'■ AuSU«26 N A .,-1 • ,' -SB Welcomf MSU: , |s^#w d*rn.'Smt,'. mgwyf by Eoit tensing Comoun- University AOortmentt Council («A*C) end MSB By BOB OURLIAN Welcome Weak Editor a megaversity in flux prefix. But before long, it could well be the MSU would be like saying a right arm is chemical engineering and population biolo¬ the whole story of MSU's educational gt£ only identity MSU has. representative of a human being. Mega: in its colloquial sense, it means For years, decades, even gy- efforts, guess again. centuries, Over and above agriculture, MSU has More students are enrolled in business abnormally large, grandiose, great. You MSU's identity was agriculture. Thousands of adults in 45 Michigan cities could equate it with 'super,' as in Agriculture developed a dozen or so programs that have than in any other major MSU offers. And will also be taking classes 'supermar¬ was MSU's raison d'etre, its reason for found their way into national and even planned and ket,' or, as some chains call them, 'hyper¬ Education, Natural Science and Social taught by MSU under the university's existing. Then came diversification. Follow¬ international recognition. MSU is on the Science along with Business have more markets.' Think of 'megalopolis," for in¬ extension service. ing World War Two, MSU started diversi¬ education map in fields of psychology, students than Agriculture and Natural stance. fying, and it's been diversifying ever since. sociology, microbiology, botany, entomolo¬ Resources. MSU's international extension sets 'Mega' is a prefix. A small, rather sedate To now say agriculture is representative of up gy, biochemistry, physiology, zoology, If you think the students on campus tell deals whereby students can spend rt Cento/ Weft) J periods of time studying in foreign countries. MSU also p(r0m the PormmwrtCj" has faculty exchange programs with coun¬ il <^m»Wyomliij/Cn&*lfeK'" tries ranging from Panama to Taiwan. »,«« ll 10:00p.m. poge 2). V, . i3$Sj^4lf And MSU has programs to help out the state's farmers, rural families and the ghetto «my Through' ' The looking • Abrorw MonotorWm, MSU poor through its cooperative extension services. All this is an integral part of what MSU President Clifton R. Wharton, Jr., calls the "demand responsive" university. But there's more yet. MSU is also an international monetary wheeler dealer. MSU's investments total nearly $100 million, including almost $20 million in common stock alone. Right or Through Tho looking 1 Abromt Wanotorkifli, MSU wrong, MSU is heavily into the cash game, and we even have financial wizards in Cincinnati telling us when to buy and sell. Twolvo Chain" otSgwTon Perhaps more controversial is MSU's international programs, which is essentially research jobbed out to MSU by foreign governments. Such projects are currently going on in Brazil, South Korea, Iran, the Sahal region in Africa, Uruguay, Upper Volta. Some of these research programs, gn language Placement Tests. , particularly the MSU-Iran Film Project, m, to 4:30 p.m. *« -V ■ *}>• ■"/" ~ have drawn heavy fire, and will no doubt nt for students who oHendfcd continue to do so, from those who say if MSU is to conduct business and dabble in inter¬ national affairs, then it ought to at least look before it leaps. MSU, however, maintains n Arithmetic/Algebra, and the issue is one of academic freedom to honilvo fnglltfi.,• Jo.m. and 1 to4p.tfi. v engage in scholarship regardless of public I library. Guided tour ' outcry or political climate. li.v.ry half hour at U«... This is only a generalization of the V second Hoor Wat) in try Building. multiplicity of activities, educational and otherwise, the institution you see through your dorm room or apartment is involved with. Our involvement! run the gammut from boring to controversial and from insignificant to very possibly earth shaking. Photoi by louro lynn Fistlsr (above). John Dykstro (right) ond Rob Koilott (below) In short, MSU is employer and employed, Jeistry Retatt. lobbiest and lobbied, adviser and partici¬ B30ond4p.m pant. benefactor and beneficiary, edu;atqg To Go for What/ and ignoramus. rr. Jr )k who can halp am ■prmidt information. . What to make of this everybody institutional megayt. IRtoding-DoYau, ShofiMYau? and Wily > [■' <*'• Into the stretch is a sticky question and one a people will be trying to answwjSJter cqupcjL^ 26 hundreds of hours of meetings dhdrdqlbera- woi Study Flkk " tions this fall. , l-time Job Opportunities s" '■ This is the week to relax your These 28 comprise what is known as the ■ To Take Exams w'.Y- psyche before the on¬ MSU Long-Range Planning Council (see slaught oi the quarter and all oi the symptoms it article below). The Long-Range Planning. brings in its wake. The nervous stomachs, migrane Council is a taskforce which will be headaches, red and sleepless eyes and overtaxed the better part of fall term arranging "Sis spepjtag". minds still lie ahead ii only by a few days. Use the morass of involvements into some -- time to wriggle around in your element just a tad cohesive order of priorities. kinj^of. longer; do what comes easy, go where you feel in But the question of what MSU is touch with you and rest assured that the last few really, about is worth your while to dwell on, t breaths are indeed the sweetest. because what you hold nearest and dearest' at MSU could be affected, and GREAT | the worse. possibly for. • t FOOD Some among the MSU community willsi 24 that MSU as an institution has c Hours l Di) I adrift, wafting directionless throug# and time, not anchored to any specifi 327 Abbott M. I for change. Eoit lomlnt f Does the tg Education P. change that occurs tfapuM u.osji ■ Hw Kallogg Cantor/ | through any design, or is it simply thrjjUM1 *'■ process of perpetual mutation? "progromropaatod.) • q # v?: When it does happen through design, is it p'°grom's, OKica al So «• Studant Racoptlon. 1 backed by solid reason and thought, or is it • Ion Hall. Introduction to tha tl basically shuffled through the mountaiqjjfl^** bureaucracy? ^ t'otionj, ¥ In general, change is Wpmoni^ somethjQg that*' universities send scout parties out to bring back, and MSU is no different. "If there's one thing which is deaJMng to a University, it's a sense of tranquility," says MSU Trustee Emeritus Warren M. Huff. "The University doesn't stand still. It J' either goes ahead or it eases backwards." / "Let there be no misunderstanding hyjp^ advises Wharton portentiously. "Without change, stagnation inevitably results." But like everything else, change is- something you can get hurg up on, and begin' accumulating, as they say, lor its own sake. But while tion nestled in M^Tj is a ponderous institu¬ a ponderous soe'ety and run What does MSU's future hold? by - say some — nobody, the lignals are >/- looking a bit less ominous these fiiys. There used td be a sort ol Titanit menlality surrounding MSU and it^future. . \ relative horn of plenty, and nobody worried Thaf mentality, after many lean years, is By BOB OURLIAN Welcome Week Editor The University is now facing about running out of money for running the school. quite gone. With the j onsbt of the Long-Range Ever thought of MSU as a college without Then came the recession in 1973. Budget Planning Council, it has been officiaUy an English department? acknowledged that if MSU doesn't change How would an MSU without member¬ the biggest trial in its history requests were run roughshod through a fiscally sensitive legislature; many were its ways, it is vulnerable. It could sink. ship in the Big Ten strike you? Whether the council will delve as Or how about this: MSU with 20,000 drastically pared by the executive branch, , mechanism for determining priorities is And once that order of priorities is struggling at the time to keep Michigan's fundamentally ipto these issues as is students on campus instead of 43,600. nearing completion now. Under priority established, administrators will know just head above budgetary quicksand and perhaps called for won't be known until These kind of changes are not real likely, reassessment, all of the multiplicity of where to swing the axe next time state October. juggling figures to do it. but nothing is out of the scope of possibility endeavors MSU is involved with will be But the crossrqads are before us, and the budget makers lower the boom on MSU. That sounded the call, and in 1975, under a new planning program MSU had examined, scrutinized, and questioned. MSU President Clifton R. Wharton, Jr.. stakes are crucial. Wharton says the stakes Wharton made a State of the University are the viability of the university as a whole.. embarked on. Everything and anything is Then they will be either tossed out or says he has been pushing for a priority Address in which he said, "Each unit, each And you can! calculate the odds for entirely conceivable. worked into a systemmatic order of what is system since he came to MSU in 1969. At college and the total University will be They call it priority reassessment, and a important to MSU. that time, the state budget was still a (continued on page IT) yourself. v4 ' A2 Michigan Stole News, East Lansing, Michigan Audio is our only business. Here's what that means to you. 2. You enjoy excellent values. 1. You choose from the We're always on the lookout for exceptional values that we can pass on to you. Here are just two current examples. The new Philips GA312 electronic turntable featuring automatic end-of-record pickup and shutoff. Complete with an Audio-Technica AT78E cartridge, it's yours finest names in audio. for just $180. And look at the Sony stereo cassette deck model TC-135SD. It has Dolby, Ferrite & Ferrite head, FeCr equalization and peak limiter for distortion-free recording. A $250 value, it's yours now Names like Yamaha. You'll find them for just $198! only at The Stereo Shoppe. That's because we search for — and extensively test — the finest audio products available. But "the finest" doesn't have to mean "the most expensive." Yamaha is a prime example. Their new series of receivers sets brand new ■■ standards for the industry, like a startling low distortion rating of just .05%! After raying about — tcara n the model CR-820 (illustrated above), one audio magazine-tecently concluded by saying "on-the basis of its performance, we thought it would be a fine example of a-receiver in the $600000 the supplies we now realize arc not in¬ finite; yet it is this energy that maintains the environment. We are already th& effects .of diminishing feeling supplies and killed outright by toxification and is being distorted by its attempt to cope with the dialog be provided by contributions from members of the academic, business, mental, public and private communities of govern¬ the output of our factories and increasing demand. Our standard of living environment creating. the area. In a summer that saw experiment m promoting community dialog, urill appear each Tueiday on runs our is directly related to our ability to take and The bulk of environmental and relatively _ „,i cars, both of which are r few letters to the editor, Crofoot's efforts mainstays in the large quantities or resources from the m0fthe State New. use here | energy problems directly related to our 1 way our society is defined and how it have yielded more rd terms, "SKcet" will deal with issues relevant to the latt quarter of the iOth environment. Every increase in our stand¬ behavior: what we consume, how feature-length articles operates. than the State News could energy, environmental, economic, and the like. To a very large extent, ard of living requires that we take make it, and the materials we use. In our print, at the rate __ We have the option to of two per week since maintain or July 25. Ig, specific content will be determined by you - the reader. Each week increase our current level of large measi prestige and personal pursuit of economic goals, we have killed The content and tone of the \,the Tueiday "Sticet, "readers will be aiked to submit written contributions on energy achievement defined in our society by and otherwise done away with much that dialog consumption through the use of nuclear the acquisition of more material contributions have been varied, but to date riject. Those articles deemed most thought provoking will be printed on the technology, but we face the problem of goods. cannot be recovered, done much damage there seems to be a strong consensus that What will we use as a measure of personal .ge. If a particular topic generates sufficient interest, relevant comments will be what to do with the that cannot be repaired; and we education is the only means by which Za future "Slices" page dealing with the same issue. In this manner, the State amounts of ever-increasing worth when the demand for "more" meets make it again like it was. The time has c< any radioactive wastes; wastes that with the reply that "there isn't any » kind of viable, lasting solution can be is to stimulate a meaningful dialog and interchange of ideas among members remain toxic for to cut our losses and do whateve of a longer period of time than What will we use to fulfill our real "needs" reached. If, as is often stated, there is no osity community. any of us can comprehend, and that kill or prevent total disaster. solution, education still appears to be the L to make "Stices" particularly relevant, it is hoped readers will relate their deform any life which when our "wants" have used up the We are faced with large problems and at the best they may come in approximation. Kond suggestions to the campus and Lansing-East Lansing area. However, this is contact with. Do we want these wastes available r small problems. The large problems, by The "dialog" will at the very least afford The factories that produce goods to meet definition, have no .. stored in our backyards? quick and simple a regular and readily available forum for ir demands, and the cars that supply solutions. In fact, a large part of the ideas and alternatives, and problem is embodied in provide material our readiness to which we can use to stimulate our own adopt quick and "simple" solutions to inner dialog and dialog among those with \Excerpts from past ' columns... complex problems of long standing. Many of the small problems we face do have quick, simple and effective solutions that are also environmentally sound, whom we live. Above all I think the ideas presented in Slices should be related in such a Jsident's modest yet courageous proposed energy perspective for the next 10 or at way as to incompatible with the reality of finite energy sources. If a severe energy crisi s least produce results that are "better" than J met on this campus with an equally courageous yet modest formal dialog. K not one of the 200 attending (excluding the deftly debunked Labor avoided, we must alter our lifestyles and minimize our energy consumption, now. to be the ones we are now getting. It seems banal make them relevant to, and reasonable to Party reps) implement in, our personal lives. We do not It'of the one half of the United States that believes there is no energy crisis. The problem-is -Mike Gold to say that all big problems are made up of a lot of little ones, but I believe this is true. I think of ourselves as acting, en masse, as a Participants are applauded for their efforts. The inspired ones of the audience are not.energy, but energy use and the human social factors which govern society; we do not think so because we do it. Thus, to understand the would further submit that we will not be I) for their awareness. That born-again feeling is a tough nut to crack... problem, energy must be seen in the context of culture; the not do so, even though it often appears that social structures and values of the communities in which able, it is used. We must explore ways as a society, to deal with the big do. Our decisions and our actions are Je question of survival overshadows dialogs of esthetics, what of art and quality in which energy use is interwoven into the fabric of problems on a national or global scale, and we Ilationships? Specialization is effective but it wears blinders that do not admit relationships if we are to achieve a true understanding of energy. culture; we must explore these in a lastingly effective way, until we can individual, whatever we see as being our Ttic view. As we gear up for the coming transformation, let us hope that order is Only by doing this can we understand the extent of the problem and the directions handle the small ones with facility and motives lor if you like, whatever we see as It the expense of responsiveness. Jimmy Carter may well be forced to become which culture must move to solve it. forcing us to do what we do). If we are land finest totalitarian president. dispatch. causing environmental problems with the -David I claim to be neither an environmentalist behavior we display in our daily lives, then 1 -Michael Crofoot It is said that Dwyer public dialog needs a moderator, particularly nor ecologist. I have been impelled, later administration's statement that we have a "permanent energy crisis...the one...proposed... a public dialog such as the an there is a compelling need for alternatives [native being conservation" is a lie. through the efforts of one Michael Crofoot, that apply directly to the way we live, Some suggested questions: What is the role of the to write these comments. Crofoot had University and education in general Jombined fission-energy programs and high technology extraction and use of in finding an acceptable future? What is the government's role? Is democracy possible in major hand in organizing a public energy a individually. I urge you to read what goes on in"Slices" Is, the world would face no energy shortage into the 21st century. the future? If "the values which govern the use of forum on campus in the spring, and has ■er, to expand our energy resources adequately to maintain technological and technology stem from erroneous views and to support it with your constructive of human nature," then what can science tell us about the before and since been a dedicated contribu¬ ■ progress, we must begin the process nature of human nature? Has thoughts (written if possible). Demand that of converting the world into a fusion-based our proverbial survival instinct devolved into tor to the State News on environmental "getting it while we can?" the contributors to Slices give you some¬ Icoaomy during the next decade. The dialog should be provocative and prescriptive. Questions should be raised and issues. I consider him to be an environ¬ thing of which you can make personal use, -Robin Perry perhaps directed toward others. mentalist; he has found actions to take and whether it is an idea or an action. And listen y to the energy problem does not lie in finding new energy sources. Our The born-again feeling, that is revolutionary conviction that the time has gives taking them. for the voice of environmental (demand for energy, our wastefulness and our selfish desires for comfort are the momentum we need. Humility can give us the direction we want. come, us In the early summer Crofoot proposed wherever you find it leven in yourself) and sanity -Michael Crofoot that a continuing environmental dialog pass it along to a friend. This is the Welcome Week edition of the What you will find strewn among these \About State News compliments. — yours free with our 150 pages represents some of the best research and most astute analysis ever to explores the coming crisis of higher education, on the front page of that section. Her forcast: we need some slick manuever style, combining more conducive news to an with analysis, is far all-summer tion than the traditional who, what, where, produc¬ This year's Welcome Week edition takes grace a general distribution publication at ing - now. when, why and how approach. It also gives a slightly different tack than in MSU. years past. There are others: the poor state of the you a lot more of the big picture. It's saucy, spicy and full of punch for once. I say that not to be self-serving, but arts at MSU; the lowdown on the way MSU Well, at any rate, take it. And read it. this It was our feeling that approach would be better for readers in general, whatever some of the subjects taking this because I've read what others have written for the Welcome Week and. as a reader, am genuinely impressed. runs its investments: the crime situation on campus: what makes MSU — especially students And for God's sake, please get tired of people calling you apathetic. — tighten the belt year after year; (victims, some will say) of the stories may Nobody, for instance, is more of an what's in store for the Spartans this fall, ★★★★★★★★★★★ 'f—4 think of them. authority on MSU history than Professor who has the clout on campus; and, of course, * NEW COMICS if Many will this issue is unkind Madison Kuhn, whose article MSU what is sure to be everybody's favorite — if USED COMICS if I ition... say to on BOB OURLIAN MSU. Some will call it rank, biased, and the history can be found in the middle of the the way we party. results of puerile efforts of little gung-ho new journalists. It won't be the first time, section 1 And on one History and Academics. of the few intellectually-oriented You'll find that many of the articles are written magazine style — another new facet J* Curious Bought (SoldShop jf Book absurd though the charge may be. MSU administrators, Dr. Dorothy Arata, of this year's Welcome Week. The magazine * ick-kir-kirkirkir-k rwhelmingl* lyourEeondt-j ugh the path! lie not te MIL month. Alter' | r/ k the safety 'I Vi nthe dorm.Wr ■own you into. 1 jr way through* jtudy, the n liable will o* dig, the more)* tendency i» jign up * specifically w faddish el s), and scurry J on experience*! The Great Outdoors Begins With Us m t»jr 'pri ? Ski Clothing and Equipment 20 Graduate students '52.50 Jf Jf Jf *" '""""i" paying $2.50 more for each credit hour. Tuition increases are what ★ ★★*★★★★★★★ Visit our store just west of WELCOME - - the campus for these and otherl great buys through-out the BACK! school year Broadway's Newest, NYLON JACKETS with thick Hottest Hit! TUESDAY,OCTOBER 4 & protection inside...to WEDNESDAY,OCTOBER 5 help keep cold outside! Reversible nylon jarki 12 A. Reversible: smooth nylon 1 sife-1 another color, quilted nylon tlie ollin. I With thick polyester fiberfill foi | warmth! S, M. L. XL Down anil poll ruler Q 1 97 | filled jacket OT1 | A nylon jacket with polyester and genuine I dow n fill! Willi zip front, elastic cuffs I and slash handwurmer pockets. I Solid colors. Sizes S.M.L.XL | Two Performances at 8:15 p.m. in the University Auditorium. SAVE *3-7 day. only 1 PUBLIC: $9.50, 7.50, 5.00 Lined nylon jaeket, reg. $16.49 -1" MSU Students: $4.75, 3.75, 2.50 C. Nylon shell with cold-fighting acrylic| pile lining. Snap front. Knit cud.| S. M, I.. XL reg. length.I Hands Tall length, reg. 318.99 15.#| ^Across The Sea^ Sale ends I Celebration October 1 The Regimental Band of Her Majesty's GRENADIER GUARDS The Pipes, Drums & Dancers of Her Majesty's SCOTS GUARDS Go the western route in Sale ends FRIDAY, OCTOBER 7 at 8:15 p.m. FLANNEL AND DENIM Sept. 27 PUBLIC: $8.50, 7.50, 5.00 MSU Students': $4.25, 3.75, 2.50 Flannel shirts 3.or'13 7 da...ml. Regular $4.66 ear Get ready for the cold with IVrma-l'resl® flannel shirts. Long-wearing blend of polyester and cotton. With long sleeves and pocket. Stay-in tails. S-XL. 688 Denim jean. Special purrlia.e While •luuiitili... |a,| W hat a buy! I liese 100'i cotton denim jeans have orange contrast stitching. 4 roomy pockets and slightly flared legs. Waists 30-40; inseams 30-31. Hurry in today! A special purchase, though MONDAY, OCTOBER 10 not reduced, is an PUBLIC: $6.50, 5.50, 4.00 exceptional value MSU Students: $3.25, 2.75, 2.00 3131 E. Michigan Ave. Single tickets for these events go on sale MONDAY, SEPT. 26 at the Frundor Center, Emitting, I'll, 351-ftOOO Union Ticket Office, 8:15- 4:30 p.m., weekdays. Phone 355-3361 for ticket availability. Sears Where America shops Satisfaction Guaranteed or Your Money Back Ui/jnn State News. East Lansing. Michigon Welcome Week. 1977 A7 o do during Welcome Week leather & silver Su Casa features A large quantity Led from PW 1 Convocation. 101 to 104 ask questions related custom silver Education: 2 p.m., Erickson Displays, booths and pre¬ North American Indian Holmes Hall. Erwin Bet- academic of jewelry and Student Program. Native tinghaus, Dean. College concerns. S sentations by members of and leatherwork ng to academic, of dents will go to the col Black student organi- . identity and cul American Cultural Room, G 33 Hubbard Hall. A dis¬ Communications and Sciences. Arts lege of their major the smoking time ond location indi¬ 7:30p.m. cussion of services and 8 to MSU 10p.m. cated below: Transfers: 100 Engineer¬ Travelogue presentation supplies L Student Program, programs for Indian stu¬ Observatory Open ing Building at Spartan Village School dents with House (24'' jilnderground, Base- an opportunity telescope Agriculture and Natural Re¬ Human Ecology: 300 Human gymnasium, entitled "800 to ask available). Corner of Col¬ J Wilson Hall. Chi- ■tudents are encour- questions. lege and Forest Roads. sources: Resources 2 p.m.. 150 Natural Ecology Building Days on a Raft." Jointly Building. Last no ie A-K sponsored by East Lansing ■to attend this pro- 7p.m. Wednesday, Septem¬ Arts and Letters: 2 to 4:30 2:45 p. Last n< neL Z Community Education, ■ Chicano loculty and Singer-composer Roy Lee ber 28 p.m., Music Building Aud¬ James Madison: 4:30 1 » University Apartments lembers will discuss Rogers in the Indian Cul¬ 8:30 and 10:30 a.m. itorium. p.m.. Wonders Hall Kiva Resident's Council, and Ks and programs for ture Room, G-33 Hubbard MSU Reading Test for all Business: 138 Chemistry Lyman Briggs: 2 to4:30 p.m., MSU community aides. l0 students. Ques- Hall, sponsored by the transfer students. Building. Attend according 101 to 104 Holmes Hall Event is free. be answered. North American Indian 9 to 11:30 a.m. to the department of Medical 7 to 8 p.m. your Technology: 2 p.m., Student major at the Organization. MSU Library Guided following 146Giltner Hall Transfer Student Program. copper Students Re- Event is free. Tours. Natural Science: 2 p.m.. B102 Wells Hall. Careei „ 1961 Room. Case 2 to 4:30 p.m. Accounting and Financial B108 Wells Hall 7:30p.m. coursework. if e L slide presentation "Meet Administration: 1 p.m. Social Science: 2 to 4 p.m.. styles University Apartment Your College.'' at Michigan State- scussion of foci I- Business Low and Office Ad¬ 326 Natural Science Resident's Program, These meetings will pro¬ a program designed services by the Day vide ministration: 2:45 p.m. assist transfer students Care Center (Corner of an opportunity to University College (No-Pref ..n the Office of Economics. Management, their Middlevale and Crescent meet the faculty, aca¬ erence Majors): 2 p.m., integrati the THE UNIQUE BOUTIQUE' s for Handicap- demic advisers, ond other Marketing and Transpor¬ Main Auditorium Roads.) Monday's pro¬ Univeristy cc nity. AND HEAD SHOP W(Call 353-9642. if gram repeated for Spar¬ students; obtain informa¬ tation. and School of Hotel Urban Development: 2 tc olOOOp. jrtotion for this tan tion about the "Code of Restaurant and Institu¬ 4:30 p.m. W-1 Owen Hall MSU Observatory Open Village residents. ,g and other Wei 7:30 p Teaching Responsibility" tional Management: Veterinary Medicine: nc House, Corner of College J Week activities it and the faculty's expecto- 3:30p.m. meeting scheduled. and Forest Roads. 0) Lyman Briggs College f|Qns ofq| students; ond to Communication Arts and Sci¬ Thursday, September Stuff it. ences: 2 to 4:00 p.m.. Union *********** Building Ball Room. 29 Classes :iENCE FICTION begin. Good luck. J )f NEW COMICS *■ -««2 Bought t Sold 1 )f J * USED COMICS Bought* Sold * j*. ^ Curious Book Shop if LANSING'S r******** *********** LARGEST DISPLAY OF 730 AM - 94.9 FM • "Bee Bumble, Bob Barry 9 pm-1 am" COUPON SAVINGS Ront your own refrigerator, 111 Donuts 10 Complete lettering service The "Bentleg" is in without being way out. location: With this Fall and Winter version of I Weekdays 1st street past Botany's best selling "Bentley" you'll enjoy 18:30-5:30 capitol turn right on the up-to-the-minute styling, the precise, Botany 500' tailoring and the extremely Pot- 8:30-11:00 wide range of luxurious, lighterweight Seymour 5-6 blocks on left fabrics, "Bentley," a classic for every occasion, sensibly priced. $189." \ervoort's HOLDENH REID FRANDOR SHOPPING CENTER DOWNTOWN tANSMO-lOOAN COTTER — ST. JOHNS -lAMMO M AfiMichigan Stole News. East Loosing, Michigoi Welcome Week | MSU crime rate increases slightly By DEBBIE WOLFE police headquarters, where the individual will go through booking size Slaymakcr and Master locks. These brands and sizes of locks State Newt Stiff Writer procedures, including photographs and fingerprints. were the ones most frequently broken into, according to the Alone in front of a microphone an MSU student stands nervously Generally if the suspect is an MSU student, he or she will be report. waiting dressed in well tailored clothing with neatly brushed and released on their own recognizance pending action from the In 1975, the year before the squad was created, campus bike trimmed hair. The judge asks for a plea and silence falls over the Ingham County Prosecutors office, Badgley explained. thefts totaled 353 during the three-month period for a total small courtroom as spectators in the gallerf await the voice of the The prosecutor will then decide what type of charge, if any, will property value of $37,520. During the same period in 1976, the first defendant — the student. Seconds pass by and slight quiver is be issued against the suspect. Generally, if the value of the stolen year of the DPS program, bike thefts decreased to 193 for a total apparent in the legs and hands of the personprominanttly displayed goods is less than $100, the suspect is automatically charged with a property value of $18,793. in the center of the room. "Guilty," mumbles a timid voice, its misdemeanor. A third area of high concern for the DPS are those crimes which amplification startling its source. The judge restates his question "The charge is strictly up to the prosecutor," Badgley said. fall under the general heading of sex offenses and rapes. Of a total and then issues a summary statement followed by a fine ofSlOOora "Each case is judged on its own merits." of 136 reported incidents during the 1976-77 fiscal year in the sex short stayin jail. The cnme: Ripping off a 19 cent pen from the MSU Another major crime problem on campus is bicycle thefts. offense categories, the specific crimes of indecent exposure, bookstore. window peeking or prowlers and obscene telephone calls During the past fiscal year, nearly 4,000 criminal offenses — constituted 88 per cent. This figure represents a two per cent ranging from bookstore thefts to sexual misconduct to homicide — increase over the 1975-76 annual report in the same categories. took place on the MSU campus, representing an overall 2.96 per In tha time it tokos to Those rapes which were reported to the DPS during the 1976-77 cent increase in crime over the last report. dig 30 cents from fiscal year — 13 — represented a decline of three cases from the "Our police department is concerned with the high rate of thefts your pocket, insert it into a vending machine 1975-76 period. and larcenies on campus," said Maj. Adam Zutaut, commander of and receive a can of pop, your bike can be To combat the problem of sexual offenses and rapes the DPS has the MSU Department of Public Safety (MSU-DPS). "Criminal ripped off. cautioned women not to walk on campus alone at night and has activity goes in spurts but in general we try and concentrate most encouraged dormitories to organize systems whereby women may of our manpower on crimes of property and crimes of violence." sign up to travel in groups to various places on campus. Statistics contained in a report released annually by the DPS In their 1975-76 annual report, the police department also show that 673 thefts occurred in which the total value of In the time it takes to dig 30 cents from your pocket, insert it recommended that an emergency telephone system be strategical¬ merchandise taken was $50 or under. A large number of these into a vending machine and receive a can of pop, your bike can be ly installed throughout the campus to deter criminal activity and thefts can be attributed to people arrested for shoplifting at the ripped off. aid witnesses in reporting crimes. Though some parking lots are MSU Bookstore. "It takes just 15 seconds, on the average, for a bike thief to cut currently equipped with a phone system which rings directly into Since 1974, thefts in this category have declined from 858 to 673. through a bike chain or unlock a lock with a master key," said Sgt. DPS headquarters, the units are subject to easy vandalism and are One reason for the difference in arrests could be the employment Larry Lyon of the DPS. too few in number to meet the need of a campus-wide crime of a small force of MSU students, primarily criminal justice But'despite the relatively small amount of time needed to steal a reporting system. majors, by the bookstore to patrol the aisles for shoplifters. bike, thefts on campus in the 1976-77 school year dropped over 54 The DPS headquarters, located at 87 Red Cedar Road employs Clad in street clothing, the men and women acting as store per cent from the 1975 figures. approximately 40 sworn police officers along with an additional detectives work in conjunction with the DPS in arresting people According to a study conducted by the DPS "Bike Squad," most staff of eight which performs limited police duty and clerical work. suspected of shoplifting. bike thefts occur during the months of April, May and June The campus police, in an effort to free salaried personnel for more Though the students employed by the MSU Bookstore are not between the hours of 8 a.m. and 10 p.m. challenging work, employs students to write parking tickets on police officers, they can and do make citizen's arrests. Anyone The special squad was created out of a need for stepped up campus. caught stealing from the bookstore is automatically charged with a surveillance of bike thefts. Officers assigned to the duty are On request, the police department also conducts group felony, said DPS Capt. Ferman A. Badgley. "A citizen arrest can expected to maintain flexible hours to coincide with theft activity. presentations on such topics as first aid, safety security and self be performed by anyone who witnesses a felony," he said. According to the 1975-76 annual report, the basic goal of the ((/efense. tl i j Those windows . S'a,e News Photo b, DobtoJ But inexperienced individuals should be careful when attempt ing to arrest a suspect because of the danger of injury. squad is to "catch persons responsible (for bike thefts) 'in the act.'" The study also revealed that most, MSU bike thieves are For reporting a crime in progress on campus or emergencies, m.y be dirty, but those Z\ mfcht high. " iPPery Md 'h09e thrM'i| dial 1-2-3. For information or for reporting suspicious behavior, To be charged with shoplifting the suspect merely has to leave Lansing juveniles who have master keys for the small and medium phone 5-2221. the immediate area of where the merchandise was located carrying store goods in a concealed manner. The suspect does not have to leave the store premises to be arrested. After the student detectives make the initial arrest a call is placed to the DPS requesting that an officer drive the suspect to * ★★★★★★★★★★★ ★★★★★★★★★★★ If j^. SPORTS ITEMS MAGAZINES Bought 4 Sold * * Jf * )f jA. NEW COMICS USED COMICS Bought I Sold T J u. CALL COMPARE SAVE 4. Curious Book Shop jf ^ Curious Book Shop J on furniture and appliances £★★★★★★★★★£ i ★★★★★★★★★★ at 730 AM - 94.9 FM • COMMERCIAL SUPPLY CO 'Bee Bumble, Bob Barry 9pm-l am" > CARPET REMNANTS Hundreds of Styles 12 16-6 Brown x Shag was $147.00 ... NOW *99.00 12 11-9 Brown Soft-Step x was *119.00 ... 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Eost tonsing, Michigon Welcome Week. 1977 A9 iGrad survey offers insight into class of '77 LB(E WOLFE All totaled however, 26 per average have had three sex ual Usui) Writer cent of the respondents to the preference, the average More than 50 per cent of the vidual decision on whether to Over half of those surveyed i MSU graduate partners by the time they reach MSU senior is strongly in favor seniors felt there is too much survey said they have never 21 years of age, most of them have an abortion or not re¬ said that student government of a traditional marriage. Less Lholic drink once a used marijuana, 21.3 concern for the rights of crimi¬ ceived strong support from at MSU did not affect them at per cent have not tried cohabitation. then 14 per cent spid asionally smokes said they used to smoke it but they nals in courts. those surveyed. Nearly 61 per all. However, nearly 46 per cent Nearly 55 per cent said they would like to have "an open don't anymore, 26 per cent had not cohabitated while 25 cent of the students said they expressed confidence in the pi grauuflte is also smoke occasionally, 5.3 marriage which would include "When courts allow a known were in favor of per cent per cent have and 16 per cent keeping abor potential of student govern¬ fight, having had smoke about once a week, 7.2 have "lived with a member of extramarital sex." guilty man free because of some tion as the woman's (and the ment. But more specifically, ■^partners thus far, per cent smoke two to three Politically, the survey re¬ stupid technical slip-up,I ques¬ man's, several the opposite sex, but did not vealed that most who were tion who is being protected, the respondents nearly 40 per cent considered it ■rward to a tradi- ' sur times a week, and 11.4 per cent have a sexual relationship, as it stipulated) choice. a farce. smoke just about every veyed: victim or the eriminal," said a day. was a coed household." •Believe the United States female medical technology stu¬ f°graduate doesn't The survey consisted of 74 According to the survey re¬ J as a solution to questions on a broad range of needs a planned economy. dent. ★★★★★★★★★★★ sults, MSU is primarily hetero¬ ■while advocating a topics and was mailed to 800 sexual. In answer to the ques¬ •Are opposed to interracial State News If RARE AND )f |d economy for the students graduating in June busing to achieve integration. "Eye for an eye!" a female jf OUT-OF-PRINT BOOKS jf tion, "Have you ever had a •Are evenly split on the (criminalization of 1977. The error margin in the homosexual relationship?" the death penalty. retailing major wrote. Newsline jf. Bought 4 Sold results was estimated to be 5 following tab¬ However, 45 per cent dis¬ jf Curious Book Shop jf _e among the find- per cent. ulated: responses were •And, they do not necessarily oppose nuclear energy. agreed and a female history 353-3382 * * ■ndom State News speed), tranquilizers, mesca¬ One of the questions asked, •Almost 75 per cent have student said, "there is i Ve 1977 MSU grad- line, cocain or LSD. Only 5 per "How many sexual Nearly 70 per cent of the too much concern for ★★★★★★★★★★★ partners never considered it. seniors said they were against human |Theresults, while cent said they used heroin. have you had in your life?" To •Nearly 20 per cent have not busing to racially integrate rights." Mjng, offer insight Almost 70 per cent of the this inquiry nearly 30 per cent had a gay relationship, but have public elementary schools. Bjtudes of students graduates felt that marijuana of the graduates said they had thought about it. T University which should either be legalized or had five or more. Over 22 per "Housing segregation is the •Eight tenths of one per cent major cause of school segre¬ Llf years ago was decriminalized. cent have had sex with only one have "tried it, but didn't like J. a typical Ameri- "It (marijuana) should re¬ gation," said a white female person and more than 14 per ■campus by televi- main controlled at least as cent were majoring in computer virgins. The remain •The same number have Xtator Geraldo Ri- much as alcohol, but the pos¬ ing 30 per cent who responded tried it and like it. session or usage of it should not to the question said they had •One fourth of one per cent ■ace, of the 361 be a crime," said a nonsmok¬ had two, three or four sex said they were bisexual. |o responded to the ing female zoology major. partners in their lifetime. Only •And, the same number con¬ Xer cent said they "It should be legalized, but 12 per cent of those surveyed sider themselves homosexual. ■ and have never taxed as cigarets," wrote a non¬ were married. However, regardless of sex¬ |tuates (downers), smoking male social work ma¬ Though MSU seniors re¬ (uppers or jor. sponding to the survey on the 'ELCOME BACK1! 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PHONE 332-3525 ALL THESE MCA RECORDS ARE ON SALE NOW FOR'3.69 ■Li ON SALE NOW! Jk ON SALE I -i0m» Wcl .^^B>hinon State News. Eost Lansing, Michigan Welcome Week. 1977 All cm 1 220 M.A.C. AVE. f MALL-ABOVE ALLE'EY WHERE HOUSE RECORDS II MON.-SAT. 9 A.M.-9 P.M. SUN. 12-5 P.M. PHONE 332-3525 SUPER CLASSICAL SALE " s7.98 s NOW ONLY '4.99 EACH DISC THESE AL00MS FLOS ENTIRE CATALOG OF DEOTSCNE GRAMMOPHON & PHILIPS ON SALE NOW 7" MCHMAMNOV 9 k W Mm* Cancan# Ik] TAMAS YAiAUT ' 7)"/" &tr ' % it'' ~ 9 MtO ' J Ik 1 1 a SIBELIUS MAHLER SINFONIE NR.1 Symphony Na2 TOSCA. FINLANDIA' HM«|.|»MITT.tntOO j BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCH. Crjtxille ! i»K'C im COLIN DAVIS m. FIEDLER SIBELIUS © CHICAGO SYMPHONY Boston Pops SYMPHONY NO. 2 STRAUSS BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCH COLIN DAWS rnrm "the mark ofquality" t Philips Imports. Because excellence is priceless. O d / #C o ^77 d f J S O • d / ft. C #\* « a #* J. 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A I Kenny Logins ImrutvMe Home I t*wu.n. inckl<'"^: including: Beat Ot My love/A Feeling la/Bleaaed How d I Know Thai Love Would Slip Away Don'l Aak My Neighbor Never Had A Lady Before Come On By/Framed/Tkneless L< Charlemagne/Gotta Find Another Way "3.69 3 2-RECORD SET ALEM $3.69 -ON CBS RECORDS- ; A1 ^Michigan Stole News, Eost lonsing, Michigon SN's purpose: service By MICHAEL TANIMURA paper for the students of MSU. paper is its value as a dissemi¬ State News Editor-in Chief Above all else, the State nator of news and information Perched atop the massive News exists as a service to for the University community. ground-hugging orange brick students at the University. Students can have indirect Only when the 43,500 students (353-33821. ' and glass Student Services input into the paper by inform¬ Building lies a gravel and at school realize and take ing the State News of any asphalt roof. Directly under¬ neath this inky cap in the north advantage of this service, ful. can the paper ever be truly success¬ occurence that might be inter¬ esting. If some students are ^fXea:/;wJ wing of the building, students simulating a demolition derby SSsrss , and professionals alike slave to What should come to pass is a complete with destruction and seek out. record, ingest, rarefy, situation where the students mayhem in the dorm cafeteria, sufr.cienHy arouse, State News will report and publish accounts of events and issues confronting make use of the State News in whatever terms they see fit. let the paper know about it. If an organization is it receives — print n« *J "HI performing and affecting students of this The primary feature of the some function which might editorially agrees "onor wta'jfl vast intellectual pressure cook¬ er megaversity commonly re- not-thats^l fered to as Michigan State University. Occasionally they are called perverts; frequently, they are addressed as scoundrels. Rare¬ ly are they praised for the job they do in turning out one of the largest college papers in the country. But praise is not even a tertiary goal to the students who work at the State News. The experience, education and State News Photo by Laura Lynn Fisfler pay they receive are also not of and do it yourself Sweet, tender, mental, physical, deep, shallow, primary importance. What is 'af's amore permanent, ephemeral, enduring, short-lived, hot 'n heavy, light and airy - whatever, 'at's what it is, essential, and what draws stu¬ dents to the paper, is the HOIST, TOOLS, DISCOUNT PARTS almost single minded purpose baby. of turning out a good news¬ 4 per hour ★★★★★★★★★*★ State News 4 RARE AND 4 4 OUT-OF-PRINT BOOKS 4 Newsline 4 Bought (Sold 4 353-3382 4 Curious Book Shop 4 OAKLAND A CEDAR 427 E. Oakland Call 4842308 730 AM-94.9 FM • "Jim St. John 1 pm-6 pm" 157. 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MUSIC... #3-221 Ann St. East Lansing Package Liquor Beer-Wine Take Out Whites Bokerv n stote News, Eost Lonsing, Michigon Welcome Week. 1977 A13 Type III recommendations: ton, member of the UCAP, the Students must remove their thy Arata, Assistant Provost should be allocated for each report must have satisfied the for Undergraduate Education Compromise report to deficiency by either retaking course," she explained. majority of the members be and an ex officio member of the That question is exactly what the go additional time exam one cause the vote for approval was UCAP. the UCAP has been grappling and passing, or through passing Arata said remedial educa with. They have come up with an appropriate Type III course. "I ran for the committee before Council this term on a tion exploded in the mid sixties their present report, but ac Credit in Type III courses will platform of no credit for reme¬ when enrollment in remedial be included in the calculation of dial courses," said Stapleton, cording to Stapleton, the Aca¬ classes at MSU increased "log- demic Council sent back the GPA and MAPS and will be "and this report satisfied me.'* counted toward the minimal arithmatically." previous proposal with very In the fall of 1976, based on That brought about a move few instructions regarding re- graduation requirements. Math their performance on the Uni¬ to 082/103 and 083/104 are exam get credit alotted for these versity Placement exams, 1,730 remedial classes which had pies of Type III courses. freshmen placed into remedial Regarding MSU's future in previously carried no credit. volvement with remedial edu •Type IV criteria: medial courses (out of a total of 6,122 "The source of the present cation Arata said, "I'd like to Placement into the course is dispute admitted). a result of problem is not whether or not see MSU anticipate phasing out inadequate academic "I don't see the decline in these classes should be offered, the remedial teaching function skill as shown on one of the Scholastic Aptitude Test scores everyone agrees that they and have high schools placement exams, but the exam pick it does not measure knowledge in as bottoming out," said Doro¬ should, but how much credit up." the area of the course. Type IV recommendations: The University Curriculum FALL DOWN SALE ming to nhilbert They must he designed for an placement exams and are de¬ end included in calculatoin of CPA Committee must be given full documentation that shows the course meets objectives justi¬ fying full University credit. Examples of type IV courses are MS 181,182 and 183. »Staff Writer students who test below pre¬ f signed to remedy a deficiency, and MAPS, but will not count •Type V criteria: wv simmering contro determined scores on Univer¬ the removal of which is neces¬ toward the minimal Course is "l 7 a -medial classes at sity placement examinations. graduation preparatory or sary for graduation. Continua¬ requirements. This type in¬ prerequisite to a 100 level . ally reach a reso- They are designed to remedy a tion in the sequence is cludes the ATL 101, 102 and required course and no placement exam II. deficiency or deficiencies whose until deficiency is removed. 103 sequence. is given. ersity Committee removal is a requirement for Type II course recommends •Type III course criteria: Type V recommendations: c Policy (UCAP) graduation. tions: These are single or sequen¬ University Curriculum Com¬ a report it hopes Type I course recommen¬ The student must demon¬ tial mittee may decide if such a table to the Aca dations: offerings which are de¬ strate that their deficiency has course is signed for students who test University level, and 1 when that his fall. body Students may remove their deficiencies by either retaking been removed by retaking and below a pre determined score if it is not, the committee will 4 v passing the entry exam or by on a University placement ex¬ demand strong documentation the ^4. one fourth of all exam one more time and completing the first term of the am and are for its need. If the course is not need to take passing, or by passing the designed to remedy en Type II sequences, retaking the deficiencies identified on judged to be on University ses. appropriate Type I course. and passing the exam, or if level, but it is needed, they may A? the entry exam. The removal of deals with what Credits earned in Type I cour unsuccessful this process will allow the course but recom¬ such deficiency is required only ' K- most debate - ses, IS 194 for example, are to continue through the maximum if the student wishes to enter a mend that credits not count emedial courses, be included in calculation of the number of terms in the se¬ certain toward graduation. dit should not be CPA and Minimum Academic degree-granting pro¬ quence. Credit earned will be gram. According to James Staple- emedial classes; Progress Scale (MAPS), but believe it should they shall not be counted towards the minimum of 180 .10 simple answer credits needed for graduation. ersally applicable," •Type II criteria: tee states in its These are sequential courses designed for students who test will recommend, below pre determined scores on that all of MSU's jrses be divided *********** _s, each with its If RARE AND 4 credit. Jf OUT-OF-PRINT BOOKS * is recommended ^ Bought I Sold ] as follows: rses, which must jf Curious Book Shop J wing criteria: . 730AM-94.9FM • Caruso 6 am-10 am' 40%-60% OFF RETAIL ON EN A WOMEN'S GREAT FALL FASHIONS! 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Not too attitude of the public, a frequent concern at you education? First, I think long ago, I likened it to a set of concentric the elitism of higher education, the selectivi¬ mw gave this yesr, it seemed as though it had an emphasized in this is the fact that very often plines. That's one of the problems with this. agree that today's air of emergency, or even of crisis, to it; recommendation and a decision of this One could argue, though, that once circles with the center at Michigan State world » a ty of higher education, the fact that it is not interdependent than it was 10 talking about the need to reassess MSl's nature is based upon the judgment of the centralization has taken place, the central University, and the further away you go, it an institution that is available to all citizens years ago, 30 years would seem the higher the esteem with ago, m priorities and the dangers oi centralization professionals within that field who know the planning group, whoever that would be with equal access because of hard judgments Given the fact that the of higher education. Could you elaborate on which Michigan State University is held, that are made about who shall be admitted increasingly interdependent il world bL— whether we're in that kind ol danger, how because those who are somewhat removed and who shall not be on the basis of certain important that the 87 per'"'I immediate it is and what possible conse¬ from Michigan State University and who levels of prior academic achievement. It is students at Michigan quences might come out of it in terms of the have either a broader statewide, national or very easy for that anti-elitist sentiment to Michigan have an opportune State wholl direction of higher education. international perspective, are in fact able to expand and begin to impact the negative acquainted with and to There are two separate questions, al assess what is happening at Michigan State image of a University. standing of the full acn^ J though they are interrelated. First is the University, and see and judge the Universi¬ If something happens at the University the United States anddiversity tb, J question of Michigan State University and ty at a much higher level than sometimes which confirms the judgments of people who enhance, I think, not in the world J our long-range reassessment. That is an happens with those of us, the members of have reservations about the value of higher only, theirM urgent priority; however, it is something I the University community, who are ^ea' with the problems ol s, right education, about it being elitist, then you greater interdependence, have talked about for quite some time. In here on campus and can't see the forest for bit begin to get a feeling that higher education is provide a broadening factor fact, a year before, in the 1976 State of the the trees. This is something which I think is a waste of time, it's not of their education with a fortlwgfl anything that's small>' T University address, I indicated we would gradually being reversed. I think more and worth looking at, that "we taxpayers" who Secondly, as I have frequently J begin the process and that was what led to more of the faculty and the students are the development of the entire long-range are supporting it ought to put our money incoming students, many of thj 3 beginning to realize that the University is an elsewhere, and so on. which we have in the exercise or plan to reassess university extremely innovative center, and it also is an There was finally, no question but what result of the inability of wider socio] priorities. That is a very serious need within institution which is committed to academic the spillover from the period of student society to J that diversity. That is, the the University, one that I've spoken to on a excellence. dijfer unrest and demonstrations in the exist, in terms of the value ori, number of occassions, and it is important to That speaks to the issue of public trust early 1970s, in terms of attitude and support the preferences and lifestyles, of the extent that there has been a continuing and confidence that was prominent feature fel general public gave to higher education. society as a result of thai diversity fiscal pressure on the University. of some of your early speeches. Are those This has had very lasting effects. Many serious conflicts. And, J The second issue that I addressed in that problems sort of slowly leaving us alone? again. I f people, and I can recall even alumni at university is one of the best placesi speech was the dangers of centralization in Which" problems are these? higher education. That also has been a Michigan State University from time to time to start a process of trying to J Getting the confidence of the public back; and when I visit with various alumni how to live with that diversity,hee] — development that is not new, but it is one doing something tangible that can be with that diversity. that is growing. I felt it was important to groups — they raise the question of whether perceived and appreciated or that has some we still have student unrest on In other speak to that issue because, to a considera¬ campus. speeches in your « positive impact on the outside world. They begin to discuss what from their ble extent, the ability of a single institution I don't think it's a matter of a lack of university series, you spoke of the^L — whether it's Michigan State, the Univer¬ public standpoints were the "terrible actions" of universal higher education, that hi trust and confidence in higher education. It MSU students, breaking the windows and education available to anyone who X sity of Michigan or Wayne State Univer¬ is a questioning as to the value of sity — to accommodate its future or to direct higher damaging their campus — because alumni II we were to run a 12,000 mile k education and it is secondarily a question of look upon itself toward some future goal is very much this as their campus the same way that, what do you think has tn the image of higher education. constrained by all of the external factors and today's students do. This had a very past several years to either h There was a period of time in which diminish the possibilities ol forces in the press for centralization. negative affect on the image of the that| considerable attention in the media about? What I was trying to point out to the was University, not only our University, but the given to what I would call the idosyn- others where the same thing occurred as Oh, just look at the levels of ear University community was the fact that cratic evidence of while we are launched on this unemployment among well. community colleges. Look at the«j| very college graduates, the fact that there was important program of long-range priority You put all that together, and it has led, I enrollment of adults in high sr 1 would soy that there has been, in the general attitude of the „ov a perfect fit between each graduate and a believe, to a greater difficulty on the part of expansion of older adults in reassessment, it is taking place in a setting public, a frequent concern at the elitism of higher education, the job, and the declining value of a college Universities in securing adequate financial Just look at all of regit] in which some of the most significant factors that will affect the outcome are outside of degree — as it was argued. A whole series of support — particularly for the public courses. thaai] you'll find, by and large, thereat J the control of the University. I then selectivity of higher education, the fact that it is not an institution books, articles and magazine articles came universities — from state government, significant expansion it that is available to all citizens with equal access because of hard out. Now the interesting thing is that while because individuals in state government, proceeded to address myself to whether the it may have made higher educational opportunities trend toward centralization was a good or a judgements that are made about who shall be admitted and who exciting reading in copy, I've always found, very, very citizens in the United States. Thes and while no one in higher education would accurately bad thing. I tried to point out what I saw as shall not be on the basis of certain levels of reflect the sentiments of their constituen¬ have been and will be experieicig some of the great historical prior academic achieve¬ say that unemployment of college cies. I've very rarely heard in that same declines due to the declining high advantages of ment. It is very easy for that anti-elitist sentiment to ' i nonexistent, Michigan's pattern of higher education, and expand and noted in several of my as you probably legislator's district when I've gove to speak graduation population, but that sb some of the disadvantages of some of the begin to impact the negative image of a University. speeches, I pointed to some group in that district. be confused with the very significant out that, in fact, the low level of You've spoken at some length about your in the availability of higher ed« proposals that have been made for greater centralization of higher education. unemployment among college graduates in concept of the pluralistic university. What is opportunity to all citizens. strengths and weaknesses of their specific the 1960s was itself the aberration. That How badly does trying to plan composed of, would cease to be external and is, pluralism, and what does it have to do with Are higher proportions ol people long- discipline and field as it relates to that would become something that's internal to if you look at the level of range priorities in this kind ol a setting tie unemployment education? good use of the availability? particular institution. That is not a judg¬ the higher education system as a whole. among college graduates by periods of the MSU's hands? ment which is easily made by an external Pluralism, with regard to the student Yes. I would say that there's! It doesn't necessarily tie one's hands. It It has rarely worked that cant increase in availability in ■ group or organization unless they have the way in any state could frustrate the achievement of the that I know of where a munities. That's of the goals same level of expertise and competence and highly centralized one reasons or any recommendations that come forward. process has taken place. expansion of numbers and sizes i insight and knowledge. The interesting thing is that in states For example: Michgan State enrollments of the community collef University, as Yet Michigan State might very well say, a result of the long-range planning process, where, several years ago, there was an Speaking generally, what eiftft for example, that we have a very might unique extremely centralized decision making pro¬ has the expansion ol higher educatios very well come to the conclusion that it should continue its historical mix of capability in the area of hotel and restaurant cess, they have now started to ease management, in packaging, in speech and up higher education itself? graduate and undergraduate programs. If significantly because they have found that it Well that varies, depending: there were a centralized bureau, that had audiology. But the ability to judge whether is extremely difficult. or not we should institution impacted. I would si; the authority, they could expand that particular field Let me just take Michigan State as a very well decree or continue to emphasize a program or a place like Michigan State. «> that that is not to be the future pattern of curriculum in those fields is very often based simple case in point. We have, as of last interesting increase in the number: Michigan State University. They could do count, something on the order of 250 adults, that's had an impart: upon the professional judgment of the that in a number of key areas, and that is one different majors, on the undergraduate level people in that field. They know that field. composition of the students. Bui that very simple example of how a plan, alone. That's two hundred and But some person sitting in a central bureau fifty different is very different from, say, the ® sets of major fields. I'd ask developed and agreed to by the University is not always able to the question: some of the community colleges. community itself, might well be at odds with judge, from a when you start applying a set of professional standpoint, what in fact are the pro¬ Has scholarship or research been what a centralized bureau might dictate. fessional judgments with regard to a need oriented in recent years? constituent parts, the demand and the complex, heterogenious set of majors and I would say that varies curricula at one institution as complex as institution. At Michigan State, It depenMj Michigan State University, and you repli¬ have an excellent balance, n e hue: cate that in 15 other institutions, you begin applied, orientation than is true a to see the difficulty of that process. If institutions, but I think that hashat Now I'm not saying that one could not put one believes, as I do, that inherent ability and excellence is in fact beneficial impact in terms of W down on paper all of the listings of the distributed randomly throughout mankind, then other various curricula, but the things being which knowledge has develop' would have to be exercised would judgments that equal, one would assume that it would be possible to have student gressed on this campus. I like" be far have this campus between t more complex than can be body in which a full range of diversity is reflected. on easily encom¬ passed in a single centralized process. It can (applied research and pure reseam Is there a trend that you can » be attempted, but there are some very I wouldn't say that I see a tren important costs that result from attempting 1920s, the 1930s, the 1940s, the 1950s and body, is the extent to which that student that regard. Nationally, there W to do so. One of the most the 1970s, the level of significant costs is unemployment in each body, to a greater or lesser degree, reflects decline in support for certain kinds the extent to which it restricts and of those 10 year periods is almost identical. judgment, the flexibility and the freedom of limits the It was the period of the pluralism of our society and our world. If research, and that's very unfortun very strong demand one believes, as I do, that inherent ability become a great concern in choice of the individual student. for college graduates in the 1960s when that and excellence is in fact distributed fields. We are fairly bureaucratized number dropped. random¬ right now, ly throughout mankind, then other things We have continued to move ag though. Do you think we're just the right Now, the other thing that I think is being equal, one would assume that it would national trends in terms of the supi size? important is that while there has been some be possible to have a student I don't consider that to be bureaucracy. I slight lessening in the dollar advantage to full range of body in which a diversity is reflected. funding we're getting at the average nationally, M'th^ th*r consider that to be a having a college degree, there is still a range of choice The diversities which I've referred to decline in the level of SUPP®''1.. available to students at significant difference in lifetime earnings — Michigan State and this is not an exhaustive list — are made the various universities. At Mi which enhances their between people who have flexibility as to their college degrees up of different income levels, different it's been increasing. Sow: field of major, or their career and people who don't. But it is easy to choice, and as go out ethnic and racial the trend. to what they perceive to be their job and find examples that are backgrounds, different , rtM very attrac¬ religious You have said, concerning" opportunities in a range of fields, and tive. You may know a classmate who was a groups, different residential pat¬ have that available to them here. they brilliant historian and he's now a checkout terns. As you know, we have students who public understanding ol it, tW » Has anything come from farm areas, rural small is that tangible results Is all« F conceptually changed with clerk at Meijer's Thrifty Acres, and towns, regard to the University since you've been 'See, a college degree isn't worth it.' And you say, suburbia, inner city, different states in the likely ever undersun sboo' ^ by United States. We have students from that they have a tough tune here? the same token, his high school classmate eighty foreign countries in the need for basic research I don't think 'conceptual' is the way I who didn't go to college is probably working So when you take our University. would view it. I have been very encouraged on an assembly line somewhere and pulling students from every apparently yield any direct I have county in Michigan, every state in the results. a belief that because we are a by the even greater commitment to down $5,000 a year more than what he is as a United States, 80 countries from publicly tion, that we have an obligation to find effective supported institu¬ academic excellence within the checkout clerk. And you 'See, around the There has been, I think in University. say, a college world, you therefore have a In the context of being ways in which the numerous degree isn't worth it.' very pluralistic j available knowledge which is areas, student body. sive,or need responsive,doestli generated on our campus is made an attempt to enhance and encourage the Well, what you're doing is you're taking a What is the significance of available to the public who academic excellence of the institution. few examples and saying that this is that for (continued on page provides that support, over and above think the most important And I what the applies to the majority. But those examples knowledge which is provided to the sons and daughters who recognition by the University aspect of this is a existed before. It isn't come to study, or they themselves who come to community's anything that's new. own members And, in fact, I think it's been used to negate ency is broader than those who take formal study. The constitu¬ as to international reputation of the the national and the value of a higher education in the minds courses at Michigan University I'liolos State or who attend courses at for a center of academic excellence and for of many individuals in the public. by Laura Lyaa Fislb'r the state. continuing education centers around being one of the most innovative, exciting Now, on the other question of how the places in higher education. University's image has been affected, I lalcrrii'u• by Itob Ourlian I'm always somewhat would say that there has been, in surprised by the the general y 8 Week., Bn„n State News, Eost loosing, Michigan Welcome Week, 1977 A15 harton shares beliefs, experiences 4 from peg* may very well be a person ning to reach out and make campus is made available to the service. , effort* in any engaged in pure research that is contrary to my role as presi¬ that's not his statement as the legal right of individuals directed at objective 'A' and in major attempts, which are new public who provides that sup¬ One last question: this is sort dent. ones for them. Others have president of Michigan State within the institution to espouse the process along the port, over and above the know¬ of an off-the-wall question. Do —se of Michigan State way, he tried it, didn't like it, and are During the student unrest University.' And to a consider¬ views as they see fit." That may discover 'B' which could ledge which is provided to the you make any conscious effort to J I would say it's pulling back. There's considera¬ sons and daughters who come to be period relating to Vietnam and able extent, in my judgment, meant that as president of more idealistic in Southeast Asia and 1'reverse- From the totally revolutionize the genera¬ ble variation on this. study, or they themselves who your so on, I whether you agree with it or Michigan State University, I I of external funding, tion of energy. And that has speeches than you are in other suspect that 1 had more years of not, that could very well have felt it was important to protect You're a fairly firm advocate come to study. The constituency w be almost an exces- happened time after time after of settings? direct involvement in Southeast been a compromise with regard that forum of the University. doing that kind of reaching is broader than those who take No, I don't role play in the ution with the time after time, where you just out. Asia, more actual physical time to the institutional posture of Some people didn't under¬ formal courses at Michigan sense of don't know where that basic having different roles in living and working as a profes¬ neutrality where divergent stand this. Yes, as part of the mission of State or who attend courses at different settings. The only dif¬ sional in the area than research is likely to lead to in anybody rt you have to have the University. And I do it continuing education centers ferentiation that I would make views obtain. Because as chief To me, the office of presi¬ terms of the applied. else on campus. And I mean executive officer, I would have because of several beliefs. And around the state. There are is that I do have, or at least I dent is uniquely inseparable „iy there's an as- What presently do you see these are not based upon the try working in the villages. adopted a position which would other citizens who have needs to have, a consistent role as the from the institution as a whole. Ehat one knows what happening in terms of higher hard, empirical evidence that as that Michigan State University But one of the problems that have been one way or the other, I've always operated in a way, urch needs are, and education doing research, or president of Michigan State occurred was that those who that would have been viewed by as economist I would tend to could hopefully try to meet, owing what one's doing things, that directly try to University. Now, that means in were opposed tothewarwanted the others as having hopefully, that I will do nothing prefer. with our set of competencies in certain instances that I may compro¬ that will either demean the s are, you can solve some of the problems in I have me to make a personal state¬ mised the academic neutralto a belief that because the educational realm and I have private views which from office, or to affect the office in a loirett the research the outside world? we ment about my views on the of the institution. 8 a a publicly supported believe that as part of our standpoint as president of negative fashion. |w to a certain extent, I would say that at Michigan institution, that we have an responsibility, as a publicly my Michigan State University I will war. I pointed out that it would ■ted research of that State we have done and will be impossible for me to make a obligation to find effective ways supported institution, we not espouse or advocate in most If you had made a statement, ■ take place. But very continue to do a great deal with in which the available know- statement such that it would be And I said, "I will therefore what would it have been? should try to find meaningful instances, in fact, I believe that | does not necessarily regard to our public service ledge which is generated - ways of providing that kind of represents something which is said, 'This is Dr. Clifton R. not make the kind of statement As I said. You're still asking in fact will be the dimension and our approach to Wharton, Jr.'s statement, but that you want, but I will protect me to make a statement. ■itcome of what begins critical problems in the state ★★★★★★★★★★★ ■of basic research. The and in society. I think we do a If State News rare and if ■ science and technolo- very fine job in that area. ]f out-of-print books * XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX XXX XXX K,|ete with cases like We've sort of had a head Newsline Bought! Sold jf. start, though, hy virtue of the Lit say that in today's land grant philosophy. jf. Curious Book Shop )f 353-3382 * lere's a great nergy need to substitute or a That's right. Because of the land grant philosophy — and ★★★★★★★★★★★ * YOUR 13th CUT OR imical way of gen- also because we're the kind of I ergy. Well, the problem. we've People institution that we are. In terms of other universi¬ SHAMPOO AND SET IS FREE Lg at all kinds of ties and how they're dong it, . But somewhere that varies a great deal. There in the world, there are some places that are begin¬ OFFERING... unisex styling—all prices are the same for men & women A LARGE SELECTION OF FASHION FABRICS, HAND KNITTING WALK-INS WELCOME-EVENINGS BY APPT. 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Steve Edwards 417 X x: XXXXXXX1 MAJORS NON MAJORS k that has I'M erms ol the J I Skilom Majors in History will find a department that provides personal attention to their needs through Non-majors choosing History that their interests and needs are not neglected. courses will find developed u| a faculty advising system. Formal requirements are The large proportion of students who enroll in js. Ilikethe| j between 4 kept to a minimum. Majors in History will find History courses are not History majors. Their their experience particularly valuable as prepara¬ experience in History courses, however, helps them pure research! tion for a career in Teaching, Law, Foreign Service, t you cio see I develop skills in communication, problem solving, [ See a trend f National, State, and City government. Library Ser¬ and creative thinking that will be useful to them y, there h«l vice, Museum and Archival Service, and various in their future careers. certain kinds J other fields. ery ern unfort in miny-l CAMPING Highlights of FALL TERM COURSES Kelly Sierra Designs Hst 111- The Ancient World Hst 151 - Special introductory course for all majors Hst 121 -- America to 18(5 offered every term Northface Eureka Hst 122 -- America since 18(5 Hst 235 -- Military History of the United States Hst MO - Japanese History Hst 28( -- The African Experience Hst293 - The Far East Camp 7 Thermos In addition, 300-level courses ore open to freshmen who have well developed skills in reading and writing. Gerry Camptrails Some examples off 300 level courses Fall 1977 Hst 30( 1ma,,er how or when you choose to Vasque boots Pivetta boots -- American Foreign Policy Hst 371A -- European Economic History Hst 309 -- Black Man in America Hst 379A -• France In the 19th Century py nature and the outdoors, we can 'P you gel the most out of Hst 314 •• History of Canada Hst 392 •• Africa through 1500 every Hst 342A -- Intellectual History of Europe 'SPECIAL NOTE: Both Hit 301 ( 302 Conititutionol History We have the finest name Hst 347 ol Iho U.S. will bo offoroil In Foil 1977 although 302 li not -- Women in Industrial Society Ilitcd In Iho loll ichodule of courioi ' d rquipment, the largest inventory, RAUPP Hst 370B -- Soviet Foreign Policy most knowledgeable experts and Please step by during registration te talk with eur ■ "liable rental |!'C1"Ul> I e "ghi ifequipment gear. Stop in and see us... you have any questions about Campfitters undergraduate advisor about ffall courses and to to use or where to I'Khtion. 2021 E. Michigan pick up our student handbook. UNDERGRADUATE ADVISING CENTER 306A MORRILL HALL 353*5289 COME SEE US IN OUR NEW LOCATION! HISTORY DEPT. OFFICE 301 MORRILL HALL 355*7500 1 A1 ^Michigon Stote News, Eost Lonsing, Michigon Welcome The fight this time IranFilm Project controversy could Following a tumultuous special continual State News Photo observation by Richard Politowski by campus escalate this year meeting of the MSU trustees, demon¬ police. Zolten Ferency, professor of strators occupy the International criminal justice, counsels the demon¬ Center, where they are kept under strators on their legal rights. By DAN SPICULES made to drop doing any work James Davis, co-editor of the State News Staff Writer on present-day Iran. asking for additional funding to lates, may be taken out of the Lansing Star and chief spokes¬ complete the project, changed University's general fund. An MSU's most controversial in¬ Bickering over the content of person for the committee, ternational program since the the film, concerning its alleged objectives and all. additional $160,000 is needed to helped found the group after Davis says the committee finish work by August 1978. Vietnam Project which brought propaganda role for the Shah doing research for his paper. will work to oppose any new "I can't imagine the school the University so much notor¬ has been heavy, with opponents His reasons for switching from iety in 1966 has been the of the project claiming that funding effort, in addition to pumping money into this pro¬ observer to activist reflect a further educating the commun¬ ject and raising tuition at the Stole News Photo MSU-Iran Film Project. The even the historical documenta¬ general trend that was occur¬ ity about the project and edu¬ same time," Davis said. "In Anti-film project activist Jennifer Davis lashes by louioijmhjl out at the Board highest point of the debate thus ries sway the truth, putting ring on many campuses last cating members of the commit¬ three years nothing is finished tees in June when that body failed to act on the film project's futin olTru I far came in June when more than 100 students occupied the current problems out of the minds of viewers and giving spring: a modest, yet loud tee, many of them members of — that shows mismanage¬ thereby tacitly approving it's continuation. I ' return to student activism. the Iranian Student Associa¬ ment." International Center in protest added historical grandeur to a "Part of my reason for over a tacit Board of Trustees fascist regime. doing tion. Iranian students involved in something rather than just Davis says this summer the controversy have added decision to allow the project to But at a more general level, writing about it was brought on dropped by Ingham County would be violated by termina¬ continue. meetings have been held every flash to the protests; they wear prosecutor Peter Houk August tion of the film: opponents of the project attack by the lack of any kind of group Wednesday and that 30 people masks to hide from possible Students became aware of it from the standpoint of sheer on 22, on a legal technicality. Proponents also argue that campus to get students consistently show up. Among retaliation by the Shah's secret the project, which began in financial involvement of any A recent decision by Lansing the films are not propaganda, involved: talking about the new topics in the planning 1974 with a (250,000 grant to sort with the Iranian govern¬ issues and Iran foreign police, SAVAK. district court Judge Charles but are historically valid and was an ideal stage are ideas about expand¬ Iranian students claim they MSU from National Iranian ment, citing MSU's policy state¬ Felice set a precedent, stating useful as teaching aids. place to start," Davis said. ing the scope of the committee have been harrassed Radio and Television (NIRT), ment that each by that there was no such thing as Economics professor Charles project have Although the committee to include other issues and SAVAK and use this to further by a 42-page booklet put out by genuine value to local people in caused additional protests dur¬ attempting to resist arrest. Killingsworth has stated that the Committee to Stop the the host country and to the printing of a new booklet prove argument about the Such a designation, the court ing finals week of spring term, explaining the situation with Shah's intolerance terminating the project will MSU-Iran Film Project in May. of free found, would leave the defen¬ cause other faculty members to University, and, that such a with 200 students staging a the film project. Originally the agreement project not benefit the repres¬ sit-in at the International Cen¬ speech. dant open to double jeopardy, feel "less secure in the exercise called for a series of instruction¬ "We're setting up study Two Iranian students were since he could be charged with sion of human rights. ter for 38 hours and of adademic freedom." al films about Iran, some ol posting groups for members of the arrested June 24 by the DPS both resisting arrest and at¬ The booklet contended that demands on the president's Michael Smydra, D-East Lan¬ them historical and some of committee so we can make our for allegedly obstructing an MSU's involvement with the door, the Board of Trustees tempting to resist arrest. The sing, on the Board of Trustees, them current. So far only the Shah's regime is points strong," Davis said. officer and attempting to resist court said either arrest is stated during the May meeting, morally took no further action on the 'There's a lot of internal educa¬ historical films have been put arrest, but there was no evi¬ resisted or it is not. the concern for academic free¬ wrong, listing among other project. tion work going on right now dence of SAVAK involvement. together to some extent. Over a criticisms, This fall Davis says the While the Iran project has its dom was outweighed by the Amnesty Inter¬ and some basic political educa¬ A protest of the arrests oc¬ year ago, according to the national's claim that Iran has committee will continue work opponents, it also has its pro¬ importance of the Iranian's director of the project, M. Ali tion, too." curred July 21. the worst record ol abuse of to put a stop to the ponents. The major argument human rights. Issari, professor of telecom¬ project. The committee will try to Charges against Nahal For- human rights of all nations, bar Issari has proposed an amend¬ block the new proposal for by supporters of the project is When Smydra moved that munications, the decision was ment to the Board of Trustees ouzin. 24, and Behzad Movazze. that the academic freedom of "MSU sever all relations and/or funding, which Davis specu¬ 25, both of East Lansing were the project's director Issari any-connection wrth'' the M8LK-- OPIN DAILY 10-10 WELCOME WEEK SUNDAY 10-6 Kmart East Only! Boon Stole Nuws, Eoat Laming, Michigan Welcome Week, 1977 A17 The taskforce hat not yet gotten down to the butinett of actually setting priorities. But when it does, it will have a schedule. Over 100 busy proposals and suggestions have already been submitted from all over the University. iversity's future [aits on a iskforce's verdict I (continued from page 1) gotten down to the business of setting business has turned into self-defense in¬ J prepare and put forward a priorities. But when it does this fall, it will stead of self-examination. I redefinition of mission for the have a busy schedule. Over 100 proposals "They're all scared as hell," said one and suggestions have already been submit¬ professor. Jo said in the speech that J necessitated the move, fiscal ted from all sectors of the university, Lounges, meetings and cocktail parties adding proposals ranging from fundamental educa¬ do indeed turn defensive when the I was at stake was "the viability of tional issues to matters of subject priority-setting comes up, faculty say. Since the priority ■rsity as a whole." procedure. system could well become a list enabling ■this year, Wharton followed up on But what the final outcome of the administrators to lop from the bottom when Kit of establishing University-wide planning council's deliberations will be budget woes demand it, nobody wanta their ■ by releasing a hefty ISO page remains a question mark. The council met unit or their job next to the 1 entitled "Proposed Plan and cutting edge. during spring term, but those meetings The fact that defining MSU's mission and i for Reassessing University were aimed at formulating procedures for role, setting its goals and formulating a .n a Long-Range Context," which looking at all of the proposals. concept of educational priority came about . ^t modification and waa then set 'There weren't many clues as to how the in response to money problems has some council would come out in a substantive other members of the MSU community ,e commitments now exceed re- sense," said Provost Clarence Winder. looking askance at the idea. I says the document's preamble, "Any attempt to say what they'll end up They argue that the university has 1st reassess its priorities to be able with would be guesswork at this point" continually ignored a philosophical and n effectively at an appropriate The council is expected to have some conceptual need to establish what is imic excellence...the allocation recommedations hammered out by the end important to MSU, and opted to do it only es must be adjusted to provide a of fall. Those recommendations, Winder, when business worries forced the issue. State News Photo by Dana Felmly |f flexibility for innovation." says, will then go either through the This makes what ought to be an exercise in There are places that are conducive to constructive ■ called a in the document is the formation the "Long-Range Planning 26 member group, 18 of whom Academic Council or back to individual colleges for amendment, a process which could take as long as a year. educational philosophy merely a different approach to budgeting, they say. There is, however, a philosophic basis to Tree's a crowd discourse, and there table to sit to be both. on. Some are places that aren't comfor¬ places, paradoxically, happen » directly by Wharton, who Following approval, MSU will at last two from which to work. The Morrill Act, B the council as nonvoting chairper- have a definitive statement on its mission, signed by President Abraham Lincoln in goals and priorities. 