VOIUME 7) NUMBER 11 WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 19,1977 News mT^^JNIVERSmrEAS^NSING^ICHIGAN4882^^^^^^^^^^^^/ MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY EAST LANSING. MICHIGAN 46824 1 [ganism lied cause 'U' drafts new plans deaths of to examine its goals lionnaires iNTA in previously (AP) - A bacteria-like unknown as a human Readies way for change used the Legionnaires' Disease jd 29 persons in Philadelphia last By ANNE STUART of both academic and nonacademic units will Academic Council, departments, colleges and |7 the national Center for Disease MARY ANN CH1CKSHAW take place. and administrators will carry major respon¬ I (CDC) announced Tuesday. State News Staff Writers Overall, the report stresses five guide¬ lines to be followed: existing governance and sibility for the project. The Annual Evaluation and Review,' rganism, which the CDC called a A different MSU may be in the future as administrative sources should be used; I for purposes of identification, was the result of the release of a which is an evaluation of a the academic long-awaited students, faculty and administrators should units already utilized at the unit level under | from lung tissue of one of the plan to reassess University priorities. be involved; the program should mesh with of the Legionnaires' Disease, which the provost's office, and a similar program The first draft of the report has been the regular evaluation and budgeting I51 other persons who eventually completed by President Clifton R. Wharton for nonacademic units will also be used in td. Most of the victims were procedures; initiatives for change should the assessment program. Jr.'s office and has been distributed to is of the American Legion attending begin at the appropriate levels and final student and faculty reprensentatives for responsibility lies with the trustees. (continued on page 12) |ttion at a Philadelphia hotel. discussion and suggestions. Entitled "Proposed Plan and Procedures JDC said it is not known how the • for Reassessing ontracted the disease. University Priorities in a L routine process of making sure we ■ missed a rickettsis, we found the Long-Range Context," the 150-page was presented Tuesday morning to the executive committee of the Academic report State of emergency Jm," said Dr. Joseph E. McDade, a L microbiologist who isolated the Council and to the Student Liaison Group to the MSU Board of Trustees. (kettsia is an organism between The plan to reassess MSU's mission and goals proposes no specific changes, but to ease, Gandhi says | and virus on the biologic scale, offers suggestions for ways changes could rs to be something we've never come about. Built into the plans are with human illness," McDade safeguards against rubber-stamping the By the STATE NEWS status quo. According to the first-draft and ASSOCIATED PRESS report, the examination of MSU's priorities NEW DELHI, India (AP) - Prime ■chers said the organism, which has will begin next month and be finished in Minister Indira Gandhi announced Tuesday apparently is not contagious, June 1977, that her 19-month-old state of emergency know whether a disease is con- The report is the result of a would be relaxed and that parliamentary r not by whether or not it spreads suggestion made by Wharton in his 1975 State of the elections would be held in March. She also he patients' contacts," said Dr. University Address. Last summer, when freed her chief political opponent, Morarji Shepard, chief of the leprosy and introducing his "fragile and austere" 1 branch of the CDC. Desai. budget, Wharton promised a specific In an eight-minute nationwide broadcast, kisease could have been spread by priority assessment model would be first in Hindi and then in English, Gandhi er, said Dr. David W. Fraser, a developed this year. said she had decided to call elections "to I epidemiologist. He said research The proposal's preamble sums up the reaffirm the power of the people and to reason for the plan. I that "the risk of Legionnaires "Because commitments uphold the fair name of India as a land now exceed re¬ was greater in those who smoked committed to the path of reconciliation, It may not look like year basic, sources. MSU must reassess its priorities to be able to function effectively at an peace and progress." le said, is common among respira- dvwfrto-earth, warm day. But Parliamentary elections were postponed Tuesday's temperature reached appropriate level of academic excellence. twice in the past year. as no spread" of the disease who came in contact with Balmy 12 degrees while this couple walked along the Red Cedar "Furthermore, the allocation of resources must be adjusted to provide a margin of The 59-year-old prime spell out how the minister did not emergency would be e flexibility for innovation." I of the Legionnaires' Disease, 1 said. Weather River just east of the Farm Lane bridge. And, in East Lansing Following the appropriate revisions to the current proposal which will based on relaxed, but she said existing restrictions on normal political activities would be lifted » is no danger to anyone in their during the past week, that's discussions with students and faculty the to enable all parties "to put forward their "is whatsoever," he emphasized. warml actual "review, assessment and points of view." reappraisal But Shrikumar Poddar, an East Lansing resident who became the first Indian national this summer to have his passport lucation impounded for criticizing Gandhi's rule, said [is part of a State News aeries college finances currently OK budgetary crunch of the past few cutbacks he did not think she had any real intention of revoking the emergency conditions. Poddar said he thought Gandhi had made the election announcement merely to give her government "some semblance of legiti¬ ig the effect of the budget crunch years, by maintaining class sizes and the support funds from outside of the Goldhammer says the cutbacks have taken macy" in the of the West. 'dividual colleges. allowing the College of Education some University should pull out," Goldhammer eyes the flexibility out of the college by flexibility in developing new programs said. , By SEAN HICKEY tightening administrative and faculty per¬ which are necessary in the field of While the "What good are elections if there still is State News Staff Writer sonnel. budgetary cutbacks have censorship, if political opponents can still be education. negatively affected the college, Goldham¬ follege of Education has its two feet "The $3.5 million would be the equivalent imprisoned, if emergency rule still exists?" mer said of the results have been [antedclifffinancially, t in but stands on the of 30 assistant professors that we have lost, "These outside funds have given us the positive. some he asked. "I think it's a clever ploy and she's light of any future which means we have given up all our opportunity to bring in some new blood and just granting token concessions." internal budget flexibility. We are in a tight introduce some new and vitally needed "Our administration is more effective and Poddar added that her release of top [Goldhammer, dean of the College of fiscal situation," Goldhammer said. programs in the College of Education," is a stronger organization. We are much opponents did not mean much "if the pn, said cutbacks over the past While the faculty and administrative Goldhammer said. more aware of getting the value out of the backbone of their support still are de¬ fars have taken $3.5 million out of personnel have been severely limited in the money that remains. Before, we had some tained." ge's base operating budget, which Though the outside funds have been three per cent cut past few years, Goldhammer said the' difficulty in allocating money and getting a experienced n we're in trouble. We have some beneficial, Goldhammer said they create maximum production," Goldhammer said. Gandhi used the broadcast to defend her , . college has maintained quality in its part of the University ideas to absorb additional cuts none of yet another dilemma. government's proclamation of a state of it program. — instructional programs. Right now, the College of Education is them pleasant," Goldhammer said, "We have brought some tremendously getting maximum production out of its emergency in June 1975, when civil fk we have our feet firmly planted, Increasing support from outside funds Though the College of Education has along with a decreasing student enrollment personnel, according to Goldhammer. liberties and normal political activities were on the brink and if we capable people in these new areas, but we don't hold maintained financial stability through the have softened the blows of the financial have no financial basis to support them if (continued suspended. on page 13) Officials nix inside admissions New law allows Oink, Oink. No it', not pig. It . Eckrich. See page 7? suggestion more discretion By PATRICIA LACROIX State News Staff Writer A recommendation made by the Michigan Efficiency Task Force to streamline the admissions process for state colleges and universities has met with severe opposition from university officials who said it pro¬ bably will not be enacted for this reason. by pharmacists The task force, sponsored by Gov. By JOEPIZZO William G. Milliken with the support of the Bute News Staff Writer Slate News/Dole Atkins state legislature, was formed to investigate Following is the second article in a State News series examining prea ription drugs, higher education institutions and make physician's prescribing habits and the drag industry. brands of the same basic drug. • Professional — The appropriate recommendations. Full and effective implementation of Michigan's newly amended Drug Product practicing pharmacist's professional education and training One of the general recommendations Selection Act will more fully utilize what has been up until now an underused resource span five years, and much of this-is underutilized if the pharmacist is forced to fill which resulted from this study was that the — the professional training and experience of the pharmacist — according to the prescriptions exactly as they are written, like stock orders. Being able to initiate admission process, now done on an in¬ executive director of the Michigan Pharmaceutical Association (MPA). substitutions would permit the pharmacist to utilize his professional knowledge and dividual basis for each institution, be The MPA, along with such discretion. groups as the Michigan Citizens Lobby, the United Auto centralized for all Michigan colleges and Workers, and the AFL-CIO, supported the original concept of generic substitution, • Therapeutic — It) recent years, pharmacists have shown that their knowledge of universities. which was eventually passed therapeutics, especially in the areas of new drug development, can be an invaluable weather Elliott Ballard, assistant to MSU Presi¬ Selection Act of 1975. by the legislature in the form of the Drug Product aid to the prescribing physician. Nanook of the North will be dent Clifton R. Wharton Jr., said the ThisbillwascosponsoredbyRep. Lynn Jondahl, D-East Lansing, and Rep. Joseph It was generally recommended that physicians order the drug under the trade name " "g •>>> position the board of education took had Forbes, D-Oak Park. Lanoxin, to be on the safe side. visit to Eist It may be surprising that the MPA supported the "Most doctors continued to order . 5 tomorrow due to some assumptions that were "not quite bill, since the drug industry was digoxin generically," he said. "If they had been the most powerful lobby against it. ■ correct." following the literature, they would have switched to Lanoxin. davewt.7tather,orE,kin"»- But Louis Sesti, MPA executive director, explained that the association's rationale "Pharmacists, however, about 85 per cent of the time, were dispensing Lanoxin, the idem, a nice for MSU "Admission to a university is not just for supporting the recently enacted amendment to the generic substitution law that drug of choice. w 2il No w°WeVer' w"h SHOW is * high rTnrrtnrl processing papers and dealing with num¬ enables pharmacists to initiate the substitution is three-fold; "Pharmacists, given the data, will respond accordingly." bers, such as salesmanship and recruiting," • Economic for rubbing nJ he said. "It's an opportunity for the — In addition to the patient saving on each prescription, the neighborhood pharmacist would also profit by not having to stock many different This sentiment was echoed by Patricia A. Catto, director of pharmacy services at (continued on page 12) (continued on page 13) Wednesday, January 19 2 Michigon Stote News, Eost Lonsing, Michigan EIGHT APPROVED FOR HIGH POSTS Carter nominations OK< WASHINGTON (AP) - Re¬ any significant opposition. Bell, too, is virtually assured which do not accept black or members. He said his Senate panels endorsed ap¬ pointments Carter cannot make •Thomas B. Lance Atlanta banker, waj .. I turning to rinks ifter the women controversy that undid one of of confirmation to join the letter of resignation went to the officially until noon on Thurs¬ by the Government (wj?l day. Committee Egyptians protest price increases President-elect Jimmy Carter's nominations, Senate commit¬ Carter team. The Senate Judiciary Com¬ clubs on Tuesday. The blocked nomination was When he does so, formal to tak» direct<>r *' the Office mittee scheduled more hear¬ that of Theodore C. Sorensen, Senate confirmation will follow agement and Budget *1 CAIRO (AP) — Thousands of Egyptians showered 3,000 to 4,000 demonstrators tees approved on Tuesday the ings Wednesday to be followed who withdrew on Monday swiftly, probably within hours. •The Banking Commit J with tear gas and smoke grenades in an appointments of eight top ad¬ angered by government-ordered price effort to control the surging crowds. In ministration officials. by a vote in the afternoon. rather than risk defeat or These were the endorse¬ PT°v*d the nominZi1 increases rioted in Cairo and the port city That cleared the way for Bell's confirmation hearings al¬ narrow approval to be director ments produced by Tuesday's Charles L. Schultze ,.T of Alexandria Tuesday, stoning police, Alexandria, 126 miles to the north, confirmation proceedings: of the Senate confirmation to put ready have lasted five days. of the Central Intelligence son Council of eZP setting fire to police stations and reports said the army was called out to them in office soon after Carter Bell has been challenged over Agency. •The Senate Finance Com¬ Advisers. Schultze restore order. for two years denouncing President Anwar Sadat amid is inaugurated at midday his civil rights record which he Carter said he would an¬ mittee approved W. Michael as budm? chants of "Nasser, Nasser, Nasser!" The helmeted, shield-carrying police Thursday. insists cast him as a Southern moderate when there weren't nounce a new choice sometime Bluotenthal, 51, former chair¬ tor during the istrationand has since J„h^ Gamal Abdel Nasser, Sadat's late did not mount a charge against the Three Cabinet nominees have yet to be approved, but many to be found, and over his after the inauguration. Tha balance of the confirma¬ person of Bendix Corp., to be teuow 01 me Brooking, £ predecessor, was popular with the secretary of the treasury; and tion, protestors here, though police sources only one of them, Atty. Gen.- membership in two clubs in tion process went smoothly, a Washington peasants and the urban poor, the group Atlanta and in Savannah Joseph Califano, 46. a Washing¬ organization. r hardest hit by the price hikes. said they had orders to use force and designate Griffin B. Bell, faces one with only ripples of dissent, as ton lawyer and Johnson admin¬ their weapons •The Finance In Cairo's main square, police if necessary. istration aide, to be secretary of Lonm backed the selectiT health, education and welfare. Laurence N. WoodWMtl Brezhnev denies arms buildup •The Banking Committee cleared Carter's choice of congressional tax specUa an assistant secretary > party chief scoffed at suggestions that Patricia Roberts Harris, 52, a treasury. That was j, MOSCOW (AP) — Soviet leader Leonid nature of I. Brezhnev said Tuesday the Soviet Union the Soviet Union was building up its lawyer and former ambassador a self-fu armed strength as "absurd and totally to Luxembourg, as secretary of prophecy, since is prepared to make a "new major advance" in better relations with the unfounded." Brezhnev was taking part in housing and urban develop¬ ment. Sen. William Proxmire, administration of President-elect Jimmy ceremonies noting Tulo's heroism during D-Wis., the committee chair¬ Carter. He said top priority would go to World War II. person, cast a token vote a- an agreement on limiting nuclear wea¬ Wagging a finger, Brezhnev said, "I gainst her on grounds of inex¬ declare that our country will never pons. perience, then praised her Senate committees embark on the road of aggression, will "brains, character and person¬ e had approved the nomi never raise the sword against other In a speech televised from Tula, 95 ality." He said she is assured a of Cyrus R. Vance u se,_ miles south of Moscow, the Communist nations." full Senate confirmation. of state, Harold Browl •The Labor and Public Wel¬ secretary of defense, ud if Bob S. Bergland of MimJ Capsized launch deathtoll rises fare Committee voted 13 to 2 to approve F. Ray Marshall, 48, a as salary of agrictO The Commerce Commr University of Texas economist, until all hope is lost. Because of the cold scheduled to meet W«h, BARCELONA, Spain (AP) — The bodies as secretary of labor. ond darkness of the water, the search to approve Rep. Brock Ai of 20 more American sailors and Marines •The Interior Committee of Washington as secret were pulled from the murky waters of was suspended at sunset, to resume J. •*?. Wednesday morning. AP Wlrephoto unanimously ratified the nom¬ transportation, and Juau. Barcelona harbor Tuesday. This raised ination of Idaho Gov. Cecil D. The launch was Berrying more than 100 Sunday night Louisville, Ky., fire trucks as well as firemen suffered frostbite as Kreps, vice president of Dl_ the known death toll to 44 in the capsizing Andrus, 46, to be secretary of University, as secretiij| servicemen back to their U.S. 6th Fleet 100 firemen fought a three-alarm blaze at a Brinly-Hardy farm equipment plant. of a U.S. Navy launch filled with the interior. commerce. ■ servicemen returning from weekend ships, the helicopter carrier Guam and leave. the amphibious transport ship Trenton, Six men were missing and U.S. Navy which were anchored in the outer harbor. It had just pulled out and was rounding a Outgoing Defense Secretary Rumsfeld: officials said Spanish and U.S. Navy divers would continue to search for them pier when the collision occurred. Train wreck bodies recovered SYDNEY, Australia (AP) — Rescue expected to find more after the huge slab dominant military power may be Russil workers recovered 36 bodies from a was removed. Shifts of rescuers, working through the night under flood lights, used WASHINGTON (AP) - De¬ Rumsfeld's message obvious¬ "such measures have clearly Coming from far behind the He said such an attack d commuter train crushed by a 200-ton ly was intended for the incom¬ not dulled the Soviet appetite not disarm the United Jf concrete bridge slab Tuesday and police jackhammers and heavy concrete bust¬ fense Secretary Donald Rums¬ United States, Rumsfeld said, feld warned on Tuesday that ing Carter Administration, for new and more capable the Russians have built 1,600 because the Russian I predicted an eventual toll of 80 or more in ing equipment to break the bridge into Russia could become "the domi¬ which is committed to defense strategic offensive systems, nor land-based intercontinental bal¬ would have to conteadf Australia's worst train wreck. 