- -' : . / ''Ti& l y .< tat® N®ws _VOLUME 70 NUMBER 198 TUESDAY OCTOBER 26, 1976 MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY EAST LANSING, MICHIGAN 48824 lews polls show Carter leading Ford the Corpus Christi Caller Times Ufo PRESS INTERNATIONAL day said Sun¬ McCarthy. Two Illinois polls were t Carter holds a 7-point lead in a statewide poll conducted in mid- But in Virginia, the Richmond Times- contradictory. The Chicago Sun-Times straw native son Ford fell from 47 to 45 per cent, That poll, a nonscientific October showed Carter favored by 47 per poll with the rest switching to the undecided sample of voters, ■d Gerald Ford has a similar margin cent of voters and Ford Dispatch poll showed Ford leading Carter showed Carter ahead by 51.1 per cent to showed Carter leading37.1 to 34.1 the week Kia. while nationwide it's Carter 48 by 40 per cent. Statewide newspaper polls varied by 42 to 35 per cent, compared to a survey 47.5 per cent for Ford and 1.4 per cent for column. before. 11„ Ford 44 per cent, according to a widely. last month which showed Ford ahead 36 to The Raleigh News & Observer I outburst of news publication polls. The New York Daily News straw 32 per cent. Carter's state McCarthy. But the Chicago Tribune, in a poll poll, campaign telephone poll, showed Ford ahead by 45 to showed a near tie in North Carolina, with Among registered voters in Missouri, accurate in every presidential election since complained the poll was not scientific and Carter leading 41.2 per cent to 40.5 Carter holds 2.1 1932, put Carter well ahead of Ford in the 44 per cent. a per cent advantage, ■magazine polled 608 voters across involved only persons from socio-economic per A Detroit according to poll taken for the Kansas lnirv after the third debate and Empire State, by 53 to 44 per cent with 3 backgrounds that traditionally favor News poll showed Carter City Star a — Carter with 44.4 per cent while Irter 4 per cent ahead of Ford — 48 per cent for independent Eugene Republican candidates. standing still at 42 per cent between the first and third weeks of October, while A poll by the Bangor Maine Daily News Ford had 42.3 per cent. About 1 per cent - and 8 per cent ihowed Ford leading 36.3 to 34.4 per cent per cent. favored McCarthy. I Oct. 16 to Oct. 19 survey of 1,578 J»j voters, including the 608 Eod. had given Carter 45 per cent to ™ ■ 'or Ford, with 13 per cent here Ford campaigners have F lot crossing a swing from the Democrats, officials delayed due to (of in sales late equipment jtickets for By SEAN HICKEY State News Staff Writer While MSU students risk their lives each putting up chains between the poles when Grank Trunk finished its construction. He said the University is unable to do any day. the construction of a pedestrian work in the right-of-way of the railroad Went seats railroad crossing over the Grand Trunk Rail line between South Complex and F lot even project. though MSU is paying for the entire remains uncompleted and delayed for an "We were ahead of our schedule with our Bi JIM DuFRESNE indefinite period of time. target date, which was the first day of | State News Staff Writer registration, and we would have made it Fred Hyde of 533 E. Holden Hall, who has except for the delay by the railroad it or not, University officials crossed the railroad for several years to stake. get company," Baron said. to his car in F lot, said there is danger even I athletic ticket office inadver- with the half-completed crossing. Clayton Jones, engineer technician for i students 200 season the Grand Trunk Western Railroad Co. in hockey "You can hear them blowing the whistle r chair back seats that for the last Kalamazoo, said the delay was due to the at Harrison Road, otherwise there is no rs have gone to regular occupants of way delivery of flashing signal markers which of knowing if trains are approaching," i! public or to alumni. Hyde were ordered nine months ago. said. 1 they are trying to get them "The equipment we ordered for this Hyde said the trains usually speed project has not come in yet. It is being held through the area going 30 to 60 m.p.h. up by higher priority work," Jones said. v athletie ticket office has "I've heard of several close calls, [d all students in rows one through especially in the winter. Many times people Jones said the flashing markers were n A. B. C, D. E, F. W and X a slip while crossing the tracks, sometimes really the only protective device for or their tickets when trains are nearby," Hyde said. the crossing and without them the plus another crossing - free of charge — in a could not be opened. If anyone was injured trea of Munn Ice Arena. Larry Bird of 533 E. Holden Hall said that Grand Trunk would not be liable because students were still using the seven or eight the injured person was aluntni and the general public different paths in trespassing, he said. IC spite of the half-com¬ their regular seats for the next pleted crossing. "Trespassers are trespassers no matter tc. the students will be compen- where we hit one along the line. It's been switching sections and the hockey "People just keep walking over the like that all through fences. Many of them are beaten history," Jones said. which is expected to gross down and stale News Dale Atkins rusted. Some don't have poles," Bird Jones said it w as up to the his winter, will bring in $4,000 to even University to Larry Bird and Fred Hyde of Holden Hall wait lor of the fences along the tracltB have been beaten see that nobody used the incompleted a train to pass at the incompleted pedestrian down by students who use a number of different crossing until the construction was com¬ It was not a close call when a 's we have created a little crossing between F lot and South Complex. Some paths to cross the tracks. 19-year-old pleted and said that MSU would be liable transfer student was killed in the fall of '74 for any injury. said MSU athletic director. while trying to do the same who, along with President thing between . X lot and East Complex. In "The University has the orked out the January 1976 a responsibility of plan before light s ~ create two game with OSU. "We were COUNCIL REPORTS FINDINGS pedestrian crossing was installed there. installing fences. We are not responsible to put up a fence at all," Jones said. distinct sections, one At cost of $112,500, the University tnd one for the general started construction of a similar Baron said that it was illegal for students public." crossing at to the entire F lot last spring, but Grand Trunk has to cross the tracks since it was the plan, however, is yet private JtudrntsIS property of Grand Trunk and that it was Minority drop-outs high would rather have the to install the warning flashers and the close to the Spartan attack not a safety asphalt paving between the tracks. responsibility of the Univer¬ lit the $20 refund, the "We can't complete our work until the sity. University |and the alumni can do nothing railroad company completes their end of the As of right now, the only work Grand deal," Milton Baron, director of Campus Trunk has done is to put railroad ties ByCHARLENEGRAY Parks and Planning, said. ► people are very attached sophomores in 1971, 8,691 juniors in 1972 on its findings, the minority adviso between the tracks and warning cables. to those State News Staff Writer and 7,780 seniors in 1973. The University has already installed Jones said he could not estimate when 14 wanted to be in the attack zone," recommended that a "new and ser The proportion of minority students to The report made from the study stated be taken at recruitment of sidewalks leading up to the track posts for Grand Trunk would be able to finish its ■liam Reardsley, asst. director of nonminorities at MSU rapidly decreases that there must be a factor at MSU that students. The council stated 1 the guard rail and lighting. Baron said the construction but said it took over nine • offered them full refunds, from freshman to senior year, according to a works against retention of minority stu University would finish its end of the deal months for the equipment to arrive for the [t oiler itthem another seat. Most of 1976 study by the minority advisory council. dents at the undergraduate level. (continued on page 12) by completing fencing of the tracks and crossing at X lot last year. that." Racial minority admissions were examin¬ el it During 1970, the percentage of on-campus was a mistake at the ed by the council as part of a study requested minority students was nearly 6 per cent of ■rardsley continued. "But I would by President Wharton. the total student body. During the next two ■er guessed it in a pple would be so picky about where million years that The rapid decrease found by the examina¬ tion indicated that the drop-out rate for years minority enrollment increased to 7 per cent and 8 per cent respectively. White control of army, police minority students is higher than the rate for However, the percentage figures have n those seats are being nonminorities. been dropping since 1973, according to the ■ return their season Itifket office in Jenison Fieldhouse 7 for a full refund and another tickets to the Following the freshman class of minority students in 1970, the report revealed that enrollment for the class that began at 755 report. The report also stated that MSU has experienced an overall increase in non minority students that may account for some demanded by Rhodesian leader decreased to 570 in 1971, 550 in 1972 and of the decline in minority enrollment. in attempt on our part to correct 478 in 1973. ■ injustice," Contrary to the pattern developed by GENEVA, Switzerland (UPI) - Rho "Clearly that is not part of the Beardsley said, "and Total undergraduate enrollment for the room for came to Geneva. He said that this would ■lnK the students to undergraduates, graduate minority student desian Premier Ian Smith said categorically negotiation," he said. help us." same class was 7,777 freshmen in 1970,6,598 have to be a decision of the British enrollment has risen from 6 per cent in 1970 to 8.5 per cent in 1975. Monday that whites must control the army Black Rhodesian nationalists attending conference chairman, Ivor Richard. and police in an interim government leading the conference said exactly the opposite — The study attributed the difference in Smith reiterated earlier statements that to black majority rule. that continued white control of the two he came to Geneva on the basis of the graduate and undergraduate minority |q against Arab plan rollment to more aggressive recruitment of minority students at the graduate level. After completing the study and the report Smith told a news conference three days before the opening of the Rhodesia i ference that he is not prepared to negotiate on this ministries is "absolutely" unacceptable. at an Smith said that if the conference arrives impasse it may be a good thing if six-point peace package put forward by Kissinger in September. The African nationalist leaders, point. Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger claiming they were not consulted, have said they peace; sole dissident "completely reject that package," setting up an apparent impasse with white leaders three days before the formal start of I if I'll — Over Iraqi opposition, Arab heads of state Monday endorsed a peace peace talks. They are pg for deployment in Lebanon of a 30,000-man demanding majority rule joint Arab peace keeping force within a few months rather than the [Wreni powers. two-year period in the Kissinger proposal. I'ders approved a plan drawn up at a restricted Arab summit gathering held last f Riyadh, capital "I am not suggesting that there are terms of Saudi Arabia. It was announced three hours after the full P summit that can't be discussed," Smith said. "But meeting convened in Cairo. J "mce statement we must negotiate within the framework of said: the Kissinger agreement." ■ meetjXCC"t'<"1 ^racT ">e summit approved all resolutions passed by the Riyadh The two outstanding points of the 'ra9 objected. But conference sources said the reason was that the Kissinger package, he said, are that the head of a biracial Council of State ■ivauk '^e withdrawal of Syrian troops from Lebanon, charged with drafting a new constitution be a white lonn patka8e — worked out by the leaders of Syria, Lebanon, the Palestine and that whites keep the defense and law lent fanization'Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Kuwait - called for a cease-fire and the and order ministries. L ;an Arab peace-keeping force. It is the duty of the Geneva Conference to j, , lre Went into effect last Thursday and has been generally holding except in set up the Council of State, which in turn LfreJright win? Christians, reportedly aided by Israel, and Palestinian-leftist P'nued to has to appoint a black first minister of a fight. Council of Ministers, Smith said. ■ Son Jel Aviv have ^that Israel was ffivin& Christians uniforms and tanks Smith said he would welcome African | Ps- The Israeli government, has denied any involvement. majority rule as soon as possible. 2 Michigan Slate News, East Lansing, Michigan Tuesd°V. Octob^ Britain's pound hits all-time low LONDON (UPI) - Britain's He placed the entire blame pound sank to an all-time low for the morning run on the Monday in its biggest one-day pound on the Sunday Times Airliner crashes in Colombia drop in history. report. Its author said only, "I Panicked traders cut 7.5 stick to my story." BOGOTA, Colombia (UPI) A DC3 while cents from its value in 45 hectic "It is a huge crisis, the kind - taking off from the town of Yopal. Colombian airliner with 22 persons No information was available imme¬ minutes on the basis of one that used to be settled by a aboard exploded and burned immediately-denied newspaper war," one dealer in Zurich, Monday diately on the identity or nationality of Switzerland said. seconds after taking off from a small the passengers. story. "Today town about 115 miles east of Bogota. Civil The plane was on a domestic flight The pound bottomed out at things are not that simple. It is hard to see how Britain can get Aeronautics officials said all aboard between the cities of Villavicencio and $1.5730 — its lowest value in out of it." were presumed dead. Cucuta, on the Venezuelan frontier, history in dollar terms. The pound opened Monday at The Civil Aeronautics Then second thoughts set in Dept. said the when it burst into flames and crashed just $1.6065, more than four cents and the pound recovered propeller-driven plane, belonging to the after takeoff from the airport Yopal. below Friday's closing price. air taxi company El Venado, crashed slightly. By late afternoon it From there on it was not so was trading at $1.5920 to the much a slide as a rout. pound, down 5.65 cents since Sparks may fly at meeting the markets closed Friday. The pound, once the world's Chancellor of the Exchequer strongest currency, was worth BOSTON IUPII - Police attempting to disperse roving dents boycotting classes Monday arrested more than a dozen persons gangs of^jS NAIROBI. Kenya (UPI) — The United The conference is expected to be the Denis Healey defended the $2.0245 seven months ago. The Boston High School. ncus? States and West European nations will try most controversial in the Sunday Times reported history of the pound in the House of Com Earlier Monday an unexploded stick of dynamite was found at to kill a Soviet-inspired plan to curb UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural mons this afternoon, repeating during the weekend that the U.S. Treasury and the Inter¬ Charlestown High School and at least two Molotov cocktails were a doom, traditional press freedoms at a major UN Organization. It is scheduled to be denials of the newspaper story found iai national Monetary Fund had classroom at South Boston High, police reported. meeting opening Tuesday, western opened by President Jomo Kenyatta and that touched off the rout. said Monday. will for almost six weeks. agreed that the pound should Police department spokesperson A1 Nupus said there were run That story said the U.S. drift down to $1.50 as part of reports ol «■, being thrown at police in the rear of the racially troubled South BobIouS Treasury and the International the conditions for a $3.9 billion School. At least 13 persons were arrested. Workers protest at plant opening Monetary Fund had decided the IMF loan to Britain. pound should drop to $1.50 as a Both the Treasury and the VALENCIA, Spain (UPI) mental and inalienable human condition of the IMF's pending IMF denied the reports. - King Juan rights'' to Carlos I and Henry Ford II inaugurated a $3.9 billion loan to Britain. But at opening of the market new Ford automobile plant Monday in a Spaniards and the admission of all political parties and labor groups. "Neither I nor any minister could accept responsibility for in Zurich, sterling crashed eight points, from 4.03 swiss U. S., Vietnam will hold toll ceremony overshadowed by workers' The letter, handed by the secretary of an irresponsible newspaper francs to the pound on Friday demands for full political and labor the Ford workers' elected bargaining article or for the market's to a median rate of 3.95 francs. WASHINGTON (UPI) tries. received