EPA orders MSU to clean up smoke mental Protection Agency (EPA) has U.SEANHICKEY become involved in the The EPA has scheduled a formal hearing reducing the pollution. State News Staff Writer eight-year contro¬ today in Lansing charging that the plant's If MSU fails to clean up the problem, the versy which dates back to 1969 when the Thf federal government has ordered MSU emissions are more than six times the EPA has threatened to take MSU to federal £'£ tike steps t° reduce air pollution at Its Michigan Air Pollution Control Commission (MAPCC) first cited MSU's Power Plant 86 plant or risk federal court to be in violation of state air pollution accepted federal level. The EPA has also slapped MSU with a court or cut the grant money. University out of federal Smokestack control cost formal notice of violation ordering the The federal action follows a clash last standards. "jC'lk first time, the U.S. Environ- University to make at least some progress in summer between MAPCC officials and MSU administrators who maintain that the University does not have the funds to comply. high due to 7-year delay JMC future To bring MSU's power plant into federal and state standards, the University would have to install precipitators costing $11.5 By SUE STEWARD SUte News Staff Writer The electrostatic move excess precipitators re¬ fly ash which is created in A seven-year delay in the purchase the coal burning process from the air. million on the plant's two coal-burning boilers. of equipment to control emissions at "In a coal-fired plant the heavy ash debated by MSU President Clifton R. Wharton, Jr. said the University has been asking for the Power Plant 65 may now cost MSU more than $8 million in inflated costs. The installation of two electrostatic settles in the bottom of the boiler and is not involved in the air-cleaning process," said Roy Wells, director of money from the state since 1974, but has been turned down each time. precipitators designed to bring projects for Consumers Power Co. "It MSU officials smokestack emissions within the is the lighter fly ash which gets carried "We keep turning in requests on our standards set by the Environmental out the stack." capital outlay list but the state has Protection Agency (EPA) has been repeatedly turned us down." Wharton said. The precipitator is placed between Wharton said the project should be funded estimated at a cost of $11.5 million by the boiler and the stack, and collects By ANNE STUART by the state and not through student fee Commonwealth Associates, Inc., a the fly ash before it can escape into the State News Staff Writer increases. consulting firm contracted by MSU. He future of MSU's Justin Morrill The University is currently trying to raise The same consulting firm estimated (-allele (JMCt remains up in the air as the money through a combination of funds the installation cost of the precipita¬ The fly ash is given an electric idminiatrators and college officials continue from both state and federal governments. tors at $2.8 million several years ago, charge as it enters the precipitator. A debate discontinuation of the under¬ MSU has included the project in its 1977-78 but when bids were opened it was plate at the other end of the precipita¬ clear that the project would be more tor is charged opposite the particles graduate program. appropriation request from the state and has requested $5 million from the Federal costly, according to Robert Perrin, and the particles are pulled out of the Faculty members and representatives of vice president of University and air stream and onto the plate. Wells Works Program (FWP). tl( college's student caucus met with federal relations. Michael Smith, EPA enforcement at¬ said. Acting Dean Barbara Word on Monday to "When Commonwealth Associates jjacuas the future of the residential liberal torney for the Midwest, said MSU was in gave us the early preliminary esti¬ Power Plant 65 now has an electro¬ "clear violation" of the accepted state arta college. mates construction costs were sta¬ static precipitator in each of the At the meeting, Ward announced that standards. ble," he said. "But the market had pollution-causing smokestacks, but incoming freshmen will not be admitted to "Under the Clean Air Act we are entitled become new equipment is needed to bring the extremely volatile because of JKC next fall and that existing under¬ to serve notice of violation to any source of emissions in compliance with EPA gTeat inflation by the time the installa¬ graduate education will be phased out over pollution once we are aware of the pollution tion was designed and opened for standards. tie next few years. problem," he said. bids." Replacing the current curriculum would Smith said the hearing will basically be an The proposed precipitators will be la a lifelong learning program for career Only two firms bid for the project built on top of the existing structures exchange of information between EPA and and they both included inflationary persons who wished to return to school for University officials. at the plant and will rise nearly 50 feet clauses in their contracts because of ■ore advanced work in their specialized 'The purpose of the hearing will be to into the air, Ronald Flinn, University (eld, student representatives said. come up with a compliance schedule. We'll rapidly increasing prices, Perrin said. engineer, said. The University did not have the 'Students now enrolled in JMC will be want to know by what date MSU can come The Department of Natural Re¬ additional money to meet the bids, and jven sufficient time to complete their into compliance with our standards," Smith the installation process was stale¬ sources warned MSU about the pollu¬ nurse work for graduation, but the section said. tion problem in 1969 and the Univer¬ choice will probably be a lot more limited,'' mated. An EPA official said MSU is one of the sity at that time converted the power student caucus member Ruth Snyder said. Perrin said he does not think bids largest pollutors in Michigan and one of the plant to cleaner-burning natural gas. "Freshmen and sophmores will probably will be more than the $11.5 million From 1970 to 1974 MSU burned coal be encouraged to switch their majors to few violators that has failed to make an estimated by Commonwealth this only in the winter when excess energy another University department," added effort to clean up. time. "I think the estimate is a good supplies were needed and burned gas "MC senior Aubrey Marron. " it lively important that MSU does clean one and is based on solid construction the rest of the year. "It's an administrative decision. Nothing up. They are polluting over an area where a costs," he said. treniendoua amount of people are highly But in the summer of 1975 the tan change it," said Valerie Shebroe, concentrated year round, and especially A representative for Common¬ University switched back to burning chairperson of the JMC student caucus. Officials in the provost's office stated that nine months out of the year," Smith said. wealth Associates refused to comment coal year round, citing high prices and while several alternatives have been The two units in violation of federal clean on how the firm arrived at the $11.5 the shortage of gas as reasons for the ■mined for the future of JMC, none of The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has charged that the air standards at Power Plant 65 on the south million installation estimate. switch. them has been formally adopted yet. power plant's emissions are more than six times the accepted feder¬ part of campus provide most of the power for al level. MSU. "There has been serious discussion about the direction of the college for over a year, but the transition to a lifelong education program is just one of a number of possibilities being discussed," said Provoat Lawrence Boger. The situation is still at the discussion Affirmative action gripes remain Page in my judgment," Associate Provoat Clarence Winder said. "It is premature to in University College, said it was unfortu¬ President Clifton R. Wharton before the tive action area, especially in areas or units munity medicine and member of the By CHARLENE G.GRAY where progress has been unsatisfactory. association, said he hopes the association is get into any kind of explanation about what State Newa Staff Writer nate that the petition came before the petition," Scarborough said. "So really the issues brought up in the petition are not Wharton said the university is still received well at the public briefing. night or might not happen." No action has been taken on a petition trustees prior to the' holiday vacation, ones." committed to affirmative action policies. "I will be elated if an aggressive concerning "the deterioration of affirmative causing a time lapse before any action could new affirmative action effort is carried out," A role change of this In a recent statement, Wharton said that Scarborough said the association will magnitude needs to action at MSU" presented to the MSU be taken. go through a series of steps before a final he and the board of trustees shared the make a presentation at the Thursday Howard said. "However, everything is in Board of Trustees one month ago. "The Black Faculty Association has been decision IS made," explained Dorothy considering the whole affirmative action association's concerns for the need for evening public briefing session Jan. 20. waiting until the briefing presentation." Anta, assistant provost for The petition, filed Dec. 3 by the MSU James P. Howard, professor of com¬ I continued on page 13) undergraduate issue for some time and has talked to continued, vigorous efforts in the affirma¬ education. Black Faculty/Administrators Association We called for the removal of the affirmative are basically redrafting the mission action program from the authority of PBB link to physical disorders 01 the college because the viability of the Robert Perrin, vice president of University •rating JMC program is not healthy. But is *«l and federal relations. lake a lot of conversation before we do anything," Trustee Aubrey Radcliffe, R-East Lan¬ 1MC st"dent caucus members had sing, said the petition was being reviewed enng reactions to the 7* dif- possibility of phasing liberal arts program. but that no opinion has yet been formed. "The whole issue will be presented at the board of trustees public briefing meeting inside found by hospital research team ihe 1960s created'a need for schools like MC, Ruth but until that time, no conclusion will be Welcome back, and watch out Seymour said. need is formulated," Radcliffe said. for Power Plant 65. By NANCY JARVIS obviously past. There is a Charles Scarborough, president of the State NewsStaffWriter If you live in Akers Hall, look (continued on page 13) association and director of student affairs The head of aNew York-based research team studyingthe effects around and you might see East of PBBs (polybrominated biphenyls) on Michigan farm residents Lansing's new city manager — he lives there. said his group has found several symptoms, including nerve, muscle Page 3. Ford proposes tax cut; and liver disorders, that may be attributed to the toxic fire retardent chemical. Dr. Irving Selikoff, head of the research team from Mt. Sinai Hospital, discussed the preliminary findings of his study at a press conference Tuesday at the Capitol. congressional passage Describing his examination and study of 1,029 people from Michigan farms as, "one of the most unusual in my medical career," Selikoff emphasized the fact that his report is a preliminary one and °f plan deemed can not be extrapolated to the general public. unlikely "Some of the people have adverse effects, presumably from PRB," he said. "But one can not be absolutely sure it's from PBB." Selikoff said the health problems his team is finding would not be &°N 5? «Ap) - Pre.ld.nt - Resident anticipated among the general public. The symptoms they have or ■110 Mr Congress on Tuesday The Humphrey-Hawkins jobs tum atw l" CUt in individluJ »«>me bill is re-introduced, in Congress. The State of Michigan will begin providing Poorest fi„i?- d raise tMM °n »me of the Story on page 11. women with kits to test their breast milk. Story 7»'&,,fPr°VidetaXrelie,tor Ve" lplorin« Philosophical differences An MSU economics professor has a plan to radically reduce on page 9. unemployment. Story on page 3. found thus far include abnormalities of the nervous system such as loss of memory, personality changes and sleeping problems, musclo-skeletal changes, gastro intestinal symptoms, pulmonary I between the Republican President and the problems resulting in breathing difficulties, immunological changes j heavily Democratic Congress, the plan is causing lowered tolerance to disease, liver disorders and skin [ likely to get nowhere. weather changes. For many of these symptoms to be directly related to PBB, Ford submitted a virtually identical tax Welcome back to Michigan Selikoff said a study of farmers from outside Michigan must be !&**$«! proposal last year that was rejected. weather. Today will be mostly conducted to assure the problems are specific to PBB-contaminated Congress is unlikely to accept the economic cloudy with a high near 30. areas. suggestions of the outgoing President, , , , Snow accumulation will be "We found one or two unusual observations and we don t know especially since President-elect Jimmy Car¬ between one and two inches. what to make of them," Selikoff said in reference to the State News/Robert Koild ter has yet to spell out his own plan of economic stimulus. Hope your suntan can survive. immunological and skin disorders. Separate studies at the Dr. Irving Selikoff addresses press conference (continued on page 13) with Gov. William G. Milliken. (continued on page 13) 2 Michigan Stole News. East Lansing, Michigan Wednesday, January S, 1977 Congress opens term, Official's suicide caucuses elect leaders shock to Israelis TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) - The suicide of Housing Minister WASHINGTON (AP) The The Republican caucus pro¬ After the Avraham Ofer stunned Israel and wu seen by - new senators were politicians Democratic-controlled 65th duced an upset when Sen. sworn in, the Senate approved Tuesday as likely to damage'Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin's Howard H. Baker Jr. of Tennes¬ chances for re-election in May. Congress convened Tuesday unanimously a resolution to and gave notice to outgoing see defeated Sen. Robert P. count the electoral college The death of the minister, who left a note denying Republican President Gerald R. Griffin of Michigan in the votes for president and vice newspaper charges that he profited illegally from government real estate purchases, overshadowed Rabin's formal Chain collision kills 11 in Italy Ford that it will look to Demo¬ contest for minority leader. Baker won on a vote of 19 to 18. president on Jan. 6. Vice Presi¬ set up a new government. moves to cratic President-elect Jimmy dent Nelson Rockefeller ap¬ Carter for economic leadership. Ford sent an openingday Thus, Baker moved into the leadership post once held by his pointed Sena. Howard W. Can¬ non, D-Nev„ and Mark 0. Rabin resigned two weeks ago, and President Ephraim Katzir asked him to form a new cabinet to govern until the pi FROSINONE, Italy (AP) - Two cars Police said they were trying to father-in-law, the late Sen. election. A bill now in parliament seta elections for message to Congress in which Hatfield, R-Ore., to represent May 17, rammed into each other Tuesday on the determine whether smoke from a nearby he proposed a $40 billion tax cut Everett McKinley Dirksen of the Senate at the ceremony. five months ahead of schedule. Illinois. The Senate then referred to Rabin is now a caretaker premier with little chance of fog-shrouded Highway of the Sun south U.S.-owned factory contributed to the designed to benefit middle- of Rome and set off a grinding, 19-vehlcle income families. It closely fol¬ In the House, Rep. Thomas its Rules Committee proposals gathering a majority in parliament to support a new cabinet. visibility problem thot caused the morn¬ Amnon Linn, an opposition member of parliament, accused chain collision that killed at least 11 lowed a Ford plan submitted P. O'Neill of Massachusetts, to amend the rule establishing ing rush-hour pileup, which occurred the government of "acting with cowardice and persons and injured 26, five of them about 45 miles south of the capital on the last year and rejected by Con¬ with solid backing from his procedure for cutting off debate lacking the gress. fellow Democrats, was elected and to carry out a sweeping courage to stand by one of its ministers." Linn also criticized seriously. Rome-Naples superhighway. his own party, the right-wing Likud bloc, saying it had speaker. change in the body's committee Rep. Al Ullman, D-Ore., "p Tsecuted" Ofer. Succeeding O'Neill as major¬ structure. chairperson of the House Ways Ofer was found in his automobile Monday shot with a pistol. and Means Committee where ity leader was Rep. Jim Wright Efforts to make it easier to of Texas. Rep. John Rhodes of The car was parked on a beach near his Tel Aviv home. Police Leader warns of nuclear confrontation all tax legislation originates, Arizona continues as minority end filibusters come up regu¬ said they were checking into the suicide, but there was no said, "Obviously, we will organ¬ larly at the start of each new leader. suspicion of foul play. ize around the Carter recom¬ Ofer's suicide came after police said they were mendation." The outcome of the House The committee restructuring investigating LUSAKA, Zambia (AP) - Zambian black Rhodesian guerillas are based leadership contests was allegations by an Israeli journalist that the minister profited Ullman and other Democratic proposal would sharply reduce from state-financed land deals and gave low-cost housing to Foreign Minister Siteke Mwale warns were organized by Prime Minister Ian decided last month when the number of Senate commit¬ that attacks Smith in the hope of getting military congressional leaders are friends, relatives and political benefactors. by Rhodesian troops on scheduled to meet Friday with Republicans and Democrats tees and could touch off a caucused. The alleged misdeeds occurred while Ofer headed the neighboring states could escalate into a support from his allies. Carter in Plains, Ga„ to discuss lengthy battle. nuclear confrontation between East and Both chambers were filled semigovernmental Shikun Ovdim construction firm, before he the President-elect's plans for became a minister in Rabin's cabinet in mid-1974, journalist with new faces for the opening Sen. Alan Cranston of Cal¬ West. "This is a dangerous gome which the stimulating the economy. session. There were 67 new ifornia was named assistant Yigal Laviv wrote. Mwale told the United Nations Associ¬ international community must unre¬ The members of Congress House members, 47 Democrats The suicide hit Rabin's ruling Labor party when it majority leader, succeeding ation of Zambia Monday night that servedly condemn because it will, in¬ elected or re-elected in Novem¬ and 20 Republicans. Byrd. Sen. Daniel Inouye of already suffering from the arrest of one of its most powerful Rhodesian attacks on Mozambique, Bots¬ evitably, result in a nuclear confrontation ber — 435 House members and Eighteen Hawaii was elected secretary of figures. Asher Yadlin, former head of a large national health wana and other black neighbors where between East and West," he said. 34 senators — took the oath of new senators, Democrats and nine nine the Democratic Conference, the service, is awaiting trial on nine counts of fraud and taking Cfrtle K Students, office in traditional ceremonies. Republi¬ Using for their end- cans tooks office. third leadership post. bribes. Then the House elected its speaker and the Senate its president pro tern. But the real leadership deci¬ sions were made at closed party Beirut explosion, raid leave 39 dead Contro BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) — Moslem gunmen killed at least four the car they found explosives and files belonging to the Commui Sen. Robert 0. Byrd of West passers-by in a hit-run raid on a Beirut street Tuesday, the second Action organization, the Christian broadcast said. attack in Christian areas in two days, a Christian broadcast said. Virginia was named Senate Lebanon's coalition of leftist parties, which includes majority leader by the Demo¬ An explosion outside a Christian militia barracks Monday killed crats. Byrd won by acclamation after Sen. HubertH. Humphrey notified the Democrats early 35 persons and injured more than 50. The Phalange radio reported that six "Communist saboteurs" from Moslem west Beirut drove a Mercedes limousine into the Communist Action group, issued a statement denying involveme in the attacks and Beirut. denouncing acts of violence in both sectors consid Tuesday that he was withdraw¬ Christian district of Dowrah Tuesday and opened fire on A hurried series of meetings followed the two incidents. T By JUDY PU' ing from, the contest. passers-by with machine guns, killing at