segregation conference held on campus I Bv JANET R.OLSEN sought to identify the specific role of each J cute News SUM Writer participant and ways in which the roles can be implemented peacefully," Jefferson said. "We must try to Green pointed out that as long as it is give any final answer on what happens in Johnson said the superintendent must I go people slowly filled the con- could be successfully realized. Selected speakers talked about identify, to delineate those strategies that have shown possible to find such a mass of contradiction on the issue of school desegregation and why it happens. educate all staff members as to why ■ room «t Kellogg CenterLeL y their progress that can be used in other school districts desegregation, public debate "What the government wants helps us to desegregation is necessary, and lie must ftirht greeting each other with hand respective fields and their better implementation of relationship to a and communities not will flourish. set the agenda for study," said Moody, reevaluate the priorities of his entire Kork slaps and how-do-you-dos. To desegregation A conference. represented at this "There is a great need for additional director of the Desegregation Institute at district and allocate funds consistently with m observer, the issue at hand with series of workshops took place to further study," he said. U-M. "But perhaps we have a responsibility those priorities. discuss these fields and Robert L. Green, dean of the MSU "Attitude change and school achievement Iraole was not hard to determine any improvements College of Urban Development, talked is to set our own agendas. One of the recommendations mn.le t,v the [talks began, because the group that could come out of them. On Sunday, about the social scientist's view of school a question of practice—how do we create "We have to help school systems come to workshop was that a training center be h 0[ virtually a "who's who in the social change?" said Ray Rist, acting workshop leaders presented lists of guide¬ an understanding of what will and will not instituted for the benefit of all school lines and desegregation and its effect on politics, associate director of the Educational Equity work in the implementation of desegrega¬ superintendents facing the desegregation SeujCKuw"." strategies, which were followed attitude change and school achievement. eroup among them school supenn- by a summary of complete conference Group and head of Desegregation Studies tion." "The politics of busing and Unit at the National Institute of Education. Jj,, school board members, lawyers, activities. desegregation The workshop on the role of the school Aside from the education of the super¬ are often emotional and not based "The outcome debate of ■j' ntists and journalists, had come to Arthur Jefferson, superintendent of De¬ reasonable data," he said. "Those of us who upon well down the road; the desegregation is superintendent concluded that it is the most intendent, it was pointed out that the public Tthe weekend to discuss, plan and troit Public Schools, said in an opening view school progress debate is important position in the whole desegrega¬ must also be further educated on the issue. Lard a successful implementation of speech that those present at the conference desegregation as a serious and central to the successful implementation. tion process. important issue must continue to search for "Data will not solve the "He must provide direction, information "The most important power of the press desegregation. represented groups that must interact if question," he accurate information and data which will said. "It is a question of is to define the issues people think about," Conference, which was sponsored by desegregation is going to occur. provide us with thoughtful and defensible ideology." Charles Moody, discussion leader for the and leadership to all parties," said work¬ said William Grant, education writer for the E College of Urban Development "We believe that the schools throughout desegregation of approaches while pursuing the goal of workshop on the role of the social scientist, shop leader Joseph Johnson, asst. super¬ intendent for instruction of Wilmington, Detroit Free Press. | $15,000 grant at Kellogg Center, Michigan and the nation educational desegregation." said social scientists not in Delaware Public Schools. Icontinued are a position to on page 6) VOLUME 70 NUMBER 154 MONDAY, JULY 12. 1976 MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY EAST LANSING, MICHIGAN 48824 I ems By FRANCES BROWN and ED LION met by rallies, parties ticket, led a group of pro-life demonstrators from Central Park to the Madison Square what she called the "pro-abortion plank" in But McCormack, who has won the the Democratic Party platform. The plank backing of anti-abortion groups throughout I State News Staff Writer's Garden convention headquarters and terms a Constitutional ammendment bar¬ the country, said she will not let these T YORK - Manhattan became around a two-block radius of the Garden. ring abortion as "undesirable." "obstacles" quell her. l city Sunday as thousands of Banks of city policemen stood idle at the The "Right to Life" organization ex¬ She said that she has obtained "way ic delegates flocked to the city side of the cordoned-off street as the pected 100,000 demonstrators to turn out, over" the necessary 50 delegates' signa¬ jwith them a host of political rallies, anti-abortion group — ranging in age from but the group fell short of that — one tures needed to place her name in land demonstrations. babies in buggies and children to gray- demonstrator estimated the crowd to be nomination at the convention, enabling one I McCormack, a Long Island home- haired people — carried signs and chanted 60,000 people — but reports varied. of her supporters to make a nominating Irunning for the Democratic presi- "Down with Carter, Up with life." A large group of Gay Liberation mem¬ speech on her behalf asking the party to nomination on an anti-abortion McCormack said they were protesting bers protested the Democratic Party plat¬ re-evaluate its stand on abortion. form which does not include rights for "We'll have to content ourselves with homosexuals by marching in another circle getting delegates to think about the issue near the Garden. through my nominating speech or lobbying igolan military police At the same time, a pro-abortion demonstrators smattering of marched around the Garden, led by a slight young woman carrying a wooden cross. Beside her efforts," she said. Outside MadUon Square Garden, Betty Friedan, founder of the National Organiza¬ tion for Women (NOW), was asked by a iecute 4 mercenaries a man carried a women sign which read "Save from the oppression of religion." Pro-lifer McCormack claimed in a phone pro-life demonstrator on the street if she supported abortion. "I'm for the right," she said. interview that the Democratic Party estab¬ "In your case, they should have made it lishment, especially front-runner Jimmy retroactive," the anti-abortion demonstra¬ By NAT GIBSON BON, Portugal (UPI) — An American Vietnam War veteran who left a wife and four Carter, is mounting a drive to stop her and tor responded. In to become a soldier of fortune and three British mercenaries were executed still the voice of dissension she plans A week of convention-related by on parties was ■squad in Luanda, the Angolan news agency said. presenting at the convention. kicked off Sunday as well, when Carter "Carter and the Democrats doing 1 national news agency Angop said the execution was witnessed by the "masses are sponsored a delegate chicken picnic fea¬ s" of the ruling regime and that relatives would be allowed to claim the bodies everything they can to eliminate me and turing 10,000 wings and legs. Later in the I the next eight days. None of the relatives were in anyone else who causes dissent," said the evening, Carter appeared at a fundraiser Angola. 49year-old McCormack, who has three in the Metropolitan Opera House with [y have been executed by a firing squad of the military police," the official news pledged and "about six" uncommitted tickets going for (10 and (15, on behalf of delegates backing her. the Democratic Woman's Caucus. [bodies of the four mercenaries can be claimed by relatives until eight days from McCormack said that a conspiracy was According to one delegate the numerous word agency report said. being made by Carter, Andrew Shey, the social functions planned this week will even Bid members of FAPLA military police, senior army officers of the ruling Popular convention manager and Robert Strauss, take precedence over the convention's ■tent for the Liberation of National Chairperson of the Democratic APwir< Angola, the attorney general, the justice minister and political activities. rs of the masses organization of the MPLA" witnessed the executions. Party, to pass party rules which would "With Carter sewing everything up, Ellen McCormack speaks at an anti-abortion rally held in the Sheep impede her from voicing her dissenting about the only thing left for delegates is the Meadow in New York's Central Park Sunday afternoon. Mrs. Met or- [American killed was Daniel Gearhart, 34, who left a wife and four small children opinion on the convention floor. mack was entered in several Democratic primaries this year as a in Kensington, Md., to fight in Angola. He said at his trial he was in the country less parties," he said. ur days and never fired his weapon before being captured by Cuban troops last presidential possibility. t serious accusations against Gearhart were that he offered himself as a in the U.S. magazine Soldier of Fortune and hints by the prosecution that he HANDICAP RESEARCH GRANT PASSED . ■have links with the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency. The presiding judge said this T the balding Gearhart was "obviously a dangerous person." Iriton, 34 year-old John Barker, was shot for similar reasons. [her of the Britons killed, "Col. Tony Callan," admitted that he ordered the massacre MSU to house special center ilish mercenaries who refused to fight. A second, Gordon Mckenzie, said he helped ut the orders. te day trial, Callan, a 25-year-old Greek Cypriot from London whose real name Istas Georghiou, seemed to have mental problems and difficulty understanding what ■ppening to him. lenzie, who lost his left By KAT BROWN rehabilitation and special education for function of the program. leg from wounds, appeared throughout in a wheelchair, there will be centers established throtighoi [irritation of the deaths followed a spate of conflicting reports on the fate of the State News Staff Writer handicappers to be established at MSU was Jordan said there is a lot that is known it LatinAmerica, Africa. Eastern and We- An international center for research, announced at a press conference Friday these areas already and it is just a matter of Icontinued on page 6) ernturope, Asia, the Middle East and the information and training in the field of morning by Rep. Robert Carr, D-East getting it out to the people. Pacific. Lansing. The international dimension of the pro- Eric Gentile, specialist in the Office of The center will be funded by (250,000 gram will stimulate cross-cultural research Programs for Handicapped Students grant from the Rehabilitation Services in order to understand how rehabilitation lOPHS), said there is no question that the Administration of the Department of services can better aid handicappers, help potential of the program is phenomenal. Health, Education and Welfare (HEW) aqd barriers to Gentile spoke of the advancements in remove employment of handi¬ Barrier Free Design that have been made at is part of a total outlay of (1 million that will cappers, improve both domestic and inter¬ be used to establish similar centers around national programs through cooperative MSU. the world. international exchange and provide a basis "The thing we lack is not an abundance of Carr, who introduced the legislation for meeting the needs of young handicappers but the coordination of the in lesser developed countries. he said. establishing the center, said that in 1973 the 93rd Congress passed the rehabilitation act Gentile said OPHS addresses its pro- and the task of the 94th Congress was to get The key idea, Jordan said, is to locate grams to the problems students have on the center funded. these centers around the world. Eventually campus. John Jordan, professor of rehabilitation counseling, will be director of the Interna¬ tional Rehabilitation-Special Education Cen¬ ter. Jordan has worked more than 10 years on the project. Jordan said two international satellite centers will be included in the first year's operation and will be located at the University of Jordan in the Middle East and inside at the University of Costa Rica. The center is a cooperative program of the What the fish are up to now. College of Education and the College of Osteopathic Medicine. Page 3. Keith Goldhammer, dean of the College of Book page. Page 5. Convention in the Big Apple. Education, said he was deeply grateful that MSU was chosen to house the center. On the back page. "There are over 300 million people in this world that are handicappers and there are less than 25 per cent of them that receive assistance," Goldhammer said. weather Warren Huff, member of MSU's Board of Trustees who has been instrumental in Today's forecast calls for rehabilitation programs, commended those considerably cooler tempera¬ who had worked on the grant, and tures, with a high predicted for the low-to mid-70s under partly specifically the efforts of 9tudent9. Jenifer Fletler has but one thing to say to those not smart enough to get Jordan outlined the main focu9 of the cloudy skies. Tonight should be Cool It out of the heat and into a pool on Sunday. She has a point, but did she have to drive It home so bluntly? center in the area9 of information, research and training. He said gathering information mostly clear, with a low in the low-to mid-50s. and disseminating it will be a primary 2 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Monday, Ju|y)j Slowdown asked on clean air WASHINGTON (UPI) - The nation should slow down its drive for clean air because of serious energy and economic problems, a top administration energy spokesperson said SUJohn Hill, deputy administrator of the Federal Energy Administration, said "it's time to take stock and insure that our drive for clean air is not aiming at goals over and above what are needed to protect health. . "We have too many other national problems that have to be balanced with the Clean Air Act." Hill said in an interview in the current issue of U.S. News and World Report. Pat recovering from stroke The energy official endorsed the administration's proposal for a five-year freeze on auto emission standards. Crysler workers end strike! Focus: World TRENTON (UPI) - Some 44-hundred members of the United LONG BEACH, Calif. (AP) — The day Auto Worke began on a brighter note Sunday for Pat Nixon, voted by a 2-to-1 margin to end their five day walkout from the who got a gardenia from her husband and a new Chrysler Corp hospital room, the same one where the former president recovered from a near-fatal attack of phlebitis. Negotiators for the company and the UAW local reached tentative Mrs. Nixon remained in serious but stable condition at Long Beach Memorial Hospital Sunday on the health and safety issues that led to the strike aer I Medical Center where she was admitted Former President Richard M. Nixon said his wife Thursday after suffering a stroke the day before. Detroit plant. Wednesday Stk""! "41 may have to go through therapy for The walkout forced Chrysler to schedule several months. half-day work shifts at five car J assembly plants because of a shortage of six-cylinder and 400 andd Drs. John Lungren and Jack M. Mosier visited Mrs. Nixon about 8 a.m. Sunday and engines the plant produces. ■- cnhi.fI 440 cubic J reported that her condition was still stable, according to hospital spokesman Jeff Gerew. A Chrysler spokesperson said the u n members would be back to work at Sunday. u Harris' trial begins in L A LOS ANGELES (AP) — William and which could round out a key Emily Harris face their jury Monday