in Paris. It _ rights. body, also demanded that the govern¬ decision to pay more attention Swiss bankers said the - American and Vietnamese ne¬ The announcement, which firmed shortly As the King toured the plant in the ment cancel a recent afterwgj, wage freeze and to that article than to the immediate reason for the gotiators will meet soon, prob¬ caught many U.S. officials by Secretary of Sute | company of Ford Motor Co. executives, grant full amnesty to workers fired for unequivocal denials from those collapse was reports of the the workers ably in Paris, (or preliminary surprise, was first reported Kissinger answers! n handed him a letter their participation in illegal strikes. whose views it purports to IMF-Treasury agreement talks aimed at improving re¬ Sunday afternoon in a Viet¬ question about it ]»« demanding the granting of the "funda¬ describe," Healey said. printed in Zurich newspapers. lations between the two coun¬ namese News Agency report "That is correct." The talks will be | New bank governor named between Hanoi and Wi since the Vietnam I, JERUSALEM (AP) - The Israeli cabinet most powerful post, after GROUP PROTESTING ARRESTS apparently were of an exchange ol an on Sunday named Arnon Gafni to be the finance minister, new governor of the Bank of Israel. The Yadlin remains in jail while police tween Hanoi and wj last August in which hi Jews taken into original nominee, Asher Yadlin, is in jail custody investigate accusations that he accepted said they wanted a i_ on suspicion of fraud. kickbacks on land pirchases made while talk about "mitten | Gafni, 44, is director-general of the he was director of the sick fund of the terest." Finance Ministry. He will take over the Histadrut. Israels mammoth national For the Vietnam bank Nov. 1, a cabinet spokesperson labor union. The fund runs most of the MOSCOW (UPI) Police written reasons for the refusal them. Boris - Chernobitsky, who arrest of the four men. meant reconstruction said. His new job is the country's second Monday took 25 protesting of exit visas. They said was separated from the others. Two Soviet Jews today said the United States it country's hospitals and clinics. Jews into custody, the wife of auxiliary policemen beat 12 The official news Tass they started full as possible ar.. agency a three-day hun¬ one protester said. It was protesters Tuesday when they Friday said "administrative ger strike to protest Americans still l_ High voter turnout reported believed to be the largest group refused to leave a bus. action was taken against some government's refusal to give the action in Southeast A held here since the June, 1974, Four men were arrested of the The Pentagon pi demonstrators for them exit visas they said were PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia (AP) - The than 10 million voters, the agency said. visit of the then-President Thursday and the Jews said 699 MIAs, but the hooligan and provacative promised last month. official Czech news agency (CTK) said Some 350 were elected to five-year Richard Nixon. subsequently they received 15 actions." Boris Fishkin said in a tele¬ Dept. has asked Hit Sunday that 99,7 per cent of those eligible terms in the two chambers of the Federal Mrs. Vladimir Slepak told days impirsonment each. But Jewish sources said the Jews phone call to Western reporters accounting ol about 1 to vote cast ballots in general elections Western newsmen her they said there was some Assembly parliament. were taking a document to the that he and a friend. Lev sons including many over the weekend. Earlier, officials said 32.2 per cent of physicist husband was among anxiety over the fate of one of Supreme Soviet protesting the Blitshtein, began their demon¬ listed as dead hut wh the 25 picked up as they went They voted for candidates of the the candidates were under 35 stration in his Moscow were never recovers years old to the Supreme Soviet parlia¬ apart¬ Communist-led National Front, which and about 30 per cent were women. ment as an "act of despair" over State Dept. officii ment administration building their date has been set a was A the only ticket offered. total of 196,119 representatives Forty per cent of the candidates were not with a document protesting the U-M graduate sweeps separation from their families, who emigrated two selected, though 1 members of the Communist party mem¬ arrest of four other Jews last elected to federal, state, district years ago. peared the most likel were bers, the officials said. week. and local parliamentary bodies by more Slepak said she did where the Jews — not know who held chimneys in old tradition public demonstrations all last DETROIT week protesting the refusal of (AP) - Dan The 28-year-old University of tit visas — were taken. Ogden says he is used to Michigan graduate usually fore¬ There surprising people who see him goes slithering down chimneys, was speculation in standing on suburban roofs, Jewish circles the men would opting instead for his special be held until the Supreme wearing a black top hat and vacuum cleaner to handle most tails. jobs. Soviet completes a three-day One man recently "screamed Ogden said he learned the session later this week. at the top of his lungs" for his trade from a friend last summer Jewish sources said nearly 50 wife, Ogden recalled. " 'Ethel,' after the energy crisis spurred activist Jews in a number of the man yelled," he said, a cities were rounded up before " widespread renewed use of Wash, highways have more litter Nixon's 1974 visit, apparently 'come out here — there's a fireplaces. to head off any demonstrations. chimney sweep on the roof!'" PORTLAND, Ore. (UPI) — Washington Ogden, dressed in the Statistics from the two states Police last week ended daily are being traditional 19th century garb of highways have 7.5 times more bottle and used in campaigns in Maine, t ins by Jews at the building Michigan, A COLLEGE RING. an English can litter than sweep, has spent the comparable highways in Massachusetts and Colorado, where by putting them into buses and past two months hauling a Oregon, according to a survey by the bottle bills similar to Oregon law are on leaving them outside of Moscow trailer full of brushes, ropes, Oregon Journal. the ballot for the Nov. 2 election. to make their way home. poles and an enormous vacuum The Journal said it compared 10 1-mile sections in each state. Oregon attempts to control litter The Jews began their pro¬ tests last Monday to demand cleaner from chimney to chim¬ It's a symbol for life The sections had through a measure which requires ney in southeastern Michigan. comparable traffic volumes and use. deposits on all beer and soft drink cans It found 294 containers per mile in and bottles and bans pull tab cans. Washington and 39 in Oregon. A Senate 'so-so' on conservation • i only WASHINGTON (UPI) Conservation Voters rated the Senate The League of so-so today in its survey of voting records on conservation issues, with 44, The average score in the Senate was the league said, with Democrats scoring 53 and Republicans 28. Sen. Philip Hart, a Democrat, rated in This Area's ®amai Only Multi-Media Discotheque Michigan's two senators at both ends of the top 10 with an 85 mark, while the scale. 2843 E. Gd. River, E. Lans 351-1201 Republican Sen. Robert Griffin drew just Picking 31 environmental issues favor¬ a rating of seven. ed by the campaign fund-raising group, The issues included such things as strip the league rated each senator on a scale mining, energy conservation, offshore oil from 0 to 100. The more the senator's drilling restraints, nuclear energy, air¬ voting record matched the league's choice on the major issues, the rating. higher his port noise, sewage treatment and air pollution. TUESDAY SUPER 60'S NITE Agreement stops layoff plans DETROIT (UPI) — Several thousand parts inventories were replenished. Special Prices on Super Beers Josten's workers at Ford Motor Co. plants faced The in-plant agreement with the and Hiballs All Nite is a ring for life temporary layoffs this week but the No. Cleveland stamping facility that makes 2 automaker said a local agreement it fenders, doors and other body parts for reached this weekend with a key parts most Ford assembly plants was reached supplier clears the way for resumption of Friday and covered 3,700 workers. I Available at the Bookstore normal production. Ford's production workers at facilities NOT ONLY THE BEST DISCO, I Ford, which was hit by a 28-day strike in 22 states ratified a national agreement BUT THE BEST BAR by 170,000 workers until a national Oct. 12. But Ford had trouble IN TOWN! returning to agreement was reached in mid-October, full production because of nt«r« said it would have to lay off up to 10,000 delays in settlement at key locals. "-kers at various plants this week until 1. Octah^^M^state News, Eost Lansing, Michigot Tuesday, October 26, 1976 3 |rraignment date »t in drug case By JOE SCALES 19. The exact details of the warrant were not Sute News SUH Writer known at the time of the arrest. Waller was a long delay in court proceedings, frisked in the courtroom and taken to the East ■the unexpected arrest of the defendant Lansing jail to await arraignment on the warrant. Trtroom, Tellis Waller, 102 Albert St. The East Lansing prosecuting attorney said T| 0VPr to Ingham County Circuit Court that he did not know what the warrant was for, ■iternoon to be arraigned on two charges but an official in the Ingham County clerk's office on of marijuana with intent to deliver. said it was for failure to pay court fines handed r Waller was set at $2,000. An down to Waller in an earlier case. ,it date has been set for Oct. 29 in That case involved Waller pleading guilty to a founty Circuit Court on the charges, charge of conspiracy to commit assault on Dec. lision was handed down by Judge Daniel 16, 1975, in Lansing. |jiart after a preliminary examination in According to court records, Waller was ling District Court on charges for which originally charged with the felonious assault, ■is arrested Sept. 23. along with three other persons, of Metro J, a 29-year old East Lansing man, was undercover agent Gerald Woods at Waller's ■along with three MSU students after a previous residence in Lansing. T,g on campus investigation of one of the I Waller was brought up from the jail later in the bv undercover agents of the Metro day, after the exams had been postponed twice, Si|uad. and the preliminary hearing was held for the «as charged with the two marijuana marijuana charges. & also with delivery of hash oil. During the preliminary exam, testimony was ■Krerichs, the Philips Hall resident who given by Rick Boyd, one of the undercover officers finally investigated by the undercover who had conducted the campus investigation and s also set to have a preliminary arrests of the four men on Sept. 23, along with one State News Robert Kozloff i for Monday morning on his charges, other agent. With Halloween just around the corner, supporters n was also postponed, The agent stated that he and the other of proposal A are bt- exact cause of the delay of the went to Waller's home the agent selling pumpkins in front of night of Sept. 23 with Bessey Hall to raise funds for advertising to II uncertain, one of the interruptions the intention of trying to buy drugs and make an counteract the media blitz •n W aller was waiting in the courtroom arrest for an alleged sale of hash oil that took by anti-Proposal A cru¬ place saders. The Etru Squad undercover agent informed earlier in the month. proposal, which goes before Michigan as being placed under arrest, The agent further stated that Waller refused to voters Nov. 2, would ban the sale of all pop-top con¬ was made for a warrant which had sell them drugs and they tainers and require deposits on cans and bottles. the subsequently arrested , Ingham County Court on Oct. (continued on page 101 ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ group's insurance unclear ■ RIKS< | News Staff Writer i is ATTERDAY reigning over of just how MSU ' :s (G As) « driving an MSU vehicle. He has been unable to find a decisive answer on the question of insurance coverage. Brown claims that the Uni¬ from Herman King, director of Academic Services, to provide writter questions. COGS has been equally con their the question. It should be delivered to German this week. King said that G-As have Workmen's Compensation plan he is vulnerable if the situation he becomes involved in is considered apart from working time. GRADUATES while at work but a when phirle. As iving i employes of Uni versity does not consider G-As as employes for the purpose of cerned in determining what kind of protection G As have. question arises: when are G-As at work? If a G-A uses a King explained that Brown and other G-As are warning students about the Winter & Spring they would be Workmen's Compensation in Ray German, president of University University's vehicle to attend a professional stand on insurance coverage a nee coverage surance if they are hurt on the COGS, has requested a letter THE M.S.U. PEACE CORPS INTERN PROGRAM WILL BE AT M, they may not job, though state and federal from Mary Groty, special as meeting he is not covered in the because it has been previously case of an accident. ignored while G-As claims for THE PLACEMENT CENTER ON FRIDAY, income tax is withheld from sistant to Roger Wilkinson, vice has G-As are eligible for injuries have skyrocketed. recently their pay checks. president for business and American Medical Insurance At one time, many urn of the Council "The G-As are foolish to finance, on policies of insurance faculty Uudents (COGS) but it remains an option for the members would take G-As with October 29th drive the University vehicles coverage for G As and stu¬ individual G A while faculty are them to area meetings and ■Dept. of Agricultural until there is a definitive dents. covered by the plan, King conferences in another state I - answer given explaining the Groty is in the process of Brown, graduate explained. If a G-A does not but many faculty members feel coverage," Brown said. preparing the office's answer to take out the hospitalization tant in agri- Dennis Heldman, chairper that doing so now is too risky as To Discuss Overseas Ting, has been sort of the Dejft. of Agricultural their own insurance would not Opportunities In Malaysia, Nepal, ither G As to cover an accident under those Thailand, And The Philippines For Those With Skills In: Engineering, is concerned over e aware of the the lack of ditfity surrounding ASMSU meet set; circumstances. Away from the University G-As would no might face if accident while insurance coverage and has longer be considered employes Agronomy requested a policy statement and would be high risks, King Agricultural Economics will discuss goals explained. Agricultural Engineering Animal Husbandry The ASMSU Student Board other members tend to involve Civil Engineering i Tuesday ' police briefs will meet tonight at 7:30 in 4 Student Services Bldg. The board plans to set up and ASMSU in issues of the East Lansing and Lansing areas. Special Dairy Science The board needs to develop Fisheries define its objectives at the "focused more goals," Borg Health Education meeting tonight, as a result of said. n off the ignition This will be the last time conflicts in apparent goals Borg sponsored a bill at last Home Economics Iving the ear. One man Jeffs roommate will take a among board members. week's meeting which commit¬ Horticulture t follow this rule in the middle of a message for him. Some of the objectives scheduled to be discussed in¬ ted the student board to discus¬ FREE Nutrition - Sunday at 6:47 p.m. the sing its "directive goals" at roommate clude ASMSU's role as an went to answer a tonight's meeting. on any pizza! Ian parked his car in knock on hia apartment door. advocate of the students, lower Anyone who wishes to con¬ fhillips Hall Monday at tuition, a strengthening of J. He left the motor When he opened the door two men asked him if Jeff was ASMSU cabinets (Legal Ser¬ tribute his views as to objectives of ASMSU should what the be To meet our program coordinators jizza |ustf Bnd went inside to home. He answered "no." vices, I^abor and Legislative pick may attend the meeting. lnd. The friend had a "Give this message to Jeff, Relations) and a look into the distribution and taxing policies contact the Placement Center p and needed a ride to will you," the men said. tl of the State News. One of the visitors kicked the 3*1 aaao tie out just in time to resident in the groin and when There is a conflict among 73 car rolling back- he bent over in pain, hit him in some of the board members V ★★★★★★★★ ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★VP" Jo the street. The ear the head. concerning ASMSU's role as a ■ a curb and rolled into The two suspects fled the student advocate, Terry Borg, 'e rack, RHA damaging 10 scene, leaving the man uncon¬ representative, said. open thursday and friday nights till nine scious in the While most board members see hallway. I did not give an the necessity of representing lol the damage to the Compiled by Mike Macksood student interests, Borg said, '"as not even Miss J wedges her ArmrrtON vitiuans* t« way through »-od thing they were cellent pay, Insurance, and re* winter in a 15" side-zip, sherpa J the hospital: The I the car said he was tirement benefits available Michigan Air National Guard. — Happiness is PEANUTS JUBILEE lined boot by Sandler of Boston ■bout the whole Call 517 489-5169 after 6 P.M., thing. Tuesday through Friday. Coll in paperback-just intime black or brandy urethane upper, today! for Christmas giving! covered wedge and crepe sole Happiness is also finding all the content and quality of the comfort, for casual original $35 hardcover (including 134 strips ■ a- v.'