New VOLUME 71 NUMBER 77 MONDAY, MAY 9, 1977 MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY EAST LANSING, MICHIGAN 48824 yewitness contradicts police B, DEBBIE WOLFE confirming results of the police depart¬ witness said that Smith was running away remained in the rear of the property. turned around and on began to run toward the killing In a conflicting account, the source, who I1 ind EDWARD L. BONDERS ment's own investigation. The account given to news agencies from the officer. Smith left the back door with a crowbar, front part of the property, police said. One ohserved the incident from a position with Stile News SUfl Writers by • The police report also said that two police said, and ran toward the officer who of the officers who had been at the front an unobstructed view, said that Smith ran the police Wednesday is erroneous in three Copyright, 1977 police officers fired one round each Tor a was in the back yard. door, John Hersman, intercepted Smith at toward the back of the property, away rprj,,. witness to last Wednesday's key areas, the witness said: total of two shots, one hitting the ground The officer then told him to stop, police the side of the house while he held a raised from the police officer in the back yard. Police said that Michael Edwin Smith, „( a burglary suspect by Lansing • and one hitting Smith. The source said the said, at which point Smith made a "slinging crowbar and shot the suspect in the chest, L has given the State News a sworn 26, of 1032 River St., Lansing, who was two shots fired to the indicated motion" toward the policeman with the were areas, police said. When Smith reached the corner of the r.jl whirh indicates the police lied in being sought in connection with a burglary warrant, threatened two officers with an but only one officer fired them both. crowbar. A second time, Smith was told to garage, unarmed, the officer shot into the ■ official account of the incident. 18-inch crowbar According to the police account, two stop and the officer who was in the back After the shooting, first aid treatment ground. Smith jumped backward, and then evidence may prompt the during the incident. The uniformed Lansing officers approached the yard fired a shot into the ground, missing was given by the Lansing Fire Department stood facing the officer without making any witness said Smith was unarmed. ]jng of Ingham County Prosecutor • The front door of the residence where Smith Smith. and Smith was transported to Ingham threatening motions, the witness said, ||„uk's investigation into the case. police said that Smith ran toward was located at 2:21 p.m. while a third officer After the first shot was fired. Smith Medical Center where he died at 3:08 p.m. an officer in the (continued on page 8) 1 cenrluded over the weekend that back yard making a L handling of the incident was proper, "slinging motion" with the crowbar. The pmm/ftee may io/afe act on pen meetings The Provost Rating Committee is charged By NANCY ROGIER ■ State News Stall Writer with reviewing applications for the position Potential violation of the Open Meet- of University provost. The committee also interviews candidates jointly with MSU |ct. all meetings of the Provost Rating President Clifton R. Wharton Jr., who Jittee will be closed to the public, selects a provost based on the committee's fict, which took effect April 1, states ratings. Current Provost Lawrence Boger is actings must be open for interviewing For the second straight year, the State News won more awards for photo¬ ant! (or employment or appointment leaving MSU to become president of graphic excellence than any other Michigan newspaper in the annual Michigan fc reviewing applicationa unless the Oklahoma University. Press Photographers Association competition this weekend in Southfield. pat requests otherwise, Kelley stated in an opinion that the act Laura Lynn Fistler won first place in Portrait and Personality for the State amittee members decided in a closed does not apply to "committees and subcom¬ mittees of public bodies which are merely Newti Bob Kaye first in Humor and Joy; Rob Kozioff second in Feature; Linda Afriday that meetings will beheld in Bray second in Portrait and Personality; Maggie Walker second in Fashion, ■session based on their interpretation advisory or only capable of making 'recom¬ and Joe Lippincott second in Humor and Joy and third in Portrait and Per¬ ■aitns issued by Atty. Gen. Frank mendations concerning the exercise of Bat specific cases. governmental authority.'" sonality. Such bodies, Kelley continued, are not From the State Journal, Brian Burd won two firsts and two honorable men¬ legally capable of rendering a final decision tions, and Ginger Sharp won one second. and "a subcommittee which can only make recommendations to the public body is not [otestors required to hold its committee meetings in public hearings." However, the MSU Board of Trustees, which is the public body responsible for ave N.H. selection of the provost, has never acted to form the rating committee and shares no common members. Using this interpretation, the committee determined that all meetings could be closed rmories to the public. Richard Lewis, chairperson of the com¬ mittee, also said Wharton had requested ■CORD. N. H. IAP) - Gov. Meldrim that meetings be closed due to the flow of Ton claimed Sunday he is winning "the confidential material. However, the Open Meetings Act states |M0f Seabrook" nuclear power because 662 of 1,414 that "interviews for employment or appoint¬ plant opponenta ment must be held at an open meeting." fen bailed out of five National Guard ks around the state. Meetings where applications for employ¬ I demonstrators are weakening in ment or appointment are reviewed must also Vive to clog the state's incarcera- be open except when the applicant requests filities and the courts," Thomson that they be closed. Committee member Lloyd Cofer said he ul Guard doubted that the open interview section of spokespersons said that Imonstrators who had previously the act would apply to the rating committee. I bail on criminal trespass charges He said it depended on what committee the ■ from $100 to $500 cash and were candidate appeared before. For example, W Saturday. Others had Cofer said, if the Board of Trustees posted bail | leaving 834 demonstrators in the interviewed a provost applicant, the meet¬ ing would have to be open because the board >f the protestors is costing the is capable of rendering a final decision and ■estimated $50,000 a day. Atty. Gen. the committee is not. Tfuter intervened last week when it According to Cofer and committee mem¬ f '"at protestors might get sua- Jaentences and Thomson has vowed ber John Wakely, business in the meeting included discussion of committee policies, [order no matter what the cost." reviewing of candidate's credentials and ■""•'Person for the Clamshell setting up committee ground rules. Cofer also said candidates were discussed and [said the group, which staged last mentioned. Wakely said no inter¬ J* ik' "f™Pation of the construction Seabrook nuclear names views have been scheduled yet. power plant, f1'reduction in the number of jailed The committee's next meeting is set for ■"ton as some were forced to 7:30 tonight in Lewis' office in 411 Eppley State News Robert Kozioff State News Laura Lynn Fistlen 'eoaatinued on page 9) Center. High admission test scores promised The opinions communicated by Michigan law schools are shared weather By DANIEL HERMAN empirical evidence exists to prove whether the claims of these courses are valid. equally by Michigan professional schools in the health field. State News Staff Writer Today s weather will be sunny and cool with As far as University law schools in Michigan are concerned, the Myron Magen, dean of Osteopathic Medicine at MSU, sees no With the increase of students attempting to get into professional ' kl7h near 60. best way to study for the LSAT is by joining a pre law club, similar point in taking such a preparatory test. schools, a new business has sprung up, offering preparation for the "In my opinion, and this is the same advice I gave my own kids, to the one at MSU, or just by buying a book which explains the test tests required for entrance and promising improved scores. But and offers samples. the test itself should just be taken twice. Use the first test to get a most admissions officials believe these tests offer the prospective feel for what is going on." professional student little more than a false and costly sense of An official at Wayne State University Law School said, "We security. Magen said that the average college student who has taken the never recommend that anybody take this kind of tutoring. We have proper curriculum in college should not really have any major talked to too many people who have taken these prep courses that Every year thousands of prospective law school, medical school, have come out with bad scores." problems in the first place. dental school and other professional school candidates take the Stanley H. Kaplan, who runs one of the country's largest prep MCAT, the LSAT, the DAT or other exama. The rise in the The consensus in Michigan was supported by officials at Harvard, number of students taking these tests has been followed by the programs, Stanley H. Kaplan Educational Centers, says the Stanford, Yale, and The University of Pennsylvania Law Schools. courses actually improve test scores, but he followed, "I never rise of many businesses that claim to be able to raise a atudent's Associate Dean William J. Pierce, at the University of Michigan quote average improvement." score on these tests. Prices charged by these businesses for Law School, does not see how a preparatory course can increase a preparation go as high as $350. student's scoring ability on a LSAT, because it basically tests Kaplan agreed that a big part of the course is to give "the student cumulative skills. confidence in himself." The MCAT, LSAT and DAT, are, respectively, the tests given to Kaplan charges that most professional schools do not recommend determine a student's aptitude for admissions to the nation's his course because, "these schools don't want people to be helped, One law school director of admissions felt the only benefit the medical schools, law schools, and dental schools. prep tests offered was in giving more confidence to a student, "but," they are saying we are screwing up the 'curve.'" she pointed out, "a student might go in with an overconfident When told of Kaplan's claim, one law school director of The consensus of opinion among all the schools polled by the State admissions commented, "That's ridiculous, we are looking for the attitude, and then mess the test up. News was that the tests were a waste of time and money, and that "I don't see how they will change anything a great deal." best people possible." results of such prep courses are not documented. No kind of 2 Michigon Stole News, East loosing, Michigon Monday, M0y 9 „ Summit concludes with LONDON (AP) Jimmy Carter and the leaders - President to achieving "sustained econ¬ omic growth" both in their Valery Giscard d'Estaing of France, Chancellor Helmut read pledge by Callaghan at the Ban¬ queting House, all that remains of six other major industrial countries and throughout the Schmidt of West Germany and of the former Royal Whitehall nations concluded their summit world. Prime Ministers Giulio Andre- Palace, built in 1622. meeting Sunday with a pledge They also promised to launch otti of Italy, James Callaghan of "We are determined to re welfare of our to fight both unemployment an urgent study aimed at Britain, Pierre Elliott Trudeau spond collectively to the chal- 2 and inflation and to find ways to increasing the peaceful use of of Canada and Takeo Tukuda of lenges of the future," they said communique said Young leaves for African tour contain the spread of nuclear nuclear energy while dis¬ Japan. in the communique. •Promisedtoco- and to war technology in the world. couraging the conversion of "Our most urgent task is to The communique also: diversify The seven leaders decided at nuclear fuel into weapons. create more jobs while con¬ •Committed the govern¬ ducti°n",„th,t * UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) — An¬ In between, he intends to confer with the end of their two-day confer¬ Besides Carter, the others at ments to meet the dependence on oil" H tinuing to reduce inflation," economic oU prices drew Young leaves today on a two-week Vice President Walter F. Mondale in to commit themselves the summit were President growth targets they have would be tb ence they said in a joint communique set a tour ol at least a half-dozen African Lisbon, Portugal, and to find time for for themselves which "should n,ew economic eonference sources J states, and the self-styled "point man" of visits to Ghona, Nigeria, Gabon, Sudan provide a basis for sustained e'd in si the Carter Administration has drawn fire and South Africa. FUTURE PLUTONIUM USE IN DOUBT noninflationary growth, in our Tokyo net before setting out. countries and worldwide." even •Called for new measures to • Promisedto increi Young, making his third trip abrood It was the announcement of the visit to Poor nations of finance the international the * the world Second SALT talk set and his second to Africa as ambassador South Africo that drew the shorpest fire. pay¬ ments deficits experienced economv to the United Nations, will be attending a Young had been invited to speak at a by grow on a sustained, some nations and able basis if university and to o group of businessmen supported develor meeting of U.S. ambassadors in Africa at "additional resources" for the tries share in Abidjan, Ivory Coast, and a UN confer¬ in Johannesburg, but a source at the U.S. that gro WASHINGTON (AP)-Paul ament Agency, stressed this is cuts in the nuclear arsenals of International Monetary Fund. mission indicated the black ambassador communique called ence in Mozambique "in support of C. Warnke, the chief U.S. arms not the time for such an the superpowers. • Promised to give a "new also creasing the r peoples of Zimbabwe (Rhodesia) and hoped to meet with some members negotiator says he believes the initiative, even though it is But Warnke flies to Geneva impetus" to the world trade World Bank, wl Namibia (South-West Africa)." of South Africa's black majority. Carter Administration would "more dramatic and more dras¬ negotiations now under way in on Tuesday for a new round of a major source favor a deal with Rusia cutting tic" than others. Geneva to help create new Strategic Arms Limitation development p off production of plutonium and In answer to an interviewer's Talks (SALT) with the Soviet opportunities for trade and countries. other explosive materials for questions, he said: chief delegate, Vladimir Hijacker subdued in Tokyo nuclear weapons as well as for "We have first of all to find Semyonov. Secretary of State peaceful purposes. But Warnke, the director of out whether the Soviets are going to be responsive to our Cyrus R. Vance and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Rioters in Tokyo TOKYO (AP) — A crew member token a stewardess hostage with a razor, comprehensive package as pre¬ Gromyko will join them later to the Arms Control and Disarm sented in Moscow" for deep discuss the issue of swinging a fire axe subdued a would-be holding it at her throat," said Federal core a hijacker Sunday who tried to force a Aviation Administration spokesperson second-phase SALT pact for U.S.