Student arrest investigated By JEANNE BARON “He was warm and' humorous and was State News Staff Writer has access to an imprisoned person, to ask He also refused to say whether MSU is very concerned about Palestinians living in about his treatm ent, health, w hether he The Office of U.S. Rep. Bob Carr is Israel," he said. seeking his release or if the Israeli investigating the case of Sami Esmail, an wants an attorney and who to notify," he government has pressured the United He was very peace-loving so the charges said. States not to investigate the arrest. MSU engineering graduate student a rrest­ of spying and terrorism are outrageous." ed in Israel for allegedly belonging to a "If there is abuse, they will file a report He also said he did not know whether Esmail’s brother, Basim, said Sami was immediately, but we cannot get involved in Palestinian guerrilla group,an office repre­ there is any suspicion on the part of the initially charged with coming to Israel on a the judicial process.” sentative said Thursday. U.S. government that the charges against spying and terrorism mission when he was Dobrenchuk refused to say whether a "Some people from MSU brought the Sami might be true, or how the authorities arrested at Ben-Gurion airport Dec. 21. report was filed in Sami’s case. knew he would be arriving. situation to our attention and we are He said Esmail had come to the country looking into it," Kent Cartwright said. to see their father who was very ill. "We normally don’t work on a constit­ The original charges were changed to uent's case unless the constituent or family belonging to an A rab guerrilla group in a request it, but we are looking into this hearing Jan. 6, Basim said, after their because of contacts from concerned people Telecast funded father died. He said they were changed from MSU.” because their father’s death proved Sami Barbara Thiebeault of the East Lansing had come to visit him. Peace Education Center said she had also “We say the Israeli authorities kidnapped called the offices of U.S. Sen. Donald Riegle him at the airport (where he was arrested and state Rep. H. Lynn Jondahl, D-East upon his arrival) because when we tried to minus approval Lansing, asking them to directly investi­ find out what happened to him, they told us gate the arrest. they didn’t know where he was,” Basim The peace center will sponsor an open said. meeting at 4 p.m. today in 341-342 Union to He added that his brother was beaten discuss possible action to assist Esmail. physically and tortured mentally for several l StatoN ow s/R oC rtK oIl^ f L William G. Mllliken delivers U s 10th annual S ta te of th e S ta te MSU mathematics professor John Mas- days and forced to sign a confession written terson, a long-time friend of Esmail's, said By KAREN SHERIDAN l e t s to assembled executive, legislative and judicial s ta te leaders, in Hebrew. State New, Staff Writer the 23-year-old student was active in Basim said he witnessed the effects of ■ken proposed a small ta x c u t which n p se t D em ocratic leaders. politics and a good student. ASMSU President Kent Barry was not empowered to commit ASMSU funds for the abuse when he visited his brother with campus-wide telecast of the MSU-Wisconsin basketball game Saturday. Felicia Langer, Sami’s attorney. He said While an ASMSU press release announced last week that "ASMSU will be footing Sami was led to believe th at if he signed the the cost of production, along with the University," allocations were not approved by confession he would be released from jail. two-thirds of the student board, as stipulated in its code of operations. DEM OCRATS CRITICAL O F M OTIVE Steven Dobrenchuk, a member of the Barry called the financial arrangement with University administrators a U.S. State Departm ent's Special Council "gentlemen's agreement.” Services, said the department is following Acting MSU President Edgar L. Harden and University Provost Clarence L. Winder the situation and doing everything within said that any procedural transgression by the ASMSU president was outweighed by 'ovemor asks tax cut its jurisdiction. “We don’t by law seek someone's release, we see th a t they have due process in the country and that international the benefits of the program. "The ends justified the means," Harden said. But both administrators said they were unaware at the time of the financial agreement with Barry that the allocation of funds for the telecast would require By STATE NEWS and standards are followed," he said. subsequent board approval. One of them, Raymond Snider of Mason, of their chairs by beginning his speech with United Press International Dobrenchuk said he could not divulge any According to last week's press release, ASMSU has also been committed to partial said he believes Milliken is “trying to do the announcement th a t this was his last Ian citizens would get $85 million in information concerning Sami because under funding of campus-wide telecasts of the Jan. 21 MSU Ohio basketball game and the everything he can. I t will take time to work appearance a t the House podium. i ifGov. William G. Milliken has his the Privacy Act, no information about a Feb. 23 MSU-Northwestern game. this out (meet farmers* demands for higher He broke the suspense with the qualifier, prices) and we know this." person can be released without that Costa of the combined telecasts, to be shared with the University, have been “this month.” ling Democratic lawmakers, smell- person's approval. estimated to total about $3,000, Winder said. However, Dale W alter of Saginaw com­ The tax relief proposal provoked intense hection year gimmick in the pro- He did say that within hours after Harden, Winder and Barry agreed that financial arrangements for the telecasts were plained th at Milliken “never did say reaction from two of the four announced kcut of less than $5 per person, learning about the arrest, the American hurriedly prepared. Barry said there was no time for a meeting of the board before the anything about farm ers paying most of the candidates for the Democratic gubernator­ jr conceded they may be forced to council in Israel had access to Sami. agreement was made during the first week of classes this term. real estate tax in Michigan." ial nomination. ft. “Many countries in cases such as this B srry said he had telephoned several members of the board prior to his agreement Milliken — who has not y et announced if “I think it's clearly political," said Sen. (involving security) don’t allow access at with University officials. He said those contacted approved the allocation hundreds of striking farmers he will seek re-election — set the assembled William B. Fitzgerald, D-Detroit, one all," he said. At Tuesday's student bosrd meeting, Barry said he was aware that he was not I Capitol corridors — some of them leaders of the executive, legislative and Democratic hopeful. "I think it was the • The State Department is limited in what authorized to allocate funds, but that based on these conversations he was confident he j catcalls at state officials assem* judicial governmental branches on the edge opening salvo of his political campaign." it can do because though Sami is a U.S. had board approval. (the House chamber for the 1978 citizen, he is subject to Israel's juris­ Barry told board members he did not know the exact amount of ASMSU's f the State Address — Milliken diction, Dobrenchuk said. contribution. The board took no official action Tuesday to allocate funds for the i Michigan’s current condition as, programs. | respects, excellent, In response to allegations by Basim that "Isn't it a bit unwise to commit us to an expense when you don't know how much it lellent, in fact, the governor asked Sami was beaten by Israeli authorities to jslature to increase individual state income tax exemptions from ) $1,600, boost property tax relief Milliken recommends force him into confessing he was a terrorist and a spy, Dobrenchuk said he could not will be yet?" College of Arts and Letters representative Scott Schreiber questioned. "I do have some idea how much that will be," Barry replied, but did not give the board an estimate. comment because of the Privacy Act. 1 citizens and handicappers and “It is common practice for the consul, if it I incentives to school districts to Jniilage rates. len said the relief to individual new building for ’U' ps is “not substantial," but it is ‘‘just fctant to lower taxes when possible ■o raise them when necessary.” By ANNE S. CROWLEY State News Staff Writer U.S. Sen. Lee Metcalf, 66, dies M Speaker Bobby D. Crim, D-Davi- Gov. William G. Milliken recommended Thursday in his State of the State Message ■d he will check item-by-item the th at the Legislature quickly appropriate funds to build a new soil sciences building on HELENA, Mont.