in a trial A|do Moro resigns in ,ta|y Women's property ruling LANSING (UPI) — The Michigan Supreme Court has ruled that money m# chapter in the Patricia Hearst saga. ROME (UPI) - Premier Aldo Moro resigned Sunday, touching off a post election crisis accumulated by a married woman can be divided between her and or, For the first time since their arrest 10 months discuss their fugitive life with the newspaper heiress. ago, the Harrises are expected to publicly that may give Italian Communists their first cabinet posts in 29 years. If accepted, Moro's resignation would mean the formation of Italy's 39th government in settlement. her husband in, j| 1 In a 5 1 decision handed down Friday, the Emily Harris, who plans to deliver an opening statement as her own co counsel, says 33 years. • high court held that the Married VJ she will take the stand in her own defense. There is little doubt her husband also will Moro handed his Property Act does not apply in divorce cases. * resignation to President Giovanni Leone during a brief meeting at the The decision came in a case in which a woman testify. Quirinale Palace. appealed lower court rulings that », Hearst, the absent co-defendant who has reviled the Harrises as her sworn enemies, is part of her private inheritance in a property settlement. Leone reserved his decision on whether to accept, but politicians said they expected ire to be the subject of much The Married Women's Property Act says that a wife has the testimony. Leone to start the search for a new premier in consultations with leaders of all parties same right to her The prosecution will present its case first property as unmarried women and is not liable for her husband's debts. — recreating through witnesses two days of Monday. violence which began with Hearst firing a fusillade of machine gun fire at a Los Angeles ■ea sporting goods store. Hearst, now a convicted bank robber, has admitted she emptied two machine help the Harrises escape arrest. It was. she said, "a reflex action," drilled into her by the terrorist Symbionese Liberation guns to Amin cuts Arab guerilla ties Milliken wants veto on dumpijJ Army. TRAVERSE CITY (UPI) Gov. Milliken says he will continue to TEL AVIV (AP) - President Idi Amin of Uganda says he has severed relations with — press federil officials for a written response to his demand for Arab guerilla organizations because they have caused him veto power over the "nothing but trouble," an Israeli wastes in Michigan. dumping «| J ^ colonel said Sunday. Bill's backer shot to death Amin also said in a telephone call Friday that the Israeli commandos who raided Entebbe Airport in Uganda to free more than 100 hijack hostages were "very good," Col. Baruch Milliken told a news conference Friday he has not been deterred by testimony from an Energy Research and Development Administration Congn— Bar-lev said. out state veto authority. official thul BATON ROUGE (UPI) — A public relations executive who produced an advertising Bar-lev the Israeli was military attache to Uganda before Amin threw out his Israeli campaign promoting passage of a controversial right-to-work bill was shot to death eight hours after final legislative approval of the measure. Leslie had just returned from a Sunday advisers. Movement not dead, Davis saj victory party celebrating the passage of the bill when he as shot. A security guard at the Prince Murat Hotel found Leslie near his parked car. a few yards from his motel room. Israeli named Miss Universe DETROIT (UPI) —, Angela Davis, acquitted of murder, charges in a trial four years ago, says the protest movement didkidnaping and eo„ not die with thetmi He had been celebrating with Ed Steimel, '60s. president of the Louisiana Association of HONG KONG (API Business and Industry, and former — Brunette Rina Messinger became Israel's first Miss Universe "There seems to be a trend to Rep. Jimmy Wilson at another hotel before the on underestimating the ability of people to become shooting. Sunday, presenting pageant officials with the knotty problem of how to protect their new a protest movement," Davis said Saturday. "In intj The three were celebrating the celebrity from terrorists. reality people are more attunedtok passage of a right-to-work bill approved by the Senate things once considered the purview of crazy radicals. Thursday night. The legislation would outlaw closed union shops in the state. Messinger, 20. wept with joy at her selection and displayed little concern Davis spent the weekend in Detroit to over fears for her safety. rights in Raleigh. N.C. on Labor Day. organize a national march for human anil SYRIAN FORCES OVERRUN CAMPUS Uganda asks New York hospital walkout continue Leftists seek troops UN to By UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL The URW is decry strike against Firestone. on A strike of New York behind normal because sanitatioi n| hospital workers Goodyear, Goodrich and Uniroyal. refused to work overtime in affecting care for thousands of patients •In Raleigh, N.C., 11 city-trucks andbne proposed wage increase. from Egypt, Lybia a broadened Saturday, growing into the from a private contractor moved out on largest of the walkouts in the nation's labor •Negotiators for about 2,500 m aggression' picture. Members of Local 1199 of the National Saturday, not a normal work day, to pick up trash and garbage piled walkout of city workers. The up during a city fired more three striking locals of the Servi ployes International union asked ml Union of Hospital and Health Care Em¬ resume with Alameda County f UNITED NATIONS. N.Y. (AP) - than 150 strikers Friday, and said it would BEIRUT (AP) Ugan¬ officials at Oakland. The workers« — Palestinian and Leban¬ Right-wing Christians said they captured da and Israel exchanged ployes went on strike against 14 nursing take a week or two to build ese leftist leaders blistering accusa¬ homes and 10 city-operated up to full strike June 2 in a pay dispute, andil charged on Sunday that four more leftist-controlled villages in their tions hospitals. Their strength. Syrian troops and tanks were overrunning Friday in the Security Council debate move, extending a walkout spokesman said the strikers have nf push north out of the 800-square-mile over the Israeli raid into beginning •Garbage collections in Philadelphia were two Palestinian refugee camps near Uganda that Wednesday against 34 privately owned wage and other demands. Tripoli Christian enclave north of Beirut. And a rescued more than 100 and pleaded for Egypt, Libya and Iraq" to right-wing spokesman said the noose was hostages from nonprofit hospitals, now affects more than send troops within 24 hours. pro-Palestinian plane hijackers. 40,000 workers and tightening in the nearly three-week-old an equal number of Fire peals for military help in the Lebanese civil assault on Egypt has refused previous leftist ap¬ Zaatar in the Palestinian refugee camp Tal southeast Beirut. Ugandan Foreign Minister Juma Oris demanded that the council condemn Israel for "barbaric, unprovoked and naked patients. Union officials said it was the biggest hospital dispute in U.S. history, and Gov. CHICAGO (UPI) interrupts rock concert] "In brief, there is total paralysis in all the — Fire broke out on the roof of a structure inside aggression" against his country. Hugh Carey of New York called it Comis) vital services" in leftist-controlled Saturday, generating thick smoke that forced most of an estimated Syrian Information Minister Ahmed Is- territory, Israeli Ambassador Chaim intolerable. fans to flee the stands. 60,000 rod kander, during a stopover in Kuwait, told Arafat said. Herzog charg¬ ed President Idi Amin of Elsewhere: No injuries were Uganda had reported. reporters the charges were a "bunch of Egyptian officials said there was little •The United Rubber Workers strike Musicians continued to play for about 20 lies." He declared that cooperated with the hijackers "under a minutes after the fire first appeared al Syrian troops had Cairo could do to stem the Christian and cloak of deception and false against four major tire companies dragged p.m., signaled by heavy black smoke, then left the "intervened in Lebanon to protect the Syrian advances beyond pretense." on, in its 12th week. The uniuu stage for a short interval. F * diplomatic moves. Broadening his attack to include Palestinian rejected an resumed, with musician Jeff Beck on the Palestinian revolution which cannot possi¬ Sadat has already said he will not send a industry contract offer the past week and The show featured such stage, by about 3:30 p.m. terrorists, Herzog declared: "Before us performers as Beck; Arrowsmith and Derringer, al bly continue to exist without Syrian single soldier beyond Egypt's borders. stands accused this rotten, declined to bargain on the local union level. stars. support." corrupt, brutal, Arab foreign ministers are cynical, bloodthirsty monster of interna¬ meeting in Palestinian leader Yasir Arafat, in a Cairo on Monday in another attempt to tional terrorism." message to Egyptian President Anwar negotiate a halt to the war. Saudi Foreign Herzog asked the council to "declare war ■ Sadat, said the Moslems are "caught in the Minister Prince Saud al-Faisal arrived in (DELIVERY AVAILABLE) ■ on international terror, to outlaw it and jaws of a nutcracker. There is deterioration Damascus on Sunday to try to talk eradicate it wherever it and the situation is worse than President Hafez Assad into may be." you think." calling off his In a rare statement to the Sludant SarvicM Bldg. ! FREE!! council, Michigan Stala Univ troops. Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim urged Arafat said "urgent action ... is needed to avoid a massacre" at the But Arafat said, "If we wait for the Arab its 15 members to refugee camps "point the world of Nahr El Bared and Badawi, 60 foreign ministers' meeting on Monday community in a constructive direction" that GERALD H. COY, GENERAL MANAGER miles or north of Beirut. Tuesday, the time will have passed." would prevent future terrorist ROBERT I. BULLARD, SALES MANAGER attacks. Arafat, head of the Palestine Liberation In his remarks, the Armored Syrian units overran the outer Ugandan minister Organization, was joined in his appeal by made only a Buy Medium defense lines of both camps, he said, and Lebanese leftist leader Kamal Jumblatt. passing and indirect reference any _ to Kenya, a "the battles are still neighbor Amin has accused of tanks are destroyed and flaring. Two Syrian many of our The two groups have been ese Christians for battling Leban¬ control of the country for collaborating with Israel in the raid. Oris said he hoped "no other African | At the regular price \ I civilian people have been killed." state" had Get Identical PIZZA IS months. been "tainted" by the Israeli action. _ TREE I Arby's Your credit union...that's Little Caesars Pizza I The Deliciously different Roast Beef Sandwich! where everyone who works NO MATTER WHICH 12031. Cd. River ■ WAY YOU TURN... J* 337• 1631 when you j on campus belongs. INCLUDING STUDENTS. 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Saginaw Lansing LAWMAKER URGES VETO ON BUDGET Wharton lauds attempts to raise education funds INDIANS RECEIVE SERVICES By CAROLE LEIGH BUTTON State News Staff Writer facing MSU and most other universities "across the board" is the rising cost of million budget bill because si ties and colleges had already raised tuition MSU President Clifton R. Wharton has issued a statement running a university due to inflation. based on Milliken's proposal. recognizing the effort Wharton said that people in education at ICenfer offers made by the Michigan Huffman said that those institutions that Legislature to meet times tend to focus too strongly on the the needs of the state's institutions of raised tuition before the legislature in¬ coun seling needs of their individual institutions rather higher education. creased the higher education budget should than on the whole picture. 'The reason I issued the statement is that justify accepting the extra funds. I know the state has been in a difficult "However, we cannot be so blinded by By GEORGIA HANSHEW Center (LNAIC) located at 1427 E. this that we fail to understand the "They can't have their cake and eat it problems too," Huffman said. .„ about 1,200 clients, the situation facing difficult choices in terms of "Now that we have Michigan Ave. It there to provide majority of whom encountered by the legislature or to be have utilised the center's resources. funding support," Wharton said. appreciative of the help it is trying to gotten the universities 16 million extra bearing .... There are nine paid members of the dollars we have to ask them where they ,w .... tri-county staff, The state legislature increased the pro¬ provide within the limits of available all Indians and American Indian Center. Ingham). many volunteers involved in posed higher education budget $16 million resources," Wharton said. propose to spend the money." rather small, crowded, but special programs that the center sponsors. over Gov. Milliken's The services ottered ■ by the LNAIC original proposal, Meanwhile at least one state senator is The University of Michigan (U-M) is one r'rvanizril rooms. On the walls of the include job An example of such a program is the which resulted in a $2.8 million addition to urging Milliken to veto the higher education school that raised tuition L tinn office room hang Indian paintings counseling and placement and recreational program. This the the appropriation for MSU. following the referral to other social service summer appropriations bill because he fears the governor's recommended budget in April. a «ens and a feathered headdress, agencies for center is sponsoring three boys' baseball "We are grateful for those additional housing and health. teams, legislature may have overfunded higher Robbin Fleming, president of U-M, said ings and necklaces hang in a glass The LNAIC one girls' Softball team and one funds, since they will help mitigate the education by $10 to $11 million. that a veto of the final bill would make was created in 1970 under Softball te'.m in the Lansing ■all. A woman sits at a sewing the Federal women s city deficit we inevitably face," Wharton said. Dept. of Housing and Urban State Sen. Bill Huffman, D-Madison, said things "extremely difficult" for the univer¬ i inner room. The phone rings (continued on page 6) The President said the main problem Development's Model Cities program. that he may call for a reduction in the $482 sity. Penally and an Indian woman answers The center receives ',s gleaming sports trophies sit a grant from the Dept. of Health, Education and Welfare Fleming said that U-M still needs the of a filing cabinet, tuition increase despite the legislature's op (HEW) Office of Native Americans Pro¬ e Lansing North America Indian gram. This grant provides the administra¬ tive base of the Urban Indian staff for the center and allows the Center, the Indian Josephine Wharton begins drive additional appropriation dollars because of 'he cutback suffered by universities in the fiscal year change. [jsitions open Center to solicit direct service from other funding sources, programs to correct railroad The legislature changed the fiscal year from one ending June 30, as the universities gate problem according to a do, to September 30, leaving a three month report put out by the center. unfunded gap. ASMSU Staff The Indian Center works in with the Lansing School cooperation District, the Dept. Legislation was then passed to allow of Social Services, the By KAT BROWN situation to him. Then she spoke to people in her office and at the Michigan Employ¬ State News Staff Writer MSU Employe's Credit Union. Wharton said funding for that three-month gap, but the ment Security Commission, the everyone was happy spending level was cut and the universities Capitol Over 1,100 students and employes of MSU have (Isu President Jersey Maskins has unced openings for any students with Area Economic expressed their to sign the petition and some of them made copies and began tost money they had not planned on losing. Opportunity Committee concerned over the scheduling of the Grand Trunk and ess experience interested in working