20-ton blocks, that could be lifted by nant military power in the budget economies, as well as have they assured stability." listic missiles compared with U.S. missiles i The bridge decking fell onto the for Congress and the country. beneath the sea and iill| world" unless the U nited States The Kremlin is behaving as this country's 1,064, and 800 crowded railroad cars after the com¬ As the casualty toll mounted, some 600 steadily strengthens its nuclear "Our nation simply cannot though it is determined to submarine-launched missiles, bombers. But 1 muter express jumped the tracks and relatives of those commuters who had allow Soviet capabilities to much of the U.S. L and conventional forces. increase its military power compared with the U.S. total of plowed into a bridge support. not yet shown on police casualty lists "Absolute proof eludes us continue expanding and U.S. "whether we show restraint or 666. missile force could c Rescue workers counted many bodies gathered at the wreck site for an all-night about the intentions of Soviet capabilities to retrench — as not," Rumsfeld said. With their new family of dangerous imbalance, heal in the flattened cars and said they vigil. leaders, but no doubt exists they have over the past decade At another point, Rumsfeld increasingly accurate long- He suggested the Hi without inviting an im¬ about the capabilities of the said Soviet nuclear capabilities range missiles, Rumsfeld said, and their east Europeuf — Soviet armed forces to threaten balance and, ultimately, a ma¬ "indicate a tendency toward the Russians could be in posi¬ could launch U.S. vital interests," Rumsfeld jor crisis," the outgoing Penta¬ war fighting ... rather than for tion before the mid-1980s to western Europe with SOI said in a somber 363-page final gon chief said. the more modish western destroy the bulk of the U.S. more men after little >| report two days before leaving Describing arms control suc¬ models of deterrence through land-based ICBM force. warning. office. cesses so far as modest, he said mutual vulnerability." »published by the students of Michigan Stole Un.vert ~ " "'eek edition is published m*Sepi«mb»r U Louis Edwards and the Haircutters tion rate ..120 per: Second dots pot . have combined services to better serve you! Student Services Bldg Postmaster Pleose of MSU Messenger Service, last lonting. WASHINGTON Court rules in (AP) - The Supreme wiretap case The law requires prosecutors to name Louis Eduiards Court ruled Tuesday that some evidence the persons whose conversations they Haircutters Display Advertising.... gathered from a secret wiretap which is expect to intercept and the court technically illegal can be used in criminal reaffirmed that requirement. trials. But the court ruled that the restriction But the court refused to ease legal was not so important as to require TWO LOCATIONS TO SMVI TOO! obligations which federal prosecutors exclusion of evidence gained from must meet before employing secret conversations of persons had not named. the prosecutors 2S1S I. Grand River SALE! wiretaps to gather evidence. (Groesbeck area) We haw marked down a soloctod group of« 484-8423 Auto makers to brand watchaa at wall ai gold |owolry, fin* «• equip cars with air bags 1417% I. rings and oarrlngi. Michigan Ave. WASHINGTON (AP) - Transportation higher price should be charged. (Lansing) Secretary William T. Coleman Jr. an¬ nounced Tuesday that four auto makers Coleman said General Motors has Owners: Above Bancroft Flowers Save 25% to 50% have agreed to equip more than 500,000 agreed to build 300,000 intermediate- Carole and Don Satterfield 487-6655 sized cars with air bags for the driver ond 30 MOST POPULAR cars with air bags and other passive front-seat passenger for sale in model restraints over a two-year period. years 1980 ond 1981. PIERCED EARRINGS For the vost majority of the cars, the air bag will cost consumers $100 for driver and passenger front-seat protection and Ford Motor Co. will manufacture at least 140.000 compact cars with driver- *0 (AP) - A tanker carrying who remained aboard the stricken 3.15 million gallons of light crude oil vessel, said Jim Gilman, a Coast Guard Jerusalem Tel Aviv Kibbutzim cracked across the middle and was spokesperson. sinking 204 miles southeast of Midway No June 27 - August 21 injuries were reported. Island in the Pacific, the U.S. Coast Guard said. The 600-foot tanker Irenes Challenger, INFORMATION MEETINGS owned by Tsakes Shipping and Trading The Japanese containership Pacific Co., of Piraeus, Greece, and under Courses, Living Arrangements, Travel Arrow took aboard 28 of the 31 tanker Liberian registry, had been en route to Opportunities will be discussed. crewmen and stood by during the night Japan and Venezuela with its cargo, Monday to rescue three other crewmen Gilman said. Tonight January 197 p.m. 111 Bessey Ind. passes Thursday January 20 7 p.m. 117 Bessey Equal Rights Amendment Students may enroll in SS 241, 242, 243, 300, UC 492 for a total of INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Indiana be¬ by sex. It needs ratification by three more 8-12 credits. came the 35th state Tuesday to ratify the states by March 22, 1979, to become the equal rights amendment. 27th Amendment to the Constitution. Financial aid is available to qualified students. The state Senate passed the measure For further information contact: 26-24 after rejecting a proposal to put the Legislatures in two states — Nebraska issue to a referendum two years from and Tennessee — have voted to rescind OFFICE Of OVERSEAS STUDY now. their ratification, but the legality of that The ERA would prohibit discrimination has 10S INTERNATIONAL CINTIR move not yet been determined. 353-4910 Wednesday, January 19, 1977 lissidents release gripes ibout Democratic leaders "I am more interested in the issues By JANET R.OLSEN than complaints, but we don't feel Morley in the candidacy," he said. that," he said. "The buck usually stops at State News Staff Writer However, he did (Winograd) should be held accountable for the last desk and he is ■hr Democratic Liaison Group, a small add that issues are more often heard louder those complaints," she said. at, the last desk. liD of Democratic dissidents headed by resolution on a from the lips of a candidate than from a Ferency, however, had a different idea of "Most complaints indicate that he has T) criminal justice professor Zolton piece of paper in committee the part Winograd has been part and parcel to this kind of somewhere. played with regard acr released a statement Monday to the complaints issued activity." by the liaison , complaints against state party Among the potential challengers for the group. Liz Giese, spokesperson for the Demo¬ rs and predicting that state party candidacy are Jimmy Johnstone, vice cratic Women's Caucus, could not be person Morley Winograd will face chairperson of the Democratic Educators' "As former state Caucus, and Robert Alexander, chairperson myself, I reached Tuesday for comment on the psilion for re election at the party's from Ann Arbor. a teacher can say that Winograd should be used to complaints issued. L convention next month. Lillian Stoner, spokesperson for the Irency said Tuesday that the basic Democratic Educators' Caucus, said Tues¬ Lints are that "state party leaders are day there is not widespread dissatisfaction Ling the Democratic party as a closed [oration and preventing people from Wing their ideas." ■eliaison group is composed of mem- with Winograd within the educator's cau- "We do agree with some of the group's S. Africa ripe ■ of the Democratic Women's Caucus, ■ Democratic Educator's Caucus and &s. Ferency said the group is a result of ■members' reactions to the last state ntion "when certain candidates were ied down people's throats." for revolt, says rrad was on his way to Washington, J, Tuesday for the inaugural activities ■could not be reached for comment. Ttky Brenneman, a spokesperson in the L Democratic office, said she didn't exiled protester L if Winograd was even aware of the By ED LION Jilaints released against him and other State News Staff Writer K leaders. "There comes a time when oppressed peoples say 'no' to their oppressors and they mean Trency, who chaired the state party for it — and that time has come in South Africa," said a 21-year-old woman currently living in bears in the 1960s, said the deciaion to exile because of her antigovernment activities there. te Winograd at the convention Feb. 12 Sikose Mji, a South African black who participated in the protest riots against the white ■3 was reached Sunday at a meeting of minority regime this summer, told students Monday that the situation in her country had (liaison group. The group has met "ripened for revolution" and she believed armed struggle leading to eventual liberation pal times since the November election. was inevitable. cy said he didn't see any circum- "The racist government is unbelievably repressive," she said, "and we can only conclude tes under which he would offer himself that this repression is the last kicks of a dying horse. The fascist nature of the white Study mandidacy, though he added that he Stotw Naws/Dole Atkint minority regime is an indication that the end is near." Id not shrink away from it. Zolton Mji said she had lived with her family in the black township of Soweto on the outskirts of Ferency Johannesburg. She participated in the antigovernment riots touched off last June when black students confronted the white authorities. She was Swaziland in the wake of a government crackdown on dissidents this fall. forced to flee to nearby Mji now is a proposes member of the African National Congress dedicated to bringing majority rule in South insure veto Africa and she is traveling in the United States to may promote its cause. "The first to die at the hands of the white authorities on that Soweto June 16 was a 13-year-old school boy," she said. 'The whites bloody Wednesday in expected the crowds broader pardon to disperse, but we did not. We are united under the umbrella of oppression." Mji said about 1,300 blacks died during the summer-long unrest that racked the If nuclear dump sites though the government only acknowledges the death of300. Scores more were wounded by the "racists firing into crowds," hundreds of students were forced to 8,000 protesters apprehended still remain jailed, she said. country, flee and most of the (ZNS) Two top officials in the Ford Administration's earned re-entry The report also suggests that pardons should be granted to persons Members of her family, including her brother and uncle, are clemency program for Vietnam war convicted of draft or other nonviolent among those still detained, draft resisters are out with a study she said. offenses related to the war and that recommending a much broader those still facing charges for these Jill which would insure full veto power ■uclear waste disposal Stevens said Tuesday the bill has been Mji called for the American government and other Western powers to stop supporting the white regime and aid the African National amnesty program than tho9e offenses should have their cases sites in Michi- written and is currently being drafted. He Congress. Right now, it can only turn to the "is announced Tuesday Soviet Union for arms, she said. proposed by either the Ford or the dropped. by its sponsor, said it will be "at least a few weeks" before Carter administrations. "an Stevens, R-Atlanta. it is introduced in the Americans should also try to put pressure on the 300 American legislature. companies who have The report, drafted by authors >n to veto power, the bill would more than $2 billion invested in South Africa to withdraw their assets, she said. She also Recently, both outgoing Secretary Lawrence Daskir and William of State ■ procedures for site approval by the "Even the best legal minds were not urged Americans not to buy the krugerrand, a one-ounce gold coin sold by the South Henry Kissinger and Secre¬ Strauss, with the support of a Ford tary of Tents of Health and Natural aware of the veto right granted by the African government to bolster its sagging gold sales. State-designate Cyrus Vance foundation grant, proposes that mili¬ indicated publicly that they believed es and Gov. William G. Milliken. statute," Stevens said in reference to a "Dealing economically with South Africa when it isn't necessary is just throwing support clause in the Federal Constitution (Article to apartheid," Mji said. tary offenders court-martialed for the Vietnam War was, in effect, a offenses in Vietnam or for refusing to mistake on the part of the United 1, Section 8, clause 17) that says a state Apartheid is the white government's policy of separation of the races under which the serve in Vietnam should have their nation's 18 million blacks and 4 million other minorities will be States. Some critics of the Ford and legislature must aprove a nuclear disposal separated onto about 13 per cases reviewed individually; that no site. cent of the nation's land. About 4 million whites live in South Africa. Carter proposals are suggesting that jp slated However, Stevens said, in 1942 a Michi¬ Mji said life under the whites is one of brutality and frustration. "We have poor job opportunities, we all must carry passes, we must live in segregated release should be offered to anyone convicted of serious combat-related desertion or civilian-type crimes; but if the nation's top foreign policy makers considered the war a mistake, then those who resisted fighting in it gan act gave the federal government the areas and we are denied basic rights." she said. that all other military offenders should be given total and uncondi¬ authority to build a disposal facility "Prisoners are treated brutally and the authorities write off their deaths as suicides, >r 'U' talk anywhere in the state. 'They waived c r right on specific site slipping in the showers and falling down stairwells. "But borne from this repression will come liberation." should be given general discharges. tional amnesty. tr of the U.S. House of vetos," he said. Repre- fv« Committee on International Re- The proposed bill would limit the 1942 sPcak on the Carter Administra¬ Farmhouse Fraternity goes waive and require that any establishment of AtriC* t0n'ght #t 7 ta B"1M dry a nuclear disposal site be subject to te approval by the three state departments. cy Options for the New Administra- "Then we can have more substantial legal _ Jbabwe, Namibia and Democratiza- effect," Stevens said. (South Africa," will be the topic of the THerschelle Challenor. ChaUenor has If the bill is passed, it will guarantee the By MICHAEL SAVEL erages at chapter functions and in chapter its highest levels since the radical '60s MSU chapter can be what it was years ago." ™ State News Staff Writer houses." caused a move away from Greek life. Farmhouse Fraternity, which was es¬ Mvisor to right to veto disposal sites, a right that has Rep. Charles Diggs and The Farmhouse Fraternity has gone dry. The policy then goes on to state that However, the Farmhouse Fraternity was tablished in 1905, has lost only two chapters ently returned from Southern been questioned in the past. The alcohol policy of the fraternity states, members can consume alcohol out of the left out of the comeback and has only 11 in its history. One of those was at another Milliken has received written reas¬ "Farmhouse Fraternity recognizes its re¬ house in keeping with University policy and members living in its 48-man house. The Big Ten school, the University of Wisconsin shot surance from Energy Research Develop¬ sponsibility to exert influence toward high state law. rest of the people living in the modern at Madison. shortly after ■ a recent ment Administration officials that he would standards of personal, social and moral In the last few years most fraternities "The chapter at Madison just could not facility on Bogue Street are boarders. bm u rmelforce' r»«l on a refugee have veto power, but it has been questioned conduct upon its members the fraternity ... have experienced a period of rejuvenation. Farmhouse Fraternity has 23 chapters recover from the turmoil of the '60s," I MozimSue, will also be shown. whether this would be legally binding. opposes the introduction of alcoholic bev¬ At MSU, fraternity enrollment is at one of across the United States and Canada. At Wilson said. "The guys lost sight of what one time the MSU chapter was one of the largest, but it never recovered from the The fraternity is geared toward agricul¬ ^SMSU creates Office of Athletic Affairs enrollment decline of the late '60s and early '70s. "We like to raise hell as much as the next ture majors which usually come from rural backgrounds. Farmhouse Fraternity has also been known as a leader in scholarship guy but we also realize that the individual among all other fraternities. person has rights," said Ed Messing, The campus average for fraternities is By ANNE S.CROWLEY president of the MSU chapter. "This is sort 2.55. while the average grade point at the !u student, State New. StaH Writer Harris F. Beeman, director of intramural programs, said he thought i, forming a special of a social contract." Farmhouse is 3.1. NUisonL; S00n h,ve another voic® "> University athletic policies. office to handle student input on athletic questions was a good idea. Last week was rush week for fraternities, Along with the usual social activities, the announcer ®"'ce °' Athletic Affairs, Student Board president Michael "We already have student input through our advisory board," he said. "But the more and rushers at the Farmhouse were Farmhouse has programs in etiquette student involvement there is, particularly now that the facilities are crowded, the better. rw office's director appoin'ed John Easley. a junior in biological sciences, to be That's the name of the game." surprised at the no-alcohol policy which training and dance. E it mavheb!iie?IP?,'.arily located in U®nz' <>"«*. 