-bound Northwest Airlines jumbo jet with 261 persons aboard to Moscow, John Leyden in Washington. "His only demand was to go to Moscow." Carter to talk with head limiting, or reducing, nuclear arsenals. protest new airpo Warnke said the Americans TOKYO (AP) authorities said. — Riot police battled on The pilot, Capt. Homer Sutter, advised and Russians are "close to Sundiv , The incident occurred aboard the bomb-throwing demonstrators trying to block the »L Boeing 747 about an hour after it left air traffic controllers of the situation ond requested directions to fly to Moscow, of Syria about Mideast agreement" for early negotia¬ tions on another major subject Tokyo's new international airport. About 300 pohcemen were injured, police said. protest.?!! Tokyo at 6:30 a.m. EDT for Honolulu, an — transformation of the exist¬ airline spokesperson said. Leyden said. less Palestinians, who are at No deaths were reported, DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) - ing partial ban on nuclear though one person wis» He said the would-be hijacker was Minutes later, he said, "the pilot When President Jimmy Carter the heart of the Mideast stale¬ condition after being hit in the head testing into a total ban. by a police tear at injured, but his condition was not advised that the hijacker had been confers in Geneva today with This would end the existing officers said. Police arrested 33 mate. demonstrators The Syrian president's The violence erupted after some 3,700 immediately known. No other injuries subdued with a fire axe and the aircraft Syrian President Hafez Assad, sup¬ arrangement allowing weapon students ud s were reported. he will be dealing with the port is seen as crucial to any states to test-fire devices confronted 4,000 riot police near the new Narita was returning to Tokyo at the advice of a airport 4 east of Tokyo. The man, identified as a U.S. citizen doctor on board because of in juries to the pivotal Arab statesman in Mid¬ negotiated settlement in the under-ground with a yield of up dle East peace deliberations. Arab-Israeli conflict. to 150 kilotons, 150,000 tons of The demonstrators blocked roads to the named Bruce Trayer, "apparently had hijacker." Assad, 47, is the only Arab Secretary of State Cyrus TNT. airport, set fire automobiles and pushed the burning cars toward head of state who enjoys good Vance has said the Carter State Department officials of the cars smashed into a house police lin relations with both the United Administration is gathering indicated a date for these new garage, damaging it. Spanish Communists begin campaign States and Russia, cochairper- sons of the dormant Geneva "suggestions sues" in the on the core Mideast — he is¬ separate talks is likely to be agreed upon very soon and Police, backed by armored shells and took several hours to cars, fired more than 3d disperse the crowd. peace conference on the Mid¬ defined them as the Palestin might include a moratorium on The new airport, which is intended to relieve congestio MADRID (AP) - About 20,000 Com¬ 1936-39 Spanish Civil War. east. And he wields consider¬ ians, Israeli borders and a what are called "peaceful" nu¬ Tokyo airport at Haneda, has drawn protest from farm munists, some carrying red banners and "The issue is not able influence over the state¬ definition of peace. clear explosions. students. a republic or a wearing red baseball hats, rallied at 0 monarchy. It is democracy or dictator¬ v. it publi.h«d by th* ti Michigon St. soccer stodium doy during F Wtnfor ond Spring Sunday to kick off the ship," said Carrillo, who returned recent¬ form ond O u tpociol W. newly legalized party's election cam¬ ly after living in exile for 38 years. ALL DEGREE 1 it $30 por yoor paign. *» Sorvkot Bldg Michigon St. "The fact that we are here shows we Polls show the Communists will take nl Sorvicot Building in have strength." said party General Secretary Santiago Carrillo in his first public appearance in the capital since the only 6 to 10 per cent of the votes in the June 15 parliamentary elections — the first free elections In Spain in 41 GERALD H. COY. GENERAL MANAGER CANDIDATES years. ROBERT L. BULLARD. SALES MANAGER and FACULTY! (XtployAdvo/tittnf... Make your reservations NOW for academic Wwhtgrophk apparel for Spring Term Commencement. Deadline is May 20 at the Union Store in the Union. PISH ft PRIIS ■ ALL YOU CAN CAT LUN- personalized CHION A DINNM SMCIALS DAILY, MICH Donatlont for the Senior graduation ,TO PIT A STUDMT'S BUOOIT. ALSO, IS dots will be accepted. announcementsnc DIFPIDINTITIMS ON ODD SALAD DAD. being ordered at | union store. FACULTY) For Information co Bell to decide on spying indictments Hoods fromothor univorsitios must 355-3498 The UnionStJ WASHINGTON (AP) - Atty. Gen. Griffin Bell says he personally will decide conscience. John Kearney, 55, a former FBI lUndepground 224 Abbott wJ bo ordorod IARLYI FULL PAYMENT MUST ACCOMPANY RESEHVATWKI I whether to seek indictments against supervisor, wos indicted in New York last more FBI agents for allegedly unauthor¬ month in connection with political spying ized spying on domestic political groups. by the bureau. Bell made the statement in a U.S. News $1,299 Bell said FBI agents are very upset & World Report interview released about the indictment. 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Mlchlgon Lichigan Monday, May 9, 1977 3 'TIME FOR PEACE,' MOVEMENT LEADER SAYS Hearing on jail \ead tells of Northern Ireland plight for Imarice mchter of violence-wracked Northern of the plight in Northern Ire¬ "What we want most is to give Northern Ireland will do it Murder and torture have county set Ireland. lie News Staff Writer Williams, co-founder of the land, from discourage individuals people self-respect and to let ourselves," Williams said at a become commonplace in Nor¬ By MARK FABIAN £ ca„'l unite people tn Peace People and Nancy Mc¬ sending financial aid to them do something they never rally Friday night at St. John's thern Ireland. "Now they're State News StaH Writer fit's time for peace," were military organizations in the had a chance to do before." Student Center. The using a new form of torture, its Ingham County Ad Hoc Special Jail Committee will hold Irdsof Betty W.l'amsan Donnell, a member of organization, were in East Lan¬ the country and to gain support for the peace movement, The peace movement has However, despite the work of slow agonizing pain. They drill a a public hearing tonight at 7:30 p.m. in the Lansing City Hall lken housewife dedicated sing over the weekend as part already managed to open two the Peace People, the violence Black and Decker drill into the Circuit Court Room to discuss alternative waya in which the Ling peace to the people peace movement. 'The small factories, one for manu¬ in Northern Ireland still goes kneecaps of victims," McDon¬ capacity of the Ingham County Jail can be expanded. peace movement is facturing stationary, and one on. Williams The committee was appointed by Debbie Stabenow, explained that the nell said. growing every aay ot the week for leather goods. Williams said roots of the seven-year old war in Northern Ireland. Already D-Lansing, chairperson of the Ingham County Board of if exports go well, the factories go back much further. "Northern Ireland is a sad, Commissioners, to look at what should be done about the »w fire station one-third of the population actively supports us, but the worst enemy we still fight is should be able to employ about 700 workers jointly within the next few years. "Its been handed down from generation to generation that Catholics depressing place — it is a dead place. Everytime i fly out or in, or drive down the street I cry shortage of bed space in the jail. They have been studying the problem since January and apathy and fear," Williams said In addition are right and Protes¬ heart out," Williams said. to community tants my have determined that the capacity of the jail must be Increased, in a press conference Friday are wrong, and vice projects, the peace movement said Joan Trezise, D-Lansing, chairperson of the ad hoc pic of hearing afternoon. versa." But Williams is organizes weekly rallies which optimistic committee. The peace movement has and sees the end as near. "All gather thousands of suppor¬ There are nine military "We were looking into the possibility of not increasing the only been in existence since ters. She said there are 162 armies on the streets in North¬ wars end, even the most insane The Irish Republican capacity of the jail by improving the court system and doing August 1976, but in this short peace groups all over Northern ern Ireland now fighting wars. more diverting away from the jail," she said. "But we can't see ILneed and possible location of a new fire station in East span of time it has been highly Ireland which are branches of against each other, as Williams Army (I.R.A.) no longer knows who their friends are — the how the judges can alleviate the problem. We don't have much wi]j be the topic of a presentation tonight at 7:80 in the successful in uniting Prote¬ the movement working to com¬ said, "in the name of God." leeway outside of the jail." stants and Catholics for the isolation has started. But be¬ B] council chambers. bat violence. McDonnell explained that Trezise said the jail must be renovated, and this could leave goal of community welfare. "Until we can evolve fore it ends, there will be more a com¬ every person has experienced the jail short 100 bed spaces. 1 Chief Phil Patriarchs said some of the reasons the city "We want to build recreation munity where we don't repress terror and violence in some violence, some of the worst yet "We want to know if the people would like a new jail, maybe a ft i new station are that a new taller aerial truck to serve the centers for our children, factor¬ people or vote .for a man form. "I've been beaten up, and to come." minimum security jail, or perhaps halfway houses or work Tidings on campus cannot be stored in the existing stations ies, and other types of facilities because he's Protestant or have had a gun stuck in my The Peace camps," she said. Bt goad or Shaw Lane, and that there is no room at either for helping people," she said. Catholic, then the people of head," she said. People is bent on Some committee members feel that if a new jail is built it peace though, and Williams Itohouse another rescue ambulance vehicle to satisfy the said they won't should be built in Lansing, Trezise said. She added that the Lg demand for emergency runs. to give up working achieve it. The movement argument against a new jail is that it would be very costly. I presentation tonight will be a review of alternate sites on AREA GROUPS TO RECEIVE FUNDS began when Williams and "Work camps would be simple to build," she said, "and halfway houses would be bought from existing houses. But ftRoad for the new station, which would replace the current another women decided that whatever the decision, there is a cost involved." jjicent to City Hall. the violence had gone on long The Law Enforcement Assistant Administration (LEAA) has L city Council recommended the station should be on E »|,ich is what we (Patriarche and Planning Director Scott Bike-a-thon to be held enough after three children were murdered by a runaway I.R.A. car whose driver had been conducting a study of inmate population at the jail. They will present their findings to the committee in a few weeks. Trezise said the committee wants to hold a public hearing %y| recommended," Patriarche said. A bike-a-thon in rural Ingham County will be MSEC is been killed in a gun battle. before the LEAA presents their findings so they can have the a Lansing based citizen action and Lve sites have been proposed, including the property north held this Saturday beginning at 10 a.m. to raise lobbying organization committed to organizing The movement has been the public's viewpoint before they make their decision. Ecaw Street the city purchased the last time the issue of a money for three Lansing area environmental concerned citizens, particularly students, in most successful attempt at She said the LEAA does not have the final word on the station was put before the voters, groups. The money will go into the general funds solving environmental problems through legisla¬ since the subject. The committee must take the LEAA recommendation peace war began in and adapt it to the wishes of the public. ie November 1975 city election, the bond issue for a fire of the Michigan Student Environmental Confed¬ tion. They have worked on legislation concern¬ 1969. The Peace People has eration (MSEC), the Natural Resources and The other members of the ad hoc committee are Bill I was defeated. Another vote may come in the upcoming ing air pollution, toxic chemicals, transportation tlready received the peace hber city election. Environment Education Club INREEC) and the and nuclear power. prize from the King of Norway Sederburg, R-East Lansing, Grady Porter, D-Lansing, Mario L complaint last time wu that there wis not enough Citizens for a Liveable Community ICLC). The NREEC of MSU helps environmental tnd support worldwide. Garzar, D-Lansing and Paul Ryan, D-Lansing. Jitlonout on the proposal," Patriarche said. Bikers will begin at the MSU Commuter education students seek answers to problems Kre chief said he preferred a new site for the station north Parking Lot at Farm Lane and East Mt. Hope with the environment. They engage in outdoor ■niwStreet because of the wider streets and less congested Ave. and will have a choice of riding a 12,23 or 50 education, recycling and community Information En that area, aa compared to the central business district. mile route. The bikers will collect pledges of a projects. BEATLES TO REUNITE AT The CLC consists of local students, homeown¬ Eirche has defended the decision to move the fire station certain amount of money per mile and must bring ers, business and professional people concerned FREE MSU OUTDOOR CONCERT their pledge cards with them to the event. prom the commercial district and toward the potential Persons under 18 must have a waiver signed by with the preservation and enhancement of the pent of the Dayton Hudson mall site by saying that he environment In the East Lansing community. LONDON - It has been reported John, George, Paul and Ringo are not any closer to a for the need for a new station 10 years ago, before the issue their parent or guardian and those under 13 must CLC led the fight for due process and proper reunion today than they were five years ago. The chances of having a reunion at MSU'b nail came into the forefront. be accompanied by a parent or guardian on the environmental review in the Michigan Avenue free outdoor concert on May 21st look pretty dismal despite intensive negotiations on iso said fire trucks will still be able to respond quickly to day of the event. and Harrison Road intersection and the Kalama¬ the part of Pop Entertainment. Spokesman for Pop Entertainment took the news with (the station is located farther north. Those interested in either pledging or riding zoo Street Bridge controversies. The CLC is a grain of salt