(AP) — Sen. Lee Metcalf, a publicity-shunning Metcalf, who has been described as the senator no one knew, ■formation from aides upon which the MSU campus. Democrat who spent 17 quiet years in the Senate, was found dead was elected to the Senate in 1960 and re-elected in 1966 and 1972. Bbased his tax relief proposal. University officials were encouraged by the news, but, as A ssistant to the President at his apartm ent in Helena Thursday. He was 66. Bscribed the address as ‘‘smooth and He was best known nationally for supporting additions to the Elliott G. Ballard put it, “we won’t be breaking ground tomorrow.” Metcalf, who had announced that he would retire a t the end of country’s designated wilderness areas. ■kind of speech I would give if I was The new building has been in the works since 1974, but was held up due to the recent his term in 1979, held a key vote on President Carter’s energy plan But Metcalf was also a member of a House-Senate conference Inbent governor running for re-elec- recession, according to Dale D. Harpstead, chairperson of the D epartm ent of Crop and and his death could mean a pricing policy more favorable to the oil committee on energy and his death could break the congressional Soil Sciences. and gas industry. deadlock over C arter's energy program. J c Appropriations Committee Chair- Funding would come from a pending $400 million state bond issue, Milliken said. Helena Police Chief Jack Williams said M etcalfs son Jerry, a The 18 Senate members of the committee have been equally ■Jerome T. Hart, D-Saginaw, said a “The remarkable advancements which have occurred in farming methods in recent state legislator, found the body. divided for weeks on the issue of natural gas pricing, which has ■might force cutbacks in educational years require th at we increase our research capabilities in the areas of soil science, ■ other services. “Investigating officers found the senator dead in bed, and it blocked passage of the rest of the plan. plant varieties, weed and disease control and toxic substances," Milliken said in his appeared that he died of natural causes," Williams said. ■year I think we’re going to be more Before joining the Senate, Metcalf served four terms in the printed message. A spokesperson in Metcalfs Washington office said the senator House. He also served on the Montana Supreme Court and in the l*ok at the total picture than to give "This building is badly needed and I urge prompt approval so that work can be had a heart condition and had been in poor health for several Montana Legislature. pens a few pennies in their pockets started as soon as possible." years. In Washington, where flags at the White House were put at half Jn reduce K-12 and other programs." In another section of his list of priorities for the year, the governor said MSU Williams said Jerry Metcalf told officers he had driven his father staff, Montana's other senator, Democrat John Melcher, said his ■ art said the Legislature may well agricultural economists could help him and the National Governors* Association decide to Helena Wednesday night from Wallace, Idaho, hometown of his colleague's death “is a great loss for the people of Montana and the ■je program because of pressure we (continued on page 14) back h o m e." wife of 40 years, Donna. Mrs. Metcalf was still in Wallace, people of the country that have long appreciated the value of his according to a staff member in Metcalfs Helena office. service and leadership.” ♦ ■Sw?^ ^ePu^*cans were generally ■ y he message — as were many of fm ? farmers, whose tractors ringed f w “ ? whom Milliken met with ■Wore delivering the speech. f ! d, ln clothes, they diverted U.S.S.R. accused of supplying arms irom the occasion and forced the from his prepared speech By JAMES GERSTENZANG During a nationally broadcast news "As a nation increasing our demands for situation51 m,nUte paragraPha on WASHINGTON (AP) - President Car- conference, the president also said he foreign oil, we may have conservation Spartans expects Congress to reach an energy forced on us by unexpected increases in oil 82 was sympathetic - te r on Thursday accused the Soviet Union of sending Russians and massive arms compromise early in its 1978 session “of prices in the future," Carter said. Illinois 70 Plicv is '.C. aSLhe emPhasized that which we can be proud." He said the first two quarters of 1978 will la SPl on the national level. shipments to the horn of Africa and said Ivervtki” ™ncerne(1' the governor is E l can to help us achieve Cuban soldiers were dispatched there by the Soviets “perhaps to become com­ He predicted a natural gas pricing compromise th a t “will be acceptable to me.” show very good economic progress, but by the end o f the third quarter, economic inside batants.” stimulation in the form of "a substantial tax Will MSU students ever get to watch cable TV in the dorms? lie ? .I s Akcr of Coldwater, a The president, who returned last Friday L k<7rotest movement. reduction" will be needed. See page 5. from a nine-day overseas trip, said foreign R s wh ^ the chambCT. many of He said th at while th e United States has leaders expressed concern during the C arter also faced several questions in the L * ho,cl°Kee®8in a new visit the ments th a t he and Egyptian President oynge and, among other thinga, trim your “Friday Face’’ on. This expression dates back to 17th Century Anwar Sadat have almost identical views England, and describes those who display a sad or moody look on legend h a s i» it their faces. on Middle E ast questions. Sadat has called ^p. ' y°u iurn your bed around tonight, you will for Israeli withdrawal from settlements in All things considered, today should be a normal day, but don't the Sinai. C irte r, asked w hether he agreed push your luck. Historically, it is also a common day for executing P®* Nieve0^ ” ^ (k*®8 k*ck t° biblical times, criminals. (continued on page 14) ■ ^ n d A d a m T J^ 10 ** unIu<* y because Christ was ve also ate the fatal apple on the same Italian cabinet ready to resin, w o lf ROME (AP) — The possibility of Communists sh« ■ Italy’s government increased Thursday with word tk* Giulio Andreotti’a struggling Christian Democrat ,d ■ was preparing to resign. nr The country, struggling with grave economic nmhi been torn by increasing violence by both leftist , T* Britain's firefighters vote to end strike extremists. n“ Communists, Socialists, Republicans and others BRIDLINGTON, England (AP) — Bri­ each in pay during the walkout. Communist participation in the government voted t tain's firefighters voted overwhelmingly They will return to work Monday, support for the minority, church-backed Christian Dem Thursday to end their nine-week-old relieving the 18,000 servicemen who have ruled Italy alone or in coalition since 1946. 00,11 nationwide strike and accept a 10 percent have handled firefighting duties through­ The likelihood of Communists sharing power in th' country aroused increased concern in Washington. 11 annual wage hike, considerably below out Britain since the strike began Nov. 14. what they hod demanded. The decision, made at a stormy union delegates' meeting in this seaside resort, The firefighters had demanded an immediate 30 percent boost in their average wage of $121.60 for a 48-hour \\ “We do not favor such participation and would |ik Communist influence in any W estern European country *11 said a State Department statem ent read to reDortn.. was a major victory in the Labor week. The deal they accepted Thursday officer John Trattner. government's campaign to hold down gives them a 10 percent annual raise “The United States and Italy,” T rattner said, “shsr, pay increases in order to fight inflation. retroactive to Nov. 7, and additional AP Wir«photo democratic values and interests and we do not believe iS "We were starved into going back to raises over the next two years boosting B ernard Miller, a form er inm ate a t th e A rizona S ta te P riso n in Phoenix, Communists share those values and interests." work," said union official Terry Segars. their average pay to just over $190 a prepares to testify W ednesday before th e A rizona S ta te T ask Force on O rgan­ But he said, “The decision on how they are governed rail The union has no strike fund, and the week. In addition, the 48-hour week will ized Crim e. T he com m ittee is studying violence and re p o rts of organized their citizens alone.” 33,000 strikers lost an average of $1,000 be reduced to 42 hours. crim e a t th e strife-torn prison. M iller was hooded to conceal his identity. Less than three months after taking office, the I administration had expressed leas concern, opposinir ■ Communist "domination” of a W estern European gover Death threat made against Sadat ISRAELI SOLDIERS ACCUSED Trattner's statem ent expressed opposition to any f Communist participation. CAIRO (AP) — A statement containing a death threat against President Anwar Sadat for his contacts with Israel was stated commitment to Islam, there was nothing to further identify the group. Al Aqsa is the name of the third holiest A ra b student bru talized Former Secretary of S tate Henry Kissinger, in an intery be broadcast tonight by NBC, predicted "grave consequent the entire West" if Italy's “slide toward communism" is uqi-' received in the rfiail by The Associated shrine in Islam, located in Jerusalem. "The Italian Communist Party has not broken with the° Press in Cairo Thursday. Protected by Israeli security men, Sadat BIR ZGIT, Occupied West by the Israeli occupation forces ment headquarters for ques­ Union on a single foreign policy question which involven- It also threatened the lives of U.S. Bank (AP) — A rab university have been made from time to tioning Jan. S and saw him with the United States,” Kissinger said. prayed there during his historic visit to officials formally complained to time, but this case is excep­ emerge four and one-half hours Ambassador to Egypt Hermann Eilts and Israel last November. authorities Thursday that Is­ tional in its apparent substan­ later badly beaten and barely The Italian Communist Party, the strongest in Western the president of an Egyptian military U.S. diplomats here said they had stresses its independence from Moscow as do some raeli soldiers had beaten two tiation by W estern witnesses. able to walk. court that sentenced a group of Moslem never heard of the Al Aqsa Organization Palestinian students. The alle­ Dr. E. Robert Adkins, an Communist parties in W estern Europe, especially in Spi The two professors. Dr. zealots to death last November. and the embassy had received no direct gation was backed up by a pair Brian Sykes and James Auty, American profeasor who joined France. The statement, a photostat copy of a threat against Eilts from the group. of British professors who say who teach at the all-Arab Bir them after Rabboh entered the Giorgio Napolitano, a top Communist leader, spoke 4 typewritten page in English, was signed Egyptian security officials were not they saw one youth stagger Zeit University, say they building, corroborated that the “imminent resignation of the government" as he left a TV by "The Al Aqsa Organization." Beyond a immediately available for comment. bruised from a government watched Bir Zeit student student left badly injured. Ad­ meeting of labor leaders and the six major parties. building. Khalid Mohammed Abed Rab- kins, of Washington, D.C., is a Similar charges of brutality boh enter a military govern- lieutenant colonel in the U.S. Three released from Vietnamese