VOLUME 72 NUMBER 2 FRIDAY, JANUARY 6,1978 MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY EAST LANSING. MICHIGAN 48824 State colleges, universities to get m ore funds By STATE NEWS u d economic times for use in leaner days. United Press International Bad times might not be too far down the A surplus of au to fundi Is not responsi­ road, Miller added, saying he “would not be ble, but M8U and othsr Michigan eollagaa surprised" to see double-digit unemploy­ and universitiaa will probably got more ment again in late 1979. money next year, according to the state “This state is never going to be stable, budget director. given our cyclical economic nature,” he said. The governor's 1(77-78 budget recom­ mendations, to be released J in . 28, will Include a "substantial increase" in higher education appropriations, Budget Director Je rry Miller said Thursday. Phnom Penh That more money will be available has to be welcome news to officials a t MSU and other colleges, as they have weathered th re a te n e d “This state is never going to BANGKOK, Thailand (API - Vietna­ be stable, given our cyclical mese forces on the move in Cambodia may have struck to within 35 miles of Phnom economic nature." —Budget Penh, the capital, after occupying the Director Jerry Miller disputed Cambodian border salient known as the Parrot's Beak, reliable Thai intelli­ gence sources said Thursday. several years of belt-tightening during the The informants believe Vietnam hopea to recession. exert enough military pressure on the Miller announced Wednesday a $68.4 capital to force a negotiated settlement of million surplus for the 1976-77 fiscal year, border disputes predating the French crediting it to steady recovery from the colonial era. They say Vietnam also may State News/Debra J. Borin 1974 recession. seek a change of leadership in Cambodia. Winter turns vandal, using invisible forces o f expansion and web around the gaping hole, veiling its blind destruction The sources said Vietnamese troops are The surplus, coming just s month after he I contraction to smash an unseen fis t through tempered safety with artistic grace; it has made its point: a reminder predicted a deficit, w u due to a decline in close to or may have already captured the Mekong River town of Neak Luong and is, thrusting frigid fingers into the warm enclave of an that nature still penetrates the glass-metal-plastic world welfare cases, the director said. other units are moving north into the low, I automobile interior. Yet it does so in style, tracing a delicate of humanity. -K»n Parker He hedged on just how the state will marshy areas east of Phnom Penh. spend the $68.4 million, however, saying Vietnamese units have crushed Cambo­ Gov. William G. Mtlliken will reveal that in dian resistance in key border areas in his State of the State message on Thursday. eastern Cambodian and are in command of A number of alternatives are “still in the Parrot's Beak, the disputed rice-rich review," Miller said, including a general tax Smith to keep private practice zone jutting 30 miles into Vietnam's Tay cut. a tax rebate or some ip edal program to Nay Province, the sources said. aid a particular group or problem. The sector, 35 miles northwest of Saigon A tax cut was considered less likely than and 60 miles southeast of Phnom Penh, w u a rebate or special program, however, since the site of the American invasion of the surplus Li relatively modest. By KAREN SHERIDAN According to Lon Otremba, co-director of ASMSU Legal Services, the contract which Cambodia in 1970. has been approved by the ASMSU Student Board guarantees that Smith “has to fulfill his There definitely will be no tax increases Recent intelligence reports said sporadic State News Staff W riter duties. As long as he can do his job here he’ll be all right." this year, Miller said. fighting continued in the border area fenn eth I. Smith, s e le c te d last term for th e position of ASMSU Legal Services senior But Smith is not expected to sign his employment contract until after Tuesday's Actual revenues met his predictions, between Vietnamese forces and small >ner. will retain h is private legal practice, it was announced this week, ASMSU meeting, and has unofficially submitted an alternative contract for except for the state lottery, which fell $13 Cambodian army units cut off from higher the announcement c a m e despite statem ents last term by ASMSU board members that consideration. million short, he said. military commands. Vietnamese comman­ d said h e w ou ld give up his private practice if selected for the ASMSU post. Smith's contract differs slightly from the one approved by ASMSU Student Board in ders are under orders to pursue and 1 > is led to u n d e rs ta n d th at he would give up hia practice — I thought it was In addition to the surplus — which w u eliminate resistance, the Thai sources said. Berstood," ASM SU President K ent Barry said Thursday, October. Section 2 of the ASMSU contract, which stipulates that the ASMSU lawyer “shall more than double the $28.3 million left over There have been several unconfirmed povever, B arry said , t h e consensus of the ASMSU board is th a t Smith would not be perform services as an independent contractor, and shall not be considered an employee from fiscal 1975-76 — the state already h u reports that Cambodian rebels opponents of fcoved from th e p o sitio n of senior attorney as long as he fulfills th e stipulations of the of the University for any purpose," was deleted from Smith's contract. saved $74.7 million this year for its "rainy the radical Communist government in JMSU approved c o n tra c t. But there may be disagreem ent between Smith and the Smith also deleted the term "full-time” from the job description in the employment day fund." Phnom Penh, have teamed up with Viet­ d over the w o rd in g of t h e final contract, which has not yet been signed. State lawmakers approved the rainy day agreement. namese forces. Recording to S m ith, n o a g r e e m e n t of his status as a private attorney had been reached fund last year to save money in good (continued on page 121 According to official Cambodian reports, ll ii time ot his a p p o in tm e n t. Vietnam launched a major cross-border P h e i asked if he h a d e v e r publicly indicated he would give up the practice, Smith operation in November. Blied that he w as u n s u re . Thai sources say Vietnamese forces |1 don't know if I sa id t h a t o r not," said Smith, who was the only candidate interviewed Baspecial co m m ittee fo r t h e Legal Services position. ™ Smith was q u o te d in t h e Nov. 22 State News as saying during a public interview, “I p be willing to le a v e my private practice," M e d ic a l innovation pays off vastly outnumbering those of their former Communist ally, and backed by tanks, artillery and aircraft, cut off the Parrot's Beak in a pincer movement. d be an a b s o lu te burning of th e bridge if I said ‘OK, Tm taking this on full time Radio Phnom Penh first reported the 5 *11 give up m y o u ts id e in te re sts,'" he said Thursday. By PETE BRONSON national recognition and prestige for the said. conflict Dec. 31, when the government said jjtmth s appointm ent w a s fuel for controversy last fall, and was particularly opposed by State News Staff Writer College of Human Medicine, according to "Several years ago we voted to keep the it was breaking diplomatic ties with P i e of A rts an d L e t t e r s representative Scott Schreiber. To be different is often difficult, but as students and faculty in the program. name 'Human Medicine' for the school," Vietnam. There h u been no recent Cambo­ i - T ' s contention t h a t h e never said he would give up his private practice is a lie,” MSU's College of Human Medicine has “I really feel good about it," said A rthur Kohrman added. Rrober said T h u rsd a y . dian comment on the fighting. There were found, individuality has its rewards. Kohrman, associate dean for education in no independent on-site usessm ents of the the College of Human Medicine. "The name ‘human medicine' — originally P j b m aintains h is reasons for continuing the practice are sound. For MSU medicsl students and faculty, situation. “A lot of people have worked very hard in given to distinguish us from veterinary contract « a o n e - y e a r contract and puts me in economic peril," he said. innovation in medical education paid off Thai sources say Vietnam h u elements of the face of great odds — now we're getting medicine — sounds funny, but it's what .M u g my nam e a s s o c ia te d with my private practice, Til be able to devote some time Tuesday night when their unique approach eight divisions in the Parrot's Beak area, recognition." he said. we're all about,” he explained. practice,'' S m ith s a id . “It's also necessary to keep up a liaison with some of the was prsised on an NBC documentary as totaling between 50,000 and 60,000 men. P | » f the co m m u n ity ." Kohrman said MSU's success in blazing Pam Gurnick, a second-year medical “the most effective" of the few medical They say Cambodian forces may have new trails in medical education is due student and editor of the Orifice, the ■ id, h o w ev er, t h a t Smith's association with Ben Gibson, with whom Smith schools which em phuize family practice numbered as high u 25.000 at the partially to cooperation from the Michigan journal of the MSU medical complex, said J™ ga! offices, co u ld also prove advantageous to the prospective ASMSU attorney. and primary care. beginning of the Vietnamese operation but Legislature and former MSU President the NBC special highlighted the most " y'mPortan‘ t0 Ken that his name be tied with Gibson's because Gibson may be Though only ten minutes of the three- have since been v u tly reduced. John Hannah. However, most of the credit important aspects of the MSU program. ""‘ federal judge," Barry said. hour show entitled “Medicine in America: Vietnam h u called on Cambodia to should go to former Dean of the College of "MSU recognizes a national need for a so said th a t to g iv e u p his practice could inflict an economic hardship on Gibson, Life, Death and Dollars" were devoted to negotiate a settlement. Cambodia refused, Human Medicine Andrew Hunt, Kohrman primary care. The emphasis (by NBC) will mith a b so rb s s o m e of the overhead costs of the offices. MSU, the prime-time exposure means saying it would talk only when all Viet­ show other schools it is working," Gurnick added. namese troops withdrew from the country. “The sad part of the NBC program is that said. it didn't highlight Dean Hunt," Kohrman said. “He's the one whose efforts in the last Arms d estin ed fo r IRA seized 12 years have made the program what it is.” Though Hunt was not available for comment, the current dean, Dr. Donald Weston, agreed that the program should |WNDon i id , BT ED BLANCHE Belgian, British and Irish Intelligence agencies declined to have given more attention to Hunt. •iklniMUj ~ A 'Iw destlne shipment of five tone of discuss the reported swoop ln Antwerp, but other qualified Overcoming "tremendous resistance" ■orthern i r . i " P ° n' d e,tin ,d *or the Irish Republican Army in Bttrdlnr , * b**n Ml*ed from a ship's cargo in Belgium, sources u id the seizure was the result of cooperation among the t h r u countries. from the traditional medical education establishment required "people with vision inside f tlv* ,0UrtM here. They said th e shipment Belgian authorities confirmed th a t customs men in Antwerp in high places," Kohrman said. What does it mean to be blind C r. ' ' Mtric«1 equipment. intercepted several crates containing five tons of military “We were told 'you can't do it, you on this campus? See page 3. * * « « 7 7 ! Northwn Ireland expressed a belief th at the hardware, including assault rifles, submachine guns, rocket shouldn't do it,' but we were the first, and U-nionth i.i»n . Lebanon, where factions who fought an launchers, mortars and a large quantity of ammunition. the first effective school of our type." Of thai. War -w 1978-r® apparently are trying to sell off They added th at shipping manifests listed the crates, destined Dr. Jam es Potchen, chairperson of the **"• The ar,en,ls now th a t the fighting h u died for Dublin, capital of the Irish Republic, u containing electrical radiology department, agreed that the ^ t"™neinP 8aile •V • t* #• • N ixon's W hite House aides, has turned W ebster o f St. Louis and U.S. D istrict dow n an o ffe r to become d ire c to r o f th e Court Judge Frank J. M cG a rr o f Chicago. FBI, an assistant said Thursday. The pap e r said it could n o t lea rn th e fo u rth m an's nam e. The Los Angeles Times said N eal was N eal, 48, c u rre n tly is a p a rtn e r in a • • • one o f fo u r men w hom A tty . G en. G riffin Bell sounded o u t fo r th e job to succeed Clarence Kelley. Three expressed "signs N ash ville , Tenn., la w firm . He p rosecut­ ed fo rm e r Team ster p resid e nt H offa on ju ry ta m p e rin g charges and w as a i* ; • * o f in te re s t," th e paper said, b ut no one was sure w hich ones they w ere . m em ber o f th e W a te rg a te prosecution force. • • •# • l ; i ( ‘o l ) s o i i s Hays says he w ill return to politics HOM E _ FRIDAY ST. CLAIRSVILLE, O hio (AP) — Form er Rep. W ayne Hays said Thursday h e 'll "ru n O hio Legislature, in w hich he served as senator 1941-42. He said he also is FASHIO N S SALE # S U PER T G 3-6 i H a lf P ric e B e e r, M a r t in is , • fo r so m eth in g " in 1978, tw o years a fte r considering a race fo r th e B elm ont M a n h a tt e n s leaving his seat in Congress in th e m idst C ounty com m issioner's job in his n ative N O W THROUGH JA N U A R Y 31 of a sex scandal. eastern O hio. 10< H O T D O G S The 66-year-old p o liticia n , w hose "Some people w a n t m e to run fo r Fill your linen shelves w ith superb vaiues career in politics began in 1939, said he w ill "m a ke an announcem ent around the firs t o f February. county a ud ito r, b ut I'm p re tty much disin clin e d to do th a t," he said. Hoys is chairperson o f th e boa rd o f the SHEETS, PILLOW CASES, BEDSPREADS BLANKETS, TABLECLOTHS, CURTAINS and ^ At the Alle We J w Give A w ay Fun 9 "But w h a t o ffice it w ill be I have not St. C la irsville Citizens N a tio n a l Bank and m ade a firm decision y e t," he soid. lives w ith his second w ife , Pot on a TOWELS all now at saving prices! Hays, w ho resigned fro m Congress on 200-acre horse and c a ttle fa rm near Sept. 1, 1976, said he m ay run fo r the Flushing, O hio. J a c o b 0o r i 0 ontests new Bv M N Z IO M .L U P O held. Dayton Hudson Corporation attorneys The whole issue began when the East j(,te N,*» Staff Writer have prepared a motion for a declaratory Lansing City Council voted on Aug. 3 to A la ry steps have been taken judgment to be filed with Ingham County rezone 86 acres of land in northwest East S Z tru d io n of the Dzyton Hudeon Circuit Court Judge James T. Kallman. Lansing from agricultural to commercial — iLbut opponents of the shopping center City officials had originally planned to file even though the master plan originally J3 > ft th^ “ n ,o h*lt the motion because certain Michigan Su­ called for the property to be eventually preme Court decisions conflict with certain used in an industrial capacity. ta u w||ed The imald be built at a cost of $16 million statutes on the right to a referendum on a rezoning issue. The mail would be a 100-acre, two-level shopping center containing 100 stores. ■a s c h e d u le d to open in mid-1981. Eighty-six acres of the mall lie in East Opinions cited by City Attorney Dennis I L Planning and Community De- Lansing, while the remaining 24 are part of Coent Department member Bob Owen McGinty say that a rezoning issue is not subject to a referendum. However, the City Lansing Township. Charter, the Michigan Home Rule Act and the Michigan Constitution guarantee a right Ijfeantt’Me, Jim Anderton, M r n to r of the environment- to have a referendum on any issue. City officials have said they would file for AC AD EM IC CO UNCIL TO MEET V m p Citizens fo r a Livable the motion to avoid the possibility of legal action by Citizens for a Livable Community v. x ‘ ircuniim 'fi; holds in his posset- Discussion on selection resumes or Dayton Hudson Corporation by either m0petition which could halt holding or not holding the referendum. I construction o f the mall Kallman's decision may not be the last word on the issue, though. Citizens for a Livable Community or Dayton Hudson Uipreliminarv site p lan fo r the m a ll hid could appeal his decision to the Michigan break, members debated several amend­ process along. meeting, trustees presented differing views By JIM SMITH ■ s turned in to th e d e p a r tm e n t. Court of Appeals or the U.S. District Court. State News Staff Writer ments to the document drawn up by the ad Wording which acknowledged the consti­ on the need iur. board involvement on the T iite plan m ust be a p p r o v e d by the G u t Consideration of presidential selection hoc presidential selection committee. tutional board authority to make the final final comnfi^M, as well as the need for 4 Ling Planning C o m m issio n before con- The Citizens group announced shortly procedures are scheduled to pick up again Lester Manderscheld, associate chairper­ presidential choice was deleted on a motion rapid condahM |to the selection process. : Ection can begin. before winter break th at they had accumu­ next week, after temporary inactivity son of the department of agricultural presented by Jam es B. McKee, professor of Dr. Jack'HMgk (R-Alma) told ad hoc l i t the site p lan tu r n e d into E ast lated the necessary 4,800 signatures on during w inter break. economics, proposed an amendment to the sociology. committee cW tperson John F. A. Taylor, LingCity offices d o e s not comply with petitions to put the Issue to a vote. Academic Council will resume discussion document which would accommodate the professor oCjhljosophy, that he was no[ j j a p e toning re q u ire m e n ts . The corpor- Anderson said the group plant to turn the The statem ents of many Academic Coun­ concerned about the Academic Council on a proposed selection committee a t its requests of the MSU Board of Trustees, (S h u r e q u e s t e d a variance from the petition in Jan. 17 and will continue to cil members were that too many conces­ delay in approving the document. next meeting Tuesday, beginning a t 3:15 who wished to be instrumental in choosing png Board of A p p e a ls on itn d icip e gather signatures until the Feb. 8 deadline sions were being made to the trustees. p.m. in the Con Con Room of the the committee's chairperson. The amend­ Stack emphasized the board had confi­ lirements and th e a p p e a l will go before in order to have a safety margin in the International Center. ment was defeated. Zolton A. Ferency. associate professor of dence in acting president Edgar Harden! I board Jan. 10. event tome of the signatures are declared Tuesday’s meeting will be the seventh At the previous trustee meeting, board criminal justice, argued for increased and that speed in choosing the new leanvbile, Jim A n d e rs o n , coordinator of invalid. consecutive council meeting in which presi­ member John Bruff, D-Fraser.said the faculty authority in the selection of the president should not be a consideration. I environmental g ro u p Citixens for a But City Clerk Beverly Coliszi said dential selection is the primary agenda trustees were interested in appointing as president. He said the document wording ■able Community h old s in hil posaeaaion Tuesday th at the petition must be filed in chairperson a nationally-recognized faculty was not strong enough in that direction. In addition to Tuesday's meeting, another item. Etition which could h a lt the construction its entirety prior to the deadline. A t the last council meeting before w inter member who could effectively move the In discussions at the December board Academic Council meeting is set for Jan. 17. S h e mall. Judge Kallman alto has another issue [he petition asks th a t a vote be taken to regarding the rezoning before him. Citizens |d ty residents decide if the mall should for a Livable Community has contested the very act of rezoning because the city's R E P O R T E R S P E N D S D A Y B LIN D F O L D E D “no* vote on b u ild in g the mail would comprehensive plan was not modified prior * the action of th e city council which to the decision. loned the land fro m agricultural to pmercial. rning the petitio n in , however, does City officials have said th at laws dealing with the comprehensive plan and rezoning are separate and therefore require no Life in th e d ark: exp erien cin g blir^lness I guarantee th a t a referendum trill be modification of the plan. By DIANE COX Safe in my journalism class, I find if not as hard getting through the building. I’m State News Staff Writer amusing that I could fall asleep and the not scared anymore. Wed, maybe a few EDITOR'S NOTE: Reporter Diane Cox professor wouldn’t know it. But I listen and butterflies. •pent one full day completely blindfolded in participate. I don’t have any problems I attem pt to walk to Berkey HaU to meet order to experience firsthand the problems communicating, but when the professor my friend for lunch. I find m yself going up of a blind MSU student. This is her report. starts discussing someone's article without what I think are the steps of Marshall HaU. I Slowly, I slip the sleep shades on and sit in identifying the writer, I feel left out. I laugh to myself. Come on, Berkey isn't that the hushed, morning-lit house, scared. wonder how many things blind people miss far. A classmate guides me. / still get his wit Clutching the red and white cane, I feel in class? directions fouled up. I never could walk a the darkness surround me. It's only for a "We need to talk to a professor after class straight line, I rationalize. Is it this hard for day. Only a d a y . . . a whole day. Something about a diagram, instead of just leaving," the blind when they start out in the world? moves in m y stomach. Not butterflies — said Mike Geno, a blind producer and "You start out lost," Geno said. "If you more like caterpillars. packager for WKAR. throw a non-swimmer into water it will take Questions squirm their way through my “I tape all of the important things in a him a while. My parents wanted me to test mind. Will the world be alien to me when I lecture," George explained. “It would be my own limitations instead of setting them cant see it? Will curbs fall out from under nice if a professor would explain what’s on forme. I failed more than most children, but me? Will people be friendly or leery? Will I the screen or board when using audio-visual from failing, I learned.” be able to do m y job well? equipment." George took mobility training at the I hear movement; soft steps on a soft George said he often gets about two weeks Michigan School for the Blind, where he was carpet. My friend tells me i t 's time to go. My behind in his homework because a lot of taught such things as using grasslines to feet feel heavy. I lift one up. I put it down. I professors don't give their book lists in time mark where he is going. lift another up and put it down. Slowly, I for readers to tape them before the next "But on this campus, if you get on one of reach the door. term starts. those slight degree forks, you end up on the A warm breeze touches m y face. I listen. The MSU Office of Programs for Handi- other side of campus," he said. ■ * il It rustles the trees softly, making me more cappers assigns books to readers, instead of My friend takes me to the Olde World for aware of m y sense of hearing than ever readers to blind students. Mike Ellis, co­ lunch. After we get our food, he takes me to before. It's an inviting day after being so ordinator of handicapper library services, is the door of the women's restroom. The S ta te NtWia r e p o r te r D iane Cox L ex*** cold and rainyfor what seemed ages. Good. I blind. In January, 1976, he started a letters on the door are not raised, so I can't g oes lo r a d a y to g e t won't step in any puddles. My spirits lift. cassette tape library so that blind students teU by touch whether it is the men’s or the som e fira d U n d e x p e rie n c e . “You don't have to see to enjoy a pretty can check books out the same way sighted women's room. day. You can tell when the sun is out because students do. “I know a lot of blind people who walk into it is warm er," said John George a blind MSU My mind begins to ramble. How hard is it the wrong room,” George said. "It’s gradually ufltft she became completely blind journalism senior. His wife, Kelly, is also for the blind to study for tests? How do they embarrassing." at the age of 14. blind. take tests? He pointed out other areas where As I finish lunch, I ask my friend how it And on rainy days? Unfortunately, "a “With cassettes, studying is slower going confusion can mount for a blind person: feels to be with a blind person; if he would w ater puddle is something a cane doesn't because it is reading aloud," George said. elevator numbers not raised or out of still be a close friend if I unis reaUy blind. He pick up," George said. "You can't skim. consecutive order, flat room numbers and said it might tr y his patience sometimes, but The car door is open. Hand searching the "There are different ways of taking ink rather than Braille on store labels. that he would still be with me. He said he seat, I lower m yself in. The vinyl feels like a exams. With an essay test you can type it or My friend takes me to our table. I order a enjoyed being needed. relief map. give it orally. Or a reader can give it at home vegetarian sandwich so I will be sure to get WeU, I don't Hke being so dependent ori I think we 're on Grand R iver Avenue. The and you give them the answers.” everything in my mouth. But I try some of someone that I couldn't even put mustard on cars sound like trucks. I know m y friend is I wonder, do blind students ever get his clam chowder and it s not so hard. No my own shbiwich. Though I believe hd, going to meet me on campus later to take me breaks or specialfavors from professors just drips on the chin, we joke. would still be my friend, I feel an to lunch, but I can't get those alarming because they are blind? "I hate it when people ask stupid uncomfortabloinklxng of doubt. I wonder if engine noises out of m y mind. What would I blind peopte^ecer isolate themselves from do if I had to cross Grand R iver alone ? people so tkapnopn't feel they are a burden "When you're crossing a street, you don't to anyone. " listen to the traffic in front of you," George "Well, I don't like being so dependent on someone that I "I tried tobew ith more people to cover up said. couldn't even put mustard on my own sandwich . . . I wonder if my basic insecurity,” Kelly George said. "You listen to the traffic running parallel blind people ever isolate themselves from people so they won't "Because you're not sure you'll be able to to you. When it stops, you stop. When it feel they are a burden to anyone." cope, and people take your mind off it. goes, you go. It’s harder now, though, since "I think I dodged on large groups, like I they passed that damn turn right on red didn’t have time to go to weddings. But, * law," he said. thinking back, I probably could have fit them “Traffic c m be very scary, especially in "I refuse breaks," Geno said. "I've had questions like, 'How can they see to put food into my schedule." the rain. Ra n amplifies the sound. Snow professors who’ve said, 'Listen, I know you in their mouths?’ George said. George, who has been blind since birth, muffles it." can't take this test and I don't have time to "I don't know of anyone who can screw his said he bec|8i* shy of adults because of In the journalism building, I find the give you an oral, so I’ll give you a B.’ 1 tell eyes down so he can see to put his food in his childhood ew H e n c e s. familiar path to m y classroom has become a them it is my right to take the test." mouth." "With k idft^hr some reason, if you're maze. Past the water cooler, turn right. Ellis said there are between 35 and 45 I bite into my sandwich. I taste what I different, y&fc&|4 up being the target of Down the hall . . . where's the Coke blind students at MSU. They can come for believe to be a green pepper. It tastes ridicule, so made me a little shy of machine? A sudden bump into a big metal help at OPH if they need it. sweeter than I remember green pepper adults." h e p q jfc box gives me m y answer. Someone asks me "Some of them have never been given having tasted before. I seem to concentrate “In high ^hnol, there is the delusion that if I want her to take me somewhere. No responsibility and don't want to take it on mg other senses more than normally. to get girls you had to be good looking, have thanks, I'd rather do it myself. now," he said. “I'm more aware of my other senses money and have a car," he continued. Okay, the room is on this haU. I wish they "I know what they can do, so I don t let because 1 have to use them," George said. "I didn't know whether I had the looks or didn't have this hole in the wallfor the stairs. them get away with much. They usually get “I use them more, so they probably work not and I knew I didn’t have the money or a Stole Newt photos/Debbl® Ryan My professor hears m y cane tapping mad, but say I'm right." better (than sighted people's)," commented l^ tle g eBDeLl u* • n^ ^ w orld o f th e blind tw o sep arate (aathnied on page 12) y on the M SU cam pus. furiously and opens the door. Class it over. I have to move. This time if s George's wife Kelly. She lost her sight New* © [p to fe fn ) In 1974, the Student Media whose publications are fumk m o n PU & R A I6N & IN T H E WkMAMA, CANAL. Z O N E Appropriations Board was es­ tablished as a branch of ASMSU, SMAB acts unjustly SMAB, In fairness to SMAB, it ca 6 with