28 of turntable, Pickering cartridge; four FOUND: LADIES watch on path — just night, 336 Union. Everyone wel¬ side of Campbell Hall, across from that year quoted the election opportunity for ca south of the East Lansing library. come. KLH model-6 speakers. $950 com¬ to F lot. Call the Union. 353-2665 and identify. PURR-FECT TYPE. Accurate per¬ commissioner as saying the plete or best offer. 355-9860 The question n. 3223 sonal and professional IBM typing. voter turnout was 3-2-20 One day service. 351-5094. C-20-2- "very, very SWU and the UnimaiM poor, disgracefully poor, dis- {_ not decide on a mutuallyhj FENDER ROAD 73, in condition. Asking $550. Call 882- perfect Personal Jf/j Place Your hearteningly poor," with an estimated 2,000 of a possible able election date. 1M4 charges which both puv 1854 at night. 6-2-25 FREE...A lesson in complexion TYPING, IBM. Theses, term pa¬ 31,000 students voting. OPEN 9 - 5:30 daily, closed Satur¬ care. or Call 484-4519 East Michigan 485-7197, Lansing Mall. MERLE pers. Experienced. Call JOHN CALHOUN, 332-2078. 0-14-2-27 PEOPLE REACHED WANT AD That year's Student Council their supporters haveh® each other are petty » day. OPTICAL DISCOUNT, 2617 election, held during the last tions, designed to into® 11:00 NORMAN COSMETIC STUDIOS East Michigan, Lansing. 372-7409. week of spring term, was a C-5-2-20 C-20-2-27 TYPING, BLOCK campus, fast, muddled affair, with the total perhaps, persuade, fc I experienced. Thesis, term papers. Pica Today... Just complete form and mail with procedure contested. Again, many persons, SWl WP Elite. Editing. 332-8498. University may often * - $250 WEDDING DRESS, long veil, payment to the STATE NEWS. few students voted, with size 7-8, $50. 882-6162. After 6, larly Bird 2-2-23 only what the real issues are. I 393-3689. 5-2-23 CLASSIFIED DEPT. 545 ballots turned in out of a Ije Of Night Leasing student population of about The reasons SWU oW [Make A Deal Rivers Idge IRENE ORR. Theses, term papers, 40,000. University cannot arn«T Jtic Company general typing. Formerly with Ann Apts. A Brown. Call 4858018. after 6 Both elections in 1972 were compromise are impow^ 1F<»Women Only 482-7487. C-20-2-27 p.m. marked by protests and confu¬ determine for certuti 1 11:30 Waters Idge sion, complete with challenged thoughts and motive!«■ & Restless Apts. UNIGRAPHICS OFFERS COM¬ ballots in the ASMSU election are not always appall J® Of Life P Hollywood Square PLETE DISSERTATION and re¬ and a complete review of the seems fair to con# I service. IBM typing, editing, voting procedure in the council since wants the wPL fill Happy Days sume Zip Coda. one Iftiegre multilith offset printing, type-aet- election. Nevertheless, it is the other apparently do«l« . ting and binding. We encourage clear that the multiple election Due fo the heavy de¬ comparative shopping. For esti¬ booths have been a failure in both are taking steps an outcome in the® »J WJ mand t for best selec¬ mate Stop in at 2843 East Grand tion make River or phone 332-8414.5252-27 the past, at least for student this case, they do wkl your reser¬ government elections. And tempting to mantpub""! vation today I TYPING BY the hour. Drop off there seems to be no reason way the number o ' Ichulz service. Secretarial assistance. AND CHECK OUT FEATURING: 2 Johns why the SWU election should who vote, with the "® _ per apt. 694-0222. If no answer, 393-2499. COLUNGWOODAPTSI balconies, walk to campus, fur¬ 5252-27 be different hoping for