least four persons and meetings involved Christian leaders, Lebanese President Eli State News Stil Byrd immediately pledged to wounding several others. Sarkis and other government officials, Syrian Carter imposes tough ethics code The radio said Christian militiamen wounded and captured the commanders of the largely Syrian, 30,000-man Arab representatives si "cooperate to the fullest" with Leag How to Say No to a Ra Carter. attackers after a chase through the area's winding back streets. In peacekeeping force that is supervising the cease-fire. i controversial informatic income," he said. an blasted by women's PLAINS, Go. (AP) — President-elect Carter will ask the top officials of his entry, is currently bei: Carter imposed tough rules agoinst conflict of interest upon his administra¬ administration to sign a contract agree¬ loops by the Michigan i tion's top 2,000 political appointees ing to make a complete and public financial disclosure and to sell or place in The CHRISTIAN The maker of that Monday and set an example in following Itoruka, is also being c the rules by giving up the management and profits of his peanut business. Carter stood outside his peanut ware¬ a blind trust any assets which may pose o conflict with official duties. In addition, Carter's ethics code im¬ CHILD CARE CENTER lesidence Hall Associat: imptis guest speaker th> house here and said his disposition of the •Christian Atmosphere Storaska has been criti poses an unprecedented requirement business he built virtually from scratch aimed at shutting the so-called revolving •Well Trained Experienced Staff redentials to lecture ol was difficult and made with "some door which in the past has permitted •Full or Half Days xusidered by most to be regrets." certain government officials and their •Convenient forM.S.U., E. Lansing & Okemos mtertaimng, has been atl Oitplay Advertising... treatment ol r»0 and th "But I don't want any decision I make os counterparts in business and other fields hilwii Offlc# become Photographic ECUMENICAL: president to hove any effect on my own to virtually interchangeable. The goal at the center it not to advance views or teachings of individual churches or lithe film, Storaska mi groups, but to pro¬ kit rape is "no woi vide children with conscientious, loving care which is centered in the love of Jesus Christ. The center is ntercourse when you do: TherelSadiff^rencenT^^ open to serve parents and children in need of child core whether or not they are from a Christian back¬ Coast Guard searches for oil tanker ground. In the wake of a prote: • MCAT • LSAT • DAT University Baptist Church tares chapter of the Nat GMAT «CPAT .VAT opmiag Winter Term 440SS. Hafadorn (Women. James Bannon BOSTON (AP) — American and Cana¬ 644-foot Grand Zenith • .GRE «OCAT .SAT s for lnf« call SM-4SS0 hief of the Detroit Pc dian aircraft and a Coast Guard cutter contact with it. • NATIONAL MED. & DENT. BOARDS •Ikd Storaska a "huckste searched Tuesday for a missing Pana¬ • ECFMG .FLEX I the Detroit Free Press manian tanker with 38 "persons and B Flexible Programs and Hours wold "expect to find 1 Spokespersons for the Coast Guard, open (hursday and frlday nights till n million gollons of heovy oil aboard. the utility expecting the oil, and the ship's Over 38 years ol experience and success. Small classes. Voluminous Jacob$on'$ Ivenue selling used cars home study materials. Courses that are constantly updated. Centers The search was expanded after efforts agent said it was not unusual for a tankdr open days and weekends all year. Complete tape lacilities for review Monday failed to locate the 18,717-ton, to be delayed and temporarily "missing." of class lessons and for use ol supplementary materials. Make-ups for Year-End .The House Coi missed lessons at our centers. Revision and Wor , . m record against Flexible Programs and Hours ! scent newslette Florida hotel workers' strike continues FariipetM Hills: 313/4764388 the film is es; Am Arbor: Frederick Stores 313/662-3149 sntertniner-entre MIAMI BEACH, Fla. Or writs tth 25882 Orchard Lake M. (AP) — While a Motel and Restaurant Employes Union union official accused Saita L-7. FaraiittM Hills, Mi. 48018 eight hotels being said of the hotels Monday. struck here of ■Affiliated Centers in Major U. S. Cities The newsletter also ci refusing to bargain "in good faith," a hotel spokesperson soid He told a news conference that the l$$AVE$$$$SAVE$$$$SAVE$$$$SAVE$$$$SAVE; $S$SAVE$$ that — despite the 11-day walkout — struck hotels have refused to make £ SHEPARD'S i with substantial savings awaiting operations "are basically back to normal." counteroffers, and he pledged the pickets would stay at the Doral Country ^ FANTASTIC GIGANTIC SEMI-ANNUAL J MSU os "They in department are evasive, ambiguous, and uncommunicative to us," Herbert "Pinky" Club, Doral Beach, Deauville, Eden Roc, Carillon, Shelborne, Four Ambassadors |<4 SHOE SALE! Thousands of Famous Brand Shoes J you every j drops Schiffman, president of Local 355 Hotel, and Dupont Plazo. > Now At Super Saving Prices! « s I U SHOES for WOMEN Discontinued Patterns, Odds & Ends J < Lingerie Foundations Robes By MICHAEL M > Dress, Casual, and Campus Styles £ State Newa Sti < Values to $29 $Q97 8 Slippers Shoes The chairperson of ft 8 NOWASLOWAS U " "stane Department 1 1 SNOW BOOTS | Dresses Coats Sportswear flUte osteopathic lie % (current styles) 2 £ huePositions Ethics Board constitu jg Fleece Uned > Fashion Accessories merest. S All leather g 2 Values to $48 S9A97 8 > NOWASLOWAS OjT « Public works funds temporarily halted Miss J <5 Downtown & East Lansing < Shop Apparel and Shoes GRAND RAPIDS (UPI) - A federal 1 SHOES for MEN s Department of Commerce and the city of > Famous Names, Current Styles > judge has ordered a temporary halt to o Grand Rapids, which filed the suit. < Dress and Casuals < disbursement of $45 million in federal S Values to $36 $1 A97 S Children's, Teens', Infants' public works funds to Michigan communi¬ Grand Rapids filed the action after it g NOWASLOWAS IB 2 ties until a suit challenging guidelines of the federal grant program is settled. learned that its applications for some 15 5! Downtown & East Lansing Apparel and Shoes public works projects, including a multi- U.S. District Judge Noel P. Fox issued temporary restraining order after hear¬ a million dollar civic center, were given a low priority status based on area \ 2 SHOES for CHILDREN JUMPING JACKS 4 CHILD LIFE f •- "wo oversees 1: 2 ™ education MiJch'8a" 081 ing arguments by attorneys for the U.S. unemployment figures and other criteria. 2 For Play, Dress, and School J Values to $21 Men's Clothing, Sportswear, °n sidelines for Regies salary § NOWASLOWAS $997 Furnishings and Shoes i Grand jury may probe welfare fraud S Downtown 4 East Lansing ui Plus Hundreds of Others LANSING (UPI) — Atty. Gen. Frank J. are under direct investigation and that at Similar or Greater Savings Mr. J Shop Apparel for Young Men SN re Kelley said Tuesday he is virtually certain indictments could come in a matter of a grand jury will be formed as Medicaid fraud in Michigan. part of a combined investigation of welfare and Kelley, after updating Gov. William G. "days, if not weeks. " "I think somewhere in this tion there definitely will be a investiga¬ grand jury," ards NO PHONE OR MAILORDERS J^ta who do not SSL? the >1 £feF over MSU's remedial courses. During the last Academic Council meet¬ ing of fall term, in December, council tween transfer students and remedial courses, the difficulty of discovering all courses that are labeled remedial at MSU course because transfer students rently receiving credit for are courses considered remedial at MSU. are cur¬ which students who take remedial ATL are elementary education teachers." members decided to send the Recommenda¬ Roy McFall, associate professor of natu¬ and the possible lack of motivation for "Forty per cent of the students take tions on Remedial Courses back to the ral science, strongly opposed removing Committee on Academic Policy (CAP), credit from remedial courses, stating that where the recommendations originated. he believed that credit removal wiU hurt V V Two full meetings were devoted to discussion and debate over the granting of Akers temporary home student motivation. In a CAP meeting several days after the credit for remedial courses, how much December Academic Council meeting, credit to grant and heated debates over the chairperson Al Thurman appointed a sub¬ actual definition of a remedial course. committee to study the remedial course ; *. -t. Stat© News/Maggie Walker Willard Warrington, professor of student affairs in University College, said the whole for E. L. city manager issue and filter through the numerous suggestions and recommendations that remedial issue was too complex to work out were brought up in the aggregated Aca¬ | ^(|e k students, ilso members of the Kiwtnis Club, were out adver- in Academic Council and motioned that the demic Council meetings. I Using lor their end-of-term book snle. recommendations be returned to CAP. By MICHAEL ROUSE State News Staff Writer James Goatley, a professor in Justin East Lansing's new city manager will get a sampling of student life this term. He will be MorriU College, was appointed by Thurman temporarily living in an Akers Hall apartment. to serve as chairperson of the subcommit- Jerry Coffman of Charlotte, N.C., will assume his duties as the city's chief executive [Controversial filmmaker, movie beginning Jan. 17, but will be housed in Akers' VIP apartment until he can find a permanent residence in East Lansing. "I was up in East Lansing a few weeks before Christmas, and I was told by the real estate agent that there were not many houses on the market this time of year," Coffman said. It has been rumored that exorbitant housing prices in East Lansing kept Coffman from He plans to late this week week. hold or a committee meeting the early part of next [considered for 'U' appearance "I'm new to the problem since I wasn't on purchasing a home earlier. He is expected to move into the second-floor Akers Hall CAP last year," Goatley said. "I hope after apartment Jan. 15. He said he hopes to bring his family here to a permanent residence sometime in the the first committee meeting we can set a timetable to work out the problems." spring. By JUDY PUTNAM and trendy" and said that he has "been find it incredibly insulting," Steinhagen "The mayor and city council were aware I was having difficulties in finding housing, and State News Staff Writer publicly termed a charlatan by one of the said. Mary Sharp (a councilmember) was aware of the apartment, so she arranged it with the . nation's foremost criminologists, Lynn Akers Hall manager," Coffman said. J Lt. John Peterson of the Department of How to Say No to a Rapist and Survive," Curtis of the Federal Bureau of Social According to the city charter, the city manager must be residing in the city of East Prof proposes Public Safety (DPS), who gives presenta¬ (ittitroversial informational film which has Science Research." tions to groups, said that Storaska uses the Lansing within 90 days after being hired. m blasted by women's groups across the Coffman may be getting a taste of dormitory food also, since the kitchen facilities in the try. is currently being shown to local whUe RHA h„ msde no finll decision on philosophy of "don't resist, but outsmart." apartment are limited. . I ips by the Michigan State Police. The maker of that film _ . Frederick , . the app,(rlnce o( Storl,k,, RHA member Mary Klapperich said that members had Peterson said that DPS has not purchased the film but uses two other less-expensive Visiting professors are the primary tenants of the five VIP apartments on campus and Charles Gagliano, manager of Akers Hall, said the tenants usually purchase about half their meals from the cafeteria. plan for cut "considered it very seriously" and were films. Peterson did use the film for one '■ » 4 *> bem« considered by the "I was in college for six years and I lived in a variety of housing situations, including waiti for more information. presentation, borrowing it from the Lansing ce Hall Association as a possible us guest speaker this year. Klapperich said that representatives had Crime prevention unit of the Lansing police. "Women probablv do have some reallv dormitories, so living in Akers Hall should be no big shock," Coffman said. Sharp said the VIP apartment has been rented for Coffman for $187 per month during winter term at the city's expense. in employment reported that some dormitory presidents | Storaska has been criticized for a lack of had seen the film and thought it was "an good criticisms (of the film)," Peterson said. Coffman was selected for the $33,000 per year office Dec. 2 by the City Council from a Under a plan released by MSU ei Is to lecture on rape. His film, "The film should be used with those field of 175 applicants. The position became open when John Patriarche resigned to become excellent program." Storaska, with his film Professor Charles C. Killingsworth, the td by most to be well-produced and criticisms in mind." would appear in each housing complex as an director of the Michigan Municipal League after serving as East Lansing's city manager for national unemployment rata would drop to ning. has been attacked for its light educational series on rape. Peterson added that the film "does have 28 years. seven per cent within a year. nt of n0 and the rape victim. Coffman is presently assistant city manager of Charlotte, bad information, but every film has bad N.C., and was an assistant to The cost of Storaska's film is $750 and he information." the city manager of Evanston, III., for four years. Killingsworth, chairperson of the National Council on Employment Policy I bthefilm. Storaskaworse e is "no makes jokes and says usually receives $3,000 for each lecture. than having Members of the local group, the Kitty (NCEP), introduced the job creation plan se when you don't want it." which would create a minimum of one I In the wake of Genovese Memorial Anti-Rape Collective, have been reviewing films as alternatives to STUDENT ONE OF FIRST WOMEN RECIPIENTS million jobs at a cost of $5 billion a year. a protest by the St. Clair Ibores chapter of the National Organization the Storaska film and are expected to Killingsworth said that the proposal wiU ((Women. JamesBannon, executive deputy recommend a 1972 film entitled "No Tears create an additional 650,000 jobs in the ief of the Detroit Police led Storaska a "huckster" and was f the Detroit Free Press as Department, quoted saying that he for Rachael" to the state police. "The collective is really disappointed in Grad wins Rhodes scholarship public service field at a cost to the government of $2,600 to $3,500 per job. 1 "expect to find him on Livernois Storaska's film," Martha Steinhagen, a "Though the salary is about $8,000, Bee* selling used cars." collective member who has seen the film, reduced costs in welfare, food stamps and said. "His general attitude toward women is By PATRICIA LACROIX her as a person interested in international the number of female recipients of the unemployment compensation lower the The House Committee on Constitutional not good and his advice is dangerous." State New. Staff Writer relations since this was a time of intense scholarship, she cannot see herself "out expenses per job," he said. 'ision and Women's Rights has also gone With an almost perfect grade point political struggles within that country. crusading for womens' rights" with this as background. A tax cut would be less effective, earned at MSU in the past three —j—. . ., .... Steinhagen said that Storaska reinforces . average p record against the use of the film. In a Norton said she is "getting very tired" of Killingsworth explained, because it could at_ newsletter the committee wrote such myths as "nice girls don't get raped" years, Rhodes Scholar Mary C. Norton, 21, people asking her impressions of being one Norton credited her parents with playing cost five to eight times more per job. and defines rape as "sexual intercouse when said she does not want to come across as "a . 1 es»mtially a monolog by of the first women Rhodes scholars. a big role in shaping her as a child. Her redenck Storaska who is more of an you don't really want it." P"8- father encouraged her to try to be a success The award, offered to the first "They ask me these questions as if I've Furthermore, the NCEP recommends |«tertainer-entrepreneur than an expert on time this year women in its 75-year history, is one been a male Rhodes scholar in the past and and her mother taught her to appreciate the that the $2 billion public works budget be "Rape is not just sexual intercourse when arts and literature, she said. doubled to create 112,000 to 140,000 new it is inconvenient. His advice is to lay down of the most prestigious available to stu- now all of a sudden I'm a woman Rhodes The newsletter also called Storaska dents. scholar. It's a totally new experience for me Norton hopes to have a career in jobs. "slick and enjoy it and that it is no big thing. We n every aspect," she said. international relations, perhaps eventuaUy As a recipient of the scholarship, insti¬ She added that while she is pleased with teaching at the college level. "Under this proposal," Killingsworth tuted in 1902 by British philanthropist said, "approximately 125,000 more jobs Cecil Rhodes, Norton will be awarded two SU osteopathic chief years sity. of study at England's Oxford Univer¬ would be created in the private sector as a result of increased employment." Norton earned a 3.99 grade point average At least $1 billion would be added in in her three years at MSU. She graduated manpower training funds including money pops state board post last June with a degree from James earmarked for private firms, he said. Madison College. She emphasized interna¬ tional relations in her studies at MSU and Killingsworth said Rep. Henry Reuss, plans to continue this field at Oxford. D-Wis„ chairperson of the House Banking By MICHAEL MACKSOOD member and department head is over and Currency Committee, presented the State News Staff Writer Ironically, Norton noted, the class that $45,000. proposal to George Shultz, who will be kept her from a perfect 4.0 average was a secretary of the treasury in the Carter Llrech,nper,0n of MSU's Osteopathic Carnegie's resignation ends a dispute tennis class, in which she received a 3.0. Administration. jMWne Department has resigned from between her and the University over her MSU has had the distinction of producing five Rhodes scholars in the past six years, "If necessary" KUlingsworth said, "a he it t nte?'lat^'c "censing board after non-University employment. and Norton said James Madison College modest tax cut could be implemented. position^c^sUtut^' (rest. ed 4V^nfltet11^ conDlct of ln AugUSt Clsrence Wblder' 4ssociste provost, reviewed the dual employment of within MSU was influential in her winning However, any tax cut would have to be ■ Carnegie and found that she was in the award. justified on other grounds because of the excessive costs involved." « L.' Dorothy Carnegie "My experiences within the college were submitted her violation of the faculty outside-work-for-pay very beneficial," she said. "The college has "Tptuon to the Board of Benefits of a tax cut are not likely to go to lutrauon and Examination Osteopathic laws which govern University faculty, helped to shape me into what I am." late in The outside-work-for-pay laws state that the labor groups most affected because 'he same The procedure for application is lengthy, day the Ethics Board a faculty member should not receive pay for taxpayers are mainly those who have jobs, > conflict of interest was beginning on the level of the individuals' he said. present. more than 16 hours per month for outside own university. Letters of recommenda¬ (non-University) activities. If the NCEP plan is implemented, the tion, along with a 1,000 word autobiography Cj'fT >ro"this summer when For the position of executive secretary to and interviews are evaluated by the judges. first jobs would be available within a "megiewL rePorte holding both positions. bargaining for the International Labor students receiving a degree by the end of Jiff Because of the dispute with the Univer- Organization, which is a division of (he summer term 1977 are eligible for yearbook 4* United Nations. ID; sity over the situation she asked the Ethics portraits. M Board to look into the matter. The scholar also traveled while in high I# "I don't know why there is any problem. school in Indiana, as she visited Uganda as The pictures are being taken free this 1. The University knew about it, I had their an exchange student through the American State News Maggie Walker week and next, in 337 Union. Call 353-5295 V approval," Carnegie said this Field Service program. She said this for appointments. experience was particularly rewarding to Mary Norton during the investigation. Break brings bad news—but little cheer Good news traditionally follows to slap MSU with a long-delayed antitrust suit filed by the Michigan that both women will be acclaimed bad news, and for