stating "Who can say if the Beatles would have been any good together can pick up cards at tablet in Natural Resources currently coordinating a drive to obtain full Building and in Betsey Hall or they can call Alex environmental review of the proposed Dayton anyways after such a long layoff." Pop Entertainment further added as a reminder to all MSU students, that tonight the Rainbow Ranch is donating all of their cover charge directors pick Sagady at 484-7421. Hudson shopping mall. (50 cents per head) to the outdoor show. For the show to be the biggest ever we need your support. See you at the Rainbow Ranch Tonight! Also, refunds for the canceled Ebony Productions' Natalie Cole concert are avail¬ student seats CONGRATULATIONS able In 307 Student Services Bldg. from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. until May 13. | State rs News Board of selected two seniors senior in journalism, will be the editor of the State News, Big Ten Bowling/Billiards Champs p student manage- beginning June 4. He will be bositions on the news- responsible for the editorial and the tone of the Jim Esch - 1888 in 9 games Pis weekend, content in Seiler, a senior in newspaper. ping, will be the new As editor, he will supervise a Tom Hart - 1806 in 9 games ig manager June 4. newsroom staff of over 70 I responsible for the ■ of the advertising de- photographers, writers and edi¬ tors. Sue Feig - 1596 in 9 games id 20 account exec- Tanimura has been a photo¬ grapher, darkroom technician, las worked at the State ■the advertising depart- production manager and co- editor of the MSU yearbook. He Competition was hold April 22-23. Tince September 1975. was the editor of the Red Cedar k: first place in a prelay- Review, the literary magazine "est, and a sales contest of the English Department. A in account executive, member of the State News staff ft i member of the MSU since last summer, he has been ling Louis Edwards Club, MSU Mar- a photographer, city reporter ■Association, and Women and city editor. puliation. He will graduate with a till graduate in August degree in journalism this sum¬ |th a degree in advertis- mer and plans to take philoso¬ phy and English classes during hl Wayne Tanimura, i us a all this week the next year. as we Haircutters |ute the Beatles,May 9-15 TWO LOCATIONS TO SIRYIYOUI 32381. Orand River (Groesbeck area) M-8W IOITV4I. Michigan Ava. (Lansing) Above Bancroft Flowers Owners: Carole and Don Satterfield W-6655 •Jf?'X' .--r-T- "V ' ' '>-■ v- - i i— i 1 - tJr'* ///■;.' .. .. v r ] A .// . ^ 7 7. 7 i| i! ' . ' /: \ •y"! GET INSIDE YOUR WORLD o . . . vviiti I pilot,, iln Miclii(,\;\ Simi llvlio 'H9HHffli1 Vl I * VI ls< • ii iairtight 11 IV Will i a. 3: Ni iw members to gain forms used for this system are audit the Lansing Star, which is If a woman finds out she is could be. — using only medical terminology — for its In 1953, the day was extended to the present in their field, more efficient since they will partially funded by the ASMSU "Kids want to know about employes Tuesday night at 7. It is open to the week-long events. pregnant, one of the three members are work- help the Comptroller "decide if Student Media Appropriations counselors who work at the tuilil at nu cost to something is a worthwhile ex Hoard (SMABI. center calm her down if she s.ioi "We should penditure," Lefko said. gets upset and allow her to In the end of The vouchers will help deter "The comptroller's office n digest the information before mine which budget categories wanted to know if their records trying to make suggestions. I fraternity reives no the requests should fall under. were being properly kept." "We then will help her make ASMSU, They will be standardized Lefko said. arrangements for prenatal care Is unbiased, l.efko said, fiiuuh the committee iv problems" in ISMSI' hooks, it will PER RIDE MAY9-14 Tuesday is Avid Day. Monday thru Saturday It's NATIONAL TRANSPORTATION WEEK! Register to win a $280 pair Find out for yourself why your regional bus is one of the best in the country) of famed Avid 102 speakers. company Everybody rides for a nickel on any C.A.T.A. bus at any time for a whole weekl Get to know From 1:0O til 9:00 p.m. Alex Hofstetter. Avid factory representative, will be at The Stereo Shoppe to demonstrate the remarkable Avid line of loudspeakers and answer your C.A.T.A.I Take a ride on the bus today! queSince their introduction in 1973. Avid's Series 100 line of speakers has received more favorable critical acclaim than any other brand. From the beginning Avid's philosophy for speaker design and fabrication has been simple and straightforward - provide the ultimate In listening performance and reliability and do It at a wonder the Avid 102 earned "top rated acclaim by one of the reasonably Ice Unle nation s most respected Been a while since you last rode a bus? consumeneshngorganizatlonSre^ Shoppe be sure to register for the 9:00 p.m. drawing for For schedule and route information a free pair of Avid I02's. There's no obligation, of course. Call: 394-1000 555 E. Grand River Ave. East Lansing Phone 337-1300 CAPITAL AREA TRAAIPORTATIOfl AUTHORITY • 4615 TRAATCR • LAAflAG 48910 £ Michigon Stole News, Eos* Lansing, Michigan Monday. May,,IWj Change integral to RTF's musical vision metamorphosis has seen it go was the focal point on stage as to describe Clark's manner. His peppered the RTF sound with band's playing. Moran's contri¬ a The Chick Corea composition success. By JOHN CASEY full circle. he acted as a quasi-conductor to voice went as low as the soaring vocals that acted aa butions on keyboard were com- from the new Return To For¬ SUte News Reviewer ever (RTF) effort, "Music- Back in RTF's early days, the the horn section and commun¬ instrument he played; his another instrument in the mix. plcmt.its to Corea's effort. tivM* T *»l»» trM. For a musician to be un¬ icated to the audience in a musicianship scored high Though at times her voice magic," explains it best: group consisted of Corea and The extensive use of horns willing or unable to change, to Stanley Clarke, the solid back¬ warm, generous voice. His com marks. His interpretations of distracted the sound quality, risk experimenting with new "There's a man who's come positions evoked an array of within the RTF sound was the bone of the group, assisted by self-penned compositions — "So it was quickly forgotten when musicians" avenues of musical expressions, through it all reed man Joe Farrell and the moods, always optimistic and Long Mickey Mouse" and her recently written lament "to largest change made by Corea, they to suit the music to merely His music's there deep inside South American husband-and- meaningful. "Hello Again" - were excellent my lover who was in Europe at though it has been used by the MMgeandcrestTir1! love for it. """a him band in the past. Outstanding please the audience, however wife team of Flora Purim and and deserved the wild ap¬ the time," hauntingly stirred ephemerally, is tantamount to He struggles with the world With a comment like, "Am I solos by Joe Farrell on saxes Airto. The sound wa^ drama¬ plause. As Clarke's bass im¬ the audience and Moran to an and piccolo; James musical self-destruction. He's a rebel too relaxed for you people?" Tinsley's provisations brought the house . . tically different in concept and emotional pitch. Her follow-up This is not to say a musician He plays his song for one down, Stanley displayed an was the positive "Come Rain, flugelhorn solo on "Hello design — it escaped classifica¬ Stanley Clarke was the funnv must start with a clean slate - tion. The fusion of rock, jazz man to Corea's straight ap¬ infectious Cheshire cat grin. Come Shine" which floated Again;" and John Thomas' lead creation.. a rhythmic [tabula rasa,) so to It's simply what he loves." proach. Relaxed is the best Michigan native Gayle Moran trumpet proved the experiment Latin and classical was unique; way light as a feather with the WE MUSICIAN. say — with every new en¬ The song "The Musician" the sound was complicated, yet deavor. There is a certain aptly applies to what happened accessible. amount of musical carry-over Thursday on the Auditorium The next cast of characters to that survives the transition and stage as Chick Corea show- i fall into place for the Corea- Clarke team were guitarist Bill Connors, drummer Steve Gadd and Mingo Lewis. The RTF sound went through changes; Ferguson conquers with instead of Purim's airy vocals and Airto's accent on rhythms, By JOHN CASEY the band assumed a jazzier State News Reviewer stance with bits of electronics Spread the word that M.F. has returnedl filtering in. An emphasis of By ail indications Saturday in the Okemos Fine Arts Auditorium, Maynard Ferguson is back, and to complete the growth highlighted this RTF cliche, and better than ever. Backed by a talent-laden Maynard permutation. Ferguson Orchestra, this Canadian-born musician proved that an The quartet consisting of old cat can use new tricks as he spiced the two-hour set with a Corea, Clarke, pyrotechnic repertoire that spanned four decades. His music was uplifting, his drummer Lenny White and stage presence was entertaining. young guitarist A1 DiMeola The 13-piece M.F. Orchestra strolled onto the Auditorium stage investigated the highly com¬ and began to tune, teasing the clean-cut audience a bit with the mercialized merging of funky theme from "My Three Sons." The older folks got a big kick out of jazz and "heavy metal," to be it, as the younger people sat and wondered why their parents were followed up with a bizarre mix laughing. of jazz, rock and medieval. This form of RTF lasted almost Ferguson then came strutting out from the wings in a white leisure suit with a black shirt unbuttoned to show off a broad three years until the break-up chest. His hair, more salt and pepper than grey, was long and had of the group last year. that blown-dry neatness to it. He instantly took charge as the What Corea and Clarke or¬ group brewed up a storm with an older number, "Give It One." ganized this time around is the After every solo, M.F. threw out his arms as if to hug the audience, most ambitious project of or himself in self-adulation. A great majority of the time the musicians to be called RTF. spirited response elicited was warranted, sometimes it was just With nine musicians filling the show. All of it was in good fun. Auditorium stage — stage right After thanking members of the Okemos Jazz Ensemble and were Chick and Gayle Moran those connected with the day's Jazz Invitational and workshop, taking care of keyboards, elec¬ M.F. launched into the blistering "Primal Scream" that featured a tronics and vocals; the solid fine sax solo by orchestra member Mark Colby. As with every drumming of Gerry Brown and horn player that Ferguson currently employs, Colby blew the ever-funky Stanley Clarke Chick Corea, founder of Return to Forever. extremely well and strong, capable of first seat in any other band. provided the necessary rhythm In the M.F. Orchestra there are no leads, all play up-front all the from stage center, and a highly time. experienced horn section con¬ serves to fortify the base of the cased the fourth edition of the sisting of Joe Farrell, John For the third tune, 'Two For Otis," Bobby Militello joined Colby change. As this diversity is RTF saga. The song might be Thomas, James Tinsley, Jim Jazz trumpeter Maynard Ferguson. for a powerful be-bop duet interspersed with short, high solos by honed and developed, the considered Corea's musical Pugh and Harold Garrett stood Ferguson. Perhaps this aspect is the only annoying part of the musician matures, gains confi¬ autobiography, for he is what off on stage left — the sight was otherwise enjoyable presentation — Maynard was playing the high dence and incorporates these he sings of: a "musician." Chick as impressive as the sound. notes most of the time, limiting himself to brief leads that could fresh concepts into product, be it an album, a tour, or both. The Corea has embraced music as revolutionary since the incep¬ Nobody really stole the show, have been lessened so he could have blown more. A "JUST FOR GRADUATE idea of succeeding or failing in tion of RTF. The group has it was a group effort. Chick One of the evening's two apexes were reached before the eyes and ears of the alwavs been a dynamic vehicle Corea performed magic on the intermission when Ferguson introduced the title song from the STUDENT" SPECIAL musician's audience is inconse¬ of musical awareness, from the keyboards as he traveled up album that is paving M.F.'s comeback trail, "Conquistadors." An quential if the musician does beginning days in late 1971 as and down the piano in true impressive sight was when the five-piece trumpet section joined ■•ad on and Had ant haw YOU as a gradaaH ft«dMtca| not have confidence in the an avant-garde musical entity classical form and created a Ferguson at the lip of the stage to blow hot and heavy together »AVi aa Lartora-Concart IrHm tkkoti. change. A confident musician to today's vast appeal. How¬ captivating sound on Fender and solo. The song had people gasping as they went to get hot-dogs plays the music he feels; the ever, the difference in popular¬ Rhodes and synthesizers. Corea and M.F. T-shirts during intermission. 19 great, new evonta will be presented by the lecture-Concert people for next Id audience is an afterthought. ity is ironic because the group's teaton, But at an added convenience to Graduate Studenti, SERIES Tiekettlej that# eventt will be told until May 13 (or until the tubtidy runt out)... and thetrn ingt are unbelievable 111 For '/> off the regular price you'll have your OWN SEAT SPECIAL (Identical to thoie purchated by non-grodt at regular price), AND you hovty# choice of attending either the Univertity, Lively Arte, or Chamber Mutlc 23 FUNCTIONS (SIN, COS, TAN, IN, LOG, Ex, Yx, SQUARE ROOT, DEG RAO ETC ) INCLUDING SCIENTIFIC NOTATION. Serlttlll| COMES WITH REGULAR BATTERIES, RECHARGER, RECHARGE¬ And look at that# tavlngt 1 ABLE BATTERIES, AND CASE. University A Lively Art* SariM TEAL SR>82 7 eventi at the Public SCIENTIFIC 7 eventi at the low, low COGS PRICE terlet ticket price ™ CALCULATOR Zone 1 • not available ot COGS dlnount Zone 1-'30" oooao WHILI SUPPLY LASTS! Zone 2- 25" Zone 2-'16" Zone 3- 20" Zone3- 13" ""J ONLY $259* COME SEE OUR OTHER FINE QUALITY CALCULATORS: TEXAS Chambar Music Surius INSTRUMENTS. HEWLETT-PACKARD, SHARP. KINGSPOINT. ANDMORF 5 eventi at the Public Savants at the WITH terlet ticket price low COGS price all teati '2S» all teoti "GUARANTEED LOWEST PRICES IN TOWN" ONLY AT All you have to do it fill out the order form below and bring It along with ID, a stamped, telf-addrottod envelope (tiekett moiled In June), and UV DISCOUNT or money order mode payable to Michigan State Univertity, to room 314 «l Student Sorvlcot Building. We'll be waiting for you there between MWF« CALCULATORS 11:00 o.m„ TuTh 5:00-9:00 p.m. If you'd like to be tented with fritodi.n" 220M.A.C. 10-5:30 Mon.-Sot. Univ. Moll 351-6470 'til 8 on Thurt. your order formt and paymenti together indicating the detlred ieotlng.M«" itudenti may purchate two tlcketi, but SPOUSE ID will be required forodmit" The last day for the SPECIAL SPRING SALES will be May 13 ot 11:00 o.m.»»" got any further quetfiont, call 353-9IS9. An UNBEATABLE bargain 11 Graduate studenti who have terlet tickets for the current teoton end whtibj already renewed their subscriptions for next year may obtoin the iomt"»l tubtidy by visiting our office during the hours specified above. (Thlt form to bo used exclusively for COGS special discounts.) LECTURI-CONCIRT •!