3s4 Student Services Bldg. In the Beeman said 76,'636 students came to the IM buildings weekdays after 4 p.m. and on goes against the typical fraternity image. "We stress programs that expand dif¬ weekends during fall term. "We did have quite a few people rush and ferent horizons," Messing said. "We try to pley vr"|| lts own sPace " a ne«d is apparent, Lenz said. "That was when we had time to count!" he added. "And we didn't take counts on two they were amazed, to say the least," have an atmosphere more like a home away ;ee. wS';861" ASMSU10 'be University Athletic Council and the IM Advisory Sundays and six Saturdays." Messing said. "But when we explained the from home." N Mid th comP°sed of several students and faculty members, John Kinney, recording secretary of the Athletic Council, said appointing someone other reasons and the benefits, most understood." The no-liquor policy is practiced by most r'tative'tfik* T.1for.med because he did not have time to be an effective student Athletic Council. than the Student Board president to sit on the council was a good idea. The fraternity has come close to closing of the other Farmhouse chapters and Easley will take the seat Lenz had held on the "It could be a real advantage," he said. "He should be a more valuable source of the down because of the lack of members and an Messing said experiments with it last year students' point of view." expansion consultant visited the chapter to were successful. I1"* rihletk! "I" be h6""51"0,f w'th a student representative on the board whose job The council, he said, serves basically as advisers on intercollegiate athletics to President give it a shot in the arm. "We found out that you can have fun ¥do and he'll »'u j ,aaW' 'Jolm can d» a good job. He knows more about athletics Clifton R. Wharton Jr. It also advises the faculty representative on academic matters like "I came to see if the group is worth without chemical substitutes," he said. "We fthe pJs( ^ a" 'be meetings and be active in committees, whereas I can't." eligibility for competition, approves athletic schedules, reviews and approves the saving and it definitely is," said Roy Wilson, sat down and looked at our goals and MtionbetLl"'1;,?,0Records were kept of appointments and there has been no intercollegiate athletic department's annual budget, approves athletic awards, determines expansion consultant for the Farmhouse decided not to be a bunch of hypocrites. 'ho*asaDDrdn.upoinled j v U and the athletic and intramural departments. He does not by the Student Board before he became president to any athletic ticket prices and policies, approves the addition of new varsity sports and serves as a International Fraternity. "There is a good base of people here and I know that the After all, drinking and high scholastics do sounding board for the athletic director. Kinney said. not go hand in hand." @[S)DiJilD®[n) State holds onto $28 million surplus funds amount of cash to bother dividing renovate the University's Mu¬ present to MSU would be those It's pathetic that the MSU smokestack at Power Plant 65 will up because it cannot support any seum. The Museum is currently needed to correct the smokestack continue contaminating the great really worthwhile projects. closed to the public because the pollution problem. After all, the out-of-doors, while state officials MSU was mentioned in the building does not meet fire safety EPA is not on MSU's back decide what to do with a $28.3 Governor's State of -the State standards. threateningto take the University Address. It seems that Gov. The most significant allotment to federal courts because our million budget surplus for 1975-76. Milliken has requested $200,000 to of funds that the state could Museum is in need of renovation. It was eight years ago that the Michigan Air Pollution Control Commission first cited Power Plant 65 for violating the state's air pollution standards. This year the U.S. Environmental Protection U.S. must alter African policy Agency (EPA) jumped into the act and charged that the plant was emitting more than six times the In his self-acknowledged search for "world grow dimmer by the day. On Monday, eight black, accepted federal level of waste. stability," outgoing Secretary of State Henry nationalists convicted of terrorism and espionage What the state is apparently Kissinger has repeatedly sacrificed considerations of were hanged. A carnage of proportions un¬ ignoring is that MSU does not have ethics, morality and justice. When he leaves office precedented in recent years is in the offing and our government is doing little, if anything at all, to z: the $12.5 million necessary to Thursday, Kissinger will bequeath to the incoming install the precipitators to reduce administration the bitter fruit of this strategy with prevent it. the pollution. The longer the state regards to South Africa and Zimbabwe, (the black The situation in South Africa appears to be even delays in appropriating the funds, nationalists'preferred term for Rhodesia), where more intractable. Kissinger apparently believes that the more money someone will wind government terrorism has blunted efforts to a black takeover would prove detrimental to trade establish racial harmony and social justice. up paying in inflated costs. relations between our two countries. Upon examina¬ According to Gerald R. Miller, It would obviously be unfair to suggest that tion, this appears to be a spurious assumption. If the director of Michigan's Department United States would merely mobilize the weight of Kissinger is the progenitor of this violence and of Management Budget, the bud¬ its moral and economic influence behind the "one disharmony, since the problems of these countries get surplus might be used to pay are rooted deep in history. The relevant point is that man, one vote" cause espoused by black nationalists, off existing debts to universities we would be likely to have better relations with them Kissinger's excessive, if not obsessive, concern with around the state. Why can't part of when they do take over. governmental stability and corporate economic the money be used to pay a great interest has compelled him to forego any attempts at History is likely to prove the bankruptcy'of United The debt here at MSU, taking care of rectifying social imbalance in South Africa, and has States policy. The massive black majorities of State News the smokestack pollution problem? given aid and encouragement to that country's racist Zimbabwe and South Africa are bound to overthrow Senate Minority Leader Robert white minority government in its dealings with an oppressive white minority rule — even if eventually Wednesday, January 19, 1977 Davis said the surplus will prob¬ increasingly restive black majority. with or without United States aid. The question is Editorials are the opinions oI the State News. Viewpoints, colon — ably be carried over to the budget basic:do we stand on the side of morality and justice, and letters ore personal opinions. for the 1976-77 fiscal year in order Kissinger's record with regard to Zimbabwe is little better. Bringing the government of Prime or are we ethically blind? Editorial Dept. to balance next year's budget. Edltor-in-chlol McryAnn CbickShow Layout Minister Ian Smith and the leaders of the black Davis further stated that the state The incoming administration must stop abetting Managing Editor BebOurflon Photoidltors Robert Koiloff louralp nationalist movement to the bargaining table at is expecting an even greater the monstrous evil of apartheid. Jimmy Carter Opinion Editor Kot Brown Copy Chief Geneva turned out to be a charade. Both sides Uty Editor Michael Tonlmuro Wire Editor surplus from the 1976-77 budget. believe Kissinger betrayed them and the Ford should, in his own words, "aggressively translate Campus Editor Carole Leigh Hutton Stall Representative The reason Davis gives as to love into simple justice," and discard Kissinger's Sports Editor Edward L Bonders Freelance Editor Administration has done little to disabuse them of Entertainment Editor Donna Bakun Book Editor why MSU or any other institution that notion. morally obtuse policy. Otherwise, South Africa and will not receive any of the money is Zimbabwe will continue to rush headlong toward a Advertising Dept. puzzling. According to Davis, The chances of effecting a peaceful transition from calamitous racial bloodbath, and the furtherance of Advertising Manager Don Gerow Asst AdvertlslngMonoger $28.3 million is not a substantial white minority to black majority rule in Zimbabwe human misery. Romantic, hero: volition and efficacy My point is obvious. Anyone m VIEWPOINT: SOVIET UNION the ability to choose a — or left with armfulls of books. Anyomil goal and accomplish it. These qualities are expressed in fiction to come and go, hence the books a I Bias and m To the Editor, by purposeful action and the exhibition of certain traits which make such action by the Library and needed by were virtually unprotected. ^ hypocrisy possible, the most important being self- esteem. Today's antihero lacks either one, or Who is to blame? Is it the Li Department of Public Safety? Bt both, of these qualities. And for those who person who tries to think n adjustment in the proposed punishment to realize it is futile to find where tkj inherent in coverage accommodate petence. possible mental incom¬ value heroes as projections of man as he should and could be, the antihero is profoundly unsatisfying. To them I recom¬ lies. Dawn Liddicoatt mend the second film in the Director's Perhaps if the personnel ol thill Candelora Versace were to act more quickly to ill ' Choice Film Series, "Captain Blood." Its By PAULA WHATLEY obscure the heroic role of the Soviet 306 Campbell Hall problem and not act so rashly is ■ people hero, a distinguished doctor who is forced Your staff has shown a very high degree in students, this type of situation * destroying Nazism and the fact that into slavery and, in retaliation, becomes a avoided. If one were to "blame" * of bias and hypocrisy in its coverage of the 20 million Soviet citizens (obviously not all No pirate, is played brilliantly by Errol Flynn. this obvious blunder, who could subject of the Soviet Union and Jews. It is Jewishl were killed in World War II. The center He fulfills both requirements for a hero: not or for that matter, end with? quite evident that the State News mainly prints articles on this topic that claim Soviets have been for Nazi persistent in their search criminals, unlike the United Flashy? I am baffled by Geoff Etnyre's article on only does he hurtle himself through war obstacles to reach his freedom but also alleged Soviet aggression against its Jewish Ervin Johnson Tuesday. His interest has States. Judy Putnam, did you wear flashy clothes exhibits the passionate integrity and self- citizens. The State News seems committed to land your job as a reporter? If you were the outward appearance of sincere admira¬ confidence necessary for his deeds. to trying to create for the image of the tion and aspiration for an individual who us Political repression and oppression < reporting about President Wharton would Many people consider such characters U.S.S.R. as the state to Nazi has unique talent. However, like most successor in many forms and faces as the Iranian you describe his wardrobe? and stories wishful escapes into fantasy: Germany while hiding right-wing Zionist students, South Africans, Chileans, Zimba¬ attacks on innocent Soviet citizens from the bweans, etc. can tell you. Blacks in the The competence of a powerful person such as Eudora Pettigrew (Thursday) does sports columnists (which I once was) he has taken a poor approach to a good cause. they are, however, really "escapes" into an experience of man's potential for greatness. Housing Code I public eye. United States have an unemployment rate not, or at least should not hinge upon her Johnson has uncanny ball-handling attri¬ butes. His passes dazzle the very fans who Specifically, in "Captain Blood," it is the of over 14 per cent and are confined to the clothes or carriage. week after week think they've seen spectacle of a man fighting and winning a I am very pleased with your int On Nov. 7, in Carnegie Hall, N.Y., Soviet nation's worst the recent controversy over the ghettoes like Harlem and violinist Vladimir Spinakov was splashed Watts. In addition, blacks have substan¬ Maybe you could get a job selling clothes, where you won't be in a position to publicize everything from their supersensation. More battle for his freedom and happiness and ment of the housing code. Your J af not the incidentals of the plot that is of with paint and trash by hooligans from the tially lower wage earnings than whites and such an inane comment. importantly, this young man has an eye and has been thorough and objective. All a touch that is beyond paramount value to viewers. Not everyone so-called Jewish Defense League. Perhaps I disproportionately fill this nation's jails Ann Gahagan comprehension. can be, or wants to be, a rebellious pirate. I wish you could be more inquisitive^ missed your coverage but I don't recall (blacks comprise 60 per cent of the Jackson East Lansing Thirty-footers are a high percentage shot But everyone wants to (or should want to) general you are to be highly eo" for his nimble 6-foot 8-inch frame. seeing an editorial or article concerning this Prison population). Oppressed people vicious attack against Spinakov. Nor do I usually come forward with documented "Magic" such as Johnson, could turn any fight such a battle. The recent changes in policy hi 1 Bruce Marr recall seeing any flaming articles or proof of their oppression which normally Potter Park floundering program into a league contender Haslett Jipson of the Department ol BT editorials on the recent murder of a Soviet has an economic as well as from any position. Etnyre talks as though Inspections and Zoning do not really political After reading the article concerning the the problems voiced by myself" ■mbassy employe in Washington. D.C., not character. But no one ever alleges that he were marketing a new product. "Who two men who pleaded guilty to attacking ' residents of East Lansing this ps*| to mention the armed attacks on the Soviet Jews in the Soviet Union face these kinds of needs him more," you ask, "MSU or M?" the animals at Potter Park Zoo (Thursday), United Nations mission. All of these crimes exploitation, mainly because it's not true we are thoroughly amazed and disgusted at Who cares if MSU needs a center? Theft the City Commission. have been confirmed by the various and could be documented Certainly not Johnson. He doesn't do the such. Jipson has yet to tell anyone a# never as the attitude of the zoo director, Doug municipal police departments that they did recruiting at MSU. They will have to find in fact occur, yet the State News has either So instead told tales of not Finley. their own center. Johnson has higher goals As a student at MSU and a daily reader of method of assigning inspectors-1 ■ we are being He implies that two 19-year-old men do one inspector to all the proper"! totally ignored or downplayed them. allowed to honor the war dead (and coming than giving a sick basketball program a shot the State News, I have followed with some from a country like Russia where not know the difference between right and concern the situation of the recurrent theft particular landlord encourages ■ ,in the arm. He is a miracle, an absolute memorials are everywhere, this is truly wrong, and that they have not had dream at guard. That's right, guard. of materials from the MSU Library. - The relationship between landlords T Yet when 13 Soviet Jews allege that they ludicrou I. and being beaten for wanting to sufficient exposure to make them realize Look at the 1976 Prep All-American Library has expressed a desire to stop this spectors. What is supposed w 1 ere beaten for no known reason by Soviet immigrate. Never are we told of the overall that breaking into a zoo and maliciously Basketball Team. "Ervin Johnson, guard." practice and has spent thousands of dollars professional, objective and n police, and their bodies don't even show status and achievements of Soviet Jews. beating helpless animals is wrong. How can Ask Bob Lanier's ailing knees or Abdul on the implementation of a new system for mosphere has resulted in 41 . bruise marks, the State News makes this Finley think that those men did not realize Jabbar's poked eyeballs what it's like to be a that purpose. Various students have ap¬ mess. The present policy does »olJ front-page news. But I'd say the State News This buying of the Soviet bogeyman that it is wrong to beat a raccoon to death parently been released for failure to stop be well thought out. Certainly. reached its height of folly on this and skin it, that it is wrong to beat deer battling big man. could be assigned on a random »»■ topic last theory only justifies and encourages the No one wants to be a center. Those guys the thieves. year when the Moscow State Symphony growth of the already obscene United with nail-pronged boards? On Jan. 9 I was returning a book to the came to MSU. The State News headlined States war budget. It gives fire to those Furthermore, the action to be taken by are there because they don't have the Library, and due to a request on a sign Another problem with Jip»"'l that the symphony was being guarded by who advocate the use of "limited nuclear the court as outlined by Ingham County ability to play the game from the outside. grandstand policy is that not ®s J Besides, after Johnson breezes through posted on the outside return deposit -box, I the KGB! We are to imagine that a war Prosecutor Peter Houk is not suitable. was forced to about the 40 or more cases tha » weapons." It also seeks to confute the college, do you really think any pro scouts attempt to enter the Library. symphony which received a standing ova¬ documented proof of Israeli atrocities Though Finley is displeased with "per will be looking for a 6-foot 8-inch center? As it was 11:15 a.m., and the sign on the on the city attorney's desk- 'jm tion was really an oppressed gang of slaves against Palestinians and Arabs by trying to secution of kids" and "wants to'see justice Hmmm. Library door stated it opened at 1 or 1:30 incredible