the MSU formal violation of air pollution Hearing Aid Society. The society for breaking the sex barrier rather community, events during Christ¬ standards. is a voluntary organization made than on the merits which won the mas break provided much to State and MSU officials have up of Michigan dealers certified to women the awards. complain about and little to brag been sorely negligent in making examine, fit, prescribe, sell and As a new year begins MSU must about. improvements because the legisla¬ service hearing aids. The society continue to wrestle with the One of two lawsuits recently ture does not budget enough charges that MSU's Audiology and general problem of decline in filed against the University will money for the University and Speech Sciences Department and college enrollment and decline in prove to be at least five times as because MSU did not request state other similar centers conspired to the public's appreciation of a costly as it would have been when aid until 1974. deprive business from Michigan college degree. Most difficult and MSU officials were first warned Now that the EPA is involved, hearing aid dealers. most important will be to continue about it in 1969. both MSU and the legislature have to educate and educate well in a Though the society's complaint The University's famed smoke¬ to cooperate immediately in order time of mounting financial and may be valid, until the courts rule stack and main power plant, which to begin the clean-up job and on the suit, the high reputation of social difficulty. TrtS IS CERTAINLY ABGKJSSID m OM A RW MIW0N TUNS OF OtUSPlLi.." is currently spewing out six times prevent the horrid possibility of MSU's Audiology and Speech the amount of allowed emissions, another tuition increase. Sciences Department may be has prompted the U.S. Environ¬ MSU has also bedn named as one tarnished. The public would do mental Protection Agency I EPA) of eight defendants in a $7 million well not to accept this view. Dr. Dorothy Carnegie, chair¬ U.S. and world undergo change FlliNfc SooT person of MSU's Osteopathic Medicine Department and execu¬ National and international dictable staff. While Carter chose news suits by the fishing industry i tive secretary of the state Board of kept up a brisk pace during the a pretty safe combination of old floundering while even the ownL Osteopathic Registration and Ex¬ vacation, ranging from the impor¬ Georgia cronies and seasoned amination, resolved another sore tance of Carter's choices for his ship of the ship is in question! Washington veterans, he also The U.S. Postal Service spot when she resigned after the Cabinet staff to the final halting of broke needed new ground in that service is getting better claimf a state Ethics Board ruled that the the inept swine flu immunization appointing blacks and women. We faster - but is it?.. America- . job constituted conflict of inter¬ program. do not understand his a hiring of chalked up a selfish new high inI est. Two nationally known politi¬ Georgia attorney Griffin Bell for A token penalty has been consumption during the month! cians left a void in the world with the post of U.S. Attorney General, December, leaving the U.S. bof handed down by Big Ten Commis¬ their deaths during the vacation. a man who had to be sioner Wayne "Do-Nothing" Duke practically more vulnerable to Arab politj Much respected Michigan Senator pried away from with 4he wrap-up of the MSU membership in and to more destruction of lal Phil Hart died of cancer, leaving a three private clubs that do not with strip-mining. 1 athletics violations. The ridiculous legacy that we can only hope Don admit non-whites. South Africa was racked wil ruling, coming so much latar than Riegle will fulfill. Chicago Mayor Carter did take an innovative fresh outbreaks of violence befol the NCAA penalty, adds another Richard J. Daley's death signaled step in actually giving his Vice- nine months to the probation Christmas, this time black-versil the end of the era of "boss" control President a meaty role in the new black, as the forces of pragmatisl period which will now end on Sept. of American big cities. Even while administration, in keeping with his and idealism 1,1978, before the football season needlessly clashej Daley's funeral proceedings were campaign promise. causing dozens of deaths. begins. going on, a power struggle to A series of oil spills was led by The U.S. government fini One bit of good news came with control the city and the Cook the running aground of the Argo decided to call off their inept sw the announcement that MSU County Democratic Party was Merchant oil tanker off the coast of flu virus immunization senior Mary Norton of Illinois Nantucket Island in Massachu¬ progrif occurring. after a rash of cases of paralyi joined a Michigan woman current¬ President-elect Jimmy Carter setts. One of the world's richest tion occurred after getting t ly attending Radcliffe College in agonized through choices for Cabi¬ fishing grounds was ruined to the shots. The swine flu progrJ receiving the prestigious Rhodes net posts, ending up with an extent of crippling the Massachu¬ deserves some final scholarship. But it is unfortunate amazingly contradictory but pre¬ setts fishing industry, and legal turkey-of-thj year award.. . standing. He votes lor needless, wasteful research projects merely because they are cheap while he opposes new naval procure¬ ment Merely because it is expensive. Yet, The the Russian fleet has greatly expanded in State News m'' To the Editor the last four years. Today the Russian fleet controls the eastern Mediterranean and it could blockade Israel today as we blockaded Cuba during the 1962 missile crisis. In the Wednesday, January 5, 1977 event of another war in the Middle East 95 Editorials ore the opinions of the State News. per cent of Israel's supplies must come by Viewpoints, columns sea. If the Soviet and letters are personal opinions. navy ever comes to the aid of Israel's enemies, Israel will be lost, and Editorial Dept. either University r public and Congressmen Carr will be one of the men Editor-in-chief Mary Ann ChickShaw Layout Debbie As the foursome slithered up the path I most responsible for that loss. found that pages were missing because Managing Editor Bob Ourlian Copy Chief Tracy R«i stood outside all alone, freezing because I someone had torn them out. That City Editor Michael Tanimura Wire Editor Joyce Laskowt is, not couldn't get back inside. I could have been Carr is either a fool or the Russian until I came to MSU. I have found that this Campus Editor Carole Leigh Hutton Staff Representative Michael Row Admiralty's best friend on Capitol Hill. Carr Sports Editor Edward L Ronders Freelance Editor Phil Fran practice is disappointingly common here. I raped myself. The police arrived about a is utterly incapable of distinguishing Penta¬ Entertainment Editor minute after the jokers disappeared. I Donna Bakun Opinion Editor Kat BroJ might be able to rationalize the destruction gon waste from actual national security. Yet of books if they were popular reference explained that it was a false alarm and could from his Advertising Dept. tell by their looks that they didn't appreciate position on the House Armed books used by Services Committee he can do, and has done, undergraduates. The dis¬ Advertising Manager . Don Cerow Asst. Advertising Manager Ceci Corfie couraging fact is that I have found pages being out there either. One officer signaled the maximum amount of damage to our the station on his radio to call my roommate —— torn out of journals and texts which are actual security. In the best interests of our to open the door. probably used mainly by graduate students nation Carr should be removed from and professors. I grant that rape is a serious crime and we Congress. again next term, Russ yesterday joined the should all do what we can to prevent its I was dismayed when I came to MSU as an occurrence. But foolish persons running James Hamilton J ames Madison College Army. I cannot believe what has happened. I am bitter because I have Inaccurate undergraduate transfer student from the always known around screaming rape falsely, holding up a MSU was a mediocre school and I should University of Michigan because I was not vital part of the police force and have directed him elsewhere. Now In the third of the series of artic getting Flagpoling allowed to ever, I soon use the graduate stacks. How¬ learned that students at MSU people out of their homes and subjecting Again 108 my only consolation is that when he is through with dealing with the treatment of rape victil which appeared in the Nov. 10 edition of were not responsible library users and I them to harm and abuse is also a crime and four years of the Army, he will at least be State News, there is an inaccuracy. C t| I am totally appalled at the should be punishable by law. And you can wary enough to pick a better college. ignorance of understood the prohibition. Sensibly, that I am enclosing a copy of a letter I have the author of the Nov. 29 letter bet that the next time I hear someone crying Meanwhile, I wish you, your board of trary to the last paragraph in that articl dealing with policy has been changed. Unfortunately the sent to Charles S. Scarborough, director of Board-certified gynecologist and a men: hazing at Delta Chi. If the author, who rape, unless it's from my lips, I won't be the trustees and Math 108 a rotten new students do not seem to have changed. residence instruction, who wrote to my son, year. of the Obstetrics and Gynecology Dep conveniently had his name withheld, had first one running anywhere. There is no excuse for the inconsiderate Russell Bush Jr., requesting a conference Margaret Bush ment at MSU is on call at all times a taken the time to investigate the incident he Leslie Phillips removal of pages from a library book, concerning his grades. I am extremely Saint Louis, Mich. available for service upon request I would have found out that 208 Van Hoosen Hall "flagpoling" has especially since copying machines are angry and have no intention of letting this student health service professional stal nothing to do with hazing. readily available throughout the Library. I travesty continue unnoticed. Dr. John Siddall, acting medical director fl am sorely disappointed that this occurs in an No defense Bad the health center, is aware of this availad This practice of tying a young man to a flagpole and covering him with a variety of institution of higher learning where con¬ I happen to be a graduate of the journalism ity and tells me that he was misquoted | sideration, responsibility and honesty University of Michigan, which happens to Marice Richter unappetizing entrees is a tradition at Delta be a good school. MSU is not. The despite his effort to n Chi. Whenever one of their fellow brothers should be among the qualities that the Bob Carr is a member of the House Armed quality of From the offensive caricature of women this fact clear. student cultivates during his college experi¬ Services Committee. He has oftdn claimed to teachers foisted on the freshman students is as bouncers to a racist becomes engaged they are "flagpoled" and criminal. advertising-game- be cutting waste in defense spending. his fiance is supposed to cut him down. ence. However, in order to cut waste supplement and finally to the recent sexist Thomas H. Kirschbaum, M.^ you must portrayal of male swimmers, the State Professor and chairpersi There is nothing harmful in this Thanks to a non-English speaking teach¬ except the Kathryn Colando have a reasonable idea what is and is not News has displayed a remarkably consis¬ necessity of having to take a bath after¬ Lansing required tor the security of America and her ing fellow at the head of a class of 500 tent pattern of Archie Bunker journalism. wards. allies. Only with that understanding can you students, Russ flunked Math 108, a five- The unfortunate but predictable juxtaposi¬ be sure that you are cutting waste and not credit course. The $100 I spent on tuition Delta Chi knows that hazing is passe and tion of your cartoon and Ronald Suter's items which are essential to the security of for that course I might as well have flushed that Article IX condemns this letter of Nov. 30 regarding discriminatory am sure do other fraternities. To practice, as I point an Crying wolf our nation. down the toilet. Women's IM Building swimming policies accusing finger at Delta Chi without Regrettably, Carr has no such under¬ And suddenly, rather than take that class serves by implication as another example of knowing the facts is as destructive to its reputation in the Greek system as if they Last night I woke up to screaming and cries of rape. I sat up and listened to make the impassable editorial position of the State News on at least two sentient and Letter Policy sure I wasn't dreaming. I wasn't. I divisive social issues: homosexuality and actually did participate in hazing. immediately jumped out of bed and ran to nondiscrimination on the basis of gender. the living room where my roommate was The Opinion Peat welcomes NancyA.Kamrath The insulting stereotype of the homosexual all letters. Readers should fol¬ 651 W.Holden Hall studying. We heard the screams again so I male is bad enough, but the implication that told low a few mis s to insert that at my roommate to call the police. all males interested in equal opportunity Meanwhile, I dashed out the door with no many letters as possible appear with females are gay is nothing more than coat or key. At Van Hoosen Hall all doors are .in print. Poor libraires an attempt to play on traditionalist bigotry All letters should be typed on locked without entry except one and once to ridicule through association. OS-space tines and ttiflt- out you must have a key to get back in. To a certain extent caricatures and tpocwt Letters mustbtiigUed, The MSU library system is and include local address, stu¬ among the As I rounded the bend there were four cartoons can be, and perhaps should be worst, if not THE worst, in the Big Ten. I drunks, three females and one male. Surely dent, faculty or staffstanding - understand that there are administrative regarded merely as parodies — the subjects they weren't ignoring the cries of rape? But of which need not be circumscribed by ifmy - and phone mnhtr. policies that contribute to this. For example, the cries were coming from their considerations of controversiality and Utters should tie it Rati or when group. One a book is lost and payment is made to of the girls thought it was lets and may he edited for funny. Apparently emotionalism. In point of fact, not every¬ replace it, the money goes into the general she thinks rape is a joke. conciseness to fit more letters They passed me thing is or has been treated as "fair game." operating fund of the University, not into with drunken greetings of cheer and Absent is a strong editorial position the Library's budget. However, administra¬ inquiries about the climate. Needless to say I condemning any and all forms of racism, . ' f/o 'unsigned tetters »e tion is not theamain reason that MSU's was ready to find out which girl was sexism and other invidious discriminations. libraries are so poor. 1 believe that the screaming and give her something to scream quality of the Library is a reflection of its about but I figured if the John W. Condon Department of I have „ never . borrowed . a . , , book from Public Safety drove up they'd arrest me and x and \xm and mx.w Psychology Department a I committing the rape. say was AWEYTDgOPHIM...' Paul Weisbord East Lansing ](1 News, EoH Lontlng, Mlehigon Wednesday, January 5, 1977 5 Marine expert says oil spill may return J NANTUCKET, Ms»»- (API ^ now- » msrine threat to British beaches should that an inexperienced helms¬ tanker that spilled oil in the portation Secretary William T. "But we're talking about a steered by a helmsman who V*rJSZiA *** Galt °f th« n"-" str»c;rried there by the Gulf man was steering the ship alone during the night just before it Delaware River said he unaware a buoy had been was Coleman reported that most immediate danger to U.S. long time," Gait said. "And we're not talking about a mas¬ was both unsupervised. inexperienced and ran aground off course. movec' to shores from both oil spills was warn of shallower sive slick, but a slight increase |^to^ndb:rhe.-v.r.. In Philadelphia, the docking water Kakaratis testified in federal <■ past. in the amount of tar balls that 'P»>ed oU posed no Mediate captain in charge of another And in Washington, Trans- Gait, who has been helping to map the oil slick, said much of will wash up on shore. "In other words, the English court that he was supposed to stay at the ship's wheel when it the oil is caught up in an eddy don't need to go out and put was guided by a new helms¬ on the north man. But on the morning of edge of the Gulf Reg/sfraf/on system straw on their beaches." he uncovered 106 cases of illegal may cause accidents Stream, about 150 to 200 miles east-southeast of the original spill site. added. The 7.6 million gallon spill, which has been floating about Dec. 15, Kakaratis said, he was in his bunk while the new man, Jose Rivera, steered the alone. ship a.CABLA*APAP0BT forgeries, though notification zation issue until 1978, but if it "The oil appears to be going 90 miles from the Nantucket Pidfit News Service recruitment and decided to begin spot checks on seamen's Analysis could have helped them stop the does eventually decide to move around and around in this loop," coast, covers an area 215 miles to 5 Rivera guided the ship from 4 a.m. At 6 a.m. it ran onto J HONGKONG - Behind the practice. on it, it will have its work cut Gait said. "The loop is not a long and about 100 miles wide, I rash of of tanker .t certificates there. on ships berthing The prosecutors in Hong out. Standards for certification permanent feature, it moves a Coast Guard spokesperson the Nantucket Shoal, 24 miles IS i» US" W,t6r- '"?• * I of shipping registration They estimate that close to ernment officials say such ex¬ changes have been routine for Kong lay part of the blame for the widespread forgeries on the of seamen differ sharply from along. But we can be fairly certain the oil is getting into said. The tanker ran aground on off its intended course. In Philadelphia, a docking country to country. Ilutioii SsThasofgivenLiberiathe tiny African the largest one-quarter of those seeking the 25,000 sea jobs Hong Kong years, an assessment that is confirmed by international ship¬ UN Inter-Governmental Con¬ sultative Maritime Organiza¬ While Britain requires a rig¬ orous series of oral and written warmer The water." warmer water may step the Nantucket shoals Dec. 15 and broke apart Dec. 21, spill¬ pilot testified he was unaware a navigation aid had been moved offers each year are involved in ping registration officials. ■merchant fleet in the world- tion (IMCO). One of their briefs exams taken after several years up the process of dispersing the ing its cargo. A Coast Guard when the tanker Olympic Is that my bo • »P1,fic»nt certificate forgeries and illegal recruitment. Prices for for¬ The Liberians also claimed that 33 license charged that the IMCO, the in training school, Liberia gives oil, Gait added. He said that should the oil get spokesperson says some oil is Games apparently struck bot¬ lame ol accidents at sea. applications made by the ship-broker who international body that regu¬ a multiple choice test. And in still leaking from the bow tom, spilling 133,000 gallons of J Uteri., along with Panama geries range from $200 for seamen's license to $3000 for a testified in Hong Kong had been lates shipping, had failed "to Taiwan, the exam is heavily caught up in the circular Gulf section, which was sunk by a oil into the Delaware River. Stream, the gummy spill could lud. ■r few other small nations, captain's certificate, according a rejected by them between Janu¬ agree on minimum international weighted with political ques head first north and east barrage of Coast Guard cannon Curtis C. Chamberlain, a tug , -flag of convenience, standards of training and ex¬ tions. fire Friday. captain assigned Dec. 27 to Hong Kong government ary 1975 and April 1976 because lit owners from around the to forgery was suspected. But amination for purposes of issu¬ Standards for promotion from toward Iceland and Great Bri¬ In New York, the Argo dock the tanker testified that Iforld regit"* fleets there to Incite taxes, union wage sources. But even more threatening Hong Kong authorities say they ing certificates of competency." The IMCO is not planning to rank to rank and for officer certification likewise tain. Then, following the cur¬ rent's clockwise direction, it Merchant's boatswain, Theo¬ dores Kakaratis, said that in he thought the channel was 43 feet deep at the spill site, which than simple were never told of the vary could head south and west back ■ales and often strict regula- forgery was the suspected formally discuss the standardi¬ widely. the early morning before the would have given the vessel o) and inspections in their discovery of a scheme whereby toward Bermuda. ship ran aground, it was four feet of clearance. Panamanian licenses were al¬ none countries. J Itreo-quarters of the Liben- tered — changed, for example, from seaman to officer - and ImshipsareGreekor American- tied. And some of the best h „ in the world, including of almost every major EjisT oil company, are among then exchanged for valid Liberi¬ an certificates at the higher grade. According to Hong Kong Marine Department officials, Evening College classes offer variety By PATRICIA LACROIX classes are taught by MSU faculty, staff, graduate students and Wednesday nights by Gary E. Stollak, professor of psychology. I But according to recent sta- Panama and Liberia long ago State News Staff Writer decided to accept each other's professional people, along with occasional guest speakers, Selected readings will be assigned to complement and inspire class ics from the Organization for Persons interested in learning about anything from creative depending on the class subject. discussions on topics related to the difficulties in raising children in lie Cooperation and De- seamen's certificates in even problem solving to Chinese brush painting, with a wide range of New courses offered for the first time this term include Chinese this age bracket. ,„™.