■■■» COGS TICKET ORDER DISCOUNT FORM STUDENT NO. INTRODUCING MORE FOODS. NAME: AND LESS GUM Now no matter how much weight CITY « ZIP you've got to lose, you don't have to feel guilty about enjoying a succulent frank. With the bun. Or real milkshake SERIES TICKETS: (COGS PRICES ONLY( (Univertity t Lively Art*)'!*"•11 a cocoa Or any of the great foods we've added (Chamber Mutlc) >3" to the new TOTAL I Weight Watchers' Food Plan. NUMBER OF TICKETS PMCE All within limits, of course. Come to a meeting. Today. There's LIVELY ARTS SERIES rensteindeher's more than ever going for you, and less than ever to hold you back. UNIVERSITY SERIES YOU'LL LOVE THE CHANCE. VTEKHT CHAMBER MUSIC SERIES FOR MORE INFO: WKVCHERS The Authority. SEATING PREFERENCE (CONSULT SEATING CHART AT COGS OFFICE) 417 E. GRAND RIVER TOTAL AMOUNT OF ORDER: S _OPEN DAILY 9:30-9: SAT. 9:30-5:30: SUNDAY 12-5 I wicHiggn State Newt, £o»t Lansing, Michigan Monday, Moy 9, 1977 |I By BYRON BAKER News Reviewer Caribbean island, we sense Claire Bloom seems miscast handsome (it's an $8 million rassing lapse in one scene: clear HemingwayVlslands:' sute immediately his love and con¬ as Hudson's ex-wife who comes movie: everything has been sunny shots of one of Hudson's 1' t Hemingways Is- cern for them the actor to confer — tragic news. Gilbert designed and constructed). young sons straining upon his K, i„ the Stream" Is an radiates it. The scenes Roland has a tiny role as a Fred Koenekamp's cinema¬ fishing pole are intercut with Irior novel: the real action of ■ hook is rooted in ita concerning father and sons are ship's captain who transports tography is aglow in filtered incredibly grey and murky awkwardly written and direct¬ Jewish refugees, and Julius sunlight and induced glare — footage of a hooked, thrashing ■agonist's thoughts, feelings ed, and the young actors (Hart Harris is effective as Hudson's what passes for period look in marlin. ■irsonal observations. Thta Bochncr, Brad Savage and aide. disciplined approach films these days. "Islands in the Stream" is at crucial problem with the Michael James Wixted) por¬ Physically, the production is There is, however, an embar¬ the Meridian 8 Theatres. Jj8 million Paramount Him Ij„n the work. traying the boys are unskilled, but there is a pleasing familial Enarist Denne Bart Petit- charm to them. When the film L and director Franklin J. turns to other and less hand in editing it for publica¬ affecting Lf(ner (who directed "Pat- purpose could alone achieve tion by William Faulkner, Jules aspects of the novel, the opera¬ tion. F and "Papillon," among greatness in a motion picture, Furthman and Howard Hawks tive "heart" — as little, really, The best thing in "Islands" is |r expensive pictures) ap- "Islands" would be up there of "To Have and Have Not" in as there was - of the picture is | tly haven't found an effec- no longer part of it: Heming¬ with the best of them. 1945) so that it can. left behind. I cinematic corollary to way returned to the manuscript The slow, almost literary As Thomas Hudson, The best thing in the film is in the early '50s and decanted sculptor, Biincway's prose. But then, pace of the film, the delicate painter and expatriate, George easily David Hemmings' perfor¬ ■L bark on the many from it his celebrated novella, dramatic focus upon the small¬ C. Scott initially expresses mance as Hudson's rummy "The Old Man and the Sea." lingway 'II"1 a^PU'ion What is left in "Islands" is est of expressed emotions — weariness and grace and disil¬ friend Eddy — doubtless an Ires of the past four dec- primarily moody and unwieldly this is the sort of disciplined, faithful approach scenarist and lusionment splendidly. But English cousin to Steve's ft perhaps none exists. Scott is a powerful, and some¬ (Humphrey Bogart) rummy L, "Islands in the Stream" prose. The master's touch is director have taken. times dominating film actor, friend Eddy (Walter Brennan) evident, but the overall work is ■cnis a particular problem However, there simply isn't and he is here on screen so in "To Have and Have Not." It's far from the peak of his literary ■he filmmakers: it is a . enough of a movie in the source much that those expressed a warm, studied, old fashioned ftd rambling book, written powers. Petitclerc and Schaffner have material to bear that kind of feelings become monotonous portrayal in the mode of the ■discarded in the '40s, and treatment, and Petitclerc and and overstated, ultimately archetypal heroic movie drunk, Tishcd posthumously in 1970 certainly come to the project Schaffner aren't daring enough meaningless. and it is affecting and almost with the most well-meaning of he wish of Hemingway's to substantially re-work the When Hudson's three sons memorable because of its ap¬ intentions, and if sincerity of |w Mary, who also lent a material la la the transforma¬ come to visit him on his pealing familiarity. That elusive identifiable sound GOLDEN EARRING: bit unusual, are enjoyable. Mediocre music and lyrics on Mad Love Golden Earring's third re¬ side two prove Golden Ear¬ (MCA - 2254) lease, "Mad Love," contains all ring's downfall. "Bombay" these qualities, but has failed to to have borrowed the With "Moontan" its first re seems let the group totally break from bottom line from Clapton's "461 lease in 1973, Golden Earring the doldrums as another off- Ocean Boulevard." with little seemed primed as' the first non English European group to center European band. cITort observable on lyrics. "I Need Love" starts off with "Fightin' Windmills" and "Con make it big in the States. But a smart, tight, quick piece Man" are also mundane, with disappointedly after the release about that elusive ingredient; of "To the Hilt" in 1976, it "Time's Op" the only saving love. The lyrics are impressive, grace, flowing well considering seemed they would not be able with a creeping guitar by the changes of pace it exper- to sustain this initial tion that belie the title. accept Koovmans that is indicative of § MARC DiMERClJRIO With the appetite sufficiently a nee. potential. Kooymans and Geel Ute News Reviewer A Dutch based group, Golden wetted, side two definitely ing team up for some outstand JRGABRIEL: satisfies. The takeoff of "Slow- Earring is Barry May on vocals; Golden Earring have held ing subtle, but potent guitar on I"Peter Gabriel George Koovmans on guitar; themselves back by attempting burn." a most enjoyable rock and Rinus "Sueleen," a bit of divorce court (AtcoSD—36-147) Gerritsen, Eelco • to perpetuate drawn-out cosmic tune, and the bluesy piano and on record. Gerring and Cesar Zuierwijk on approaches in music and lyrics. „ is this new face on the guitar of "Waiting for the Big bass, slide guitar and drums, "Mad Love is Comin'" is a bit "Mad I.ove" is decent work I scene? Is he any good? One" leaves one wondering ■ does he sound like? what Gabriel has been doing respectively. more intricate; the lyrics un with an impressive first side, The members are very tal¬ certain. The music, while giving but until side two can he Jl, the mystery man is all these years. The new face has a sound like ented, with Kooymans partic a smooth buildup, seems to fall brought up to date, Golden ■Gabriel. He is very good. no other. He is very good, and ularly impressive on guitar. off with what would seem Earring will remain a bit tar¬ |e sounds like no one else, The music is rock; strong, with appropriate power totally ah- nished in American eyes. (an detect shades of his how can one forget the name a good beat, and the vocals, a • band. Genesis (for Peter Gabriel? iiis lead singer), but ACCOUNTING AND form and total o music is his own. FINANCE MAJORS LET US HELP YOU PLAN jntity is a big word in the AHEAD TO BECOME A CPA world, and without it, it id to gain recognition, let lISKilSi ollowing. Gabriel's first entitled appropeiajtfly Ir Gabriel." is a eoner*te ■ of vinyl with a musical |l that leaves no question t the muddy, arcane usie of "Moribund If you qualify, you can sign up for Navy flight training while lurgermeister," and the ly, sprite, and smooth flow you're still in college and be assured of the program you |olsbur> Hill." one knows want. Our AOC Program (if you want to be a Pilot) or our OPEN THURSDAY AND FRIDAY EVENINGS UNTIL 9 00 :an is to be reckoned with. NFOC Program (if you want to be a Naval Flight Officer) can |0ne finishes with "Hum- x of smooth vocals get you into the Navy sky for an exciting, challenging career. ■percussion and orchestra¬ For more details, see the Navy Recruiter below. LT. 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S30 Bailey, Armstrong, Bryan, Rather, come to your dorm soon - watch Butterfield, Campbell, Landon, Yakeley, Gilchrist, Williams, Mary for it.) Mayo, Wonder, Wilson, Holden and Case) and order a pizza from Who else delivers a hot delicious your dorm, you can take pizza to your room door in 30 minutes or less and gives you an advantage of Domino's Dorm Discount! You can have a hot, automatic discount on the price of delicious pizza delivered to your your pizza? room door for the above discounted prices - no coupons necessary. 10. Offer good till May Call us. We deliver fast...free. 351-7100 966 Trowbridge JacobBoriB g Michigan Stole News, East Lansing, Michigan Monday, May 9 |9?? Organizations working behind scenes By TERRY PRZYBYLSKI Though they are not conduct¬ ing any open political activities member of the Committee For Rent Control in last fall's elec¬ Schaefer also said PIRGIM was looking into a that coordinator for the Committee For Rent Control last fall, is conceivably be paying over legislative initiatives that pro¬ $313 per month in the twelfth 1 ponents of rent control might State News Staff Writer month of the contract. at the moment, spokespersons tion, said that PIRGIM (Public revision of the Security Deposit currently active in the East introduce. oppose it." "WqM The song is over, but the "The law doesn't prohibit for both groups say they are Interest Research Group in Act which would give tenants Lansing Tenants Resource it," Though pro-rent control melody lingers on for those who Michigan), the Human Rights interest on their security do Center (TRC), a nonpartisan Ipcar said of the stipulation. forces have no definite plans for ran the campaigns for and still working behind the scenes influence legislation that party (HRP) and the Student posits, as well as limiting the organization which provides in¬ "Right now we're discussing it putting a rent control proposal against rent control in East to affects landlords and tenants. Housing Corporation are all amount of the deposit. formation on housing to both and trying to publicize it, then back on the East Lansing ballot ProPerty did wnt control not"11<| Lansing in last November's Another tenants and landlords. see if anything should be done." in 1978, the next year it can nroDO<1, election. Both groups also say they currently working on landlord project which pro tenant legislation. rent control forces are inter "It's basically a repository Mary Luttrell, an East Lan¬ appear on the ballot, -Schaefer would enter the political arena Schaefer said that groups ested in, according to Schaefer, with a lot of housing literature, sing landlord who headed the said that possibility still exists. R-n. i Rent control has been dc again if they thought it was Renl Control didn't which supported rent control in is the formation of an Ingham legislation, bills and booklets," Committee Against Rent Con¬ "We haven't definitely de¬ feated twice at the polls in East necessary. the fall election are currently Ipcar said, "including all of the trol last fall, said that area cided on it yet, but sure, it's an Bernard Schaefer, who was a County Tenants' Union, which Lansing. concerned with violations of the would bargain collectively with pro rent control and antirent landlords are politically in¬ option," Schaefer said. "The *?d' , Apparently I control literature that's been active right now, but said she thought thev could i' I housing code and ance of poor mainten rental property by landlords on rents and mainten circulated in East Lansing." was involved in some antirent housing market is getting tighter, and rents are still going "'nt control." !d l,,( 1 landlords. "A similar operation is in Ipcar is also currently work¬ control projects of her own. up, so it might be necessary." I'UUroll said, many „f lht. ho».,„I "Right now, PIRGIM is re¬ effect in Ann Arbor, and its ing to remove a stipulation in "Right now, I'm compiling all Luttrell said that she be¬ of landlords wm" property simply p„,™ Witness contradicts police searching what we think are illegal rentalfclauses," Schaefer said, "such as requiring tenants worked very well," Schaefer said. "Under the contracts there, the rent can't go up more some local contracts that allows the landlord, if he chooses to do so, to raise rents 10 per cent a of my antirent control material from the last two elections into booklet form," Luttrell said, lieved another antirent control organization would be formed if the proposal was brought back ,IBht lh" bSs,rath"rthan»»J PropoXhl to pay their own attorney's fees than 8 per cent a year, and month for every month of the "and I will make it available to in 1978. (continued from page 1) in court cases, and a landlord's tenants can refuse to pay their contract. interested people." "I don't know for sure if it "That's the best if you have rout, J Moments afterward, the same officer took careful aim Irom not being responsible if a rents if landlords don't keep up Under such an arrangment, a Luttrell also said that oppon¬ will be back on the ballot, a Sibic people who group of i® about 10 to 12 feet away and fired a second shot into Smith's chest, tenant injures himself on the their property." tenant who signed a contract to ents of rent control would most because I can't speak for the this back on the keepS ' ' immediately knocking him to the ground, the witness said. landlord's property." Charles Ipcar, who was a pay $100 a month in rent, could likely be working against any other side," she said, "but if it year," she said. Smith was unarmed and the other two officers at the scene never drew their guns from their holsters, the source said. "At no time during the incident did I see Smith carrying a 1-STOP SHOPPING SAVES MONEY, TIME, ENERGY crowbar, tire iron or any other object which could have been used as a weapon against the officers," the witness said in the affidavit. The source also said, "At no time did Smith make a threatening motion toward any officer." The Lansing police reportedly the incident Friday, concluding Hersman was in self defense. completed their investigation of that the shooting of Smith by ' A SAMPLE & SAVINGS! The report was then handed over to Peter Houk, Ingham County prosecutor, who, according to weekend news reports, concurred with the findings of the report and said the actions of the Lansing Police Department were "legal and justified" and that there would be no coroner's inquest into the incident. The notarized affidavit of the witness will be turned over to the Ingham County Prosecutor's office Monday for consideration of an additional and further investigation of the shooting. The witness who presented the notarized affidavit to the State I PRICES GOOD THRU SAT. MAT 14,107. MEIJER RESERVES THE RIGHT 1 LIMIT SALES ACCORDIHG TO SPECIFIED LIMITS. HO SALES TO DEALERS I STITUTIOHS OR DISTRIBUTORS. _ News has agreed to cooperate with the prosecutor's office. The also said that he chose to release the information CZ2EE3 source through a news agency to avoid a possible conflict with the Lansing police. "RACER" LOOK VACSITy INN' MIX& FOOD •BOOZE* PIZZA MATCH Tonight is Pixza & LADIES' RACER SHORTS AND TOPS | Pitcher Night TO COORDINATE IN BRIGHT SPRING aftur 6:00 p.m. COLORS. 