1862, granted the land which enabled ■r eight members are automati- Wharton's 1975 speech is regarded as the Michigan to construct what eventually I the council by virtue of their framework for all of the priority-setting would be MSU. More recently was MSU's response to a 1 These eight consists of the activity to be taking place in the months The act, written by Sen. Justin S. Morrill, sTo cherish the knowledge from the past; request from the Michigan Department of eTo encourage ★★★★**★★★*★ I three vice presidents and four ahead. said the colleges built under its provisions Education for a statement on MSU's role meaningful research and If RARE AND If- is of academic council standing In his 1977 State of the University were to be schools "where the experimentation; The Academic Council is leading and mission. If. OUT-OF-PRINT BOOKS if. . Address, Wharton said the self-examination object shall be, without excluding other That statement included a list of six eTo respond to the needs of society; jf. Sought a Sold |iiefd tolegislative make and advisory body, will result in "an improved focus of our scientific and classical studies and including "goals" adhered to by MSU, among them: sTo pass on knowledge and information j Curious Book Shop j recommendations to mission, better fiscal health and greater military tactics, to teach such branches of ^ 307 E Grand Rl,.r ~ #To offer undergraduate and graduate gained at MSU to the state and nation; and 1 idministration. capacity to achieve our educational, re¬ learning as are related to agriculture and education of the highest possible quality in eTo encourage discussion on all appropri¬ K chosen by Wharton consist of a search and extenaion goals." the mechanic art...in order to promote the all ate issues of scholarship and life. 1 administrators, faculty and stu- Individual departments and units are appropriate fields; liberal and practical education of the already underway in the process of examin¬ industrial classes in the several pursuits ■far, the planning council has not ing priorities, and some say the whole and professions in life..." 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East Lansing, Michigon MSU: involved in the game "This is a low risk venture, of stocks (continued from page 3) corporations. stocks and investments is cor- And there are other consider- law" with its go-slow policy. The controversy was shar- The numbers are staggering; but it's not no risk. When Penn rupt and disgraceful, and the ations. U-W has, however, refrained pened by the fact that Wharton especially in common stock; Central railroad went under, administrators ought to be "I guess our basic philosophy from further investments in sits on Ford's board of directors. $330,881 in Ford; $1,081,219 in there were some universities ashamed of themselves," he would be that there is no clean companies with subsidiaries in "Frankly, I'm not that famil- EliLffly and Company; $896,362 with holdings that took sub- said. place to invest. One corpora- South Africa. ir with what Ford is doing in in IBM; $908,826 in Coca- stantial losses." "What MSU has really done is tion might be tremendous in A spokesperson for U-W said South Africa," Carrigan said. cola. The list goes on and Terry said there is a "realistic to turn over responsibility for terms of pollution control but that in the opinion of one legal "If you were to find some Exxon. Mobil. Proctor and possibility" that MSU could be . its investments to this firm in bad in terms of employment consultant, which will be made gross exploitation of human Gamble. Standard Oil of Indi¬ rendered financially destitute if Cincinnati (Scudder, Stevens practices. So you've got to work public shortly, universities are beings in a country, perhaps we ana. It reads like a Who's Who of the state ever chose to withhold 4 Clark) and then say they can within the system to bring prohibited from such invest¬ should withdraw investments," the Fortune 500. aid, as it did for about a month accept or reject their recom- about changes.'' ments by nothing less than the she observed. "However, I'm How are these investments last year. mendations. In fact, they do Roger Wilkinson says he can U.S. constitution. not an expert on what's going on broken down and managed? "We have about $50 million in follow all the recommendations. live with this idea. Ford Motor Company invest¬ n South Africa." Steve Terry, asst. vice presi- our short term pool," he ex¬ Trustee "MSU deals with hundreds of Carrigan admits ments in South Africa was a hot Carrigan maintains that her dent for business and finance, plained. "At the rate we spend r . that, while the board has the companies," he said. "If we issue last spring at Stanford memory of the Ford stock explained that the various in- money — about a million dollars power to turn down investment withdrew from those whose University as well. In an inci¬ dispute is not very clear. vestments, both short term and a day —we'd be broke in 50 days recommendations by Scudder, policies we might not like, we dent which harkened back to the Another trustee on the board long term, are divided into (if the state withheld funds)." Stevens 4 Clark, she could not would have to withdraw from all 1960s, 294 students were ar¬ committee, Raymond Krolikow- three categories; But so far, the fates have been think of a single instance when of them." rested after staging a sit-in at ski, is less rigid in his opinion, •Income funds — primarily kind to MSU. Terry estimates this happened. Carrigan also but basically agrees with Carri- Nonsense, says Larrowe. the Stanford Union to protest short term investments, de- that the University stands to argued that the Cincinnati firm "We could find good invest- Stanford's Ford investments. gan. signed to attain maximum profit make as much as $3 million on its is aware of certain corporations ments without propping up Brodney Adams, director of "I'd say that our position (on when income is needed quickly, investments this year. that MSU does not feel com- dictatorial regimes. We could finance at Stanford, said that investments in Ford) should be or for high annual return, As large as that sum might fortable in dealing with, and get the same return on our the University has not divested reviewed," he said. Kroli- Income funds might be used to sound, it terms of MSU's total makes recommendations ac- investments. I have no faith (in itself of these stocks, and kowski said he planned to bring pay off scholarships, for ex- income it ranks far below the the subject up at the cordingly. Smith's proposal that stock- anticipates further student pro Sep- ample, or payroll funds for money gained from state and However, Carrigan declined holders work within the sys- tests. tember meeting of the student and . _ However, he is sympa¬ administration federal aid and student tuitions to name those firms, saying, "I mittee. tern). That implies that corpor- thetic with the philosophy of employes. and fees. don't want to get into a public ations are run democratically. However, Krolikowski is •Growth fund trying to influence corporate — primarily Summarizes Vice President discussion about these kinds of We all know this isn't true, that dubious about the feasibility of policy, but, like Tim Smith, long term investments in com¬ Wilkinson; "These investments corporations or industries.' they do whatever they want. believes it must be done within judging financial transactions mon stocks, designed to attain do not provide a substantial part Larrowe is scornful of this "I say on standards other than the boycott the dirty the existing system. maximum appreciation over a of our income." traditional ones. philosophy. bastards." "If you want to stand on long period of time. For ex¬ All of this brings up an "We have turned our invest¬ Colleges around the country "Yes, we give some attention ample, the income derived from principle (by divesting stock) important issue; just what is the ment policy over to a bunch of are confronted with problems that's a pretty to social issues, but you can't long-term investments might be role of a public institution like simple answer to control that aspect of the port- entrepreneureal hacks. I think similar to MSU's. The Universi¬ a very complex problem," he used for construction of new MSU in private corporate deal¬ it is shameful." folio, except by relinquishing ty of Wisconsin provides an maintains. campus buildings, ings? What influence does it The debate over the morali¬ interesting case study. Adams says your stock. 'Balance funds — a combina- have over corporate policy? that Stanford is "I think it's a mixed bag. ty and ethics of University Last spring the attorney organizing a committee to make tion of both of the above. How should that influence be investments is a national one. In There's a pretty heavy burden general of Wisconsin, Bronson an in-depth study of the whole Money for both long and short used? New York, an organization LaFollette, was asked to con- in trying to maintain the sound- issue of financial transactions. A term investments is derived As evidenced by the com¬ called the Interfaith Council on sider the legality of the U W's ness of these portfolios. You - similar study is being organized chiefly from the endowment ments of Wilkinson, Carrigan, Corporate Responsibility stock holdings in Ford and other have to determine what viable fund, which consists of gifts at Wisconsin and the Univer¬ Krolikowski and others, that (ICCR), whose director is Tim alternatives you have. It's corporations which have subsi- sity of Michigan. Nothing of the given to the University by role is seen by MSU brass as a Smith, is actively involved in diaries in South Africa, to pontificate when you can do it various benefactors. kind is in the works at MSU. minor and essentially self- trying to change corporate in a vacuum." MSU maintains accounts in A peculiar Wisconsin state Carrigan said she would be in With regard serving one — maximizing the policy. statute mandates that univer- favor of such a committee "if to the Ford- First National Bank of Lansing, return on investment. That's A collection of 150 South Africa issue, Carrigan East Lansing State Bank and religious sity boards of regents may not there was a need for it." At the way it always has been, orders, ICCR holds stock in invest trust funds in corpora- said she lacked "a sufficient the National Bank of Detroit. present she does not feel the advocates of this policy say, and various corporations, and tries tions which are forced by law to quantity of facts... to make a suf¬ need exists. Other administra¬ Long term investments are a the way it always will be; to bring about changes by practice discrimination, as is the ficient evaluation" of whether minimal-risk proposition. A low tors are similarly ambivalent. indeed, the only way it can be. initiating stockholder resolu¬ in South Africa. LaFol¬ MSU's position wasi right or but steady return on invest- Ambivalence will not likely Not so, says MSU economics tions, as in the case of the Ford- lette interpreted this statute to wron8- ment in corporate stock is vir- South Africa controversy. bury the issue, however. The professor and Faculty Grie¬ mean that Wisconsin must di¬ rights and wrongs of tually assured, barring some vance Officer C. Patric Lar¬ "We have not called on any As the ticker clatters out the vest itself of its investments go far unforse<,n and highly uniikejy holdings in names and numbers and fi¬ beyond Ford Motor Co. and rowe. university to sell stock in Ford. nancial experts tote catastrophe like the stock Larrowe strongly believes companies," Smith insists. "We A spokesperson for U-W said up the South Africa, of course. MSU's ket crash of 1929. the University should take an have asked them to use their profits, the voices will continue investments are enormous and the University is not Short term investments are activist role in pressuring cor- "aggres- to rise, both pro and con. diversified over a vast range of shares to have an impact by sively" divesting itself of these "It's easy to put your head in another matter. porations to make substantial voting." holdings, and David Hansen, the sand and say you won't do ★★★★★★*★★★* "The name of the game is to, policy changes. He further be¬ Smith believes that selling Wisconsin's asst. atty. gen. business with these T RARE AND get every available dollar lieves that MSU should divest stock in corporations which corpora¬ While some say it ean be * OUT-OF-PRINT BOOKS * vest*?'" Tel7 "plained. "Fre- itself of stock in corporations have unsavory policies is use- agreed that, in order to avoid substantial financial losses, tions," says Krolikowski. therapeutic to legs over something which allows them higl Bought ft Sold jL quently we have overdrafts on that have holdings in, or signifi¬ less, since the stock will be such divestiture must take place On the other side of the fence, Larrowe is equally adamant. is generally recognized that todiqf cant dealings with, dictatorial splashing wu(t| 1^ CUrlr*^ "^d that decisions on sjj-om short term investments are regimes. "I think the picked up by someone else anyway, and the institution over * 'on8 period of time, However, Hansen admitted "A University is stand for the best in supposed to society," he may be hazardous to your contemplition - J your white pants. policy of this . . which has divested will itself that U-W was violating "the ★★★★★★★★★★★ made daily. University with regard to lose a voice in company says. "These investment poli¬ policy. sPirit. f not the letter of the cies stand for the worst." —. AND FOR GALS... IkBMKIJ Levis BASIC and PREWASHED JEANS SWEATERS BLOUSES and CORDUROY TOPS CORDUROY VESTS and SLACKS and MUCH, MUCH MORE EAST LANSING'S MOST COMPLETE LEVIS STORE FEATURING VSo Come on In with THIS1 BASIC C0RDS""13 CMS 2IGET /CDUAINTEt DENIM AND PREWASHED JEANS .GIFT CERTIFICATE PANATELA PANTS and SHIRTS GOOD MQO Toward any new purchase in our store.] MEN'S SWEATERS Sorry, this certificate may not be used for a refund or as a c ward an existing charge or layaway balance or sale merchant PANATELA 3-PIECE CORDUROY SUITS Expires OCTOBER 31 1977. Limit ol one cerfificote per customer. — IhcDBfflS! PIUS A WIDE SELECTION OF FLANNEL SHIRTS •STARTING AT MO00 IheBRAIKH University Mall 220M.A.C. East Lansing WE ALSO HAVE PAIHTER'S PJKIS Mon., Toes., Wed., Sot. 10-6 Thurs.&Fri. 10-9 Welcome Week, 1977 A19 THE PATH OF LEAST RESISTANCE • • • and least expense, and least hassle.. . TRAVERSE CITY blNGTONi I CADILLAC BIG RAPIDS (FERRIS STATE COLLEGE) MT. PLEASANT | (CENTRAL Ml. UNIVERSITY) 'SAGINAW BAY CITY MIDLAND ALMA (ALMA COLLEGE) GRAND RAPIDS IONIA DURAND FLINT PORT HURON IKEGONy 11US.11. HOLLAND CHARLOTTE " OLIVET (OLIVET COLLEGE) BATTLE CREEK BENTON- HARBOR JACKSON DETROIT & KALAMAZOO .SUBURBS* (WESTERN Ml. UNIVERSITY) METRO ANN ARBOR AIRPORT ADRIAN (UNIVERSITY OF MICH. (ADRIAN COLLEGE)' VOLEDO SOUTH BEND (NOTRE DAME) Meeting the travel needs of over 40,000 Spartan students is a big job. To get the job done we've developed a modern network of rail and bus services that makes it easy and inexpensive to travel throughout Michigan. Whether it's a weekend fling or a term break expedition, we're ready and waiting to meet your travel needs. * SPECIAL WEEKEND CAMPUS-TO-CAMPUS * MODERN EXPRESS RUSES WITH SHUTTLE SERVICE. RECLINING SEATS & BIG PICTURE WINDOWS. * FREQUENT NON-STOP SERVICE TO * SHINY NEW TURBO TRAINS. DESIGNED IN DETROIT, ITS SURURRS, GRAND RAPIDS FRANCE AND OFFERING A FULL RANGE AND CHICAGO. OF ONBOARD FOOD & BEVERAGE SERVICES. * SPECIAL GROUP DISCOUNT FARES * MONEY SAVING RAIL AND BUS TRAVEL FOR TRAVEL ACROSS MICHIGAN OR PASSES OFFERING UNLIMITED TRAVEL ACROSS THE USA THROUGHOUT THE UNITED STATES. PERFECT FOR TERM BREAK VACATIONS! * CONVENIENTLY LOCATED CAMPUS RUS AND RAIL TERMINALS So pick your own path and bring your friends. We've got the least resistance and the most fun going for you this fall at MSU. S* £3Greyhound Lndjuui Ls-jbuLLs ^fuicyimuiiu AmtTflk *0- Featuring: Featuring: Featuring, Featuring: Impress service Jo Saginaw, Express service to Tnrboliner Service to Service to Northern P'int, Kalamazoo and Muskegon, Grand Rapids, Port Huron, Flint, Michigan, Mt. Pleasant, [Chicago. * and Detroit.1" Kalamazoo and Chicago. * Ann Arbor, Jackson and Toledo.* 332.2569 332.2569 332-5051 332-2569 E. LANSING BUS STATION RAIL PASSENGER STATION * 308 W. GRAND RIVER and other points statewide 1210 S. HARRISON s Services in Cooperation with the MICHIGAN DEPARTMENT OF STATE HIGHWAYS AND TRANSPORTATION A9QMichigon Stole News, Eott lonsing^Mlchigon _Welcomi There are two good reasons for Shoppin atShoprite: 1. We are small enough to give you personalized serviceand top quality. 2. We are big enough to save you money, ★ ★ All prices are effective Mon., Sept. 26 thru Sat., Oct. 1 ★* MEAT Bonanza Boneless Hams $ | 59 USDA Choice Round Steak $J 19 USDA Choice Sirloin Steak $ J 89 USDA Boneless Rolled Rotisserie Roast . $147 USDA Choice Sizzler Steaks $ (Sizzler Tip Center Cut) J 69 Ground Chuck — 80% Lean or Better 87* Farmer Peet Franks — 1# pkg. With meat prices as high as they are it Playtime or All Beef . 79* to purchase wisely. At Shoprite we pr individual service and meat cut to specifications and food buying needs. .GROCERY. ■FROZEN & DIARY- Foultfs Elbo Macaroni or Thin Spaghetti 7 oi. box ® /* 100 Kleenex Facial Tissue White or Colored — 200 ct 1 /* 100 Appian Way Reg. Pizza 12% 01. box 769' Country Fresh 2% "..n™ Spartan Catsup 12 oz. bottle 3 /$ 100 Hamburger Helper t-8o>. box Country Fresh Yogurtsoi.cont.in.> 59® Spartan Aluminum Foil Reg. Box 12x25 769* All Flavors ...V88* PRODUCE ■HOUSE WARES- Thermal Insulated Tumblers 3/$ l00 Macintosh Apples —3# bag.. 49* Dust Pans 59* Laundry Basket 89' 10# Michigan Potatoes 59* Decorated Cutting Boards *1" 2 pc. Stoneware Planter 89' -COUPONS- Country Fresh 1# Cottage Cheese Large or Small Curd By BOB OURLI AN explain how MSU's size gives students that MSU runs like the and perpetual motion plenty of freedom of choice and career gyroscopic bureaucracy. More likely than DIANE COX flexibility. anything, it runs at the encouragement of a State News Staff Writers either run the place, or you don't. The evidence does everybody runs not indicate MSU. Nor does it indicate that select few nothing else. — including Wharton — and Here's who they are, t's the way it stacks up with large organizations, as experts in s will tell bureaucracy, you — and more often than not, the place runs itself, any bureaucracy, is quite capable of running itself, Power. Intoxicant of the centuries, opiate of the already powerful, what they do at MSU set in motion, it can simply go on and on and on, taking as its fuel dream of the impoverished and oppressed, the scourge of humankind's ADMINISTRATORS My tasks of the organizational peons. quest for peace and international understanding. Clifton R. Wharton Jr. letters as an undergraduate in football, baseball and basketball. aucracy is a giant mechanism Czar Alexander. MSU is too big, too Modern times are riddled with power and the incertitude it by pygmies," wrote French author brings. President As executive vice president and sprawling and contains too many vested "Of all social, moral and spiritual problems," wrote Aldous A specialist in economic de Balzac. lobbying interests to be run by one or even Huxley, development, president for administration and state ,ever ruled "that of power is the most chronically urgent and the most difficult of Wharton holds four academic degrees: a relations, one of Breslin's chief duties is Russia. Ten thousand a dozen people. B.A. in history from Harvard; an M.A. in ruled Russia," lamented Czar Alex¬ solution." lobbying for money at the state legislature. And it could well be that one day, MSU international studies from John Hopkins; an Breslin also supervises eight other in his deathbed. president emeritus John Hannah who, it Very little has ever been said about the Now: M.A. in economics from the University of of the apply tnose same questions to University, including the University 'jenogenuine sense, bureaucracy is the was said, ruled MSU with fist of corrugated merits of power. Yet, some psychologists MSU. Chicago; and, a Ph.D. in economics from the Archives, MSU Placement Services, the one. It is government by inertia, iron, might return to despair, "I never ran say it motivates all that we do in social life. Granted, a University does not have the University of Chicago. Parks and Planning Dept., and the Akers sneer size. Organizations composed of minorities of all MSU. One hundred twenty five department archetypical, drunk-with-power maniacs Wharton has distinguished himself in his Golf Course. " *'e three dominant schools of chairmen and 69 program directors ran sorts lobby for it. terrorize for it, die in such as those history has had to endure; a academic career both by starting at He was MSU's administrator of intercol¬ .'of who runs MSU: MSU." guerilla combat for it. Power. University is smooth, suave, scientific. Harvard at age 16 and by being the first legiate athletics until the "Jy runs it; recruiting Is MSU this sort of bureaucracy? The But power resides in many different black admitted to John Hopkins. dais came along in 1974 and 1975, when he Why we want it is perhaps a subject for a " body runs it; sort which lumbers through time and space quarters at MSU, those wanting it and In his professional career, Wharton, 51, was relieved of the duty few run it. collective convention of sociologists, psy¬ by President like a Jupiter, any attempt to influence it weilding it affecting the lives of everybody holds a string of board and council Wharton. * those at the chologists, anthropologists, biologists, theo¬ fringes of the MSU having the net effect of a small meteorite? logians, philosophers and a score of other else here. iberships, including the Rockefeller Also in 1975, Breslin was honored by the y - professors, instructors, pro- Or is it still something like when Hannah And when all is broken down, what Foundation, the Carnegie Foundation for state Legislature he lobbies for his 25 years eoordinators, graduate assistants professions. - was here — responding only to the directive emerges is a textbook illustration of a large, the Advancement of Teaching, the Equit¬ of service at MSU. kiareLpower|ess Id the at MSU, those they of a few familiar guiding hands? Is there a ruling class in America? Or is complex organization of the ultra-modern able Life Assurance Society, the Ford Robert Perrin reigns - trustees, vice While being a ruler isn't socially accept¬ America run by a plurality of competing variety, ripples of concentric power circles Motor Co. and the Burroughs Corp. Vice President for University and "ts. Wharton, - - insist likewise that able these days, neither is the idea of and all. Being black, extensively honored and Federal Relationa also powerless - or, if not, choose ponderous bureaucracy. And MSU officials lie in fields of economics and foreign The administrator with probably the "Iters run the place, will accept culpability for neither. policy, Wharton is considered as asset to most Washington experience of any other, on and his inner circle of adminis- "I don't call that bureaucracy," snaps such boards. Perrin had been both a journalist and 'end to demur along the lines of Assume for the moment that all things are the way they say they are Wharton to the charge. He then goes on to He is also regarded as prime federal government employe before joining MSU in on paper. Assume that theory equals practice. Assume that what was government material. He served on former 1970. President Johnson's Task Force on Agri¬ He was a member of the staff of the late planned to be, is. In other words, assume the absurd, if only for a culture in Vietnam and is chairperson of Sen. Patrick V. McNamara, D Michigan, for moment. President Carter's Board for International 10 years until 1965, then joined the Office of MSU is run by a system, and the system is called "academic Food and Agriculture, AID, U.S. Depart¬ Economic Opportunity IOEO) as assistant INSIDE governance." ment of State. director in charge of governmental rela¬ Earlier this year, Wharton declined two tions. In 1968, Perrin was appointed acting Academic governance involves hundreds be student government, is not linked to this Carter offers for positions in his cabinets. deputy director of the OEO. Wl'iI race for the of faculty, student and administration system. The Student Council, composed of dty council stack, up something like the tortoise vs. the participants who meet in a body called the students elected in individual college elec¬ Jacweir (Jack) Breslin As vice president for university and folk not the UuR of the candidates, but the issues. Pago 24. Executive Vice President federal relations, Perrin supervises the Academic Council. tions, is the student representative group Shxtani* p0™*^ dotk>t ,or y°ur tatasy life. Gentlemen, start your Briggs ' Breslin has held seven different positions Department of Information Services at to the Academic Council. The Academic Council is the chief vehicle at MSU since starting in 1950 as assistant MSU. which is the University's public ^ »l the There are rules to playing any game, and faculty at MSU are still pushing for collective bargaining. They say through which faculty and students can academic director of MSU alumni relations and field relations organ. He is also responsible for "*<>. this time. make their views known to the MSU governance at MSU is most Pag, J5. secretary. executing MSU's affirmative action pro¬ administration, which in turn makes the certainly no exception. There are rules: they are called the Bylaws for Academic "Tiger Jack" Breslin also received his grams, which have occasionally come under final derisions. B.A. and M.A. from MSU, securing six (continued on page 28) Governance and a booklet 43 pages long ASMSU, what most students believe to (continued from page 361 A22 Michigan Slote News, East Lansing. Michigan CATA PRESENTS THE CAMPUS CONNECTION Woo/Ate, o <£ e.SMAiAi u\K*r NOW THERE ARE 2 NEW BUS ROUTES THAT CONNECT WITH THE MSU CAMPUS! For the first time, compus is conveniently accessible vio the Burcham-Hagadorn-N. Harrison Routes for all commut¬ ing students. This allows you to park farther owdy and conveniently take the bus to jlAKC t-ruofclM&gOAC your campus destination. A bar¬ gain for "10"'-o lot cheaper than paying E. Lansing parking tickets "'4.00" or campus parking tickets "$5.00.") That's 40 or 50 rides per traffic ticket! Buses run every 20 minutes on both routes to keep you waiting less and getting you to class on time. WHAT TO LOOK tM EAST If you are new on campus (or using the CATA system for the first time) look for our BLUE and WHITE CATA bus signs LAMSIkife located along the routes shown above. MALO-TO fAVI VOW MOM Y The Campus Connection is only 10*. However, you can buy a CATA bus pass good for 44 rides at either Freshman Registration in the Women's IM - Sept. 26 and 27th, or Upper Classmen's Registration in the Men's IM - Sept. 26, 27th and 28th. We'll be next to ypur campus bus system booth. WHAT AHOVT THANMM TO OTHIH HOUTIST A transfer from our Burcham-Hagadorn and N. Harrison E. Lansing MSU Loop Routes requires a regular 25' fare to any CATA express line. WHIM CAN IOIT A SCHIBVUT 1). MSU Registration 2). Paramount News 3). Student Bookstore 4). MSU Bookstore 5). Residence Halls Reception Desks COHVINIINCI CATA s added new bus shelters in the E. Lansing area to shelter you from the elements. We've also added a new direct dial information phone in Meridian Mall to help you co-ordinate your trips to and from the Mall, look for our familiar BLUE and WHITE logo in the main entrance to the Moll. CAPITAL AREA TRANSIT AUTHORITY 4615 TRANTER ■ LANSIN6 48910 HOW THE CAMPUS ROUTES CONNECT 394-1000 WITH THE RE0UIAR ROUTES BURCHAM/HAGADORN/MS" MAP harrison/msu i-hinon Stole News, Eo»t Lansing, Michigan Welcome Week, 1977 A23 COME IN AND SHOP fauj MSU BOOIERY 225 E. Grand River (across from the MSU Union) and SHOES 'N' STUFF 217 E. Grand River (across from the MSU Union) BACK TO SCHOOL RED TAG SPECIALS QcOflVERSE $ave! $ave! Save! AAU SHOES .The Footwear of Champions TZLvJki All pictured items net en sale •,! •' A24Michigon Stote News, East lonsing, Michigon Welcome Week, 1 Fall Council election sure to evoke snores from sleepy E.L. voters By MICHAEL ROUSE SUte News Steff Writer Beware of the grinning hand¬ shakers and wade through the leaflets slipped under the door. That's because the East Lan¬ sing City Council race will be getting more intense as the election nears (Nov. 8) and candidates court the vast stu¬ dent vote. You hang a right on Farm Lane coming from the and take fnoiobyDjJJ MSU students are notor¬ a sharp dlve-that'a where they are. iously apathetic when it conies Library, pass Bessey Hall to the Farm Lane Bridge, to political matters on the other side of Grand River Avenue. For example, in one student apartment precinct in the Au¬ BUT MANY ANGERED BY DECISION gust primary election, nine votes were tallied from 784 City or less resolves Johnson Fox Stell registered voters. To there are make no matters worse, burning issues this microphones of cable television Mayor George Griffiths; their Association of Community more year, in contrast to the bond channel 11; approving con¬ terms expire in 1979. Health Boards, is vice chairper¬ Dayton Hudson mall issue proposal for a new fire station tracts, listening to complaints The four contenders, who son of the Ingham County and rent control on the ballot in and acting on the city budget. were the top four vote-getters Republican Party. She has also 1975. The five members, including out of the six candidates run¬ been involved in various com the mayor, work closely with ning in the primary, are Paula munity activities. The present city council gave Johnson, Alan Fox, Karen Bar¬ By MICHAEL ROUSE building the two-level mall in As of early September, about Flint and the the city staff and city attorney Carolyn Stell is an attorney , State Newa Stall Writer the spring. The completion new T«el» J its approval in June for a new rett and date 1,800 people have signed the Mall in Novi. I on administrative, planning and Carolyn Stell. and a hearings examiner for the The Dayton Hudson mall is set for mid-1980. fire station to be built on petition. The Abbott Road about a mile north engineering matters. Michigan Insurance Bureau. issue was finally settled this company amasxd ports from consultants I of the present one. For this, and the homework Johnson is a 1969 graduate of She has been chairperson of the summer, sort of. However, not everyone is A lawsuit initiated by CLC traffic, environmental si J nl involved in investigating city MSU and was chairperson of cable television commission, pleased with the outcome of the charging that the city council The location is the same as With little fanfare, the East nomic impacts of the one proposed in 1975, but problems, councilmembers re¬ the volunteer-appointed plan¬ chairperson of the Elected Offi¬ city council vote. had no authority to act on the Similar studies were the 1 this time the federal govern¬ ceive $25 per meeting with a ning commission last year. She cers Compensation Committee Lansing City Council approved the rezoning of 86 acres of land The Citizens for a Livable rezoning is still pending. CLC the city fal ment is picking up the tab in an maximum total of $1250 in a was manager of Hosier's cloth¬ and a member of the City for the mall in the northwest¬ Community (CLC), led by MSU attorney Tom Downs claimed engineering ij| J fiscal year. ing store for six years and has Manager Screening Committee that the planning commission's ning departments, s|3 effort to stimulate local con¬ assistant professor of humani from other been active in when new city manager was ern corner of the city. struction. Upcoming issues the council promoting the ties James Anderson, and MSU 5-4 recommendation to the commumuej public interest groups, will have to wrestle with are city's business interests being selected. Voting in favor of the rezon¬ council in April was premature f PIRGIM have joined forces to Other issues The only other issue of merit, through the Central East Lan¬ Stell has been active in ing ordinance were John Po¬ and coming uj widening and improvements for try to rescind the council's a change in the city's the decision on rezoning land Grand River Avenue, relieving sing Business Association and numerous school and health lomsky, Mary Sharp and John intended use for the land in the forefront were the wiM the Bastille Day celebration. Czarnecki. The two opposing approval and put the decision Lake Lansing Road-tl»l for a two story, $16.4 million the city's shortage of parking organizations. before the people of East comprehensive plan requires a Dayton Hudson mall, was set¬ and regulating the inevitable Alan Fox is a part-time MSU The four will be wooing votes were cast by Larry Owen 6-3 vote. thoroughfare to the new J student majoring in history and and Mayor George Griffiths. Lansing in a referendum. East Lansing's bid lor an3 tled the day after the August Klondike-like claims for com¬ prospective voters in earnest, Starting on the night of the The city council's approval primary with a 3-2 yes vote. mercial development in the is an aide to the Consumers Committee in the Michigan the campaigns moving into high The land rezoned to a com¬ approval, signatures were be¬ was the culmination of 10 land from Lansing the mall would be e#_ Towns? iSee related story.) vicinity of the new mall. gear now that MSU students mercial classification is House of Representatives. He come back to town. part of ing collected in an effort to months of controversy sur¬ within the city's bordeitl There are four people eager the 170 acres Dayton Hudson collect 5,000 of them within six The council dealt with major has been active in various And perhaps they have every rounding the mall project. the city's control over ra J ly vying for the two open city Properties of Minneapolis has months. issues such as these and even Democratic campaigns and con¬ Dayton Hudson Properties commercial development I council seats. Incumbent coun¬ right to, since MSU students purchased in this area over the With the backing of 5,000 dabbled in foreign policy and sumer interest groups. are credited with putting the made its pitch to the council in The planning commit cilmembers John Polomsky and past 10 years. human relations this year with Karen Barrett, an admini¬ young and fairly liberal Owen, registered voters, the council's October, highlighting its other held a public hearing anil 12-year veteran Mary Sharp With the approval in hand, a resolution stating that the have decided strative assistant to the Exec¬ Griffiths and Czarnecki into approval could be suspended mall projects such as the "land" city council held two of not to run for Dayton Hudson will submit site and a citywide referendum city will do business, if possible, re-election. utive Board of the Michigan office. malls in metropolitan Detroit, All were attended by os plans and expects to begin would be held. only with corporations that do The other three are John the Genesee Valley Mall in people. not have interests in apartheid Czarnecki, Larry Owen and South Africa. But, city council members generally do not deal with such k ★★★★★★★★*★★ RARE A OUT OF 4 WILLOWPOND STABLES earthshaking matters. They sit in the auditorium of the East Lansing library every first and third Tuesday in front 4 jf PRINT BOOKS Bought 4 Sold Curious Book Shop 4 if ^ Hunters •HORSE BOARDING - Dressage Horses SAVINGS ON FALL of the lights, MERCHANDISE IN ALU •TRAINING •INSTRUCTION ENGLISH LANGUAGE CLASSES FOR NON-ENGLISH SPEAKERS Transportation Available BEGINNING TO ADVANCED INCLUDING: •Preparation for University Studies Only • mild south ol MSU down Collogo Bond. DEPARTMENTS •Small class size •Varied class schedule WILLOWPOND STABLES •Individual attention •Experienced teachers •Special classes for Arab Students 3301 Harpor Rd„ Mason 676-9799 1/s to % off: COST from $20 per week ON ASSORTED COLLECTIONS OF; fM/m FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL 351-3815 SWEATERS Coll oftor 12:00 noon • • SLACKS • BLOUSES SENSORS. • DRESSES When it com | • SUITS • LINGERIE Copying & Printing iv is our Business Open Monday Sept. 26 thru ...Wft taw/ 351-5575 Friday Sept. 30 from 9:30 a.m. n , where you're Mm. H""1V/ IVWIV Comer ol MAC & Ann 125 E. Grand River until 9:00 p.m. iM 10-5-30 sd 10-5:30 EAST LANSING 1 53ZFranrlor 33Z- 009 7 open 8:30 am-6:00 pm 351-2170 Open Saturday Oct. 1st 9:30-5.30 Sal. 10:00 am-5.00 pm linnn Stole News, Eost Lonsing, Michiqon Welcome Week. 1977 A25 /VWVBE "MATS WHAT'S MlSS|KJ0 IN OUR LIVES BdDNEV- 6uF DON'T" REI0M3 TO THE CREDIT UNION1* Discover your credit union, we're doing more for you! Everyone who works on campus — including student employees — is eligible for membership in the MSU Employees Credit Union. And that's an important "fringe benefit" of working at MSU. You see, a credit union is a non-profit financial institution owned by its members. At your credit union you're a member, not a customer. That's one of the reasons we say "it's where you belong." But there are lots of other reasons for belonging, too. Loans cost less and are fast. Savings earn more. And now your credit union offers savings draft accounts. What are savings drafts, you ask? They're the convenient way of paying your bills. A savings draft account doesn't require a minimum balance, has a built-in line of credit and actually pays you interest on your unused funds. But your credit union is doing even more for you this year. Drive-upTV tellers and a 24-hour automated drive-up teller machine soon will be operational. And next month free family portraits will be taken again. In November, Hertz will conduct another used car sale for credit union members. Little wonder we say "we're doing more for you." Stop by today. Get acquainted. And join. It's where you belong - for a lifetime! eti MSU EMPLOYEES CREDIT UNION 600 E. Crescent — on campus / 9 to 5:30 Monday thru Friday / Phone 353-2280 ITS COMING... A new generation of credit union services. A26Michigon Stole News, East Lansing, Michigan Welcome Week, i,77 4 • -JM ■■ > Where the ' 't up-t usounds p like a 'rooaarr/' Ji, ■ * 4 lit1*:- .. -> r *v}5r.~rva It muy feel as though you're going awfully, awfully Abbott Rd. The track is closed until spring, »l fast, but top speed is somewhere around 20 mph at its hours will be noon to 10 p.m. every dty. the East Lansing Go-Cart track up on north "Now, ya gotta make sure ya "That's 'cause you never rode ya wanna get a fast one, ci getta fast one." 'em before. See that one witha "Howd'ya know which one's a green motor ana red seat?" these other jerks waiting in want the fast ones too." lj fast one?" "Yeah?" "Ya hafta watch 'em go around "That's a fast one. See, he's "What happens if ya don't gd fast one?" to see which one passes all the passin' everybody." other ones." "Jeeez! He's gonna "Than ya getta slow one. Thl flip!" no fun." "Oh, yeah?" "Naawww, ya can't flip." "Yeah. See that one witha green "Ya can't flip?" "Drag." motor and black seat?" "Naw, 'cause they got 'em "Yeah! That one's fast!" rigged so ya can't." "Yeah. Then everybody ra®| from the back with their go-cart "Naawww it ain't. That's a slow "Ya mean no matter how fast one. He ain't passin' nobody." you go ya can't flip?" "Geez, I wanna fast one.' "Looks like he's goin' fast." "Yeah, but ya hafta really run if "Yeah, me too." Wr'':'r I MiMMf Lhinnn Stole News, Eost Lansing, Michiqon Welcome Week, 1977 A27 [rancine defense group epping |yKAT BROWN began a statewide drive in August petition up tually moved in. its efforts incorrect TNews Staff Writer requesting that she be set free with all "On the afternoon of March 9, in Kalamazoo has had to turn Sandahl also said the commit¬ ] the high incidence of dropped. The committee be¬ charges a patrol car came to the tee is puzzled that many women away because it Itse in America has yet lieves Hughes should be freed Hughes' home 'to quiet the expressed Houk, who was "swamped," she said. Edely recognized, sup- because of the circumstances domestic disturbance', respond¬ women concern for battered The inequality of women in ■0f a Dansville woman, ing to a call for protection from during his campaign society enables men to "beat surrounding her life with her last year, prosecuted legedly murdered her Francine that followed another Hughes so women and get away with it Eod in retaliation of ex-husband. severely. because they are in positions of A committee release reads: fight during which James had "It appears as if Peter Houk Ise, are hoping the case beaten her and destroyed her does not power and authority," Wilson "A frequent victim of violent Jtract national promi- beatings textbooks. rase recognize how this raises issues of said. [„d make the public by her husband, "That night, she put the special Hughes' sister, Kathy If the plight of battered James, she divorced him in importance about how unjustly Fought of Jackson, said people children in the car, allegedly set the legal system treats bat¬ 1971, left the town of Dansville played "sick jokes" a fire which resulted in the on her with her children and moved in tered women." sister's opie were drawn death of her ex-husband, and birthday when, while in , with her parents in Jackson. Better legal recourse is one jail, she received two cards. iy for that purpose held "James visited the children turned herself in to police." The petitions will be sent to of the committee's major con¬ One, addressed to Francine, hate Capitol earlier this cerns in often, and fights with Francine seeking alternatives was signed with her ex-hus¬ In which guest speakers usually ensued. After one such Ingham County Prosecutor for the more than 28 million band's name, and the other, Jmbers of the Francine visit, he left in a rage, got Peter Houk and Circuit Court American wives - over half the addressed to her ex-husband, ■ Defense Committee at- drunk, and was involved in a Judge Michael Harrison, who nation's married refused to disqualify himself women — who was signed, "Out of sight but ■ to gain support and car accident that left him from presiding at are physically abused by their never out of mind, we're wait¬ ■funds for Francine Hughes' trial husbands ¥ trial, set for Oct. 3. (seriously injured). Under pres¬ after being charged with mak¬ as reported in a new ing for you." from James' parents, who book "Wife sure ing a prejudicial remark. Harri¬ Beating - The Speaking only briefly about ■30-year-old mother of convinced her that she was Silent Crisis," by Richard C. how "Francine went from one son denied making the remark. Levy. Jorced James B. Hughes, somewhat to blame for his "We recognize that there is hell to another," Fought was [971 but later cared for condition, Francine returned to some legal Housing facilities, emotional overcome by emotion and left lr he suffered injuries in Dansville, bought dispute over bond support, police training in wife the microphone on the a house, and being set in first degree murder steps of feculent. In March, she moved in with her children. In cases," said Carrie Sandahl, assault and cooperation from the Capitol building during the |y set fire to their bed the months that followed, Fran¬ committee spokesperson and authorities, agencies and medi¬ rally. Je was sleeping after he cine nursed her ex husband, member of Sisters for Human cal personnel that deal with Support for Francine Hughes Idly beat her and de- who was still living with his Equality. "Nonetheless, it has battered women are necessary was demonstrated in several T the schoolbooks she mother, back to health while at services for women who have other ways at the rally: an area been done and attorneys in Lg in classes. the same time attending classes Detroit confirmed it is often left been taught they should not break up their homes by leav¬ feminist sang a song she had ;s immediately turned at Lansing Business University written for Hughes: women to the judge's discretion." in, was subsequently and taking complete care of her ing, are fearful of their lives or gave testimonials of similar J with felony and first children. According to Houk, those are economically dependent up¬ accused of first degree murder experiences during an open ■ murder, and has been "As James' injuries im¬ on their husbands. are excluded from bond by microphone session: and reso¬ Jthout bond in the Ing- proved, the beatings began Kay Wilson, committee mem¬ lutions of support were Michigan law. However, ber and member of the New pre¬ |unty Jail since. once again and increased, and Hughes' appointed lawyer, Ar- sented by the Committee to se committee mem- so did Francine's calls America Movement, spoke at Stop the MSU-Iran Film Pro¬ to the yon Greydanus, disagreed and the rally, rotesting the charges police. He also spent more time stressing the need for ject and the Lansing Equal argued - unsuccessfully — that shelters for battered women. A | Hughes as "extreme", at Francine's home and even¬ the interpretation of the law is Rights Council. shelter which recently opened The committee, which has raised over $700, has been joined by several other area groups including the Kitty brory institutes info desk Genovese Memorial Collective, the Ingham Demo¬ cratic Women's Organization, the National Organization of Anti-Rape Women, the New America make for easier research Movement and Sisters for Hu¬ man Equality. The defense committee will Photo by Maggie Walker ByDANAFELMLY Search," she said. "But it's more general location continue its unfailing staunch support of Francine Hughes in Rally for Francine Library is now offering a new answer for those of you who questions like its quest to find some solutions 'Where's the Science Library or the Art lent frustrating hours looking in vain for that book Library?' " for wife abuse because, as one Approximately 80 people rallied to the defense of accused murderer Francine you need Even questions not z research paper. pertaining directly to the library are member said, "Violence Hughes at the Capitol earlier this month. Supporters say handled by the Information Desk. Staff members can tell patrons against Hughes should be set where to go women is as American free with all charges dropped. 'answer is an enlarged Information Desk which for what on the MSU campus, building hours and as apple greets i the minute they step through the main entrance. department locations among other things. One of their most Though lie to the MSU community before this summer, it is now popular information services is a listing of current and future risible and much more useful than it was campus and community events like concerts, theater productions, previously. films and sporting events. :w aspect of the Information Desk is called Instant Search, And to save patrons some tracks id because if through the grad stacks, the a patron cannot find the book he or she is Information Desk also offers assistance through the card catalog B for. a student librarian assistant will try to locate it for and Serial Holdings List to see if the Vithin 15 minutes or so. library even owns the book or journal wanted. If a request is phoned in, the material will be held at the |etdthequestions staff member is contacted by a patron, the patron will to see if he she Circulation Desk to be picked up. or looked in the right place. If Since the Information Desk expanded its services it has been isn't solve the problem, a check will be made to see if the b checked out. Some patrons have shown "a little bit of quite busy, said Mary Duffy, library clerk. She thinks, however, that people will be happier with the kiveness," said Jane Barnwell, a student librarian assistant, library because of the new system. Bning that patrons sometimes felt accused of negligence when '. Their reactions "They can be a lot more satisfied, because we ran give them a lot were different from what she of help here. "It's an attempt on the ■ first I thought there would be a lot of requests for Instant Library's part to make things easier to work with," she explained. HEY LOOK US OYER! 'ast one, causel ciarcoal ;s waiting in i| within 1 mile Now... Ride the Bus es too." sif ya don't gt of MSU campus toFrandor! louse SHOPPING CENTER t slow o OVER 50 GREAT STORES — PARKING FOR 3,000 CARS The only place around where you can wash your cor, buy the kids a treat at the five and dime, buy a house, buy the groceries, deposit money or take it out, wet your whistle, tickle your taste buds, buy a tie, or a tack, see a show, and clothe the family from heod to toe. All this and more at Frandor, located between Lansing and East Lansing. Come explore us soon.... )) Anchor Inn Linn Camera Apple Jade Bank of Commerce Baskin-Robbins Ice Cream Michigan National Bank Modern Youth Shoes Playback, Inc. M Beaux n' Belles R.L. Rolston Bollert's Hardware Sears Butler's Kiddieland Seasons Community Newscenter Silver Lead Paint Co. Costa's Restaurant Sir Lock n' Mane Cunningham Drug Co. Skin Care by Terry Earport Slenderform Universal Health Spa Fat Daddy's Sunglass Shack Flash Cleaners Spartan Travel Fotokey of Michigan Spartan Twin Theatre Fox's Jewelry State Vitamin Foxhold PX Roger Stuart Frandor Barber Shop Super X Drugs Frandor Family Bookstore Suzanne's Apparel Grande Gourmet The Attic Greens Apparel Thorn McAn Shoes Grinnel Bros. Inc. Thompson Jewelers Hobby Hub George Tobin Insurance Holden-Reid Uniform City Jones Gifts Warren's Shoes Kinney Shoes Wheeler Dealer Jo-Ann Fabrics Winkelmans Kroger Co. F.W. Woolworth Co. Frandor Shopping Center Kwost Bakery 351-7132 A28 Michigan Stole News, Ea»t Lansing, Michigan Welcome Week, |,7? A run-down on MSU's leaders SQCIAL LIFE FOR INTELLECTUALS (continued from P«g' 21) Since then, Wilkinson has ly an adviser of the Oak Ridge TRUSTEES Mensa offers fire for not being stringent assumed the duties of MSU's National Laboratory. Patricia M. Carrigan A democrat, Stevens is chief money handler and bud¬ He is presently the adminis¬ enough. Chairperson heavily involved with labor, get-maker and is considered to trator in charge of MSU's Carrigan is one of the two having worked extensively Elliott Gr»h»m(AI) BaBard be smooth and efficient. His graduate programs and of all most influential members cur¬ with the AFL-CIO. but for smarties Secretary to the Board of Trustees and Assistant to the President A! Ballard is likely the most recommendations, like those of many other vice presidents, are nearly always accepted without question by the Board of Trus¬ research MSU conducts. He advises the trustees which gifts, grants research sponsor¬ ships to accept, and they gen¬ rently on the board. A clinical psychologist, Carri¬ gan has been on the board since 1971 and, along with John Two Michael J. Smydra things distinguish Smydra as a board member; he By CHRIS KUCZYNSKI only is the youngest person ever tees. State News Staff Writer animated MSU administrator. erally accept them. Bruff, D-Mount Clemens, ce¬ elected to the board and he is Students who come in contact Wilkinson is also responsible ments a bloc which tries to the first MSU trifstee from the Incoming students who fear they may lose for MSU Internal Audit, which Eldon R. Nonnamaker their identity among 43,000 faces may with him frequently exclaim at attract trustee Raymond Kroli- Upper Peninsula. distinguish themselves from the crowd by "on of intelligent people here his somewhat unique brand of keeps track of how money is Vice President for kowski, D-Detroit, Trustee Smydra, a self-described pro¬ joining Mensa, a social club whose members "Out of the 40,000 wit and observation. spent all around the University. Student Affairs Blanche Martin, D-East Lan¬ duct of the 1960's is also a ,tude«u pride themselves on being among the most about eight per cent or This makes for an interesting Clarence L. Winder Nonnamaker is one of two sing or Trustee Michael Smyd- strong student advocate, and intelligent people in the country. would qualify," about 2 4M.? contrast to Wharton's dry pub- MSU vice presidents who does ra, D-Lansing to its voting. other board members have Saper explained Provost "We are not people who talk about high There,re 24 000 Mens. lic image. not have an office in the An educator since 1949, the Winder at the moment is the publicly admonished and con¬ flown E=MC squared stuff," said Mensa the country and 105 membf Since 1958, when Ballard received his B.A. from MSU, newest member of this inner Administration Building. His office is in un-airconditioned democrat is amount the most consistent supporters of the descended to the democrat for local president Roy Saper. "We're more of a Lansing area alone. member, ^ his occasional aggressiveness. circle of administrators at social group." s«per said the local chapter Ballard has held a variety of Student Services Building, the MSU administration on the meet, m, MSU; his appointment was Mensa, which means a group of equals, is six to112 times per month government posts, including reputed center of student activ¬ board. Aubrey Radcliffe and that of state house fiscal ana- approved by the trustees in ity. A counselor for the Lansing an international organization whose mem¬ monthly events include TG's ral May after an almost certain Since it is Nonnamaker's job John Bruff Public School system, Radcliffe bers include preschoolers, senior citizens, and scotch tasting contests. ' lyst. recommendation by the Pro¬ Ballard, who received his to keep tabs on what the Vice-Chairperson earned a Ph.D. in adminis¬ professors, students and even factory work- vost Rating Committee in its Members are required to M.A. from MSU in I960, has students are up to these days, An attorney, Bruff is likely to tration and higher education pay no ln»ia. been Wharton's assistant since deliberations. A psychologist, Winder has his Student Services location be the trustees' next chair¬ from MSU in 1972. Some of their more distinguished members but national dues are $15 students are required to peVyeT^J 1968, and secretary to the puts him closer to the action. person and most influential A black, Radcliffe is continu¬ include science fiction author Isaac Asimov pay only Wi m members receive both a trustees since 1975. been with MSU since 1963, Nonnamaker has a reputa¬ member. Bruff has been in ally pressing for the minority and actor William Windom. And some of national32 publication which outlines monthl/li moving rapidly up through the tion for fairness to students, politics since 1955 and Leland W. Cam, Jr. ran as a angle on issues that come their less distinguished members include the events. ' " hierarchy from professor to something that does not come democratic candidate for lieu¬ before the trustees. However, University Attorney infamous H.R. Haldeman, who is no longer a Mensa members have the department chairperson to col¬ easy for administrators. tenant governor with unsuc¬ the republican has made no opportune Cam, who still sports a member. traveling around the world and Saperu«u lege dean, to associate provost He's been at MSU since 1956, cessful gubernatorial candidate statements or taken any action flat top hair cut, is probably and, finally, provost. The only requirement for membership is to has met fellow Mensa obtaining his Ph.D. in education Zolten Ferency in 1966. on charges against MSU's affir¬ member, in rl, among the busiest of MSU As provost, Winder presides have scored in the top two percentile on any and around the from MSU in 1959. He is also a Bruff has also been counsel to mative action program. standardized test which includes tests given country. He aid i personnel. Cam's duties consist over matters relating to MSU's traveling members are guaranteed of defending MSU against academic and curricular pro¬ professor of education. the U.S. Senate Labor and by the military, IQ tests, the SAT and ACT. dations with members of the iJI scores of disgruntled plaintiffs gress as well as recommending Public Welfare Committee. Blanche Martin A combined score of 1300 or better on the varim7 chapters, of which there are 115 natioart Lesk'e W. Scott A dentist, Martin has been a and advising other MSU admin¬ to the trustees proposals for Jack M. Stack SAT or a composite score of 29 or better on For those people istrators on what they can and Vice President trustee since 1969. The demo¬ the ACT is sufficient to gain entry into the wishing to ^ faculty alterations. for Development A republican, Stack is likely crat was re elected last year. members but have no proof of ever ht«i shouldn't do under the law. the most consistently indepen¬ club. scored in the top two Scott is the v.p. with probab¬ Martin was an MSU running percentile, Meruioi Cam is regarded as a techni¬ John E. Cantlon "More people qualify than they think," its own test. For $6, a ly the most business experience dent voter on the board, some¬ back while he attended school prospective wad cal craftsman in the legal field, Vice President for Research Saper said. of any administrator — he times voting more liberal than here as an undergraduate from given a preliminary take home applia, even though his disposition and Graduate Studies his democratic colleagues. "We have a lot of intelligent people in the test. If the person scores seems sluggish when he at¬ Cantlon is another one of spent over 35 years as a corpor¬ 1956 to 1959. East Lansing area that would, qualify." high enough, tl Stack is a physician and can take the ate officer for several different qualification test. tends trustee meetings and those administrators who has active on the staff of Gratiot Raymond W. Krotikowski other public functions. been at MSU longer than most companies, many of them hotel Community Hospital in Alma. A Detroit lawyer, Kroli- Carr is a graduate of MSU students have been alive. The complexes. kowski is also director of the and holds a law degree from vice president came to MSU At MSU, Scott has been Don Stevens American Polish Action Council U-M, and serves on the Oak¬ from Boston University in 1954 director of Kellogg Center, Stevens is the member of the and the Polish-American Cham¬ land University Board of Trus¬ as an associate professor of director of the Union Building, board with longest standing; ber of Commerce. tees. botany and plant pathology, became provost in 1969 and assistant dean of the College of Business and director of con¬ he's been on it since 1957, and was chairperson in 1968 and The democrat has been the board since 1975. on BflUTELS IRC. Roger E. Wilkinson moved into his current position tinuing education. Vice President for Business in 1975. As vice president for Univer¬ with supplies A instruction Isi and Finance Cantlon has served on a sity development, Scott's re¬ •crochet *wei*iij and MSU Treasurer variety of commissions, includ¬ sponsibility is to oversee MSU's Wilkinson ought to be one of ing a White House Conference efforts to attract money from •wcram 'sfiMii? the most widely known MSU Youth in 1971. He is current- outside administrators, since it is his on s 'Mttiif 'nedlepoiit signature that appears at the ★★★★★★★★★★★ ★★★★★★★★★★★ *ra| hookisc bottom of all MSU paychecks. Wilkinson took over his pre¬ * FOOTBALL PROGRAMS * * NEW COMICS * 730 AM - 94.9 FM • sent position in 1970 when that * BASEBALL CARDS 4 * USED COMICS If AU TYMS Oi WIAVINO PR AMIS 4 I office was rocked with scandal, Sought 1 Sold ^ If- Bought i Sold jf. resulting in the retirement of W. Curious Book Shop W. iL Curious Book Shop I the former vice president for "Dr. Steve Idwards 6 pm-9 pm" Mon-Frl 9 am to 5:30 pm 2916 Turner, off East Grand River business and finance. * If ^ *7i.o,«,a»i.., J Saturday 9 am-l pm in North Lansing ★★★★★★★★★★★ FRATERNITY Calling all Sig Eps Undergrads, grad students, alumni faculty and staff. Sigma Phi Epsilon is forming a new fraternity by reorganization of our Michigan Epsilon Chapter and wish to immediately establish contact with all Sig Eps and interested undergrads on campus. PLEASE CALL IfTimEDIATELY! Undergrads call Grads, faculty and alumni call DAVE WESTAL CY STEWART, Ph.D 353-6387 office 355a5280 349-0715 home in stote News, Eost lon-ing, Michiqon Welcome Week, 1977 A29 Science fiction game 6 , W-jl wizards, ,seplastic sruc clubs Take two wizards — Glenn Wright — associate professor of English and Justin Morrill After the final whistle the referee squad met to determine the final score. Since College — and Damon Knight — science fiction author, editor and critic. there were no contested points, the white team was pronounced the t;Mr. Gather as many players as possible, including writers from the Combined Milford and Clarion Decennial Jubilee, spectators from the East Lansing area and even a Detroit Free team 3-2. No injuries occurred winner, defeating the black despite the violent appearance of the playing. Press reporter persuaded to Cohn announced his intentions for a full-scale participate to get the "inside story." Moopsball game utilizing the experience gained in this first trial P *<$&•', ;v Designate five referees led by chief official Kate Wilhelm, also a science fiction writer. for the event. game. No date or location will be set until a sponsor can be found Give everyone football helmets and plastic golf club tubes padded with foam. Put a The trial Moopsball match was made large foam ball in the center of the MSU band practice field next to Cowles House and set possible, in part, by the MSU Athletic an over sized plastic garbage can at either end of the field. Department which loaned football helmets and the MSU Grounds Department which Now you're ready to play provided orange highway cones to mark off the playing field. Moopsball. a game only science-fiction aficionados can really appreciate. Moopsball is the brain-child of Gary Cohn, a graduate student in popular culture at Bowling Green University. He attended the annual Clarion Science Fiction Writers' Workshop at MSU several years ago. Subsequently, he wrote "Rules for Moopsball" which was published in Orbit 18, a science fiction anthology edited by Knight. The game outlined in Cohn's article is complex, involving 324 players and team followers supervised by 51 referees. The Milford and Clarion Decennial Jubilee provided km the setting for the first trial his flowing black robe, mask and game of Moopsball at MSU on Aug. 27. Reduced in scale to fit available manpower and equipment, Mini Moopsball Trials began at 10:30 a.m. with the duel of the opposing wizards. White wizard Wright relied on myriads of bubbles while black wizard Knight spread curses through symbolic gestures, some of them with a water pistol. Afterward the wizards retreated to the sidelines to wait for the Wilhelm's hat. At this signal the teams drop of official charged toward the ball at the center of the field, Moopsball clubs flailing. White team member Jim Kelly scored the first goal by landing the foam ball in the garbage can goal marker. Twice more the white team scored before the first unofficial rest break. The black team made its first point during the rest break. The last the black team just before the end of the goal was made by game at noon. Rules were changed repeatedly to increase the action. I'll III on by Richard I'olilouski and Maggie Walker Is convey mngicnl powers as white wizard Glenn Wright casts s li the ball at the opening of Mini Moopsball Trials. Story by Jim Ransom Wright uses an authentic ceremonial mask labovel to work his magic. Black team members cheer (below) after scoring the final goal of the game despite their 3-2 loss to the white team. , Vr - Black team member l^riscilla Pollner hands off to a fellow teammate during the first half of the match. Team members were identified by the color of their goll club tubes. r Jjard Damon Knight labovel watches from rWioes. Wielding a Marx Sock-it-to-em lAi*?®6 wWnator Gary Cohn (right! 'be ball downfield. A30 Michigan Stole News, East Lansing. Michigan W.lcom.w,ek,lw, GET YOUR ACT TOGETHER for the 1st Annual JS9f rnff WFMK-Meridian Mall GONG SHOW iw J"? WekonJ Sunday Oct 2 4:00 P.M. Bad c* Unbelievable Prizes for entry information contact office Meridian Mall Meridiai Mai or radio station WFMK. \ f* ""I GENFRAi. *• GNC .WTHtfiF- JL Jl.ENfFRS. imimimoi THE PICK OF THE LITTER IN PET & PET SUPPLIES AKC Registered Puppies Tropical Fish IBI 87.85 S-con>ptax II Cage Birds and Parrots wmm 85.15 wmmm Native and Exotic Reptiles GhWM Mm Iran mmm li Popular Small Animals Plus one of Lansing's H IBS 'Mmm. largest selections of tli M %% in pet supplies and accessories. Dog ALL Breeds By Appointment :|i tt.85 fiidtiii'i'" mm® WM 8M8 kWBC*:::: i L4 IN MERIDIAN MAU j FAMILY PET CENTER Mon.-Sot. 10:00-9:00 Sun. 12:00-5:00 SEE OUR NEW FALL FASHIONS AT BIG SAVINGS NOW! PAINTERS PANTS, KAHKI'S, CORDUROY'S and JEANS GET THEM FOR FALL AT THE WIN tfrime eqeetf coordinates include CASH Men's Ladies PANTS SUITS TOPS SWEATERS WfiTCH FOR SWEATERS SKIRTS THE SN SHIRTS DRESSES T-SHIRTS JUMPSUITS FOOTBALL 10% OFF THIS COUPON GOOD ON ANY CLOTHING. i?ium CONTEST^ sale valid clothing not included Sept 28-0ct 4,1977 SQg&Ct CHECK STATF NEWS 10% OFF | ■ MERIDIAN MALL 349-1850 EVERY TUESDAY OCT. 4 - NOV. 75 [■hinan Stote News, Eost lonsinq, Michigan Welcome Week, 1977 A31 B0Y0B0Y Boys-cut jeans made to fit girts. Sized by waist and inseam so when it fits your waist it fits your tips too. By Wrangler in No Faidt cotton. No bagging. No pucker. They're the tops in bottoms! Waist 27-32, Inseam 32-36. *19. Mwtflj A Located at Meridian Mall Ar^Capved wedding But get yourself to Miscellaneous at Meridian Mall before you fix rings: the promise up your room or apartment... Downtown beyond tne promise. OR YOU'LL WISH YOU HAD! 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M 10.99 Ut* on* ol our convenient charge plana or OFFER GOOD THRU OCT 2 Amarfcan Expaaa • BankAmaricatd - Maatar Charge WITH VALID STUDENT I.D. MORGANS Fine MERIDIAN MALL Jewelers Since 187h 121 S. Washington, Lansing Levi's MOVIN' ON™JEANS Meridian Mall, Okemos miscellaneous with the famous slim, trim, European fit, are available at Webster Men's Wear as usual. But now, they're on sale at a new low price. Levi's" register MOVIN ON™ corduroy jeans and MOVIN ON™flare jeans are now "10.99. WEBSTER MEN'S WEAR MERIDIAN MALL LANSING MALL A32Michigan Stole News. East Loosing. Michigan Welcome Wetk i For Fashion'sl Sake.. ...a STATE NEWS fashtog tabloid for the college student. Set in a i photo format, "For Fashion's Sake" focuses on Fall and Winter Fashions for 1977 An advertisement placed in this issue will catch the interest of 44,000 MSU students! Deadline Sept. z{ Published Oct. 2 Call 353-6400 for more information Recordland Meridian Mall 349-3730 coupons expire 10-2-77 FLEETWOOD MAC i lames Taylor 1 Pablo Cruise Rumours" j "IT" ! "Place in Hie Son" LP <4.87 | LP <4.87 i LP <3.87 ♦ape <5.99 One coupon | Tape <5.99 5 Tape <5.99 per item i One coupon per item Barbra Streisand Dave Loggins EMOTIONS Superman "Anytime Anywhere" "Rejoice" "Celebrate Me Home" LP <4.87 LP <3.87 LP <3.87 LP <3.87 Tape <5.99 Tape <5.99 Tape <5.99 Tape *5.99 One coupon per item One coupon per item One coupon per One coupon per item item r-— MID MICHIGAN'S MOST COMPLETE RECORD CHAIN LP s, IMPORTS, TAPES, 45's, CARRYING CASES, BLANK TAPES, POSTERS, QUAD and MORE! n State News, Eo»t Lonslng, Michigan Welcome Week, 1977 A33 i 3.97 Shatterproof and tarnish r 32 OZ. HUNT'S 77' Thick, rich, delicious. UNFINISHED FURNITURE urniture for folks on a budget! 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Since A project spanning two-and- McKay is responsible for the literature, art and architecture. Geography Dept., and editor of state — its people, history, crisp appearance of the volume. then, public officials, research¬ a half years and costing the the atlas, says some of the atlas' "You could describe that in a economy, environment and re As in any atlas, maps are the ers and citizens have had to MSU Foundation lot of words and statistics and roughly information has already been creation — displayed in a staple of illustration. But as¬ rely on that atlas, and it has $200,000, the new atlas pro¬ used to lure industrialists to the colorful configuration of maps, charts," said Sommers, "but sisted by exhaustive research, become old, antiquated and duced by MSU stands state. this describes it much better among photographs, illustrations and computers and approximately virtually useless. MSU's concrete contributions "This will show better than text. than words. It's more But a team of MSU aca¬ to 100 contributors from 12 differ¬ meaning¬ Michigan, and its producers anything else the state's char¬ The atlas' detailed art was ent MSU departments, editor ful to look right at the informa¬ demics have just published a are proud of it. acteristics," Sommers said. done by local artist Bob Brent, Sommers achieves minor feats tion, rather than go through a of miracle in lot of statistics." putting Michigan in the showcase. The atlas, which sells for There are maps, for instance, $24.95, is available to students that can tell you at a glance or and alumni at a discounted two — three at the most — price of $19.95. where Michigan residents mi¬ grate to when they move, how much crime there is in the ★★★★★★★★★★★ state, how many people attend * SCIENCE FICTION * college and where Michigan's ]f MYSTERIES )f so-called Boomtowns are lo¬ Bought I Sold jf WOMEN'S cated. 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Michigan • 351-3070 September 29-0cteber THE ATHLETE'S SHOP 233 E. GRAND RIVER 1 BANK AND TRUST CO. Main office: St. Johne Grand River office: 2201 E. Grand River - Lamms (5 block* W. of Frandor — l°ok for tha eagle). Phone 482-1393 Other branches: Bath, Elale. Fowler. Hubbardeton, Lalngsburg. EAST LANSING Maple Rapldt, Valley Farms (Lansing) and Wacousla. Member: F.D.I.C. (SAULS t WEASEL) „ Mote Newt, Eost tensing, Michigon Welcome Week, 1977 A35 p IvDANSPICKLER LN' 'he rival faculty This spring MERC rejected the MSUFA hoping to see the position rotating and one members in the medical school have a Higher Education unionization is new but "There were just too many questions, too feu. AAUP ran as an intervening petition because some of the early signa¬ in which the teachers have a greater voice distinct interest from the rest of the quickly growing with only a handful of many fears, not enough understanding last ff |sst ballot in 1972 and received tures were too old to count. But six weeks in selection. school," Korth said. "There are, however, schools in Michigan without such a bargain¬ time," Korth explained. L between two union alternatives later after the speedy collection of another ing unit. "This time I think we'll win it." Medical school salaries and work condi¬ Jjch were rejected. 200 signatures, MERC ruled that enough tions are different from the rest of the [UP president Zolton Ferency, cards were signed. University and Korth said that MSUFA Tf criminal justice, explained that Intervening groups such as AAUP then would rather see medical faculty left out of ifer Quality Project State News GREW LOOK,GREW PRICETi kes use of sewage Newsline Now you can put together an entire room for no more than what one good sofa might cost. And the look? Wastewater is a possible source for Research. Ion and a 500-acre outdoor laboratory The 353-3382 Dynamic, contemporary perfect for Lpus is taking a biological approach water project pumps partially treated waste¬ from the East Lansing sewage treatment today's - and . .. Ear energy to clean wastewater and plant to the lakes. Solar energy provides food tomorrow's lifestyle. Ttants. energy and the aquatic plants take up the ALL ARE CARTONED FOR Water Quality Management Pro- _e ■$2.3 million facility which includes a abundant supply of nutrients in the wastewater. TAKE-WITH, EASY ASSEMBLY AND EXCEPTIONAL SAVINGS. COME TO | East Lansing's sewage treatment The mature plants are then harvested, and BUNDAY'S TODAY! J and a half miles of pipeline, four dead algae and other nutrient-rich compounds ■lakes, three marshes and a spray- settle on the bottoms of the lakes. This is then ■he best way to maximize the joining ■land and lake systems," said Thomas collected and spread on the land. 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North Street, Michigan Open Monday 8i Friday Until 9:00 Other Days lRJRITITURC GALlCRICi Until 5:30; Closed Wednesday 8c Sunday A36wichigon Stote News. Eost loosing, Michigoi The power scheme at MSU:Who runs (continued from poge 211 Steering Committee, which for get totally caught up in describes them. wards it to the floor of the full, red tape and the University T 'he The way this system works 129 member Academic Council; wouldn't move," said more.' ' on paper is roughly something 7) The full Academic Council Homer Hawkins, associate professor of like this: votes on the proposal; racial and ethnic studies. 1) Somebody gets a bright 8) If passed, the vote repre¬ "But the faculty could play a idea to do something with a sents a recommendation to the role. In promotions and larger course or a program at MSU; MSU administration; salaries the votes of the 2) That somebody goes and 9) If it wishes, the adminis¬ faculty should be more than tells their Academic Council tration may act on the recom¬ advisory. We "There is need to move more representative; mendation; if it doesn't wish, it toward shared 31 That representative goes doesn't have to. responsibility, recog- to either the Student Council (if nizing that it can't be a total That, at least, is one way it thing." they are a student), the Faculty works on paper. Another Council (if they are a faculty way is for a proposal to be initiated But whether or not member), or to the Appointed by "shared Council (if they're a dean or the MSU administration itself. authority" would really be administrator) and brings it up But the clincher is that the shared is another Often things that are question. J'? the Ki"% Provost, 4i with one of those bodies; administration, even on paper, planned he is not obligated to anything the on paper don't happen in actual¬ usefu|ne!s ,| 4) If the appropriate council we tune." He Academic Council says, except ity, as less-than-satisfied pro¬ s (student, faculty or appointed) consultation things it says that deal with fessors are quick to point » decides to bring the bright idea out. when it j, courses and curriculum. , to the attention of the Aca¬ William Ewens, associate someone whi demic Council, it informs the The Ace-in-the-hole is in a interest in ft professor of sociology, used the Academic Council Steering half page disclaimer at the be recent appointment Committee; by Provost At any ginning of the booklet de¬ Clarence Winder of ri 5) The Steering Committee a new dean scribing the bylaws. It says the in University College decides which of nine Academic students and faculty of MSU to illus¬ system ca trate the point. Council Standing Committees have only the power to advise, of facult should deal with the bright consult with and share respon¬ He said that a faculty com¬ tees mull idea, then parcels it out; sibility with the administration. mittee, which was to select the issues. I 6) The standing committee The administrators, those men such as candidates, gave Winder three makes a recommendation and in the clown suits on the front names — none of which Winder "Mickey passes the idea back to the page, have the final say. found to his liking. Winder meetings gave them two more names to be more tha added to the list and Those ultimately that mos Educators in higher learning. Critical thinkers, picked one of the two additions, Ewens said. lated in I original thinkers. Distinctive individuals who have spent years of their lives learning, questioning, "That will go down in history cultivating their minds. Prestigious individuals, ment. trators' backs." as a shared decision," he said. often experts in their wide-ranging fields, who sociate professor of biological However, Lester Mander hope Educators dissatisfied with Advocates of the system say areas. Many professors, even science. "There are ways to those who are basically satis scheid, associate chairman and to enlighten and train the future leaders of the world. the system say that any high get the Academic Council is an ideas discussed in Faculty fied with the system, feel that professor of agricultural Devise a system suited to them level of faculty or student effective advisory source be¬ econ¬ — a huge Council if any reasonable num¬ there could be more shared omics, said that the faculty's mega-university and give them this institution and participation perceived is illu¬ cause it does, after all, give ber of professors are interest authority between the faculty most important power is intel¬ the power sory. collective opinions. They say ... to advise. ed." and the administration. lectual rather than absolute "Ordinary faculty have very — that the disgruntled are either "But if you hold a Advise. The primary "mode dent involvement in running little power, even collectively," those in the minority or those minority "From the faculty and stu providing brains behind the of participation in academic the University as proof of the said Stan Kaplowitz, assistant viewpoint and can't persuade dent view it would be better if administration's decisions. who don't know how to use the governance" by the teaching case that decisions are not enough people, you can't get the council was not professor of sociology. "The system. advisory," But there are those who feel faculty of MSU is to advise. made solely at the top. They your way. That is different said Gerald Miller, faculty can only advise. The "One of the pervasive prob¬ from not getting your views professor of that even intellectual power Different faculty members put cite the Academic Council, a faculty has no source of poten communication. "But part of has not been sufficiently lems with professors who feel heard. It is a tapped one of two accents on the word: network of committees, sub¬ tial power: no administrative democracy," he that comes from the Michigan by those in charge. •'We can advise' (those satis¬ they don't have a voice is they explained. committees and conferences as power, no money to bribe and don't know how to constitution, so it is out of "I would like fied with the system). use the The faculty has final an advisement the sources of that involve¬ no gun to put to the adminis¬ say on administrative hands." •'We can governance system to the ful¬ courses and curriculum, but is procedure to tap the intel- only advise' (those "It's not as democratic as it lest," said Ralph Taggart, ectual talent of the University," dissatisfied with the system). as¬ primarily advisory in all other could be, but if it was, we would Miller said. "I'm sure we could Administrators and educa¬ tors satisfied with the system point to what they see as an abundance of faculty and stu- ★★★★★★★★★★★ If SCIENCE FICTION * * MYSTERIES * 730 AM-94.9 FM • Sought t Sold * If Curious Book Shop If "The Original Rock' M7I.CrmrfH»«r ★★★★★★★★★★★ Welcome Back, M.S.U. with this Pre-Season Special 3-Piece Vested Corduroy Suits 79" (9500 volue) Sues 36)37 38 39 40 41 421 I43 I44 46 Recta's xk X X X X X 1 X X* Shots Ix X X Longs 1 X X X X X X (Not every color in each sue) Choose this fine-wole in blue, ton or brown. corduroy May's charge and bank cards welcome OF AAAV5 MICHIGAN"^ ^ Lansing Mall Shop Lansing Mall Nightly Til Nine. Sun. 12-5 +hye//t>uJanjprtth sf&n oh e. 35/BITS n state News, East Lansing, Michigan Welcomu Week, 1977 A37 (continued on page 36) A trip up the elevator of the sponsibility as president is to convened and [ally anything the MSU Board of Trustees Administration Building takes keep on top of the administra¬ business quite conducted its Ik by the State Constitution, you to the fourth floor, and into tion." privately, meet¬ ing in locked buildings after because it says so. a University altogether differ¬ Wharton, of course, feels hours to avoid public ent from that which we know in exposure. [college governing) board shall have general quite differently. The outcome of the selection Berkey Hall, the Union Build¬ "I don't sit on ion of its institution and the control and ing or the Erickson Kiva. top of the institution," he asserts. "The process - that of Clarence Winder, and able academic and of all expenditures from the institution's Carpeted hallways, paneled flexibilities for action in the administrator Bads the constitution. walls, sublime quiet and central administration are in - was predicted weeks in advance of Wharton's whoosh of air conditioning fact far less than what most ku as well as at the overwhelming majority of make decision. one think that perhaps us and universities, what the President puts before people realize. They're mini- This year's rating one has stepped out of the process Boards don't do all the Board is accepted, but thai elevator into the offices of a scule, really. also caused a flap. One of the ■Some people think most of the proposals concern Yet it would be difficult for rating committee members, multinational corporation. Wharton to deny that if any¬ *,jng. routine matters like salaries It is up here that the direc¬ Harold Hart, professor of chem¬ Kd of Trustees are a and the rewarding of contracts, tives are issued, the orders body has a controlling share in istry, resigned, charging that jp for administra- In addition, Smydra ex- given, the policies formulated the MSU power scheme, it is the selection procedure was mendations," said plained, the trustees only and the meetings held. This is him. The unit decisions in the phony. pay, associate pro- meet once a month. the site of weighty involve personnel addi¬ Wharton, he said, was look¬ Xunal justice. "It is a non-paying job for us, pivotal conferences, super- decisions, tions and transfers, and such ing for an administrator well Eident has the final so we need to find another job," exclusive consultations, and decisions have little bearing on able to deal with the public — W lias the Board of he said. "It is the administra- the overall University. that is, PR — while members of free perculated coffee. ■his pocket," said C. lions' income. They often have Decisions on matters of bud¬ the rating committee, Hart This, at any rate, seems to be ■rowe, professor of " a better idea of what's going on, the scenario. Faculty are limit¬ get, institutional direction, and said, were more interested in new administrative so we rely on them." ed in whatever appointees finding a qualified individual to If the Board does power they may do not take place on unit levels be MSU's chief academic offi- disagree exercise; student power is a iys Trustee Michael with the Administration, it is — they are University-wide and L slogan from the past. As for the handled by the central adminis¬ gays that Whar- not likely that the public will trustees — they don't get paid tration. (sals are generally hear about it, according to to be trustees, and don't i Jt that is because "he Smydra. New administrative appoint¬ tain daily contact with the ■ homework, he "The Board is latent, unless ments are a case in so institution the state constitu¬ point. In Ithing he knows will they disagree; and that is done tion mandates them to 1972, MSU was seeking a new | t if he senses the behind closed doors," he said, super- president for student af¬ fairs. Wharton convened a "rat¬ go along with "They are not likely to hold a So it seems left to the central Ike will modify it." press conference." administration ing committee", a group which — by process of ranks several candidates he ■John Bruff said that That, he said, is their style. elimination, if nothing else — to run MSU. Unless, of gives them, and swore them to secrecy. MSU is lidding itself looks something like a citadel, one of that genre of ponderous bureaucracies which The names of the candidates somehow leaked out, got larble, rising angularly from a plot of land drifts according to institutional published in the State News, listing of greenage, small trees and beds of whim. and Wharton dissolved the ■long a more scenic part of the Red Cedar. they run it," rating committee, threatening Eristened the John Hannah Administration trustee emeritus Warren Huff to keep his future decisions 1 and its dimensions says of the central administra- wholly secret. uncannily resemble in. This spring, when former ■the Greek Parthenon, built during the Age "Wharton is the prime i Provost Lawrence Boger left les, shortly before the Greek civilization and shaker in the University." MSU for the presidency of k plummet. says Michael Smydra, MSU's Oklahoma State newest trustee. "Wharton's re¬ University, another rating committee IBLIC SERVICE OF MICHIGAN NATIONAL BANK IROTECT YOUR PROPERTY and help OPCRME with the [visible Marking Pen Kit $1.00 PLUS 4% SALES TAX pimple to use as a ball point pen Excellent supplement to electric jengraver Marks without damaging soft or hard items Easily read by police UNDER SPECIAL LIGHT r INCLUDES: |1 — INVISIBLE MARKING PEN 2-WINDOW DECALS se four convenient campus locations: iFrandor Branch ■300 Frandor 1374-1514 lEast Pointe Drive-In 13021 East Saginaw ■ 374-1549 I University Branch ■ 2731 East Grand River 1374-1543 I Meridian Branch I ]7W Hamilton Road I Okemos 1 374-1509 _ lichigan National Bank The All Day Saturday Bank Icicle of Michigan National Corporation with assets in excess of $3 billion»Member FDIC 'Equal Housing Lender A38Michigon Stote News. Eost Lonsing, Michigon Welcom •We*,, BLOCK & BRIDLE'S 'LITTLE INTERNATIONAL' Evening College offers MSU an alternative to a "course Where the swine shine By ANN HOLMES If your fall schedule is as predictable as the seasons that follow it's time for you to strike out for change and adventure. MSU's 1977 FALL TERM EVENING COLLEGE Evening College has a smorgasbord of courses that can give you Care to make a pig look pretty? Or, have you ever had a Showmanship Contest which used to be held in Chicago and was just that and more. Mondays yearn to dress up a sheep in its Sunday finest? known as the end-all of animal husbandry contests. The Evening College is a division of the MSU Beginning Swimming You can, by getting involved in the MSU Block and Bridle The Block and Bridle Club provides the annual impetus for all Continuing Black ft White Education Service which is located in the Kellogg Center. It offers Photography Club's Little International Showmanship contest which will be of the fun, but the 200 or so club members get involved with Workshop much more than the University Community - and even the a variety of non-credit educational programs for adults in the Creative Off-Loom held Oct. 22. Weaving entire state — can appreciate. Lansing-East Lansing area. Creative Writing Any MSU student - even if you've never seen a live pig - can enter the annual animal husbandry contest for free. In fact, This weekend, for instance, the club will be managing MSU's The 63 courses offered this term range from technical courses in French Conversation I W.dn.,dayi business to swimming classes for infants. The classes will meet the American Anli Block and Bridle Club members encourage it. sale of half of its Hereford and Angus cattle herds. As an French Conversation II "It's a learning, fun kind of thing that doesn't cost you a auction type sale, it is fun to spectate at, even if you aren't one needs .of people interested in improving themselves, their job German Conversation I AutumnSky-wilcL of the hoards of Michigan farmers who buy the live-and-kicking possibilities and their leisure activities. And the non-credit, no Great Films of Federico thing," said club member Sara Stadler. "It's just a good time." Fellini MSU provides the dairy and beef cattle, sheep, swine and transcript, no examination criteria for the classes give interested Fencing Skill, 1 breeding cattle. adults a chance to enjoy the classes devoid of Indoor Plants and Flowers horses for students to groom and show. Block and Bridle "You can get an awfully interesting situation," said Stadler. worrying about (Sec. I) G'°PhkD«i,„ instructors will be with participating students to help and guide "The animals can get rowdy — and the people get rowdy — and grades. Mow'o look „^ The year the Evening College is Investments and Securities mon them to a possible scholarship prize in the contest on Oct. 22. you just never know what's going to happen." featuring a course entitled: Italian Conversation I Relation, „ 'The Pleasures of Opera: Puccini and Verdi." ogement All student contestants have to do is spend the time to get Block and Bridle Club headquarters in the Judging Pavilion Seventy persons Life Drawing signed up for this course last year. in'erperionolp, over to the MSU Judging Pavilion by the beginning of October, has more information on the cattle sale. Michigon State Government and Last year, 3,105 persons enrolled in the 140 courses that were Piano for Adults Interviewing preparing their assigned animal for showing throughout Later this fall, the club will sponsor a sale that may perhaps nique, * offered Fall, Winter and Spring terms. Polish Conversation I the month up until the contest. attract more of the student market — a pork sale. Club Jewelry Deiign The Little International Showmanship Contest is a smaller members slaughter and process the pigs, then sell loins, hams Registration for this fall term is already underway. Persons may A Practical Course in Self cation ' ov scale, local adaptation of the world-wide International roasts and other cuts. register either by mail or in person at the registration desk in the Defense Physical FimM1|#„ Kellogg Center lobby. Class Registration will continue until Spanish Conversation I and Wile classes start on October 10. Strategies for Strugglers The Pleoiur,, ^ Women and Assertiveness Puccini ond Verdi ' The classes range from $26.00 to $75.00, but the majority of Training them cost about $25.00. Two persons from the same household, Sculpture-Bromecoa. students and other persons that qualify will be Sensitivity ,g , charged a Tuesdays d'en: Birlh-Five East Lansing Public Library small, but discounted price. Retirees space is available. can enroll free of charge provided that Driver Education to Drive) (Learning Stained Gloi, Construction ^ Charles McKee, Coordinator of the Evening College, says that Folk Guitar (Basic) Toy Design ond Co,. offers unique brand of services the courses can serve as a "decompression chamber" for adults who have been away from an educational "A lot of women entering the work force or setting. Laboratory in Reading ft Learning Skills for Adults Personal Financial ft Estate Watercolor Pointing Yogic Exercises (Indl, going bsck to school The MSU Library might be For children, the library take a course or two," he said. Planning Weekend Course, For ry shows free films every every The East Lansing library is Rapid Reading the biggest library in town, but McKee said that some persons can Field Natural schedules story hours, for Monday at 7 p.m. This fall open from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. from acquire Continuing Stained Glass Design and Education Units (C.E.U.) which are units Autumn it's not the only one. which parents may register equivalent to 10 contact they'll feature old classics, and Monday through Friday and hours of class. Only some courses allow Construction Preschool Swi The East Lansing Public their kids by calling the library. in the winter, French and you to earn these units, he Woodwind Repair ft Main- from 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. on said. Water Babies Library, 950 Abbott Rd., is And for everybody, the libra¬ German films will be running. Saturday. available for the use of anybody who can demonstrate they live in the area by showing an ID, or CLIP ft SAVE even a piece of mail addressed to them. The library offers services, including 8 a slew of Sorority founded in 1 SUPPLEMENT YOUR STUDENT mm films, records and cassette tapes which can be checked out. It aids women in careers HEALTH INSURANCE WITH also has cable TV and video cassettes for use in the library, as well as other audio-visual Long before the advent of the women's advise women on careers, as well as over 80 HOSPITAL BENEFITS FROM SENTRY movement was the formation of a sorority that employers, many of which interviewed MSU equipment for patron use. encourages women's advancement in the fields of business and economics. students for permanent positions and summer FEATURING: One of the unique features of jobs. the East Lansing library is that it loans art original area art Phi Gamma Nu, founded in 1924, is an international sorority consisting of women Also at the fair were workshops for interview¬ (1) $10,000 Benefit at $40 par day - ing and resume writing. done by local artists — can be students in business and economics, checked out, for a fee to be education students planning to become teachers though Phi Gamma Nu holds rush twice during fall and spring terms. Women who have annually, (2) Unrestricted Benefit displayed in either home of business subjects are also members. or completed nine credits of pre-business subjects, office. It also has services for the The sorority's MSU chapter sponsored last winter's Women's Breakthru Career Fair, which such as economics, retailing, management, (3) Annual Cast Only $50 political science, data processing or food manage¬ visually impaired. brought academics and professionals to MSU to ment are eligible for membership. FOR INFORMATION CALL JEFF WILLIAMS MSU 68 LJ.