/;,)/ h t>, rs as possible appear in that war have not yet begun to heal. nation's Editorial Dept. supported to change the policy-making working-class majority. These victims of the war should be system. Miller could do nothing hut praise Editor-in-chief Mary Ann ChickShaw Photo Editor 1 li shntihl hr typed on brought back into full participation in the life Monoging Editoi Bob Ourlian Copy Ch,et s 65-space Carr for his programs and continued of our society. Many acted from conscience, Carole Wire Editc f- a ti,! i npit spared. Letters must be wherever Carr left off. Further, it is noted News Editor . Leigh Hutton but many were also simply caught up in the Edward L Ponders Stoff Representi •/ ••/. atiil iif!wit local address, student that Conn is a staunch supporter of Carr, Sports Editor grinding wheels of this brutal and Possibly, Conn had no idea that Carr and Wasting votes sary war. unneces¬ Freelance Editoi Miller would turn the lecture into a Only the president of the United States In the 1968 presidential election many ot can take the leadership in declaring a full should In 25 lines campaign stop, however, he made no move Advertising Manager • rs or less and may my classmates in graduate school were so amnesty for these American victims of our to stop them. This type of action (or • d tor conciseness to fit more letters nonaction) was uncalled for and inexcusable. appalled by the choice between Humphrey Vietnam War policy. President Ford has and Nixon that they voted for Dick Gregory. failed to heal these serious wounds in our The course is not a course in campaign issues I understood their predicament, but had society. His limited and conditional and elections, but a course to outline the So ans'tjnrd b ttcrs u ill be accepted. little sympathy for their later laments when basic structures of political science. If Conn clemency proposal was so worthless that DEBBIE WOLFE • sr. u-.thht hi from publication Nixon: bombed Cambodia in 1970, created only 10 per cent of the resisters were willing only wants to convey his candidate's views, he the Burger Supreme Court that has to sign up for it. should do so between classes. In a restricted civil liberties and opened the To bring our society together and heal the classroom, a totally biased attitude does nothing but distort the learning process. If floodgates to executions of prisoners now on wounds of the Vietnam War, the president Carr wants to campaign on campus, let him do it outside of the classroom. This writer Death Row and began the series of abuses collectively known as the "Watergate Horrors." must issue a full and unconditional amnesty for all of the Americans who resisted the war or who could not accommodate themselves Debates: Not in class did not pay $78 to sit and listen to his A similar problem may confront some to the military machinations of the war. If campaign rhetoric. students today who are disturbed at the this president won't issue a full amnesty, we only voters /o.scl Because of Conn's actions, this writer choice between Carter and Ford and view a need a president who will. .» class offered by demands that Charles Cnudde, chairperson vote for McCarthy as a way out of their ■ailed "Presidential Perry Bullard ' 2901 of the Political Science Dept., publically dilemma. Let me remind them: 1) McCarthy State representative which the guest reprimand Conn. This writer also demands a will not win, and the extent to which the 53rd district Ann Arbor Itubner of James Madison — iluled to lecture on foreign public apology from Conn and asks that he protest vote for Dick Gregory in 1968 There has been a lot of talk around the take immediate action to correct his in affected Nixon's behavior (not at all) the current campaign, error campus lately regarding the presidential presenting the issues, and judgment. suggests that a similar protest today will be Chose Carr race, and rightly so. At least for me, the k y«»urse . an admission was i hardly Ford a combined total of over $25 million to get the students registered and set up and each word from the candidates was were summoned to debate • vervone attending had they did in Angola. pay for their bumper stickers, posters and convenient polling places while extensive carefully listened to, evaluated and criti¬ television a topic with wliien The choice seems clear: to waste a vote ^ campaign buttons. Now, with these debates, for McCarthy (and thus cast half a vote for canvass campaigns by political contenders cized. The result? A "winner" was chosen iar, would you be able t«» delivera !\ this attempt the two capitalist candidates are handed the have been initiated for the student benefit. and publicized, making the "loser" r« -eni by Rubner to Ford), or to choose Carter, recognizing that appear performance? Being a most extensive and powerful communica¬ The advantage to all this work is for the bad in his national tuition money for his blatant and he is more in tune with the interests image. sarily n »l< tions networks in history. students' behalf. The students at MSU are all his personal emotions. electioneering on the academic expressed in the peace and civil rights 1 hough I defend his right to an movements and with the concerns we all an integral part of the Fast Lansing Among the candidates for the highest i,. would W I «io not believe he .should take The debates represent a gift of free air community and it is imperative to them to office in America there is no winner or loser And, I don't think an; time worth literally millions of dollars. share for individual liberties and social exercise their vote in order that the politics until the votes arc tallied penny if he were to grr lW 1 s professor as he justice. during the night lVllu5»i done this Minority parties wouldn't have been allowed of this community represent them properly. of Nov. 2. It's ridiculous to treat the debates candidates were extreim'l} ner ' J i i Daniel S.Hamermesh to buy such exposure even if they had the Professor of economics An important gain was earned in the like a boxing match with Carter throwing staring into hundreds ol [>rl;K_' ililrf J knowing J money. To top it off, this restrictive political 18-year-old vote along with simplified voter lefts and Ford using dozens of cameras, an I uppercuts. That was censorship is passed off as "a historic registration. not the intended several million pairs of e> purpose of the talks. exercise in the democratic process." It's time in the upcoming election to utilize every move they made, Amnesty policy your vote for the man who has stood fast for make a decision based Wrong way Imagine what the debates might have been like if Socialist Labor party candidates, the student cause at MSU. Bob Carr The debates were voters and to test the held to inform the movements or how manv 1 j JT The substantial contrast between reasoning power of Levin and Blomen, had been there to ask Jimmy promised in the '74 campaign to return on the candidates while under extreme them slipped up in th,"i|"|a"Sflirfri«li Carter's support for a pardon of Vietnam pres¬ Paul Conn, a lecturer in the Ford and Carter why they support a weekends to his constituency. And he has; sure while virtually being like to think voters would system War resisters and Jerry Ford's opposition to on their own. ! >< |>1.. brought Congress- that breeds racism, poverty and war? Or returning not only to East Lansing but to country and mi any a pardon for anyone but Richard Nixon this University, holding weekend forums all than that. oid of a hundred other questions that could have Both Ford and Carter should be com¬ Rep. Miller. I) Cal.. to compels me to state my concern on this 'ongressional policy making over campus. He was then and remains now mended for their efforts. I'm sure both men tlu- brought into focus the differences between major national issue. the students' Congressman. And he is If discussions regarding about five minutes of candidates like Ford and Carter, who realize that each of them made Asa veteran of 250 reconnaissance flights mistakes, race continue to he "iieual, Carr turned the returning again to the students for their though some have been publicized more i represent capitalism, and those of the in the Vietnam War, I feel strongly that "won" or "lost" the deb:'"'* ■ •':> " h It was noted Socialist Labor party, who represent a new support in the Nov. 2 election as they have than others. And. I'm equally convinced fairness requires a full amnesty policy for will not suffer in the end socialist form of society based on production supported him in the past. that they would hope the American people ^ for use and control of the industries the war registers. Patty Sullivan will be fair in their judgment of the debates for displaying their nariv" 1 by the Two years after the final withdrawal of 210 Abbot 836 and weigh each candidate not ultimately proving thai th* only from his losers. Tuesday, October 26, 1976 5 iewpoint: Rent Control Why you should vote 'yes' Why ino, vote is _ By CHARLES IPCAB a month with the landlord paying the heat, and a right ■control is designed to address the water and electricity. charging reasonable rates may even By MARY LUTTRELL Thus, in a four year benefit by rent control. tenance costs are reduced by housing uses are changed. uals are unable to compete with . Il( exorbitant rents and shoddy period there has been an increase in rents Your editorial of Oct. 18, with rental Some of With regard to the Slate News property owners who housing is sold to become of students for desirable re within a tight housing market. well over 50 per cent. Without rent editorial its headline "Rent control de¬ cannot depend on rent review groups c ritics of rent control challenge control, criticism of rent control, we are owner occupied. (In East Lan¬ housing in the city. Reduced you can certainly expect rents to forced to serves defeat" was the first boards to allow such continue to wonder if the writer has even expenses. sing, these would be the single- rents might , of our description of existing escalate. examined a symptom of what we hope will change this. Thus, copy of this year's proposal, let alone a family residences that students selective ...nditions in the off-campus neigh- What do we mean by shoddy mainten¬ be an awakening on the MSU • Housing shortages intensify. occupant selection review of rent control enjoy renting in a co-op type K'of Mast Lansing: ance? Well, in a tight market, not only can programs in over 200 communities in other states. We campus to the destructive im¬ Because this unpleasant devel manner.) Some apartments be could be utilized by landlords as ■v rate below 5 per cent for a landlords extract excess suggest pact of rent control on the opment is the aspect with one technique to hold down profits from sound that the editorial staff come condominiums. Other j'eriod buildings but they can even get away members begin availability of rental housing which most MSU students housing is torn down or aban¬ with reading the city's official report on rent Hci'i v of tenants pay more than 30 per renting substandard facilities. We've heard control, and then reconsider their stance. for MSI! students in the East might be confronted, this col doned. What has been detailed Further documenting this: income for rent, of cases where tenants are forced to conspire Lansing community. umn will center on the signifi¬ here has Byron Brown and Daniel Saks, these critics raised a single The critics of rent control have of the increased short happened in other MSU with landlords to pay $80 a month to share an an easier Implementation of cance rent controlled cities. professors in economics, the barriers we cite which job than we have. They do not have to come rent con in their "Scorecard on Rent unheated attic or damp basement. Without trols guarantees, in brief, about ages as they will affect the up with an alternative To further Control," ■he resolution of the housing crisis rent control, landlords will have little program. All they residential patterns of future compound the an article published have to do is induce a sense of a four step effect on any com problen trol: incentive to keep doubt about MSU students. in the State News. Oct. 30. itorium in the northern half housing from deteriora rent control. Remember, economists would munity on which it is imposed. Hi 1975. said, "Future students in ting. Documented . drainage problems When you boil away the rhetoric hardly describe our rental housing market • It shifts some of the tax statements Rental property own< East Lansing Rental Housing. . ' of as perfect competition. So when you go to from economists at the Univer¬ strict the number of u provide burden from the rental .Probable losers, since housing of MSI to new housing political debate, you will recognize that the the polls Nov. 2, proper¬ sity, added to the views of real issue is one of consider the rent control ty owner to the homeowners quality will adjust to the lower accountability. With rent those involved with rent con¬ of the city for the federal proposal carefully, consider what you know and local business. level "of rents. Neighborhood control, landlords will be more accountable trol programs everywhere, about the housing market situation and sup¬ int nt program. for the rents they what quality will deteriorate. Land¬ charge and the quality of it may be like next year without rent control, port the fact that rent control lords will allocate ur mean by exorbitant rents'.' the services they provide. If tenants existing play an and vote for what struction ceases and breeds housing shortages. The |, renting houses off campus now active role in you think is best for govern space in an arbitrary way." helping to verify excessive yourself and your community. ment housing must fill the void. diminution process ueh aware that they are paying rents and In the past, the usual shoddy maintenance, they will be these ways: Becau? tal process h plus utilities; those of us who to benefit. Of course, landlords who are There is a general deteriora¬ mobile than in nonco: lor leasing a sure Ipcar i • property owner does not want dwelling unit for 1 it'72 remember paying only 160 □ spokesperson for Co mi tion in the d areas. Having found a fall was started in the presently keeping their property up to code quality of the the hassle of dealing with a spring. housing and environs as main With rent controls in governmental bureaucracy, force, the rental owner will look to the .ids of t Lansing area market for long¬ property er-term tenancy, and the prac¬ hopir tice of leasing in the ji'ksiabbing the throwaway bottle ban, as a bottles were responsible for ited because of infrequen fall rentals will disappear. spring for significant effort in eliminating over 11,000 Quoting the California Court an often ignored, but hospital emergency iragesthe letters very real cases in Children of of Appeal decision, declaring health hazard. The Journal of one year. are use long t. n attack on rent often the victims of broken, the Berkeley Charter Amend- specifically, the the American Medical Associa Substantiating thrown-out bottles, and pull our positio.. ional: the Nov. 2 East tion, in its July 28, 1975 issue, tabs that the housing shortage here nd t cited the swallowing of carelessly disposed of. will be felt it Not only are pull- more bv the student Further, the economic effect - ill timed, they are tabs as a medical hazard: these accidents create are to be >up of Uncertainty abo ut receiving a hack as well to editorial page "Potential medical hazards are quotal ; fror fair of the State members will be required to owner can, considered, the greater number return on . capital invest- News. and probably will, involved in the procedure of local author \literally spent have any training or of emergency room cases, the ment tends to c iiscourage the experience reduce the number of tenants dropping the 'pull-tab' into an a political solution Terry Cherner or proven greater number of insurance construction of n< pw rental units expertise in property permitted, as a means of aluminum beverage can before Quoting from the "Report on ling's rent rip-offs Lansing or financial management. claims, and the higher insur¬ Rent Control" published bv the and the replaci'ment of old. using conditions. reducing the wear and tear on drinking the contents. We have ance' rates are a deteriorated ren tal units." At 26 points in the document his property. Owners will select burden to us East Lansing Office of ie proposal and seen two cases of inadvertent all. Housing For those of us who are where a specific figure should Policy and Program Develop ternatives at this All lose appear, some form of the word a class of renters who are more ingestion and one of inadver ment on Oct. 15. 