the expressed purpose of be said that it failed to u,g enabling various student groups to editors of the Star that it] publish alternative media. Since and unless an appeal scheduled for demand that any publication it considering re-evaluating \tS S S K i& B W riU ' r i f j NOTE: Thlz I* * then, the existence of the board Jan. 16 is successful, the cutoff will supports be primarily a student funding status of the paper, b has made possible the existence of mean that the Star will have to organization since it uses ASMSU should not have cut off W many worthwhile publications. suspend publication — at least money, its view of the Star as a from the paper so suddenly] Therefore, it is somewhat dis­ temporarily. non-student enterprise is inac­ arbitrarily. No enterprise can1 concerting to see SMAB complete­ Richard Lehrter.ASMSUcomp- curate. The Star is a registered easily absorb a sudden cutol ■ S B * ly cut off its funding to what is troller, said the Star was cut off student organization which is nearly half its budget, and] ■t.mA iliu n i l Pr°jecl 15 ’ ry W ™e; pJ probably the best-known and most from funding because it “does not staffed primarily by students. suddenness of the action givea ■ L a , the * widely read alternative publica­ have sufficient student interest or It is probably true that, politi- impression that the Star p ^ f f e c t i i n t h e l o tion, The Lansing Star. input.” Specifically, SMAB is cally, the Star is far to the ' left of singled, out for liquidation. iiUH to expand a. Of all the publications which unhappy over the fact that the the Majority of MSU students. We hope SMAB reconsider! jnidli»n grndun SMAB funds, the Star was the Star's staff is not completely Nevertheless, it represents an action and resumes funding oI LiDda*»i»t Universi only one which SMAB completely composed of students, and that it important segment of the com­ Star, at least until it can nf l" ud idministratfo cut off from funding this term. The draws over half of its operating munity which is just as deserving other arrangements to fund id ^involvement; w ith t Star has relied in large part on revenues from advertising and of SMAB funds as the fraternities this is in the interests of fair] tatkin oroject l» other sources outside of SMAB. and sororities, science-fiction fans, IfjaiK. So far, MSU h SMAB appropriations to continue and of preserving an impor] E i IS ictdefflic con*! publishing since January, 1975, While it is proper for SMAB to various ethnic groups, and others voice at MSU. taffidwt* student*. m| (acuity members, i Diplomacy, Israeli concessions needed L Konomio profe**® t Tayio' M d C. f< kirrowe and Zoltr L BBCUte professor G ’justice, hsve sccux Egyptian President Anwar By publicizing his opposition to Palestinian cause. mystery. Ujeet of su p p o rtin g Sadat’s bold visit to Jerusaleni to an independent Palestinian state, At present, the best positioJ i " regime. break the long-standing Mideast Carter upset the nuances of Meeting with Sadat on Wednes­ United States can publicly r (g ratin g with the Br diplomacy that are so vital to day, Carter rectified his mistake to — while privately press! Input, we support si logjam is more than a month into Irwlutioni more unit* history and his gesture still re­ achieving complex political agree­ some extent by declaring U.S. Israel — is summed up in a s| ■ I, yd, “I don’t belie' mains largely unreciprocated. It's ments. That president’s remarks support for “the legitimate rights statement Carter made durini n jfu c is m by suppor time the United States pressured could have only encouraged Israel of Palestinians.” The phrase is an visit to Poland: “Any agreed Israel into showing equal good not to make any meaningful con­ obscure but diplomatically astute which can be reached beta Tenure Brun will, lest Sadat's bold move sour cessions, and given the impression one. However, the details of Israel and her Arab neighf Bfltr, International libras ■ySU md mein coordin into war. that Sadat was abandoning the Carter’s thinking remain a would be acceptable to us." Iftellbriry portion of tt The United States, which sup­ L aid she did not feel hi plies Israel with large amounts of | h i supporting hums economic and military aid, has DOONESBURY by Garry Tn 1 rsprassion. tremendous leverage over Israel. Is brought education to tt WOHOURSLATER,HE TORMAN/OFTHERE- My,”shesaid. "At no tin It is time to exert that influence. ..A H D K m m m DERARJWPARIS, AR- PORTERSOm NSTTE HRSISROLAND lssl that I wasn't workir President Carter started the state dinner, a t m - RTVIN6 IN BRUSSELSIN CARHR1Rf>HELON6 HEDLET.TENSCNS jspoople as a whole." Friday, January 6, 1978 new year with a serious blunder, i sauie s . m r . c/m m HMBFORWNCHUMTH HOURSAND SR1BLJN6 H E M B & T tm , Editorials are the opinions o f the State News. Viewpoints, columns RETURNED TOM RS, K1N6BAUDOUMI . MR. PACEH/W TURNEDTT Assam BROKE I librsry project assume and letters are personal opinions. asserting in a televised interview ■UHBEHEMETUm a m m s expected INTOS0ME9EN6OFA ourABOARDTHE u importance during tl that he preferred the West Bank of f kfrench president tom eetutih natd NIGHTMARE. UEHA/E PRESSPLANE.. jjsar then its origin Editorial Department the Jordan River not become an LBADSS LATER AR 0O C FROM M of {400.000 was raiae Editor-in-chief...........................Michael Tanlmura Photo Editor............................. Richard Pollfowskl independent Palestinian state. It BRUSSELS. ' f ■million. The increase pt Managing Editor...................................Kat Brown Entertainment and Book Editor. . Kathy Esselman / L ai pressure on Brum Opinion Editor...........................Dave Misiolowski Sports Editor...................................Tom Shanahan was not the substance of Carter's Special Protects Editor.....................Debbie Wolfe layout Editor...................................Kim Shanahan remarks that offended, among hen you sre spendin City Editor............................................. Joe Scales Copy Chief................................. Renoldo Mlgaldl Compos Editor....................................Anne Sfuorf Freelance Editor.........................Michael Winter others, Egyptian President An­ | k rise's money you don war Sadat — Sadat also opposes an B make mistakes,” ah Wire Editor.............................. Jocelyn Laskowski Staff Representative...................Chris Kuczynski Advertising Department independent entity — but rather ltd i lot of sleepier A d vtftlllng M onogtr......................Shoron Seller A illstonr Advertizing aSonoger.. . . . Denise Deor the timing and tone of the U JL M t-V 3 president's words. I main duty was urchase books i Lilian univers lned. the various areas in ways that will I tremendous si Jtork was i endanger other participants. Above is the important sentence of this IRA ELUOTT Kthveiler said, notice. Tennis players, please share this pnetimes the horribly designed area with us; we have dties duplicate always shared with you. | wrong entries, TURFARENA encompassed by the net. / a m lingthe put thi MSU Orddinance 16X13 provides that Juhteiler has U n d e r a rre s t? INFORMAL USE campus facilities must be, " , . . assigned or I times to Brazil. OF Participants using the area between ■traveling, I go1 scheduled through appropriate channels.” Companion MSU students and faculty, TENNIS COURT A AREA tennis court A and the north wall will be for the first time since Winter term 1973, This area will be on a first come/first confined to that space. Because MSU Intram ural Sports and Rec­ reative Services Direcctor H arris F. Bee- th e sa m e Katus oftheir libi lenthusiasm to t the Intramural Department has posted the serve basis. Informal use in this area will be man believes that he is that appropriate I ahasaid. The participants first to use one of the regulation for the U9e of the Men's for a period of one hour. Participants using channel, do not be surprised if someday above three areas will have the use of that I her suggestion, Intramural building Turf Arena’s baseball tennis court A will have use of the entire while you are using the baseball net, a I heldthis past s area for an hour. These participants may net. MSU Ordinance 13.01 states, ”, . . such tennis court playing area extending from bald-headed man walks up to you, smiles, I br Brazilian lib line up again after this period for another I am like everyone else. I am no sneeze, I pick my nose. I get a regulations must be posted a t the entrances th ' East to the West wall. and says, “You’re under arrest.” period of use on one of the three areas. different. I am the aame. I get well. I get bored, I get interest panted to put th to the facility or portion of the facility or I status ss profe building of this notice, the new regulation Participants using the baseball bat­ A variety of activities will be going on My work is turned in late (this column I drink water, milk, wine, ■ Michael Grant Marshall should have appeared yesterday), I P i a they coul reads: ting/pitching cage will have use of that area simultaneously. Participants must not use Pepsi, orange juice, apple juice, appj East Lansing start on papers the day before they're 1 ea oonsultanti grape juice, tomato juice, beer, i due, I rack up incompletes like empty vodka, scotch, bourbon, whiskey, bt^ | | u9 educatioi entire Vietnam episode as a “waste." Instead of forging ahead with new aware­ students, I might add) a student body When I meet new people I stick my Their children, forever unborn, would be True, the lives were wasted, all 55,000, president who is the reincarnation of school me yet.” ness and commitment we are regressing to hands in my pockets. When I get the same age as mine, the warmth of family with those directly responsible for the an apathetic mentality similar to that of the presidents I knew back in the 50s and early nervous I jiggle my legs on the balls of You know what he said? He e N n g set fc living permanently denied them by a bullet my feet. suppose you’re coming to some | in a jungle far away. They still live in a sense, but only in the Kent Barry's a nice enough guy, but in conclusion about even though every^ tt Week the advancement of student rights he is a Standing in line a t the bank I am Hk* is the same everyone is different? painful memories of those they loved or step backwards. everyone else. I am no different. I am were loved by. the same. I said nothing. But now I am sayt Once again student leaders are in a Particularly a t the holiday season, the “No, Dave. I am not copiing to any g position to be patronized and unknowingly I am about the same age as everyone parents, wives and children of 55,000 dead manipulated by University administrators. conclusion other than this one: else, my hair is about the same length as soldiers are joined by the grim reminders of But this column is not about them, it is everyone else’s. My jeans look the I am like everyone else. I am | happier years. about you and me. same, my jacket looks the same. I am of different. I am the same.” Years before, their government, on I am not bitter, although there was a time about the same basic intelligence. I liked Dave's earlier idea on ho* I fraudulent pretenses, sent their sons, when I was. Bitterness leads nowhere. I am, end this pitiful premiere column. TnU| husbands and fathers far away and then however, wiser and much more cynical. I register when everyone else does, I delivered them home in a box. his idea: It is not that our uncaring is annoying or go to the bars when everyone else does, The world goes on while the bodies rot mystifying, our apathy is simply dangerous. I go to the bank when everyone else things fall into eternity, but some of us refuse to or It was apathy on the national level which does. I go to classes when everyone else can’t escape the awful remembrances does. part. led to the Vietnam was and it is the new connected with the pointless loss of some­ apathy which will undoubtedly lead us I bite my nails, I chain-smoke ciga­ this one close. somewhere equally terrible. rettes (sometimes), I chain-chew bubble People, 55,000 of them, humans like you lumn If that should happen, then as the student gum. and me whose only existence now is on a said, the whole Vietnam experience was a I smile, I frown, I stare, I cough, I tombstone or in a time-yellowed official thing. “waste." telegram, “We regret to inform . . Take the entire student body, the faculty , dim Smith is administration reporter for the State Neuis foject opinion divided SAVE ON M EAL CO STS Along public, members TO 29% “The libraries were probably "I couldn't identify with the “It's hard to say a t this Michigan State University HISS’ jT s tiff Writer . the weakest part of the univer­ sities," he said. concerns in the State News,” he said. period of time how long I will teach." “When the Brazilian students studying in the United States Another consultant, Dale Harpstead, chairperson of He said that he is not required by the contract or the U n i o n Cafeteria return, they need to maintain MSU's Department of Crop and Brazilian government to go their studies and tie in their Soil Sciences, traveled 5,000 back to the university. activities at Brasilian universi­ miles in Brazil a* part of a "It's more of a moral agree- 1J j £ t critic**®1 m il P r o je c tis su p - niliUnr r e g im e - p « r - „ th e p ro )1* 1 , w U ‘ ties." • Laughlin spent his first year in Braid] traveling to various survey team. He said he saw no evidence of a “state of siege.” “I spent a lot of time talking ment," Berger said. “We had a problem with the course I taught a t Sao Paulo and I hope I s tu d e n t^ „ ( f le e t! i» t h e l o n g universities preparing students to Brazilians and they had a can go back and help.” to come to the United States to strong feeling of support for the Antonio Rolim, from the Fed- 1974 to e x p a n d u * d study. During his second year government," he said. “Those eral University of Ceara in R ru iliin g r a d u a te jd ia a is t U n iv e r s ity he taught at Escola Superior Agricultura in Sao Paulo, the ind ^ . ‘ion. oldest agriculture school in in the northeastern part of Brazil said they never had it so good." northeastern Brazil, agreed with Berger. “I have no obligation or arts Brad. Harpstead said the survey agreement with the univer­ olvement w ith project is a c h e d u ln ® he Laughlin said his goal was to team, composed of four U.S. sity,” he said. “But it has WHAT IS THE UNION CAFETERIA MEAL PLAN? ^ S o fs r.M S U h u have interdisciplinary work professors and three Brazilian invested a lot of money In me ic id e m ic c o n s u l- come together. professors, evaluated the post­ and I feel I have a sense of It is an a g re e m e n t b e tw e e n th e U nion C afe te ria and p a rtic ip a tin g students fo r buying m eals a t d is­ ,,1 m ore t h e n 1 2 ,0 0 0 “One of my best days was graduate programs in agron­ responsibility to it.” count ra te s. If you decid e to join you