waters Air Reserve. The three profeasors also said they later saw the other N icaraguan gun slayi BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) — Three Americans captured with their yacht The trio and their boat originally were reported set free Jan. 3 at the Vietna­ Defense ministers student, Mohammed Ibrahim Shtiyye, and that he appeared three months ago by the Vietnamese mese port of Vung Tau, but the to have been beaten, though not as serioualy as Rabboh. of publisher protest: Vietnamese later announced that stormy were allowed to sail out of Vietnamese waters Thursday, Hanoi's official news agency said. seas had kept them in port. The three are Cornelia Dellenbaugh of repeat no progress The Associated Press learned of the incident through an A rab contact in nearby MANAGUA, Nicaragua (AP) — Demonstrators looted and demonstration and son injured. Unofficial repo In Washington, the State Department Vero Beach, Fla., Charles Affel of Ramallah, which was seized burned the customs building one person was killed, I CAIRO, Egypt (AP) — Egyptian and Israeli defense ministers and set businesses and cars National Guard denied" alerted the Defense Department to begin Philadelphia and Leland Dickerman of from Jordan in the 1967 Mid­ repeated their conflicting stands on Israeli withdrawal from Sinai afire Thursday to protest the port. search for the yacht with naval forces in Flagstaff, Ariz. The 35-foot yacht, the east war. Thursday and acknowledged they made no progress. A fter five machine-gun slaying of opposi­ the area. Officials said there was no Brillig, is owned by Dellenbaugh. The university administra­ Authorities said more' and a half hours of meetings they said the Israeli minister would tion newspaper publisher and official confirmation of the Hanoi report It was not known immediately where tion delivered a formal com­ dozen cars were set afire fly home for consultations. editor Pedro Joaquin Cha­ the Brillig was sailing Thursday. plaint to the Ramallah district businesses burned bet. monitored in Washington. Although Egyptian W ar Minister Mohammed Abdel Ghany morro. military governor saying it funeral of Chamorro, Gamassy and Israeli Defense Minister Ezer Weizman said there “strongly objects to the beating outspoken critic of the <1 was no progress on Israeli military withdrawal from the peninsula Authorities estimated the of two stu d en ts. . . without any ship of President or on the future of Jewish settlements there, Gamassy said the damage a t $7 million. justification." Copiea of the Somoza. Small groups g two sides "are not too far apart and determined to bridge the gap." complaint were addressed to Officers used tear gas and in the streets to block The ministers held a news conference together on the Defense Minister Ezer Weiz­ fired machine guns in the air to fighters from reaching palm-shaded front lawn of the Tahra Palace after their joint man and the W est Bank mili­ break- up rioters but made no blazes. Demonstraton committee completed a three-and-a-half hour session on the second tary governor, Maj. Gen. David arrests. Several persons were started some of the Snr day of talks on military aspects of a peace agreement. Hagoel. trampled by crowds during the they had been extingi The Stale News is published by the students ol Michigan State University every dots do, during Fait Winter ond Spring school terms Monday Wednesdoy and Fridays during Summer term ond a speciol Welcome Week edition is published in September S u b s c rip ts rate is $20 per year Second d a ss postage paid ot East lonsmq Mich Editorial ond business offices at 345 Student Services Bldg Michigan State University East lansu.g M.ch 48624 Post OHice publication number >s S20260 Postmaster Please send »orm 35 9 t0 Stote News 345 Student Se< S Buildin SPAGHETTI ( v e r y ) SPECIAL careo*M SU Messenger Service Eostionsm g Mich 48623 Wholesale prices increase GERALD H. COY, GENERAL MANAGER ROBERT L. BULLARD, SALES MANAGER PHONES N e w s 'E d ito ria l.......... WASHINGTON (AP) — Pushed by percent in November and 0.8 percent in 355-1252 Classified A d s .......... 355-1255 ALL YOU GAN EAT EVERY SIMMY FIHM 4 PJL higher food costs, wholesale prices October. Display Advertising . 353*400 Our own homo mode meaty spaghetti served with Business O H ic e .......... increased 0.7 percent in December and Prices of foods ready for the consumer 355-3447 Photographic............. 355-1311 rolls plus a help yourself salad bar! brought the total increase for the year to rose by 1.5 percent in December, up from 6.6 percent, the government reported an 0.4 percent gain in November and the Thursday. biggest one-month jump in seven The 12*month price rise was twice the months. , K E R M ’S 3.3 percent gain in 1976 and reflected a quickening in the pace of inflation during The December rise in food prices [a u t o B c r o y .x : fl^ n n h p i U htkhnwnt i signaled higher grocery bills for con­ the year, although it was in line with government forecasts. sumers, especially for^ork, poultry and American & Foreign Cars 231 M .A.C. - EAST LANSING vegetable oil products, all of which rose Wholesale prices had advanced 0.4 substantially. Q uality Work G uaranteed OPEN T H U R SD A Y AND F R ID A Y EVEN IN G S U N TIL 9 0 Free Estim ates WHO predicts Russian flu epidemic fTlon. - Fri. 7:30 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. Sat. 8 . 0 0 a.m. - 12 Noon WASHINGTON (AP) - The World Dowdle conveyed the WHO guidelines C orner Larch 4* M ich ig an A v e . Health Organization is predicting that drawn up in Geneva earlier this week to Lansing 489-6577 epidemics of Russian flu will spread U.S. Public Health Service officials and through other countries of the world next medical experts who met at the National flu season, and nations should develop a Institute of Health to try to set a proposed vaccine to protect their populations, U.S. flu vaccination policy for the influenza flu experts were told Thursday. season beginning next fall. Dr. Walter Dowdle, a virologist and Dowdle said the WHO made no specific U.S. representative to WHO in Geneva, recommendation regarding a vaccine for said the United Nations agency also is calling for continued use of the B-Hong Kong vaccine against the relatively mild flu strain that caused numerous out­ the A-Victorio or closely related A-Texas influenza strains, which have caused several outbreaks in the Eastern states this year and could reach epidemic •••• breaks among school-age children in the proportions before the current flu season United States last year. expires in the spring. •111c o l )S () I I S V*V Mobil releases gasoline process details j ' V HOME y i to FASHIONS PAULSBORO, N.J. (AP) — The produc­ 553 ™ w w tion of high-quality, unleaded gasoline line. Development of the process was announced about a year ago, but until la g ^ ® ® SALE from coal rather than oil may be Thursday details were scarce. N O W T H R O U G H J A N U A R Y 31 economically feasible by 1990, officials of • F R ID A Y one of the nation's largest oil firms said John Wise, a Mobile vice president, Fill your linen shelves with superb values Thursday. said that the new gasoline "would cost SUPER TG 3-6 | Half Price Beer. Martinis. Mobil Oil Co. officials, at a news 40-50 cents more per gallon than gasoline Manhattan* SH EET S, PILLOW C A S E S , B ED SP R EA D S. • conference in this south New Jersey made from oil, but with oil becoming 10$! The State News Friday, January 13, 1978 Editorials are the opinions o I the State N ew s. Viewpoints, columns and letters are personal opinions. Editorial Dopartmont Michael Tanimuro Campus Editor..........................................Anne Stuart Sports Editor...................................... . TomM ................. Kat Brown Wire Editor Jocelyn Laskowskl Layout Editor.......................... Rebeccakj .. Dave Mislolowskl Photo Editor.................................. Richard Politowskl Copy Chief..................................... Renaldollj Debbie Wolfe Entertainment and Book Editor.. Kathy Esselmon Freelance E d ito r...................... W/cfWl Joe Scales Staff Representative................. NunifoAl Advertising Deportment Shoron Seller Assistant Advertising Manager. ISl' Telecoi DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau ,m. weekdtj IRA ELLIOTT ompiny pu W r e su r e oh, re s. s ir . U H .X lS ,-m iS D IL D m C A U M ! I I YW HAVEA N NO, SIR. abo u t th is im a k e it TM FROM OUTOF TOWN, A tC I'V E SURE, DOC! I I e x o v n s w n t , thank PHARMACt, BOY? M Y BUS/NESS ID BE SU RE! lO STM YPRBSCRm u PAD, BUT I WONDER IF I COULDORDER A TEW v m s to be se n t c m NO PROBLEM! WHATDO YOU u _ NEED? I LAD. NEVER. ABUSE IT. YOU, S R . v Transform ations lomiinTEL^-rfiU SK a BOOM? U J w t r ,T a rem em brance of things past thought I summon up remembrance of % past, I sigh the lack of many a thing I sor. And with old woes new wail my time’s waste **♦ I am the last to leave the office tont,' M ICHAEL CROFOOT rarity. Once, about two years ago was a reporter, this wouldn't have M odd — the State News was so muchI life. Tonight I’m reminded of those alia, macroscene ers with staff members who have t- stayed on continuously and moved , editor positions, have quit and returned in other capacities like tny» have simply moved on toother things-^ has happened over the last two yean, Much of the midwest and northeast is here I am, looking out from the well#, experiencing bitterly cold and windy came from a computer model. Simplistic office into the closet-dark night. winter weather. I telephoned Ottawa, — yes. But it exploded into the Somewhere out over the trees, m where they were having a thawing wind macroacademic scene and it and all the Grand River, beyond Taco Bell and C*sj while we in the wrist of Michigan (left books since are still with us — stronger Corners, a party takes shape to the sop hand outstretched) were being blown than ever. Diana Ross, clinking beer ca n s and J about slick icy streets, scuttling like Remember back in the fourth or fifth between friends who really h ave not freezing rodents for warm homes. Even grade when the kids were acting out much to say to one another. dogs (careful of the specism) don’t want their egos and frustrations so confusing­ I have just talked on the p hon e »‘i® • to be outside. ly? I like to use my little kid’s memory to understand what’s happening in the host of the gathering. I have said tWj Know anybody that doesn’t want to eager to participate further in human­ column is still unfinished and that*| go outside good weather or bad? ity’s designing functions . . . and am Middle East. When Sadat made his magnanimous move for peace, my among other reasons we laughed abP “I have a friend inside of me. He hides aware that humanity is approaching a why I am not going to party tonight his head inside a dream." crisis in which its residual ignorance, memories of little kid egos said maybe Do you have a friend th at got shortsight- some silly (and frightening) rivalries I am still looking out the w i n d o w . But overwhelmed by what they had to do to shortsightedness and circumstance- would be acted out. What do you think difference is, this time I could jum p in10 live and so they stopped living some? A biased viewpoints may dominate, thus has happened, or haven’t you been water if I cared to. friend who had a nervous breakdown, carrying humanity beyond the ’point of following the news? Tsk, tsk. freaked out, or just stopped paying no return.’ " The story has to do with his Words and concepts are only models attention as much?'Seems as though own nearsightedness. for what they mean. Special words, like everybody knows somebody that had to It seems that when Bucky was three symbiosis, and concepts, like the world drop out to keep it together. I’ve had or four, his parents discovered that as an organism, can be enlightening. that feeling myself — have you? some of his unusual behavior was due to Scientists, climatologists and such are Seems like there’s good reason for it. the fact that he was farsighted. They saying that, once they started thinking You know, increasing information over­ had some spectacles made for him and of the Earth as one huge organism, load, cultural shock, communications he made less of a spectacle of himself. understanding big processes like the static, accelerating change and all that But his tendency to see the pattern, the weather and evolution became easier. ballyhoo. I go in and out of following the news — depending on time and energy. gestalt, of things a t a distance per­ I know a woman who can talk in ‘S p ir it’ blasted And as always, there a re t sisted. He still sustains a configurative complicated concepts like most of us can Spirits in the front row w ho 11 Sometimes I can be here now but too farsightedness. Maybe he is so good at talk in words. She looks for the essence playing Jud Heathcote ja w in g much of the time I’m on automatic pilot what he does he looks for the essential of the news, books, media, hard human referees. I dread the day w h en o — so preoccupied as to not listen. Not all character of things. reality. receives a technical foul because there, kinda. There are such beautiful A freshperson Ecology book reminds activities. I won’t even get in to the people all over the world who couldn’t its students: “Not only is the ecological Next time you start ignoring what’s we stood up all night for °ur take in what their society is dishing out crisis more complex than we think — it happening to you because it’s too much, whereas the Spirits somehow attain so they holed up somewhere in a place is more complex than we can ever try squinting your eyes and scanning of their own. the scene. tickets beforehand. think.” Maybe Bucky’s way of seeing I told one such friend a story that could help us overwhelmed people Please understand that I am also' Buckminster Fuller likes to tell. Bucky’s some. Keep them cards and letters coming. Especially those surveys grading your fan just hoping to see the e n tir e ga that spacetraveling sage who wrote in Here's some unsophisticated tricks: favorite educational institution as to more importantly, hoping th at his book-poem, Intuition: I am now for holistic understanding make a model how well it’s preparing you for the teams don’t think that all Spartan seventy-three years of age and am of things. The Limits to Growth book future. Cross country skiing, anyone? like the "new brand of fan Spartan P h ilip " locus: cable television at MSU Wm IS r E.L. now has second largest jg l m s u cable television station in U.S. By CHRIS KUCZYNSKI p ro p e r The City of New York, with about 7,000 August, Meridian township is expected to channels offer free air time, but charge a fee State News Staff Writer hours of public access programming, holds be hooked up to cable with two public Many people believe East Lansing's only for use of television equipment. National first place in the country, but East Lansing access stations of its own. claim to fame is a small highway sign which Cable in East Lansing offers both free air is growing by leaps and bounds. Last year East Lansing Cable Commissioner Val­ time and free use of equipment. says it is the home of MSU. But, if the city WELM Cable Channel 11 presented 1,200 erie Drachman said, the cooperation be­ wanted to gain more notoriety, it could add East Lansing is a leader in cable because hours of programming. tween the city and the National Cable Co. is to it's "Welcome to East Lansing" sign: it has taken advantage of the opportunities "excellent." that the medium offers, said Thomas 'Home of the second largest public access When public access originated in East Drachman said that although she is in Baldwin, MSU professor of telecommunica­ A television station in the country.’ Lansing in 1975, there were only seven shows being aired on a regular basis. By the favor of seeing community-owned cable tions and a leading advocate of cable when National's franchise with the city television in the city. of 1976,10 shows were being presented expires in 1980, she admits the cable Baldwin attributes the success of public ^ibgularly with 25 programs broadcasted company has cooperated more than they television in the city to a tough cable last year. are required by providing equipment that ordinance. The ordinance spells out the "We've got quite a center here," said corrects defects in picture reception. procedures for a cable franchise and Randy VanDalsen, public channels coordi­ Another contributing factor to the suc­ mandates the existence of the cable nator for WELM television cable Channel cess of public television in East Lansing is commission. 11. "We have designed the system to work, the presence of a cable commission. The Baldwin, who helped compose the ordi­ have a lot of equipment and have en­ commission serves as the governing body nance, said it was written at a time when couraged people to use it." for cable television and approves rate there was a great deal of competition for increases for the National Cable Co. It also cable franchises and the city could afford to The encouragement seems to be paying negotiates franchise agreements. be tough. off because last year 960 shows hit the air The cable company is like a public utility, waves; nearly five times the amount holding a legal monopoly, and it is the When National CableCompany applied to presented in 1975. the city for a franchise, they did so without commission's responsibility to advise the knowing they were the only applicants. The It is VanDalsen’s job to carry out the East Lansing City Council on what action to application promised several offerings that city's mandate for a public access channel take to regulate the company. the company may have not made otherwise and he acts as a liason between the city and In contrast, the city of Lansing does not and were subsequently included in the the National Cable Company to make sure have a cable commission and as a result, franchise agreement, Baldwin said. id that the system works. Continental Cablevision does not offer the However, Baldwin said, the weakness of variety of public access stations that the the franchise is that the penalty for not VanDalsen said the average city with National Cable Co. in East Lansing does. living up to its provisions is revocation of public access television broadcasts about In addition to cable Channel 11, National the agreement. 15 to 20 programs each month. Last year, Cable offers five other access channels for “The Cable Co. has the upper hand if cable Channel 11 averaged 80 programs the benefit of the community: Channel 22 each month. there is a dispute over the provisions in the for use by the local government; Channel 23 franchise,” Baldwin said. “The cost and Presently, the public access channel for use by the city library; Channel 24 for effort of fighting with the cable company broadcasts five days a week for six hours use by the East Lansing public schools; and, make it tough for the city to enforce the each day. But, by the end of January, cable Channels 19 and 20 for use by MSU. franchise." Tom9 "People are amazed when I tell them how Channel 11 will expand its operations to six Technically the franchise agreement is R e be c ca ( I many access channels we have in the city," Renaldolf hours a day, six days per week. being violated because National Cable is not VanDalsen said. The city of New York has MicfWll Cable Channel 11 also employs the use of two cable companies and between them providing a Community Affairs Channel. Nun:ioA| But. the company compensated for this by a mobile studio and by August it is hoped they offer nine access channels — eight that another public access station will be public access, four of which require a fee for providing more equipment for public access Denmi functioning, VanDalsen said. Also, by airtime and studio use. The other four than is required, Baldwin said. The Federal Communications Commis­ sion’s regulations require that all cities Stote News/Ira Strickstein which offer cable television and have 3,000 MSU Telecommunications m ajors produce a 5:30 Channel 11) on 1070 T row bridge Rd. N ew scasters or more subscribers, must provide a E.L. rules stringent ^.m. weekday news program a t th e National Cable for th is show are (left to