-SENTRY Welcome Back Students 332-1838 WINSURANCE CLIP a SAVE \\l Artyfe announces GO THERE BY AIR . . . DELICIOUS What'll if be? An Arby's Roast Beef Sandwich? Or a whole platter: sandwich, crispy potatoes, and SAVE cole slaw? Make your delicious decision, then cut along dotted line solid line. Be sure to include var—jPy i- «lj "20< | a 20C the center part. i on a delicious i You'll love coming to Arby's for a delicious "change of taste." Arty's No two ways about if. Roast Beef Sandwich USE YOUR AIRPORTI p The Capital Region Airport Authority welcomes y, Lansing I Visit us . . . you'll find total accommodations 1 travelers I Enjoy fide meals In our lovely restaurant be I after your flight. Enjoy the convenient scheduling at 1 airlines, United and North Central, giving you connect* all points of the world. _ Enjoy our general aviation facilities, small-engine P'a"®B At these or flight instruction Plenty of Parking too! The nex ■ participating Arby's plan ,.. a trip think Capital City Airport. We Know .. • *ou | Us! 270 W. Grand Rivw East Lansiij (nex» 10 bus station) 4219 W. Saginaw Lansing 909 W. Holmes Lansing M/rfoktI 6031 S. Cedar Lansing CAPITAL CITY AIRPORT ,^jganSta^Newj^arKaniin£^ich^an Welcome Week, 1977 A39 STUDENT HEALTH INSURANCE Sponsored Ity ASSOCIATED STUDENTS OF MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY and COUNCIL OF GRADUATE STUDENTS Lnderivritten Hy AMERICAN COMMUNITY MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY : •• • • The Associated Students of Michigan State University and Council of Graduate Students are proud to offer students and their families one of the best health insurance plans available for college students. With this plan, and the facilities of Univer¬ sity Health Center, students have comprehensive hospital, med¬ ical and surgical protection at minimum cost. We urge you to investigate this coverage thoroughly and help protect yourself against the burden of accident or sickness expense. Insurance Benefits * IN-HOSPIT4L ROOM AND BOARD *75°° per day LP TO 70 days of confinement * US HOSPITAL MISCELLANEOUS BENEFITS Full payment of charges up to '30000 UO<7c of the next - *5,000°° \ * HOSPITAL OUT-PA TIENT TREATMENT FOR 'JI ACCIDENT On the day of or the day following the accident *50°° 7 * OUT-PA TIENT SICKNESS TREA TMENT -up to - *15000 After the first *25°° of charges * PA YS FOR NECESSARY SURGERY up to *500°° ^ +ACCIDENTAL INJURY TO NATURAL TEETH --*300°° ^ * A CCIDENTA L DEA TH BENEFIT *2,000°° * OPTIONAL MATERNITY COVERAGE Two Plans Offered ^ *24 HOUR-A-DA Y COVERAGE ^ ANYWHERE g * ON-CAMPUS CLAIMS SER VICE INSURANCE OFFICE I LOCATED IN THE UNIVERSITY HEALTH CENTER I ENROLMENT DEADLINE—OCTOBER 31,1917 *this is the finol date for students to enroll lor Fall Term. 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We found out that te too early or too late If the who wiretapped Martin Luther machinery is so complex and dehumanizing ordered massive bombings of Hanoi and the ... King, the marijuana, disdain for traditional mores and Schiff actually filed suit at 2:30 in the that the victory is a phyric one. it exists it exists despite itself, man who was killed by Sirhan somebody or standards of conduct — lives on. But the afternoon, a few hours before the University mining of Haiphong Harbor. 10 many people need to believe in it other Jim Davis denounces the system as a At that time thousands of angry, chanting .. . Cause — the Movement — seems to be a reconsidered." and fragile existence indeed." "bureaucratic maze." impervious to student ui thing of the past. protesters laid seige to Grand River ToddGitUn, 1960s activist involvement. Avenue, disrupting traffic and battling with Jim Davis is one activist trying to revive - Nelson Brown. Jim Davis. The Schiff case was a landmark one. Out of "Some of these administrators must have By DAVE MISIALOWSKI Names unfamiliar to most, they are social commitment at MSU. it rose the Academic Freedom Report, police. In many respects, 1972 was a pivotal gone to a seminar on handling campus year for the Movement as a whole: the State News Staff Writer campus activists who mirror each other Davis, a leading figure in the Committee which provides students with certain legal disruptions," he says scornfully. Of Asso¬ Liberal Left seized Democratic party (Movement. across the gulf of a decade. to Stop the MSU-Iran Film Project and an rights when charges are filed against them. ciate Dean of Students Louis F. Hekhuis, editor for the left-wing Lansing Star, machinery and succeeded in nominating one rkely. Columbia. Chicago. Hayden. Brown, who obtained his master's degree The document, revised many times since its Davis sarcastically says: "He must have of its own, George McGovern, for jr. Hoffman. Free Speech. Freedom in social science from MSU in 1973, was an believes that MSU students are "apathetic" president. inception, also outlines student rights and undergone empathy training." McGovern went on to a crushing defeat at ner.SDS. The Weathermen. The and that "issues today are not as clear." Days undergraduate here from 1963 to 1967. His responsibilities. Larrowe concurs. the hands of Nixon. By 1973 social protest It. Cambodia. Kent State. Yes, even credentials as a Movement participant are However, he insists there is hope for the The Academic Freedom Report epito¬ "I think the Academic Freedom Report is future. had virtually disappeared from America's (College" MSU. impeccable: a member of SDS (Students for mizes a massive though reluctant — shift in due for revision," he says. "I haven't kept up campuses. "One can see why the MSU-Iran Film p Movement: A Freedom Ride of a Democratic Society), he applied for University attitudes. No longer are students on the details, but from students I talk to In the years since then, large-scale s. places, people and causes that conscientious objector status to avoid the project should be stopped," he says. "And treated like children. Less than 15 years ago there is dissatisfaction." there are other issues. Why is tuition always activism at MSU has been practically ■ toastcred maddeningly through the draft. His application rejected, he refused it was so bad that dorm RAs were supplied On the other side of the coin, Madison non-existent. In the autumn of 1975 about > It ended a war, toppled a president induction and was subsequently indicted. going up? Why can't students get jobs after with keys to inspect students' rooms for beer Kuhn, professor of history, believes that 200 protesters, enraged because the CIA le two), raised political and social The charges were dropped in 1973 after graduation? Why does MSU have the and drugs. Even off-campus students were students have won most of their points. highest rape-per-day figure in the U.S.?" was recruiting on campus, staged a brief ew level and radicalized a years of litigation. subject to such harassment. "The war is over, the draft has ended. We sit-in at the Placement Services Office. Then on of young Davis believes there are larger issues Today students have all the rights people. Today, Brown is active in a socialist group no longer dismiss students for being caught came the occupation of the International students can latch onto as well. | Movement: In the 1970s it is more called the New American Movement (NAM) granted to those who attain the age of with a beer can. We have developed Center last June. would and the Francine Hughes Defense Commit¬ "South Africa is on the agenda of history," majority (18). 'en - some day — he asserts. "Student protesters in Soweto practices to deal with grievances. Most of Jim Paquet, a self-described "burned-out" But really it is still there, tee. He is also a student at Cooley Law In that sense, the impetus for protest has the things students have been asking for activist from the 1960s, is now a carpenter, . and Iran are setting an example for U.S. been removed. At MSU and universities ring beneath the surface, waiting for School. have been realized" largely divorced from radical causes. "I'm |ht Cause to fix on students. And people in the media will have around the country, the protests of the 1960s .. . Brown looks back on the 1960s as a time of reading things I never read, but heard a certain responsibility for real progress. kindling the were a major force in bringing about this So: what of the future? about, when I was carrying signs," he says, >1.1968. fires." change. "Part of the tragedy is that people didn't Protest at MSU reached its peak in April (continued on page 47) ■hundred and fifty protestersoccupy a realize the impact we had," he says. Despite Davis' apparent optimism, evi¬ ■of the MSU Administration Building dence shows that campuses are becoming "This country lives on a false sense of Tag the arrest of 13 persons (eight of history. You have instant mash potatoes, more conservative. Economic malaise and a ■students) on charges of possession and you flip a dial on for instant programs. tightening job market force many students ■marijuana and LSD. One hundred and People lack a sense of saying that the to place a premium on "getting ahead" and ■J policemen clad in riot gear encircle antiwar movement provided a crucial check attaining financial security. In addition, scores of archaic University regulations that yAling. The protesters are told to on people like Johnson and Nixon." persisted for so long — no beer in the dorms, for face arrest. They leave. Brown remembers the early days, the a ban on coed living, Tf following day the confrontation night hours for women, marches, the freedom rides, the teach-ins. no recourse in cases of F Eighteen students are arrested on "We had the first real antiwar march in University expulsion — have been eradicated or modified. poof rsity trespassing and obstruction of the 1965. About 50 of us marched on Lansing and Case in point: Paul Schiff. process. The demonstrators are we were met with hordes and hordes of cops, pi into a bus. Police, forced to beat back with ax-handles and things. They had these wry mob, are pelted with bottles, dirt Schiff is a name not calculated to evoke people, FBI agents or something with short much more than blank stares from today's I and obscenities. Nine more are haircuts who looked like Haldemans, taking average MSU student. Eleven years ago, though, he was a cause celebre. Schiff was refused admittance into grad¬ uate school because of his political views and «a time when the involvement in activist causes. At that time operation of the machine becomes so John A. Fuzak, vice president for student i. makes you so sick at heart, that you can't take part, you affairs, explained it this way: tacitly take part. And you've got to put your bodies upon "Schiff acted to disrupt the organization of ■gears, and upon the wheels, upon the levers, upon all the the University. He urged the violation of T'Ptus, and you've University regulations in 'Logos' (a news got to make it stop. And you've got to indi- bulletin)." I to the people that run it, the people who own it, that unless Though the University officials would not J™tree, the machine will be prevented from working at all." come right out and say it, the refusal to admit Schiff amounted to expulsion. -Mario Savio Economics professor and faculty grievance officer C. Patric Larrowe was intimately involved in Schiffs case. Larrowe and several other faculty mem¬ hinnCharges ranging from resisting our pictures. Oh my God, we thought, there bers lobbied the administration to relent and [^lomous assault. Several are later goes my career in this or that. . . The antiwar teach-ins - day long admit Schiff. Fuzak - (then president John) "Hannah's errand boy," according to Lar¬ ®gkt. in a gruesome capstone to the seminars in which students and faculty aired rowe — refused. of student protest that had rocked their grievances over U.S. policy in Vietnam Schiff took his case to U.S. District Court, . .. | W long, Bobby Kennedy, — also provided searing insight into what which threw it back in the lap of MSU, L J® c,|ididate and, to at least a few Brown calls "the uptight" society. ordering that charges against Schiff be put EL, ,e|rient, a veritable demigod, is "At the first teach-in, whenever we said in writing and that he be given a formal P*1 "1 California. . . something even remotely criticizing the hearing. government, these wierdos got up and The University complied tfith the order. JjHl977, started singing 'God Bless America'." On Nov. 24,1965, the Faculty Committee on K P'o'estera occupy the MSU Things are different now. Student Affairs ruled after extensive debate lioiT, , ,ter "t response to the MSU "The fact is. a lot of students today, that "Schiff had been properly denied T'nitv 8 deetsion reaffirming the though more conscious, don't have that readmission." lhteBI8 C(lntractual commitment to bedrock faith in the system. At least most Following the decision, Schiff said he Ef ">e repressive government are not operating under the assumption, would file an appeal in federal court. ii,fo„ii t * a brief ,our sit-in Is almost festive in •this country, right or wrong.' " Suddenly MSU reversed its stand and altercation with police. Things are different today in another admitted Schiff. Hvk re roade. The ninth anniversary respect as well. The fact is, large-scale "The facts were garbled to make Schiff Kennedy's death passes unnoticed. student activism is dead. 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Models LDA3000 and LDE3000. n state News, East lonsing, Michigan Welcome Week, 1977 A43 Eulenberg looking to 'decomputerize' electronic brains iff1 |t| nil IT 1/ ■ 11 4 marl j By JOHN CASEY State News Staff Writer !hu W IjJ !■ir; "A general feature of u ,1 : )j It ! FT: ' <'ft* Amid fearful cries that the computer de-humanizes people, reducing them to mere num¬ doesn't invest much in those who are society is that it poor » -}$\\ I or have communication handicaps." ftI : ISM bers on a printout, is a creative t man involved thoroughly with -John Eulenberg, associate professor ^ jaAaa . Jy . "de humanizing" computers in order to aid humanity. of linguistics and computer science "A general feature of society 1 is that it doesn't invest much in those who are poor or have communication handicaps," said associate professor of linguist¬ Eulenberg said. "Language is just tional thing — we a conven¬ agree to student with cerebral Jackson, a palsy. former student of ics and computer science John communicate in certain ways the Michigan School for the Blind in Lansing, became w Eulenberg. and agree not to communicate As director of the Artificial friends with Stevie Wonder, ' by other ways," he said. "It's more important who who has financed many projects - Language Laboratory in the in the language lab. Wonder * * # * Computer Science Department, communicates with who," he has from time to time express¬ Eulenberg and his student re¬ said. i 'A A i " ' 'I search team have created com¬ His interest in technology as ed to Eulenberg an interest in puterized devices enabling han- doing a benefit concert at MSU 0 f dicappers to communicate. One of Eulenberg's innovations has been the talking computer. bers" was undergraduate Massachusetts nurtured days in at the Institute his of to help the lab. Not unlike his work in the If t Slate News Photo by Rob Kozlofl lab, Eulenberg's life has been a used-anything will do, Fred Kletke of MSU salvage in the man to see. In October of 1975, Vicki Technology where he studied colorful history of "interdisci¬ Caruso spoke her name for the engineering and German litera¬ plinary ventures." He has been first time in her 17-year strug¬ ture. From there it was a a professional photographer in gle with cerebral palsy. With master's degree from Harvard SALVAGING THE OLD AT MSU the use of the talking computer modified keyboard contain¬ in linguistics, keying on the college (he met a fellow photog¬ rapher whom he eventually — a problems of a synthetic lan¬ marriedl, movie company own¬ ing a matrix of phrases and guage used through mechanical er and film producer. ink? All you want-and vertical and horizontal lights — the young handicapper formed "I like to document my Attending the University of more the message by selecting words from a display board. Via tele¬ phone hook up, the message California at San Diego, Eulen berg received a Ph.D. upon the projects into sight and sound presentations," Eulenberg said as he showed snapshots of his Iseanhickey Inside the salvage building Last summer, sifter the Jeni- Kletke said. "I was transmitted to completion of his research on recent work with the two-way ■tNews Staff Writer the various items are was waiting for you to call." a computer the major language of Nigeria neatly son Fieldhouse locker room was cable project in Rockford, Illi- The "I've known people that have on campus, which relayed the ■ that have washed a arranged along the walls and yard, which is open from — Hausa. This well-rounded remodeled, the back of the signal back to the vocal synthe¬ 1 hands, gym lockers the shelves which harbor an salvage yard became the home 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily, collects worked at MSU for 20 years sizer, where it was then con¬ background aided Eulenberg X harbored a perennial infinite inventory of doors, for two hundred lockers, but salvage from the almost 300 and don't even know that we verted into words. when he decided to combine Glossolalia, If ripe athletic socks and mattresses, desks, waste bas¬ now all that remain are a few. departme nts on campus in addi¬ have a salvage yard. I find it Eulenberg was heralded in technology and linguistics in his tongues, has intrigued him a toilets that have flushed kets, typewriters and adding tion to the lost and unclaimed hard to believe." Kletke said. pursuit to help the handicap¬ another aspect of linguistics. "We also had some salt brine many newspapers for his hu¬ ■ times are but a few of machines. items turned in by the campus per. He came to MSU in 1972, He cites a woman who claims tanks that came from a labora¬ manitarian work, receiving as But the salvage yard does after teaching at Stanford Uni¬ of oddities that line "You would be surprised at tory on campus a lid police. Ea ch term an auction is much coverage as his famous foreign languages pass through you wonder held to clear away have its regular customers and, her and is able to interpret ms walls and shelves of how many different things we what the hell hundreds of versity. someone is going "computer ordered" pizza in Ij Salvage Yard. sell around here. Why go out to use with a big;, ugly rusting unclaimed bikes. according to Kletke, they are 1974. "Alexander" the talking He considers his work in the their meanings. He wishes to the most persistent people he talk with her someday. | much for that chair and spend a lot of money when thing like that,' Kletke said. The has computer successfully placed a Artificial Language Lab as an revenue from the sal¬ ever seen. a prospective cus- you can get it here for less?" "Some farmer (looking for a telephone order to a local avenue for potential Kletke advertised. vage yard', which is usually gratifica¬ Perhaps Eulenberg's most feeder came along and they about $25,1)00 each year, is put "Some students after three pizza establishment, proving tion from a highly emotional timeeonsuming hobby is what rt, muscular man with The yard, which has been or four weeks of vacation come the viability of a synthetic were gone." into the University general packed job. Eulenberg has he simply states as "thinking Ir, dwarfed by a moun- in operation since the end of here right when they get back language. Amid operating fund. helped and been helped by J. J. about what we're doing." For Hgarbage cans, wheels World War II, draws all types a mountain of sinks, to see if they missed anything. I Eulenberg claims the compu¬ Jackson, a blind consultant at John Eulenberg that is quite a 1 contemplates for a of people, but Kletke says most lampposts and rusty radiators have had students come here ter is often used as a scapegoat. the lab, and Jim lot of thinking. Last spring, after hearing Renuk, a | then bellows, "That? of the business is from campus outside the building and near that the fall homecoming activi¬ two years after they have Through his work he has shown la quarter." the back of the yard was what the computer capable of bring¬ groups, students and various ties would include a bonfire, graduated. They'll arrive with a looked like a huge caterpillar ^aa is Fred Kletke, who other organizations. monster. Kletke began over the summer U-Haul and cart everything ing the humanity out of people. is head of the MSU "We had a pile of Technology has helped the han¬ light to collect all the wood that came away," he said. H Yard has been selling fixtures up to the ceiling last "That's dicapper rise from being the a dishwasher con¬ to the salvage yard. In the fall, Ting from old computers week that sold at a dollar "You have no idea what is out most politically weak group on veyer belt that came in from unable to find enough wood a ewriters to lampposts here until you come in," he said. earth to people with apiece. Some church organi¬ Brody last year. Every once in week before the bonfire, the t. zation came along, picked them a while when something breaks homecoming committee in des¬ o idea what is I be here until it comes up and zip they were gone," Kletke said. down on campuii out and rot) us for parts," peration called the salvage yard. Kletke promptly replied, 349-9560 • CONSC I that gate. Just yester- TV | T had three or four ans come in SEL! FORI pried housing and I just p to unload them i Michigan National Bank Kletke said as he point- FAMIIY-Sf I to the side I building. of the VIEWIN re working just like ■of little ants — taking Your Ci (the truck one by one." i the corner of and Harrison he Salvage Yard is the II thousands of miscel- I items that are recov* If from the MSU t [have«l long since served " purpose. Kletke's d the abandoned Do you want tolly? Face it you've always wanted to fly! Most of us remember that leeling and lor a lot ol us it has never gone away: You're in luck. Air Force ROTC can set you winging. Our Flight Instruction Program (FIP) is designed to teach you the basics of (light and includes Hying lessons in light aircraft at a civilian* operated Hying school. The program is an EXTRA given to cadets who can become Air Force pilots through Air Force ROTC. Taken during the senior year in college, it is the lirst step up for the cadet who is going on lo Air Force jet pilot training aHer graduation Air Force ROTC also has a scholarship program lo pay lor books, fees, and full tuition, along with $100 a month. This is all reserved for the cadet who wants to get his life off the ground . with Air Force flying. Major Ron Wo|ock Assistant Professor of Aerospace Studies PHONi: M5-21H, or M5-21M VISIT: Quonset 47. northwest corner of campus Mr Force IWTCfiitewiy to* Gnat Way ol Lift YOU HAVE A NEW NEIGHBOR: Come on over & get acquainted PRO BOWL IABT (next door (o Roller- world) is brand new and ready for you to start making those strikes. We're taking league reservations NOW; morning, evening and weekend leagues, for all ages, or form your own league. Apply now at New Pro Bowl East or at the old Pro Bowl in Lansing. PRO BOWL BOWLING CKNTIR 'bowling •cocktails ♦pool tables •dance floor Pro Bowl last 2757 East Grand River 337-1709 mi ; A44Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Welcome Week,, Orientatio whips 'em into shape By DELINDA KARLF. of the RAs. Kids the MSU struggle with MSU life... Unlike most dormitories on Students then proceed to WoiJ campus, Wonders Hall does not enjoy a well to have their deserved rest during the summer. Instead picture taken enroll for fall term fond it provides the setting for the beginning of a classes. OnoiP go through almost the a major transition in the lives of more than returning MSU students do at: 6,000 high school graduates — the summer Academic Orientation Program tAOP). Despite the compactness ofthe J briefly outlining the program. Then MSU At 3:30 p.m. students are required to many students still find time to Sixteen AOf's initiated the newly "The variety was good. It was a lot better que st ions about resident hall living. students. J President Clifton R. Wharton, Jr. addresses attend a meeting held by their selected than home." admitted freshmen between June 27 and "The meeting with the RA eased my the new students and answers questions college. After this session they may attend After supper students can attend several Aug. 3. With the help of 20 resident mipd," said Kathleen Marshall, 18, of "I met people from they may have, which range from academic a meeting of a different college, in case they different "special mnetings" — informa¬ ju assistants (RAs), academic advisors from program quality to rules for building a loft. are undecided about their major or curious tional sessions explaining Honors College, Northville, Mich. "She answered many said Kelly Method, 18, ofj every college and various placement tests, questions that were running through my "You could talk and learn a At 12:45 p.m. the first of several tests about other academic departments. lot the student is "oriented" to MSU in a hectic developmental programs and athletic pro¬ mi nd." just standing in line." begins — the MSU reading test and MSU Students have the opportunity through¬ grams. 24 hour whirlwind. This encounter with arithmetic and algebra test. All freshmen college life costs each student $40. out the program to change their major. At 7:45 the RAs pe rform their basic duty | The lreshmen barely have a chance to At about noon the last |te„ are required to take these tests. Students sl eep "About 20 per cent of the freshmen of the program — showing the freshmen before their alarm clock rings or their wearily from the Kiva. Behind! also have the option of taking chemistry and RIA knocks on the door to remind them hours of tests, At the beginning of each program about foreign language placement tests, depend¬ change their major during their AOP," said how to arrange a clt ss schedule. During a breakfast starts at 6:45 a.m. meetings, auk] 400 students arrive at Wonders Hall around Maurovich. sions, evaluation, rc 45 minute slide presentation the RAs 11:30 a.m. They barely have a chance to ing on their curriculum plans. The tests last computer forms. until 3:15 p.m. The only break from the hectic activity is illustrate how a hypothetical MSU fresh¬ After breakfast, the freshmen pick up open the doors to their room and drop their But the new students have no time to an hour for dinner, where many of the man prepared her fall schedule. The new t heir test results, see their academic "The program was suitcases before being sent to the Wilson ve relax between the first MSU exams. students get their first taste of dormitory students then return to their rooms to advisors to select courses and then go to Hall auditorium. gave me a headache," "There wasn't even time to go to the prepare a practice schedule. Wonders cafeteria to prepare their fall ci,,,,,,— food. Okkomen, 17, from ComstockPirM Once there, Robert L. Maurovich, direc¬ bathroom." complained Lisa At 10:30 the RAs hold "house meetings." schedule. Before they leave, their schedule Milostan, 18, Patty Rapin, 18, from Saginaw, said she haven't been given this moth * tor of Orientation Programs begins by from Warren, Michigan. liked the food. During these meetings students can ask is: checked number by number — by one school last spring." — ... while the folks take it easy and get (just) a taste of college By DELINDA KARLE using health facilities, how to obtain sports she said. beds and use the same facilities the Staying overnight in a suite with com¬ tickets and the approximate costs of books. Norrell explained how to read the test students use during the school year. plete strangers, having the opportunity to He also discusses the University's proce¬ results freshmen will receive at AOP. Then "The facilities were nice," said Mrs. talk to MSU President Clifton R. Wharton, dures on cashing checks and then briefs the she tells the parents to give their child a James Collins from East Walpole, Mass. Jr., and learning about life in a residence parents on the local banks. little extra love on the way home if their "We thought wis would have trouble hall is all part of every MSU student's "I personally thing it is good for students results are low. have their own checking account here," sharing the bathroom with the couple next orientation program. to "MSU would not have accepted them if it door, but we didn't." It is also part of their parent's orientation Levi told the parents. "They should learn to did not think they could succeed," she The second day starts early — at 7:00 as well. handle their financial matter by them¬ added. a.m. breakfast is served and at 8:00 a.m. the For the sixth summer in a row parents of selves." Several meetings follow where parents At 2:40 p.m. parents attend a presenta¬ parents are giver a guided tour of the newly admitted MSU freshmen attended a learn about student life at MSU. They are tion on academic life at MSU. James campus by a RA. After the 45-minute tour Parents Orientation Program (POP) at the able to talk to members of the student the parents may go to their child's same time their kid attended an Academic Pickering, director of the Honors College, affairs and residence halls management residence hall to meet the manager and tour Orientation Program (AOPI. For $11.50 tells the parents of the various academic staffs as well as representatives from the its facilities. each, parents spent the night in Holden opportunities MSU offers its students. Counseling Center. At the end of th e 24 hour program, most Hall and participate in a variety of activities "The resources are here for the asking," Parents then eat dinner in Holden Hall to introduce them to college life at MSU. he said. "However, the student must take parents feel they have acquired a greater just as their child will in their dormitories in knowledge of thei r child's future life. Some parents choose to spend the night in the initiative." the fall. "I have a much better feeling of what it more luxurious surrounding, such as the Pickering stresses that students are "The food was excellent, especially the would be like as a freshman," said Trippel. Kellogg Center or a local motel. and the faculty is paid to be selection," said Mr. Fred Trippel from "As parents we think of college as only a During the first day of the program Worthington, Ohio. new experience. This program has shown parents are given the opportunity to talk "There is nothing v for the faculty After dinner the parents are able to get me how scary it can be." with various people their child will encoun¬ than to have no one come to them," he another view of life at MSU. A panel of ter at MSU. After noon registering, they One father, William Kimball from New¬ 0 tf three RAs working for the AOP answered attend a meeting where Wharton answers town, Conn., was impressed by the adminis¬ Gwendolyn Norrell, assistant director of question the parents have. These range trative organization of MSU and felt the any questions they may have. After a coffee the Counseling Center, explained why MSU from bicycle theft to academic facilities at break the parents can talk to a representa¬ has its own tests for incoming freshmen, in MSU. POP was a terrific experience. However, his wife had one complaint. m 'k tive from the Office of Scholarships. addition to requiring a national test such as Parents are then free to explore the "The bunks were a little hard," she said. Since questions of money frequently the ACT or SAT. campus, tour the Lansing area or go to their come up throughout the program, Lowell "MSU has found that if the freshmen are suite to meet the couple next door who will Photos by Laura Lynn 1 rrvr*Ji Levi, controller at MSU, explains to parents placed in the right courses in the beginning, be sharing the suite with them for the fees, MSU's deferred payment plan, costs of it will maximize their success in college," Fistler ami Maggie Walker night. The parents sleep in the same bunk J Introdj ■Mpjjjp Wedge The i i f ' WELCOME STUDENTS TO EAST LANSING FROM THE NEW CLOTHING STORE IN TOWNI SAM'S STORE Corner of Abbott & Grand River 337-SAMS klgjn mote News, Eost loosing, Michiaon Welcome Week, 1977 A45 ringy-dingy for [id a more few bucks MoBell's coffers IsUE STEWARD MSU community by phone com¬ pany bill collectors. Not includ¬ Bell's endearing basic wall- ■ink, that once upon a mount black, cost the Universi¬ Stote News Photo ed in that by Rob Kozloff ■hev' were considered figure is the mind- ty $6.54 apiece monthly. This 1unsffordable to most. reeling sum students spend on amount is The MSU Cord then charged to Tike the horseless car¬ long-distance calls, which the Block, alive student room and board rates. again ta, irt of telephony has phone company says is difficult, But it used to be that if after nine years. if not impossible, to you |an indispensible com- compute. But if you spend about $20 or wanted to make a long-distance ,[ the American life- call, you had to leave the more a month in long-distance questionable comfort LsU? Likewise, with a calls, and people you know also do, then Ma Bell is doubtful privacy of your dormi¬ and skimming a tory room and go down the hall fMroorecampus, than 20,000 and an yearly $9.5 million from the MSU student body pocket. or down to the lobby to call on „ the pay phones. till which saps the These enriching or ■ impover¬ And if you think this is a relic Lv 0f more than (3 ishing figures - depending practice out of MSU history, i„ funds, MSU rates which side you're on acrue - you're wrong. It was kc state's most gener- from 11,680 phones in dormitor only in 1971 that Michigan Bell offered ies and married ■ons of Ms Bell. housing and the to collect the fees for long dis- ■that $3 million tab remainder in faculty and staff tance dialing, enabling students work quarters. The student ■begin to tell the tale of to call from their rooms. ^ney plucked from the phones, most of them in Ma But prior to this, in the early '60s, students could call from their dormitory rooms. The yU's magnificent University, however, had to CARD BLOCK, STUDENT FOUNDATION RAH IT collect the debts, which proved too costly — UP possibly because of general student reluctance to jnchie machines Spartan spirit returns to MSU be prompt with bill payments. Last year's phone bill can be broken down into several cate¬ gories. ■atricia lacroix •Nearly $1.9 million of the bill T News Staff Writer came from the service By TERRY PRZYBYLSKI compo¬ Jim Thomas, president of the East Lansing. The Foundation f chink goes the money nent, which is equivalent to the State News Staff Writer MSU Student Foundation, said will solicit the alumni for contri¬ to get something positive go¬ rally will be held at Landon s its one-way trip base rate phone bill for 'Tis the season — football ing." Field before the game, private the group was founded "to butions to MSU, which would as well money deposit slot, residence. It includes the use of tason, that is. A time for TG's, Another group, concerned le generate spirit at MSU and into the University's general as a victory celebration at [ down the vending phones and other service-con¬ pep rallies, weekend keggers, ultimately to make students go fund. with firing up Spartan boosters Landon Field after the game ft metallic corridor into nected fees. first and-ten and 45 yard field into better and more on one particular weekend this should the Spartans beat Illi¬ loyal The group will not cease fall is the ey box. Press goes the •Staff tolls for long distance goal attempts, marching bands, alumni." Homecoming Commit nois. However, the dance which operations when football season [g button, and presto... calls rang up another $656,000 cheerleaders, guzzling wine and One project that the Student ends, because it also sponsors tee, which activities is in charge of was held on Saturday night of wly, inexplicably, out to the bill. passing up people in the stands. Foundation resurrected last surrounding the last year's homecoming will not the Spartan Spirit section at x cream bar, candy •At 6 cents per call, calls made Anything, in short, that can be season, after an absence of Homecoming Day football game be repeated this year, accord¬ basketball games. Thomas said against Illinois on Oct. 29. ||k, orange drink or pop off campus but within the loosely filed under the category seven years, was the card block the group would remain at 300 Cathy Andress, a member of ing to Andress, because of some i selected by the greater Lansing area amounted of fun. trouble encountered at last at home football games, in students, the same as last year, the to $160,000. Here at MSU, despite the which more than 1,000 students Homecoming Committee, year's dance. minutes later, after •The fee for University direct although Jenison Fieldhouse is said the Homecoming Activi¬ The Homecoming m probation with its provisions of participate. Committee er has dropped the lines to Ann Arbor, Grand TV and no bowl games, and expected to be sold out for ties, with the theme "This will also name a "There was a card block back King and a wastebasket and every game this season as the Masquerade," will begin on Queen during the halftime fes¬ Rapids, Pontiac and Detroit t even a guarantee of a in the 1960's," Thomas said, basketball Spartans make a run ic food, he rarely, if was $68,000. winning season, football time Thursday night, Oct. 27, when tivities at the football game. "but it was dropped after 1968 for the Big Ten Kinks of his investment •Advertising in the yellow remains basically a fun championship. the Spartan Marching Band will "The Homecoming Commit¬ for lack of interest. We brought If that goal is march around the pages of the phone directory time, and over the past couple accomplished, campus, lead¬ tee was founded last it back last year and it filled up Thomas' group has plans to year after lite this seeming non- cost the of years a number of ing students to Wilson Field, there were no homecoming University $1,500. people on in three days." bring students to the NCAA across from the South n the part of the The other fees were for campus have come together to Thomas said any MSU stu¬ Complex festivities at all two years ago," basketball championship tour¬ residence halls, for a pep ner, there is much more dormitory disconnections, organize and publicize the fes¬ dent is welcome to join the card rally Andress said. nament in March. and "Yell Like Hell" contest, mling maching busi- hook ups and other miscellane- tivities. block. The group's first meeting The Homecoming Committee Thomas said the football similar to the one held at last meets the eye. One student and the MSU Student Founda¬ organization will be Tuesday, September 27 probation was a major catalyst year's Homecoming. is alone, there are Staff phone use around the heavily involved in generating at 3 in getting the group started tion, along with the MSU Collge p.m. at Dooley's, 131 On Friday, Oct. 28, the Bowl, comprise the Program¬ |aehines which peddle campus ments. varies among depart¬ enthusiasm for MSU athletics is the MSU Student Foundation, Albert St. last year. Committee will sponsor a Pop ming Board of the Associated im, milk, cigar- Another project the Founda "We were sort of depressed Entertainment concert, but An¬ Students of MSU (ASMSU). |i coffee. In addition, The Mathematics Depart which sponsors the card block tion has planned for this fall, and insulted that something dress said she did not know N 112 soft drink ma- at football games and the according to Thomas, is a "fall like that could happen to us," he what group would be They will have information ment, which has approximately playing at booths set up at Registration I which plug themselves 150 phones, has an Spartan Spirits section at bas call-up campaign" to MSU said. "But our idea was to not the concert. average ketball games. for any student interested Kiversity outlets, monthly phone bill of $2,000 alumni living within 50 miles of just mope over it, but to use it On Saturday, Oct. 29, a pep p average cost of be- general manager of ARA Food joining their organizations. with $200 of the total in long "10 and $1,500 (for Services, the main vending distance fees, according to a d models for milk, ui the wages of route machine company which has served MSU for the past seven Mathematics Department f years, and Herron said the spokesperson. | Ell the machines and intors to oversee the can easily main goal of the service is to provide what the people want The Department of Agricul tural Economics has an annual More than just your i lot of where they want it. phone bill of about $35,000. but money is that figure does not include the has the biggest daily Id up in the business, For this reason, it is the ■tether? people who use a particular machine who determine what is long-distance calls of various research projects. newspaper ft Herron, "ig machines on cam- manager of put in the machine, they said. A spokesperson for the de¬ selection of alpaca wool :h the Housing and partment said the phone bill it main I vending machines is Department, advantage of Coke generally comprises 60 per cent bought from of the merchandise any soft drink per project is near $1,000 per month, and there are usually knits in Mid-Michigan This Fall Tei*m eight or 10 projects going on at lence for the students, machine on campus, he said. M and M's are the biggest candy one time. at the lowest prices |'nd staff of MSU. ' building, most selling item on campus, perhaps because the students feel they 30 The State News, which has phones in the newsroom the State News (My, Oh no, we don't are getting more for their alone, had a bill of $18,000 for u in here,' " he said. money. the first 11 months of last year. > month later, they are Jmmplaining ■•alkali the Td such a building that they way over to to get ftfmfioifa Come see Brings to you.... K want." 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(511) 3141892 A46 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Welcof 'meVVl9» John Taylor: concerned about BP I the By MARTHA G.BENEDETTI de-emphasis of liberal arts "When I attended Princeton in the tie that exists between phy practical and real is neces creative capacity is ignited State News Staff Writer in the 1930s, an education in society and philosophy. sary to the formation of a good through the study of what has liberal arts was taken for After a summer and fall term society." he smiled and paused. been done. John Taylor's office held the sabbatical in Italy, Greece and "My colleagues' interests lie in "The paths may be old but silence of a church. The scholar granted. A person majoring in Egypt, Taylor completed his their application of philosophy the destination is constant," he ly atmosphere reflected the philosophy was able to express dignity and refinement em¬ himself through rigorous and manuscript of 10 years sub¬ to Isw and medicine. They deal said. "Good professors make bodied by the MSt' philosophy- profound thought and logic," titled "The Role of the Com¬ with ethics and bringing know the old paths interesting. Philo¬ professor. Taylor said, projecting an air of munity of Scholars in an Indus¬ ledge to bear upon the truth." sophical truths have to be intrinsic knowledge. "At that trial, Urban And Corporate Taylor's philosophical rediscovered with every gen¬ The distinguished looking time, a student may have Society," which he is conside- thought processes began at a eration." professor said that the student He sat composed and spoke populations shift away from thought about a career in law or ing publishing. young age. He felt a sheer humanities studies to applied teaching if he became a histor¬ "This is my examination of fascination with philosophy and without hesitation. The words humanities presents a dilemma. ian, but mainly students were how the scholar's role or func¬ it remains a passionate inter flowed, firm and prosaic. concerned with getting a broad, tion in relation to society has est. "We must show philosophy's "I regard this as a real rounded education." transformed in the wake of two Though he realiies the job relevance rather than assuming problem, not for me as a Also an art historian, Taylor world wars," he explained market for philosophy graduate «it is relevant. The question is philosophy educator but for the said the arts, such as literary proudly. students is poor, there are how to show its relevance. society at large. There are plays fiction, further enable Taylor served as chairperson redeeming factors. Unlike health or science, which problems of justice in society or or one to gain self knowledge and of the MSU Faculty Steering "The applied science people is justifiably studied because of human rights, and these prob¬ lems involve self awareness through imagin¬ Committee from 1966 through have, through learning, de its immediate need, what you ned abou ative observation. The audience 1968. This posilion put him in tached themselves to do things do with the study of arts and close touch with the turbulent through rote. The information letters has to be justified." decline in lil mis things the players or characters do not. The audience activities on campus at that the> have attained is often Taylor added, "We need to becomes more aware, through time. drilled rather than ignited show how philosophy comes to English depai "One can beti the plights, tragedies and joys There has noi been any one through thougly." bear upon what the University field, but at look of other people. major change in philosophy Taylor pointed out that one's John Taylor i hum i beir Taylor believes that the Col¬ between the '60s and 70s. he capac almost needed human pursuit." lege of Arts and Letters, of stated, but there has been a Taylor came to MSU in 1946 which philosophy is a part, is change of emphasis. Why Rent It When as professor and head of what (Vivernod with preserving the "The motives that cause stu was called the Department of ty providing dents to go to applied studies Literature and Fine Arts, an i on the and are an indication that they want incorporation of English and art object s of these skills. to bring themselves back into You Can Own It history classes. Since 1952, he "Philos not an absen- some respective relevance. has taught philosophy with an frot ociety but a They want to bring about direct emphasis in ethics and aesthe¬ in good life and good effects and philosophy's effects tics, which he terms "the philo are always indirect. The bene¬ society." he said. "We want to sophy of art." apply philosophy to what is fits are long-range rather than Born in Texas and raised in California, Taylor moved east to New Jersey and received a going on. Liberal arts do not just belong in the concert hail short range." "However, unless himself one gets philosophically right, all At Highland's Low Price! bachelor's and doct orate degree Taylor's book, written in the arts and sciences are a in philosophy at Princeton I'ni 19fib, entitled "The Masks of delusion." versify. Society" shows his avid interest "An effort to make philoso¬ |TsCiEKTiFiCALLV We're into J SPEAKiKGfl A" Zn& nails & make-up & pREDKEN nutrition 27 Professionals at 2 Full-Service Salons: "hairstyling "skin care/make-up "manicuring "nutritional diet analysis FRK CONSULTATIONS! Good Looks & Good Health SANYO COUNTER-TOP COMPACT COUNTER-HIGH We've got them down to a science. STUDENT REFRIGERATOR STUDENT REFRIGERATOR SIGOURNEY-JONES Fit, anywherel Quiet •• a mouael Handy freezer section ha, twin Ice traya. Sliding thelf, meat tray and | 88 Perfect tor rchool! Convenient worktop eurface. Full-width top *14 freezer taction with ice trays. Two ad|uatabla cold control. 2 year, •helves plui vegetable critper. carry-In aarvlca FREE! Gat the Hairstying for Men and Women "cube" that goat to collage at our Loads ol storage In the door, too! low price! Modal 4S01. Egg rack. 5 cu. ft. lor that big •upply ol snacks and goodie.! #140. 484-1491 EVERYTHING YOU NEVER EXPECTED FROM AN APPLIANCE STORE. IgOtfE BRiGST Day-In, Day-Out You Get The Lowest Prices From Highland's Audio Rooms mm BS BSR,R°fTTR0 Amu«»£ ,h®'n?U8,'y like' Pl°neer, Marantz, Sansui, JBL, TEAC, Tamon, U11 ral I near Acoustics, Akal and RTR, Ultrallnear, others. 30-DAY LOW PRICE WRITTEN GUARANTEE PROTECTION Buy from Highland. If within 30 days after your purchase you see a lower orice on the Z^!3^rolnVwHhar.eH7oh,l,rHUnf tou just can t go ,heuud' wrong with Highland price. a "erenCe We put plu' 10% 01 ,he difference It In writing. YOU GET SERVICE FROM OUR OWN SERVICE DEPARTMENT EASY TERMS ■INSTANT CREDIT BFREE SERVICE 1FREE DELIVERY I Li-nyin Stole News, Eost Loosing, Michioon Welcome Week, 1977 A 47 Yes... you can... and you can and you can.., By SEAN HICKEY circle shoulder toshoulder in an The "fast and reckless" method is open able. More State News Staff Writer field. After tugging, recently, Central Michigan Wide, round, slim, flat and firm clenching, pushing quite impressive when it is accom¬ University students held a Lap Game are and constantly but a few of the hundreds of readjusting, contestants plished, but the participants usually end which included 2,010 rear end turn to the right and participants and is very gently sit up in a spectacular display of enough recorded as a world record in the possibilities in a new game that requires down on the lap of the the participants to park their person behind body positions to fill a Masters and Guinness Book of Records. poopers in them. Johnson sex manual. another contestant's lap. The object of the game is to end The lap game craze MSU students got into — or onto — The recently invented sport, labeled up originally became with a circle of sitting the craze this past spring, but fell about the Lap Game, is more people which can popular in California, where, in recent appropriately either be done through the "slow and years, groups of up to 2,000 people have 500 people short of breaking CMU'i named the Can Game because of where the players more than often end easy" method or the "fast and reckless" participated in this far-out sport. world record. up. method in which everyone quickly tries Photos by Laura Lynn Fistler The game is played by Because there is no limit to the Will MSU try again? Well, it all gathering the to sit on his neighbor's lap at precisely number of people that can largest possible amount of people into a the same moment. play the depends whether or not people ai game, world record attempts are inevit¬ the mood to bottom out. |eseorcher goes after cancer i rough dogs and IBVPETEBRONSON ment for cancer victims may be selected immunology cases of bone cancer in has been m" stopped. In two or IN STORE family pet seldom is available if the recent k findings dogs, I've had very encouraging three cases we've had a corn- 1 as a potential flu of MSU veterinary medicine results. In half of the cases the plete remission of cancer in the jr heart attack candi- professor and researcher Ulreh metastasis, or spread, of cancer animal treated," Mostosky said. I but according to research- Mostosky are proven correct. In MSU's School of Veter- A veterinarian and radiolo j Medicine, dogs and cats gist at MSU's veterinary WAREHOUSE ■plagued by many of the school, Mostosky is doing can¬ 1 diseases as humans. cer research using a new drug Along the nation's top kil- known as MER-BCG. So far, Ifor both humans and do results of cancer treatment with the drug are fir animals are the various encouraging, Ji of cancer. Researchers he said. llhat the I animals ga incurable types with the same results that strike hu- His own twoyear study of the drug in cancer treatment looks promising, he said. "In application of MER-BCG 730 AM "Po>« Owens 1 - 94.9 FM • am-6 am" V SKI SALE successful treat¬ treatment to more than 30 1«nGOGGLES 11200 The Movement at MSU m OPEN DAILY We have gathered from all five West MC ski Michigan stores the greatest selection ever 10 A.M. TILL 9 P.M. Greet buys are here nurd from page 41) ment, poverty, hunger, racism, SUNDAV 12 TO 5 P M on every type of |quet is readying himself § future that he believes is neglect and inequality, there seems more little doubt that many will echo, rightly or hll Do nuts 10$ ski need ly so Selections will be at their best HURRY'"" ear protest, eac'1 e LADIES FASHION r nuclear power issue wrongly, Savio's sentiments in Limit 2 dozen really develop into a the years to come. tent," he asserts. "Look- Because parallel to the tide of i COUPON NOT VALID IN CONNECTION WITH ANY OTHER OFFER SKI SUITS in the road, war and peace flows the inten¬ COUPON GOOD 2-PIECE eight, 10,15 things are going to get sity of protest among the THROUGH SATUBPAY, OCTOBIR 1ST by GOLOLINE Itr lor energy. There is a THE LATEST IN FASHION LOOK populace; and certainly one ■ potential for organizing a may generalize that history has NOTHING HELD BACK SKI I of people around these •owe agrees that activism yet to display an epoch in which a single state or government has not demonstrated an infal¬ DUNKIN'^ 50% Oft NO PHONE ORDERS BANK CARD ACCEPTED BOOTS MENS AND LADIES jecially the campus vane¬ lible propensity for trampling ft* 1100 00 s' could spring up anytime, clumsily over the feet of the NOR IDC A SURPRISE ■ at a moment's notice. people in its mismanagement of »65w In April 25 of 1970, I the affairs of state. ftl by a Newsweek reporter, ■tsked me to was size up the SKIS «s ol student protest at SAVE UP TO 50% AND MORE JUST A FEW EXAMPLES OF OUR MANY SKIS Itold him there was no . ROSSICNOi CAIREA II Stuff it. pet for a campus out- Jl because all the provoca- ■ tad been removed. Then Jf the invasion of Cambodia ■ '•(Kent State ■ whin shootings, CROSS COUNTRY a week the entire 30 ffiawffwIOC C0M' ■" was on strike for the ■« the term." OIINMVICOMPSL SKI PACKAGES r ~ 'here is SPALDING PACKAGE a body of •» Which holds that the ftoent could come to life l* stronger than ever. ' b reminded of Mario .»• • leader in the Berkely ■"Speech Movement of 1964. 10 FUAUUIU 1 T Sav'° 'S a janitor, ob- HEAD YAHOO FIIISTYU , SKI KINDINOS rand forgotten. Thirteen 10 RM-NN-ftlN F sp> he summed JLUWRM »ir up his WAD YAHOO II ■"P this way: , rnoulmoRuxi „ , *37- • time )n of the machine he¬ when the PAciuOI PA* E ~r '37" ■ KASTU-K-n SAAW b|Rt) T0MUNF0U rn^ s° odious, makes you so fcg 1130 00 A DOOR BUSTS SPECIAL *OQU I* tit) OOUBJ- I" heart, that you can't "a" Can't even tacitly l ■tlTt iu i j youve ff°t to _ Rent AFTER SKI I ■Poti™, a'eS the "PC" the gears, GRABBER BOOT ■ wheels, upon the opon a|i the apparatu9i your own refrigerator., MAOE IN ITALY GENUINE GLOVE LUTHER - ALL II got to make it iff g0t t0 indirate to stop, just pennies a day. FEELS LIKE A SLIPPER iff thal run it, the K*"0 °wn it. that unless K,,.. 'he machine will be CONTACT: ■ 'ede,e;from working at all." •Compact yet spacioas itheff!y r ProblemsSti" of burdened •Same Day Free Deliwry ami P-U- 355-8111 SKI BOOTS unemploy- •Univ. Approved 332-4700 AU RRAN0I0 NMK8 MnSANOLAOKS •iMiptRSiVt ******** 10 am till 9 pm dally RAOKIN SIZES 000S AN0EN0S Only It" per academic year, plus tax, jupiissri I Cl],: o * told J insurance & 5.00 deposit (deposit re¬ funded at P.U.) rahop ,J . W-«ii j £ ********* Michigan Stole News, East Lansing, Michigan Welcome w.-i. mmrnmm STATE DISCOUNT Store Hours: Across from the ALL BRANDS, All Ti Mon. thru Fri. 9-9 Student Union limit 3 packs Sat. 9-6 Sunday 12-5 Phone 337-1521 ON FILM PROCESSING < DEVELOPING ,oo«R3io.nZ 20 EXP. REG. 2" cjiE.rn.iii REG. 1.E0 1.1M. uwn ■ BARNES t HIND i MAGICUBES 12Hathot 2M.REG.2.W stati coupon APPIAN WAY PEPSI-COLA PIZZA MIX 2.2SVALUC 12m. 155 • pack I 2/79' mmit1 expires im-77 STATI COUPON VICK'S HALL'S MENTHOLYPTUS NYQUIL COUGH DROPS COLD MEDICINE expires 10-5-77 expires 10-5-77 5 QUART PLASTIC PAILS PEPTO- 5 GRAIN TOOTHBRUSHES BISMOL ASPIRIN Soft, Modium & Hard CHEWABLETABS expires io-s-77 STATE COUPON state coupon state coupon STATE COUPON 3 PRONG 3 WAY STAY-FREE ELECTRIC CORD summer e\ CUBE TAPE MINI-PADS ADAPTER DISPOSABLE DOl state coupon stati coupon FABERGE ORGANICS MEMOREX PURE WHEAT GERM t HONEY CASSETTE TAPES SHAMPOO OR 1 CONDITIONER I Mot. RIG. 2.2S state coupon limits expires, STATE COUPON G.E. 9 FT. SOFT WHITE WALDORF listerine EXTENSION LIGHT BULBS CORD BABY OIL mouthwasi STATE COUPON CURLING IRON TIDE expires iq.s-77 LAUNDRY DETERGENT state coupon state coupon am. expires io-s-tt 149 state coupon STATE COUPON LADY LORA ' stat. coupon state coupon RE0.1.W I PONY TAIL ELECTRIC OR 1250 WATT UMITt EXPIRES I0.S-77 CUTEX VISINE HOLDERS KEY WOUND ETATS COUPON HAIR STATS COUPON NAIL POLISH REMOVER eyedrops ALARM WOOLITE BLOWER CLOCKS COLD WATER WASH RIG.1.M ' Mo*. state coupon MITI state coupon i2g-r7 13" RIO.t.M 149 I limit i ' SOLO umlt1 expires im-77 state coupon STATE COUPON SCRIPTO ; SHOWER MIGHTY MATCH umffj expires 1 GILLETTE VASELINE TRACK PETROLEUM CAPS BUTANE LIGHTER RAZOR WATER fto1 MG.M* 88 v I 4copREG.4.S0 EXPIRR* i«.«.n Welcome Week, 1977 STATE 211 East Grand DISCOUNT River 9-9 Across from M.S.U. Union Mon.-Friday Saturday 9-6 Sun. 12-5 337-1521 "PRICE BUSTERS99! I|sf HEATWAVE Too Hot lb Handle L.P.9S /tV Itops including: Boogie Night* Super Soul Sitter All You Dote Dial/Beat Ybgr Booty BURTON CUMMINGS MY OWN WAY TO ROCK SaVi Too Hot lb Handle including: Had A Lady Before 1 tAtlO El FA IEE SOCKS] including: _ On The Run/Sorry*) Say ■ TiteBomb/ChaeingCotourt/DolloveYou ncowoN INNEtj SHIRTS 54' n Joan Bui*: BhminAmy 5TYX 11II ( !■' \\i' : 1 s|i >\ STATE COUPON Time Rag- VICK'S rM . JpT 5^ s* ' Sailing * Many A Mile NYQUIL ® ' m A '&% To Freedom I ^ ^Rwet COLD MEDICINE i I" 1 .9# FLEETWOOD MAC Rumours Includes the Hit Go Your Own Way Also Includes Dreams TheChain Dont Stop n ixpiks in Songbird ^ARBR A STREISAND STREISAND SUPERMAN | U. ^ForMnMlNwYMMMtOINM IKf!®11, A50 Michigon Stote News, Eoet lominfl, Michigan FEW SLOCKS EAST OF CAMPUS Mill BMHIIB BlilAi VARIETY ran STORES INC. FASHION] MON-FRI 9am - 9pm SAT 9am • 9pm SPECIAL PRICES GOOD SEPT. 22 THRU SEPT. 28 Stainless Steel Plastic Shower Curtains Bed Pillows HOW TO MAKE A BARE Dinner Knives solid colors foam fill Dinner ForRs 512V 21" x 27" $069 L ea Shower Curtain Hooks ' WALL BEAUTIFUL Teaspoons 2 on a card metal or plastic Santa Cruz Thick 'n solid colors Thirsty A big blank ipoca itarat at you avaryday. It makes your room taam o Contact SUPER SPECIAL little cold S empty even if it's filled with furniture. Hopefully It's covered washcloths «f by o fresh coat of paint. If you're not one of the lucky ones, your walls Plastic Adhesive 69c Petting Soil have probably been marred by previous occupants. yd. hand towels t What a better way to ad warmth to a room and at the same time help over 50 patterns 8qt. bag reg. 1.19 87c bath towels »y» to hide Its scars than an interesting collage of pictures and mirrors. Frame snapshots of your friends and the special times you shared. Hang Coupon good thru 9-2B-77™ ~ them beside Interesting prints or among a series of uniquely framed mirrors. These little extras you add can make the difference between a Coupon good thru 9-21-77 "J" ~7u"gSSdTfiJ! *28-77" ™""d"Tu" a""1 I room that's just okay or a room that's really special. We have a wide selection of frames in a fascinating variety of sixes, shapes * colors. Our framed prints ore from across the continents as are our candles, vases, ash trays, mugs, bulletin boards t the kind of things that ad texture I color interest ( stationary. They're into a room. Stop by ( browse around. We know interject personality WASH j Floral Print you'll like what you sea. CLOTHS STORAGE PLANTS solids BROWSE 'ROUND GIFT SHOP 33' or stripes {BOXES big selection CLOTHS reg. ea. I regular * underbed reg. 59'*79' any in stock-big selection| Mon-Sat. 9:30am-5:30pm 332-5979 BUT 1-fiETI FREE j reg. 1.99 $J 2^9 BUY 1-GET1 FREE BUY 1 GET 1 FREE (limit o6 per cuiiomur; ^imiT customer) (limit 8 per customer) (limit 2 per customer) ^ (limit 2 per customer) j l"m —J... (limit 4 per customer) $ 1.00 OFF ON YOUR NEXT BULK IDRYCLEANINO ORDER* with this ad •4 minimum expires Oct. 7, 1977 OPEN 7:30 am-10:00 pm 7 HAYS A WEEK •One or two hour service if desired •40 washers 17 dryers •always attended MON-SAT 7AM-6PM By appointment or walk-in Specializing in long hair Relax and have a cup of coffee while you wait for your shaping & styling for laundry & try our homemade sandwiches, soups and chili. men & women . WELCOME WUK SPECIALS "Where you can have your hair cut the Hot dogs .39 way you want it." Corny Islands .49 Ham Sandwiches .£9 Wi USE A RECOMMEND R.K. REDREW PRODUCTS News, Eost Lonsing, Michigon Welcome Week, 1977 A51 ItHEY'RE ugly, slimy, dirty, but ... Scientists, scholars convene aches are also smart .LMACKSOOD "You can think of these Eisenstein said it can be This leg lift learning can be at summer MSU conferences SUfl Writer ganglia as minibrains," Eisen¬ demonstrated that this behav¬ retained for 24 hours in the stein said. 'They have the r,re fast learners ability to learn, remember and ior is true learning and not just headless roach. By ANN HOLMES grant college dedicated to public service." memories, but a reaction to the shock. Eisenstein is also interested MSU is a summer attraction for people who enjoy its natural The conferences focused on a control the animal's behavior." This is done by wiring two in short-term and variety of topics. The members long-term landscape and for students attending cheerleading camps, discussed such subjects as crystals, food I biopby»icisti the A single ganglion has only about 1,000 nerve cells so it is a animals in a series of circuit so memory. workshops and orientation. But it also attracts many national animal trainings and parasitic worms. preservation, crops, l|ence Foundation simpler functional unit that when one animal is shocked Eisenstein said there is evi¬ and international conferences for scholars. The conferences held this summer included tje National Insti- to they both feel it. dence that both short term and When most of MSU's students push their books aside and those by: the U (NIH). to name a study. The first roach's leg is long term head for summer fun members of various science associations American Society of Limnology and "We hope to combine electro- memory occur in Oceanography; the American Society of Mamalogist; the International Conference shocked whenever it is extend¬ roaches. invade the campus to further scientific progress in their fcisenstein, profes- physical, behavioral and phar¬ ed. The second roach's leg feels "If a protein synthesis inhibi¬ respective disciplines. on the Cyclitois and Phosphorositicles; the Fifth Symposium on liysics, has been macological techniques to get a the shock independent of what tor drug like puromycin is About 12 science conferences were held at MSU this summer. Animal Technological Training; the American Crystallograhpic handle on how these minibrains it does. Association; the International Conference on Thermal Electric¬ L learned informa- introduced you can block the The number of guests attending each conference ranged from X stored and re- handle learned information," After the first roach has transfer to the long-term mem¬ 100 to 2,500 persons. ity in Metallic Conductors; the American Phytopathological Eisenstein said. Eeruse by nervous Eisenstein said the ganglia learned to lift its leg to avoid ory," Eisenstein said. Clayton Wells, director of MSU's Office of Conferences and Society; the Society of Nematologist; the American Institute of The work is being the shock the two animals are This block can only be de¬ Institutes, said that the University's facilities and faculty Biological Science; the Combined Milford/Clarion Decenary L NIH and NSF. have a lot of autonomy, they monstrated before the learned Colloquim; and the 29th International Conference on Handling involvement attracts many conferences to campus. He said the can work independently of the Now if Perishable Agricultural Commodities. a good animal they are both shocked information has been trans¬ Kellogg Center and residence halls were available and that " Eisenstein brain and each other. One independently only the first ferred to the long-term mem¬ dedicated faculty members were willing to invite organizations Wells said that some of the conference members presented ■use it is » 80"! ganglion controls a pair of legs. roach knows to lift its leg to ory. to campus. results on research projects that may "For example, if you separate avoid the shock. Eisenstein has been working eventually get national or. "Many of these conferences are planned two to three years in international fame, but that usually the conferences were a pair of legs and a ganglion "This indicates the leg life in this field for 14 years, first at just ■jttle beasb- advance," he said. "But many faculty members are quite willing mutual exchanges of experiences and from the rest of the behavior is due to learning and knowledge. Ktrh the cockroach nervous the University of Oregon then to work on planning committees. I think that this reflects on the But for all of the interested persons who missed the Em is very much system this single roach gang- not to some sensitizing to the at New York State University qualitv of MSU because it enhances its reputation land as a conferences, it was a potential scientist's dream. T individual nerve lion can learn to lift the legs to shock impulse," Eisenstein at Stonybrook, before coming avoid a shock," Eisenstein said. Xnilar to those of It takes about 30 minutes for to MSU in 1968. Els both in struc- Eve impulse. the ganglion to learn this s26s [ said the ultimate a handle on this response. ■voiis system which ★★★★★★★★★★★ J„ understanding of 4 FOOTBAU PROGRAMS* ■advanced nervous * BASEBALL CARDS if a nth nervous sys- of a chain of J Bought t SolShop Curious Book d TJ S-J09 nning the length of im&I »2'9 -COUPON- HIS COUPON AND |S'WILL BUY A OLIDIPICI RIAMCONI at tiller's Ice Cream Parlor I It W. Grand Mver Comoro! Evergreen Expires October 30,1977 KVIRYTHINQ FOR YOUR SIWING NIIDS cottons, lingerie J. loces, elastics, trims, nsS sewing classes. lee's Seuring Shoppe 332-4311 Rd (Hailatt Shoptown) p need a facial if your skin is... 4lMM ve to cosRwtics P|hi t beiil m maun i skia aflrtl Iw 1 (iurtta rat cm M the «flma ittar m KICKSVILLE Mini-Facial Includes... ^^wnsasrtcapniu ^■beepiiaikB . Iran'15 .KuA. • unco^ bhepard's HEADQUARTERS bV appointment J1 !■#»«• f'ondor.North Side ol Kroger Bid. Mon-Sot Open Evenings campus 317 E. Grand River • 332-2815 A 5 2 Michigon State News, Eost Lansing, Michigan Welcome Week,, THE STATE NEWS CLASSIFIED ADS PHONE 355-8255 M HRU FRI. 8:00-5:00 Wm Classified Advertising Automotive M (Imnjcte Ifta] I Auto Service f/\ i frUft IflTI fapWwt [foplojini DATSUN 240Z 1972, automatic, YAMAHA 1973 650cc. Dull back JUNK CARS wanted. We pay THE STATE NEWS RESERVE YOUR job for fall now. CLASSIFIED Information power steering, air, just $2795; bars, excellent condition. 332 8445 more if they run. Also buy used CAMPUS PIZZA needs drivers DEPARTMENT will be accepting ,TTAKING«e ™ easy terms. BJ'S AUTO SALES Laurie, $725. WW 1 13) cars and trucks. Good selection of applications for telephone sales season f0,1.1 and counter help. Apply in person, IONE 355-8255 347 Student Services Bldg. INC., comer of N. Cedar and used starters and alternators. Call 1312 Michigan, next to Silver personnel for the positions: r— "* I Grand River, Lansing. 485-5497. YAMAHA 250 1972, excellent, 321 3651 anytime. C WW 1 I7I upcoming assistant. Dollar. WW-1 (5) school'year. Must be aggressive WW-1 17) helmet, chain, lock included. $350 and a good salesperson. Must be or best offer. 351-1563. WW 1 (3) MASON BODY Shop 812 E. ARE YOU WORKING YOUR able to work a minimum of 2 Kalamazoo since 1940. Auto paint¬ consecutive hours daily 1 day • 90C per line MALIBU CLASSIC 1974, air, pow¬ during 8 AVON OFFERS WAY THROUGH COLLEGE? No. Lines l 3 DAYS 6 8 3 days • 80< per line er steering/brakes, 350 2 barrel, 48,000 miles, $2700. 394-2721. Art Service |(/j ing Collision service. American- Foreign cars. 485 0256. WW-1 (41 a.m.-5p.m. Students only apply in person at 347 Student Services "V to earn e,„ 3 2.70 7.20 13.50 16.80 6 days • 75C per line WW-1 (3) MODOMAC "44" Earn money for S-WW-1 (10) spare and time. The it's a gre hcx^l 4 3.60 9.60 18.00 22.40 - — 8 days • 70C per line tuition selling experience « 5 4.50 12.00 22.50 28.00 TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS- N S R AUTOMOTIVE Employment TYPIST, KEYPUNCH Operators, company. Cal 6 5.40 14.40 27.00 33.60 1968 Buick $250; 1969 Chevelle BEAUTY CENTER world famous file clerk. Temporary openings. Line rate per insertion For further information call MAN¬ 7 6.30 16.80 31.50 39.20 VARIOUS RESTAURANT posi¬ $250; 1970 Ford $275; 1968 Chrys¬ Avon products. POWER INC., 372-0880. WW-1 (51 tions only those sin¬ .! now open, ler $150; 1971 Ford 4-door $295; MODELS WANTED 1966 Falcon pick-up $275; 1970 cerely interested in restaurants should apply, THE GRAND ZOOK, High $. Flexible will tram. 489-2278 Ey EconoLines • 3 1 ines - *4.00 - 5 days. 80' per line over Torino Wagon $295; 1969 Fairlane hours. No UNIFORMED SECURITY Ofticers- $250; 1966 Chevrolet Impala $250; 1146 S. Washington Ave., Lan¬ ex¬ part time. Call 641-6734 between 3 lines. No adjustment in rate when cancelled. ELIMINATE TUNE UPS. Replace 1970 Pontiac Hardtop $375; 1971 sing. WW 1 (5) 10am-3pm, Monday-Friday. WW- Price of item(s) must be stated in ad. Maximum Pontiac Wagon $350; 1970 Ford your conventional ignition with a perience neces¬ Piranha electronic ignition at sale price of *50. Wagon $150. Many other trade-ins CHEQUERED FLAG FOREIGN WAITRESSES, BARTENDERS, sary. Peanuts Personal ads • 3 lines • *2.25 - per insertion. to choose from. BJ'S AUTO CAR PARTS. 2605 East Kalama maintenance people. Apply at the ESCORTS WANTED. $6/hour. No 75' per line over 3 lines (prepayment). SALES INC.. corner of N. Cedar RAINBOW RANCH, 2843 E. CALL 481-6893 200 Street, one mile west of training necessary. Call 489-2278. and Grand River, Lansing. WW-1 Grand River. WW 1 14) Rummage/Garage Sale ads - 4 lines - *2.50. (17) campus. 467 5055. WW Z-WW-1 (31 63' per line over 4 lines - per insertion. 'Round Town ads 4 lines *2.50 per insertion. Before You Buy Call • 63' per line over 4 lines. - - VW 1974 7 passenger bus. Very NEED A GOOD USED TIRE? Lost A Founds ads/Transportation ads - 3 lines - M .50 - clean, excellent mechanical condi¬ tion. S3300. 339-2536. WW-1 (41 We have all sizes including standard FOUR SEASON'S AUTO & per insertion. 50' per line over 3 lines. VW 1975, excellent condition. Just $1895. Easy terms. BJ'S or radial tires, hubcaps and wheels. TRUCK SALES ' Deadlines ALL TIRES MOUNTED FREE I Used Cars Used AUTO SALES INC., corner of N. - Engines, Transmissions, Radiators Cedar and Grand River, Ads - 2 p.m. -1 class day before publication. Lansing Cancellation Change - I p.m. - 1 class day before 485-5497. WW-1 (51 PENNELL SALES publication. 1301 % East Kalamazoo - Lansing V" WE BUY JUNKED CARS Once ad is ordered it cannot be cancelled Chrqyrrrt 482-5818 or changed until after 1st insertion. Hours: Mon.-Fri. 10-6, Sat. 9-3 1200 MARQUETTE, LANSING 321-3651 There is a *1.00 charge for 1 ad change plus 50' per additional change for maximum of 3 changes. The State News will FOREIGN only be responsible for the 1st day's incorrect insertion. Adjustment claims must CAR PARTS , U4y be made within 10 days of expiration date, PEACE CORPS AND VISTA WE KNOW PEOPLE WHO NEED YOU... AND ACCESSORIES ills are due 7 days from ad expiration date. If not paid by due date, a 50' late service charge will 00R SPECIALTY. Consider volunteer positions in Africa, Asia, Soufh be due. We need Free advice with every America or anywhere in the United States. Several qualified people now to assist us in providing oi part sold. openings currently and upcoming for qualified in¬ patients with quality care. We offer an opportunity for the career 2605 E. Kalamazoo Street dividuals. Contact Bill Magee in Room 27 of the oriented professional who wishes to advance in Student Services Bldg. or call 353-4400. specialty, salary Automotive (1 mile west of campus) and personal growth with a progressively-minded organization. | Automotive A Call 487-5055 AUSTIN HEALY 1964.3000 series. FOR DELICIOUS ICED TEA place Mark II. Spare parts included two or $2500. 332-2110. WW-1 (3) three tea bags (dependent M.S.W. upon the strength you like) in a quart jar of water. Cap jar and let computer operator occupational therapist CAMARO 1975. 6 cylinder, stan¬ set in sun for several hours. For For The Best VOLKSWAGEN-VOLVO diagnostic radiology technologist dard. AM FM stereo, rustproofed. quick results when you have dietitian registered mrst 34.000 miles. Jim Novell, 616-459 9504. WW-1 (3) something you'd like to sell, place & MAZDA Service, See histolofist a low-cost ad in Classified. registered pharmacist COOK-HERRIMAN ;°u; VimlV". licMsad practical mmrsc skilled trades WANT TO WORK IN AFRICA? regularly •Completely equipped ihop medical secretary medical technologist altrasoied technologist patiemt food services management with all tha latast tools Job opportunities for all majors •Shuttla bua service leavta available through PEACE CORP. daily 8 a m. to Downtown Lansing & MSU The above positions require formal education in the related For Further Information Contact: fields with appropriate experience African Study Center Rm, preferred. 106 International Center. 353-1700 HENRY FORD HOSPITAL (313) 876-1811 AUTO BODY J&ftee Complete Colli! — ;C?"iston AMERICAN Cars and Trucks - FOREIGN 2808 W. Grand Blvd. Detroit, Michigan 48202 AND SPORTS Equal Opportunity Employer M/F I "Complete Paint Jobs I lacquer (Enamel & Acrylics) __ig«pert Color Matching) Using ■ I | Free Estimates COOK-HERRIMAN, INC. We Stand Behind 6e135 w Saginaw - jU8t west of Lansing Mall Our Work - Satisfaction Assured ■ Service Department open Monday Til 9 p.m. Welcome Back Studei 321-6900 Call 489-0113 205 N. LARCH - 1 BLOCK N. OF MICHIGAN M. J. MURPHY BEAUTY COLLEGE OF LANSING Fly the jet set. ENROLL NOW FOR A REWARDING CAREER CLASSES START ONCE A MONTH VARIOUS FINANCIAL AIDS, LOANS 185 mph and « GRANTS Quality Reconditioned at 220 the jet-powered .n Used Cars AH-1 Cobra gun- ship CLINIC OPEN TO THE PUBLIC See Ovr New Pall COMPLETE HAIR, SKIN & NAIL SERVICES Line of Carat FOR WOMEN & MEN OCT. 6th OCT. 6»h FlyMarine. •" : .V,ni to fly BY SUPERVISED SENIOR STUDENTS TheM J. MURPHY BEAUTY COLLEGES SALIS DIPT. we can get you • t h, !\ ?o0Uk' Apartments | Apartments Apartments GENERAL LABORERS If you are ^ t MESSENGER NEEDED for fall. M Wr0rk least on« ,ul1 day Monday-Friday (and have own Apply at State News Display FEMALE NONSMOKER: < LARGE SPACIOUS two bedroom EAST LANSING, 2 bedroom low¬ LARGE TWO party furnished effi¬ townhouses, across from Berkey. 2 BEDROOM duplex $205 month Advertising or call Sharon 353- er duplex, furnished, carpeted ciency. close to campus, air r,lTSL?lv in P"50"- 6400. Must have good runninq 1 year lease, 351-0359. WW 1 (31 clean. 351 5964. WW-1 13) ut.iit.es not included 1 mile MSU t"'m: W- manpower inc. 105 WasMehaw. downtown S-WW-1 (41 car. conditioned. $184 month. 351- 1610 after 5 p.m., 487-4451 0-WW 332 2110 WW 1 i3> Lan- SHARP 1 bedroom apartments, smg. WWJ_(6| across from campus. Large, clean, ARE YOU I4I FOR RENT. 3 bedroom home, ™|.S™TE DEPARTMENT is NEWS CLASSED ror Rent ~|f$: Free Roommate furnished. CLAUCHERTY REAL¬ TY, 351 5300. WW-1 141 LOOKING FOR- garage screened in porch, close to MSU LCC. typist who can looking for work from 8-11 a Service 3-6 Bedroom Homes HURRY... shopping and bits route. $195 plus security deposit a.m., Monday Friday. Other quali REFRIGERATORS-FREEZERS- TROWBRIDGE ROAD, spacious 2-3 Bedroom Phone 485 5060 WW 1 (5» ''"''ons dishwashers. ESCHTRUTH AP and comfortable. 1 bedroom fur¬ Only o few apartments are: able 50-60 wpm., love detail to type PLIANCES, 315 South Bridge, 332-4432 nished or unfurnished. Walk to Apartments left for the loll. EAST SIDE work and Grand Ledge. 627-2191. WW Nice Rooms ? Lansing. 3-4 bed can work in a beehive atmosphere MSU, shopping, bus, or 1 block to rooms, carpeted, stove and NEXT TO CAMPUS refrig Students need only 4 MAN apartment near Union, 496. 9 and 12 month leases. From LET erator Double lot 641 4549 WW apply in 4 person compact males only; $90 per month. Call $180 plus utilities. Phone 351-4745 apartments SeM7S,Ud- S— refrigerators- tv.s, stereos. Best rates, free 337 2669 10 a.m. 7 p.m. Z-WW-1 (3) after 5:30 or 351-4107. WW-1 (9) EQUITY VEST from SS&'niMth EAST LANSING near 5 bed delivery. dorm rental. 372- 1795. 0-WW-1 (4) ONE AND help you locate one rooms, 2 baths, ga'aoe. 3 4 acre 9 two bedroom furnished RIVERS EDGE ollingwood Apts. mini-kool refrigerator OKEMOS, ONE and two bedroom apartments, spacious and in¬ mobile homes on lake. East Lan¬ sing, 10 minutes. One child o.k. 351-1500 351-3305 351-5312 WATERS EDGE month lease $400 339 2961 after 6 p or WW 1 (4) expensive. Call 351-8135 from 8-5 Phone 641-6601. WW-1 I4I loir conditioned * »ho9 carpeting rental. S39.95 per academic year. Call 355-8111 or 332-4700 110 a m p.m. and 349-9217 evenings. 