„int(OECDI - made up exchange. They also accept courses offered in between, should hurry to Kellogg Center this Brush Painting, taught on Thursday nights by graduate student Ljapan, the United States and certificates from other coun¬ week and next as registration for Evening College classes Sue-wheri Tseng. Like many of the classes, it requires no prior McKee recommends that since most classes will begin next pMem Europe - ships flying tries, through none of the major maritime nations return the continues. experiences in Chinese art by the student. week and many are already filled, interested persons should sign ip of convenience were lost at Evening hours of 5 to 7:30 p.m. will begin Thursday and Sensitivity to Young Children: Five to Eight is offered favor. on up for the classes they want as soon as possible. „ly four times the rate of continue from the following Monday through Thursday in addition .jiefrom OECD nations dur¬ One convicted ship-broker in to daytime hours of 8 to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. ing the 10 years prior to 1978. Hong Kong testified that he had Registration is held in the main lobby of Kellogg Center. | An investigation in Hong gog last spring for the first »shed light on one of the simply written in higher grades — elevating one sailor from pump-man to chief engineer, for The classes offered generally focus on self-improvement techniques or personal hobbies such as art, plants, weaving or yoga. Lansing council leader elected ijor reasons: lax standards example — on Panamanian Charles A. McKee, director of the evening college program for William Brpnke, South Lansing councils-ember, was elected resolved my primary concern in that area." it have routinely allowed certificates. He then photocop¬ the past 10 years, said the purpose of the program is two-fold. mayor pro tern of the Lansing City Council at an unusually short "Believe it or not, I'm speechless," Brenke said, after being ed seamen to become ied them and sent the copies to Primarily, the program is designed to offer diverse learning meeting Monday night. elected as the leader who calls all city council meetings to deal with in Liberian and Pana- the Liberian Maritime Adminis¬ The choice of Brenke as new council leader experiences for adults in the greater Lansing and central Michigan came after an earlier current issues and appoints council members to special committees. m ships. tration in New YoTk for the council meeting Monday that had split votes "I certainly will try to uphold the beliefs of this entire council," he between Brenke and [Investigators discovered that equivalent Liberian certifi¬ Secondly, it serves as a liaison between domestic and college life 1976 Mayor Pro Tern Terry McKane. said, adding that his No. 1 priority will be to seek more cooperation Be only 25 percent of the cates, which were in turn used for persons who have been removed from the learning situation. However, because of an attorney's opinion that Mayor Gerald among councilmembers. lan-going traffic in the Hong by sailors to get "genuine" "It's also a decompression chamber which offers to help get Graves be allowed to vote to break the tie, McKane changed his In other action, the council: ea in 1975 flew flags of Panamanian licenses. vote to keep the Mayor out of the people comfortable with the experience of college again," he decision-making process. The • Passed a resolution to extend free parking on Saturdays in the nee, they accounted for The Liberian government result was a unanimous council vote for Brenke. explained. South Washington Mall through January: lli percent of all ships that sank flatly denied that it accepted No college credit can be earned by taking the classes. No exams McKane said an important consideration was the level of activity • Passed a resolution accepting the proposed Community Ix seriously faltered. Panamanian seamen's licenses or grades are given. by the mayor pro tern and. consequently, the level of activity of the I List February and March the Development (CD) third year projects and budgets proposal. The as a basis for issuing Liberian Fees ranging from $5 to $50 are charged for each class, based on council. resolution also included the scheduling of a public hearing on CD BmgKong Marine Department licenses. But Hong Kong gov- the materials needed per student and other considerations. The "Brenke will be active mayor pro tern," McKane said. 'That has funds for Jan. 17 at 7 p.m. in the council chambers. USED BOOKS USED BOOKS USED BOOKS FOR UNDER—GRAD COURSES STILL IN STOCK! art supplies -spiral notebooks-school supplies CAMPUS BOOKSTORE ACROSS FROM BERKEY HALL OPEN 'TIL 8:30 TONIGHT & TOMORROW (Wed. & Thurs.) 6 Wednesday, January 5, Michigon Stote News, East lonsing, Michigan 1977 M^ig0nStajeN^ WMSN and MSU BOOKSTORE Celebrate the Arrival of WINTER ... And Welcome You Back to MSU by G|tg Out PRIZES GALORE! Just Listen to or Stop Down and Watci WMSN Broadcasting Live (640 am orour From the Front Lobby of MSU Boohsfy-ot of the International Center. Special Hours for Registration Week FIRST WEEK JANUARY 5-8th WEDNESDAY 1-5-77 7:30 a.m. -9:00 p.m. THURSDAY 1-6-77 7:30 a.m. -9:00 p.m. FRIDAY 1-7-77 7:30 a.m. -5:30 p.m. SATURDAY 1-8-77 9:00 a.m. • 5:00 p.m. SECOND WEEK MONDAY 1-10-77 7:30 a.m. -9:00 p.m. TUESDAY 1-11-77 7:30 a.m. -9:00 p.m. WEDNESDAY 1-12-77 7:30 a.m. -5:30 p.m. REGULAR HOURS 7:30 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. "MONET MAN" HOURS - Buying Your Used Books Wed. 1-5-77 7:30 a.m. -5:00 p.m. Thors. 1-6-77 7:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Fri. 1-7-77 7:30 a.m.-5:00 p.m. 'ur dial) on the Lower Level 8 Michigan State News, Eost Lansing, Michigan Wednesday, January 5, 1977 Most Stores Copyright 1977. Tho Krogor Co. Wo Rooorve OPEN Task force to study nutrition The Right To Limit Own titles. Prices And Coupons Good Mon.. Jen. 3 Thru Sun., Jen. 9, 24 By JONICIPRIANO nutritionist at the Ingham force will provide a forum for include recommendingaction on may be set up under the HOURS , State Newt SUB Writer County Health Department. To offer some solutions to this the discussion of issues dealing with nutrition and will recom¬ child care feeding, checking to make sure all Ingham County direction of the task force, she TK2SBB8S.I Though Ingham County is problem, the Ingham County mend action to alleviate nutri¬ schools take part in proyiding relatively wealthy, a great deal "I can't give exact statistics of its residents suffer from Board of Health has decided to tion problems. lunches under the Universal on how widespread the problem undernutrition or inadequate establish a Task Force on School Lunch Bill which will go "We would like to see the type of malnutrition is in Ingham diets, said Marilyn Schorin. Hunger and Nutrition. The task of people on this force who can into effect next September and exploring the possibility of County," Schorin said, "but I do move things or other people," know that when people come to Schorin said. providing school breakfasts, she my office saying they are out of food and can't afford to buy Court quarters cent The task force will consist of 50 per cent citizens and 50 per representatives of agencies "In addition, since a proportion of those suffering great !, they really mean it." Persons of any age who wish involved with the nutrition of all from undernutrition are the the task force people, she said. Some of the elderly, the task force will should submit their names to change location agencies which will be repre¬ sented on the force include Michigan Legal Services, Wel¬ fare Rights, Peace Center and explore the possibilities of ex¬ panding the senior citizen food program," Schorin said. Schorin at the Nutrition Office of the Ingham County Health Department as soon as possible. The Hall marks the second expan¬ Ingham County Board of The East Lansing District Bread for the World. To help people of all ages who Health and the Board of Com¬ Court has moved from the East sion of city offices caused by Some of the areas the task may be suffering from malnutri¬ missioners will pick members Lansing Police Station into rising population in the East force will be concerned with will for the force in early February. tion, an emergency food bank larger quarters at the Power Lansing area. The first major move came about 11 years ago anifKirkpatrick (PKI Building, 301 M.A.C. Ave. when the old City Hall was The two-story PK Building is forced to expand into a second on the corner of M.A.C. Avenue building. Roots and Ann Street. Its first floor Moving into a third building contains a number of stores and was not an inexpensive affair offices. for the city. Remodeling costs Lack of elbow room in City of the PK Building will cost the Hall, which held not only the city about $27,000, and re¬ court and police station, but modeling City Hall for police also a number of other city use is expected to cost about offices, was the reason for the $11,000. Reduced! The parking violations bu- Added to this is the cost of reau has also moved to the moving, about $1,100, and the second floor of the PK Building, five-year lease of the PK Build- The current move from City ing, which will cost $32,000. L . ^ 15% to 40% off THE BIG WHITE BARN * This Area's selected styles Only Multi-Media Discotheque 2843 E Gd River, E Ions 351-1201 I only during January. 220 M.A.C. UNIVERSITY MALL HALF PRICE NITE 332-2212 Half-Price Kpqular Mixed Drinks Till 10 p.m. INSTRUCTIONAL TELEVISION SERVICES WINTER 1977 It you arc taking one of these courses (or would like to) this Winter term, you should know that their televised presentations are being offered on Channels 19 and 20 on the East Lansing Cable System. You should check with the individual departments listed to register and/or obtain detailed schedule information about recitations and tests. BS 211 Ceneral Biology II, Professor Robbins MWF 10:20 AM & 6:00 PM on Ch. 19 4 1:50 PM BS 212 Ceneral Biology [II, Professor Taggart with the Vivitar MWF 11: J0 AM on Ch. 20 & 3:00 or, Ch, 19 - Automatic 2X Tele Converter BIO 201 You'll see her twice as large without Shorthand I, Professor Kraeer moving an inch closer. Fully coupled with the automatic MTWT 10:20 AM on Ch. 20 6 12:40 & 5:30 PM diaphragm and through-the-lens metering system, CPS 110 the 2X Tele Converter is so light- h weight and compact it adds just t Introduction to Computer Programming, Professor Burnett ■ inch to the camera length Your MWF 11:30 AM 4 1:50 & 7:00 I'M Ch. on 19 1 photo outfit won't he complete R without it And you can be sure that CPS 120 V VIVITAR QUALITY assures above Computer Programming for Eng. & Sci., Professor Weinberg f average pertormance and reliability at a price you can afford MWF 9:10 AM on Ch. 19 & 3:00 PM on Ch. 20 . FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY... III'R 331 * - - a. (Mamiya/Sekor-Pentax Mount) V ■ First Aid and Emergency Care, Professor Baker TT 8:00 AM on Ch. 20 5 10:20 4 11:30 AM 4 6:00 PM Prlcas Shown Are For Moll Ordwr HNF 102 Only Nutrition for Man, Professor Cederquist MW 8:30 AM, 12 noon, 7:00 4 8:00 PM on Ch. 20 NORMAN'S OF BATTLE CREEK is a national mail MOT 302 order photo equipment specialist, with our ads Organization and Administration, Professor Tosi appearing in Modern and Popular Photography. MW 8:00 AM 4 4:10 PM on Ch. 19 4 7:0(1 PM on Ch. 20 We sell at New York and Chicago prices, but MOT 306 deliver quicker because we're so close. A Bank Analysis of Processes and Systems, Pr card order, phoned in on Monday, would pos¬ TWT 9:10 AM 4 12:40 4 6:00 PM on Ch. 20 sibly be delivered to your front door on Thurs¬ NS 115 day. We stock everything we sell. Nature and Continuity of Life, Professor Lopushinsky TT 8:00 PM on Ch. 20 WRITE FOR PRR 301_ Wilderness ial, Professor Risk FREE CATALOG TT 8:30 AM 4 7:00 PM < Ch. 19 and 3:00 PM on Ch. 2(1 616-965-7285 NORMAN co 56 W.Michigan Battle Creek, Ml 49014 For 1TV further Services, inf.,rin.it ion its operation and regarding Instructional Television televised courses, contact the Scheduling Oft ice at 230 I'.rickson Hall, 353-8800. M«ws, East loosing, Michigoi I Michiasn. Wednesday, January 5, 1977 Lisumer boycott of coffee By JONICIPRIANO State Newa Staff Writer Test kits for PBB breast milk contamination are expected to make breast-feeding dangerous, since there is not evidence to set a particular level as added. potentially hazardoua, he enough be available to Michigan women by next week, according to "I want to emphasize that this is not a self-test that can be |hows no impact on prices Dr. John Isbister of the Michigan Department of Public read immediately as some seem to think," Isbister said. Health. A nursing mother will be able to obtain the kit from her "Including mailing time, results should be available to each woman's private physician in seven to 10 days." physician or from local health departments, he said. The kits The tests will cost $25 each and will be covered by past boycotts against sugar and sugar boycott of 1975. and will contain a three-ounce specimen bottle, a styrofoam meat. Anne Ackerman of Medicaid, he said. For those women not covered by Medicaid, aimed Miami, mailing container, and instructions on how to use the L brake" on high **■'£* «®e coffee Even the Brazilian Coffee Institute, a government agency leader of a 1973 moat have begun to boycott, organize coffee Michigan equipment. A brief form concerning the woman's overall health must be filled out and mailed along with the specimen. the state legislature has appropriated approximately $117,000 to pay for the tests. The Department of Public Health is also arranging for that regulates coffee exports boycotts. "The kits are to be mailed to a lab in Ann Arbor called Jrsbu' has had no effeci °n from the South American coun¬ "We're being taken advan¬ comprehensive examinations of infants born to mothers living i„«t try, has called the boycott tage of again, and I'm tired of to provide Environmental Research Group, Inc. This is the only lab that has the facilities to run this sophisticated test," Isbister said. on quarantined farms. BftWS r J Affair' Commifr "level headed" because it will bring attention to the high prices. The swiftly climbing it," said Ribaudo. She said she has mailed letters to 50 cities, women in calling for a "coffee PBB tests The test results will be sent to the woman's physician, he said. The state's 17,000 licensed physicians have been provided with a report detailing the findings of a study done "We are planning to evaluate the health of infants born in areas in with high PBB contamination as compared to those born areas with low contamination in order to detect unusual Kl"1Elinor Guggenheimer prices have been blamed by brake," adding that she is by an advisory committee on PBB breast milk contamination. health problems that infants in highly contaminated areas Thread to half a dozen other some on a frost during the 1975 attacking the problem on a The report lists different levels of contamination and the may have," Arthur Bloomer, chief of the Division of K Tuesday- But there s spring in Brazil, the world's personal level, too. JSmofW cJLojiet We Are An Equal Opportunity Employer M/ F Ph.J32-6519 with this coupon only at the East Lansing store t 4631 N. last St. IN. U.S. 2T) 1001E. Grand River IVi mlloi North of Or. Rlv. Ave Phone 489-6967 sleis 203 L. Grand River MSU BOOTERY 225 E. Grand River, East Lansing Great January Now Offering Tremendous Savings CLEARAWAY of Famous Label Fashions Save 1/3 To 1/2 On • Leather Coats • Blouses & Shirts • Buckskin Jacket • Knit Tops Winter Boots ? 30% • Cloth Coats • Skirts • Parkas • Gouchos • Down Jacket • Sweaters All FRYE • Casual Dresses • Pants & We Specialize in] the hard to fit Offer Good 9 DINGO Id I' • Cocktail Dresses • Jeans •Women's sizes 4Vt-12 •Men's Sizes 6'/>-14 at Both 2 BOOTS OFF; • Pantsuits • Dress scarves _ »Wide Calf Boots (Not on Sale) ' hmmmhmm— Stores • Jumpsuits • Purses SHOES 'N' STUFF 217 E. Grand River Use your Bankeards I hut s. S: I ri. Across from MSU Union Bldg. = S£ >l»en till 9:00 a in noleJtowL E°" lor"ln9' Miehi9°n Wednesday, January 5, 1977 ]1 Host organizations benefit Fraser favored for UAW post By STATE NEWS tically active as the UAW. plant, believes that the UAW office space re-allocation in the way unions should be and WIRE SERVICES East Lansing Democrats are should not only serve its' mem- In Douglas A. Fraser appears certain to succeed Leonard highly in favor of Fraser as- bers "bread and butter" issues, Sobel said a renewed affilia¬ tion with the AFL-CIO would run, and an advocate of change for the sake of change." suming control of the UAW. but strive first to support dilute the power of the UAW JJSSSSS, most groups applying for space library will be used for the Woodcock as head of the United "I have known the for 20 man major social causes, and at the same time move the Joe Finkbeiner, financial sec¬ which met ASMSU's guidelines storage and distribution of Auto Workers union in May. years, and he is a person with a Mark Grebner, 8th district UAW further to the left. retary and treasurer of UAW for allocation could receive it, pamphlets and other colleges' Fraser's two potential rivals strong feeling for rank and »f asms,u's said Bob Stark, executive as¬ Ingham County commissioner, Ferency sees re-affiliation as local 1618 and former Ingham * S* reallocation, sistant to ASMSU President newspapers. for the position as president of the 1.4 million-member union, file," said Zolton Ferency, as¬ sociate professor of criminal said Fraser is one of the last members of the Walter Reu a way of strengthening labor County chairperson, said, 'The unions and settling disagree¬ L, «ent into effect this Michael Lens. Any registered group which Irving Bluestone and Duane justice. "He has demonstrated ther dynasty. differences between the UAW C more croups have office Groups, requesting space does not have office space will "Pat" Greathouse, told Wood¬ ments that exist between the and the AFL-CIO will still be fcJS.Student Services must be primarily undergrade be able to use the Office for cock they are not pressing their over and over that he is aware of the problems in the com¬ "While Reuther, Woodcock and Fraser saw the UAW as a UAW and the more conserva¬ tive AFL-CIO. with us if Fraser wins the inc than ever before. ate and an ASMSU body or Library Groups, 331, when it candidacies and were sup¬ election. The contrasting atti¬ munity." social force for the auto worker, J changes than usuN registered student organiza¬ needs a home base. Stark said this will work out porting Fraser. Fraser, who served as Wal¬ the generation of UAW leader "While Fraser would not be sympathetic to people like tudes will be reinforced with L jude this year so that tion. Space is not given to well because each group should Fraser is director of the ter Reuther's administrative ship of the future will be more George Meany or other conser¬ Fraser as president. groups which have substantial only need the office for a short UAW's Chrysler Corp. and assistant from 1951 to 1959, has business-oriented and con¬ vatives, he knows how to work "Fraser understands the auto space elsewhere, have violated skilled trades departments. He been said to have the same cerned with Importers time and all will not need it at bureaucratic well with people who disagree worker because he has been in the ASMSU Constitution or is also in charge of white collar outgoing and amiable personal¬ issues," Grebner said. with his philosophies, and this once. their situation. As a result of code of operations, been con¬ organizing and the union's poli¬ ity as the UAW's founder. Fraser's election to the top would smooth relations be¬ The Coalition his experiences, the workers victed of a violation of a against tical arm in Michigan Com¬ "Fraser is a very aggressive, post in the UAW, which de¬ tween the two Racism, Iranian Students As¬ unions," Ferency feel more comfortable with him