w ill be a ble to b uy up to $3 w o rth o f fo o d fo r $2.25, w ith th e one ! ,o d h o s t e d 39 when the faculty of Sao Paulo, omy, horticulture and plant R o lim s a id t h e r e a r e a ls o m eal p e r d ay p la n , and up to $6 w o rth o f fo o d fo r $4.25, w ith th e tw o m eals p e r day p lan. For lunch p d u ste s t u d e n t s . member* of the state and pathology in eight Brazilian o p p o r t u n itie s fo r r e t u r n i n g a n d /o r d in n e r, you w ill be a b le to choose fro m a la rg e sele ctio n o f entrees, salads, vegetables, Ktilty m e m b e r s , in - federal research agency, and a universities. B r a z ilia n s t u d e n t s in p r iv a te potatoes, desserts, ro lls and beverages. ito o ic s p r o f e s s o r s member bom the production “We compared them to world e n t e r p r i s e s a n d in d u s tr ia l p r o ­ ,|or s n d C. P s t r i c and marketing cooperative standards,” he said. “Some je c ts . (fe v e e n d Z o l t e n ig d itt p ro fe sso r o f were In the same field discus- sing a problem,” he said. meet these standards and oth­ ers are a long way from it." “But right now I am satisfied with the university and my HOW DOES THE PLAN WORK? pice, h i v e s c c u s e d “We wanted to get people Harpstead said the team It gives you th e o p tio n to b uy a ny U nion C a fe te ria m enu item s a t a la ca rte prices, to o lim it o f $3 per work," he said. I of s u p p o r t i n g * from different departments to tried to give constructive criti­ Rolim taught in the depart­ m eal. A n y c re d it n o t used fo r a m eal m ay n ot be tra n s fe rre d to th e n e x t m e al. If yo u r purchases are look at the same problems and cism to the Brazilians. It recom­ m ore than $3 a t a ny one m eal (fo r those o f you w ith h e a rty a p p e tite s ) you w ill pay th e a d d itio na l rime. ment of biology a t Ceara and is Kting w ith t h e B r s - cross boundaries." mended the universities dis­ am ou n t. If you jo in , you m ust b e lo n g to th e plan b e fo re February 13,1978. researching biological control * we s u p p o r t s n d Laughlin said he feels Brazil courage new programs until the at MSU. He is interested in utioni m o r e u n l i k e - is in a “building process.” existing ones are improved. (jd, “I d o n 't b e l i e v e “I really think Brazil has the potential to obtain the quality “The greatest impact will be controlling pests through nat­ ural enemies instead of chemi­ WHEN IS THE PLAN VALID? iucism b y s u p p o r t - in two or three years when cals. of life that the United States The plan m ay be ,sed M ondays th ro u g h Fridays, fro m January 5 th ro u gh M arch 10. students studying in the United had in the 1980s, which I “I want to find some ideas to T s m trs B ru n n - States return and teach in consider good,” he said. integrate chemical and biolog­ ite n a ti o n s l l i b r s r i - Brazil,” he predicted. “It takes time. I am not ical controls,” he said. end m sin c o o r d i n s - Ricardo Berger, a forestry b rsry p o r tio n o f t h e concerned with the next five or Rolim is anxious to return to Lunch: Monday through Friday, 11:15 a.m. -1:15 p.m. student from Brazil, has been at Iih e d id n o t f e e l h e r 10 years, but whst is further Ceara. Dlnnar: Monday through Friday, 5 p.m. • 7 p.m. MSU about a year and a halt. su p p o rtin g h u m s n down the road." He plans to go back to the “Three others in my depart­ usion. Laughlin said hs has not been university where he was a ment are studying in Arizona ght e d u c a tio n t o t h e affected by tbs criticism of the student teacher after he finish­ under the Brazil Project," he In s lid . “ A t n o t i m e project He said he knew es his education at MSU. said. “I am looking forward to it I w s s n 't w o r k i n g nothipg about it until someone “I'll stay at Sao Paulo until meeting with them again and WHERE MAY I JOIN? ill i s s w h o le ." sent him newspaper clippings another opportunity to make integrating our research to of the protests. improve the university." The m eal plan is sold a t th e Union B u ilding business o ffic e , on th e second flo o r (east entrance) o f the 7 p ro je c t s s s u m e d money comes up," he said. o rtu c e d u rin g t h e U nion, M ondays th ro u g h Fridays, 8:30 a .m . - 4:30 p.m . when its o r ig in n l 400,000 w a s r a i s e d mure on Brunn- Environmentalists go to court F O R M O R E IN F O R M A T IO N C A L L eu you ire spending neelse's money you don’t LANSING (UPI) - Michigan Supreme Court ha* The effect an injunction it issued Dec. 22 prohibiting the Shell Oil and the state claim the agree­ ment which contains specific 355-3465 l i nuke mistakes,” she agreed to hear the environ- Co. from clearing any new oil provisions to protect the elk mental case against oil explora­ drilling sites in the northern herd, is adequate to protect the lid s lot of sleepless tion in the Pigeon River Conn- Lower Michigan forest, which environment as well. try State Forest. has been th e focus of a protract- Shell officials had a drill rig in msin duty wss to locate In a decision issued late ed dispute between environ- place at one of the 10 proposed urchue books requested azilian universities, she ~ed. Thursday, the high court said it would take on the case even though the matter is still pend­ Shell is fighting for the right to develop oil leases under drilling sites and had begun clearing three others. The high court's injunction WELCOME BACK MSU STUDENTS! tremendous amount of ork vis involved,” ing before the state Court of Appeals. term s of an agreem ent it signed with the state Department of allows Shell to continue clear­ ing work and exploratory drill­ CELEBRATE THE NEW YEAR WITH NEW MOSIC FROM WARNER ELEKTRA ASYLOM shveiler said, Natural Resources. Both Shell ing at sites under construction etimes the Brazilian The Supreme Court kept in mentalists and oil companies. when it was issued last month. V o lu m e 2 “ties duplicated orders wrong entries.” '^g the put three years, QUEEN N EW S 4 * 1 v EM ER SO N LAKE & PA LM ER "hweiler has traveled times to Brazil, WO wKLI/ R LD traveling, 1 got ideas on W ORKS stuiol their libraries and 9 enthusiasm to the iibrari- she said. her suggestion, seminars heldthis past summer at !» Brazilian librarians, INCLUDES -snted to put them on the TIGER IN A SPOTLIGHT . status is professors and SHOW ME THE WAY TO GO HOME 7 so they could partid- I u consultants in the • B e lo n g in g id."she laid. sshwiiler said Brazil $469 net lack books. However, Jicentralized method of n s n i" $4 69 4 hum. has been working on F o r th e B eg in n er!!! Mmpesn system - no JACKSON BROWNE ROBERTA FLACK RUNNING ON FMPTY wiry but several scat- BLUE LIGHTS wpwtmental libraries," "They have no BENTLY Student Classic *4203 $39 ROD STEWART !V>ot Loose A Fhncy fr e e IN THE BASEMENT Includes You're In My Heart “ lyitem to see if books |If LovingYbu IsWrong ] nibble." •** Laughlin, assistant HONDO 7/8 *306A Classic $45 I Don'tWantToBe Right Hot Legs/ Bora Looee “ Iheagriculture and C irces academic Bunt two years in Brazil , “ *uer. He said he felt BENTLY Student Guitar *5115 $35 FINE, FINE DAY THE CLOSER I GET TO YOU greatest impact of the r'WW will be on the MAGNUM 3/4 Classic *MS200s $30 Rig 7" $ 4 9 9 Reg 7" $ ^ 6 9 F o r the In te rm e d ia te u9 education ALVAREZ F u ll SizeClassic *4103 $64 RANDY NEWMAN Little Criminals GARY WRIGHT Touch and Gone Includes S h ort People Baltimore SEX PISTOLS Includes StayAway/ Night Ride in|ng set fo r NEVER MIND Can’t Get Above LosingYou ALVAREZ S^el String *5014 $119 Kathleen / Vbu Can 't Fool th e Fat Man THE BOLLOCKS ^ week “ "“ “on Center will for the ALVAREZ Steel String *5022 * Expert Repair ServiceAvailable $135 $ S*x ft® 1 0 * $ - PlrticiP*nt »*- at 6 p.m jJ»331 Union and at 6 FREEESTIMATES Includes Bodies GodS.ivf the( Anarchy in the U K Pn*ltyV;i* c t l ‘n 304 0ld, Hall- . of w,Ug 'nvolvea 82 worU™8 a"d awkshop, on topic> a®1*11 Marshall’s Guitar Shoppe r >4» " f'f » 5 S“ “itervention, 248 ANN ST. Ph. 351-7830 W HEREHOUSERECORDSII irm stl lnterv*ntion, •tea the rcfer- E ast la m in g ^ rT CeMfully com- HOURS: MON-FRI 10-8 ,"Jtowork in tb"* ex ' “biscent rg,niza- SAT 1 0 6 220 MAC AYE Main floor University Moll above Alle’ey »t,S S i S « . HRS. MONDAY • SATURDAY 9 AM - 9 PM, SUNDAY 12 MOON 5 PM PH. 332-3525 1977 vintage year for roclc ByDAVEDIMARTINO Iggy P®p: 1 * kBet - Another ( State News Reviewer effort, this time between Bowie and While the status of vintage 1977 wine may be over-popular Iggy, represents territory doubtful a t this early date, the music produced neither Iggy or Bowie are likely to pass t during the year leaves little room for debate th at again. The entire L P concept, featuring 1977 was probably the most eventful year in the ® Phone very low, dold-as-death voice In a frame* decade for rock music. reminiscent of but not quite identical to Bovft The advent of new wave rock, the rebirth of own, climaxes with the spectacular "Telefon"out of order creative spirits like Iggy Pop, Brian Wilson, and Leonard Cohen, and the fruitful collaboration of Production," a tune that Iggy will find exct ly difficult to ever improve upon. Lust For L. David Bowie with Brian Eno all point toward an good as it is, seema to avoid any reference toii- excitingly revitalized rock and roll climate. psychological turmoil of The M a t and suffer, • By BYRON BAKER the (I.S. In keeping with popular fashion, this w riter a result. State New* Reviewer According to the screenplay, the programming has compiled a list of what, to him, stood out as The Kinks: Sleepwalker — Talking There is in old proverb that states a film can was quite ingenious: the agents actually were either the best or most significant records revitalized bands, this L P b y the much-resn, only be as good or bad as its screenplay — a made to believe they were typical Americans produced in 1977. While, sad to say, the expected oldtimers of British pop, ia the strongest thi disgruntled and underpaid scenarist coined it, I leading typical American lives, and only a special Fleetwood Mac don't show their head here along the group has put together since Arthur think. Teleion, M-G-M's current cold war telephone call quoting a few Unee of F rost' (the with several other equally plausible possibilities, eminently Untenable work without even the k melodrama, is practically a textbook example of script's sole brush with class) could activate their that group's fantastic commercial success can by o f a week moment, ffleepw elaie reaffirms t this adage. mission plans. no means be overlooked in term s of its the Kinks are still one of the brat - and • It is an expensively and handsomely mounted But that was years and many purges ago. significance or eventual influence. timeless — rock groups now playing. production, graced with appealing, interesting Today, detente is the new party lin e -a n ideology The LPs, in no particular order but the first: performances and the talents of top-drawer Soft Machine: Triple Echo - A British inl­ which nauseates ardent Stalinist Dalchimsky Leonard Cohen: Death Of A Ladles Man — My and a triple-record set —obviously an expem director Don Siegel. Siegel, a consummate (well played by a beady-eyed Donald Pleasance), vote goes to Cohen here for producing the album craftsman, has directed the picture with great venture — this set fully documents the U who purloins the little black book of agents’ of the year. In an extremely unusual collabora­ verve, taste and style, but all his best efforts career of one of the best British bands that e r names and phone numbers and hi-tails it to tive effort with the great Phil Spector, Cohen has haven't managed to transform the dross-laden was. Aside from including a fuUy-iUustrat- America, with hopes of starting World War m . manufactured a masterwork that will stand as a script by P eter Hyams and Stirling Silliphant booklet that charts the band’s recording cai KGB bigwigs Strelsky (Patrick Magee, of landmark of the 70s. Cohen's lyrics, particularly into something bearing more than a cursory the set features enough previously unrele Stanley Kubrick's last two pictures) and Mal- on the title cut and on “The Walls of This Hotel,” resemblance to a good movie. material to classify as a “new release," and' chenko (Alan Badel) dispatch crack agent Bonzov are probably among the best he's done; combined The Hyams-Silliphant scenario — based on a easUy one of the year's best. Starting out u (Charles Bronson, who isn't bad a t all) stateside with Spector's wall-of-sound production methods novel by Walter Wager, who also wrote the rock band, the group evolved through sevr to join a fellow Soviet agent (intelligently played — and, for the first time in years, Spector has source novel for another recent interesting diffefent stages, playing space-music, jazz by Lee Remick) — who is a double agent — to adequately reproduced his famous production failure, TwUght'i Last Gleaming — is astonish­ fusion jazz before petering out due to co track down Dalchimsky before he phones in technique — each tune has become a miniature ingly mediocre; it is the kind of script that might personnel changes. All phases of the group catastrophe. masterpiece in its own right. I haven't reacted as have been rejected as B picture fodder by heard here, and much to the band's credit, emotionally to any album Tve heard in years, at sound equally impressive. Monogram in the 40s. D irector Siegel here often manages to conceal least since Lou Reed's Berlin. The dramaturgy in Telefon rises out of the sort the slipshod logic of the screenplay — and Beach Boys: The Beach Boys Love You — Hugh Hopper: Hopper-tanity Bex — f of implausible gimmick often utilized by the dialogue, which is no better — and sometimes Speaking of rejuvenations, Brian Wilson's crea­ of the Soft Machine, Hopper, long-time producers of The Six MOlioa Dollar Man and The gives Teleion the plush and glossy feel of a good tive metamorphosis on this LP, released early in for that group, has produced a second solo Bionic Woman. It seems that a t the height of the spy picture. But to convey the feel of a spy 1977, marks the first time he's approached his that fits nicely, into the original Soft Mac cold war, Soviet intelligence, wary of the picture is not enough; quality espionage-adven- classic’Pet Sounds effort since his much-publi­ framework. Incorporating jam-rock element ever-tipping balance of world power, trained and ture is primarily dependent on sound conception cized physical/psychological decline in 1968. and a dash of psychedelia. Hopper's LP ' hypnotically programmed a flock of KGB agents and plotting. It is not always possible to fashion a Incomparably better than Sixteen Big Onea, something of a futuristic glance at w' to act as (extremely) deep cover saboteurs insidb silk purse from a sow's ear. Wilson's initial comeback effort. Love You stands contemporary music is heading. Again, the LP as, in many ways, Wilson's most admirable