and MSU. passing them around themselves. Fleming said that he would be "very Study of the ASMSU Business Office Chesapeake and Ohio railroads and the "frequent malfunctioning" Wharton sent copies of the petition to the Technically, anyone can use the services of the crossing gates at South Harrison Road. presidents of both surprised" if Milliken vetoes the bill -dures. of the center. railroads, President Wharton, Mayor Griffiths, Blanche Martin, because of the difficulty they had reaching ; is also open until 5 p.m. July "You don't have to be Indian," said Bill Josephine Wharton, coordinator of training programs in the chairperson of the MSU Board of Trustees and several others and MSU personnel office, began a final figures. J, the position of Assistant Comptroller Cross, chairperson of the Michigan Indian petition drive after waiting at the is now waiting for action to be taken. Ae newly designed programming board, crossing gate one time too many. The President's Council of State Colleges Benefit Assn. (MIBA). "It's there for Over a period of three weeks in June, 1,128 Wharton said it is not just the students in signatures were University and Universities sent a letter praising the ■ogramriling board was created to anyone who would like to use the referral obtained stating, "We, the undersigned, apartments who are affected, but also the employes of the legislature for the work done the higher 'inale all student entertainment pro- protest the scheduling of on Grand Trunk and Chesapeake and Ohio trains crossing South buildings on Harrison Road and many who drive in from Lansing. education budget. ning groups on campus, such as Union The MIBA is the nonprofit corporation Harrison at the hours 8 a.m., 12 noon, 1 p.m., and 5 ties Board, Pop Entertainment and which administers the Indian Center. p.m. Also, Wharton cited the credit union as a The letter said that while tuition will attention is called to the frequent primary example because But, Indian Center director Janice Beck- malfunctioning of the crossing many of the members try and do business during their lunch hours have to be raised at most universities to itions are available in 307 and 334 gates previous to and following passage of trains." and will get held up going to and from the credit union. She horn added, "we're here added meet the rising costs, the presidents mainly to deal with Wharton decided to take action one day when it took her 25 ni Services Bldg., Monday through Indian that people will often get out of their cars to lift the people." minutes to get back to work during her lunch hour. She said she crossing gates appreciate the effort made by the legisla¬ Beckhorn estimates that the center has called East Lansing Mayor George Griffiths and up so they can cross the tracks. ture to improve upon the recommendation explained the (continued on page 6) of the governor. iV Fish flourish in project to improve wastewater By MICHAEL SAVEL Information. "From lake to lake these some is being used as State News StaH Writer nutrients are taken up by algae and plant experimental live¬ stock feed," Downs said. "This represents Large-mouthed black bass fingerlings life and the water becomes cleaner." useful recycling of what would be stocked in an experimental lake in the Downs said the fish are stocked so their pollutants Water Quality Management if allowed to flow into natural rivers and Project one growth can be checked and examined to lakes." year ago showed growth of up to 10 inches determine if they could be suitable for The Water Quality Management Project in samples taken Friday. eating. seeks to stop eutrophication, the 'The growth has been very good aging of a compar¬ 'These fish can produce additional food lake by nutrient enrichment. ed to other lakes in the county," said and we have indications that they Eutrophica¬ Thomas Bahr, director of the Institute of may be tion has harmed Lake Erie and threatens suitable for eating," he said. "The ones we Lakes Michigan and Huron. Water Research and associate professor of netted last fall had no more bacteria than "In the project, the nutrients are taken fisheries and wildlife. 'They were nice and the average Michigan lake." fat, some were 10.5 inches long." up by plant life instead of flowing into lakes Bahr attributes the fast growth of the and leading to The Water Quality Management deterioration," Downs said. Project fish to the ideal conditions in the project "If this excessive amount of consists of four lakes which are fed by and the excessive amounts of food. nitrogen and wastewater from the East Lansing phosphorous goes into lakes it causes sewage 'This growth is unusual for treatment plant. The water flows from lake Michigan excessive weed growth and encourages because of cold water, this is like a to lake and the main eutrophication." pollutants are taken up Southern lake." he said. 'These fish also The Water Quality Management by algae so it is cleansed by the time it have a very large food supply which of Project is the only one of its kind in the country. reaches the last lake. "Water that is piped from the East course, accelerates their growth." "The research facility itself is unique in Mark Halter and Tom Rohrer of Another possibility is the harvesting of that we have the series of lakes," Downs the Fisheries and Wildlife De¬ Lansing sewage treatment plant still has the algae, which recycles another pollutant said. 'The idea of removing the nutrients is nitrogen and phosphorous, which leads to partment harvest bass from deterioration of a lake," said Charles that under the conventional methods of being experimented with, but the ones that Lake Four at the Water Quality sewage treatment winds up in waterways. I know of only consist of a single lake or Downs, editor of Environmental Quality 'The algae can be used for compost and Management Project. lagoon." r 'u~r fSNphotot/RaixrtKwM ?n!k c* when Put Into the lake a year ago as fingerlings grew np wMeh is above average growth for area lakes. to Board report reveals gross underfunding The The State News recently issued State Board funding is that the MSU student is to ask MSU students to shoulder of Education's to justify the inequitable distribu¬ report on the gross asked to pay more for support of more of the state's fiscal burden tion of state support. funding discrepancies between the the operating costs of the univer¬ Monday, July 12, 1976 than students at the others. We suggest that the state University of Michigan, Wayne sity than students at the other two Such a request is especially State University and MSU de¬ legislature take a look at MSU's Editorials are the opinions of the State News. Viewpoints, columns serves state-supported schools. odious when it is realized that programs and compare them to the letters are personal opinions. comment. MSU students have silently increased tuition fees often place other institutions. It will perhaps The figures speak for them¬ bowed to the inevitable tuition Editorial Board the educational future of certain be a revelation to this august body selves: of the three major state- increases which have come in the rdilor in-chief Mory Ann ChlchShow Opinion PngeFdilor students in jeopardy. that there is no reason for the supported institutions, MSU face of the state's fiscal crisis. We Managing editor . Bob Ourlian erni°nGo,cf.| re¬ The state legislature should current funding disparity other Al Burlingham 0on"oBokv.B hchel, ceives the lowest per student state have paid our money and sug¬ Edward L. Ronders 'Mo^f learn that universities need to be than their own biases. .. support. The difference between gested only that the state get its funded on the basis of an equitable And it is not the biases of the MSU and U M in the category of Advertising Dept. - budget in order through better model which considers the higher state legislature which will solve educational support is as much as Advertising Manager . OonGerow Asst. Advertising Manager planning and a more equitable and educational requirements of the the problems. They only create Ceo Corf. B $656 per student. efficient tax system. state and not on whatever arbi¬ them. The result of this "system" of However, it is a gross injustice trary basis they currently employ UN needs to prove seriousness The spectacular Israeli commando raid which nation, diplomatically also oppose it through freed over 100 hostages from Arab terrorists at complicity in an act of terrorism? Did Uganda do so? Entebbe airport in Uganda will now be •Will the UN successfully unite with one voice brought to the UN for debate. In the initial procedural phases, against terrorism or will it continue to pick and many nations have attempted to center the choose its moral standard in light of the political discussion on "Israeli aggression" rather than a persuasions of those involved? serious consideration of the issue at hand. It is likely that the UN will ignore these issues and Such focus is concentrate on bombarding Israel with abuse in a narrow more amicable to propaganda than conflict resolution and threatens to hopes that world opinion will see that Israel has been take the Israeli action out of the context of an condemned by a prestigious international body. abhorrent act of skyjacking, the threatened mass But world opinion should not be so easily fooled. More and more citizens of the world are murder of all aboard the airplane and the possible beginning to see the UN as an assemblage of nations each seeking complicity of the Ugandan government in an act of international terrorism. its own purposes rather than the international arbiter it was intended to be. No serious debate could ignore these factors for If the UN chooses to heap abuse on Israel for its they raise profound international issues: actions without taking a close look at all the •How far can an individual country go to recover evidence, then it should realize that it is not its citizens victimized by terrorism? condemning Israel, but only itself, •Can a country in opposition to Israel or any other seeking A WON THE KNUCKLE —TRB— VIEWPOINT American reflections Conference why. Every now and then we ought to take a Adams gave was himself like the men Several more hours of lecture followed little time off, go into a on quiet place, and try around him. They had something they Sunday, plus singing and other group to figure out what America is all about. Not I've been reading so much lately about would give their lives for. Adams was small activities. By now I was so tired of requires doing rules too often, maybe; it shouldn't be a burden to the Unification Church and Reverend Moon and fussy, but when a mob in Boston had us and it's habit-forming; but we might better understand the course ahead, per¬ plagued a sentry and the affair turned bloody, and when second cousin Sam that I, too, felt compelled to write about my own personal experiences with the group. everything with a lot of other people all the time that I simply announced, I'm going to go off by myself and do "Forget it; new haps, by occasionally glancing back. Several weekends ago I allowed myself to my Adams (a revolutionary agitator if there One place to start is the be talked into a 2 day chemistry." And you know, they got very creaking sign of ever was one, and just the type the FBI workshop in By BOB CARR purpose was two-fold. First, just pi Lemuel Cox's tavern 200 years upset, but at that point I didn't care because The conference committee is ago: would hound today) exultantly proclaimed Indianapolis, under the premise that I uniquely interest in serving and experiencing 4 pence a night for bed "The Boston Massacre," John Adams knew would get a summer job if I went through my own peace of mind was considerably important in the legislative It is tij more important right then than what they process. dynamics of the conference. Second, brt 6 pence with pot luck better. Somebody had to defend British their training session. I later found out that there that a small number can decide the Ms. Schroeder and I had amendments ii 2 pence for there is no such thing as a paying thought about me. It was in these quiet ultimate outcome of legislation. The confer¬ housekeeping Captain Preston and his seven soldiers, and job for moments alone that I disagreement on the bill on which f No more than 5 to sleep in one bed he took on the task knowing full well that it one of their workers; all finally figured out ence committee has great potential for good money goes into a what I felt was wrong; these thought we could make a posii No boots to be worn in bed would probably ruin his career. His Puritan common fund. people beyond the formalistic function of reconcil¬ tion. believed that the second Messiah had No razor grinders or tinkers to be taken in When we first arrived I had a somewhat ing differences between House and Senate conscience told him to, and he did it and got We failed to get appointed. The spirit® No already arrived and that Rev. Moon was the dogs allowed in the kitchen them off. uneasy feeling, but nothing that I could put versions of the same legislation for final not the letter, of the antiseniority systr Organ grinders to sleep in the wash house figure. I checked out my theory with the House, Senate and Presidential approval. Those men could write, too. Tom Paine's my finger on. I wasn't terribly thrilled lecturer and my suspicions were confirmed. reforms conveniently eluded them. That was how you traveled in those days. Common Sense was meant for plain men in about calling people whom I'd never met I felt so much more Unfortunately, as presently conceived, Ms. Schroeder and I sought to sit And just about that time a before "brother" or "sister," but I figured peaceful inside after I the conference committee has group of men desperate danger and desperately in ear¬ made this realization, but I great poten¬ the conference committee meetings. were deadly serious and in grave danger nest and its peroration still makes the that was my problem, so I settled back, desperately tial for bad. It can be a public confidence §i| were meeting in spine wanted to come home. I never knew how mising that our colleagues on the Anna Carpenters Hall, Philadel¬ tingle. "Oh ye that love mankind!" it begins. trying to relax and enjoy myself. hard it could be to do just that, however, restoring procedure or the worst that Services Committee who seemed phia, to hear what kind of statement Tom It says that "Freedom hath been hunted All day Saturday, I found the idea of until after the last lecture, because then the backroom, doubledealing politics has to ly programed to close meetings to tif genetiflj Jefferson had worked out in his offer. Under the present conference com¬ upstairs round the globe. Asia and Africa have long relaxing impossible. We were up at 7:00 hard-sell campaign started. These so-called public would do so in conference c lodgings at the brickmaker's to go with the expelled her. Europe regards her like a doing calisthetics for 30 minutes and we mittee rules the choice is left to the resolution of independence offered then proceeded to sing for about as "loving" people even tried to tell me that conferees. I submit that that choice is too we politely asked Chairman Price il by stranger, and England hath given her long. I none of my other friends would mind if we attended. Richard Henry Lee. They would vote on it really cared about important to be made by conferees, but warning to depart. 0 receive the fugitive was starving but breakfast was incredibly me and that the Except for the very first day. Pat this week. only way to be truly happy should be made instead by the full and prepare in time an asylum for skimpy, so my physical strength was below was to be with the Unification Church House, attended all conference committee nr" "Do you recollect," Dr. by the adoption of certain and enforceable Benjamin Rush mankind." Consider that, America. par right from the beginning. Lectures ings. On each day the House wrote John Adams long after, "the pensive The Declaration, too: "Our lives and followed—about 3 to 4 hours worth. I was group. At any rate, we finally did get back to guarantees against the secrecy of confer¬ voted to close these confer^ and awful silence which pervaded the house ence committees. meetings to the pi)1" fortunes and our sacred honor." What a squirming 80% of the time; many of the East Lansing at 6:00 AM Monday, and I've On each day we were asked to leave. when we were called up, one by one, to the phrase; it rings. things the guy was talking about (Creation, been telling others about the Moonies ever Prior to the adoption of House Resolution each day we refused. And on each day Qj table of the president of the Congress to We don't have to listen to the platitudes Adam and Eve, etc.) were purely review for 5 on January 14. 