that pot one housing being forced to perform for the glory of the make us believe Nazist anti Semiticism done," we feel his attitude along with the has ever been brought to court. Brad Graham p.m., the apparent result was that I was state! And the evidence? Oh, none really lives on in the form of the Soviet Union. proposed punishment by the court is far too unable to return the book. except the "educated guess" of some And of course the Zionists wish to detract lax regarding the severity of the criminal Williamston The problem is basically action of these Falling subject to normal human nature, I team of inspectors and the spm anti-Soviet Jewish students. attention from their military collaboration men. pulled on the door I knew should be locked, they enforce the law. with racist South Africa. All of this is We feel Finley should re-evaluate his very only to find it open. Curiosity now took The paper's repeated biased reporting of this subject go hand-in-hand with biased dangerous propaganda designed to keep the American public confused while the local feelings towards what happened, and consider it not as an act of ignorant Captain Blood over. I entered the lobby and attempted to It is now the time for tbe * reporting on the racist policies of the state red squads/CIA/FBI rev up to roll maliciousness by kids but as a criminal act Without too much open one of the inside doors, which was manager to hire new building of Israel. It is obvious that this simplification, this again unlocked. Hence, I was unimpeded in who are ready to get out ofl phony issue of outright cruelty by men who should at literary progressive movements in the United age has been justly characterized of Soviet Jews has been created in order to States and the Third World under the least know that such brutality towards as that of the antihero. He is the entering the Library and no one was in autos and roll up their sleeve J detract attent'— from Israel's racist and those or any animals is wrong. sight. Being somewhat shocked, I yelled a ticketing landlords who ins'S banner of crushing the red menace. protagonist of literature who possesses teenocidal policies against Arabs and Pales if those men really can't conceive of their few words to obtain some attention but my the housing code. Until tben', J Itinians. This whipping up ol tne Soviet qualities contradictory to those of the words fell only on the deaf ears of continue to live in substandard, Paulo Whailey is producer and director ol actions as being wrong, perhaps their traditional hero, and has been made unprotected books. I left my book on the and dangerous housing. [bogeyman out to crush all Jews seeks to "Perspectives in Block" lor WKAR TV mental stability should be questioned and possible partly by the failure to realize the floor behind the information desk. Here I dealt with appropriately: i.e. making an primary qualities of the traditional, or felt sure that it wouldn't be stolen. an cmte News, East Lansing, Michigan Wednesday, January 19, 1977 5 ales join MSU faculty women's kristin v an VORST fstste News Stsff Writer memberships. We let," Wilbur siid. ere not sex- professional staff for an Associate, nonvoting member¬ S8 fee. The FWA was formed many lor at the Counseling Center havior and administrative shorter lives than the national group The change was years ago when women in who had just retired, for her plans to higher education insti¬ ■o^rs Faculty Women s As- about because brought ships are available to graduate — faculty and administrative posi¬ outstanding contribution to stress. The seminar is co-spon¬ average. tutes in the country, have lost i,tion(FWAI has a new look organization members felt that all graduate men and women students for tions were few and far between MSU. This award was a result sored by the FWA and the Wilbur said the two statistics at five points across the coun¬ ss a result of its new •2.50, and supporting, non¬ graduate school of business. balance each other out and it is students, professionals and fac¬ — to fulfill the need of campus of the fact that no women try at the first level. Several Stion ratified last spring. ulty who share the same goals voting memberships for both women who sought to get to received a Distinguished Facul¬ The seminar will be held at the unfair that though women groups have appealed the deci¬ Eith a membership of 153, of advancement of equal men and women are available know each other. The group ty Award last spring. Kellogg Center for Continuing make the same payments into sions. however. Wilbur is confi¬ 115 are men "coming from oppor¬ at 116, sharing the goals of the then became involved primarily A Feb. 12 Education. the plan during their working dent the cases will ultimately of departments on tunity for women at MSU, career seminar is FWA has also taken the derange should be permitted to organisation. Supporting mem¬ with scholarship activities until years, they receive, upon re- go before the Supreme Court. planned, featuring Eugene Jen¬ I," according to Elvira join. bership fees will probably be its transformation last spring. nings, professor of manage¬ position that the pension plans 'irement, 20 per cent less than FWA is considering filing a r'second vice president Voting membership in FWA dropped to «8, changing an One of the first projects of ment in the graduate school of the Teachers Insurance Annui¬ their male counterparts. letter ol brief that would public¬ Is open to men and women of error written into the ty Association-College Retire new the reorganized group was to' business at MSU and a sought- Wilbur said one of the main ly state its philosophical posi¬ L, Hint men In full-time the faculty and admlnistrative- constitution. honor Dorothy Ross, a counse¬ after speaker on executive be- ment Equities Fund (TIAA- CREF) offers MSU are in¬ problems is that insurance com¬ tion on one of the suits against panies won't conceed that there TIAA-CREF. Wilbur does not equitable and discriminatory are a variety of against women. ways to set up anticipate that the FWA will The plan, according to Wil¬ actuarial tables that are more file against the insurance com¬ forld club forms local sound and equitable. pany because it would be bur, provides women smaller Itmnesty chapter periodic payments on the basis of sex-differentiated tables and the greater average longevity of women. According to stud¬ Suits against TIAA-CREF, the largest supplier of pension "repetitious and it would clut¬ ter up the courts." International, the Tridwide organization dedi- ' response," he said. The chapter held its first strategy meeting Monday at licity campaigns to improve the human rights situation Lansing chapter is part of Midwest expansion plan, he a He said Amnesty has docu¬ mented human rights abuses in ies, approximately 16 per cent of women live longer than the Bell's Pizza- , upholding human throughout the world. Re¬ said. well over 100 nations, the national average and approxi¬ the United Ministries of »ts has formed a Lansing- Higher searchers at the organization's Each chapter adopts three worst being Uganda, Iran, mately 16 per cent of men live E chapter, organization offi- Education, 1118 S. Harrison London-based Road. Interested residents can headquarters political prisoners detained for Uruguay, Chile and the Soviet E announced Tuesday. periodically issue reports on their political, religious or Union. He estimated that contact the United Ministries \bout 30 local residents from for information on how to human rights conditions in var¬ philosophical beliefs and works worldwide there are well over Ev sectors of the community Rubenstein said. join, ious countries. toward securing their release. 500.000 people imprisoned as td up as members, said Since its formation in 1961, Rubenstein said there are The three prisoners to be aided "prisoners of conscience." ua Rubenstein, an Amnes- currently 86 chapters in the by the Lansing chapter have "Our main emphasis is stop¬ I organizer. "We were Amnesty International has or United States and 1,665 world¬ not yet been decided, Ruben¬ ping torture, repression and pleased with the ganized letter-writing and pub¬ wide. The formation of the stein said. other restrictions on human 225 M.A.C. 332-5027 rights," Rubenstein said. "It's hard to 1135 Gr. River 332-0858' conceive, but much of the world lives under SOME MEASUREMENT CHANGES IN WORKS tyranny." E H H—l UU Free deliveries from 4:00 iMetric system slow in coming going to give you one We're BaSHINGTON (API Metric is coming. But don't toss out that do substantial amounts of business overseas. f yardstick just yet. - Lageofthe Metric Conversion Act of 1975 was designed to • • About two dozen states have begun using road signs in metric. The U.S. Geological Survey has started making a few maps emphatic statement E| up the replacement of inches, miles, quarts and pounds with with exclusively metric measurements. about the future Imenters. kilometers, liters and kilograms, • The California legislature has approved a plan allowing the jt utile has happened since the new law committed the sale of gasoline by the liter. of the ry to going metric voluntarily. Patent applications to the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office • .newyear has brought a few changes. In some cities, mainly L Northeast. calling the telephone weather number gets you must include metric measurements. computer industry in both Fahrenheit and Celsius. Bsecond change now in the works this year will eventually and the future la fifth ol liquor a collector's item. Seven major distilleries I announced plans to convert to a "750 milliliter" size bottle, MICHAEL D. MITCHELL WILLIAM D. MITCHELL of your career. ts will be replaced with liters, 927 E.GRAND RIVER 401 W. GRAND RIVER ond that: EAST LANSING EAST LANSING ta Cola and Pepsi Cola are following 7 UP in test marketing 332-2145 332-2S54 lie-sized bottles. he New York state legislature will require automobiles and ks registered after Sept. 1, 1980, to have kilometers on the APPLY! .or industrial firms, including the major auto manufac- k have set timetables for metric conversion, especially those "Count on me for economical protection If you have a degree in Electrical Engineering. 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Grand Rlvar (former Pizio Express location) Till 9:00 p.m. American Express Wednesday, January 19 , (f Michigon State News, Eost lonsing, Michigan Court approves By MICKIMAYNARD lawyers increase the amount of increase in law ad infj information in classified Michigan State Bar Association President William called the Supreme Court's ruling "a major gain in the public G. Reamon right direction." "This will help consumers be better informed" n* j State Newt Staff Writer advertisments in the telephone book. interest." think it will also help the legal profeasion as well'" Are you looking for a young lawyer who doesn't charge for an Besides the name, firm name, business sddress and telephone initial conference and who speaks fluent Chinese? You may soon be number now permitted, the public will be able to find out Reamon said the added information will aid the general public in The attorney said he thought most lawyer. I able to find that person in the Yellow Pages. biographical, educational and professional information about the finding the right lawyer to meet its needs. advantage of the more permisaive advertising plu "Of course the rich law firms ean afford to " hhl The Michigan Supreme Court this week approved a lawyers themselves. Information that may soon appear in phone books could include adverse plan to let the lawyer's age and date of admission to the bar, the lawyer's think most moderately successful firms will make■„ T®1'* advertise and will take their cases to the consumer" office hours and even his dr her fluency in a foreign language. heZS'l COUNCIL OKs JOINING STATE COALITION Two additional provisions are currently under study. One would However, one Lansing attorney said that he did matter was of major consequence. Hq added that if JjTN allow advertising the lawyer's field of expertise in law and the , other would state the lawyer's initial consultation fee, if he or she firm was successful, it would not need additional advertisements. informitt?1!?^ 105 charges one. Antiredlining resolution passed Disclosure of expertise information is hinging on amendment of the Code of Professional Responsibility. The bar association will take up the matter at a meeting on April 2. an area lending institution that will not finance homes over 25 Price disclosure is up to Michigan Bell, which currently carries By JANET R.OLSEN State News Staff Writer years old, a figure which he said would include two-thirds of no price information in the Yellow Pages. A resolution to join a state coalition against alleged redlining by Lansing's homes. The new ruling met with mixed reactions from area attorneys. lending institutions was passed by Lansing City Council Monday "Changes have to be made," he said. "Without mortgage credit East Lansing lawyer Phillip Dean called the plan "a step in the available, we will have in fact said that parts of our city should be night by a 7 to 1 margin. thrown away just like throwaway bottles. Councilmember and Mayor Pro Tem William Brenke cast the "The question becomes whether we are committed to investing only negative vote, saying he had not received any documentation in the older parts of the city. It's a pretty clear issue." on the issue. In other action, the council voted down Mayor Gerald Graves' RADIO FIIMFVND The resolution defined redlining as arbitrarily denying nominee for city attorney, Kenneth Williams, the former Assistant mortgages, home improvement loans and home owners' insurance based upon geographic location rather than the credit worthiness Ingham County Prosecutor, by the expected 7 to 1 vote. Undergraduate students living on campus in a residence The mayor is given the responsibility of nominating a new city halt who do not wish to use the services of the Michigan of the applicant and the condition of the dwelling." attorney to be confirmed by council, but council retains the option State Rodio Network and its stations WBRS, WMCD, WMSN The Statewide Coalition on Redlining, a group which will consist of voting no. may receive a refund of their $1.00 rodio fee by going to of legislators, government officials and citizens, will meet Jan. 25 Former state Rep. Fred Stackable has been acting as interim Room fi Student Services Bldg. between 1-5 p.m. Monday in the House chambers in Lansing to discuss the process which January 17 through Friday Januory 21. Please bring fee could lead to "the unnecessary and undesirable decay of urban city attorney. receipt and 1.0. card to obtain refund. centers and cities," their resolution stated. The resolution was sponsored by council members Richard Baker, who is co-chairperson of the coalition, and Robert Hull. Hull called the resolution "one of the most serious resolutions that has appeared before council since I've been on it." insty-prints* "Redlining flies in the face of your credit rating," he said, adding sayst that if a house is not located in an area agreeable to a lending institution, the money necessary for purchase or home improve¬ ment will not be lent. Baker gave several examples of redlining in Lansing, including yes we can ONLY 2 DAYS LEFT ■ (DELIVERY AVAILABLE) yes we can! SALE MEN'S TRADITIONAL RING i FREE! i What m insty-prints do? Things like posters, letters, ■ Buy any Medium At the regular price pj \ \/j£JA - stationery, leaflets, and resnmos. We serve all ynr printing needs with fast, ONLY $59.95* Get Identical PIZZA plity work. Stop by and see for yoursolf!! FREE Little Caesars Pto I 12031. 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GENESIS FREE GENUINE STONES HI FI BUYS ALWAYS ONE STEP AHEAD MQ1RVED RING DAY OF THE REST. place: time: 10 3 p.w- HJ FI BUYS " 11A1 C Mtunmurn 1101 f GRAND RIVER ft PH 337-1H? 4810 W SAGINAW Disc Shop 323 E.GRAND RIVER ^ its ^^tudent ook fore a.m. - LAN PH 484-4519 OF129 MF129 EL. PH. 351-5380 Houri M-F 10-9 (Across from Olin) S 9-6 Wednesday, January 19, 1977 f "Mii-fl ■*T." ^ *% r-p XM J ECKRICH told to / as ? ■ JIM DUFRESNE From scribe to pig farmer m (and bock again) JUDGING PAVILION — this is it. This is what every pig, horse, beef cow, sheep and nn dairy heifer born at the MSU farms dreams about. I mean the annual Little International mi fitting and showmanship tournament, sponsored by the MSU Block and Bridle Club, is the Miss America contest to all us farm animals here led. at MSU. As far as we're concerned, the grand winner from this event is the top specimen on campus. uncoil And I've been waiting almost half a year for this chance. I'm Eckrich, a 6'/i month-old 'if* / who has been just dying to enter this show. I was born on the Forest Road last August and am 30 inches tall and 36 inches University swine farm out on pig long. Not a bad figure, huh? Even better, I have bright red hair. Rumor in the pens was that the judges were crazy about redheads. All last week every animal in the show had been workingwith his or her trainer. That'. _ human, many belonging to the Block andBridleClubortheMSURodeoClub.whohadbeen training, grooming and preparing us for our big moment in the spotlight on Saturday. That's what I was worried about. I had been assigned to this rookie, a real city-slicker, from the State News. Don't get me wrong. Jim DuFresne really tried hard. But from the S/afp News Photos moment we were introduced I could tell he was a tenderfoot when it comes to working with animals. by Like the first time he was in the pen with the rest of the pigs. He behind my friend Blackie, who was getting a drink of water from the faucet. was standing right Anybody worth their pitchfork knows that a lot of pigs, especially Blackie, go to the bathroom while Robert Kozloff they drink water. You guessed it - DuFresne had soggy pant legs for the rest of the workout. Because of DuFresne's inexperience, I knew all the other pigs in the pen had a jump on me. Which meant I had to be extra patient with my green trainer and work a little harder than my friends. On Sunday and Monday of last week we got acquainted with each other and practiced commands. It is extremely important for the animals to get accustomed to the trainers and vice versa. The better acquainted we are, the more relaxed we will be in the show ring. But as to who pushed who around, DuFresne weighs 180 pounds while I have been tipping the scales at 247 pounds. Man, that's a lot of spare ribs to handle. DuFresne cut my hair and shaved my ears on Tuesday. First he ran me around the pen until I was tired and then when I was laying down in the corner he snuck up on me with pair of hair clippers. He trimmed the hair on my ears, stomach, around my face and snout and on my tail. He also shaved my ears with that Old Spice tangy lime shaving cream and six disposable Bic razors. This year the natural look is in at the pavilion, w ith no parts down the middle of the back. And of course the golden rule to cutting hair, according to Joe Strittmatter, manager of the MSU swine farm, is "you can always trim more off but you can't put any hair back on." Clever guy. On Wednesday all the pigs and trainers had a practice run walking through the show ring along with the other animals. Driving a pig, whjch is really just guiding him along with a ■cane, is probably harder than any other animal in the show because we're the most ihtelligent contestants. Even more so than some of the trainers. So we get bored quickly and lose interest in the workout. I was given a bath on Thursday, brushed and reclipped on Friday and woken up too early Saturday morning by DuFresne, who was shaking like a leaf. "Take it easy," I told him. 