a large ■ * air conditioned nished, air conditioned, on Because there has never SWU pushing for a * dishwasher sight maintenance man, friend¬ been an election of this type Ernest Frey, MERL«"1 ly management. * * shag carpeting and size before it is difficult for labor experts to know, or even officer, said his the election will dwjjj * * unlimited parking Plush furniture Model Open Daily See or call resident manogers Vlcki or Mori IX?ING TERM papers and theses, 12 Word* or Let*: Payment muft ba tant with Peanut* Personal* 1 day - '2" 3 do*» • '5" 6 hypothesize, would be best. which procedure MERC personnel had no ex¬ announced next SWU has meeting wee.1H said it deM*1 "1 with hun * 9' Apt. 214 1050 Watersedge Dr. »Tmrz"l1?S,88",iC9Cal1 days '10" er 11'par word 50'par word 90' par word perience or knowledge in this thztt the Over 12Words Add: call 351-8282 (next to Cedar Village) □ □ □ area and, therefore, declined changed Us P""® "J (behind Old World Plato on the river I) 332-4432 TYPING: TERM papers, dissertations, general typing. Ex¬ theses, Mall to: Stato Now* Classified Dopt. 347 Student Services Bldg. comment. Bob Repas, MSU professor of labor aifd indus¬ complex nature may veryweUdeW $£•« J perienced, fast, dependable. 485 trial relations and former SWU ,ion further. A »!*«' 6900. 0-152-27 East Laming, Mich 4*123 adviser said that the Univers¬ can be hoped for. ity's proposal is equivalent to expected. ^"'Bigon Slots Newt, Eoit lontlng, Mlchlgon Friday, February 20, 1976 15 THE SMALL SOCIETY by Brickman ODAY'S PROGRAMS | Video Everyday - *11 Rights Reserved - Dickinson Neespoper Sofyicts 7 WXYZ TV. Detroit (ZfeArSAN^ 6oTGCOV 8 WOTV, Grand Ropidi &yroo£ S4F&- 9 CKLW-TV, Windsor Fl(Z4TCAPABILITY - £IJA£P -sYsTeM (50) Underdog 6:00 12-13-23-25) News will ena^lb OK 6:45 AM (2-34-5-6-7-8- 11:55 (41) Mary Hartman M Presents 10-12-13-2541) News (50) Groucho <3-6) News (9) Beverly Hillbillies 6:05 11:30 capability to 12:00 NOON (14) Modem Home Digest 6:15 (2-5-6-0-13) News (23) Attack Heart Attack (2-3-6-25-50) Movies FIMIEH HIM OFF IM (3) Young & Restless (4-5-8-10) Tonight Show ,e For Today (50) Brady Bunch (741) The Rookies THe PPlMAPi&S - (4) To Tell The Truth Ring (12) Space 1999 (7-12-41) Let's Make A Deal 6:30 6:20 (13) Movie (9) Doh McLean (3456 7-9-10 12 25) News ■a Country Almanac (13) Adam-12 12.00 MIDNIGHT 1-Zo (10) Mtrble Machine (23) Firing Line (23) Erica (9) Wild Wild West (50) Bugs Bunny (41) Movie 12:30 AM (50) Lucy (12) Movie ,, 01 Lifelong Kf Mich. Learning (6) Almanac 12:20 PM 7:00 (41) Rock Concert DOONESBURY Tod Nugent Pretty Thingt 12:30 (2-3-6-25) Search For Tomorrow (2-7-8-14) News (3) Concentration (4) Bowling For Dollars (7) Movie 12:37 by Garry Trudeau [lorlaiqjneqt Styx Feb. 27,7:30 P.M. (4) News 1:00 MSU Auditorium (5-10) Take My Advice (5-10) Adam 12 (3-9) Movies Ticket! at Union (6) Hogan's Heroes (4-5 8-10) Midnight Special (7-12-13-41) All My Children TU1KMM.MR.LI, "THERE IS (12) Brady Bunch 1:30 MR.TEN6SSPEECH OREATUSOm HUH?..OH, YEAH, ABSO- (8) Mike Douglas (13) Truth Or Consequences LUIELY! ESPECIALLY SPEAKING OF (2) Caputo ,LEFTME BAFFLEP. UNPERHEAVEN, "THERE IS (9) Celebrity Cooks (23-25) Off The Record THE VEGETABLES- AH, WHICH, HUMS (13) News SUHATEXACTLYUK /WTHE SRV- CHAOS ON (50) Lucy 1 LOVE TOUR TES-THE THE CHAIRMAN (50) Femily Affair (50) Religious Message HE 6ETTIN6AT? /WON IS EARTH, ANP 12:55 VE6ETABLES. VEGETABLES. PUNS? HIS PULSE 7:30 2:00 EXCEUENT." (5-10) News IS