1976: "The interested in p roviding good permanent to cut down on the tent aspiration of the puil-tab. The overall hazards of throw cs nothing more "reasonable" has been substi¬ dispersion of MSU the politics of the The rent rapid turnover of tenants from One of the patients who had away bottles and cans in the students control tuted. outside of East Lansing the student population. This facing East Lansing voters on What the 7,500 words does ingested a pull-tab required areas of public health and also result from deliberate land* may could result in little or no environmental health compel the Nov. 2 ballot will be do — is to slip a noose around endoscopic extraction of the lord ( of the inequities in the housing the matter is that described by 113 words. But, if reduction in rent per person. pull-tab from the esophagus, the Ingham onlv the financial neck of every Some owners will opt to sell — County Board of nstuden [ their situation should come from a |ess than a two per cent passed it will put into effect an owner of rental and the patient who had inhaled Health to lend its unanimous much improved transportation East Lansing at property. It further reducing the supply of Generally, the fewei ate in amazing supporting document legalizes the confiscation of a pull-tab required an open support to Proposal A on this ber ol inhabitants, and th ch-improved hous nt time. The housing available rental units. November's ballot. of over 7,500 words which will rental property income by the thoracotomy for removal of the older the inhabitants, the les en for t and c and the lack of well- Several thousand students give vast powers to a five-man board and empowers the board foreign body from the Elinor Holbrook wear and tear a of it d. have already found their own bronchus." (JAMA 233:345-348, dwelling uni quality housing at a board. This document strips ■ i- not an acute to bludgeon the owner of rental solution to high rent by 1975) Chairperson Ingham County would experience. At present away most of the inherent nt'. rather that has property with his own money. securing housing in Lansing at Board of Health that one rights of property owners and This rent control proposal a savings of 25 to 40 The hazards of these tabs nal families • n 'or granted over gives proposed rent control per cent. does absolutely nothing to The excellent becoming imbedded in a foot upporters of rent CATA bus unlimited access to the pocket- benefit the students living on when ir.'tigh their open ef system makes this very feasible stepped on, and more hooks of the East Lansing tax campus. All housing units and lots less expensive than seriously, the injuries occurring the last several years payers to support the program. financed or subsidized from persons stepping on i. it us with a chance It boggles the mind to find wholly living in East Lansing. in part by federal or state broken throwaway bottles con¬ TheTeachings of Jose Cuervo: or i a workable solution, that in the proposal no formula Everyone loses with rent funds are exempt from this rent control. stitute a health hazard which e News and Karla for maximum rent or for mini¬ control measure. Furthermore, Donald C. Cline we believe to be unnecessary. ire now trying to slur mum rate of return on invest¬ rent control will do far less for 222 Northlawn St. history of the housing ment is given. In fact, it students living off campus The Consumer Product by suggesting now is than contains no figures on the Safety Commission, in 1975, .o consider alternative number of staff to be hired, no its promoters claim. Throwaways verified that throwaway bottles "How to get Just as quickly as the rent salary figures, no estimate for control board reduces the maxi break more easily than return¬ The Ingham County Board of required office able bottles, and that space, no esti¬ mum rent on a housing unit, the Health supports splinter- mate on office Proposal A, in8°i equipment needed and no proposed opera¬ ting budget. All these vital decisions will be in the hands of a five-man board, none of whose FREE to anyJewish person NEW TESTA¬ MENT in English AMP CLINIC the juices flowing." Yiddish or Hebrew Other literature available, including a study course on the Torah. For information write. CHRISTIAN INFORMATION SERVICE^ (Baptist) P.O. Box 1048, Rochester, N Y. 14603 riND OUT HOW YOUR RICIIVIR OR AMPLIFIER The Km u.iv to »ei the juice- tlowiny is to IS PIRFORMINO, ABSOLUTELY FREE! cut plutajed into the Iv-i tequila lose Cuervo White. Because lo-v I 'uervo o the premium white tequila. 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Jondahl quoted figures say¬ voters on Nov. 2 in the form of a constitutional amendment. Proponents of the measure "It would take a minor mir¬ acle for it to fail," he said. "But if we could inform the people of fighting impeachment ing that if a budget limitation Lansing, said Monday that MSU students' interests by had been in effect for the say it will restrain tax in¬ its full consequences we may MSU students could expect slowing the state to give less present fiscal year starting Oct. creases, increase the legis¬ see a reversal." he said. By UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL would have limited the sizeable tuition increases if a money per student to MSU Jondahl said if the measure U.S. Rep. Marvin Esch, the Republican committee's subpena 1, that state would have had to lature's cost accountability and power' I measure to place a ceiling on than at the other two univer¬ cut its budget by 4.5 per cent. hold back rampant growth of passes he expects a court battle candidate for the U.S. Senate in Michigan, Esch said he felt Republican K state expenditures is passed by sities. To offset a 4.5 per cent re¬ government. But opponents, because of its imprecise says charges by his Democratic opponent, members should have the "same voters next week. But Jondahl Jondahl said that the pro¬ duction in MSU's state appro¬ including the MSU Admin¬ language and its conflict with Donald Riegle Jr., that he voted to kill the interrogation said at this posed budget ceiling setting other pre-existing portions of Democrats and investigation"™'! point it would take priations, tuition would have to istration, the board of trustees the Constitution. impeachment investigation against former on the Judiciary Commit? 'kl "a minor miracle" for eveTS I Proposal state expenditures at 8.3 per increase about 12.5 per cent, he and student government, say it President Nixon are unfounded. "The record shows that. C to fail. cent of the combined state said. would constrict the legislature, were unable to Jondahl also told reporters at personal imcome would result Jondahl said varying reports and result in cutbacks in state Jondahl said Bunka's attacks Esch's position was supported by Con¬ get such voted for a continuation of minimalI in cutbacks or freezes in higher on him for not insuring that gressional records. the imn..! ' I a press conference in Giltner have indicated that state sup¬ services, and result in an in MSU gets the same per capita Riegle had charged Esch with voting to probe." Esch said. P'T* Hall that disparities between education outlays. ported colleges and universities crease in tuition and property The state funding as the other two cripple the "impeachment, and, in fact, if he Congressional Record the ... 1 per student funding at Univer "The only way to keep the would have to raise tuition tax reliance. minutes of Congress, and universities were ill-founded had been successful, Mr. Nixon would be in the Concre, ? I sity of Michigan, Wayne State budget intact would be to raise between 10 and 35 per cent to Jondahl said at this point University, and MSU could be tuition." Jondahl said, "and that keep up services if Proposal C many people "just hear the part because each "university has a the White House today." Quarterly, an independent Congressional activities, showed Fsrh chrSl accounted for in differences in could price the lower and passes. about tax limitations and it different educational purpose Esch said the motion he voted against on to continue floor I their educational purposes. He middle classes right out of the The proposal goes before the sounds good." and has different needs." MSU Feb. 6, 1974, was for ending discussion kill the debate on t he amend ^I not to impeachment probe"**11 - has always been thought of as a about adding a series of amendments to the Meanwhile, Gov. land grant, professionally main resolution H.R. 803 calling for the today will Jerrv Brown Dr.u I oriented school, U-M as a impeachment probe. afternoon appear with Rjegje *'| Professors say Taylor center for research and Wayne press conference at D« I State as a school where urban "I voted against that amendment to shut Metropolitan Airport and later at a ml!! off the debate because I wanted considera¬ "on « Aquinas College in residents can obtain a low-cost eiiucation. he said. tion of another amendment which would Arizona Congressman Morris Grand Rap? | have placed a specific time limit an April 30 finished a distant second to Udall >i,l Bunka had criticized Jondahl deadline the investigation which would the race for the Democratic Jimmv Can.?I for not representing the college on presidentsI lacks economic know-how have nomination, will attend a rallv constituency since MSU last protected the rights of the minority MSU while Sen. Birch Bavh, Tuesda?! party Republicans year received $2,191 in state on the Democratic-con¬ trolled Judiciary Committee," Esch said. at tend a fund raiser in Bind ill funds per student, while U-M A third amendment under consideration Flint on Wednesdav. Riegle's homet«?|■ received $2,928 and Wayne State received $2,392. By JON ICIPRIANO >n wages paid by businesses increasing personal tax deduc¬ attempt to balance the federal Stale News Staff Writer hat hired welfare employes, tions to $1,000. budget during a period of high Tax reform and job creation on I; •mployed 30.000 people in "This would mean that for unemployment as recom¬ surfaced in the Hi h district st year and half of them every single dollar of tax sav mended by Taylor, Hamermesh SELLING SELVES LIKE SOAP, HE SAYS tave disqualified for the credit ings for a family of four making said. tnd, according to two MSI' so the firms did not retain $18,000 per year, the family "Mr. Taylor's proposal would making $40,000 per year will likely drive the unemploy HRP leader blasts Taylorl very Pay lor. Republican candidate iave a clear understanding of ['he t way fastest and most effi- to generate these save two said. It is dollars." Hamermesh more equitable to use a ment rate nation wide above 10 per cent within a year and put it over 15 per cent in Michigan." Carr, is through the balanced tax credit approach such as the he said. "A balanced budget is a Daniel"?. Hamermesh, MSI" Tax Reduction Act of 1975 and guaranteed job destruction pro By KI) SCHREIBER Congress awarded itself this candidate , equal \ McClure said that he ij the Tax Reform Act of 1976. State News Staff Writer year, McClure said. said. grar push for a reduction 'harles C. Killingsworth. I'm both of which Congressmen "Mr. does The front running candidates "Bob Carr doesn't give up his "I'll take my . Tay >r Congressional defense budget of 25 v pr. Carr voted for. Hamermesh understand this most basic for the 6th District Congres¬ Congressional pay," he said. pay -- all of it — and give the the first year and 50 per J that said. issue," Hamermesh said. "I sional rate have given up on the "That is a fraud. He's letting other candidates a $5,000 the next. ptrl ther to say that each "These acts gave personal issues and "have resorted to people believe he is refusing his annual retainer fee so they In addition, McClureliJ Hamerme Situ is DIMF SI II >4 u'll li«i>e .1 15 I ime 4 4«<1 lime. 4 lie,ii» I i,ills V - m $22 77 $32.77 4 << <1 limes 14 iiite .it Hie Vile Introducing a new generation of women's College Rings JUNIORS SKNIORS NUCLEAR PROPULSION The leading operator of Nuclear Reactors is currently seeking college juniors and seniors to serve as Nuclear Propulsion Of¬ ficers on Nuclear Surface vessels or Nuclear Submarines upon graduation. Interested candidates should be in pursuit of a Bac¬ calaureate Degree with an engineering, pure science or math major and hove demonstrated abilities in math or physics courses. A minimum of one tegral calculus with is year of college physics and math through in¬ o B average or better in technical courses with a selection of required. Successful candidates will be paid up to $500.00 per month during their senior and year of college and upon graduation commissioning receive a year of graduate level nuclear train¬ ing. Nuclear officers will be challenged by the entire spectrum FREE GENUINE STONES of management and engineering responsibilities as functioning Nuclear Engineers. Selected applicants interested in teaching may be eligible for four year School in Orlando, Florida. mathematics, chemistry, teaching positions at the Nuclear Power Subjects to be taught may include radiological controls, physics, electrical engineering, thermodynamics, materials, and reactor plant en¬ MQ1RVED RING DAY gineering. A complete benefits package, personal growth and development and a starting salary of $11.000 to $12,000. place: time: 10-4 P* lt.danirndli (517) 351-6370 SAVE $5.00 call collect Mon.-T4iea.-Fri. on any ArtCarved ring paid in full Tuesday, October 26, 1976 7 [roposed debate Three vie for sheriff's office topped by conflict By DONNABAKUN SUte News Stiff Writer The Metro Squad moves under the direction of the Ingham rapists, murderers and muggers, not the gays and prostitutes," he | Hop. Lynn Jondahl, D-East Lansing, has agreed to The role of the County prosecuting attorney, Preadmore said, and does not make said. Irliripatnin a ^reat Iasues debate' but bis opponent (or the Tri-County Metro Narcotics Squad and the philosophy of law enforcement Goodwin voiced the Libertarian party platform of Insinc House seat, Don Bunka, has refused because of the three candidates for represent divisive opinions among Ingham County Sheriff. re have to respond to it," legalizing all drugs, including heroin, to eliminate crimes resulting from support ihcduiing conflicts. Sheriff Kenneth L. Preadmore, the 16-year Republican of a drug habit. He said that two rivals, who face each other in next week's elections, incumbent; Libertarian Martis Goodwin; and write-in harassing of gays and prostitutes Pri •admore said his Metro constitutes a violation of the ,nid in the past that given the proper forum and enough Peter Coughlan are candidate Squad budget of money spent on public's right to privacy. vying for the four-year office, which carries an investigations is "right open" to the they would accept any invitations to debate by MSU annual salary of public, with "every penny Goodwin, who said he has never seen the Ingham County nt organizations. approximately $22,210. There is no Democratic accountable and available." He added that individual case jail, said candidate on the November ballot. information was the property of the a person should seek out rehabilitation and not be forced to v Wilson, Great Issues director, said he asked prosecutor until the case was rehabilitate. The police force, he said, must work with the the two Preadmore, who said the absence of a Democratic candidate solved. Indidates Friday to participate in a debate drawn from "not unusual" because of his record as sheriff, feels the Metro was rehabilitators. ms from students. Walter Adams, former MSU is necessary to the Squad Write-in candidate Peter Coughlan, an MSU •nt and economics professor, was to moderate the county to avoid overlapping drug investigations. Opposing Preadmore, from the Libertarian party, is Martis junior in criminal Preadmore views the Metro Goodwin, 28. a law student at Lansing Community justice, said the sheriffs position should be visible, as should public scheduled for Thursday night. Wilson said any other Squad as the "total county policing College. Unlike , agency" which grew out of a series of activities Preadmore, Goodwin is campaigning to abolish the Metro input regarding issues such as the Metro Squad. Neighborhood r a debate before Tuesday, voting day, was impossible resulting from the Squad, councils would report to the "drug culture" of the '60s. which he said is operating in violation of the public's right to Ingham County Board of Xtausc of room scheduling and student interest. "The concept of the Metro privacy. > and the sheriffs office on such matters, Coughlan Squad is to combine groups that do a | A spokesperson from Bunka's campaign said that Bunka job at the most economic cost," he said. said. ould have liked to debate the opponent, but two events at 7 He added that Goodwin called the Metro Squad "Preadmore's However, Coughlan said he personally feels the Metro m. and an MSU communications class conflicting search warrants, questioning of Metro Squad was pet" and said the not Squad is appearance at suspects by a multitude of police agents forced the spending its money and man hours in the wrong wanted, and