a British import, but is no less vitaL Pick it up achievement. you can. KGB a gen ts Charles Bronson and L ee Rem ick place a telephone cell vital to international security in Telefon, the n ew M-G-M spy m elodram a directed by Radio City to close in April The Jam : In The City — It stands to reason that a t least one punk LP would find its way to the top of the heap. This very young band, Elvis Costello; Elvis CaeteBo — After appearance on Saturday Night liv e and a vs heavy publicity puah from CB8 records, < ■ Don Siegel. despite continual comparisons with the Who, seems to be riding high both critically NEW YORK (AP) - Radio keep it open.” $3.25 to $5. stands as probably the best and most original commercially. The writeup be recently roniv: City Music H all that lavish But Koch later talked to The Music Hall, erected as new wave band to emerge from the entire British in Time Magazine won’t exactly make him t holdout from the vaudeville era Marshall, and emerged saying part of Rockefeller Center, was scene a t this point, which certainly is no small next Bruce Springsteen — th at only hapjx that showcases the high-kicking that Marshall “had no sugges­ conceived by S. L. “Roxy" distinction. The powerhouse conclusion to when you make the cover— but it will alert th~ A s im o v 's 'Q u e s t io n ' Rockettes and the family film, tions a t the moment” on how Rothafel as a counterpart to the “Bricks and M ortar,” the LP’s final cut, unaware that Costello's talent ia one of ( will bow to changing times and the d ty could help keep the great European music halls. It demonstrates ju st how awesome a potential this freshest of the Seventies. tastes this spring and shut its Great Stage lit Koch said opened on Dec. 27, 1932, with band has to work with. Bruce Cockburn: Ia The Faflfeg Dark doors on April 12. Marshall “was very pessimis­ the world's biggest s t a g e - 144 David Bowie: Low —T h e predecessor to his Cockburn, who appeared on campus last T I o f A b ra m s P la n e t a r iu m Alton G. Marshall, president tic.” feet wide, 67 feet deep and 60 more recent Heroes, Low is the first startling een with ,Randy Newman, is a of the parent Rockefeller Cen­ Marshall told a news confer­ feet high. collaboration between Bowie and Eno and vocalist/guitarist who regularly releases h£ te r Inc., said Thursday that the ence it had become increasingly Attendance over the years probably the leaat accessible of the two. Bowie's masterworks th at are generally Ignored by t Isaac Asimov's science fiction phisticated over previous usage of song fragments and sparse instrumental press and the public but slowly build action was forced by falling difficult to find movies suitable passed 250 million. The A rt tale The Last Question returns shows. lines are an historic switch in the role of the attendance and a projected $3.5 for family viewing — the staple Deco interior went out of cult-following into a larger, more m ilitant; to. Abrams Planetarium from The soundtrack will feature contemporary popdOODCA»VINS-HACRAI!?-l1OSA::S-L0rS KORS M l 1 Blk. Wont of Hagadorn Visit Quonset 67, northwest corner of 332-6517 campus 2224 E-Mich’9an Ave- ! 7oriws pliMtariin •Automatic Scorers Specials! Games 80< Adults for places T B t th e C o la •Cocktail Bar R en t - a - lane 70S Children Weekdays 9:00- 5:00 p.m. •Restaurant Bowl as many games as you want With a Bowl of Hot- A after 11:30 p ,m. •Billiards Sunday nights 1 1 :0 0 p .m .-1 :0 0 a.m. (up to six persons per lane) Set. • Sun. 9:00- 2:00 p.m. to dine out. BEEF * 6 .0 0 per lane BARLEY SOUP A different k O p e n B o w lin g Holiday restaurant Lanes 930 Trowbridg«, East Lansing 109 E. Allegan, Lansing Soon to Open - Saginaw & Wavarly JO 3101 E. GRAND RIVER Just North of Frandor 337-977S is featured I RID CROSS MSU WINTIR M SU-W ISCONSIN BASKETBALL ON CAMPUS TELEVISION each week! FACULTY-STAFF BLOOD DRIVE Place: Rooms 247 & 2 4 8 O lin H e a lth The closed-circuit telecast of the MSU/Wisconsin basketball game is being made possible by grants from the University and ASMSU , which will cover the over­ (S P O N S O R E D D r : , ICenter time labor costs. Large screen color projection will be provided in the Men' s IM sports arena and in the # to ■Date: Tuesday, J a n . 10, 1978 Vet Clinic auditorium. There will be no charge, Good Food The IM is accessible to handicappers. iD if e mm Sunday Buffet ‘ 4.25 and D rin k |Time: 10a.m. to 4 p .m . you can eat: roeit boat, chicken ihrfmp BBQ meatball* vegetable* potatoet relish iaied bar breedt better, dessert. Downtown Lansing Im f a* ^-0290, for an appoint- 217 S. Bridge St. Brand Ledge 116 E. Mich. Ave. 372-4300 a ljn«n ° ?!ve kl°°d by 5:00 p.m., Monday, The live transmission will be o n campus channel | m.iUar^ ^ II is not possible for you to 5, and available on all dormitory classroom tel evision GREAT l o r r . 6. T QP P ° i n , m e n t , w a lk - in s w ill be ■uccepted. sets connected to the closed-circuit system. Bessey FOOD Hall classrooms will also be o p e n to provide 24 additional color and black-white television viewing H our* a D ay space. All 4,000 seats will be available on a first RESTAURANT come, first served basis to MSU students and staff 327 Abbott Rd. FINENORTHERNITALIAN FOOD 0 l a o00° ° On O o0 9 showing ID cards. lo s t Lansing LUNCH 4 DINNER DAIL YAT SENSIBLE PRICES 136 W. Grand River PH. 337-1755 )0 0 PEKING RESTAURANT COmPUTER Viewers in the classrooms should tune the r is t a u r a n t 0° 00 00 LABORATORY television sets to campus channel 5, and be sure the AND h ■ i f ■* °0 0 °0 0 oO set is connected to the closed-circuit outlet as well LOIfNGI SpecializinginMandarinCutai 0° as the electrical outlet. •pamilv stv it dinners •BUSINESS lUNCHEONS 718 E. GRAND RIVER-LANSING ’0° 0 ° 0 o0 0 cocktails CARRY OUT FOODS The Finest in Mexican Cuisine 0 0 a ^ 1S1SCENTERST. LANSINO 489-2445 °o°- 0 °0°o •°S O o ” ^ JO 0 " TOURS o O ° THE im p e r ia l g a r d e n °f the Comnn, U rb° ratory staf t w ill conduct tours Gametime is 8:00 PM, Saturday, January 7. G R A P E V IN E COrnPutin<> (a C,r , ' er i ° r new users o f the M SU F f7 P'esentation C' ' a - to u r consists o f a slid® “Wation of 1 5,cusslon o f the fu n c tio n and GO SPARTANS! 349-2698 “”alkii H1 ing tour , e,LCom , vputer L a b o o ra to ry, and aw 2758 E ast G rand R iver 337-1701 20S0 W. G r. Rv.Okemos ,0,n 215 at tu j iding. The tours sta rt in at the follow ing times. January 9 steak 1:00 p.m. January 10 9:00 a.m. & January 1 1 Janua y 12 7:00p.m. MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY seafood 3:00 p.m. January 13 11:00 a.m. TELEVISION I n s id e B o n n ie & C ly d e :il(i E. M ic h ig a n A ve. L a n s in g :171-1500 , stoteNevs i i M f B i obtw m v n M j the Dixie Diesels Reporter learns to confront blindness this Sun. (M a n n (continued from page 3) to do something for me. Some­ “One image of blind people is successful blind people, not by a Student Services. We talk long for the blackness I've seen Jan. 9-14 Ja n .15 ■ rh tlM llm la W Hpw » n d M H i j m IBB car, so I didn't ever make any where in life I just said BS to all that they are sexless, neuters. sighted person's assessment of about the weather; about class­ all day. Blackness . . . is that The ramifications of this go into their abilities. es. No one asks me about my what blind people seel Jan. 16-21 M s T— a i n moves to take anyone out," he of that and decided I was as good said. as anyone else.” dating. Every female I’ve ever Now I have to find m y way blindness. "It's like not really seeing any I \a n d the A N M w P ra g a “I didn't isolate myself, but I Geno had other thoughts dated I’ve had to educate to an from the Administration Build­ “People are very leery to ask color at all," Kelly George said. j will pBB-condem I v 1 felt badly if someone always had about dating. extent. I don't want a good deed ing to Student Services Build­ how it happened," Ellis said. “It’s like the beginning of a very MW MtVh n or a favor. But many have ing. That's a laugh. So far. I've “They talk about the weather." old film before the film starts. It maternal needs. That's alright, needed help everywhere I go. I “There are three kinds of looks kind of scratchy and except I don't value that as a basis for marriage." Time to work. In the admmu- bump into a parked car. Luckily I hear footsteps. Excuse me, could you tell me where I am so I people,” John said. 'T here are those who dodge blind people completely because they don't there's no real color. It’s like closing your eyes tight in the bright sun." ®ndei°gpound tration building, lam interview­ can get to Farm Lanet know how to react. Then there 224 Abbott 351-2285 ing a person I've interviewed The person not only tells me are the over-reactors: I had a before and want to talk with again. Fumbling, I turn the tape recorder on. Late in the inter­ where lam , he takes me all the way to Farm Lane. This hap­ pened a lot today. Tve been person come up to me and say, 'Oh, are you blind?' He gave me 50 cents. Smith view, Iftn dlpu sh ed the wrong button and have been taping the totally lost, so Idon't mind. But I wonder if blind people get 'Then there are the intelli­ gent people who can say, 'I don't (continued from page 1) Schreiber disputed Smith's CLASSIC FILM SERIES radio. However, the story will helped more than they need? know anything about blind contention that the $20,000 PRESENTS r ■ -d animals ui turn out all right, I discover “People do things that I don't people, but if I don't ask, I'U senior attorney salary stipu­ later. I got interesting informa­ need," Geno said. “Ju st last - never learn. lated in the ASMSU-approved tion both when I was sighted and when I couldn't see. My week I got on a bus at Back m the newsroom, I type contract and deleted from ROBERT ALTMAN'S ■fDers prcua**— uid o th e r p ro N * Kalamazoo Street and I asked up my experiences of the day. Smith's proposed contract was BREWSTER McCLOUD ■ jj (inner (Hirer dissatirfact vision has nothing to do with the the bus driver if the bus was Fumbling on the keys, I try to - a tentative figure. X ^ i t y ou uu rA ai ireo if tTl f pD 1 quality of my reporting. full. He said no, but th at I should remember where to place my “I was told after I was ‘T he expectation by the gen­ ^ ind contributed to I sit in the front where it would be fingers. nominated that $20,000 was a eral public of a blind person is wl to change tactics. easier to get off near the door. I A few long hours of jumpy tentative amount and that very low," Geno said. wanted to go back and talk with typing later, I quickly pull the there could be an increase,” “My biggest problem is not people. His assessment of my sleep shades off. Light flashes Smith said. being blind. It is the lack of understanding. I will go to a job abilities put restrictions on me. So people inadvertently put pain in my eyes; for a second I “That’s bull," Schreiber said. jonal P interview and be rejected sum­ restrictions on you for your own marily because I am blind. good." “When I came to WKAR the Walking alone again, a few people were open-minded blocks down Farm Lane, enough to let me try things and another person helps me across fail. I can't read the labels on the a street and all the w ay to for summer jc tapes, so I make Braille labels. jjjgjmilPirk Serv So, I'm inconvenienced, but not 41 Jan. 15 to se stopped. You learn to live with K M i the inconvenience of being blind, but that is all it is." Ikebde park aides, 1 According to Geno, the lines riagen and studi for what blind people can do should be drawn by the most Undent employmi State News/ Debbie Ryan Senior journalism majors John G eorge and W endy Love converse on the W ells Hall bridge. G eorge has overcom e m ost of th e mobility difficulties which seem to overw helm visually handicapped new ­ com ers to campus. .(USD 0 WINTERSHORTCOURSES ° 0 The C om puter L aboratory will offer a series of non-credit short courses in com puting during W inter Term . Registration must be m ade by January 13, 1978 in the User Inform ation Center, 313 C om puter C enter. A $2 fee covering m aterials is charged for each short course. C om puter tim e is not included in the basic fee, but is available for an additional cost at the student's option. A sterisks (*) next to course num bers indicate courses that • • • • have prerequisites; for m ore inform ation, call ! s 9 SM *SS, S tS , S S S * • • • • • • • 353-1800. • S ' s a: YOU'VE GOT Introduction to C om puting (100) For persons w ith little o r n o c om puting experience. January 16. 17, 18. 19. 2 0 7-9 p.m . Introduction to the MSU 6500 (101 *) WORK TO D O ! For persons w ith experience a t a n o th e r com puting facility. January 16, 1 7 ,1 8 .1 9 3-5 p.m . GRADER (115) A program to relieve faculty m em bers of m uch of the clerical w o rk in HELP PICK UP com bining scores an d assigning grades. January 193-5 p.m . THE PIECES AT Basic SPSS (155*) Introduction to the S tatistical Package fo r the Social Sciences. Sec. I : THE MSU AUDITORIUM, January 23. 25, 30. February 1 7-9p.m . Sec. II: January 24. 26, 31, February 2 3-5 p.m . JANUARY 28 •s Introduction to Interactive Usage (175*) Introduction to th e use of the interactive com puting facility a t MSU. February 6 , 8 ,1 3 ,1 5 3-5 p.m . • 1, • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • BASIC (220*) Instruction in th e BASIC program m ing language. February 8, 9 7-9 p.m . 'EmTen Pound Fiddle presents 0 Advanced SPSS (255*) Instruction in the use o f a dvanced features o f SPSS. February 7, 9, 14, 163-5 p.m . JOHN and ROSY A dvanced EDITOR (275*) Instruction in advanced features of the MSU interactive text editor GQACHER February 20, 22, 273-5 p.m . Introduction to M agnetic Tapes (310*) G eneral use of magnetic tapes for inform ation storage an d retrieval 8 PM John and Rosy Goachet blend January 23, 25, 303-5 p.m . lovely haononies as they sing UPDATE (325*) Friday John’s traditional folksongs from A utility program for revising p rogram a n d d ata files. January 24, 26 7- native England. For a 9 p .m . A Jan. 6 songs, join John and Rosy at relaxed evening of beautiful APEX (330*) m a l l theatre hu w. uaiMm-iMtum $2.50 Friday's Ten Pound Fiddle show. Instruction in APEX, a linear program m ing language. January 24, 31, February 7 ,1 4 . 