50% I RAY-O-VAC 12" 2 item Pizza 150 oz. Pitcher 5.00 POLY / 50% COT¬ / "C" OR "D" SIZE WALLET SIZE TON IE" 2 item Pizza & 50 oz. Pitcher 6.25 TRANSISTOR BATTERIES COLOR PRINTS TOUR CHOICE •Style 14-2-Cand 13-2 D (From a color negative). Add $1.50 for Pitchers Vz off! copy print. negative if sending in a portrait or a . For electronic applications. 59* PKG. 49 lO/'l Photo Dept. lediei' Dept. Housewares Dept. HadexreDept. OF 2 NEUER FINEST IBM CHOKE ROUND STEAK MOST POWIAR SALAD VEGETABLE ** VINE RIPENED The Farther You Spread it, the Thinner it Gets!! TOMATOES 39 MEUER WHITE SAVE 17* t THIS WEEK S MEIJER 1 STOP SHOPPING GUIDE HAS AT LEAST BREW 2001. WT.UMF 22 QH3 WORTH OF PEPSI IMNT, MET KRl OR RE0. COUPONS GET YOUR FREE COPY IN THE STORE! IPEPSkCOlA Get Identical PIZZA FREE _ little Caesais Piz» I 1201I.M.MVM- S f „ * * 337-1631 I Coupon ..pit.. 1-H-7I On. coupon p«f wSff ■ »HO» MONBAT T—M MimAT I A.M. TO 1MB B.M. - lUMBAT * A.M. TO T P.M. State News, Eost Lansing, Michigan Monday, Moy 9, 1977 9 NATIONS SINGLED OUT FOR AIDING GROUPS Terrorism rising, State Dept. says .'ill to deal with further attacks on ation of Palestine, both of which Store Hours: WASHINGTON (API - The American citizens and installa¬ Somalia — There is "open French ambassador to Moga¬ deal with kidnapings and hos¬ ^Department, saying tions abroad including those of carry out international terror¬ ist activities. cooperation" between Somali government and the the discio. tage situations. Mon. thru Fri. 9-9 is "every indication that American companies." The Slate Department also national terrorism is on The department furnished Yemen — "There is some Front for the Liberation of the outlined proposals for dealing The department said numer¬ Sat. 9-6 Sun. 12-5 . „,pase," identifies Libya, these reports on the four coun¬ public evidence that the Somali Coast (FLSC). The with terrorism. Among the ous diplomatic efforts are un¬ 'south Yemen and Somalia People's Democratic Republic FLSC has been involved in two plans under consideration is the derway to develop agreements entries believed to have lt,rrorists in recent years. tries: Libya - The Lybian government, since at least of Yemen allowed its has on occasion territory to be used major terrorist incidents in the past two years, including the assignment abroad of "ready reaction teams" of psychiatrists for international cooperation on controlling, apprehending and CIGARETTES 1972, has actively assisted a sanctuary for terrorists." March 1975 kidnapping of the , department singled out number of terrorist groups and as a and other specialists trained to prosecuting terrorists. untries in correspondence public Sunday by Sen. javits. R-N.Y., a member individuals, including the per¬ petrators of the massacre at the 2/89* Senate Foreign Relations 1972 Olympic Games in Munich. Primarily they have been mem¬ fep[pxg(n)0(n)<§) All Tax Included LIMIT 4 PACKS EXPIRES 5-15-77 All Brandt littee. bers of the several "rejection- its asked for reports on ist" factions of the Palestinian Announcements for It's What's Volunteers needed for tele¬ The MSU Chess Club meets at 7 The Career Resources Center s abetting terrorists Happening must be received in the phone survey on redlining. Call tonight. The meeting is in 205 offers information on many career movement who have broken staff assistant, Harold State News office, 343 Student Dave Persell, Center for Urban Horticulture Bldg. possibilities. Open from 8 a.m. to OUR DISCOUNT al was killed in a away from more moderate Services Bldg., by noon at least noon and 1 to 5 p.m. Monday Affairs, College of Urban Develop¬ PRICE ON , „ 'attack at Yesilkoy Istanbul, Turkey, last Palestinian leaders. Iraq — The government of two class days before publication. No announcements will be ac¬ cepted by phone. ment, for information. An astrological organization is being formed in this area. Any¬ one interested please call through Friday, 207 Student Ser- 10% OFF KODAK FILM Iraq gives political and moral Faye Student employes: Are you Eilola (in student directory) for ec. of State Douglas J. support to all Palestinian rejec- Thomas C. Cochran, eminent having hours cut? You can do details. PROCESSING & PRINTING aid in a letter: "There tionist groups, and probably Nutrition Services at DEC 7 to 9 economic and social historian, will something about it! Contact unately, every indica- financial, military or training be in the Eustace Hall lounge from ASMUS Labor Relations in 327 p.m. Monday and Thursday; 1 to 3 NO LIMIT EXPIRES 5-15-77 international terror- support to a Fatah group and 3 to 5 p.m. Tuesday for dis¬ Student Services Bldg. Video Workshop needs people p.m. Wednesday; 8:30 to 10:30 the increase and we the Wadi Haddad wing of the cussion with students. to run cameras for 9 p.m. a.m. Friday; and 9 to 11 a.m. City prepare ourselves Palestinian Front for the Liber¬ Council meetings. Contact the Saturday or by appointment. to Emergency Medical Services Musicians and entertainers Video Workshop at the Union. KODAK COLGATE Club will discuss internal injuries at needed for volunteer work at 7:30 tonight in 304 Bessey Hall. Campus Al-Anon group meets COLOR FILM TOOTHPASTE Stockbridge Nursing Home. Con¬ Want someone to talk to? at 8 p.m. Tuesday in 253 Student Protestors leave armories tact Sam Garlinghouse at Tralfam- Lesbian Rap Group meets at 6:30 Services Bldg. $1 46 99' The Classical Guitar Society of adore Co-op. tonight in the Union Sunporch. mnlinut-tl on pajjo 1 |i Lansing meets at 7:45 p.m. Tues¬ day at the Beekman Center. 7 that the demonstrators in¬ Members will be performing. C126,110 20 Exp. oz. Reg. 1.41 1OT id from page 1) tended to reoccupy the site. LIMIT 1 LIMIT 1 _e n to jobs and school. protestors have been As of Sunday, guard spokes¬ to MSU GO Club meets from 8:30 11 p.m. tonight in 331 Union. ATTENTION ALL EXPIRES 5-15-77 EXPIRES 5-15-77 Hin armories since Monday, ■ they were arrested while persons said that 91 demonstra¬ COAST PLAYTEX lying the site of the $2 In plant. tors remained in the Dover armory and 100 in the Somers worth armory. In Manchester Interested in handicapper is¬ sues? STIGMA welcomes you to its weekly meetings at 7:30 tonight Professional Hairstyling SOAP TAMPONS Friday, the state in 339 N. Case Hall. Accessible. me Court turned down jpeal to have protestors 392 remained, after 299 had bailed out. The Portsmouth The Christian Science Organi¬ Only $5.00 2/65' *1 77 personal recog- armory still held 87 and the zation-East Campus is meeting at jed on im alter the state agreed Concord armory 164. 7 tonight in 221 Baker Hall. 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M.46 Reg. 2.19 12 oz. $1 99 Reg. 2.98 LIMIT I LIMIT 1 Call 351-5330 EXPIRES 5-15-77 EXPIRES 5-15-77 Dr. James Nixon ZORRIES Registered Optometrist Brookfield Plaza SANDAL THONGS 99 Men's Sizes Reg. 3.99 1. HAWAIIAN TROPIC SUNTAN LOTION Sandal Trade-In 8oz. Reg. 3.25 $2 88 Bring us your SHEER NYLON PEPSI-COLA KNEE HI'S old sandals *1." and got 3/$l.°° 8 SHADES Reg. 69« each 8 Pack Cans LIMIT 6 LIMIT 1 EXPIRES 5-15-77 EXPIRES 5-15-77 SJOO 0FF RAMSEY LEWIS L.P. SPECIALS!!! on a now pair Love Notes Reg. 6.98 *3. 69 (•xdading salt iloms) 10CC $4." |4Sll Bootory • Shoes 'H' Slulf L Brand Eivar Deceptive Bends Reg. 7.98 BOB JAMES 4 Reg. 7.98 *4." REO LIVE *4." Batsmen fail in Big Ten race Disappointed golfers Rosin erased even that remote Cotter was called for a balk The ed base when Buck pitcher By MIKE LITAKER Spartans managed to State News Sports Writer MSU's flickering chance finishing in the top two of the at possibility with his second two- hit shutout of the year against the Spartans. Rosin victimized which scored the equalizer and sent the game into extra inn¬ ings. Cotter got the first two bring home a consolation win in the nightcap thanks to a com bination of a windy Ohio day and Brian Miller botched his bunt attempt. Centerfielder Ken Robinson regroup for Big Ten Big Ten baseball race was Buddy Baker with his first men he faced in the ninth before bat strength. followed with his third four By JOHN SINGLER The Spartans can enter two tesrn ■ heavily doused by Indiana on performance in Texas this yielding a single and Terry bagger of the season to seal the Saturday and solidified by Ohio spring and also shut out his Jones' game-winning double. Weston, Ken Robinson and State News Sports Writer own tourney. wo«anun Jerry Weller played a little long triumph. If the Ohio State men's golf team had a State on Sunday. Spartan buddies once last Jones hit a bases-empty homer ball off the Ohio State pitchers Ohio State came back with a in the first game to provide choice, it would probably want to play the Big Indiana, which had a 1-5 Indiana with most of their bat in the weekend finale that put pair of meaningless runs in the Ten Tournament right now instead of waiting conference record going into the fifth on a two-run homer by More sports page II the Spartans' record at 20-24 two weeks. weekend, swept a pair from the power over the course of the overall. Wade Manning off starter Todd Ditto for Michigan, Minnesota and Indiana. Spartans, 20 and 5-4. The A1 Weston and day. Weston opened the Spartan Hubert, who was lifted for Jerry Weller All four conference teams finished ahead of Buckeyes made it three losses in MSU tried to get back on the scoring in the first with a Cotter in the inning. MSU in this weekend's Spartan Invitational Pontinen a row by taking the opener 5-2 picked up the lone MSU hits in victory trail in Columbus but was two shots back »fi„ ■ the contest as starter Sherm two-run homer, his sixth of the Cotter kept the Buckeyes off and probably can't wait to return to Forest and 35. His 72 before MSU salvaged the windy the Buckeyes weren't impress¬ on Saturday Johnson dropped his fourth year and 20th career shot. RBI stride the rest of the way to Akers Golf Course for the enough for the medal, despite a 68 £ afternoon with an 8-4 win in the ed with Larry Pashnick's league league champion¬ even his record at 3-3 while nightcap. game in seven decisions. leading earned run average. singles from Randy Hop and ship May 20 to 22. State's Rick Borg. ^ The Spartans, now 5-7 in the Cliff Northey's bases-loaded Northey made it 4-0 before the getting an insurance run in the The Buckeyes won the Spartan by 15 shots The Buckeyes finished double and an RBI (run batted Pashnick was touched-up for Bucks closed it to 4-2 in the third sixth on Welter's opposite field over runner-up Miami of Ohio and finished 19 round with a team total Saturday', Big Ten, needed to sweep their of 357 fo, t, in) single by Weston staked five runs in the first three on Steve Watson's solo homer blast in the sixth. The home run ahead of third-place Indiana. final 10 league games in order to freshman Brian Wolcott to a 4-2 frames of the opener before and a run-scoring single. was Waller's eighth of the The Spartans were ninth, a distant 31 M«tn*n°Ver '>?r °monK 'ivegolfers. stay close to powerful Min¬ lead in the nightcap before the Spartan coach Danny Litwhiler MSU went ahead for good in campaign, coming after Buck¬ shots shy of Ohio State, paced by Mark MS„Vs Domigalski, the Big Tens finest,considered to be» nesota, whose 10-2 slate tops Hoosiers came back to tie the called on Mark Sutherland, who the top of the fourth when Dave eye pitching had sat him down Brooks and Mark Egly, each of whom shot tournament on his home has yet to * the conference. game off reliefer Jim Cotter in held the Bucks hitless over the Radke led off with a single to four previous times during the 149. The pair finished seven strokes back of senior will get one more course S chance at th* But Hoosier hurler Larry the sixth. final three innings. center and Jerry Pollard reach¬ day on strikes. freshman medalist Ray Pontinen, of Minne¬ Ten tourney. sota. Domagalski had bogey, par, fa. -double bogey to close Other MSU scores included Gary Domagal- then opened Friday's firstZL ski, 151; Rick Grover, 152; Joe Marx, 155; Saturday with bogey bom Doug Lemanski. 160; Eric Gersonde, 155; recovered and played the front nine w Tom Baker, 157; and Marty Holda and Jack had more problems on the final nine hole Delaney, 158 each. couldn't recover. Women golfers roll o No one in the Big Ten could Karen K scott and Sheila *ue Ctinlin, 130;; stop it and now everybody Tansev lied for second, with 1.1 and Cindv' should know it'll take more 122.Eseott dropped a four-iron lhan soggy fairways and slow shot six feet from the cup on greens to halt the MSU wo¬ the first overtime hole and the lasi men's golf team. edged Tansey in the playoff. It nnild hav Despite falling rain through¬ was the seeond straight week out Ihe weekend, the Spartans Tansey had lost a playoff for won the first Cincinnati Invita second place. al Michigan third and!" linnal bv 23 shots and carted Other Spartan scores in reen fourth. home nine trophies for the effort. "It was so wet. The course was just saturated," MSU head coach Mary Fossum said. In addition to the team title, the Spartans had the medalist fircstone 9 in Joan Garety. The junior fired a first-round 83 and shot 38 for nine holes Saturday. The final round was shortened from Jockey Jean Cruguet, aboard Seattle Slew, (2nd from right) looks back to check the crowd of horses chasing after 18 holes because of the wea¬ him. Seattle Slew won the 103rd running of the Kentucky Derby in a time of 2:01.5 over the 1 '/e mile course. ther. CAR FIX-UP TIM .Produce. An Store LUBE & OIL CHANGE Coupons VINE RIPE TOMATOES 44'lb. HiC FRUIT DRINKS 46 oz. Cans ARTICHOKES 27 Six. 7*1.00 All Flavors ■ limit 2 777® Save 21' SHOPRITE VANILLA ICE CREAM EGG PLANT 3 Medium Size Oneost side of MSU at 1109 (Glossy Purple) *1 01 '/, Gallon Carton 66* Save 44' East Grand River. Includes up to 5 quarts of high grade oil IOW40 Open Mon. - Thur. 9 am • 10 pm KEEBLER ELFWICH Fri.tSot. 9 am-11 pm Call for appointment today! -Bakery- an COOKIES 14 oz. Pkg. 66® Save 23' FIRESTONE SPARTAN WHITE BREAD 20 oz. loaf 25* AJAX CLEANSER Special Label -14 oz. Container 9' Save 16' Meat DOWNTOWN fTORI ONLY MIXED 74 LOIN PORK CHOPS 329 S.GRAND 485'7Ul SCHAFER'S OLYMPIC MEAL EDON BATHROOM TISSUE 4 Roll Pack 84* Open Dolly 7 a.m. toSorvoYou 20 oz. Loai 57' White or Colored 44® CENTER CUT RIB CHOPS Save 23' M.2' ib. -General Merchandise- HAWAIIAN PUNCH DRINK MIX All Flavors PORK STEAK CUT 4 STRAIN 28% oz. Container I . Save 30' Regular or Thick Cut 84* lb. SINK BOARDS »2." ea. RUBBERMAID DISH PANS LIMIT 1 PLEASE BONELESS PORK ROLLED COUNTRY Assorted Colors '1." ea. WITH 'S.00 FOOD PURCHASE BUTT ROAST 98* Ib. pFrozen & Dairy- PORK SPARE RIBS LEAN & MEATY *1. 