favors an investigation of the squad's tactics. t p.m. precluded the event. She said that events at a more professional county to arrive channels of law enforcement. Rehabilitation, Coughlan said, should be a part of law d by both the candidates also provide a way to operate the department. "We should be large enough cleaning up the city of the real criminals — the enforcement, but he added that punishment is necessary for society o air the issues. to maintain its respect for the law. Drug and alcohol problems | "Why do we need the debate if we get the issues out enough should not be political if », he said. is just time?" she said. "His schedule's absolutely no Coughlan said he would like to see more police patrols on foot lacked." I Jondahl expressed disappointment that the debate could not T held and said that he had been told that Bunka had Ihcduiing conflict. Jondahl, who is also appearing before the a Workers soy support instead of in cars, and this would remove the adversaries. in Both feeling that police are Coughlan and Goodwin agree that there are too many people jail for noncriminal offenses. Coughlan opposes plans to build e MSU communications class prior to more jail space and Goodwin feels that by removing the Bunka, said his •dull' was flexible for that night. The rest of the for McCarthy night will noncriminals, such as gays and prostitutes, the jail would be better jscd to stump on the campus, he said. suited to accommodate the "genuine" criminal. Ijondahl said he especially regretted that he could not Infront Bunka at the debate for charging that he had not resented the MSU constituency by not joining the Universities Committee to give MSU a greater share of the le budget. The higher education Colleges budget is drawn up in a By MARY ANNE KENEALY obstacle, though changed Preadmore has been nationally recognized for the the Ingham County Jail. He said he is satisfied treatment program, which he plans to continue and Rehabilitation, he said, should make people productive. Preadmore said he has been working on the development of with the jail's drug expand. expansion of the — getting on turing the executive branch Bhrommittce of the House Appropriations Committee, In 1968 Eugene McCarthy the ballots of 30 states. Most that many people who are county paramedic program to rural areas, and added that he would and welfare and going also like to see more police |ndahl said. was a strong candidate for the states, Michigan included, have tax systems, to vote for McCarthy are not protection in these areas. instructor of the communications class where the Democratic presidential nomi¬ laws limiting military spending to "I work for the people," he said. barring independents create new jobs and doing anything for the Indidatrs will appear to lecture separately on "politics and nation but his revamping "The Democrats have looked at my record and hopes were from their ballots but the present two McCarthy campaign. they thought I was dashed " said she would be willing to hold the lecture earlier by Vice President party system. "We can dream these doing a good job." McCarthy has had his name Poddar said it has been things, mdate the candidates in a debate. But Bunka's Hubert Humphrey. added through petitioning and but it is important to estimated in national polls that go the lokespcrson said the other two events he had scheduled still In 1972 he ran as a Democrat court battles. next step and actively cam¬ •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••A* It in the way. again, but got into the race only 43 per cent of the McCarthy is now on the American voters are paign," Weymouth said. ■ Jondahl i« finishing his second two-year term as representa after George McGovern, the ballot in key electorate states, planning The campaign workers 1 Ire. This is Bunka's first stab in politics. State representatives lake $19,000 a year. party's nominee, was clearly in front. and the campaign workers are positive about his chances for to vote. All McCarthy needs to win. Poddar said, would be 12 hopeful that their efforts will help change the two-party are ARTHUR TREACHER'S This year McCarthy is run election. "Tim whole campaign can be to 17 per cent of that vote. Met arthv. who has said that system — their petitioning has already helped to change ''-y THE ORIGINAL Tisb ning as an independent candi¬ fsider date and won in 10 days," Shrikumar only "clutter up independent candidacy laws — campaigners are find the campaign," has i differc Poddar, and have helped lay the ing support is McCarthy's national ground wnty treasurer not what it used to be. finance chairperson, said. work for an independent candi¬ "It's a far cry from '68," said Dave Bockoton, MSU student Poddar said that effective campaigning of what he called equired for the ballot. He do date winning a presidential Your Choice Of coordinator for the McCarthy the "real issues" could isputes 'tightwad' get •esideut until after the A FISH WITH CHIPS OR campaign. McCarthy 12 per cent of the i. should he win. "When I leaflet for A BONELESS BREAST OF CHICKEN Some of the y's vice-presidential McCarthy, I get a lot of blank McCarthy cam¬ WITH CHIPS AND A LARGE DRINK laim used in race Michigan, Patricia a stares, sometimes hostile paign issues are: ending the nuclear , a professor of ones," Bockoton said. "Demon¬ arms race, restruc¬ ience at MSU said he was noted for looking with great care at the commission's strating support for a candidate and expressing views is some¬ thing students don't seem to be Peanut prank played on Dole •I. 24 budget. doing anymore." Any day from 10 am - 5 pm tore said it is not "I abhor waste." he said, One example of a lack of for million-dollar SAN ANTONIO. Tex. (AP Coupon expires Nov. 7, 1976 noting that he saved the support for McCarthy was a — The spirit of Democrati< Eat Here ■ Take Home ross his desk in the county an "unnecessary" $2,000 turnout of only 35 to 40 people a workday at the prankster Dick Tuck emerged for for a fund-raising potluck din¬ air-conditioning and another to tweak the campaign of GOI1 unty Courthouse in $221,000 for remodeling the ner at the McCarthy campaign vice presidential candidate Bob s Moore who must Auto-Owners Insurance headquarters in Lansing last Dole during a visit to a Mexican Offer valid och check before it makes Building. weekend. market here Wednesday. to any number of Moore, however, disagreed But the McCarthy campaign with this coupon As part of the scheduled >ns in the county, with the "tightwad" connota¬ workers did not seem dis¬ a Republican, faces tion's place in the treasurer's activities, designed to make only at the couraged, nor did anyone blame good television film and enter I John Veenstra, a the poor turnout on voter East Lansing store tain onlookers, Dole took a of the Ingham County "Frugality has nothing to do apathy. baseball bat in his left hand and 1001E. Grand River with the position of treasurer," "It's not that students don't split open a pinata — a hollow | for county treasurer, a he said. "The treasurer can't care, I think they are disillu¬ papier mache form usually fill ar position with an allocate monies." sioned with government since ed with candy. salary of approximately the Whatever your style... Though allocation of funds is whole Nixon thing," ). Moore has been county not one of the treasurer's Bockoton said. per since last January, duties, The Moore said the McCarthy campaign ping checks is just one of treasurer must that there is workers Sunday night he see attributed many factors to We've got it all together! county enough money to cover each r. Moo 1 said. check written by the county. what they termed a lackadais¬ i[ui the Ingham Medical less campaign being conducted ik handled daily. bearing accounts. "We're not in the business to by Carter and Ford and inade¬ y Diane Pufcas Jal and state revenue collect interest," Moore said of quate public education on the WOMEN'S COUNSELING nust be channeled into the treasurer's office. funds or invested in of "Veenstra is just plain not McCarthy has been suc¬ CENTER « banks approved by familiar with the operation of a cessful in overcoming one large 'd of FREE PREGNANCY TESTS commissioners. financial office." Moore added that the county Family planning counseling 332 - 3554 1031 E. Michigan (near Sparrow) itra. 38. served for four must maintain general bank Birth Control Information 927E.Gr. Rv. Bus Service to our door FREE PARKING | Introductory Coupon | »n the board of commis- reserve accounts in order to Ed. Literature & Referrals Suite 3 — the committee, >unty have money available to checks. Tues. • Frl. 10 a.m. • 3 p.m. "Women Helping Open 8-5 Tues. 8 Wed. 7-7 Thurs. 8 Fri. | FREE other with any HAIRCUT 482-5022 ■ service und was Sat. ■ 10a.m. ■ 1 p.m. Women" chairperson fo ■ "We can't invest all our 7-2 Set. commission's fiscal money in interest-bearing Closed Monday | Regularly '5.00 ac¬ cs committee, which counts," he said. J county purchases and Veenstra vowed that his first fv'cs county building proj- act if elected would be to select four noninterest bearing ac¬ Ppaign bumper FACULTY WOMEN'S ASSOCIATION stickers counts for investment and con¬ [censtra proclaim him a vert them to savings accounts . and Veenstra said to "save on property taxes." OFFERS OPEN MEMBERSHIP FOR ALLMEN AND WOMEN FACULTY, A-P's AND GRADUATE STUDENTS. All interested people are cordially invited to the Fall Social Hour at the University Club. Cash Bar — 4:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. Thursday, October 28 Invest in a new direction f tD- ""♦art MARSHALL and THURS. OCTOBER 27, 28 and sense of For Details S SOUND SHOP community. SEE YOU THERE! 351-7830 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Tuesday, Octnh..o, state news 4th annual Governor FOOTBALL halts penalty CONTEST^ FIRST WIN! $30 of execution PRIZE SECOND PRIZE WIN! $20 THIRD WIN! $10 for 90 PRIZE days rules of the game: To enter, |ust place an "X" in the box beside the team By ROXANNE BROWN State News Staff Writer you think will win this weekend. If all had gone as The Football Contest Is open to anyone except State News planned today, a Georgia inmate would have made history as the first man executed in the United States in employees but limited to just ONE entry per person, per nearly 10 years, week. John Kldon Smith was convicted of murdering his girlfriend's All weekly entries must be delivered to the State News husband in January 1975, He currently waits in a Reidsville State Advertising Department office, Room 344 Student Services Prison cell while capital punishment abolitionists fight for his life. Building or postmarked no later than 5 p.m. on the Thurs¬ Georgia's Committee Against the Death Penalty ignited mass day proceeding the games. protest of Smith's execution to insure that if he were to pay the Another Reidsville, Ga., man, Troy Leon Gregg, waits on death The contest will continue through the weekend of Novem¬ highest price for his crime, it would not go unpublicized — as Georgia officials had hoped. row along with 36 Georgia inmates for the setting of execution ber 21. Decision of the judges will be final and all entries The committee, a coalition of civil liberties, black and political dates. become the property of the State News. Winners will be organizations, urged citizens all over the country who are opposed Gregg was found guilty in the shooting of two men who picked announced two weeks from today in the State News. to the death penalty to send telegrams to Gov. him up when he was hitchhiking across Georgia in 1973. George Busbee. On Oct. 18, the Committee Against the Death Penalty spoke out David Kendall, attorney for the NAACP, said Gregg and 21 other against capital punishment before Busbee at a press conference. inmates in Georgia, Florida and Texas who were denied rehearings THIS PAGE IS YOUR OFFICIAL ENTRY FORM Protest of the October-slated execution became so intense that Oct. 4, "represent the cases furthest advanced procedurally and in the Georgia governor was forced to announce a 90-day these cases executions could come as early as six to eight weeks stay, which Smith's execution date to from now." moves January 22, 1977. Marvin Zalman, MSU criminal justice professor, said that the In I he meantime the Georgia Committee Against the Death Penalty plans to approach the Reidsville parole board, in plea of a death penalty can be stopped through strong public pressure. TIEBREAKER! Whan it'* 4th and 1 yard to go, inn. 9 pardon or grant of clemency for Smith. People shouldn't expect a turn around of the courts, unless public printt will da tha |ob for you! Since the 1972 ruling of the U.S. Supreme Court which declared opinion is changed, he said. Zalman also stated that some of the individuals strongest in all death statutes unconstitutionally cruel and unusual, 35 states tasty printt tayti have written new death penalty statutes. opposition to capital punishment are people in corrections. The In case of a tie, the single professional game The Supreme Court approved the death criminal justice professor believes that states having the death will determine the winner. All participants penalty statutes of Florida. Texas and Georgia in July of this year. The court ruled that I he death penalty under circumstances can be imposed by certain states, as long as it is not mandatory for certain crimes. penalty experience "undue tension and a rotten atmosphere within the corrections system." "I disagree with the death penalty's i a controller of ci should guess the total number of points for that game. we BE SURE TO INCLUDE YOUR NAME ADDRESS Organizations throughout the United States against capital punishment have agitated a recent movement over the legal and said Zalman, "I think it's effectiven marginal. There are lots of reasons foi n reducing crii ANDPHONE insty-prints the wlz of the prmtmg biz1 moral issues of the death penalty. Zalman said that he personally would courage citizens to join ir Organizations such as the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, the the protest of capital punishment and that he personally would join Name SIudent Coalition Against Racism and the Civil Liberties Union are them. wra Director of the American Civil Liberties Union. Deborah Address ^ in the process of forming coalitions on a national level to Levy, protest the 1456[.Michigan believes that at least one executuion will probably have to take 3205SCedar I opening up of another 100 to 140 executions in the 14 states with death statutes similar to those upheld in July. place to arouse enough opposition to turn back the tide. Phone 3J4762S 489-3511 There are over 600 persons. 12 of them women, on death row in "I think that when we come to that actual execution," says 4308 W. Saginaw the United States. According to a recent census, 310 of those on "people are going to turn away from capital punishment just as they Levy, □ St Louis vs. □ San Francisco IISE.AIIegai | death row are black, and all of those awaiting the death sentence are did 10 years ago." ( ) TOTAL POINTS Wake Forest vs. of the lower income bracket. If the imminence of an actual execution in this country does spur Glaring racial and economic inequities in the use of the death people to re-enaft protest measures of the early 1960s, then crowds penalty is of foremost concern of the abolitionists against capital punishment. may well gather once again at prison gates in all-night vigils protesting capital punishment in the United States. ®izapd| For Books, Supplies Gary Tyler, an 18 year old Louisiana black youth, is the youngest candidate for the electric chair. Tyler was found October 1974 slaying of a 13-year-old white guilty in the youth. Louisiana's Ears may be hurt by alcohol ^ndepgpound L1,y hcj'.faaKint Backpacks, Posters, and Just about anything else.. death penal' y statute was struck down 224 AhUvtl Rd t Lansing Ml. 48823 by the Supreme Court, but 1 yler si ill w aits on death row as the state tries to retain its The tests showed, he saidt "a '517'351-2285 death SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - cow stai us. So for the moment, no actual date of executuion can be person has a greater risk ol Warning: a University of Utah sel for Tyler. professor of audiology has de¬ hearing loss from noise when in Juanita Tyler, mo'her of the sentenced youth, Detroit, Oct. 28 to Oct. 30 in defense of Tyler. along with chapter of the Student Coalition Against Racism, is holding a a local rally termined that drinking may be hazardous to your ears. Martin Robinette said resuilts there is alcohol in the system.' Burglar foiled BARABOO of a six-week study he o ducted at Wayne State Univer¬ Chicago's Progressive Rent control symposium sity show that stapedius muscle GLENDALE; Calif. (AP) - June Taylor didn't mess around Country Rock Band THE UNDERGRAD BOOKSTORES of the middle ear, which nor¬ mally contracts to protect the when she found a burglar in her food specials all day 507 E. Grand River Ave. slated; open to public eardrum from loud noises, doesn't operate as well when a house. She simply picked him up by the seat of his pants and □ Alabama vs. □ Miss. St □ Harvard vs. □ Brown threw him out of the place. person is tipsy. ASMSU Great Issues will been one of the most heated The 6-foot, 175-pound Taylor, Audio Ace, THr Boy, shows hit gridiron stuff with this wtili I sponsor a symposium on rent issues on both this year's, and In the sessions of the study 44 was awakened by someone constts special, th* Kenwood KX-620. Tha Boy. long termed* F control at 8 p.m. Wednesday in last year's ballot. where alcohol was used, sub¬ in the front room. She tiptoed chaarlaadar circles as "just the right I 109 Anthony Hall. In the 1975 election, the rent jects suffered a greater amount into the room and confronted a height," has been dodging defensemp I for years. Speaking for rent control will control proposal received 42 of temporary damage to hear¬ man she described as 5 foot 3 be Charles Ipcar of the Com¬ per cent of the vote. ing ability, Robinette said. and 125 pounds. mittee for Kent Control and Phillip Dean, an East Lansing Many questions have been raised about not only the pos¬ The Opposing rent control will be sible effects of rent control in East Lansing, but also the Kenwood Ml Mary Luttrell of the Committee Against Rent Control and Ar¬ legality and constitutionality of the proposal. Cassette Deck | thur Civ ne. a Lansing attorney. The public is invited to Whether East should adopt rent control has Lansing attend the symposium on this controversial issue. for s199.95 A* anM2ing Audio See sgecial' i Taylor, Carr stumping □ □□□□□ 3301 [ MICml\ DISTRIBUTING COMPANY e6s! ol □ Florida vs. □ Auburn □ Illinois vs. □ Wisconsin at Mason Hall cafeteria I" ■■^■"■■■"coupon Guess who's coming to dinner? Mason Hall residents will have the opportunity to meet, eat and Kevin Brozell is at already deciding which great buy Roger's Distributing he can put his *30.00 prize prlnlt-In-a-minlt chat with t he candidates for U.S. Congress from the 6th district this week. money towards. HELPS YOIJ ! Republican Cliff Taylor will be at Mason Hall cafeteria from 5 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. Wednesday. $AVE ON I Democratic incumbent Bob Carr will put in an appearance at the 3rd Week's hall cafeteria Thursday night, from 7:30 to 8:30. K COPIES 3.31, en any piua Winners: VARSITY INN 1st OPEN 8:30 a.m.