0- FEMALE TO share Brandywine APARTMENTS (dlitiwaiHer * unlimited parking till 9 p.m. daily). WW-1 (41 WW-1 14) EAST SIDE and Downtown-effi¬ apartment. Grad student or work¬ 1050 Watersedge Dr. CURIOUS USED (piuiit furniture * model open daily EAST LANSING close to ciency one and two bedroom ing girl. Ann. 351-1240 after 5 WW-1 '4t p.m. (next to Cedar Village) BOOK SHOP 2 bedroom furnished campus, units. Call 374-2800 noon to 9 p.m. 332-4432 furnished two bedroom apart¬ or 332-6741, ALCOLYTE INVEST¬ Hardbacks Now Rare Books leasing for Fall ments, 9 and 12 month leases. Call MENT MANAGEMENT. Our AIM MALE NEEDS assertive male for Paperbacks Paperbacks 351-8135 during the day and is to find you a home. No fees. apartment near campus Write Houses Magozmes Call 351-8282 Comic Books 349-9217 evenings. O-WW-1 (5) WW-1 (8) Jay. Box 31. East Lansing. WW-1 <31 £ Sports Items Books (behind Old World Mall en the river) Movie Items ABBOTT ROAD. 2 bedroom un¬ :e Ftctior Baseball Cards VILLAGE GREEN NEED ONE or two females for ONE OR two men needed for furnished townhouse. very clean. $300 year lease 351 6729. WW 1 apartment near campus, 332-4432. apartment, close to campus. 332- Science Fiction APARTMENTS WW-1 (3) 4432 WW-1 (3) Football Programs lake Mobile Hemes 1804 Hamilton Rd. Cedar Greens BOUGHT 4 SOLD Okemos we rent what you want Apartments 9 & 12 leases » and two bedroom furnished mobile mo. wson lake. East Lansing 10 minutes. One NOW LEASING FOR PALL Now Leasing Id OK. -On© & Two Bedroom —Furnished & Unfurnished —Very Spacious —From S17S-S210 Rhone 641-6601 CURIOUS USED BOOK SHOP CALL 307 E. Grand River 351-8135 s 5 pm Open 11:30-6 332-0112 349-4067 a. Special rate, MM LAKIAPARTMINTS 349-92 17 Evenings available far fall. MM0 Marsh Road (near Meridian Mall) FREI DELIVERY (oteoffi] rent-all 372-1795 1135 e. Michigan Ave. Lansing, 351-8631 ACOLYTE (next to Brody) Aim ★ Vlfkitt ★IhpiS ★loiirj facilities ★ Disposals INVESTMENT ★ Staf Cjrprtn *Air OIT YOUR KIT TO Welcome Back MANAGEMENT inc. HURRY... $153 plwe utilities Only a few apart¬ YOUR LUXURY ART. BEECHWOOD STUDENTS ments left for the fall Icovntry olmotphere is axcellent location. Close to IMSUand shopping fSdilities. Great for grad students AIM is to find you o home. •next to campus APARTMENTS Best of luck in Hand couples I -new managers this years 339-8192 or 655-3805 Houses and Apartments •2 johns per apt. 5 Blocks -furnished school pursuits to Campos No Fees -air conditioned -balconies 2 Bedroom Townhouses Extra Large 2 Call Noon to 9:00 P.M. -tree canoes Bedroom Units Roommate Service available -Spacious *2 levels EDEN ROC 374-2800 4 person apartments -Balcony -Dishwasher -Carpating -Modern $260 RIVERSIDE from *85/month ★ Air Condifioned Complete Investment Management ★ Furnished CEDARVIEW RIVERS EDGE Close lo Bos line Services ★ Laundry Facilities AMERICANA WATERSEDGE Cambria Drive ★ Ample Parking Joseph O. Miller — President APARTMENTS East Lansing CAPITOL VILLA' 10S0 Watersedge Dr. 351-5937 eFULLY CARPETED (next to Cedar Village) 1130 BEECH Reaume & Dodds 332-4432 332-6492 351 2798 e GAS HEAT AND CENTRAL AIR Management CONDITIONING COMITO e SWIMMING POOL THI e e 24-HOUR MAINTENANCE PLAYGROUND FOR CHILDREN "FUNPLACI" BURCHAM &toj>ttungl)am 2 BEDROOM FURNISHED LUXURY APTS. UNIVERSITY CALL FOR INFORMATION ^private balconies 349-4700 WOODS *twimming pool 'central air TERRACE 'dishwasher, disposal APARTMIHTS 'shag corpeting Located across Fall leases only — Special 12 month rates •Huraraa from Williams Hall. • lirMittoiiit Call 351-7166 Best location in town. • UtliiiM Pattiif Located ot Hagadorn Road just south of Service Road Students 1 S 2 bedroom as shouldn't have Fall Rates Studio I Br 2 Br , j Mmo* WESTBROOK APTS. low as $240 a month. to live in drab have openings for fall little rooms. >175 '198 '280 a2ll*«l ★ Air Conditioned studios $125 1 bedroom $145 ★ Furnished 745 Burehom Dr. 351-3111 ★ Various Floor Plans Treat yourself- 9-5 ★ UnfurnisheJ ★ Appliances ★ Laundry Weekdays - 'til noan Sat. ★ Air Conditioned ★ Tennis Courts Only 5 Blocks To Campus! ★ Carpeted ★ 10 mins. from campus 1147 W. Grand River 655-2642 414 MICH. AVE. 332-5420 731 APARTMENTS A special breed. 731 BwrW Dm." Welcome Back 351 7212 CAMPUS Quiet . . . that's what Whiteholl is. Curtis FORD HILL We seem to have the more serious Your Transportation Specialists students — the ones who want to live close to campus, but want a little Used CARS - $49." „nd „P *2 Bedrooms more quiet, serious atmosphere to * Furnished Apts. ease those long hours at the books. Two used car Lots— 'Free Roommate Service * Dishwashers • 1 or 2 bedrooms Fall line of new Fords— • 'Central Air Conditioning carports Large Parts Dept. - Complete * • Swimming Pool carpeting * Unlimited Parking • air conditioning Service & Body Repair Facilities •Pleasant Landscaping • fully equipped kitchens 'Special 12month rates • — Large Daily Rental Fleet community building • What does it take lo be a Marine officer' It takes strength, FREE BUS swimming pool agility, coordination, endurance. Intelligence, moral and Lansing Only - 48 HOUR From $195, hut and water indudad. physical courage II lakes desire, determination and SERVICE grit Above all. it takes the ability to lead other Marines under conditions ot extreme stress In v >■ Money-Back used car Guarantee Model Open 9-9 short, it lakes a special breed ol man Everyday Curtis FORD II you have what it lakes, well bring out the best 11 Contact Copt Tom Ryan Coll 372 1910. ext. 334 351-1830 leasing for Fall The Few.The Proud.The Marines? 3003 E. Michigan-Just west of Campus CALL 349-3530 "andMt. Hope Road 351-4091 A54Michigon State News. Eost Lansing. Michigan WelcomsWoek i UjmJB Rooms For Sale }[%\ [Mobile Homes | [ Rea[ Estate Ifel Service J^j JntoJjA) EAST LANSING furnished, 3 and COMMUNAL HOUSE one person 100 USED VACUUM cleaners. WE HAVE a special rate to NEW IN Town? Let me help you EQUITY LOAN if you are buying GUITAR. FLUTE, banjo and drum 4 man. Available September. 337 needed for large 6 bedroom Tanks, cannisters, and uprights. find a place to call home. Paul your home on a mortgage or own lessons. Private instruction avail¬ advertise your GARAGE or RUM¬ 9412. WW-1 (31 country location, 1 '/? miles from Guaranteed one full year. $7.88 MAGE SALE. 4 lines, for $2.50 for Coady, 351-8058, MUSSELMAN your home free and clear, ask able. MARSHALL MUSIC. 351- accu,a,eTi campus, $76/month f utilities. and up. DENNIS DISTRIBUTING REALTY, 332 3582. WW-1 (51 alK>ul our equity loan. Borrow 7830. WW-1 (12) 1 day. Call 355 8255, THE STATE AND six bedroom homes 332 1702. 6083 Porter St. WW 1 COMPANY. 316 North Cedar op¬ FIVE two blocks from campus. They are (5) posite City Market. C WW 1 (24) NEWS CLASSIFIED DEPT. S against your equity to consolidate your bills, make major home PUT A OOLLAR BILL half in Ind TERM "®U. papers" Weekend'JNl ,6 I furnished and have fireplaces. Call 361 8135 or 349 9217. O-WW-1 (51 UTILITIES PAID, free parking. WW 1 15) | Service )(Ay] improvement, take that long a- waited vacation, or for any other half out of your refrigerator and close' the door. If the dollar delivery. Sandy 8879^J CHEAP FOR Sale; luggage, vac pulls NEW, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, gar¬ Kitchen facilities, 351-7525 or 337- 7184. WW-1 (3) uum, and 19" TV. Excellent condi¬ tion. 669-3855. WW 1 (3) [lost t Full |(5 FOR ALL your ALDER AGENCY, 351 8620. 0 good purpose. Call FIRST NA TIONAL BANK OF EAST LAN out easily, you're leaking cold air and need new seals. Put lots of turn 0FF~HF4T~;-- age near Sparrow Hospital, $260 WW 1 (3) SING, 351 2660 and ask for Mr. extra dollars into your household 339 2961 after 6 p.m. WW-1 131 SINGLE, MALE student; block IF YOU lose something the first McDonald. 0 WW 1 (12) budget by selling "don't needs" Union, cooking, parking. 314 Ever¬ BLACK DIRT, sod farm soil. thing you should do is call for cash with 355-8255, THE STATE NEWS CURIOUS USED a quick-acting ad in bV this simple pr0cMS] 5 MINUTES to campus, 4-6 per green. Evenings. 332 3839. WW-1 Approximately 6 yards delivered ALL TYPES of optical repairs, Classified. son home, unfurnished, lease and locally. $39. Sand and landscape CLASSIFIED DEPT. and place a I00K SHOP prompt service. OPTICAL DIS¬ damage deposit, 484-7695 or 485- rocks available. Call 641 6024; LOST & FOUND ad at our special Hordbacks MSU CO-OP The Nursery School COUNT, 2617 E. Michigan. Lan¬ 8016 after 5 p.m. WW 1 141 GIRLS, DOUBLE or triple rooms in 484 3379. 0 WW 1 (5) rate of 3 lines for $1.50 for 1 day. Poperbacks sing. 3727409. WW-1 (14) in a country setting with a five Sorority House close to campus. S WW (6) Magazines acre play area has fall openings for COUPLE WANTED to share nice $495 per term, room and board. Sports Items 3 or 4 year olds. Call 349 3518 or house with vet student and hus¬ Call 332 0447 or 337 2479. 2 WW Animals Comic Books FREE...A Lesson in complexion care. Call 484-4519 East Michigan 337-9207. WW-1 (6) band. Close to MSU, bus. $175/ month . 351 4566. WW-1 I4I . 1 14) GIVING AWAY A black and white f Personal"]!/1 Science Fiction and much m or 321 5543 Lansing Mall. MERLE NORMAN COSMETIC STUDIOS. PORTUGUESE/ENGLISH basic CAMPUS NEAR, for senior and male kitten, grey and white female GUARANTEED WEIGHT Control kitten and one black and white CWW-1 (4) grammar and conversation, chil¬ QUALITY HOUSES and duplexes, graduate women. Large, nicely program. Abundant nutrition. Feel dren or adults. $5.00/hour. Phone 3 7 bedrooms, campus near. From furnished room. References. Call female cat, year old. Call 393-1794. healthier. Call 676-4625, 8-5 p.m.; HORSE NAIL HOLES IN WHITE WALLS 641 4007. WW 1 14) $350 month. Also private rooms 332-1746 after September 3rd. S WW 1 (5) BOARDING. New low 489 1802 5-11 p.m. O-WW-1 14) can be quickly and easily hidden and 12 bedroom apartments. WW-1 (4) rates. 3 miles from MSU. Box stalls. Indoor arena. Tack store. by filling with white toothpaste. LOWER YOUR THERMOSTAT a 332 1946. WW 1 151 ELEVEN YEARS SLICTROLYSIS British Horse Society instructor. Household appliances can be ex¬ few degrees when you go to bed eiM„" ■ SPARROW NEXT door. Students, TtwONLY HOUSES, HOUSES, HOUSES-lf nurses, four bedroom, decorated, 337 2791. WW-1 (5) changed for cash quickly and at night. This is an easy way to '"9 theses. manu2»| you haven't found a place to hang permanent 19 yrs. experience easily when advertised in Classi¬ conserve energy and reduce your Papers. Evenings SJ your hat yet for this school year carpeted, partially furnished. Call liair 'FACIAL 'BODY BUY JUNK cars and haul all kinds fied. fuel bill. The easy way to find a WW-1 (121 9 ' 675 *1 351-8810 or after 5 p.m. 351-0676. cash buyer for items you no rail us at 374 2800, noon to 9 p.m. WW-1 (5) remember our ECONO LINE SPE¬ removal! ,HAIRUNES of trash and steel. Call anytime at longer or 332-6741, ALCOLYTE INVEST¬ MENT MANAGEMENT, Inc. Our ROOM IN quiet family house, CIAL 3 lines for 5 days for $4.00. Call 355 8255. THE STATE NEWS Virginia Hanchett, R.E. 2017 S. CEDAR. 444-1632 332-1760. WW-1 (3) [~ Instruction need is with a low-cost Classified. ad in TYPING, EXPER^d reasonable. 371 4635 c" AIM is to find you a home. No CLASSIFIED DEPT S WW 1 (6) FOR QUALITY stereo service, PIANO TEACHER seeks students. fees. WW 1 181 cooking, parking, call after 5 p.m. THE STEREO SHOPPE, 555 East 351 9043. WW-1 (3) Experienced, certified. Evenings, AVAILABLE NOW! Near Spar¬ Mobile Homes BhimhIf Ikw-fifnl remits resMji }g( i i likl Grand River. C-WW-1 (12) persistently 332-6089 WW-1 131 Betty's Bridal Cakes & row. sharp. 4 bedroom house. Call L For Sale Qt COMPLETE REPAIR service for Rare Books Wilton Decorating SuppljJ 351 4107 before 5 p.m. O-WW-1 MARRIED STUDENTS only 10 PLACE A PEANUTS PERSONAL stereo's, TV's, guitars, banjos, CONCRETE BLOCK and brick for ad to welcome back a special band instruments. MARSHALL minutes from campus. Richardson Paperbacks Custom cakes, many do-it-yourself bookshelves. CHENEY CONCRETE CO.. 2655 E. See 1973, 14 x 60, shed, deck, central friend! Our special rate is 3 lines MUSIC, 351-7830. WW-1 (14) Comic Books All banquet and varieties, 8tlavors| EAST LANSING fall, 4 bedroom duplex Appliances, washer dryer. Grand River, E. Lansing. 337-1381, air 372 4795 after 6 p.m. WW-1 for $2.25 for 1 day. Call 355-8255, birthday supplies. WW 1 (5) (5) THE STATE NEWS CLASSIFIED Movie Items No pets 332-3746. WW 1 13) DEPT. S-WW-1 (6) Baseball Cards Also, private or group cake dJ SEWING MACHINE SALE' Open GOOD 8 x 26' for student or NEAR PENNSYLVANIA, off Kala arm Dressmaster. Stretch zig-zag sportsman. $900 as is. New metal Science Fiction orating lessons starting Oct. | mazoo, 3 bedroom, $175 month. Classes limited 351 7497 0-WW 1 131 by White. $119.50 while they last. EDWARDS DISTRIBUTING CO.. shed and floor for $110. 353 5143; 339-3630 WW-1 I4l Mafic Addict? Football Programs so register soon! I HAGAD0RN ROAD-lovely brick 1115 N. Washington, 489 6448. International Menu 0|*HI«i-fri.!W,SitH C WW 1 121) BOUGHT 8 SOLD home. 3 bedroom, large yard, Quality used LP's & Opw HOSI meiits: plusi ptat first DAILY ETHNIC SPECIALS $350 month. 351 7497 O-WW-1 Two • Five Man cassettes. CHEAP. NEW, USED and vintage guitars, 'CHINESE 'MEXICAN Guaranteed. Rock, soul, 1115 banjos, mandolins, etc. Dulcimers Houses • GREEK 'ITALIAN Hagadorn, Mason AVAILABLE NOW1 Two 5 bed¬ and kits, recorders, strings, acces¬ classical, jazz, blues, 'FRENCH 'EAST INDIAN room houses, within walking dis¬ sories. books, thousands of hard- East Lansing country. SUNDAY-SPAGHETTI 676"43M tance of campus. Call 351-4107. to-find albums. (All at very low or Lansing 0WW-1 (15) prices). Private and group lessons Clean, modern and ALL YOU CAN EAT FBC Recycled Sound on guitar, banjo, mandolin, all furnished. FULL SERVICE GROCERY styles. Gift certificates. Expert CURIOUS UtID TWO. THREE, four, five, six, HEALTH FOOD • OILS • VITA¬ repairs-free estimates. ELDERLY Upstairs 541 E. Grand Rivar BOOK SHOP seven bedroom houses. 2 in MINS • NUTS • DRIED FRUITS INSTRUMENTS. 541 East Grand Open 11 am Mon-Sat country, rest campus, close. 676- River, 332-4331. C WW 1 (49) Call •CHEESE • TEA • COFFEE 307 E. Grand River 3780 WW 1 '41 351-0838 •HERBS 4 SPICES 332-1800 372-1800 Open 11:30-6 OF DOMESTIC | DUPLEXES FOR Rent. 3 or 4 $$$ TOP DOLLAR PAID$$$ 225 ANN ST. 351-6230 332-0112 person, furnished, available Sep¬ for stereo components, TV's, AND IMPORTED tember 669-9939 WW-1 13) CB's, cameras, guitars, amps, For all your typewriters, calculators, tools, calculating needs. HOUSES AND duplexes with 1 to 5 bed rooms near campus, no pets, jewelry, guns, stereo albums, an¬ tiques. WILCOX TRADING POST- BUY DISCOUNT CALCULATORS WINES - SELL - TRADE - 509 East CLAUCHERTY REALTY. 351- 5300 WW-1 (41 Michigan, Lansing. 485-4391. C- WW-1 (9) Guaranteed Lowest Prices In Town UNIVERSITY VILLA For scientific, gineering, business, statistical, etc. programmable, en- J DICKER & DEAL ADDITIONAL SAVINGS Single Rooms *15 Abbots T'xax Inlfrumenft, Casio Hewlett-Packard. and Efficiencies —98 12 month leases Klngipalnl HCOND HAND STOM ON ANY 12 B01JUS —Two Bedroom furnished apartments Furnished, kitchen, —Under new ownership & SPECIAL CASE Oil visions for your living quarters, at pr porking. Clean, very budget. PARTY SUPPLIES close to MSU. CALL But that's not all. We also carry c< Call 351*8135 85PM sporting gear, jewelry, tools, as well i is other it. So whatever you're looking for. see us first, it will and 5$. save you fir THE 332-1800 372-1800 3 49*9217 EVENINGS ALSO SEE US FOR TELEVISION & STEREO REPAIR HOURS: n BEVERAGE 0UTLE Trading Post MATERIAL AVAILABLE FOR BOOK SHELVES AND LOFTS Michigan's Largest Dealer Gun 1701 SOUTH CEDAR NORTH OF MT. HOPE 882-2661 Includes: 4 x 4'$, Plywood, >v:SportinyUonds FREE PARKING ACROSS ST. 2832 SOUTH CEDAR Boards. ,)ewe|„ l«r..||.i.tfiw«b HASLETT LUMBER "ro|»»n«»nts Ttxils Antiques 487-3886 OPEN 7 DAYS 9AM-10PM COMPANY rl >":> I486 Haslett Rd. BUY-SELL-TRADE Stem Haslett, Mich. MATERIALS CUT TO SIZE! 509 E. Michigan Lansing • 5 blocks East of Capitol 0 ViDiscount to M.S.U. Stiulenl 339-8236 Ph. 485-4391 UNIFORM CITY FRANDOR SHOPPING MALL Welcome Back To Whalen's Bargains Radios, Televisions, Stereos, Housewsres. Appliances, Photo Equipment. Luggage, Sporting Goods, Gifts, Hours to Suit Your Needs Monday Thru Saturday 10am-9pm Sunday 12-5pm Priced from OPEN WON. IFRI. Till 9 PJL UNIFORM IANSINO WHALEN'S 2709 W. MICHIGAN IN FRANDOR MAU No'th Side ot Kroger hi.. Master Charge - Visa Wclco I frlgnn Stote News, Eost Lonsing, Michioan Welcome Week, 1977 A55 |rAPHSEP. -E complete . „r-n C mmnlntn Mccn a nm,--.... NEED A RIDE' Want riders to round town ^ help Resume, KM and ,esume I*™06 ease costs? We have a special IM A.C. and G,3nd R£?,r TRANSPORTATION rate to help Ivj Monday-Friday. 337- X01.! 2^1' 2J'nes for $1 50 Call 355 1 day |>11'61 8255, THE STATE NEWS CLASSIFIED DEPT. S-WW-1 17) m'rED IBM 'vpinfl- Dis" JN,pica elite) b C WW I IbaPEWES CLOSED yyhen 131 FAY ANN. Need a new or better car? miss the many great auto ,he C|assjfjed Don't buys pagej FOR A LONG-LASTING choose hardwood logs that pro¬ duce a shorter flame and burn less rapidly than soft woods. If is the most EIRE, ?J(iesLs, „1 need light. Windows are important considera¬ u. (or 26% of heat loss, tion, select wood from fruit trees. flow cost ^Ksse/ttation If you ad in Classified have fireplace logs for sale, find buyers the quick and ou want to exchange LIONEL TRAINS and easy [id merchandise for cash. made before 1966. Phone accessories 332 way with a low-cost ad in Classi¬ fied . 0096. WW 1 (31 JVVN PRINTING AND SEWING MACHINE SALE-Guar it Dissertations, resumes, Se/a/ices anteed used machines. Complete¬ COMICS BOOKS, magazines ■ onntmg Serving MSU for wanted. ly reconditioned. $39.95 and up B with complete theses CURIOUS BOOK SHOP EDWARDS DISTRIBUTING CO. 332 0112. C-WW-1 131 1*349 0850. C WW 1 1191 '115 N. Washington, 489-6448 C 1 8-31181 fcjcome bock oni TO ANNOUNCE that LIGHTNING LITHO j luck to the NEED CASH? special hap¬ pening or event, place a ROUND photocopies 3.5® |,y people I've had TOWN ad at our special rate of 4 Printing 1 lines for $2 50' for 1 day Call Quick As A Flash opportunity to Choice ot Free LP when 355 8255. THE STATE NEWS 2711 S. Cedar 394-2995 L this past year in you sell us records or CLASSIFIED DEPT. S WW-1 (61 626 E. 2\\ Michigan Ing or selling cassettes. paid! Top prices Y.W.C.A. BINGO TBOuTT 371-3 ■rhome. 1 Paul Coady Wednesdays 1-4 P.M. FBC FOREIGN STUDENTS Recycled Sound Early Birds 12:15 hisselman realty 217 Townsend, Lansing English problems shouldn t keep you from getting 1.3582 351-8058 Upstairs 541 E. Grand Rlvar All proceeds to Y.W.C.A good grades. Editing,proof reading by PhD candidate T 322 Abbott Rd. Opan 11 omMonSat 351083# BINGO TUESDAY in English and Linguistics 7 yeors U.S. and abroad. Night, 7:o„ |l outside Abboft Rd. p.m. Doors open 6 p.m. Early bird Private tutoring also available. entronce starts at 7 p.m. Regular at 7:30 P m Minimum age 18. SHAAREY Call Mis* Peterson ZEDEK. 1924 Cootldge. East Lan¬ Leo's Continental sing C WW-1 (5) at 485-5065 and leave message anytime. Coiffures Tuesday night is announces BINGO NIGHT biggs Early Binl 7 p.m. Regular 730 p.m. Solar Hair bp SHAAREY ZEDEK for fall styling ¥ 1924 Coolidga, e. Laming FIRST BAPTIST Church SBC printers holar Hair will have an open house at 9 September 25th Following will be p.m BUSINESS & SOCIAL PRINTING ■rom the sun) a suoper for students. WW 1 141 "No Job Too Small or Too Bigg" l|es that create Mailers-Pamphlets Offset & Letterpress Tergy-filled feel- ]g$ of vibrancy Mil Flyers-Etc. 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A56Michigan State News, Eost lominfl, Michigan THE CLASSIFIED DEPT OF THE STATE NEWS is located at 347 Student Services Bldg., open Monday thru Friday, 8a.m.-5p.m. (open thru lunch hr.) and we are ready to serve you throughout the year in the following ways THE CALENDAR THE YELLOW PAGE CLASSIFIED DISPLAY SPECIAL PROMOTIONS Upcoming specials you c look forward to this fall are,, ★ Halloween promo Published the first class day of every month. A full showing all you ghosts &g page blins feature, on durable paper wandering arou with a hint of color, is an ex¬ places to pick-up the n cellent pull out and save item. Business Service Offers PRIME position in a things you need to give yo Directory, An inexpensive way to deco¬ designed as a convenient high readership section. For party or costume the Ha rate a room or office. Also guide to save you time and that extra emphasis in ween spirit. Also indud rentals, employment, Halloween peanuts person provides the following... money. Published each Thurs¬ or sell¬ so you can * Various businesses are day to help you find depend¬ ing, Classified Display is convey your t' where your potential cus¬ or treat message. features daily able businesses and services. tomers will be ★ Hunting Season secti * Holidays (common & shopping. where to buy your supp unusual) * Sporting events and where to use them. ★ Resume ★Academic dates, i.e., last guide-publish twice during the term, toh day for drops you give that professional i pression. FOR MORE DETAILS FOR MORE INFORMATION FOR ASSISTANCE FOR MORI DETAILS CALL BARB 355-8255 CALL CAROLYN 355-8255 CALF 355-8255 (ALL ROXANN 355-81 To Place Your Classified Ad Call 355-8255 GET THINGS ROLLING WITH THESE USE THE CLASSIFIED SPECIAL LOW RATES ADS JUST SOMETHING TO SELL MAIL IT ( ECONOLINE ADS FOR wish to sell or • give away for those items under *50 that you PEOPLE REACH 3 lines ■ '4.00-5 days WANT AD RUMMAGE SALE ADS 4 lines • '2.50-oim day • to announce that big sale OF IT! 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'til6 pm ' Cowhoy Boots ' Sat. til 1 pm occasion to remember! House Slippers M GOLF COURSE TYPING SERVICE AUTO SERVICE bicycle Completely * — assembled ft ser- Problem HIOHLAND HILLS viced-plus Life¬ ChtelMliaNilla BUD'S time Guarantees :gnancy GOLF CLUB ANN I 1-1560 24 Hours f OoH Cearsa typing (marital 10BLEMS? I 2397 S. Washington Rd. GREEN FEES 9 holes -'2.50 Banquet Facilities tor wedding Receptions 300 people P experienced WTO PARTS, NR. ...the finest EEDTOTALK? | 11 holes -'4.00 SERVING CATHOLIC All Day-•<.00 reasonable rates MSU 'Fast 8 Reasonable at prices you catered meals * LATE MODEL | SOCIAL Make reserved Tee Time 2 Miles from Campus CRVICES for Sat., Sun. & Holidays cocktail lounge orner of US 27 North and COMPLETE THESIS SERVICE *60" per page MOTORS AND PARTS A SPECIALITY can afford! WCanHelp' — Call 694-0169 on Thurs¬ Alward Road 371-4635 694-2154 Hallway pesw4*n Holt 6 ill 372-4020 days for reservations. Phone 669 9873 Miion on 19. 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Holt 4:30-1:00 Sun-Thurs Hours: 882-2411 Cedar, Lansing 4:30-2:00 Fri-Sat 5214 339-8246 1561 Haslett, Haslet otre Dame, ■M: the old 2 knockout? By TOM SHANAHAN But despite being outmatched, Rogers says the Sutc News Sports Writer Spartans will be ready- and that he himself is 'bail ti'am would relish the opportunity more involved in the rivalries than last year ,n(j have rivalries with prestigious when he was in his first year at MSU. ms such as Notre Dame and Michigan, "When you play two great football teams bat opportunity, but back-to-back ... back-to-back the tendency for football players is that they don't let down," Rogers said. "There's „ the Spartans head into this brutal no question that the rivalry between Michigan end and this year could be the worst and Michigan State means a great deal more and be playing the two national powers. is more intense for me this year. Reading about a rivalry means nothing until you are personally he national championship. But then involved in it," he explained. means it's the best time to upset them, Indeed, it is reminiscent of a similar statement n State schedules have been tradi- made by Schembechler after MSU upset the renuous." MSU head football coach Wolverines. And Schembechler has not lost to »ers said. "Last year we played Ohio MSU since then. „[e Dame and Michigan in the first five "I felt we grew last year and learned a lot as jfhigan State has its basic big games in we played both teams," Rogers said. "It is an or five games then pays the price," opportunity when you are rebuilding to have our football players realize how good they have to be. Spartans do get a break to rebuild "The crowds are a big advantage and the s before playing Ohio State again two Michigan State crowd will help us." But that is all the crowd can do. It will take MSI' tends to come out of the big more than a boisterous crowd to beat Michigan at , injured and happy to meet the Spartan Stadium this year. Ten, the Spartans have had more "The first thing you've got to have is do _ any other school. everything right," Rogers said, getting down to MSI' upset Notre Dame at Spartan the basics. "You also have to be emotionally nd beat the Irish on the road in 1975. charged up and prepared to play. But if both ms upset in 1969 — which was coach teams are prepared, the team with the superior Lcchler's first year at U-M. Then came personnel will win. Emotions can carry you but a State upsets of 1971,1972 and 1974 that lot depends on superiority. the NCAA controversy between the "It doesn't do you any good to be emotionally or is it between Woody Hayes and charged in the first quarter and then get the - (continued on page 6) ew basketball era dawns on players and fans But other Big Ten teams also capture top recruits There's going to be lines of fans waiting for season basketball By TOM SHANAHAN tickets at MSU this year, something the MSU ticket signing," Heathcote said. "But we think we're a been Lansing's all-time greatest player had it not managers State News Sports Writer are not accustomed to. But MSU assistant athletic good basketball team and we have more good been for Johnson playing at Lansing Everett; director in Everybody already expects it. players than last year. Whether we'll be good Len "Ice" Williams, the highest scoring guard in charge of business, Bill Beardsley, says they should be able to The MSU basketball team behind 6-foot-8'/i handle the ticket demands for seats in 9,800 seat Jenison enough to win the Big Ten is questionable Chicago public school history; Sten Feldreich, a freshman sensation Earvin "Magic" Johnson because what it takes to win the Fieldhouse. Big Ten is still 7-foot center who has international experience on should lead the Spartan basketball team from experience and we hope we have enough to blend Sweden's national team; 6-foot-7 forward Rick The basketball tickets will be sold in two series of six games last year's sixth place Big Ten finish to the with our new players." Kaye of Detroit Catholic Central; and 6-foot-4 each. The tickets will also be sold on a reserved basis instead ol conference championship and into the NCAA And high school ail-American Johnson, rated forward-guard Mike Brkovich of Windsor, Ont. general admission. tournament. one of the three best high school players last Heathcote also adds that Ron Charles, a Basketball tickets will be sold on a class standing priority Indeed, it would be a miraculous turnaround. 6-foot-7 forward voted the most improved player basis (as the football and hockey tickets are) and year, is the kind of player to blend with. tentatively MSU basketball couldn't have been darker last "The charisma and enthusiasm for the game last year, is also going to improve the team. will go on sale the week of Oct. 3. year when first year coach Jud Heathcote took that Earvin has is almost contagious to the over a team racked by transfers of the junior Another turnaround in the basketball program Hockey is becoming a perennial sellout at MSU and the team," Heathcote said. class recruits and the fact that only Edgar will be a full Jenison Fieldhouse to watch the season hockey tickets (sold in two series of 10 games each) are Wilson, Greg Kelser and Bob Chapman had any "People love to watch Earvin play because he awesome Big Ten games this winter. tentatively going on sale the week of Oct. 17. experience. makes basketball a happening, not just a game. Always a money loser at MSU, basketball is Football season tickets for the Final three home games are on But now things couldn't be brighter as He captivates a crowd." expected to sell out this year. The tickets have sale during student registration. Heathcote embarks upon his second campaign MSU's other recruits are Jay Vincent from been split up into A and B series with the with a team that is a legitimate contender. Lansing Eastern, who Heathcote says could have (continued on page 4) Wilson is gone, but 6-foot-7 Kelser will be back along with Chapman. Last winter Kelser earned all-Big Ten honors and specialized in thrilling dunks while finishing third in scoring and rebounding. Chapman, the team captain, finished seventh in scoring and has added experience as a fifth year player after being red shirted because of a knee injury his freshman year. Two other starters return in sophomore guard 'Amo!' Terry Donnelly, who started every game as a freshman and Jim Coutre, a 6-foot-9 college transfer last year, is also back at center. The combination of the returning players and Heathcote's six recruits may be enough to fill junior Loop's grand old man everybody's expectations. But in all the hoopla banking talent fans didn't realize that the other Big Ten schools were signing their own Earvin Johnsons. "We thought we had a good recruiting year," Heathcote said. "But it seems that the consensus on young is that we rank fourth or fifth in the conference. have solid, but ByTOMSHANAHAN to a inexperienced nucleus The Big Ten had an unusually good recruiting State News Sports Writer returning to the ice at always sold out, 6,255 seat year. I wouldn't say we're disappointed, but we MSU hockey went from second place in the Munn Ice Arena. thought we made great strides and we may have WCHA (Western Collegiate Hockey Association) But the real drawing card for MSU, both on only just kept pace." in 1976 to a tie for eighth in 1977. And assistant the road and at home, is the feisty coach of 26 Heathcote said that the consensus around the coach Alex Terpay says if the Spartan icers had seasons at MSU, Amo Bessone. league is that Ohio State had the best year by won their triple overtime, sudden death play off "Amo is probably the most colorful and signing its state's five top high school players and with Minnesota in 1976, MSU could have won the well liked of all the opposing coaches in the Kenny Page out of New York; Indiana, with NCAA title and been recognized as one of the league," Terpay said. "People would have to see three of the nation's top 50 high school players, is top two or three hockey powers in the country. how opposing crowds react to Amo to realize he's second; Wisconsin is third with one of the But they lost that game and MSU graduated probably more conservative at home than he is nation's best pivotmen in 6-foot-10 Larry Petty its key players in all-Americans Tom Ross, Steve on the road." and one of the best guards in Wesley Matthews; Which is hard to believe for anyone who has Colp and Darryl Rice, while Minnesota went on and either MSU or Michigan fourth and fifth. to win the national spent time watching Bessone bait referees, yell championship. But the Spartans are still in the running and all Last year MSU depended on its freshmen that at his players and blast his distinctive whistle hasn't been given up on. that tells the players to switch lines. Terpay says, "compared to the so-called super "I think that maybe here locally people expect "When we go to Wisconsin and play before crop of freshmen we had in Ross, Colp, Rice and more immediate results because of Earvin their 10,000 fans there are 10.000 people yelling. (Brendon) Moroney."But what hurt the icers the most was injuries. 'Amo! Amo!"' Terpay said. "But after we scored "We had six players have surgery," Terpay the winning goal that knocked them out of the said. "Anything that could have gone wrong last play offs three years ago, 10,000 fans suddenly Suddenly, MSU basketball players turned deathly sUent except for our 20 players year did." who have labored before sparse But back from injuries are seniors Pat Betterly yelling, 'Amo! Amo!' crowds at Jenison Fieldhouse are and Tim McDonald, sophomore Darryl DiPace "At Michigan Tech and North Dakota Amo is part of an attraction. But don't over¬ and hopefully junior Doug Couter, whose back greeted by whistles from the fans. Amo is look the veterans-MSU head basket¬ operation is still questionable. constantly threatened by the referees when he State Naws/Robort Koilolf ball coach Jud Heathcote says that MSU also has its top three scorers back in whistles because you're really not supposed to do both Greg Kelser Heft) and Bob Chap¬ sophomores Russ Welch, Jim Cunningham and it, but Amo just tells them, 'How the hell can you ■far shoots! man are pro prospects. MSU opens Paul Klasinski. Senior Dave Versical and blame me when there are 4,000 other people Stole News/Moggie Walker the season at home against Central sophomore Mark Mazzoleni are back at goalie. whistling?"' Based on the returning players, MSU appears (continued on page 4) Amo Bessone ponders his 27th season at MSU. Michigan Nov. 28th. B2 Michigan State News, East lonsing, Michigan • Welcome Week, |qj, Kearney has huge MSU rebuilding tasl Spartans face probation stigma and finances .« .rn a a I AS .1 u: nenklam IrMnlnff Tlf liltln Altt biggest problem keeping T« . IKS EDITOR'S NOTE: MSU does the NCAA probation ef¬ JK - It uiae was a a little different a. athletic director Joe Kearney is heading into his secondfull year as the athletic director of MSU fect the athletic program? JK — It makes it more difficult to recruit, first of all. I from being a powerhouse is lack of depth because one or two injuries could hurt the team a at Washington because it was more of a problem getting space to get the fans in. There was saftssl le»cs had was """ uf after a successful seven year think this past recruiting year lot. great interest in the teams and typically "ma,e "SL SN-How important to an Program" would«J^0 tenure at the University of was the toughest one for the Sonny Sixkiller, our quarter¬ wfih\hl the Michi^J Washington. Kearney it con- coaches because we'd been entire athletic program is it to back, but we only had a stadium with fronted with the problem of have a successful football team? built for 60,000, while here our growth and J probation for a year and people Hghtl H , ment' an« rebuilding an athletic program had known about it for a while. JK-Ifyou took away all the problem is filling the seats in the that wot torn both by a foot¬ The first year of probation revenue generated by football, stadium. But there are profes¬ intercollZl ball scandal that resulted in a happened so fast that we hadn't and the expense to operate the sional teams moving into Seat¬ tics, we're proiJr I three year NCAA probation for the football team and a basket- been on probation long before we signed the recruits. But we program, there would only be about a six or eight sport tle now and it is creating a new ^ down JJ problem for them. ballprogram that was devestat- program. You just couldn't pay ed by the transfer of three for the 24-sport program we players and a lack offan support have now because of the money that made it a perennial money- made from football. Basketball loser. In an interview unth State and hockey could self-sustain its News sports writer Tom Shana- programs, but that's about all. "If we're going to do the right thing J han, Kearney discusses the SN-How much have the women of this campus, we're fa- * problems MSU is dealing with promotions of the football sea¬ anywhere from three-quarters to u and will be dealing with in the son helped? dollar budget for a women's future. JK Some people said we athletic n™« SN-Can you assess how long — Now, when you go from zero to a million I ft will take MSU to get back to may lose money on this first in x number of years, you do year of promotion by spending it t the top of the Big Ten? more than it'll return in tickets. existing resources that were tradition JK - Darryl Rogers, MSU But we decided that even typically available for men's program • head football coach) came out last year and he said seven though we may lose money, we Kearney, MSU athletic director on thefii needed to start promoting to let years, but I'm a little more future of college athletics. people know that despite the optimistic. I hope it'll take five. probation we're still alive and The toughest years for Darryl well. When Michigan started are going to be this year and this same type of promotion next year because you always have that honeymoon period Kearney nine years ago they were fortunate to be comming off a SN - Now that there is a lot when everybody is enthused campus, we're lookii successful season, while we're of interest in basketball, what and hoping some great magical only essentially have one year where from three quirt— only coming off a 4-6-1 are the chances of a new arena and four months of the proba¬ year. million dollar thing is going to happen. But to budget! rebuild a football program you tion left and only one more SN - Does Michigan's suc¬ being built? women's athletic wl recruiting under proba¬ cessful athletic program make Now, when you go from have to have 56 to 60 quality football players in place. This tion. season it harder to generate interest JK—A few years ago there million dollars in i J J was a building priority estab¬ SN - Does MSU still have here? lished on campus and No. 1 on years, you do it withdU year is going to be a struggle the potential to be a power¬ because we're not deep and an that list was Munn Ice Arena, ing resources that *gJ house that it was in the 1950s JK—I think each team in injury or two could complicate which has been built. Second tionally and typically J things. The next year is still a and'60s? Michigan has its own public to was the Performing Arts Cen¬ for men's programs, jl year of rebuilding to get more JK — In football we still need appeal to and that there is ter, which has seen its plans we're doing in essence J depth, so we have a building the depth and it is what we have enough room for both Michigan start, and next was an all- ing our program with! and Michigan State to have resources. That is the J process before you'll see some to have. We have good front line purpose type of arena. There's progress. As he enters his talent but you also have to have successful, well supported pro¬ still a lot of planning involved that is going to be thel fourth year, I think right about the players that can step in grams. I think there is enough but I'm an optimist and I like to financially. How don! then you'll start to see the there when someone gets hurt interest here even with all the think that plans could take new resources, pro other interests people have good women's l_ progress and hopefully from and still not lose too much shape in the next year or two a then on we'll be able to step up because hockey usually sells out because I believe there is a real gram. That's the k strength in the team's play. To and it looks like basketball will into the top rungs of the Big get those type of players you need for an all-purpose arena. there, if we can find i) Ten. I think what most fans sell out this year. If football was SN - Can college sports as a augment our r have to have more than one really want is that when that good recruiting year tohavethe winning we could probably get whole continue economically as we're alright. If we a. ball is teed-up to be kicked-off, effects show. Once you get the over 70,000 fans for it also. it is now? obviously cutbacks kj in their minds when they're top recruits and improve the SN-Are there any parallels happen and anytimeyoi JK Let's put it this way, sitting there in the stands they program it's easier to get more with the rebuilding you did at — a retrenchment period,fl we all talk about inflation feel their team has a chance to top recruits. But now our very much fun for tboot win. If they go in there thinking, Washington? because it hits every segment it cuts. 'Geez, if they can play well can get out of here only gett beat by three touchdowns.' Ai that's not what you want. You want people to feel that Iiooh Into our guys got a chance to win. When State News/Robert Koiloff you get your program to that Successful college athletic programs depend on football teams that generate area you're going to get good fan funds for non-revenue sports. And if MSU isn't a big winner, it'll take support. exciting SN - Besides the no bowls performances from people like quarterback Ed Smith to draw fans and' pay for and no TV games, how much MSU's 3.3 million dollar athletic budget. Hour Future 349-9560 A Michigan National Bank SPORTS and here • are some Courses open to facts that should interest you: college men and women. LETTERIRQ • No service obligation now. Full scholarships available that pay tuition, all fees, plus a $100 • a month tax-free allowance. custom printed shirts • An Air Force officer commission when you receive your baccalaureate. • The opportunity to get to know the spirit that made our nation great. Talk with our Air Force ROTC representative. For more information, call or write to: GROUP RATES Major Ron Wojack Assistant Professor of Aerospace Studies UKAT1UN! PHONE: 355-2182, or 355-2168 T-shirts *2" each VISIT: Quonset 67, northwest corner of Windbreaker Jackets (6 & up) »7" each campus While forming your team and preparing for competition, or if you just want to be recognixed. get shirts, |erseys or jackets from us. your Mr Faroe RETS 1187 W. GRAND RIVER {1 Ml. EAST OF CAMPUS) - 349-5184 Gateway lo a Great Way of Life t ^n-J-tnte News, Eost loosing, Michiqon Welcome Week, 1977 B3 'omens sports continues l OHN Hews Sports Writer SINGLES as a person, women athletes do enjoy winning. nasties, at 3.25, moving from dead last the year before. men and women in a less formal ate Athletics and the general emergence ■1976-77 school year, it The victory column in 1976- setting" to the current rapid fund of the university and is This year's guest ■ M of 154 dual meets, k ■|ijmpionsl,'Ps' ■Vional Ten titles, crowns four thre« and 77 for invitational events 17 firsts, seven thirds and a fourth. In competition, MSU boasts one reads seconds, five national was Dr. Joanna Auburn speaker Davenport, women's athletic director at University. She scribed the growth of de¬ growth of both amateur and professional sport for women. MSU offers a diverse gram pro¬ of athletic competition for coordinated by the Assistant Director of Athletics for Worn en, Nell Jackson. MSU has perhaps the finest Golfers pursuing 1 (ive national champi- seventh place, one eighth, a women from its sports for highly skilled women athletes. all-around women sports pro¬ twelfth and an 18th. position as "a The program is funded through gram in the nation, and the best fifth straight title No one has respectable social encounter for the Department of [7 Perhaps Michi- topped the perfor¬ Intercollegi¬ winning record, too. mance of 1976's Softball team. I be wrong on both Diane Ulibarri's squad breezed Lose numbers repre- through the College World ■ ugu women's sports Series winning five straight ■ tod all that it accorn- games and copping the first By JOHN SINGLER Atwood. Ann Mclnerney, a sophomore, was not national State News Sports Writer ■ this blue ribbon year championship for the on the roster last spring but played with the In the four years they have held the ■women athletes. women's sports program at Big Ten team and shaved 20 tournament shots off her MSU. women's golf tournament, there has been one Imen s sports program game. Freshmen Pat Caruso, from East Lansing, winner year in and year out — MSU. L gradually gaining a and Lynn Kulazinka will The Spartans journeyed The Spartans added a join the chase. X bigger share of the to victory in their Fossum, entering her sixth season as the head Omaha, Neb., again this season invitational and competed at the national ftv's attention. Thor- and minus Gloria championship tourney in Hawaii last June. coach, conducted intrasquad playoffs Sept. 13 Ministrative backing in Becksford, and 14 to determine the who pitched all five wins in the Everyone is back from 1976's banner season. traveling team for the ■ontlis has provided a 76 World Series, Sue Ertl heads the season opener at Illinois State Sept. 16. they finished group of veterans. The fdation. . .. a creditable third. Ionia junior averaged slightly more than 80 There closest home action for the Spartans in Jjiinistration has initi- strokes per round last fall and was the low the fall was in the Central Michigan Invitational ■program ■ of athletic The women's golf team com¬ individual in last spring's Spartan Invitational. at Mt. Pleasant Sept. 23 and 24. Jj(j [or women ath- peted in another national tour¬ As a freshman, Ertl was the Though the Spartans usually have a fine fall ,omen's varsity club ney, in Hawaii the third week of only rookie to join and spring season, MSU faltered at the national the traveling team of the d last year and June. In the four years there Spartans' top six tournament after one of its best performers. spring cam ia booster club has been a Big Ten paigns. Champion¬ B the support of wom- ship Tournament, the Spartans Karen Escott, a senior from Rochester, won MSU had the nation's ninth lowest qualifying efforts are now have all four. medalist honors two score for the AIAW (Association of won years ago in the Midwest Intercollegi¬ ate Athletics for Women) ptentrated on promo- mrtucu v.. r- regionals at Bowling Green, Ohio. Joan Garety, championships. But playing in Hawaii proved too much for ouraging fan inter- In May, the third annual also a senior, carded the low score for the Women's Sports Banquet was Spartans in the 1975 nationals, her freshman MSU as the team shot in the high 80s and low 90s lire 10 varsity sports held. The outstanding award is year. Garety notched medalist honors in last individually, and came home with a 1336 team MSU. Although presented to the senior athlete fall's Purdue Invitational at West total. It was a far cry from the at Lafayette, Ind. winning total of 1221 by Miami (Florida). The inflated score jopbv of women's ath- with the highest grade point Sue Conlin is a transfer student from the es'emphasis on the average. University of Florida. Last year was the first at placed MSU 22nd out of 27 schools qualified for ■nt of the total person The team with the highest MSU for the Ann Arbor the national tournament. junior. Her best for the athlete grade point average was gym- competitive round last fall came in the Purdue Fossum said the team was "bitterly ■n disappoin¬ Invitational. Grand Ledge's Sheila ted" after returning from the Tansey tourney because rounds out the first five for coach they hoped to finish in the top 10 or 15, which Mary Fossum. would have been accomplishment She is the daughter of former MSU competing golfer Bob Tansey and established a number of track and against the southern schools that dominate field records at Grand women's college golf. MSU and Ohio State JOHN SINGLER Ledge High School, some still standing. traditionally finish the highest among the northern schools. The scramble for the sixth, and final, spot on Fossum, who has coached all for of MSU's the first team promises to be a frantic one. Those women's golf teams, will now be searching for a Where are in the hunt include Linda Smith, who has had to overcome a couple of leg injuries the past two fifth consecutive Big Ten title and a better showing in the national tournament with her years, Laurie Everett and sophomore Ann experienced squad. women fans? VOLLEYBALL DEFENDS TITLES In something going on here, something that everyone It put of. Netters rank TMSV women's sports program has reached the summit Irive toward a more significant share of the University's Htm it from the administration, i.e. the initiation of a nationally After storming through Big |n of athletic grants-in-aid for women athletes. it from the formation Ten state, and regional compe¬ player Angie Del Morone, senior from Flint, is also back. a cago. Other prized freshmen rn of a women's varsity club include Lynn Barber and Karen is booster club tition en route to a seventh Mitzy Hazlett, Christy Wag¬ now a solely for the support of Keener, both from Dearborn. ft athletics at MSU. place national ranking, the ner, Carolyn Adams and Joan One of last year's ich leaves you, the fan. MSU volleyball team hopes for Ferguson each boast at least highlights for the volleyball team was a Stat© News/Scott more of the same success this ds from the sale of tickets to last Bellinger one year of experience. Wagner trip to the West Coast to spring's alumni MSU junior Sue Ertle has been the fall. . e channeled into women's athletics and the Spartan's most consistent golfer on the ex¬ is one of only a handful of raise the necessary funds to Idab peddled bumper stickers which "MSU IS MAGIC," perienced women's golf team that will be seeking its fifth straight Big Ten title The Spartans also won the outstate players on the team. compete in a UCLA tourna¬ j the arrival of high school basketball Ail-American in the spring season. Big Ten and state champion¬ She is from Muncie, Ind. Fresh¬ ment. The squad had drives to ■Magic" Johnson. ships two years ago, which man Peg Lukens is from Chi¬ (continued on page 6) rs such as these are too often passed off as just so helps them nail down No. 1 liblic relations. Besides donations, one factor critical to seeds in the annual tourna¬ Twthoi women's athletics at MSU and elsewhere, is the MSU HAS EXPERIENCE ments. But their record helps also. Last year MSU went into the national meet with a 38-6 MSU cross country Field hockey has new coach record after winning the No¬ vember regional in Chicago. pmens money up. By JOHN SINGLER Carol Kiddon and Mary Newton. Karen Santoni, Besides last season's seventh place national ranking, the squad places fourth State News Sports Writer squad was also ranked ninth to 'thing said at last spring's awards banquet still hasn't an outstanding fullback defensively, has chosen For followers of MSU's field hockey team, this to concentrate basketball this fall rather than give MSU two straight years in quite right. Joanna Davenport, women's athletic on the top ten. After flirting with a national * a Auburn fall's season should offer a little of everything. split her time with field hockey. championship the past two seasons, University and the featured speaker, said, "There's a real balance between offense and the 1977 MSU women's cross country team began another run at the Itake a concerted effort to create Anchoring the defense, which posted six Six seasoned veterans pro¬ coveted crown Sept. 6. programs comparable defense," said Sam Kajornsin, newly appointed fcmen''" shutouts in 13 games last fall, is Patti Lawson, a 5 vide the nucleus for head coach The Spartans placed third head coach. "We are fundamentally stronger, foot 2 inch junior from Ann Arbor. Other Annelies Knoppers' fourth sea¬ nationally two years ago and added a with more experience and confidence." fourth-place ranking in 1976. Ann Forshee and Karen McKeachie ft'.1 word is model, not mirror image. standouts are Nancy Babcock and Lorie Fiessel- son at MSU. Pat Fellows heads are gone, from the squad that won both its dual meets last fall by it's With 14 returnees, and the defense nearly mann. the list. The Grosse Pointe kept in the proper scale, the powers that be in sweeping the top five places. intact, Kajornsin will work on generating the The offense is keyed by Nancy Farms senior will anchor the ftithleticscan, and should, build their programs around offense. Graduation losses include Kathy Smith, Lyons and The key returners include Lisa Berry and Cindy Wadsworth, 'J experiences the man have lived through in their (continued on page 9) Spartan defense. Third-year sophomores; Kay Richards, a junior; and senior Diane Culp. ■key must be careful. It's OK to Heading the list will be Lit go ahead and build a Warnes. a senior from South ™*del of an automobile or a ship, but if you were to 1 s model of Porcupine, Ontario. She was _ identical proportion to the real thing, it the top finisher for MSU in last ■we a hard time State News Linda Bray sitting on the bookshelf. year's national championships •w.the women's Like almost every program has taken off and reached the in Ames, la., running ninth ■'ere it can no other women's sport longer grow without spreading itself too among all entries and sixth P» program has to start reinforcing what it now has. at MSU, the women's among those running for team pity, more exposure and increased fan interest should basketball team points. Warnes is described by pled into areas that now exist. These areas can only be showed well in na¬ head coach Mark Pittman as a pitted. tional hard worker who loves to *'athletics competition. now have scholarships, a booster club, a Last year MSU won compete. [ of their own and some of the finest facilities in the both the state and re¬ The list of incoming freshmen is headed by Mary Ann Opalew gional tournaments to ski and Kelly Spatz. earn a trip to the na¬ In addition to last season's tional finals the pd-raisers critical.... University of Minne¬ sota. at MSU also fin¬ success in dual meets, MSU won the prestigious Springbank In¬ vitational, a state championship ished second in the and the Big Ten Invitational. ■nhnik" "" a.n be effect>ve in that it not only breeds Pittman is entering his third ftto 1"Igorests "• H>s the logical starting point. Women's Big Ten tournament ■ have to remedy the and was 23-4 on the campaign at the helm. He growing pains they competed in track and field at K , lhe pasL They are w»y bey01"1 that' season before being Central Missouri State in the boil ways to get people to attend the games, eliminated at the na¬ quarter-mile, one mile and titt? gettm8 these people out to the playing fields and * tional tourney. sprints. He was an All Ameri¬ "Cd someone becking. ment experienced competition this winter during to fill the empty seats. team after last year. the indoor season. One of the (continued on page 11) ,-ft^.Michigon Stole News. Eost Lansing. Michigan welcome Week i BAUM NEEDS SCORING Amo and icers return Offense deficient (continued from page 1) is still fun for him," Terpay forced the defense to play all and adds that Versical and Sutton (defenseman) and Bessone is now the senior coach of WCHA hockey after Murry Armstrong retired last year from many seasons concluded. This year Bessone and Terpay are faced with the problem of improving the the time. I don't care how good your defense is, if your forwards are not doing the job you can't win in this Mazzoleni two are as good as any goalies in the country and could be both all-Ameri- Mitch Horsch (defenseman). The season opens at home against Toronto Oct. 21 and 22. same old probler at Denver. defense and getting more league. Also to strengthen the By MICHAEL KLOCKE second leading scorer on last "Amo is a throwback to points from the offense. 'T'he team overcompen- young team, Terpay says the old style of coach," "It's pretty obvious we sated on defense instead of MSU had an excellent re¬ State News Sports Writer year's 7-4-1 team. Paul Kenne¬ have to score more goals and The MSU soccer team has a dy will also return at a mid¬ Terpay said. "And his popu¬ taking chances and that was cruiting year. "ley have had ■! brand new head coach, but he fielder position. larity was probably more give up fewer if we're going part of our problem. We Being counted on already widespread in the hockey to win many hockey games," tried to protect our leads are Dave Gandini (left Hockey and basketball will still have to solve an old The success of the Spartan yT''"elude The 13 gam. areas of the league then it Terpay said. "Everybody and we lost games by sitting wing), Paul Gottwald (cen¬ schedules are on page 11. problem. forwards could very well deter¬ teams who four al was here up until five years talked about our weak de¬ on the lead." ter), Leo Lynett (center), After serving as Ed Ruther¬ mine the success of the whole «»»on partic£ ago. Amo will probably keep fense, but our offense lacked But at least Terpay said John Sikura (center), Jim ford's unpaid assistant coach team, Baum said. The top three tournaments ia coaching as long as the game an offensive threat and it there isn't a worry at goalie, Clifford (defenseman), Dan for three years, Joe Baum will forwards from last year's squad Jj* booters wilt, Indiana take over a soccer squad which all graduated and Baum will fill University ^ has a strong nucleus of defen¬ sive players returning. But the their places with freshmen, junior college transfers and by year s NCAA runnerup. Baum',™" Divj|^ will also host question remaining to be an¬ changing the positions of re¬ AkronU, swered is whether the offense eh w»s turning players. among thep can put the ball in the net. During spring practice Baum season long. 1 State News/Robert Kozloff "We haven't had an abun¬ dance of talented scorers in moved midfielder Ed Quinn to forward and Baum said he up Asforthefia^i, MSU, Baum said Munn Ice Arena is a to h„, build up a recent years," Baum said. "Our performed well. Baum also soccer w expected to sell out strength has always been in the thinks Canadian Nick Bowen tne Lansing area. for the third consec¬ defense. Again this year, the can start at a forward. ■ "If we can utive year as 6,255 get u big question will be whether we "I'm hoping Bowen can pro¬ **eer when they,,,, MSU hockey fans will can score goals." duce and Quinn can make the come out to watch the Baum said the booters de¬ adjustment," Baum said. "If the years old, we're op some good soccer g0J Spartans mix-it-up fense would be strong again offense doesn't generate, it just Baum said. "And J , with the best college this fall. puts so much pressure on the help the MSU prom "We will have a strong defense. They can't always hold hockey teams in the might be able to gef, defense geared around several team off for the whole 90 country. At right, the a recruits out of our „ solid experienced players," minutes." Spartans upset even¬ yard." Baum said. "Both of our co- tual NCAA champion Wisconsin 5-2 in a captains, Rob Back and John Haidler, are defensemen." November home game. At Wisconsin the time was boast¬ Also anchoring the defense will be senior goalie Mark Grembarowski. He has been Cagers are popular ing a seven game win¬ the backup goalie to Gary (continued from page 1) Like ' ning streak. This Wilkinson for the last three year's schedule will years and Baum is confident Michigan and Purdue games on Jenison one and Indiana and Minnesota transfori bring the same that Grembarowski can be a on the other. barn to i caliber of competition regular. to face the Spartan "Mark hasn't missed a prac¬ "Magic" tice in three years. He has seen The regular season opens at terest al icers as the WCHA is home Nov. 28 against Central basketbi regarded as the spot action during games and has performed very well," Michigan and the Big Ten of a cat toughest hockey Baum said. "It will be interes¬ campaign opens at home Jan. 5 league in the nation. against Minnesota. ting to see how he does with the MSU, which is loaded whole burden on his shoulders. with young talent af¬ Baum said the booters would ter two healthy re¬ be "pretty solid" in the mid- cruiting campaigns, field, paced by two-year starter will be trying to im¬ Michael Price. He was the prove on last year's eight place finish. ★★★★★★★★★★★ 4 FOOTBALL PROGRAMS + If BASEBALL CARDS if ji. (ought (Sold jL J Curious Book Shop J r Best Wishes to Darryl Rogers OKEMOS IF Stamps and Coins And his Coaching Staff • Supplies • Appraisals • Collections Bought For the 77-78 Season 167B E. Grand River '/> ml. East of Meridian Mall Okemos, Michigan 48864 Phone 517 - 349 - 3144 WELCOMES STUDENTS WE PREFORM ASOCIAL SERVICE... FEEDING THE Here's to a great season of MSU HUNGRY! football and Strohs beer! FROm ONE BEER LOVER TO ANOTHER- GREAT LOCATIONS! SUPERIOR DISTRIBUTING CO. ONE IN YOUR HALL 5400 Aurelius Lansing J |lir^,qnn Stole News, East Lansing, Michigan Welcome Week, 1977 B5 SB S ludent Q^ook f^lc • T-shirts a pennants a jackets • sweatshirts a mugs a spirit buttons • hooded and zippered a gym bags a big apple caps sweatshirts a East Lansing's most complete a knit caps a Blankets selection of gym shorts FallFootball Fun Begins at the Student Book Store! We have a Complete Selection of M.S.U Personalized Sportswear from Champion and Velva Sheen. BOOK RUSH HOURS MONDAY, September 26 and TUESDAY. September 27. 8:30-8:00 p.m. VISA WEDNESDAY. September 28 and THURSDAY, September 29. 8:30-9:00 p.r MONDAY. October 3, 8:30-8:00 p.m. REGULAR HOURS AFTER OCTOBER 3 tudent tore MONDAY-SATURDAY 8:30-5:30 p.m. RA Michigon Stole News, Eost Lonsing, Michigon Welcome Wee Gibbard harriers Smith continues MSU sprint on ByTOMSHANAHAN to get experience SUte News Sports Writer First there was Herb Washington with a worid indoor 60-yard dash in 1972. Then there was ....... record 5.8 in the 1Marshal1 Ddlwith a world record 29.3 in the indoor 300-yard dash in 1974. Now could Randy Smith be the next MSU sprinter to earn a world record sometime in his next three years as a Spartan/ in uncertain year MSU head coach track these three and others before. Jim Bibbs wouldn't discount the idea as he says MSU sprinters are nationally known after the likes of , . . . To achieve the acclaim, MSU sprinters hold all three indoor by MIKE KLOCKE improved upon. many of the other Big Ten sprint world records on the books.Washmgton s ?.0 m the W^meter SUte News Sport writer "We're going to have to rely teams to dash, combined with his 60-yard record and Dill s 300-yard record by very strong. To say that 1977 will be a on our freshmen this year," "Michigan has to be the gives MSU sprinters the sweep. In addition S™th "n col^a^ rebuilding year for the MSU Gibbard said. "I can't make any favorit. Thevlost only one (of and world best time for the 50 last year (5.6) and the third best 60 cross country team is quite an predictions because we'll have their runners) to graduation." in the world last year (6.1). understatement. for the most part an untried Gibbard said. Michigan was the Plagued t>v graduation losses team." 1976 Big Ten cross-country "In the last 10 years since Herb came in '68 weNe (MSU) been and other runners simply not Gibbard said he did have a team champion. known for sprinters across the country, Bibbs said. Herb never returning to complete their lost a 60 or a 100 and Marshall never lost a 300 or a 220 in the Big good recruiting year and there Gibbard also expects Minne will be some good freshmen on Ten and now we have Randy," Bibbs explained. eligibility, the crosscountry sola to be tough this year. squad will have only one letter- the team. What remains to be Although the MSU harriers "Randy knows what big time sprinting is now. He won the Big winner back from last year's seen is if these former high can't be expected to fare too Ten 60 yard title, the Big Ten 200-meter title and won the AAU 4-2 team. school standouts can make the well this season, those incoming Junior meet against the Russians (in July). I think he can still Gone will be all American Herb transition to the rather gruel freshmen won't remain inex¬ improve and I expect him to. He's already established himself as Lindsay, whose classic battles ing six mile course. perienced for long. And with the best sprinter in the Big Ten and Midwest and now he's ready with perennial Big Ten champ¬ The best of the incoming another couple good recruiting ion Craig Virgin of Illinois have to move up with the best in the country." freshmen, Gibbard said, will be years, the MSU cross-country culminated the last three cross¬ Kim Prulx of Brighton. Prulx learn just might regain the And there are other sprinters on the team to complement Smith. country seasons. was the 1976 Michigan Class A respectibility they had during Rickey Flowers was a freshman from "Saginaw last year and he Stan Mavis, a cross-country individual champion at the the Lindsay-Mavis era. came on strong during the outdoor season. and track standout, has also state meet. ' "We'll be very strong in the sprint corps with Randy, Rickey and been lost to graduation. Steve Koerner of Cranbrook The other three top runners is another former high school Denny Anderson (from the same Jackson High School that Smith went to)," Bibbs said. "We expect to be the toughest in the from the 1976 MSU harrier standout who will join the squad, Paul Morrison, Mike Solis and Jeff Pullen, will most likely not be returning. Morri¬ team. Koerner placed among the top finishers in the two-mile run at the 1977 state track meet Volleyball conference and one of the toughest in the Midwest." But it takes more than sprinters and Bibbs says he is only (continued from page 31 cautiously optimistic about moving up in the Big Ten standings. son has left school and Pullen and Gibbard is optimistic about But he is happy with several recruits. Particularly the possibility still remains a question mark. his cross-country ability. pay for the trip that proved that MSU could have three 7-foot high jumpers in freshman So head coach Jim Gibbard Two other freshmen that valuable because it gave the Dennis Lewis, who has gone 7-2 in high school, and juniors Pete will pin his hopes on sophomore Gibbard has high regard for are Spartans a chance to compete McClain and Dan King. Keith Moore and a group of Ted Unold of Westland and Tim against the perenially stronger incoming freshmen. Chances Rock of Lake Orion. West Coast schools. Paul Schneider returns in the shot put and Bibbs says he could are slim that last year's fourth While MSU will be rebuilding Knoppers said that a lot of throw the shot 60-feet this year. place Big Ten finish will be this year, Gibbard expects the Spartans played on various clubs during the summer and Fred Parker is a junior college ail-American in the long jump 'I the team will feature quickness from Jackson Community College who can also triple jump. Pole yM ; t on defense. Ohio State's Vaulter Jim Steward, a freshman from Fort Wayne, Ind., is heavily ND and U-M back-to-back financed women's athletic pro¬ gram makes the women's teams from Columbus tough, and the another field event man MSU is depending on. Bibbs is also hoping that Tyrone Williams can continue to (continued from page II volleyball squad is no excep¬ develop into a surprise in the hurdles. ginl run. They didn't do any¬ tion. The Buckeyes were sec¬ living daylight knocked out of thing. Just bang — he was gone Where the Spartans will hurt the most is in the distance events ond in both the Big Ten and you by the second quarter." and it was over." after the graduation of mainstays Herb Lindsay, a three-time So everything will have to be MSU fans who at that regional play last season and were -oss-country all-American, and Stan Mavis. right for MSU Oct. 1 in South Knoppers looks for more of the "To ask freshman to replace people like Herb and Stan is asking game can remember it and the same this time through. Bend., Ind. against the Irish hopes that a Rose Bowl year lot," Bibbs said. "But I hope people don't overlook the two fine and Oct. 8 at Spartan Stadium The Spartans opened on the JUihVr . was coming soon. An upset of distance runners we have in Ted Unold and Kim Prulx because road Sept. 22 and 23, in Illinois. against the Wolverines if the Notre Dame or Michigan this they someday down the highway that Herb and The home debut comes the final may run same Randy Smith tied a Ralph Young Field record with a 9.4 winning tine i Spartans are going to add to year could create the same Stan did." Eastern their list of recent upsets. weekend of September. Michigan in the 100-yard dash. Smith won two Big Ten titles. hopes for MSU when it gets off "Upsets are very well calcu¬ NCAA probation in two years. lated and things have to go And if the upsets don't come your way," Rogers explains. there is still six Big Ten teams "An upset can't be at the start left to pick up some wins of the game, it has to build against. through the game on every¬ thing; the crowd, the kicking game, the offense and the defense. "Every upset has a turning ★★★★★★★★★★★ if FOOTBALL PROGRAMS f- 730AM-94.9FM * What kindofpeople )f BASEBALL CARDS if "Bee Bumble, Bob take Am^ROlC? point. The turning point against Ohio State (1974) was Levi's it Bought 4 Sold jj. Barry j^. Curious Book Shop (Jackson, whose fourth quarter 88-yard touchdown romp pro¬ if if 9pm-l am" vided the 16-13 winning mar- ★★★★★★★★★★★ ************************************** They're all kinds of people, from them in a civilian career. i all walks of life, with all kinds of Some can use the extra 1 NOTICE i interests. Music, sports engineering, and almost every academic major. month they'll get for up to 20 during the Advanced Course, monthj Their reasons for taking Army just like the physical and ment^ STUDENT FOOTBALL ? ROTC are as diverse as they are themselves. challenge. What kind of people take J Some want the personal benefits ROTC? People who want to get eve SEASON TICKET they'll get from a pure leadership thing they can out of their collei course. Others want the experience years. People like you. INFORMATION they'll get from serving as an Army officer, and the head start it will give Army ROTC. Learn what it ti to lead. THERE IS NO COUPON TO EXCHANGE THIS YEAR - THE TICKET THAT YOU PURCHASE WILL BE YOUR RESERVED SEAT FOR THE ENTIRE SEASON! PLACK OF SALE. NORTH CONCOURSI SPARTAN STADIUM HOURS OF SALE • 8:30 A.M.-4:30 P.M. DATES STUDENT NUMSERS Thursday, Sept. 29,1977 8:30-12:30 ■ 1 thru 707999 Thursday, Sept. 29, 1977 12:30-4:30 - 708000 thru 741599 Friday, Sept. 30,1977 8:30-12:30- 741600 thru 770499 Friday, Sept. 30,1977 - 12:30-4:30 770500 and above Saturday, Oct. 1,1977 • 8:30-4:30 Any Number IF TICKETS ARB LOST OR STOLEN THEY WILL NOT RE REPLACED For each ticket purchased you must have a validated fee receipt card and $12.00 check). Married students may purchase a season ticket for their (cash or proof of marriage must be presented at time of spouse at the same price - purchase. Any students wishing to sit together must reserved One student purchase tickets together - all seats are may purchase a maximum of 8 season tickets (this includes spouse location Q,,empt be Can made at ,he s,adi"™ »o place more than 8 tickets in any one . Arm) HUM ' OPEN THE DOORJO N1 A" blocks of 9 or more tickets must be purchased at the Jenison Fieldhouse ticket office - v OPPORTUNITIES SCHOLARSHIPS). TRVWJ (iNOJjJp J blocks monies will be located in the south end zone. BLOCK PURCHASES: Bring fee receipts and ' INTRODUCTORY COURSE. T to^json Ticket Office anytime 8:30 to 4:30 Friday, September 30, 1977. Tickets ' IT MEETS FOR ONLY ONE »u £L EACH WEEK WITHI NO OBUW■ W®w,be)|T^^ppaffer 1 P.M. on Monday, October 3,1977, INCURRED. TRY THE LEADER | NOTICE: *twd*at Hockey Season Tickets on COURSE; ARMY ROTC. Sale the week of October 3rd Student Rasketball Season Tickets en Sale the week of October I Oth FOR MORE INFORMATION, VISIT THE DEPARTMENT OF CALL3 MILITA"' p.!^jlJ IN ROOM 2. DEMONSTRATION IIALL WATCH THE STATE NEWS FOR FURTHER DETAILS ******************** ****************. in state News. East lonsing, Michigan Welcome Week, 1977 B7 MICHIGAN, OHIO STATE STILL FAVORED s equity coming in Big Ten gridiron? By TOM SHANAHAN Northwestern coach John Pont spoke for the bottom teams and State News Sporti Writer said his Many of the coaches got back to theme of more equity as a result you're not playing great football every Saturday you'll lose - that squad would be bigger and faster and he disputed of the 95-scholarship rule. j coaches of the Big Ten once again predicted a claims the school of 6,400 any was proven to us last year (Michigan was upset by Purdue, 16-14). undergraduates with stricter entrance "The 95-grant national legislation has leveled off ■ »ap this year in their Michigan and Ohio State requirements cannot compete in the Big Ten. talent as best There are going to be many more close games." E league. The mentors made their unanimous prediction Xeason Big Ten Kick-off Luncheon in Chicago when the "Northwestern will be back," Pont said. "Northwestern is good It s in the best interests of the Big Ten," Iowa's Commings •2ly laud each other. for the Big Ten and the Big Ten is good for Northwestern." "The 95-grant national legislation has leveled reiterated. "The 95-tenders rule has this past year at Iowa We've had our best brought a frame of equity, ' 'i,es said the so-called "Big Two-Little Eight" will Former our first recruiting year. This is frrtill he won by Michigan or Ohio State for the 10th Michigan assistants Jim Young, now at Purdue, and off talent as best as possible and I'm not sure if opportunity to honestly say we can be a good team." Gary Moeller, now at Illinois, both introduced themselves ■ «ear hut all included a healthy dose of pre season Big Ten with their enthusiastic hopes. to the there can be any unbeaten superpower teams Defensive coach George Hill of 1977 I [or their own teams that may or may not materialize this anymore. It's not exactly equal now, but it's State took over for Hayes to evaluate the Orange Bowl winner Ohio Like every other coach up here feel we have Buckeyes and he said an opportunity to coming close to it. If you're not playing great OSU should be better than last year's team that lost to Mich Bob Commings spoke the loudest about a changing be a very good team," Moeller said. Young said he was Michigan fcin the Big Ten: "Everybody here is better than when I back in the Midwest after his happy to be football every Saturday you'll lose - that was 22-0, but still tied the Wolverines for the Big Ten title. He also successful head coaching stint at expects f t|,ree years ago," Commings said. "This conference is _ Arizona. He said Purdue has an excellent proven to us last year (Michigan was upset by a more competitive league. nucleus of returning fbe a sun-of-a-gun, there's something crazy going to seniors. Purdue, 16-14)," Bo Schembechler, Michigan "I don't believe in the 'Big Two-Little Eight,'" Hill said. "We In the Big Ten this year — remember where you heard it MSU coach Darryl Rogers also says he has more to look forward head football coach. respect every team in the Big Ten because if we're not preapred Ihigan and Ohio State may still win, but something's going to this season. we can get beat." Amidst all the optimism Minnesota coach Cal ooach Bo Schembechler and Ohio State coach Woody "This year there are no excuses," Stoll, the last Rogers said. "We're just going as possible, and I'm not if there speaker, said his team would be improved, but he may also have to play football and we're looking forward to having all the sure can be any unbeaten players superpower teams anymore," Schembechler said, before been trying to keep things in being able to play at the same time. We can't win unless we play lauding perspective as the coaches at all-American guard Mark Donahue and tackle Bill Dufek as previous luncheons have spewed out the same optimisms. great defense and we also hope to be more accurate with our part of ^erybody here is better than when I came passing," he said. an offensive line that he says could be his best in nine years at 'Take all this talk with a grain of salt," Stoll said. "It's still mthree years ago. This conference is going to Michigan. "It's not exactly equal now, but it's coming close-to it. If to be a race between going there's something crazy Michigan and Ohio State." L fo happen in the Big Ten this year - JLber where you heard if first. Michigan IOhio State may still win, but something's To to happen," Bob Commings, Iowa head ill coach. ,ad with their rival coaches. Schembechler went on to it the NCAA rule limiting each school to 95 tendered ayers was bringing about the balance. But Hayes went Jk about integrity in Big Ten football. While Philosophy of football is built on truth and integrity," said h roach of 26 seasons. "I said that last year and I'll say it L year. That is what we have in the Big Ten and that is Jvegot to have. When somebody gets out of line we've got I them back in line." Hayes declared. 1 I know they say everybody cheats, but we play j|t football within the amateur code and nobody tells us Kfootball players should live," Hayes concluded, before you're waiting I leaving for a previous engagement that conveniently let lithe usual media interviews. Jerest of the coaches were more concerned with discussing ivement of their teams. for the ■asr £££& nasar* ■out Book Shop i jL Curious Book Shop j *. t j J ERAofEarvin / ¥ Belief from the ache of active feet MO Cushion Arch front Dr. Scholl's loioi orl>ers for your feet. Sponge rubber cushions Wi4h Aw your feet ■iK^e "ppers 9ive y°Ur tire *eet ond absorb °'°t °* the imPact 'hat quickly and ache sooner. High quality a long active life. Available in two l^omo,, e$' each desi9n«d to redistribute your weight J®"50'® 'or a specific arch weakness. Available in f The era of PIMM is here! women's sizes, wide and narrow. °y and you'll Sftg* ;v find men and women who are well ophor'" ,°ri Schol,s me,hod$. We'll make free Pedo- tedSI LOCKER ROOM iHhoir c your s,°ckinfled feet and then show you how Bon 1^°°' A^ds can h»'p relieve your particular type of DR. Scholl's W CQmpU&l 317 E. Grand River • 332-2815 footwear-Foot Care Center WON-SAT 9:30-5:00 4S5-6341 *rs. Washington, Lansing RftMichiqon Stote News, Eost loosing, Michigan Welcome Week, 197, Recreation in Big Ten grows past MSU wrestlers Waad Nadhir missed last bach and John Connell a : at position. i,uon- This year ,h Wisconsn defeated Oklahoma | Lansing parks Perennial and Oklahoma State on consec¬ utive nights on the road, which was the first time any school year because but should be of Jim Ellis at 167 a knee injury, ready to contend pounds. 150-pounds. Sophomore Jeff Thomas 'Injuries and being young hurt us last year," Peninger said of the team that finished open the year hv teams Nov. first MSU is Inuii- J*""'! j *1« 19 '»H By ANNE E. STUART titles gone had turned that trick against moves to 126-pounds and Penin¬ 9-9. "We'll be young again and we're still trying to rebuild ger said it wouW l!"111' J State Newe StaH Writer the two traditional wrestling Doug Siegert is back for his ger recruited Shawn White Take-Down Cluh ' hi Take a Lansing quia. powers. third year at 158 pounds and from Wisconsin to challenge ourselve up again to what we ment to heln "111 "C What do the names Reutter, Moo res, Fenner and Potter all ByTOMSHANAHAN Terry Etchinson for the 118- were." for the wrestling1' •" Dave Rodriguez, Jim Britten- have in common? Hint: They're just a few of many in the area. State News Sports Writer "It will be even worse next It was the Biggie Munn and Sports and recreation buffs can quickly supply the answer. year," Peninger said. "Iowa has The names are just four of 102 parks located in and around Duffy Daugherty football guys red-shirted that were teams of the '50s and '60s that Lansing. sitting on the bench last year." made MSU nationally known in Lansing's Parks and Recreation Dept. boasts over 2,600 acres sports, but the most impressive The Big Ten was so tough of park land in the area, including three cemeteries and four record at MSU has been accum¬ last year that for the first time golf courses. According to Ted Haskell. Parks and Recreation the NCAA allowed the top ulated by MSU wrestling coach Dept. Director, there are about 19 acres of parks for every thousand Lansing residents. Grady Peninger. three finishers at the Big Ten tournament in each weight S'o'.WRob.ofc.J MSU junior The history of the park system began with Oak Park, located Though the Spartans are class to qualify for the national shortsu, I at the corner of Saginaw Street and Pennsylvania Avenue in Lansing. Until about 1870, Oak Park was a cemetery, but only coming off two consecutive meet. fied. Usually only two quali¬ R»»dy Hop this double compelI p|,, , during that decade, the graves were moved to what is now the game list spring «;,! I Mt. Hope Cemetery at Mt. Hope and Aurelius Roads. Since then, park land had accumulated in parcels ranging from tiny And the first wrestler to take Northwestern I advantage of qualifying with a Though the biseluu I tirangles in the downtown area to the 120 acres of the Fenner third place finish was Dennis Arboretum. More than half the land has been donated to the Brighton, a 142-pound senior. "won is months , I city residents. Brighton was only 4-5 because wny, MSU coach Du. I Reutter Park in downtown Lansing, formerly Central Park, of injuries in his junior year, ny Litwhiler is ready ||. I served as the ceremonial park in the past, but was renamed but at the NCAA meet he went running y, I after former Mayor J. Gottlieb Reutter donated the fountain all the way to the final before pliers and through h|| I that stands in the center of the park. Dedicated fountain fans will enjoy watching the fountain, complete with colored lights, finishing as the runner-up at drills silti,. I 134-pounds. through nunier,„ I during the summer months. Moving up to 142-pounds, wMk-on Moores Park, located along the Grand River, a few blocks I he candidate, Brighton will have his hands team will a|u I south of downtown Lansing, is believed to be one of the first school-park combinations in the country according to Haskell. full according to Peninger who said he will be "fighting it Practice indoor, the Men's IM „ I Settled into an older but exclusive residential section of out" with Jeff Therrian, Don Buildin, I Lansing, it boasts one of the two outdoor public pools in Rodgers and Bruce Harrington. turf arena throJ I the winter in Lansing. Frances Park, located farther west on Moores River Mike Walsh, who also quali¬ tion for the prepu,. I Dr., one of the more outstanding area parks, was also a gift. A fied for the NCAA meet last break trip south spring I popular spot for family gatherings and picnics, Frances Park year, will move up from 126 is the last that I slopes gently to the riverbank and includes playground .500 seasons, Peninger has led pounds to fill 134-pound slot. warm-,, I equipment and a pavilion. MSU to an unprecedented sev¬ Another move Peninger hopes before the season be I Easily the most popular park in the Lansing area, especially on weekends and holidays, is Potter Part located off en consecutive Big Ten titles to make is elevating Shawn gins. Last year 28-26 for the MSU I year I from 1966 to 1972 and a national Whitcomb from 190-pounds to was Pennsylvania Avenue, just north of Mt. Hope Avenue. Potter championship in 1967. There and finished tied Park is the home of Lansing's zoo, and features Bingo the baby heavyweight. with I also two NCAA runner-up Iowa in the Big Ten I are Last year the Spartans weak elephant, who was purchased by Lansing area elementary finishes, a third and two more for school children a few years ago. est weight classes were the fourth place. fourth places at the national Friends of the Zoo, a nonprofit society formed in 1969, has upper weights and Peninger meet. been active in raising funds for the development and expansion recruited Steve Foley, a state He has produced 37 Big Ten of the park. individual champions and 10 champion from Ohio, to chal¬ Fenner Arboretum, located at the corner of Mt. Hope NCAA individual title holders lenge Mike Chaffin at 177 Avenue and Aurelius Road, is one of the most unusual parks in since coming to MSU in 1962. pounds. He also recruited Bill the area. But as Peninger heads into Salisbury from Temperance for Sports are not encouraged in the park, and a variety of the 190-pound class. his 16th season, he is still trying nature trails lead through wooded areas, a field and around to rebuild his team in a confer¬ such attractions as a duck pond and pioneer cabin. A small ence that is museum explains many of the attractions of the park and getting tougher cMmjsconwu; every year. displays exhibits geared particularly toward the many school Last year MSU faced three children who make field trips there every year. teams that were ranked No. 1 One of the latest additions to the park is a system of guide in the nation at different times. posts for the blind and an accompanying booklet in Braille Iowa is the biggest name in the which explains what exhibits the person is approaching as he Big Ten right now, but Wiscon¬ walks along the trails. sin and Norhtwestern both A COMPUTE PARTY STORI 730 AM • 94.9 FM • OMN TRAYS have strong teams again accor¬ ding to Peninger. Last winter "Dr. Steve Edwards 9 A.M. 'Til MIDNITE SUN. THRU THURS. 9 A.M. Tit 1 A.M. FRI.« SAT. 6 pm# pm" | hammondsport, inc State News •IMPORTED Wins Newsline •KEG BEER 353-3382 •ICE COLO BEERANOPOP •CHEESES •RATIIRA1 FOODS ★★★★★★★★★*★ •PACKAGED ICE )f SCIENCE FICTION if •GROCERIES jf MYSTERIES )f jf Bought t Sold jf Spectalhing in fine motorcar rtstoration WE ALSO CARRY HARDWARE AND HOUSEHOLD rL Curious Book Shop if • Exotic, Antique and Sportscar CLEANING ITEMS. jj 307 ■. CwU Rivet jl • Custom Pantl Making "GUARANTEED tOWEST PRICES IN TOWN MMVinYMnVICI ★★★★★★★★★★★ Show Quality Paintwork AT • ★★★★★★★★★★★ 'Porsche Problems * SPORTS ITEMS * DISCOUNT CALCULATORS We are enthusiasts like yourself. TNI L1TTU SHOP * MAGAZINES * THAT LOWIRBD THE PRICIB ]f Bought 4 Sold )f Quality is our priority, OF CALCULATORS IVIRTWRBRBf if Curious Book Shop jf hammondsport See vrIsoMc coupon In History and Academic Section. 1732 Hamilton Rd.,Okomos 220M.A.C. 551 E. Grand Rivor Drive 349-1770 10-5:30 Mon.