18 Ib. SPARTAN FROZEN ORANGE JUICE 12 oz. Can 44® BONELESS BAR BQ BEEF 39 SARA LEE CHEESE CAKE Reg. or Strawberry S] 39 (Cut from Center of Chuck) 1 , Ib. HEATHERWOOD FIGURE 8 LOWFAT MILK •/, Gallon 66® SPLIT OR 74 FRYERS 59* Ib. HEATHERWOOD BUTTERMILK 1 qt. Carton 777® KOEGEL'S RING OR 1 LB. SLICED BOLOGNA 99* ^-Grocery- COCA COLA OR TAB l Liter Bottle, Plus Deposit 7*1.00 PENN DUTCH MUSHROOMS 8oz. Can Pieces & Stems 77® MARDIGRAS PAPER TOWELS 2 Roll Pkg. 69® OCEAN SPRAY CRAN-GRAPE DRINK 32 oz. Bottles 59' on west side of MSU at 910 SPARTAN GRAPE JAM is oz. Jar Trowbridge Rd 39' Opon Monday • Thursday 9 a.m.-9 p,m. HERSHEY SNACK SIZE CANDY BARS 20 ct. pkg. 9 a.m.-l 1 p.m. Friday 8 Saturday Milk-Almond or Mr. Goodbar M." 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Sunday I mi! t^ri^10'8 N*w*'Eo" Lor"'n9, Mlchi9°n Monday, May 9, 1977 11 \ ;partan netters change face's Number two singles Kevin Women netters win 2; Lr TOM SHANAHAN balls across the net. McNulty, 6 2, 7-6, and in No. 3 te- ..News true "' Sport" Writer tnd Mf" McNulty had an assemblage of "bleacher bums" help him take New Zealand import John The crowd was wryly razzing Rotica between games and singles against Tighe Keating, 6-3, 4-6, 6-3. It year was also the first time this the Spartans had won all state tournament next i"fashion. MSy»^nn» Botfea to a tiebreaker before Botica, enjoying the attention, was just as three doubles matches, which J completely eh.nfH 'U losing 4-6, 6-7. The warm return sharp with his dry humor. Dee McCaffrey waa the net¬ pleased coach Stan Drobac .nality fridoy ,nd Satur' weather brought out a large, The ters only double winner as he immensely. ByTOMSHANAHAN Vogel also replaced Mascarin at No. 1 doubles and picked up another win with Buckeyes also had Pedro fell behind early against 08U, State News Sports Writer enthusiastic crowd that saw L Spartans had passed up J first chance to get over McNulty and Botica break each Gonzalez, from Puerto Rico, criticizing himself aloud in but came back to win 2-6, 6-4, 7-5. He easily won against one The Spartans are 6-7 with dual match left against It took three weeks, but MSU's women's tennis team finally added some wins to its dual teammate. Jodi Ross, 6-1, 6-3. "I expected a good match from Central and other's serves and play the I break even mark when Spanish when he and partner Indiana, 6-2,6-2. Gudelsky also Eastern Michigan at home record. we got it," MSU coach Elaine Hatton said. "I short and long game, while 1, ord fell W 5-6 after an r ™ivc loss to Western sending each other knuckle Botica had trouble winning No. 1 doubles against Gudelsky and beat Indiana in singles, as did Wednesday before the Big Ten The netters have held a 5-2 record since don't think anyone played well though because of the wind," she added. Keating and No. 5 Steve Car¬ tourney May 20 to 22. beating Miami (Ohio) April 16 and hadn't EL, Wednesday, 51 played a dual match since then until the "We played alright against Kalamazoo, but they just weren't that good," Hatton said. Tpriday the netters blow a Thursday and Friday wins over Central MSU now has until Thursday to prepare for fin a 7-2 win and pushed TWO MAKE NATIONALS MORE Michigan, 5-4, and Kalamazoo College, 9-0, respectively. the AIAW (Association of Intercollegiate The Spartans, Athletics for Women) state tournament in ■ State as far » 1 finally succumbing. 7-2. P^f'6 Central rained now 7-2, had a match with out two weeks ago and a Big Ann Arbor. Each school can only bring four singles UBuckeyes came into the Ten Women win Invitational tournament in between to cause the dual ■ with a 155 record, had lay-off. players and two doubles teams, which means Hatton was only able to enter Mascarin at No. |i4 straight and were tied Central almost surprised MSU when both 1, Bogdonas at No. 2, Ross at No. 3 and IpM and Wisconsin for Kellie and Toni Serges won No. 1 and No. 2 in the Big Ten. But even Krueger at No. 4. Mascarin and Ross will ByGEOFFETNYRE singles. But the Spartans won two doubles play doubles and Selke will get a chance to T|, osil won seven of the relays. and the middle singles matches as Jodi Ross, Latches against MSU, the State News Sports Writer "I'm-pleased with the whole day," Bridges said. "We did a lot of compete with Bogdonas at No. 2. Two Spartan women turned pressure into a No. 3, Mike Krueger, No. 4 and Diane Selke, "I feel bad that Mary Hicks (No. 6) can't Js never expected to work plus and qualified for the AIAW (Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women) horsing around, switching people in the relays, and everybody still No. 5, took victories. play because she's played well for us," Hatton |rd as they did for the nationals in the last meet of the season Saturday at MSU's Ralph did great." The Spartans have qualified 15 runners for the nationals to be Kalamazoo was just no match for the said. "But we want to have our best team to Young Field. Spartans. In the shutout No. 1 singles Debbie try and win it." , Gudelsky took his held in two weeks. Mascarin sat out, while Cindy Bogdonas took The first two teams and First four fn, three sets in No. 1 Olympian Debby LaPlante of the D.C. Striders grabbed the Jane Pearce of Central Michigan will also be aiming for Los the win at No. 1. Everybody else moved up individuals qualify for the regional tourna¬ -s before Jim Flower won limelight with a triple victory in the sprints and the 100-meter Angeles. She'll throw the discus after qualifying at 143 feet lO'/r one slot and Jeanie Vogel played No. 6, ment the following weekend in Columbus, k7, 63- Flower groaned hurdles, but it was Spartans Lil Warnes and Diane Culp who inches, Saturday. tasted sweet victory — a round trip to Los Angeles for the national winning 6-1, 6-0. Ohio. iw'ith the rest of his team Pearce ran away with the shot put and discus events, just as she 1 their shots didn't get by championships. had done at the MSU Invitational in April. The pair's performance sparked the Spartans to 203.5 points and Spartans as easily as OSU the MSU Invitational title. Central Michigan was second with 150.5 Tried. points, Western Michigan was third with 83, the D.C. Striders were fourth with 46 and Eastern Michigan was fifth with 45. Calvin, Lathcote Grand Valley State and Jackson Community College tied for sixth with four points. Warnes entered her two mile race just two seconds slower than hns 7-foot the 10:45 qualifying time. She cut eight seconds off her best time, however, and won going away in 10:39.1. "I felt the best I have felt in a race all year," Warnes said. 'Today a lot of people came out, a lot of my friends. My teammates were Ige center spread around the track cheering me on. I had to do it for them." Head track coach Cheryl Bridges was glad a week of planning wasn't wasted on foul weather. She said the sunny 60-degree iu signed its fifth basket- weather was ideal for distance running. .ecruit as Sten Feldreich, a "It made it easier in that two and three mile," Bridges said. £ 215-pound center, will "Especially for Lil. She had Lisa (Berry) with her for awhile, but most of the race she was on her own. Running against just the clock |d MSU next fall, eich is 21 years old but is a tough way to do it." all as a freshman. He is Culp's three mile was a bit more dramatic and still needs the f Bromma, Sweden and approval of Nell Jackson, assistant director of athletics in charge of women's programs. Id for the Swedish national 1 The squad lost in a Although the AIAW qualifying time in the mile is 17:18.0, the llympic tournr-nent and standard set by MSU is 17-.Q0.0. Culp Finished in 17:00.6. (it make it to the Montreal "She'll probably go, "Mark Pittman, assistant coach said. "We've sent runners before when they're that close." g for a club team in Bridges said, "In a three-mile race the .6 can be the watch or the winter he timer. We shouldn't penalize her for that." I 17 points and 12 While Culp and Warnes performed under pressure, teammates ds a game. Sue Latter and Cynthia Wadsworth frolicked in the sun. id coach Jud Heathcote Both had already qualified for the nationals and Latter turned a ■Feldreich has great po¬ personal best of 2:08.2 in the 880-yard dash. ll but needs more expert- Wadsworth paced Culp for half of the three mile and then took off |He added that Feldreich to win in 16:89.0. it quickness and jump- Johanna Matthyssen won the 440-yard dash and Sue Sebastian By. won the 400-meter hurdles. The Spartans also won three of the four WB m INBTY-PRINTS DOBS IT RIGHT!! yes insty-prints we can! the wiz at the printing Hzl 419-3303 0821104 3747626 409-3511 1496 L MicM(H 3205 S. Mar 4308 W. Saginaw 115 E. AllefM E. Mich.. W. Sojlnaw and S. Cedar ilora 1 ■ 12 Sot. All ■teres open 1:30 • 5:50 Sandal Trade-in Bring us your old sandals and got $200 wf "a / an a new pair J (excluding sal* Btt Bootery • Shoes 'N' Stuff I ,l't. Grand River 217 E. Grand River L a 01 12 Michigan State News, East Lansing. Michigan __Mond°y, May 9 THE STATE NEWS CLASSIFIED ADS PHONE 355-8255 MON. THRU FRI. 8:00-5:00 Classified Advertising Automotive )[44j j Automotive ~][<4] RHwycte jjfto, | ah Strict \[7] cwsbil]® l i DODGE CHALLENGER 1972. Air, PINTO 1974 station wagon. Good SUZUK11971, excellent condition, GOOD USED TIRES. 13-14-15 SENIOR COUNSELOR, ex- cook Information power steering, brakes. Vinyl top, stereo tape, V-8, automatic. 394 condition, 2300 cc, automatic, maintained by mechanic, 4000 miles, $350. 482 4731. 6-6-13 (3) inch. Priced from $4. Mounted free. PENNELL SALES. 1301 % perienced. Mornings, Jewish Day jun cod '„to.. very economical. $1300. 332-0041 East Kalamazoo, Lansing. 482- Camp. August 8-19. 361-2072. Au9«l 13, u. 1034. X 3-5-9 131 347 Student Services Bldg. 4^5 10 (31 HONDA 1975 CB200T, $499 or 5818 C 8-5-12 (3) f,*Pe' No menu,ence qua„, y7' FIAT PLYMOUTH OUSTER 1974 best offer. Great gas mileage. 21-5^3U17) _ "tanning or 1974, red sport coupe. APPLICATIONS NOW being ac- JS""1 ,oom" board ,nd Sharp, 20,100 miles, Clean, call 332 1200. 3 5 10 131 MASON BODY SHOP 812 East 18,000 miles, front wheel drive. automatic. V-8. $2000. Call 349-4666. 8-5-11 Kalamazoo Street since 1940. cepted for part and lull time ™' . 9'"n8 e<„er- RATES 25-38 mpg, very good condition. evening supervisory positions. Ex- s° ™" fly|ng eaglf (31 NEW LOW rates on motorcycle Complete auto painting and col¬ PAYS 1 day - 9CK per line $1995. 1-647-4364. 6-5-11 141 lision service. American and for¬ perience helpful. Apply In person. ^ L,,"v'ew" Lansirv, 3 days ■ 80C per line PLYMOUTH FURY III 1973. Ex insurance. Alder Agency, 351- GRAPEVINE RESTAURANT, 489 0981 5 5 9 n0> Unas 1 3 6 8 eign FIAT 124, 1969. 5 speed transmis¬ 8620. 0-2-5-9 112) cars_485 02561C:2_l5:3J J20I 3 2.70 7.20 13.50 16.80 idays ■ 7SC per line sion - good for parts, body rough. cedent, automatic, air, AM/FM Power. $1765/best offer. 356 ELIMINATE 275^Easj Riven 8-5-12 (5) UNIFORMED security" BRIGGSTONE 1967, 175cc, high TUNE-ups. Replace 4 3.6* 9.60 18.00 22.40 8 days - 70C per line $50'best otter. 676-9334. 5-5-9 (31 7889 8-5-11 131 pipe, good for dirt or road use, your conventional ignition with a PART TIME employment. Office rip" nito 5 4.50 12.00 22.50 28.00 $200, call 627-2351. 5-5-11 131 Piranha electronic ignition at skills needed. Hours flexible. 332- - 8131 6 5.40 14.40 27.00 33.60 FIAT 1974 Spider, convertible, PLYMOUTH ROAD Runner~1975, 011TOR-10-5-19 7 6.30 16.10 31.50 39.20 Line rate per insertion AM'FM stereo. 5 speed, excellent. automatic, 22/18 mpg, rustproof CHEQUERED FLAG FOREIGN <_3|_ _ MALE COUNSVLORS:^ CAR PARTS. 2605 East Kalama¬ $3225 or make offer 694-4860. ed 5 years. Excellent condition HONDA 750. 1975 - sissy and crash bars, clean. 8400 miles, mint zoo Street, .one mile west of COLLEGE strative TEACHING/Admini- positions. Most fields. '°I Dlab««c Child*, 5 5 13 13) 332 6677 nights. 8-5-12 13) condition, $1595 offer? 353 1177. campus_ 487-5055. C-21-5-31 (281 Write for application: SEARCH. 5 5 " 141 Econolines • 3 lines - '4.00 • 5 days. 80' per line over 3 5 7 (3) Box 2652, Eugene, FORD LTD convertible 1972, has PONTIAC FIREBIRD 1970, For WE BUY junk cars and trucks. Top Oregon., WAlTocccr^ -- 3 lines. No adjustment in rate when cancelled. all options, excellent condition, mula 400. 4 speed, vinyl top, wide dollar. 489-4647. NORTHSIDE 97402. 5-5-9 (31 ™",ESSES- only EXPfr, Price of item(s) must be stated in od. Maximum KAWASAKI 350-S2, street, 4900 daytrme and will take best offer 393-0940 tires, Headers. 351-4959.8-5-12 131 AUTO PARTS Et SALVAGE. 0-21 parttl™, miles, like new. $495. 353-8800, RESIDENTIAL CONSTRUCTION sale price of '50. 5-5-12 (31 5-31 1141 31 ,he WlO Harold. 5-5-11 131 Peanuts Personal ads - 3 lines • '2.25 - per insertion. PORSCHE 1973, 9-11-7, air, leath assistant-Experienced individual ,7?c! G,and" FORD MAVERICK 1972, automa¬ needed for growing residential er, loaded, rustproofed. $9000/ HONDA 1973 350cc, low mile¬ 75' per line over 3 lines (prepayment). Rummage/Garage Sale ads ■ 4 lines - '2.50. tic, runs well, good body. $750. 351 0789 after 6 p.m. 6-5-11 (31 offer 1 543 7529 after 6 p.m., weekends. 7-5-16 (41 age, start, excellent condition, electric many extras. Call 332- [ Aviation i[X' construction company to coordi- nate and control costs and sub- Fnrvrn/u, ..." P°°JBALL MANAGERS." 63' per line over 4 lines ■ per insertion. FORD 6878. Z 2-5-10 131 LEARN TO fly free. Line at¬ contracts. Interviewing on campus S"? redui,ed. "art, 'Round Town ads 4 lines '2.50 per insertion. ■ - - PICK-up 1967, 4-speed, Morrison boxes, $350. 355-5867. SUBARU 1974, 2 door, 4 speed, tendant needed to work in ex¬ May 17. HOMKRAFT INC. 351- 1383.7-5-16161 wilj J)* Arthurs more inl°n at 355-16 63' per line over 4 lines. HONDA CB450, 1972 OHC. Low change for free flying lessons. 676- 6309 after 5 6 5-13(31 radio, good gas mileage, $1800 4860. 2-5-10 (4) p.m. 3.5.9 Lost ( Founds ads/Transportation ads ■ 3 lines - '1.50 ■ 393 2347 after 6 p.m. 5-5-13 13) mileage, sound engine, luggage GIFT SHOP clerks from June 20 MAVERICK 1974, 2 door, auto rack. $600 firm, 353-5178; 332 ma, c rmiuccTaV"" per insertion. 50' per line over 3 lines. i through Labor Day. Also bus help. ™ 5EL0RS "- matic, 32,000 miles, good condi lion. $1800. 351 2783. 5-5-11 131 VEGA 1974 - station wagon. Radio, automatic, excellent shape. 6329. Z-2-5-10 (31 SUZUKI TS-1851973. $350 or best Employment )[ffj Housing available. SINBAD'S. Box 125, Mackinaw City, Ml bovs AuausTt3 bZn |ud°" 4 Jn crat"-T.m ^ 49701. 3-5-9 (41 IK Deadlines MERCURY MARQUIS 1975, 4 627-7526. 6-5-13 131 offer. Call 482-5520 days, 487 archery. 5460 nights. 5-5-10 (31 Competitive Ads - 2 p.m. -1 class day before publication. MERCURY MARQUIS 1975, 4- EARN WHILE you learn. Models Write 9'ving exp¬ door, extra clean, loaded. $3295. VEGA GT, 1974, AM/FM, ra¬ and escorts wanted. $8/hour 9r°und, FLYING EAGLE Cancellation/Change • 1 p.m. ■ I class day before dials, no rust. 35,000 miles. $1400/ publication. 349 3935. 8-5-16 131 HONOA CB 350, 1969. Very good CAMP SEAGULL needs several Phpne 489-2278. XZ 47-6-3 (12) " North Fairv'ew, Lansing' best offer. 351-1116 after 5 p.m. condition, just tuned, 9500 miles. male counselors with skills in 489-0981. 5 5-9 HOI Once ad is ordered it cannot be cancelled or changed MGB-GT, 1974. Fine condition, 8-5-13 (31 PART TIME employment for MSU Asking $425. 393-2719. 