-i p.m. Mon.-Fri. ztiz W«d. Nights. Limi* »«p°" p®r prize 1st prize Kevin Brazell Michigan Ave. ,3004 9:00 a.m.-) p.m. Sat. Off,, ^ Nov. i ll] • ALL THE SPAGHETTI 2nd W[ST CAMPUS TOUCAN EAT'1.75 prize 2nd prize Merrill Farhat 103 Van Hoosen $i play, trick and Ed Lubanski's entered and said he expected such a opportunity." "1 keep my but you can quarterbacks the Lawson said he didn't see cape on to stay only pla> „I1C hockey squad extended its three assists highlighted i t completed si* of 10 for 112 per dry and keep warm," he formance when he was asked quarterback," Lawson said winning streak to 17 the Kd Smith yards after Smith had the Smith get hurt and downplayed explained. "I stay by the about his reserve role. "I wasn't Spartans' scoring if the game with what his thoughts were when games, over two seasons, assault. MSU out.shot the backside of his left shoulder his ability to be Smith was hurt. ready during a coaches and try to look for down about it I play on the with twin victories last boulder and the injured on a late hit. cold, rainy afternoon. — visitors by a 54 29 margin. "I thought, 'Marshall Lawson things in the game. Sometimes field," he said. weekend. K in Slegar was On his first drive he "I just took my cape off and I see The got MSU is going to do a great something and try to On Friday, the junior Spartans will have with injured ribs, close enough for Hans job for W'ent in," he said before two more chances to ex¬ Nielsen's going make suggestions — I just try with any mistakes he made Spartans skated past rrnrr in the 31-23 field goal from the 27. On the tend their winning string than whether or not he felt that Ferris State College 4-2. ■ante when Illinois' second drive he this week. completed a he had played his best game. Mary McLaughlin paced Wednesday larterback, Mike 43 yard pass to Eugene Byrd MSU travc "I'm always thinking of mis the MSU scorers with two Booters inspired . oiUt n't move his that resulted in a Rich retui tch Baes takes," the senior from Lake tallies while goalie Mark be for ugh a rigid Spartan touchdown and an eight more than three I. MSU's Marshall lead. But neither Lawson nor point MSU in Charles, La., said when asked to evaluate his performance. He Mazzoleni thwarted Ferris State shots on the 34 turning to Munn Arena Thursday for a 3:30 p.m. clash with Henry Ford pointed out that if he had Spartan goal. gotten his pass off to split end Saturday the Spartans Community College. Byrd a little quicker it would raced past St. Clair Com There is no admission |)im PuFresne last home game have been good for down. He was eve uch ical munity College by an 8-3 count. Denny Austin's hat Iabsolutily n charge for the junior sity home games. var "(Kirk) Gibson had his )' rushes man By GEOFFETNYRE beat. I ll take the blame - if I'd State News Sports writer provided the only real output have got back quicker he would You can't for the MSU offense and seven have had six." RTNOWIMOWIllltt NOW ' keep the Spartan k* varsity letter this to alum cry soccer team down for long. le sixth, Kamy Asdigha, year, of those 11 scored by one goals have been player — center The extent of Smith's isn't known yet, but both will injury Tonight Featuring SHOWING Adult* Only Despite a crushing 6-1 defeat at rned his second letter this halfback Rom. practice with the first unit all . ,itl President Clifton Wharton and Joe Kearney. MSU the hands of Spring Arbor ■ar after transferring from The booters may or week as they have all season. B CANDANCI «•- ■« < lor. on the way they handled the minor College a week ago. coach Ed •hoolcraft Junior College. may not And if Smith can't play, or gets I COMFORT hockey ticket Rutherford said the squad is up The ors will be aiming need a strong scoring punch to hurt again, the poised Lawson i-i weekend. I.i. .. ■ afternoon, the day of the opening series with j\« d numerous phone calls from OSU, angry alumni and past for its final home game of the season today against Central to go out in style for their last appearance in front of the MSU top CMU. It's the first time CMC has played the and Rutherford is Spartans will be readv again. MSUINGS: The Spartan J[ 3 XXX FILMS | Tt .. i holders who wanted their usual seats in Michigan University. fans, and Rutherford said the admittedly coaches named senior center the Spartan home game finale is somewhat in the dark. Al Pitts as the offensive player #1 riled 111 . ..f Munn Ice Arena. "The spirits rood," definitely on their minds. of the week and junior tackle night i hey had confronted, looked into and worked "All u is ess® 1 Jf; ;i\ out "They're thinking about it," just go out 1 !'«■ problem of the Larry Bethea as the defensive displaced alumni. "Hev e got beat Rutherford said. "They want to .,. ih. I niversity absorbing a $4,000 to $5,000 loss in by of the eek. Pit leads Si team," he added, reterring ; 1" the students who will move to another an •■ver improving MSU often part of the Spring Arbor loss. Th II t squad c in turn around MSU stands .500 line and which would allow the alumni to return to their sue graded out at over Sally's Palace regular second goal opened the flo the Spring Arb< defeat, it will ■ the with 90 per cent on his blocking Of Delight gates and that's all there >ut t he same record After today's CMU ni V\ barton and Kearney were wa< assignments. Bethea. an All-Big amazingly quick, efficient bugaboo that has been game there will be two iioul the entire situation. plaguing away Ten selection last year, led the st of the season - consis dates remaining: U-M on team with 14 tackles, I have never seen the University work so fast in solving a Today's including risis which makes me wonder, what kind of game may carry a coring. Friday and Bowling Green one for a 20 yard loss that killed influence little extra meaning for six e problem we've University on Nov. 5. sl rated XXX alumni have over President Wharton and a crucial Illinois drive. »3 riled HI his Spartan starters who will be had ail \ Rutherford said Gloria Cream there playing their last the usly. "fror line Comas Homo NOW SHOWING ]■ was also a problem with the sale of season hockey MSU soccer field. consisten 349 2700 MERIDIAN MALI ADULTS Rime Adults Only ■ ni ibis conflict didn't involve contribution donating only -t the lowly students. No less than five of the i e single | ME WEEK OIU! 1 THE \ , ^'da^SoCdo,2 00 °m ^ Lava Lips II the reaction of the players — Gary Wilkinson, U 1 course University and the athletic and •e was entirely different. Doug Bigford. Zdravko Rom. RIC riLos Bordallo ■ ■d last October that senior Audrey Cantell and five of i Jim Stelter and Ed Randel -- Four goals against lege and Wisconsin and three Hope Col¬ J TillltIS lli'Ay..; ■« •Iris and ■ ■ ■si stood in line overnight to have first crack - m section V. supposedly an all student area, at'buying 30 will be culminating four years againsl Albion College have bp*-"® IOipb r BUS^\ ifrvii MtRslmifM XXX High School Rownlon !■ ■ iu m front of us. who was first in line, bought five or six All Fills For Adults Only M mi ('anted last fall, "that means there should 1 2?T5S33SG& Baled XIX !■ it m section U when we approached the window." have been ^^^NEWJtKONLV!^ j TILL THIM JOHNNY WADD WAS MINI \ Ooe# J45 to l| wore told that some seats were already sold and we I ^UNA ' *""* I ^ 100 AM daily || together." she continued. "Where did those tickets -stand." go? I I^TSFtlWlTTOSl WERTMULLER'S U 1 Audrey. Hut despite several complaints by students ^utT'STALKABOUTMEN^/ 1 < • !e m this newspaper, neither President Wharton or the looked into the matter, much less came to a I1 Ufa S&Hk I|i(s w " ~Yst*TH(niioXiilrMi | speedy Twjlitr 5 30 WD J* Ikimu Mi::: | ■.my other student complaints and grievances, the entire hfllf?BUGslh| eunnv | iwm\ missing tickets was forgotten as the University played inib to all those who brought the confusing situation to 30 n bother to see who people about last weekend's mixup and only 15 was sitting ii *1 SUPERSTAR Ws&lx more than slightly disturbed," said William lirector for business. "But sometimes we have that • squeaky wheel gets the grease." 1 n I till * Marty E«t HO MO TwilitxMO HO TS&yJSjlDam DeLulia L npus it's more like the "squeaky alumni get their Sjim At I \SU harriers CHECK IT OUT... see '•men s cross Big Ten "Brilliant new "l> - country Chris Banks of Penn State *' mt'il up for its Oct. 30 crossed the finish line first, with porn film. No other film Is going to equal this one. It hampionship meet last a 3-mile time of 17:35. MSU's I'.v winning the State Kaye Richards ran third with a simply has to be the best film "i A A I' contest the on 17:49 clocking, while Cynthia of 1970. 100%" .4-1. i/. Wadsworth's time of 18:03 was "It easily rates 100. It's the finest good for sixth place. Diane Culp . . a State Univer- blue movie I've _ was ninth with an 18:20 run, and ever seen. It is inventive, I"'" N". 2 team in the . I Howling Green Isoran in the meet, -cored separately Lisa Berry came in 10th with a time of 18:36. Coach Mark Pittman said he opulent, and highly erotic." -n-m, » LUST pleased with the Spartans' "Misty was | i!"'"c Michigan li hail the low :,h Hi. team with 36, and followed by schools, score of the performance Saturday and add¬ ed that members some were of the team out with in¬ MSU sophomore Mike Price heads the ball past an OSU opponent in the State News/Linda Spartans' first-round loss in Bray Beethoven" for the juries. the "Big Ten Classic" Oct. 16. _ ■m. Ml" team with 98. ■j. Michigan Howling Green scored University MSU hosts the Big Ten Invitational this weekend at the Forest Akers Golf Course and LIFE ■ wh"e Eastern Michigan Pittman said "this will be a big State News Newsline 353-3382 p.* picked up 151 points. weekend for us." with Kirk Douglas, Anthony Quin Directed by VINCENTE MINNELl The Rent Control Issue in East Lansing Memorandum of Decision-Superior Court, "Hollywood's most State of California Introducing exploration of the < Constance Money Rent Control Charter Amendment by with Jamie GiUis Jaqueline Beudant Honorable Robert L. Bostick, Judge "There is convincing evidence that the tendency of landlords Terri Hall/Gloria Leonard/Casey Donovan/Has Kean Directed by Henry Paris TCNKUT under rent control, not having the option of renting on their SHOWTIMES: 7:00,8:45,10:15 TUESDAY,OCTOBER 26 own terms, would seek to protect themselves as much as SHOWPLACE: 106B Wells possible by renting on long-term leases to small family units,... STUDENTS '2.50 w Such a practice would inevitably shift the typical tenant from the more mobile to the less, to the more financially stable than FACULTY & STAFF *3.*° the less, and thus diminish the available housing market for RATED X, MUST BE 18. STUDENTS, FACULTY & STAFF student, low income groups and other young people." WELCOME. Pqld for AN ENTERTAINMENT SERVICE Of THE BEAL FILM CO-OPERATIVE. by tho E.l. Committee ogolnit Rant Control 1 0 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Forum set on issue of street closure By MICHAEL ROUSE State News Staff Writer East Lansing residents will was the result of action taken by the Street Closure Com¬ mittee of the Bailey Community diverter or a Czarnecki said. partial closure, "Grove is the only street that streets where traffic is diverted to. Czarnecki responded by say traffic from one place to another," Czarnecki said. "The closure is meant to force people around the blockade over the curb and onto the grass," he said. "INTIMATE |'PLAYMATES" .usau^t^I have a chance to comment on Assn.. led by city councilmem has been acted on," Czarnecki to use major streets meant to Grove Street will be closed ing that the street closure is an the temporary closure of Grove Street at a public forum Friday ber John Czarnecki. In deciding on closing said. "No other streets are attempt to make the neighbor handle the traffic, not residen¬ until January, when a deter¬ mination will be made on [R] Grove proposed to be closed." hood more residential. tial streets." at 7:30 p.m. in the Street, quadrants of the Bailey whether continue the city hall to "We're One woman contacted by Czarnecki said he has not council chambers. neighborhood were canvassed looking for more feed¬ closure. If the street becomes Tree planter boxes have back from the Czarnecki in a door-to-door received any negative com¬ for resident concerns on the people who live closed permanently, Czarnecki blocked the street to through there and from the community survey said she did not like the ments from the police or fire traffic situation. Some of the said the area could be land traffic since Aug. 1 in an solutions to excessive traffic as a whole." Grove Street closure because departments about servicing scaped into a minipark. attempt to divert cars from through a neighborhood are a she did not feel safe walking the neighborhood with Grove Czarnecki said the closing of Street closed. residential streets. The closure complete closure, a traffic along the street without i streets may benefit the people present. living in the immediate Drug case arraignment set A WHITE-HOT ASSAULT ON Laui ST PRECINCT 13 192,'> CLASSIC Sil.KNT SII.M starring Jton Chaney:i Live Organ Accompaniment By DENNIS JAMES n S(0te News, Eost loosing, Michigon Tuesday, October 26, 1976 j ] STATE NEWS CLASSIFIED Call 355-8255 mt ["Automotive j(5j Automotive « Employment ](jjl [ Employment [ For Rent J[$j [ Apartments Rooms FORD VAN 1972, V-8, stick, good vw BUS. 1971. Excellent tires, 92,000 miles. $1096 or otter, buy. WANTED: ORGAN player with PART TIME Must sell. $1160. Ask for employment with HIGHLAND HILLS HOLT. 349-1100, 9-5 p.m. weekdays. Jay equipment for established group. banquet FURNISHED, country, SPARTAN HALL WANTS TO 351-4490. 6-10-26112) multi-manufacturer distributor. 12- rooms available for Christmas 4-10-29 (15) Call 1 684-1251 before 1 20 Hours/week. Automobile re¬ campus 3 miles. $150, includes thank the students at MSU for p.m. or 1 895 5003 after 10 parties and wedding receptions, utilities. 1 adult 882 2394 after 5 their patronage. C 12 10 29 (12) VW p.m. 10-10-26 quired. 339 9500 or 339-3400. 0- 1972 Red 4 (16) etc. Corner U.S. 27 North and p.m. 8-10-28 (14) GMC VENTURA Custom Van speed, with 21-10 29 (16) stereo. Clean. $1250. 694-6517 Alward Road. 669-9873 9 3 p.m. 1976. 1$ ton white with gold WANTED: WOMAN to share after 6 p.m. 8-11-3 1121 TWELVE MALES MSU students 20-11-22 (21) HASLETT LUXURY, 2 bedroom, interior. 14,000 miles. 487-0278 or MODELS WANTED. $8.00 house. Own room, $70 plus utiii for small group per I1/? bath. 1100 square feet. All 487-8211, ext. 46. 8-11-4 (181 supervised male hour. 489-1215. Z 30 11-30 ties. Call 482 3688. 8 10 <1?i VW 1971 Bus. genital and rectal examinations. (12) MASON-TWO adjoining rooms in Excellent, new appliances. Call 351 3946. 8 10 28 engine Iwarrantyl, paint, 18-25 Friday, November 5, Monday, large house. Share kitchen, living GREMLIN X1971. Grey and black. mpg. 351-8999 4-10-29 (12) November 8. 2 shifts, 1-3 p.m. MASSUESES WANTED. We will areas. 676 4601. Z 6 11-2 (12) l13!