21 3-5 p.m . Showtlmss Mon thru FrI. 7:00 ft 9:00 - Old College Hall in the MSUnion G rill Cyber Loader (410*) Wod. m otinaeot 1:00 adm. '1.25 Use of C yber Loader from control cards an d C O M PA SS program s. Sot. ft Sun. 12:00,2:30,5:00, 7:30 ft 10:00 February 1, 3, 8 .1 0 3 -5 p .m . Sorry odvonce ticketx not available f | r ™ Fast Lonalng. Mlchlflon PROBLEMS SURFACE IN PAY SYSTEM the last question igB cattle shipped to Fremont a science fiction classic by isaac asimov narrated by leonard nimoy Michigan'* new PBB law, demned animals will be kept on their property. cows have been barred from which took effect last October fri. & sa t 8 & 10 pm tjg g g ff* state alive a t the Diamond K ranch Other problems also con­ receiving the promised reim­ ^ P B B -ro n d e m n ^ called for th e condemnation and new Fremont. Owners of the sun. 2 & 4 pm tributed to the program's un­ bursement for the value of their destruction of all animals ranch are being paid $1.50 per F n l o n t , Mich- ra n c h popularity. Because of a legisla­ animals by an attorney gene­ having more than .02 parts per head per day, but that will ral's ruling, Van Patten sud. P ‘i m s h » v e c r ° l’P f d tive oversight, Van Patten said, million of PBB. It also provided increase to $2.00 per head when the state Budget Department The DNR began to pick up OUTDOOR OBSERVING AFTER 8PM SHOWS for the owner of condemned the cow count reaches 200. has not been able to send out cows in December from animals to bo reimbursed. The daily costa are somewhat ALBUM 8 LIGHTSHOW AFTER 10PM SHOWS « h u n s l P>t “ checks to farmerA holding their farmers who were complaining While more than 400 animals lower than those of the reim­ about the program. cows. It is expected the prob­ have been found with unac- bursement program, but the lem will be corrected when Last week, officials decided lf ^L o rof, w s leg*1 t w h i ithcondemned ceptably high levels of PBB, the extra cost of transporting the lawmakers return to work next to systematically pick up all the state cannot kill them because ■ S o not been g e ttin g It 1250 PC ?Y it has no place to p a t them. animals to Frem ont makes it almost certain the new plan will week, he said. In addition, the $2.50 per day animals still being held on their owners' farms, Kellow said. 0 §& i P lans to open a burial site in eventually be more expensive, program ended Dec. 1, leaving He said it will take tw o to I Jlmised. I” ad d iti0" . th e i C n a d it cannot reun* Oscoda County wore delayed according to Fred Kellow of the it unclear w hether farmers will three weeks to end the current PLANETARIUM by a legal fight with residents state Department of Natural be paid for the days they have backlog. \ S S I for th e v a lu e o f r S L t d sn im alj u n til who tew ed th e toxic chemical Resources. kept the condemned cows since 355-f672 would seep Into th eir ground­ Kellow and Kenneth Van then. I (o « rem0 m water. Patten, head of the state's PBB The legislature failed to ex­ th e last question K S fp ro b le m , The state eventually agreed Project Unit, said some farmers tend the program when it * ^ * TONIGHT &SATURDAY farmer dissatirfacU o n to have the burial p it lined and were unhappy from the start expired in December. now hopes to h tv e it ready with the idea of keeping con­ To make m atters worse, ■Lqeep-ityonfff p^ soon. demned, unproductive animals farmers who are keeping their PLfllHETflRIJB % ind contributed to th e odtochenge U cU cs. In the meantime, the con- M 355-4672 Una/ /'yJ THIS YEAR- I ippfllcatlormeffered , „ • CATCH THE FEVER. — l l t t summer jobs office record* show that parks BSfrwI.Pirk Service from IllnMgnn kadAruund -.the W Lg Jan.' IS to send country offer I m M m i o f 'jA openings lar temporary em- D lo vm a n t kfkdude park aides, Bfe- Individnala interested should W^ iqws and student apply th the NFS reginMd erase, 170# Jaekaon Street, employment Omaha, Neb., 68101. 349-21011 MERIDIANMAIL XnlOe — t i h f . ________ , drum «h» ,s t ,ls whe fivs ysu “ Thu!»««I ln iir 11 ^ a s ri 'Bttncsiauswa**w;rntvw r M m R H K K H W ' t r o i r l l l i H WW ?■*>■ W W wsimnjR f l l B BERQMM m u m M # _• v". , • oMINOHS MWOrififfbfi'i'IjLi tuition " w ™ TONIGHT AND SATURDAY m ir iiM tttie m e w b Z . SHOWTIMES: 7,30,9,30,11,30 SHOWPLACE, 102 B Wells ADMISSION, »1.SO on entertainm ent service of the B ed Film Cooperative! Students, faculty ft staff welcome. ID's w ill be checked. PRYOR TONIGHT AND SATURDAY tfaoiWAYISIf? A N IN C R ID IB L ID O U B L I FEATURE )bmshh* « iw tw i m b s « aaio« t The very best Porn Film ever m ade ’ A1 Goldstein a <5- From the outrageous No.1 Best-Seller |ElNfllinilo| I wocmwoMumoR ...Catchit here I® AMPUS b’-tTHE ■ T h u i t 't fo '.t I a is 'iq 1407 1 GUANO ftV M OOWNTOWN TONIGHT OPEN 6:45 shown 7:20-9:35 Sat. & Sun. 1:00-3:10-5:15-7:20-9:35 I CHOIRBOYS BliitfS**1S1t3l IwiHU 515-MSAdstoT Msridi—S»sS^^^^Z uS«a «e_ _ _ I— RHA RHA LINDA Attention Students, Faculty A Stall LOVELACE Bonnviouii uisnirrim ii O n January 9th ond 10th, s tu d e nts liv in g in M .S.U. re sid e n ce h alls w ill be SEMI- v o tin g on a prop o sa l to c o lle c t a *3.00 ta x each te rm to fu n d th e e x is tin g R .H.A. M o vie P rogram and a n e w ly c re a te d R .H .A . V id e o p ro g ra m in the d o rm ito rie s . B e lo w is an e x p la n a tio n o f th e p roposed p ro g ra m . It onsw ers 000H” th e m any q uestions w h ic h have b een a sked in re c e n t w e e k s re g a rd in g the prop o sa l. The R .H .A. g o v e rn in g b od y b e lie v e th is p ro g ra m to b e inn o va tive in concept and one w h ic h w ill b e n e fit th e students, fa c u lty and s ta ff of DEEPTHRC4 T M.S.U. w ith Increased film and vid e o p ro g ra m m in g a t a re du ce d cost. aWfiRIWHUI TrllHl 541415hraitxM* HOW W ill IT WORK? ^WEWilKR Each te rm a *3.00 fe e w ill be assessed to a ll students liv in g in Residence ADULTS ONLY IN COLOR . < JK t halls. For th is fe e a ll students liv in g in th e dorm s w o u ld be a b le to a tte n d PLUS SECOND GREAT HIT any o r a ll o f R .H .A .‘s m ovie s th a t te rm a t no a d d itio n a l ch arg e . Films w o u ld be show n th re e tim e s p e r n ig h t w h e n possible o r in tw o locations TONIGHT u WMW w hen a p o p u la r film such as Jaws o r Spy W ho Loved M e w e re b e in g show n. "The'Devlin Miss Jones’ AND N bt Lover The funds w o u ld also p ro v id e fo r tw o A d v e n t V ide o Beam p ro je c to rs to be used in h alls a ro u n d cam pus. These screens w o u ld ro ta te a ro u n d all co m plexes to b e used to b roa d ca st n e tw o rk p ro g ra m m in g o f in te re s t to is Unique, Surprising, Provocative! SATURDAY SHOWTIMESi miiih[Mms>« EXCEPTIONALLY WELL FILMED AND ACTED-AS WELL AS LUSTILY PERFORMED. AND DEEP THROAT AT Resident H all Students. Charles Bronson GOES ANOTHER SlG STEP TOWARD BRIDGING THE GAP BETWEEN SERIOUS ART FILMS ANO THOSE PREVIOUSLY LABELED SEXPLOITATION 7:00,9:30,12:00 w.it,am,on Pi AYiPY Lm Remick DEVIL IN MISS JONES WHAT ABOUT REFUHOS If YOU’RE HOT IHTERESTEDIH PROGRAM? if you have to go to Hell 8:15, 10:45 1 /' LAST COMPLETE Students w h o d o n o t w is h to ta k e a d v a n ta g e of the p ro g ra m can g et a r e ­ SHOW AT fund th ro u g h th e second w e e k o f each te rm sim ply by g o in g to th e tre a s u re r The most in his o r h e r d o rm d u rin g sc h e d u le d hours ond by show ing his o r h e r ID can 10:45 m kexplosive b! picture o b ta in a re fu n d . If stu d e nts w h o have re ceive d refunds w is h to a tte n d a SHOWPLACE, [W of Of the veer! m o vie th e y m ay purchase sin g le a dm ission tic k e ts fo r ‘ 1.50 a t th e d oo r. 108 B WILLS L !*1$1»3W5 t-'ijn M5515 SQiHt *1- CAR OFF CAMPUS STUDENTS AS WELL AS FACULTY ARD STAFF TAKE ADVANTAGE ADMISSION TO THE DOUBLE FEATURE: OR PROGRAM? “OhjGodT YES. a ll they have to d o Is purchase a non tra n s fe ra b le te rm pass, a v a ila b le a t a ll R .H .A . film s os w e ll as a t th e R.H.A. o ffic e d u rin g o ffic e '2.50 STUDENTS >3.50 FACULTY S STAFF R A T ID X Islt Funny! ^ i Geo, ,f9« Burns hours, fo r *3.00. If they w is h th e y con purchase single a dm ission tic k e ts a t STARRING GEORGINA SPELV1N « ) MIM JOHNCllMNS ■M*Mt HUMS ■C l** lUtfWM • '* COlOH WW*S 0th> j an entertainment service each show fo r *1.50 p e r p erson. of Beal films. Students, faculty and staff welcome. ID's checked TwiHti US5M AMDs I" L ■ > Friday, January 6, jt* * * * * * * * * * * * * * k * * * * * * * * * , Election pam p hlet w ould inform voters Attention Students Living in ByJOYL.HAENLEIN State N ewi 8U fi W riter Lansing, would , mail an infor­ mation pamphlet before an to Jondahl's aide Alan Fox. “The pamphlets give the would supply the data. Ballot proposals would be ‘T he single most important political reform which permits Residence Halls Michigan voters would re­ election to every voter in the candidate quite a bit of expo­ analyzed by the attorney gener­ intelligent voting is providing ceive a pre-election campaign state. sure, so it will be well worth al from both legal and technical the electorate with information information pamphlet under How the cost of printing and the proviaions of a recently mailing the pamphlets if the bill their while,” Fox said. The pamphlet would contain considerations. The pamphlet would include arguments by about candidates and issues. This proposal takes a giant step The Residence Halls Association encourages introduced house bill. The bill, which was intro­ passes will be met has not yet been determined, but candi­ information on ballot proposals and candidates for the legisla­ supporters and opponents of a proposal. in placing such information before the voters," Jondahl said every Residence Hall student to vote on the duced last December IS by Rep. H. Lynn Jondahl, D-East dates would probably have to pay a token amount, according ture, congress and state-wide offices. The secretary of state Information on the candi­ in a release. Similar voter pamphlets are Proposal Regarding RHA Movies, Mon. Jan., dates would be supplied by the candidates themselves. distributed in many western states, including Washington, 9th and Tues. Jan, 10th in your residence The pamphlets would also Hall by the entrance to your cafeteria. Blood pressure tested free contain general information about absentee ballot applica­ tions and poll locations and California, and Oregon and have been in existence for as long as 20 years. hours, as compiled by the Free hypertension clinics will pathic School of Medicine will Abbot, Shaw and Owen on secretary of state. be held in MSU residence halls do the checking. Wednesday: and McDonel, Monday through Thursday. Clinics will be held in the Holmes, Akers and Hubbard on Sponsored by Alpha Phi lounges outside cafeterias from Thursday. the Showcasejazz Presents Omega, the clinics will allow 5 to 7 p.m. in the following Alpha Phi Omega is present­ students to have their blood residence halls: the Brody Par­ ing the clinics in conjunction la st question pressure checked for signs of lor and Yakeley on Monday, with the Student Osteopathic hypertension. Students in the MSU Osteo­ Case, Wonders, Wilson and Holden on Tuesday: Mason- Medicine Association Sigma Sigma Phi. and by iaaac atimov ANTHONY BRAXTON MSU Theatre Department FRIDAY & SATURDAY. JAN. 20 AND 21 QUARTET presents ERICKSON KIVA 8&10:30pm M A D M E N TICKETS: $4.00 at MSUnion and Wazoo Records A d iv is io n o f the ASMSU PROGRAMING Board. This concert made possible, in part, by a grant from the National Endowment for t Arts in Washington, O.C., a federal Agency. ACCESSIBLE a n e w p la y Please, no smoking, food or drink in the Kiva. Friday, Saturday, Sunday RUUM m U PR ESEN TS January 6, 7, 8 Room 49 - Auditorium Admission - 25c The New Playwright Theatre Project I a inpus Wide I CHEVROLET Beauville 1 3/4 ton, loaded, sharp Auditions! “ m. 3234258.8-1-1613) N M S M M * K lO fflH S O IIm » iUWOOO-JUhif W PSO O O O N Produced to JON f t I f RS Directed to FRANK PIERSON f lecntive Producer BARBRA SIREISANO - Scteenplav to JOHN GREGORY DUNNE 4 JOAN DtDfON and FRANK PERSON ALL MSUSTUDENTS •Fri. Conrad 7:00 & 9:40, 118 Physics Astronomy 8:30 . Sat. 109 Anthony 7:00 & 9:40, Brody 8:30 *1 .5 0 WELCOME! Sun. Wilson 9:00 T The w o rld ’s ta lle st building is on fire. * Jesus Christ Superstar You are there on the 135th flo o r... R ehearse & perform S pring term no way d ow n... no way out. iV The Time of Your Life * % Rehearse & perform W inter term * The Corsican Brothers Rehearse & perform Spring term ☆ An Arena Play to be Selected AUDITIONS- J a n u a r y 8 , 9,&10 STEVE NEWMAN _______ PAUL .McQUEEN WILLIAM Sign up for appointm ents in IRW IN A LIEN ’S HOLDEN productionol FA YE DUNAWAY Theatre O ffice-Room 1 4 9 Auditorium Ig M & N G A . W FERNOI PLAYING FEELS GOOD! .Fri. 109 Anthony 9:00 .Sat. Wilson 9:00 Sun. Conrad 8:00 Fri. 12 Midnight Wilson Aud. Sot. 12 Midnight Conrad Aud. PHONE 355-8255 MON. THRII FRI. 8:00-5:00 L_ HI EiplqM rt M EnplojfMit H Apartaiits y Apartmts y Im sr !£ ! Hn s k ;j £ | g iu lf to d A d v o r fM a f lafon—H— DEPENDABLE BABYSITTER COMPUTER OPERATOR- ADMITTING CLERK FEMALE NEEDED to share 3 3 BEDROOM duplex, private 4-MAN house, 420 Ann St., companion - girls aged 3 and IBM Systems 3. Experience A PERMANENT pert time WOMEN-SHARE 3 bedroom J47W u8~tl.nH .relM ,, person apartment. Winter- garage, carpeted. Available 6, in our Okemos home. * 1.35 Carpeted, semi-fumished. houses (fireplace, full base­ required. Supervisory back- P°s studying or sitter's children. noon shift. Start immediately. SPARROW HOSPITAL, 1215 5-1-11(31 campus $80/month. 351- 8370. Z-2-1-6I3I ferred. Call Jerry, 351-0664, evenings. 8-1-1613) RESPONSIBLE PERSON for ££ n it m Phone 348-9341 for interview. 323-7663. 2-1-613) East Michigan Avenue. ONE FEMALE needed to room in nice house, block to u \iM line rete per Insertion 2-1-6(11) A non discriminatory campus. $100 + phone after u» ii.H SIM sublet 2-man apartment one EUREKA STREET near Spar­ 99J t COCKTAIL WAITRESSES- affirmative action employer. block to campus. Quiat grad CLOSE TO campus. 3-man 5 p.m., 332-5609. Z-3-1-1013) row Hospital. 1 bedroom house. Phone Julie, 482-6231 WANTED - DEPENDABLE Needed, full or part time, Male-female/handicapped. student preferred. Cell 361- upstairs apartment, parking. days; 337-2120 evenings. 3 BEDROOM brick, all car­ I . ^ t i w . 3 lire* • '4.00 • S doys. W per IIm ov.r babysitter to care for adora­ HUDDLE SOUTH LOUNGE, 8-1-16(15) 2819 after 5 p.m. 7-1-13(4) $126 + deposit. 351-7497. 8-1-16(3) peted, East Lansing, by own­ l " 7 T , no odjuitmtn' In rot* when cancelled. ble one-year old -girt in my 820 W. Miller Road. 882-7579. 0-6-1-12(4) er, 337-2504. 8-1-17(3) home Monday-Fridey, 8 a.m.- Please apply in person. HELP WANTED -waitresses, PM oi itum(i) mu»t bp stoted In od. Maximum EAST LANSING, two bed­ experienced bartenders and NEAR FRANDOR-Two bed­ 5:30 p.m. Within walking 12-1-10(5) maintenance men. Apply in room lower duplex. Fur­ P in Lak* room house. Garage and OWN ROOM with bath in ■1.33 ■ pur iniurtlon. distance to campus. Call nished, carpeted, clean. nice house. Two blocks to 1 w w lin* o*« 3 lin « (prapoyment). 363-4364. 2-1-6171 person at the RAINBOW INCOME TAX PREPARERS RANCH 2843 E. Grand River. 351-6964. 4-1-10141 Apartments yard. $240/month plus utili­ campus. 351-4684.2-1-613) 6080 Marsh Rd. ties. 337-1133 or 485-6035. JSam m I * •* ' * * " ,J i0 NEEDED- Fully computerized 2-1-8(51 8-1-16(4) " 7 L lint ovtr 4 linre • pur Iniurtlon. WAITERS OR Waitresses tix preparation-we need GRADUATE OR married stu­ Meridian Mall Area Rooms I ^ l n r n M i • 4 linre • 1.50 • pur Iniurtlon. part time. Cell after 6 p.m. 12-15 people to staff the BABYSITTER NEEDED in my dents. New East Lansing two M U plus utilities NORTH HAGADORN - Two irptflire ovir4lin«. 