'This is the only fitting show I will ever enter and this little piggy is going to be the top pork chop of the swine farm." We didn't do bad, but we didn't win. DuFresne was pretty calm out in the show ring and kept one eye on me and the other on the judge. He was too jittery when trying to pen however, and never did get me in the small wooden corral. That could have cost u much as two places or a chance of being in the finals. Yep, I'm sorry to see that journalist go back to the State News. I was starting to like him. And I may not have won the competition, but considering what I had to work with, third-place finish in our class isn't bad. Who says sports writers don't make good pig farmers? >w/ne fine, but students shine at pavilion show By JIM DUFRESNE in one-two, respectively, for dairy heifers, and a 1965 graduate of MSU. "But for the The contestants, however, supplied the vilion. are journalism. But all were at the . Stste News Staff Writer "I really enjoy doing this kind of thing," pavilion over the weekend with an MSU Mark Chapman was grand champion and total number of students involved in it, this patience and time. And for some students it ruarmon walked up to a red-haired said Jarmon, who worked with his swine farm animal that they had spent a week George Buckham was reserve champion for is as large as most county fairs. meant working with their sheep or horse pig ►n number two and sheep and Byron Schunk and Rick Rogers "Each animal here has a personality and for as much as six hours a day, seven days slowly rubbed her each day of last week, "and I'm not even training and cleaning. f'WIy in a circular motion. The finished first and second for beef cattle. week. from the country or a farm. Each species was divided into classes and you apply yours with his to get the job pound farm animal purred at first, then "I'm from Birmingham," from within those groups two students Mark Chapman was honored twice Satur¬ done," Smith continued. "Showing an "If you're not calm or are nervous," said he went on E" er lp8s and finally melted to between clippings, "and I think I might be were picked in the preliminaries to show day night, however as the MSU Block and animal is both an art and a science and the Charles Crissman, swine superintendent of poor as Jarmon began clipping the hair their animal in the finals on Saturday night. Bridle Club, which sponsors the show, only to excel at it is through the show, "your animal will pick that up and the first person from Birmingham to ever way J" stomach. show a hog." And in the end Ed Groholski was grand presented him the Jack MacAllan Award as experience." beat you. 1 s»ine farmer in a nearby county? So it was with 150 MSU students. Some champion and Phil Knisely was reserve the top showman for all the species. It didn't cost the students a penny to "You've got to be smooth out in the show T-jnst an MSU freshman "As far as the number of species are enter the contest. MSU farms supplied the ring," he said, and then added with a smile, competing in are from the country; others are from champion for swine, Marcia Spink was first J™ annual Little International and Rusty Plummer was second for horses, concerned this is not a very large show," animals, most of the equipment and the "or at least give the judge the impression Fitting Detroit. Many are in animal husbandry; a ■ Mowman Show at said Stan Smith, who was the swine judge instructions. that you know what you're doing." the Judging Pa¬ few have majors of business and a couple Paul Alsbach and Lynne Dzuba were Wednesday, January 19 g Michigan Stote News, East lonsing, Michigan Snowmobile trail conflict solved weren't interested in the new vehicles is out of their scope forest areas are laced with over ByJONICIPRIANO running from Oscota (on the 5,000 miles of two-track trails, shore of Lake Huron) to section of it," Matthews said. and the government tries to Sute News SUM Writer Empire all of which are open to snow¬ (on the shore of Lake Michi¬ "If this whole thing had been provide space for everybody," Everyone has a right to Conner said. mobilers unless specifically winter fun, but what happens gan). was used mostly by talked about in the first place, none of this action would have With undeveloped land be¬ marked. when a group of snowmobilers snowmobilers, Allen said. A and a group of hikers and 45-mile section of the trail been taken by us." coming more precious and lim¬ "I believe the Forest Service running through the Huron However, not everyone is ited, the attempt to make has made the most minimum cross-country skiers engage in Forest was relocated, after satisfied with the outcome. everybody happy is clearly and grudging step toward giv¬ a tugof-war battle over the careful study, to accomodate Roger Conner, executive impossible, he said. ing horseback riders, hikers right to use the same Michigan "To their credit, the snow those nature lovers who did not director of the Michigan United and crosscountry skiers trail? Conservation Clubs, said the mobilers who still wanted to go The only solution is to sit down and talk about the prob¬ lem, according to Wayne Allen, want off-road vehicles stream ing through the forest. "The Forest Service declared problem of land use between snowmobilers and hikers can¬ on both sections of the shore-to- shore trail backed off this equity," Conner said. "We need substantial closings of some of these two-track trails to isolate SIRLOIN STEAK not be solved so easily. time," Conner said. "But what areas which can be totally free SUSDAT $#47 director in charge of land this new section of the trail — which consisted of one track "There has been a long¬ about the future?" from the din of off-road management planning with the U.S. Forest Service in the now — closed to vehicles," he standing controvery in Michi¬ The Huron and Manistee vehicles." TTtfm t Huron and Manistee forest said. main "Formerly, the two track trail had consisted of gan over how to regulate snow¬ mobile traffic. Two positions ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ [CHOICE -- mrr »m,^. "The conflict over the re mostly roads and even cars and have been predominant," he Lb located 45-mile section of the trucks used parts of it." said. The problem arose in One position, held by many Men's and Women's Michigan shore-to-shore trail the resulting confusion this clo environmentalists and property built during the summer has sure order created with snow¬ owners, is to prohibit off-road finally been solved and both parties seem satisfied," Allen mobilers, said Roger A. Mat¬ vehicles in most areas, with STYLED HAIRCUTTING said. The original two-track trail, thews, president of the Michi¬ gan Association of Recreational Snowmobilers. only a few exceptions, he said. Snowmobilers, however, be¬ lieve that all areas should be ONLY $5.00 ()■&! ' Krapr 100% For* Fturidi "We thought the Forest Ser open to them except in specific at Frown M0i 88 Survival food vice was planning to close the places, Conner added. ORANGE T old, two-track portion of the "When you force regulatory JGUYS& DOLLS sold in Denver trail to snowmobilers. We had been using that trail for years," bodies to put up signs prohibit¬ ing off-road vehicles in the area, iN JUICE M" DENVER (API - If you Matthew said. "Because we the signs just don't last," he HAIRSTYLES In Limit 1 With Coupon I *S AMMomI Purchase think 53 million stale crackers thought this was a very ar said. "If people really want to EXCEPT BIER WINE b CIGARETTES b OTHER aren't worth anything, you're bitrary decision, we requested snowmobile there, the signs get COUPONS WITH PURCHASE REQUIREMENTS not in the hauling and storing a stay of execution of the torn down and aren't very RK Products LIMIT ONI COUPON FEN FAMILY business. The city of Denver is closure to talk things over." effective." 3.1077 Subject To When the snowmobilers and The current mix of policies paying $20,000 to have the walk-Ins or call 332-2414 for appt. crackers, left over from the the forest rangers realized it has allowed the off-road ve¬ 210 Abbott Rd., above Cunningham, Suite 26 fallout shelters of the previous was the old trail, and not the hicles to take over the trails by entrance at Crossroad Imports decade, taken off municipal new one, that was the focus of default, due to the absence of hands. the conflict, the situation was government action. Bill Whitt's company won the solved. "The traditional view of the bid after the city advertised for "All we wanted was to be federal and state government is haul away the able to the old trail and we that banning off-road TahOr 8 someone to use to say 89 crackers, which the U.S. Office of Emergency Preparedness decided are inedible. 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Kroger will replace V( umrasiTFCMii snap FREE CATALOG with the seme brand or e comparable brand or refund your money We also guarantee that we will do everything in our power to supplies of eM advertised specials on our shelves when you shop hevj ITI 616-965-7205 If, due to conditions beyond our cgntrol, we run out of en advertiser 56 W. Michigan we wW substitute the seme item in e comparable brand (whan sucn is available) reflecting the seme savings or. if you prefer, give VoU Phone 337-0934 311 E. Grand River Sameru ^co Battle Creek, Ml 49014 CHECK" which entitles you to the seme advertised special at the »• any time within JO days cmte Newt, Eo»t Lansing, Michigan Wednesday, January 19, 1977 9 Third chance a charm for Lubanski, Siegel By MIKE LITAKER played in seven contests during Siegel. State News Sports Writer the 1974-75 campaign when Siegel, nicknamed the 'Road- Siegel, one of the fastest runner,' played for the Junior B The old line. "If at first you defenseman Kelly Cahill went skaters on the Spartan squad don't succeed try. try again," is Muskegon Arcs before coming out with a knee injury. had flunked out in three pre¬ to MSU. He did not play for a well worn. But in the case of He opened the current year vious fall trials before injuries high school team, as Bessone Spartan skaters Ed Lubanski on the third line with Darryl forced Bessone to turn to the likes to point out, but had and Don Siegel, it has become a DiPace but an injury to the swift left-winger. plenty of experience in working phrase to live by in their long sophomore transfer dissolved "I was sorry to see them go his way through the amateur struggle to make the varsity that unit and it was another (JVs) but I was glad to be with ranks. hockey squad. dozen games before Lubanski the varsity and get a chance to Getting noticed hasn't been worked his way back into the "Heck, I've played hockey play," said Siegel, who was since I was four," said Siegel, easy for the pair of juniors who line-up. called up to the varsity at the began the year with the junior "After my freshman year I end of the '74-75 campaign. holding his hand a few feet off wasn't prepared physically or the ground. varsity until financial problems forced the folding of that team. mentally for what expected was Getting his first chance to Coach Amo Bessone kept a few of me," Lubanski said. "I play in the home series against of the JVs around to practice thought about quitting but Wisconsin last fall, Siegel near¬ with the regulars; the break when I went home for Christ¬ ly blew his opportunity in the needed by Lubanski and Siegel" mas break I took up cross excitement by taking a penalty to get one more look see. country skiing and lost 10 that, should we say, brought on Both are members of Marty pounds." the wrath of Bessone. McLaughlin's popular fourth The weight loss and Ais move line penalty killing unit, a to a forward spot allowed the "I really wanted to make a position that has taken three Oak Park junior a chance to good impression and I suppose years of toil with the junior team with his brother Paul on that I should've concentrated varsity to achieve. the JV team. But when the on playing hockey," said Siegel. "Being on the fourth line we junior varsity was eliminated, "I figure as long as he (Bessone) naturally want to work up to so was Paul, who Ed claims still sees you and knows you're being a regular," Lubanski said. helps him out. "That's being aggressive you can't go what happened last "It was fun coming to prac¬ tice everyday for our wrong." Friday night. Amo put us out to rivalry ,.ji center Jim Coatre triee to protect the boll Monday night. Coutre hauled down 11 rebounds ib ' take a regular turn and we had but he's still into hockey ana¬ So far this season the 5-foot- i the Hoosiers' Jim Wisman (left) end Glen the game. a good shift and the people got lyzing me," Lubanski con¬ 10 Muskegon product has mwild in MSU's 61-60 upset over Indiana behind us." tinued. notched four assists in his Lubanski is not exactly a What ended the career of fourth line role. The line has newcomer to the varsity squad. Paul Lubanski and his JV accounted for six goals despite WILSON'S-FREE THROWS SEAL 61-60 WIN Though he did not appear in a mates at MSU may have been the best thing to happen to Don the recent absence of Lubanski, game last season, Lubanksi who has been teamed on de¬ fense with Ron Heaslip while low sweet it is! Indiana falls Red Wings tab Wilson: Doug Counter his back injury. recovers from Both Lubanski and Siegel are at home. the hero, sinking two free deficit of 48-38. walk-ons and are among the . GEOFF ETNYRE was tNen Sports Writer Apparently Heathcote throws to the tune of 15,485 Junior guard Bob Chapman lucky few who make the jump I WIRE SERVICES Heithcote may or may t gambling man, but doesn't read Jimmy "The Greek," as his Spartans pulled off their second big upset of the hostile fans with nine seconds remaining to give the Spartans a 61-58 lead. Hoosier guard Jim Wisman then drove in for finally broke Indiana's lead with a jump shot as the Spartans went on top 58-57. Wilson then hit a free throw, 'get tough' policy vowed to varsity. "1 u s kind of mad at being cut because I always felt I was likes to buck 41-1 odds, year, defeating Indiana 61-60 a John in a rematch of their many "In our remaining 36 games," By RICHARD L. SHOOK as good as some of the guys c Heathcote took his and pulling to within half a layup as the Spartans let him followed by another from the Wilson said, "I figure we've got UPI Sports Writer American Hockey League who made the team," said c basketball team into game of the fourth-place score, avoiding the chance for a Hoosier's freshman forward to win 21 or 22 to get in the Detroit (UPI) — This may be coaching confrontations. Both Siegel, recalling the past while ill at Bloomington, Hoosiers. foul and a three-point play. Mike Woodson, setting the Wilsons are among the eight playoffs. I'm not one of those I.arry Wilson's only chance to relaxing in front of his locker. Ida; night to tangle Indiana dropped to 3-2 in stage for Wilaon's heroics. coach in the National coaches Detroit has had since guys who like stick-check hock¬ Woodson finished with a game- Hockey "But those guys deserve to be lobby Knight's Indiana league play and 8-6 overall The Spartans reversed their 1970. ey. I like to play body hockey. League, so he's taking it. there and you can't take I, he had the unfor- while the Spartans raised their early season form of relinquish high 26 points. Wilson, brother to Colorado "If some of the players think Big Ten record to 2-2 and 5-8 for ing big leads in losing efforts. The Hoosiers' Ail-American Larry Wilson to De¬ nothing away from them." knowledge that only one Rockies' coach Johnny Wilson, comes they can pull the wool over my I opponent in the last 42 the year. Against the Hoosiers they ral¬ center Kent Benson found the troit from Baltimore, one of eyes," he said, "they are mis¬ accepted the job as coach of the Ed Lubanski and Don Siegel had beaten the Hoosiers Senior forward Edgar Wilson lied from a second-half 10-point Spartans 2-3 zone tougher to Detroit Red Wings Monday only three teams left in the taken. If I think we can make an deserve to be there, too. crack than Fort Knox as he was shrinking Southern Hockey improvement in the team by even though he knows General held to a mere 11 points and League, and plans to install a making a change or a trade, I'm Manager Alex Delvecchio has IM teams cut from just a field goal and free throw agreement with another "get tough" policy to get the going to make a suggestion to the play an in the crucial second half. Red Wings into the playoffs. Alex." man to coach the NHL team Chapman and Greg Kelser, next season. yJIMDUFRESNE "The new team would play Softball. the Spartans' dynamic duo, again led the team in scoring "I look at it as an oppor¬ tunity," he said. "I've got 36 ATflNTION DORM RISIDINTS mate box with 21 and 20 points re¬ « News [ Sports Writer weren't kidding, out the schedule of the squad it replaced," Vanderweele said, "It's important to know that even though less students are spectively. Wilson added 11 games to play, to prove what I can do in the NHL." STUDENTS intramural officials said » limit on the winter "and at the end of the season we would ask them if they want enrolled this year, more teams participated because of the points, including seven of 10 free throws. His debut as the Wings' interim coach comes Thursday T-SHIRTS... II leagues would pre- MSU returns to the friendly *2.00 per shirt includes a quality T-shirt, to play in the independent growing interest in intramural — ironically against brother your dorm name, froternity or sorority ne teams from playing playoffs." confines of Jenison Fieldhouse sports," said Frank Beeman, ensignia. any picture, any omount of rm and It happened, director of intramural services. for two consecutive home letters, whatever you want. "ty-five teams, despite Because of the structured "Our business is to encourage games. Thursday night the Minimum order 3 doien — ing the manager's meet- playoff system, the residence people to participate in intra¬ Spartans meet Illinois, and li turning in their hall Saturday night they tackle Mixed sixes ok. entry postseason tournaments mural activities," said Beeman. Purdue. Call Stave at jwill not play this year are closed to any teams on the "That's why we feel badly F of»lack of funds and waiting list even if they did Ihnlfit replace a dormitory squad. about limiting the number of teams in any sport." 