right) Jeffrey Levy, television station that is accessible to the Company public access television studio (cable Gisele “Gigi" S ilvestrini and Michael McLean. public. East Lansing currently has about 5,600 cable subscribers. The East Lansing cable ordinance is tough and public-spirited. Public access television is funded by The result of over three years of work by a citizen commission and the E ast Lansing money provided by subscriber fees from the ifa/e TV notslated for M SU City Council, the ordinance spells out special features found in few other cities and which were even questioned by the Federal Communications Commission for being too stringent. Originally approved in 1972, the ordinance has been revised and amended National Cable Company. Three percent of those fees goes to the city of East Lansing and 80 percent of that figure is earmarked three times. for the East Lansing Cable Commission. The ordinance requires that a cable company obtain a seven-year franchise in order Fifty percent of the 80 is designated for >spite efforts for procurem en t to s ta r t providing cable TV service. cable Channel 11 which amounts to about National Cable Co., which holds the current franchise, went through an extensive $5,000 each year. review of its management, finances and plans for installing cable TV equipment. The d ty granted itself in the ordinance substantial control over the operation of the Public access television in East Lansing system, including the right to throw out the franchisee a t will, and require extension of has become a model for other cities to ByDeLINDA KARLE service throughout the city within three years with the utmost efficiency and the most emulate, said Mark Adler and Bill McCon- State News Staff Writer "I had a feeling the recommendations we made (about cable up-to-date equipment. key, co-directors of Video Workshop. They [erous efforts to install cable televi- television for MSU) would go down between the cracks of the Other provisions in the ordinance are: attribute the success of cable to community campus over the past decade have desks in the provost s office. A lot of man-hours were spent •A t least 50 channels have to be available, of which 40 percent are designated "public interest and cooperation from the academic concrete results. working on it and now nothing happens. ” - Thomas Muth, channels." community. 'port supporting MSU experimenta- •Specifications are listed for public access program. Listed are the equipment, studio This city is the video capital of the state," associate professor of telecommunication Adler said. e office to# ith cable television was submitted requirem ents and need for a production consultant necessary for East Lansing rears ago * 14, 1975 to the provost by the Ad residents to run their own hometown network. The objective of MSUs Video workshop is dn’t have ^roiUee on University Relationships •Public service installations of cable hook-ups are required at the police and fire to teach people to use video equipment and is so mucho>| use the equipment. power plant to control therm ostats and stations, City Hall, all public and private schools and at any five locations on the MSU to provide an alternative form of television of those all oj »mmittee was established specifical- Adler said that the Workshop circulated lighting in various buildings, Jorgensen campus. besides network television. McConkey said. who have« :amine cable television and consisted a petition in the fall of 1976 to determine the added. •T he city maintains the right to buy and run the cable system itself. and moved| fessors, administrative officials and student demand for cable television. Ap­ •The cable system is required to have an audio alert capability so the city can Another contributing factor to the suc­ ident. proximately 250 persons signed the petition "Wires can carry a vast variety of broadcast emergency information to all cable TV viewers. cess of public television in the city is the quit land Hunter, acting dean for lifelong but, Adler said, it was not a very effective messages, not just entertainm ent," he said. The franchisee was required to put up a $5,000 application fee and pay a franchise fee cooperation and the willingness of the ; s lik e m ysflj iion and chairman of the committee, campaign because it was conducted in Jorgensen said he has submitted a of five percent of subscriber revenues. The FCC challenged the stiff franchise fee National Cable Co. to se it work, Drachman ;h er things, i f t tw o yeafs.ll >has heard nothing about the statua classrooms and not in the dorms. Another proposal to the vice-president of business requirement and it was lowered to three percent. admits. lle television on campus since the survey is planned for the spring. and finance, Roger Wilkinson. •T he E ast Lansing Cable Communications Commission was established. Some of the i t h e w e ll# was submitted. functions of the commission are to resolve disagreements among the cable company, The FCC requires that cities with public n ig h t. However. Wilkinson said that he has not committee was asked to make a "The Video Workshop feels that the access stations must provide a minimal i e trees. seen any proposal for the University to subscribers and users of the system; advise the city council on the regulation of rates; and submit recommendations," he students should have the chance to decide if and encourage the use of public channels. amount of studio facilities with funds Bell and Cam build its own cable system. have heard nothing since I they want cable or not," Adler said. "If all received from the cable company. The ie to thesouafl He said the University has reviewed •Envisioned are guaranteed access for students and minority groups, channel time |tcd the study, the dorms could not be wired, at least high for pay TV — such as Home Box Office — educational programs and the ability to get National Cable Co. has provided East • ca n s and i] proposals to have a cable company come on committee disbanded after the priority places such as the Union, Interna­ information from the library or other information sources. Lansing with a studio that is one of the most |y h ave I campus but it did not seem financially I was submitted. tional Center and Library should be sophisticated public access systems in the connected with cable wires." feasible at the time. country. Adler said. ; p hon e with! | ence Winder, University provost, ,v e said thatf p e recommendations of the study have An on-campus cable system would give played due to lack of funds. a n d that a customers a clearer television picture, more tu ghed aboat| I administration review is currently ;y tonight. I n under the associate provost, Jack |K r. to see if further studies on cable channels, 24-hour news and public access channels, Adler said. Anyone can be o star Ed Townsend, chief technician for the F ' e at this time, he said. National Cable Company said, the company lid ,3 tbe recommendations would be very happy to install cable on fh„m»l U I R° dow" bet*een the tke Prov°st's office," ""mas Muth, associate professor of campus. "We have talked about a reduced rate for on public access cable the University," he said. “The holdup is due | ” ®"nicatio n a n d a m e m b e r o f t h e to the University." came committee. By CAROLE LEIGH HUTTON Installing a cable system does not have to cost the University a cent, said Don Backus, State News Staff Writer lo u r«Uw 0rtU "a t e b e c a u s e 8 l o t o f You don't have to be a star to be in their show. manager of National Cable Company. lo th in c r SP!,nt' w o r k in 8 o n it a n d In fact, almost anyone can have their own show on East Lansing’s Cable television I B h a p p e n s ,” h e s a id . Only the individual students who wanted to subscribe would be charged, he said. But, Channel 11. The only requirement is that the user be a resident of East Lansing or L p 'rt s t a t e s t h a t “ t h e r e la t io n s h i p before this happens, a contract must be Meridian Township. s s h n u iT T o l ° .c a b le t e l e v i s i o n Randy VanDalsen, public access director for Channel 11, said the station now has 25 If,',.. ' w it h in i t s t r a d it i o n a l negotiated between the University and National Cable Company, he added. regularly scheduled programs, 20 of which run weekly along with six to ten special shows. I pubhc u n i v e r s it y a n d la n d - g r a n t P art of the University — married housing But, he added, the station’s studios are now being used at only 2/3 of their capacity. |li» n tr i’o r t a d d e d t h a t MSU h a s a n “We can really accommodate a lot more, even though there's been plenty going on here — has had a contract with National Cable with this new Company since 1969. lately," VanDalsen said. Erling Jorgensen, professor of telecom­ "Last year we averaged 80 public access shows a month, but by the end of the year we munication, said the contract between were showing 100 each month." P U h e V ir t CL0 r 0 t V id e o W o r k 5bop. married housing and National Cable Com­ The shows can be almost anything, VanDalsen said, with the only restrictions being on f ble television ' P h M b e e " t r y i n g t 0 obscenity and indecency. (ea r s. ° n ca m p u s fo r a t le a s t pany was not considered in the total University context when it was negotiated. The Federal Communications Commission rules prohibit cable television companies “The dorm manager of married housing from censoring any material going on the air, but the shows must be free of obscenity. l"a""ibgrf» y„°,h1Cia! t Say they need That, VanDalsen said, could create a problem. made it (the contract) as a service to the P a w h a s itik . r gs'" be “ id. students, such as a phone would be," "We haven't really had to deal with that here though," he said. "I’d say we ran over a I ow" its o w n c a h l U n iv e r s ity w o u ld thousand shows before we even ran into it." Jorgensen said. “But as soon as it was made r * d -m o a m p u ^ 3 y ,t e m if it W e r e t 0 known I screamed. I think that MSU ought Because the FCC is vague in this area, the National Cable Co. is in the process of writing a request to the East