-Sot. ★★★★★★★★★★★ 11..IW LA.. 11 351-6470 , , . PUT TENNIS YEAR ROUND We Are *1 AGAIN 1975 & 1977 State Champions ★ STUDENT MRMBRRSHIPS $40 Dance-Twirl and Twirl Team (Silver Stars) ★ MEMBERSHIP GOOD THRU Sept. 10,1978 ★ SPECIAL STUDRNT STANDBY RATES ★GROUP LISSONS AVAILABLE the Baton Twirling.Ballet, Jazz, Tap Greater For More Information Acrobats, Gymnastics Laneing Call SPECIAL CLASSES Boys only, Dance d MCCUET 372-9531 •!Hother& daughter Trampoline, pre-sehool for 3.4*5 years 604 Creyts UdDCl * SATO9 321-3862 — 321-60| m Stole News, Eost Loming, Michioon Welcome Week. 1977 B9: sfcens and women's swim teams break records IlflMSHANAMN f. New" Writer diving coach John Narcy aren't doing a good job, it's because ally at the other conference schools as it is at Indiana. with helping us get up in the Along with ail-American Bur Though Fetters concedes Melinda Whitcomb had one in August. conference," he added. gering, MSU also had all-Amer- tre's one team on cam- Indiana will more than likely But MSU's swimming team is Narcy, who last winter first place to Indiana, at least individual and two relay, Kathy MSU placed second in the Big Eij definitely f«n not going championship win its 18th straight Big Ten Still on the upswing. Last year coached Dave Burgering to the icans in Marc Stiner and Jesse Griffin who helped lead the Wisconsin may no longer have a Brown set two individual and ' Ten to Michigan, and finished ■ o:« liMien ,—. championship and probably win lock on second place. one relay and I MSU nudged Michigan for a first two Big Ten diving titles Becky Hastings 21st in the nation as a team out gpjrtan men s swim- it going away. third place upset. Traditionally diving team to the upset of "ItH be a battle between had one individual. of the 90 schools at the AIAW (one and three meter) an MSU diving team. Indiana wins, Wisconsin is sec¬ Michigan on the final day of Wisconsin, Michigan State, Diver Jeanie Mikles also (Associated diver has ever won, said last Intercollegiate K>, not because swim- Swimming just isn't as big a ond, Michigan third and MSU, year's performance will help competition. Griffin Michigan, Illinois and Ohio participated in the Outdoor Athletics for Women) cham¬ :h Dick Fetters and sport financially and tradition- Ohio State and Illinois MSU improve. will be back, but State (after Indiana) and it National Diving championships pionships. fight it Burgering and Stiner have should be an interesting year," out for fourth. "It will help but the crucial "I don't see any graduated. Also returning are Fetters concluded. drastic thing is we've got to have a Greg Moran and Kevin Mach- MSU's women's swimming change in the conference be¬ scholarship that we can offer emer. After Machemer's fresh¬ and diving team is also coming hockey balanced cause Indiana is still ahead and shoulder above the rest of us," Fetters said. "But we're coming the real blue-chip divers," Nar¬ cy said. "It created a lot more interest and I had a lot more man season said, "He's last year Narcy as freshman I've had." good as any off an excellent year having finished 8-1 in dual competition. There were 14 individual re¬ up and I think we'll continue to people contact us, but I didn't The main swimmers return¬ cords and five relay MSU because our new athletic direc¬ have a scholarship to offer ^ued from P««e 3) averaging close to 2.5 goals per tor (Joe Kearney) is concerned ing for the Spartans are Shawn records set over the season. game whUe them," he explained. Elkins, a senior from Grandville Karen Heath had a hand in a most effective allowing less than who one, getting shut out just once. won the Big Ten 200-yard six individual and two relay Jo scoring pucch. This is a ■Snjrtan team, with jun¬ It came in the season finale, at butterfly, and Mike Rado, a records. Kathy Kolon captured the state senior from West Bloomfield two of each, Vicki Riebeling had ior Reed and Debra championships, in who won the Big Ten 200-yard Adrian. one individual and two relays, ■expected to contribute individual medley. Sophomore Jennie Practice began for the Spar¬ 'The backbone of our team ★★★★★★★★★★★ a plus on offense. tan stickers Sept. 12 and the are the season opens at home October people who placed and * FOOTBALL PROGRAMS 4 scored points for us in the Big nnuw » kis fourth 1, against Eastern Michigan. Ten meet last year," Fetters If BASEBALL CARDS 4 iMSU. spending the last The squad plays at Old said. Fetters also went as far 4 Curious Bought B Sold 4 I an assistant to Diane Field. College Book Shop 4 T who formerly coached away as California, besides his Michigan recruits, to bring in 4 4 jd hockey and softball Kajornsin began his exper¬ ,w strictly the softball ience with field hockey in some new talent. ★★★★★★★★★★★ Thailand. He has international ...in coaches with "the umpiring experience in South¬ ■"They are skill, strate- east Asia along with collegiate L,, and strength. He umpiring experience in the Estate would be among United States. C to beat in the Big Ten We carry a complete line of I MSU will also have an assis¬ * pleased with the level tant coach from Ohio State in Athletic Shoes and related ap¬ ■ 'n the state of Kathy Ann Zupcsan. She is also good a veteran of Ohio State's soft- parel and accessories. Our .,e have three I Michigan, those being ball and track and field squads. CAN-U CANOE? clerks can testify to the quality f (Michigan), Western of our products — they aver¬ V|, Northern (Michi- Jd of course, MSU," he 4★★★★★★★★★★★ SCIENCE FICTION 4 aged 93 miles of running last | the Big Ten, OSU isn't 4 week. II, We beat them last MYSTERIES 4 If Bought t Sold 4 4 Curious Book Shop 4 Men and Ladies Sizing I rattled off a seven- 4 4 inning streak in 1976, > 9-3-1 mark, ★★★★★★★★★★★ •Nike 'Brooks . •E,onic GO BACK TO SCHOOL IN STYLE. JOLLY REDSKIN CANOE •New Balance •Tiger The Male Box has the quality and fashion to satisfy the U.S. Male (and LIVERY Female). Come in and check out fall collection. (On thn AvSabln River) Open weekends through November. 730AM-94.9FM • We have winter canoeing through Jan., Feb., & March THE Croup rates for fraternities, sororities, dorms, or¬ ganisations. maiE 403 E. Cnnd Bivir i Owens 1 am-6 am' Call (517) 3(8-5611 frank shorter sports 337-1109 P.O. Box 396 Grayliig, Mick 217 Ann St7 BOX Next to the Campus Theatre CLABA'8 SIR PIZZA Two Convenient Locations Sir Pizza welcomes you to Clara's Room, our brand new attraction in East Lansing. Clara's Room fea¬ tures turn of the century atmosphere for an |122 N. Harrison (Across from Brady Cnmplex) Hours evening of relaxation and intimate dining. Enjoy premium beer or choice wines. We also have the - Monday-Saturday 11 A.M. - 2 A.M. longest happy hour in town. Happy Hour — 11 a.m.-6 p.m. Monday-Friday Sunday - Noon-2 A.M. Phone: 351 -7363 TRY SIR PIZZA 2417 E. Kalamazoo (west of campus) Hours - Monday-Thursday 11 A.M. • 1 A.M. Friday-Saturday 11 A.M. ■ 2 A.M. THE "PIZZA WITH PERSONALITY" Sunday - Noon-12 Midnight Phone:487-3733 R1 flMichigon State News. East lonsing, Michigon W«lcomeWeek. 19?7 CO-REC SPORTS ALSO POPULAR Women's I.M. continues to grow women's league, while the co-rec leagues also continue to get By TOM SHANA HAN State NewsSporta Writer bigger." The total participation on campus of women has increased from Participation among women at MSU is increasing year by year in intramural and intercollegiate sports. Each year at MSU the total participation on campus by women has increased. 2,515 in all sports over an entire year in 1963, to 6,876 last year. The biggest jump came between 1975 and 1976 when the '75 school year total increased from 4,985 to 6,195 in 1976. But other than those two V jut*' There are the women's leagues and the co-rec leagues that the IM years, women's IM sports have grown gradually at MSU. 32 offers to complement the men's programs. The two most popular women's sports last year were softball with "Softball is the biggest women's sport," Allison Scruggs, 175 teams and 2,275 players and basketball with 85 teams and 850 assistant director of the Women's IM Sports and Recreative Services, said. "Last year we had 175 teams playing in the straight players. The women's sports that are also offered are floor hockey, water polo, volleyball and touch football. Last year there were 63 teams and 636 players. "In softball we could have taken more teams but we had to cut off the total because of a lack of space," Scruggs said. "We also had to cut off basket¬ ball. If we had more facilities we'd have more teams enter¬ ed." Space has been an IM pro¬ blem for a number of years at MSU. The long hoped for plans of an IM East on the East Complex still have to be formu¬ lated. And when Men's IM Building closes it puts and even bigger cramp on the existing A unique type of touch football is the popular IM game among the men's leagues in the^all facilities. WIDE VARIETY OF SPORTS "During registration when the Men's IM is closed, the Women's IM is full and it's a real madhouse over here for the basketball courts," Scruggs said. "We also have a real big swimming following who want Men's IM growing too to use the pools," she added. By MICHAEL KLOCKE uous passing which adds more proximately 10,500 people, al¬ Scruggs has previously direc¬ State News Sports Writer action to the game. most one out of every four ted the co-rec IM programs and Involvement and the chance Some of the other sports students, participated in soft- says it is also receiving in¬ for everyone to compete are the during fall term include: bowl¬ ball. creased interest on campus. underlying principles of the ing, volleyball, badminton and a During spring term there is fast growing MSU Men's Intra¬ cross-country race called the also a residence hall track meet, "We're doing things with mural program. turkey trot. team and individual golf tourna¬ rule differences so that the rules Last year there were 20 team During winter term basket¬ ments and a tennis singles are not so much different from sports and 18 individuals sports ball heads the way with about tournament. the regular rules, and more provided by the Men's IM 500 teams participating. Courts Vanderwheele said the Men's attractive a game for the fel¬ Department which involved a in the Men's IM Building, IM program has always grown lows," she said. "A lot of people total of over 26,000 partici¬ Jenison Fieldhouse and the steadily, but in recent years it play in both the co-rec and other pants. Women's IM are put to use in has grown so much that the leagues because of the interest "We try to offer a wide order to fulfill the demand. program has reached a satura¬ in co-rec." variety of sports to the stu¬ Another winter term sport tion point. dents," said Tom Vander- that is becoming very popular "I think we've already Besides the organized team wheele, assistant director of is ice hockey. The games are the largest point that the sports, there has also been an the Men's IM programs. "Any¬ played in Munn Ice Arena and program will reach," said Van¬ increased use of the track, time there's a demand for a there is a limit of 50 teams due derwheele in speaking about paddleball courts and other sport we try to work on it, to the scarcity of ice time. one of the five largest college individual sports on campus by though we have had to drop Two co-recreational sports, IM programs in the nation. women. The increase of partici¬ inner tube water-polo and floor some programs with question¬ "Because of our budget re¬ pation has created even more able participation." hockey, drew well over 600 strictions, we've often had to crowded IM conditions that During fall term, touch foot¬ participants last year during scrape." won't be relieved until new ball is the most popular sport winter term. Vanderwheele said there facilities are built because the with over 5,000 participants. The largest IM sport partici¬ probably won't be any new Women's IM program shows no The game is a unique type of pation-wise is slow pitch soft- sports added because of the Stole News/ Pete Obee signs of fading. football in that it allows contin¬ ball during spring term. Ap¬ tight budget. He said the most Aklipse won the Women's IM Residence Hall league softball championship when it defeated Akadia last spring. mSu BOWLING LANES FALL TERM LEAGUE SIGN-UP Leagues Start Week Of October 3 (league schedule for fall term 1977 below) PAY GROUP TIM1 STARTS iwuKtfn * muMYOuraUEAiToyiT.aas.aaso SUNDAY ascension lutheran church- :30 p.m. September 25 *faculty folk- :30 p.m. ?? *women's intramural >:15p.m. October 9 I MONDAY *faculty bowling league - —6::15 p.m. October 3 j *bowling club 9::00 p.m. October! TUISDAY *msu university apartment league 6::15p.m. October 11 *men sIntramural (dorm & fraternity)—*:00 p.m. October 11 WIDNISDAY *bowling club 6::00 p.m. October 5 *men's intramural (dorm) 9::00 p.m. October 12 THURSDAY *bowling club 6:00 & 9::00 p.m. October 6 •Also: Tryouts for MEN'S and WOMEN'S Bowling Teams Start October 1 (Sign up at Union Lanes) Board Your Horses mSu yes i'm interested in joining a league! (openings lor now leagues still available) Close to School This Year! STUDENT RATES $49.$69/month Bowling Club Mmi SWEET GRAIN & HAY FED DAILY • everyone invited to ADDRESS. INDOOR RIDING ARENA join... no experience PHONE. BEHTAl HOUSES ALSO BTWhour necessary. Please CHECK your CHOICE DAY. 322>9438 o COMPETITION • PRIZES (15-20 minutes from campus) OBANQUET /"ImENS □! 1 MIXED □( \m]a If "Wi 9819D"isltw>- Dimondale, Mich. 48821 (all per term) / i«sa iclIT ai State News, Eost loosing, Michioon Welcome Week, 1977 BIT Gymnastics unique game Nov. 28 1977-78 MSU BASKETBALL SCHEDULE Central Michigan Among the numerous winter Europe and in Japan, gymnas- posting a 10-1 dual record, Dec. 2 and 3 sports, both men's and women's (Associated Intercollegiate Carrier Classic tics does gain and at Syracuse, N.Y. MSU, LeMoyne, Rhode Island on the MSU more njore losing the Big Ten champion- Athletics for Women) national and Syracuse. campus is gymnas¬ attention each year. ship to Illinois by 1.1 points, Dec. 8 tics. championships. Wichita State ,•5IM Building is open Monday through Friday from 8 Though not nearly the The women's gymnastics winning the state champion- Dec. 10 sport in the United States or the An experienced, but still Western Michigan jjOp.m., Saturday from noon to 7:50 p.m. and Sunday from team captured most of the ship, placing third in the re- Dec. 19 Middle Tennessee Midwest, as it is in parts of young women's gymnastics I'to 5:50 P-m. interest at MSU last year by gionals and 12th in the AIAW team returns for the 1978 Dec. 21 at Detroit Dec. 29 and 30 Limn'sIMpo®! I"0"" are 11:30 a.m. to 1:50p.m. and 5 p.m season as a senior only Ann Weaver was last year. Returning Classic at Norfolk, Va. MSU, Southern Old Dominion Methodist, New La Monday through Thursday. Friday it is open from 11 the Skillman sisters, who Hampshire, Old Dominion IF' - ,nd 5 p.m. to 9:50 p.m. The Saturday hours are co-rec are Jan. 5 gathered points for Minnesota ki lo 7:50 p.m. Sunday there is an IM swim for children numerous MSU all the way up to the final Jan. 7 Wisconsin Ljls.m. and 1 p.m. in addition to the co-rec 1 p.m. to 5:50 AIAW meet. Sara is a junior Jan.12 at Illinois 1,1 Jan.14 at Northwestern « •♦• and Kathy is a sophomore. Both Jan.19 paritcipate in the all-around. Purdue ,]y gird swim, beginning Sept. 29, is from 6:30 a.m. to 8:50 Other veterans are Diane Jan. 21 Iowa ^through Thursday and 6:30 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. Friday, Lovata, Pamela Harris and Jan.26 at Ohio State co-rec. Jan.28 Pam Steckroat. All scored well at Indiana Feb. 2 in the all-around for the Spar¬ Michigan ■Entry deadline for women's vollyball is noon, Oct. 4. The tans. Feb. 4 Indiana Ldeyball deadline is noon Oct. 5. Women's bowling also has a MSU's men's Feb. 9 at Iowa Tjj deadline. The touch^football deadline is noon Oct. 6. teams are gymnastics coached by George Feb. 11 at Michigan Feb. 16 at Purdue L cards to turn in can be picked up at the meetings for each Szypula, a long time booster of Feb.18 Ohio State JL t0Uch football meetings are at 6 p.m. Oct. 4 in 137 of the gymnastics in Michigan who Feb. 23 conducts Northwestern JV juj, There is another 6 p.m. meeting in the same room gymnastic sports Feb.25 school and a clinic in the Illinois ■Women's volleyball will meet Oct. 3 in 137 at 8 p.m. Co-rec summer months. This will be March 2 at Wisconsin ■,il wd| meet at 6 p.m. in 137 Oct. 3. All entries should be March 4 at Minnesota Szypula's 31st year at MSU. ■jo at the Women's IM Building office. Szypula's gymnasts have won 43 individual Big Ten titles and ■student interested in officiating should attend meetings for 18 NCAA crowns over the ■volleyball at 6 p.m. Sept. 29 in 137 of the Women's IM, for years. Is■ volleyball at 7 p.m. Sept. 29 in 137 and women's touch Last winter the Spartans Oct. 21 and 22 Toronto m. Sept. 29 in 137 of the Women's IM. ■ • - lacked depth and finished with Oct. 28 and 29 at North Dakota an 6-8 record and seventh place Nov. 4 and 5 Minnesota Imcb's IM Building hours will be similar to the women's IM finish at the Big Ten meet. Nov. 11 at Michigan jt official times were not determined at the time of MSU's most consistent gym¬ Nov. 12 Michigan Nov. 18 and 19 nast was all-arounder Jeff Rud¬ Michigan Tech swill be published when the State News begins its fall term olph, who is preparing for his Nov. 25 and 26 at Notre Dame Uion. There will also be information regarding the entry senior year. Rudolph has been Dec. 2 and 3 at Minnesota Duluth stsand manager's meetings for fall term IM touch football. Gymnastics allows one of MSU's Dec. 9 and 10 Wisconsin an opportunity for both MSU's men's and women's team to top all-arounders since his freshman year Dec. 29 and 30 Boston host the same opponent as Dennis Yee warms up before last year's double dual and Jan. 7 and 8 Minnesota-Duluth with Wisconsin. consistently scored in the 50s I.M. last season. Jan. 13 and 14 at Michigan Tech offers participation Jan. 20 and 21 Jan. 27 and 28 at Wisconsin Colorado College id from page 10) representatives, they felt stu¬ Women's cross country and track teams well known Feb. 4 and 5 Feb. 10 and 11 Feb. 17 and 18 at Minnesota North Dakota at Denver pidly diminishing." dents would support a new Feb. 24 and 25 Notre Dame (continued from page 3) Jk Beeman, Director of building. was hired last April to take over woman. experience has provided her Mar. 3 Michigan Ei's IM Department, said Beeman said the new build¬ highlights of MSU women's the women's track team from One of the track team's most with valuable international ex¬ Mar. 4 at Michigan T for additional space is ing would be completely acces¬ track is that both the indoor and outdoor seasons host an MSU current women's athletic direc¬ talented runners is Sue Latter, perience if she has any thoughts Mar. 10 and 11 WCHA Playoffs (first round) for those in- sible and co-recreational. In¬ tor Nell Jackson. Bridges has a whose specialty is the 800- about the 1980 Olympics. Mar. 14 and 15 WCHA Playoffs (second round) cluded in the building would be: Invitational to bring in some of long track experience and still meters. She spent the summer Mar. 19 Latter also helped the track NCAA Playoff Berth said land has been the state's and midwest's best trains regularly. In 1973 she so bowling alleys, tennis courts, 24 touring with a United States team to the Big Ten champion¬ Mar. 23,24 and 25 NCAA Finals |led for a new IM Build- paddleball-handball courts and women runners. held the world record for the AAU team in Europe and at the ship in April as MSU nudged _ in said the building a pool. Cheryl Bridges will be in for fastest time in a marathon by a World Games in Moscow. The second place Wisconsin. fie located somewhere in "Even when there is a reduc¬ her first indoor season, as she campus," he i„„ r is but there is no tion in enrollment there is inting at a campus ma | timetable for construc- always an increase in IM parti¬ ★★★★★★★★★★★ lount of 'green spa cipation," Beeman said. "The * RARE & OUT OF if (continued s ASMSU in- IM program is open to all, both * PRINT BOOKS )f «w| kl sports liaison commit- good athletes and those with Jf Bought 4 Sold ■★★★*** ml jf. a meeting with few skills." )f Curious Book Shop RARE I OUT0f| IPresident jl. PRINT BOOKS K |i Jr., that Clifton as R. student "All people have to do is come in and ask," he concluded. + -zzr J Sought!Soli ★★★★★★★★★★★ Curious Book SIm J07I Grwdlb. L This coupon good for one free pinball game at Food & Games in Frandor next to Super X Only one coupon per customer, please. Expires Oct. 15,1977 STARTS | WIN A September 25 ?? 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Grandma-Grandpa Order Early And Others NIU^H 'In the center of campus MIKIItil l^^ggg53u5!Zii!B31EBiMWHH 1 stote of the Arts at MSU: is it just slightly out of tune, lancing precariously, or is it simply... he Pits? always, potential unrealized;caliber js behind expectations >o: If you don't mind my saying so, it wouldn't have hurt you to tof what the gentleman wanted. fa: I know what the gentleman wanted. )o: What, dear? In: You'U find it in Balzac. tsroo: Excuse me for livin' but I've never read it. to: Neither has anyone I in this town. Paroo: There you go again with that \e old Comment — a — lout the low mentality of I River City people and Takin'it all too much to heart. Act One. Scene 3 of The Music Man. Copyright 1958 by Meredith Wilson. ByJOEPIZZO to be a bunch of downhome folks having SUte News Stiff Writer good, clean fun and keeping the people lament of "Madame Librarian" may smiling - except when some hilalutin' se — especially to new- intelekshul suggests something insidiously ■ to the MSU community — when it avant garde, like putting on a dirty play? indications are that, while it's not too late to performs at the Okemos Barn Theater in an introduction to an article on the And isn't keeping the people smiling what hit the skids, time is dwindling peril¬ Okemos. I don't want to ih if the arts on campus and sur it's all about? ously short. The Lansing Civic Players, founded in my friondi and neighbors in a play like Like it or not, the arts are not alive and 1928, also community theater, stages its Who s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?' because it's too It is far too easy for newcomers to MSU, well at MSU, nor are they likely to be for at We don't do those depressing. | all. aren't there a plethora of brains thoroughly fried by the trauma of productions in downtown Lansing. avant-garde things. - Winifred Olds, member lis and performing companies in the least a few academic and fiscal years, given The BoarsHead Theater, a group that is of the Community Circle Players Qoard ofDirectors on its decision not registration, overwhelmed by the abun¬ to dance of activity in areas of "the arts," to the state of the vehicles of art at the essentially a professional repertory com¬ ■eluding several on campus and in the stage the critically-acclaimed drama at the Okemos Barn Theater this moment. 1 Lansing area? assume local groups are ever-busy rising to pany, is in production all year. The Center t their offerings received with new heights of innovation, especially here in Theater is, by far, the most visible of the for the Arts in downtown Lansing is used ti and deafening rounds of ap an art/culture/history/intellectually domi¬ performing arts in the MSU community. during the regular season, while summer Most visible of local theatrical companies is productions are staged at the Ledges Play¬ [except when reviewers who have nated University community. the Performing Arts Company (PAC), house in Fitzgerald Park, Grand Ledge. The production was not approved by the The revised program would t acted before an audience An easy assumption perhaps, but not provide "an 1 know nothing about theater write affiliated with the MSU Department of There is a marked similarity between the board. order for everything," Wagner likely the correct one. The truth of the said, "start¬ Theatre. two community groups in the types of "We all read the play and we debated a ■spleen-venting criticisms in local matter lies somewhere among the points of With precious few ing students from where they're comfor¬ "O.K." and, not to mince words, the pits. exceptions, PAC has seasons scheduled and they quite often long time on it and the majority won," said table" with a freshman level course on jpersl? concentrated on safe ("Keep 'em smilin' ") freely share personnel, ideas and theatrical Leanor Reizen of Okemos, another member writers and literature that will feature lommunity entertainment supposed That is the consensus, anyhow, and of the board. theater, or has wreaked havoc on the hangups. working writers as guest lecturers, the classics in the name of experimentation, An example of the closeness between the Don White of Holt, past president of the usual workshop sequence of writing courses, "relevance," or quite possibly the Divine Lansing Civic Players and the Community Lansing Civic Players and vice president of and closer advising by faculty who teach and Right of Department Heads. Circle Players is neatly elucidated by the Michigan Community Theater Associa¬ publish their own work. In the latter cases, as though it was Winifred and J. Wesley Olds of Okemos, tion, adheres to a middle-of-the-road philo¬ |heater this decided playwrights didn't know what a One purpose of the increased number of both of whom were active in the civic players sophy. year: stage was when they wrote their plays, PAC personnel have been known to gleefully perform major surgery with the enthusiasm and helped found the Barn group in 1964. This year Winifred Olds is secretary of the Community Circle Players Board of Direc¬ "In community theater, there's a danger courses and the addition of an introductory because they're all hometown folks (some¬ creative writing course without the permis¬ body might be offended)," he said. sion of the instructor based on judgment of a and often the skill of back alley coat- tors and J. Wesley Olds is president of the Theater groups have a sense for what portfolio of work is to seek out talented touch of — — hope hanger abortionists, before that procedure Not even the Bard of Avon has been spared what may be loosely called exten¬ companionate body governing the Lansing Civic Players. men, "We're amateur theater women — business¬ and housewives," Winifred their audiences will tolerate according to students who may not have written White because season ticket holders finance creatively before. their performances. "You have to temper your judgment with The acid test, of course, will be to see whether the new emphasis raises the of dismay sive editing — assuming editors performed Olds said. "In every community there are the financial facts of life" when selecting somewhat undistinguished level of local a sea their functions with hatchets instead of copy amateurs who want to act." plays. literati. pencils. She believes community theater should White suggested a studio production of But it is true, as Wagner says: "I've felt In one PAC "adaptation" of Shake¬ foster involvement by families in the such plays might be an acceptable compro¬ for years we're not doing what we can with a speare, so important a principal as the community, and should provide entertain¬ mise, provided the theater group "advise campus this size." By JOHN WALL title-role character was reduced to the ment and instruction in acting and technical the folks this (the play) is strong stuff in SUte News Reviewer status of a peripheral hanger-on. theater as well. promotional materials. Fin? experienced theater in this area for four years, and having reviewed it about In terms of providing theater that fosters "Community theater is a recreational Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? will be Neeks, the time has come to declare publicly that we live in a cultural wasteland. insight into the human condition, en¬ outlet," she said. That position was reflected presented early next year by the BoarsHead _!«y I localyear I anticipate the possibility of one of three glorious things happening: courages the questioning of attitudes and in her staunch opposition to the inclusion of Theater. or university group will find a modest but brilliant play and give it the kind the like, the PAC has usually failed to rise to Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? by Edward Ray Turner, administrative director for ■Migent, sensitive staging it demands; these same people will go all-out and bring ■theatrical extravaganza, sparing no expense, audition the entire community to get the challenge. Instead it offers the kind of Albee in the group's current season. the group, felt the play could be staged with inside theater many insist does not befit that which The powerful drama deals with, among relative impunity because the BoarsHead TSl" actors, and bring everything they have to bear on a play like Tennessee should be offered at a University ostensi¬ other themes, truth and illusion using as operates as a professional repertory com¬ Be you a dancin' fool or a dancing lams' Camino Real John Osborne's A Patriot for Me; or the ultimate that or — bly committed to encouraging intellectual metaphor the game-playing and ritual in the pany. sage, you'll find the opportunity to J" or both of these things will be realised in a production of an original play by a and psychological growth. marriage of a middle-aged couple, George Because all involved in the production will execute your plies, pirouettes and jetes [Playwright. 'ar I The PAC has had its successes, of course, and Martha, and their encounter with a be paid, the group can expect them to have a the Lansing area. A rundown on page " am still anticipating, a testament either to my endurance or my stupidity. which have been duly noted in the past. But younger couple in the course of an evening. "professional attitude" towards the play. 2. year my One of the many far-from-campus anticipation is again aroused by the possibility of good things these are hardly sufficient in quantity or On Broadway, it was met with critical He suggested the rejection of Virginia acclaim, including the Tony Award for Best Woolf by the Community Circle Players had tourist attractions directed by MSU are fe are a quality to offset its notoriety for the anti¬ couple of plays I have been waiting to see for some time, and others I something to do with the differences in the cenic Hidden Lake Gardens, with pathy which thrives in its audiences. Play. The film version, which starred [seen Te many times, which hold the promise of fresh and innovative interpretations. One faculty member said of attending Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton, won audiences sought by the two groups. nooks, brooks, crannies and seclusion. Performing Arts Company (PAC), is the sanctum sanctorum of the University PAC performances during the 1970's: "I six Academy Awards. But locally, they say The theatrical productions and Lecture- Page 5. , Jler groups, stages its productions in Fairchild Theatre. This season PAC has endured so many things that I didn't have to smut with six trophies is, well, is smut none¬ Concert Series performances are the best Art — from the abstract avant garde j™led the N. Richard Nash romantic-comedy The Rainmaker for the opening slot in endure." This faculty member eventually theless. known of any area of the arts in the MSU style of body art to the more structured resolved the problem by ceasing to attend community. They buy the biggest adver¬ sort you find in the Kresge Art Center PAC productions entirely. Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? is tisements in local papers and sometimes Gallery — yours for the enjoyment. re the term's end, the PAC will stage Shakespeare's exquisite romantic tragedy considered excellent as theater and litera¬ show up on the news pages as well. Page 6. w«nd Juliet. Of all Another, who has been at MSU for nearly Shakespeare's tragedies, this is the most appropriate for the 20 years, offered this comment: "We (the ture by the general consensus of critics and The University recently completed what Your pick of the flicks. Page 6. crsity stage. academicians. Edward Albee, a two-time One of the more distinguished cultur¬ faculty member and his spouse) just stopped was billed as an "as widely publicized as ■ February, William Saroyan's Pulitzer Prize-winning The Time of Your Life will Pulitzer Prize winner, is considered among possible" Enrichment Fund Drive, primarily al attractions of MSU is Lecture-Con¬ i'erfive performances. It is a going" after years of regular attendance. ■ "ansico bar. Depression-era study of the lives of hangers-on in a An attempt to elicit comments on the role the most talented and significant of contem¬ to raise $11 million for the construction of a cert, which provides films, speakers, of the PAC, theater in general and the area's porary playwrights. Performing Arts Center. music and other quality events. Page T'"? term brings two PAC productions. The first, The Corsican Brothers, is But the play's three acts, peppered with 11. professional theater from Theatre Dept. This makes stark contrast to such •umably based on the Dumas swashbuckler about Siamese twins separated in body confrontation and the vicious destruction of The State News' first bookstore l"et spirit. The finale of the 1977-78 season is the Webber/Rice rock opera Jesus Chairperson Frank C. Rutledge were virtually unknown problems as the lack of illusion, contains a fair amount of profanity. wall space in the Kresge Art Gallery review. Page II. T81 Superstar. greeted with a deadening "no comment." Winifred Olds did not want to see that rendering the showing of even a liberal Once a social gathering spot around A secretary said, "Mr. Rutledge says he production staged at the Okemos Barn ■Mi"8 e Theater is located downstairs in the Auditorium. It provides a more portion of the entire collection impossible. campus, now undergoing resurrection, theatrical does not wish to discuss those matters." Theater. due to the effort of some manually-in¬ setting for both play and audience. In past season such plays as A One nearly invisible aspect of arts on I, Named Desire, Seascape, and Oscar Wilde's sensuous and decadent Salome Apparently, Mr. Rutledge has learned well "I don't want to see my friends and campus has traditionally been the writing clined MSU students. It's called the from discussing those matters with unim neighbors in a play like "Who's Afraid of made of logs, naturally. LT 'eatured. This season, the Arena Theater promises a challenging and program offered by the English Depart¬ Forestry Cabin, pressed playgoers in the past. Virginia Woolf?" because it's too depress¬ P '.is' °' productions. This fall they will open their season with The Trojan « ment. Page 12. 'Euripides' Aside from the PAC, there are three area ing," she said. "We don't do those avant- Popular music. We've got it. and epic, poetic study of defeat and endurance. Winter promises to be The curriculum has quietly been under¬ °'y exciting term for the Arena as they bring two brilliant comedies to the theatrical companies not officially affiliated garde things. going extensive revision, and some of the plenty of people are busy bringing it to with the University. "It didn't take me long to talk them (the (continued on page 4) new courses added may be offered by Spring you. Page 15. The Community Circle Players, a com 12-member Board of directors of the group) term, according to Linda C. Wagner, munity theater group, founded in 1964, out of Virginia Woolf, she added. associate chairperson. C2M'ch'9°n Stote News, Eost lonsing, Michigon Lansing, Michigan, is not exactly New York, New York. But Lansing does offer the opportunities to dance — both in the classroom and onstage — and in its different types, if you are willing to look for them. Art in movement: dance options abound By CONSTANCE A. WARNER For those who wish to venture farther tram the MSU campus, State News Reviewer Lansing Community College in downtown Lansing schedules Are you new in the Lansing area and want to dance? dance classes in a variety of techniques, including ballet, modern, If you are a beginner or an intermediate in ballet or modern tap, folk, and social dancing. In addition, several local dancing dance, you have a wide selection of technique classes from which to studios have classes for adults. choose.More advanced students of dance will find fewer classes on Unfortunately, fewer local organizations offer dance technique their level, but the campus and surrounding area offer the dancer at the advanced level. Those which do usually have a limited many opportunities to gain performing experience. selection of advanced classes. This deficiency is somewhat For the beginning and intermediate dancer, the MSU Health alleviated by the performing opportunities available to advanced and Phyaical Recreation department (HPR) offers many dance dancers. classes in a variety of styles, including ballet, modern jazz, social, For those willing to devote time to dancing, the MSU Repertory folk and square. Dance Company and the lecture-demonstration touring group Also under HPR sponsorship is Orchesis, MSU's modern dance (which holds auditions at the beginning of Fall term) are good bets. club, which offers two modern dance classes per week for a Another active organization is Happendance, a small independ¬ nominal charge. ent modern dance company composed largely of veterans of the Other on-campus organizations which sponsor dance instruction MSU dance program. The MSU Theatre Dept. sometimes needs free or nearly so include the MSU Promenaders (square dance) dancers for musicals and plays it presents as do other on-campus and the Society for Creative Anachronism (Medieval and theater groups. Renaissance dance). Dancers willing to go off campus can turn to Lansing Several organizations offer inexpensive dancing instruction at Community College which sponsors dance organizations for locations close to the campus. At the East Lansing Arts several styles, including ballet, ethnic, and show dancing. Workshop, for example, you can choose between beginning or There are also miscellaneous local groups which present dances intermediate tap and ballet fundamentals. of specific, narrowly defined styles — such as Ballet The Arts Workshop also sponsors classes in such related fields Hispanico — and groups which occasionally present dancing as as yoga, mime, and conditioning part at special exercises, as well as classes in occasions — e.g. for the local Israeli Independence Day music and the visual arts. celebration, which sometimes includes exhibitions of folk dancing. Modern Dance Workshop, a division of the East Lansing In summary. Lansing, Michigan, is not exactly New York, New School-City Activity Program, offers beginning and intermediate York; but Lansing does offer the opportunities to dance, both in "Happendance" in its rendition of Lunar Muse, created and modern dance classes at Hanna Middle School. the classroom and onstage, if you are willing to look for them. ordinator Diane Newman. choreographed by Happendance' 7ym^m/ '// THE BIG WHITE BARN /1 Hi, 2843 E. Cd. River, E. Laos. 351-1201 This Area's Only fTlulti-ffledia Discotheque| A Total Entertainment Concept I Featuring A Different Special / Every Nlte of the Wei I Continuous Danclngl 7 Nltes a Week Low or No Cover eoupoit On* Fr** Admission Expires September 30,1977 L^jgon Stole News, East Lansing, Michigan Welcome Week. 1977 C3 "East Lansing never sounded so good- until 1 got my new stereo system from Marshall's Sound Shop! 99 'I checked all around no-one else could compare.' 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And they are scheduling clinics and seminars with ex¬ pert reps from world reknown manufacturers. It's a good way to learn the facts about getting great stereo. Something good is always going on at Marshall's. Stop in — you'll hear what I mean! You get a sound deal at Marshall's - just check! Verit Speakers Empire Cartridge 200 SL 2 Way Model 2000 £» M >\ '3 List $ 109.95/Sale $61 $11.93 While Supplies lost Coupon Good Through 10-15-77 CSjewU- Coupon Watts Dust Bug N VJ Co#pon JSI I1 hi 111 BASF 90 minute Cassettes list $6.9 5/ tale $3.95 Coupon Good through 10-15-77 ^a( fl 3 bag for only $4.39 r-j | While Supplies Last Superex Headphones Coupon Er W A J5? Model TL-3 All Direct-disc Records ^ 3" AS "fflU •Jj Save $3.00 •« marked price List $39.9S/tale $31.00 Coupon Good Through 10-15-77 i Jm] iJY While Supplies Last _ rir MARSHALL MUSIC COMPANY 245 Ann St. Hours: Mon-Fri 10-8 Saturday 10-5 C^Michigon Slote News. Eost loosing. Michigon Theater: the components are present, but will they crystalize for us? (continued from page 1) marriage of George and Martha and will be already scheduled, unscheduled produc¬ stage. January will close with Oscar Wilde's guest-directed by Arthur N. Athanason, tions are often staged by smaller groups as amusing, epigrammatic comedy of manners assistant professor of English at MSU. The Company and Black Renaissance. They The Importance of Being Earnest. Watch The Okemos Barn Theater is the home of usually announce forthcoming productions out for this one - it is extremely the Commuity Circle Players, perhaps the through the use of posters and advertise sophisticated and has to be done with just area's best amateur group. Their schedule ments listing pertinent information. the right amount of precious wit and style for the 1977-78 season includes Anything In summary, this season warrants the to work. Otherwise, it can be lethal. Goes, the musical featuring the music and expectation of fine things. Whether those At the end of February, the Arena will sophisticated lyrics of Cole Porter. expectations will be met is something I dare In November, they will stage Androcles not say. present The Hostage, Irish dramatist and the Brendan Behan's hilarious, ribald, music Lion, George Bernard Shaw If you can only make it to two or three hall fantasy about love, war, and the IRA. It abridged for kids. Their Christmas show is plays all year, see Who's Afraid of Virginia the endearing Dickens tale A Christmas Woolf? at the BoarsHead, The Hostage in is inspired madness. Carol. the Arena Theater, and perhaps The In the spring, for the children, is the The Barn's big dramatic offering of the Runner Stumbles at either the BoarsHead puppet show Hansel and Gretel, and for the season will be The Diary of Anne Frank, or Meadowbrook. grown-ups (I assume) there is the myster Frances Goodrich and Albert Hackett's If those three deliver everything they ious Morgan Rainwater, MFA which may or may not be about the director of this Pulitzer Prize-winning drama of Nazi promise, anything else that turns out well Richard Thomsen as Drummond confronts John Peakes as state NewspCJbyu?a Brady in the BoarsHead production Inherit til summer's production of Farquhar's The persecution. Hay Fever, that perennial will be "extra dessert." Wind this summer. favorite by the modern master of sophis Beaux Strategem. ticated comedy, Noel Coward, will be the Off-campus theater groups seem to have March presentation, and the season will end Theater Schedules 1977-1978 April 2 Damn Yankees, book by George Ab¬ The Corn Is Green even better schedules, especially the Boars- with the musical Damn Yankees, a rework¬ Performing Arts Company Stop the Worldl I Want to Get Off by bott and Douglass Wallop, from a book by Emlyn December 29-January 22 Will Head Players. They are the area's only ing of the Faust legend in a baseball setting. | (Fairchild Theater) Anthony Newley and Leslie Bricusse - by Wallop, Music and lyrics by Richard The Tempest by William professional theater company and they A fantastically rich season merits special The Rainmaker by N. Richard Nash ■ April 6-April 30 Adler and Jerry Ross May 11-14, Shakesj generally attempt more challenging mater¬ mention of a theater group at Oakland - January 26-February 19 October 18-22 The Runner Stumbles by Milan Stitt - 18-21, 25-28 The Runner Stumbles ial than the other groups. University in Rochester, Michigan. The Romeo and Juliet by William Shake¬ by Milanl This season, at the Lansing Center for Meadowbrook Theater might be worth a May 4-Moy 21 Arena Theater February 23-March 19 I speare - November 15-19 Sexual Perversity in Chicago by David The Trojan Women the Arts, the BoarsHead Players will trip for those who have the time and money by Euripides - No¬ Misalliance by George Bernard! The Time ol Your Life by William Saro- Momet present, among other offerings, Equus, to travel to the Detroit area. - May 25-June 18 (Tentative — vember 1-5, 9-12 March 23-April 16 Peter Shaffer's masterpiece and perhaps The Meadowbrook Theater schedule for yan - February 14-18 Pending availability of performing The Importance of Being Earnest by Os¬ A musical to be announced The Corsicon Brothers la the finest play of the last fifteen years; The 1977 78: She Stoops to Conquer, Oliver - April 18-22 rights.) car Wilde Last of the Red Hot - January 24-28, February 1-4 run April 20-May 14 Lovers, the Neil Simon Goldsmith's eighteenth-century comedy of Jesus Christ Superstar by Andrew Lloyd Community Circle Players The Hostage by Brendan Behan • Febru¬ Lansing Civic Players I hack comedy with which they will open manners; Picnic, by William Inge, a Webber and Tim Rice - May 23-27 (Okemos Barn Theater) ary 28-March 4, March 8-11 (Partington Aud., corner K their season this fall; The Norman Con¬ Pulitzer-Prize winner that was revived BoarsHead Theater Anything Goes by Cole Porter - Octo¬ Hansel and Gretel (puppet show) - and quests, by contemporary British play¬ locally last year; Table Manners by British (Lansing Center for the Arts) ber 6-9. 13-16 Chestnut, Lansing)! wright Alan Ayckbourne; The Runner farceur Alan Ayckbourne; The Corn is April 22-23, 29-30 Night Watch by Lucille Fletcher| The Last of the Red Hot Lovers by Neil Androcles and the Lion by Bernard Morgan Rainwater MFA - April 25-29 Stumbles, written by Michigan playwright Green, a sensitive play by Emlyn Williams ber 21-22 and 28-29 Simon - November 25-December 11 Shaw (obridged) - November 4-6,11-13 Milan Stitt, about a monk who is tried for about a Welsh coal-mining youth who is Meadowbrook Theater Scapino (adopted from the I The Norman Conquests by Alan A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens the rape of a nun; Private Lives, the Noel discovered and educated by a woman Ayck¬ (Oakland University, Rochester, Mich.) classic) - December 2-3 and 9-lo| Coward classic comedy; and Edward Al- bourne - December 29-January 22 (stage adaption) • December 1-4,8-11 schoolteacher; William Shakespeare's last She Stoops to Conquer by Oliver Gold¬ The Music Man by Meredith bee's Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? which Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? by Ed¬ The Diary of Anne Frank by Francis great dark comedy The Tempest; The smith September 29-October 23 - February 17-18 and 24-25 promises to be perhaps the dramatic event Runner Stumbles; and George Bernard ward Albee ■ January 26-February 12 Goodrich and Albert Hackett Febru¬ Picnic of the season at the BoarsHead. Albee's - by William Inge ■ October 27- The Dark at the Top ol the Stars! Shaw's Misalliance. Their season will end Private Lives by Noel Coward • Febru¬ ary 2, 4-5, 9-12 November 20 liam Inge - March 31 and April ll unconventional drama is about truth and with a musical to be announced later. ary 16-March 12 Hay Fever by Noel Coward - March 2-5, Table Manners by Alan Ayckbourne - God's Favorite by Neil Simon I illusion as mirrored in the love and In addition to these dramatic events Equus by Peter Shaffer - March 16- 9-12 November 24-December 18 13 and 19-20 The State News IS FROM little ( DELIVERY AVAILABLE) (DELIVERY AVAILABLE) Caesars i FREE!: | Buy any Medium At the regular price JlI£Z3 Get Identical PIZZA I I I I Buy'any Medium At the regular price -rv» Jl1ZZ3 I Buy any Medium At the regular price VJ* |ilZZ3 Pizza I Get Identical PIZZA _ Get Identical PIZZA FREE I Little Caesars Pizza I .FREE I FREE I 12031. Od. River 30 337-1631 ■ I ■ J m I V Little Caesars Pizza I 1203 E.Cd. River ® 337 -1631 I ■ J ■ ;r® 33? - i63i Little Caesars Pizza Covpom piplrp 12031. Od. River Onpcpvpoppt. I S l Treat! j.^tnte News, Eost Lansing, Michigan Welcome Week, 1977 C5 |SUs Hidden Lake retreat of IffiBHV PMYBYLSKI planning and development of serenity utes before sundown. Scenic, serene Hidden Lake Gardens, do¬ nated to MSU in 1945, B%gw« Staff Writer Hidden Lake, applying his own to the public for It is open includes junipers, lilacs, rhodo- ■ has been enlarged "1 Msu has been ac- great interest in landscaping to a small dendrins, willows, yews, azal¬ its development. admission charge. from its original 226 7u one of the most In 1945, Fee and his A small picnic area is avail- eas and spruces. Over 150 different plant genera are rep¬ acres to more than U college campuses in wife ab e for visitors donated Hidden Lake Gardens and picnickers 670 acres. The nature try by many people, will be able to resented in the collection alto¬ to MSU and set enjoy the fall reserve is located in Gthem know that the up trust funds to insure its future colors, which will soon be gether. For hikers, the Gardens the Irish Hills, near also maintains na- mainte- pro¬ nance and reaching their peak, until about vides three different f^jas outside of East development. Under MSU's management, it November 1. hiking trails with a combined length of Adrian in Lenawee has Aside from the lake County, and makes a [ cf them is Hidden Lake grown from its original 226-acre itself, about five mUes. The Hikers' beautiful Saturday or natural points of interest at size to over 670 acres. Trail, in the northernmost part W, located in the pictur- Two buildings Hidden Lake Gardens include of the Gardens, is the Sunday excursion fbish Hills, near Adrian structed at Hidden recently con¬ Juniper Hill, formed thousands about three miles, and the longest, away from campus. "kern Lenawee County. Lake, the Hidden Lake Garden Center Of years ago by glacial debris, Sassafras and Pine-Tree Trails, Iihough it is now admin- and now covered with junipers; L by MSU, it wasn't Building built in 1966, and the the Butter Bowl, a near the lake, are2/3 of a mile Plant Conservatory built in large de¬ and 1-1/3 miles long, respec¬ pression caused by the melting 1968, were gifts of the Herrick tively. of buried glacier family of Tecumseh, also bene¬ ice, which is now covered with trees; and factors of MSU. numerous rounded Located on Highway M-50 also carried to the boulders, ★★★★★★★★★★★ near the tiny town of Tipton, vicinity by if SCIENCE FICTION if oV." Hidden Lake Gardens is glaciers long ago. year-round, from 8 a.m. on weekdays, and 9 a.m. on week¬ open Another prominent feature of the Gardens is the collection J MYSTERIES •ought t Sold if jL. ends and of over 2,000 different species if Curious Book Shop if holidays, till 30 min¬ of woody Jf *" 'mlu'"" plants. The collection if .•••••••••••. I llll V II a III Nil II III ill 11 M I IN IK WN i 'GREAT RRIINGS GREAT EGGR GREAT TIMES f f\ Michigon Stote News, Eost Lansing, Michigan Welcom By MICHAEL TANIMURA college gothic mixed in with 1950s' and 60s' opulence detailed in State News SUM Writer concrete and glass just ain't your bag, and the pedantic mimicry Of sensory deviance, Pick a day. Any day actually, just as long as school is in session. Pick a time. The best of course being 9:57 a.m. (The reason is beneath Farm Lane Bridge just doesn't take you where you want to go, hit you where you live — meander on over to Kresge Art intuitively obvious.) Now pick a spot. Afficianados will certainly Gallery (it's shown on all those nifty campus maps they pass out at choose the intersection of Farm Lane and the Red Cedar River, a orientation or in the front of the schedule books). Oct 6 spot on the sidewalk the southwest corner of the bridge really The gallery, open weekdays 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Tuesday night 7 to through 9 sensual drunk and - about six feet in from the curb smack in the 9, and weekends 1 to 4 p.m., is the home of MSU's permanent art °rt""ndllow.ri a being the best - middle of where the crosswalk is. collection. The collection includes work from most periods, many ... I Now simply close your eyes. (For those quick to blush at the different cultures and a wide reange of mediums. * first hint of an embarrassing "What the hell are you doin'7" One problem with the gallery, however, is its size, or more mirrored sunglasses, though highly Unprofessional, are allowed.) aptly, its lack of it. Open your pores to the amazing stimuli that bombard the T deprivation: the artistic "Only about 10 per cent of the permanent collection is ever up at N?»- 20 through D« „ remaining senses: the growing din as class change gets under way one time," Alain Joyaux, master's candidate in art history, said. d«,9„Mithi90nec'» I Jon. 3 at the busiest intersection on any university bar none; awkward "Although we usually have the best stuff up, there are still other through 30 and often paining sounds of people, cars, trucks, buses, all just things that we should show." N°7 ond S'-dhou,, , trying to pass through the concrete and flesh bottleneck: arms, In an attempt to alleviate some of the space problems, Joyaux, eye, pointings ^ mind, hand legs, and other portions of the anatomy, both clothed and who worked for the gallery for three years, two as the graduate thematic (and Kresge unclothed, brushing against your yielding and respondent body; smells of the mass of humanity scurrying by - if you're really assistant, had been commissioned to build walls in the gallery this summer. The work was expected to be completed by the time photogrophl TOW hi is AT The atmosphere brings you in TH£, The food brings you back. ^HOLIDAV lAjjp evefty ffticWr'.' Of all the restaurants in the Lan¬ sing area, only one has "The Tiffany Touch." It is unique in FISH * its warmth. mood and congenial¬ ity. The food is superb: the ser¬ vice. excellent. FRY EVERY Friday *2.50 Reservations suggested. 372-1300 all you can eat ^^^f|*^venta^pirtln^^^twnJb^^stoftheCapitol A INTRODUCING 351-1440 3121 East Grand River (across from Frandor) IDE WET IVRRITO I MEAL IN ITSELF. <3> Q ' 0uf ".west i—srliwi A 13 inch roll ol tender lorrillo stuffed with hamburger or beef with cheese, lettuce and tomato served on a hot plate. No wonder we call it a meal in itself. And wet? You bet! A thick beef gravy with melted cheese and hamburger or green pepper chunks covers our special burrito. Try a green or a red wet bur- ,, rito. like all our other Mexican meals, they're made with . . fine, fresh ingredients. Relax, sit down and eat in an touthentic Mexican atmosphere. It's like taking o trip to Mexico. ^wdMe've been #1 in Mexican food in lonsing for S yeors. We think we'll be fomous in East Lansing too. Now serving your favorite cocktails and Mexican beer. M-Th 10 am-2 am Ft Sat open 10am-4am Sundoys kt lighted parking In the FAMOUS IAC0 539 E. MICHIGAN AVE. 485-3155 You're gonna love Wendy's hot-n-juicy hamburgers. Juicy meat. Juicy toppings. And lots of napkins. Wendy's Wendy's Single French Fries '/« pound of 100% Crisp and tasty pure beef Wendy's Double xh pound of 100% pure beef Open 7 Days Per Week 10:30 AM - Midnight Trowbridge off Harrison Road (Next to the Pretzel Bell) Wendy's Triple Wendy's Frosty DAIRY DESSERT 3/« pound of 100% Thick and delicious pure beef . Welcome Week. ]97? ■wichiganSfatel INTERNATIONAL MENU Ethnic Daily Specials Monday ★ Chinese Thursday ★ East Indian Tuesday ★ Greek Friday ★ Italian Wednesday ★ Freneh Saturday ★ Mexiean Sunday all you ran eat — Spaghetti Health Food FULL SERVICE GROCERY • Nuts •Dried Fruits Cheese - • Bread • Oils •Vitamins • Tea •Coffee • Herbs & spires and many other items We have soft frozen yogurt serve made with honey - 110 suga for a quick snack between 225 ANN STREET classes or lunch at noon stop in at Crossroads Cafeteria, EAST LANSING in the center of campus 351-6230 Open 7:30am-4:00pnT Mon Fri - we're also open for your convenience, Mon-Thurs 5:30-9:30 Football Saturdays 10am-1pm welcomes YOU to MSU featuring: • OUR FAMOUS SUBMARINES! • DELICIOUS PIZZA! 9", 12", 14", 16" (with 11 extra items) • GREAT SANDWICHES! Roast Beef, Corned Beef, Turkey and Giant Ham & Cheese pew no • FREE DELIVERY! 332-8611 RESTAURANT 1515 center St. Tit., 469-2145 PIZZA & SUBMARINES 515W.Grand River -family dinners- (formerly occupied by Mr. Mike's) M-lijC-l'"'6 NeWS' E°St LOnSi"9, Miehiqon Welcome Week, 1977 C9 CORK »N CLEAVER WELCOME ... to the Cork 'N Cleaver. for authentic Mexican food, come on down to afTIAll'<2 restaurant Uncompromising in its concern for quality steaks, chicken and seafood served in J V . & lounge a comfortable atmosphere, the ry our daily luncheon specials Cork 'N Cleaver offers a Southwestern, Mexican motiv complemented by Mexican artifacts nly $1.95 each 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.] and amber original artworks. Handcrafted tables and subtle *Monday & Friday: Tacos lighting complete the relaxed, informal interior. *Tuesday: Beef Enchiladas ^Wednesday: Burritos Thursday: Tostadas There is nothing casual about the service, though. Patrons are greeted by dynamic young staffers and management. Ramon's Restaurant fe*— Open 11-11 Weekdays Bk Lounge 7181. Grand River Sat: 11 am-3:30 am /y>-~ Sun: 12noon-ll Serving Lunch and Dinner daily . . . 203 M.A.C. East Lansing, Mi. Rot; jasfc anotkep IwiRch 1310 N. Abbott of gpiRgos" (just North of Saginaw St. Honoring American Express El Azfeco now features new delicious dinner entrees. For 351-5327 BankAmericard a new and Master Charge vegetarian adventure, try the exciting Chilaquiles, called "the poor man's dish" because tortilla chips are made to taste like chicken. For a truly gourmet treat, try the Chile Rellenos, three long green chiles stuffed with Monterey Jack cheese then dipped in a whipped egg batter and fried. The Mexican counterpart to the American Chef salad contains everything from chicken, avocado, to Jalepeno chile. Come and treat yourself to some truly authentic and excitingly different Mexican comida at very reasonable prices. 351-9111 j[ t; i.s.i i.i.i i.i.lu.i.oji. 1 ; N.Y. STRIP Higher Quality Steaks STEAK & SHRIMP juicy ounces of sizzle SIRLOIN thick and tender <1 choice steak, with 7 pieces ^i)t fried shrimp New Salad Bar BELL'S PIZZA 2 Locations 225 M.A.C. 332-5027 1135 E. Or. River 332-0S5I fry one of oar 20 famous grinder sandwiches 600 N. Homer near Frandor Shopping Center, Lansing 5001 W. Saginaw across from the Lansing Mall, Lansing We deliver loo! flOMichigon stote News, Eost loosing. Michigan Welcome Week | CNINISR RRSTAURANT k Quick Luncheon Special different •very day,,. ,2.35 (o,swe.tS5ourPo;,p If ©CD f©D TDCDCDT^ * Hot dishes for hot food lovers ★ So many other fine Chinese Cui,i„. ADVERTISE YOUR RESTAURANT fi.O & Sixxlirin Sizzling rlr. beef, etc.) rict, tkl_ thin Chin.,. pancakej )w Mooshu p„ EVERY FRIDAY IN THE STATE n. Dine . in or Carry Out °Pen Hours MON.-Sat Call 332*8010 ,,:30Am-'0:oopu ALL YOU NEWS DINING GUIDE CONTRACTS 503 Candor Ay. CAN EAT ARE AVAILABLE FOR 20 or 40 serving your favorite cocktails WEEKS ON FIRST COME FIRST banquet & catering 600 FRANDOR SERVE BASIS. LANSING, MICHIGAN 351-6851 CALL 353-6400 The Vintage Year offers you many weekly specials •10% off all cheeses We're more than just nuts... every Monday 8 Tuesday Featuring Gourmet food from All of China •Weekly wine specials MUSIC Bands you can groups, listen to - East Lansing's favorite Wednesday through Sunday nights. Also Polynesian drinks and American Feed • FAMILY STYLE DINNERS e I up to 50% off • SPECIAL LUNCHEON • •Extensive selection of imported 8 domestic wines 8 cheeses FOOD A full and our menu, including pizza...daily lunch specials famous "All You Can Eat s." • LUNCHEON COCKTAILS • CARRY-OUT BANQUET ROOMS • PARTIES WELCOMED e 317 MAC E.Lansing 332-1111 DRINKS Draft beer and a well-stocked bar...daily Happy Hour" and Monday night pitcher special. 349-2698 and Tuesday "Trivia Night" with Sam Spiegel ARTHUR MOCKER' S Monday night football on the giant TV screen. MORE r THE ORIGINAL Tl*l) FISH SANDWICH, CHIPS, AND A The Peanut Barrel 521 EGrond River from Willow Lounge| ocross Berkeq Hall LARDI DRINK 351-0601 & Pizzaria *1.25 Any day from 10 a.m. -5 p.m. Italian Fooif £ Spirits Coupon expires Oct. 2,1977 Eot Here • Toke Home Featuring: Whole Whe Crust, Stuffed Pizi Offer m* It is worth the drive for wilfeiscNpH the finest Nlyitthe pizza in town. | Esst LwBiit store INI L M River The Willow Lonnge £ Pizzaria ^ 2006 W. Willow /j WE DELIVER FAST, FREE erafL'st 337-1377 campus pizza is the all new, all italian pizzeria, owned and operated by msij students made completely by hand-no rolling pins, no dough machines—our recipe has been in the family for 30 years come and taste homemade ■ cwT-' I 54 YEARS OF FRIENDLY goodness NEIGHBORHOOD SERVICE Perhaps the only thing better than f OUR WEEKLY SPECIALS: our Pasta, Steaks and Seafood is our Price t MONDAY: free item night Mon-Thur: Our famous Pizza Pitcher NiteT lues: Spaghetti (all you can eat) TUESDAY: we feature whole wheat crust WEDNESDAY: "pop night" -one free yijart of coke with every pizza. THIBAOIL-PRAOIL FAC All our sandwich., or. s«rv«d on bagels. Use "ou emiLs east Choose from a variety of flavors: pump.rnlckl. »bIbb garlic M" whol.wh.ot 374-0328 2012 E. MICHIGAN Or try one ch»s. s.som. of our own sandwiches: ,B|,|B Pl»in c.m.db-1 ;r erafL's coest roost b»l [h««s. Our Special Features: , Th. FRAGEL a cross b.twMn a doughnut ( hog" 321-4124 - Th. PIZZA BAGEL - spicy t good. 8 a.m. till 12 p.m. Ml „ 6045 W. SAGINAW 591 F GRAND RIVER 3" " Open 7 Days A Valuable Coupon Intimate Atmosphere-Dress Casual Cocktalls-Wlne-Beer i * ran | coHm, tM. or soda with purchase ot any «BBBWlt ' J ! GOOD THRU OCT. 7th - ONE PER CUSTOM**! |n tmte News, East Lansing, Michigon Welcome Week, 1977 cn hecture Concert lines By JOE PIZZO up the musicals and 26): This story of a Cockney set in the streets of Manhatten State News Staff Writer Christopher Parkening, a clas¬ cost from $16.50 to $8.50, while flowergirl's transformation boasts music by Leonard Bern¬ sical guitarist who will be tickets to four The greatest single source from "a are $8.25 to of draggletailed gutter¬ stein, and lyrics by Stephen making a return to MSU; Les entertainment events for the $4.25, depending on the seats snipe" into a "duchess" based Sondheim — an unbeatable Brown and his Band of Renown, MSU community, the Lecture- requested. on George Bernard Shaw's combination. It will be per¬ who will perform a musical "There are many students to Concert series, now offers a Pygmalion may well be the formed. by the Young Ameri¬ salute to big-band leader Glen whom the arts have not been program of selected Broadway greatest musical to have ever cans, a New York-based touring Miller (February 28); the Ba¬ musicals in addition to its available," she said, adding graced the Great White Way. company. varian Symphony Orchestra of standard fare. that half the seating for every Adapted for the stage by Alan Curtain time for all perfor¬ Munich, conducted by Rafael The following musicals will Lecture-Concert sponsored ac¬ Jay Lerner (book and lyrics) mances will be 8:15 p.m. Kubelik, which will include be featured in the University and Frederick Loewe (music), it tivity is reserved for students such classical favorites as Bar- in order to Auditorium: make the arts easily enjoyed a nearly seven year Another innovation is the tok's "Concerto for Orchestra," accessible. Bubbling Brown Sugar (Octo¬ Broadway run, and has been Choice Series, which permits and Dvorak's "Symphony No. 7 ber 4 and 5): The sound track recently revived in honor of the Murray said she and Beach¬ students to purchase tickets to in D Minor." (April 9); the from this hit which is still 25th anniversary of its ler try to involve students as opening a package of either four or eight Verdi Opera Gala, which will much as possible in series enjoying a healthy Broadway at the Mark Hellinger Theater events selected from a list of feature guest artists from the run, earned well deserved activities. The Lecture Concert a on March 15, 1956. Edward what the staff considers "the New York City Opera and Grammy this Muhare and Anne Rogers will office is staffed predominantly year. The show Metropolitan Opera who will features music of such jazz and top ten," according to Adminis¬ by students and the 135-mem- star as Eliza Doolittle, the include arias and ensembles trative Assistant Sally Murray, ber usher corps consists solely blues greats as Duke Ellington, flowergirl, and Professor Hen¬ who, along with director Ken from "Aida," "La Traviata," in of students. Billie Holiday and Cab Calloway ry Higgins, the "expert d'lecti- Beachler, are the only full-time their program. amid a Harlem setting in the tian and grammarian" Murray summed up the philo¬ respec¬ Lecture-Concert Employes. Two touring company pro¬ Cotton Club era. tively. sophy under which she and The choices may be made ductions, My Fair Lady (Janu¬ Beachler operate the Lecture- The Robber Bridegroom The Same Time Next Year from these ten events: the San ary 24 and 25), and Bubbling Concert series in a single (January 17): This family musi¬ (February 6): A relatively new Francisco Ballet performance of Brown Sugar (October 3 and 4), cal is based on a short story by sentence: "If we didn't have comedy by Bernard Slade cen¬ Romeo and Juliet (October 26); round out the list of possible Edna Ferber adapted for the tered around two married peo¬ students, we wouldn't be here." Dimitri, a Swiss mime and selections. In the time they have been stage by Alfred Uhry (book and ple who take part in adulterous virtuoso musician "The Choice Series (November gives "here," so have such well- lyrics) and Robert Waldman rendevous in a country bun¬ 22); Lazar Berman, Soviet con¬ students a chance to (music). It will be directed by pick," known performers as pianist galow every 12 months. cert pianist (November 2); Lar Murray said. "They're not Van Cliburn, dancer Rudolph S'a'e News Photo Tony award-winner Barry Bost- West Side Story (February Lubovitch, a modern impres¬ forced into one little niche." by Laura Lynn Lynn Filler wick. Nureyev, and singers Tony Lecture-Concert director Ken Beachler 21): This critically-acclaimed sionistic dancer Tickets to eight selections (January 19); Rennett and Lena Home. My Fair Lady (January 25 retelling of Romeo and Juliet bookstores OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK | Galley (P Sunday - thursday llOOam-100 am friday & Saturday ■ J lovide a decent OPEN 24 Iriety of literature rj East a variety of bookstores nestled around the streets of Lansing, with capacity and breadth of subject KrsufGcient to satisfy both the casual and the more studious M A Campus Book Store, the Student Book Store, Gibson's Book Hand the ever ubiquitous on-campus MSU Bookstore all stock ltd teats, school supplies, and an array of more general I; fare. •SPECIALS vary daily on breakfast, lunch, dinner, and late on know that. Just as the University has more to offer it! than merely the regimen of specified curricular activities, night meals; the perfect way to end your evening out. ta bookstores can provide much more than the usual •Breakfast served 24 hours! II text, copies of Star Wars and 'Beat Ohio State' |tr stickers. News Center, from the campus at 537 East aount across 4 PAGE MENU - EFFICIENT SERVICE | River, is a busy, inviting shop stocking magazines, ■tiers and a large selection of current paperbacks and 2701 East Grand River ■aher. even more well-rounded store is Jocundry's Books, at T.t.C. street, a spacious, friendly shop in which many furrows |lj filled shelves [owing purposes. are interspersed with benches and chairs Open from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. seven days a I, lite store carries a fine general selection, and stocks selected ('/a mile E. of Campus, just before bridge) Ph. 351-0421 BUONO APPETITO Authentic Italian J & Samtwiches t Dinners in; the city's specialty bookstores, the largest and possibly is Ray Walsh's Curious Book Store which caters to if comic books, science fiction novels, pulps, and old ., Iirr. WELCOME WEEK SPECIALS :,4** 1 - vt books and magazines of all sorts. Three floors of the 307 -*■ FOOT LONG ITALIAN BEEF SANDWICH 1.29 , "rind River shop are devoted to housing literally thousands r ' ■ & with |tdand rare books and periodicals, and the store frequently Papparoncini Papper tea books, magazines and comics from those willing to part lull items. LASAGNE DINNER ■151 East Grand River, downstairs from Paramount News, is fijflover Book Shop, specializing in books and pamphlets on ^.metaphysical themes and ideas pertaining to the occult. (IS Book Store, at 220 M.A.C. street in the University Mall, STACK'EM UP! U with tot sad salad and garlic braad Mon.-Thun.: 11 a.m.-9p.m. Frl.-Sot. 11 a.m.-ll 1.89 p.n in Judeo-Christian literature. The store has a nice Sunday: 12 noon-11 p.m. »n of children's books, as well as gift books, posters and Bof both a religious and non-secular nature. <* the Logos store in the University Mall, is Womanself are, which features books by and for women. It stocks a 1045 E. GRAND RIVER at GUNSON PH. 337-9549 ta of feminist books, women's literature and a special P of non-sexist children's books. AMERICA'S CUP Restaurant U Lounge 220 M.A.C. AVE., EAST LANSING, Ml over 60 flavors rf\l to choose from nJ f try our organic flavors ond frozen yogurt. Bring this happy cone & receive in free pinball with any ice I cream purchase. Weekly pinball S foosball tournaments. 545 E.Grand River i across from Berkey Hall Welcome Aboard lor on exciting new experience in the proud tradition ol the America's Cup. Enjoy the warm, friendly atmosphere, in a yacht club setting that is truly unique in the East Lansing area. Our drinks are great, and the food is excellent. Be sure to try our euper sandwich "The Great Gyro." It'e a delicious combination of frexh flaked beef, sweet onions, tometoee, topped with yogurt dressing. America's Cup dedicated to the sporting spirit. ftaturtnc m We accept: American Eapresx + Master Charge £] 2Michigon State News, East Lansing. Michigan Welcome Week A TOUCH OF OLD MSU RETURNS TO CAMPUS IN THE 1970s Students work for new Forestry Cabin ably," said Rob Mair, member of Students involved with the By BOB OURLIAN State News Staff Writer a coalition called the 'Cabin project, Mair said, are not Years ago, MSU students and Committee' and past vice presi¬ drawn to it by a sense of their friends used to enjoy many dent of the forestry club. nostalgia or a lust for Ameri¬ "Everybody appreciated the cana. Most of them, he said, are a spirited evening carousing about at parties held in what use of it and recall the good interested in the project itself was known as the Forestry times they had there." and in learning how to build a If all goes right — and it looks log cabin. 0nce Cabin, a one room log structure And those involved with the » hotbed as though it will — construction which was built in 1937. recreation and on the Forestry Cabin will begin actual construction of the cabin Won, the old Those days ended in 1965 when, after having moved it next month — done with stu¬ will quite likely receive credit Cabin was dig the University bulldozed dent volunteers, naturally. for their participation. One once, credit will be awarded for by bulldozer the small log cabin. With it went Mair, one of the original Now, however many of the good times recalled proponents of the idea to rebuild approximately 50 hours of work cabin very * the Forestry Cabin, says the during the term. by what we now view as MSU the old will old timers. cabin will be built on the edge of Construction will progress at b But the current MSU genera¬ Baker Woodlot, a site hand- a steady grind, but Mair said the "> Baker Wood tion may again have the oppor¬ picked by Milton Baron, direc¬ Cabin Committee hopes to be coalition of F tunity to experience socializing tor of Parks and Planning, on completed with the project by Natural Re — and education — in a pri¬ the orders of Jack Breslin, MSU spring. fisheries am meval little building nestled in a executive vice president. Students interested in parti¬ life, Parks an primeval setting, thanks to a The Baker Woodlot site cipating in the construction ation and band of forestry students who caused a bit of consternation need not be forestry majors. mental Educi have been pushing for permis¬ among MSU's environmental¬ They should, however, get in dents. sion to build such a place since ists, but Mair and the forestry touch with Mair at the forestry last fall. students, many being environ¬ department. Aided by students in Fisher¬ mentalists themselves, dis¬ And if things go as planned, ies and Wildlife, Parks and pelled the fears. classes and social activities will Recreation. Natural Resources "The cabin is going to be on be going on at the Forestry and Environmental Education, the edge of the woodlot on a hole Cabin by late spring term. the students have been logging where there are no large trees," wood, devising blueprints and Mair said. Access to the cabin lobbying at every level of the will not necessitate any tram¬ MSU superstructure in a valiant pling of natural areas, he says. effort to sell the idea of con- "They'll be able to get to it structinga new Forestry Cabin. without bushwacking the wood- And judging from the evi¬ lot from the inside," Mair said. dence, one might characterize the effort as w ildly successful. ★★★★★★★★★★★ For not only have they"sold" ji. NEW COMICS *. the idea to MSU administrators, * USED COMICS Z but gotten them to embrace and J Bought I Sold 7 cheer the idea as well. "The old-timers on campus jj. Curious Book Shop remember the cabin very favor¬ CHRISTMAS IN SIPTIMBIR? CALL: COLLEGE TRAVEL OFFICE 351-6010 110W. Grand Dlvaron Grand Rivar just across tha straat from Campus ALL ABOUT YOU... your interests your community the world as it effects you PUBLIC TELEVISION State News, Eost Lansing, Michigan Welcome Week, 1977 C13 Video If it's television you're interested in, you're in luck ByDANHILBERT State News Staff Writer Video Workshop broadcasts live city council meetings, and ud covers events expression through the interactions of humans and technology," "Our primary function is to put out some connected with Lecture-Concert things that are issues, Manah and Showcase Jazz, etc. Series, Great Moon said. "Such forms can take as many forms as there are CHRIS KUCZYNSKI informative to MSU students," Minard said. "I The Alger Hiss people." anticipate about lecture, last spring, was broadcast, as was a five productions all year." .re four student organizations on campus that are discussion with former Federal She said the organization has been in existence since 1971, but !y concerned with the electronic art of video tape, and are commissioner Nicholas Johnson. Communications Committee just became a student registered organization in 1973, and now For their first production this year Minard hopes to do a Z i by the ASMSU Programming Board through the Adler said the counts seven members with seven affiliates. two-part production designed to acquaint new and veteran „,1 of Student tax dollars. All are looking for new members. are hardcore group now consists of 100 members, 25 of whom They recently purchased a $2,000 computer that simultaneously students with university government. ' devotees he can call upon any time. croups, all located in the Union, are Video Workshop, The Video programs various pieces of electronic equipment, which thereby diary Telescope and Video Tape Network. Workshop also had $3,000 worth of equipment increases their creative The Video Tape Network is a closed circuit system for showing purchased by the City of East capacity. Purpose of Video Workshop is to get people involved with Lansing for the purpose of broadcasting city council meetings and other community "In the future, we plan to make the computer the director and I non-commercial video productions, It is the only according to Adler and Moon. ce a hnth.j . L said its director, Mark Adler. We want to get events. will just serve as administrative assistant," Moon explained. system that has been successful, thus far, in reation. 11 I idea for Vide0 WorkshoP was conceived in Married people involved with television so they can talk The only regularly scheduled event for the beginning to reach their goal of a total campus wide cable system, j *J" back to their TV sets," Adler organization is 'The said Adler. 1 on campus in 1972. We began with next to nothing; expand our horizons and therefore said. "We are always ready to Electronic Way" a half hour live video cable program every hilt equipment, a smorgasbord that worked," he said, to encourage anyone with an idea Tuesday at 8:30 p.m. on cable channel 11. According to Moon, the participate." They have programmed the films, "The Yellow Submarine," and jer logging some 400 hours of programming on cable 21 (now show has been running for four and a half years and is always live. "The Producers," night club acts with such vocalists as Stevie ' I we made a proposal to the Student Media Appropriations Intermediary is an organization that also deals with video tape and its artistic potential. As described by director Liza Moon, Telescope is a student operated production organization run Wonder, cartoons and various documentaries. (SMABI. The Board's subsequent grant enabled us to Intermediary is an "imaginary organization." primarily by communications students. According to producer 1, portable production studio." Intermediary s function is to provide opportunities for creative John Minard, the organization produces television programs They broadcast Monday through Friday, fall term .equipment is the property of the MSU student body, he designed to give students input on how the University operates. through spring. Jjt is available to individual students without charge. They j( workshops to teach the basics to those who would like to to use the equipment. closely with WELM cable 11, they provide SERIOUS work Introducing: • us with ie over the public access channel," Adler explained. For*. ★★★★★★★★★★★ Jf State News if if NEW COMICS USED COMICS * * THE RESUME MODELER Newsline Bought! Sold J 353-3382 If Curious Book Shop J ★★★★★★★★★★★ ACE 730 AM-94.9 FM • If it's a Resume you want, he "THE ORIGINAL ROCK" knows it all. That's why he takes his job to the Abbey Press - When it comes to putting pizazz into your 349-9560 resume, Abbey Press the Aces are at the strictly top-flight. They can do it all: Typesetting, Layout, Sharp Paper, Michigan National Bank even Original Art Work at a price that We have a complete stock of models & model won't shoot down your wallet. Go ahead - Be an Ace. supplies Tndersqn Take your resume, poster, camera work, any other printing job to the folks who know the typesetting, or score: We Carry: Dungeons & Dragons and War Games Rules, Figures and Equipment by [INTERNATIONAL The Problem-Solvers at the: Ral Partha, Grenadier, Archive, Hinchliffe and Many others. Heritage COMPLETE di I TRAVEL " Games By: Avalon Hill, SPI and many 3rd World Manufacturers. 'SERVICE aar-isoi 332-8667 Coming this Fall: A complete line of board games 1308 MICHIGAN, EAST LANSING BE SURE AND WATCH including Backgammon and Chess knext to the Silver Dollar Saloon . FOR THE ACE THIS FALL ON THE COMICS PAGE!!! HOURS: Mon-Fri 9:30-9 547 East Grand Riper, East Lansing 920 Trowbridge (next to Hobies) mips Sat 10-6 Closed Sun Ph. 332-6344 innA Serving Mid-Michigan Since 1912 ARKARHFLRHA.KHR RJ-lARHARJ-lft.RHRRi-tA RJ-lAWHARJ-lARJ-lRRKA. RJHfl RHARHARHARHA 20% MORE PICTURE WITH BORDERLESS PRINTS 1 PRESENTS Welcome Week Film Schedule Vj lin f-RL, ...AT NO EXTRA COST! You don't a case. assign Harry Calahan to You turn him loose on it! ^ [nan instant loading camera WOODY DIANE ALLEN KEATON "LOVE and DEATH" A JACK ROLLINS CHARl ES H JOFFE PRODUCTION Produced by CHARLLS H JOFFE Written jnd One,led by WOODY ALLEN Iptj, United Artiste _ —0< Sat., Sept. 24, Conrad Aud. Sat., Sept. 24, Wilson Aud. 7:304 9:30 Sun., Sept. 25, Wilson Aud. Mon., Sept. 26,104 B Wells Sun., Sept. 25, Conrad Aud. 7:304 9:30 Mon., Sept. 26, Conrad Aud. Tues., Sept. 27, Conrad Aud. 206 E. Grand R. T Tues., Sept. 27, Wilson Aud. Tues. 7:30 4 9:30 7:3049:30 Wed., Sept. 28, Conrad Aud. /:3USv:ju Wed., Sept. 28, Wilson Aud. n«u„«pi,z.,..u.v..nvv, ,.„v«r..v - Across from Union £ *1.25 *1.50 $1.25l $* ******************************************** ************ 4Michigon Stole News, Cost lonsing, Michigon New museum in MSU's future MSU's Pewobic PoffJ an oasis for The MSU Museum will be relocated at least time, since $2.75 million of the $17 "This is the type of thing that donors (outside as well as inside the effect in 1957. Since then, codes of fire Plans call for all of the exhibits to be on display potters one more University) will be attracted prevention have become more strict, and in 1975, on the first floor of the new structure, whereas million MSU "Enrichment Program" has been by," Baker said, since donors could share the the building was closed, branded one of the worst A unique MSU outpost nurtures a cutural .„a earmarked for the construction of the first phase displays are now spread over three floors. facility "with the University family" upon fire traps on campus. heritage while almost hidden amid tall h of a Natural/Cultural History Museum. completion. downtown Detroit. The new building will be located on Harrison The site selected for the new building is a "real Baker said there will not be "too much more ""'"hup j MSU has always given high priority to the natural place," Baker said, since it will serve as a space" in the The little Pewabic Road, south of the WKAR-TV radio station. A establishment and support of a campus museum. "front-door" facility for the campus. new facility, estimating the difference would be about twice much ceramic art students a Pottery provides an education,, 1 completion date has yet to be set for the project. Within two years after Michigan Agricultural as room. rallying point f„r with the nation s artistic past. artT, " "'>1fi The money will be used for the construction of College was established in 1855, a museum was the first phase of the new building, which will begun. The endeavor was the result of work of Throughout the year shows present the include the display areas of the museum. The second phase, consisting of research and learning facilities, will be funded by appropriations from agriculture students and economic biology pro¬ fessors. After this, it was moved to the top floor of the Impression 5: a little museum professionals, and give visitors nation s few as a work of e.j opportunities to " noncommercialized potteries. It ha«.»L national historic site since °*1 B the state legislature, to be requested sometime 1972. protf* new Administration Building, now known as in the future. Museum Director Rollin Baker said a museum Linton Hall. It has occupied its present location since 1957. that says, "hands on, please' Earlier this year a special show anniversary of the opening of the commemorated ,h potterv b, u e such as the one proposed is the type of project At that time, Baker said, the building was that appeals to a "certain type" of alumni. refurnished and updated to fire standards in Most museums are the sort of places that contain interesting The museum is known Impression 5, and it is located as Impression 5 also offers lec¬ tures, workshops, films classes SnuitaiMtH°raceCai,lkins'Hisfamily° relics from bygone ages pre¬ in Lansing, at 1400 Keystone. and group programs. served in plastic or glass cases, Impression 5 has more than 150 Welcome Wagon acquaints or roped off in inaccessible exhibits. Or they are the sort of places museum-like exhibits, which can be appreciated by all five senses of the body. which have paintings and sculp Impression 5 officials stress new students with the area lures famous the world over hung on walls, there for the public to view, but no more the museum's sensory on" orientation, and say the "hands * than that. individual creativity of people Big a: is, MSU doesn't and coupons about the MSU- Welcome Wagon hostess. need such an experience to when first East Lansing area from the "By the second day we were ignore you There is another kind of personally derive as much of it Welcome Wagon table set up at there last year, the students museum, though, and it deals as possible. This emphasis has Quite the contrary the registration, including guides were really watching for us," with letting more than just caused conventional museums deluge of mail, floor meetings, to dining, entertainment and she said. "The information ser¬ your eyes become acquainted to take raps from those who talks by residence hall and shopping for those who don't vice is very much appreciated." with the subject of the exhibit. administrative folks show. compare concepts. quite know their way around And then there's the Wei yet. "It's w* I come Wagon, the people who geared toward fresh bar spfgius I always came over bringing men, but we can't tell the coupons and cute little items transfers and frosh apart, so we 5BS I just hand it out to both," said flj) PIONEER p3DD MUSIC when your family moved to a new neighborhood. Laura Wilcox, East Lansing you wont something bottor , For the second year, the Welcome Wagon will be wel¬ ★★★★★★★★★★★ * SPORTS ITEMS * OQDDfQDD coming freshmen and transfer * MAGAZINES * students to MSU. encouraged to do so by the Associated yL Bought ft Sold 800 Merrill Students of MSU lASMSU). Curious Book Shop jf- (turn left - block post \ iGGDDTIMei one New students will receive a packet of useful information 7 DAYS A WEEK ^izGtpdi, (Mndepgpound MR&RenwRNir 224 4BDOTT € LWWIG 351-2285 Do you want to fly? Face it... you've always wanted to fly! Most of us remember that THE FREESTYLE SHOP'S feeling ... and for a lot of us it has never gone away. You're in luck. Air Force ROTC can set you winging. Our Flight GIANT PRE-SEASON Instruction Program (FIP) is designed to teach you the basics of flight and includes flying lessons in light aircraft at a civilian- SKI SALE operated flying school. NOW IN PROGRESS The program is an EXTRA given to cadets who can become Air Force pilots through Air Force ROTC. Taken during the senior "year in college, it is the first step up for the cadet who is going on to Air Force jet pilot training after graduation. 