1975, most conference conferees commenced their business wr tij subscribe to what was believed committees were closed to the by many at of the Bicentennial orators. (Although they me; we'd gone over all these things in It's weird, but you read in Revelations press, the out further that time to be their own death warrants?" Sunday School when I was younger. taxpayers, and to nonconferee Members of confronting the issue of Yes, and General Howe about that time are doing the best they can.) Circumstances that false prophets ("wolves") will come to presence. and men and deeds tell the story. George Time and space regrettably prevent me Congress. We learned a was joined by 127 tall-masted ships loaded from going into everything, but by after¬ you dressed in sheep's clothing, but I never House Resolution 5 included a great deal which we belie'1' with troops off New York, till the Washington seems like a stuffed shirt to believed that anything like this would touch provision will help us become more producti" harbor, But once at Monmouth, N.J., on a noon, although I had no concrete reason, I that mandated all conferences to be many. me personally. It did though, and in a way "open members of the Armed Services Cor people said, looked like a forest. On the day brutally hot day, the American troops was ready to leave. One girl from East to the public except when the managers of _ I'm glad it happened. I'm now and the Congress. We have also Congress voted in Philadelphia Gen. Howe landed 9300 men on Staten Island un¬ began to waver and fall back. Down the Lansing decided to take off that very night just very thankful that the traditional Christian God either House or Senate, in open session, that if other members are to have thestf" learnej road through the cloud of dust and bullets to Kentucky with a guy she had met there. determine by a rollcall vote of a opposed. that I believe in was there to give me the majority of rights without the embarrassment of intioi came that big white brute of a horse You see, she had only known about this those present, that all or In this bicentennial business of they strength and the power to resist and stand part of the dation, the rules of the conference needw| refreshing knew so well with the best rider of the group for one week and she had already remainder of the meeting on the our spirit at the up for what I feel is right. day of the be strengthened and clarified. spring of our origin some of Colonies on it, and young given away everything she owned. I was vote shall be closed to the public." the words of Walter Marquis de Sincerely, Therefore, Ms. Schroeder and I hi'fl Lippmann, as usual, Lafayette wrote afterwards that he "rode becoming more frightened by the minute, While the rule has undoubtedly improved introduced House resolutions designed put it better than anything else: "Our civilization can be maintained and restored all along the lines amid the shouts of the yet I still couldn't put my finger on exactly Phyllis Popp 204 Snyder Hall the situation by turning the rule around to correct J favor the presumption of procedural deficiencies we soldiers; cheering them by his voice and open conferences, observed regarding our recent experie only by remembering and rediscovering the it did not go far enough. In truths, and by re-establishing the virtuous example and restoring to our standard the spite of this and The first and most fortunes of the fight. I thought then, as other reforms of the 94th important of of habits on which it Congress there resolutions would amend the rules of use was founded. There is looking into the blank future for no now, that never had I beheld so superb a are still tough and troublesome pockets of House and make it clear that in no event t«j some resistance to the idea of new and fancy revelation of what business in public. Indeed, aided conducting public a Member of this House be barred vr man Most great movements of the world are needs in order to live. The revelation by the attending a conference committee meetuM has complicated; there is a mixture of motives. laxness and general been made..." unenforceability of the The second resolution amends the It was so in the Revolution. There is rules, the cloak of secrecy still The revelation, of course, is mixed with hangs over sent rule to mandate that the conferee refreshment in the great phrases: "We hold public proceedings. legend. George Washington didn't cut the these truths to be self evident, that all men Rep. Pat Schroeder and I have committee be open to the public unless cherry tree. Patrick Henry may or may not had some experience which recently full House votes otherwise. are created equal; that have said. "Give me they are endowed draw this Our third recommendation is to af liberty or give me by their Creator with certain inalienable situation and its absurdities into death." Ethan Allen didn't capture Fort focus. sharper Member of Congress who has successful rights; that among these are life, liberty Ticonderoga in the "name of the great and the pursuit of happiness." Ms. Schroeder and I are offered a floor amendment 10 minutes1! Jehovah and the Continental members of the Congress" There was also simple common sense. House Committee on explain the amendment to the conferees-■ iwhat he said sounded more like, "Come Armed Services. Our fourth recommendation is to reqwT out Historian Samuel Eliot Morrison quoted an Along with our colleagues in the of there you damned rat!") The committee all conferees' Liberty Bell 91-year old veteran of the fight at Concord. we have an intense interest in our proceedings to be conduct pealing out for freedom from the Phila¬ Had he taken up arms against "intolerable posture and the budget which military in full conference committee. delphia Statehouse has no foundation in As members of the supports it. Our fifth recommendation is ^ fact. We don't even celebrate the right day; oppressions"? committee we have a strong desire to learn as much as we prohibit the Speaker from appo^r J the Declaration of "Oppressions? replied the old man. "I Independence was adopt¬ didn't feel them." about military needs and the can conferees on the basis of seniority- ed July 2, and John Adams legislative exultantly We suggest that the wrote Abigail "The second Nor had he used stamps, the account goes process that reviews these needs. In procedures ot I day of July, on. nor paid a tea tax. He had not read the particular we have a keen conference need study and improved B 1776, will be the most memorable interest in the Public confidence in the epocha in learned theoreticians and cared politics of the military legislative pr1* B the history of America. I am apt to believe nothing for budget. can only be as that it will be celebrated philosophers. "Well, then," he was asked, Any adversary advocacy on good as public confide"1* P by succeeding "what was the matter? budget issues comes from the few of military its weakest link. Ms. Schroeder generations as the great anniversary festi¬ "Young man, what we meant in going for the majority side who believe we can us on believe the conference committee is P ■ wJL val." get those Redcoats was this: We always had more defense for less sently that weak link. It should become "p Adams was wrong, of course, on the date money. governed ourselves and we always meant We recently sought to be appointed new frontier of congressional reform- e picked to celebrate, who cares? What to. the House-Senate to be They didn't mean we should." on conference rommittee on the military Bob Corr Is authorization bill. Our a Democratic Congressman senf/ng our own sixth district. I ..;,hinnn Stole News, Eo»t loosing, Michioon Monday, July 12, 1976 O logic and too little of the "soul" and intuition. Monroe again makes no pretenses about Hard sciences and technology have put us having privileged information, but dimply worlds away fr*,:n the human of 2000 sticks to telling us what he has years experienced ago, yet we remain in the same place as and thus skirts the issue. those predecessors in terms of BOOKS knowledge What he does have to say is remarkable: about the mind and human nature. We are "In the midst of normal activity, whatever notably ignorant about the nonverbal parts it may be, there is a distant Signal, almost of us and it required a rough, imprecise like heraldic trumpets. Everyone takes the concept such as "vibes" to describe the Signal calmly, and with it, everyone stops presence of communications between people which are separate and distinct from any speaking or whatever he may be doing. It is the Signal that He (or They) is coming sort of intentional expression. through His Kindgom. But this has been the reason so little is At the Signal, each living thing lies down ten and published in England, Herzen dead?" Yet. the gentlemen in this volume known, goes the critique, a quite valid one. — my impression is on their backs, bodies provides. We have even run into disbe¬ managed to smuggle his journal into We are continually looking for scientifically Kontinent (not unknown today) and have Russia, are hardly half dead. They are alive with lieving in the spirit, the soul, God. Perhaps verifiable phenomena which can be studied arched to expose the abdomen (not the it widely the spirit of Nicholas the vision of these men can save us from the genitals), with head turned to one side so read. Even the tsar read it and Berdyaev's words and duplicated under laboratory conditions. many of the about Russian writers:"...they seek salva¬ modern threats of ennui, nuclear destruc¬ that one does see Him as He passes by. The intelligentsia fell under its spell. There is no tion that is the characteristic of Russian purpose seems to be to form a living road doubt that Herzen's mark was left — tion, or life without foundation. Psychic phenomena is a classic example of FMt, il by Vladimir Maximov upon the creative writers, they seek salvation, thirst an occurrence which has been repeatedly over which he can travel. . . The purpose of I% pp. Garden City, NY: rest of Russia's 19th and early 20th century. to make expiation, they suffer for the ruled invalid, has been mocked, ridiculed the abdominal exposure is an expression of inchor Press/Doubleday This is what the editors of "Kontinent" world." anddelegitimized because clairvoyants sim¬ faithand complete submissiveness... In the S3.H5 \mperback seek to do in our own time. several times that I have experienced this, I It is the image of Atlas ply have not been able to perform under assuming the stringent laboratory conditions. lay down with the others. At the time, the spiritual burdens of the world which moves thought of doing otherwise was incon¬ each writer. Ludek Pachman's Thus, if wishes to learn analysis of one anything ceivable. As He passes, there is roaring Czechoslovakia concludes with words that about this outside of musical sound and a feeling of radiant, By SHERMAN GARNETT sense personal might echo the feelings of all contributors: experience, one is forced to turn to books irresistible living force of ultimate power ' Shfstov once wrote of the relation- "Those of us who regard atheism as the between the most desperate times of produced for mass consumption. This, too, is that peaks overhead and fatles in the height of modernity and Christianity as an area which has tenuous credibility; which distance Is this God? Or God's son? Or listener and the uplifting of the ... passe may discover, one terrible day, that is understandable. Most of the stuff one sees His representative?" lirit towards heaven. This com- God's greatest mercy is that He will not is classified under "occult" and most of that Monroe realized that to even intimate that >f desperation and spiritual flight allow Himself to be banished from our lives stuff is junk produced with the sole object of he might have been in God's or God's brufnundly embodied in the new review even though we have worked hard for years a journal of literary, political tickling the public's palate for the bizarre, representative's presence is one of the most at banishing Him." the horrific and the us commentary which has been supernatural. audacious things he can do. But Monroe is But isn't this just more "Slavic not really a pious sort and I confess that I am to the English-speaking world by hysteria" It is uncommon, if not highly rare, that a not either. about God; why should we bother at all Ibledav Anchor. about a Russian journal book like Robert Monroe's "Journeys Out of But what is at issue here is not Khis edition offers us excerpts from the seeking to influence the Body" should appear among a field held piety or T, ,w„ volumes of the original "Konti- the course of Soviet development in a way in such low esteem. It is one of only a few religion: it is a fundamental question of unknown to the West? This is a hard human existence, nonetheless. _Lt" hut the selection is far from poor for which can enrich one's knowledge about the For Monroe gives us experiential evi¬ ■editing. There are articles by Solzhenit- question which I believe the book answers noncognitive, nonverbal, psychic (spiritual! dence that must be incorporated into the il Sakharov which continue their more eloquently than I, and thus I offer only world of existence. two reflections: answer to the question which has not been on the future course of Russian Monroe began having what he calls "out of answered through all of human history. mrnt; Andrei Sinyavsky furnishes •The future of Russia, much as the the body experiences" in 1958. The first time 2,000 years of philosophy and all the an essay on the literary process ravings of 14th and 15th century Muscovy it happened, he thought he wonders of technology: What is a human lide the Soviet Union; and we are treated predicted, will have a decisive effect on the was dead, for there he was, on the other side of his room beine? iterview with Milovan Djilas. In human condition. Our own lives in the West there are poems by Joseph have been irreparably changed looking at his body laying on the bed without , by the his mind's presence. For Monroe it came ■odskv, a narrative by Vladimir Maramzin events of 1917 and their challenge to our other articles both of involuntarily. For you or I, it may be reus a conceptions of liberty, freedom and the political, and religious nature. entirely different. But Monroe doesn't have good life. The men in "Kontinent" call to us to a system, he doesn't advance a doctrine. Ali The shadow of Russia which darkened |fhc editors of the journal compare their restore the spirit, both to Russia and the he cares to do is to tell us what has happened with Alexander Herzen's famous our skies during the 50's and early 60's is West. They seek to oppose all that to him. of the 19th century, the "Bell." another indication of this trivializes man with that which allows him impact. And There is another name in the psychic er. to emphasize the character of the against these observations we have numer¬ to soar. "Kontinent" brings us a message world for what Monroe has" and is ex lies, they offer this addition: "Herzen's ous predictions of Russia's future ranging almost as old as Western Civilization, but periencing: astral projection. Astral projec il was a strictly political publication from an internal cataclysm, to a disastrous still as fresh and profound as a war with China. "Kontinent," if it becomes singular tion is basically a divergence between body ut literary, for the simple reason that oasis in the midst of never ending desert. and mind; the mind (soul) taking leave of the |the "dark times of reactionary tsarism" the platform from which Russia's greatest body to