_ SUBLET WINTER and spring Standard shift, good condition train. $8.00 per hour. 489-1215. 3-4:30 p.m. Call CLOSE TO campus. Large unfurn¬ $685. Phone 489-4630. 8-10-26 Holly Holdman, Z-30-11-30 (12) ished 1 bedroom apartment for 1 campus. Woman preferred Call 353 4735, COLLEGE OF OSTEO¬ 332 *8001. 5 10-29 f 15) I*ol PATHIC MEDICINE. 3-10-27 (31) FULL AND part time Apartments or 2 people. Call after 5 p.m. game room 351 2123. 8 10 27 (17) girls. Excellent pay and work SINGLE OR double, spacious, IMPALA 1970. Excellent TYPIST: ACCURATE typist need¬ body and B.M.W. 1973, 600 cc. Perfect conditions. Must be neat and ONE BEDROOM furnished or NEEDED IMMEDIATELY - 2 fe furnished, carpeted, semi private- motor. New exhaust, AM/FM ed, 12 noon-8:30 p.m. to operate condition, new parts, extras, best personable and enjoy playing pool, bath, shared kitchen. Close on $850. 337-1140. 4-10-26 (12) word processing equipment. Will unfurnished. Haslett Rd. Close. males, sublease Eden Roc apart¬ offer. 355 7599, 332 0422. 8 10 pinball, etc. Apply in person only, MAC. $100 $120. 372 1800 or 26 train, excellent fringe benefits and NORTH POINTE APARTMENTS. ment through 6-15-77. Call 351 (12) weekdays, between 10 and 5 p.m. 332 1800 OR 5-10 29 (19) working conditions. Near airport 332 6354. C 9-10 29 (12) 9553. 3-10-28(12) KARMANN GHIA 1965. Runs at the CINEMA X ADULT ENTER¬ e Homes Good. Needs brakes, location. Call 374 8979. Equal Op¬ NEED ONE easy excellent tor HONDA FIVE-speed TAINMENT CENTER, 1000 West going, sem. neat Hatchback. portunity Employer. 5-10-29 (28) FOUR APARTMENTS unfur ■found parts. $50. 332-0714. Z-E-5-11-1 20,000 miles. Excellent condition¬ Jolly Road. 0-11 10-29 (44) ONE BEDROOM apartment. Neat, nished. Deposit required. Suitable Iai like new. $2550. 351 0899. 3-10-28 CHOOSE YOUR own hours. Sell clean, utilities paid. Near Sparrow. for one. Prefer student. On Bus farmhouse. Quiet friendly country $155 'month. 332 1095 fts PERSONAL (121 business supplies to local busi¬ WAITRESSES, APPLY in person, 0-14 10-29 (131 evenings. lines. Call 372-6043 after 4:30 p.m.; atmosphere. 5 10-29 1181 Phone 337 7776 LEMANS 1967. Automatic, 60,000 Atate miles. SPORTSTER 1969. Good nesses. Must be neat appearing HUDDLE SOUTH. 820 West Miller other times 393 5521 or 487 0899 Ition Mechanically excellent. condi¬ and able to devote 20 hours/week. Road, Lansing. 8-11-2 (11) 8-11-4 (21) Clean interior. 351-6958 after 6:30 tion, must sell fast $1200/best ANDREA HILLS offer. 393 7315. 6-11 1 (12! Call me and will see if we can EAST LANSING. Room for male. p.m. 8-10-29 (121 Brand new, five minutes to cam benefit each other. COMBINED OVERSEAS JOBS ONE PERSON for furnished apart¬ Close to Union Call 332 0205 443 - summer/ pus. One and two bedrooms, TRIUMPH 650 road bike, 1969. BUSINESS SUPPLIES. 487 6820. year-round. Europe, South Amer¬ ment, own room. $85 month. Heat Grove Street. 8-114(131 LEMANS 1969. 46,000, automatic. 5 10 29 (36) some furnished from $169. Phone paid. 332-1093. 8 11-4 (12) Absolutely mint condition. 7,000 ica, Australia, Asia. etc. All fields, New tires. All power. Phone 351 6866, 332-1334. o 10 27 (20) kORTATION miles. First $800. 484 2266. 3 10 26 $500-$1200 monthly. Expenses SHARE LARGE quiet house. 339-2998 after 6:30 p.m. Z-3 10-29 Id FULL TIME Secretary needed for paid, sightseeing. Free information ROOMMATE NEEDED to share write: CEDAR VILLAGE apartment. $105 month plus utili¬ per bedroom 374 8536 4 10 29 I TOWN' property management company. INTERNATIONAL JOB one female - - Married preferred. Phone 332- CENTER, Dept. ME, Box 4490 needed beginning November 15 or ties. Own bedroom. 355 6441. HONDA 350 1973. Good condi MERCURY COUGAR 1970. Auto¬ 0111 OR-5-10 29 (12) Berkely California 94704. Z 20 11 December. Call 332 6758. 6 10 28 8 11 4 (12) tion, must sell, $500/best offer. matic, radio, runs good, power 353 1415. 8 11-2 (12) 16 (32) ONE ROOM $62.50 per steering/brakes. $375. 625-3112. LOCAL BUSINESSMAN MALE ROOMMATE needed for 8-10-29 (12) expand¬ furnished apartment. $95'month- HONDA STEPTHROUGH 50 cc. ing. Some sales, management, ROOM IN deluxe townhouse for TWO BEDROOM Duplex, one iy. One block campus. 351 3648. Excellent condition. $175. Phone promotional experience. Call 372- desperately needed live-in babysit¬ mile from campus, $189/month. MGB-GT, 1967. Special edition 1046 4 6 p.m. Z-3 10-26 (12) ter for second 4-10-29(27) 485 5384 or 485 0823. 6 10 29 (12) grader. Watch Call after 6 p.m. 332-2110. 8-11 2 NO DAYS model. Engine, A-1 condition. $1,200. 882-6166. 8-10-27 (12) before and after school and occa¬ FEMALE NEEDED. December 1. For Sale ^ STAFF ACCOUNT for CPA office. sional evenings. Will also consider 3 6 North Point Apartments. $92.50. MGB 1975 Auto Service / Federal, state, and payroll tax babysitter, housekeeper. Must be THREE BEDROOM duplex: nea 351-3103. 5 10 29 (12) Roadster. Excellent dependable and like kids. Reply to condition and loaded. Call experience required. Financial in¬ campus, partly furnished, parkini Craig Box B-2, in care of State News facilities. 351-7026, after 5 p.m. Gibson at 627-9973 and leave IF YOU have any automotive stitution or insurance experience Classified 818 CLEO, 2 bedroom, wall to wall a parts Department. 8-1029 5 10 28(12) BEETS AND message. Z-5-10-29 (16) you'd like to sell (like snow tires) helpful. Pension plan and hospital¬ (42) carpet, utilities paid except electri¬ carrots by the and your el. $4.00 also half bushels price is $50 or less -Our ization, parking provided. 484- ONE OR two males for furnished city. Garage, washer-dryer hook¬ Econoline Ad can help, 12 words, 651 6557 E-5-10 27 (12i MUSTANG 1975. 20,000 miles. 1379. 6 10-28 (25) ESCORTS WANTED. Earn while up. Partially furnished. 882-8913 or apartment. Close to campus. Call Power steering, power brakes, 5 days, $4. you learn. $4.00 per hour. 489- 489 5652 6-11 1 (21) 332 4432. 0 6 10 29112) tinted glass. $3,500. Excellent DRUMMER WANTED for working 1215. Z-30 10 29 (12) hand. Call 351-0614 FIVE ROOM upstairs apartment. 513 HILLCREST TOWNS largest condition. 355-8148. X5-10-26 (14) anytime. TV AND stereo repairman needed! one bedroom apartment. Brightly 6 10 28(12) Unfurnished except for ap 351 7645 4 10 26 M6> Experience necessary. Hours flexi¬ pliances. Garage. Utilities paid. furnished, security, dishwasher, OLDS 98 Luxury Sedan 1971. Low ble. WILCOX TRADING POST air, etc. Nice area. 3 blocks MSU mileage, factory air, cruise control, $155'month plus deposit. 320 TWIN BED. desk. TV. small NEEDED IMMEDIATELY: Person¬ 509 East Michigan, Lansing. 485 $210. 337 1562. OR 5 10 29 (21 North Butler, Lansing. IV2-2577 6-way seat, clean. 1 owner. al aides for male student Handi- 4391. C-l 1-10-29 (17) bookcases. Coffee table, like new. $1,650. 484-5856. 3-10-26 (19) between noon and 2 p.m. S-6 Call 351 0894 4 10 29 (12) cappers residing in Owen Hall. Call 10 29 (24) TWO NEEDED for four man. $75 353 9642. 8 11-2 (14) WAITRESSES AND cooks. Apply each. Campus Hill Apartments. OLDSMOBILE 88 1974 two in person, Call, 349-4805. 6 10 27 (12) FOUR-CHANNEL Pioneer QX-949 - HUDDLE NORTH, SUBLEASE ON large one bed door hardtop. Air, power Downtown Leonard's Plaza. 309 Receiver, four OHM B loud¬ steering MASON BODY SHOP 812 East SAINT VINCENT HOME FOR room and brakes, radio, low apartment, Y? block from speakers, one year old, 351 4925 mileage. Kalamazoo Street since 1940. North Washington. 7-11-3 (14) ONE - TWO females for 3 man CHILDREN needs one live in campus. Furnished. $250/month. X 8-111 112) Very good condition. 489-0602. Complete auto painting and colli volunteer to work 20 hours per Call 332-5324. 8-11 3(15) apartment. Available winter term. 8 114 (18) sjon service. American and foreign COLLEGE AGENT Intern-life in¬ Call 337 2138. Z-6-10 27 (12) week in our office. Will work from cars. 485 0256. C-21-10 29 (20) surance sales; 15-20 hours GIFT MERCHANDISE 40" o'f 59 p.m., Monday thru Friday. per FEMALE NEEDED to sublease for PINTO 1973 station wagon. 4 week. Straight commission. winter and speed, air conditioned, 39,000 JUNK CARS wanted Pay top Responsibilities: Typing, filing, re¬ ceptionist, phone answering, and Sophisticated training program, spring terms. $70 a month. Capitol Villa, 351-3059. EAST LANSING-Furnished/un¬ furnished one bedroom. Patio, TsKSJOO West Poca rhiles. $1,600. 349-4456. 8-11-2 dollar. Also late model wrecks. other general office duties. ST. develop referrals and sell quality 5 10-29 (15) protection. Can lead to permanent carpeting, drapes, air condition-' 489-3080. C 8-10-29 (11) VINCENT HOME will provide career on ing, ample parking, laundry facili¬ room and board, laundry, and graduation and ad¬ THREE MEN needed for two ties. Rent includes heat and water. PINTO 1971. New alternator, re¬ WE BUY vancement to estate and business junk cars and trucks. Top sewing facilities. This is an excel¬ bedroom apartment. Furnished, Phone 351 6159. X 0-12 11 1 122; cently tuned, good tires, rust but dollar. 489-4647 NORTHSIDE lent opportunity for a college planning. Contact Jere Whiteley near campus. Available 351 2500. 8 11 4 (40) January. mechanically excellent. Call Paul AUTO PARTS. 8 111 (12) student who needs a break in 337 0161. 8 11 3 (13) after 6 p.m., 349-0446. Z-4-10-29 NEED A good used tire? Over 400 paying rent. We are looking for a mature qualified person. Please EXECUTIVE SECRETARY - Lan¬ CAMPUS, MALL close. Carpeted Houses £ in stock, priced from $4. All tires call Mrs. Anderson or Mr, Wolf- sing law office, Good typing skills, deluxe one bedroom. Snack bar. NEED ONE for 4 bedroom, 6 man PINTO WAGON 1973 Four speed. . mounted free. PENNELI. SALES ston at 482 1484 to set up an some bookkeeping required. At¬ $150. 9 a.m.-4:30 p.m. 339 2346 tractive salary. 372 6031. 8-11-4 after 655 3843. 8 112 (15) 31,000 miles, excellent condition. 482 5818. 5 10 27 (19) interview. 1 10 26 (87) (14) Must sell, $1600.351 0894.4 10-29 LIFETIME GUARANTEED exhaust PART TIME help wanted, nights ROOMMATES NEEDED for large TYPIST RECEPTIONIST. Monday systems for your foreign car at and weekends. SEVEN ELEVEN at house near airport. Call Bill 482 CHEQUERED FLAG FOREIGN Waverly and Holmes. Call or come through Friday, 11 a.m.-2 p.m. 5116 after 6 p.m. 8 11-3(121 PLYMOUTH FURY II. 1969. Good Student only; apply in person CAR PARTS, 2605 East Kalama¬ in. 882 9585. 8-11 4 (18) body, good engine, good deal. Call TODAY only. STATE NEWS 484-2246. 8-10-28 (12) zoo Street, one mile west of ONE OR two females for f irnished CLASSIFIED DEPT., 347 Student SHARE LOFT 6 X 7 4" X 5'10 Pre fab. T»: campus. 487 5055. C 12 10 29 (24) CHOIR ORGANIST, with sensitiv¬ ity for prayerful worship. Needed Services. S I 10 26 (21) apartment. Close to campus. Call Studious LARGE house quiet mates. house. $75' Supports Queen size mattress, 3 PONTIAC LAMENS 1968. Auto¬ 332 4432. O 6 10-29 (12) month, per bedroom X 6' couch. $125 351 4925 AMERICAN, GERMAN AND for South Lansing Church. Call 374 8536. I your unwanted matic transmission. Power steer¬ 4 10 29(12) 8 10 28 (12) FOREIGN CAR REPAIR, 489 1736 or 393 3030. 8 11 4 (16) SECRETARIAL POSITIONS h a State News ing. Best offer. 351-0004 morn¬ FEMALE NEEDED immediately to also body. 20% DISCOUNT to available in busy association head¬ share furnished deluxe one bed¬ Call Kathy at ings/evenings. 10-11-4 (12) students and faculty on all cash'n TRADE BOARD and room for quarters. General secretarial skills STUDENT RENTAL Large 4 bed¬ ANTIQUE CARVED solid oak I cheerful assistance. room apartment. Close to campus. room house. No lease required. 4 carry VW service parts IMPORT light housekeeping and occasional including excellent spelling and headboard, footboard, bed frame. 337 0398. 8 11 2 (14) PONTIAC LEMANS Convertible AUTO PARTS, 500 East Kalama¬ students, $75 each plus utilities $50. 468 3905 after 6 p.m. E-Z 5 babysitting. Near buslines. 351- language abilities necessary. Ex 1970. Power steering, power zoo and Cedar. 485 2047, 485- 7025. 2 10-27 (13) and deposit. Ownership care. 339 10 28 (12» cellent fringe benefits and working MERIDIAN MALL. 2 bedroom, |D0R 1973. Southern brakes, AM/FM, excellent condi¬ 9229. Master Charge and Bank conditions. Near airport location, 900 square feet, new shag. New 8349. 8 11-3 (20) 1 High road miles, air tion. 332-4951, after 6 p.m. 8-11-4 Americard. 0 10-10 29137) call INDOOR GARDENERS. 3 Flores " BEAUTICIAN NEEDED immedi¬ Monday-Friday, 374 8979 paint, new drapes. No pets. $195 220 West Barnes. 4 bedrooms. Is. $850. 332-1304. (14) cent light fixtures, with bulbs $15 ately. Prefer some clientele. Call Equal Opportunity Employment. 669-3654, leave message. 8-11-2 6 10-27 (33) Stove'refrigerator. 5 minutes to Call 1 589 8996 Leslie. E Z 5 10 28 Cindy, 332 4314 or 339 9928. (19) |ALEY 1964. 3000 TORINO 1970 2-door. 8 cylinder, snow tires, $700. Runs great. { Aviation ji\ EAST LANSING one bedroom campus. 482-2589. 3 10 28 (12) II. plus spare c parts. 355 9757. X6-10-28 (12) MANTA WING hangglider, 18 For Rent furnished apartments available fall foot standard AVON - LOOKING for part time and winter terms. Close to m. 332-2110. wing. Colorful cam¬ TRIUMPH SPITFIRE, 1972. $1600. dacron sail includes prone har¬ opportunity. Sell famous pro¬ pus, bus stop. From $180 per ness. $450. Call Dan 353 6400 or ducts, set your own schedule and TV AND stereo rentals $25/term. month. Call CEDAR Excellent condition, many extras. GREENS ■ SPORTS Van, 1976. 393 5962 after 6 p.m. S 5 10-28 earn money. 482-6893. 22-10-29 $10.95/month. Call NEJAC 337- APARTMENTS. 351-8631. 11-11 5 339-2967 after 5 p.m. 3-10-28 (11) (21) 1010. C-21-10-29 (12) (25) ' 350 V-8, power res. Air s 637 conditioning, VEGA 1974 Hatchback. Radio, 9570. 4-10-29 automatic, new brakes/exhaust Employment jjif IMALIBU. 1971. Three system. 36000 miles. 484-3849. 5-10-29 (12) MEN/WOMEN - moke money PEOPLE REACHER L'lrns Good condition. VEGA, 1976. Only 600 miles. Stick, before Christmas. Everything sup¬ P' 6457. 8-11.4 1121 [PICKUP 1974. 3- radio. $850 off sticker 332-3936. 3-10-27 (12) price. plied. BT, P.O. Box 352, Kansas City, MO 64141 Z-10-11 5 (16) WANT AD JM. low mi|es VEGA 1971, mechanically sound. AIRLINE TICKETING-n .jncn (10-39112! 3 speed. 44,000 miles. Radio. 332-0425 after 6 p.m. 8-11-4 (12) one year experience necessary. Just eompleti form ami mail Part time now to develop a new frith payment to. travel agency then build up to a 'wer steering VOLKSWAGEN BUS 1971. Pow¬ full time position if desired. 487- _ fw exhaust. der blue, remanufactured engine, 8643 after 5 p m. 8 11-3 (291 State Sews Class ifit J Ih pt. ■ 373 2449, warranty 3,000 miles or 90 days. .U?StudentSer. iees Blily. 332-0783. Very clean and sharp. See at SANTA CLAUS needed. Must East IMPORT AUTO. 485-2047. C-8-10- Lansing, Mwh. love children. Job related experi¬ 29(22) ence helpful. Beginning November ■ ~ '671 Automatic, ■went 26th thru December 25th. 25 hours condition no VOLKSWAGEN CAMPER 1973 m? Or 487 0106.6-10-27 a week. Open schedule. Salary Sportsmobile. Refrigerator, rebuilt negotiable 489-2435. 5-10-29 1251 Address . engine. $3100. Phone 355 8059. 2-10-27 (12) ®'1973. 46,000 miles GUITARIST WANTED for estab City Zip Code . condition. $1595 lished band. Phone 489-4684 after 172 8113 (12) VOLKSWAGEN FASTBACK 5 p.m. 8-11-2 1121 1968. Good running condition. Usually we think ot Classified Ads Snow tires included. $550. 351- AUTO WASH/gas pumpers Part/ Classificotion Preferred Insertion Date ONET _ - as little ads. And admittedly, , ,970 v_g 6575. 6-10-26 (121 full time, open 7 days, 7 a.m.-9 they Print Ad Here don't take up much space. 393-1510.miles-Sacr|- ■ im'. ■ p.m. Male, female, retirees call _ But C-3-10-28 VW 1965. $150, in OKEMOS AUTO CLINIC, INC., there's one thing Classified Ads are running condi¬ tion. Good gas mileage. Call October 26-28, 351-3130, 8-5 p.m. really big on. That's the fast results 353-2842. 8-11-3 (12) tor appointments. Z-3-10-27 (25) you get when you put one to work IS Spider. 