introduce University ordinance are connected with or a policy, Univer¬ sociation, Organization of Arab Students, Minority Pre-vet, munity Action Program (CAP). As head of Michigan CAP, Fraser is well-connected in the outspoken man," Jess Sobel, 10th district Ingham County pends on the official endorse¬ ment by the UAW leadership said. "If elected to the post," than with Woodcock, who has a more intellectual air." sity department or a corpora¬ commissioner, said. "He is very Tuesday and election by the Ferency said, "Fraser will look tion or did not maintain pre¬ Minority Pre-med, Sierra Club Democratic party's liberal wing much in the mold of Reuther." International Executive Board bor bill and the Star Trek Club have upon his role of management as "Fraser is going to be force- vious space in good condition. and experienced in political Fraser, a Scottish immigrant in May, could lead to re-affilia¬ an agent for social already been assigned to the change. ful in working for the benefits maneuverings — important at¬ - who started out as a metal tion with the AFL-CIO, which "He is a strong factor in of the auto workers and social office. IpASHINGTON (API - The The ASMSU Space Alloca¬ tion Committee based its deci¬ common tributes for a union as poli¬ finisher in a Detroit Chrysler the UAW separated from in working toward major changes problems," Sobel said. nphrey-Hawkins full em- sion on the number of students ment bill, shelved by Con- served by each group, said L |ut year, was re-intro- Carol Wanston, president of the J7j Tuesday by Sen. Hubert ■ Humphrey, D-Minn. and Panhellenic Association and member of the committee. IN CASH/ p. Augustus F. Hawkins, Among the groups given hey said they will push for hft action on the measure. It space in the Student Services Building were the Iranian Stu¬ PER CASH series 747 dent Association and the Or¬ ied at stimulating private NGO ■istry to produce new jobs ganization of Arab Students 1 provide public works jobs (OAS), which were denied WPUOHWZ ■ individuals unable to find space last fall in the Union. The Handicapper Council and NECeSSAW/ in the private sec- the Programing Board, formed last year, were given space for Perf)ILS IN YOUR STOKE/ r,vy said in a state- the first time. J,t that the stops and starts The Chicano and North |die economy and the rising American Indian councils, mployment rate are the which did not apply for offices, alt of poor economic policy PROM TEN PER PORKERS! LEAN FIRST Q/UT are the only ASMSU councils -king and poor planning by which have none. ■ government. He said the PIRGIM also did not apply PORK pillion would end. this. Jiwkins said in a statement for office space because of a £Ql bureaucratic f there Xeu of still is immense human resources mix-up, Stark said, but retained its space when the mistake was caught. ■phots. "No forecasts today CHOPS £ov As they already had an office, pi that the idleness will not a intolerably high for PIRGIM leaders thought they did not have to reapply, he |ny years to come unless we ibe new and powerful wea- explained. Ls to achieve comprehensive The former Board Room, 328, I integrated national ero¬ has been converted into a tic policies and programs," library, 328A, and a conference ■■aid. room, 328B. Stark said the We carry everything you need for that next great party! SAVE 20* wrrv IN-STORE COUPON Mon.-Sat. 8 a.m.- 9 p.m. Sun. 12 a.m.-6 p.m. 337-7572 2950 Jolly Rd. (Corner of Hagadorn) PIONEER BEET A1 mm FREE COMPUTER SUGAR AU vmenes-PANNON /ST [c§£D a / 'E'Mic^I6AKe? LABORATORY YOGUWV 31*1.00 iI M10 SAVE 80* W/IN-STORE COUPON TOURS MORTON-FROZEN Kif.mUEN.TVRUtY TUNA The staff of the Computer Labora¬ tory will conduct tours of the MSU pot rs$m CHEE$e /pies 5 1. COMPUTING FACILITY on January 12 and 13. Each tour will begin in Room 215 Computer Center and POLLY ANNA | ' will last about 45 minutes. Starting fURIOHMD PAANIV _ . \ J, BUY 2 AAVE VO E SME K°i WITH IN STORE COUPON times are as follows: ww/rs o-*- tseum o reNotR.iY.RUST- Z DA/ / CAPS FROZEN SAUSAGE T& / PIZZA r Leaves lanuary 11 9:10 am FRSSH BAKED Janaary 12 IfflpjiL January 13 MO p. BREAD POSTERS !3j r POSTERS GOLDEN, RIPE POSTERS BANANAS POSTERS &UY2-SME 60* W/ IN -STORE COUPON OOUftm FRESH POSTERS WNILLR. OHOCOLfttE, QEKMAN CROC. CRUNCH, OHOC..MIHT FlRtCE, OHPC CMP, CHOCOLATE - "15' pe're more than books.) MAR&HMALLOW,WREATH TOFFEE CRUNCH ICECREAM 22°M.A.C ^»991 1 2 Michigon Stote News, Eost Loosing. Michigon Wednesday, January 5, 1977 StoleNj Team sti (conl i^ty of Michigan a ^deterioration. W ltd vast It is good "e"8 Stat. N.W./Robert hut wedon't know Add Ko,lofl new problem the oae more cheerleader for the Spartan basketball team sMeof more than one coach Jud Heathcote. - ^cH'lhet Since the regular Spartan cheer, ,f He'sdded '' coder, yell exclusively l°r the two follower., Heatbcote direct, hi. ^.tedb.phenyl unique routine, lor that own 5ng the lttter cl left-out segment .1 the lonely, gmne, the referee.. d «d consult with tl Though Heathcote execute, with a fervor unparalleled In the cheerier lerewillbecircumal f, where the benefit: lot Michigan residen They have been known ohat the effects are fo to reward him with a technical foul or however. Keep up the good work. two, (in the state but hi ontimination and dis t,„ asked if he woul jnn, 5 Selikoff answei thp nAODl levels as low as posi v William G. Millike ooa Speaker Bobby I By GEOFFETNYRE games by one point and two However, it was not all season the 3partans brought son Fieldhouse. rtmentof Health, Ed For the nine State New. Sport. Writer games by five points, in which disappointment for the nonconferene assistance. uiislance. cagers their record to 3-4 by upsetting Greg Kelser hit for 24 points, games, Kelser is they allowed leads of 13, 12 over the holiday break. highly touted North Carolina averaging ffi ikofl slid he w'" co" After the Spartan eager, including a slam dunk over the points and 10 rebounds p and 11 to slip away. A 13-0 lead In the seventh game of the State University, 78-60, at Jeni- Tar Heels 7-foot-2 center Glenn its ire available, and suffered an opening season loss was wasted in the opening game and leads the lusions r "w"- to Central Michigan University, Sudhop, and grabbed 10 re¬ both categories. IBs were first mtrodu round of the Gator Bowl Tour¬ head coach Jud Heathcote said bounds. Bob Chapman pumped he would be satisfied if the nament in Jacksonville, Fla., as Holy Cross went on to beat in 22 points, mostly on high, arching 20-foot jump shots, to Msrsf.". hind in scoring with SSffS! '76 Basketball „ team played at .500 or better MSU. 71-60. ether slaughter of q complement Kelser's inside points-per-game average, and Cagers close for the next eight games. Though the team fell slightly short of that, winning just " A lot of people say we don't have the killer instinct," Heath¬ game. In the Gator Bowl Tourna¬ hitting buckets at a .570 d from the field to lead the ten in that category. nouth. Michigan. cote said, referring to the ment the cagers were winless, three of those eight, Heathcote can't help but think of what team's inability to come through in the latter stages of wrap-up but Kelser made the all-tourna¬ The Spartans open the 3 Ten season with Wisconsin but no cigar might have been. "We, the coaching staff, still the game. "Maybe we don't have the ability to play hard, Dec. 4 Western Michigan 74 MSU 73 ment team at forward and was runner-up to Bob Smyth of the University of Florida, the tour¬ Jenison Fieldhouse, 8:05 Thursday. The cagers get pj I.M. recognize that we could well be and continue to play hard, like Dec. 6 North Carolina 81 MSU 58 nament winner, for the most day's rest and then take on t 8-1 right now instead of 36," we did when we got the lead. Dec. 11 Eastern Michigan 52 MSU 54 Northwestern Wildcats Satin outstanding player. Heathcote said during 1977's Dec. 15 U.ol Detroit 99 MSU 94 day at 8:05 p.m., also at first press Dec. 18 Kelser banged through 53 luncheon held at "I think the inconsistencies of Canisuis 59 MSU 82 Crossroads Cafeteria in the our club are becoming too Dec. 20 N.C. State 60 MSU 78 points and pulled down 26 Heathcote made an N.. Year's ticr New V..r'. resolution optmuM_.,p(or teams in the Center for International Pro- consistent," he added, "but Dec. 29 Holy Cross 70 MSU 61 rebounds in the two games. His the coming Big Ten season. i. |8un Thursday in Dec. 30 53 points were just 3 shy of the j fee per team, when you have an inexperi¬ Jacksonville 65 MSU 63 all-time Gator Bowl Tourna¬ "1977 has got to be bett nose of the limited enced team you play that way." ment record. than 1976," he said succinctly pled in the league. students who would sinter should attend 1208 Men's IM Bldg. I IM to limit basketball By JIM DuFRESNE squads turned away might be who is in charge of the winter personal opinion, it doesn't league EDWARD L. RONDERS esidence hall, fraterni nen's intramural bask Wednesday at 8 p.m Eng. Attendance at idatory for a team to | If you were stunned when anywhere from 25 to 150. game as the two schools will be tions for MSU." leagues, "and that high school seem fair to MSU students that paying only for set-up of the Other intramural policies dry deadline for frati you found the Men's IM Build¬ Beeman cited a $12,000 cut game will knock 25 games out the University is allowing the bleachers and cleaning of the that will be resumed this term alMBIdg. There is a 1 ing closed during Christmas from the intramural budget as of our schedule. field house to be used for a vacation, prepare yourself. one reason for the new high gym. are the decreased building change "As an intramural super¬ school game." 'The townspeople came up dleballand racquetball There is more to come this and just as important, a lack of hours, checking of University visor, it puts a cramp on us for esdlbe an organizat term. facilities to handle the growing According to Gene Kenney, with the idea of using Jenison identification upon entering the gyms and scheduling games is assistant athletic director of on Jan. 14 for aU stude Like the closing of the IM, the University Intramural Ser¬ number of students in the IM going to be a real hassle," facilities, the University will Fieldhouse," Kenney said. "The main reason we're doing it is Men's and Women's IM build¬ ings and closing the facilities WJR lacks ethical code program. Vanderweele added. "As for my not be making a dime off the vices and Director Frank Bee- because it is good public rela¬ during all holiday breaks. "Our facilities for the intra¬ row man have other country skiing stai budget-cutting mural program are not suit¬ PASADENA — Some things which need to be said (from 3,# first time e innovations to put into effect able," Beeman said. "What we and the most notable is a limit need is a new intramural co- MSU DROPS THREE IN A ROW miles away). Unfortunately, some journalists have failed to maintain a degn sill be open Saturdays on teams which can participate recreational building." of professionalism, much less an ethical code. JSp* *t «nd Monday t 25 cent fee for stt in the winter basketball "We can see the need for The reference is made to radio station WJR in Detroit and leers lose to Colorado such a facility," Joe The Men's IM Office Kearny, management, which sacrificed professionalism for the almight will athletic director, said. "But it dollar and thereby turned more than a few stomachs. "try deadline for worn accept only 500 team entries in will be a while because of the The clear-channeled station's brain trust deemed it necessary co-rec basketball an its four leagues and only 150 University building priority place the ax on reporter Bob Page shortly before Christmas, is can sign up in 121 squads will be allowed to play and the in the women's league. Performing Arts Cen¬ By JIM DuFRESNE their actions were not a spur of the moment hereisa$12 fee forte ter is in process scored two of his three goals in ing "Last win'er right now." How well did the MSU season, he finished with end in a two-game series. One The timing isn't in question here, rather the principle involve m ud season schedu we had 503 Other reasons for the pinch hockey the first two periods and left- 1,410 saves. ft" teams playing in the four team skate over the holiday member of the squad not play¬ Apparently, Page had the audacity to query Lawrence Gaines entry deadline ft on gyms this winter, according winger Ron Heaslip added an¬ The Spartan icers will spend James Hunter of the Detroit Lions about the contracts they inks ee is at noon leagues," said Denny Byrne, break? other as the ing in that series is Doug Jan. 13 i to Tom Vanderweele, intra¬ Spartans jumped to another week out in Colorado as Counter, whoreinjured a disc in with the NFL club last summer. ''students who want ti intramural supervisor. "But we mural supervisor, Great, mediocre and terrible. a solid 3-1 lead. are the It all they take on Denver this week¬ his back. •should attend the usually get a 5 to 10 per cent depends on the series, But the two periods of fine According to the Lion's code of eonduct, reporters shall not si i increase in the number of teams scheduling of varsity basketball game and particular period the how much a player is making. Page was even warned games on Thursday nights and play were lost in the final stanza by the Lion each year and in some sports Spartans happened to be play¬ PR person not to ask that terrible the Eastern vs. Everett when Colorado scored four question. But being an ethia high like Softball and basketball it might be as high as 20 per cent." Or in other words, there will be some students signing up for school basketball game, which is being played in Jenison Fieldhouse on Jan. 31. ing in. Or as assistant coach Alex Terpay put it, "We have been very consistent with our inconsistency." times in the first 10 minutes and finished the period outscoring MSU 5-1. Spartans open journalist, Page went ahead and did so. This earned Page a rebuke from Lion GM Rusa Thomas via WJR bosses. The hitch is that the Detroit station has broadcasting rights to the Lion's games and that, plain and sim| see "We will lose three Thurs¬ The second game was a the winter basketball program The MSU icers have encoun¬ is a financial plum. repeat of the first. With goals by who will not be allowed to participate and the number of days because the basketball team will be using Jenison Fieldhouse," said Vanderweele, tered a lot of problems this season, but none have been as Tim McDonald and Marty Mc¬ Laughlin, Bessone's skaters led winter season come While it's not sad that an organization (the-Lion's) which in for criticism to balk at same, it is pathetic that WJR sd from page 1! confusing as their lack of a 2-1 after 12 mintues of the broadcast dollars over a professional journalistic effort. steady performance from one opening period only to watch A further insight of WJR's lack of guts concerns Page) By CATHY CHOWN IM Building pool. game to the next or even from Colorado turn the game around State News Sports Writer In late November, MSU won involvement when Woody Hayes choked this scribe and ' Iivn ' b74 '■ received | UCLA Invitational in one period to another. with three tallies in the second Report finished The new year also marks a the Miami Invitational, then Page. When the subsequent furor was heaviest, Page The Spartans swept their period and two more in the new season for two MSU went on to beat Western Michi¬ complete backing from his station. series from nationally ranked third. women's sports, as the gymnas¬ "to U-M, 7-5 and 6-5, in early The outstanding player in the tics team and the indoor track gan in a dual meet on Dec. 2. Saturday's meet marks a However, when Curt Hahn called Page into his sanctuary t explain the reasons for turning him out into the cruel world, t1, inspire; December; split their next two lopsided series for MSU had to and field team make their 1977 four-meet home stand for the by the Big Ten games with New Hampshire, 3 2 and 4-11: and the holidays by wrapped up dsopping a pair of outings at Colorado be goalie Dave Versical who faced 45 shots Friday night and an unbelievable 47 more on season debuts Saturday. The track team, under the leadership of Nell Jackson, Spartans, with meets on Jan. 14, 15 and 22 against Illinois, Purdue and U-M. Hayes incident in Chicago was one of those listed. Perhaps that's indicative of WJR's inability to conjure-i legitimate excuse for firing Page, or put more succinctly, it's I subtle cover-up for the station's bowing to Russ Thomas' demand fir designer MSU's probation-plagued football program received its MSU's position. last week, 6-4 and 7-3. College Sunday. "We lacked forechecking in meets Westerq Ontario on the Canadian turf Saturday, in the U-M should prove to be one of MSU's biggest rivals, but a and love of the almighty dollar. One last thing — Bob Page will certainly be a journalist a hell « 'fashion cl And from one series to the our opponent's zone so we were first meet on this year's strong Spartan team and final penalties from the Ten during the MSU Christmas Big "Speaking for the University, I can say categorically and next team. they were never the same playing defense all night," Ter¬ schedule, which was expanded eral new freshmen who sev¬ are a lot longer that Russ Thomas will be a general manager. Hup VILLAGE. Id V -Jimmy Carter pay said. 'The result is an over last season's. MSU-WEST is i break. emphatically that our inter¬ "We have been very inconsis¬ already showing their strength, . overworked Versical." Though the team looks to be will give MSU the depth it Yes, Sparty, there is a Rose Bowl. And, there is a MSUI collegiate athletic program will tent and bogged down with The long-awaited be rigorously policed and that The junior goalie has strong in the running events needs for a good season. connection with same. The Big Ten Club of Southern California has! ap¬ ment injuries," coach Amo Bessone peared in 17 of the 20 games and with several returning mem¬ been active in nurturing was delayed several our proposed remedial actions said. "We've been The women's basketball aaiaa waaa relationship uvtnccu a IVMVIVUOIIIJI aaan sa between mo the U'ft »v" and! Big Ten P>be, Cut" is the b] months before Big Ten Com¬ will be playing two allowed 82 goals for a five-goal- bers, there may be some weak¬ the Pac-8. An intrical part of that outfit is members of the MSU ■rel Frank _ scrupulously enforced. goou periods but have been team, under new coach Karen Agosta, a su missioner Wayne Duke called a per-game-average. Versical in the throwing events. Alumni Club of Southern California. losing the games in the final ness Langeland, will not see action — — . troit men - — men'ss hair stj stv press conference in Chicago. "The release of the commis¬ tops the league in saves, how¬ MSU's first home meet will be one." until Jan. 13, when Grand According to Pete Trivers, the organization had nearly fallenlopes the r- - Athletic Director Joe sioner's report brings to an end ever, with 597 and has been the MSU Invitational Relays on into the Pacific before a rebirth of interest boosted enrollment and the football Kearney coaching staff 21 months of charges, investi¬ In the opener with Colorado, averaging over 36 saves per Jan. 29. Valley State comes to East activities. The reason, "The probation seemed to and| all expressed relief that the right-winger Kevin Coughlin Lansing at 8 p.m. The team pull us together. gation, findings and penalties game. Last year in aq outstand¬ The women's gymnastics A bunch of us wanted to do that steihmed from the original currently sports a 1-1 season something for MSU," Trivers said. speculation on the Big Ten's team faces Kent State on record. But, Trivers best exemplified the Spartan spirit of the West actions came to an end. NCAA allegations. when he remarked, "I feel I owe MSU a lot and I want to do Saturday in a double dual meet A trip to the national volley¬ with the men's team, in the something for the school." My question is, why can't In effect the penalty dupli¬ "It is our sincere ball championships in Austin, more people I cates the NCAA hope that Spartans opener. Tex., ended in a tie for seventh be as grateful as Pete Trivers? penalties, but this unhappy episode finally is Though coach Barb McKen- Club the Big Ten also extended the place for the women's volleyball Sports ]) closed and that we will be zie has only two women return¬ THE BIG TEN probation to September 1979. team. MSU was the only team The extension into the first permitted to continue our ef¬ ing from last year, the squad east of the Mississippi River to "Do-Nothing" Duke didn't do it again. By extending forts toward the restoration of has hopes for a good season. probation eight months what did he come up with? Would someone week of September finish in the top 10. The merely integrity in our athletic pro¬ The contingent's home please explain that to me? excludes MSU from opener University of Southern Califor¬ ™°g any bowl gram." will be on Jan. 18 with Eastern With the conference's dismal showing at Pasadena the put inauguration. competition during the spring nia won the national title in the decade, Iwo schools on probation and another being investigated, and summer months. In addition the Big Ten made it clear that if MSU isn't An organizational women s meeting and practice for the MSU men's and rugby club will be held in the turf arena in the Men's IM Michigan. Coach Jennifer Parks' championships, which the Spar¬ tans qualified for by winning perhaps the Big Ten fathers will take an objective look » **<7 American n to express i MSU president Clifton R. women's swim team swims at "Do-Nothing's" contract when it comes up for review three months Wharton Jr. issued a statement successful in cleaning up its Building from 10 p.m. to midnight Tuesday and from 8 to 10 n m home Saturday, as the Buck¬ the Midwest regionals. hence. •dJ!