be free of physical constraints and Letters minted nan's finest literatures was born in dissidents speak to their fellow country¬ The publication of this journal and the travel through the city, through the world, ind developed without hindrance... men, will have a decisive role to play in Sherman Gomel! men who have contributed to is a senior in James Madison universe heavens at will; that is, it is it, signify or a re Russian writers worthy of note determining which prediction becomes College and the Opinion Page editor of Ihe State Would like to establish some line of hope. The USSR has dealt with Sinyavsky, faculty that is not easily regulated, if it is at ver. and we emphasize all, were prophecy. For this reason alone, the journal News communication with anyone who is willing Solzhenitsyn, Sakharov and others in the is required reading. all, by the conscious will. fclished in their own country." By and to write a lonely incarcerated man who has only way that it could: unable to execute ■ge. history and the overwhelming power But Monroe doesn't care to stick with the no family and no one to occasionally write. them as Stalin would have, they are 1 the USSR's totalitarianism •Secondly. Rusian Revolution offered the conventional terminology; he doesn't want You see loneliness and imprisonment is the give this hounded within the Soviet Union, or exiled world an image of the satisfaction of the ment its validity. to taint what he has experienced with his closest to being dead that one might from it. But this I, we see Solzhenilsyn interviewed by only contributes to the magnificence of their effort. It causes needs of the body for the mass of people. It challenges those of us who hold other things Journeys Out interpretations of the experience. experience in this life, all natural feeling has been lost; and we all know that (Loneliness BBC; we read his books; we see others to follow in the same footprints. As more dear. "Kontinent" is a force for those In his "travels," Monroe has bumped into ivsky has published a new book and we Sinyavsky said to the Soviet leaders: "Did who seek to exalt the spirit. In our own of the Body all sorts of people: friends who never had Hurts). Man, Woman, Girl, Boy or Child cannot endure a trial so monstrous as wonder what all of these activities, you think you could crush people with tanks time, in our own nation, where we see any idea that they, too, existed in this realm, loneliness without demanding of one's mind. p this journal, have to do with Russia's without some maverick or dissident then freedom as coming without pain or believe Robert A. Monroe beings who seemed somehow celestial and others who seemed demonish, friends and You see all natural feeling would be lost, e. What do they have to do with our using your tanks in his novel? Did you not that the material foundation must be laid 274 pp. Garden City, N.Y.: relatives who he had presumed dead. His and (Loneliness Hurts). So I would like to n'.' In this regard, the parallel the editors realize that the voices of the dead would one before the spirit can be launched, we are in Anchor Press/Doubleday receive mail from anyone of any age, (male ie drawn to the "Bell" may be apt.Writ¬ day be heard out of the mouths of the half need of the prop which such a journal $3.50 paperback experiences out of the body have been wild or female). Will answer all letter's that are — including astral sex (which is nothing and received, and feel free to discuss any yet everything like what we in the physical call sex). subject. With all good wishes I remain But in discussing some aspects of his Sincerely, experiences, Monroe is necessarily in the William Wilcoxson #119-769 midst of an enormous turmoil — it is the P.O.Box 787 debate over the spiritual and over God. LucasVille, Ohio 45648 >n Thursday and friday nights til nlnn j Miss J ties on a softie I 'or casual comfort . a I leather walking oxford with puffed ankle I styling and tricot lln|ng atop a rugged, I vet flexible, I wedge. In pecan 'an for 6-10 Narrow and I 5-10 Medium sues. $ie MwfA JA&op Jacob0ori0 6 Michigon State News, Eoat Lansing, Michigan MondayJu|y|^)97( MONEY WILL GO TOWARD HOUSE PAYMENT Student wins $15,000 in lottery By RAY PARSONS Hyde, who hopes to be a golf "Everyone is very happy for and place it in one of empty ing. Brian Wilke, a freshman at I SUMMER HRS. MON.-SAT. 9-6 | James Hyde, 27, a aenior in course superintendent after he me," Hyde said. "They all wish spaces whose money designa MSU last fall was the winner of agronomy at MSU haa won graduates, is not sure what he me the best." tions number from $10,000 to $260,000 earlier in the year. $15,000 in the Michigan State will do with the rest o( the $200,000. None of the contes¬ The To be eligible for the big Michigan lottery brings Lottery's Superplay drawing Lottery winnings. His wife tants knows where their envel¬ in $10 million a week. The held on July 8. superplay drawing where the Debra, who works at the First will end up. is then divided, with 44 Hyde, who works in the National Bank in East Lansing prise money varies from $10,000 to $200,000, a contes¬ ope Hyde, who won with a ticket money per cent being given to the CIGARETTES pathology department at MSU, says he will put the winnings to would like to take a tour of Europe. tant must have both numbers on one of the weekly green dated May 27 was a little disappointed, and had the right state government, 45 per cent being given out in prise money, 2 pk/79' good use. Hyde, a native of Caro, tickets. After these winners are to be. and 1 per cent given to the "I'm going to put a downpay- ment on a house, as soon as I Michigan, says friends' and called to participate in the "I put my own envelope in dealers. relatives' reactions to his win¬ the $15,000 slot, if I had put it in Though the instant version of graduate and find a job," Hyde superplay drawing, the names 10% OFF OUR PRICE ON ALL KODAK ning have been nothing but of si* are placed in unmarked the one marked $200,000, I the lottery is more popular (it said. favorable. envelopes and put in a bin. The would have won that much. I sells four times the amount as contestants pick an envelope played against the odds and the weekly game) the revenue FILM PROCESSING & DEVELOPING they beat me," Hyde said. from both is about the same, Wharton circulates petition Hyde, who has won three times on the green ticket, is the second MSU student in a year with the greatest number of winners coming from the De¬ troit area, where the greatest (continued from page 3) Construction will begin Monday on South Harrison Road to put Desegregation (continued from page 1) to win in the superplay draw¬ number of tickets are sold. in curbs and gutters. Gordon Mclvin, East Lansing asst. traffic engineer, said Grand Trunk and Chesapeake and Ohio railroads "But the issue is no longer ALL SINGLE ALBUMS are planning to improve the crossing gates in conjuction with the improvements on South Harrison Road. clear-cut and simple. We need an end to segregation and a Indians receive services $099 When Wharton heard this, she said it was great if they were beginning of racial equality." (continued from page 3) is approximately 40 per cent. going to rectify the problem, but she was doubtful that much Grant suggested that access would be done. to information on desegrega¬ league. When a client comes in and Sherman W. Bennett, trainmaster for Grand Trunk Railroad, MSU offers technical assis¬ said that as of Friday, no one at the railroad had heard about the tion be made more available on both a national source and local tance to the Indian center and wants help in finding a job, the center may refer him or her to INCLUDING NEW RELEASES petition but he said they will begin looking into the problem. is now assisting the center in level. the Greater Lansing Urban "We at the railroad were not aware that there was a serious writing up a three-year plan League, which has a job-train¬ The workshop participants which will state "where we're problem," he said. on the role of the attorney in ing program. But the center Bennett said they occasionally have problems with the at. where we've been and does have a staff member who especially during the winter months, but was not aware this was gates, desegregation concluded that a where we need to go," Beck works specifically in placing J&J NEUTRO- on a regular basis. He said Amtrak has a way must be sought to shorten horn said. schedule when they use the Grand Trunk line, but the minute-per-minute the time it takes to get through Some of the special problems clients in what it terms "mean¬ BABY GENA ALCOHOL freight the trials and judicial red tape, ingful employment." trains vary to anywhere within an hour of the schedule. that the center deals with are SOAP No one could be reached for comment at but Thomas Atkins, an attor¬ home-school relations, minority When asked about job dis¬ POWDER Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad. Wharton is hopeful that something will be done about the ney on the National NAACP Legal Staff, pointed out the positive side of appealing. alcohol abuse and unemploy¬ ment. The Lansing School District crimination against Beckhorn said, "I don't think there is as much here as in Indians g. M" 89* Reg. 'I" 79' Kir 251 problem, but said, "It's all in their laps now, there's nothing more we can do hires home-school visitors (all other cities. The main problem except let them know how we feel." "Appeals help convince the Expire* July II. 197* Indians), based is that 70 per cent of our clients community that the inevitable upon recom¬ Eo*tLon*lng Store Only mendations made have only a 10th grade educa is going to happen," Atkins by the cen¬ ter. tion and very little work ex¬ said, adding that there was a Four executed in Angola "need apparent to raise hell about the judicial separation Home-school visitors work in the classroom with the teacher perience. The center may place the BAN ROLL-ON KERI LOTION about the need to and the students and also work client in a 13-week work ex¬ desegregate. (continued from page condemned The site men. and 1) time of the Sen. Mathias said he was dismayed by news that Gear- "Why should we accept any¬ thing less than desegregation?" with the parents of Indian children to encourage parental imvolvement in the schools and perience program, where the client will work 30 hours a week iiS- .... 84' Reg. '2" hart and the others had been for pay. When it is determined executions had been kept secret he said. "We need quality to help them understand the shot. that the client is "job ready" from Information Ministry of¬ 'This has been a day of lost desegregation education every¬ educational system. the center attempts to find an ficials, who denied that the where and now." There have been definite opportunities," Mathias said. appropriate job for the client. J&J event was had taken place until it announced several hours "The men who died lost the opportunity to live and show In a summary of the con¬ ference activities, Gary Orfield, indications of improvement on the part of the children in Out of 98 clients seeking jobs in 1975, approximately 50 BABY OIL CREST LISTERAAINT1 later by the national news new respect for their fellow research associate for the school, Beckhom said. The first cent were placed into per MOUTHWASH 1 jobs, agency. The executions men. Angola lost the oppor¬ Brookings Institution in Wash¬ year of the program, 75 per Beckhorn said. io 02. $1 24 502. AQt 602. came as Charles Mathias, R-Md„ seek¬ Sen. tunity to show its maturity and ington D.C., listed four basic cent of the Indian children 'They did fulfill what they Reg.'1" 1 Reg. 79' H 7 CQC the use of its new sovereignty." recommendatons for a success¬ tested were below average in were supposed to do in their Reg.79' -J 7 ing to plea for clemency for Secretary of State Henry A. ful implementation of desegre¬ reading and math skills. contract with us," Tyrone Gearhart was refused a seat on Kissinger earlier warned Presi¬ gation. In the past year, the same Robinson, acting executive di¬ liplr.'i ». I»» jjft 1976 an Angolan bound Lisbon because the Luanda flight from dent Agostinho Neto that ing out the executions would carry¬ "There is a need for informa¬ group was tested and this time only 30 per cent were deficient rector of the Capitol Area Expire* bpUel^Xl'l. tt» 1 Economic Opportunity Com¬ authorities did not issue him a harm any future U.S. - tion. People must understand in these skills. Angolan mittee, said. This included pro¬ that segregation did not occur relations. by accident and won't go away The center also holds weekly viding food to Indians in the VASELINE INTENSIVE Alcoholics Anonymous meet¬ community and giving referrals by accident," he said. "There is a whole ing and about eight to 15 people to the food stamp programs. CARE LOTION range of things on come each week. "We've got a lot of work which information is necessary. There is a staff member on ahead of us," Beckhorn said. "I was Secondly, cited. a need for training the board of the Alcohol Abuse Project, who Minority think we've scratching the surfaces." just started 79c does treatment and "We need to alert people to follow-up An immediate goal of the work and has a good-sized center is to find larger accom¬ rethink their basic caseload of Indians, Beckhom assumptions. Much of the train¬ said. modations for the nine staff members presently squeezed ONE-A-DAY SUMMERS ing has to rely on people who have lived through it and According to a statistical into four rooms. EVE (continued from page 8) MSU Cycling sponsors easy- they w/IRON Interested in Rent Control? must survey made by the Indian "It's really cramped," Cross convey it to others," he Center of the Indian population paced Wednesday evening rides 4.502. Drop a line to P.O. Box 54 East for everyone, leaving 6:30 p.m. said. in the Lansing area in 1975, the said. "If it was bigger we could 100$ 4/47C Lansing or call Bernard Schaefer or Jack McCallough. from Commuter bicyclists welcome. parking lot 4. All Orfield also concluded that there was a need for more unemployment rate for Indians in and around the Lansing area provide kinds of services housing and other right out of Reg. '3" $239 Reg. 69' research and evaluation. He the center." Expire* July 16. 1976 Learn about co-operative living lad Expire* July 11, 197* Lansing Store Only this summer! Visit the co-op International Folk Dancing will said that processes within in¬ house nearest Office, 311-B you or the Co-op Student Services meet Tuesday evening at 8 in the D Kedzie Courtyard. All interested dividual schools need to be studied to provide better data KERM'S PEPTO Building. people are welcome. and more long-term studies are SLXJTO BODY ,X3 BISMOL The necessary. SHOWER TO SHOWER Volunteers needed for Environ¬ Community Bike Co-op American & Foreign Cars mental clean-up on Monday, July movedl You can learn to fix your must Lastly, Orfield be said there 96* 981 12. Interested students must come bike yourself or let us do it. 547 an intense focus on the to the grams today. office of Volunteer Pro¬ East Grand River. process of educational change and its dimensions. Quality Work Guaranteed Expire* July II Reg. T° Expire* July 18, 19 People's Yellow Pages com¬ "School administrators and Volunteers needed to repair munity resource guide now avail¬ boards at this stage face an Free Estimates Eoit Laming Store Or able at 311-B Student Services bicycles; flats, painting, etc. Stop educational problem, not a ITIon. - Fri. 7:30 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. ' in to Office of Volunteer (Co-op Office) and East Lansing for more information. Programs Food Co-op. political one, and they must confront it." Sat. 8:00 a.m. - 12 Noon NOXZEMA Outing Club meets at 7 p.m. 6oz. Tuesday in 116 Natural Science Corner Larch & Michigan Ave. Building. Lansing 489-6577 Reg.'l" 99' Learn Karate. Classes held Tuesdays and Thursdays, 6 p.m. Sports Arena, Men's t.M. PEPSODENT DAISY J&J Hairstyling for TOOTH-BRUSH DISPOSABLE RAZOR BAND-AID Men and Women Reg. 79' 46' 79' #5627 $ ] 05| Country Swing ALSO WE FEATURE Reg. *1" Reg. '1 .. R.K. Product* , Body Perms Expire* July 18, 197* Facing a big long- Chf C"M •ngsBen below Jones 208 MAC Stationery 30's PLAYTEX DEOD. TAMPON Make ones change in your life? sure you and your loved hove the protection that shot 7PC.BAND! at PIZZA PIT downstairs 203M.A.C. Reg. '2" $1 59 they deserve. Call 331-8870 Graber ot 411.0111 to take Greg hot dogs 25C chili dogs 35C VISINE PLASTIC EYE DROP care of all your insurance * Under New Management needs. health i Specialist in life and 5-10pm A New Expanded Menu Get a piece " ★Nil* HOURS* 99' ot the rock! The Prudential Insurance Company of America OldtimeT.G.'fi Mon. Thurs Frl.SSat Sun - Free Delivery Every Day After 5 p.m. S p.m. • I a.m. 5 p.m.