0 & 0 T-SHIRTS "Unless a dormitory team But as Vanderweele put it, natch, however. dropped out in the first two "What else could we do?" NYION JACKETS ALSO I 355-3097 ofter5*0 (oil k Is Caps note) | »mefirst time a team for- weeks," said Vanderweele. it has to pay a fine "Then-we might try to make up to get back into LONG'S of Lansing1 its those games for the new squad said Tom Vander- which would allow them to play I assistant director of in the residence hall playoffs." ™ sports. "The second The team limit and other ny forfeit a game, We , ® 'rom the schedule." policies put into effect this winter will be used again % are replaced with "he 25 "g squads who are on list right during the spring Softball sea¬ son and all next school year for WINTER ENTEKIAINMENT now. touch football, basketball and Sunday, RHA.RHftRHARHRJ^ARJ-lARJHA January COMINO THIS WIIKIND 23 Peter folk & me night only- Gena Rowlands DAVID in BRENNER—1 "1976 Comedian A Woman of the Year" Under The & -American Guild of Influence Bananas Variety Artists with ^ there will be DIANE a LOUISE KEATON & LASSAR tickets available at Longs Itat Wise M LmtDott general admWon S5.SO MM W Dm. Mr 1MI1M M M. MM M Sm WllsN 1M ' Fri. Nils, mi tie Sit M WIIM Sit Metal letita utile t* ne te I LONG'S uunu a 6810 S. Cedar <1-96 at Cedar St. Exit) 4 $1.50 ^ for reservations Lansing H U*!!.as $1.50 and information (517)694-8123 " Students fatuity t staff welcome. ID s required. MMfS ] (J Michigon Stole News, Cost lonsing, Michigon CITES PAIN CONTROL AS ONE USE „ silver ' STRE$J MSU prof works with hypnosis Reyher warns against these experiments by amateurs. By MATTHEW GRYZAN State News Staff Writer 'The danger of hypnosis in the hands of an amateur is that he Transcendental Meditation, Zen and Yoga have all impressed might activate some forgotten emotional conflict in the subject." the West with their teachings about how to control the body. Reyher said, "and then be unable to control and resolve the conflict." But now scientists have discovered that hypnosis can also "I have been called upon by University officers to get someone control body functions that were once considered as automatic as the beating of a heart. reintegrated after being hypnotised by an amateur," Reyher said. One social scientist, Joseph Reyher, professor of psychology at Reintegration means that the subject is brought back to normal functioning. MSU, has been working with hypnosis for about 20 years. 'm Reyher said experiments that are trying to prove that ia Reyher, who learned the technique at the University of Illinois, said he feels that one concrete use for hypnosis is pain control. hypnotism heightens the ESP level in a person are "sheer "That is how I originally became interested in hypnosis. I have poppycock." ' and usually does! hypnotized women just before childbirth so that they didn't require an anesthetic," Reyher said. Reyher, who is a member of two societies of professional CAR' hypnotists, pointed out some stumbling blocks for the widespread use of pain control. "The problem with hypnotism as pain control is that it isn't as TONIGHT reliable as drugs and it may not be as stable. Not everyone can be hypnotized to the degree needed to control pain," Reyher said. "Also, a busy physician usually doesn't have the time or the training to use hypnosis as an anesthetic." . FREE JniversitY Theatre" Reyher said hypnotism can both increase and decrease the sensory thresholds and some of a person's physical functions. ^ CONCERT V A N>w Klitf of Musical experiment, the subject was told that one hand was in a Jacgues In one pail of cold water and the other was in a warm oven. Scientists were actually able to detect a change in the skin temperature of DEBBY FRIEDMAN both hands. Nfty Songstress "There has been experimental evidence that has shown that hypnosis can enhance creativity," Reyher said, "and even remove 8 PM warts." Not all of the experiments with hypnosis seem to be done by scientists, however. no ANTHONY Dan Proudfoot, junior in psychology at MSU, has experimented with deep hypnotic trances to see if people have a greater extra Arena TMitn | sensory perception while under hypnosis. 8:I5 j>m Other amateur hypnotists on campus have performed similar experiments and have used hypnosis for entertainment purposes. JarW/ 2°, 21, i 12,131 tikzimm I t.nia News, EasKonsing^chiQ bi on Wednesday, January 19, 1977 1 1 1 Aitwitiw |_ EipliyRHt Iflli FRANKLY SPEAKING ... by phil frank [ Wwits ]g Plows ||jfi % FORD GALAXY, 1985. 66,000 miles. New battery and tires, 92U0. 361-2571. 8-1-211121 MERCURY COUGAR 1973 - HAVE POSITIONS open for part time salesperson and cashier. Apply in person at MAY'S in the Lansing Mall. 10-1-19 1181 PART TIME employment for MSU ONE MAN to share apartment on Burcham. 4115/month plus util¬ ities. 351-1134. 61-19(12) APPLIANCES. AVAILABLE mediately. Lease: 4225. 394-0436. im¬ ONE BLOCK from MSU. Fur¬ nished room. Cooking facilities. Available now. 337-2304 or 337- 2400. 17-1-31 (131 EAST - TWO bedroom bungalow. SINGLE ROOMS. 425 deposit. From 466/month. Also lease by week. Call between 12 - 6 p.m. 351-4495. C-19-1-31 (15) ROOMMATE NEEDED to share XR-7. Sharp, AM/FM with tape. ♦2196. students. 15-20 hours/week. 61-24 (131 Living, dining, kitchen and rec modern furnished five bedroom Phona 349-2000. 8-1-20 Automobile required. 339-9600 room with fireplace. Call Chris house with two students. Call (121 or AUTOMOTIVE 339-3400. C-13-1-31 114) TWO BEDROOM apartment. Kolbe at 484 2164. 61-24 (17) 394-5287 or 351-4799. 61-24 (161 Close, comfortable, 4190 includes | Scooters & Cycles MUSTANG 1969. Automatic, utilities. 332-6159, 58 p.m. 61-25 EAST SIDE, large three bedroom I ports 4 Service good condition, naw brakes/ BARTENDER: EXPERIENCED and refiaBte. Call 627-4300, LOG JAM (121 home with fireplace. Nice yard. HEDRICK HOUSE has room for batttrv 63.600 miles. 4760. 366- one male and one female member. I A*io'ion 2963, between 5 - 7 p.m. 8-1-19 INN, T10 West Jefferson, Grand Also, four bedroom home, two Call 332-0844. Z 61-24 (131 yPLOVMENT (14) Ledge. 7-1-211131 TWYCKINGHAM APARTMENT baths, patio, enclosed porch. Call For sublease. Balcony, two Chris Kolbe, 484-2164. 61-24 (231 j0R I «NT MUSTANG GHIA 1974, silver. CHILD CARE, some household bedroom, dishwasher, available MEN. CLEAN quiet single room. Cooking, one block from campus. Apartments SAVOY COURT, Lansing. Three I AM/FM. 4 speed. V-6, very econ¬ duties. One infant. 8 a.m.-5 p.m., immediately. Janie, 351-8212. 2-1- Call 487-5753. 0-61-24 (121 Horn" bedroom close to Capitol Building omical. Excellent condition, new 5/days, 487-8868. 61-24 (12) 20112) I Rooms tires. 42000/best offer. 351-0190. and Cooley Law School, 4170/ EAST LANSING. Close in, unfurn¬ JR SALE 8-1-28 (18) BABYSITTER NEEDED East FEMALE NEEDED immediately for month plus utilities. 487-0161 after ished, share kitchen. Female only, |I Animols Lansing area, four days a week. 4:30 - 12 p.m. Must have own beautiful and spacious apartment. Excellent location. 472.50/manth. 5_pLm_7:!:2l'20! 480/month. 332-5988 after 6 p.m. 61-21 (14) Mobile Homes MUSTANG II. 1974. Mach I. Burnt HAGADORN: ACROSS from red with red interior. 24,000 miles. transportation. 420 weekly. Call Call 332-6676. 3-1-21 (14) ■OSTI FOUND 3568209. 8-1-21 119) campus. Nice, two bedroom. Rea¬ THREE NICE reasonably priced 4 speed. Sport wheels, radials. Jersonai - MALE NEEDED to sublease apart¬ sonable. Call EQUITY VEST. 484 rooms for rent in house close to IEANUTS PERSONAL Excellent condition. 42076. 381- 0379. 5-1-21 (21) BABYSITTER remewbek- ho one \$ jo be ment on Burcham. Furnished and 9472. 6161-31 112) campus. 332-8001. 61-20 (13) NEEDED. EAt ESTATE home, Monday through Friday, my caught \hnuournibib ooat utilities paid. 4100. 351-4777. 2-1- COUNTRY HOME. 17 miles IeCREATION iervice MUSTANG II 1974. 4 cylinder, 7:30 - 5 p.m. 3463018. 61-25 (121 450 a week. hawser in mom umtil 20113) Northeast, near Laingsburg. Five ONE PERSON for plex, own room. beautiful du¬ 2.5 miles from 4-speed, new tires. Excellent con¬ AFTER RUOU... ONE FEMALE for Water's Edge bedrooms, out buildings, 30 acres. campus. 475 plus utilities. 394- I Instruction dition. 41860.349-3335.8-1-28113) CHILD CARE. Monday - Friday. Apartments. One block to cam¬ 4200 up. 351-7497. 08-1-21 (161 4513. 81-25 1161 I Typing 612 a.m. Own transportation, C College Medio Services Bo* 9411 Berkeley,Co 94709 pus. Immediate occupancy. 351- MAN WANTED for nice, furnish¬ Kransportation NOVA 1975. Two door hatchback. 3424. 61-28 112) Air conditioning, AM/FM stereo, near campus, references. 351- ed house. Good atmosphere, walk CLOSE TO campus. Room in iANTED low mileage. 361-1789. 5-1-21 112) 6527 evenings. X 61-27 (121 COZY ONE bedroom upper with to campus. 490 includes all utili¬ co-ed house. Cell Ann or Craig, 3UND TOWN' OLDSMOBiLE 981972T fuiTyToed- BABYSITTER NEEDED in my | Apartieits |[y[ 1 *parfwts \m parking. 4160/month. Six blocks to LCC, one block off Saginaw, 10 ties. 351-7064. 3-1-20(161 351-4389 after 4:30 p.m. 4-1-21 home for pre school girt. Wednes¬ ed, excellent condition. 42000. Call minutes to MSU. 482-9226. 3-1-21 FEMALE NEEDED to share small "RATES" day and Friday. Transportation NEEDED - ONE female for four IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY. Fe¬ OWN ROOM in co-ed house. One 348-1421 8-12 p.m. 6-1-21 (12) male to sublet Burcham Wood house. Winter/spring. Must love I ijwordrranim provided. 351-6929. 3-1-21 (141 person - Cedar Village. Through block from campus. Call 351-1258; spring term. 351-9382. 61-19 112) Apartment. Very comfortable. dogs. 5 miles from MSU. 351 -8807 after 4:30 p.m. 3-1-20 (18) 351-9477. 81-27 (121 OMEGA 1975 Hatchback. Deluxe PEACE CORPS 351-2366. 61-24 (12) VISTA Re¬ interior, rally wheels, power steer¬ cruiters are - looking for people with WANTED TWO females to share Collingwood Apartments PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE FURNISHED ROOM for girl. CAMPUS, MALL dose. One bed-' 2 bedroom furnished ing. Six cylinder standard trans¬ backgrounds in agriculture, skilled apartment. 466/month. Call 882- room, carpeted. 4150. Before 4 South. Quiet for student. 465/ Close, carpeted, utilities paid. Very mission. Excellent condition. 868 trades, business, health fields and 8285; 3461006. 61-20 (121 one available till June nice. Nonsmoker. 332-1946. 62-1- 1 » p.m. 3362346; after, 6563843. month plus deposit. 489-5574, 3020. 8-1-26 (16) teaching. Talk with a recruiter at 19 (121 after 5 p.m. 0-2-1-19 113) aaBMjB OPEL STATION wsgon 1971. The Placement Center. 1-1-19 (27) CAMPUS TWO blocks. Free heat, one bedroom, unfurnished, shag 61-27 (17) 351-8282 irnnmmtm Economical, in great shape. Call FEMALE-FOUR woman River¬ 556 LEXINGTON. Two rooms GIRLS SINGLE room 3 blocks PROGRAM EVALUATOR: Bach¬ carpet, dishwasher. Central air. No lEiinirnnri 332-2617 or 3568313. X4-1-24 (191 elor degree in the social sciences pets. Lease to September. 4186. side Apartments. Winter, spring. SUBLEASE TWO bedroom apart¬ open in five bedroom house 485/ from Union. No kitchen, quiet, inangcEGO 129 Highland, 3328033. 61-25 Furnished, balconies, close. 475/ ment, White Hall Manor. Large, month. Call 351-3775 or 3567733. nice. Phone 351 -5076 before noon, with at least 10 semester hours month. 337-9334. 8-2-1-19 (13) X-61-24 (161 after 5 p.m. Z-4-1-19 (17) iehbdeeeei PEUGOT, 197V A-1, no rust, sun credit in research and/or evalua¬ (22! with pool, clubhouse. Quiet. Steve roof, excellent condition. 4-door. tion required. Primary function will -332-6114.4-1-19 041 41360. 394-1168; 393-8238. Keep TWO GIRLS needed for Twyck- MALE NEEDED to sublease 3-man THREE BEDROOM house. '300 OWN ROOM in co-ed house. be to assess through development Sunset Lane, 418/week. Parking, DEADLINE apartment. Close, rent negotiable. North Fairview Street. Furnished trying. 8-1-19 (16) of measurement devices, evalua¬ ingham Apartments. 482.50/ Steve. 351-2876. 4-1-21 (12) kitchen. 351-5847. 2 8-1-19 (121 tion design, data collection and month. Immediate occupancy. Hoists completely, refinished $300 per PINTO WAGON. Red 1973, car¬ 3518492. 61-21 (12) month, plus utilities. Phone 486 analysis techniques the effective¬ FEMALE NEEDED winter/spring 1353 after 6 p.m. 81-19 1191 peting, automatic, radio, new tires ness of country gram programs. terms. January rent free. Rent OWN ROOM in fine four person ice ad is ordered it cannot EAST LANSING, modern ranch and battery, A-1.41100, 394-1168, Some experience required. Posi¬ EXCELLENT LOCATIONI Three house. 475/month. Behind Coral ■concelled changed negotiable. Close, 351-9255. home. Ideal for four or five SHARE HOUSE, Lansing -East or un- 3938238, keep trying. 8-1-19 (15) tion located in Maeon. 410,000. females needed, sublet spring. 61-19 1121 Gables. Available immediately. students. Finished basement with Lansing bus. 6 blocks LCC. 483/ |oiler first insertion, un- 6765222. INGHAM COUNTY Beautiful view, balcony, reason¬ 351-0313. S-61-19 (15) i is ordered & concelled PONTIAC CATALINA, four door, able. 332-1973. 61-21 (12) bar or fireplace. Call after 5 p.m. month. 484-8504. 61-26 (121 PERSONNEL, 121 East Maple, EAST LANSING. One bedroom 351-6226. 3-1-21 (211 I) p.m. 2 doss days before 1971. Mileage 78,000. Air, power Mason. unfurnished, 4166. On busline. steering, enow tins, rustproofed. This position is funded through EAST LANSING. Close in, three Phone 3328036 after 4 p.m. 61-21 ad Only two owners. 41,000 or best otter. 332-1968, Mr. Pinto. X6T-20 the PLOYMENT COMPREHENSIVE AND TRAINING EM¬ rooms, bath. Basement apart¬ ment, unfurnished. All utilities 112) AVAILABLE NOW, one bedroom in 3 bedroom duplex. Close. 351-7779 after 6 p.m. 8-1-28 (121 Rooms ][7| I FlfS>lt 1151 an change (19) ACT ICETA). In order to qualify, paid. 4185/month. 332-5988 after 6 ANDREA HILLS - Brand new, TREMENDOUS ELECTRIC guitar >r word per day applicants THE must contact p.m. 61-21 (181 large one and two bedrooms TWO PERSONS to share room in WOMAN TO share large attic selection including hard to find itionol words. PONTIAC LEMANS 1974. V8 MICHIGAN EMPLOYMENT SE¬ (some furnished). Excellent neigh¬ house. Flexible. MSU very close. bedroom across from campus. guitars. Travis Bean. B.C. Rich, automatic, power steering and CURITY. COMMISSION 13216 LARGE TWO bedroom furninshed borhood, five minutes to campus. 475/person. 332-3320. 3-1-21 115) $87.50, all utilities included. No Hagstrom suede, Dan Armstrong, jfi Personal ads must brain* Low mileage, excellent South Pifinsylvenia, Lanslngl, for From 4180, no pets. 351-6866; 332- lease. 332-2826 after 5 p.m. 61-19 Gibson, Les Paul Jr., SG's, 1958, , apartment. Ntfj-qmoking female. condition. 351-2898. 1-1-191141 certification before applying in the Own room. 490 plus electricity. 1334, 4868299. 61-21 124) PARK LAKE. Small 2 bedroom. ES-175. ES-335 Custom, Firebird, county. 4-1-20 (1201 Across from Snyder-Phillips. 332- 495. Plus some handy person work L6-S, S-1, Les Paul 56 special and RANCHERO 1973 - Like new, 5100.3-1-19(17) FEMALE NEEDED for Cedar SHARE HOUSE with three stu¬ deluxe. Fender stratocasters, Tele- per month. 351-0997. Z-3-1-21 (14) AM/FM. .new tires/brakes. No RESURRIECTION ~ DAY" "CARE Village Apartment. Balcony, ca¬ dents. $67/month plus utilities. casters, Esquires and Fender bass rust 81800. 6661663. 61-21 112) CENTER needs bus driver. Good DESPERATELY NEEDED. Female. ble TV, parking. 332-6281, 349- Convenient to campus. Rick, 351- ROOM IN house. Available Feb¬ guitars. Also, Gibson Ripper and experience helpful. Apply in Cedar Village, winter/spring. 488. 4736. 61-21 (12) 1865. 61-21 116) Les Paul Recording Bass. Huge ruary 1st. No lease, 470, share THUNDERBIRD 1974. Good con¬ person. 1527 East Michigan Close to campus. 351-9576.61-21 utilities. 337-7191. 61-26 1121 selection of new and used ampli¬ jrtdue 7 doys from the Avenue. 4862343. 8-1-21 1181 WATER'S EDGE. Need three dition, many extras. Silver-blue ROOM IN 2 bedroom. $97.50 fiers and speakers for guitar, bass, ■ expiration date. If not females to sublet winter-spring. metallic. 44400. Call John 351- OWN ROOMS in duplex. 1620 includes water & heat. Nice. keyboard and P A. We carry such |l by the due date a SO* 6692. 3-1-21 113) PART TIME handyman. Carpen¬ FEMALE NEEDED desperately to Close to campus. 351-9263. 3-1-19 Greencrest. No lease required. 394-3398; 353-2971. 3-1-21 112) quality names as Fender, Ampeg, try/plumbing/minor electric repair. share apartment one block to 351-7068 anytime. 8-1-26 1121 Acoustic, Marshall, Pe8vy, Tray- VEGA 1972, green, two door. Experience, car. tools, necessary. campus. 487 plus electric. 332- NEED ONE to share two man nor, Sound City, Heil, Pro, Gibson Good condition, 4600/best offer. 332-1800. 0-3-1-19 (13> PLAN AHEAD - Choice apart¬ house. Furnished. Own room. and Sunn. We also stock new and 8239. 61-21 (141 LOVELY THREE bedroom farm 3562748, Motta. 61-20 (12) ment, available spring term. Inter¬ house for rent, 15 miles north of Utilities cheap! $90/month. Close used drums, keyboards, acoustic DESIGN ENGINEER. B.S.M.E. or ested? Call 332-3804. X-4-1-20 (121 After 8 p.m., 351 -6982. AVAILABLE FEBRUARY 1, Clem¬ campus. Modem utilities. Take to campus. guitars, banjos, mandolins, violins VEGA 1972. Must tell, good B.S.E.E. Local. Fee paid. Phone ens Street. Roomy one bedroom, care of horses to reduce rent. 162-1 (101 and band instruments, plus a large GORDON ASSOCIATES. 346 furnished. Walk to campus or bus NEEDED. FEMALE to share nice line of accessories. Repair service condition, good looks. 4600. Call Experienced couple needed. 4240/ 4603. 61-27 1121 it. 4166 monthly including utilities. furnished apartment. Campus month, deposit required. Call 349- available. Excellent low prices on 372-8990, anytime. 61-211121 FARMHOUSE/40 acres. Needs References, deposit. Phone 351- close. 332-0539 or 351-7074. 61- 1574. 61-27 1301 two people. Close to campus. $82 all merchandise. BUY - SELL - ■ SELL ME V0UR CAR VEGA 1972, 4896; Vega 1974 FULL OR part time car washer. 8457 or 482-0717. 61-25 (251 20(12) 349-5590 evenings. 