484-8796.2-1-6(31 newest tax service in metro­ East Lansing home 7 pm- bedroom apartments with ONE BEDROOM near M.S.U. bedroom house. Unfur­ L |h w 4 .i*/T 'u » H » rtW '« >— "^ '- 3 lin re -'1 .50- politan Lansing. Do you 3 am. Possible live In. 332- carport, on bus route. No •one bedroom unfurnished Call 349-3546 or 351-4032. w innriion. 50' por p«r H m ovor lino o v tr 3 lln linre. 2625. 2-1-6(31 nished. Large rooms (nice). DELIVERY PERSONS-Part know taxes? Does working pets. Start at $230. Call •G.E. appliances B-6-1-2413) time 63/hour plus car ex­ •fully carpeted $200/month. Days 482-2911. with people and a computer 361-9483 or 351-9196 after 6 •A ir, drapes C-19-1-3K4) pense. 12-18 hours per week. excite you? Call COMPUTER p.m. 0-19-1-31(6) SINGLE, MALE student! DoodlinM Reliable transportation need­ TAX SERVICE, 337-7234. We •adjacent to new county Block Union, cooking, park­ IF you ore tlncaroly looking park GREAT LOCATION - Fur­ ing. 322 Evergreen. Evenings ■ I* -1p.m. ■I tlo» day buforo publication. ed. 489-5467. 8-1-16(5) need both part-time and full­ for o career In tales TWO BEDROOM apartments accepting applications for nished-own room-fireplace. 332-3839. 8-1-16(4) Icpnllolion/Chonji • I P m • I doss day botoro time people. 8-1-16(15) IF you wont to earn more from $196. UNIVERSITY Winter rentol Call 332-8585. 5-1-11(3) pdlkotion. NEAT APPEARING mechan­ than the overage Income VILLA APARTMENTS. 635 ROOMS FOR RENT. Partially Inctodii ordirid It cannot bo concullud or changed ically minded men for ma­ BARTENDER WANTED, IF you are tired of the Abbott. 351-3873, 351-8135 N M lt l HOUSE FOR rent, 834 furnished, available immedi­ mtiloitr lit insertion, chine helpers end custodial HUDDLE SOUTH LOUNGE, "pie in the tk y " offers. THEN, tve are Interested in or 351-1957. 0-7-1-13(5) Iveeiefs Johnson, Two bedroom, ately. Close to campus. Call honii a '100 charg« lor I od chongo plui 50' por work. Flexible hours, part 820 West Miller Road. Some Immediate Occupancy. No STE-MAR MGT. 351-5510. oddilioral changu for maximum of 3 changre. time. Also hove openings for nights and days. Apply in you. We are 0 national firm PERSON TO share two bed­ pets. $185 per month plus 7-1-13(5) opening ■ new office in FIFTEEN MINUTES from hoStott Ntwi will only bo rrepomiblo for ttio l i t cooks end waitresses at person between 10 a.m.-6 room apartment, MSU stu­ campus. Country setting. utilities. Deposit required. Lansing in cemetery sales. Call 372-5375 for appoint­ 2 NICE rooms $55 each plus doy'i incorruct insertion. Adjuitmont daim t must MARVEL LANES and p.m. 882-7679.11-1-19(71 dent preferred. Quiet, nicely Two bedroom, all carpeted, bomodi within 10doyi of oxplrotlon dot*, ment. 8-1-16(6) utilities. Celia or Kris after 7 LOUNGE. Phone for appoint­ Call ROGER HILL furnished, reasonable. On appliances furnished. 322- p it on dot 7 doyi Irorn ad oxplrotlon data. It not 9532. 8-1-16(5) p.m. 374-0390. Z-8-1-16(3) ment with Mr. Bertrand COOKS/ WAITRESSES/ 349-9158 bus line. Phone 351-8238 MSU - SPARROW Hospital poid by due dot*, o 50' lo tt lurvicu chorgo will 337-1383. 3-1-9191 Busboys. Part time. Apply weekends. 10-1-18(6) MALE ROOMMATE. Own near Sharp 3 bedroom, dining FEMALE WANTED for nice buduo. BACKSTAGE, Meridian Mall, room, large kitchen with house, lease till September. PART-TIME positions (or PART TIME secretary in Has- bedroom. Utilities paid. $100 after 5 p.m. 349-3220 TWO BEDROOM town- appliances. Full basement $106 per month. 351-2751. lett. 9 am - 1 pm Monday- per month. 394-3312. MSU students. 16-20 hours/ 8-1-1614) house, finished basement, 8-1-16(3) with washer and dryer, ft 3-1-9(41 .... . , Friday. 60 wpm minimum. washer/dryer, pool and club­ block from bus. $295/month. kitmini Iw A rt Same* / Phone 339-9600. 0-19-1-31(4) rw,ulred’ ----------------------------------- COOKS, DISHWASHERS Phone Nancy 339-9600. C-4-1-1014) house, 3 minute drive to campus. $309 per month FEMALE SHARED two bed­ Available now. Tom Brooks CAMPUS NEAR. Furnished 669-3834 or 484-2555. room, modern house. From and Waitresses wanted. Ex­ room, two bath, Birchfield 7-1-13(8) $80/month. 485-1436. perience necessary. Apply BABYSITTER, PART time, total. Call 394-2631. 4-1-10151 Apartment. Own room. $110 ►RICE 1970, four door CUSTOM MADE Ignition 0-19-1-31(3) LABORATORY TECHNI­ M-78 Restaurant. 7149 E. my East Lansing home. Call per month. 882-2814 after 12. top, automatic, all wire seta for your imported 8-1-16(4) FOR RENT 127 N. Nayford 3 CIAN for doctor's office. Pert Saginaw, E. Lansing. 361-9324 after 5 p.m. dopendable, winter- car. Checkered Flag Foreign FEMALE ROOMMATE need­ bedroom, furnished. $300/ FURNISHED ROOMS availa­ time. Call 349-3300.8-1-1613) 7-1-13(5) 2-1-6(31 11625.3534832. Car Parts, 2606 East Kalama­ ed to share townhouse, with month plus utilities. Available ble in a large house. All WINTER TERM- One bed­ 1-9141____________ two girls, own room. $103 per now. 1-623-6357 after 5 p.m. utilities included from $85/ zoo St., One mile west of WAGON 1972. V-8, cempue. C-J 1-1-19(6) BABYSITTER- 8 a.m.-4 p.m. Monday-Fridey. Boichot YOUNG MOTHER needed to care for 20 month girl two F t Reit 11^ ] month. 374-5021, 12-4 or live room and two bedroom. Fur­ 484-7999 after 5. 5-1-11(5) nished. Five minute walk to 8-1-16(4) month. Call EQUITY VEST, ttic, power iteiring, campus. $108/month. Call 351-1500. 0-19-1-31(5) BATTERY SALE. 67 tor your area. Infant, references, mornings a week. Prefer your FEMALE ROOMMATE want­ . Good Tunning condi- REFRIGERATORS- NEED 1 female-two bedroom 351-3352 or 332-8184. E. Lansing home. 332-8190. ed for own room in four old battery in exchange for a 487-8773.8-1-16(3) FREEZERS - dishwashers. with 2 girls, own room, $107/ 8-1-16(5) ONE BLOCK to campus. 240 1595. 6684343. 8-1-17(41 person house. $93 plus/ new one. WESTERN AUTO mFELTSTM STORE, WWiamston. ESCHTRUTH APPLIANCES, month. Varty at 351-0660. month. Very close. Call Jan Beal Street. $90/month, own DOORMAN-EVENINGS. Ap­ 315 S. Bridge Street, Grant 6-1-11(3) AfflOLET4-1-1014) 0-1-1-6(41 -BABYSITTER WANTED, 2 SUBLET: EFFICIENCY apart­ 361-5362 after 5 p.m. 2-1-6(4) room In hduse. 355-6757 or , ply in person to manager. children, Okemos. 3:30-6:30 Ledge, 627-2191. 3-1-913) 694-7575 or drop by. 2-1-6(4) ment in house 1 block to CAMPUS THEATER. p.m., Monday-Fridey. 349- 1 2 ,1 MSU, carpet, sharp! Jenny, 1 MAN FOR 3 man duplex, j/ROLET NOVA 1974. 9 automatic. 2 door. We Deliver 2-1-613) 3449 after 6 p.m. 6-1-13141 REFRIGERATORS - DORM apo r t» M li 363-2631. 2-1-9(3) $100/month. Rent paid FEMALE ROOMMATE need­ size, 2 and 4 cubic foot. Free 1-25-78,1/3 utilities, 8 month ed - own room in spacious | radial tires. Excellent. Service! PART-TIME JANITORIAL - delivery. UNITED RENT-ALL, WANTED TRUCK driver, ONE BEDROOM furnished lease. 393-7271, immediate apartment in Okemos, $90/ 9-1282.2-1-6141 Take your American Nights. Muet have car. Call light delivery, pert time morn­ 361-5652. 8-1-16(51 • fully cerpofod month including utilities, 5 apartment 1-2 people, couple occupancy. S-5-1-1113) compact or Jerry, 482-6232. 8-1-1643) ings or afternoons. M utt be • got hoot and cantrel air ideal. Close to campus-Cedar minutes from campus. Call REFRIGERATOR, STEREO, conditioning I CHEVROLET Beauville aubcompact to: reliable and have good driv­ St. Call evenings, 332-8347. EAST LANSING 929 Sever 349-9382 3-1-10(5) 13/4 ton, loaded, sharp PART TIME - Travel Central ing record. Cell Bob Aldrich T.V. rentals. Free delivery • swimming pool 3-1-10(4) Drive, duplex, 2 bedroom, fejxr. 3234258.81-16131 RKMM Michigan“ Interview , -pros- pective members for dating at OOCUXUD. ai 882-0208. c2-1-946) -l-m o i _______________________ on/off campus. 372-1796. 7 1 l-tf-Jl /- i - u i j i • 24-hour maintananca • play ground for children basement, garage, Adults, no OKEMOS RANCH room­ students please. 332-2968 mates needed. Utilities to |TER, 1970, 318 V-8, t.GoodTranspona- IMPORTS services; we set appoint­ ments. 393-7000 afternoons. WAITER AND Waitresses full time days 7 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Apartnwrts y ; • no pots ARABIC, PORTUGUESE, or Spanish speaking graduate student to share townhouse, 2-1-9(4) share. Large rooms, $100 single, $150 double plus util­ I Call 394-3328 after 6 M S ) _________ Part time hours variable. Ap­ call for information 349-3M0 with all conviences, including LANSING, 3 bedrooms, furn­ ities, 349-9615. 5-1-12(4) 14-1-10(41 1 BEDROOM country apart­ 10*5 Tuasday-Friday ished, washer/dryer, heating, SUMMER JOBS guaranteed ply BURCHAM HILLS RE­ pool, exercise facilities, and ment. Need stove, refrigera­ 10*2 Saturday $275 407-2166 5-1-12(3) ROOMMATES WANTED or money back. Nation's TIREMENT CENTER, 2700 sauna. Located south of cam­ 1 1976128SL. Newpaint. Burcham Dr., E. Lansing. tor. $75/month, utilities, de­ pus on busline. 393-0125. West Lansing vicinity of Sag­ largest directory. Minimum Tdutdi AM/FM radio. fifty employers/state. In­ 8-1-17161 posit. 349-1748. 2-1-6(4) Knob Hill 3-1-10(8) 5 MINUTES to campus 3 inaw and Logan. Call 372- « or best offer. Phone bedroom, 2 bath includes 5486 evenings. 10-1-19(4) 3030after 5 p.m. cludes master application. NEEDED QUIET female to Apartments EAST LANSING - One block yard and garage $310/month. |7 I4 | Only $3. SUMCHOICE. Box HALL SUPERVISORS for EAST LANSING room for \^THE SMALL CAR PEOPLE7 share large apartment. Own from campus $210/month. 482-9226 5-1-17(4) 646, State College, PA. 16801 EAST LANSING HIGH male, close to Union, parking. room, car necessary. Call 1 MAN apartment $150 per All utilities included in rent. 3-1-1047) SCHOOL 7:30 a.m. to 2 p.m., $14 a week. 332-0205. 443 600- 35 miles 394-1352 evenings. 5-1-11(4) month, garage privileges, Days 349-1340; nights 349- | QMon, new Michelin JUNK CARS wanted. We and 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. For SHARE HOUSE, prefer cou­ Groves St. 2-1-6(5) RELIEF AUDITOR desk clerk 482-5104. 5-1-12(3) 1266. 8-1-17(5) Mjjxl shape, very de- pay more if they run. Also further information cell Per­ ple $130/month. Will con­ FEMALE ROOMMATE for 2 buy used cere and trucks. Call applications now being ac­ sonnel Office 337-1781. sider singles $97.50/month. 7- WOO. Phone days bedroom furnished apart- FEMALE ROOMMATE need­ STUDENT, NICE room near 8-8-1-16(4) 321-3661 anytime. cepted. HOLIDAY INN 8-1-17(6] Houses {fc j 100 feet from campus. Rent ed to share apartment close C-19-1-3K4) Howell, Michigan 517 546- m ent 0n,y 2 y/i blocks MSU‘ paid until January 15. 332- East Lansing, $60/month. 6800. 5-1-12(5) to campus. $100. Call 351- 484-0994. Kitchen privileges. ■ Some rust, c h o r a l - A c c o m p a n is t New sh89Call carpet' plen,y of LARGE CARPETED 3 bed­ 4877 3-1-10(6) parking. Cathleen 6712 5-1-12(3) 5-1-11(3) f nice. 390 engine, for EAST LANSING HIGH r j " - fsdials, air, spoil- Employment J i f f THE FOLLOWING CETA title SCHOOL. For further infor­ 332-0969. Z-3-1-9(5) WOMEN, NEAT, non-smoker room duplex. immediately. Approximately Available BEAUTIFUL ROOM. Nice MEN, WOMEN, singles, f* * W (08 and trannie. VI positions ere available. mation call 337-1781. FEMALE NEEDED for 1 room 1 mile to campus. Call STE- girls $85 plus. Close. June cooking, campus close. 327 Secretary typist, work sample to have own room in apart­ |332.3970.1-1-615) 8-11-17(4) in 3 bedroom furnished apart­ ment, $113/month 351-3873. MAR MGT. 351-5510. lease. Phone 351-5362 or Hillcrest. 332-6118 or 337- CLERK TYPIST POSITION development technician, art­ ment, $87 includes heat and 3-1-10(44 7-1-13(5) 332-5622. 2-1-9(4) 9612. 8-1-16(3) WITH Meridian Township. ist illustrator, food service SITTER - 24 hours/week. water, 351-6068.8-1-16(4) . CAP10, 1975. Funded through Title VI of writer, and occupational anal- Hours flexible. Campus close. Jmint condition. C.B. CETA. Must be resident of ysiat. Applicants must meet 337-0246 8-1-17(3) PEOPLE REACHER SERIOUS FEMALE student »C 394,725 Ingham County and meet title VI unemployment and t0 .hare'mobile home, own' WELCOME Title VI criteria, Including 15 income requirements and ------------------------------------ room, campus 1 mile, pets PJANG II, 1974 Mach I, week unemployment. Apply also be a resident of Ingham There's something for every­ welcome, non-smoker. 351- BACK at Michigan Employment Se­ County, excluding the city of * WANT AD one in today's Classified Ads. 2571. 3-1-10(5) white with black Lansing, Apply at M.E.S.C. curity Commisaion, 3215 S. Check them out for super t aut°matic, con- office at 3215 South Penn­ buys. EAST LANSING - near cam­ W s here a l Dicker Pennsylvania, Lansing. i»t»K LSaugM an(i sylvania. 3-1-10(15) pus, 2 bedroom, parking, and Deal extend our Duties include typing police FINANCE ASSISTANT 20 appliances, 1 person needed. b e lt w ithes for the reports, answering phones, GIRL WANTED with hospital Ju st complete form and hours/week. Assignments in­ $135 month. 337-2127. and 9ome public contact experience. 8 a.m.-12 noon. 1-1-6(4) New Y ear to all i t a activity. M utt be able to Close to campus. No week­ clude responsibility in A/R, dents and faculty at mail with paym ent to: purchasing, budget develop­ handle confidential material ends or holidays. 332-5176. FEMALE NEEDED to share. MSU. and type 50 w.p.m. Meridian 1-1-6I5) ment, financial analysis in One bedroom, furnished, State News Classified Dept. prepaid health care. Send 347Stu d en t Services Bldg. Township la on Equal Oppor­ very nice, Grove Street BABYSITTER. TEACHER resume, salary requirement to tunity Employer. ^1-11(18) Apartment. $104.50/month, E ast Lansing, Mich. 48823 needs motherly care in Oke­ B. Taylor, Department 206 heat included. Call Karen, We also suggest that |h w iH? We buy im' Health Central, 2316 S. L„ ,at® models mos home for 3 month and 4 351-9064. 2-1-9(4) you take this opportu MATURE WOMAN needed year old. Starting January 30. Cedar. Lansing 48910 E.O.E. for pert time evening work, 1- 1- 6 ( 12) nity to stop in and take Name „ & ^ A M S ° hnv.w 8 a.m.-4 p.m. References, ONE MALE needed 4-man cleaning on MSU campus. own transportation 655-4132. advantage of the Address ........... apartment Winter/Spring $70 Must be near and depend­ 8-1-17(7) LIKE TO drive? Do it for values w e hove on all monthly 332-2327. 5-1-12(3) able for long term employ­ DOMINOS. Starting wage our m erchandise. City ________ Zip Code ment. Call between 3-5 p.m. $2.65 per hour. Full and part 655-3931.5-1-11(61 COLLECTOR time employment. Must be Daytime Phone Student Number l £ S llent c°ndi- PART TIME 18. Apply at 1139 E. Grand LEASE THE BANK OF LANSING has Classification . Preferred Insertion Date WAITRESS - PARTTIME, must be able to fill in (or an opening for a part time River after 4 p.m. 5-1-11(6) A We have a wide selection of stereo cook. Cooking knowledge collector. Must be available to work from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. BABYSITTER NEEDED in MAZDA musical equipment needed. -Mon-Fri, 10 a.m.