-2 a.m. 4 p.m.-12 p.m. MENNEN SPEED STICK HERBAL ESSENCE "fleStwjtt dEfrifor" LIBRIN§NCrOU~THE "ALT iSiSP)JJ PIZZA PIT •I" oH t 2 tree cokes wHh any 14" 58' oH t 1 free coke wtth any ir (mod.) pine (large) pine 2.5 oz. Reg. M10 99' 8 02. SHAMPOO East Lansing limit 1 coupon por pizza ixplroc 7-1«-7« (coupon) Expire* July II. 1976 Reg. M" (cMfaa) 99' trptrei Jul. II. 1t74 .Jatsmlm Mere Pel, f.:.hinnn stote News, Eost lonsing, Michigan Monday, July 12. 1976 7 Barney discusses Lions future By RAY PARSONS Our exhibition season is half as Forzano is a great motivator said. When opposing quarterbacks natural grass. long as the regular season." and instills enthusiasm in all of Forzano said Barney has a devise a passing game against "I know of no player in the 28 Barney, who enters his 10th us," Barney said. "He en¬ great impact on the Lions and the Detroit Lions, they know teams in the NFL, who likes it year as a Lion, commented on courages the players to help that the younger players can enough to keep the ball away the Lions (artificial turf)." concluded training camp's each other. I like to help learn a lot from him. from Lem Barney, the Lions "family atmosphere." Barney. players if I can, because it all-pro defensive back. "It's just like a family. Coach "Lem is just a super guy," might help the team," Barney Asked if he had any personal Barney took time out from Forzano said. "He has goals for the upcoming season, competing in the Superstar charisma, a great personality and fantastic leadership quali¬ Barney, who has 52 intercep competition at Brandywine tions in his 10 years with the Creek Apartments this week¬ ties, as well as being a super Lions, said that he carries the end to talk about the upcoming football player." same goals to camp with him season and the possibility that the Lions can overtake the Talking about the Lions every year. facilities at Pontiac Stadium, "I just want to do my best to Minnesota Vikings as Central Division Champions. Barney said he thinks it is a help the team," Barney said. "If "We have shown the Vikings great place to play football everybody does that, then I can except for one thing, the Astro reach my goal which is making that we can compete with Turf. Barney said that he them," the playoffs." Barney said. "We just realizes that a grass turf would have to get out there and not keep in a domed stadium Barney stated that the Lions execute our plays properly, try and that the cost of maintaining will be a contender this year to minimize our mistakes and and that the only weakness he natural sod is expensive, but he hope that our personnel can also said that he believes that the stay healthy." the artificial sod is responsible >meone should get hurt. Barney said the Lions team for a lot of injuries. "We just have to keep as a whole should be a lot uarterbacks said healthy stronger than the team which Barney remarked about stud produced a 7-7 record the past ies which show that injuries not sure what he two seasons. that have taken place on arti r his football days With the Lion veteran play¬ ficial turf would not have d he said he is not ers scheduled to show for camp happened had the incidents taken place on natural grass. i a coaching career, Tuesday and the first exhibi¬ oment. he will earn tion game scheduled for July It was also noted that the stealing opposing * 24, the Lions leader in intercep¬ Lions two top quarterbacks. tions last year talked about the Bill Munson and Greg Landry, were both injured in the length of the exhibition season. same "It's just too long," Barney game in the Houston Astro¬ said. "With the addition of the dome last year, with injuries Hall of Fame game this year, many think could have been we will play a total of 21 games. avoided had they occurred on SN photo/Mike Tonimura "Capital Punishment" is alive and well in Lansing with the advent of Arrow receiver Pat Perino both go IM. for a Tom Slade pass. the 1976 Lansing Capitals football The aerial eluded both combatants, but others Notes season. Above, Lansing defensive didn't as Pontine punished the back Willie Donahue and Pontine Caps by a 35-0 count Saturday night Interested golfers have until Wednesday noon to register for the IM golf tournament to be held Saturday. All 'low and Jones and Fidrych start high handicap' may compete and thus have a chance to make the prize list. Green fees may be paid at the IM office from 8 All-Star game in Philidelphia 1 p.m. each day. The and 1 p.m. to fee is $3.25 5 for students and $4.00 for CINCINNATI (UPI) - youngster who talks to the Lee MacPhail ordered AL Sinker, slow ball and slower baseball, cheers his teammates faculty and staff. Those with managers not to use their MSU season passes will not ball. That's what American on each play and gets down on AD-Star pitchers on the week¬ have to pay additional fees. League All-Star batters are his knees to adjust the mound, end before the game again this going to see when they step up owns the major leagues' best year. The strategy didn't work to the plate Tuesday night in earned run average, 1.78, and last year. Philadelphia and face 16-game has a 9-2 record. Randy Jones of San • Sparky Anderson's choice for the National League All Stars starting pitcher. Walking, talking and digging up the mound. That's what National League hitters are likely to deal with when they face Mark Fidrych, Detroit's sensational and char ismatic rookie, who will be the American League starter. Jones, who has a 16-3 record and a 73 m.p.h. "fastball," wil1 go into the game with more victories than any other Nation¬ al league pitcher in history at a corresponding time. San Diego Manager John McNamara indicated Saturday he would not use Jones this Weekend so that he could showcase his star in the mid¬ summer classic Tuesday. Jones heat Chicago in his last start on Wednesday. Fidrych, who has turned on Detroit fans and the nation with his mound antics, is far mtn just another "flake." The MONDAY Pitcher Nite - All Nite Tuesday Super Nite - 4 Super Beer 2843 E.Gt/. RIVER E. LANS. 8 Michigan Stote News. East Lansing, Michigan Monday, July i2. ig7t c STATE NEWS CLASSIFIED Aitewalive R! FRANKLY SPEAKING. by phil frank f ]['>]. 355-8255 f ][5] I j I , PONTIAC LEMANS Sporte 1970, SECRETARY AND clerk typist . Rooms SUMMER TERM singles or dou¬ For Sale BOSE MODEL 800 P.A. speakers Strvlce FOR QUALITY stereo _"]|^ radio, $960. 1932 Winchester positions available in busy associa¬ with equalizer. Excellent condi¬ service the SERVMG AMERICA bles Reasonable. Call 332-2502 STEREO SHOPPE, 555 River. C-13-7-30 (12) Eas.G« Drive, East Lansing, 337-9430. tion headquarters. General secre¬ after 6 p.m. Close-in comfortable tion, used commercially. 6-7-14 (121 tarial skills and good typing essen¬ never ir< house. 7-7-16 114) $560. Phone 351-8070. 3-7-14 (16) tial. Airport location. Call 374- FREE...A lesson in PHONE 355 8255 RENAULT 1970, 50,000 miles 35 7914. E.O.E. 3-7-14 (22! TV ZENITH portable black and comn|«l 347 Student Services Bldg mpg, new radials, good running, MEN Clean, ONE quiet block to rooms. campus. Cooking. white, $50.332-5491. E-97-14 (12) care. or Call 484-4519, East 4857197 Lansing Mall, MfcS $TO351-^_Z-3-_7-MJ12)__ TYPIST - ACCUR ATE-part time. Phone 4856836 or 3516192.0-13- MOVING SALE: Couch with NORMAN COSMETIC MERLF STUDIOS 4:30-8:30 p.m. To operate word AUTOMOTIVE SUPER BEETLE, 1974 VW. Per- 7-30(13) C-13-7-30 (18) 0S Scooters 8 Cycles feet condition, low mileage, auto¬ processing equipment. Airport lo¬ tables, chairs, record player, lots cation, will train. Call 374-7914 more. 3557827 after 5 p.m. 3-7-16 Ports C Service Aviation matic, $2300. 351-5599.6-7-211121 VEGA GT Hatchback 1973. Low E.O.E. 3-7-14 (171 r nt$»"i5i □¥*!*> BOOKKEEPER. PERMANENT AMP-FENDER twin reverb; Vox WRITING consultant EMPLOYMENT mileage, no rust, extras. Best TWIN BEDS, sofa, desk, chair, l offer. 655-3132. BL-1-7-12 (121 part-time, 12-18 hours per week, excellent condition. Phone 675 trumpet amplifier with two oc¬ years experience in profession FOR RENT experience required. Phone 339- taves. Must sell. Sacrifice. Phone editing, writing skill instruction 9376. 3-78 (121 Apartments VEGA GT Hatchback 1974. Many 3400. 0-10-7-30 (13) 351-0215. 3-7-12 (151 337-1591. 52-7-14 1121 Houses extras. Good condition. Must sell. COMIC BOOKS, science fiction, Rooms FOR SALE 332-6451.3-7-16(12) [_ For Rent J! mysteries and much morel Visit CURIOUS USED BOOK SHOP, VEGA HATCHBACK 1973, 36,000 TV AND stereo rentals. $25/term. 307 East Grand River, 332-0112 Animals FREE ADORABLE Kittens6 weeks UNIGRAPHICS OFFERS COM miles, leaving country, best offer $10.95/month. Call NEJAC, 337- (open 11:306 p.m.), C-13-7-30 Mobile Homes old, need a home. 337-7252 after 5 PLETE DISSERTATION and ,» 353-0697. Ask for Ludo. 3-7-14 1010. C-13-7-30 <121 LOST t FOUND p.m. E-97-14 (121 ume service. IBM typing, edit™ OUTDOOR FREAKS buy your multilith offset PERSONAL VOLKSWAGEN FASTBACK | Apartments ][y] equipment here. Tennis, golf, printing, typeset¬ ting and binding. We encourage PEANUTS PERSONAL REAL ESTATE 1967. Good engine with Michelin tires, radio, $250. Call 332-0949. ONE BEDROOM $130 to $140. ©COLLEGE MEOf* SERVICES-BOX 9411 BERKELEY. CA 94709 softball, fishing, camping, snorkel- ing, biking and photographic sup¬ [ Mobile Homes « comparative shopping. For «ti mate stop in at 2843 East Grand Two bedroom $150 to $160. Any River or phone 332-8414 0 137 RECREATION 7-7-19(121 plies at low reasonable prices. See OKEMOS-SUPER Travelo with 30 length lease, now until September what we've got. Come on down to 132) SERVICE 15th. Phone 337-0894, 1300 East expando. Decorated lighting fix¬ VW BUS 1970. $600. AM/FM DICKER & DEAL, 1701 South tures, nice woodsy setting. $5700. Instruction Typing radio, new snows, shocks. 394- 3832 after 5 p.m. 6-7-23 (121 Grand River, or 208 Cedar. Z-10-7- 16 126) Rpiffnts Ify] Q Houses Cedar, 487-3886. C-57-12 (36) Must sell quickly. Call Nancy Kooyers 3393626 or LOOMIS IRENE ORR. Theses, term general typing. Formerly with Ann papers TRANSPORTATION NEAR CAMPUS and mall. Carpet¬ EAST SIDE, Lansing. 4 bedrooms, 1976 OLYMPIAD tickets, July Brown. Call 374-8645. After 6 CLEMENTS, ROOMY 1 bedroom, REALTY 482-1671. 4-7-16 (23I p m WANTED VW ed, deluxe one bedroom, snack¬ carpeted, fireplace, available fall, 23-26. Semi-final basketball, athle¬ 482-7487. C-13-7-30 116) SUPERBEETLE 1971. One furnished. Walk to campus or bus owner, radials, stick, plus extras. bar, air, $150/month. 6553843. reduced summer. 349-1540. 2-7-12 tics, swimming, soccer. Call 485 BEAUTIFUL 1974 Liberty on large ROUND TOWN' it. $165 per month Excellent condition. Call Sid, utilities. References, including deposit, 57-23 (13) (121 7319. 3-7-14 (14) lot in park, 2 bedrooms, furnished, COMPLETE DISSERTATION a?d resume sen/ice. Printing, IBM weekdays 373-3730 ext 36. Z-4-7- central air. 15 minutes from MSU. "RATES* phone 351-8457 or 482-0717. 97- ONE BEDROOM furnished apart¬ STUDENT RENTAL near Capital. AM/FM STEREO with changer & typing, binding. Printing from your 16(171 14(22) Many extras. 6593215. 97-23 (201 12 word minim ment with air, 7-30 thru 9-12, $215. 613 West Shiawassee. 5 bed¬ reel-to-reel tapedeck, 10 watts plain paper originals. Cornet 7.11 Burcham, 351-7019. 3-7-16 rooms, fireplace, nicely decorated. rms. $200 after 7 p.m. 351-1774. 10 x 55 mobile home M.A.C. and Grand River. Below furnished, 1 Mftrcycte [[ftp] (13) Summer $300 per month. Sep¬ tember through June $360 plus SJ-7-J9J15) close to MSU. Must sell. 6792466. 97-12 (121 Jones Stationary Shop, 9 5 Monday-Friday. Call p.m COPY ONE BEDROOM upstairs apart¬ LARGE TWO bedroom, complete¬ CROWN 800 series studio 10)4" GRAPH SERVICE, 337 1666 C TRIUMPH 1973 750cc Bonneville, utilities. Deposit required. Call Bob ment. all utilities paid. $125 per ly furnished, one block from Homan, 349-3310 or evenings tapedeck-modified to accept )4" ' 13-7-30 (31) stock, excellent condition. Phone MARLETTE 1971. 12'x 65'with 7' 13 6 8 month. 487 3886. C-11-7-30 (121 campus near Jacobson's. Sum¬ 3494429. 3-7-16 (31) through 1" tape-stereo pre-am- 21' expando. 3 bedrooms, 332-6047 evenings. 3-7-14 (12) x mer and fall leases. Call 3556118. plifiers-3 speed transport-custom TYPING, EXPERIENCED. Fast and 12 2.16 ' 5.76 ' 10.80 13.44 excellent condition. Phone 372- NEAR L.C.C., pleasant 2 bedroom, 5246-27 (17) STILLMAN ROAD, 11 miles maple cabinet-excellent condition, reasonable. 371-4635. 1973 YAMAHA 4744 or 372-1796. 97-14 1141 C-13 7-30 15 2.70 [ 7.20 ] 13.50 16.80 650. Luggage newly decorated, all utilities paid. south. Country home now avail¬ $450. In Lansing days, call collect 112) rack, sissy bar, 2 helmets, 4764 IS | 3.24 ' 8 64 | 16.20 20.16 HOLMES SOUTH, near Sparrow. at farm, 1819367-3731. Z-2-7-12 20 25 3.60 4.50 ] 9.60 ' 18.00 *22.40 *12.00*22 50 *28.00 total miles. $1200 or best offer, 517-851 7630. Z-3-7-14 (17) Call 484-8383. 57-16112) SUMMER SUBLET; one man One bedroom efficiency partially furnished, ground level. Includes able. 4 bedroom, carpeting, large yard, $250. 351-7497. 0-12-7-30 (16) 1331 [wTjSDEO LOST DUVAL watch, black fac¬ ANN BROWN PRINTING AND TYPING. Dissertations, resumes, needed. Near Old World Village MARTIN D28, used. 1923 Gibson 1972 SUZUKI 750. Only 12,000 ing. no digits. Great sentimental general printing. Serving MSU for Mall. Nice location. $40/month. SUMMER ONLY, unfurnished F2 mandolin. 1943 Gibson South¬ miles, value. Reward. Call 351-2643. 26 years with complete theses custom paint, fairing, ex¬ townhouse, rent negotiable. Call ern Jumbo. 1938 Martin 017H. DEADLINE tras $1150 351-4238. 57-19(15) service. 349-0850. C-13-7 30 1191 351-6458. Z-3-7-16 2-7-121131 EFFICIENCY APARTMENT. Near 882-9783 997-14 (121 Martin D20-12 12-string. Vintage ONE MAN for Kings Pointe East, Gibson Hummingbird. Super se¬ day beiof e publication HONDA 1972, CB-350. Excellent own bedroom, July rent paid. 351-1342, 337-2367. 3-7-12 (121 FOUR ROOMMATES needed for a 5 bedroom house. $70/person/ lection of electric and bass guitars by Fender, Gibson and Gretsch. f PersoMl 1|7] PURR-FECT TYPE. Accurate per sonal and professional IBM One day service. 351-5094. C 13 7- typing Cancellation collections 12 condition, 1200 miles, original month, includes all utilities. Call MRS. MARCO Used Travis Bean artists electric CHARACTER noon one clo.s doy before owner. $600 Phone 3490657. 484-6536 after 6 p.m. 12-7-26 1181 READER AND ADVISER. If you 30(12) 3-7-16 (12) 120 SOUTH Hayford. Basement guitars. Bass guitar amps by publication NORTH. Furnished one bedroom, havo any doubt in your mind or apartment, 2 bedrooms, includes i i Ampeg, Fender and Acoustic. EXPERIENCE IBM typing. Disser¬ Utilities paid, $150/month plus Several P.A. systems, new and any problems, call her today. All YAMAHA 250 Enduro 1971. Must utilities, summer $110. 351-7497. ROOITIS * tation. (pica-elite). FAYANN, 489 be cancelled see and ridel $375. 337-2162 after 913-7-30 (121 deposit. Phone 627-5454. 9137- I J'- J used. Reconditioned band instru¬ readings private and confidential 0358. C-13-7-30 112) oi changed on 30(141 ments. WILCOX MUSIC, 509 East in her home. Call 372-2463, locat¬ after first insertion unless it 2:30 p.m. 3-7-16 1121 SINGLE: MALE student Block 1 & 2 BEDROOM furnished mobile ed at 914 N. Capitol Avenue. Union. Michigan, Lansing. 4894391. C- THESES, TERM papers, legal, ordered & cancelled by noc homes on Park Lake. $39$45. VALLEY FORGE Apartments, one Cooking; parking. 314 13-7-30 168) 11-7-30 (36) IBM (pica-elite) typing, reason 2 class 1972 KAWASAKI 750, 4500 Evergreen. Call evenings, days before public. miles, Available now and for fall. Clean, bedrooms available September 332- extras, nicel $1000 or best offer. 