61-26 (12) TRADE. WILCOX MUSIC, 609 ■WATSON AUTO SALES, automatic, 41196; VW 1968 stan¬ Good driving record. Prefer 21 or LAKEFRONT HOUSE. Three bed¬ East Michigan, Lansing. 485-5157. >0UTH CEDAR. PHONE older. Mechanical ability. 489 ONE BEDROOM furnished apart¬ rooms furnished, 10 minutes cam¬ C-3-1-21 1127) dard, 4395; Pinto 1971 automatic, EAST LANSING Quiet, lonely, ONE ROOM in nice five bedroom, ft C-181-31114) 1*84. 61-251161 ment. Near Sparrow, busline. - pus. 4250 plus utilities. 3362524. 4986; Ford 1972 Torino Wagon, courtyard setting. Two bedroom, two bath duplex. Rent negotiable. 4120. Mel: 482-9733 or 3563496. 8-1-20 (121 CONN FOLK guitar and case. automatic, 6 cylinder, 64,000 miles 351-2624. 3-1-21 (121 81974,32000 miles. Good CLEANING WOMAN, bi-monthly corner apartments available, Schwinn men's 6speed bike. Call 4896; 1972 Ford LTD wagon, 4895; 61-26 bn, radial tiras, radio. to clean dorm room. 42.50/hour. (12^ nestled in tamarack and spruce FEMALE ROOMMATE needed. 3562776. 3-1-21 (121 Vega 1972, 4696; See Bob Emer- trees. Carports, central air and FIREPLACE - SPACIOUS, quiet, 14833256; 882-5394. 61-20 eon, Terry Walters, Noah Hagler, Call Mick or Jon, 3563720. 1-1-19 ONE BEDROOM unfurnished. Haslett Road. Close. NORTH many other fine features. Bus Own room. Two miles from cam¬ co-ed farmhouse. Free parking, WOMEN'S VASQUE hiking or Jerry Holt-The student trans¬ 115) pus. 487-1763, after 5 p.m. 8-1-20 POINTE APARTMENTS. 332-6364 stops at door. Rentals from 4230/ near campus. $85/month, small boots, size 7 V4, like new; $60 new, ORY OLDS Economy Lot portation specialists at MAX CUR¬ C-161-31 month. On Abbott Road, north of deposit. Workers and students will sacrifice for $30. 332-0448. 'ifa in inexpensive trans- TIS FORD, 361-1830-across from AVON-t have openings in East J121 East Saginaw. Phone Kings Point NEED ONE female. welcome. 351-5518 after 4 p.m. S-61-25 (15) Sears. 661-27151) Lansing and MSU, choose your Lansing, near i. Cars from 4100 to THREE BEDROOM furnished. North at 351-7177.16-1-26 (46) 5010 Park Lake Road. 8-1-28 (241 own hours, 482-6893. C-17-1-31 bus line. 455/month, share ex- 1 Orw block west of Brody Newly decorated, carpeted. Prefer volkswagon" T9747 "am'fm graduate students. Utilities STUDIO APARTMENT. Clean, penses. 371-4572. 8-1 20 (12) SKIS, POLES, bindings, boots- ^9*n Avenue three _ or call 361- radio, excellent condition, low PREFERABLY WOMAN wanted. size 8, used only dozen times. $100 wfor Economy Lot. 61-21 furninshed, 4225/month. North quiet, shag carpeting, modern OWN ROOM in house, January mileege. 41800, must sell. 351- PART TIME phoning for sales $70 plus utilities. Close to campus, complete. Call 482-8081 after 5 orientBted male. Easy hours, fine Pennsylvania in Lansing. 486 furnishings. 4120/month. Mike rent free. 1023 Holmes Street. p.m. 3-1-21 1161 0190.61-28 (12) 332-5566. 61-28 (121 326 MAC. 351-6256. 3-1-21 (12) 1924. 61-19119) 4860229, 332-8419. 81-21 1121 J 100-LS 1973. AM/FM pay. 351-3957. 4-1-21 112) P. 87,000 miles, naw trans- VOLVO 1970. Four door, auto- Includes three little words.. 1" and matic. 41000/best offer. 353-7757, PART TIME grocery. valves. 41950. Call Place Your ■03*3-1-21 (14) 372-2580 evenings. 61-24 (12) delivery, must have car. Call 882-5659 or apply—76 MARKET, 5724 South Logan. 3-1-20 (171 VALENTINE (AND MORE!) Paatsaribwl/iand deep dish wheels. 1478 after 6 p.m. 61-28 ~ BRAKE PARTS; pads, shoes, and hydraulic kits for your foreign car WE ARE now accepting applica¬ tions for maintenance positions. Hours 6 a.m.-10 a.m. Monday through Saturday. Apply in person PEANUTS PERSONAL AD 80 1870, 8 cylinder, four at CHEQUERED FLAG FOREIGN CAR PARTS, 2605 East Kalama¬ at Personnel Office, Today... Just complete form and mail JACOBSON's wndrtioned, 41200 or "* 393-0697. 8-1-26 (13) zoo Street. One mile west of 333 East Grand River with payment to the STA TE NEWS. campus. 487-5065. C-161-31 (27) East Lansing. ® 1971. 61-24 135) Red, sharp, no MASON BODY SHOP 812 East J automatic, power. Runs Kalamazoo Street since 1940. TEACHERS AT all levels. FOR¬ JW or bast offer. Might EIGN AND DOMESTIC TEACH¬ ■89-3475.3-1-20 (181 Complete auto painting and cofliaion service. American and ERS, Box 1063, Vancouver, Wash- 98660. Z-3-1-20 (13) 112:AM/FM. new ft hakaa, exhaust, battery, foreign 1-31 (201 care. 4860255. C-16 inaton, K00*. I* 0' 351-8654. brown, 42000. X10-1-20 AMERICAN, GERMAN AND r f« »«t im . Zip Code FOREIGN CAR REPAIR, also Student TV AND stereo rentals. 425/term. body. 20% DISCOUNT to students 2*T 7971, Kingswood r"9**»gon. power ai, and faculty on all cash 'n carry VW 410.95/month. Call NEJAC, 1010. C-161-311121 337- _ Number _ There's an easier, better way to say "I love you" 81*486 service parts. IMPORT AUTO to your sweetheart! And you'll be telling the PARTS. 500 East Kalamazoo and whole community about your love of the same GARAGE, RIVER Street, two Cedar. 4862047; 4869229. Master blocks from campus. 420/month. time. On Monday, February 14th — Valentine's PICKUP- 1972~ Charge and Bank Americard. C- Phone 4861731; 332-1492. 3-1-20 4 KM-3H37I Day — you can tell that special person in your Good condi- 351-0969. 8-1-24 1121 (12) life just exactly how you feel. Put your love mes¬ WE BUY junk care and tracks. Top LARGE HALL for weddings end sage in print on the Classified pages. It's ever dollar. 4864847. NORTHSIOE parties. 475/nighf. 425 depart so easy here's all you have to do! dwirh971 Sta,km wagon. AUTO PARTS. X161-27 (12) returned after cleaning. 339-9551. ... 61-21 (141 Come to JUNK CARS wanted. Ws pay 347 Student Services by more H they ran. Also buy used cars and tracks. 4863080 anytime. [ frlffHtS ilVl DEADLINE: WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 9th, 5 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 9th, 5 p.m. 12 words for M.50 C-161-31117) »«• FEMALE - OWN room in two Additional words bedroom apartment. Call 372-4334 Mail to: State News Classified Depf. GOOD USED TIRES. 13-14-15 after 6 p.m. 8-1-261121 12 Words For $1.50 347 Student Services Bldg. 12' each. inch. Priced from 44. Mooted NEED ONE woman for Water's Each Additional Word 12C East Lansing Mi 48823 PrePoyment Required free. PENNELL SALES, 1301)4 East Kalamazoo, Lansing, 482 Edge Apartment. Winter/spnng. 6818. C-161-31 (17) Very close. 332-1973.61-21 (12) Wedneaday, January 19 1977 ] 2 Michigan Stole News, East Lonting, Michigan "fir Silt [[51 ' L ror Sa'8 K MSU drafts new plan to examine its goals to ready way for SPEAKER BARGAIN. Pair of HONDA 1973 350. 4600 miles. FOR QUALITY stereo service THE are cited in the report as "on as a OHM F apeakera. Excellent condi¬ Electric start, excellent condition. STEREO SHOPPE, 566 Eest Grand (continued b • 1) tee to be set up. Two alterna¬ officers. Und-gr,nd ' The committee would necessary to consider in long- tion. MOO. 332-4363, eveninga. Repossesaion, now taking bids. River. C-19-1-311121 The Office of Inatitutiona! tives are given. priority planning. Some » 1* responsibility in 5-1-21 (121 393-7710. 5-1-25 (14) Research will also prepare a document of trends (5-, 15- and First, a special committee with four subcommittees could receive, analyze mend and recom¬ "suggestions which are range of the key assumptions are: t««l instruction'S|T extension missions- UP TO 1/3 and more aevinga, BABYSITTING IN my home. 20-year periods) relating to be formed. The report does not not easily introduced through •Priorities for J Monday, Wednesday, Friday af¬ eContinuing financial stress, comparieon welcomed. OPTICAL "enrollment, admissions, stu¬ say what the composition will regular structures and proce¬ tional programs ^Gibsons" partially based upon the belief such OISCOUNT, 2817 Eaat Michigan, ternoons, and all evenings. 351- dures" and then send them to dent body age, employment be. tutry and law must be uLj 1253. 5-1-241121 that it will be several years Laneing. 372-7409. C-5-1-211151 regular structures for action. prospects, program level mix and curricular trends." The subcommittees would before MSU receives legislative against those of grams; exi^l ^Ili deal with course duplication, This committee would be SNOW TIRES for Valiant, 13", INCOME TAX preparation by TAX Even funding on a par with the ■OOKSAU CORPORATION OF AMERICA though most of the services and facilities duplica¬ responsible for issuing an over¬ University of Michigan and •Strong undergrade, J mounted and balanced, 420 each, assessment program can be tion, changes in programs and 372-1122. E-6-1-24 (12) Load* of Papar counselor in your home. Week¬ done through already nonacademic sectors. all report to the president. The Wayne State University; grams in areas culture, includin.!! and hardback* ends, evenings, 337-2747 after 5 established channels, the report The second choice would be to report is to be "an integration of engineering and business will -"*1 APARTMENT SIZE waBher and p.m. 0-10-1-31 (17) suggests this method will "tend set up an "administrative plan¬ the more important and ef¬ eStable undergraduate and C0^"H dryer. Montgomery Wards Signa¬ ture, 2 years old. Excellent condi¬ Text and to justify and defend the status ning committee" composed of fective proposals recommended graduate enrollments and a emphasized and gng *i tion. 892-8819 after 5 p.m. 5-1-24 Reference quo." It suggests that it is the president, the provost and by the committee and not a continued commitment to life¬ grams will i* en|™»l report on the long-range plan." selected (161 We buy booLs anytime necessary for a special commit¬ other selected administration long education; and areas of natufTf behavioral sciences. J 120 W. Grand River A series of basic assumptions .MSU will continue to func- and NORDICA SKI boots, 8)4 me¬ WRITING CONSULTANT 7 years professional fieldt dium. Used two seasons, good lbl.W. of Union experience in professional editing, condition. 353-1060 evenings. 5-1- writing sfcill instruction. 337-1591. New law allows di v MthruFrl. /" 24 (12) HEATHKIT AR-1500 stereo re¬ \ 10-5:30 f 0-3-1-19(121 FOR SHINIER HAIR add a tea¬ beaumont (continued from page 1) ceiver, 60 watts per. Tested better than specifications. 1534. X-7-1-21 (13) 4299. 337- MARANTZ amplifier. Dual turn¬ table. Marantz Imperial 5 speakers, 4250. 339-9360 after 7 p.m. 8-1-19 spoon of vinegar tore bottle of liquid shampoo. Shampoo and rinse as usual. For quick results the MSU Clinical Center Pharmacy. "The pharmacist, physician and nurse are a team, and their only advertising... 100 USED VACUUM cleaners. 1131 when you have something to sell, concern as far as the Clinical Center is concerned, is the patient and his welfare. ... is looking for a few good people from the disciplines! place a low-cost ad in Classified. Tanks, cannisters and uprights. Guaranteed one full year, 47.88 CUSSICAL GUITAR lessons by Jondahl, cosponsor of the original legislation as well as the of Commercial Arts, Advertising and Design to operate g| and up. DENNIS DISTRIBUTING Mian IfH graduate music student at reason¬ amendment, recommended that consumers discuss their drug purchases with both their physicians and their pharmacists in order student-run advertising agency in a professional, high | COMPANY, 316 North Cedar, opposite City Market. C-12-1-31 able rates. 355-5853 evenings. 8-1-21 (121 to utilize the law to their best economic advantage. quality manner; with an emphasis on gaining experience! I24I BUCK LABRADOR puppies, eight weeks old, pure bred, beauti¬ "Start with the physician and request that prescriptions be written genetically, or that prescription orders not be initialed in commercial advertising as a business venture. Interest-! PIONEER TX9100 tuner. Excellent ful, make good pets and hunters, LIGHTED CANDLES ADD A FES¬ TIVE TOUCH to any party. They 'DAW' (dispense as written — forcing the pharmacist to dispense ed people should contact Steve at 337-9885; or attend | condition. Make offer. 353-1892. 3-1-21 (121 435 each. 372-0505. 8-1-20 (171 FREE KITTENS, take your pickll 1 also prevent the room from be¬ coming smoke-filled. Table and the name brand)," he said. Jondahl also recommended that consumers ask their pharmacists Beaumont's first meeting of the term; Thursday, 20 at 8:30 pm in Room 334 of the Union Building. Come! January! floor lamps sell quickly when what options are available when having prescriptions filled. Highboys, grey feisty female, 1 docile male RECTILLINEAR III 4250; Pilot 254 receiver, 4225; tiger and 1 uncoordinated male advertised for sale with a low-cost ad in Classified. help build a viable organization, gain additions to your] tiger with white face and pink Philips 212, 4125.351-3226. 6-1-26 (121 nose. Call 393-5627 after 2:30 p.m. portfolio and take part in the career of your choice now. S-4-1-21 1281 20 GALLON aquarium with stand and all accessories, 446. Call 332-6129. E-5-1-25 112) PUPPIES - 8 weeks. Mother, Old English Sheepdog, AKC. Father, unknown. 374-8906. 3-1-21 (12) ANN BROWN PRINTING AND thurs.,jan.2O,8:30 334union TYPING. Dissertation, resumes, Announcements for It's What's Opportunity available to work as COMIC BOOKS, science fiction, general printing. Serving MSU for Happening must be received in the an attendant for a handicapper and much more! Visit CURIOUS TWO FEMALE Lab-cross puppies. 27 years with complete theses student on campus. See John State News Office, 341 Student USED BOOK SHOP, 307 East 3 months old. Call 337-9483 5 -8 service. 3494)660. C-19-1-31 (191 Bankson at Programs for Handi- Services Bldg., by 1 p.m. at least Grand River. 332-0112 (open p.m. B-1-19 112) two class days before publication. cappers. 11:30-6 p.m.). C-19-1-31 1201 No announcements will be ac¬ cepted. Den leaders needed for Cub SIMMONS CRIB and mattress. IMilt Huts Scout troop. Must love to work Like new, 440. Playpen, 415. High Israeli Dancing at 7 tonight, 218 with kids. Contact Don Christy, chair. 676-4646. E-5-1-19 (121 PROMPT EXPERIENCED typing. Women's IM Bldg. Instructor is 339-3566. HOMETTE 12x802 bedroom. Fur¬ Thesis, dissertations, term papers. Norman Schiffman. DYNACO A-25 speakers, Phillips nished, reinstated, dishwasher, IBM Selectric. Phone 694-1541. 8-1-28 (121 Christian Fellowship and Bible 212 turntable, Alvarez accoustic fireplace, air. shed. 44900. 371- Attention Rodeo Club mem¬ 3037. 8-1-28 (12) Study, Man's Self-Governing na¬ guitar, mint. Mark 393-6063. bers: Meeting at 8 p.m. Thursday ture. At 7:30 tonight, University 3-1-19 1121 PROFESSIONAL TYPIST. IBM in the Judging Pavilion. Board Reformed Church across from tt. Look what you'vo boon mitsing at 12x80 LIBERTY, 1969. 3 bed¬ Selectric. Call 339-9076 evenings. meeting at 7 p.m. ASSORTED AVON bottle col¬ rooms, includes storage shed, Associated with Ann Brown Hubbard Hall. THE GRAPEVINE: lection, new craftsman toolbox, washer, dryer, stove, refrigerator. Printing. X8-1-26 (12) Students interested in the sum¬ 44600.393-1478 after 6 p.m. 8-1-28 MSU Pre-Law Asaociation pre¬ peraonal push button telephone, mer humanities program in Lon¬ sents the University of Toledo Law two leather saddles, Traynor 100 (16) don should attend at meeting at 7 watt 8 channel P.A. system, Kodak Ectasound 130 movie cam¬ PARK ESTATE. 1968 12" X 6077' UNIGRAPHICS OFFERS COM¬ PLETE DISSERTATION and res¬ tonight, C-1 Wilson Hall. School at 7 tonight, 118 Eppley Center. Exquisite Lunches era, Akai 4400 reel-to-reel tape recorder, Ludwig 6 place drum set, X 12' expando. Three bedrooms, air, fire detector. 45800, negoti¬ ume service. IBM typing, editing, multilith offset printing, typeset¬ Wotf for National meeting at 7:30 tonight, 331 Student Services The Psychology Club will meet Moderately Priced at 7 tonight, 207 Olds Hall. Dr. Fender jazz bass and a Gibson able. 351-8782, evenings. 8-1-19 ting, and binding. We encourage Bldg. Help save the wolf! Spon¬ Blueridge guitar, precision pro¬ (15) comparative shopping. For esti¬ sored by MSU Fund for Animals. Seagull will be the guest speaker. mate stop in at 2843 East Grand ficiency compound 70 pound bow, east"LANsTNG7Must sell. 10' X River or phone 332-8414. Attention all retailing majors. Monte CrUto — Moog synthesizer, CB radios, 440 Beaumont Advertising! Due to 50" two bedroom, furnished. 41,- Come to our meeting on "Field -490, 8-track and cassette tapes. 300/best offer. 332-3317. 8-1-20 C-19-1-31 (321 schedule conflicts, Tuesday's Training - A Unique Journey in Turkey, ham, and Swiss DICKER AND DEAL SECONDS cheese dipped in a light egg (201 meeting has been changed to 8:30 Retailing," at 7 tonight, 300 Hu¬ HAND STORE, 1701 South IRENE ORR. Theses, term papers, p.m. Thursday in 334 Union. man Ecology Bldg. batter and fried to a golden Cedar, 487-3886. C-5-1-21 (71) general typing. Formerly with Ann 1966 MARLETTE - unfurnished, Brown. Call 374-8645. After 6 p.m. lot. Also others for rent. Interested in a Social Science Shiela Bienenfeld is the week's brown, and served with SEWING MACHINE CLEARANCE on 482-7487. C-19-1-31 (161 ' SALEI Brand new portables - 4140/month and up plus deposit, Program in Israel this Summer? speaker at the Brown Bag lunch steak cut fries. utilities extra. One mile to MSU, FAST AND eccurate typing. Rea¬ Attend an information meeting a' sponsored by the Woman's Re¬ 449.96. 45 per month. Large aelection of reconditioned used on bus route. 332-2437.8-1-26 (251 sonable rates. Near Coral Gables. 7 tonight, 111 Bessey Hall. source Center. At noon today, 6 42.25 machines. Singer, Whites, Call Marilyn, 337-2293. 0-15-1-31 Student Services Bldg. Necchi's, New Home and "many MARLETTE 1968: sharpl Three (121 Looking for current, accurate others." 419.95 to 39.95. Terms bedrooms, central air, enclosed career information? Come to the A Cross-Cultural Orientation EDWARDS DISTRIBUTING entry porch. Many extrasl Owners Career Resources Center, 207 and Planning session will com¬ SOUTHWELL TYPING SERVICE. COMPANY, 1115 North Washing¬ anxious. 47300. Call Jo Redmond, Student Services Bldg. Open from mence at 7 tonight, dining Room ton, 489-6448. C-19-1-31 (261 372-5216 or ROGER PAVLIK Typing and mailing. Services done in my home. 485-0185. 6-1-24 (121 8 a.m. to noon and from 1 to 5 B, Owen Graduate Center. THE GRAPEVINE REALTY, 349-9650. 8-1-21 (24I C.B. NEW Royce 23 channel with ELEVEN YEARS experience typ¬ Third Culture Brown Bag ILun¬ 2758 East Grand River 10 X 55 CHAMPION, two bed¬ Do your own TVI Get first-hand cheon at noon today, ly, Dil Dining antennas. Originally 4269. Now rooms, partially furnished, clean, ing theses, manuscripts, term Room B, Graduate Center. Betty 337-1701 4210. 337-1565; 393-6398. 8-1-19 papers. Evenings, 625-3719. experience in television produc¬ (131 shed, skirting. 42200. Call 487- 0-11-1-31 (12) tion using simple equipment. Griffis speaks on "Third Culture 6826. 