Lansing Cable Commission for help in determining what the Stote News/Ira Strickstein r W«rksh1 to build its own system." °P is a division of the Union city’s community standards for obscenity are. Philip MSU should have a system that would Telecom m unications g rad u ate stu d en t Dean R. Sm its directs the 5:30 Lan® "The Supreme Court said community standards are what we have to go by and, since tree of „k video equipment involve more than just cable television, he p.m. cable Channel 11 new s show which is broadcast live. '0 1 charge to students. The the FCC is so vague on this, we’re hoping for a lot of public input," he said. said. It should build two-way facilities to "Mrs workshops on how to give courses in dorm rooms and allow the (continued on page 12) Galumphing Gourmet Simon's 'Goodbye Girl' charming By BYRON BAKER have none of it p.,- course)!, .» State News Reviewer > There’s nothing supernatural about the people but it doesn’t. Filled with the sort of w it and « Off-Off Broadw," of East Lansing; like the rest of the world’s •BURGER KING — Once my personal choice fine comic observation th a t has tion of Richard in mortals, we all have to eat. And like the rest of as the King of the F ast Food Shovelers, Burger typified his best Broadway sub-let the apartment t, the country's college towns, East Lansing has King has since fallen on hard times. Is it work, The Goodbye Girl is far Paula's last lover. more than its fair share of eateries — fast food imagination, or are the Whoppers getting and away the best thing Neil havens, swanky sit-down restaurants, lunch thinner and the buns getting thicker? The food Simon has w ritten directly for Paula, however, i, U a specialists and the like, capitalizing on the average for the usual gunkburger, but the onion the screen. Director H erbert ElUot has a signed leas, insatiable appetites of the ulcer-owners of rings are inedible and the silly hats on the Ross and stars Richard Drey- pocket; after some barely J tomorrow. employees ridiculous. ciliatory dialogue, they J fuss and Marsha Mason have Like a vast army of post-pubescent Coneheads, invested sufficient energy and tantly decide to share we students consume huge quantities of beer, •RED LOBSTER — The prices are right and intensity in the script as to apartm ent Their ,dvm , pizza and oil-saturated junk foods every day. In the food so-so, but watch your digestion. A good fount a superior romantic com­ have only begun: Elliot di* the first of this series of restaurant reviews, the share of the surprisingly large seafood menu edy. The Him is likely to please e rs his director want, Galumphing Gourmet looks a t the local fast food FRIED, with FRIED scallops, FRIED clams, and elate a good many movie­ Richard to have a wildly h, scene, picking out certain aspects of it for FRIED hush puppies, FRIED potatoes, etc. Stay goers. sexual bent, and Paul, I well deserved praise or good natured abuse. away from too much of the fried goodies and your after years of inactivity t The fast food industry is a fascinating slice of dinner wj|j be enjoyable instead of nauseating, One of the reasons the pic­ certain muscles don't work i pop culture. Assailed by nutritionists and The decor is dull and plastic looking, the ture works so well — it works because you have to audit aesthetes alike, the fast food industry has waitresses preoccupied, but the prices (though better than any Simon play for a chorus part. nonetheless grown to the point where Americans they hover around the top end of the junk food adapted for the screen — is will soon be eating half their meals outside their sca]e ) make it worthwhile, Mason is fine as Paul,, because the talents involved homes. In East Lansing alone, thousands of reasonably portraying, » •MCDONALD’S — Once you say the name, compliment each other so well. gallons of vegetable oil go into the making of woman who prefers living Simon wrote the screenplay millions of French fries annually. Judging by the what more can you say? The decor is unoffend with Dreyfuss and Mason in a man and making a homeir number of fast food emporiums that are popping ing, the food acceptable, the service cheery. mind — the first tim e he has her daughter to a career (** up like Kudzu all over the landscape, the trend (New employees have to read a little book on how written for specific actors. Di­ thing not seen much in ping, doesn't seem to be reversing. to be a perfect McDonald's employee.) They have any more). But Dreyfuss, the cleverest commercials on TV. They’re in rector Ross had previously The following list is not meant to be the last M arsha Mason and R ichard D reyfuss w arily size each o th e r u p in The Goodbye terrific as Elliot, coming d* for the money, and they’re making tons of it. helmed the film version of The word on what I conveniently label “junk food.’’ Sunshine Boys (the author’s Girl, a new rom antic com edy from M-G-M and W arn er B ros. T he film w as w rit­ to purloining the entire pint,! McDonald's is not merely an institution; it's in a performance which bin After all, it is only one person's opinion. One favorite among the films made ten by Neil Simon and directed by H erb ert Ross. national shrine. brashness, arrogance, fnm, could argue that some of the places mentioned of his plays) and directed don’t even fit under the "fast food" label. But •WENDY’S — One of the newest and most tion and tenderness - « Simon’s new play Chapter Two, they all have a haunting similiarity, a curious successful contenders for the junk food dollar, currently on Broadway. Mason, necessarily in that orderT to walk out on her. already left her hanging when knocks on her door one night to mixture of public service, capitalism and com­ Wendy’s bases its success on a limited menu and it should be added, married with recognizable humanity. Two thespians (her ex-hus­ Elliot Garfield (Dreyfuss, in his inform her that he holds a lease mercialism that puts them all in the same a "wholesome" eating atmosphere. But despite Neil Simon in 1973. band and a recent lover) have best performance to date) on her apartm ent. Paula will The W arner Brothers rein, category. the almost overpowering wholesomeness of the Here is a representative sampling of East place (the freckled, pig-tailed girl on the logo, the is at the Meridian 8 Theaten. The script of The Goodbye .ansing's junk food dens. You can take it as plastic Tiffany-style lamps, the gloating over­ Girl judiciously combines the seriously as you want. emphasis on fresh food products), Wendy's tone of the boy-meets-girl pic­ •DOMINO’S PIZZA — In all fairness it has to serves up a damn good hamburger, and it isn't a tures so popular before the said that Domino’s pizza is not very different hassle to get whatever you want put on it. from the rest of the home-delivery pizza served in this town. Flat, bland and lacking any sort of character, it doesn’t taste much different than the cardboard it’s served on. As a mayonnaise freak, I was shocked to find you can get good old mayo on your burger without having to fight the attendant. Whoever conceived of Wendy’s deserves sainthood. coming of television, with the more brittle, contemporary feel of some of Simon’s recent efforts. At times it seems consciously structured as a Weekend Calendar By STEVE SZILAGY1 at 2 p.m. Tickets are $8, $7, and $4.50 for the evr;1 Having worked a whole summer pounding stage play, but director Ross' State News Reviewer performances, with all student, admitted for half price. Tickets' pizza dough, I can say from experience that pizza •ARTHUR TREACHER’S FISH AND CHIPS careful, unobtrusive handling of The Ten Pound Fiddle Coffeehouse will present folksinger Ed the matinee are $2 for adult, and $1 for young people. one of the highest profit food items on the — Not bad stuff, these deep fried wonders. the actors and story makes it Trickett at 8 p.m. tonight in Old College Hall in the Union Grill. Paintings by Vernon Kauffman are a t the East Lansing Libs market. So it seems amazing that Domino’s Though the menu is limited primarily to very functional, indeed. Trickett, one of America’s foremost unknown singers, accompanies Gallery, 950 Abbott Road, through Jan. 31. skimps so much on the overpriced "extra items." batter-dipped fish, French fries and multiples himself on guitar and hammered dulcimer. Admission is $2.50. Mason plays Paula McFad- Frontline Cinema will present Hector Olivera's 1974 Argenth you order mushrooms, you get a random thereof, it’s about the best the gulp-and-go Lansing's Impression 5 Science Museum has an exhibit of satellite den, a thirtyish ex-Broadway film Rebellion in Patagonia Friday and Saturday in 104-B W- sprinkling of mushroom chips over the cheese; if business has to offer. photography called "Window to the World" during January and Hall. you order pepperoni, you usually get less than a dancer who has a history of February. It will be available along with the usual touch-and-feel NEXT TIME: The Gourmet, wrapped in black falling in love with actors. The factual story of the slaughter of hundreds of stn' dozen quarter-sized pieces hidden in the sauce. cloak and chefs hat, ventures into G reater stuff at the museum at 1400 Keystone in Lansing. Hours are 9 a.m. Patagonian workers by government troops in 1920, the filmhu. It seems like the high competition in a Unfortunately for Paula and to5 p.m. Tuesday through Friday, and Saturdav and Sunday 1 p.m. Lansing, leaving large amounts of money in his her terrific ten-year-old daugh­ several internati® al awards. Penelope Gilliatt of The New Yrf college-town market would upgrade the product, to 5 p.m. wake. te r (played with disarming has called the p ictu tt ‘‘superbly thoughtful and ironie," and - The Opera Guild of G reater Lansing will present Puccini's opera it with “a marveloin sweep and historical consciousness." precocity by Quinn Cummings), La Boheme tonight at 8 p.m. and Sunday at 7 p.m. in the MSU Rebellion in Patagonia is in Spanish with English sub" actors have a marked tendency Auditorium. A special young people's matinee will be held Saturday Showtimes are 7:15 and 9:15. Admission is $1.50. ’S o n g of S o lo m o n ' w in s book aw ard Get Ready for New Adventure O O/ ( T MSU BOOTERY . O r,9 NEW YORK (API - The National Book Critics Circle on Explore a °poO Wednesday named Toni Morri­ son’s Song of Solomon as the best work of fiction published Book ^cP °° o 0 ° 0° CO m PU TER 225 E. G ra n d River, East Lansing VISA by an American writer in 1977. 