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OF CORAL GABIES) 351-9026 Jitiling'"1" News, Eost Lonsing, Michigon Welcome Week, 1977 CI 5 .;-y| Doobiei „ Stat# Newt Photo by Rob Kozloft Bothers T.ran Porter other Doobiea in concert at and Jeff "Skunk" Banter along with the Jeniaon Fieldhouse in Here at the end of November, Earth, Wind and Fire State News Photo by Laura Lynn Fistler Jeniaon into a giant AM April. Timing the displayed its usual radio, the Doobiea grinded out the expertise, smoothness and ability to establish a rapport with its audi¬ music. ence. Phil Bailey, the group's smooth vocalist, excels on the congas. he music spectrum: it's a wide I B,BILLHOLDSHIP on his only Michigan stop during that tour, range universities, thereby cutting out all middle¬ I Sun News Reviewer and sponsoring The Marshall Tucker Band men. The organization is completely stu¬ show and be disappointed," he said. Mariah presents performers within the Entertainment (both share the same office), the past. However, with recent jazz articles 4 students who suddenly find on the eve of their rise to superstardom, all dent run, and it is financed by and its function is to present the best in in Rolling Stone and cover o lost in that giant registration three events held in the money from general framework of folk and blues, and its national black and r&b music. Since its story in 3,700 seat the Programming Board. Newsweek, it's becoming apparent that is should not despair. After all, Auditorium. objectives are to consider the intimacy and inception, Ebony has brought acts like The The Programming Board consists of jazz's time has finally come. Wilson said the pie seem to like card arenas, and Pop Entertainment, like the other organ¬ proximity of the performer with the Spinners, The Pointer Sisters, Earth, Wind funds from student money that is used to audience at reasonable prices as most act prices are going up as a result. P ire advantages to life at a large izations, is presently in the process of coordinate entertainment and extra-curric¬ & Fire, and Gil Scott-Herron (another of If someone can't find enough here to booking acts for fall term, so there is no important. Mariah concerts are held in the last year's "biggies") to MSU. Ebony has ular educational experiences on small Erickson and McDonnel Kivas, and satisfy musical tastes, there are always the llthem is plenty of entertainment, a schedule of events available at this time. campus. rotated its concerts between Jenison Field ■ of that being music which means Pop Entertainment receives minimal funds the overall effect is a national artist in a off-campus concerts sponsored for the most Rich Franks, Pop Entertainment Direc¬ from the Board due to the house, Munn Ice Arena, and Fairchild profits it part by Pyramid Productions, Liberty Bell, If quality concerts. tor, said, "We're looking at many different generates, while the other three organi¬ coffeehouse atmosphere. Theatre. and Metro Stadium. ■ marts on the MSU campus are Since its birth, Mariah has sponsored things right now, and hoping to cover all zations generally break even Oddly enough, all three groups pulled Tj |>y four services of the student- corners of the (music) during the such diversified acts as "Big Boy" Cruddup Like Mariah, Showcase Jazz prefers spectrum. We're year. (Elvis' mentor), David Bromberg, Martin together for the Aug. 22 Foreigner show, U ASMSU Programming Board: negotiating with a couple of the 'heavies' Every spring Pop Entertainment intimacy and brings national jazz artists to and it will be interesting to see where it ent, Mariah Folk & Blues, right now." spon¬ Mull, Leo Kotke, Tom Rush, Steve Good¬ Erickson Kiva. Some of these acts have sors a free outdoor festival concert in the man, John Lee Hooker, Michael goes from here. he Jazz, and Ebony Productions. Franks added that Murphey, been Gato Barbieri, Gary Burton, Dizzy Pop Entertainment's field between the Red Cedar River and the Louden Wainwright, Doc & Merle Watson, And finally there's the East Lansing bar negotiating power is limited compared to Auditorium. These concerts have included Gillespie, Sonny Rollins, Sun Ra, Chuck scene. Bow your head in remembrance of linment is the oldest of the Vassar Clements, Jesse Winchester, and the University of Michigan. Taj Mahal, Bonnie Raitt. Little Feat, and Mangione, Sam Rivers, Oregon, Ron Car¬ several years ago when acts like Patti is and books national rock Tom Waits (possibly last year's best ter, Bill Evans, and Pat Metheny. In "People ask 'Why didn't you get Fleet¬ Dicky Betts, and Franks said that the Smith, Aerosmith, The Tubes, Peter Irts. In the past five years, they wood Mac like the U of M7' " he said. "But concert). addition to the Programming Board, the Frampton, Les McCann, Roger McGuinn, ented such performers as Chi- organization is looking forward to making Kirkwood added that as a volunteer bands like Fleetwood Mac always go where this year the biggest and most successful organization is funded in part by the and Spirit performed at local bars. There's ro M, The Doobie Brothers, there's the biggest bucks. Our limitation is organization, Mariah is always open for new National Endowment for the Arts. still plenty of "boogie down," meet markets, festival yet. volunteers and suggestions. pa, Ted Nugent, The Beach Boys, our facilities compared to Ann Arbor's Gary Wilson, SJ director, said that the and mellow environments if that's what "It gives people a chance to broaden their main objectives of the organization are to a, Loggins & Messina, Hali & Crysler which seats 12,000." Besides the you're looking for. Mariah Folk & Blues will be celebrating interests in things like lighting, sound, and sn Stills, and Heart. Auditorium, Pop Entertainment also spon¬ its fifth anniversary this winter, and expose jazz to a larger audience and give I'm almost convinced after this summer such," he said. "It's a lot of hard work, but Iputtwoyears. Pop Entertainment sors events in Jenison Fieldhouse (7500 director Tim Kirkwood said that the the experience is something more people an opportunity to hear the though that the bars can be classified under p! lateral tour de forces by booking seats) and Munn Ice Arena (5,500). people will "Disco and the Death Culture." Of organization plans on continuing in the never forget." course, krud Peter Frampton together on In addition. Pop Entertainment uses no same vein it has during the last Wilson added that SJ is trying to recover some people like both. la hill, catching Bruce Springsteen as five some heavy losses from last year, but that it outside promoters as do most other But then again, some years. "It's rare that people will go to a Ebony Productions is a branch of Pop people like card hopes to continue in the same direction as in arenas. Needs a £*1 &Michigon Stote News, Eost Lansing, Michigan Welcome Why Tech Hifi is the hest place to buy stereo. Of all the places you can buy stereo, none offers you You 11 also notice that Tech Hifi has the best selection as much as Tech Hifi. of name-brand stereo components on display. Including names like Advent, B*I*C, BSR, Dual, EPI, We carry over 70 brands of quality components. And Garrard, Infinity, we guarantee what we sell. 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They range like the salespeople at other places, they really know what from as little as $200, to as much as $6,000. Chances are, they're talking about. one will be just right for you. You'd expect to pay more for this kind of service and selection, wouldn't you? But at Tech Hifi, you pay less. In fact, we guarantee you the lowest price. If any store offers you a lower price within 30 days of purchase, well refund the difference. Tech Hifi. We're the best place to buy stereo. No other store even comes close. 619 East Grand River Ave., East Lansing 337-9710 In Michigan: Ann Arbor, Dearborn, Detroit, East Detroit, Royal Oak, Livonia, Mt. Clemens, Rochester and Southgate. Stores also in Ohio, New York, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and New England. Star gazing at Abrams and the MSU observatory s not exactly Star Wars, « ♦ ut it is a galaxy of fun By JIM RANSOM lightning, meteor showers, and an elaborate winter and spring terms have not been amount of light emitted ..'time ago in a galaxy far, far away by a star and to light show? announced, but previous shows have in¬ examine its spectrum, So begins the movie Star Wara. In the lobby are exhibits such as a six-foot cluded a blend of science fact and science telling astronomers its size, temperature, and rooting for Luke and the robots model of the Earth and a display of fiction with optical effects even Star Wars composition. Cameras attached to the telescope permit it ' -•i at Darth Vader, your mind is Michigan meteroites. The planetarium gift didn't have. to photograph planets, clusters of stars, and by the wealth of technical wizardry, shop sells posters, books, and other The MSU Astronomy Department other galaxies. op¬ film, like mass-appeal science fiction astronomy-related items (including tickets erates the MSU Observatory among the The nicest attraction about the observa¬ put. has made a lot of people aware to the planetarium shows). farms and trees south of campus. The ~e is more to our tory is that it is open for public viewing on universe than just Programming during fall term in the Sky building itself (again with a dome on top) is the first and third Saturday night of every planet Earth. When you watch the Theatre begins with "Astronomy Through located on Forest Road between Harrison month. During these open houses, ' set in the you get a evening sky of Luke the Looking Glass," an examination of the and Farm Lane. Turn north off Forest onto change to tour the observatory and look r's home world, the beauty and theories of Immanuel Velikovsky. This College Road and the observatory is right in through the telescope at selected objects, o( those other stars and planets show runs through October 23, with front of you. provided the weather is clear. Check the seriously to sink in. Are there other presentations at 8 p.m. and 10 p.m. on The MSU Observatory houses a 24-inch State News for the exact times, because t beings on worlds far distant from Friday and Saturday nights and at 2:30 p.m. reflecting telescope controlled by a Raythe¬ these change as the sun sets earlier and What do we know about black and 4 p.m. on Sunday afternoons. on computer. The computer can be used to earlier while the autumn progresses. galaxies, and other stars? After the 8 p.m. shows, a brief "sky talk" automatically aim the telescope toward the 1 During Welcome Week, two special open students are lucky to have two on the current evening sky is given. After desired location in the sky and to analyze houses will be held, on on Tuesday and campus where they can learn the 10 p.m. shows, a current album release the data collected by the instruments on the Wednesday, from 8 to 10 p.m. 'bout the heavens, contemplate the is played over the quadraphonic sound telescope. The facilities at the observatory The MSU Astronomy Club will be active 'or simply fantasize. system with appropriate lighting effects. are used to train students and to conduct again this year for those interested in Planetarium is the low building Through November, A.R.C. 77 combines research. Studies currently in progress telescope making, hearing talks and seeing by a dome on Shaw Lane between a live rock band and a light show in the Sky Top left: a whirlpool galaxy, with a satellite galaxy at the end of one of its include the observation of "variable" stars, films on current topics in astronomy, and arms, containing about 100 billion stars. Top: an open cluster of stars. Hjll the and the Chemistry Building, Theatre. The Christmas program will be so named because their brightness changes having a good time. Watch for announce¬ Above: Orion Nebula - a cloud of interstellar dust and gas illuminated fifty-foot dome is the Sky "Star of Wonder," exploring the origin of over a period of time. ments of the first meeting, or look for ; »ith a Spitz planetarium projector, the star of Bethlehem. Programs for next The by the hot young stars within. telescope is used to measure the (continued on page 22) sited electronic and optica] equip- ™ one of the best sound systems in Michigan. planetarium is expected to reaustic images of the stars but how about thunder pro- and and The summer's reading: sex and self-help By CONSTANCE A. WARNER frequently by local booksellers and cus¬ Read any State News Reviewer good books lately? Or has your 'Passages', 'The Hite Report' sell at the top tomers are science fiction, fantasy, main¬ stream fiction, biography, history (real and inside summer summer term reading been limited to textbooks? your iv of area bookstores on page historical fiction, and romances these days. The Paramount News local paperback Other bookstores seem to have escaped fictionalized), economics, self-help books of all kinds, and sports, particularly jogging. '80 According to the American Booksellers the trend towards heavier sales of gothics we go yonder. We bestseller list includes such items as Captive » and Association, people have been buying (and and romances to college women. Janice Star Wars, which is second on the fro. We travel Passions (described as "an engrossing saga highway, Haynick (Jocundry's) said she hadn't noticed Paramount News list, is widely read on i presumably reading) so many books this tJln,way, freeway, roadway. summer that bookstore proprietors "were of a woman's love and revenge"), Fire in the any such tendency. Milinsky (MSU Book¬ campus, especially by the large contingent 5/or 01 some that perfect drink. We've generally enthusiastic, and in some cases Books, agrees: "Passages was a hot seller Blood ("provocative story of a woman's store) believes that gothics and romances of George Lucas fans in the local scientific local imbiberies that from the time it came out in paperback. A lot search for love"), Love's Wildest Promises come downright ecstatic, about how business has are sold to all ages, but in particular "the community. Typical in this respect is Alan pretty close, and you're of the young people have been buying it, in ("a swiftly moving romance"), and Shanna. "e to been in the last month." high school women have been asking for Carroll, a graduate student in zoology, who ™n leapfrog about town on spite of the fact that it is about the crises of Shanna is number one on this week's New them." She does not subscribe to the theory has seen Star Wars several times and has !°n journey. A brief guide The book business is doing fine in East middle age." York Times trade paperback bestseller list, that university students are becoming also read the book. Carroll pronounced the page 18. where its plot is briefly summarized as "a novelized version of Star Wara "pretty Lansing, too, with books on psychology and heavy consumers of such books: "I'd hate to Books on psychology in general are stormy marriage from London to the »rs' is not sports doing especially well. Science fiction, think that that's completely true, personal¬ poor," but said that it was "straightforward precisely the word popular with East Lansing readers. At the Carribean to Virginia: historical romance." space opera" which was "bearable because it ' P ies to the people that plan your gothics, and women's historical romances Student Book Store, one staff member ly. The Hite Report has certainly sold well, also seem to be favorites in the University One staff member at the Student Book too that's sort of the other side from the gave me more information about the tenmg options in Lansing. But, reported that psychology and education — community this summer. Store (who prefers to remain anonymous) gothic novel." (The Hite Report, characters than the film." • though leaders they are not, were the strongest sellers. At Jocundry's a survey of believes that from the women's sexual habits, is fifth on the Times Ii»jS,Ltlley are' Jazz afficionados Undoubtedly the hottest selling paper¬ Terry Henry agreed that "people are hitting women University Then there are those unfortunates whose community are consuming women's histori¬ mas»market list and ninth on the Para¬ , me i Piekins slim, but there is a back, both on and off campus, is Passages by the psychology section very heavily." The cal romances and works in similar genres in mount News list.) The Hite Report is also summer reading consists mainly of text¬ diversity of music scattered Gail Sheehy, described as "case histories MSU Bookstore is also noticing a run on books. "Normally. I do read, but this 'ne Lansing airwaves. Page record amounts. "They kind of got away doing well at Jocundry's, along with similar has been like a zoo," said one and common sense about adult crises" in the psychology and education books because, works. summer from them for a long time, but now they're According to Robinson, "Our best- MSU student who asked that her name not Paramount News listing of bestsellers in its explained Milinksy, "a lot of teachers come getting back to gothics, mysteries, that kind selling book in the store since the store has be used. "I'm carrying 13 credits this outlets in the Lansing area. Passages is up here (for the summer) and they like to say about this one of thing." She indicated a paperback cover opened is Our Bodies, Ourselves, which is a - number one on the list; it is second on the check it out; they buy testing aids, and all summer, so I read a lot of textbooks." One WATCH THAT FIRST STEP. sorts of things like that." which depicted a pensive young woman in a woman's book in that sense (i.e., feminist ■ tf s A REAL DOOZYII Trite New York Times mass market paperback professor lamented that his summer reading rather vaguely eighteenth-century cos¬ self-help), rather than fiction." bestseller list. "Passages is what every¬ "consists mainly of six books that I should One matter on which there much less tume, flanked by two young men in period 25 y true- ^ for yourself on body's asking for, of course," said Bethevda was have read when teaching my last course." If agreement among local booksellers was the attire, with a large house in the background. Many other types and genres of books are Milinsky of the MSU Bookstore. r reading for you is synonymous with question of whether or not college women "Anything with a cover like this goes," she being bought and read in the MSU-East • term textbooks, you have plenty of were buying more gothic novels, women's John Robinson, owner of Jocundry's Lansing area. Among those mentioned most company. Though neither Dooley s nor Alle-Ey's prices are by any means low, both bars fortunate¬ ly feature weekly specials, most significantly the TGIF, (Thank God It's Friday) or TG, with reduced rates on both drink and hotdogs. Generally, Dooley's and the AUe-Ey are bars to dance and flirt in, popular for their prox¬ imity to campus as much as for anything else. Other pubs in the area that share Dooley's and the Taverns Ey's meet-people nature if not their walking-distance nearness are the Rainbow Ranch, Coral Gables, and the Silver Dollar Saloon. The Rainbow Ranch, 2843 E. Grand River Ave., offers disco in the accompanied by a drummer. It is not only large, but has a unique second floor balcony wrapped around and overlook¬ ing the ground floor. If disco is your dance, shuffle out to the • . Ranch. Coral Gables, 2838 E. Grand River Ave., is practically across town the street from the Rainbow Ranch. A restaurant in front, Coral Gables metamorphosizes into pop bands, drinking, and dancing in the rear. Both sections have separate en¬ trances, and downstairs is a By FRED vanHARTES VELDT tained, but readily available, Rathskeller. SUte New# Stiff Writer easily applicable. The Silver Dollar Saloon, Life isn't all beer and skittles, And in East Lansing, like the 3411 E. Michigan Ave., rivals but beer and skittles, or some¬ thing better of the same sort, world over, the social lubricant has quite a number of dispen- Dooley's for size, but counters top 40 sound with hard, at times Ml must form a good part of even glitter, rock. Its decor, everyione'sI education. along with its customers, is Thomas Hughes Ym<) - Perhaps the most popular posh, and the patrons are It is to some the cup that night spots locally are Dooley's, usually beyond the frosh/soph cheers, liquid courage, bosom 131 Albert Ave., and the Alle- syndrome. friend, the oil of joy, the nectar Ey, 220 MAC Ave. Both feature For those who can live with¬ of the Gods. live top 40 music, cover charges, out dancing and who prefer to To others, it is embalming crowded dance floors, and a live without top 40 rock, other fluid, rat poison, coffin varnish, predominantly undergraduate suitable taverns can be found liquid fire, bottled dynamite, clientele. within stroUing range of cam¬ popskull: corpse reviving belly Dooley's is not necessarily pus. Lizard's Underground, for busting rotgut. "better" than any other East example, at 224 Abbott Rd„ is a To yet others, it may be tiger Lansing bar, but it is substan¬ cramped, occasionally rowdy milk, nose paint, whoopee tially larger. Indeed, it can only rock/country rock bar with water, or snake medicine. Si¬ be described as cavernous. consistently good bands. In¬ multaneously, it is hooch and Upstairs, it sports a game room, triguing aspects of Lizard's are and jeans atmosphere guaran grog, nip and swig, bracer and fire place, complete restaurant its reptilic decor and its plank Varsity Inn, 1127 E. Grand proper. Mac's Bar, 2700 E. often non-student as student, teed to make any stuffed shirt River Ave., offers folk music dine, or (if one m chaser: drop in the eye and nail menus, and a lot of tables and tables and benches. Also, in Michigan Ave., has long been a and it is anything but dimly lit. dine. uncomfortable, and is locally with its fare. It is neither favorite nook, featuring a juke in the coffin, a pick-me-up and a chairs; downstairs, three bars, Lizard's, it is impossible not to large Of course, there exist plenty Then again, for famous for Sam Spiegle's Tues¬ nor loud; it is, however, box rather than a band, good knock ya-down, the Admiral of terraced floors encompassing sit near the band. always of other imbibing emporiums only wish to bypi the Red and the companion of the dance floor and a band, and day trivia night, in which genial. Hobie's, 930 Trowbridge inexpensive brew, and no pre¬ close to campus, but most Located at 521 E. Grand but also the decor; the pot, mickey finn and Tom Spiegle spews trivia questions Rd., also entertains with folk tensions whatsoever. still more tables and chairs. River Ave. is the Peanut Barrel, at the Peanut Barrelers, whose emphasize food rather than anytime, there an Collins. The music, as does the Olde World, Monty's Bar is on the other brew. Cave of the Candles, for AUe-Ey, though not as which boasts rock/nostalgia answers are in turn rewarded (if pus Corners II, 1 In East Lansing, like the 211 MAC Ave. end of town, in Okemos at 2399 large as Dooley's, is still by no rock bands, beer, excellent correct) with drink discounts. instance, at 110 Abbott Rd., rite, 7-11, and thr world over, it is booze, the drink Some of the most popular W. Grand River Ave. It is means small. It too features peanuts, and appropriately The Peanut Barrel, like Liz¬ specializes in seafood. Beggar's three, Quality Da of a thousand names: a five-let¬ local college watering pits are, similar to Mac's in atmosphere; pinball and pool, and unlike enough, a floor covered with ard's, has been known to occa¬ Banquet, Sir Pizza, America's And they're all ter word for social lubricant; Dooley's, does not have ter excellent peanut shells. The unfortunately (or fortunately, perhaps Monty's is more down- Cup, Moon's, the Pretzel Bell, sionally get raucus. ing distance, folk; entertainment not only self-con- raced floors. Peanut Barrel has an easy rags depending on your viewpoint) a home. Its juke box is basic and Win Schuler's Grate Steak As the motion | On a more subdued note, the bit of a jaunt from the campus country western, patrons are as are all nearby places to wine and that's entertainm; Your stereo investment is much at HI-FI BUYS more than just dollars and cents. Your stereo dealer should be □ That's been around □ That has earned a good □ That has the brands one successfully reputation are recognized for high quality and leadership □ That presents its □ That has a qualified, professionally merchandise in an organized equipped service department so □ That has sales people who are and orderly fashion interested in that you are assured long term satisfying your protection for your investment special requirements AT HI-FI BUYS YOU WILL FIND ALL OF THESE THINGS AND A WHOLE LOT MORE. Hi-Fi Buys is an authorized dealer for: PRE-MATCHED MclNTOSH, BOSE, ADVENT, B.I.C., J.B.L., AUDIO-TECHNICA, GENESIS, BANG & OLUFSEN, FINCO, COMPLETE LINE DBX, GARRARD, PIONEER, TECHNICS, MAGNEPAN, KENWOOD, MUSIC SYSTEMS JENSEN, NAKAMICHI, TANDBERG, STAX, ACCUPHASE, ALM, SONY, ADS, SENNHEISER, SANYO, PULSE, A.K.G., UHER, BLAUPUNKT, MITSUBISHI, DISCWASHER, MICROSEIKI, REVOX, SCOTT, AUDIO- WATTS, TEAC, J.V.C. OF BLANK TAPE FROM $29900 SEE US FIRST, YOU WILL BE GLAD AND STEREO TO $1300°° YOU DID. ACCESSORIES 1101 E. GRAND RIVER HI-FI BUYS 4810 W. Saginaw 323 E. GRAND RIVER ■ E.L. PH. 337-1767 Lens. PH. 321-2373 E.L. PH. 351-5380 PARKING AT ALL LOCATIONS 60 DAY LAYAW AY ■ ■ FINANCING jqrc- ntnle News, Eost lonsing, Michigan Welcome Week. 1977 C19 Special Events WEEKLY SPECIALS ★WEDNESDAY NIGHT Welcome Week MUGGERS NIGHT V2 Price all mugs Monday Night 26th on GET ACQUAINTED NIGHT of beer 8:30 - 11:00 p.m. botb upstairs & downstairs No Cover Charge with Coupon below ★THURSDAY NIGHT Tuesday Afternoon 27th WINE COOLER SPECIAL MSU STUDENT FOUNDATION V2 Price on all wine ALL UNIVERSITY T.G. from 8:30 - 11:00 p.m. V2 Price Beer & Liquor ★FRIDAY TG SPECIALS- Live Band—No Cover 3:00 6:00 - p.m. 15$ Hot Dogs 2:00 - 5:00 p.m. Downstairs Only Pitcher Special 2:00 - 6:00 p.m. Spartan Spirit block Steering Committee and all M.S.U. Students upstairs & downstairs LIVE BAND - NO COVER Wednesday Afternoon 2bth OFF CAMPUS LAMBDA CHI ALPHA PRESENTS ALL GREEK T.G. HEADQUARTERS OF M.S.U. STUDENT V2 Price Beer & Liquor FOUNDATION Live Band—No Cover 3:00 - 6:00 p.m. Organizing Committee for: (Downstairs Only) • Card Block • Spartan Spirits Wednesday Night 28th • Winter-week-end SPARTAN APPRECIATION NIGHT Spartan Spirit Block AND MUGGERS NIGHT Organizing Meeting Free Spartan Spirit buttons Wednesday 6:30 p.m. — Dooleys Downstairs 111 film highlights of 1976 Football season Special appearances by MSU Cheering Squad and Marching Band DOOLEY'S FOOD We serve outstanding Steaks, Sandwiches and COMING BANDS: Deep Dish Pizza — complimented by our salad bar. !»i Art Attack Sept. 26 tkru Oct. 2 Daily Luncheon Friendly Persuasion Oct. 3 tkru 9 Specials MONDAY Foxx Dooley Burger and Salad 1.75 Oct. II tkru 16 mmm Pure Jam Oct. 24 tkru 30 TUESDAY French Dip WEDNESDAY or Roast Beef & Fries. 1.75 msm Crowd Pleasers Oct. 31 tkru Nov. 6 Soup and Salad Bar THURSDAY 1.75 French Dip or Roast Beef & Fries. 1.75 mmm These and many more outstanding groups appearing nightly at Michigan finest live entertainment facility. s FRIDAY Hot Dogs 2-5 pm 15 $1.00 off Dooley's - MSU Get Acquainted Coupon Price of any FREE ADMISSION Dooley's Deep Disk Pizza. WITH COUPON Good thru Oct. 2, 1977 Downstairs Monday night—Sept. 26th fPflMichigc" State News, Eost lonsing, Michigon What the summer hath wrought in E.L.: fun, food, ice cream and belly-dancing What the MSU community lacks in the way of formal entertain¬ ment during the long, raunchy summer it makes up in outdoor pastime. Summer, as has been tradition in recent years, saw ac¬ tivities such as Bastille Day, the sidewalk sale, the Orchard Street Pumphouse Ice Cream Social, the Youth Music per¬ formances and, of course, in¬ dividual ingenuity in passing the time. Photos by Laura Lynn Fistler, Rob Kozloff, Kay McKeever and Maggie Walker. *1 feb. 14-18 OCt. 18-22 10V. 15-19 The The Romeo Time of Rainmaker & Juliet Your Life * * * * * * PLAYING FEELS GOOD! * * Performing Arts Company Season Bargain Books Now on Sale * * The only way to get your Student Discount * * 5 Great Plays for the low * price of$ 10.00. See one show free. * * * Buy your bargain book from a PAC salesman during Registration, * + September 26-28, or call 355-6690 NOW t* Buy Now - Play Later - For Less . T||ih;^Slale News, Eos! taming, Michigan Welcome Week. 1977 C21. Michigan Ave. 300 yds. west of Brody Show Bar Cactus Room I To quench your thirst to the tune of live bands, visit our main bar. There For a drink during the day, you'll find... sandwiches or dinner in a relaxed atmosphere 11 am to I*largest dance floor in town close. Join us in our Cactus •pool and pinball Room featuring... • deep dish Sicilian pizza • Salad Bar • happy employees • Super sandwich menu • Different Lunch Special • super rock bands 6 nites Daily a week • Assorted Munchies Come in and havedinnerbefore a big night in our Show Bar. (J THURSDAY! r 1 MONO/ TUESDAY THURSDAY W? Stay tuned to ./U li r the State News for vzm WEf; .• '-.V T Redact on all i §1.00 OF! word ton the biggest food special ever to Elkv ■PpCNT 5* ■ hit the MSU area! m !.*.» gil k /'J»| —L4i- r22Michigon Stote News. Eost Loosing. Michigon Welcome Week. | BROADCASTERS SCAMPER AFTER BIG—TIME Programming Board EXAMPLE strives for diversity Area radio a blend of trend; Radio in the Lansing area is up REO Speedwagon with Ted special programming, and in the in MSU entertainment afternoon the station offers Soul golden oldie so exciting and pretty good for a Nugent. If so, you can flip down WITL Is country music. The town that isn't as big as the big the dial to WFMK. 99FM, and Rhythm and Blues pro¬ station, much to everyone's Of all the city east of here. where people are "easy rockin'." gramming. categoneaof WFMK will surprise on campus, captures a J® "overs will By DAN HILBERT ment. Frequent programming probably sound a lot like WNIC in Detroit, since The dorm stations are large share of the overall issomeofitonSund,,„2r SUte News Staff Writer "We're not in it to make money," she said, changes make it hard to keep Lansing market. WLS-FM There are roughly a couple dozen musical, "just to bring about versatile programming." track, since the stations, though Paul Christie has recently WMSN, WBRS in Brody and »®nie jazz on and WKaJlI theatrical and cultural organizations in and "That's why we might charge admission for one event even lagging a bit behind Detroit, are trend conscious, as evidenced started consulting for them. WMCD in McDonel. Program¬ WKAR has a lot of public ming varies on these stations, as WJIM offers "beautiful" music, computerized to the on the weekends. both AmI" around MSU, and you may have wondered though the student tax by the high level of consulting affairs programming mixed in does the quality — but the maximum on the FM side. On how many can remain at all financially already helped pay for it. It's not to charge the just can.t. I so » you student twice, but to get money so we can activity that goes on. with a good dose of classical stations have the advantage of AM, the station could be called soluble. The answer is an entity known as the ASMSU redirect it into another event." But whether you like clas¬ music. Experimental programs being much more responsive to "the WJR of Lansing," featur¬ ^'"K-there'saCl radio if you P™ Programming Board, one of several segments She said the result is that the Programming sical, country, jazz, soul, oldies, and talk shows also dot the requests for songs. Possibly an ing lots of news and discussion are a W album rock, soft rock, folk, or schedule. On AM there is more FM station will be acquired mixed between Detroit radio, but of the MSU student government structure. Board can invest in a concert that is not a popular current gj„ u a chance. ^ The Programming Board is responsible for surefire draw, but because it is interesting. hyperactive Top 40, somewhere collecting monev and handing it out to groups "An example would be Showcase Jazz," she on this area's dial, at sometime, such as the Player's Gallery, Pop Entertain¬ explained, "they are programmed to lose there is your kind of music. Figures show that students ment, Showcase Ja_z and the like. It's not one of those sub-institutions which have been around forever, though; quite the money simply because we know there aren't enough people interested in jazz to make it a financial success, but those who are love it." will primarily listen to WVIC (94.9,730), WILS (101,1,1320), IMC offers color film service contrary. The Programming Board was The Programming Board came into exist¬ WFMK (99 FM only) and MSU's created a little over a year ago by a vote of the ence partially to educational station, WKAR MSU student body in response to what had help make it easier to direct funds into such groups, but they don't just (90.5,870). In the dorms - and By SCOTT WIERENGA Beginning this term the graphics department of the MSU for an institution supported businesses which pay taxes." by tax money to compel.J M l"l heen seen as system of culture and entertain¬ sponsor the established groups, she said. possibly in the future, in the Instructional Media Center (IMC) will offer students, faculty and Film or slides submitted by students ment which was scattered, fragmented, Ten thousand dollars of the MSU community — students staff a 35 millimeter color film processing and slide duplicating class related work, Wilkening said. for processing ocess"18»«l| I overlapping and generally chaotic. $100,000 also listen to the Michigan State collected is earmarked for any student He said IMC is The Programming Board's mission was to act Network (currently 640 AM Graphics director Ronald J. Wilkening, said IMC will purchase a tentatively planning to install five J organization meeting the Programming depository boxes at various campus locations and as an umbrella group for the slews of Board's criteria. only). $10,000 automatic film processor this summer which will make high pick-up stations operated by MSU personnel. He establiol programming agencies around campus which WVIC simulcasts Top 40 volume processing possible. He said IMC will also purchase a copy said tilll would lend a semblance of order and rationality to the hodge podge of the former According to Gatto, any event funded by the Board must entertain and educate the general during the day and most of the evening on both AM and FM. At camera and slide duplicator. The service will not include the printing of color pictures or the the nwt day'*6''dcp°sitory 8nd then picked upalfol system. student body and must be accessible to all night the station's sound is a bit processing of black and white film, he said. Film In its first year, it has been generally regard¬ MSU students. The organizers of the event more progressive, broadcasting Wilkening said the service will probably be offered at a slightly left at a station could be picked station, he added. Wilkening said there will up and paid for«ilI ed as a success not a wild, unmitigated must also prove that they have tried to get on FM only. lower price than local commercial shops charge. service for University departments which evenTJ success, but a success. funding elsewhere before coming to the WILS recently began "101 "It won't be much cheaper," he said. "It would be almost criminal regularlv k.JI FM" going with album-oriented amount of film to be processed. ™vea| According to Sheri Gatto, Programming Programming Board. These are just a few of Board president, the goal of the organization the criteria and the paperwork is consider¬ rock throughout the day and is to provide a wide spectrum of entertain¬ able night after years of only offering progressive rock at night on the FM band. Stars shine at Abrams, MSU observatory Don't be surprised if the station sounds something like WWWW in Detroit, since 101 wTARLtTE (continued from page II uses the same programming many exciting things going on troductory courses in the as¬ in consultant. On the AM band, Marty the Martian at registra¬ now astronomy and space tronomy Department. tion. WILS is Top 40 around the Or you and your date can just clock. Like last fall, Jim Loudon, Michigan State is the place to find a spot away from the U.S. 27 WEST OF WAVERLY science lecturer and Planetar¬ be to see the stars, whether it's Sometimes youll want some¬ ium Director at the University inside at the planetarium or streetlights and trees to do a thing just a shade more mellow, little stargazing on your own. since 101 (Take 1-496 to the Charlotte of Michigan, will present talks outside at the observatory. You occasionally will follow exit and follow US-27 on astronomy and space sci¬ can get involved in the Astron ence. Dr. hearing. Anyone who attended his lectures last year on Mars and on space colonies will tell you Loudon is well worth omy Club or listen to the wonders of spaceflight with Jim Loudon. And, if you enough interest, there have are in- Phone 322-0044 LANSflW S. CEDAR ST. NEAR JOLLY RD. Tentative subjects for this ★★★★★★★★★★★ (Take 127 South to Jolly Rd. fall include the Space Shuttle 730 AM • 94.9 FM Follow and future manned space flight, RARE AND < Jolly West to Cedar.) faster-than-light travel, and Ve 4 OUT OF PRINT BOOKS )f nus. The times and dates of his jj. Sought t Sold jf. Phone 882-2429 talks will be announced later. *. Curious Book Shop *- "DAN CARUSO 6 a.m,10 a.m.- Make a special effort to see * * them, youll find there are ★★★★★★★★★★★ WHERE HOUSE RECORDS II WELCOME BACK STUDENTS! !|QQ m cj? XI ■)/ |f FULFILL ALL YOUR MUSIC NEEDS AT EAST LANSING'S NEWEST RECORD STORE. ■ llyl! ALL HEW AND CATALOG STOCK LP's MANUFACTURE LIST <6.98 ON LIVING I OUR EVERYDAY PRICE ONLY *3" Living is no toughing mailer: you must live with great seriousness There, in the first offensive, on that very day. | we might loll on our lace, dead like a squirrel, lor example— We'll know this with a curious anger, PLUS HUNDREDS OF CUT-OUT LP'« AT I mean without looking lor something beyond SUPIR LOW PRICIS LIKE: and above living, but we'll still worry ourselves to death about the outcome of the war, which I mean living must be your whole occupation. mighljj for yen GROVER WASHINGTON JR., MR. MAGIC ONLY *2" Living is no laughing mailer: you must lake II seriously, so much so and to such o degree thai, let's soy we're in prison and close to fifty, and we have eighteen more years, say. belort lor example, your hands tied behind your back, the Iron doors will of" CHECK OUT OUR WEEKLY your back to the wall, We'll still live with the outside, SPECIALS or else in in your a laboratory while coat and thick glasses, with its people and animals, struggle and wi IAMES TAYLOR JT ALAN PARSONS PROJECT I ROBOT you'll be able to die for people- I mean with the outside I mean, however and wherever we are, beyond the wollj even lor people whose faces you've never seen, YES GOING FOR THE ONE GEILS even though you know living we must live as If one never dies. MONKEY ISLAND Is the most real, the most beautiful thing. Ill CAROLE KING SIMPLE THINGS FIREFALL I mean you must lake living so seriously This earth will grow cold, LUNA SEA that even at seventy, for example, you will plant a star among stars BARBRA STREISAND SUPERMAN doobie bros. olives— and not so they'll be left lor your children and one of the smallest— living on a fauli lihe but because even though you lear death either, a gilded mote on the blue velvet, I mean, I mean this, our great earth you don't believe it, REO *7.98 ONLY $4M because living, I mean, weighs heavier This earth will grow cold one day, not like a or a heap of Ice dead cloud even, but like an AMP FOR YOUR RECORD empty walnut it will roll along MAINTENANCE Let's soy we're II seriously ill, need surgery— in pitch-black space... You must grieve for this right now, which is to say there's a chance we won't get up you hove to feel this sorrow now, DISC WASHER KIT REG. MS™ ONLY Even from the white table. though It's impossible not to feel sad about for the world must be loved this much if you're going to say "I lived". going a little too soon, ?™EEFLUIDREFILI REG. 150 ONLY $179 we'll still laugh at the jokes being told, we'll look out the window to see If it's raining, or we'll still wait anxiously NAZIMHII| lor the latest newscast... Transit Let's say we're at the front, Randy Blasini WHERE HOUSE RECORDS II 220 MAC.IN THE lor something worth lighting lor, say. MollvhO UNIVERSITY MALL ABOVE THE ALLE 'EY HOURS: 10-9 PM seven Oays jo-to-P A MONDAY-SATURDAY 12 PM-5 PM SUNDAY PHONE: 332-3523 210 roac avenue ne Week, M^nStat^^>yoj^nsirg^ic^^ Welcome Week, 1977 0lden oldie song,, illthe categoiiesnf . Jazz on >n will even be regularly havetl tant Provost for undergraduate education versity administration only since 1969. Prior to that, Arata taught J speech before the House of Commons on the 11th of March, biochemistry at MSU. ■Benjamin Disraeli said, "A university should be a place of She has also served on lot liberty, and of learning." the State Selection J history of higher education is dotted with intense effort to Committee for Rhodes i a semblance of that triadic form even as the larger scholars in Michigan iiy, of which the university is a part, undergoes periodic and is a member of the ■assive shifts in its value structure. Higher education, American Council on pilarly the public sector, is constantly buffeted from external Education. Arata re¬ i with pressures and demands for services which tend to pie the triad by upsetting that internal balance. ceived her doctorate ■further complexity is the tendency for large complex from the University of ationstodevelopa loci of internal rigidities in operation and Wisconsin. j; the university is not exempt from this all-too-human It, In consequence it periodically finds itself an innocent The responses were, in fact, generated from the spinal column Kpant in upsetting that extremely fragile balance on which the rather than from the higher cerebral center; more reflexive than Kition gingerly sits. reflective; more instinctive than philosophical. (result of the play of these internal and external forces is a Consequently, higher education finds itself confronted with three jut state of adjustment and alteration within the major problem with stem from those four major change university areas inity. Very often the first-level alterations are catalysed by factors and which demand thoughtful but swift resolution: leant changes in the needs of values of the society and then •academic quality Wain after a trial period to correct flaws and to bring those •credibility tons into articulation with the central purposes of the •Academic Program Development Jrsiiy. The two-phase cycle plays and plays again, never And limiting the span of possible solutions in each: |gthe nirvana of precise equilibrium, but always in a condition •fiscal exigencies Istructive flux. Academic Quality rr education is often accused of being too static, too In our commendable zeal to increase the accessibility of the ve, too smug in its own substance. educational system to a wider public and to deal more effectively Ireality. the university system is a kaleidoscope of constant with individual differences in the student population, we Vchange, assessment and reassessment. One need only read inadvertently disrupted that fragile balance of educational llilogs of any major university at five-year intervals to principles and caused a temporary dislocation. We became more tie the shape and dimension of that change. concerned with nurturing and less with educating. ■problems in higher education, therefore, It began in the late 1960s and continued into the arise less out of a early 1970s, a ■inability to change and more out of change which is period in higher education which can only be termed a paroxysm. In that period, the educational system was confronted with ^touted, or of only short range benefit, or which ultimately demands for reform which resulted in general relaxation of ptsthe critical balance which preserves the essential core of rigor across the country. Less Jauniversity is and should be. demanding courses appeared everywhere, lie Disraeli description of a university, the concepts of light, of softer grading systems mushroomed, academic requirements were T'.of learning are not always clearly differentiated one from diluted; even such a prestigious institution as Yale University in pristine categories so that all three may be nurtured removed the "F" grade from student records. A strange kind of Ir and at the same rate. All too frequently, to nourish one universal leveling infected all sectors of the educational system. That generation of students expected that their own limited view of ■ to deprive the other. the world and their own limited competencies and skills would be I university, then, stays viable and vital enshrined with the cloak of institutional certification. by stepwise its while The result was a highly inflated GPA and rapidly attempting to maintain a calculus growth in all delcining test r time. It is on such a jagged course that the scores on nationally normed exams. More serious is the fact that the Jrtity serves its various publics. University served poorly many young persons in that generation of students. Unfortunately, the most critically harmed were those projection into the future is valid, therefore, without a careful itothat crucible in higher education reveals a education is profound. legislatures; faculty and studentsl; and people who could ill afford it — the less competent students. roiling mix of Perhaps it is well to step back periodically to remind ourselves, lud counterforce which justifies Moreover, the nature of that shift is perplexing. There appears to •Extraordinarily tight resources. application of the chemist's our students, our publics of what the university environment is and ^'fermentation ve pot" to the highly reactive — sometimes be a growing tendency to flatten out the priority listings laterally rather than to reorder values vertically so that all things tend to Each requires a significant response from the educational what it is not. We are not here for the eole purpose of licensing or - system. community, but the response pattern for any one must not preclude certifying students so that they may be more competitive in the job be valued equally. As one disgruntled responding to another, and the sum of the responses must be ■ chemist frequently refers to such professor put it, "A market. We expect that the university environment will not a system by the simple knowledge of Shakespeare is no more important than a knowledge compatible with the role of the university and, in fact, should enrich only I'pot 'and that term is used here in the context of the chemist's of comic books." and ennoble that role. One half of that challenge has been met. develop marketable skills, but will also force students to cope with dature and not in the more ideological differences, to accept and understand differences in contemporary usage of the word, ct into the future of As we contemplate that highly reactive mix in the "pot," we can The years from the late 1960s to the early 1970s produced these thought and behavior of others, to synthesize and not merely higher education is to isolate those ■ forces from the present and isolate four major factors which occurred in the last decade, are four major elements in the system; the next five years will require analyze, in fact to recognize that analysis is only the precursor to past which hold such a high with us now, and which will extend their influence to the future: an extraordinarily high creative effort to If potential that they will mold, shape, and temper events in incorporate those factors synthesis. llure. into the context of what the university is and what the university The university strives to develop young intellects in order to •Efforts to make the university accessible to a wider range of should be. Those four waves of change pounded on the shores of produce, in Adlai Stevenson's words, "critical thinkers and thinking ■energy potential is increased by the changing values in the potential students; academe with such swiftness and with such force that there was critics." We are not here to accommodate students by accepting ■"dingsociety. In this society, in this time, in this place, the •Development of new instructional models; little chance to bring a sense of history and a sense of purpose to the whatever state of intellectual development a student presents at ■'shifting societal values is so great that the impace on higher •Increased scrutiny by external and internal groups (citizens and response patterns generated for each one. (continued on page 101 usf/n Morrill: he trashing p a liberal rfs enclave And that is exactly the situation which gave the students an alternative President Clifton R. Wharton repeatedly By KAT BROWN loom nearer, the hostility over the demise — to workshop — of which student governance JMC is "going away". the diploma grindmill of the University. said JMC and the two other residential fen u News Staff Writer of an alternative undergraduate education members were present for two days — and "® Morrill College. at MSU has changed to sorrowful accep colleges would not be hit harder than any the subject was brought up. JMC faculty are currently working on a Administrators are quick to point out BdtonT.1'e,ars' simply speaking the lance. proposal for a lifelong education curriculum, that the program has not been eliminated other college. tine student who attended the I,' ® liberal arts college brought . The controversy surrounding JMC's similar to Continuing Education Services, and that students currently enrolled in JMC But the process began just prior to the did not feel that the lifelong workshop ■tein ot different reactions about education ik "new mission" has made administrators of that is aimed at older "non-traditional" will be able to obtain their degrees within beginning of fall term — though the proposal was explained and said she was "in T. 'he University, its programs, its students and will replace the undergrade the college. But in March 1977 a morator Pand 'ts people. the college reluctant to talk about it and possibility had been discussed much earlier the dark" about the whole issue. ate "Life of Inquiry" program. ium was placed on freshman enrollment, when the JMC office received a letter Valerie Shebroe, chairperson of the JMC University officials continue to deftly — A drop in enrojlment in the college and and unless the moratorium is removed, j.'i'1ecame Past year, however, the sidestep the issue while the students would higher costs per student were cited as JMC's demise is certain. from the Provost's office requesting that a new direction for the college be discussed. Student Caucus, supported the views of many students who said they were not less mixed and turned prefer not to think about it at all. At the same time, all three groups wish the reasons for phasing out the undergraduate During the summer of 1976, with a Thy week before the school year began, the consulted about the changes — and student ■is a somewhat hostile nature. And I ls'°ns about the future of JMC problem would just go away. program known for its experimental ideas deepening budget crunch hitting MSU. faculty of JMC attended their annual (continued on page 8) D2Michigon Stole News. Eost Lonsirig. Michigan Graduate TAs and the lazy MSU professor By JOE PIZZO "I would come down firmly op¬ State News Staff Writer posed to turning a course over to Before you raise your hand to ask the first question of your academic career at MSU, think o graduate student — it's con¬ twice before calling the person recognizing you trary to University policy." "doctor" or "professor," because there is a good chance he or she does not have a faculty —Dorothy Arata. assistant provost for undergraduate education appointment, but is instead a graduate student assuming the responsibilities of a faculty member. Surely more than one first-term freshman, Educational Testing Service's Advanced Place¬ bristling with righteous indignation over a grade ment and college board achievement ( received on an essay examination, arrived at the tions. office of the professor only to be told his examination was graded by a graduate teaching "You can bring s (' degree of standardiza- assistant never seen by those taking the tion," she said. examination. Arata said it has been determined that the The University employs nearly 2500 faculty members in instructional programs — and responsibility for the grade lies with the faculty almost member supervising the graduate teaching 1,500 graduate teaching assistants as well. assistant. Departmental distribution of graduate teach¬ ing assistants ranges from a fall term average of "When the issue came to the floor of the 135 in the Chemistry Dept. to between 10 and 12 Academic Council," Ithe main campus-wide in the School of Journalism. academic legislative body)," she said, "It was Some graduate teaching assistants take full determined the graduate assistant is not the sole responsibility for a course or sections of a course, agent i responsible for a while others serve as "readers" grade)." - merely mythical figures in whose hands ostensibly over-burdened professors drop blue book exams Any grievances challenging a grade filed with and term papers to be graded. departmental committees in accordance with the Last fall, 15 per cent of all MSU courses were procedure outlined in the Academic Freedom report cannot be filed against a graduate taught by graduate teaching assistants — at a fraction of the cost to the University of faculty teaching assistant. coverage. And there are no statistics available on "It's not fair to file grievances against the number of blue book exams, term papers, and students," Arata explained. other written work graded by "readers." The professor cited above said students have Many department heads and faculty members little recourse in challenging grades assigned by have complacently accepted the idea of graduate graduate teaching assistants who are "covered" teaching assistants' assuming faculty designated by the signature of a faculty member on a grade responsibilities. card. Grievance proceedings are often so Other believe permitting graduate teaching assistants to have complete responsibility for a time-consuming students hesitate to file. course is unethical at best — and possibly a He does feel graduate teaching assistants can violation of University policy. contribute significantly to an academic program "I would come down firmly opposed to turning given the proper training and supervision. a course over to a graduate student — it's "On a supervised, instructional level, the use of contrary to University policy," said Dorothy graduate teaching assistants is justified." he Arata, Assistant Provost for Undergraduate said. Education. She believes such violations are "widespread" Arata agreed, noting that "graduate assistants at MSU. ought to be chosen with absolute care." One professor in one of the University's three The professor suggested his colleagues — largest colleges, who has worked extensively whose salaries average between $20,000 and with graduate teaching assistants, said he $25,000 yearly for between six and eight hours of considered the signing of a grade card by a classroom teaching a week — could better earn faculty member who did not grade the papers on that money be personally grading papers and which the grade was based to be unethical. examinations instead of relegating that function "A teacher who signs for the grade should to "readers." have given the grade," he said. "Anything else is misrepresentation." "Major university professors , the last Though he teaches at least one course yearly pampered elite," he said. with a large enrollment and written work Arata suggested a requirements that would entitle him to the "three-pronged approach" be taken to improve graduate teaching assis services of "readers", this professor had consis¬ tants: tently refused to accept them. "I mark every goddammed paper," he said. "I •Selection of graduate teaching assistants with consider it unethical to have graduate assistants the ability to communicate a comprehensive grading papers." knowledge of their subject; He said there is no way for the teaching •Supplementing that with "a good training assistant to know exactly what the professor has program" in college teaching; and in mind while lecturing, preparing an essay •Associating each graduate teaching assistant question, or what he would expect in a term with "a master teacher" for guidance and advice. paper or similar written assignment. She stressed the importance of interaction "It is possible to get readers trained so grades with a "master" college teacher. have validity," Arata countered, citing exami¬ "Very few Igraduate teaching assistants) can ners trained to grade essay sections of the teach well at all without a mentor," she said. WHY WAIT A WEEK FOR YOUR SLIDES? SAME DAY PROCESSING EKTACHROME in by 9 a.m. out by 2 a.m. in by 3 p.m. out by 10 a.m. the next day YOU'RE THIS CLOSE University United Methodist • PHOTO mflRT 2312 E. TO LOSING WEIGHT: Mon Thurs. 1118 Church S.Harrison 7:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. Tu«s. 1:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m Capitol 2H9Ham,l,onRA fTllchlgan 484-7748 n^Michiqon Stote News, tost Lonsirg, Michigon Wekomoweek, W7 What matters for faculty survival at this and other/ <0 universities is not scholarship or good education //^ Playing the game of second guess and toeing the line By KATHY ESSELMAN and the Linguistics Depart¬ to feed their departments from operating costs of his lab. State News Staff Writer ment can bear witness. They the meager rations apportioned Though a faculty member in An Emperor of the Holy were recently dissolved. to them by Legislature. the sciences may get a minimal Roman Empire once disagreed Departments which have sat¬ The previously quoted facul¬ sum at the beginning of his with the sex and scholarship of isfactory enrollment figures are ty member-administrator said, appointment to cover initial a young female mathematics trying to beef up their depart¬ "This University is set up like a expenses of basic laboratory professor at the University of Alexandria, so he had some of ments, and hire the most quali¬ fied people so they can attract big day care center where every dept. is forced to fight equipment and the hiring of a technician, the faculty member V his henchmen scrape off her better graduate and undergrad¬ over the toys, by the very is expected to apply for a grant flesh with oyster shells. uate students, and keep their nature of the set-up." Few faculty members enrollment figures up. This need to scrap over These grants provide money through the ages have suffered In Microbiology, an upper dollars with every other de¬ for the University, because quite such stringent reprisals level course, immunology car¬ partment fosters an unhealthy these are in the form of for their deviation from the ried an approximate enrollment dog-eat-dog attitude. matching grants — half goes to expressed policy of those who of 400 students winter term. It In the Sciences, the econo¬ the University, to defray the direct the development of their was held in the largest lecture mics are external rather than costs of administering the grant school. hall available, and studentsstill internal. It is not primarily the and providing supportive ser¬ Faculty members nowadays found themselves crowding in number of students enrolled vices. are caught between the legisla¬ the aisles and sitting on the which give security to these Promotion and tenure pro¬ ture, the administration and floor. In contrast, an advanced departments and its faculty vide the only security in the appointed chairperson of the the needs of the students. In Old English class had an enroll¬ members, but grants and con¬ shifting cosmos of the Universi¬ department wanted to change this four-sided affair, it often ment of five. tracts from federal agencies. the direction of that ty for faculty member. Faculty depart¬ seems no two have any interest One anonymous faculty mem¬ In Engineering, Communica¬ come up for promotion five ment, inspite of the candidate's in common, so at any given time ber and administrator feels the tions and the Agriculture de¬ years after their appointment papers, grants and excellent a faculty member may feel like University "is run like a Ford partments, money comes from to a tenure track position. At qualifications as a teacher. An¬ Dionysius torn apart by the Motor assembly line. The more government grants and busi¬ this time, their individual fate other person in Arts and Let¬ Penthean women. cars you produce (i.e. the ness contracts. Concerns as more is decided on the basis of ters had promotion and tenure For the past six years, medi¬ students you process), the bet¬ diverse as CBS News and cal school faculty members departmental structure, aims of delayed three years because his ter a professor you prove Midwestern seed companies the department as defined by have been required to fill out a chairperson once saw him sit¬ yourself to be." support research programs at the chairperson, and the criter¬ ting with his feet form every term, accounting The more students a depart¬ up on the MSU and these in turn contrib¬ ia mentioned above. desk. for every bit of their working ment has, the "better" the ute money to support graduate The tenure committee, com¬ Faculty make time, so that the legislators can department, and therefore the students, buy equipment and up depart¬ posed of department members ments, and the departments judge whether or not they are more money allocated to that underwrite programs. meets and recommends promo¬ constitute the colleges within wasting the taxpayers' money. These forms take an excessive amount of time to fill out for the department by the legislature. "The basis of education is economics," he said. The disci¬ Faculty members in all de¬ partments get promotions and tenure, partly on the basis of tion and tenure, just tenure or that tenure be denied. Promo¬ tion can be denied for political the University. All these com ponents must be oiled with cold cash provided RUNNING LATE?! faculty member, and shed little plines which are not grant- these economic factors. Teach¬ by the legisla¬ light on the individual's com¬ or even personal reasons. ture, as long as that is so, supported, must compete with ing ability and enrollment fig¬ There are no hard-and-fast faculty and departments must passion, enthusiasm or ability one another for dollars since ures influence promotions in all rules which as a teacher or director of regulate the tenure play to the masses and base the dollars follow students. The departments, but are more system. their advances not on scholar¬ research. running of the whole university significant in Arts and Humani¬ An assistant professor in the ship, or students properly edu¬ The role of the legislature as is based on external or internal ties where outside grants exert a combination Department of Political Sci¬ cated, but on the — body count Big Brother Dad¬ little influence over promotion. for example, was denied ence, — students enrolled and tuition dy Warbucks encourages facul¬ The internal economics are In the liberal arts and human¬ tenure because the recently- received. ty members and department based on the raw data of ities a faculty member is expec¬ chairpersons to spend an inor¬ student enrollment figures ted to publish a book in order to dinate amount of time justify¬ Since relatively few national qualify for promotion and ten¬ ing their own existence. The grants are available to re¬ ure. In the sciences, a faculty penalty for failure to do this is searchers in arts, letters and member is expected to publish serious in the extreme, as the humanities, these disciplines a minimum of three papers and fates of Justin Morrill College must have compete with one another a grant to cover the Alta Surgical Supply "Carries on the tradition of more than one Co hun¬ We'll Do Your Printing In a Hurryl dred years of service to the company." Books - Medical Supplies - School Supplies yes we cm! insty-prints' the wlz cf the printing t4zl See Alta for all your Medical Books, equipment, 489-3303 «H| supplies, rental, sale and service needs. WELCOME, 1456 L Michifaa 8821104 3205 S. Mr 3747628 4308 N. Saginaw 123 S. last \ Cash-n-Carry discount for Medical Students. E. Mich, W. Visit our larger location at S030 Northwind Drive, Suite 101, just east of campus. WELCOME! Saginaw and 5. Codar .tore Opon 1:30-5:30 9-12 Sat. except Wath. Sq. store Our Lansing location has plenty of parking. 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CHINESE CHS 101-2-3,201-2-3 OPEN 7 DAYS AND EVENINGS PritN at Ml" a mri Will IMS O JAPANESE JAP 101-2-3.201-2-3 A WEEK Thl» coupon ondOrlontotlon popor coupon oxplro 10-4-77. HAUSA (West Africa) AFR 101 -2-3,201-2-3 (Sec 2) FKANDOR SHOPPING CENTER 220M.A.C. HOURS: KISWAHILI (East Africa) AFR 101-2-3,201-2-3 (Sec 1) University Mall 10-5:30 Mon.W & MERIDIAN MALL East Lansing 351-4470 '♦II8 onThurs- higon side News, Eost Lansing, Michigan Welcome Week. 1977 D5 making msu history Ifc^SINCE 1896... J BOOK STORE The Most Complete Bookstore on Campus-We have: • The Official University Book List — Required and Recommended • Largest amount of Used Books ever! • Buy used books & save 25%!! We stock Books for each and every Course taught on this campus • Books arranged according to Dept. Listing — Just as they are listed in MSU's catalogue Open more hours for your shopping convenience Remember: All books guaranteed to be correct Save Your Receipt- Don't put your name in the Book! Last Day For Book Returns Oct. 12, 1977 Open all home Football Games 9 am - 5 pm Sat. Sept. 24th 9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Sunday Sept. 25th Noon - 5:00 p.m. Monday Sept. 26th 7:30 a.m. - 9:00 p.m. Tuesday Sept. 27th v 7:30 a.m. - 9:00 p.m. Wednesday Sept. 28th 7:30 a.m. - 9:00 p.m. Thursday Sept. 29th 7:30 a.m. - 9:00 p.m. Friday Sept. 30th 7:30 a.m. - 9:00 p.m. Saturday Oct. 1 9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. OPEN ALL HOME REGULAR STORE FOOTBALL GAMES HOURS 9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. 7:45 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. D6 Welcome Week, l Seventy young men appeared on the of Michigan in May 1857, hoping for villages with less than adequate preparation for college study. Other colleges required thorough training in the classics but this new one promised a scientic and liberal education that could con¬ vert their home farms into ex¬ periment stations and them into politi¬ co! leaders ot their communities. The 70 had come by family wagon, by stagecoach from the train in Jackson, and even by stage along the Grand River plank road from the Detroit area. They found a typical Michigan "oak opening," a park-like area with scattered oaks covering the hill to 1921: MSU the march in the women on homecoming parade. the south of the Grand River plank. The opening was blackened by charred stumps and piles of half-burned logs that remained from the thinning and clearing designed to make a campus, gardens and fields in the Michigan forest. In the opening were three brick buildings: College Hall where Beau Madison Kuhn is a professor of re¬ mont stands, a residence hall in the east end cent American History at MSU. Re¬ of the present Circle, and a small stable. cipient of the 1968 Distinguished Arriving in ones and twos over a period Faculty Award, Kuhn has been at of several days, they filled to capacity the MSU since 1937, and has written a dormitory which survives today only in its foundations beneath the sod of East Circle. major book on the history of MSU A marker beside the walk from the as well as several articles and Library to Berkey records its informal name: shorter books. Kuhn received his "Saints' Rest." They ate in its dining room, masters and doctorate in history toured the clearing, visited laboratories, from the University of Chicago. classrooms and library in College Hall, and worried over the impending examinations. On May 12 they reported to College Hall a student wrote home ii where President Joseph R. Williams and 1859: the three professors examined them in the I have not much news to write, being three Rs. 63 of the 70 were admitted, situated without the bounds of civilization although few were eligible to enter the right in the woods ... Last Saturday I went Freshman class. Most of them would to a husking bee down to the "Female require a year or two of preliminary study. Academy" . . . The young ladies came out That summer they attended classes in and we had a general time. There are some College Hall where the first floor was given pretty nice girls there, I tell you. I got the over to laboratory and lecture-room of the best coffee and pumpkin pie there I have queen of the sciences: chemistry. had since I left home & doughnuts in There they listened, recited and experi¬ profusion. After supper had a time until 9'/, mented through three years of qualitative past and started for the college only about and quantitative analysis, organic chemis- 4'/! or 5 miles distant. Arrived there ll'/z by Madison Kuhn MSU Professor of History try, and physics. They worked with past. Perhaps you think it was paying accurate balances and with the great pretty dear for the whistle. I don't. I would static-electric wheel. On the upper floors go that far for the pumpkin pie, let alone the they studied mathematics, English, history, girls. logic, ethics, psychology, physiology, bota¬ ny, zoology, entomology. The faculty hoped During Michigan State's first forty years that they would not only diffuse agricultur¬ the academic terms ran from March al science throughout rural Michigan but through November to encompass the sea¬ would provide enlightened son of field experimentation. In the long leadership there. winter vacation, many of the students went Student Life Back Then out to teach country schools where they Three or four classes filled each were needed to cope with strapping young morning 1928: Beaumont Tower under construction. but afternoons were spent in men who came back to class, year after earning a small wage while conducting year, when farm work was slack. In March faculty experi¬ ments in fields, gardens and orchard. That many a Michigan State student returned to meant three hours in the campus bringing from his plowing, planting, country cultivating, weeding and harvesting. Most school a winter's earnings and the brightest of the students came from farms and pupil, well-prepared for the entrance exami¬ needed no instruction in those tasks but nations. Photos courtesy of they learned much from the new varieties, new fertilizing techniques, new cultivation In the Spring of 1861 the seceded Southern Confederacy fired on Ft. University Archives practices that the professors tested from Sumpter and Information Services and commenced a civil war. Some plot to plot. students That first summer of 1857 some helped to enlisted others stayed on to study and work build the four brick homes on but also to drill under a science Faculty Row. professor in One of those homes, much the Plowboy Guards. On the enlarged, is now Fourth of July the West Circle residence of President and the Guards marched smartly in Lansing's Mrs. Clifton R. Wharton Jr. It is named for parade. But in September the faculty Alice Cowles whose father hauled brick for reluctantly excused its first Senior Class to Congress passed the Morrill bill but a these as a reward or punishment for having many home lamps to explode. Every Kedzie those homes and who wrote that year in his enter a company of scientists in the Union presidential veto killed it. In 1862, it discovered how to run an agricultural student became an anylytical chemist and Cheap iron, cheap oil, and n. .. copy of the first catalog: "This is the Army. reappeared and President Abraham Lincoln of the electric motor spawned tM» college so as to turn out farmers." the best joined the faculties of other property of A. E. Cowles, who wishes to signed it into law. It promised land for state It was indeed turning out farmers. land grant colleges. machine shops that needed skill preserve it in memory of the students, and When the year ended in November there colleges that would teach, in addition to the tists. Engineering students could Deeply grounded in laboratory science, Zoologist Albert Cook developed the first of the first term of the Agr. College of the were no Commencement ceremonies be¬ regular studies, the sciences related to experienced in the application of theory to successful insecticide to save They had passed second year W State of Michigan. The first of the kind in cause the graduates were drilling in agriculture and engineering in order "to agricultural practice from their three hours Michigan's fruit industry. But he also trained a better to keep abreast of scientilic the United States; and of which he is at Missouri and experimenting with electric educate the industrial classes in the several a day in the field, and made more articulate With two curricula, rivalry present a student." lights to replace the kerosene lanterns that pursuits and professions in life." majority of the nation's entomologists of "aggies" and "mechanicals gave a the Army used in by their grounding in literature, history and that generation. Evenings they played soccer and base¬ night signalling. The class Michigan State received its share: a philosophy, the graduates were leaders in campus life. . of 61 was more Horticulturist liberty Hyde Bailey who, But it could not replace W ball, studied and practiced public widely trained in laboratory quarter million acres of land in the north their communities. speaking as a student, edited Speculum, the school's in literary societies. Saturday afternoons science than was any college graduating country which it sold for one million dollars. Earning Renown first continuing periodical, became so rivalry between classes. Soph"® class in the nation, but the That endowment continues to died Freshmen in need af orient" many went to Lansing because there was no Army command support the But by 1890 Michigan State was not. was turning successful a taxonomist that Cornell lured threw them into the Red Cedar- East Lansing at the campus gates and only Shortly the company was dis¬ university. out more than farmers. Revenues from the him away. a few farm families within a mile or two. banded and for a decade or more the As the retaliated,often with the aid of J troops prototype land grant institution, Morrill land-grant endowment, along with These men's names dot the stuck to their dim kerosene There they bought books, visited the lanterns. its curriculum, its work program and its state appropriations, had added campus thought that last year's r iresM buildings, today. Senio-stook Capitol, and tried to meet the city's young graduates were seized upon by other states laboratory equipment, research funds and further instruction. A Grant of Land Scientists like Beal, Kedzie, Cook and women. From the opening months in eager to found their own land-grant library until it was becoming known for its Sophomores until every ntan cou™ Sunday mornings they attended religious 1857, colleges. Not all of them succeeded. Some Bailey became the nucleus of the Experi¬ involved. The faculty, in veekly President Joseph R. Williams and scientists. ment Station founded in the services in the "chapel" which was, at other Sarah developed a course of study so vocational late 1880's with solemnly punished the very ie Botanist William Beal had read Darwin federal funds. Their recent seniors times, the chemistry lecture-room. Langdon Williams (who was to become one Sunday of the nation's and so elementary that students left in on dross-feritlization and become the first to research assistants, earned became caught in night-time battle afternoon they wandered leading suffragists) had disgust after master of But intercollegiate cortests through the pressed for a federal land grant to found a term or two. Others built a cross corn in the field to induce hybrid science degrees, and went out to woods south of the Red Cedar curriculum staff the drain off some of the intranet"® ( looking out and support an agricultural so heavy in Latin and Greek, vigor. He had insisted that the laboratory for deer and wild college in each experiment stations springing to life in the 1880's, springtime field day turkey. Sunday evenings state. Joseph wrote for farm philosophy and English, that there was no provide a compound microscope for every ether states. For years some were invited to faculty homes but all magazines, time for science. Their graduates entered student and that it be used thereafter, any together students from published circulars, and lobbied in constantly. His national experiment station must study and write for Monday morning. Washing the professions. students were pioneering in the meeting served Albion, Hillsdale and Olivet,»»« Social events were uncommon: a ton. At the end of the 1880's teaching of as a Michigan State alumni reunion. public South Carolina's botany and in plant research. In 1885 there was sufficient eager to compete in base! meeting of a literary society, a Fourth of governor wrote income to field. July celebration, an address Congressman Justin Morrill agreed to Michigan State's president Through chemical testing, Dr. Robert introduce a second c". riculum: .I,, by a visiting introduce a land grant bill and for advice in the pattern of faculty Kedzie had forced manufacturers to be under the title ,.i mechanic arts. engineering, In May, 1888, on this cantons, statesman, or a scheduled spoke for it appointments. "Your school," he wrote, "is Mathemat¬ held the first field day of tie" ween students at exchange bet¬ in 1858. There was, he said, such a college in honest in their descriptions of fertilizers ics and mechanical the college and those at a the pioneer and guide for all similar drawing, physics and Michigan Intercollegiate At'I private woman's Michigan "in the full tide of successful and forced oil companies to remove from chemistry, woodshop and foundry prepared school in north Lansing. Of institutions which are not their kerosene the gasoline (a tion), the oldest conference experiment." humbugs and you waste-pro its graduates fur leadership in the factories must bear the infliction of such requests as duct before the automobile) that caused so springing up all over the Middle West. Appalachians. , Freshman leader Burnett. a«" Welcome Week, 1977 D7 us of the Agricultural College orlission. They came from farms and A lecture-concert series brought perfor¬ All were concerned for the mers to the campus. There was a unemployed J-Hop and and the underpaid, but a thousand gathered a Senior Prom and a succession of dancing at the west entrance in 1937, the year of the parties. And beginning in 1919 some Sit Down strikes, to stop a Labor Holiday students filled their free time with writing march of union members from and editing the Holcad that would become Lansing, throwing a few in the Red Cedar. In state the State News in 1925. and nation, liberals were distressed but For many, the high point of the Snyder conservatives were pleased with the Spar¬ era came in 1907 when President Theodore tans. Roosevelt addressed a Commencement As the decade progressed, a crowd of 20,000 on the West Circle lawn and spirit of hope swept the campus. President Robert Shaw handed diplomas to 97 Seniors graduating had. by judicious economies, brought the in agriculture, engineering, home econom institution through the worst of the 1874: Portions of the ics and forestry. The band played impres¬ depression. Under the umbrella of Franklin house on the left still sively. Roosevelt rode majestically to the Roosevelt's New Deal the economy exist in Cowles slowly campus in a REO driven by Ransom E. revived and family incomes rose House, the presi¬ Olds. enough to make college possible for more young dent's residence. World War and Change people. Enrollment doubled. The houses behind World War I brought an abrupt change to The New Deal brought federal money for the trees the campus. As young men enlisted in 1917 - Faculty campus improvements, for student work Row and 1918, M.A.C. promised to become a - were re¬ programs, for WPA artists like Charles women's college for the duration. Pollock who painted the Auditorium's placed with the But in September, 1918, the Army sent West Circle dorms. mural. It paid half the cost of several new six hundred draftees of college caliber to buildings: Music, Jenison and the field the campus, enrolling them in a Student house, the Auditorium and Fairchild Thea¬ Army Training Corps (SATC). Housed in ter, the Health Center, Abbot and Campbell long barracks hastily contructed where halls. Berkey Hall now stands, they went to As enrollment rose, there were enough classes in English, history and science. students preparing for specific jobs to A month late the barracks became permit expansion in professional programs. hospital wards for the vast number of There were new majors in speech, journal students stricken in the world-wide influen¬ ism, public administration, and conserva¬ za epidemic. Most of them recovered but tion as well as expansion and subdivision the November 11 Armistice ended fighting within many existing departments. and it ended serious study for the men in As Board Secretary John A. Hannah the SATC. They renamed their unit "Stick planned and watched to completion each of Around 'Til Christmas." the new buildings, some faculty members 120 years of history From those months with the SATC, a memory lingered of bright students eager to pursue careers other than those in farm, faulted his optimism. They saw the seven thousand enrollment as a temporary, de¬ pression-born phenomenon. There would forest, factory and home. Faculty members never be, they warned, enough students to led by Dr. Ernst Bessey pushed through a fill Hannah's whole new list of majors in science and the The Coming of Hannah liberal arts. Physicists and botanists, Eng¬ But the Board liked what it saw and in lish and mathematics professors had always served many students but suddenly they July 1941 entrusted the presidency to John Hannah. He devoted the next twenty-eight could train majors in their own depart years to building a university to his liking. ments. In Hannah's sixth presidential month, the In 1923 three transfer students were Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor and shortly graduated under the dispensation: one each the draft was draining men from the in chemistry, economics and history. Soon campus. Michigan State took more than its there were seniors in other departments share of air force and army trainees, that had previously been no more than service units. housing them in new and old residence halls. New majors developed in business, in hotel administration, in physical education Faculty offered cram courses in mathe¬ matics and physics, in geography and and in school music. A distinguished faculty history, in English and foreign languages. composed of concert musicians built a Intercollegiate athletics shrivelled but strong department that drew talented women took over the Sute News, the students to the campus. annual Wolverine and many a campus Graduate study expanded under an organization. improving faculty. Students had earned Amid a global war, the world penetrated master's degrees for half a century but the the campus. The State News began to first Ph.D. was awarded in 1925. It went to report international events and the new a young man in Dr. Bessey's botany Auditorium offered Saturday night travel department for a study of the physiology of films. President Hannah brought Professor the sunflower. With doctoral programs in Shao Chang Lee to head an institute of many fields, the college had become a foreign studies that taught courses on Asia university. and Latin America. In later years it evolved In recognition of the school's expanding into International Studies and horizons, the name was changed in that Programs whose work extended Michigan State's year from Michigan Agricultural College to campus to the world. Dr. and Mrs. Lee lived Michigan State College. The Holcad became in one of the Faculty Row brick homes that the State News and the Aggies were survived from 1857. Overseas students re-christened the Spartans. In the Fight went there to explain their problems, to Song, "Their Specialty in farming, but those cook familiar food, and to welcome visitors farmers play football" was revised to "Their from home. specialty is winning, and those Spartans When the military programs tapered and play football." MSC took over the communi¬ there was time to plan before the veterans ty and MAC survives only in the name of returned, Hannah turned faculty attention the avenue where the trolley cars from to the drafting of a program in general Lansing once turned around. education. He regretted that in recent Glee and Gloom years new vocational courses had so The 1920's were good years. There was a crowded liberal study out of the curricula new separate library on the hill (now the that in some the student took no social Museum) with more books and more staff. science, no biological science and no There was a small theater on the top floor of humanities beyond a term of composition the new home economics building and a and a term of speech. talented director from English. In order to graduate truly educated men Under the leadership of Lewis Richards, and w^.nen, the Basic College that is now the quantity and quality of musical perfor University College came into being in 1944 mances advanced remarkably. And Peoples under Dean Howard Rather. Its courses Church moved into its present home, provided nearly a fourth of the academic welcoming student groups to its meeting- program of every candidate for the bache¬ rooms and drama to its auditorium. lor's degree. In a new stadium (much enlarged since) In the summer of 1945. with the war larger crowds watched teams from better J9M: A horse-drawn fore the widespread carriage travelling on Michigan Avenue, be¬ use of concrete and cars. schools. Fall Saturdays brought yellow coming to a close, Hannah prepared for the influx of students that the G. I. Bill could slickers or raccoon coats, mums, and some bring. Persuading the Board to borrow hip-flasks with four ounces of bootleg money at rates as low as one percent, he (watered) gin to help a couple while away a planned indispensable housing. By 1946 cold afternoon in the stands. Weekends veterans and their families were there were dances in the ballroom of the crowding into quonsets, trailers and barracks-apart¬ new Union that students and alumni had ^jumps Chief Petoskey, won three of Morrill Hall (19001 but they attended other century these buildings were small. Some of early November, football emerged as an built. There were films at East Lansing's ments on south campus. There they studied, raised families, shopped at their - backward, standing classes in almost every building on the them survive along East Circle: what is now intercollegiate sport. The first professor of new State Theater. "running hop, step and jump — as campus: chemistry and physics, mathemat¬ Linton Hall sheltered zoology, the library physical education joined the faculty and co-op, and played ball in the open fields. Life he "hiKh kick with both feet." By Fraternities and sororities flourished out ics and drawing, history and English, and the museum: Horticulture is now the began to develop teams. In baseball and magazine ran a feature on what it called ' slu,)ents had adopted green as in the town, a bit removed from direct "Fertile Valley." botany and horticulture, physiology and Honors College: Botany has become Jour¬ track there was a record on which to build *■ adding white later, but they nalism: Forestry; and Entomology was and basketball soon joined them, but the supervision by the Dean of Women. And a Through the next fifteen years borrowed zoology. Each also studied piano or voice for mile east of town. Coral Gables opened as ,he "Aggies" until 1925 when two years. A woman must have many named for Professor Cook. In President football team must undergo several years money strung residence halls across the "the largest roadhouse this side of Detroit." Snyder's time enrollment grew from 400 to that were little more than training. campus from Gilchrist-Yakeley, the Brody jame MSC and they became accomplishments. The diversity of their courses was unified 2000 and there were larger buldings for In 1902 it lost to Michigan 0 to 119. Not A part of the fun went out of the campus Group and Wonders on the west to Snyder. fte Advent of Woman each curriculum: Morrill Hall for home until 1913 was that disgrace avenged in a Van Hoosen and Hubbard on the east. It by their living-learning community in life after the 1929 Crash developed into the agricultural and engineering Morrill Hall. Cooking and sewing laborato¬ economics, Marshall for bacteriology. Agri defeat of the Wolverines in Ann Arbor, 12 Great Depression of the 1930's. It cut down added three villages of brick apartments. res'dent Jonathan Snyder and cultural Hall, R. E. Olds Hall for engineer¬ to 7. State and federal funds filled much of the , ries, music rooms, gymnasium, dining-room on the money from home, made school-year *7 added, in 1896. a women's and parlors occupied some part of each ing, and the gymnasium north of the Cedar. Back on the campus, students celebrated intervening space, from Berkey Hall to the jobs scarce and weakened the hope of the The coming of women in greater numbers with the ususal bonfires including one medical area. Private foundations provided Mass Spring of 1870, each floor. Women faculty members lived near finding a position after graduation. had enrolled three or five the exits, the better to apprehend coeds hastened the development of a fuller which consumed an offensive barn that Fees, room rents and meal prices Kellogg Center for continuing education, ®en but they had stood on Grand River Avenue behind the Kresge for art, and Eppley for business. On pursued the returning from "after-hours" dates. campus life. The simultaneous shift of the dropped on the campus, but scarcely as fast ^culture course of long vacation from winter to summer home of the Secretary of the Board. the Hannah empire, the cement never set. d m study. Ten Many graduates married, as the founders as income shrank. Grand River Avenue 1870, taken courses along had intended, but many also became home helped even more. That schedule change Fortunately his cow was absent; students restaurants, where many of the men and Kellogg Center for Continuing Education and worked had led her down to the railroad track on opened in 1951 because of the phenomenal afternoons with economics teachers, depaKment store buy¬ grew out of the professionalizatioh of the some of the women ate, slashed the price of ,' n and greenhouse, ers, dietitians, ' institutional managers. agricultural course, in part because of the Farm Lane to welcome other fans returning weekly meal tickets to five dollars but they growth of education for off-campus people. opening in the 189()'s of winter "short late from Ann Arbor. As early as the 1870's professors had gone j* reputedly a refining influence What had begun as training for the home courses" for young people who expected to With a rapidly growing student body, also reduced the protein to serve starchier out into the state to speak at three-day , a"e raised a decline in the had become training for separate careers. meals. Less fortunate students sought out CCOt But most of Other curricula emerged in other parts of remain in farming, dairy manufacture or many of whom were women, and a normal cheaper rooms in attics, basements and institutes for farm families. them, and ss°ra, stayed the campus. Engineering divided into civil, fruit-growing. academic year, campus life changed quickly. barns where they lived on day-old bread, By 1913 those institutes had evolved into only a few terms, general liberal and scientific Increasingly, the four-year students There were concerts by the growing beans, rice and a bit of hamburger. Farmers Week on the campus. Meanwhile, mechanical and electrical. Agriculture split ■ nd departed when into soils, crops, animal husbandry, poultry, looked to government, business, industry number of musicians. In 1902 they sang On campus, students worked harder and the institution was deploying resident upper-class rd t»o professional. agricultural engineering and farm manage and the land-grant culleges fur professional "11. M. S. Pinafore" and in 1904 Haydn's worried more about their personal futures agents in the counties to work with "the work of leaders like ment. Forestry grew from a one-year careers. Laboratory work shifted indoors "Creation." There were plays like "School and the quality of American society. Some farmers, farm women, and youth. Mary from the field and the school year need no for Scandal" in 1913 and, in 1914, "A turned out for peace meetings to restrain a But those programs utilized few beyond course into a four-year major. Veterinary kL a ge' Mrs' Snyder. Librari- den and Dean of medicine graduated its first doctor in 1914. longer be tied to the growing season. In Midsummer Night's Dream" performed nation seemingly bent on war. Others the faculties in agriculture and home the women's 1896 the calendar added winter term. down the hillside from College Hall (on the economics. In the 1920's, President Kenyon t,, c Gilchrist, a highly profes- As each department and curriculum a Wolverines 119, Aggies 0 site of Beaumont). Intercollegiate debates interrupted those meetings out of a concern Butterfield introduced a Continuing Educa- ig"" J™,developed "mok aevelopc after 1896. Worn developed, it moved out of College Hall into When students no longer left for home in and oratorical contests drew good crowds. that pacifism could lead to the nation's t. rookingn. „j and • . sewing in the _ ., n a building of its own. In the late nineteenth destruction. (continued on page 9) DflMichigon Stole News, East Lansing. Michigan Welcome Week Iq/j ITS HISTORY TALE OF SENSITIVITY, INNOVATION A AND CHANGE JMC: the college that 'died a thousand deaths! By DIANE COX In addition to being residential, JMC was tion and group skills. The language require¬ wants to better their State News Stall Writer organized around an international theme ment was broadened to include these other would like to „ JMC allowed me to become the kind of person I happy about." re,!