®1""* ~ a i program, stiffer penalties will Jan. 13. r The squad finished its out¬ concerning the report stating One last Rose Bowl thought: while the sun, ocean, palm be handed down. For more information contact Wayne Wrobel at 351-5102. eyes of Ohio State meet the Spartans at 2 p.m. in the Men's standing season with a 41-9 and a tailgate picnic are nice, give me the cool crisp days, colorful ■"Won 5ffe"«W hu c|,osen , th page 13) leaves, a brunette and Big Ten football everytime. „ HJ«W». East lonslng, Michigan Wednesday, January 5, 1977 13 LrfBdiespbbeffcctsI Ford's (continued from page 1) tax proposal unlikely to In pass dividends. calling for higher payroll (continued from p«f» 1) scheduled to rise to 6.3 per cent the fact that more Social At a White House briefing, Rep. Al llllman, D-Ore„ According to White House taxes to finance Social Security by 1981, to 6.8? per cent in Security benefits are being paid Treasury Secretary William E. of Michigan are currently underway to examine these Chairperson of the House Ways and Means figures, Ford's plan would have benefits, Ford contended the 1981. In addition, the maximum out than are being financed Simon said the Ford Admin¬ Committee, told these effects on typical four- system will be bankrupt within amount of wages subject to the through current payroll taxes. istration did not consult with 1/6 two-thirds of the people studied reported no reporters, "Obviously we will member families: a few years unless the law is tax would rise graduallv from There is some sentiment for the incoming Carter Adminis¬ ^"deterioration, while those remaining complained of health organize around the Carter recommendation." •Because Ford would repeal a special tax credit for low- changed. Under the Ford plan, a the current $16,500 to $23,700 phasing out the separate pay¬ tration in drawing the tax plan. in 1982. roll tax because its impact is Simon refused to predict how K a vast differences among the people we studied." he Sen. Russell B. income working families, a fam¬ worker earning $7,000 would Long, D-La., Congress is under increasing heaviest on the poorest the plan would fare in Con¬ news to know that many people remained perfectly chairperson of the Senate Fi¬ ily with adjusted pay $431 In Social Security tax ■ Itisgoon kww >bout the future." gross income pressure to do something sbout families. gress. nance Committee, offered a "no of $5,000 would lose $300. in 1978 or $7 more than under •but " mhlem the research team has encountered is the comment" when asked about •A family earning $10,000 'current law. The tax would rise ■*,eW/mire ■enceormo than one PBB compound. Selikoff said the original Ford's proposal. would pay $166 less; the typical to $452 in 1979 and $462 in 1980. I'h^i a numtar 0f different compounds have .nd he is not sure if each chemical has the same The Ford proposal, spelled family of four at the $15,000 level would get a $227 tax cut, For a $20,000-a-year worker, the tax would rise from the Future of JMC debated by 'U' officials i^f iTthat the combined effects of PBB's and PCB's out in a written message to while the $20,000 family would current $965 to $1,089 in 1978, ■ n nited biphenyls) must also be studied since the team is Congress, includes a $10.2 bil¬ pay $250 less. $1,238 in 1979 and $1,320 in (continued from page 1) mented. Ward could not be reached tjffS latter chemical in the breast milk of Michigan lion increase in Social taxes over a Security two-year period; a •In the upper brackets, tax relief would range from $2& 1980. The higher payroll taxes whole new type of student now with whole new concerns." "It came as a surprise to us that they were playing around for comment Monday or Tues¬ day, but will meet with JMC commended that nursing mothers have their mUk $2.5-billion cut in corporate for the $30,000 family to $380 would be raised by increasing "I am angry that the students with this lifelong education students at 8 tonight in Snyder Ed ronsuit with their physicians before deciding to breast taxes and elimination of the double taxation of for the four-member family the current 5.85-per-cent tax were not given input on this idea. I feel that this will cut into Hall cafeteria to answer ques¬ corporate earning $100,000 a year. rate, which already is decision," Aubrey Marron com- my education." tions. n till be circumstances where the risks are too great and JrreJre the benefits outweigh the risks," he said. I" Scan residents in general, Selikoff said it is difficult to fcf.X effects are for them. He did say there are PBBs in most Affirmative action issue remains stalled the state but he does not know if disease will result, • 'lamination and disease are not synonymous," he said. (continued from page 1) familiar with the petition or any Don E. Coleman, director of „ked if he would eat bacon and eggs during his visit to Howard said the petition is grievances of the Black the minority support program in Selikoff answered, "Yes, but I won't be here long." specifically concerned with in¬ Faculty/Administrators Asso¬ and member of the association, ■Surged the people of Michigan to "prod the governor to get creasing the number of black ciation. concurred with Howard in that Kuwls as low as possible." faculty, staff and student en¬ everything concerning the peti¬ I, William G. Milliken said he would support such legislation, rollment. "No one has bothered to tion is up in the air until the r o jker Bobby Crim said he is seeking funding from the discuss things with me," Perrin trustees' public briefing ses¬ ntof Health, Education and Welfare for further research "I would hope that appro¬ said. sion. Look what you've been missing at priate action will be taken Perrin, who has jurisdiction "We are not demanding any¬ m-Sd he will continue to report on the team's findings as concerning this," Howard said, over the Human Relations De¬ thing or criticizing anyone. We THE GRAPEVINE: a, are available, and added that it may be 18 months before "appropriate action meaning partment, where affirmative simply want the board of ■/. greater equity. That is the action is housed, said he hoped \ something special each night of the week hjions are possible. trustees to look into why af¬ IB) were first introduced into the food chain three years ago by overriding consideration of the the vacant directorship of that firmative action is so slow," Tonight Frog Legs $5.95 lentai mixing of the chemical with livestock feed. Since then, petition." department will be filled by the Coleman said. "It is a question da of farm animals have died or been slaughtered, Perrin said that he is un¬ Jan. 21 board meeting. of equity and nothing else." ^ Thursday Top Sirloin Steak $5.25 icr slaughter of quarantined cattle is scheduled today in Friday Crablegs $5.95 ith, Michigan. it* \ All specials include Grapevine Salad, potato or vegetable, and hot homemade bread. Jlemtp And in the lounge, something I.M. Notes •'equally special, to entertain you Tuesday - Saturday after 9 p.m. jp up for teams in the men's intramural ice hockey league will lane Benny & Clemens old and new jazz pla.m. Eke Thursday in 201 Men's IM Bldg. There will be a $50 THE GRAPEVINE per team. ue of the limited ice time, id in the league. only the first 80 teams will be APARTMENTS ■ TOWHHOUSES 2758 East Grand River 337-1701 Ill students who would like to be intramural basketball officials ■winter should attend an organizational meeting Thursday in ■ 208 Men's IM Bldg. Individuals will be processed for hiring at START THE NEW YEAR OFF RIGHT IN A NEW APARTMENT AT PENNY LANE! PENNY LANE HAS NEW TWO BEDROOM APARTMENTS AVAILABLE FOR IM¬ MEDIATE OCCUPANCY, COMPLETE WITH NEW APPLIANCES AND DECORATOR ce hall, fraternity and independent manager's meeting CARPETING. SIGN YOUR LEASE FOR YOUR NEW TWO BEDROOM APARTMENT sen's intramural basketball league will be Monday, Tuesday BEFORE FEB. 1st, 1977 AND THE FIRST MONTH'S RENT IS FREE. COME SEE US | Wednesday at 6 p.m. in the sports arena of the Men's IM TODAY AT 2905 BEAU JARDIN, CORNER OF JOLLY AND DUNCKEL ROADS OR ";. Attendance at any one of these three meetings is CALL 394-1350. PENNY LANE, THE PLACE TO BE THIS YEAR! ry for a team to play this winter. »*• ij deadline for fraternity volleyball is noon Jan. 14 in 201 I'sIMBIdg. There is a $12 entry fee and play will begin Jan. 18. nil and racquetball ladder competition will begin on Jan. 14. START THi NIW YEAR RIGHT! Ire will be an organizational meeting in 208 Men'a IM Bldg. at ■on Jan. 14 for all students who want to compete in the ladders GET GOING ON THOSE * sss country skiing starts Saturday at Forest Akers West Golf for the first time ever. ■will be open Saturdays from 10 a.m. until 4 IMPORTANT RESUMES ARE YOU READY FOR TAKE OFF WITH p.m., Sundays from ■tu5p.m. and Monday through Friday from 2 until 5 p.m. There Jbe a 25-cent fee for students and a 50-cent fee for faculty and AND HAVE THEM — WINGED SPARTANS — deadline for women's intramural co-rec innertube water PRINTED AT Your University Flying Club? »-rec basketball and co-rec floor hockey is noon Jan. 12. If Yes, write P.O. Box 287, E. Lansing, "•an sign up in 121 Women's IM Bldg. » a $12 fee for teams planning to enter any of the three INSTY-PRINTS! or call Jewett Airport, Mason, 676-5623. 5ei»n schedules will be ready at 5 p.m. Jan. 14. !deadline for the women's intramural basketball '»at noon Jan. 13 in 121 Women's IM Bldg. ^students who want to officiate in the women's IM basketball »• im Dutend the offici41'' cUnic ton«ht at 8 P-m- in 137 insty-prints •TWO 1976 CHEROKEE CRUISERS •ONE 1976 CHEROKEE WARRIOR (IFR) •AYSt •ONE CESSNA SKYHAWK (IFR) •GROUND SCHOOL Ren see weekend action yeswe tasty-prints can! •PRIMARY AND ADVANCED FLIGHT INSTRUCTION •adaiKd from page 12) the wta of the printing Uzl ember, when the team raised nearly $5,000 to make the trip. mm N2-11M 374-7628 4MS11 . addition to a Big Ten The Spartans also proved to be ¥°nsh.p. The Spartan sea- 1458 E. WcMgaa 32KS.M* UHR.Slftow 115L AHsfM »u the best in the state of Michi¬ highlighted by a trip to vondt Cl DooLeys UCLA Invitational in gan, after winning the Michigan Nov- championship in November. 'far inspires >ir desiigner JANUARY fashiiion cut Lvtuy w/f.diNEsdAy! CLEARANCE ^uCt?tor hopes, is the SPORTCOATS up to MUGGERS NITE &7risthebrain- IW, 80sta'a subur- SUITS LEATHER COATS to W?n's ^ylist. up ^"^anut-inspfred loo trend nstlonwide DRESS SHIRTS TOPCOATS up to HAif—pitiCE OIN Muqs bJK& "Goober - 'N like '• a a peanut _ 8-11 LipSlAIUS ANd "'Bimy Carter Open Thurs. S Friday doWNSlAiRS ,Edentof Creative I1" 9:00 p.m. EVERYTHING FOR THE MAN *fe;tmericw ire hrdezfe ~ « new, ^ "Press what tonfia^ Areata. "And ma|e» MfiRTYS I Bank Americard Master Charge American Express RELEASE 305 E. Grand Rivor East Lansing 1 4- Michigon Stote News, Eost Lansing, Michigon Wtdnsiday, jonuo //A V NOW THRU SATURDAY! "Buy it for yourself' STEREO SffLE If you were hoping for a new stereo for Christmas and wound up with six new albums instead, head for The Stereo Shoppe right now! There's no point waiting for your birthday, dropping more hints, and hopingfor the best. Sale ends Saturday, so hurry! SONY Model 7035 Stereo Receiver. "ITS A SONY" Plenty of clean power and flexible control. Outputs for two pairs of speakers. Complete with wood case. Nat. Adv. Value: $300 *22999 co pioneer Elecfrol/bice Repeat of a holiday sensation! Here's a complete component music system that will give "ITS A SONY- you years of service and satisfaction. It includes the full- AN SONY Model TA-1066 Stereo Amplifier A remarkably clean and full-featured amplifier at its regular price, it's unbeatable at this sale price! featured Pioneer 535 stereo receiver, the sophisticated BSR 710QX turntable and a pair of accurate Electro-Voice Model 16B12" 3-way speaker systems. $830 VALUE) 9499 Nat. Adv. Value: $170 9119 MAXI MAXELL UD-XL C-90 Give those new albums Many one-of-a-kind Bh Blank Cassettes The beat choice for the care they deserve with a Watts Preener. Super Specials! vk mualc and other - critical applications. critic H It's one of the best stereo Investments you can make! REG. *4 # $£50 $5.25 REG. \9lnfffnity V EACH EACH $5.95 One of the most popular models we've ever offered from the legendary people at Infinity... the Model 3000-J. Come and compare! s350 A PAIR Mfg's. Sua. Retail: CD Now you can enjoy all the sophisticated features of the BSR 710QX for a fraction of what It's worth! PIONEER Sale price Includes base, dust cover and cartridge. 10% Off ALL Our Reg. Price: Pioneer Project 60A Speakers Used Equipment $199.95 sppso Proven bass reflex design 8-inch, two-way system Nat. Adv. Value: $80.00 each BUY THE PAIR FOR JUST *89" Free Customer Parking Next to Store 555 E. Grand River Ave. in East Lansing 10 to 9 Mon. thru Fri. 10 to 5 Saturdays (NexttoTaco Bell) Phone 337-1300 Complete In-Store Service Five Convenient Ways For Everything We Sell to Finance Your Purchases Where you're treated fairly every time. % Jonuory!■ Michigar stgteNgw'. East lonsln,, Michigan Wednesday, January 5, 1977 15 lofesf releases spin in, rock, classical Irritable diversions Chuck Berry, Beethoven, MSI HARD QUARTET: Mozart - The cini, Verdi and the Beatles Wagner, Puc¬ t Four String Quartets - (MG J3978) - what do these various musicians have in common? Jeff fee juilliard String Quartet, whose PL will become artists-tn-residence at Lynne would like to think it is his Electric Kis October, present in their latest Light Orchestra. MoZart's last four string quartets The influence of these people on ex-Move luartet No. 20 in D Major, K. 499;Quartet member Lvnne, who writes and arranges, |^i„D Major, K. 575; Quartet No. 22 in as well as producing all of ELO's material, , Major, K. 589; and Quartet No. 23 in T can't be precisely measured. But he refers to them lyrically and his arrangements fe' works were produced during the inventively marry classical orchestral ef¬ J(j ol 1786 through 1798. During that fects with all-out, full-tilt rock and roll. x) Mozart produced some of his most lorable works, including, "Con Gio- ELO's newest, "A New World Record," li," and his last (our symphonies. can be seen as this group's compromise with the age-old dilemma of deciding whether to „ K, 499 Quartet, nicknamed the pursue sales or art. ■offaeiser" (because it is thought that Lz Anton Hoffmeiser, Mozart's friend This struggle of philosophy began with T publisher, commissioned the work), the group's first album, "No Answer" - L published in September 1786. At the superb artistically, with an uncompro¬ ie Mozart was in a good state of finance mising vision of fully integrating classical C health, having just successfully pre- and rock music. Jzred the "Marriage of Figaro" (K. 492) E his 38th. or "Prague" Symphony. The new album would be encouraging if w years later he began his last three only for the inclusion of ELO's version of a uts. Then plagued by sickness and tty, Mozart in his correspondence 4 to the last three quartets aa classic song Lynne wrote with the Move - "Do YA." Now prospering mightily with his last two albums top sellers, he pays tribute January artists ■resume works." Under these conditions, to his poor relations, the closet-classic L outstanding qiality of these works lean even more pronounced, for the last he quartets in no way mirror the state of Move, one of whom was named Jeff Lynne. Wild, powerful chords and heavy percus¬ sion open the song and nice vocal harmonies Warming stage and soul leir composer. on a chorus with one of the finest hooks The ftcee of these upcoming art¬ Jibe quartets. K. 575, K. 589. and K. 590, you'll hear push it along. Some fine slide ists for the month of January the first time since 1969 for two L often referred to as the "Prussian" performances in the University guitar by Lynne leads up to the bridge — are a sampling of aifare suited Jartets because they were commissioned ■ King Frederick II of Prussis. music and beautiful lyrical imagery combine to balletomanes, opera buffs, Auditorium. Separate programs here for a complete release from the tension will be danced Jan. 24 and Jan. Hit is unfortunate that works of this of the rest of the song. theatergoers and anyone seek¬ 25 at 8:15 p.m. The Winnipeg, iilit; are often overshadowed by Mozart's ing artistic diversity. founded in 1939, is under the ■e popular "Hayden" quartets. The "Tightrope," the album's first song, is one Canada's Royal Winnipeg Bal¬ direction of Arnold Spohr. They lisrd Quartet gives these works tech- of those bouncy, catchy, "can't miss" let, a classical company of 27 are appearing as part of the 11; perfect performances, with careful singles. Opening with the only extended dancers, will return to MSU for in to structural line and textural Lecture-Concert Art of Dance orchestral piece on the album (a sad Series. indicator of commercial potential judg¬ ments), "Tightrope" dissolves into Lynne's Organist Virgil Fox (leftl will le Juilliard have a wonderful tonal also appear through the Lec¬ slide guitar, as tasty a lead as he's ever an, and the recorded sound is well ture-Concert Series Jan. 18 at While they by no means played, over a strong string arrangement. 8:15 p.m. in the University Audi¬ . tly adhere to the classical style, I can ELO ventures into the world of opera torium. ■o qualms with the Juiliiard's per- with "Rockaris," a brusing Chuck Berry- flavored number, which delicately begins Opera returns to MSU with "he only competition the Juilliard Quar- the presentation of Metropolitan with a female voice singing an aria. What k has on disc is the Italiano Quartet (which becomes of her in the devastation that Opera leading baritone John Reardon (right) singing the title psents le Guarneri all four quartets) on Phillips, and follows is secondary (she does surface role of Don Juan in Mozart's String Quartet (which only again, briefly). Listen for all those famous nt the K. 589 and K. 590 quartets). "Don Giovanni." A cast of Amer¬ names in the chorus, as you wonder how (It this is competition of the highest many others are left who can rock and roll ican and European stars will be Mity. 1 give the Juilliard a slight edge. like this. featured in the Opera Guild of - Daniel Herman Greater Lansing and MSU Mu¬ "Above the Clouds" has a beat one could sic Dept. presentation. Perfor¬ tATO BARBIERI: Caliente! tango to, giving its lovely melody the edge mances are Jan. 14 through 16, (AAM- most of the other slow songs on the album in the University Auditorium. lack, preventing muzak-al sweetness from ["Ciliente!" MEANS hot. 'e for the new album What a perfect by South American setting in. Curtain for Jan. 14 is 8 p.m. and 7 p.m. for Jan. 16. A children's .""n Gnto Barbieri. It's a cool heat. It's all pretty nice, but when people can matinee is scheduled for Jan. 15 Barbieri plays with a smooth, emotional rock like this, you wonder why they don't at 2 p.m. """sity and is here in his most accessible more often. )g (some might say commercial), hying wailing, throaty, passionate sax, Record courtesy Discount Records "bieri is backed -BOlBrienza on these R & B/disco- i numbers by a full string section. This is the way other horn men, like rover Washington with Bob James, have Tastes vary among top box office choices me wzth their jazz to give it wide ■tthe danger of the appeal, style is that it tends I Become the too smooth; it tends to rob much M love behind individuality (basic to playing jazz) a toUl sound. ™ someone as uncompromising as the rise in ticket prices and to an said wistfully. "The last time I looked it had ten HOLLYWOOD (UPI) - What do "King specifically constructed to stampede the 5. "The Sting" 1973 made $200 million worldwide and I think it might be expected to slip toward turnstiles. 6. "The Exorcist" 1973 overwhelming public response to those rare •»'being overwhelmed by the strings. His Kong," "The Omen" and "One Flew Over will end up doing $400 million." the Cuckoo's Nest" have in common? But "The Omen" was a sleeper, an occult 7. 'Towering Inferno" 1975 pictures which provide elements of enter¬ rawer on "Caliente!" is tainment uncommon to television. Herb Alport, who All three will break into the top horror film starring Gregory Peck in a do or 8. "Love Story" 1970 10 Bernhard is a pragmatist. aware that box £g toce1*' " W°Uld Seem' " C°mpr°" all-time box office attractions this year. die battle with Satan. » A year ago the top 10 box office hits 9. "The Graduate" 1967 10. "Doctor Zhivago" 1965 Both "Cuckoo's Nest" and "The Omen" office figures are juggled to suit a variety of It is difficult to take comparative "Cudkoo's Nest" comes as no surprise. It are still being shown abroad with turnstiles purposes. ushneu of "We earned $80 million domestically and comes back to the studio have taken their cut. after theaters CBS will air radio adventure series another $20 million in Japan alone. 