0 LABORATORY Now Offering 0° The circle gave its poetry < Go O 0 0 0 >o , 0 o FURTHER MARKDOWNS criticism to Susan Sontag's On o a lm o st every su b je c t. S cience fic tio n , TOURS ~ c oQ Photography. sp o rts, tra v e l, h o b b ie s a n d “ how t o ’s ” g a lo re . R ight n o w , th ese ex citin g new T h e C o m p u te r L a b o ra to ry sta ff w ill c o n d u c t to u rs Tremendous Savings the last question o f th e C o m p u te r C en ter fo r n ew u sers of th e M SU best sellers a re in sto c k : c o m p u tin g facility . Each to u r c o n sists o f a slide Tho High Frontier C a su a l and D ress p r e s e n ta tio n , a d iscu ssio n o f th e fu n c tio n a n d Changing PLflNETflfllUI3 M 3 5 5 -4 *7 ? The Acts of King Arthur A His Noble Knights o p e r a tio n o f th e C o m p u te r L a b o ra to ry , a n d a w a lk in g to u r o f the b u ild in g . T h e to u rs s ta rt in WINTER BOOTS and SHOES R o o m 215 at th e fo llo w in g tim es. A d v e n tu re s ta k e p la c e 7 d a y s a w eek. Ja n u a ry 9 1 :00 p.m . Compact Paramount Ja n u a ry 10 9 :0 0 a .m . Newscenters 30% Refrigerator Ja n u a ry 11 7 :0 0 p .m . SAVE Lansing: 102 S. Washington Ave. Rental | 2010 W. Saginaw • Last Lansing January 12 3 :0 0 p .m . UP TO 3 72 *1 7 95 .,.w . w ----------- 1537 L. G rand River Ave. Ja n u a ry 13 1 1 :0 0 a .m . ParamountNewscentereOpen V o u r M in d ... O p e n a Book TOASTY WARM... K u v s e r s "1 n asties ome, the crucial question "What is needed is a more effective channeling back into the states of money paid out th at goes to the Pentagon," he eligible with the program, she said. OPEN 24 Hours 3 II-7 7 M 2000 E. Grand Rivar O ■0 is getting the tax dollars added. lentagon is supposed to be Spokespersons for several lie out," Anderson said, Lansing agencies said they had [higan taxpayers are only their own ideas of what could L back 50 cents on every gr they shell out. Kderson cited figures from Kudy that was introduced be done with small allotments of the defense budget money. Nelson Brown, of the Lansing Energy Action Project, said the *5)511 Ingress in July, 1976: money that could be used to 1 1977, the Michigan De­ create energy will be used 220M.A.C. Sorry, this may not be used te n t of Defense tax bur- elsewhere. The University Mall for o refund or as credit |was $4.7 million. $1.4 East Lansing toward existing layoway, or In was brought back into (517)-332 2212 on sole items. la te through government the last question Kse contracts, leaving a %Rjon net loss, £ ☆ by £ ft m 1975, a floundering De- I paid out $9.5 billion in Lai taxes, getting back lillion in government con- is a a c a s im o v ro? $5°° TS Sfcoi Purchase / & £ In Our Store \ ^ EXPIRES JANUARY31,1978-LIMITONE PEIK3JSTo!w» A t the Peking Restaurant, 1515 Center Street in Lansing, dining is a fam ily a ffa ir. The minute you enter the restaurant ■ Detroit residents ab- you're aw are of the friendly atm osphere. M rs. Wang, as a $4.5 billion drain. the hostess, greets you with her w ide, warm sm ile to seat you J ,t ween 1957-74 when la s t q u e stio n ■d R. Ford served as a in a dining room complete with a fireplace and Chinese b a n Congressman, Kent ☆ lamps. irner Brothers rtltJ Meridian 8 Theatetil t v went from a low unre­ by isaac asimov For dram atic dining try the deep fried rice dropped into soup which steam s and sizzles as it's served at your table. Chinese pancakes, the counterpart to tortillas, are rolled with slivered pork and sprouts. They specialize in Polynesian drinks with Mai Tais, Scorpions and Singapore Slings, some of the favorites. ira's 1974 Argentin I 7 cremt u n io n ' 111 ... w here s t u d e n t Sjpli The Peking Restaurant offers banquet facilities that w ill seat up to 130 guests. Reservations are accepted, and on w eekends this might be a good idea. The restaurant is located on the corner of Center and North Street. It's easy urday in 104-B wj II w elcom e to get there from MSU if you follow G rand River (O akland) M I m S U EMPLOYEES . to Center Street. The hours are 11 a .m .-10 p.m . Monday thru CREDIT UNION Z Thursday; 11 a .m .-11 p.m . Friday and Saturday; and Noon 600 E. Crwcunt to 9 p.m . on Sunday. 363-22*0 SAVE 30%to50% CELEBRATE THE CH IN ESE NEW YEAR ON THETOPS INTOPS FEBRUARY 4th AT PEKING! ANDTHETOPS This next Chinese New Y ea r w ill be the "Y ear of the Friday is IN BOTTOMS, TOO H orse." So, the special celebration to welcom e it w ill include leans-terrific ones, of curse 10 courses of Chinese gormet food, one-half bottle of and dress pants, sweaters, cham pagne per couple, live entertainm ent and dancing. A ll teg Day Afternoon shirts, tpps'n more for Junior sires. this for the price of *29.50!! Limited reservations only, call 489-2445 n o w ! foot long Chili Dog Happy Hour Dance to the music of "Brandy" on February 27th and 28th 80( 2 .5 p .m . d a l l y MtPWftf 4 from 9 p.m . - 2 a .m . Nightly Intnrtainment In Meridian Mall "KA IN -PAI" (Chinese toast for "bottoms up"). Mellow Folk 8 Big Screen TV ....................................... U S P C N S C E E D B r :J OpenM-F: 11a.m. J S a t.-S u n .: Noon Strike - it Lucky 11227 E. Crand Rivar I Blit. West of Hagadorn for an afternoon or IG o o d F o o d 1 332-6517 a n d D rin k evening of entertainment I Downtown Lansing 116 E. Mich. Ave. •40 Lanes r 372-4300 A •Automatic Specials! Scorers Gamas 8\ talent. meter competition at Wisconsin presents need only present a valid I.D. The Spartans have been and finished well back at for admission. paced in the early going this winter by newcomers Audrey Columbus, losing to Ohio State's Olympic standout Jenny Chandler. Next action for the Spartans is Jan. 21 a t Michigan. friday night Flood, Annette Kubiske and Linda Mrosko. All the Spartans are ready to improve their 2-2 p 1 record in the home debut. i 8 pm ^ E D “Since it is the first home meet, the kids have been work­ i 5 0 * O FF! TRICKETT ing real hard this week," said i Joel Feldmann, head coach. i any p iu a l 2 Haircuts i “There are some that didn't get any size! good workouts over the break i for the price of o n e.* but I'm hoping they'll start i Few folksingers can match the warmth and swimming better." M ake an appointm ent In the absence of competi­ tion, it appears Flood got better iCAMPUS ta s te o f E d T ric k ett. H is e n d le ss repertoire o f o ld and new songs i s enhanced by h is e x q u isite to com e in with your boyfriend, or even your prof! C all now over the holiday layoff. After a pre-Christmas run of success, the Niles frosh picked up where she left off and won the l ■ I PIZZA accom panim ents on 6 - and 1 2 -s trin g guitars and on hammered dulcim er. H is sh ee r love o f good songs — and th e a c t o f sharing them — m akes any T rickett room m ate, girlfriend, S I G O U R N E Y ’S H A I R S T Y L I N G for m ore information. 4 8 4 -1 4 9 1 I 1312 Mich. Ave. concert a very sp e c ia l experience. E d sin g s a lo t o f 200-yard freestyle in last week­ chorus songs in p articular, eagerly inviting th e audi­ end’s triangular meet a t Colum­ D ILIV IR Y 337-1377 for Men and W omen . ■f - en ce to join in . H e does old b a lla d s, funny songs, bus, Ohio. She’s likely to have her hands love so n g s and lam ents, and lo ts more. Don’t m iss 1712 E. M ichigan A ve n u e U ll J full Saturday, going against th is truly outstanding ^ ^ m£\ •O ffer ex p ire s 1-31-78 TvVlv l l v K l~ l \ Pitt's Kathy Stetler. The Pan­ folks in ger! k d ijU ther sophomore is one of the top 10 freestylers in the coun­ O ld C o lle g e H a ll in the try and is currently ranked fourth nationally at 200 yards. M S U n io n G r ill & N E W C O L O R S IN 14 K A R A T G O L D W E D D IN G R I N G S W A R R A N T E D T O R E S IS T W E A R F O R A L IF E T IM E ! Mrosko has come close to T h e brilliance a n d b ea u ty of ev ery A rtC arv ed w e d d in g rin g we winning her races this season o ffer is w a rra n te d in w ritin g for a lifetim e. S h o u ld refin ish in g T h is month’s dance w ill be in Holmes is a a c a s im o v s 8pm H all, classroom s 101-103. Our two c a lle rs and liv e stringband ev er be n e e d e d , A rtC arv ed will refin ish w ith o u t co st. F rom our large collection in th e n ew co lo rs of 14 k arat g o ld . Yellow gold ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ floral: A .$195. B.$200. P ink, w h ite, a n d yellow : C .$185. D.$180. the sat. night alw ays welcome new dancers — give it a try! Yellow o x y d ized b an d s: E. $155. F.$160. Something Beautiful for Everyone. K la s t q u e stio n CONTRADANCE $1.25 Colorado Comfort DISCOSKATING F r e e A d m is s i o n the night your hall is featured Every Monday “Super Spartan Nite 8-11 p.m. Jan. 16 Hubbard Halls Jan. 23 Fee Halls Ian. 30 Holden Halls NOW $49 95 Feb. 6 Wonders Halls Feb. 13 Shaw Halls reg. W Feb. 20 Brody Halls M ORGANS lin e leivelers S iiu e IH7(> Feb. 27 Giltner ft Akers Halls 121 S. W a sh in g to n , L a n sin g zip pockets, high collar, Mar. 6 All College M e rid ia n M all, O k e m o s a rainbow of colors, sizes extra sm a ll to Just 50* with college I.D ., General Use one til Morgan's convenient charge plans nr Admission *1 ,so Skate Rental 75* American l-.xpress, RankAmericard, Master Charge extra, extra large. Mail and Phone Inquiries Invited: (M7) W’ -StP) .141, irPII 220 MAC University Mall ^ f ir s t ^ 0 R p m n 2751 E. Grand River across from Coral Gables OKLAHOMA STATE RATED NO. 2 rapplers face two foes In 1978 • • • Less is By LARRY U L U S edge over them by winning all 11 of the meetings. SUte New* Sport* Writer I he big meet of the weekend will be Saturday when Oklahoma MSU wrestling team will have a buay schedule ahead this * nd as it will play host to Southern Illinois and Okla- faS E C „ T 9 k ‘T " . S,U»7 ^ tly 0W>hon“ S u t* “ number 2 State this Friday and Saturday, respectively. Both meets will y h6JA W ? kUhom,‘SU te h“ 8uch » well-balanced team that it 15 hard to find a weak spot in their lineup. 