4-5-9 I3I guitar, piano, tennis, and drama¬ PHV".:.; I "~ - - until after 1st insertion. low mileage, overdrive, stereo, tics. Call 355-6417. 3-5-9 (41 students. 15-20 hours/week. PHySICAL THERAPIST:- There is o '1.00 charge for 1 ad change plus 50' per one owner. Lest year of the VEGA GT 1971, rebuilt engine, HONDA CL350 1973, black, sissy Automobile required. 339-9500 'or a part time registered - hardtop. Already a classic sports- EXCAPEI TRAVEL-work on ships. C-21-5-31 113) therapist. Contact Person* additional change for maximum of 3 changes. $325. Runs good. 349-9644 after 7 bar, highway handlebars, low partment, INGHAM r Good pay! Men/Women. Send The State News will only be responsible for the 1st car.J4000, 355-2979. 8-5-12 (51 p.m. 5-5-9 (31 mileage, excellent condition, very HEAD WAITRESS and waitresses CENTER, 401 West Gc clean $550. Call after 8 p.m.. name, address, 25 cents postage. MGB 1974, low mileage, no rust. 351 and cooks, lull and part time. Lansing, Michigan, 48910 day's incorrect insertion. Adjustment claims must 5766 5-5-10 151 GLOBETROTTER, Box 1266 - C3. be made within lOdoys of expiration date. Tonneau cover, 28 mpg, $3400. VOLKSWAGEN BAJA. fiberglass Kansas City, Missouri 64141. Z-1- Apply at OLD TRESTLE or call 374 2246. 8 5 1217t Call after 5:30 p.m. 371 3627. fenders, front end, and air scoop, 5-9 (51 374-0465. 8-5-12 14) Bills are due 7 days from ad expiration date. If not has sun roof and tow bar, headers, MOTO GUZZI 1971. 750 Am¬ p 8-5-11 (3) paid by due dote, a 50' late service charge will MGB 1972. Runs great, needs hang engine, two wide white letter rear tires, $500 or best bassador, has windjammer II and PART TIME maintenance person. PART TIME cook - waitress. Will train. Nights and weekends. [ fOT fill T be due. offer, bags. $1500 699-2404. X8-5-11 Some experience _ body work. Make us an offer. 627-2351. 5-5-11 I6I preferred. FRENCHIE'S BAR, 400 Baker TV AND stereo rentals, r Trade up or down. We buy used Wages negotiable. Apply in per¬ Street. 482-0733. 8-5-12 (31 $10.95/month. Call NEJAC son between 9-11 a.m. ALLEY-EY 1010. C-21-5-311121 sports cars. PRECISION IM¬ VOLKSWAGEN BUS, 1974. MOTO GUZZI 1976, 1000 auto¬ NITE CLUB. 3-5-11 (3) PORTS, 1206 East Oakland. 6-5-12 HOBIE'S, 930 Trowbridge Road Sharp! Radials, AM'FM. 365-1725 matic, Windjammer III, low mile¬ will hold auditions for acoustic and inarleaalc fii { Automotive 1[a| [_ Automotive 'A £5) NOVA 1974, automatic, power or 351-5737. 6 5-9 (31 age, $3300. 351-3222 after 6 5-5-11 131 p.m. KEYPUNCH OPERATOR perienced. Afternoon shift 4-12 - ex¬ folk performers Tuesday and Wednesday evenings, May 17-18. { 55, albert s„ee, i !IT! p.m. Good pay plus Blue Cross „ AMC MATADOR 1972, power COUGAR 1970, 33,000 miles, A-1 steering'brakes. 487-0132 before VW VAN 1970, excellent mechani¬ Sign-ups will be after 2 p.m. daily from c and , brakes, steering, air, very good condition. Power brakes, steering, noon. 484-0991 after 5-5-10 cal condition. Need to sell, make other benefits. Call 394- this week Sign-up,"person only. ][/} noon. condition, 55,000 miles, $1200 or air, automatic, steel belts, wire <3) offer. 339-3218 5-5-13 (3) Art) Serrici 0120. 5-5-13 (41 furnished air best otter. 355-7842. X-5-5-10 I4I cony. Summer. Call 35HT wheels. $1600 or best offer. 349 OLDSMOBILE 1969, 53,000 actual AUD1100 LS, 1973.4 door, 48,000 4266, 1-7 p.m. 5-5-13 (5) miles, power, air, stereo, excellent VOLVO 1973 • air, AM/FM stereo, JUNK CARS wanted. We pay more if they run. Also BABYSITTER NEEDED in my home. Own transportation. Light PART TIME charge nurses need- ed for summer relief, hours flexi- t_"It3.! ™_. condition. 605 Dahlia, 882 8671 buy used SUMMER SUBLET 1-2- miles, rust proofed. 332-6126. rustproofed, $3400 or best offer cars and trucks. 489-3080. C 21- housework. Part time. Good pay. ble, call BURCHAM HILLS NURS- CUTLASS SUPREME Colonade. after 5:30 p.m. 6-5-12 14) dio, close MSU, furnished 5-5-13® 351-3775 after 7 p.m. 8-5-10 (131 5-31 117) Call 349-4084 attar 5 p.m. 8-5-17 ING OFFICE 351-8377, ext. 48 4-door, 1973. ALL factory options. month. 332 8170,351-2402 CAMARO 1968 V8 automatic, Best offer. 321-5721/321-2337 5- I4I between 9 a.m.-4 p.m. 5-5-13 151 11(3) OPEL 1974. 25,000 miles, 4 speed, snow tires, new brakes and ex¬ 5-12 131 radio, new tires. $1800. 351-1222. haust, $500. 339-2587 after 6 p.m. 3-5-9 (31 TWO 1969 Datsuns. Sacrifice 8J-13 131 $400. Extras. 351-6117. 5-5-10 I3I PINTO 1972 Runabout, automatic S'ORSINGUIT CAMARO 1975,350, V-8, 4 speed, 28,800 miles, power steering, DATSUN 710 1975, 4-door. Excel¬ transmission, radio, excellent con¬ brakes, under coated. 349-9647. dition throughout. $795/best offer. lent condition. 25,000 miles. New 4-5-9J3) CAMARO 1970% Rallysport, steel radials. $2500. 337-2257. 8-5-17 13) DODGE STATION wagon 1969. 361-1963. 8-5-17 131 APPEARING radials. new brakes, good engine, CAMPUS FRIDAY, JUNE 3nl custom wheels, good interior, some rust. $1075. 351-7882. Z-5-5- 33 141 Automatic, power steering, no rust, $200. 1967 Falcon, standard shift, good transportation, $100. 1971 Maverick, standard shift, as HILL AROUND ••• ;3CAPR11973 V-6, four speed. Mint is, $250. 321-8471. 8-5-10 (25) BARGAIN HUNTERS •"Condition, AM/FM, power brakes, * "deluxe interior, $1900. 489-7905. 2 Bedrooms 8-6-16 131 Now leasing * Furnished Apts. DREAM. To place your Peanuts ional Graduation 1 for fall CHEVY IMPALA 1969, •Free Roommate Service brakes, steering, window, air, power and summer * Dishwashers No frills BUT lowast prices Ad, just fill out the excellent transportation. $600. CAPITOL VILU APARIMCNTS * below and moil or Central Air Conditioning 332-8339 after 6 p.m. 8-5-11 (41 332-5330 ' in town for Large 2 bedroom it with payment to 1444 E. Grand Rivar * Swimming Pool State News Class AMERICANA APARTMENTS Unlimited Parking furnished units. * Pleasant Landscaping Dept. Cedar Greens 112$ Victor Street ONLY EDEN ROC £ _ _ aaa •Special 12 month rates s Apartments 252 River Street NORWOOD APARTMENTS 160 per month. G furnished apartments • 9 or 12 month leases avoiloble 1330 E. Grand Rl.ar CEDAR VIEW APARTMENTS FREE BUS BEECHWOOD APARTMENTS 3 Lines '2 I1S0E. Grand Rivar SERVICE Each Additional Line W G swimming pool RIVER HOUSE APARTMENTS G air conditioning G with-in distance walking to campus 204 Rivar Stroat CEDARS EAST APARTMENTS Model Open 9-9 351-2798 Everyday 140 Cador Stroat (also leaiing lor fall) IIVEISIOE APARTMENTS Rents from* 180 Leasing (or ADDRESS 1310 E.Grand River Summer ( Fall CITY 1135 Michigan Ave. Main Office CALL 349-3330 Americana Apts. E. Lansing. 351-8631 332 0111 (next to Brody) DEADLINE: FRIDAY, JUNE 1st, 5 P.M. INSTRUCTIONS 1. The first 2 words are capitalized. 2. Extra words capitalized 25' each. 3. Insert one letter or punction mark per box. 4. leave a space between each word. Students JOIN the gang at shouldn't have ES to live in drab for si Burcham Woods C nonover AND CHECK OUT little rooms. Just across street from campus. Large furni¬ COLLINGWOOD APTS I shed 1 & 2 bedroom apts. Air. carpeted, * * air conditioned Treat yourself- balconies. Heated pool * A dishwasher Air conditioning * Tennis courts * shag carpeting * Ample parking A unlimited parking UNIVERSITY 731 * Nicely furnished * plush lurniture A model open Bring or Mail to: 1 bedroom units 2 bedroom units 'i j Now daily leasing for TERRACE 3 Lines For'2 State Newt Cloeilfled ''•P'" *11 Each Additional Line 67' 347 Student Service! Bldg. Fall APARTMENTS 444 Michigan East Lansing, Ml 48823 745 Burcham Coll 351 -8282 351.3118 (behind Old World Moll 1 the river 731 Burcham Drive 332-5420 I) 351 7212 (also leasing for fall) |ri1irf.^„ Stole News, Eost Lansing, Michigon Monday, May 9, 1977 13 SS31. ' 7T. ie.:«u _jr furnished, 3 to 12 Furnished, yard, clean, females. OGMAT .VAT .GRE tOCAT .SAT I leases. Start at 6175/ is Rent negotiable. 355-8913; 355- OWN RURAL rooms, private lake, posite City Market. C-21-S-31 I Call John or Sue, 332- now leasing for sum¬ SUMMER SUBLEASE Woodmere animals, garden. Quiet, available NATIONAL MED. & DENT. BOARDS 8912. X-8-5-17 (4) mer (with special rotes) Apartments, 2-man; 2 minutes summer. 351-6643,4-7 p.m. 8-5-18 SEWING MACHINE CLEARNACE pR-21-5-31 1371 and fall. from campus, negotiable. 355- GROVE STREET, 2 blocks from (3) SALE! Brand new portables • ECFMG .FLEX 7390; 355-8677. 7-5-13 (31 Flexible Programs and Hours 12 bedroom, air, children Union, beautiful house/disposal, 649.95. 65 per month. Large Over 38 years of experience and success Small classes Voluminous ts. bus line, storage, pool, dishwasher, perfect for room¬ LARGE ROOMS available now selection of reconditioned used ) or 2 bedroom apart¬ MALE GRAD student to share home study materials. Courses that are constantly updated. Centers dudes heat, available July. and June 15. One block to cam¬ machines. Singer, Whites. Nec- ments across from cam¬ apartment, fall. 6110/month. Call mates. Call 337-1817; 351-2897. open days and weekends all year. Complete tape facilities for review Walter 6 p.m. 8-5-12 (4) X-6-5-13 (4) pus. 605 Albert, 6 5 and 67. Call chi's. New Home and "many of class lessons and for use of supplementary materials. Make-ups for pus. 332J209. 3-5-9 (31 _ _ 351-4142. Z-5-5-13 141 others." 619.95 to 639.95. Terms. missed lessons at our centers. * . __ ( STREET - 3 man, 2 CAMPUS, MALL, close. One bed¬ DUPLEX ONE bedroom, fur¬ EDWARDS DISTRIBUTING Flexible Programs and Hour* K n, June. Large windows, room, carpet, air, snackbar. 6150. nished. No lease, utilities paid. NEED ONE person to sublease for COMPANY. 1115 North Washing¬ 235 Delta it negotiable. 351-5266. 339-2346, after 4 p.m. 655-3843. 7-5-16 (31 6155/month. Close, available im¬ mediately. 485-9241. Kirk, after 8 summer term. Own room. 680 plus utilities. 2010 Jerome Street. 482- ton. 489-6448. C-21-5-31 (26I fjfiiiftoi mils: Ik I tiff. mum iirtti JIfl it« mt ntnutioa W A* JlJWz SHI 332-5978 TWO FEMALES to share summer p.m. 3-5-11 (4) 9572. 5-5-10 (4) TEAC AN300 Dolby encoder/ Or write to: 25182 Orchard Lake Rd. SPECIALISTS SINCE USE I decoder for cassette reel cartridge apartment, 640/month. Great lo ROOM IN house, 658/month, BEAL STREET, 2 bedroom apart¬ cation. Call 353-3427. 3-5-10 (3) SUMMER SUBLET house on large kitchen, living room, parking. or FM. 6430 new. Now 6299. Sulfa 1-7 Farmington Hill*. Mi. 40018 mat.«*.*■»J Grove Street. 1-3 rooms available. 2010 Kalamazoo. Call Bob, 482- 374-8896 or 694-3934. 8-5-13 (41 ^■■■■■Affiliated Centers in Major U. S. CitiesMBMB^i^ ment, pet ok, available June 11. 685/month. 332-3315. 8-5-16 131 6200/month, option to rent fall. ONE OR 2 females to share 4801. 4 5-9 (3) Cel^351-2089. 3-5-9J4I apartment for fall through spring. SUMMER SUBLEASE for female, ONE BEDROOM, furnished, upper west of Frandor. 6160, utilities furnished. Call after 10 a.m. 489- Great location. Call 353-3427. 8-5- 17(31 MSU-FALL 1, 2, and 3 bedroom own room in modern duplex. Rent negotiable. 351-5245. 8-5-16J3| SEVERAL 5-person houses avail¬ OWN ROOM in coed house for summer sublet. Utilities included, close to campus. No reasonable offer will be refused. 337-9885, ask DIABETES 4789. 8-5-16 (31 house apartments and deluxe able starting fall term. Call 1-772- for Leslie. 5-5-10 (5) SPACIOUS persons, APARTMENT, 2-3 shag carpeting, parking. One block from Union. June to duplexes. Furnished and unfur¬ nished. From 6165. Year lease. 339-8802. 2-5-9 (5) 4209 or 351-4107 after 5 p.m. 6-5-13 (141 AVAILABLE NOW: large room in house for female: parking, laun¬ BIKE-A-TH0N TWO 5-person houses available dry. Rent negotiable. 351-8986. June lease, rent negotiable. 332- immediately or for summer. Call 3-5-JM3) 2388. 5-5-10 15) Yes... we have locatioe! 1-772-4209 or 351-4107 after 5 p.m. 6-5-13 (151 SUMMER ROOMS, large house Sunday May 15, 10a.m. - 5p.m. SUMMER SUBLET 1 man effi¬ next to campus. Rent includes ciency very close, nice. 6140 utilities. Call 351-5515 for appoint¬ 9e double closets • 2 minutos to campus ROOM IN good house summer includes all. 332-3057 after 5 p.m. ments. X-8-5-11 (3) ■auditioning (Appliances 6-5-12 (31 • on Rod Codar Rivor term, 4 minutes from campus, Sponsored by: 670/month. Call Chris, 351-0969. punl.t - Amplo parking PHI GAMMA DELTA [Ray water and heat SUMMER PLUS year option. 2 • frea conoos EAST SIDE (Lansingl - large, I f»rS»H l|5) and (• APPOINT MINT bedroom across from Varsity Inn. Water's eed River's five bedrooms, for summer (6175) Reduced rate, all conveniences. or fall (62901, 3, 9, or 12 month 10-SPEED bicycle. Super light (22 the American Diabetes Association 351-6648. 8-5-16 (4) ■6|Bfkp«rta4iti lbs.), Fuji racer. Excellent machine. lease. 676-1557. 10-5-20 (4) (noar Cedar Village) 6150. 351-7326. 8-5-17 (3) Information and sponsor sheets avail¬ OWN BEDROOM and bathroom. SUMMER. FALL. 3 bedroom par¬ 333-4431 CRUISING SAIL80AT Aquarius able at residence hall reception Close, 6118/month, pool, air. A- tially furnished, pleasant neighbor¬ I WILLIAMS Hall - Beal vailable summer. 353-7886 after hood one mile from campus. Rent 21. Elaborately equipped, depth desks, local stores and E. Lansing ■Apartments, furnished 2 8:30 p.m. 8-5-16 (3) sounder, motor, trailer, galley, COUNTRY DUPLEX, 10 minute negotiable, call 1-787-4865 collect McDonald's restaurants. head, lots of sails, wenches, more, 2 people apartments. [ATOMncludes heat. Year freeway drive. 2 bedrooms, freshly after 6 p.m. 8-5-18 15) 65600 firm. 332-2935. 6-5-13 (51 ONE BEDROOM - real nice, real renovated. Garden space, trees. !p'3654, leave message. close, real cheap. 351-4203. Z-2-5- No Dogs. 6195. 351-3898; 332- SUBLEASE SUMMER. 3 rooms, BICYCLE OLYMPIC Ace, dura- CALL 332-5053 10 (3) beautiful 6 room house. Across 3396. 8-5-18 (51 Ace components, 22 lbs., as new 355-7092 campus. Negotiable, option pos¬ condition. 6375. 351-2814. 5-5-13 EASTSIDE NEAR Sparrow. 1 bed¬ sible. 351-0127. Z-8-5-18 (3) (3) room deluxe furnished apartment. 6140/month, deposit, references. ONE OR two rooms for summer, Start at any Checkpoint: Call 485-7593. 8-5-13 (31 one block from campus. Parking, CAR CASSETTE deck plus speak • Kellogg Center • East Lansing High School ers, used, good condition. 630 East Fee Hall • Y-lo» Form Lane I Ml. Hope Students: « dishwasher, sunporch, etc. Rent • FEMALE - TWO man. Excellent negotiable. 351-5885 after 5 p.m. negotiable. 256 Durend. 332-3452. location. Furnished. Air. June- Z-5-5-13 (4) 8-5-13 (3) Xi September. 697.50. 351-7453. 3-5- AU 9(31 MSU NEAR - 2 and 4 bed¬ room houses. 6150 monthly plus WOMAN WANTED, summer on¬ utilitie&484-7115. 0-21-5-31J12I Classified ly, own furnished room. Great AMERICA'S CUP j> location, air. 680 negotiable. 332- 3792.8-5-1213) 680, SHARE house on farm. Apply Sundays, 2158 South Aurelius k Road, 15 minute drive. 3-5-9 13) Restaurant U Lounge 458 EVERGREEN: Close Union. One bedroom, furnished, carpet¬ PRIVATE ROOM in house, 5 ed, sir. 6175. 351-8058, evenings. minutes from campus. 685/month 8-5-13 (4) includes utilities. 374-6677. 8-5-13 131 Free Soup la — UNFURNISHED ONE bedroom apartment with air conditioning and dishwasher available June 15. EAST LANSING duplex, 2 bed rooms, large yerd/garden area, PRE-PAID furnished, utilities included, 6310/ Steve, 332-8516 between 5-10 Now, in addition to our great Clam month. Call 487-6481/373-3257. p.m. 7-5-13 141 8-5-13 (41 Chowder, we are offering a new hot and OWN ROOM in two bedroom FOUR BEDROOM house to 4 hearty toup each week — French Onion, As of apartment available May 15. Fur¬ people, summer. 