'All The "The second is box office gross — the President's Men' did as well as we did in total amount of money people paid to see a this country but not abroad. lu-y K?ect'on can cook- ar gradi for beginning, intermediate, and Association is the first national conference on women's studies and Beer, wine and live music will be offered at the party and todoyl advanced Karate students will be held this term. Learn Karate as an will bring together women across the country to discuss donations of $2.50, $5, $10 or any amount are asked for. ort, as o sport and as self-defense. depending curriculum, strategies and program development. on the donor's 1 Everyone welcome. Members of the MSU Women's Studies Group, a nonofficial support group of women's studies programs, said it is important for MSU representatives to attend for the MSU KARATE available. inspiration and information Welcome Back! MCN & WOMKN SPORT A SILF-DIFINSI "It is terribly important to get in touch and communicate with Discount Calculators, Inc. other women around the country," Marilyn Frye, member of the PH 351•4471 Women's Studies Group, said. The program has no director and no budget. Consequently, the group members must raise money themselves to send represents- Texas Instruments SR-56 SR-40 SR-51II Business Calc. TI-30 SR-52 Let a pizia or TI-1200 TI-1270 TI-1250 TI-1600 TI-5050M TI-5040 grinder (rem Bell's HP-25 HP-22 DRUM BRAKE SACK AM HP-21 HP-25C | Includes Welceme Yen Back. and Kingspoint, Sharp, Novus, and More! Deploring linings On All Four Whee "G UARANTEED LOWEST PRICES Machining All 225M.A.C. 113$ Gr. River Four Drums 332 - 5027 332 0858 IN TOWN" Repacking Front Open from 11 a.m. Free deliveries from 4:30 p.m. 220M.A.C. Univ. Mall 351-5470 rtT' Whool Searings In,poet Hardware Mon.-Sat. And Hydrallc Sys. I Doodtost J499: Most 8 Cy Cars Most 6 Cyl After Holiday Sale Cars Yes, the mouth-watering, mouth-challenging cheese¬ burger sitting on top of this sentence is OK on the new 1/3 to 1/2 ftnd more sight Watchers. But the big news is the Watchers Program. flexibility of the No matter how much you've got to lose, there's new Weight more choice than ever in what you can eat. Now you can 90% off all enjoy corn-on-the-cob, real cocoa milkshakes, bologna- * Sportswear * fill Coats up to 1/2 off on-rye and more. All within limits, of course. It's the most personal approach to losing weight that Weight Watchers has ever offered. And our Medical * 90% off all Dresses * fill Scarves 1/3 off Director, our nutritionists, and more than five million hours of classroom experience, worldwide, back up up to 1/2 off every change we've made. Come to a Weight Watchers * fill (Tlittens meeting: Find out how to lose it our way. 90% off all Pontsuits You'll want to make it your * * fill Hots YOU11UVE THE OUNCE. way. WEIGHT 1/3 off yyflJ£HERS * fill lingerie 1/3 off 8f more The Authority YOU'RE THIS CLOSE TO A CLASS: * fill night gowns 1/3 off * fill Socks 1/3 off & more & University United Methodist Church Parkwood Family Y more 11185. Harrison 2305 Hailott Rd. Monday 7 p.m. Tuaoday 1 p.m. Thursday 7 p.m. Tuasday7p.m. Hours: Thurs - Fri night until 9:00 Flrof Wwk just $8.00 p.m. - Each Waak th»r»«(t»r $3.00. News. EoH lonolng, Michigon Wednesdoy, January 5, 1977 HOUSE MEMBERS WILL CONVENE TODAY lew faces to Senate scheduled to begin at grace legislature Only one of the new repre¬ November election, though two of the combatants in the U.S. 10:30 Thursday morning. sentatives is a woman The elected 14 are new - Mary new members will take seats Senate race. Congressmen C. Brown of Kalamazoo's 46th f iahature when the Michi1977 convenes its gan representatives who will join the 96 incumbents in the House. district. The new lawmakers' sometime in the spring. The two Senate vacancies Marvin Esch, R-Ann Arbor, and Donald Riegle, D-Flint, the professions are largely law or were caused by the election of new U.S. senator, left their ,i0°|t,wrsWewiil return from Observers say this is an un usually small number of new business concerns. tin the other side of the Senators Carl Pursell, R-Ply- positions to run for higher ■5 e and sandy shores legislators in the llOseat mouth, and Dale Kildee, office. JZtm ■' he/nsitnnew al noon today with the chamber. dome, the make up of the Senate is unchanged after the D-Flint, to congressional seats. Both senators took the seats The Michigan Senate did undergo a mild shakeup when Democrats chose a new major¬ ity leader. William Faust of clinic offered for smokers Westland will replace William \rea Fitzgerald of Detroit, who was ousted in the December c L average of 52 per cent of meeting Friday at 8 Sparrow Hospital. p.m. in 207 nique. The clinic will begin Also included in the 10-year- &who join the Greater Monday, and costs $20, a fee old nonprofit clinic, which is Iff Smoking Withdrawal Helen Carpenter, coordinator that includes a lifetime mem¬ staffed by volunteers, are films gic succeed in breaking the of the clinic, said the free initial bership and continuing contact on smoking and talk sessions. I Anyone interested in with the clinic to help ex- Carpenter said that all ■nine to raise this avera9e meeting is to inform the public smokers stay off cigarets. bers are required to quit of clinic procedure and tech |,ttend a public information "We put together groups of smoking "cold turkey" on the first night of the clinic. about 20 to 25 people who meet every Monday. Wednesday and Friday for two hours a night for Deposit forms due soon four weeks." "We Carpenter said. have four professionals COMPUTER LABORATORY come in and talk about the body SHORT COURSES and smoking." Registration must be mode in the User Informotion Center, Room 313 Computer Center. A fee covering computer ti br graduate assistants and handout materials is charged For more informotion call 353-1800. Introduction to Computing (#100) for each short c ■Graduate assistants whose paychecks are deposited directly in For persons with little or no computing experiei fal banks or in the MSU Employes' Credit Union will begin Cost: $5 January 10, 11, 12. 13. 14 7 9 p.m. Irving proof of their deposits in the next payroll, Robert P. Introduction to the MSU 6500 (#101) Eaton, payroll manager, announced. [Direct deposit notification forms will be issued to those students agwith their check stubs beginning with the Jan. 14 payroll, FEBQUAQY For persons with MSU facility. Cost: $5 computing experience who Januory 17,10.19. 20 7-9 p.m. ore new to th< tally and staff members who have payroll deposits made LSAT GRADER (#115) feady receive the forms. An oid in Cost: $2 maintaining course records and assigning grades. Rather than having secretaries pull the approximately 340 Januory 19 3-5 p.m. Introduction to Interactive Computing* (#175) Kits from the entire payroll and stamp them individually before SEMINARS Introduction to the use of the interactive facility at MSU. posits are made, the computer will make out one check to each Cost: $5 January 25, 27; February 1.3 3-5 p.m. pit for the entire deposit. Basic SPSS* (#155) START JAN. 28 Introduction to the Statistical Package Jof the Social Sciences. AUTO SERVICE 12-Student Avg. Classes Cost: $5 5 Specialist Instructors Jonuory 25, 27: February 1,3 7-9 p.m. Advanced SPSS* (#255) Specie!, expire 1-17-77 18 Class Hours Advanced forms of data i procedures. DELUXE BRAKE SERVICE Cost: $4 For information or registration call February 7, 9. 14,16 7-9 p.m. Introduction to APEX* (#330) 800-243-4767 Use of the CDC APEX system for processing lii DRUM BRAKES DISC BRAKES Toll-tree, 12 noon to 7 pm. programming problems. Includes Cost: $3 Includes February 0. 15, 22: Morch 1.8 4-5 p.m. Replocing linings Replacing Front AMITY TESTING INSTITUTE 'For prerequisite informati On All Four Wheels Disc Pads Machining All Machining Rotors Four Drums Inspecting: Calipers, Repacking Front Rear Brakes And Wheel Roarings Hydrallc System Inspect Hardware Repacking Front And Hydrallc Sys. Wheel Bearings (oodtest Roadtest a logo contest s49" Additional ports If needed *571? The contest is open to all students, faculty, and staff. The winning logo will be used on all future ASMSU materials. TUNE UP SPECIAL Includes: New Spark Plugs H.D. Points BCond. Timing I Dwell Set to oo cash Most 8 Cy I. Specifications Carburetor Ad|ust 100 prize Cars $3495 Most 6 Cars Cyl. $2995 Entry details may be picked up at the ASMSU Business Office in Room 307 Student Services Bldg. TWO CONVENIENT EAST LANSING LOCATIONS Entries may be mailed, but must be received by Jan. 5, 1977. Logos are due at noon that day. I IN DA RONSTADTN C, R i A l l S i HI'I S J TH€ DOOBK BROTHERS , B6T0fTH€D00IKS I'CLUR'il IARR"* U-mm Indudes the Hrts Oma Grove llHIRlVn IK! fc & r-i-HHn I lix'liktrs TJii>S.mn IV.irl>i*- Backwater Listen to the Music lakin lt to the Streets £mn£m bination o influences ■ n m i ■ that only I awaited i m 1 ■■ 1 America s ■ ■ 1 Ml ■ . •. ' ' ' «**« STILL Sill IMKSON BROWNE -we FwrENW?- THE UNIVERSITY MALL 220 MAC AVE. PHO IT LOOKS ROD STEWART A Night on the Town h iciudes the Hit Tonights the Night mm JEAN-LUC PCMY Also Includes Joni Mitchell Hejira Trade Winds TheBalltrap M IMAGINARY VO/A3E CONTAINS THEHlTSiV.il WW Wmi CTA2 WINGS PAULMcCAE^NEY TKS( nwwqLii S BOB SEGER NIGHT MOVES 11,1 ,1 STEVE MILLER *1 frl Fly Uln An Ewglw | 'LEO KOTTKE 1971-1976 fa ', ■ "WD YOU HEAR ME?" • THE BEST OF • GEORGE HARRISON 'ew she had th e Tonight A Saturday power Seal Presents for persons over 18 yrs of age iMULMONASH-'oxw. BRIAN OePALMA • "CARRIE" jrmSISSTSWCEK A LANTASTIC DOUBLE FEATURE!! JOHN TRAVOLTA m PIPER LAURIE 'mm * LAWRENCE D COHEN o-nSTEPHENKING -vxun-uRUILMONASH iftecMDvBRIANOePALMA R "fluHdwtlMfo—Rod * MUIKTUMC HOT< 00*i«T TH| t If lion WMOa KA| tfvtt |f|N M MONGll MK'fO ON THi KNIN » auHOn ItAWO CAN N MAUN POt &VMG MS AUlOlf Ail NiAi'TanGO «»AM OM wONOttt WNAt H ACTION wRt it TO null JOMS if AO GtOttNA StflVM ANCIlSSONAftO TKlMtlOMAiuniVlMVAMNOANVACY M WNOU TVR 1:20-3:20- 5:25 ■ 7:30 • 9:30 ,^j|» , ,o~ NNAll f*MS A AN AAtA SAW S NO «!»' '0 A lOOCAl NOiAiiinc t w«i AM UMSMftT Add** vwi'vAl*rr THE NEWEST* PINKEST HuRUithMrwHntUn PANTHER OF All! dihKMfeDtfd MOWS! If OtUOtviS T* OfSfMCnON MTWIIN Ml A*S If AIT AM UOtOMA SXtVM s NNOtMANa WAS If NAMART NISUASW $ .^Dom DeLuise Leo McKern T ChorlM AA«ha«w/NCMfSWffl { M NcMUn JflIM O i Ikn Mm r*My 11 UMltovlhMlMJaNi' J fit nut iaiti J * SA MM IJttl _ _ _ IICIIffONAU»wlu »M!D AM ACTIO-AS Win AS lUStlY HMOIMO. AND uawa 1^25 [fMTHUT O | Above all.Jt's a love story. H HaylhthluiniiM T bavolt lay for Ilia piwuurMf « Of- " ?* THROAT II bu become the moat ii atacarmi retard. acroai America. Rmtwtwf NURh. *10*1 TNOAT If vilely teen wft.ll Film in cinema MOOeUiAN TONS M CAST Malory. Worda ire ilmpiy inadaqudtc lo conety the ANAMONTOlftlNOnOtfr laeridlbM .rodclim of lh. film. DIE? THROAT Ii Judith Criil, NfW TOK MACAZSJf Manually explicit ■ II |oei beyond uyOiini prevtou.ly S i Alan James mddt. DEEP THROAT la rapidly becomln| the aludsrd to wftich ail other Mill Film, will be THROAT cihnot be deacrlbdd -II mat be conptred. DEEP A f Arkin Caan Oe eaptrlenct ol DEEP THROAT uptrlenctd. Anythlni yoi hive am belore la mraly praphridon lor T U j Freebie and the Bean m Dm. Throw V nil found obecwe pMocftnj ot Ave n Denned n Drtaii end %» vo-« li e m moonM. lo the bu ttat ibetieri Dean Tntoit n« been bumo vd ih» R D •a sitm ifliHS ftbeememiy cm,mid mo« dun cy othor nin- * mnory. I Fit Mm III MS The li* Film Group A n Vwrnnj Daap Tbroei. oncui. not ont I Sal Una Cart IIIMS limthmbmdMad Y Sat Sils* M 1.50 J The King Has Returned j *ioriHrd IIWIWII only to Ihoee peraona : Long Live The King : !! !**£* of il» who enjoy eatremely explicit orotic «lirulfim.nt We hire no vtah lo ollend or ahoek II yw do nut Mjuy • Alan Bates : vievtni Incredibly piphlt tuuil bdhavtor, ve nl Setl strongly recommend that you : ** in \ altyaviy. In DEEP THROAT ve hiva In erotic entertainment the uMmttt II you slab to experience It, ve cordially Inrlle you Ic itUnd - U SHOWTIMIt DIIP THROAT 7:00,9t1S, 1 It 20 King oi Hearts : double itait your prohibit ruction lo Ala you has. any Mm. .a MISS JONIS 8t05 and IOt2S >ht itrngly aecairi|t you lo en)oy uotbr profru Last coaoplotu shew at 10:20 nut 1111a : DEEP THROAT ii dincuy tut moM vho can mi cana utti laka II. Fit WMh Iiiu J * SKOWPLACIi 109 Anthony Sal nut Hill * » _ 1.15 J 1 THIS DOUBLE FEATURE ADMISSIONS *2." student, »3." staff A faculty SMuti, tally (stall wilcnt ID'S required >♦♦♦»»»»»»»»***»*»***,********„„„, I IS RATED X. An •ntertainm.nt s.rvice Stud.ntt, will bo ch*ck.d. faculty I dtaff ID'i e Newt. Eo»> lomlng. Mlchlgon Wednesday, January 5, 1977 23 State News Classified 355-8255 N FRANKLY SPEAKING . . . by phil frank 1 tearfits W | Hpirtiwts | Roors |[7] PHONE 355 % 1255 FORD GALAXIE, 1969. Tuned-up, air, radiala, new battery. Good condition. 1496. 349-2234. 2-1-6 (13) FORD PINTO Runabout 1973. BUSBOYS, WAITRESSES. time, lunch shift. Apply in person after 2 p.m. BONNIE AND 316 East (181 Michigan Avenue. 3-1-7 CLYDE, Full THE HA FREUmw P//&J&I5 OF ccmE, BE IT LCC& LIFE A MALE ROOMMATE needed win¬ ter term. Cedar Village Apart¬ ments. Rates negotiable. Cell 313- 626-0891 or 351-4602. 8-1-14 114) IMMEDIATE Cedar Village. 337-0924. 5-1-11 1121 OCCUPANCY, winter and spring. One female. 488/month. ROOM FOR rent in nice house, close. Call 484-5762 for appoint¬ ment. 3-1-7 (12) SINGLE. MALE student. Block GRADUATE STUDENTS - FAC¬ FEMALE: SHARE homey apart¬ Union. Cooking; parking. 314 Iyw 49,000 miles. Radio, snow tires] SUMMER JOBS: Over 200,000 in excellent condition. $1100. 35£ all 50 states. Your money back if OEiBFE CASE OF 0///E FLU ULTY - MARRIED. Need a quiet ment in Lansing. 470 includes Evergreen. Call evenings, 332- place to study? We offer one, two utilities. Near bus. 371-3855. 3839. 8-1-14 1121 ■automotive 7851.2-1-6 03) you don't obtain yours thru our T ME- and three bedrooms. 4170, 4205, 8-1-14 (121 n Scooters S Cycles comprehensive catalogue. Send $255. Heat and water furnished. CLOSE, OWN room, furnished. ports 4 Service HONDA CIVIC Hatchback ~1974. 42 to: SUMCHOICE, Box 645, Three minutes to mall. Five min¬ DOWNTOWN AND near St. New house, cooking. 476. 339- Blue-tan interior. Four speed. 3500 State College, I Pennsylvania, utes to campus. Cata bus service. Lawrence, several one bedroom 2961 after 5:30 p.m. 3-1-7 (121 Avlotion miles. Excellent condition. $1475. 16801. Act now Tor best selectiom Carports available. BRAYMILL and two bedroom units available. IfMPlOVMENT 351-0379. 5-1-12 (15) 2-1-1-5 1351 APARTMENTS. 4394 Okemos From 4130 to 4180. Includes all EAST LANSING. Single rooms, ■for KENT Road, 349-4030. 3-1 7 1431 utilities. Call Joe Miller, AIM. Inc. male students. Refrigerator and JEEP COMANDO, 1970 V-6, hard¬ LOCAL BUSINESSMAN expand I Apartments ing. Some sales, management, 332-4240 or 393-9331. 0-3-1-7 1281 parking. 332 5791 after 5:30 p.m. I Houses top. Four wheel drive with plow. promotional experience. Resume: SUBLEASE APARTMENT, 8-1-14 (12) Good condition. $1950 or best married grad students or faculty, FEMALE ROOMMATE needed I Rooms offer. Must sell. 482-7235. 3-1-7 Box 781, East Lansing, 48823. walk to campus. 4260/month plus winter and spring. Americana SHARE NICE country home near ■foe sale 0-3-1-7 114) deposit. 351-5269. 8 1-14 (14) Apartments, 490/month, parking. East Lansing, own room. 475/ I Animals R.N.sl TIRED of Michigan's long 351-6142. 8-1-14 (12) month. 60 acre back yard. Pasture J Mobile Homes MAVERICK - 1970. Runs good. winters? Relocate with the U.S. FEMALE SUBLEASE Cedar Vil¬ and horse barn. 349-2673. 8-1-14 ■lost i found MAO or best offer. Call 487-9123 Navy Nurse Corpsl Must be lage, across campus. Winter/ spring. $88 - negotiable. 349-3652; ■personal ■peanuts personal after S p.m. 8-1-141121 B.S.N, or 3 year Diploma gradu¬ ates, up to age 34. Senior students 351-0712. 15-1-25 (12) L h<>kkJ8E ROOM AND board at Fraternity. 4450/term. Close to Triangle ■real estate MAVERICK, 1970. Six cylinder, also eligible to apply. Call (toll- TWO GIRLS needed for Twyck- ON LANSING'S west side near campus. 332-3563. 3-1-7 1121 free) 1-800-841 8000. 2-1-6 1351 ■recreation automatic. 1300 or best offer. ingham Apartments. $82.50/ bus lines, three bedroom. ■service 351-5311, 5:30-7:30 p.m. 8-1-14 MESSENGER NEEDED for month. Immediate occupancy. 351-6492. 8-1 14 (12) 4210/month. Newly redecorated. EAST LANSING, single male. Walking'distance MSU. Parking, 1121 I Instruction J typ'n9 state news Pay is 42.25 display advertising. per hour and 81 a kmiL Call 482-0688. 8-1-14(15) quiet. 337-9633. 3-1-7 112) 0c.. -.4:1 Be-ue'e ANDREA HILLS - Brand new. TWO BEDROOM fully furnished ■transportation M.G. 1972. Low miles, southern car. Good body end miles. Must be dependable, have large one and two bedrooms home. Male renters only. Refer¬ ONE - PERSON needed for ■wanted engine. Wire car and be able to work between (some furnished). Excellent neigh¬ beautiful duplex, Vh miles from wheels. 11075. Phone 351-0426 11-3 weekdays. Students only. ences. MSU close. 332-1133. | HOUND TOWN' S-5-1-11 (151 Call Dan or Ceci. 353-6400. S-2-1-6 (36) for Rent |f$] ( Apartments )(jp) borhood, five minutes to campus. From 4180, no pets. 351-6866; 8-1-14(121 campus. 394-4513. 2-1-6 1121 332-1334; 485-8299. 8-1-14 1241 ONE FEMALE for four person WOMAN, QUIET single room in "RATES** TV AND stereo rentals. 425/term. NEEDED DESPERATELY - two MUSTANG 1969. No rust. Six home. Own room, 481.25, plus private home. Kitchen, close in, no NURSES. R.N.'s, L.P.N.'s, nurse 410.95/month. Call NEJAC, 337 female roommates winter/spring 12 word minimum cylinder, automatic. Runs great, TWO BEDROOM garden apart¬ utilities. 332-2681. 3-1-7 (12) parking. 332-0647 after 5:15. 3-1-7 aides for private duty and home 1010. C-19-1-31 1121 terms. Cedar Village. 488/month. very economical. 4695 or best Heat, water included. Close to ment duplex. Close. Furnished. care. Call TEMPORARY HEALTH 351 7969 after 5 p.m. 8-1-14(12) offer. 339-3475. 3-1-7 (161 THREE BEDROOM house, close CARE SERVICES. 487-2144. MSU, Grand River, bus lines. OWN ROOM in house, close to REFRIGERATORS, BRAND new. to campus available January 15. Parking available. We're friendlyl OLDS 88, 1971. Good condition. 8^14(17) Free delivery. UNITED RENT-ALL, 351-1963. 8-1-14 (271 ONE FEMALE needed winter end Garage, full basement. 4240/ campus. Clean, warm, ample facil¬ 351-5652. 8-1-14 1121 spring to sublease apartment. ities. Cell 351-4806. 2-1-7(13) Power, air, new tires, stereo. One JUST PIZZA needs additional part month, 694-6606. 8-1-14 (14) Good location, one minute walk to owner. 4750.353-4305.8-1-14(14) time delivery personnel. Must WOMAN TO share house. Own WOMEN NEEDED for Campus campus. 486/month. Haslett man Ha cn era have own car and have good ONE GIRL needed for four person gnncunniro SUBARU 1973. Front wheel drive, driving record. Apply in person: pjpiftBHtS "V1 Hill. Nice apartment and room¬ mates. Free bun 349-2071. 3-1-7 Arms. 332-5832. 2-1-61211 house. Own room, washer/dryer, room $75 monthly plus utilities. Call 485-0351. 8 1-14 (121 QEODSirEJBXI] goes in snow, greet mileage, after noon on weekends, after 5 112) PINILAKI close to campus. Real nice. 490' month. 337-0316. 1-1-5 1191 □EnmUIETEtEl excellent shape. 41,100. Tom, on weekdays. 1139 East Grand ONE BEDROOM unfurnished. APART MINTS ONE LARGE room in Oke¬ mpniUMtrlHEIO 353-6400; 394-2895. S-5-1-11 (151 River. 5-1-11 1321 Haslett Road. Close. North Pointe FEMALE NEEDED to sublease mos. Transportation needed, Some short term MALE NEEDED winter term for Apartments. 332-6354. C-19-1-31 490/month - utilities included. COOKS WANTED. Part time. apartment. Winter and spring leases available own room in house. 465/month. VEGA GT, 1974, Automatic, low 1121 349-1353; 353-6485. 6-1-12 113) terms. Close to campus. Cheap. 351-3225. 8-1-14 112) DEADLINE mileage, AM/FM, tape, snows. Experience helpful, apply in per¬ 8-1 14 (14) Meridian Mall Area. son between 2 - 5 p.m. AMERI¬ SUBLET SPACIOUS two bed¬ . ONE FEMALE. Own room, 488. Excellent condition, 41600. Okemos 449 ■ 1193, 1-441 ■ HIT WOMAN WANTED for farm. CA'S CUP RESTAURANT. 220 room apartment. Close to campus. No summer rent. 351-8279. 3-1-8 (13) FEMALE NEEDED for two person M.A.C. 2-1-6 (161 4205/month. Small pets welcome. 485/month plus utilities. Call 651- 351-2847. 5-1-11 (191 349-1735, evenings. 8-1-14 (131 apartment. Close to MSU, park¬ PROSPECT - PRIVATE, warm, 6627 after 1 p.m. 6-1-12 (12) Jnceod is ordered it connot ing. 490/month. 332-4912. two rooms. Two men, each, PART TIME employment with MENS SINGLE room. Close to w conceited or changed un- 351-0304. 8-1-14 (141 416/week. 371-1270.1-1-5 1121 multi-manufacturer distributor. FEMALE NEEDED winter term FURNISHED THREE bedroom Union. Lease until June, no after first insertion, un¬ house 16-20 hours/week. Automobile re¬ only. Furnished apartment, great near MSU, bus and shop¬ kitchen. Call 351-5076 before it it is ordered & cancelled EAST LANSING - Quiet, lonely, VW BEETLE 1973. 