NORMAL." (2) Wild Worid Of Animals 112) Rock Concert 1:00 (3-12) $25,000 Pyramid 2:30 (2-25) Love Of Life (4) Hollywood Squares (4-10) News ■ Today (3) Accent (5) Family Affair 3:00 ■Morning, America (4-10) Someiset (6) Thirty Minutes (2) Mayberry RFD 1 Rangers (5) Marble Machine (7) Let's Make A Deal (7) News (6) Martha Dixon (8) Wild Kingdom 3:30 (7-12-13-41) Ryan's Hope (9) Room 222 (2-12) News (9-50) Movies (10) Candid Camera (7) Religious Message | In Detroit (23) Black Perspective (13) To Tell The Truth iin Today 1:25 (14) Cable Journal E Morning, Michigan (2) News (23) Evening Edition 1:30 (2-3-0-25) As The World Turns (50) Hogan's Heroes 8:00 THE DROPOUTS FBI. A SAT. SUNDAY (4-5-8-101 Oays Of Our Lives (2-3-6-25) Sara (7-12 1341) "Little Fauss & Big by Post Gat a mined drink V, PRICE ON (7-12-13-41) Rhyme & Reason (4-5-8-10) Sanford & Son Halsey" Robert Redford, Michael for % price with BEER ft PIZZA (23) Perspectives In Black the price of cover. Storting at 4 p.m. (7-12-1341) Donny & Marie J.Pollard. Two men roar through 2:00 (9) Monty Python the modern West. (7-12-13-41) $20,000 Pyramid (23) Washington Week In Review (23) Woman (50) Merv Griffin 11:30 (2) "Operation Cobra" David r ail thc&chamcwx in 2:30 8:30 (2-3-6-25) Guiding Light (4-5-8-10) The Practice Janssen. Treasury agents THeaj/flics-sywe cum$ (4-5-8-10) Doctors (9) Pig & Whistle crackdown on narcotics smuggling "iWiiN.iEMot/r-Ytw (7-13-41) The Neighbors ring. UJOPlbcA ABOUT IT. t\VF? ' 8:25 (14) Sports & Travel World (12) Mary Hartman (3-6-25) "Shaft" (23) Wall Street Week Richard |t In Detroit (23) Tele-Revista 9:00 Roundtree, Moses Gunn. A jan Today 3:00 (2-3-6-25) Ali/Coopman Fight detective challenges New York's ■er Report (2-3-6-25) All In The Family web of syndicate crime. (4-5-8-10) Rockford Files |l Morning, Michigan (4-5-8-10) Another World 8:30 (7-12-1341) Movie (7-12-13-41) General Hospital (13) "Pretty Poison" Anthony (9) Jubalay (9) Insight Perkins, (23) Special Of The Week Tuesday Weld. (23) Realidades Melodrama. 9:30 3:30 (14) News (2-3-6-25) Match Game (7-12-1341) One Life To Live (59) Dinah! 10:00 PROFESSOR PHUMBLE (9) Take 30 (23) Lilias, Yoga & You (4-5-8-10) Police Story by Bill Yates (9) Sports Scene 12:30 AM (50) Popeye (12) "Voyage To The Planet Of (14) Classified Ads 4:00 Prehistoric Women" 10:30 (2) Mike Douglas (9) Funny Farm (3) Tatdetales 12:37 (23) Monty Python (4) Lassie (7) "It's Alive" Tommy Kirk, 11:00 (5) Special Treat (2-34-5-6-7-8 9-10 Shirley Boone. (8) Confetti 1 East Lansing (7) Edge Of Night 1 Rogers (8) Gilligan's Island (9) Vision On FRIDAY'S (10) Scrambled Eggs (12) Love American Style (13) Bewitched (14) Cable Spotlight (23) Mister Rogers 8:00 PM (25) YogiS. Friends (CBS) Sara (NBC) The Rockford Files (41)Speed Racer A new student from the East "Where's Houston? Rockford is (50) Three Stooges must choose between being loyal hired by an old family friend to 4:30 to his unreasonable father and locate granddaughter. his kidnapped FRANK & ERNEST fitting in among Sara's other 9:55 (3) Dinah! students. by Bob Thaves | Duvall (4) Mod Squad 10:00 (6-8) Partridge Family 10% MSU DISCOUNT • Price Is Right (7) Movie (NBC) Sanford And Son (ABC) Friday Night Movie I Celebrity Sweepstakai (9-12) Andy Griffith 'The Engagement Man Always "little Fauss And Big Halsy" i thought you ian Schools Robert Redford, Michael J. were (10) Mickey Mouse Club Rings Twice" When Lamont and kdied Ads Pollard. (1970) Two men roar (13) Lucy Janet announce their engagement, MAKING THE POOR! pt Street (23) Sesame Street Fred tells Janet of Lamont's through the modern West on (25-50) Flintstones "secret vices." battered bikes. 