- Okemos home two days per 25 characters in a line, including punctuation and spaces between words. 7 p.m. Mrs. Gunnell 489-6501, Monday • Friday. Apply in (GLC Hatchback) televisions, furniture m | / j person at Room 902 Bank of week. Own transportation ®xt. 50. 2-1-615) 349-4190 after 6 p.m. and much more. Lansing, 101 North Washing­ Print Ad here _ ......... _ _ ______ ____________ 3-1-9(41 AVON REPRESENTATIVES ton, Lansing or phone 372- * 8 4 .5 0 par month 9230 extension 330. An equal 34 month opan and plus lax and f c ? T'RES' 13-14- NEVER LOOKED SO GOOD. ROOM AND board in ex­ So stop in and check Opportunity Employer. Iicon M . lorminotion volvo *1.100. k J : ; d,ree.Aiso You will too, selling world- change for supervising an 11 K famous products. Flexible saLes0", ,i,es- hours, high earnings. Call 482-6893. C-7-1-1316) 7-1-13113) HOLIDAYS DEPLETE your year old. Great opportunity for right person. Walk to CPA highway iatod 42 m.p.g. C o o k H o r r io r a o us out. CIRCLE RATE WANTED 3 LINE MINIMUM finances? Need extra in­ campus. Call 351-3328 or VW VO LVO MAZDA ^ l8 C'19-1-3ll5^n,,n8' ECONOIINC AOS 1 linos ■$4.00 • 5 day* 374-8877. 3-1-915) Oils W. Saginaw3214«00 We buy, se ll. swap. por day rafo* ^M ALE ESCORTS wanted, come? Call 374-6328 week­ n n o E a r a n c a E itE S Far $ • !• '5». or U s» *>« P *' 1 •*» » so/hour. No training neces­ days, 4-6 p.m. 18 and older, Man. SThun, 'til f i n 5*"ALE masseuse wanted. Excellent earnings. Call 4-6 Mornings at 487-6001. M W DAILY. 417-3806 D D E D E D E O E D E D ID E Q LOST t FOUNO AOS l l in o t • SI-SO por insertion ™hour. We will train. 489- p.m. weekdays. 337-6324. I W if i & B | W il l I TRANSPORTATION AOS S0< por lino quo. 3 lin o i 8-1-16(6) D ID 2278. 2-19-1-31(31 5-1-11(3) IlM S For Sill ^ For Sale ] [ $ ] F Jiiojls_ J ( V j [ P— b N rsul [[W , 1 f Smrtd [|*s ] • [Typlij S w lw jle ll L_ |«triietl«j—[[*; UNIGRAPHICS OFFERS RIDING LESSONS, jumping NEWFOUNDLAND PUPPIES GIGI, I hope you have e COMPLETE REPAIR service DAY EMPLOYED, graduate INSTANT CASH We're pay­ WE PAY up to 42 for LP's fr COMPLETE DISSERTATION and dressage. TranepOftMlan AKC shots, wormed. Phone Happy Birthday tomorrow. for stereo's, TV's, tapes, student. MO. Call for details. ing 41-2 for albums In good cassettes - also buying 45‘s, AND RESUME SERVICE- available for Thursday even­ 676-2089.8-1-17131 Enjoy yourself. Love, S. guitars, banjos, band instru­ 372.7973.6-1-13(31 shape. WAZOO RECORDS, aongbooks, magazines. FLAT typesetting, IBM typing, off­ ing jumping classes. WIL­ Z-1-1-613) ments. MARSHALL MUSIC. 223 Abbott, 337-0947. BU CK Er CIRCUUR. Up­ set printing and binding. For LOW POND STABLES 3301. (4)WJW-TV(( OWN ROOM in house, dote 351-7830. C-1-1-6I5I 0-2-14(4)______________ stairs 541 E. Grand River. estimate stop In at 2843 East Harper Road, Mason, 9 miles lost I Fond 1[ ^ ] to campus. 381-7113.2-1-9(31 SEWING MACHINE CLEAR­ Open 11 a.m., 351-0838. C-19-1-31-I6I Real Estate ftB EQUITY LOAN-lf you are Grand River or phone 332- 8414. C-19-1-31-I7I south of campus. 676-9799. 5-1-12(81 ANCE SALE. All floor sam­ LOST DARK gray'male cat buying your home on a FEMALE NEEDED to sublet ples and demonstrators used BOOK - VISIT Mid-Michigans with white spot on throat. mortgage or own your home DRESSAGE CLINIC with own room in house with 3 ST. JOHNS. Older brick 2 COPYGRAPH SERVICE, during our X-mas buying largest used bookshop. CU­ Potters Park area. Reward. story with 4 bedrooms, natu­ free and clear, ask about our Jean Froissard, French riding others. On busline. Mary- complete dissertation and 482-0049. 6-1-13(31 season. Up to 50% discount. RIOUS BOOKSHOP, 307 E. Phone 349-5148. 3-1-6(31 ral cherry woodwork, 1 % equity loan. Borrow against resume service. Comer instructor. Spectators are FRIDAY Guaranteed used machines Grand River, East Lansing. your equity to consolidate welcome. WILLOW POND a fte rn o o n baths, antique charm, fire­ M.A.C. and Grand River, from 439.95. KEN ED­ 332-0112. C-19-1-3115) place, double living rooms, your bills, make major home STABLES, Mason 676-9799. ROOMMATE NEEDED - 2 LOST . GOLDEN Retriever, improvement, take that long 8:30-5:30 p.m., MOnday-Fri- WARDS DISTRIBUTING CO young male with brown and dining room. Excellent day, 337-1666. C-19-1-31-161 1-1-6161 12:00 man 480 per month plus awaited vacation, or for any 1115 N. Washington, 485 THREE PIECE blue living braided collar, near Marigold, condition. Located on spa­ utilities 610 N. Hayford 372- other good purpose. Call Furnishing that first apart- 112) NEWS 6448 C-19-1-31-I10I room aet plus ottoman. Wide reward. 351-0685.4-1-11(4) cious corner lot in friendly LOOKING FOR A 8127 Z-2-1-913) FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF 100 USED VACUUM clean­ seats, 495. 339-1143 even­ small community. Call Annett EAST LANSING, 351-2660 GREAT JOB7-get a head ment? Find what you need in the Classified section of to-, (0) To Soy the Leost ROOM IN country house. ings. 2-1-6(41 White 1-224-4296 or BRIGGS start on that first impres* Line ers. Tanks, cannisters, and LOST MAN'S gold wedding REAL ESTATE 1-224-2301. and ask for Mr. Me Donald. day's paper. h) Firing Skiing. 480/month plus util­ sion by having your resume 12:20 uprights. Guaranteed on full band. If found please call 0-1-1-61121 ities. Mature. 322-2191. CPS TEXT and manuals, 311 5-1-11-1111 typeset. Tbe Typecutter year, 47.88 and up. DENNIS Rich 1-543-0634 collect can make your credentials I Aimonac and 312. Reasonable. Phone 3-1-10(31 DISTRIBUTING COMPANY. nights weekends or leave Don't store things you can't EDITING ARTICLES, books, I 12:30 Rolland 373-3255 until 5 p.m. stand out in any stack of 316 North Cedar, opposite message at 1-726-0257. use. Sell them fast with a theses by former newspaoer Been busy with After 5 p.m. 339-2079. resumes. Looks much bet­ 1 Search For Tomorr DAVENPORT 90 Inches long. City Market. C-19-1-31-I7I editor. 882-1281.2-1-9131 Medium green upholstery, 2-1-6(31 Reward. Z-3-1-10I4I hard-working Classified Ad! Phone 355-8266 ter than typing. a call -we're very. Give DAY CARE - Teacher with M.A. and mother. ANIMAL your spring cleaning? I)Seng Show TWIN BEDS, solid mahog­ Find lots of things 476. 351-1710 after 6 p.m. any. One box spring and Animals VJ | Motile Homes TypiH Service || very reasonable. 487-9296. CRACKERS DAY CARE you no longer use? B) Ryan’s H°Pe S-5-1-12I3I mattress. 332-3152 or 393- Service | |^ TYPING EXPERIENCED, fast CENTER, 332-1157. 51-18(3) Sell them fast fo r I 1:00 I Tovng and the Res 8147.4-1-10141 ANN BROWN PRINTING ELECTRONIC REPAIR on AKC GERMAN Shepherd 1966 VINDALE, 12 X 60. 6 FOR QUALITY stereo service and reasonable. 371-4635. extra cash with AND TYPING. Dissertations, HAVE BUYER for duplex in I ) for Richer, For Pe stereo, T.V., C.B., camera, Puppies Champion Pedigree. C-19-1-31-13) guitars and amps. All repairs BEDDING-SAVE f 10-4200. Health and hips guaranteed. miles to campus. Furnished, children and pets allowed. THE STEREO SHOPPE, 555 E. Grand River. C-19-1-31-13) resumes, general printing. Serving MSU for 27 years East Lansing. Call Paul Coady low-cost I)All My Children guaranteed. WILCOX TRAD­ Sets 469.95, bunk mattresses Call 517-7257322 after 5 p.m. Smart shoppers check the at MUSSELMAN REALTY. Classified ads! 44,900 489-2241.7-1-1315) with complete theses service. | ) Music ING POST. 485-4391. 429.95. sofa beds 479.95, 4150 each. 51-15(5) 332-3582. C-2-1-614) WE HONOR the GM prog­ 389-0850. C-2-1-616) Classified section first. That's F 1:30 C-19-1-3116) roll-aways 449.95, hide-a- where they find the best buys GALAXIE, 1973. 12x60 foot ram. OPTICAL DISCOUNT, I As the World Turns beds 4179.95. WILD BILL'S FREE TO good home. Black Today's best buys are in the trailer. New skirting, storage 2617 E. Michigan, Lansing, EXPERIENCED IBM typing. in town. BEDDING WAREHOUSE and white male cat. 8 months Classified section. Find what und T own I ) Days tu rfy American Cancer Society 7:00.4:00.'11:00 PM ADMISSION11.00 for STUDENTS, FACULTY, STAFF 4 GUESTS with I.D. I —Preparation for a new career In social or behavioral science —mid-career advancement for working professionals THametmtniuftDiytu»piiium*»s*puiucuna I —background for further academic study ' 4j^Jublii in a variety of fields Students formulate individualized study in urban SPAGHETTI J k M T"* planning, philosophy of social science, delivery I BUY TWODELICIOUS ™ d iiv Twn n n ip in u c iF“ of health services, industrial relations, problems (v ery ) SPECIAL MR. TONYSUBMARINE SANDW ICHES(rag) nr- of psychopathology, public policy, international problems, cross-cultural studies, evaluation re­ I FORORLY*1.50(andthiscoupon)SAVE ’IJO search, economics and many more areas. ALL YOU CAN EAT EVERY SUNDAY FROM 4 PH . —a distinguished faculty —curriculum and career counseling Our own home made meaty spaghetti served w ith hot rolls plus a help yourself salad bar! I 2T —hundreds of courses 3T —full and part-time opportunities For further Information and application, w rit* r vr $ 2 .2 5 5r~ Off leg of tho Doon of Studonts Fottor Hall BoxSR 11301.59th Street Chicago, Illinois 60437 I P IZ Z A A • U B M A M N M 515 W. Grand River (just w a il of Greyhound Station) n o d u u v u iy L Rete. craad. color, m i or national origin of applicant* play* no rain In odmi>*longf anynppllcnnt tothqUnlvenlty of Chicago. 231 M.A.C. — EAST LANSING Pick-Up or Dine In Only 3 3 2 -8 6 1 1 E x p ir e s J a n -. 112,1’ 7' State Newt. Ea»t Umelng, Michigan PROFESSOR PHUMBLE m i f tfv [hiSfIn ilf fatss by Bill Yates SPONSORED BY: AT m s M M a h m t m iu m ja m . is (*)WJIM-TV(CBS) (lO )W llX -T V (N IC ) (ll)W E LM .T V (C oble) (I2)WJRT.TV(ABC) (23)WKAR-TV(PBS) flfiO T H e fZ T H IM 6 T D 4:00 - - fJ o p o c Y FRIDAY (23) MacNeil/Lehrer Report 10:00 afte rn o o n (6) New Mickey Mouse Club 8:00 w e f t k ja ll-g (10) Groan Acres (10) Quincy (6) Wonder Woman (23) Documentary Showcase 12:00 (12) Brady Bunch (10) CPO Sharkey T H P C H IE F (23) Satama Street 11:00 112) NEWS (12) Donny & Marie (6-10-12) NEWS P Y H f* , ,, 4:30 (0 the Least (23) Washington Week in P P 6T ) To Say (6) Doris Day (23) Dick Covett Review E) Firing'Line (10) G llllgan’s Island 11:30 12:20 8:30 (6) President Carter's Trip (12) Emergency One! (10) Chico and the Man I Aimonac (10) Johnny Carson I 12:30 S:00 (23) Well Street Week (12) Forever Fernwood | Search For Tom orrow (6) Gunsmoke 9:00 (23) NEWS + CLEANERS ,M D « * (10) Emergency Onel (6) MOVIE B) Gong Show E) Ryan's H°Pe (23) M ister Rogers' Neigh­ (10) Rockford Files (6) M*A*S*H 11:45 PEANUTS ® SPONSORED BY: in r a m in n LAUNDRY u :i lu iin " I D l ia t m im I 1:00 borhood (12) MOVIE by Schulz 12:00 332-3537 C U A M ID ■ Young ond the R o s ie s t 5:30 (23) I, Claudius (12) MOVIE I ] f o r Richer, For P oo rer (11) NEWS I All My Children K) Music (12) Rookies (23) Electric Company MSU SHADOWS ® LISTEN, BEAUTIFUL 6ET V0UR STUPID F16URE SKATES CUE WAVE TEN HOCKEY STICKS HERE TELLING V0U O H ,Y E A H ?C O M E ON A N D TRY SO M ETHING! I THINK ILL SO HOME.. 6:00 OFF TXE iCEiLUE LUANNA I HAVE 50ME CHAIN f 1:30 by Gordon Carleton s p o n s o re d by: TO “GET OFF THE ICE,'" M E AND M Y COACH'LL LETTERS TO WRITE... I As the World Turns (6-10-12) NEWS PLAY HOCKEY, 5EE? T ~ — TAKE YOU A L L O N !! I ) Dots of Our Lives (11) Rockin' In the U.S.A. P Z K B A L L P E T E 'S T 2:00 (23) Dick Covett 6:30 Present this really funny comic for 25* h ra I Love, American S tyle (6-10-12) NEWS Worth Of free p l o y ! N et valid F r l . t Sot. N lghti I ) Over Easy I 2:30 (23) Over Easy D 'D V o u , s e e , u x e f i e . s g a i e a i o v i t T H M T i'te s ') ■Guiding Light 7:00 ■ Doctors SHCVJ C O IW X c iA L S UJITH T M e jfl F IL M S (6) My Three Sons WCXO T I ) Out Lifeto Live (10) Mery Tyler Moore I ) french Chef (11) Bull Bowl 77 'VEAM > I T 'S PR06 A6 LY T H t T 3:00 (12) Mary Tyler Moore T R lr if c T o HAPPeaD T O T V I/O A ) Today's Special: ■ Another W orld Enchiladas Jocoque | petal Pusher (23) O ff the Record T I M E — ■' -------------------- y FRANK & ERNEST SPONSORED BY: 2.7 5 I 3:15 7:30 by Bob Thaves IL AZTICO MSTAIMANT I General Hospital (6) W ild. W ild W orld of 203 M.A.C. 351-9111 " 3:30 Animals ill in the Family (10) Family Feud I Villa Alegre (12) Hollywood Squares S o R f c Y , M R . gQBlB — — T I N O A G A T H A C H R iS T jE IrOUR AD COULD BE HERE >m, “ NT,L Fin ish e d Y O o 'v e y° dR CALL H m Elvi lle 3 5 3 -6 4 0 0 O lB 7IByNEA.Me.TM Reg US P« ON to w gos prices Plus Service THE DROPOUTS * by Post RAVELSWITH FARLEY® Bem dm 't lUHo N RonrlB o tfH o B 13011. i#r. Rlvar tw iy SPONSORED BY: Phil Frank SPONSORED BY: N a if f a V an ity Mm •We Appreciate Your iu tin e t t 'I E IW .T H em H6REl smuGe c m jurbg am mu cm I m w m m r E O our WGWBQ AS SWWJNS5.. JHBR HAW S A R E v e ff MAYBE M &U-Y C M T 6 R ! iEKftAlRS I stm-QHD w w DIFFEReAir A H P T » € Y A C T TO TAKE OVffft.. IN STRANGE W AVS- \ HOWARD THE DUCK!® SPONSORED BY: by Steve Gerber and Val Mayerik JMBLEWEEDS • CAMPUS 1912 Mich. Ave. (next to Silvor Dollar Soloon) M o n . - F ill QT. OF COKE Tim s .-FREE ITEM F o m K. R y a n s p o n s o re d by: PIZZA 337-1377 W«d. • WHOLE WHEAT CRUST (on request) HILP’E&ARP HAMHOCKERS AFTER ME/CLAUDE! WHERE C A N --------- ISO?! , c iu u r p E c l a y I Cl a u d e c l a y _ ltTHKEETaKEB.] • ■ o m a M : V0U PLUG’EM-! PUNTEM f f iT X ,-J) JypunoertM-iPt.AHT'gf Hair Styling fa r Man and Woman PASSWORD ■SnSB HSHS3 SAM and SILO ■ SPONSORED BY: Call fo r appointm ent today phono 332-IIB I p aaaa a a a m by Jerry Dumas and Mort Walker 2M MAC (a lo w Jana* Stationary PUZZLE p a a a ii guhbh I ACROSS 24 Exclamation ■os sessq B a ra s s a g o H E ia mam SPONSORED BY; Smpus Rose’s son aca aas a n a I tonseagull 27 Beverages I l^diton nq a s s raanss I Por,,Jy 32 Salad plant aaaaaaa sa a s TOWO 33 Period of time Roman circus post S a S H fflB B □d s b b aaaQ B i a a o 2*m m M AH h)“ »sli„ce 34 Chess pieces rasass osQ osa IpHteome 35 Pound I WRfilerbands 37 Boring s s s s aaasao I '^ l 38 Banish island 48. Shepherd's 54. Irish statesman t e ',ibb' 39 Addition letter to a crook DOWN i „ <9. Criticize Mlendmg 43 You and me 50. English letter 1. Synthetic fabric Like 51. — Cassini 2. Despoiler StH« O NWg Paaturae lynatcete, • 1-4 Buff 52. Sacred chest 3. Having three feet 4. Whole TH E DOCTOR 5. Having run off is iN ..please 1 The one and only IT " the tracks BE SEATED BOB H O P I r 6. 7. Fetish Desert in Asia BEETLE BAILEY SPONSORED BY: ii coming to ! by Mort Walker the Lansing Civic Center io 8. 9. Yore Icecream container N 10. Flip a coin IT HAS EVERYTHING YOU V 16. Jeer NEED TO SIVE YOUR EYES THAT COME "HITHER LOOK Je N- one _ I~ i> p r We'll be open Saturday from 9 to 5 p.m. to help with your book buying needs. We'll be open from 9 to 5 p.m. Sat., January 7, 1978 with a complete selection of Winter term textbooks, all on the official MSU booklist. Come in and choose from both new and used books. "MONEY MANS" LAST DAY 7:30 AM ■ 5:00 PM