-1| Throughout its history, Justin Morrill instead of a traditional major. techniques of communication, Hurrell said. College has been noted for its ability to "The majors seemed too fragmented," be taught by. The smallness made us responsive to the needs "Anyone might learn writing, but the Jhe new public conSjst!. ,, I and concerns of the students. question is how well they can use this skill," "'"dents, th„Se experiment and change. This flexibility has Hurrell said. "An international theme was new over h, allowed the small liberal arts college to go chosen because it could include a wide - John Reid, JMC writing professor he explained. "We want to strengthen these program, if passed..ne aje o! 1 through many changes in response to range of diseiplines and address a common skills of inquiry so that students become channels, will be called?,'1*! internal and external factors. JMC has been considered an alternative concern, instead of being fragmented. "The international theme was quite life-long learners." But in the fall of 1976 a decision was made will focus o programs related t0 d th» >1*1 to the traditional methods of education natural, given MSU's projects overseas," he changed to an inter cultural and inter per identity was based upon. by administrators to phase out the Life of student's job. It is smaller adult a T ,SI taught throughout MSU since its inception said. sonal theme: relating the student to the The year before that requirement was Inquiry program due to low enrollment and education offered at JMC. proW%J in 1965. The curriculum is flexible and the Reid said he thinks the international world, instead of the world to the student. abolished, JMC suffered another setback, financial crunch. A moratorium was placed "This has been students actively participate in the design theme came about in response to President "The faculty was chosen after the the loss of joint appointments, also due to on freshman enrollment. Hurrell said. "The deveUi., . 1 of their education. They utilize both JMC Kennedy's inaugural address, international theme was chosen." Hurrell financial reasons, Hurrell said. When JMC originated there were 400 basic runs and University courses to form an interdis- "Kennedy said that Americans should be explained. "The theme was not strongly "When we lost the joint appointments we students housed in Snyder-Phillips Hall. In of Inquiry was directed t! ."^I ciplinary field of concentration, rather than willing to go anywhere at any price to carry endorsed by them, so it gradually changed." had to ask if we had an attractive staff to 1968 enrollment peaked at 880, while in the lifelong education. *ari the college was to prepare students to be foreign language requirement was shifted was the erosion was pretty severe — a figure and closer to the original, at 440. self-learners and their programs are to be back to the University departments, largely give it a chance to take spokesmen for America to other countries." stripped down model." "Student enrollment for the last two But hold, there are financial geared towards independent study, an But the "spokesmen" soon started get- for financial reasons. Hurrell said. The new model, which began in 1975, was years is down, so the administration realiJ* experiment now being forsaken throughout ting bad press and were identified with "Some referred to JMC as the foreign called "Life of Inquiry." legitimately looked at that reality," Reid extremely brutal. The only !'i the nation in the interest of returning to the "un-American" activities in the sixties, such language college.' Hurrell said. "So when "The point of the Life of Inquiry program said. "The public of the sixties is no longer accept a moratorium is financial crunch." hjf'l "basics." as drugs, sex and protests. They did that requirement was taken out JMC was is the development of the autonomous here in sufficient numbers." Both Hurrell and In addition to dents are given independance, JMC stu- ample attention from experiment more than students in the considered dead by some. My feeling is it has died a thousand deaths." learner who can acquire and use knowledge "The charge of the college has always the situation would Reid said th..l University at large, and JMC students are effectively throughout a lifetime," Hurrell been to experiment and change," he circle so that both eventuallv professors, who teach small classes and the type of people who get involved in social Reid said that he thinks the abolition of said in a 1974 report on JMC and its future. continued. "The consequences can be un¬ t'onal students could traditional aL J write extensive evaluations instead of just and political issues. But the sixties were a the foreign language requirement was a The core of Life of Inquiry involves pleasant for many individuals. But we need Justin Morrill use the«* giving arbitrary grades. time of "radical" activity all over campus. mistake, because tty*. was what JMC's writing, problem solving, values clarifica¬ to experiment and there is a public which College. So do a lot of Choice, atmosphere self reliance and are an intimate "JMC students were probably just more three main characteristics articulate," Reid said, traditional studeaj which have been retained in JMC through Indeed, Dr. Harold Hodgkinson, an the years. Others have fallen by the outside consultant brought in for an wayside, victims of JMC's mandate to evaluation of JMC it 1974, came to the change. conclusion that "the image of Justin Morrill JMC's fate is signed, sealed, delivered JMC was created in 1965 in response to a as a haven for freaks and professional growing feeling throughout the United screwballs does not seem to me in any sense States that the university as an institution, warranted." continued trvm pug* I going to be harder." dents were not consulted but they didn't stricture an adult with its rising enrollment, was becoming True or not. JMC students could not have input is one of '.he :jj '.e.cecs :i the Working within the system to maintain hold any representative office." degree-grim, gram without duplicating the life too impersonal, anonymous, rigid and been spending the majority of their time on college. the program did not work, according to monolithic. Shebroe, and she said she feels a lot of When the lifelong education proposal is continuing education services ah, vices and protests for, because of JMC's Though she admits fu: JMC administra tablished, or possibly To counter the facelessness of such a international theme, the students were tors may not hive Swa wmpieceiy tn mistrust due to the procedures followed by completed by JMC, which Ward said would offices with JMC. coordiiutk] the not happen until after December, the huge concentration of people, JMC was required to take part in an intensive foreign formed of the situation. Shebroe said the University. made a small residential college within the language program until 1974. shift towards adult education m the college proposal must be approved by the provost's Whenever the final decision on I "It's really unfortunate that MSU won't office, the Committee on Academic Policy if fate is reached is big University, said Paul Hurrell, a "The foreign language requirement re- began three years ago. when two adult inconsequential ff JMC philosophy professor who was on the have an alternative program (like JMC) for the provost deems it students currently enrolled in the ■ presented a very rigorous and heavy degree-granting programs were begun. necessary, the JMC planning committee. students my age," she said. committment." Hurrell said. "It gave those Shebroe said she finally understood the University Committee on Curriculum, Aca¬ will not be affected by any future "X JMC students originally lived and had who survived a common bond and compe- direction the college would take when she demic Council and, finally, the MSU Board of the program. JMC Acting Dean Barbara Ward main¬ classes in Snyder-Phillips Hall, where the received a letter during Christmas break to of Trustees. tency. On the other side, the students had a tains that the students in governance were faculty also had their offices. Combined lot of choice, so there was a good balance." attend a meeting of student advisors and They are prepared for what a to J informed and all procedures were followed "Part of what we're trying to do is define with with the smallness of the classes this gave Another requirement, which remains to some faculty members tit governance members. correctly. who lifelong education students are," Ward other colleges or an opportunity for much closer relation- the present, allowed students to learn by "That's when the boom really fell and you said. leaving MSU alt and the course selection book ships between faculty and students. experience rather than by books. In this knew something was cooking that was not "Any allegation that the students weren't di "JMC allowed me to become the kind of involved is Obtaining this definition will be compli¬ even further this fall - when!) "Field Study," JMC students spend at least really kosher," she said. shaky," she said. "Some stu¬ cated since the person I would like to be taught by," said college will attempt to one term off campus in a setting in which John Reid, a JMC writing professor who Shebroe, who is a junior in JMC, said they are initially unfamiliar. Because of the started out in the first year of JMC as a graduate assistant. international theme, many students origin- many viable people still feel the program is a one. ADVANCED REPAIR ally spent time overseas or working with "The smallness made us responsive to the needs and concerns of the students," he foreign students, But in the late sixties, although there was "If I can get what I need (in the college) I SERVICE will finish in JMC," she said. "For people We repair all makes of: explained. no official change, the international theme who haven't finished the requirements it's o Typewriters • Calculators REMEMBER US FOR YOUR • Adding Machines Free estimates I COMPLETE READING NEEDS Phone 476 ■ 1396 Mason, Mich. 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Tzitsikas FASTEST-GROWING AND CHALLENGING FIELDS Literature TODA| CALL OR DROP IN' ft underolAmrriCan Cen,er' 200 Center ,or '"♦"'notional Programs, coordinates majors ' fuTth1*'0-9*0"1 For 'ur,ber 7 Lat'" information, visit Amer,con us S,udies which complements disciplinary at the Center, or call 353-1690. on PACKAGING SCHOOL RM. lOQ PACKAGING BUILDING. 355-9580 in stale News, East Lonsing, Michigan Welcome Week, 1977 D9 [•om msc to msu and beyond | enrollment College dips (eoDtioued from PW 7> wall of Kellogg Center's lo Send all of the faculty into all Room: "It is for us new Centennial picketing, "trashing," glass-breaking, traf¬ for first time in years the living Kite urba" 89 weU " rUra1, dedicated here to the ... unfinished work." to be fic snarls and even talk of "levitating" the T Hannah revived that movement A part of the "unfinished work" related to adminstration building all contributed to AaiO's and encouraged on-campus the quality of education. A movements for an end to campus surveil¬ J, the pe°Ple of the sUte' Kell°K8 campaign, armed with Alumni continuing lance, for student participation in academic Distin¬ K,(ommodated the endieaa succes- guished Scholarships and other awards, government, for co-educational living in 1Ln-oups. Across the dnve a new hall honored the memory of attracted more National this campus than to Merit Finalists to campus residence halls, for an end to military training, and, above all, for an end College enrollment has de¬ clined for the first time in 26 in four-year schools and a .5 per Parker is troubled by a 3.2 than three doctoral programs any other save, cent dip in two-year schools, per cent drop among part-time was down .3 per cent, Parker to the Vietnam War. There was years, says a University of occasionally, Harvard. Some of them en¬ even a according to Dr. Garland G. students. He called it "the said. cafeteria sit-in to protest discrimination Cincinnati enrollment expert ■of the building complex resulted in rolled in the residential colleges — Justin Parker, executive director of hidden surprise in the enroll¬ He said the brightest note in who sees the trend as "an on of upper decks to the Stadium, Morrill, James Madison and against black employees. enrollment policy and educa¬ ment package." Part-time the study was the increased required by an expanding - where classrooms, Lyman Briggs There had been solid progress in agonizing preview" of times tional research at the universi¬ stu¬ faculty offices, dining- Presi¬ dents increased enrollment of women. Full-time dent Wharton's years. ahead. nationally by f program whose expansion was room and student rooms clustered in single man who University Ombuds¬ championed the rights of students The recently-completed ty. 7.7 per cent in the 1975-76 enrollment increased 3 per buldings. Most of them found a sur¬ Parker, who has supervised school year. cent, though part-time enroll¬ congenial had been joined shows a drop of .8 per IMunn and Duffy Daugherty came home in the new Honors by a Faculty Grievance vey cent the survey for 17 consecutive Parker said he originally ment of women declined 1.8 ■apus I" 1947. Their first Spartan helped to justify the awardCollege. They Officer who enlarged the freedoms of years, said research indicates a hoped increases in part-time cent. Women comprise 46 per by Phi Beta per tin Ann Arbor, 0-55, but later ones Kappa of a chapter to Michigan State. professors. Minority students were encour¬ national enrollment decline of. 1 enrollment would offset expec¬ cent of the students surveyed E The 1000 team defeated Michi- In the 1960's Michigan State became a aged to enroll and supported after they had per cent for all the nation's ted declines in full-time enroll¬ |t score of 14 to 7 and the 1953 and yeastier place in which to live. Students done so. Ramps and curb-cuts made The MSU postsecondary schools — or ment in the next decade. But he in said. four-year schools, Parker learned New Year's Day victories read more and discussed social issues education a bit less difficult for the about 15,000 fewer students said the surveys indicate the lose Bowl. responsibly. They picketed the local Kres- handicapped. Women and minorities experi¬ than last year. There are pre¬ drop in part-time enrollment He said the enrollment lag, [ball there were lean years like 1958 Jones like 1965 which sent another ■ the Rose Bowl. In other sports, ge's to encourage the chain to southern lunchcounters to open,its blacks. They enced less discrimination in hiring. The colleges of human medicine and osteopathic medicine emphasized library is sently 11.22 million persons enrolled in American colleges and universities, he said. will not counterbalance the loss of full-time. "meant a critical loss of funds either in fees income or state marched and sat in and barricaded doors, family and community Parker said large public insti¬ funding, both." He said the laons were worse than others, [shools could show so many NCAA but they attended teach-ins and newspapers to protest racial and produced sex medicine to encourage social in the profession. Home economics responsibility had a big place Parker and other enrollment analysts have predicted a radi¬ tutions were most vulnerable to the enrollment decrease. He or loss of part-time students may jeopardize many continuing and ships in so many sports. discrimination, or Michigan State's involve¬ expanded its mission to become Human Sometime cal decline by the mid-1980s. said total enrollment in adult education courses while during your stay public ment in South Vietnam's Ecology. Agriculture added natural resour¬ at MSU,"you are bound to come But most experts had projected institutions with three or more faculties may suffer as a result maturity earned membership in John Hannah left the dictatorship. ces to its assignment. A new College of into contact with the Library. It enrollments for the current doctoral programs was down of less money for salary in¬ presidency in 1969 Urban Development introduced degree school year at as high as a 4.5 Ian Stae's athletic prowes and >n and with it the opportunity to to assume happens to be so big it's hard 3.5 per cent. Enrollment in directorship of the Agency for programs in racial, ethnic, urban, and to per cent increase. creases, program improve¬ ,wjth great universities in library- International Development (AID) as an avoid. public institutions with fewer ments and fewer job openings. in research consortia, in overseas extension of his longtime commitment of metropolitan studies. A compulsory re¬ The Library houses around Its members also provided a set examination of the athletic program cleared in. Michigan State to educational, agricultural the air. And under Wharton's 2.15 million books and receives Is against which to measure and administrative progress in Costa Rica, guidance, more than 25,000 serials and State's resources, faculty and task forces had studied admission Okinawa, Pakistan, Nigeria, policies periodicals. On the fourth floor Turkey, Co¬ and lifelong education. From each lumbia, India, Brazil and Vietnam. study, rests the voice library with From MSC to MSU He left behind a new policies emerged. over 30,000 voices from the university that had In the 1970's the moved farther in intellectual stature than building fever subsided. 20th century on tape. When you IMichigan State opened its Centen- February 12,1955, it was still a had almost any other Enrollment was growing less rapidly and an on count all the books, microfilms, university in the increasing proportion of the students lived n name but one with sixteen nation during the third of a government documents and century that he in commercial apartments rather than students, a 1-0 record in the Rose v library with a million- had sat in Michigan State's buildings. His office in the new administration administration campus residence halls. For the College of Human Medicine there were two monoliths tapes, the Library's total collec tion is close to 3 million items. At any one time, 5,000 people TRADITION to the south and for We're part of it - we are Iipacity. renamed Michigan State Universi- building I named for him) was occupied by hockey the Munn Ice can be seated in the »s the year that the campus saw Walter Adams who served from March Arena next to the IM pool. large brick structure that also provides your J Professor Owen Reed's "Michi- through December as acting-president and But history may remember Wharton's conference rooms, typewriters, Alumni Association the year that launched the thirteenth president of the eighth year best for the campus drive that slide projectors, tape record¬ University. netted pledges of over $800,000 to launch a You don't have to wait til graduation to Adams and Dr. Clifton R. Wharton, Jr. ers, dozens of copying ma¬ enjoy 111 Review from Morril Hall, and 17 million dollar enrichment that the words of Abraham Lincoln who succeeded him in program, the chines and other services to these membership benefits: January, 1970, were chief fruit of which I in Michigan copper on the east caught up in the campus unrest. Rallies, promises to be a help students. Performing Arts Center on south campus. Each year over a million Alumni Magazine MSU Panorama volumes are circulated. Extending lifelong learning Michigan. Group Life Insurance Worldwide Travel opportunities across Michigan The record 1,184 courses inclu¬ becomes a bigger part of MSU ded more credit programs - Student Alumni Alumni Clubs each year. "Ski 1,024-and noncredit ones-160- Activities Board University Extension, part of than in any previous year. Alumni Summer MSU's Continuing Education Service, is ready for a third In addition to the records for Homecoming University enrollment, locations and cour¬ record-setting year in taking ses, University Extension set credit and noncredit courses off marks for credits earned- Here's Greet News about INTERESTING? WHY NOT STOP BY THE of the MSU campus. a great place ta live; conveniently located 51,001-and cooperation with Last Year, 23,322 persons, MSU's colleges, Michigan's 5 minutes tram campus an Jolly and Ounckel Dds. Ask about our special plan lor students. 194- 1350 ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OFFICE - 1ST FLOOR mostly Michigan residents and other colleges and universities, including many former on-cam- school districts, government UNION BLDG CALL 355-8317 pus students, took University agencies and private firms. Extension courses at 127 loca¬ TO FIND OUT MORE. tions, 123 of which are in •NATIONAL MED. & DENT. BOARDS • ECFMG *FLEX Flexible Programs and Hours ks II rears ol experience and success. Small classes Voluminous ■t study materials. Courses that are constantly updated. Centers jp and weekends all year. Complete tape lacilities lor review •ftlxs lessons and for use of supplementary materials. Make ups for ted lessons at our centers. n m f *rit» to: 29226 Orchard Laka Rd. cu™,-u.u ""205 Farmington Hills, Ml. 48018 ■Attiiiated Centers in Major U. S. Cities SUMMER PROGRAMS SEMESTER/YEAR WINTER TERM Florence, Italy London, England Italian Language Art History Come and visit our Gal¬ TelAviv/Jerusalem, Israel and lery, part of the Kresge | European Language and Athens, Greece ■ Humanities* Mayen, Germany Criminal Justice Art Center which houses Educational Centers in German Language Decorative Arts & Architecture Yucatan/Mexico City, Mexico the MSU Department of France, Switzerland, Italy. < Mexico City, Mexico English Literature Spanish Literature & Culture Art. With a nucleus of Spain, Germany and possibly Social Science Spanish Language Humanities* works from antiquity to (Beginning, Intermediate, and Leningrad, USSR Mass Media the present, our changing Advanced Courses) exhibition schedule offers SPRING TERM Russian Language Political Science I Mediterranean Semester (Italy) Tours, France Social Science* visitors the opportunity Copenhagen, Denmark to view and study the art | MSU/University of Surrey Social Science* French Language Studio Art of many ages and cul¬ Exchange Program (England) London, England Valencia, Spain Theatre tures from outside our Junior Year in Freiburg (Germany) Spanish Language London/Stockholm Humanities/Social Science* permanent collection. Semester in Southeast Asia The Gallery stages var¬ (includes one week in Scotland) Tel Aviv/Jerusalem, Israel Sociology (Comparative Health | Semester Russian Language Social Science* Systems) ious lectures and concerts Political Science throughout the year. Program British Columbia, Canada Watch for announce¬ | Undergraduate Language ♦Programs listed with an asterisk can be used to satisfy General Education requirements Natural Science* ments of upcoming Program in Rennes (France) Stockholm, Sweden | Undergraduate Language FINANCIAL AID IS AVAILABLE TO QUALIFIED Social Science* '' m|rbl., Anatolia, ca. 3000 B.C. Program in Seville (Spain) STUDENTS I Year in Japan 'the THE INTERNATIONAL STUDENT IDENTITY CARD IS SOLD BY THE OFFICE OF OVERSEAS STUDY. Applications and further information regarding programs may be ^resge Art Gallery obtained from the: OFFICE OF OVERSEAS STUDY accredited by ■ooas $•• Center tor hlsrsellseel Programs the American Hnmi 383 1930 or 3S3 Mil I Association of Museums ■ • D1 QMichigan Stole News, Eost Loosing. Michigon Welcome Week, i Higher education:approaching the brinl (continued from page 1) inflation' that many educators said was eroding the value of college The State of Michigan, for example, in the middle to late 1950s, previously excluded groups who have the ™ degrees." ranked in the top 10 in the nation in support of higher education without demeaning the students entry and asking little more. We are here collected as professionals and the 10 * to serve as mentors, catalysts, instruments, to insist that students from tax revenues; in 1976 the state ranked in the lowest quarter in paper courses and paper grades. Primary and secondary schools are restoring emphasis to the nation. ers*yby„ stretch intellectually. We do - and should - hold reasonably high teaching the fundamental skills of reading, writing, and arithmetic. expectations of students so that they may experience the sheer joy of meeting a challenge and conquering it. Recent data from the College Entrance Examination Board suggest that the decline of SAT scores has slowed. The fiscal crisis is real, and it is severe in some sectors. Moreover, all signs suggest that the crisis will persist for the next decade, at deficiencies rather than inadequacies - and thereby le^sTpro™^ perpetuate them ipor,tl Clearly, inflated grades, soft courses, and other devices which •Provide effective and least. coordinated summit. ' . hold little or no academic expectations of the student are, in fact, Interest in newer instructional models remains high, but that the academic sector. Such denials of the fundamental raison d'etre of a university. As the interest has been joined by demands for carefully controlled A special report on 'The Financial State of systems shortd personal support mechanisms as well nclude?""^ functions and activities of the educational system came under increased scrutiny by external groups, the decline of academic evaluations for close scrutiny by members of the academy before published in the September 1976 issue of Change magazine Higher Education" as academic on""wd^| those models are institutionalized. attempts to quantify the magnitude of the crisis. A total of 2,163 New Instructional •Seek a better Models quality in the late 60s, early 70s inexorable gave rise to the next representative institutions were surveyed and rated against 16 key understanding of the potential ,„d u.s problem.... In order to sustain these trends and to regain credibility, the of the newer instructional financial health indicators. Of the total sample: models. ™ '■A™ Credibib'ty effort must be joined by larger numbers of faculty and students. 'View media hardware as a In December of 1975 Newsweek published a piece entitled "Why Students can help, in the words of Milton Pressley, "by •25.1 per cent were judged "healthy;" •18.8 per cent were judged "relatively instructor rather than as a supplement or a comai substitute comPlementJ I understanding that easy grades lead to easy degrees which often healthy;" Johnny Can't Write." That article along with others in the mass •6.9 per cent were precariously balanced on the "mean;" •Recognize that a student who requires 10 media, including such stalwarts as Time, The Wall Street Journal, turn out to be of much less value than the four years and thousands body of knowledge is not the same as a weeL, The New York Times, etc., pointed to the inability of too many high of dollars they invested in obtaining them." •34.8 per cent were judged "relatively • 14.4 per cent were judged "unhealthy." unhealthy;" same material in one week. student wh Construct evaluation1 i?"" school and college graduates to master fundamental skills in ■ To put it another way, easy grades provide the student a way of reading, writing, and arithmetic. The immediate effect was a getting nothing for something. Faculty must recognize and accept To take the dimmest view of the data, less than one half of the difference^C°Ur9eS 10 aCC°mm0d,te ' significant loss of credibility in education by the public and, it total number of institutions surveyed could be •Avoid looking upon new the fact that holding high but reasonable expectations of given reasonably instructional model, might be added, by members of the academic community as well. good financial status report, and only one fourth had high marks. levelers. u» What we are observing is simply another "play" of the cycle to performance in the world of the intellect is a noble mission. Each member of the academic community is the sole guardian of that When those data were broken out into various •Apply solid experimental designs and which reference was made earlier. Society made demands of the descriptive evaluate u»k mission and in the hands of each rests the quality, the worth, the parameters, marked inequities within the system emerge. testing new models with as much vigor as is educational system, educators deemed those demands valid, and applied in integrity of the educational system. concepts in the traditional disciplines. * the response pattern was initiated. On the basis of size, the percentage of healthy institutions As so often happens in large, complex organizations, the doubled in the megaversity group (enrollments of 10,000 or Increased Scrutiny Program Development more). Public institutions are far more momentum generated was sufficient to carry the change pattern There is need to focus on a sense of progression from freshman healthy than private institutions; •Accept the fact that external groups will , I beyond the point where the fundamental mission and integrity of through senior year. The system of courses and credits should only 1 per cent of the private colleges sampled were classified as educational institutions be accountable for the the system could be preserved. With the help of the mass media, follow some sort of rational building of a body of subject matter healthy as compared with 48.1 per cent of the public institutions. funds, and that that demand is right and expenditure^?J proper combined with increasing cries of outrage from within, the interlinked with other subject matters. The system of courses and Increase efforts to explain to the Other severe stress points are found in institutions which are public what the gn,„ academic community recognized the need for repair and initiated credits should serve one purpose, an academic one, and no other. striving to accomplish, with particular emphasis on that phase of the cycle. By the middle of the 1970s phase two had single sex, predominantly black, or religious affiliated. Can we explain why a quality The educational program should move the student with chemistry major just study human™ begun and it continues still. •Develop a more finely honed sense of the The educational system is now in transition. It is currently increasing urgency toward a mastery of the chosen discipline, to an While large, coed, public universities are in relatively role and sense of "place" within the university! expanded view of himself or herself as a part of a larger society, to comfortable condition, there is sufficient threat to other larger system of two-v™ engaged in the process of sifting the good from the first phase in the four-year educational institutions in the state, both«. late 60s, early 70s and separating out the bad — the exploitive. To an appreciation of the interrelatedness of human knowledge, to components of the system of higher education to cause deep concern to all members of that system. At best, the private. cite only one example, in the fall of 1976 Yale University restored consistently and persistently spotlight the value of constructive public Megaversities are •Review the internal priorities and institutional the "F" grade to its record system. Students have lent their support dissonance, debate, questioning — always questioning. fiscally healthy in an infectious ward. values Is J that reading comic books is as valued and as to this effort, in fact, they have valuable as frequently supplied the initiative. In the quest to focus more tightly on the academic Shakespeare? goals of a Though the financial picture is sobering, it is not moribund. It The academic community is returning to the idea that, in an •Condone, support, and encourage scrutiny of the university experience, there is no need to lose the commendable calls not for despair or desperation but rather it calls for the finest ed orderly system of self-governance, the pronouncements of the concern for the individual student which emerged in the late 60s. creative thinking and management the academic system by students. collective are generally binding on the individual. The rules, community can generate. Attending to the problems of acadmemic quality, •Develop a more orderly system of processing formal J regulations, requirements developed by students and faculty in the That concern can, and should be, a visible component in planning complaints so that coercive tactics and personal croi credibility, and programming planning need not be excessively governance system must be scrutinized with consummate care, academic programs. The more rapid learners should have access to ineffective tools in controlling grades and costly. otherwise co must support and operationalize the fundamental mission of the alternative tracks, courses, requirements which maintain the academic environment. university, and they should be applied with equity across the challenge to their intellects. Likewise the students who proceed I submit that the business of holding reasonable standards of •Preserve, protect, and support the institution's in campus. They should be flexed or suspended only when more slowly, or who come to the university with more deficiencies, performance for students, stretching them to venture beyond their governance system by designating responsible repr academically justifiable reasons or extenuating circumstances particularly in fundamental skills, should have access to a full range own perceived limitations, and rewarding the achievement of its various structures, by debating carefully and rt_, prevail, they should serve only to buttress sound educational of support systems including tutors, advising, even special courses reasonable goals, need not require great expenditures of dollars. policies and procedures under consideration, and by ad principles as distinct from the personal convenience of either which remedy the inadequacy so that the student can enter The climate that obtains in the classroom and in the pronouncements. laboratory is faculty or students. Innovative courses and instructional models the standard academic program and complete it with a profound largely created by the professor, and the quality of the university is Those are the tasks that await us in the next should be encouraged but carefully evaluated for effectiveness after several ye sense of pride and accomplishment. That sense of largely shaped by all the professors in all the classrooms and all the have the flexibility, the equipment, the dedicated and pride can only to a suitable period of trial. come from the knowledge that one has risen to and conquered a laboratories. faculty to rise to the challenges and conquer them. The extent to which credibility in education can be regained is challenge, diminishing the challenge serves only to diminish the There now remains the completion of the feedback There is one additional factor necessary to make it loop by vt. directly related to the speed with which responsible members of the human being. drawing connections between the four major change factors in the factor which hasn't been mentioned academic community can restore integrity to the specifically but » grading system "pot" with the four problem areas confronting higher education, implicit — leadership. Administrators must chart some! and, indeed, to the full range of academic programming recognizing that the fiscal question appears in both lists and institutional directions after open and honest The efforts from within academe, both student and faculty Interwoven through each of these problem areas, and limiting the functions as a kind of emulsifier by being at the same time an faculty and students, and then make some difficult interatiooa| efforts, have begun and have already had some impact. The marked range of possible solutions to any one of them is the critical fiscal instrument of change and a change-limiting factor. Priorities must be set which speak directly to the fu inflationary spiral has abated and the GPA curve has plateaued. condition in which higher education finds itself. From those somewhat incestual purpose of higher education and decisions must flow I In fact, an article published in The Chronicle of relationships a laundry list of Higher Education Runaway inflation, deterioration of the ecology, fuel shortages, specific challenges can be drafted. Each provides a challenge for reasonable tightness from those priorities. on September 7, 1976 notes that "College grade-point averages deficit spending, and a host of other economic creative solution in the next half-decade. If we an build that sense of community of scholars co have declined for the first time in 10 years thus signalins at problems, have , . least a temporary end to the widespread phenomenon of . . combined to seriously weaken the fiscal support of higher faculty, students, and administrators from the current -1 'grade education. Accessibility to University worrisome adversarial structure, then the job can •Seek ways to increase the accessibility of the University to — be| effectively, efficiently, and with integrity. THE POLITICAL SCIENCE DEPARTMENT THE COLLEGE OF SOCIAL WELCOMES STUDENTS TO MSU SCIENCE WELCOMES NEW 303 S. KEDZIE HALL CHAIRMAN: Charles F. Cnudde MAJORS AND INVITES YOU POLITICAL SCIENCE MAJORS ATTEND THE The ter study of political science provides the analytical skills and breadth of subject mat¬ COLLEGE DAY PROGRAM necessary for success in law, government, service, teaching, journalism, and busi¬ ness. There are three possible majors within the Department of Political Science: Day: Wednesday, September 28th General Poli-Sci: s,u<^en*, won,in9 to politics, journalism, business or teaching, or to pursue graduate studies or to prepare for employment in international Time: agencies. The program is flexible enough with its wide variety of courses 2:00 p.m. outside Political Science. A choice or combination of these 4 progroms may be selected: American Political Process, Comparative Politics, International Place: Relations or Political Thought. 326 NATURAL SCIENCE BLDG Poli-Sci-- Pre-Law: for students interested in preparing for law school or para-legal careers, the pre-law program is and the judicial process with a more designed to introduce students to the study of law Purpose: To meet Faculty and Administrators general orientation than can be pro¬ in the vided in law schools. Also Ideal for those law enforcement. seeking careers in intelligence or College. To receive information] and ask questions about Poli-Sci-Public for students interested in administrative goals, positions with local, state or fed- programs and administrative Administration: era.' 90vernmen,s or wi,h Publlc ogendes, universities or volunteer organi¬ zations such as labor unions, farm civil rights groups, this organizations, chamber of commerce and program provides an excellent background. procedures. There are also special studies and thematic Russian and East European studies, and programs offered such as: African, Asian, Latin American, The following units offer undergraduate programs thematic programs on film. Islamic, Jewish and Women's studies. in the College of Social Science: See your advisors and check the student handbooks for requirements and course descriptions. UNDERGRADUATE PROGRAM: Multidisciplina Consult with your advisor about a plan of study. Plan ahead for your college curriculum. Call for ap- Departments Schools Social Science] polntments: Ms. Lee Ann Matthews, undergraduate 306 S.Kedxie Hall-353-7225 advisor Programs Check into our honors program, pre law, and field work studies (PLS 494) programs. Anthropology Criminal Justice General GRADUATE PROGRAM: Geography Social Work Pre-Law Political Science Urban Teaching There is a meeting scheduled for all new Grod. Students on: •GENERAL Planning and „ Chance to meet advanced Monday, Sept. 26 at 3:30 p.m., 324 S. Kedzie Hall grad. students and faculty and gather information. •PRELAW •PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION Landscape Architecture MPA PROGRAM: Psychology See Ms. Valerie Eisenberg, Advisor for information c i the Masters of Public Administration Sociology and possible Degree internships thot are available. For further information visit If you have further questions, feel free to call: or call 355-6590 355-6672 "e w«ek, 197? ^ stole News, East lonsing, Michigan Welcome Week, 1977 Dll rinlcfm/ss/on [rep courses: forth the money? By DANIEL HERMAN how a preparatory course can increase a student's m SUtc News SUff Writer scoring ability on a LSAT, because it basically ■lithe increase of students attempting to get tests cumulative skills. Professional schools, a new business has L up, offering preparation for (d for entrance and promising the tests improved onfel00' director only benefit the prep of admissions felt the tests offered was in giving more confidence to at most admissions officials believe a student, "but," she pointed leS(s offer the prospective professional ■ L little more than a false and costly sense of un |.m,ght g°in With attitude, and then mess the testan overc°nfident attitude up. ,v year thousands of prospective law great deal.^ Cha"ge a"ything a f medical school, dental school and other The opinions communicated by Michigan law al school candidates take the MCAT, schools are shared equally by Michigan pro¬ IS. the DAT or other exams. The rise in fessional schools in the health field. (inber of students taking these tests has Myron Magen, dean of Osteopathic Medicine at followed by the rise of many businesses that UNDERCRADUAIES: Msu, Jto I be able to raise a student's score on these sees no point in taking such a preparatory Prices charged by these businesses for ■ration go as high as $350. "In my opinion, and this is the same advice I ■MCAT, LSAT and DAT, are, respectively, gave my own kids, the test itself should be taken lis given to determine a student's aptitude twice. Use the first test to liissionstothe nation's medical schools, law get a feel for what is Js. and dental schools. Consensus of opinion among all the schools going on." Magen said that who has taken the the average college student avoid the rush ■ buy your books ■by tbe State News was that the tests were a should not really have proper curriculum in college [of time and money, and that results of such any major problems in the re leal evidence exists (of these not documented. No kind of to prove whether the courses are valid. first place. Stanley H. Kaplan, who runs one of the country's largest prep programs, Stanley H. early and SAVE! Jiras university law schools in Michigan are Kaplan Educational Centers, says the courses fried, athe best way to study for the LSAT is pre law club, similar to the one at actually improve test scores, but he followed, "I never quote average improvement." We have a complete selection of new & ■orby just buying a book which explains the ■id offers samples. Kaplan agreed that a big part of the course is to ■official at Wayne State University Law ■said, "We never recommend that anybody give "the student confidence in himself." used undergraduate books for Fall term ■is kind of tutoring. We have talked to too Kaplan charges that most professional schools do not recommend his course ■people who have taken these prep courses schools don't want because, "these le out with bad scores." people to be helped, they are lb at sus in Michigan was supported Harvard, Stanford, Yale, and The by saying we are screwing up the 'curve.' " When told of Kaplan's claim, one law school PLUS fsity of Pennsylvania law schools, director of admissions commented, "That's wiate Dean William J. Pierce, at the ridiculous, we are looking for the best people • [roily of Michigan Law School, does not see possible." Notebooks, Spirals • Art Supplies • T-shirts WHEN YOU'RE • Memo Boards • READY TO Study Aids • Posters MAKE THE MOST IMPORTANT INVESTMENT IN 1st YEAR MEDICAL STUDENTS: YOUR LIFE, LET FOX JEWELERS • Welch Allyn Diagnostic Sets HELP YOU MAKE IT. • Tycos Blood Pressure Cuffs • Lab Coats I DOWNTOWN t'PANDOR LANSING MALL MERIDIAN MAIL INTERESTED IN ALTERNATE REALITIES? CALCULATORS INTERESTED IN BONES AND STONES? New! Thin-line styling from Texas Instruments. Hewlett-Packard calculators and accessories DISCOVER YOUR ROOTS... always available - batteries & battery packs lexistence is the study of the 5th dimension of human for Texas Instruments & Hewlett-Packard. -- culture. In our classes we examine the range Inhuman behavior, beliefs, and values from the begin- l"ln9 of the human species to the present. The anthropo- I 'ogical perspective has much to offer everyone regardless I major. Our courses deal with the study of the people I and cultures of l^ch subjects as Africa, Asia, and the Americas, as well as patterns of behavior in modern hospitals lQnd law courts, the varieties of religious experiences, dif- CAMPUS Ifences I "man and similarities between humans and apes, and adaptation to natural environment. I hthropology courses for 1977-78 include: BOOK STORE _ ■ Status of Woftien in Cul- 250, Culture, Environment and 'The undergraduate book store' i;« andSocie,y Adaptation 285, Anthropology and the Modern World I ■ Anthropology and 464, Religion and Culture 507 E. GRAND RIVER ■ ""cation V/SA C"nne descriptions may be picked up al the Anthropology Department, (Across from Berkey Hall) Baker Hall and at the Anthropology table at Registration. Q ] 9Michiqon Stole News, Eost Lansing. Michigan Welcome Week, | ®St° ,terviewed si iith the exce 8®°* WE HAVE THE LARGEST SUPPLY OF USED BOOKS IN EAST LANSING! BUY USED AND SAVE 25%! THERE ARE OTHER GOOD REASONS FOR YOU TO SHOP AT THE STUDENT BOOK STORE .... HELPFULL, FRIENDLY SALES PEOPLE WKMM Jjjjygjj WIDE EASY SHOPPING AISLES ( I FAST, SPEEDY CHECK OUT REGISTERS! NO WAITING! GYM SUPPLIES AND ATHLETIC EQUIPMENT VISA AND MASTER CHARGE ACCEPTED ONE stop 1/ r SHOPPING FOP _ allschooi WE BUY USED BOOKS EVERYDAY! ® SUPPLIES-APT MORE MONEY FOR YOUR BOOKS £ H engineering and calcu- MORE BOOKS FOR YOUR MONEY. S lator needs Wa HOURS: 8:30-5:30 MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY JUST RIDE THE CAMPUS BUS TO OLIN AND CROSS GRAND RIVER AVE. free VALIDATED parking IN 10T ATREARORClTy LOTS (with pur¬ tudent ook tore 421 E. GRAND RIVER chase of'2<» more) A cohabitant s guide to sheer paranoia By ED LION residents have to be instructed never to Jane feels the same New. SUfI Writer drawbacks. cute -.lion. To some it'» living In »in; to ill WkVstrapsS and!fCtother all jock 0t her male roornma'e- And "It's an invaluable way. experience to get to "It's great in the winter when it's cold," things go into know living in bliss. hiding — not to mention the roommate someone else. It's like a marriage. said Rob, "but in the summer it can get too There's probably as much no statistics are kep«. °n it:, most personal commit¬ hot." say it's becoming increasingly Sue' .T °f 'ike Pl"ying Sue, a housemate who a game'" said ment ..." MSU prohibits male and females from especially among the college- remember not to talk about always has to But she says there would be no living together in the residence halls that — Janet's room¬ marriage is officially. In the mate to her parents. as far as she's concerned without living University apartments together first. "I definitely want to make only people of the same sex can live (ion js usually defined as living together unless a couple produces a jth a member of the opposite sex „ names and,Jane be 7 the? ask<,d 'bat their changed just in sure my interest is something other than purely sex." marriage license. ss purpose of being mates out case Mom and A spokesperson from the T And most cohabitants - for wfth with no a.k other U paper -live together housemates. That means it To si le the economic argument seems to Lansing Family Planning Center said she has "absolutely" het'ter word, that's as good a tag as comes down to a make s no idea how many people cohabitate in the terviewed say it's fun. That is, of guessing game deciding "I would whoa going to answer the sleep with her even if I had jth the exception of hiding it from phone late at another room, so we might-as well live night. "I think you'll have trouble together and save," said Ted, a junior. getting any "We try to decide whose statistics on that," she said. But then parents have a His parents know about again his living she said "I can • my values are a lot different than reason to call and from there it's luck." said help you if you want to tell arrangement - it met with a cohabitants how to use contraceptives." ts"said Janet, a sprightly senior Dick. old block" approval from dad "chip-of-the- but he can't Arnold Werner, a noted hid her living situation from her — „ He said living campus psychia¬ together is tantamount to say his name because his cohabitant trist, said cohabitation is don't feel there's anything marriage, "it's not anything you take be secretive. must nothing new g, however. I feel it's right and lightly." Cindy lived with her fiancee for except that many in the younger set seem over a to be doing it parents it would only hurt But that doesn't mean it's year and she says it's a more. necessarily a - good thing she And proof of that is a recent New York testing ground before marriage, says Dick. did. ■d to some situation comedy- Times article on how to "I did it just because I wanted to," said "We broke properly refer to For instance, when her Dick. "But I up," she said. "It really is the your cohabitant - is it cohabitant, room¬ certainly wouldn't get married only way you can get to know someone." Une to visit all the other house without living together." Of course, as with anything there are mate, lover, boyfriend, girlfriend, or plain "shacker up-er"? just Does doMSU Believe it! it By MICHAEL ROUSE party party State News StaH Writer The stories categories — party party generally fall into two major regurgitation and exhibition¬ were heaved from windows. Speaking of people passing out at parties, party who found the RA from their child's floor handcuffed to the inside of an elevator, Someone who barfed into the ventilator "Oh God, I'll never get this drunk again!!" ism. The latter is most of the house where he was drinking caused likely a result of ,one overweight frat brother was frequently Sound familiar? alcohol's notorious, if skimpily attired. a pungent odor to be wafted through the erroneous, potency as the life of the party when his housemates There was once an athletic man who ran It is the recurring moan oftentimes heard an aphrodisiac — despite its tendency to be home for days; in the aftermath of another MSU stripped him of his clothes and ever-so- all the way home from a skinnydipping A fountain full of mai tais had quite a kick party. counterproductive towards male perfor¬ surreptitiously placed him in the middle of And it is usually uttered by someone mance party — after he discovered his clothes to it after it was spiked with 16 ounces of — symptomaticaily known as brew¬ the party. inflicted with the wine flu while "tossing his er's droop. were missing. pure ethyl alcohol. Eleven casualties were How would you like to be a female Bailey cookies," "worshipping the porcelain recep¬ First of all, there was the guy in Wonders But don't get any ideas about doing bare counted that time; Hall resident and open your door to find a tacle" or "playing bus driver" — with his Hall who managed to walk through the backstrokes in the Men's I.M. pool after One group of Hubbard Hall residents had man who had passed out at a around the toilet if it party and was hours or else you might end become proficient at ordering a pizza for as were a building to the side where the female clad up like one very steering wheel. students reside while exceedingly inebria¬ only in underwear and about to throw drunk and stoned female, she people who had no intention of buying up? hopped out of one He is engaging in the activity which he ted, and noticeably naked below the waist the pool into the arms of a DPS officer. and then paying half price for it because the The same gentleman, it turns out, had loathes with a deathly fear, yet earnestly except for his B.V.D.'s. deliverer did not want to take it back to the been in a similar state and his "buddies" Rumor has it that one faculty member desires to deliver him from that tortuous The women he decided to visit store. In an effort to crack down on this were used him as a model for some suggestive drove through the back wall of his condition known as "the spins." understandably embarrassed and he was garage ripoff, one deliverer came to the room of the photographs. after tipping a few too many. Vomit, barf, upchuck, get sick or lose it. kindly led to his rightful room. In similar dupe in the pizza trick. a vein, just imagine the Okay folks, now for a few good puke But the door opened just as the dupe A puke by any other name will smell as The Brody halls are often unjustly shocked expression on the faces of parents stories: ad. degraded as being a zoo where rampant puked. And next week this freshman antics can take place in those "I guess he really doesn't want glutton for ethanolic any euphoria — as well as punishment — will be indestructible buildings far from the center pizza," the deliverer said. seeing how fast he can pour beer down his of campus and is the brunt of many Halloween parties are always fun, as throat or mix liquors like an artist mixes distasteful food jokes, but the most bizarre people dressed up as pimps and prostitutes colors on a palette. stories seem to have emanated from that at one fraternity party, a uterus at a In this instance, the drinker's palette will domicile. veterinary school party and one gentleman be numb and his vision will be more like a flashed at a dorm party with a rubber Supposedly a promiscuous female Brody Picasso abstract. And once again he will chicken dangling from his loins. resident, possibly from some primal in¬ invoke the heavenly spirits to exorcise the stincts or a lack of air conditioning and People in University Terrace apartments still talk about a person named Larry who demon rum from his unstable stomach. something to do on a Saturday night, posed did a nosedive into the gravel pit outside Yes sir, MSU students know how to have nude in her window. She invited one member of the one basement apartment in the middle of a good time. Following the triumphant herd mounting swarm of hooters and gawkers to her room the winter. call of "party down," they can engage in The tenants spent all night trying to excesses, revel in vices and rack up a fair and engaged in some rather torrid love- get the drunk and noncommunicative Larry to number of deadly sins as well as anyone. making in the window. (Eat your heart out, his rightful residence, which involved And they all know a slew of party stories. guys.) Those extortionist tales in which someone The there was the ill-fated female fending off a fellow partygoer who offered to take inside claims to have had enough presence of mind to record every foolish, horny and regret¬ stagette party in Bailey. The film to be shown, which had something to do with a charge of Larry for a nominal sum, driving through East Lansing with wild table event of their friends. goose chase directions and seeing Larry group of women and a carrot, broke before If nothing else, MSU partyers keep East the party began. dodge cars as he sauntered across Grand to it comes River Avenue. to living arrange- Lansing bar and party store owners But you haven't seen anything until These party stories are the ones people "•We". «s they say, it takes all healthily wealthy — one party store'sells you've been to the 4B Bailey annual stag stomake talk about — from the out of the ordinary a world. You can most between 100 and 150 kegs of beer every party, complete with a stripper and a MSU parties. J and what you want, but don't »n weekend during the school year - and keep mysterious male streaker who has a flaming However, the typical dorm party has finding it where you want the police busy. East Lansing police last roll of newspaper sprouting from his anus. ""you want it, or at the "No one knows where he comes from or people jammed into a narrow hallway, using price year nabbed 572 people for driving while the same pickup lines like asking about "M it. Page 6. under the influence of alcohol and the where he goes," whisper the lucky few who have attended this event. hometowns, high schools and majors, a MSU Department of Public Safety arrested |fcr. Dope, Pot. Mary Jane. 266. Ah. but the nitty gritty came when stereo blasting out J. Geils, people jamming their paper cups under the beer tap and m _ "«d. Hooch. Marijuana. It The following is a totally haphazard partygoers were found hibernating in State News Photo/Rob KozloH bash bashes and finding out that your roommate has kicked "not J-days, collection of MSU party stories. bathtubs and vomit-covered mattresses Rally 'round the beer wagon. always free from the long you out of the room again. the law. Page 7. "re a renter with a crummy «• Or, you're a landlord with a "> renter. What to do? For ^ you can cheek out the Js Resource Center. Story on Greeks continue o remarkable comeback *1 « student means lots of -like not always having good By BOB OURLIAN Greeks in recent years fast-paced social change and the Greeks J™'10": But if it's a used car State News Staff Writer have been re¬ in attitude on both sides has caused it, being unable to pull out of 20-year old rut t .a 411 .5° ance' your chances The death knell has stopped tolling. bounding from their nearly catastrophic de¬ forcing the Greeks to become responsive in fast enough. that bad. Page 10, cline It stopped tolling in 1972, when the final during the student movement years. the process. By the time of the student movement, ^Americans '« 'hey are - car worship- - are now burst of social upheaval spewed thousands of students, angered over the mining of Spokespersons for the Greeks say a change said Interfraternity Council President Dan Courtney, "stagnation had already set in * Hire on horseless car- Haiphong Harbor, all around the campus and deterioration of the greek system had n foodstuffs. Page 10. and finally out onto Grand River Ave. thought themselves impervious to the tion after tradition and ritual after ritual begun. As far as I'm concerned, all they leaders of today weren't around for the nose needed was for the wrecker to It stopped tolling, and the Greek system demands for social change. Riding the crest were almost come along, I"" ^f'you can import it, at MSU heaved a profound sigh of relief. of its power and strength, the Greek system indiscriminately tossed out, dozens of chapters groped dive taken by their predecessors, they and that was social upheaval." J's p-owandyour 4t 0Wn. What is After half a decade of a seemingly endless was entrenched in a rigid tradition and its new images. desperately for Many, not moving fast enough, weren't around when the Greek system as a whole fought furiously to keep away from "The frat system itself did not respond," a reasonable said fraternities adviser Dave Westol. members were quite full of themselves, Page 15. cycle of siege, retreat and more siege, they stumbled and were crushed beneath the hitting bottom. What is stressed these days is the could at last take stock of the wreckage and confident in the illusion that they were stampede of the times, their existence as responsiveness, activity and plurality of 1"I!!,6 °f "bua' bu' who'll run "between MSUand try to plan some sort of future. somehow as eternal as Socrates. They soon learned that not to respond was to no longer fraternity chapters pulled out from under them. Yet, they have no doubt been told of those times, and they seem to have been Greek houses. "The chapters are evolving CATAis toward more individualism," said Sarah reaching a conclusion. Page Greeks likely will never forget the exist. inculcated with the reality lacked by Thus it's Hibbard, Vice president in charge of rush experience of those years. Many chapters, no wonder that Greeks today caretakers of the Greek system past. By the early 1970s, though, Greeks were for the Panhellenic Council, which governs at first smug and indifferent to the rapidly are quite consciously offering students at Today's caretakers are quite willing to shifting demands and needs of students, scrambling frantically for survival. Tradi¬ large a distinctly different line. Greek admit that the decline resulted from (continued on page 13) METAMORPHOSIS 20 ECONOMICAL STEPS TOWARDS BREATHING NEW LIFE INTO YOUR HUMBLE ABODE 5125 W. SAGINAW - 2055 W. GRAND RIVER - 6200 S. PENNSYLVANIA t|lig„nStote News, Eost tonsing, Michigan Welcome Week, 1977 Photographs by Laura Lynn Fistler Move on down move on down the road It more or less depends on what you figure is the best way for you. Whether you go conven¬ tional - car, bus, bike, walk - or more avant garde - skate¬ board, unicycle, water skis on pavement - you get around. These days, they who employ a little imagination go a lot further for cheaper. And they who pay for the usual, well, they got some imagination left over for other thin) Ever try to cash a check with a who doesrit cash checks? Any day of the week. And it doesn't cost you transfers between accounts. Or, if you like, Our Ready Teller a penny to get a Ready Card. just use it to get cash. Or, don't use it at all. But that's not all. With Ready Teller you It's still a nice feeling to have it around never forgets a face. can also make deposits, payments and just in case. So open an American Bank and Trust It happens to everyone sometime. You're short on cash. The bank is closed. And the checking account and apply for a Ready Card. Then, the next time you have a problem cashing store where you usually cash checks is on the a check, you won't have a problem at all. other side of town. You've got a problem. You wouldn't have a problem if you had REAIOTELLER an American Bank and Trust checking account. Because if you did, you could apply for a Ready Card. Which would give you access to our conveniently located Ready Tellers around Lansing. And that means you could get cash from One Washington Square • Lansing. Michigan 48909 your checking account any time of the day. Member F DIC • Member American Bankcorp. Inc. E4 Michigon Stole News, East Lansing, Michigan Welcome Week '• 197? I again if they thought it searching what we think are For Rent Control last By TERRY PRZYBYLSKI was fall, is State News Staff Writer necessary. illegal rental clauses," Schaefer currently active in the East The song has been over for Bernie Schaefer, who was a said,'"such as requiring tenants Lansing Tenants' Resource quite some time, but the mel¬ member of the Committee For to pay their own attorney's fees Center (TRC), a nonpartisan ody lingers on for those who Rent Control in last fall's elec¬ in court cases and a landlord's organization which provides in¬ people. v * mtl Rent control issue ran the campaigns for and tion, said that the Public Inter¬ not being responsible if a formation on housing and rent¬ against rent control in East est Research Group in Michigan tenant injures him or herself on ing to both tenants and Lansing last November. Rent control has been de¬ (PIRGIM), the Human Rights Party (HRP) and the Student the landlord's property." Schaefer also said PIRGIM lords. Ipcar is also working to re¬ land¬ srfifa feated twice at the polls in East Housing Corporation are all was looking into a revision of move a stipulation in some local Lansing. Though they are not currently working on landlord- the Security Deposit Act which contracts that allows the land¬ ponents of introduce. rent ",1! conducting any open political tenant legislation. would give tenants interest on lord, if he chooses to do so, to continues to churn their security deposits, as well TW activities at the moment, Schaefer said groups which raise rents 10 per cent a month pr».reBt . as limiting the amount of the for every month of the contract. spokespersons for both sides supported rent control in the . say they are still working fall election are currently con¬ deposit. Under such an arrangement, a behind the scenes to influence cerned with violations of the Another project, which pro- tenant who signed a contract to legislation affecting landlords housing code and poor mainte¬ rent'control forces are interes¬ pay $100 a month in rent, could and tenants. nance of rental property by ted in according to Schaefer, is conceivably be paying ballot-Schaefer ^B over Both groups also say they landlords. the formation of an Ingham $313 per month in the twelfth hj'ity still existj1'" Luttrell said l would enter the political arena "Right now, PIRGIM is re- County Tenants' Union, which month of the contract. her she beu ant,-rent con jl J could bargain collectively with 'The law doesn't prohibit it," landlords on rents and mainte¬ Ipcar said of the stipulation. tion would be tJ*i CHARGES REALTORS WITH PLANNING DISCRIMINATION nance. "We're discussing it and proposal was br!?l "A similar operation is in to publicize it, then trying if 1978. °*f J don't know (, I see effect in Ann Arbor, and it's anything should be done." he back on worked very well," Schaefer Mary Luttrell, an East Lan¬ the ballothV MSU researcher sees segregation trend said. "Under the contracts there, the rent can't go up more than eight per cent a year, and sing landlord who headed the Committee Against Rent Con¬ trol last swsKii iRSKtl fall, said area landlords tenants can refuse to pay their are politically inactive right ByROXANNE L.BROWN State News Staff Writer An MSU researcher predicts "The cost of housing has never been a reason troit), but most blacks get to the suburbs through a process called ghetto expansion (Flint), Darden suggests federal leg rents if landlords don't keep up their property." Charles Ipcar, who was a now, but said she was involved in some anti-rent control pro¬ jects of her own. wSrsssi did not oppose the mtl islation to correct such discrimi¬ Proposal last fad, that unless stiffer penalties for coordinator for the Committee "I'm compiling all of for segregation. This is a myth. Blacks with spreading beyond the boundary my anti- 'continued on housing discrimination are en¬ of the central city," he ex nation. pap* acted, Michigan's suburbs will money cannot live anywhere they want to." plained. Joe T Darden "Housing brokers must be be more segregated than the — Darden said that though regulated so persons can check state's central cities by 1980. there was a substantial migra¬ and find out exactly what Joe T. Darden, an associate professor of geography and metropolitan studies, recently Darden blames housing crimination entirely for dis¬ this Flint, Grand Rapids, Jackson, Kalamazoo, Lansing, Muskegon tion of blacks into the suburbs in several during the 1960s, the suburban black population houses are available," he said. He added that a computer¬ ladies completed a study of residential uneven pattern of distribution. and Saginaw. numbers remain proportion¬ ized system would be the most segregation of blacks in central cities and suburbs. He said because of the fact that even wealthy blacks are af¬ In the suburbs of Flint, Grand Rapids and Saginaw, ately small. "Only in suburban Ann Ar efficient check. "A computer¬ ized listing service should be you/t ®oiA can be According to Darden, when a fected, the skyrocketing cost of Darden found that the black bor was the black population available, one in which all comparison is made of the suburban housing is not a factor population more than doubled greater than four per cent." he houses are listed until they are • conditioned suburban distribution of whites to be considered. said. "Even though blacks in from 1960 to 1970. Suburban actually sold." he said. • to that of blacks, blacks tend to "The cost of housing has Flint experienced the greatest Michigan suburbs have a higher shampooed remain clustered in certain never been a reason for segre¬ socioeconomic status than those Currently, housing brokers • cut, styled/redesigned percentage of black migration areas, even in higher-income in central cities, these groups found guilty of discrimination gation," Darden said. "This is a and suburban Detroit the low¬ • blown dry and curled sections of a community. remain equally segregated." are only fined. Darden suggests myth. Blacks with money can¬ est. "Normally, as a much stiffer groups leave not live anywhere they want These patterns of migration The researcher charged that penalty. the central city, as with the to." can be explained in part, Dar¬ real estate brokers privately "If brokers found guilty of Irish, Jews, etc., they become Darden has examined data den said, because of black construct plans for housing discrimination had their li¬ - more dispersed. But blacks for the Standard Metropolitan suburbanization. discrimination and that remain clustered in a few they censes revoked, then more of Statistical Areas (SMSA) of "Some blacks migrate out of also keep black real estate them would think twice about areas," Darden said. Ann Arbor. Bay City, Detroit, the ghetto as individuals (De¬ brokers out of these private it." he said. $g 50 at (lie" Jgqt/" At Campus Bookstore, we've got more than just books! wmc m Cull 332431J, for iipp I. or just walk in. U.S. Branch Post Office located in the E. Lansing State Bank building, Suite 201. Elevator t stairwell near theatre. Art Supplies Framed Prints Mugs • Posters Wooden Plaques Bulletin Boards MSU Blankets At Campus Cobbler, the shoe Calculators repair specialist. We offer T-Shirts & Shirt Imprint Shop the finest workmanship and the lowest prices available in the area. shoe repairs shoe care supplies dye work - leather & vinyl leather crafted purses and bell' CAMPUS BOOKSTORE Below Campus Dregs 507 EAST GRAND RIVER CAMPUS COBBLE! (across from Berkey) 351-5420 501'/ir E. Grand River 332-3(1) OPEN MOH.-FRI. 9:30-5 MI. 9:30-3 ^ : Welcome Week, 1977 E5 UCOmOCIVE ?ACc KIDOI AND ,'^lRtlDOI *JWof«„w|9#Dr «»^ar VIII«9«) 332-4432 E6 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Get a load of / these luscious (?D housing options By BOB OURLIAN competition for the commercial apartment market. It's true. The closer you get to ctmpus, the more you pay for rent. The gradations of distance shown here are from Bessey Hall. Prices cited are av¬ erages of high and low rents in each sum range. Ac¬ counting for the tapering of the trend miles is the those distances. in Lansing will most likely increase of 'luxury' after tpirtment. its ja State News Staff Writer At college, home's a bit more than simply where you hang your hat. For most students, In terms of space, you can't exactly characterize them as 'sprawling,' but then again, transportation bill. get you your own bedroom, but it also get, J *1 they are generally close to campus — Cherry Lane is actually on campus — and the price When scouring for rental home is an extension of their personality — or ego, if you don't mind the honest term — where plants, posters, furniture, prints, pictures are blended, often none too smoothly, to includes all utilities. A University Apartments Resident's Council (UARC), property, the look-before-you leap stringently. Property should be inspected from top to bottom, principle questions as | increasing in its advocacy of examined; it is rarely the student who has the upper hand in create the abode that most feels like home. Whatever that is. dwellers there, provides services ranging from discount-rate rental rental am garden plots to market such as East Lansing's. It's this way for most folks; students just tend to be a bit more, shall we say, unique, organization of such things as babysitting co-ops. Rent control has been defeated in East than normal American taste. The apartments used to be called Married Housing until that name no longer fit the Lansing on two successive elections seeing strong student support and strong homeowner opposition. boil Similarly, the very type of housing most students select is itself a reflection of a scope of the apartments' function. Nonmarried students have designated sections of all r When you do run into trouble with the personal inclination. And in a college town, what with 'personal inclinations' so often three complexes — Cherry Lane, University Village and property you rent, the Tenants 4 Spartan Village — but only Center, a clearinghouse on rental information, may be able to running amuck, you can generally find what you're looking for, but not always at the price you can afford to pay or the location you'd like to have. unmarried students of the same gender may live in a single apartment. To cohabitate, you in the right direction. help you out, or tost] need a marriage license. But there are a few things you can look for in leases to avoid j There are also the more individualized styles not necessarily offered on a mass scale in the housing market. One is reminded, for instance, of the student who lived in a tent in Nobody likes cockroaches, and there are plenty of those in University Apartments. A a contract to be valid, it should include: hassles to begin J combination of close quarters and steam the middle of a field. Or of the student who pitched a tent heating are a veritable manna for the little — •The tenants' names and signatures; atop Conrad Hall. Or of the and not so little — vermin. •The landlords' names and signatures; student who slept for two months in his spanking new Pontine Trans Am, not But not all of the roaches suffer the fate of Black Flag, being able rolled-up newspapers and •The amount charged for rent; to afford anything else. And of course, there are numerous examples of students who brooms. Annual cockroach races see apartment dwellers pit their prize cockroaches •A description of the rental unit (the address). used to view the entire campus as their home, craahing in different dorm lounges every against one another for fun and ... self esteem? If a security deposit is night before closing hours were readopted. Cost-cutting measures are limited only by the Who knows. required, there must be: •The landlords' names and addresses; imagination. Only at college folks For students who prefer to use their imaginations for better ... •The name and address of the bank where the things, there are those deposit is to be held; basic housing categories, with enough of a choice to •A notice that the tenant is to pretty much do the trick. For some students, give a forwarding address within four days after■ relationships have little to do with where they live. For others, it out; is a heavy factor. But for those seeking a profound sense of belonging and commitment, There's no question about where it's cheapest to live. It costs more than $50 leas •Two copies of an inventory check list. You have seven days after moving in per there's always the Greek system of fraternities and sororities. term to live in Coop housing than it does to live in dorms or Greek houses. Rents list out and return one copy to the landlord. You may want proof that your lant range The Greeks stress belonging, commitment and involvement, and the Greek from approximately $50 to $60 a month, some co-ops priced even lower. For another $10 system at received a copy by either having him or her MSU seems to be undergoing something of a sign and date the copy or by mailing! to $14 a week, you can eat there. resurgence (see related article, front page of her one certified mail/return this section), especially in terms of its receipt requested. It's so cheap basically because co-op houses are member owned, membership, which is growing at a rate fraternities says an adviser to the adviser Dave Westol calls "gangbusters." Intercooperative Council (ICC). If you live in a co-op, you are a member of ICC and a part There are three main religious living units at MSU, aside from the handful Aside from the close relationships and the Greek social life which has such a oil owner of the place in which colorful such as His House. These are the Asher you live. reputation, Greeks are increasingly involved in service and fund-raising functions for Foundation, Bethel Manor and Deseret S| The way this works is that there's no landlord, owner or institution charging you charities. Muscular Dystrophy, Muscular Sclerosis, and Bounce-for-Beats are the more Living Center. money for the privilege of living there. In other words, you don't have to pay for someone Asher House, which is composed of Christian Scientists, started at MSU in else's profit. What you pay goes directly into costs of prominent philanthropic work they engage in. eight veterans fi omWorld War II who wished to practice their faith at the co-op. purchasing and maintaining the Prices for Greek living are comparable to University room and board rates, quarters Beatrice Asher Jn East Lansing. hjI Aside from generally spacious and, for the most part, well maintained. But, as membership is not Since then, it has become a national just being cheap, adviser Joe Murphy says there are several other benefits fully open, you must 'rush' before getting in. organization for both men and women | to living in a co-op: How does one rush? chapters across the country. •The houses all are well within Keep your eyes open; Greek membership drives are hard to miss. city codes, more than can be said for many other rental units; The editors have concurred that those of With one of the highest rent districts in the state — second you who have made it this far throd •Co-ops maintain a policy of open housing and open membership, and all the houses are only to Ann Arbor — MSU article must be either really serious about students face a market that is tight, expensive, and limited when making the right housing decision, I democratically run; they go looking for really wacko. •They adhere to a philosophy of "economics for people, not for profit," which hints of off-campus housing in the commercial rental market. Assuming that the reason is the former (we have no data which indicates most s| f In looking for apartments or houses in East their protest movements roots; Lansing, you'll find you'll most likely be are savagely masochistic), then we wish you luck in your house-hunting ei •Once you move in, you are a paying in excess of $80 for a place that does not always get you your own bedroom Remember, within each of the options cited here are even further breakdowns, so part owner. Apartments . Housing co-ops used to be peopled largely by student movement adherents, but the are generally cramped, houses often in need of repair. Paying a comparable not confined to the rough sketches above. radical character of co-ops, like the movement itself, has ebbed somewhat. But Murphy says the co-ops still tend to attract individuals active in social-type movements such as MSU-Iran film project opponents, rent control advocates and the kind of people who would be involved in agencies such as the Drug Education Center and listening Ear. But if you want to get in at this point, talk fast. Murphy says the coops should be full to their capacity of 330 this term. They take good care of you in dorms. Sure, the food may be starchy, the noise intolerable, the people obnoxious and the johns quite indelicate over weekends when the are where cleaning personnel are gone. But dorms you go when you don't want to hassle with meals, furniture, landlords, or keeping your sheets clean. And you pay for it. The MSU Board of Trustees in June hiked dorm rates another $25 so that now it costs you $490 to live and eat in a dorm room for one term. An attempt to stall the vote on that hike State News Photo/Laura Lynn Fistler by Trustee Michael Smydra was turned down Their popularity have by the rest of the trustees. Smydra said he wanted to find out if the hike really was spread absolutely necessary. like wildfire, and it is because of Overassignment — or tripling, as most people call it, has come to be a standard their danger in fires that a uni¬ phenomenon in dorms. Residence Halls manager Robert Underwood versity-wide loft policy was says he expects tripling will be a bit more wide-spread this year than last, when sbout 300 rooms were adopted at the end of Spring overassigned. term. The policy dictates that The reason, he says, is that more students are returning to dorms than officials figured lofts must not occupy more than and there will be more new students than officials figured. 