665/person. 3 Navy Bean, Minnestroni, and Lentil Thursday nished. 332-0949; 332-1946. 4-5-9 blocks from Berkey. Chris, 355 Ham. 131 3663/Mary, 355-3686. 5-5-11 (4) GOOD OEAL (really). Summer Stop in for a steaming mug today. [tote News Classified, THREE BEDROOM duplex, sum sublet, fell option, spacious 2 mer. possible fall option. Large It's Free with the purchase of any sand¬ bedroom apartment in duplex. 646 yard. Rent negotiable. 332-3955. wich, with this coupon. Stoddard, 6210/month. 337-1168. 6_5-12 <3I_ Offer good (for soup only, not chowder) 2-5-9 (41 _ HOUSE SUBLET summer b any Monday In May. SINGLES ACROSS from Williams block campus. Fully furnished, 5 - fall and summer, reasonable bedrooms. Call 332-3365. 8-5-16 rates. Call 337-7349.4-5-11 (31 . 1 4 Michigon Stote News, Eost lonsing, Michigi RHARHARHARHfl SATOn GRADUATION PEANUT'S Per- ■onal Special will run June 3rd. 3 COPYGRAPH SERVICE complete dissertation and resume service. Announcing UNN& linaa for »2. Each additional line 67 cant., PRE-PAYMENT WILL BE Corner M.A.C. and Grand River. 8:30-6:30 Monday-Friday. 337- RHA'i 24 hour movie program Line. BTilnrw REQUIRED. So coma in today and 1666. C-21-5-31 1161 Call anytime Day or Night for Movie place your Graduation Peanuts UNIGRAPHICS OFFERS COM¬ irontinui il Inini pane 9* KiiM'ii Personal Special. Deadline: June 1st 5 p.m. 5-5-13 1101 PLETE DISSERTATION and re¬ MSU Single Parents meet at Program Information. ik ROBERT EVANS' 1 sume service. IBM typing, edit¬ 5:30 p.m. tonight In Spartan PRODUCTION 1 ing, multilith offset printing, type¬ Village Cay Care Center. Baby¬ 355-0313 A PERSON'S home is his castle. Homes are my specialty. Paul setting and binding. We en¬ courage comparative shopping. For estimate, stop in at 2843 East sitting provided. A lawyer will be guest speaker. m| Panavision* ] Coady, 332-3582. MUSSELMAN REALTY. C-18-5-31 131 Grand River or .phone 332-8414. 0-21-5-31 (32) The Lansing chapter of N.O.W. meets at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at gigjigtiEi^ 1 United Ministries in Higher Educa¬ TWO-THREE bedroom home, THESIS, DISSERTATION, and tion, 1118 S. Harrison Road, to »!>(■ if Jackson. Large kitchen, base¬ term paper able. Call JOHN typing. Fast, reason¬ CALHOUN. 332- discuss "Living as a Single Per- presen Is l i IM7.UI Sanmu II [ ment, garage, fruit trees. 337-9131 evenings persistently. S-5-5-12 (31 1 Strvict |f*s] 2078. OR-21-5-31 (121 ELEVEN YEARS experience typing theses, manuscripts, term Bike-a-Thon for the Environ¬ ment. by bike Tour rural Ingham County on Saturday. For Infor¬ DOC&MERLE FAST GUARANTEED service on ma|or brand stereos and TVs. MARSHALL MUSIC, 245 Ann, East Lansing. MARSHALL ELEC¬ papers. Evenings, 675-7544. C-21- 5-21 1121 mation call Michigan Student En¬ vironmental Confederation. Community Service Center of¬ WATSON fers Vegetarian Cooking Class TRONICS SERVICE, 116 South from 7 to 9 p.m. Mondays at 5400 Larch, Lansing. C-1-4-25 1221 COMIC BOOKS, science fiction, W. St. Joseph St. Demonstra¬ baseball cards, much morel 11 tions, samples and recipes will be ALL TYPES of optical repairs, CURIOUS USED BOOK SHOP, given. prompt service. OPTICAL DIS¬ 307 East Grand River, 332-0112. COUNT 2617 East Michigan. Lan¬ (open 11:30-6 p.m.) C-21-5-311201 sing. 372-7409. C-5-5-13 1141 ASMSU Programing Board is LIGHTED CANDLES ADDA_FES- TIVE TOUCH to any party. They seeking applicants for the as¬ sistant comptroller. Applications also prevent the room from be¬ available in 307 Student Services coming smoke-filled. Table and GUITAR, FLUTE, banjo and drum floor lamps sail quickly whan lessons. Private instruction availa¬ advertised for aale with a low-cost ble. MARSHALL MUSIC. 351- ad in Classified. - ■ 7830. C-1-5-9 1121 WANTED - APARTMENT or room for quiet female grad stu¬ [ m s»fviciH dent. Within walking distance of campus. For fall. Please write: Jan ANN BROWN PRINTING AND Eickmeier, 1016 South Park 4 4, TYPING. Dissertations, resumes, Columbia, Missouri, 65201. 3-5-10 general printing. Serving MSU for 27 years with complete theses WANTED: ONE backpack tent s. 349-0850_C-2J-5-31 _I19I and 21 -3 pound down or polyester EXPERllNCED IBM typing. Dis¬ sleeping bags. 627-3447.8-5-16131 sertations, (pica-elitel FAY ANN. 489-ra68._C-21j5-311121 Town IBM SELECTRIC typing. No job too big or too small. Near faculty c!ub_CaH_Pat 393-9642_2-5-9 141 EXPERIENCED TYPIST - fast and accurata. Dissertations, the¬ sis, and tarm papers. Call 339- 3576. 0-1-5-9 1121 jot: com \oumc; TU0®IV,MIV1O; 8PM wnrcciMcoernER RESERVE SEATS: $6.50 & $6.50 AVAILABLE AT: DISCOUNT RECORDS, CIVIC CENTER BOX OFFICE AND ALL KNAPPS LOCATIONS WFMK 99 And PYRAMID PRODUCTIONS I MiIhigon Stole News, East Lansing, Michigon Monday, May 9, 1977 15 DOONESBURY ® (slDDly k Refunds for the canceled Ebony Produc¬ tion's Natolie Cole concert are available SPONSORED BY in 307 Student Services Bldg. from 8 a.m. by Garry Trudeau T. to 5 p.m. until May 13. M-TV(CBS) (lO)WHX-TV(NBC) Ml)WELM-TV(Coble) (12)WJRT-TV)ABC (23)WKAR-TV(PBS) so i ke£pasking mysoif, amyam damn smm! on. i I m mn mtm> ssrtm STANDTW INDUSM, TAB MAY IT OFCoutse.YOU "THB INTBRMINGLtD DIDN'T pidnT. rro/ASA lhahoh.w.mooimeto ims! MOT M mi DO! HSU. gotcha! DesriNies Of MSN see THAT mv/tre printing. i 1 wea fall'I'm not mem.'I'm OIL'S em MY UHOLB UFe! I AND OIL"! j \ notanom! hbu., tmern you 1:30 ' wonday 7:00 ItONOreVENA BOOKONIT! m? (6) As the World Turns (23) Spartan Sportlite TBXAMjT morning (6) Hogan's Heroes 11:30 (10) Days ol Our Lives (10) To Tell the Truth 8:00 (23) Guppies to Groupers (6) Kojak (12) Brady Bunch (10) Johnny Carson 2:00 .joinKongaroo (23) Spartan Sportlite (12) Mary Hartman, Mary Kood Morning (12) $20,000 Pyramid 7:30 Hartman (23) Woman (6) Gong Show 2:30 (23) ABC News (10) Hollywood Squares , ■ r 9:00 (i) Guiding light (12) Hollywood Squares " ' Jhil Donahue (10) Ooctors (23) MacNeil/Lehrer SPORTS f— (12) One Life to live |Mar£U« Welby.m.d. Report (23) Dig It |Dinah I 3:00 8:00 MONDAY PEANUTS ® $,,ome Street (6) Jeffersons EVENING (6) All in the Family (10) Pilot (10) Another World (12) Happy Days (23) World Press (23) Six American Families 7:00 by Schulz 3:15 (23) Spartan Sports 8:30 (12) General Hospital 8:30 (6) Busting Loose 3:30 (12) Baseball Game of Week (10) Movie 11:00 10:30 (!) Match Game "The Eiger Sanction" is Right (23) Lilias, Yoga and You (23) Spartan Sportlite (12) Disco 77 4:00 lollywood Squares 9:00 WEDNESDAY cyShow (6) Confetti (6) America's junior Miss EVENING nHnity Factory (10) Scrambled Eggs Pageant (12)Bonanza (11) Cabletronic 11 News 9:00 11:00 (23) Sesame Street (12) Testimony of Two Men (10) Boxing 4:30 Iwheel ol Fortune (23) Arts Billboard Norton-Bobick ppyDays (6) Bewitched 9:30 liter Rogers (10) Gilligan's Island (23) Anyone for Tennyson? FRIDAY 5:00 10:00 EVENING (6) Gunsmoke (12) Emergency One! (6) Andros Targets FRANK & ERNEST (23) Dialog 11:30 sponsored by: (23) Mister Rogers' 11:00 (6) NBA-PLAYOFF 10% MSU DISCOUNT Neighborhood (6-10-12) News Western Conference game by Bob Thaves LADIIt tlIKO WATCHIt freer 'St" 5:30 (U)Cabeltronic 11 News 11:55 (23) Electric Company fOp(?Y, MlSTtP i News MSU SHADOWS tD/iOM — X upao c v.j | afternoon MONDAY EVENING by Gordon Carleton sponsored by: >nalrp „ j 6:00 12:00 (6-10-12) News PINBALL PETE'S (11) South Africa: There is Next to Coral Gables. No Crisis Present this really funny comic for 25* (23) Studio See worth of free play! 6:30 (6) CBS News 'Dip nanac (10) NBC News Yoa see. ttht 3-D Movig. ove.R) (11) The C.i.A. at M.S.U. Tug. oofcgKetop, POP?JZ 12:30 (12) ABC News Larch lor Tomorrow (23) Woman THE DROPOUTS ® fhico and the Man sponsored by: en's Hope No gelitan, low-cal, completely natural by Post 1:00 ROME long Show fll My Children ital Pushers YOUR Anderson AD International COULD Complete DE Travel Service HERE! PROFESSOR PHUMBLE ® 337-1301 SPONSORED BY: 177 SWWeCCxSCtTbCl, by Bill Yates FINEST IMBLEWEEDS sponsored by: cleaners laundry QUALITY lorn K. Ryan int »i»:lira ustuniM CUANINO 332-3537 I WHATS SO IMPORTANT > Hometown People ma asEs raaa fOSSWORD 309 03B9 3113 Giving Hometown ServiceI LPUZZiEPassageway ag||aanan|[DS 23 IwHh'i Little Freeway Service Station 26 Elk sanci ma uinnn tSOII.Gf.klw 28 Steep slope aara nana ma Na*t to Vanity Inn "tsulli. 30 Evaluated 33 aaaana 3i Wd Appreciate Your Business 31 Patriotic organization: manaii] aa an no anaaa BBSS? abbr 32 Croud together aaanaaasaaran 34 Wading bird ass 9333 ana EMERGENCY WARD 36 Phithpine tree ma aann nas 37 Our Gal DOWN 40. Puzzle 1. Liability 42 Fastener 2 Rake 44 Made a loan 46. Firmament 3 Roman loins 45. Girl 47. Chemical gas 4 Chinese yellow 5 Scolfers 6 Attention 7 Potato 8 Request 10. Asteroid 12 Conseciate 15. Fanatical 18 Here and — 20 Between Miss pr and Ga. 21 Stoiy teller 23. Chief Norse gods 24. Gill's name 25. Newspapermen 27. Compensate 29. Favorite 33. Oxidation 35 Defeated 37 Miner's nail 38. Clarinet or sai 39. Spanish |5T province 41 Pigpen ©HIT Ueivt'Ml PlHl SjmdU.t. 43. Wine cop J £ Michigan State News, East loosing, Michigan Monday, May ^ Inmate By MARGARET GENTRY still waiting for last Monday, prison officials bomb threats. Although much manual A Bureau of Prisons lawyer, fense or foreign policy secrets. Hearst faces hearing A Justice Department official determine senteno of that section was deleted. Charles Faulkner, said: '.'We opened it in a routine search for WASHINGTON (AP) - Eddie David Cox wanted to learn more about the FBI. so he contraband. They were startled to find the four-volume FBI Riggsby said he still doesn't want to offer inmates any clues feel it would be injurious to the safety of the institution to allow said, "We do not discriminate against a prison inmate who to manual, Riggsby related. to help them carry out success some of the material, and makes an FOI request, just used the Freedom of Informa¬ By LINDA DEUTSCH "We don't know what to do ful bombings. probably the whole manual, because... he's in the slammer." Superior Court Judge E T.n, tion Act (FOI) to request a copy LOS ANGELES (AP) Patricia Hearst, of the bureau's secret manual of with the damn stuff." Riggsby So far. the prison officials are into that institution." But if Cox should win access - "very apprehensive" as she faced a possible who will sentence Hearst, has !&%■ instructions. said in a telephone interview. holding onto the documents Faulkner said the bureau has to the material, Warden 15'/i-years-to4ife prison sentence today on in setting the penalty. He much as 15V, years 1m H5I The FBI scratched its collec¬ A cover letter from FBI Di¬ while they consult with Bureau rules prohibiting inmates from Riggsby may have another t„ life or assault and robbery counts, had a weekend simple probation. u kith tive head over the problem for rector Clarence M. Kelley ex¬ of Prison and other Justice having publications considered problem. The FBI charges 10 reunion with a sister who flew in from dangerous to prison security. cen-s a page to provide mater nearly two years. Finally, Jus¬ plained that the material was Department lawyers on being made available in re whether Cox is entitled to the The prison rules also set out ial under the FOI Act, so Cox is England, her lawyer said. It was believed that a r , I tice Department officials ruled that much of the manual must sponse to Cox's request. papers. procedures for inmates to chal supposed to pay $97 for the Attorney Al Johnson, who came to Los Angeles to prepare for the sentencing, said Callister by the Los "°n Angeles Department recommends p l*ilJ he made public so the FBI Prison officials skimmed The FBI manual also made available at bureau head was lenge any decision to withhold material, and Cox ultimately package. Miss Hearst spent the Mother's Day week¬ tence or probation for Hearst. ^,™ bundled up 970 censored pages through the manual and found a "I haven't even thought end at her parents' Hillsborough home in could take the case to court. and shipped them off to Cox. But there's a hitch: Cox is an discussion of the type of tear gas used hv FBI agents. The quarters here to a reporter who sought it under the FOI Act. At this point the legal debate about what to do if he doesn't have the money" said the Northern California with her sister, Gina 11 She pleaded no contest charges stemming from April is I manual also advises agents on The bulk of the book describes does not involve the FOI Act Bosworth. Bosworth and her husband live in a W H " goods store inmate at the federal peni¬ avoid being incapaci¬ criminal laws and court deci¬ itself, which was enacted 11 warden. Ixmdon. shooting and subsen l!1^ tentiary in Marion. III. serving 35 years for bank robbery and ways to tated by their own tear gas. sions involving crimes ranging years ago and amended in 1975 Cox. 42, < acted i Since her release from prison last Novem¬ three years ago. The amounted to an admission judge Su* of guilt. to make it easier for individuals bank robbery and drug charges ber, the newspaper heiress has been living narcotics violations, and prison "It's the same kind of gas we from espionage to transporting in Kansas and Missouri. He with her parents, Randolph and Catherine Miss Hearst's in the prison to control riot defective refrigerators. to gain access to once secret codefendants in u warden James D. Riggsby use Hearst, who hired a platoon of private doesn't want all these FBI situations." Riggsby said. "I Other sections describe pro government files. The law declares that all began serving the federal lences in 1972 after he sen security guards to protect their daughter William and Emily Harris, terms of 11 years to life i„ were sent. secrets circulated among the sure as hell don't want that cedures for making arrests and was state p around the clock. their conviction of some prisoners. kind of information in the hands questioning suspects, qualifi¬ federal documents, with some paroledfrom a state prison term of the count, Johnson's only comment on his 23-year-old summer. They were When the six-inch-thick of prisoners." cations for various bureau jobs, exceptions, should be made in Kansas, according to a acquitted of the available to the Bureau of Prisons client's mood was: "Very apprehensive." that Hearst committed. package addressed to Cox Another section outlines FBI and services available from the public. The spokes arrived at the prison mailroom procedures for dealing with FBI laboratory. exceptions include national de¬ person. THIS WEEK The new fashion college rings that live the life you live ONLY! FIRST SALE MEN'S TRADITIONAL SILADIUM® RING ONLY $59.95 Regularly *77.00. Now you save up to 25% ONLY $59.95 This is an unusual opportunity to get your SALE BONUS: Free genuine gemstone, regularly $10.00 Choice of: Smoky Quartz, Regularly *80.00 contemporary college Garnet, Jasper, Oriental Jade, or Sardonyx. ring at a never-before price. Shown here are just two from the ArtCarved Fashion Collection of Col lege Rings. Created for today's lifestyles, the designs combine a contemporary feeling with college traditions. All are custom-made with the exquisite attention to detail and hand-finishing that make them look hand-sculptured. They are cast in one piece so they cannot come apart. Available in 10-K yellow or white gold with a choice of stone. 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