10:30 (41) Green Acres {high Rollers EVENING fitW/Oennis Wholey 5:00 PM (ABC) Donny And Marie 10:00 (5) World Of The Beaver Guests: Kate Smith. Ruth Butri, (NBC) Police Story (6-8) Ironside Edgar Bergen with Charlie "Eamon Kinsella Royce" A (9) Jeannie McCarthy, and the Ice Vanities. detective with a solid reputation (10) Family Affair must choose between his regular (12) Partridge Family job on the force and insurance 11:00 (13) Beverly Hillbillies 8:30 investigation. (14) Facts 'n' Fun (NBC) The Practice (25-50) Monkees "Molly And Jim" Dr. Bedford's "buy, IIU Off TRAM ■(Wheel Of Fortune (41) Mod Squad Harina LP'fAMTANI i» Street family tries to prevent him from 11:30 3)3 Sfudant 5:30 l*r>lc«» finding out that his long-time (NBC) Tonight Show Record Shoppe |dgeMake01 ANight (2) Adam-12 has fallen in love with •*r CROSSWORD W J"it Company Deal (4-13-14) News nurse patient. a Johnny Carson is host. r. PUZZLE ■ For Women Only 1 (9) Bewitched (10) Andy Griffith S33E? 11:30 (ABC) The Rookies (12) Lucy It 5 Restless (23) Electric Company 9:00 'Time Is The Fire" Lt. Ryker (CBS) Muhammad All-Jean Pierre f I 01 Life (25) Hogan's Heroes Coopman Heavyweight Title Bout learns that a kidnapped girl was Hollywood Squares (50) Gilligan's Island born on the same date as his The 15-round fight will be f'I Happy Days 5:55 broadcast live. daughter, whom he had placed up (41) News for adoption. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION WUTS NORTH CAMPUS Meeting Tues. fhulz 6:45 r- r" 7- H * 341 8 342 Union 3 M h Building 3 * U 1 i— . " i7 J Z M I 2v 1 ! ■i z i r~ z m w ■M r] U »r z — I t I L 1 6 Michigan Stot« News, Edit lonilng, Michigan ^oy.Febr, Citizen group aims w&8 Momenta after this pic tore snapped Wedneaday theae to $Qj historically valuable hoj happy maritimera awept on down the cold Red Cedar River to a minor diaaater. The trio had just shot the rapida beyond the dam and were near Beal Entrance when they hit a tree move the home to its new site. and the raft flipped. The three By NANCY ROBERTS State News Staff Writer Another $8,000 will go to the But "Man7 times | students, who wished to be unfortunately for the A part of Darius Moon is Board of Water and Light for Moon house, funds are not the Possibility of v known only by their first names thing fr„m the "JUl acquiring some house-sized new plumbing. And Michigan only obstacle facing it. Plans - Bill, Tim and George - "medical" bills these days, even Bell estimates $3,000 to rewire are But, Gannon because they "felt like a bunch progressing to widen Logan final decision said tU oi turkeys," were thrown into though Moon has been dead the old home. Street. willdenJjJ the freezing water. "The way since 1939. Lee, co-chairman of the labor The Lansing City Council ^rd of have a trustees. Q we went down, it wasn't sup¬ The ailing part of Moon is his sector on the Lansing Bicen¬ tennial Commission, said that granted two extensions on re¬ has the thirdmeeting „w?l he expectsMonday historically valuable home, in posed to happen," Tim recalled. moving the home from its 'The current was damn strong which the famed turn-of-the- he has an "unconfirmed com¬ mitment" from various labor present location. It now has a final dti^S I don't wanttoputTP century architect built in Lan¬ . and it