3839. 97-12 (12) able. JOHN CALHOUN, 332 2078 from $159.50, some furnished, ATTENTION: MARSHALL MUS¬ 332-3230. 2-7-14 (12) peaceful, quiet. 641-6601. 913-7- JENSEN 4 (pair) 3-way speakers. 0-10-7-30 1121 latest IC announces new store hours 301211 appliances, shag carpeting, $120 (pair). Gordon, 351 -7743 after air conditioning, free ROOMMATE NEEDED, specious beginning Tuesday July 6th. SUZUKI Road bike. Electric start, parking and 6 p.m. 3-7-12 250cc. Excellent condition. $300. 332 0170 or 337-1028. 3-7 14 (12) EUREKA STREET, near Sparrow, large 1 bedroom, ground level, security door locks. 1031 West Lake Lansing Road on bus line to townhouse, $81.50 month.- 933 Ann Street. 3514869 after 4 p.m. 3-7-12 112) (1_2I STRATOCASTER - FOR Sale, Weekdays 11-8, Saturday1-1Q-5. 91-7-12(151 ,l wit.~nfs] carpeting, available now, $130. MSU. 351-1943 for an appoint¬ black body with maple neck. $250. 1974 Honda CB-360 with helmet. Like new, must sell. 332-3568, Bill. 351-7497. 913-7-30 114) ment. 7-7-23 1371 BEST LOCATION in town, rent Call Greg 337-2069. 3-7-14 (121 [ Rial Estate negotiable, available immediately. OKEMOS, LARGE attractive brick 97 21 (12) PIONEER PL-10 turntable with ' Call 351-4280 after 5:00. 4-7-14 ranch home at 3635 Pondorosa 2 bedroom, furnished, large. HONDA 750 1975. Only 5000 n, Rent negotiable. Jack, days 353- new Shure cartridge, $65. Excel¬ lent condition, 3492707. 3-7-16 Drive. Excellent lot and landscap¬ ing, only $55,900. Telephone 34&- l^oist) TOWN miles, like new. 332-3250 after 5 6400, evenings 351-6351. S-57-12 1121 p.m. 97-16 (12) PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE SUMMIR TRUMPET, CALICCHIO, custom- 2253. 10-7-23 (18) FEMALE: OWN $95 month , SOUTH. Furnished studio, utilities HOMIS and made professional model. Mar¬ SKYLINE HILLS, includes heat, v golf and ski area. £?£" paid, $12S/month plus deposit. shall McNutt, phone 351-0215. doei Mo Service \/\ ing. Close. July paid. 351-6772. Z 2-7-14 114) Phone 627-5454. 0-13-7-30 (131 ROOMS Reduced Rates At 3-7-22J12I 4 bedroom, furnished or unfur¬ nished. 332-6832. 6-7-23 (12) GUARANTEED EXHAUST for LARGE, FURNISHED efficiency, SEWING MACHINE CLEARANCE your import FLAG FOREIGN CAR PARTS, at CHEQUERED FURNISHED room. All UPPER one bed¬ utilities paid, $155. Available immediately. 4894789 close to campus, air conditioned. $125 summer, $180 fall. 487-4451, 351-1610. 913-7-30 (141 KOUITY VIST 484 >9472 SALEI Brand new portables $49.95. $5. per month. Large selection of reconditioned used BEST 3S RATES to Europe. Still ADVERTISE Garage Sale YOUR Rummage- at "special rates" 20 2605 East Kalamazoo Street, one words for after 11 a.m. 3-7-16113) charters to Europe. TRAVEL BY $2.50 a day in our Or Evenings machines. Singers, Whites, Nec- [_ Automotive j|»] mile west of campus. 487-5055. chi's, New Home and "many HARRINGTON, 351-8800. C-13-7- "Round Town Column." Call 355 BUICK LESABRE 1972 silver blue. New radials, CB radio, just 50,000 C-13-7-30 (211 EAST SIDE, one bedroom, utilities included, male, deposit, $166. CjsOB MT. Jenny 351 - 3305 PERSON WANTED August first, others." $19.95 to $39.95. Terms. EDWARDS DISTRIBUTING 30 8255. S-288-27 (21) After 5 p.m., 351-0241.2-7-14 (12) HOPE/Lansing. Unfurnished, COMPANY, 1115 North Washing¬ CANOE THE MISSISSIPPI? Join miles, clean. $1650. Gary, 332- upstairs, carpeting. $135 plus elec¬ and two more September first. In 23 others for 11 week fall or winter ton 4898448. C-13-7-30 (36) 3797. 3-7-16 (16) tricity, deposit. Call 355-1120. large country home. 4899520. ROOMMATE WANTED female trip. Also 2 week Wilderness 3-7-16 (12) 4-7-16 (141 BUICK LIMITED 1958. Rare, ex¬ with or without child to share 100 USED VACUUM cleaners. Camping Leadership Workshops townhouse. 3590170 days. 3-7-16 in August and September. For cellent condition. 51,000 Tanks, cannisters and uprights. original BMW 1973 600cc. New parts, EAST LANSING-3 and 4 bed- OWN BEDROOM. Co-ed house, Guaranteed one full year. $7.88 brochures contact the PINE RIV¬ miles, $1250. Phone 337-0447. room houses, furnished, available 162 Gunson. 332-2018. $66 sum- ER CANOE 3-7-14 (12) extrasl Excellent condition. $1950/ and up. DENNIS DISTRIBUTING CAMP, 918 Lantern best offer. 332-0422. 3-7-16 (121 September. 337-9412.2-7-14 (121 mer, fall option. Nice extrasl COMPANY, 316 North Cedar, Hill, East Lansing, Michigan 48823 CAMPUS, TWO blocks, free heat, 2-7-12 (131 913-7 30 CADILLAC SEDAN Seville 1974. one bedroom, unfurnished, shag opposite City Market. C-13-7-30 Air, cruise control, regular gas, American? German" "and carpet, dishwasher, central air, 526 FOREST STREET. 4 bedroom, (24) Announcements for It's What's $6000.351-5870 after 5 p.m. 3-7-16 FOREIGN CAR REPAIR, also bo¬ fully furnished. Through Septem- ATTRACTIVE SINGLES - two BUDGET VACATION pets. Lease to September, ber. 332-5298 after 5 p.m. Z-97-23 $90 per Happening must be received in the dy. 20% DISCOUNT to students ' months at $50/month, in advance. week. Sandy beach, furnished State News office, 341 Student and faculty on all cash 'n $175, $185. i" 129 Highland. 332- "" (12) SQUINTING CAUSES wrinkles. carry VW 523/538 Park Lane. 337-0427, 663- kitchenettes, linens, fishing, swim¬ Services Bldg., by 1 p.m. at least parts.;. IMPORT AUTO 6033 5-7'21 1231 Help prevent with prescription CHRYSLER CONVERTIBLE, 1965. ""— 8418, 332-1191. 93-7-16 (16) ming, boating. Poplars Resort, two class days before publication. PARTS, 500 East kai AMA7nn KALAMAZOO QUIET 0NE ^room apartment ground sunglasses. OPTICAL Route 1 Box 243, Houghton Completely repainted. 2nd owner. ONE BEDROOM furnished DISCOUNT, 2617 East Michigan, Lake, No announcements will be accept $500. Phone 3450657. 3-7-16 (12) and Cedar. 485-2047, 4899229. apart- house. Lease 13 months start HUGE ROOM, near campus, no Michigan, 48629. 517-422-5132. ed by phone. MasterCharge and BankAmeri- ments available. Close to campus. $200 fall but discount Lansing. 372-7409. C-3-7-16 1161 Z-97-21 (251 pets, $85 plus utilities. Call 361- (more IWH 6) 1966 CO~RVETfE~CONVERT7BLt card. C-13-7-30 (37) Starting at $110 a month. Call mer. 405 Hillcrest. 337-9572, 337- 6185. 4-7-16 (12) on piffe 327. 4 speed, new paint, brakes. 332-0111. 99-7-30 116) 9633. Z-97-19 (20) Excellent shape. $5400. 351-0428. i Employment |jjj SINGLE ROOM, very quiet, pri¬ ROOMMATE WANTED for large PEOPLE REACHER Z57-12 (131 NEEDED ONE or two women for vate, 4 blocks campus. Parking. apartment. Next to campus. 332- modem apartment, own bedroom, 337-0678 after 6 p.m. 97-16 1121 CUTLASS 1963 automatic, air. VISTA POSITION available with 4432 97-23 1121 580 P®r mon'h. Call Mike until 5 Body good, runs great. $400/best local consumer group. Call 337- p.m. 337-1361; after 5 p.m. 351- ~ ~ ~7 ~7 ~~7 offer. 332-8752. Z-1-7-12 1121 1676. 3-7-14 (12) 3064 3-7-14 (19) 2 ROOMS, house near Frandor; WANT AD EAST LANSING area, models garage, finished attic. 735 North open11 a.m. to 7 p.m. One and DART 1966, creampuff, mechani¬ OPENINGS U.S. NAVY. College CLEAN WELL-organized house Hayford. 484-3361. Z-97-14 (121 two bedroom. juniors, seniors, grads/masters in: Newly remodeled, has two openings for summer, cally sound, good paint, tires, no starting at $170. Utilities furnished rust, dependable, 627-9800. 3-7-16 engineering, business administra¬ four blocks from campus. $70 and ROOMS FOR Rent summer and % t except lights. SWIMMING POOL. tion, math, chemistry/physics, Security deposit $125. On bus 555 call John after 5 p.m.. 351-4285. Z-4-7-14 (201 fall in large co-ed house near ,, - Jus 1 comple te form and mail computer science, civil engineer¬ route. Under new management. campus. Cooking, parking, and with payment to: DATSUN 1973 Red 240Z, with ing or nuclear engineering, 26 Call NORTH POINTE APART- utilities paid. 332-6990 evenings. Michelins. Must sell, best otter. 2 BEDROOMS-Half house, Bur- years old max. Call 313-2297795/ Z-97-12 (19) MENTS off M-78 and Haslett State News Cell 351-1147 after six. 6-7-16 114) 89 collect. 2-7-14 (30) cham-Hagadorn area. Private en- Classified Dept. Road, 332-6354; evenings 351- 1173. PEEZ REAL ESTATE. C-97- trance. Call 351-1850 evenings. 3h7Student Services Bldg. FIAT 1970 124 Spyder. New RELIEF HOUSEPARENTS, group 97-16 (12) East shelter home, Howell. Married 30 (47) Lansing. Mich. U8823 exhaust, new u-joints, new top, Cibies. Runs excellent, little rust. couple to relieve regular housepar- GR0VE STREET. 4 (,^00,^ 2 NEEDED ONE or two men for 41300 negotiable. 371-2310. 2-2-7- ents every other weekend, during baths, appliances, garage, $400 apartment next to campus. 332- 14 1181 vacation (2 weeks), and emergen¬ p|us utilities, lease. Phone 332- 4432. 97-23 (12) 1266 or 351-8976. 3-7-14 (16) Address cies. Responsible for total care of . FORD FAIRLANE 1967,6 cylinder residence and management of City $75. Call 393-4399 after 5:30. 3-7-12 112) shelter home operations while on dury. $35/day. For further infor¬ 731 BURCHAM WOODS — Zip Code . MGB1974 Blaze color convertible. mation call Mike Clemens, 517- 5491500. X97-16 (46! APARTMENTS APARTMENTS Student Number. Closa to Campus Have a place to head Classification 4-speed with overdrive, radials, _ AM/FM, 8-track with headphone •Air Conditioned Now laailng far tall to . . Colllngwood Preferred Insertion Date GAME ROOM girls. Full and •All Print Ad Hero - Appliances in¬ • HEATED POOL jack, luggage rack. Call 355-8024. part-time, neat appearance a Apartment* I . BL-2-7-13 (20) cluding dishwasher • italinittd must. Good pay, pleasant sur¬ •Luxurious Furnishings parking ★ air roundings. Apply in person only at •Shag Carpeting • Famished conditioned MUSTANG II 1974, hatchback. CINEMA X THEATRE, 1000 West •On-Site Management ★ dishwasher Clean, 37,000 miles, steel radials. • Stadias Jolly between 10-5, weekdays. •Private Balconies 42350/best offer. 489-0940. 6-7-19 9148-2 (29! • 1 Bednxm ★ shag carpeting •SWIMMING POOL ★ unlimited parking TYPING POSITIONS for Fall term, e2Mnm ★ plash furniture PINT01971, automatic, AM radio, snow tires, excellent mechanically, 55 wpm required. Test will be IwirlMI • fir cnditiofiiig ★ model open daily given. Apply in person 427)4 Summer '53 per person Special events at special some rust, ; 50, 351-4969, 355- Albert St., State News Fall Ratoai rotes. Tell 0737. 6-7-2C Composing Fall '78 per person campus . Dept. Friday between 1:30 p.m. Studio 1 Br 2 Br Now leasing for what's doing in Round Something to sell for '50 Discount lor 12 mo. lease and 2:30 p.m. '198 or PINT01974 Runabout. Automatic $165 '260 Fall Town.Up to 20 words 5 - less?Try Econolines transmission. First reasonable of¬ MODELING $10 per hour. Phone 351-7212 745 Burcham Dr. Coll 351 -8282 days for'12. only '4.00. 5 12 words for fer moving out of state 372-3422. - 4892278. Apply in person 527 East 351-3118 (behind Old World Moll days. 3-7-12(13) tSWeekdays Michigan Avenue. 248-27 (13) 'til noon Sat. on thorivorl) Please Specify Please Specify Monday, July 12, 1976 the small society by Brickman 6 WJIM-TV, Lansing 2 WJBK-TV, Detroit 10 WILX-TV, Jackson 25 WEYI-TV, Saginaw WUAT Oo HE -STILL U£E=S VJOZPS TWAhl H& 7 WXYZ-TV, Detroit 3 WKZO-TV, Kalamazoo 12 WJRT-TV, Flint 4 WWJ-TV, Detroit 8 WOTV, Grand Rapids 13 WZZM-TV, Kalamazoo 41 WUHQ-TV, Battle Creek 50 WKBD-TV, Detroit YooimK T° *AY N0** 9 CKLW-TV, Windsor OF 5 WNEM-TV, Boy City 23 WKAR-TV, East Lansing x \ LATENT MORNING (7-12-13-41) Happy Days (11) Phil Donahue 2:00 6TAThM&HTS?r 5:45 (14) Antiques (12) love, Americon Style (4) Classroom (19) Off the Record (13) (23) Villa Alegre Beverly Hillbillies (7-10-12-13) News (25) Addams Fomily 2:30 (50) Underdog (29) Bozo |Ne"S 6:15 11:55 (4) News (41) Mod Squad 3:10 7-6 MACVnJ*.) (3-6-11-25) CBS News (50) lost In Space m 0f M Presents (2) Protectors 6:20 AFTERNOON 5:30 4:10 (2) Adam-12 t—'s"'a**+ml£ (4-13-25) ... News (2) News doonesbury Colleqe of Lifelong Learning 5-11) Summer 6-11) | Classroom I TV College Semester (3-11-25) Young and the Restless «> To ToI( Hot 7-29-41 The Seat (10) Fun Factory Truth (10) Andy Griffith (14-19-23-35) Electric Company, (29) Mickey Mouse Club 5.55 4:30 p.m. by Garry Trudeau ffarfal} I u of M Presents (13) Eyewitness At Noon (41) News (5) - TAMMY AND THE MILLION¬ Town and Country Almanac <|<> (19) Consumer Romagnolis'S,urvlva. Table Kit AIRE (1967) Starring Debbie CAN W£ PRINT tmicotm&MAN ss ***"% 1) Form Report (23) Evening at Symphony EVENING Watson as a backwoods charmer TT, BEN?! CM M£E15 IN LOVE-NEST STUFF IN HA'HA! * I, Hipper 6 35 (50) Bugs Bunny 6:00 (2-3-5-6-7-8-10-11-12) News who matches wits with conniving UB?! CAN HMM..IST !j THATTRBATY?! Ill SIT ON IT, 12:20 blue bloods. Also stars frank toe?!, MB- CHICK 11 \ "1 /// (WTtfMBN!- News and Farm Report (13-41) ABC News McGrath and Denver Pyle. WI1HSAUY: • ' ATUASTI 6:45 (6) Almanac (14-19-35) Zoom RBAPrr! 12:30 (7)-CHEYENNE AUTUMN (1964) News (23) Woodcarver's Workshop 7:00 (2-3-6-11-25) Search For (25) Hogan's Heroes Starring Richord Widmark, Carroll Tomorrow Baker, Karl Maiden, Sal Mineo and -12) Bozo (29) Little Rascals (4) News Ricardo Montalban. An epic .6-11-25) CBS News (50) Brady Bunch (5-10) Gong Show 6:15 tribute to the American Indian by -5-8-10) Todoy John Ford. 411 Good Morning, America 0 (7-12-13-29-41) (Rl Mi Ira Dnunlnr (B) Mike All My Children (29) Little Rascals Douglas . 6:30 6:30p.m. )) Cartoons 7:20 (14) What's Cooking? (3-6-11-25) CBS News (41)-THE RAZOR'S EDGE (1946) I41 ■ Town and Country Almanac jl'J Antiques (4-5-10) NBC News Starring Gene Tierney, Clifton 7.3O (50) Lucy Show (12-29) ABC News Webb, John Payne and Anne I: News 12:55 (13) Adam-12) Baxter. A quest for spiritual I) Cartoons <5-10) NBC News (14) Romagnolis' Table peace by a World War I flier based ■31 Rnm J 00 (19) Crafts With Karen on the novel by W. Somerset the dropouts *4 Sesame Street (2) Love of Life (23) Farm Digest Maugham. 8:00 <3' Accent (35) Carrascolendas by Post 8:00 p.i 1-3-6-11 -25) Captain Kangaroo jJ-10) (5) Fun Somerset (41) Movie (7-12-13-29-41) - FUTURE COP ■21 Sesame Street Factory (50) I Love Lucy rcaEST -xou must buninai (6) Not For Women Only 7:00 (1976) Starring Ernest Borgnine ■3 Good Morning, America THE PKflf lX3Wtv TWSCfYEDlB/UTy 6AP U B:30 (7-12-13-29-41) Ryan's Hope (2) CBS News and Michael Shannon. A veteran -v 111 Consultation (11) Northeast Journal (3) Concentration cop named Carver (Borgnine), is ea-IEVE A ITIE MOST fftKTl 9:00 (14) Crockett's Victory Garden (4-5-8-10) Democratic Conven- selected to play wet nurse to the I. MEANS, AT yOUR DISPOSAL! (19) Masterpiece Theatre department's newest rookie SA^, STUBS, |) Phil Donohue (23) Book Beat (6) Hogan's Heroes I) Clubhouse named Haven. Unkown to Carver, lj Concentration (25) That Girl (7) ABC News Haven is crime prevention's (50) Movie (11) Greatest Sports Legends || It Tokes A Thief 1:25 (12) Brady Bunch lastest gimmick: a robot program¬ med to be the model policeman. ■I Young and the Restless (2-25) News (13-29) Truth or Consequences 11:30 I) Movie 1:30 (14) Capitol Report (50)-DEADLINE AT DAWN (1946) I) Buck Matthews (2-3-6-11-25) As The World (19) Day By Day ■0) Mike Douglas Turns (23) Scene One, Take One Starring Susan Hayward and Bill Williams. A green sailor II) Phil Donahue (4-5-8-10) Days of Our lives (25) I Love Lucy |2| Oinohl (7-12-13-29-41) Family Feud (35) Trains, Tracks and Trestles befriended by a dance-hall girl 13) Movie (14) Washingtons Week in Review (50) Family Affair^ when he's suspected of murder. ■ 4-19-23) Mister Rogers (23) Guppies to Groupers 7:30 sponsored by: 1st Mike Douglas 111 Good Morning, America 2:00 (7-12-13-29-41) $20,000 (2-3 6-11) Democratic Convention Convention professor phumble Thurs. Nite by Bill Yates Blue Grass Music ll) 700 Club Pyramid 7) Let's Make A Deal I) Morning Accent 9:30 (14) Vegetable Soup (19) Consumer Survival Kit (12) Hollywood Squares (13) To Tell The Truth close up: 50 01. Pitcher Special ll Gong Show (23) Antiques (14-19-23-35) Robert "With the Republicans, politics Is I) Tottletoles 2:30 MacNeil Report e business; with the Democrats, it mh THat HI Not For Women Only (2-3-6-11-25) Guiding light (25) Gomer Pyle, USMC ■4-19-23) Villa Alegre (4-5-8-10) Doctors (29) To Tell The Truth is emotional...a combination of NastY Christmas and the Fourth of 9:55 (7-13-29-41) Break the Bank (50) Hogan's Heroes MotQUtTO c 8:00 July." -U.S. journalist |l Carol Duvall (12) Mary Hartman, Mary George Creel G00/U'T r « 1 0:0^ Hartman (7-12-13-29-41) Movie 1-3-6-11) Price is Riglit (14) At The Top (14-19-23-35) Great Perfor¬ Special: The 37th Democratic 1-5-8-10) Sanford And Son ■4-19-23) Sesame Street (19) Book Beat (23) Consumer Survival Kit mances (25) Bugs Bunny National Conventiongetsunderway MnpE! ^/i it \(pm FREE SERVICE 12:30 I Theft Insurance Available (29) Happv Days (41) Speed Racer (2) Movie okftimetg.'flt 1NEJAC (50) Munsters 5:00 (7-12-13-41) Honeymoon Suite 1:00 (4-5-8-10) Tomorrow iTsTiMei^WORRy: (6) Ironside (8) Mission: Impassible 1:05 114 A»e«t Eest Unel WHSNYbUSHOWOP (10) Fomily Affair (29) News FOR WORK 4NP FiND peanuts Get In on tremendous weyveremovep fy Schulz savings at our sidewalk sales VOURWBASKer 11 SORRY, MANA6ER...THE OLDER YOU 6ET, THE LES5 SURE YOU BECOME ABOUT A LOT OF THIN65... 