8-1-21 (12) FREEI We train you! Call 351-0214 Perspectives, Ideas, Dreams." PORTABLE TV in excellent condi¬ PAULA'S TYPING SERVICE. Call for details. Student travel information and X* announcing tion, 428. Call 484-6783 anytime. 482-4714 for free estimate. My E-5-1-21 (121 i u$t 1 runnel specialty is dissertations. 0-1-31 Jesus lives among us. Bible study at 8 p.m. everY Wednesday. film on spring break in Jamaica sponsored by ASMSU Travel, at 7 » FORMICA DINETTE set, twin bed, Dinner and worship at 6 p.m. tonight, Landon Hall's east formal I and women's artificial fur coat medium. 349-4935, evenings. 8-1- - LOST: DOBERMAN puppy. 6 month male. Answers to Charlie. Reward. 337-1075. 8-1-28112) PURR-FECT TYPE. Accurate per¬ sonal and professional IBM typing. Sundays, 4920 S. Hagadorn Road. Recent photographs by Richard lounge. Agriculture Education Club TWO FOR ONE! 201131 One day service. 351 -5094. C-19-1- Lott and Jim Colando at Hobie's, meeting at 7 tonight, 310 Agricul¬ 31 (12) EMBRACE THE FINEST HAPPY HOUR IN TOWN LOST: FEMALE Cocker Spaniel. 109 E. Allegan St., Lansing, ture Hall. KIRBY UPRIGHT Sweeper. Fine Black with tan markings. Near through January. condition with attachments. Cost EXPERIENCED IBM TYPING. The Jerry Axelrad Fan Hannah Middle School, East Lan¬ Club will is over 4350 new. Sell for 450. Dissertation, (pica-elite). FAY Please join the Southern Africa meet at 1 p.m. sing. 351-7853. 8-1-27 (151 Saturday, 359 N. 489-2529. E-5-1-24 116) ANN, 489-0358. C-19-1-31 (12) Liberation Committee (SALC). We Hubbard Hall. New members wel¬ FOUND: (NEAR Chemistry Build¬ meet every Wednesday at the come! STAINED GLASS SUPPLIES Peace Center, 1108 S. Harrison Inventory sale. Excellent prices. Open 9 a.m.-5:30 p.m., 349-5027. ing), calculator, Tuesday, 1/11/77. Call 351-9373 and identify. 4-1-21 | TranpirtHiM |[fl] Road, 1 Women In Communications, Inc., presents guest speaker Jo¬ OMNIBUS 4245 Okemos Road. 1121 COMMUTERS ALONG U.S.27, COME SQUARE DANCEI From anna Firestone of the Lansing UPI 8-1-27116) LOST: GLASSES in burgandy anywhere in between Mt. Pleasant 7 to 10 p.m. every Wednesday, office, 6:30 p.m. tomorrow, 341 case, large frames. Initials J.F. on and MSU. Must be on campus Brody Hall Multipurpose Room D. Union. TWO TWIN beds. Includes: head¬ silver arms. Between library and Monday, Wednesday, Friday 9 - MSU Promenaders board, frame, box-springs, mat¬ tress. Call evenings, 351-8258. museum. 410 reward. 351-3896. 1:30 p.m. 772-3470 after 6 p.m. Free Pediatric Clinic! Immuniza¬ MSU meets at Amateur Radio Club 8 p.m. Thursday in 339 Your favorite Beer, Wine, or 8-1-27 (191 3-1-21 (22) 3-1-20112) tions, well-baby checks, birth to 12 years, every Wednesday by ap¬ Engineering Bldg. All hams, CBers and SWLers are invited. Cocktail at two for the price HOFNER TWELVE string guitar IF YOU HAVE SLIDING DOORS pointment only. Call DEC, 396 for sale. Excellent condition. Call 351-4096. 4100, Peyton. 5-1-24 F«"»hI If/1 ON YOUR MEDICINE CABINET, slide one door open before show¬ Park Lane across from East Lan¬ Student employes: Problems at of one. sing Police Department,,, work? Contact ASMSU Labor (122 ering. It will not steam over. If you MSU Soaring Club is giving free SKIIS, KASTLE 206cm, 420. Sears, 205cm with Cubco bind¬ ings, 430. Call 694-1415. E-5-1-24 PROFESSIONAL ASTROLOGER; eight years experience. Charts, interpretations, lessons, career have still good, but no-longer- used items around your home, exchange them for cash with a ground school during winter term, beginning at 7:30 tonight, 203 Men's IM Bldg. Relations open from noon to 5 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. Monday through Thursday and 9 a.m. to noon Monday, Wednesday and EVERY M0N.-THURS. 2-6 counseling. Call 351-8299. Z-5-1- low-cost ad in Classified. 20112) Friday in 327 Student Services The MSU Polo Club meets at 7 Bldg. The STRATTON-NELSON JOHNSON CB Messenger. Two tonight in the Livestock Pevilion. base or mobile. Comes with mobile antenna. All hook-ups. 480. 663-3843. Rial Estate Ifftl f "a"*' \\%] For more information, contact Laurie Kaplan, 102 Anthony Hall. Anyone interested in piping, drumming and dancing, join Mac- BAND I. BACK 11 JM-MUi1 OKEMOS-BRIARCLIFF Drive. SOLID WOOD table. If possible, Medical Humanities Seminar at Leon of Lewis Pipe Band. Meeting with matching chairs. Call 694- at 7 tonight in VFW Hall, St. FLORIDA INDIAN River citrus, Next to MSU on quiet street. 7:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Univer¬ Johns, Mich. arriving monthly. From tree to table within hours. Temple Oran¬ Georgian style bi-level with 4 7311. X-8-1-26 112) sity Club. ' FISH FRY AU YOU CAN EAT bedrooms, quality built home, Meet your world's best friendl ges, 47.50/case. Pink Grapefruit, large landscaped lot, fireplace in EXCELLENT ELECTRIC blues and Agri-Chemicals presented by 47/case. Order before January 24. Help a foreign student practice Pick up January 31. 485-0783 days; 485-0375 or 627-2844 even¬ paneled family room, 2 baths, attractively decorated. Newly of¬ rock cians guitarist looking for musi¬ for jamming. Call Eve. 351-5912. 5-1-21 (14) Mr. Van Drasek. Horticulture Club Seminar at 7:30 tonight, 206 English. International Interactions Volunteer Program Orientation at ♦1." fered by owner at 455,000. Call Horticulture Bldg. Members meet 7 p.m. Thursday in 6 Student ings. 4-1-21 (34) 351-9469 for appointment. 8-1-28 at 7 p.m. YOGA FOR dancers. Mondays or Services Bldg. (40) _ _ _ STEREO EQUIPMENT: Some Fridays 3 p.m. 410. for a four week MENSA discussion new-some used. New: Large session. Call 332-4060; 646-8183, topic is Come square dance at 7 tonight Advent walnuts, 4218/pair. Ken¬ ASSIFF STUDIO. 5-1-20 120) "Civilization," at 8 tonight, Peg in Multipurpose Room D, Brody and Pat Wolf's, 1725 Teel, Lan¬ Hall. wood KR7600, 4376. ADC XLMII, sing- 439. Stanton 681EEE, 438. Ken¬ wood KR6600, 4324. TDK SAC90, COMPLETE REPAIR service for stereos, TV's, tapes, guitars, ban- I^olnu Town Reminder to students going to Cross-country Ski Club meets at 430/10. Maxell XL tape, 438/12. 8 p.m. Thursday in 215 Men's IM jf*. band instruments. GM Tech Center with SWE tomor¬ Used: Yamaha CTBOO tuner, 4235. MARSHALL MUSIC, 361-7830 Bldg. Sign up for trips. People row: The bus is leaving at 7:30 Thorens 125B with Shure tone- with racing experience needed for arm, 4285. Much more! Brian, C-1-1-19 (14) a.m. from the Engineering Bldg. organization. Grand River 361-8980. 5-1-24 148) FREE A lesson in comDlexion ... Game and Recruitment Night! Jim Nordie will be speaking on OLIN SKIIS, Nordica boots, size ^'o^4519 East Michi0an TRY BINGOI Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. Bring your favorite game at 8:30 retailing and wholesaling in the 8ft. Look bindings, poles. 332- "n®;7'97' Lansing Mall. MERLE Congregation Shaarey Zedek, 1924 Coolidge Road, East tonight, 331 Union. Sponsored by the Social Cultural Floral and Greenhouse business at Union 0168 after 3 p.m. 8-1-27 112) cmsm-31 na)SMETIC STUDI0S- 5-1-19(12) Lansing. " Pionysus. of 7:30 p.m. Thursday in 204 culture Bldg. Horti¬ n c,„lo New*. Eoat lontlng, Michigon Wednesday, January 19, 1977 13 DOONESBURY SPONSORED BY: .ortaiqmpql Ifficials oppose recommendation by Garry Trudeau HCK,MAHC/N£Al MHN6UJUSI mCAUWMB. ASREPASOUT mNOUHOUTAOflt ptopiosemm ■raining, its A YOU'RE SENERN6 WASTHAT?LISTEN, KICK, WATS personality YOU'LL ME TO A GOSSIP , h0B1 pi^e 1) report states. "The data re- "I would not like to see a what could be gained by the ANPHES FURIOUS! "8/miMH' I'MSENmYOUTOTNE PST? SYMPOSIUM ON TCP- JOURNALISM? ME IT. CLINIC, AREN/T . to explain the pro- quired varies from institution complete state-controlled ad implementation of the program, UPCOMING SeSOONOF SONAUTY JOURNALISM GO. NOW. YOU? \ Fl offer to prospective 10 institution and a separate mission process, but a system but that he was "opposed to it PST/1 THINK rr'p DO IT'LL HBIP YOU GET at this time." He added that you some 60a>! t ts by pcop'e w,u> ,re with the pro- aPP[' e«cl> ctime- f,tjon Students fec must who be paid could be set up to help high are school students identify open study could be conducted to a UNTO IT! [ familiar not accepted by one school may ings at colleges and provide determine the need for the not have sufficient time to information," Porter said. "This program. Sfl*parateform™!* »PP'y to another."rpctify this situa- does exist to some degree, but it could be streamlined." Terry Carey, admissions di¬ rector at Central Michigan Uni¬ KIm. the U"k f0rC* In order to rpctii tion, the task force recom¬ Porter said the new system versity, (CMU), said the idea of mended the admission process "could save money" for apply¬ saving money for the students be centralized. Under this sys¬ ing students, since the applica¬ is "not a real thing." ances OK tem, a single application would be used. John Porter, Chairperson of form tion fees would not be charged for each institution. He added that the fees that students pay "Most high school only apply to the one university they eventually attend," he students the State Board of Education, for applications are "astronomi- said. "Eighty per cent of the sapd the board decided to cal"'if they apply to more than people currently attending •d from page 1) Per all year support the recommendation in one university. CMU used this as their first r;,e reduced the secre- early January. Porter qualified his support choice." hl|ti uppllss FLl significantly which He said the board has been of the idea by suggesting He added that the only cost PEANUTS SPONSORED BY: Open 10 AM-4 PM Dolly Vfaculty have to spend trying to "move in this direc- limiting the of the new for students to apply to CMU 220 Abbott Rood Eoil Looting ipoundmg tion" for "a long time," since the power system so that "it takes nothing was 13 cents, since this is the by Schulz cost of postage. ftXdo"Goldhammer Biue"10 ' equality of the educational sys- tern is among the top six away from the individual schools in regards to selecting Lance Erickson, associate di¬ I'LL BOY THAT! YOU WERE THEY'RE Y I JUST FEEL priorities of the Department of the students to be admitted." rector of admissions at the 60NNA LEAVE UKE I'VE PROBABLY HERE IN A er said that 92 per Education. He added he felt Charles Seeley. admissions University of Michigan, also US HERE! J BEEN HERE FORMER LIFE. AND YOU and scholarships director at does not support the idea, If the budget for the this type of system was neces- calling it a very difficult type of BEFORE... FROZE TO DEATH X of Education is made up sary for equality. MSU, said he was not sure unit to set up. -y Lj costs and with another "Many problems would need ±me of those charges to be overcome to insure the be eliminated. ■ have to Fund for Animals group students are free to be con¬ sidered by the institutions they , of Education as it has wish," Erickson said. He added that where this • Urivershy^Mirchastog to host meetingU tonight I Of needed supplies and O type of unit has tablished — such as California been es¬ it has proved to be restric¬ L decreases as well as FRANK & ERNEST — the fund is seeking to tive to the individual students. SPONSORED BY: Jnds that go to support The MSU chapter of the year, promote the wolf to national "It tends to limit their free ■ Goldhammer said. Fund for Animals will hold a by Bob Thaves 10% MSU DISCOUNT I t meeting for all people inter- recognition. choice, and this is a hard pill for Ifar the College of Edu - este(j jn participating in the On Friday the fund will run a the public to swallow," he said. I has accommodated tne „Wolf ^ Nstjonal Mlmmar booth in the International Cen¬ Despite the controversy sur¬ nil crisis by sacrificing its ct[np&ign toni?ht in m Stu. ter between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m. to rounding the issue as to wheth¬ it's from the ality. but future cuts, ac- g . Bldg at 7:30 collect signatures for the "Wolf er it is worthwhile or not. „ to Goldhammer, wdl for National Mammal" petition. Ballard said he feels the pro¬ sanitation | severe financial trouble Because of the Alaskan wolf Rick Doyle, chairperson of gram will not be implemented. department... killings, now in their second the MSU Fund for Animals, "Because of all the response said the wolf is coming seri¬ to the program, I think it's a they're going to ously close to extinction. If this recommendation that has gone have our Kitchen [■tling amount of information is allowed to happen, the eco¬ system will be disrupted. He also said that man has already as far as its' going to. think it could stand on its own feet." he said. 1 don't declared a Led by MSU bulletin office wiped out at least six sub¬ species of wolves and is work¬ national wildlife sanctuary. ing on the remaining few. The most popular publica¬ ic you been searching in "It's about time we recog¬ Ir authoritative informa- tions, according to Cora Bern- rose, senior clerk at the bulletin nized their (wolves') presence State News 225 Ann 351-6230 Jr beekeeping for begin- office, are "Familiar Trees of as essential, and learned more Wednesday Dinner: |His only lack of proper Michigan," available free for about the way they manage Newsline THE DROPOUTS SPONSORED BY: Quiche alsacienne, French te prevented you from wildlife," Doyle said. "Then onion soup, mixed greens and tg dwarf apple trees next single copies, and a guide to 353-3382 ■marijuana plants in your simple parliamentary proce¬ maybe we can adapt our system by Post vegetable salad. dure, entitled "The Meeting of wildlife management to more Tory courtyard? fc search tor these and Will Come to Order," which closely resemble theirs. i not so-esoteric bits of lation may be rewarded carries a 25 cent price tag. 'tPRllEMySElF) TmTTfENPy IDOBR □□□ I visit to the Cooperative ■ion Serviep Bulletin Of- Other publications have found favor with the which CROSSWORD QBE QME2 S3a MY OWN P 1>A6 T TH/£ ■ Acoustic Afternoons 4-8 Bill Nerd Duo roducad prices TODAY'S SMCIAL (Mndepqpound OUT THE WINDOW I I boons, lettuce, tomatoes, 'elr.od cheese, ond by D. Wayne Dunifon IL AZTICO RESTAURANT 203M.A.C. 351-9111 |SU Tordon Corleton SHADOWS iVC&Vl I CL05?ST TO «8U0ICXW TV ,S'<*«U€'S JpAu-a-M*: gib AUTrtS ft*cnee, ?5Afl4iiUA. Wodnosday, January „ 14 Michigon State News, East Lansing, Michigon 1Sherlock Holmes' returns to stage ByKATHYESSELMAN State News Reviewer Sherlock Holmes the British Empire. a epitomizes He stalked fog-bound London steeped in order and tradition. It was at a time the empire stretched from the sun to sun. It was the end of the empire, the end of the civilized world as people knew it. Holmes sought criminals who destroyed the proper order of society through social order honesty. tern by death Holmes established the pat¬ tive, restored honor, property and righted injustices and inequi¬ ties. In his person, Holmes encompasses the Old School honor and the sense proper order of things which was associated with a way of life already past. By setting up or for the consulting detec¬ a figure of power, dis¬ who of the lockania." "The Seven Per Cent Solu¬ tion," is based lished" case cause it dealt with on an chronicled by the eminent Viennese "unpub¬ Watson, left unpublished be¬ by Dr. Holmes' cocaine addiction and his cure specialist Herr Dokter Freud. The book gained instant suc¬ cess and has been turned into an elegant film. Gene Wilder scored with extracted "Sherlock Holmes in New York" from the canon for a fine made-for-TV movie last fall. It was a sensitive and canonical look at Holmes' later encounter with Irene Adler, which the good doctor, for personal reasons, judged un¬ suitable for publication in the Strand during his Holmes' life¬ times. MSU will bear witness to this renaissance of "Sherlockania" rooms Lecture liam at 221 Baker tion of the Concert Gillette's Street. The Series will present Tony Tanner's adapta¬ Royal Shakespeare Company's production of Wil¬ "Sherlock Holmes." Gillette was a popular turn-of-the century American actor who created the popular vehicle for himself, and toured it in England and America for many years. Tickets are on sale at the ■rf "• ^ 'The Adventures of Sherlock MSU Union Ticket Office. They murder, or threatened the a consulting service he identi¬ Thursday at8:15p.m. when the seams of society with anarchy fies with the bourgeois indus¬ Holmes' Smarter Brother" last University Auditorium will be range from $4 to $7.60, at John Michalski as Sherlock Holmes and Kurt Kasznar as Professor MoriT^ and disorder. The world trial culture dominating the season, and Alvin Sapinsley transformed into the immortal half price for students. Paul Elliott and Bernard Jay's production of "Sherlock Holmes." '1 Holmes knew ended with the late Victorian period. death of Victoria, Queen of Sherlock Holmes is a nostal¬ England, Scotland, Wales, Ire¬ gic figure, like a figure from the Arthurian tales or the Western Eberhdrd land and Empress of India in 1901. heroes who were gaining accep¬ Sherlock Holmes first ap¬ tance as popular heroes in peared in Beeton's Christmas Harper's and Atlantic in 1880s Annual in 1887 with "A Study America. in Scarlet." After the success of Donald Yates, head of the this initial appearance, Dr. MSU chapter of 'The Baker Watson, writing as Conan Street Irregulars," said the Doyle, continued to chronicle upsurge of Holmes' popularity his exploits in the Strand "takes us back to a simple time Magazine. Holmes sought to when we felt right was right maintain the proper order by and wrong was wrong and it eliminating anarchists who tore was punished." at the seams of society and The past few years have criminals who endangered the witnessed a boom in "Sher- Director's Choice features i Flynn in 'Captain Blood' The Lecture-Concert Brothers in 1935. Director's Choice Series will present "Captain The corrected schedule Blood" in Fairchild Audi¬ for the remainder of the torium today at 7 and 9:30 series is as follows: Jan. 28, p.m. The film stars Errol "Angels With Dirty Flynn and Olivia de Havil- Faces;" Feb. 2, "Yankee land, and was directed by Doodle Dandy;" Feb. 7, Michael Curtiz for Warner "Mildred Pierce." BOILED HAM SWISS FRANKLIN BRAND DELUXE BRAKE SERVICE HARD SALAMI* $30\ p DRUM BRAKES DISC BRAKES NATURAL AftRD tndudos Includes Replacing Linings On All Four Whoolt Replacing Front Disc Pads SWISS ^CHOICE G|%BY Machining All Four Drums Machining Rotors Inspecting; Calipers, CHEESE ^ i* Repacking Front Rear Brakes And Wheel Bearings Hydralic System Inspect Hardware Repacking Front And Hydralic Sys. Wheel Bearings Roadtest Roadtest $4995 '57 = BUY 2-SAVE WfTHIN-STORE COUPON GLAZED PONUTS OQt SAVE 2Oi- CHERRY TUNE IIP SPtCIU COFFEE Includes: New Spark Plugs H.D. Points 4 Cond. 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