50 per cent of a dorm room's Underwood says, however, that rebates for tripled dorm dwellers which tripling is not strictly a bad deal. MSU does provide floor space; must be at least 30 this year have been increased to $60 student. per tripled inches from the ceiling and 48 But the residence halls can't lose inches from the floor; cannot ob¬ on that deal, either. MSU will still be than an extra $300 making more struct windows or per room that is tripled. All money collected over and above costs goes doors; may to pay the mortgages of the 25 dorm have no flammable decorations well into the 21st buddings - some of which won't be paid off until such fishnet, curtains, But Underwood century. as says given it all, some students like posters, etc.; cannot be enclosed whatever to whatever living shoulder to shoulder — or - with their roommates. In in any way, and must have more remain in 1975, some 300 students elected to tripled rooms despite being given another than There are a couple bones of option. one avenue of escape in the contention having to do with dorm event of fire. One has to do with those living. Construction of monolithic space-savers called 'lofts.' The advent of lofts in lofts cannot begin until Monday j dorms has come and often dangerous - that the only in the past two years, but their burgeoning became so swift - of Welcome Week, and a build¬ The policy is a strict one fire University has imposed a loft policy on the structures. ing permit must be obtained be¬ safety being one of the University's major concerns. rhe other has to do with damage in dorms. Damage is fairly common, but is rarely very fore construction can start. extensive. Regular fare in dorm Standards for construction are wall during a drunken spree; damage usually means, at most, a hole punched through a perhaps some crunched furniture expected to be available this But sometimes, damages careen out of the scope of normal wear and tear when week. windows are broken, elevators filled with water, and light fixtures decimated When the costs start running up, somebody has to pay. to !!eZt,iUdLC,iary accept the blame.rfy h*veguilt And when he!d entire Doors responsible when nobody steps forward has been fixed - and sometimes when euilt is still ZZyT ' indiVidUilS hSVe bWn 10 leave Cruniv^suy £ • The creation of fact-finding committees in forms to investigate damage and fix responsibility has resulted in a dramatically lower rate of damageiTdZs ®Tecal' j1,» hold'ig t»nk, others call it a -housing ptirgafbry 'kit if you «.nt University0 Aprtments. Uvi"g and apartment dweUin«' ^ . ** cWk out the fora^np bedroom, a one m°Sl [?,P"lar features $147 month a for of University Apartments is their price- $139 a month a tw*bedroom. Rate, such as the^provide rigols I^ bjnnj'ote News, East Lansing, Michigan Welcome Week, 1977 E7 |-day s brief history: from fun a confrontation with the law By LINDA BRAY Sute News SUM Writer distrihUeh °fposters," distributing guys from Shaw just started another wanting to have a J-day. "About 150 people just sitting around ■ ne a few hundered people just tor, now a junior, explained. J-day initia¬ "This year," he said, "we took it back." having a good time relaxing," said Ed In the switch-over, the r-round Beaumont Tower. People The first year was the best," he said. "It meaningful June Carey, MSU senior and three-time partici¬ Kllover campus and the East Lansing Ma'vft6. I. My ntlle month ,June>- like 1 date was somehow lost and merely the first Friday in June. J-day became pant of J-day. ■ They're strumming guitars, playing May first and May Day. so there Then a group of uniformed police arrived. I frisbees, doing magic tricks...and a double meaning in J-day." was kind of The first Friday in June of 1977 was The police had Both of these somewhat different from the instructions to warn J-day originators agreed concept origin¬ X was exactly what the initiators of that the main goal of the project was to ally laid out by the beginning J-dayers. Students and visitors, in the words of one whoever was smoking pot to cease and desist, Maj. Adam Zutaut of the MSU ■dreamed of in the spring of 1975 when have a good time. initiator, had previously been unconcerned Department of Public Safety (DPS) said. ■first began Jday. "Decriminalization was a big part of the about legality or "They didn't believe us that they were jp of six or seven (exact numbers idea Rowlee said. "But it wasn't the main illegality of J-day. "You're so free to smoke not going to have a I tne J day pioneers) Shaw Hall part. dope in East pot party at Beaumont L sophomores and freshman decided News about J-day did not need poster the Lansing." he said, "you don't even have to Tower," Zutaut said. in answer to Ann Arbor's follow,ng year. In fact, the initiators of the worry about it. When people got busted this Officer Merle Lemon of DPS then I Bash* marijuana celebration said there year, it arrested the unidentified male i. was no kind of changed the pace." who, Zutauts ft was finals week, as one J-day need to do anything at all. said, persisted in |r gerjc Rowlee, an MSU junior in "Someone else started it," one said. The people this J-day vanguard referred lighting up a joint after "I to were Elizabeth the warning was issued. | ^members, and everyone just think it was people from Brody." tified male. Byerlein and one uniden¬ Ll0 blow things off." He added the good part about the second "Elizabeth Byerlein then tried to get Lthe concept of J day was realized. year was that it started J-day of 1977 had started out as in other others to stop the arrest and was arrested just from people years. herself," he said. ED OF TRACKING DOWN hOD WOMEN'S BOOKS? UAITC Bike wAn u shop Serving jet vuiy You Since i uu omc J 944 |® America's* |meu|> ;mH Ivse through our new SCHWINN Favorite Bicycle iction of used and •NEW SCHWINN'Quper^&te 'COMPLETE PARTS AND SERVICE 10SPEEDS ■en-omen's btxiks" FOR ALL MAKES •BICYCLE MOTORCROSS ACESSORIES •RACING AND TOURING SPECIALTIES (■MB ceel seas H 485-1963 507 e. shiawassee Kitty Corner From City Market, Lansing Wwmoon M cwjj|fj| bakery BICYCLES FUJI • GITANE • ROSS SALES & SERVICE HOCKEY EQUIPMENT CCM • COHO • COOPER HOCKEY EQUIPMENT J IS ALSO AVAILABLE AT THE LITTLE PUCK PRO SHOP IN LANS¬ ING ICE ARENA. CALL 485 - 5257 321-3845 i modern youth shoes FOR... QUAIITY SHOES... ■ EXPERIENCED F1TT1NC... 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I 30t carbonated beverage one j | Lunches 11:15 a.m. to 1:15 p.m. Dinners 5:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. I 16 oz. pop — good through Sept. 30 I Sundays 12:00 to 2:00 p.m. 9 30 10 S:30 Tutr Closed Saturdays Located in the main lobby of the Lower Level of the Union Building Union Building Corner of E. Grand River and Abbott Rd. Corner of Grand River <& Abbott Rd. Michigan State University £Q Michigan Stole News, Eost Lansing, Michigan Welcome Week, ] ■MHHM1Ifi PUBS IWlfr r *p»ww TRC aids Symbol of both parties struggle It's called the Orchard Sta£t to lease water treatment plant, which was h„ii» .*'> little more than three years ago, citv el. 1( bulldoze the structure, until assistant professor of Jeremy mIT American Thou,h, \M8 guage, initiated a community movement building, as a city landmark. Workini t ** agreements city government circles and support Mattson managed to was called the scaring UD "Pump House Gang " bring teg u "T 11 ' f Street Pump House. Now, preservingH ions and students Almost aiming at as important as the sent by certified mail with a Listening Ear toJstudent rem return receipt requested, so the pump house stands, thanks toV.ir i ters in crisis in the East that proof the letter was re¬ social gathering place and serving t8 , " Lansing-MSUcommuntty is the ceived can be produced if headquarter, Bailey Community Association, a citizen » J Tenants HesourceCenter necessary. tion founded, (TRC) a group staffed by Winthrop said it was not according to one of its docum.-.J volunteers that has been pro¬ unusual for tenants to sign promote cooperation between viding information and gmct leases containing provisions dents n solving . community problems, . . commuTj residents for the that cannot be legally enforced. and i„. J ance to area tag to improve the quality of life for all past four years. "Someone... came (to TRC) group, □ Though the name might im¬ and showed us a lease where ply otherwise, both parties to a the landlord has waived his leasing agreement - 'enan's liability for repairs and dam¬ and landlords-may utilize the ages," he said, "This means if (ree services of the center, located above the Unitarian the roof falls in on their (the tenants') heads, the landlord is Advice from TRC: Universalist Church at 855 not liable. But actually, the Grove St.. in East Lansing. Atypical month brings about 300 clients, the landlord has an obligation un¬ der Michigan law to have the unit habitable." read your contract majontyof whom are young adults.seek i„e assistance from cording to funding coordinator 1»V or Tenants with questions about leases they are about to sign — have signed already — are Many renters read a can prevent lease before undue headaches and hassles if they signing on the dotted line. NOW AT e@PPIR RIVET I STORE FOR Charles Ipcar. encouraged to call TRC at TRC suggests keeping canceled rent checks, contracts or letters MEN When a client comes to 1KL 337-9795. from a landlord to prevent misunderstandings. A tenant should with a problem, Ipcar said, All TRC counselors are cur¬ keep copies of any letters sent to the landlord and have the volunteer counselors attempt rently unpaid volunteers who landlord sign and date a copy or send letters certified mail/return to help him/her to clarify the have undergone training in the receipt requested. This is proof that the landlord received a copy IT'S ON! situation and offer viable alter legal codes affecting the four of the letter. natives which the client may most common housing problem Many renters think they have to accept a lease as its printed. pursue. areas — leasing, security depos¬ But the contract can be changed if both tenant and landlord agree Consultation with a T_r lm- its, and maintenance. to the change and initial where changes are made. resource attorney is provided They are also trained to "Someone just came in and showed us a lease where the landlord on an "as needed" basis, as are advise clients with problems in had waived his liability for repairs and referrals to agencies that can damages," Winthrop said. provide specialized follow-up assistance to the client. these areas through various training techniques, including role-playing exercises. "That means if the roof falls in on their heads, the landlord is not liable. But actually the landlord has an state law to have the unit habitable." obligation under Michigan Welcome Back Special! Questions surrounding secur- TRC first captured public There are two types of rental agreements and both have ity deposits have traditionally attention in mid-1974, with the been a major part of requests advantages and disadvantages. publication of the first in what A fixed-term tenancy agreement gives the date the renter can 15% OFF! for assistance from TRC. has become a series of informa¬ move in and must move out. The Of 2.900 client contacts made tive booklets on housing prob¬ advantage of the fixed-term agreement is that rent rules do not change unless the landlord and at TRC last year, Ipcar said, lems. the tenant agree to them. But if the tenant wishes to leave 908 involved security deposits. before The booklet, entitled "Securi¬ the move-out date it is difficult to break the contract. "We try to find out what ty Deposits: How to Get Yours A periodic tenancy agreement's contacts the renter has made advantage is that the renter and Back" sold quickly and in large landlord do not set a date when the renter must move with the landlord, if theyve out. The renter only needs to give notice of one rent returned the keys or havent quantities to individual renters period. But then again, the landlord needs missed a deadline date, Ipcar as well as groups with varied only give similar notice to raise the rent or give '""Then we suggest he write a interests, including ASMSU, the Ingham County Depart¬ ment of Social Services, and the the renter the boot. on your next purchase of letter to the landlord or go to small claims court if the deposit Tri-County Landlord Associa¬ Avenue the best and latest fashions is under $300," he added. tion. Other booklets followed, and Another major area in which TRC now offers a variety of TRC services are rendered concerns leases, many of which these informative publications Apartments dealing with subjects such as - though unread, unenforce¬ leases, eviction, and tenants able and misunderstood — are nonetheless renters. signed by unwary rights and responsibilities der existing housing laws. un¬ 609 w. GRAND RIVER men's 1977 Campus wear TRC is affiliated with a state-wide housing lobby "Read the lease and keep it and anything else you get Ifrom group, the Michigan Tenant the landlord). It's for your own Rights Coalition. 1, 2 & 3 bedroom apart¬ protection," said Roger Win- Funds for the center come ments available for fall. throp. a TRC counselor. from yearly appropriations by Get ready now, we're the City of East ready for fall with the TRC suggests tenants keep Lansing, latest and best in men's donations, and the sale of TRC campus wear. Bring in all cancelled rent checks, Call: 332-0625 con¬ publications. this coupon and get 15% off on even the tracts or letters received from after 5 p.m. Training sessions for interes¬ finest landlords, and recommends ten¬ ted students wishing to become name brands, quality you can trust! ants have copies of correspom TRC volunteer counselors are dance sent to landlords signed usually held several times year¬ and dated by the landlord or ly- SAVE 15% ON HAGGAR SLACKS SAVE 15% ON ARROW SHIRTS SAVE 15% ON BRITTANIA JEANS • fired of SAVE 15% ON BRANDED LION i high rents "GUARANTEED LOWEST PRICES IN TOWN" DISCOUNT CALCULATORS SAVE 15% ON DRUMMOND SWEATERS SAVE 15% ON INTERWOVEN THI LITTLI SHOP THAT LOWIMD THI PRICK SAVE 15% ON JOCKEY & OP CALCULATOMIVIRTWHIRI! See valuable coupon in History and Academic Section SAVE 15% ON ROBERT BRUCE SWEATERS SAVE 15% ON OSHKOSH B' GOSH SAVE 15% ON SATURDAYS IN crowds? SAVE 15% ON SPIRE CALIFORNIA "SOMEBODY TRY AND SAVE 15% ON A-1 TOBIAS TELL ME I Westbrook SAVE 15% ON...MANY MORE FAMOUS BRANDS WHY I SHOULD 3 BELIEVE • AptS. can help) IN GOD." 10 minutes from If you really want to find out, come Westbrook is far enough campus in Williamston, away to beat the crowds • § among friends. and talk 15% OFF COUPON ond high prices, yet still convenient to MSU. Bring in this coupon to Coppar Rivet and get Bring your ideas and see where they lead. Discover what God does and how 15* oft on your next pure hate of Men's wear. 'Unfurnished studios: '125 to make 'Unfurnished 1 bedroom apt: '145 sure He's real. Otter Expiree: September 29.1977 "Carpeted, air conditioned, appliances Then, learn how you can prove it in your 'Quiet, pleasant atmosphere own life every day. e Limit one per customer, pleasel "Tennis courts Otter good on regular price merchandise Solid class discussions for thinkers *6 mi. east of Meridian Mall through age 19. BANK AMERICARD AND MASTER CHARGE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SUNDAY SCHOOL WELCOME . FREE GIFT WRAPPING • LAY AWAY 655 2642 STORE HOURS'. MON. THRU SAT., 10 a.m. »o 9 1147 W. Grand River p.m.; SUN. 12 noon to 6 p.m. 7 housemothers, [larger r student body, the turnaround generally recognized as point in the Greek decline visitation hours and curfews, but not on a .one and good riddance, they say, scale like i hat of Since then, several years gone by. . days when Greeks portrayed to chapters have returned campus and overall Membei ship also remains a ■selves as the select group of students membership has been of Greeks. The annual fall rush top priority growing, according to adviser Westol, "like Tow superior to others. "We're getting gangbusters." Fraternity is one of the year's big gest attractions involving con¬ I from that, trying to eliminate the membership has leaped 60 per cent in four siderable Greek effort to delve into the lotypes," said Hibbard. "We're trying years. student be >dy for prospective members. Urate people on what we're all about." More important than numbers, though, r president Courtney says the reason are attitudes, But men ibership is still not according to Courtney. "I see entirely open; Janbership. growth because of individual resources " he there remains an element of selectivity. Be rapid change of every aspect of said. Just as pr. >spective members select which n living has been a direct result of chapter th ey want to join. Courtney says, It took about six o'ple who are members of the throw out a slew of old years, said Courtney, to "The housi ? also has the right to say 'no.' " he said. "The changes that came traditions. Now, he said, many are being The cha nges by the Greeks themselves I,ere not because some isolated group selectively brought back. combined with a more tolerant student Inhere derided that the changes were mood is al 'owing the Greeks to rise A COMPLETE pd." But things such as again. pranks, "rah rah" They don't call it a renaissance, but it is was the grassroots, Courtney said, activities and destructive behavior are L caused the liberalization of fraterni- certainly a firm resurgence. Or, as Court¬ being deliberately left in Greek history, ney put it, "The Greeks are coming back on excluded from the present. "Most of the campus." ... l'ar. J dwindle as finals and cold wedges between two harder from pollsters to weather hit, but a few crazies soles at the heel of the shoe. The of campus. visible religious group on campus. With more noted and acted pastors to priest, Jl are still spotted trudging along wedge acts as a much needed There is something primal than 300 members, the crusade often passes organizations. upon by the arei'ireliJ«■ shock absorber when about running through the si¬ out free literature or organizes speakers for through the drifts of February. pounding Having escaped the eclipse down a couple miles lent acres of Baker Woodlot. interested students. of the in Seeing all those bronzed bod¬ of pave¬ faith is alive and well at MSU. ies in the sunny South over ment. The maze of trails seems to go spring break must really get to a everywhere, but it's not hard to lot of people because the start of The slight lift at the heel and maintain a relative sense of the spongy wedge go a long direction. spring term always brings forth an explosion of joggers, nou- way in preventing painful shin- Whatever your motivation veau-joggers and quasi-jog¬ splints. Shin-splints occur from for starting to jog might be, it's gers. running with improper shoes on a hard surface. a good one. Experiencing t;he Joggers of all shapes, sizes and various levels of experience ■ Slate News Moggie Walker beauty of this campus can o nly The pain is often severe and be done justice on foot. A.nd get out in the spring sun and do can keep you from jogging — chances are you'll never live i n a ALL'® UP! it. Whether you're alone, with a even walking — for a few days. only a temporary loss. new running gear just about place so idyllic for jogging as I he friend or with a pack of well- If you don't want to spend the The sidewalks on the MSU anyplace, including to places MSU campus. intentioned but only fair weath¬ bucks for the right shoes then campus can take you and where there Take advantage er joggers, it's a good endeaver. your are no more side¬ of it. The health profession seems keep on the grass or in the woods. LEVIS to concur on the physical bene¬ fits of jogging, despite a few FADED GLORY JEANS Clothing should be light and renegade articles in the Readers loose but plastic or rubber FORUM KNIT TOPS Digest. If you're over forty it is advised you see a doctor before really exerting yourself, but for exercise suits should worn never jogging. The unbreath- able plastic can dehydrate your body, making for one sick be Louis Edwards DAMON SPORTSWEAR RAY-BAN SUNGLASSES most of us it can do nothing but person. The only weight loss is good. It's good for the muscles, in body fluids, and that's at best HOBBY HKADQIIARTIRS Haircutters Most everything for your hobby or project Model Planes-Boats Trains-Cars TWO LOCATIONS TO SiRVI TOU! Wargaming-Miniatures Complete Handicraft Department 22231. Grand River Gnimbacher Art Supplies (Groesbeck area) OPEN W««kdays til 9 p.m. m-sw Sot. 9:30-5:30; Sun. 12:00-5:00 Frondor Phono 351-5943 1417ft I- Michigan Ave. (Lansing) TheHofcbu Hub Owners: Carole and Dob Satterfield Above Bancroft Flowers 487-6655 MfiRTYS 305 EAST GRAND RIVER EAST LANSING, Ml. Michigan Bell Service Bulletin student I.D. and Social Security Students: Older number and when you will arrive. Please be sure you make an your phones now. appointment on a day and at a time when you will be at your apartment. And we'll have your phone connected on time. Avoid visit If you're in town, you may our business office at 115 the rush later. Albert, East Lansing, anytime between 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. HIGH QUALITY OFFSET Monday through Friday. This year we are able to offer We try pretty hard to make it TYPING AND PRINTING OF you a variety of services with easy for students to get through your new phone equipment to people. including Call Waiting, Call AND DISSERTATIONS For example, we've set up a Forwarding, 3-Way Calling and special system so that you can Speed Calling, Touch-Tone® SHORT RUN BOOK PRODUCTION • order your phones before you Service, Design Line arrive for the fall term. You simply call Telephones*, and many more. • MANY OTHER SERVICES us collect. But don't forget. Order your Dial (517) 489-9911, and tell us phone service early and you your address, apartment number, won't have a wait problem. • PHOTOCOPIES "Trademark American Telephone 5 Telegraph Co. FAST SERVICE CORNER 1 . LOW RATES (^) Michigan Bell Please stop in and see us or call 337-1666 |n state News, Eost Lansing. Michigan Welcome Week, 1977 E15 hardens flourish at area's rental By LAUREN BEALE You have several options for nutrition in and around MSU. You plots can go to the commercial supermarkets, poke around in the natural "Most people find they con grow o lot more food stores and food coops, or you can grow your own. And that's what more than 500 students, vegetables than an average family can eat. faculty and area A lot of people residents did over the summer at rental garden plots. give stuff away, and I've Energetic gardeners grew the usual corn, aabbage, lettuce, heard of people still eating tomatoes and cucumbers, while some more things they had courageous souls canned last year." attempted more unusual crops such as mustard, okra, zucchini, eggplant, beets, herbs and Brussels sprouts. -Douglas Thalman, In early spring, ads, flyers and posters about available rental Spartan Community Gardens manager plots began appearing. The University Apartments Residents' Council (UARC) rented plots measuring 25 feet by 25 feet to residents of University Apartments for a mere four dollars. sympathize with the life of farmers after their hard work and In the commercial market there are two worries about rain for their garden. They have an organic garden garden plot renters: Spartan Community Gardens in Wood Township rented 25 foot by and stressed that it is just as easy and effective to hand squeeze 50 foot plots to the general public for $18; while insects as it is to use pesticides. Spartan Acres Gardens rented 30 foot by 50 foot plots for $18.50. "It is a lot better for your health and the environment to grow Gardeners at the rental plots cited the benefits of your vegetables organically," said Donn Johnson. eating fresh vegetables, saving money and having a hobby as reasons for In spite of a dry spring and an unusually hot June, harvests were plentiful with many renting a summer garden. gardeners starting to harvest some "Most people find they can grow a lot more vegetables than an crops in early July. average family can eat," says Douglas Thalman, manager of As advice to next year's gardeners senior Faye Walburg Spartan Community Gardens. "A lot of people give stuff away, and suggested that smaller rows be planted at different times in the I've heard of people still eating spring to stagger harvesting times. She did so this year by things they had canned last year." University Apartment resident Karla Christenson and her planting peas two weeks apart. husband Larry King said they started their garden in late spring by turning under their plot and raking out grass and weed roots. "Next we planned out our garden in terms of where and what we would be planting," King said. After the initial buying and planting of seeds, Rent control still an issue they continued to go out to the garden almost everyday to weed and water. Those (continued from page 4) of property simply preferred to little green patches require a lot of care. 1975. fight the proposals in the Another resident of University Apartments, Wilma Hranilovich, "The Committee Against Rent courts, rather than on the city encountered an unusual problem when she Control didn't get much sup ballot. planted her garden. port from them last fall," he _ State News Photo/Laura Lynn Fistler "When I planted my lettuce seeds it rained and the lettuce seeds said. "Apparently, I Eut they "That's the best route to take Lfsjng .re. g.rdenere by the hundreds h.v. cent Residents Council c.n g.rden here, .t the floated into other parts of my garden," she said. "I now have lettuce mixed in with most of my other vegetables and in my thought they could live with rent control." if you have a group of irrespon sible people who keep bringing neighbor's garden." Luttrell said, however, that this back on the ballot every Students Donn and Polly Johnson said that they feel they can many of the landlords with a lot year," she said. YOUR BEST TICKET TO WHERE YOU'RE GOING... THERE'S WHOLE A LOT OF CAMPUS OUT THERE AND WE KNOW OUR WAY AROUND ITU LEAN BACK and ENJOY THE RIDE-IT'S ON US DURING REGISTRATION WEEK (September 26th thru 28th) then stick with us the rest of the year, and enjoy the BIGGEST BARGAIN ON CAMPUS ONLY Pennies a day for unlimited rides Maps and schedules available on all busses and wherever passes and tickets are sold. NI/LAK & COMMUTER INDIVIDUAL TICKETS ANNUAL PASSES TICKETS ★ ONLY 351 it Good all 3 terms ^e9Mtar Passes ('18.00) available at ★ Available at all Residence Halls, Te9istration, International Center Bookstore, ★ Regular $50.00 Union Building Ticket Office, all residence International Center Bookstore, mis <£ Married Union Building Ticket Office, Housing. ★ Commuter $30.00 Married Housing, & Kellogg Center. Commuter Passes (*11.00) available at all of the above areas ADDITIONAL INFORMATION OR QUESTIONS? CALL 353-5280 £] ^Michigon Stote News, Eost Lansing. Michigon Welcome Wee|, „,7 Meridian Mall * •>>\ 0 m^ *1 p W "jus *\ ..JJf Associated St \t if Jtf* ^■JKSU) ► * has I™ done, is your stu( been be I*™, many of its in the a P&nt, nothing. Bu |®H will have i it's P« this year. as falling off Page easy as a log... Shopping at Knapp's Meridian Mall, that is. And it's one of the nicest favors you can do yourself striding into fall or traveling through any season. Knapp's has just what you'll need come frosty mornings, long, lazy weekends or an occasional midnight madness. Find fashions for taking cover in style, heartwarming coats and the zippiest accessories for putting them together. Imaginative dorm decorating items that work well with your kind of Watch for living. our .big red, double decker bus to take you to Knapp's Meridian Mall, September 26 through October 2. Here a mood, there a mood, but nobody knows the score PRIME TAB By BOB OURLIAN State News Staff Writer It has always been chic for the nation to "There given a change in the national/international scene, it could well happen again," Hekhuis affix a "mood" to the current was a whole lot of consciousness raising going on said. "Today, there aren't the rallying BUI college scene. UNION In the '60s, it was "apathetic", in the was "radical". The chosen word for the '60's, it present decade, (during the student on what students do and what movement years) and that's had they get involved in." an effect points there were then. There's no war, For the moment, however, student of course: "self-interest". And document — Louie Hekhuis, associate dean of students organizations reflect something of a de- that any way you possibly can, emphasis on political starts of things, piease. The Time-Life though not on a scale imagined by the world Company seems to go out outside University boundaries; indeed, ME IT of its way to dig up evidence of the typical, even within the University. seltinterested, career-oriented college stu¬ • and dozens more which cannot be late 1970s are self-interested, career- The example of MSU's international dent. Give the country a marathon lap-sit, identified on the basis fo their names. oriented and such is no myth - at least, not programs is a case in point. For the first or a streaking epidemic (circa 1974; nipped The number of them is up time in years, a demonstration — which was in the bud by an over-eager media), or even roughly 25 per completely. But to conclude that all stu¬ cent from last year, an increase at which dents don't care is to contend that nobody, against the MSU-Iran Film Project drew PUP a job-hunting seminar, and you've got proof Assistant Director of Student Activities but nobody, missed the exhilaration of more than a few handfuls of students. — positive that students are back to the Lana Dart admits she is surprised. sitting on blocks of ice, sans trousers and In fact, at some points business of college, that is, back to their during the protest, When asked what it all means, Dart says, buttocks bared, in years past. the number of participants actually crossed own business. "The list of organizations represents what Bather, the number and nature of the level of scores and swelled into the What's really going on in the student is happening on campus, locally, state-wide, hundreds, the ranks dynamic, of course, never makes the political and social organizations now in including faculty nationally and internationally." existence suggest that the early 1970s members. headlines, the weekly news magazines, or The staff of the Student Activities portrait of former demonstration ring¬ About a hundred were involved in the even Howard Lancour and the six-o-clock Division, consisting of Dart, Assistant Dean leaders quietly reading Marx and Mao may weekend seizure and occupation of the news. of Students Louis Hekhuis and Student well apply here to some extent. International Center, headquarters of What's really going on? Quite a bit, Services Assistant Jeff Frumkin, "Some people say we're back to the era of MSU's international programs. At a special among actually. In fact, close to 500 different others, advance the idea that the activities the 1950s, but I don't think that's true," student organizations, all of them meeting of the MSU Board of Trustees, formally of student organizations "mirror" the says Dart. "I could see where you could say more than 600 people were in attendance, registered with the University, are busily students' worlds. most of whom were opposed to the film interest has declined, but in reality, it's just engaged in some pursuit or another. The Vice President for Student Affairs Eldon showing itself in a different way." project. That meeting, which the trustees spectrum runs from ecology to religion to Nonnamaker agrees. He says the posture of were forced to hold by demonstrators, also Politics on campus has in fact undergone scholarship to brass tacks party politics and student organizations reflect "a sign of the some specialization. Willingly leaving the triggered the International Center occupa¬ t back again to theoretical idealism. Among times." front lines where slogans from a dozen tion. them: • 114 During the protest years, lasting through causes were lumped in one long incompre¬ At first, protestors billed it as a organizations related to fields of 1972, honorary and professional organiza¬ academic study: hensible, incohesive string, students have "University-sanctioned occupation," be¬ Stat# N#ws Photo/Pet# Obee tions and others related to academic fields instead chosen organizations with specific cause Vice-President of Research and • 103 W lUnds lor Temporarily Able Bodied, and that's what handicappers organizations related to political faltered. For the obvious reasons, those foci, particular aims and at least a Graduate Studies John Cantlon, acting as ■liil non-handicapperi, the rationale being something could happen to and social issues; • 41 groups, and similarly the Greek system, semblance of methodology. Some entered president in Clifton R. Wharton's absence, liuyday to turn you into a wheelchair user, make you dependent on a religious organizations, not including didn't attract students of a social justice established churches; party politics. Public interest groups — played it cool with the demonstrators. bent. psring aid, impede your speech or vision. Handicappers ol all kinds - • 41 organizations involved with sports PIRGIM, the Human Rights Party — and But at a trustees meeting during the first ml, physical, aural - are mounting what may be the social movement They are now enjoying a period of various ecology groups — the Fund for week of summer classes in June, four and the martial arts; M 1970s by demanding that buildings - such as the MSU Union strengthening, Dart says, as is evident by Animals, Greenpeace — have set reach¬ demonstrators who were at the meeting - be • 33 organizations involved with litera¬ the figures. Challenges to the Grade Point were arrested after the demonstration be accessible so that they may use them. Read about their way ol ture, the media or the arts; able goals, do research and public educa¬ Average and honor systems have them¬ tion, but are rarely seen in public displays. ended and the participants were walking Ikking on page 6. • 31 minority organizations; selves lapsed, allowing honorary and scho¬ And, as Hekhuis points out, national away. a 28 ethnic organizations; lastic groups to come out from behind the events could well trigger another "student Administrators are hoping international • 9 organizations involved with weaponry barracks. movement" anytime in the future. programs won't lead to any trouble for or the military; That college students in the middle to "Given a similar set of circumstances, or (continued on 3) lack groups page reflect rising "Tho. most thing poople must do, in or- Important Gays: planning to "Homosexuality could be dor to fight peoplo liko (Ani¬ a private sexual prefer¬ ta Bryant), is to come to¬ gether in numbers." meet the offensive ence. In America, it must be self-interest lifestyle." a - Richard Varin, — Gay rights poster Gay Council member By KAT BROWN "The (black) groups all tended to be the head on in numbers State News StaH Writer forerunner of OBA (Office of Black Affairs) bre apathy is the matter, all men are being established at MSU," she said. By TERRY PRZYBYLSKI to talk things with call the support group any Of the 31 black organizations registered over n time of the day o — Anon with Dart's office, almost half are dormitory State News Staff Writer night." 'epidemic long Dart said the increase in the black Anita Bryant's nationwide crusade against homosexuality has brought not only the The number of the Gay Support Group is 349-5637. ago permeated most caucuses. I save lew who dorm groups is probably due to a short-lived issue of gay rights out into the open, but also the gays themselves. Varin doted that one source of problems for Lansing-area gays is the petty - a desperately harrassment to which they are subjected, especially by |t to ignite the fire and become increase in minority enrollment following At MSU, the Gay Council, sihce its founding in 1971, has served as the focal point of police. iby the effort — and it appears to be organized gay activity in,East Lansing, and Richard Varin, a member of the council, "The police always keep an eye on the two gay bars in the late 60s, the granting of hall funds and Lansing," he said, "and gays W if not incurable, the minority aide program. hopes for increased activity among gays on campus this year. have been arrested for petty things like vagrancy-and jaywalking." h students at MSU have not been "The only way Anita Bryant can be fought is for all gays to come out of the closet," Varin did note that laws prohibiting unconventional sex practices, Academic, service and special interest including I from the Varin said. "She has to be met head-on." homosexuality, are seldom, if ever, enforced. malady and the "move- groups make up the remainder, and mass He still feels, however, that in the wake of Anita Bryant's anti-gay crusade, bote so prevalent media and communications appears to be a Varin acknowledged that Bryant "has a lot of support, which is too bad," and that she gays oncampus drags for have to come together to gain and keep the rights which they have won and deserve. (involvement. favorite. has mistakenly turned her anti-gay crusade into a religious issue. I evolution "The gay rights issue," he said, "is really one of civil righta." "I'm frightened by it," he said of Bryant's crusade. of black student organiza- Black students have also joined in Greek tt East Lansing has a law similar to the one which Bryant helped repeal in Dade "The most important thing people do, in order to fight someone like her, is to come MSU, as with the majority of life, with seven sororities and fraternities ■I Poops on being established in the past several years. County, Florida last June. The law forbids discrimination against homosexuals in together in numbers." campus, demonstrates ttitudinal shift. The renewed popularity of these organiza¬ employment and many other areas, though it does not forbid discrimination in housing. Photo by Bob Poly tb early 1960s, civil Varin does not anticipate any attempt to repeal that law, but he said that if an rights student tions, and the decline of political groups and «*ere popular, according to Student activity, reveals a turnaround to self attempt were made, the Gay Council would fight it, since one of its principal functions is conducting political activity on behalf of gays. J*s Assistant Director Lana Dart. interest and a change in priorities of black Varin described the Gay Council as "a place where gays can get together," as well as "ra>J the late 1960s and early 1970s, organizations. a place with a lending library and a collection of periodicals on gays. political and educational reform Except for the Vietnam war protests »sere dominant. "The two main purposes of the Gay Council are to provide support for individuals in affecting all races, the black movement differed substantially from the political the gay community, and to lobby for legislation protecting gays," Varin said. The Gay Council itself, in its relatively short history, has not been one of the activity and protesting by whites. White liberals joinpd to defend the causes popular groups in ASMSU, and there were rumors that some ASMSU board members hostile to the Gay Council were planning to abolish it. of various minority groups which did not "I have not heard such rumors at all," Varin said, "but it's not unusual for a few usually directly affect them, while the blacks inside were forced to fight for fundamental civil rights - civil rights of their own. ASMSU board members to oppose us." Varin said that since a minimum of five per cent of the U.S. adult population is b Associated Carl Taylor, director of minority student homosexual, he estimates that there are at least 3,000 gays on campus. Students of MSU "The number may be smaller on campus than in the population at large," Varin said, «SU) is your student affairs and assistant to the vice president of government. "because we have a young population and many people's sexuality is not well-developed r/1 h«s been beset by so many student affairs, says of the change: "It's not J""ens, many of its own so much that the (black) movement has died, yet." making, that Varin also noted that a new service for Lansing-area gays, the Gay Support Group, as the times have changed. I™! ™ne, in the words of its new "Black students, as all students at this has recently been formed in Okemos. IT"', nothing. But student leaders, "It's like tne Listening Ear," Varin said, "and gays with a personal problem who need ■JW, will have another go at it University, are concerned with what they are going to do when they get out of here." T"hisyear.Pj^4. Speaking of white student involvement get around in wheelchairs, during the spring protest against the a" Mve MSU-Iran film project, Taylor said blacks hearing aids, others can't must first contend with their own problems. ["^call ■'by themselves handicappers, are one of the "Black students are more concerned about 1970'a moat save social their own welfare in this country before they movements. 8tories _ ■ ^6, get into international affairs," he said. Minority enrollment also contributes to want to the apathetic condition at the University. On join a. club or the decline since 1972, reports show that the iTr" »t MSU. you've got around number of minorites enrolling at MSU are L k«w from. And they're aU , behind national figures. Taylor said the economy plays a major role in the decrease, forcing many blacks to J!, i"teLrvent'on centers are no J* just the attend a community college and possibly Tap groups and sensitl- transferring to a coUege or university after hro?'?".s "Betting into the7 <>■>« wore. Now two years. brass tacks social Another factor Taylor attributes to the Mii« evitle>iced by the Drug decline is the black graduate who returns RJ® r 8loriesCenter on and the Listening home jobless, and continues to remain pages 7 and 9. unemployed. (eoatinued on page 10) p2 Mlchlgon Stota News, Eost lowing, Mlchlgon Welcome Week, Single parents at MSU learning how one copes By DAN HILBERT have to get a bike or walk. Also, when the SUte Newt Stall Writer winters are very snowy bus service is stifled Perhaps the biggest problem facing single again. parenU is getting over the divorce or separation Plus, she said, there is the problem of and being able to talk about feelings related to it. ex-husbands wanting to get back together with For Pam Tobin, it took a year, and that's why she their wives and beating them up. helped organize a Single Parent group in married The other problem that she mentioned was the housing. potential for child abuse, especially in this "We definitely needed a single parent organi¬ situation where there is pressure and tension zation ... it's hard suddenly being all alone with a which could easily turn into a lapse of temper. child or two or three," she said. The good aspects of being a single parent are The organization was bom in the fall of last not nearly as numerous, but they still exist. year and since then it has grown to between 30 "It provides for better one-to-one interaction and 35 members who meet every other Monday with children," Tobin explained. night to listen to speakers and discuss the The one big positive factor is the Single problems of being a single parent. Parents group and the activities its members "After a separation or divorce you're totally plan. alone, you don't know anyone and the children Aside from getting speakers to address the are under foot all day and all the responsibility is meetings, they also have community picnics and on you," she added. parties so single parents can meet other people. Some of the problems, she said, consist of the The group has also organized a baby-sitting inability of the parent to communicate with any coop, which Tobin said works better than the other married friends, because he/she repre¬ one that was tried by married housing. sents the stigma of divorce. "We need to get single parents to enjoy being Also, it's harder to find men to go out with, she single parents, to change the image of a parent added. She said the average age of the women the group is 29 and they have two children. in who's alone," she added. The Spartan Village Day Care Center is good m SSfirBS "Once you start dating, it's like being single all and helps ease the burden on the single parent, State News Photo RobTL over again. The problems are the same (should I she says, but that alone is not good enough. Much like skateboards and hulahoops, the Frisbee fad in past years are involved in a Friabee-throwing contest as part of Residence hJ kiss him or shouldn't I?) and are complicated by "If single parents can get enough people has evolved from a simple throwing game in the street or yard into an Association (RHAI Week activities in the the fact that he knows you've already been spring. Judging is based! together perhaps we can initiate some changes," endless variety of contests, competitions and sports. These people distance, style, accuracy and catching married once," she explained. she said. "If people have a night class on the - one handed catches only. I The problem of raising children is an especially other side of campus, perhaps we can get it important one, she stated, with the difficulty in moved," getting a baby sitter when the mother has a class Anyone who is interested in the Single Parents and the father is no longer around. group, which is made up of both men and women, INTERESTED The campus provides additional problems for single mothers. The lighting is very poor, which should contact the Spartan Village Day Care Center, which is where the group holds its LEARNING IN POLO? ANGEL FLIGH1 makes walking to campus for a class dangerous. meetings. TO SKI? During summer and term breaks there is no "You learn to cope with a lot as a single The MSU Polo Clab Would you liko to otfond two formal done a yoor? bus service in Spartan Village, she said, and since "SEE OUR AO ON moomm parent," Tobin said, "and the Single Parent welcomes you to Would you liko to work most women don't have cars, that means they on compui blood drir.i? group is a big help." Page 9 Would you like to go to o oar first Spring picnic? Would you like to bo port of a growing organisation Do you core about endangered species? IISCOVER THE MIDDLE AGES... meeting. thot hoi pi tho community? So do we 1 For more Would you liko to travel to St. Louii ond Pho.nii? Would you liko to bo port of o civilian Are you opposed to animal cruelty — Tho Society for Croativo Anachronism, a national organization information, organiiotion die I of ovor MOOwiambors, studios and rocroatos tho Middlo holpo support Air Force tOTCf hunting and dog fighting? Agos. At tournamonts liko thoso hold at MSU. in tho contact Laurie Barony of tho So are we 1 North woods, mombors uso and display thoir skills and pro- jocts. Cooking, costuming, fighting, horaldry, moad-making, Kaplan at 353-9756. Do you believe animals have rights too? danco, music, |owolry-making, armoring, thoatro and mora That's what we're all about. aro practicod by local mombors. Wo havo wookly mooings and dassos listod in It's What's Happoning. Call Christiana or Kay at 355-0749 for infospation. _ _ . ^. Who are we? hook Into The MSU Fund lor Animals Come to our 77-78 organization meeting Thursday, Oct. 6. See It's What's Happening for time and location. M.S.U. CIRCLE K tice active wwioe clu& ifour Future ALUMINUM RECYCLING LANSING BOYS CLUB BOOK EXCHANGE DEAF FRIENDS Meetings Wednesday 6 00pm Society of Women Engineers Sunparch -Union Builr'n j S.E.X. MSU CROSS COUNTRY SWE of Michigan State would like to welcome all Ireohmon ond frontier itudonti In engineering rotated curricula along with our returning mambert. Our orgonliatlonal ob|octlvoo Include ac¬ SKI CLUR quainting women with opportunities In tho engineering Hold ond providing tupport to women who chooio engineering 01 their is now recruiting members and career. those interested in Club and here are some facts that should interest you: Participation In SWS provide! our member! with vorloui peripec- organization. 11**1 ^ engineering. Monthly mooting!, plant tours, high school visitation!, and tho blg-llttlo lister program ore some of our Please contact the MSU Sports office. • Courses open to college men and women. rugulor Socially, wo hope to provide our mombors with opportunities to Jaime Green, Allison Bostiek, directors. • No service obligation now. moot and Interact with other engineering students ond faculty. This Is accomplished through our ond ol tho term get-togethers ond our SKI EXCLUSIVELY X-COUNTRY • Full scholarships available that pay tuition, all fees, plus a $100 participation In Intramural sports. In keeping with tradition, our first event ot toll term will bo tho a month tax-free allowance. Annuel Hot Dog boost. This Is o greet opportunity to moot foculty, advisors, ond other students from tho College ol • An Air Force officer commission when would like to cordially Invito all Engineering. Wo engineering students, especially you receive your baccalaureate. reach out freshmen and transfer students, both fomolo and mole, to come ond en|oy tho tun. Moot ot tho west Iront entrance ot tho Engineer. Ing building on Tuesday. October 4. ot 4:00. No charge! • The opportunity to get to know the. spirit that made our nation for mar. Information coll W.ndy hokorJM.44U^ great. WELCOME Talk with our Air Force ROTC representative. For more Information, BACK TO DEC call or write to: CoMllHWljKli M.S.U. can help toistut Prates* if AnspxtSlNK PtaftSMievflN IF YOU WANT TO TALK Visit QhbM U.urtMstctur if cups WE'RE ALWAYS THERE Department of DEC Chemical 398 Park Lim East Laming Mr Fane BETE 351-4000 Engineering Gateway ta a Great Way if Life ■ 1,1-j.n Mote News, Eost Lonsing, Michigon Welcome Week, 1977 F3 Iielping foreign students )ake a tough transition y0ur world's best "One of the most awesome Young. "This group gives the F ... sspects of the foreign student's student a chance to they are encouraged to share K', the slogan oHntmm- time here is that he has to learn what he learns in practice their social activities as well. ■ interactions, MSU s lar- enough English in one or two English "Foreign students who have classes." lolunteer group, in which terms to sit next to American Volunteers are asked to meet been sent to this country to %i students help foreign students in an American class- with their foreign students study will eventually assume 0 practice Engbsh con- room," said English Language three to five hours a week, said positions of leadership in their Center counselor own countries," Bouffard said. Lloyd De staff adviser Ed Bouffard, but "The relationship established between the volunteer and the foreign student can be instru¬ mental in the development of a \SU students positive attitude toward Ameri¬ are still cans and their culture." Though International Inter¬ actions was only established in 1974, political, but the as an official volunteer program, an informal program stress helping foreign student with English existed for eight years previous, DeYoung said. He encourages foreign and Ameri¬ now on other things can same students who live in the residence halls to get together and practice English. "It's never been formal Stole News Photo Icontinued from page 1) There has been more emphasis on a V, You name .. ... .... it, and its probably been dumped by . . . . _ Rob Kozloff tutoring service," said De- 1,200 pounds of junk out of the river. Shopping Liu this fall. "I doubt it'll become a cause religious and what Dart calls "personal someone into the Red Cedar River sometime or carts, bikes, fences, chairs and smaller items were itlebre." said Eldon Nonnamaker, vice- Young. "It's not to teach formal growth" groups. the students. We another. More than 500 people participated in this jnsident for student affairs. "Some of them," grammar to among the pollutants. she of the hope friendships might evolve." Greek Week Red Cedar cleanup, says pulling in excess of | Organizers of the Committee to Stop the burgeoning number of religious organiza¬ Interested students, both for¬ llllran Film Project, however, have tions, "might be in this line of the 'born ed to at least show up at each trustees eign and American, can apply The Women's Resource information, information about again' sort of thing." the information for the student," at Office of Volunteer ting until MSU ends its dealings with But perhaps what is most significant Cpnfpr V-tfl I It: I offoners ore Center' sP°nsored b7 the Vice services and activities at the said Joanne Rettke, Programs, 26 Student Services President for student Affairs, about the shift in general student behavior University and in the 'coordinator of the center which Bldg., or in 12 English Lan¬ contains information for and I Dart says that the deemphasis on politics and student activities is the lifestyle of guage Center in the Interna¬ info on women community, and a library is located in 162 Student nd social causes may exist, but is not as about women. collection. "It's Services students. What was flamboyant and risque tional Center. mainly an Bldg. renounced in student organizations as it is The Center offers academic 10 to 12 years ago is accepted in 1977. attempt to centralize L the public arena as seen through the "There was a whole lot of consciousness raising going on," said Hekhuis, "and that's [ *Vou remember the activism, because it CHECK US OUT! had an effect on what students do and what left strong impressions," she said. they get involved in." LEARN KARATE M.S.U. Karate Club $99 DOES IT! Check with any of the nearby Michigan National Bank locations and you'll find count does it! write all the checks you want. No service charges. And Easy to use, that you get no-cost checking by keeping a easy to open. Check it out and then let ■Sport and self defense minimum balance of $99. That's right! A $99 minimum balance in your checking ac¬ everyone know you've got it T-Shirt iron-on. with the free classes meet 5 days a week Ph. 351-4471 iWicljtsan ©mijcrsttp lObftCfttii • INTERCOLLEGIATE COMPETITIONS • BEGINNING AND ADVANCED CLASSES • MON.& WED. 7:00 P.M. • 150 MEN'S I.M.BLDG. • ALL STUDENTS & FACULTIES ARE WELCOME • MEET THE 1977 NATIONAL CHAMPIONS to create: •ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION Just iron it off the page on to your T-shirt •.. •CONSUMER PROTECTION INSTRUCTIONS 5. Place the cartoon face down on the area of the T-shirt LAUNDERING: •TENANT'S RIGHTS 1. For best results, apply to material made with at least you wish to decorate and pin it on the shirt so it wil' No special laundering is required. The colors will mellow 50 percent polyester and 50 percent cotton. Shirts of not slide. Place a clean sheet of paper directly over with the first washing to a slightly faded look which •HEALTHCARE 100 percent cotton do not hold the colors after the cartoon to protect the iron's surface. Heavy paper will not wash out if you have followed the directions repeated washings. will prevent the proper heat transfer from occurring. carefully. Wash and dry with other permanent press 2. Cut out pattern along dotted lines. 6. Set the iron on "cotton", allow it to heat up and apply clothes using the proper settings or temperatures. Do We Need Your Help, 3. Place a protective piece of cloth or bonded typing with firm, even pressure over entire surface for 30 not use chlorine bleach on any permanent press paper over the ironing board to keep excess ink from seconds. Use a dry iron, not steam. materials. If properly applied and laundered, your Because staining ironing board cover. 7. Allow to c<^>l for at least one minute before removing T-shirt design will last through repeated washings and 4. Slip the T-shirt over the end of the board so that the poper. dryings. front (or back) is directly over the board's protective WHAT WE DO AFFECTS YOU! ^1. Michigan National Bank THE ALL DAY SATURDAY BANK • MEMBER FDIC • PH. 374-1212 Frandor Branch Meridian Branch University Branch 1701 Hamilton Road 2731 East Grand River 300 Frandor Okemos East Lansing FA Michigan Stote News, East Lansing. Michigan Welcome Week, m 39" now «I9« w/coupon SPECIAL OFFER SUN. thru SAT. 9/25 - 10/1 * ONE PER CUSTOMER EXP. 10-15-77 ONE PER CUSTOMER £ T 2 FREE COKES WITH EVERY PIZZA °DY pizzA SHOp 5-7470 lDEN PIZZA FACTORY 3-5932 OPEN Jr MUSIC CO. LMES PIZZA JOINT 3-7776 SUNDAY AT 5 PM 24S Ann St. E.Lansing 351-7830 V°ER PHILLIPS PIZZA SHOPPE 5-5246 MONDAY Thru SATURDAY MON-FRI 10-8 0NI)ERS PIZZA PALACE 5-2391 AT 9:30 PM SAT 10-5 y FA Michigon Stote News, East Lansing, Michigan Welcome Week, ^ By DAVE MIS1ALOWSKI ordinator for the Office of Pro¬ growing minority. OPH runs a the University and state legis¬ bus system is still without cappers attended the first Stete Newe Staff Writer grams for Handicappers (OPH) campus transport system with lature on behalf of handicap¬ accessible buses. White House Conference on -■.^rapper, •• is one of the leaders. three fully-accessible green and It is this People call them "cripples," per rights. STIGMA is also attempting Handicapped Individuals. Mich¬ typ,,.,. ■ 1 "retards," and "disabled." They "My only aim in life, here at white vans, which serves about One of STIGMA'S top prior¬ to make campus housing more igan's delegates to the con¬ Particularly ..H"u Trying to are discriminated against in the areas of jobs, housing and employment. They are ignored, the University," Gentile says, "is to facilitate involvement of handicappers in the University 20 students. In addition, OPH recently started a program to train assistants for handicap¬ ities is a fully accessible cam¬ pus bus system. "It would be an exceptional available to handicappers. on "There are only two dorms campus equipped to house ference ment handled. expressed disappoint¬ over the way it was B"-'keirf ■ sSStAfi shut away, scorned and ridi¬ on the same basis as pers. show of faith from both CATA handicappers, Case and Owen," Gentile, who nin« to fall " . anyone was a delegate, correct culed. For many people, it is easier not to even think about else." Gentile cringes at such words Also fighting for handicapper rights is an organization, found and MSU to make sure that the Knoll explained. "In each one, handicappers have to live on was particularly upset. Utude towart often one of h. jH buses routed on campus are all "They (Carter's handicapper them. They are handicappers an as "cripple," "disabled," and "victim." He prefers to use the ed in 1976, called Students for Total Integration through accessible ones," said Len Sa- wisch, STIGMA chairperson. the first floor." Despite the best efforts of conference committee) aaked us to compile C0™[°rt'»ndo^q society's — a comprehensive estimated 35 million of them word "handicapper" and en¬ Greater Mobility and Accessi Last year, STIGMA and OPH, and the document of priorities, needs handicappers from nationwide, and roughly 500 at courages people to say "wheel¬ bility {STIGMA). all over Michigan marched on support of countless TABs and problems of MSU alone. Now, after years of chair users" instead of "con¬ "We handicappers," want to help handi¬ the state capitol to present the (Temporarily Able Bodied per¬ Gentile said. "Then they threw putting up with subtle and fined to a wheelchair." cappers to develop skills to deal legislature with a resolution sons), the battle to achieve and out our data and got a perception overt discrimination, America's largest statistical minority is OPH has fought to make buildings on campus accessible with discrimination," explained STIGMA representative Jeff demanding that public trans¬ portation be made accessible. maintain handicapper rights clearly has a long way to go. medical professionals, out of touch with the mainstream of group of alive," end 11 this kind ot '*> J J fighting back. to handicappers and to change Knoll. To that end, STIGMA is Very little has come of these In late May, over 3,000 advo¬ the consumers, to write up ignorance that 3 Eric Gentile, assistant co¬ public attitudes toward this actively involved in lobbying demands, and MSU's campus cates of legislation to aid handi¬ recommendations and needs of overcome before hL " are fully accepted by aot By ROXANNE L. BROWN Teschendorf, through the his professors at the beginning dorf said. "Gallaudet is a very 'There should be a law have captions and if they are State News Staff Writer Most students, before organization, hopes to make education little easier for all of the term and asks to obtain a limited libera) arts school. My allowing for flexibility and not available, to request them fighting yet. H«pUjI " Proposal to I entering class for the first a copy of lecture outlines, reason for coming to MSU was transferring of monies," Tesch¬ from the film companies. Tesch¬ aside one week STIGhul a handicappers by establishing a especially if the class requires a because I wanted to major in endorf said. endorf is urging all those in¬ cj|U f time, need only to concern themselves with whether or not working relationship between lot of memorization and dicta¬ agriculture." A proposal has been drawn volved in MSU television ser¬ tapper's week will Week."TI the students and the tion. u™ 1 Hearing Teschendorf has realized up by the handicapper student vices to make captioned televis¬ provide they have a notebook and pen University. ""J 'or student, or pencil to take with them. According to Teschendorf, "Most professors do not real since he first set foot at MSU council, requesting that certain ion presentations available. The "00 DJ ize the difficulties and dif¬ that in order to get services one provisions be made for handi¬ proposal has been presented to faculty memiJ, 1 Greg Teschendorf and four the problem lies in the copying ferences of having a person must make demands of the OPH to together and hold cappers with hearing charac¬ incorporate in next "" other MSU students like him of notations. A deaf student difficulties with a hearing problem in we can University, he said. He said he teristics. Among them is a year's budget plan in order to discuss cJ must first try to secure a tape who tapes his lectures needs a class," Teschendorf said. "Fac¬ regrets having to suffer by request for interpreters, for have the money appropriated lems.andcommunicitj all recorder, a transcriber and an transcriber to type notes from ing the class more often while being one of the first who will persons who do not read lips; for necessary changes. A pro¬ that we have to dol interpreter, as well as an the taped lecture. Teschendorf lecturing, and not walking a- eventually make MSU accessi¬ aural fire alarms own, then maybe thmj understanding professor. has 12 credits and usually needs (flashing posal has also been submitted back we round or facing the black board ble to other students with lights) for all buildings on can dissolve tkj can also Sometimes not all of these available. are four to seven tapes transcribed after a week of classes. It takes when talking makes it much easier to read their lips." hearing problems. Securing funds has been an campus: telephone typewriters for emergency cases to be to the MSU Board of in hopes that they the importance of Trustees, will realize interaction and the between hj University «. 1 Teschendorf, three hours to transcribe one having the stress that the a junior A more feasible program for obstacle as far as the total placed in designated areas; and captioned aids in particular. the problem! majoring in crop sciences, is hour of class work. Presently, students with hearing prob¬ Office of University', refjl hold deaf. He devotes a lot of his time fighting for services for there are five transcribers available. The long delay in lems, in Teschendorfs estima¬ tion is the only answer to Programs for Handi¬ cappers (OPH) program is con¬ cerned. The office under a new captions for all visual and audial class material. The proposal for captioned Teschendorf is not through with deaf student.' .-J those with hearing problems having notes transcribed forces making it less of a task for the program is trying to secure films and television series is students and helping to open up lines of communication between the the student to cut down or her course load. on his students with to hearing problems keep up in their classes. funds for this fall. Teschendorf thinks it's a shame that funds in Teschendorf s personal de¬ ARE YOU A UNIVERSALIST WITHOut UNITARIANI mand. He is sending letters to University and handicappers. Teschendorf said if there Going to a college for deaf Though he said it will probably were more transcribers and if persons is not the answer, some areas cannot into others: be channeled all University departments, KNOWING IT? urging them to order films that this Is a fellowship of free human be after he has graduated, he beings joined in „ down hopes his endeavors will pave a less painful path for deaf fundswere available to pay the workers, then he and others like him would not be forced to according to Teschendorf. Gal laudet College in Washington, D.C., is the only such school in Welcome to of seeking and shoring. Membership Is open lo 0ny who shores o common concern lor humon dignity, no JL J /ustlce, and peace and a commitment to o search lo, t,„ students who attend MSU in carry light class loads that the the future. five transcribers are able to the nation. "I do not believe deaf stu CENTRAL UNITED wherever it may be found. Why not give liberal religion a try? ' Chairperson of a group called Communication Task Force, accommodate. Usually Teschendorf goes to dents should have to go to a school for the deaf," Teschen METHODIST CHURCH Sundays -10:30 a.m. Adult Life Education In Downtown plus Lansing (across from the Capitol at Ottawa) suitable R E. Education for children available THE UNITARIAN FIND OUT WHAT Services JL We rv | The MSII Mennonite UNIVERSALIST CHURCH WE'RE ALL ABOUT 1r at Care •55 Grove Street at Library Lana In iait laming Fellowship welcomes 9:45 and I About Talaphona: 351-4011 you to worship with us I PICNIC 11:00 a.m. You any Sunday at 9:30 a.m. Dr. Howard A. in the Union Building, Lyman, Pastor WHEN: Thursday, Sept. 29, 6:00 PM Rev. Paul L. Hartman, associate FIRST CHURCH OF THE Room 334. WHERE: PATRIARCHE PARK Rev. Lloyd VonLente, ossociote RIDES/INFO: 355-2690 BRETHREN 3020 SOUTH WASHINGTON, LANSING, MCHIUN INTER VARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP Campus A» A Church Family, We Are: -Seeking to be Brother! and Sisters in Chriel under the PI hood of God. Reaching ont to he oervinte to "the leant of them." Crusade fur - -Intending to be witnetee, to the call of Jeiue lor pi jontice -Studying the Bible under the creative guidance o! Ik Spirit to be faithful miniitar, of God'i Word. Christ -Striving to he the Body of Chriet to each other end el I children Worship 11:00a.m., Study 10:00a.m. Phone 882 0811, Pastor 487 - 5042 - For information call: 351-2455 UNIVERSITY | CHRISTIAN REORGANIZED CHURCH CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST 310 N. Hagadorn Road OF LATTER DAY SAINTS Study Period - 10:00 a.m. THIS IS A CORDIAL INVITATION Worship - 11:00 a.m. TO ENJOY OUR SERVICES WITH US CAMPUS MINISTRY AT MSU Singspiration - 7:00 a.m. RLDS Student Center Transportation Provided 1518 River Terrace DR. HOWARD F. SUGDEN, PASTOR (One block east of Hubbard Hall) DR. SAMUEL L. HOYT, MINISTER OF YOUTH 337-1845/399-0429 Reception lor Stndentsl Campus Minister — Following morning servicf Robert Kent Oct. 2 COLLEGE COLLEGE CALL 332-5193 BIBLE CLASS FELLOWSHIP 9:45 A.M. 8:30 P.M. WELCOME STUDENTS IN THE FIRESIDE ROOM DISCUSSION REFRESHMENTS AND FACULTY WORSHIP MAKE SOUTH UNIVERSITY REFORMED CHURCH 11:00 A.M. and 7:00 P.M. YOUR BIBLE-CENTERED RELEVANT MESSAGE "CHURCH-AWAY- (Reformed Church in America) INSPIRING MUSIC FROM-HOME" An evangelical ministry, seeking to show that Jesus Christ is vitally relevant to the deepest needs of all FREE BUS SERVICE MORNING AND EVENING people, including the academic world. TO ALL DORMS WORSHIP 11:00 a.m. and 6:00 p.m. at 4930 S. Hagadorn CALL 482-0753 FOR INFORMATION (across from Akers HalH DISCUSSION GROUPS AND SUNDAY SCHOOL FOR CHILDREN 9:30 -10:30 a.m. SOUTH BAPTIST CHURCH COFFEE HOUR 10:30 a.m. NURSERY 9:30 and 11:00 a.m. Tom Stark, Pastor (AN INDEPENDENT BAPTIST Gayle Barnes, Staff Associate CHURCH) SOUTH WASHINGTON AT Phone 351-6810 MOORES RIVER DRIVE LANSING (For RIDES call 351-6810 after 9:00 on Sunday morning) COm#WMk|t977 tli| hi^n stole News, East Lonsing, Michigon andicpper," Welcome Week, 1977 F7 CRISIS CENTER'S NEWEST SOUTH LANSING uppers and their PROGRAM 'Tgh CHURCH of GOD 'ndicapper lng t0 Wl th. righuT* ^ •or looks to aid Visit the World's most friendly and fastest growing fUde t each other and el IIVERSITY BAPTIST ' Hogodorn 200 West Grand River A. Schultheis dy 10:00 a.m. ( Interdenominational Serving MSU for 70 years 144:332-0134 r487 n 5042 Haptist - United Church of Christ- Methodist Presbyterian - SAINT JOHN - (Independent) SIT1 Jirsi ^Baptist QJljurcij 4684 Marsh Rd. 'IAN (Located just east of Meijers) Okemos, Mi 48864 SINEW PARISH CH tgrams- 327 M.A.C. Avenue 337-9778 Sunday School g;45 a.m. rn Road Morning Worship Service ll:00a.m. ):00 a.m. Evening Praise Service 6:00 p.m. CO-UNI-BUS (college, university 9 a.m. & business MORNING WORSHIP 9:30 & 11:00 students) 7:30 p.m. a Summer Services at 10 a.m. :00 a.m. Wednesday Night - Classes 'rovided Prayer Meeting 7:00 p.m. WELCOME ALL STUDENTS TO MSU We invite you to join in our worship and service programs Prayer Students "pie • For further information contact: lev. David B. Doku, Minister of Youth & MINISTERS: Raps ig servic Education Jack H. Boelens Carl Staser Picnics of 349 2830 Julius Fischbach William Fuerstenau - 193 Transportation can be arranged. . YOU ARE SPECIAL! Weekend of God has written a special message to you and about Christian Living Lutheran Campus you. Each week we look into that message to discover what it to live a life of faith. Ministry at MSU means Liturgy (Lutheran Student Five Bible Friends study groups, led by students, meet in Movement) various dorm complexes on the campus. Call the office for information. Community UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CH CHURCH Retreots, parties, activities with University Baptist Church, music and witness teams are just a few of our special ways of bringing excitement into your life. 1020 S. Harrison Rood East Lansing 332 • 2559 COME AND SEE! BAPTIST STUDINT CENTIR rid. AT MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY '*°,-mJWOr,hlp * °nol and Education Contemporary Liturgies) Hour 4608 S. HAG ADORN RD. EAST LANSING, MICHIGAN 48823 Come fo an Open House gadorn •W'ntOrtaklast/fellowship/Forum Sorlos with disrussion iers HalU (worship In a divorsily ol stylos) *4 by o cost soup-sandwich suppor n: '"K SCHEDULE 1 ol spiritual Christian Education and social natur. ■ music ond worship. Tues., September 27 — 7:30 PM study opportunities, porsonol caro: Fellowship Mtg. Tuei. 7:30 P.M. 6».ki°tCfl,'on,; "p »M»onol festivities; rocrootlonol octlvltios: Choir Wed. 7:15 P.M. groups Faith Studiei Sat. 10:00 A.M. (M.A.C.) Ujjj BACONS: Lutheran Students living In the dorms. Thoy *,0 onswor your questions. Worehlp (U.B.C.) Sun. 10:00 A.M. College Clan Sun. 11:15 A.M. COME AND SEE US I CALL l)S. Jack Bailey + Bible tfudiei on campus Wed., September 28 — 7:30 PM Custav Kopko, Jr. Pastor Chaplain - Director -I- Social A retreat activities Tom Patorman. Assodoto Postor Mor|orlo Zlbbol, Stolf Assodoto Office (517)351 -6494 Home (517) 351-9478 (East-across from FEE parking lot on Hargdorn) e*Hy L. Downs, Administrative Secretary Pft Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Welcome Week, 197, Muslim Students Association Friends of the Rape Awareness Kappa Delta Pi (Education PIRGIM [Piibii,, Honorary) National Student Program Coalition Group in MiJ" "H* Student groups— Friends of the Student Workers Kappa Kappa Psi (Band Service Against Racism Native American Union Fraternity) Solidarity Com¬ Chapter [Mem J" Friends of Tenants Resource Cen- Kappa Kitten Club mittee ... Karate Club, MSU Nigeria Club. The P,Z9r°"°'°™' Frisbee Team, MSU KCSEA-CAP (Community Action NORML [National pm , £?*■Msu Fund for Animals, MSU Programsl Organisation for the Reform of Marijuana —van) Fusion Club Kellogg Center Student Employes LawsI North American Indian here's your choice Game Society, MSU Association Student Gay Liberation Movement Kitty Genovese Memorial Anti- Organisation Gays for Violent Non-Action Rape Collective North Coast IMulti-Media Co¬ p™ Pub'Ms" Geographers Undergraduate Ac¬ tivities Club Korean Student Club L-5 Society, MSU Chapter operativeI Northwoods Recorder Consort SSL*-** Geology Club of Michigan State Labor History Club Officers Club, MSU PoffirG^s, Acrobats Club For information on any of the organiza¬ University Landon Hall Black Caucus Omega Chi Epsilon (Chemical Delta Omicron Music Sorority Go Club, MSU Landscape and Nursery Club Progressive Labor Administrative Management Soci¬ tions listed here, or for information on how to Democratic Student Caucus Engineering Honoraryl Promenaders ' ety. MSU Chapter of G.aduate Business Students Ad¬ Lansing Area Lesbians Omicron Nu Alpha Chapter Adopt A Grandparent found your own organization, contact the East Complex Halls Organization visory Council (G.B.S.A.C.) LEAN (Lansing Energy Affairs (Human Ecology Psychology Club, MS| (E.C.H.O) Graduate Students in Children's Honorary) graduate wsu Advertising Club, MSU Student Activities Division, 104 Student East Complex Photo Club Network) Orchesis (Oancel puWic Relations African Students Union Literature Seminar Leprechaun Alternative Organization of Arab Students s, Services Bldg. East Lansing Peace Education Agricultural Economics Graduate Student Association Center, MSU Great Lakes Greenpeace Green Splash (Synchronize Swim Libertarian Alternative, MSU Organisation of Black Graduate end Professional "Si-SB! lion (PRISAI Association of English Graduate Eckankar International Student Club) Libertarian Cooperative Students, The Agricultural Production Club Students Society (ECKIS) of MSU Organisation of Iranian Moslem Railroad Club, '■All Nighter" Club Association of Graduate Students Group Creation Libyan Student Union Students [OIMS) MSU Economics Club, MSU Life Line Rainbow Alphabet 26 in Communication Economics Undergraduate Club, Group of Jewish Students, The Organisation of Jewish Students Chinese Student Club Gypsy Scholar Lotus Society Ranger I Alpha Continuum Astronomy Club, MSU CHISPA (Chicano Students tor MSU Organisation of Venesuelan Stu- Rather Hail Black Hang Gliding Society, MSU Caucus Progressive Action) Egyptian Students Association Recreational Alpha Epsilon - Michigan Sigma Chapter (agricultural engineer¬ Baha'i Club, MSU Christian Medical Fellowship Emergency Medical Services Club Health Club, MSU Masters in Public Administration Student Association VokeytM^ Bailey Hall Black Caucus Christian Science College Organi¬ McDonel Black Caucus Red Cedar ing) E.F. Heard Enterprise Review Baptist Student Union zation, East Campus Engineering Council, Student Medical Care Facility Volunteers nvnaissance Alpha Kappa Psi (Professional Beaumont Advertising Eta Highland Dance Association Orifice Dance Asm. lis offenders » Agency Christian Science Organization, Kappa Nu (Electrical Engineer His House Fellowship (Formerly Medical Technology Students, Representative Business Fraternity) Beledi Group, MSU North Campus ing Honorary) Original Okinawa Karate Students, College of UrbsnZl * the Ingham Alpha Lambda Delta (Freshmen Eternals Christian Student Fellowship) Michigan Society for Outing Club, MSU RnLU!ban treats such offei Resource Honorary) Alpha Mu (Music Therapy Club) Beta Alpha Psi, Alpha Omicron Christian Science Organization, Eternal Order of Druids Horticulture Club, MSU Mellow Notes w9 ;:: .* r, e'eSC0pe A roe \o^et ''Uni°n <> s Afe, -(V® „e*°\ cV6% STUDENT FOUNDATION -°o "c// Who Pays for this Programing 9 this is .90 to Programing Board (45%) assessed .70 to Student Board (35%) at registration .40 to Student Media Appropriations Board (20% $2.00 Why have a Programing Board? TO DO 3 THINGS — to facilitate — to organize — to execute Student programing of an all-university student programing nature How Do I GET INVOLVED? Drop in for Coffee, Room 333 Union Bldg. or Call 353-5255 During Welcome Week, see our offices & meet the staff ASSOCIATED STUDENTS OF MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY Student Services Building • Michigan State University • East Lansing, Michigan 48824 I'f! F1 ?Mkhlgon State N«w», Eoit Laming, Michigan Wjkomjvv^ 1977 You live here, study here, play here, vote here, got all your belongings here. Shouldn't you hank here too? Q East Lansing State Bank Is the best C.S.A. THE SIMPLEST WAY IS OFTEN THE BEST We're the ONLY bank who offers FULL BANKING place to put your money and here's why. WAY. C.S.A. stands for Consolidated Statement SERVICES to students. From travelers checks and money Account. You get it with Handi-Check 93 and the V.I .P. orders to trust services, safe deposit boxes, What it does is combine all your accounts; YOUR CHOICE OF CHECKING ACCOUNTS: No savings, bank-by-mail, installment loans. All deposits are fully other bank around gives you a choice of checking and installment loans, into one statement. It insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. Handi-Check really makes bookkeeping much easier. 99 with free checking with just a $99 minimum daily LONGER BANKING HOURS: We're always open. balance, the V.I.P. Account for $3 per month or straight And you can't find any longer hours than that. Our DIME-A-CHECK. The difference between them is this: if branches are open from 9-5 Monday through Saturday you can maintain a minimum daily balance of and till 6PM on Friday nights. But the $99, you big news is Teller get free checking. However, if your balance falls below 24. Teller 24 (automatic teller machines that are the minimum, you are charged $1.00 service charge per hours a day, 7 days a week, every day of the open 2.4 month plus 100 a check. With DIME-A-CHECK there are year) lets no minimum balances. You you bank anytime you want. And perform eleven pay 100 for each check you different banking transactions. We've got Teller 24 at. write and $1.00 for your statement. The V.I .P. gives you every one of our branches. a lot of banking services such as traveler's checks, SIX CONVENIENT LOCATIONS: accidental death policy, no-bounce Three within protection, and free walking distance of campus. Downtown East Lansing ait checking. All for $3 per month. Abbott and Grand River, Brookfield Plaza across from BEST SAVINGS PLANS AROUND: We welcome East Campus on Grand River, and student savings accounts, unlike other banks in the Trowbridge Road near area. And we Brody and South Campus. That's fhore than anyone else. pay high interest. Only a dollar opens your regular passbook account. And you can make deposits or withdrawals anytime. If you prefer, we have other higher paying savings plans from Golden Anniversary to Certificates of Deposit. Our most popular is the - statement savings which eliminates the need for a passbook. .East Lansing State Bank, your Hometown Bank away from Home. Member: F.D.I.C. East Lansing State Bank houn: Sot. Sept. 24 (Wyoming here) 9:00-5:00 Sun. Sept. 2S Noon till 5:00 p.m. Mon. Sept. 26 7:30 - 9:00 Tue«. Sept. 27 7:30 - 9:00 Wed. Sept. 28 7:30-9:00 Thur. Sept. 29 7:30-9:00 Fri. Sept. 30 7:30-9:00 Sot. Oct. 1 9:00-5:00 OPEN AU HOME FOOTBALL GAMES 9:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M. 2 Michigon Stole News, Eo»t Loosing, Michigon Welcome Week, | TO MAKE MSU THEMAL HELP BOOKSTORE A CO ALL IN 0 SHIRT CITY Is the place to go for a shirt with a personal touch. Get shirts printed with the emblem and individual names of your floor team. Or have a shirt specially made for a friend or yourself with one of our many designs. COPYING CENTER We have a Xerox machine which can print copies up to 8V2 by 14 in. size for only 5C stote News, East Lonsing, Michigan [hops... lete shopping center jilding THE SPIRIT SHOP has everything you'd want in the way of MSU Mugs, Pennants, Emblems, Shirts, Blankets & Jewelry. They also have many small gift items. THE SMOKE SHOP Our newest edition to the Mall, this shop has candy, make-up, various sundries, pipes & tobacco. 4 Michigon Stote News, Eost Loosing, Michigon Welin9, Michiqon Welcome Week, 1977 7 Roger Foster, Assistant Store Managei Connie McAuliff, Acc't. Supervis Customer Service Gold Room Mary Jane Ohlemacher (Not pictured) Kothy leisman SHIRT CITY SPIRIT SHOP SUPPLIES •1 s. >1 |l «i Cindy Gerling OFFICE CEIVING , Mary Cotter KRESGE ART CENTER Top Right: Ellen Kirk Medical & Reference I p®ul Christ Jerry Parr, Book Dppt. Buyer Cotherine Weinman Assistant Head Cashier Eileen Lane, Asst. Buyer Bill Allen, Shipping & Rec. Dept. Q Michigon Stote News, Eost Loosing, Michigan To Make Textbook Purchases Easier For You... We have all of our textbooks arranged on our shelves by course number and are identified by shelf cards such as those pictured here. These cards represent a guarantee that the books are required or recommended by your professor and are on the Official MSU Book List. And Don't Forget That Our Rows Are Alphabetized. /VJ ENG THRU " ENT ENG GEO Weicome Week J^Lminjjglg. News. Eost Lonsing, Michigan Welcome Week. 1977 9 'e Carry A Wide Selection of Paper fotebooks, Folders, Pens, Pencils, ind Markers... id a Complete line bfMemorex tapes i h , ] Q Michigon Stole News, Cost Lansing. Michigan WE ARE YOUR calculator Headquarters SST | GSB : j GTQ" K9 jlEB1 I ■ ' ENTER til fBFlj f EEl' fCLX5 l ii s a m ! ^ t ^ •' ^ -a ^ i x=y +H.MS ' L'AST x PAUSE ii [iZBhJI o m fm ■ , ■ .1; h ■ i e. 1' 1^-pan ii h |! (iv/trtUHtf 'fifif/v Jjj Choose the new HP-29C from Hewlett-Packard. TI Programmable - The advanced pr mable calculator with plug-in Solid Software™ modules. The new HP-29C could be the last calculator you'll ever need. Because it has the programming • Up to 480 program steps or up to till power of calculators costing much more—and it mem„rte integrated with the Master Library Module deli™, has Continuous Memory. 5000 steps. P • 4 types of display testing with an independent Sooner or later, chances are you're going to buy "t" register. a Hewlett-Packard calculator. And the sooner • Up to 10 additional test registers directly a for: Looping. Increment. Decrement. the better. • Up to 10 user flags available: Set. Reset. Test. • Up to 6 levels of subroutines available. Come in and see the new HP-29C Advanced • 72 useful labels. Programmable with Continuous Memory today. In addition to a wide variety of art and • Extremely flexible addressing of: Only $195. Price $169.95 Program Steps: Data Memories: 1. Absolute 1. Direct Write programs of 175 keystrokes. engineering supplies, we offer calculators 2. Indrect 3. Label 2. Indirect • 10 user defined label keys. Each function-one, two, three, or four keystrokes in every price fit —requires only one step of program memory. And with 98 steps of continuous program memory, range to every pocketbook. Price $124.95 Our Price $99.95 that means you can easily write programs of 175 keystrokes or longer. ...And Your Pro-Ked Tennis Shoes Headquarters. n cwte News, Eost lonsing, Michigan Welcome Week, 1977 1 1 BOOKS BOOKS BOOKS mrtnnu t?E mm 'ilTiiowms* fin i mim FATHERS AND ' ^ """ far from the SODS m arms madding crowd up to 60 memories, nry Module deli vers I Monarch notes In our culture center, better known 4'Crib as Alley", we have many titles in Cliff's Notes and Monarch Notes. We also have Schaum's Outlines. med" books nursing^ ^ t Check out our complete selection of required and recommended books for nursing and medical courses. We also have the most complete display of medical reference books in the Lansing Area. Pleasure Reading 1»ar AK We have an excellent supply of Best Sellers, paperbacks, magazines and hardbacks in our Pleasure Reading section. Special orders on any book published are available. or J L i i i i i m '(/fr't ft Goop thing it's |M TR£ C£NT£R OF CAMPUS - I HAVE-TO CohE. BACK FOR A <=£COIUV load/ hours: Sot. Sept. 24 (Wyoming here) 9:00-5:00 Sun. Sept. 25 Noon till 5:00 p.m. Mon. Sept. 26 7:30-9:00 Tue>. Sept. 27 7:30 - 9:00 Wed. Sept. 28 7:30 - 9:00 Thur. Sept. 29 7:30 - 9:00 Fri. Sept. 30 7:30 - 9:00 OPEN All HOME FOOTBALL GAMES Sat. Oct. 1 9:00 - 5:00 9:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M.