60,000 miles, quired. 339-9500 or 339-3400. C- location. Call 351-9135.8-1-14 (12) ping. No pets. 351-4097.3-1-7 (12) 4-1-10 (151 I p.m. 2 class days before A Few Lease* courtyard setting. Two bedroom, noon. new clutch/new brakes. 41200. publication. 627-2845, after 5 p.m. 8-1-141131 19-1-31 (161 HASLETT, 5906 Marsh Road. Two Will Be corner apartments available, OWN ROOM with extras. Prefer nestled in tamarack and spruce GIRLS SINGLE room three blocks STENOGRAPHER - 04; Bilingual. bedrooms, carpeted, 4185/month, grad. 494/month, close, busline. her# .! M OO t 48978 - 410602. Language require¬ Available.... trees. Carports, central air and 351-6315. 3-1-7(12) to Union. No kitchen. Lease until Call 485-2948. 8-1-14 (12) June. Call 351-5076 before noon. charge for on od change ments: Must be able to converse, winter and spring terms many other fine features. Bus stops at door. Rentals from $230/ 4-1-101161 lus 18' per word per day read, and take dictation in Arabic, MALE TO sublet. Share apart¬ * HOUSES, HOUSES, HOUSES! Roommat* Sarvica month. On Abbott Road, north of -r additional words. Spanish or Vietnamese, and per¬ ment. Reasonable rent. Close to * We have two, 2-bedroom houses Naxt to Campus East Saginaw. Phone Kings Point WANTED: ONE female to rent form other secretarial duties. Only 351-1333.1-1-5 (121 on the east side. 4180/month plus BRAKE PARTS; pads, shoes, and campus. * Naw Managers North at 351-7177. 16-1-26 (461 own room in house. Seven those persons possessing these * utilities. Call Joe Miller, AIM, Inc. hydraulic kits for your foreign car Furnished minutes to campus. 475/month. at CHEQUERED FLAG FOREIGN qualifications need apply. Position WOMAN FOR winter in Cedar- 332-4240 or 393-9331. 0-3-1-7 1251 487-1763 3-1-7 (16) MALE MEDICAL student has two CAR PARTS, 2806 Eaat Kalama¬ is located in Lansing. Send state¬ ment of qualifications and social view. Close, parking, furnished, cheap. 448.75/month. 337-0282. WATERS & RIVERS bedroom, two bathroom, fur¬ FOSTER STREET North, need Ihe Stole News will be re zoo Street. One mile west of nished apartment. 4100/month. SINGLE ROOMS. 425 deposit. clean and quiet female for own ponsible only for the firs lays incorrect insertion. campus. 487-6066. C-19-1-31 (271 security number to: Stenographer D, P. O. Box 30001, Lansing, 3-1-7 (121 EDGE APARTMENTS 882 2595 4-1-10 1131 room in two bedroom furnished From 466/month. Also lease by week. Call between 12 - 6 p.m. Michigan, 48909. An Equal Oppor¬ NEED FOURTH female. Old Cedar (Next te Cedar Village) house. Washer and dryer, garage. MASON BODY SHOP 812 East HOLT: CARPETED two bedroom 351-4495. C-19-1-31 1161 Kalamazoo Street since 1940. tunity Employer. 8-1-14 (60) Village. Perking space, balcony, 1050 Water. Edge Dr. No pets, no lease. Deposit ills are due 7 doys from the with appliances. 4160/plus elec¬ Complete auto painting and cable T.V. 351-8504. 8-1-14 (121 required. 4125/month. 485-1089. STUDENT HOUSE in Aurelius id expiration date. If not SICRETARY - RECEPTIONIST. tric. 484-4188, after 5 p.m. 6-1-12 8-1-14 129) collision service. American and 1121 Road area needs roommate. Own Mid by the due date a 50' Full time. Shorthand and typing foreign cars. 485-0266. C-19- ONE WOMAN-4 person furnished room. 4240/term. Near bus lines. 'ice chorge will be required. For interview call Fred MSU NEAR. Small house, married 1-31 (201 apartment, immediately. Seconds- TWO FEMALES needed. Old FEMALE NEEDED immediately for Phone 487-1841. 8-1-14 (16) Abood. 372-6700. 8-1-14 114) campus, 491/month. 332-5292. graduate student preferred. Lease. Cedar Village. Winter/spring. $88. winter term. Four person, two Stove and refrigerator. 882-0336. 8-1-14 (12) Air conditioning, dishwasher, bal¬ MALE NEEDED. Own large room bedroom apartment, close to cam¬ 3-1-5(131 INTERCEPT SECURITY Store De¬ in nice co-ed house. Cooperative tectives. Criminal justice juniors cony. parking. 332-3306. 8-1-14 pus. 475/month. 337-0313. 5-1-11 FEMALE ROOMMATE to share living arrangement. Great food, 1151 (17) ilnotive and above. Call between 10 a.m. home. 2Yi miles from MSU. Call LANSING. EAST side. Two and dishwasher, bus, pets allowed. and 3 p.m. 485-2231.5-1-11(14) three bedroom homes for rent. evenings, 487-8440. 8-1-14 (12) ONE TO share quiet two bedroom ONE FEMALE needed to sublet 332-6300; 374-6490 evenings. Call after 6 p.m. 484-2164. 8-1-14 5-1-11 121) SELL ME YOUR CAR - apartment. Furnished, walk to Rivers Edge Apartment. Rent ne¬ BABYSITTER • 20 hours/week. FEMALE NEEDED - Old Cedar E WATSON AUTO SALES, Reliable, with references, loves campus. 4160, including utilities. gotiable. Phone 351-3576. 2-1-6 SOUTH CEDAR, Village. Furnished, four person. 332-2465. 8-1-14 115) 112) TWO ROOMS in modern five PHONE children. Hours flexible. 337-0246. 488/month. Call 332-3882. 4-1-10 SINGLE GIRL to share large two 4202. C-1-31 1141 bedroom duplex. Two baths. Rent bedroom house, 4125/month, plus NEED A good used tire? Over 400 IMJ4M2) OWN ROOM in three bedroom IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY, large 1/2 utilities. 487-8366. 8-1-14(141 negotiable. 351-2624.5-1-11 (121 01 1973 four door in stock, priced from $4. Snows BABYSITTER - EAST Lansing duplex. Utilities paid, parking. two bedroom, furnished. Dish¬ 100LS. SIX MONTH lease. One bedroom. EFFICIENCY ROOM in quiet single Wd. stereo and tape. Very from 46. All tires mounted free. near campus. Monday, Wednes¬ 485/month. 332-1093. 8-1-14 (12) washer, shag, air conditioning, FARMHOUSE. THREE rooms, 40 Furnished utilities paid. Close to « PENNELL SALES. 130114 East day, Thursday, Friday evenings. 10 lease until June. 332-3705 after 6 acres, good people. House privi¬ family house. Prefer nonsmoker. condition, 57,000 miles. cempus. 332-4798 or 351-3118. 465/month. 485-6815.8-1-14(12) Kalamazoo, Lansing. 482-5818 p.m. - midnight. Two Saturday LARGE ONE bedroom lower flat p.m. 8-1-14 1161 leges, rent negotiable. 641-6802. ^11465076, or 669-7521. 8-1-14 (26) evenings/month if desired. Own transportation. 42/hour. 351-8650. 8-1-14(14) with working Franklin fireplace. Appliances, and garage. 4185/ BEAUTIFUL ONE bedroom apart¬ 6-1-12 1121 ROOM IN large house. 3 blocks JUNK CARS wanted. We pay 3-1-7 123) NEEDED: ONE female winter month. Also cozy one bedroom ment. Half block from MSU. 4205/ from campus. Call 337-0367. 3-1-7 « FOX 1973. 40,000 miles. more if they run. Alto buy used term, spring option. 470. Capitol upper with perking. 4160/month. month. 351-8241. 8-1-14 (121 « condition. 42100. Burnt «71288 3-5 p.m. 5-1-11 cara and trucks. 489-3080 anytime. C-19-1-31 (171 GIRL WANTED. Hospital experi¬ ence desirable. 8 a.m. - noon. Villa, tt18. 337-7016. 3-1-7 (12) Willing to rent the shove as three |_ Roons / CAMPUS 1 block. Large furnished bedroom, two bathroom house; TWO GROUND level apartments Weekends and holidays free. $3/ WOODMERE APARTMENTS, downtown Lansing. 482-9226. 5 1- near MSU. Grad'married pre¬ LANSING EAST side. 466.66 studio rooms. Utilities paid, cook- three blocks MSU. Four man unit. monthly. Call Peter, 353-8695 hour. Mrs. Daw. 332-5176. 1-1-5 121371 ferred, three rooms and bath. or inq, ceramic bath 4105- 11 ,™AL 1973' F°rd 1 faspteyweiirn f#H ' 1151 Also need two men for existing four many unit. 482-5075 or TWYCKINGHAM, IMMEDIATE¬ Stove, refrigerator. No pets, chil¬ dren. Lease. 882-4990. 4-1-10 1201 484-1811. Leave message. 3-1-7 4120/month. 332-1946. 0-8-1-14 IT1''0!6 Oldsmobile Cut- GOVERNMENT JOBSEEKERS, 332-4106. 8-1-14 120) LY. Female wanted tor winter ■» vxEf" more '"'^motion DATA CODING machine operator Attentionl Here's help in locating and/or spring term. 472.50. 337- 9'5:30' "ugh Friday. 8-1-14(181Monday FEMALE WANTED for two per¬ PEOPLE REACHER to work for 2 - 3 montha at the and landing one of the thousands 1841. 8-1-14 1121 State Police Post on Harrison of federal jobs open to graduating son luxurious apartment. Close to Road. Hours 12 a.m. - 8 a.m. seniors and grad students. Federal campus. Call 332-1058. 3-1-7(121 NEEO WOMAN for close apart¬ fi'L™ .^l7old Salary 48727 ■ 49542; commen¬ Job Kit contains (11 new 160 page EAST LANSING, close in. Three ment. Immediate occupancy, Jan¬ WANT AD fldlon c.' I1 9®. 22 miles surate with experience. Contact book "Complete Guide to Civil uary rent paid. 481/month. Call »™n. Steel belted radials rooms and bath. Basement apart¬ Dorothy Hall, Personnel Office, Service Jobs" (2) Federal Joblet- 332-1707. S-5-1-11 (141 ■itang 489-5607, »£ MICHIGAN STATE POLICE, East ter, a bi-weekly listing of current ment, unfurnished. All utilities ^'445. after 7 p.m. 8-1-14 (22) Lansing, 373-2238. An Equal Op¬ federal vacancies (3) brochure paid. 4185/month. 332-5988 after 6 p.m. 3-1-7 1201 Phone portunity Employer. 8-1-14 (421 "Insider's Guide to Name- Just completeform and mail I'971- «wi..manyFour speed. Good requested Jobs" (41 Sample appli¬ NEED FEMALE winter. Colling- with pagm, nt to: new parts. after 5 p.m. 8-1-14 4660. (131 MECHANICAL ENGINEER, greed. Local position. Fee paved. do- cation and supplementary forms. For free brochure describing Fed¬ wood Apartments. 469/month. SPORT! Ten minute walk MSU. 337-2317. State Xeus Classified Dept. Phone Dave. GORDAN AS¬ eral Job Kit, write to WASHING¬ 1976 Mazda RX-3 SOCIATES, 349-4603. 8-1-14 (121 TON RESEARCH ASSOCIATES. 8-1-141121 Ji 7Student Services Bldg. 3812 Old Dominion Blvd. (Suite East Lansing. Mich. 1,8823 BABYSITTER NEEDED in our ONE OR two females or four 11), Alexandria, Virginia. Z-1-1-5 persons for Cedar Village Apart¬ ^i,^7l°r best home for one school aged child. 7:30 - 8:30 a.m. and 3:30 - 5:30 183) ment. 332-6281 or 349-4736. p.m. Monday/Friday. Own trans¬ BABYSITTER - HOUSEKEEPER. 8-1-14(14) SrG°NWsr.n- portation necessary. East Lansing January - June, Monday - Friday, FURNISHED APARTMENT, one • Exciting rotary- Address fg***eaZMOmpg. . location. Call after 6:30 p.m. 7 - 9 or 10 a.m. in East Lansing bedroom. 4155/month, utilities engine in¬ 351-8303. 3-1-7 (251 home. Own transportation. cluded. 484-2438. 3-1-7 (12) performance 337-2321 after 6 p.m. 8-1-14 (19) • Tachometer City WANTED - WAITERS, waitres¬ Electric clock BURCHAM WOODS • ",^MV3nPeedC0nver,i oHsr «7 "200 ble' ' ses, floormen. Apply in person, 2843 East Grand River. RAINBOW Gwrman APARTMENTS • Optional 5-speed transmission ^ ^7-1763. 3-1.7 I1H or Classification _ Preferred Insertion Dote - RANCH. 2-1-6 (131 Automotive, Now leoslng for Print Ad Here Inc. Winter Term. _ Owly ■l«ycl« Overhaul •HEATED POOL PARTS &URVICI •Unlimited parting 3797.°° '25M FOR VW-PORtCHI- • Furnished plus freight A prop •Hat MiM it mt WmlM OB Winter Storage •I Mm nits mazoa On your way down to •5 IMa It cops Bi|'e,e'y. disrnon,'®cl. inspected, bearings 20% discount on •trcMMit the RX 3 here; Something to sell lor '50 rotes. Tell campus n"J most over counter Winter or less?Try Econolines 1°redunh"p7inled W"h a" ad'us,men,s made' sales 9 mot. Leasing Rates 3 or 4 mos COOK-NIRRIMAN whets doing in Round Town.Up lo 20 words - S only M."0 - 12 words for 5 days. '!•■ *21R v*!«12. 6135 W. Saginaw Lansing 9-5 Weekdays Phone 371-5600 Please Specify Please Specify 'HI noon Sal. 24 Michigon Stole News, Eost lonslng, Michigot Wednesday, January 5, 1977 Rims 1 FirSiU 1151 Frogmen find NICE ROOM in homey house. One block from cempus, $66.88/ month. Greet opportunity. Cell 361-3266 after 5 p.m. 8-1-14(161 ROOM AND boerd. Men. Weekly MARANTZ 2010, Pioneer 737, Pioneer 626, Kenwood TK-88 receivers. Pioneer SA-7100, Ken¬ wood KA-2002, Pioneer SA-6500 Sansui AU 506, end 6500 amplifiers. Quadereal Synthesizers c Announcements lor It's What's Ingham County Health Depart¬ I 'ducky' solution, 'oil' ends well Need Extra Money? Happening must be received in the ment services by appointment or term rates. Adjacent to campus. and decoders, Kenwood KW- State News office, 341 Student NORFOLK, Va. (AP) - A 337-9230. Z-2-1-6 (121 only from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., 8077, six head reel-to-reel, Bic Sen/ices Bldg., by 1 p.m. at least Monday through Friday at the Navy diver who helped photo¬ Venturi formula six speakers, two class days before publication. Medical Center graph a massive oil spill off the NICE FACILITIES, great room¬ West, 701 N. Advent and Marantz speakers, No announcements will be.ac¬ Massachusetts coast last week mate. maid service. Call 394-4062. 3-1-7 (121 recorders, tape players, tapes, and albums. Sharp leather coats, soma like new, C.B.'s, assorted sporting cepted by phone. MDP majors: Join the Student Logan St., Lansing. Important: graduate students says save shaving cream oil-soaked ducks. That is, could help Sell Those Unwanted Advisory Committee for Multidis- please notel COGS office hours if money is no object. QUIET, FURNISHED room, 4 goods, car tape players, furniture, ciplinary Programs. Get invoked for winter term will be from 11:30 blocks from campus. Call after 7 tires, bicycles, T.V.'s, small ap¬ Items With A in your education. Call Kevin 3:30 p.m. and by appoint¬ Kenneth S. Hess and three Classified a.m. to pm 337-0678. 8-1-14 (121 pliances, binoculars, guitars, and Keena. ment. other divers from the Little amplifiers. If you want it, there's FURNISHED, FREE cable T.V. Creek Amphibious Base probably one here at half of what Come dance with us. Social, Coalition for Justice will discuss Free January rent. 478/month. you'd expect to pay. OICKER descended repeatedly through folk and square dancing from 7 to local justice issues at 7:30 Thurs¬ Call 361-2326. 3-1-7 (121 AND DEAL SECONDHAND two inches of oil left by a 7.6 10 p.m. every Wednesday in day, Community Services Bldg., STORE, 1701 South Cedar, million gallon spill from the Brody Multipurpose Room 0. 300 N. Washington Ave., Lansing. CLOSE TO campus. Large single 487-3886. C-3-1-8 1941 Liberian tanker Argo Mer¬ All interested are welcome. room. Friendly 6 person coed Cross Country skiers: There will chant. $83.50/month. 351-4160. 3-1-7 1121 J i|Minin| on ill itimi m illnrpliti. •SOLID COLORS developers to put in. All lots priced WARM FRIENDLY visiting gradu¬ •ONLY sues ron any and »u additional aepairs. no mint, •54" to 60" WIDE at $5500, with $157 down how axtanaiva, on «ny pisca ws silvsrplats. Includsi loldirinj broktn •ASSORTED STITCHES SEWING MACHINE CLEARANCE payment ate student seeks temporary low handlai, lags, knobs, ate. (Only axcaptiont are for furniihini now parts). •REG. 4" YD and low monthly payments. Don't cost SALE! Brand new portables — housing. January 11/January miss the opportunity to share in 31,1977. Call Bob Stein, 3557876 $49.95. $5 per month. Large this. Subdivision is located in or 353-4540.3-1-7 (211 SALE ENDS JANUARY 31 $2 99 selection of reconditioned used $1 66 Northern Michigan on Round Lake machines. Singer, Whites, in Wexford County. Call us for BRING IN SILVER TODAY! ' Necchi's, New Home and "many an appointment to YARD others." $19.95 to 39.95. Terms EDWARDS DISTRIBUTING 1-615839-7272. REDMAN LAND COMPANY, 103 Main Street, Lake see. I^OliND TOWNr YARD COMPANY, 1115 North Washing¬ City, Michigan, 49651.1-1-5 (136) ton. 489-6448. C-19-1-31 (26) LARGE SELECTION of glasses for everyone. OPTICAL DISCOUNT, 2617 East Michigan, Lansing. 372-7409. C-3-1-7 114) FOR QUALITY stereo service THE STEREO SHOPPE, 555 East Grand frames, | Recreation J[gj] LEARN TO ride at a stable with small classes for more personal attention and the best school horses in the area. English jump¬ MOVING SALE: Odds and ends. Furniture, some antiques, and rummage. 516 Regent, Lansing. Store Hours 9:30-5:30 JLQi jatlUVart? kRT CtNTtR 319 E. Grand River Ave. T 417 E. GRAND RIVER - EAST LANSING River. C-19-1-31 (12) ing, dressage. $7/hour. 663-8036. Saturday, January 8, 9 - 5 p.m. 51-14 (27) Z-2-1-7 (16) Eoet Laming, Mich. 48823 OPEN DAILY 9:30-9; SAT. 9:30-5;30: SUN 12-5 n onto Newi, Eaat longing, Michigan Wednesday, January 5, 1977 25 DOONESBURY jdat agreeable to U.N. forces by Garry Trudeau its.fp imm mm mis Middle East uci encourage peace 10MBDT i. WOULD nam. , vnRK V (API) - Preiident Anwnr Sadat of Egypt said in ^whatever guarantees" the Israelis want from the United States this week he w.s ready to accept any U.N. forces in „ ■iridic East to bring .bout peace in the Middle But and that Sadat said' g'V6 me SamC Euarantees" for arrangement, an lMlT Palestinian problem was the key to peace. In response to a question on whether agreement on other RCe V1 Minister Yitzhak Rabin of Israel laid the major problems such as the Golan Heights was necessary for a over-aII settlement in the area waa the Arab world's settlement, Sadat said the Palestinian problem was the "core and crux.' With that solved "All others if mess to recognize Israel M viable Jewlah state." will be side problems," Sadat wders dicussed the condition, for a aettlement in the said. I^Mrate interviews on the NBC "Today" new. panel talk Israel captured the Golan Heights from Syria in the 1967 Six Day War but returned part of it under an interim agreement L with the interviews broadcast by utellite from Cairo and Tel worked out by Secretary of State Henry Kissihger in May 1974. Rabin asked why for 19 years - from 1948 to •m ready to accept any U.N. forces to give security" and also had the west bank - 1967, when Jordan "didn't they (the Arab leaders) make a Palestinian stater Israel captured the West Bank in the 1967 nical dulls smell fighting. The heart of the Arab-Israeli problem, however, waa the L. The Monsanto Chemical Company is about to release a unwillingness of the "Arab countries, Arab leaders, Arab world, to recognize Israel as a viable Jewish state," Rabin said. Egypt has 1 themical product that is expected to revolutionise the fought four wars with Israel but has never signed a treaty with the larant industry. Jewish state nor has Syria which has fought Israel three times. E Village Voice reports that Monsanto is coming out with a "We have had all kinds of interim agreements," Rabin said, ill that stops the nose from smelling bad odors while explaining that his objectives at a conference was an overall mini rood orders to be perceived clearly, settlement or a "real peace" or a limited agreement. i name of the new chemical is "Veilex." Veilex does not work Cosmetically covering up unpleasant smells with perfumed u as other deodorants now do. Instead, the new chemical rtedly anesthetizes the nerves in the nose which sense bad ]I while leaving the good smell nerves untouched. Feature of the Week! PASSAGES "A lively, passionate, and read¬ able meseage to the preseat gen¬ eration In middle life. Passages 1 HOPE I'M shows that there Is a pattern la IAIRONG AgOUT our lives, a pattern of adult developmental stages, which THI5, ERNIE, once recognised, can be managed." BuT THAT -Margaret Mead little one WA5N'T THERE Recycled Clothes WHEN ME LOCKED UP LAST NIGHT, Flannel Shirts 7'5 INAS IT? TUM 7*5 Wool Shirts Cord Shirts ft 7*6 \('U\(I'III CI IIH AND RIVt R I I ANSIN Wednesday Dinner: Jackets *5.00 Quiche alsaclenne, French '.Muff onion soup, mlsod groom and |*L ALI. ashMiUha vogotablo salad. Wim VMI Wipim 129 E. GRAND RIVER (DOWNSTAIRS) 19:30 - 6 Mon. ■ Sat. bed aaaa am CROSSWORD nua awn aaa PUZZLE braa srisiian i3b[-i!»][3iiaa Eaaa ■OSS 29 Mum BQDBQ auaasa English 31 Like vinegar unnnra aaa 4 Escsped 33 World 8. German aan asaBa Organization: composer abbr raaanaa esbhq 11. Old name ol 34. Deficient asaa asanas |*A<9«ntic Afternoons Tokyo 12. Ireland 36 36 Hauled Suffice aaaoanua razm il3l3 OHOS EBB 55 re music A rsdscsd prices 13. Menagerie 39 Similar to asm raaa fe^rZm daily M p.m.!! DOWN 48. Tallied cloth ' (>'» . ,k 2 Half bro her of , PROFESSOR PHUMBLE | 'Open for Inexpensive 49 50. Man's nickname Pipe-fitting , ™'a™ 1 by Bill Yates Breakfast 51 Nevertheless 3 pa™el) 52 Chopping tools ?■ Pa"s 53. 5. Scottish waterfall 16 I Repair 7i00a.rn.Men.eFri. ioo mzzm? , ■'Bamboo HUMOFTttJ! i tu PETROL) [ Chicago's Premier Mover R5V&TFF j Country Rock Oroup ofl TH£ ; Wed.'Sat. j THAH YOL> VO , Of*'THfPOAp! | Sizapdg r-r #w/%tc^ I Underground TODAY'S SMCIAL Vegetarian Combination $ at Abbott fkt E. Lansing Ml. 48823 15171531-2283 OUT THE WINDOW SPONSORED BY: Rica, ond any olo tot esHySl.TS by D. Wayrie Dunifon IL AZTICO RISTAUeAMT 203 M. A.0.341*9111 SPONSORED BY: Wo buy comics. "• buy icltnce fiction. iCurlougBookShop %ai'ma ®'. "Ivnr Record Shoppe 332-0112 1SU SHADOWS 0332E? pGordon Carleton Grab all the kicks you can baby...vou only make ©1177 PUMWM this scene oNce » Wishes Everyone a BEETLE BAILEY Pyramid Happy New Year Productions By Mort Waiker . Stay Tuned 26 Mlchlgon Stof Naw«, Eo»t Loniing, Mlchlgon Wadnatdoy, January 5,,, WHY SHOULD YOU PURCHASE YOUR BOOKS AND SUPPLIES AT SBS??? We have many good reasons: 0 16 checkout registers O ene-stop-shopplng for all school supplies, art, engineering, calculator needs. 0 friendly, helpful tales people O Largest supply of used books In E. L. 0 wide-easy shopping aisles 0 Free validated parking in lot at 0 BAC A rear or city lets (with purchase Maslercharge accepted of $2.00 or more.) O Open IUES., WED. A TNURS. to 8 p.m Just Ride the Campus Bus to Olin and Cross Grand River Ave. 421 E. GRAND RIVER 351-4210