10 Michigan Stole News, Eost loniing, Michigan Monday, Ju|y ,j % Women, minority delegates down Support for Carter WASHINGTON (API - De¬ overwhelmingly identify them¬ cent of the delegates earn less led by Mississippi at 33 per cent delegates cluster far more spite (our years of effort to selves as Democrats. Another than $10,000. and Georgia at 26 per cent, with heavily in the 35 - 50 range. promised by UdalJ encourage greater representa¬ 4.5 per cent of this year's •More than one in six of every South Carolina at 28 per cent This results in decided under- tion for women and minorities, teh three thousand Democrats delegates are Spanish- delegates is an elected public and Tennessee at 21. representation for persons 18 to surnamed. official, the largest occupational The District of Columbia 24, and persons over 65. who will choose a presidential •Less than 14 per cent of this group. Lawyers and educators delegation is 50 per cent black, nominee this week are pre¬ The differences between the year's delegates are under 30 each comprise more than 10 per although this is proportionally convention the first of the "I want Gov. dominantly male, ingly white. overwhelm¬ years of age. Four years ago, 22 cent of the convention member¬ lower than the D.C. population, delegates and the general U.S. population are NEW YORK (UPI) - Morris Udall, who chased ence - convention — shortly after know everything Carter ta I 4.™ I I per cent were in their teens or ship. Next come self-employed which is more than three They also are far better twenties, but in 1968, only 4 per businesspersons and home- quarters black. even more pronounced when it Jimmy Carter through al¬ arriving by train from constructive," Udall JI educated and generally wealth¬ ier than Americans cent were in that category. The makers. The only other group comes Spanish-surnamed delegates Just under 50 to household income. most all the primaries and Washington. "I will make and tell him. If up my SI An Associated Press generally. average age of all delegates is with more than 200 members is hold 61 per cent of the seats in per cent of the never caught him, pledged his full support to the Chipper and relaxed, Udall smoothly fielded all serious he L I based on individual interviews survey 42.9 years. union officials. the New Mexico delegation. delegates are earning more than $25,000, more than four times as former Georgia governor questions, uaing his sharp reservations, take that into 1^ I with 93percentofthe •More than two of every five •These union officers help Their proportions in California, and certain Democratic wit to balance serious tion. consider. 1 I delegates delegates have done postgrad¬ swell the proportion of dele¬ Arizona and Texas range from high as in the general popula¬ shows a distinct falloff from uate work and tion. presidential candidate. Udall, who filed for~ 1972 in the number of female, another two of gates who are members of a 13 to 17 per cent. that five attended or graduated And while more than one- Udall said he was "98 per election to the House labor union to 21 per cent, or The youngest delegation is Udall, the liberal Ari¬ Fit ■ under-30 and minority dele¬ cent certain" that he will day, also warned gates. from an undergraduate college. almost 600 delegates. from South Dakota, whose third of U.S. households earn zona congressman, said have his name placed in crats against Den» I These groups, however, are Only 2 per cent of the delegates Hidden among these over all members average 36 years of less than $10,000, only 7 per Saturday, he has spoken nomination but will not dence based overcoat I far better represented this have less than a high school figures are sharp variances age. The Wisconsin group cent of the delegation falls into with Carter several times on the I make a decision until after recent polls which show than they were at the party's year education — but about one- among some states. averages 38, and those from that category. and most recently told him meeting with about 350 Carter beating either I 1968 national convention. third of all Americans didn't Delegations are all-white in Vermont, Massachusetts, Ohio While income figures by state "turn me loose" in the Udall delegates and their ident Ford or Ronald Pra I The AP survey finish high school. five smaller states: Montana, and Arizona are 39. in some cases appear to simply campaign so that he can leaders. R». I pinpoints •The high educational level is New Hampshire, South Dakota, At the other end of the age gan. some states where these groups represent varying living costs, help give "Republicans the He said it reflected in income. Almost Utah and Vermont. Among the have fared extremely well — spectrum are Hawaii and West more than 70 per cent of kind of beating they have Udall said a small num¬ was "vital, I exactly half the delegates live in ten largest states Virginia, averaging 50. ber of his delegates want important" that Democrat) I and others where to be a woman a household with delegations from such states as earned and deserve." do not "take it for or of a racial minority seems to earnings of Massachusetts is the whitest in Although the average dele West Virginia, Maryland, "There is no doubt who him to endorse Carter be¬ "This is not won granted. I be an invitation not to go to the more than $25,000 a year, an composition at 95 per cent. gate age is about the same as for Iawisiana, South Carolina, is going to win," Udall said. fore the nomination but a by aaj I convention. income reached by only 11.5 per Several southern states have the U.S. voting age population North Dakota and New York "There is no doubt that I far larger number want his means and it could be lost" f cent of the public. Only 7 per sizable black representation, taken as a whole, the ages of than $25,000. Udall said. I Participation of the under- earn more am going to support the name placed in nomination He parried with represented groups soared in Democratic ticket." and have a chance to vote and jokes all stories I 1972 due to the imposition of a Noting that the conven¬ for him Wednesday. about being picked as question I quota system. This year, affir¬ V SPECIAL ED MAJOR AMONG 204 MEMBERS tion marked his last But Udall said one of the Car I cam¬ ter's vice presidential mative action plans without options under considera¬ can I paign appearance in New tion is to have his didatc but made it clear he I quotas were used. name York, Udall said "now placed in nomination and did not believe the Geor- I Michigan delegates ready to vote One of the few genuine we're here to help Jimmy then withdraw it before gian has him under consid- I contests of this convention is Carter" and to aid in the voting begins. eration. I expected Thursday night when unifying the party and And he virtually ruled rules governing the selection of I putting it "on the track to While Udall made it out another run (or the I delegates to the 1980 conven¬ By ED LION Governor George Wallace, and It is also only one of two ton Hotel on the Avenue of the victory in November." clear that his actions would presidency. I tion will be considered, possibly State News Staff Writer four remain uncommitted. Udall, still guarded by states that be guided by the wishes of hope I is sending more Americas (a double room goes "If things go like I including whether or not to NEW YORK-Michigan will According to a party spokes- i than men to New York. for $54 a night), located about Secret Service agents and his delegates, he also said they go," Udall said, "by I return to a quota system. be represented at the Demo¬ person, under state Democratic Mississippi and Oregon 12 blocks from Madison Square accompanied by his wife, he would take Carter's 1984 there will be 1 These are the key findings cratic National Convention with rules delegates will be bound to Ellen, held confer¬ from the AP study: evenly divided, but only Ne- Garden. a news feelings into consideration. figures on the scene." a 204-member vote for their pledged candi¬ vada and Michigan have t delegation. At the convention Michigan's •Women hold 33 per cent of One hundred delegates rep¬ date in the first two ballots. as the majority of the the delegate seats, off from the delega 133-member voting bloc, picked resenting each of Michigan's 19 After that, they can vote as tion. 40 per cent they won four years 55th in a 56-delegation drawing Congressional districts and 33 they please. One MSU student will be a for seats in the Garden, will be ago but 2'/i times the 1968 In adherence to its affirma¬ at-large delegates picked at the delegate to the convention, figure. Census figures show June 19 state convention will tive action program approved sitting toward the back of the women make up 51.2 supporting Udall. She is Terry arena away irom me podium in per cent of cast their votes for the 1976 by the Democratic National Lynn Bedford, 532 Spartan, a the nation's population. what is generally considered by Democratic Presidential candi¬ Committee, the state party senior in special education. •Just under 11 per cent of date. In addition, 71 alternates delegates as a "lousy position." took steps to include as many "I'm the district's token stu¬ The 71 alternates will be sitting delegates are black, double the will journey to New York. different sectors of the amount in 1968 but off popula¬ dent," she said. at the far extreme corner of the nearly Based on the results of last tion as possible in the delegate The other delegates from the one third from 1972. About 11.5 May's primary, 69 delegates selection process. Michigan's 6th congressional district are The per cent of the nation is black, were apportioned to former chairperson of the Michi¬ but the proportion of blacks delegation will include 28 Marion Anderson, projects gan delegation is Morley Wino- Georgia governor Jimmy blacks, two Hispanics, one director of PIRGIM: Richard grad, chairperson of the state's among Democratic voters is Carter, 58 to Arizona Rep. American Indian and 19 young Conlin, an Ingham Co. commis¬ Democratic Central Commit¬ higher since blacks traditionally Morris Udall, two to Alabama people. sioner from East Lansing; Cyril tee. Among the luminaries on A. McGuire of Lansing, presi¬ the Michigan delegation are dent of UAW Local 652; Detroit's Mayor Coleman New York City prepared Nathaniel Darnell of Jackson, a UAW international representa¬ tive; Cecil Ann Graham from Young, porter who an ardent Carter sup¬ once figured as a possible vice-presidential candi¬ Jackson; Sue Gaylord from date on the Georgian's ticket; Mason; and Dawn Braman from for Democratic convention Holt. The Michigan delegation will State Rep. D East Lynn Jondahl, Lansing, pledged to Udall; and Senator Phillip Hart, be staying at Manhattan's Hil¬ also pledged to Udall. By ED LION the convention, the work in¬ State News Staff Writer eluding a baggage search—to volved in organizing the event NEW YORK get in. I'LL BUY THAT! - Even before is "mindboggling." The the long slew of primaries and city business community caucuses began in January, the Democratic National Conven-. "It's unbelievable how many arrangements must be made," is bracing itself for the extra $24 million the conventioneers Sign language sessions Clephas said last January be- will bring with them. tion, Inc. has been busily pre- fore the preparations for the to begin paring for the opening of to¬ day's convention at Madison convention took on the present frantic pace. "By the time we Two large avenues adjacent to the Garden will be cordoned meeting tonight thk bcst op thib y rds off throughout the week Square Garden. get right down to the wire, to The Sign Language Action up. Tonight's meeting will take 2.99 At first avoid massive traffic jams. Movement (SLAM) will hold working with a staff we'll have spent literally thou¬ care of unfinished organization¬ of 18 in four-room suite in the Five hundred New Yorkers a sands of man-hours in prepara weekly sign language classes al aspects and the sign lan¬ Garden's have volunteered to host the corporate head¬ tions." beginning tonight at 7:30 at guage classes will begin. quarters, the convention organ¬ If the work in organizing the delegates and an additional C110 Wells Hall. izers labored over the enor¬ 1,200 workers will be aiding the Basic sign language used by Hogg, a graduate student convention is mindboggling, the mous number of Democratic Party in conducting the deaf will be taught as well majoring in child development, preparations logistics of it are just as the convention. said that the primary as intermediate necessary to hold a political unbelievable: sign language purpose Five thousand press of the classes is to gathering of such magnitude. Fifty-one hotels all within passes for those who have had some help people Entrusted with coordinating 38 block region will be rented will be issued with special background in sign language. learn about problems of the VAL. TO 9.98 deaf. The classes would be the entire event, the tion planners made conven¬ out to house conven ion-related arrangements 9et up withthe three te|evision networks. Anyone can attend the class¬ es, which are free, said John especially helpful for those who i oftMIace Artist such as: Dave Brubeck Quartet 1 arrange¬ visitors to New York City. powtutcuof • n the end, the climax are going to be counselors, ments with the city's hotels to New York City. Hogg, chairperson of SLAM. Maynard Ferguson • Beach Boys • The house the thousands of dele¬ willci e when the 4,512 dele- Volunteers from the Michi- and doctors, yet would Seventy buses will be used in Hollies - Jay & The Americans Gordon ft gates and alternates will cast ■ gates who will deluge the city, worked closely with New York a special shuttle to ferry dele¬ 3,008 votes to get the necessary gan Registry of Interpreters the deaf. have n0 contsct Lightfoot • Quicksilver R.E.O. gates back and forth from the for the Deaf (MIRID) will teach - to see that all preparations convention to hotels. tally of 1,505 behind one candi¬ the classes. Deaf students will also at¬ Speedwagon - George Carlin - Boz Scaggs • would be taken care of, and date so the Democrats can The SLAM held an organiza¬ Plus Many More. One thousand special police¬ tend the classes so that those assisted the media as best men at a cost of $2.8 million will proclaim their Presidential tional meeting during as candidate for 1976. spring learning the sign language will possible. be called on duty to cover the term at which 53 people showed have an opportunity to use it. Three weeks ago, as the Garden area. convention drew nearer, con¬ An elaborate security system vention headquarters moved will be used to check all 16,000 I.L99 across Eighth Avenue to occu¬ people who will enter the py the second floor of the Garden area. A conventioneer Statler-Hilton Hotel and the will have to undergo three staff expanded to 60. Tonight, separate security checks—in- when the long-awaited conven¬ VAL. TO 6.98 tion becomes a reality, the convention offices will take over the entire hotel as a base HAVE AN Artists such as: Deep Purple - Allman Bros. of operations. KA'CIWTIONAI - Beach Boys • Guess Who James Fifth Dimension Steppenwolf - Bee - Gang - According to Vince Clephas, DAY! - Gees - director of communications for Plus Many More. mus: V2 Pmct IJquor Dr'inI