swept my pants away." until May. Bill and George grabbed the sing. groups to donate their efforts in uj a bad position." GanZ, overturned raft and paddled to According to Bert Lee of the restoration work. These groups The proposed new site is on J ™ sympathetic SKSSfil Michigan Building Trades Com¬ want to restore the house as a the LCC campus, between shore. Two Williams Hall resi¬ two mission, estimations to move Bicentennial project. other restored homes. But the dents. Rowan Riekard and "Walter proposal." ■ the house and its electrical Dembowski, busi¬ LCC Board of Trustees has not Bruce Jeffries, helped to pull If the Moon Tim from the rushing river. wires and plumbing pipes have ness manager of a carpenters yet approved the plan. 'o the house i. J reached $17,000. local; Aldine Guy, business LCC can* ,] Later they donated towels, a Philip Gannon, president of said '• *il' It all started nearly a year manager of a labor local and LCC, is in favor of the home be usedul quilt and some blended sippin' several others have told me space, like the whisky to warm the three. ago when the Lansing City being moved to the campus. stored homes other'J SN photo Alan Burlingham Planning Dept. decided to they are interested in donating their labor," Lee said. "This will "I like the idea," he said. there. that are 3*1 widen S. Logan Street. For awhile, the Moon house faced a save us thousands of dollars." gloomy future. Lee and his co-workers met Recital features modern Then Karen Burrell, a grad¬ uate student and research as Wednesday night to discuss possible fund-raising activities. A string quartet qUOrJ sistant at MSU, spotted the usually con¬ Music Rldg, A raffle or a beer and hot sists of several violins, a cello dog house and, knowing of the plans lunch may be scheduled to and perhaps a viola. But that to widen the street, decided to cover the cost of materials. won't be the case Sunday when "Until |%0 it that the piece „„ J try to save it. She rounded up Bette Downs, who has pre¬ four MSU bassists wasinunM perform play." Satterwhite as many interested people as viously worked on restoration Gunter Schuller's "Quartet for difficult, but not ui 31 possible to fight to have the projects, said that she has made the Double Bass." house restored and moved to a up a brochure telling about the police briefs The 20th century piece will new site. Moon house. Attached to the be performed as part of Marc Also at Sunday's terwhite will perform raj Burrell did her work well. brochure is a form for interest¬ ■« Satterwhite's recital at 8:15 in f." by Now, a myriad of concerned ed people to pledge funds. p.m. at Hart Recital Hall in the Sammartiniufl Pieces, 0p,9" hy Gleere. citizens are working toward "This will give us an idea of V restoration of the house. how many donations we can An Introductory lecture on Surot Shabd The sight of a tipsy MSU student assaulting the side- a mysterious man walking i One of these people is Bert Lee, who is in charge of depend on," Downs said. "I celestial light and sound yogo current) will be held on (yogol the opposite direction. apparently gained entrance to distributed them at the art view mirror of a 1967 Chevy As the man n the building by forcing open a collecting a labor force and festival at the Civic Center and Saturday evening, Feb. 21, 1976, 7 p.m. at All approached he reieased See must have provided some took a step toward on $1(W bond"'after"a window above the door to the researching