44,000 to sell J condition. Ph0ne VOLKSWAGEN 1968 bus. Fully CHRISTMAS SALES help. We something. Try a little ad that's big on results today' pcollecr after 6 p.m. equipped for camping. Good con¬ will be taking applications (or part dition. $1095. Phone 372-8130. and full time Christmas sales help way to attain a said. "The government played be willing to sit down with an country is not there anymore. it down and it is not our The state is only 30 years old pent peace in the Middle place to criticize in that type of situa¬ authorized Palestinian group and creating a just and demo¬ that recognizes Israel's tion. right to cratic society is only ve error on the exist. beginning. The government must JIsrael not to recognize on "Actually, Israel is the United States, but a burden "Somebody has got to break to project these people that they are ■justices done to the sometime and talking with the here not to build roads and ns,' she said. "Jews America takes it on because it Palestinians is a must," she claim to the land of has its own interests in the said. buildings, but to build a great and the Palestinians to area. There is society." ■ definitely a game A Freedman said it does land they call of power politics being played controversy has been not , ™mpromise parti- in the Middle East with raging over Israeli settlements matter to Israel who the next in occupied lands. Freedman president of the United States nicnt must come American interests," she said. Reaction said the settlements are hire is to be a was stronger aggra vating tensions in the area and "It really doesn't matter among the Israeli people con¬ 'situations such as cerning the firing of Earl Butz should be stopped immediately. "These because American policy is based on American interests ivil war in Lebanon for the settlements, discriminatory remarks authorized or not, should not be and also placating the Jewish e to happen if the he made recently. "In Israel nobody considered or construed as a community in an election year," n 0f the Palestinians is gets fired sign that Israel will she said. "The United States Ived. for anything," she said. "There never return that land," she said. will maintain Israel as a | created a situation is not nearly as much sensi¬ strong "They could be part of a Jewish state no matter who is the Palestinians are tivity to such remarks even she said. "Wherever though there is racism and minority in an Arab state. president. [o they are a disrupting discrimination between Arabs, "There are 20 authorized .1 and Israel must come as with them." Oriental Ashkenazi Jews and the settlements now and plans fur FRANK & ERNEST Sponsor Sale through November 12. (Middle-European more in the future, and I think was born in Jews)." they must be stopped im by Bob Thaves 1976. to Sovings you have to see believe. Think ahead and v Jersey, and Once the probelms with the mediately," she said. (Christmas! I). 10% MSU DISCOUNT jel in 1969. She Lebanese civil war get settled, The problem of decreasing I known fur her feminist it is expected that Soviet calls population and Soviet emigra I was elected into for a Geneva Conference will be tion have plagued Israel for the COME BACIC in 1973. said Israeli reaction was renewed, and, Freedman said. Israel must be prepared to past few years and, according to Freedman, Israel is not LATER, doing ERN|E... IT'LL TAKE ALL FEMINIST SHOOTS DOWN MYTH AFTER NOON working ON quality claim disputed WHAT'$-HI*-NAME'$ INFERIORITY kvJIDY Pt'TNAM cent. said it is necessary to COMPLEX, HERE. te News Staff Writer • Because legislation con¬ continuance of the have female cerning marriage and divorce is movement in foture genera¬ but the image of a left to Orthodox Jewish tions. if et|ual rights is a religion, a widow without Future achievements, she rcording to Israel children is legally bound to said, require women "being t member and marry her late husband's able to identify in a clear, |st Marcia Freedman. brother. genuine, universal way, what n the military • A woman cannot initiate a are the basic needs of | relegated to lower divorce without giving up is with 70 per cent, ghts to her children. „ or typist positions whfi oJ*K very : work in kitchens, fold feV wWnen in high political ites and direct traffic, positions, is currently an said at a luncheon speaking tour in the United at the Shaarey Zeduk States. She told the group of jation in East Lansing, local women that the varioi major task is to break backgrounds of people living io myth that Israel is a Israel (Jews and Arabs from i.i which dozens of countries) have equality "made it very, very clear to a long time ago," that women's interests are the n said. "The same all over the world." myth is 'rung outside the Freedman said that the feminist movement is coming nan pointed to other into a crucial period as the | during her talk to "initial enthusiasm and e the Israeli woman's energies which fired the ment" have become channeled forking women (30 per into "project-type" men between ages of Citing the need for an inter¬ earn 47 per cent less national framework, Freedman despite an equal pay nerage wage for a CMU students (oman is below the 'vel, so that a single innot even support begin relay run '• 80 per cent of MOUNT PLEASANT (UPI) are female, only a — With supporters chanting Pi" of principles and ad "Run Northern Down," a group gators and of Central Michigan University _ comprise only 2 per students M college professors. Thursday began a 356-mile relay to Marquette, m 81(110 per cent of the " carrying a football to Northern government are >• The figure for local Michigan University for the last scheduled football game be¬ ■went is about 2 to 3 per tween the two schools. Jotbail programs new comics ^baseball cards used comics Bough,« Sold Bought i Sold Ifrious Book Shop Curious Book I *" 3071. Gwt Rl..r Shop |su SHADOWS " Gordon Carleton th&v didn't raise tuition r i'p 4<.*osr 6s a0ll to pay back f OK) ths lctaw i had to ■ ^ seofust ihiy Raised tuition i 1 4 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigor Kubrick spins off odysseys like clockwork Director's daring cinema 'Barry Lyndon:' a travelog reaches mass audiences through history; brooding with artistic film statements serious, respectful tones classics play to small commercial followings and By BYRON BAKER It is a long, slow, By BILL BRIENZA extremely intirr.tK- The American cinema has become second- State News Reviewer pirture, a rare and austere story — college film societies. Kubrick reaches the rate. While all over the world men like Fellini masses with really daring cinema. Stanley Kubrick's much-maligned film of personal greed, class struggle and the " and Bergman and Truffaut have made quality His black humor, making grotesque satires of Thackeray's "Barry Lyndon" has returned to of wealth. There is elaborate beauty here films. American artistic substance has been made the sacred cows other overly timid Americans town after a lengthy absence, and perhaps the DeMillian pomp. There are great »«, genuflect to. is his trademark: in "Lolita," a picture is deserving of some further reflection. with soldiers and structures, but secondary to profit and commercial potential of note Certainly, as has been previously Written, the sense of spectacle. every film. 12-year old nymphet seduces a middle aged man: The money and power is still great here, but in "Dr. Strangelove," the American military film is ravishingly beautiful: the sets, costumes, Stanley Kubrick is here involved in the number of top-notch directors has dwindled establishment is pursued with savage humorous cinematography were all properly Oscared and respectful depiction and commentary oli- to almost nothing. Americans produce pablum force as it provokes a nuclear war with the otherwise acclaimed. period. He has attempted to immerse the like "Bad News Bears" or "The Apple Dumpling Russians over the "international Communist But the praise and appreciation — and completely in that time in history, Gang" or "The Way We Were" most of the time conspiracy" to sap and impurify our vital body possibly, the understanding of the film — ended unprecedented authority as to the atcsr with an occasional "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's fluids by putting fluoride in the drinking water. with the carefully chosen, respectful phrases authenticity of its depiction. He (ollowr Nest" (directed by Czech Milos Forman) or Making American generals look like cornball regarding the picture's visual design. Critics with this in the film's low key at: paranoids was clearly risky lin pre-Vietnam '641 seemed perplexed that "Barry Lyndon" was not, slow, eventual paoing. "Midnight Cowboy" (directed by Briton John Schlesinger) to keep the critics at bay. to the film's financial success, but Kubrick and say, "Tom Jones," and latched onto that Indeed, in a major departure from t« his studio iColumbia) did. admirable John Osborne-Tony Richardson kinetic "A Clockwork Orange," KuWl Artistic American cinema must first make The film was a hit anyway, but it is through his adaptation of Henry Fielding's comic opus as a deliberately understated his picture's ig money: a hard lesson Orson Welles learned with last three films, painstakingly planned and hard and fast example of how this sort of subdued its tone to that of time "Citizen Kane." The technically adventurous executed, that Kubrick has claimed certain historical piece should be done. a longipi masterpiece (maybe the finest American sound As for Ryan O'Neal's performance in' status as a master. These films constitute a But, when Thackeray wrote "The Luck of film ever made) in 1941 was a box-office flop and role, it must be said that he does e> trilogy — the future 1209D, the present Barry Lyndon," he was not yet a great novelist needed of him very well an Welles was never again given full artistic control iCIockworkl and the past (Barry Lyndon) — and (the maturity, and the greatness of his "Vanity over a film by the studios. work is one of the rare instances ofi display his virtues as a director. Malrom McDowell of "A Clockwork Orange." Fair" still to come) and neither was he the master But in the last 15 years, one young American He has of form and tempo satirist that Fielding was. Resultantly, "Barry forsaking his personality and n a rare sense but, favor of creating a fleshed out charact was able to combine serious philosophical and beyond that, he has a sense of what makes a Lyndon" and "Tom Jones" are very dissimilar artistic film statements with box-office appeal. dishonest, falsely ambitious, finally - picture, having begun his career as a still books. Where Fielding conveyed his acidic view individual who cannot learn from his Stanley Kubrick's 1962 film, "Lolita," followed photographer. of the period through a genunine comic mistakes. Tragic hero Oedipus by "Dr. Strangelove" in 1964, then "2001: A The State Theatre's showing of this "trilogy" sensibility, Thackeray missed the mark of satire. of Kubrick's I "Clockwork," "Barry Lyndon" and If O'Neal here seems to segue from tie Space Odyssey" (1968), "A Clockwork Orange" His book leaves a dark impression of the flat charismatic appeal of his previous roles Is (1971) and his latest film, last year's "Barry "2001.") is an unusual opportunity to see several inevitability of individual destinies which marked of distant indecisiveness. this is fcr1 Lyndon," represent Kubrick's quintet of highly of the parts of a film career add up to something his subject and his period. artistic films that sell. While many of the foreign character is never really in touch with" resembling a whole. star of Cocteau's play, Just as Thackeray's book differs from Field¬ ing's book, so is Kubrick's "Barry Lyndon" removed from the Osborne-Richardson 'Tom In "Barry Lyndon," Stanley Kubrick uses complex, compelling visual and Jones." elements to give an eloquent vision o MSU bluegrass performers The Infernal Machine' "Barry Lyndon" is no comedy. Kubrick has chosen to tell the rise and fall of an overly period and some of its people. The Warner Brothers release it ambitious rake in often brooding, elegiac tones. through Thursday at the State Theatre. The MSU Arena Theater will be the scene for the rawMWSiiS| try to 'make people smile' production of "The Infernal Machine," an offbeat version of the age-old classic involving the problems 0! Greek tragic hero Oedipus. "The Infernal Machine" runs Thursday through ooLeys Sunday and Nov. 3 through Nov. 6. Curtain is at 8:15 p.m. The play is based on the Greek tragedy of Oedipus, who By MARTHA G.BENEDETTI Along with MacCluer, there make people smile with 1 State News Staff Writer is Ron "Doc" kills his father and marries his mother — in both instances, Rosenberg, a "After giving the student MSU professor of mechanical unknowingly. "The Infernal Machine" refers to the gods' plot against body so much grief in class, we engineering who plays guitar Bluegrass attracts a wide are going to try to make up for and Erik "Billy" Goodman, an helpless Oedipus, director Farley Richmond, associate spectrum of people. If one it by playing bluegrass music," MSU systems science professor attends a bluegrass concert, he professor of theater, said. said Charles who plays banjo. "The moral is, man can't control his own destiny," he added. "Farley" might see real country folk with MacCluer, MSU mathematics The group members have The play as to be presented at MSU is the work of French their lawn chairs swaying and playwright Jean Cocteau, who was active during the 1920s professor and fiddle player in FIFTIES NIGHT! various ties with Southern cul¬ square dancing to the old and '30s, and managed to make the work a criticism of Hitler The Blue Grass Extension Ser- ture. Goodman is from Winston traditional tunes or a pack of and Mussolini. Salem, N.C., Clarkson is from college age people jumping The group, which plays every Arkansas and MacCluer stems Cocteau, best known for his film "Beauty and the Beast," around to the music's gay Sunday night at Art's Bar, 809 from reflected many of his personal beliefs in the play, such as Put-In-Bay, Ohio. Layman rhythm. E. Kalamazoo St., Lansing, will and Rosenberg surrealism in art, Freudian psychology and existentialism. have relatives play tonight at Moon's High- wheeler Restaurant and Bar. in Kentucky. "Our group started out "Bluegrass works best in its In regards to finding his own identity, it cannot be said that Oedipus struggles too hard to find it, being more concerned, Drasii'cAlly Reduud Pukes "We feel that through per¬ natural habitat," MacCluer as were most rising European dictators of the 1930s, with messing around with bluegrass, forming for the student body, we can further student-pro¬ it was a joke," MacCluer said. "Then it became big business. said, "the great outdoors. While some music people think bluegrass fame, fortune and power. Stephen Jones and Carolyn Fry star as Oedipus and on Liguou ancI Beeu! fessor interaction, which is We are now the second-best belongs in the Southern Jocasta, (the mother), with A.J. Rocchio as Tiresias, the blind sorely needed," MacCluer said. "As professors, we believe in a bluegrass band in Michigan." Ann Arbor's RFD Boys hold • states, it has caught on largely in the North with Washington, Tickets are $2 at the Fairchild Theatre box office, open from 8-11 upsiAius ancI more relaxed relationship with the No. 1 title for bluegrass D.C., being the hottest blue- noon to 5 p.m. Reservations are recommended. the students and bluegrass music is our way of promoting it." bands in the state. "We started dabbling with local television and radio grass area right now." dowNsmius dp The Blue Grass Extension Service began five years ago with five MSU professors. stations," MacCluer said. "We played once a week at the Peanut Barrel and entertained RETAIN TONiqhr. JPJ There are still five musicians, however, two of the original professor-musicians moved to Nashville and were have regularly at Frank 'n' Stein's, (now Tree)." called The Spaghetti Often referred to as Amer¬ JUDGE IAN QUAIL ^ replaced by Bill "Junior" Lay¬ ica's native music, bluegrass man and Jack Clarkson. was derived in the late '30s MICHAEL G. Layman drives a truck for a from Appalachian musicians by living and plays bass for the Scottish settlers. Its tempo is group. Clarkson, an MSU med¬ ical student and business ager for dolin. the group, plays man¬ man¬ usually fast, light and happy. too "Students tend to take music seriously, like MacCluer said. "We want to a religion," HARRISON OPENINGS CIRCUIT COURT A hardworking Judge who cares. 'BOC's' 'Agents of Fortune:' packing punch in new form The U.S. Navy is looking fof BLUE OYSTER CULT: let it rock with force without ALL DEGREE college juniors, seniors, grads AGENTS OF FORTUNE letting it overpower with ICOLUMBIA - PC3416-4) With songs such as "Cities on Flame (with Rock and Rolll" monotony. "The CANDIDATES masters in: Engineering business Reaper" has been re and "Buck's Boogie," BOC has always had the distinction of ceiving a lot of airplay and it is handling this overexposure and FACULTY! administration, math, chemist^ physics, computer science, civil being one of the truest-to-form well. Piano and the vocals of "raunch" and roll bands of the Eric Bloom accentuate the tune Make your reservations NOW for last five years. The guitars, at "Morning Final," while Patti academic apparel for Fall Term ,Com¬ engineering, or nuclear engin times numbering five leads Smith lends her own brand of playing at once, have always "Cult" singing to "The Revenge mencement. Deadline is Nov. 20 at the been the overpowering base of of Vera Gemini." Don't become Union Store in the Union. the group. After numerous records with disillusioned, loyal HOC fans, because the band still packs the PERSONALIZED ing. Max age, 26 years old. this bulldozing style, the group punch you grew on, but has GRADUATION has done a turnabout and fortunately decided to present ANNOUNCEMENTS NOW considerably improved its music. "Agents of Fortune" is the proof of this surprising it in form a whole new form. This gives a good balance of music and vocals with more of FACULTY: BEING ORDERED AT UNION STORE. Call 313-226-7795 or 226-771 rebirth of Blue Oyster Cult. "This Ain't the Summer of an effort seeming to be made in the direction of impressing the Hoods from other universities must For Information call 355-3498 The Union Store collect. Low" is the lead cut which has listener instead of overpower¬ be ordered EARLY! the essence of past "Cult" music ing him. in it, with that elusive ability to — Marc P. DiMercurio :