restoration costs. at the Lansing Fund Festival. Episcopal Church, 800 Abbott Rd., East Lansing || amusing entertainment for complaint warrant was issued west entrance. He says it will cost $6,000 to So far, the donations topics of the lecture will be: self and God reolitofa mumbling something unintel from the East Lansing prosecu¬ are im- policemen late Tuesday ligible and then walked meditation ond true living, on. She tor's office Thursday morning. mystery of life and deM evening. MICHIGAN STATE NETWORK BROADCASTS LIVE man's true purpose on Earth, The student was arrested for then heard an unusual stir and service. There is no unity ol Mankind J behind her and was almost charge, malicious destruction after certain that the man was inde¬ Thieves got away with 73 donation. no collection onj| police observed him attempting to car kick the outside mirror of parked on South Brody a cently exposing himself. Ac cording to the police report, however, the student never gallons of gas. valued at $29.12, from a gas pump outside the Plant Pathology Building some¬ Hocke I. Villa. eWtt in the «,Uv.lftiood:CloMly nudc.U .I* dl.l spirituality. The and hara does not (vatlfy moani, at It may ba construed to da Road near Bailey Hall. Dam¬ time early Wednesday morn¬ also. onywtioro was quite sure Ignoble moans to earn ana's living do just what hap¬ ing. Police said the thieves ages to the broken mirror were pened because she didn't dare Michigan State estimated at $15. look back. broke into the building to turn on the vs. Iww iwwlairr (hen'" "n "lu" thoroforo to bo nurtured with puro water to make The student wasn't quite able gas pump switch which H sound healthy, a fit instrument for tho to give an account for his With the aid of two students, was located just inside the door Notre Dame efflorescence of spirituality. otherwise inexplicable action, and then proceeded to draw 73 2. Achor or Conduct: Tho above rofhorhs campus police were able to apply gallons of equally to one's conduct In life. Every thought, telling police he had consumed arrest gas. The thieves a 32-year-old Lansing ovary word and every doed. good or bad, loaves on only a few beers before the man for window peeking in Friday 7:35 p.m. Indelible Imprint on the mind and has to accounted for. Hence tho bo incident. necessity for right University Village at 11:15 Saturday 7:35 p.m. thoughts, right aspirations and right conduct, oil of SANT Wednesday night. DARSHANSINdj A female student was walk The two students witnessed sapling of spirituality. T PRESENT LIVING MA ing back from Kellogg Center Billy Cobhcni have boon dealt wltl SUCCESSOR TO KIVAfl to her dorm at 9:15 Tuesday the man peeking into the bed¬ room window of an apartment Campus Music 640 AM sinch mm I Theater evening when she encountered and eventually apprehended listen to the MSU vs Oakland IV jfflw or Saturday at 5:10 p.m. and Recordland Prespn(s r-4 ' J'What's A 2-Fer?' The World's Finest Jazz-Rock / TONY WILLIAMS and Drummer ™ —L If^LAnsu>er: One of these THE NEW TONY WILLIAMS and other LIFETIME TONY WILLIAMS was cutting his tooth with MILES DAViS at ago 16. Great 2 Tho first Tony Will.on,s iilotimo included JOHN MacClAUGHI iN ON GUITAR AND IACK lifetime includes SOFT BRUCE on bass The current fony Williams MACHINES and ALLAN HOLDSWORTH en Album sets guitar For The Price Of One. 59 only On Columbia Records & Tapes Tickets Are On Sale At Discount Het orris, Reconlland At Both Malls And The Silver Dollar Saloon