117.30 p.m. in the Men’s IM Building. In the 158-pound weight class Oklahoma SU te haa the top Spartans, who are ranked 19th by the Amateur Wrestling freshman in the country in Dave Schultz. Schulte won the is (AWN) are coming off of an impressive 81 to 10 win over Lrecco-Roman event in the Pan-Am games last year. In the mere. 167-pound weight class Oklahoma SU te has Paul Martin, who was a u th e r n Illinois will invade MSU Friday, but this will only be a national contender last year. A t heavyweight, Oklahoma SU te has ' up for the Spartans with Oklahoma State coming in Jimmy Jackson who is a returning national champion. Jackson was Jm, also a member of the 1976 U.S. Olympic team. ,e S o u th er n Illinois meet will be sort of a surprise meet for us," The Spartans were shut out by Oklahoma SU te 40-0 last year, P e n in g e r , MSU wrestling coach, said, and the Spartans wtuld like nothing better than to avenge last e don't know that much about Southern Illinois,” he said. “In year s loss. * ■ w e don’t e v e n know what their record is so far this year. Last “We are definitely the underdogs in this meet," Peninger said. “If 1 m ^ a t th e m by a score of 32 to 5. We still have to play one we beat them it would be quite an upset. As a team, we have not k at a tim e and overconfidence is something we have to avoid.” reached our peak yet, but Oklahoma SU te is a very st rong team and I their p r e v io u s meets this year Southern Illinois has shown will make it rough for us. L th in th e 118,128 and 190 pound weight classes. So far MSU "Oklahoma State is a strong, well-balanced team and they are Southern Illinois have met 11 times and the Spartans hold a big going to give us a rough time." A loudtpeokor small enough to fit in the palm of your hand. rankers to put record on line A loudspeaker that can fill a room with sound. By LARRY LILLIS Wisconsin this weekend to face the Big Ten last year and this year," said John Narcy, ttte News Sports W riter the Badgers in a crucial Big Ten should be a tough team again head diving coach. “I think that A loudspeaker that can be used B e MSU men’s swimming match. this year. The Badgers lost only with this team we can be almost anywhere. T will take its 4-0 record to Wisconsin finished second in three men from last year's competitive with anyone in the team. Big Ten or in the country." In the butterfly event the The Braun Output C. The Badgers should be cers face Michigan Tech strongest in the backstroke and freestyle distance matches. Swimming the backstroke for Spartans will send a trio of swimmers. Swimming in that event will be Shawn Elkins, Imagine a sp ea ker system , no bigger then one o f the heftier twin-lens reflex cameras leaned from page 8) in Saturday's 3-2 win. Wisconsin will be Jeff Marohl, Jeff Gaeckle and Dave Seibold. and in black m etal, too Imagine if with ; nomination in the Rube Bjorkman, in his 10th who is a returning national In the freestyle sprint event sound that's quite respectable for any [A last week was Mike season as head coach of North finalist from last year. Brent the Spartans will have John speaker, regardless o f size: just a notch zner. The freshman from Dakota, has resigned “for per­ Phillips will swim both the 600 VandeBunte as their main or two short of top-notch and minus the igton Heights, 111., scored sonal reasons’’ and will finish and 1,000 yard freestyle dis­ strength. deep boss. You now hove a fairly good and added three out the rest of the season. tances races for the Badgers. Dick Fetters, MSU swim­ picture o f the Broun Output C. Amazing Its tn the two games Bjorkman is hoping to stay on Another top swimmer for the ming coach, feels that this will and lots of fun w e have nothing but 1... st Duluth, including with the physical education Badgers is Gunnar Gunderson, be a tough match. admiration for the Braun Output C ts on all three MSU j staff a t North Dakota. who is a Swedish Olympian. “We will be listed aa the Gunderson's specialties are the underdogs for this match," "The Audio Critic" Sept. 1977 individual medley and the F etters said. “This won't mat­ II women on road again breaststroke. Going into the Wisconsin meet the Spartans should be ter, though, because win or lose we are going to give them a good battle. Last year Wiscon­ Output C ’225/pr L-300 '400/pr sin finished second in the Big 1-200 *260/pr 1-1030 ‘800/pr mtioued from page 8) entering this weekend’s games strong at diving, the butterfly and freestyle sprint events. Ten and we finished third so it ir of play due to the new with a slight advantage. The MSU diving team is should be a good meet." es," she said. “They may “Due to the type of grimes especially strong this year. In going 4-0 this year, the iwitch defenses though. If th at we play, I believe th at we Jesse Griffin, a senior from Spartans have beaten Eastern the case, the test will be have had the advantage . . . Lansing Sexton, and Kevin Michigan, Oakland University, lerwecan adjust to th at.” where teams are going to be Machemer, a sophomore from Northwestern and Cleveland BRflun plans on going adjusting to us, and not us to Detroit Henry Ford, have State. the man-to-man defense them,” she said. it Northwestern, but is The last game MSU played teamed up to make the Spartan ilythinking of trying out was over a week ago. diving team one of the best in is zone defense “We’re ju st Anxious to play,” the country. Add Greg Moran, the last question who is coming off of bin best the Badgers. said Langelmid. “We definitely performance as a Spartan, to to the type of ball that need some dbmpetition. We’ve MAXIMIZE YOUR MINIS that list and you have one of the BU women play, Lange- had ten days off since our last PLflflETflRiUEl top diving teams in the country. feels her squad will be g a m e . . . we're ready to play.” "We have a good diving team M 355-4672 Weekend Action ‘0 ° OO U 0 0 n o °o 9 O WITH AN M AK GOLIATH II 0 ° o o ° °0 cO 0 q>°o DAYHOMESCHEDULE western, 1:30 p.m. a t Jenison CO m PU TER Itling: Southern Illinois, Field House. j p.m. in the Men's IM ^Q p O 0 Women's swimming and diving: Bing. Pittsburgh, 1 p.m. in the Men's O 0 0° LABORATORY | RDAYHOME SCHEDULE IM Building pool. o 0O fO 0 « ° 0 jstling: Oklahoma State Fencing: Michigan-Dearborn, ° 0 ° ^ O o 12 in the nation), 7:30 p.m. Lake Superior State, Purdue, 0 o p' oO °0 le Men's IM Building. oO Windsor, 10 a.m. in gym three oO °° Is track and Held: North­ of the Men’s IM Building. o °o O „ 0°0°o 0 O O o ° 0 ° 0 < ° 0 0 , WINTER SHORT COURSES ° 0 LOCATION T h e C o m p u te r L a b o ra to ry w ill o ffer a series of non-credit sh o rt c o u rse s in c o m p u tin g d u rin g CHANCE? W in te r T e rm . R e g istra tio n m u st b e m a d e by la n u a ry 13, 1978 in th e U ser I n fo rm a tio n C en ter, I Tired of Michigan's long w in te rs? Relocate 313 C o m p u te r C e n te r. A $2 fee co v e rin g m a terials is c h a rg e d fo r ea ch s h o rt co u rse. C o m p u te r tim e i I to California or Florida w ith the U.S. Navy n o t in c lu d ed in th e b asic fee, b u t is a v a ila b le fo r an j Nurse Corps. Senior B .S .N . students are ad d itio n a l co st a t th e s tu d e n t’s o p tio n . A sterisk s I eligible to apply. (*) n ext to co u rse n u m b e rs in d ic a te c o u rse s th a t h av e p re re q u isite s; fo r m o re in fo rm a tio n , call Tor further information C all Collect (313) 353-1800. 226-7795/7845. Introduction to C om puting (100) For persons w ith little o r n o com puting experience, la n u a ry 16. 17, 18, 1 9 ,2 0 7-9 p .m . Introduction to the MSU 6500 (101 *) For persons w ith experience a t a n o th e r co m puting facility, la n u ary 16. Com bine our $175 Goliath II sub-woofer with your choice fehttheCold! 17, 18. 193-5 p .m . GRADER (115) of tiny satellites for a great sp eak er system at only $300 to A p rogram to relieve faculty m em bers o f m uch o f th e clerical w o rk in com bining scores an d assigning grades, la n u a ry 19 3-5 p .m . $600 retail. capacity driver and built-in matrixing crossover. I With a Bowl of Hot- Basic SPSS (155*) Introduction to th e S tatistical P ackage fo r th e Social Sciences. Sec. I: la n u a ry 23, 25, 30. F ebruary 1 7-9p.m . Sec. II: January 24, 26. 31, Hook up Goliath II with any pair of the new small super-speakers by ADS, Braun, Rogers, Visonik and others. Now you have a giant system sound with Selectable at 150, 125, 100, 75 or 50 Hz. for fine-tuning I to room and placement. Easy hookup to source with I F ebruary 2 3-5 p .m . unbelievable presence, imaging and detail; together outputs to satellites. Introduction to Interactive Usage (175*) with effortless, room filling deep bass. A-B this combination against the biggest and best. I Introduction to th e use of the interactive co m puting facility a t MSU. And, equally unbelievable, you can even hide Goliath Become a believer wherever Goliath II is sold. BEEF February 6 .6 ,1 3 . 1 5 3-5 p .m . BASIC (220*) Instruction in th e BASIC p rogram m ing language. F ebruary 8. 9 7-9 II. Because superb bass actually seems to be coming from the satellites. Goliath II comes complete with special 12" high- Also available, the M ft K Goliath I, for even deeper, I tighter bass and greater output capability. $315. [ BARLEY p.m . A dvanced SPSS (255*) M X MILLER I KREISEL SOUND CORPORATION 87IQ Wikhiir Boulevard Beverly Hills.California 90?!l USA* 213 bb2 8318 SOUP Instruction in th e u se of advan ced features o f SPSS. F ebruary 7. 9, 14, 163-5 p.m . Advanced EDITOR (275*) Instruction in advan c ed featu res o f th e M SU interactive text editor. February 20, 22. 2 7 3-5 p .m . L Introduction to M agnetic T apes (310*) G eneral use of m agnetic tapes fo r in form ation sto ra g e an d retrieval, lan u ary 23, 25. 30 3 -5 p .m . UPDATE (325*) A utility program fo r revising p ro g ra m a n d d a ta files. January 24, 26 7- 9 p .m . r 245 ANN ST. APEX (330*) Instruction in APEX, a linear p rogram m ing language, la n u a ry 24. 31. O P E N 1 0 -8 M o n . - F r i. Sa t. 10-5 February 7 ,1 4 , 21 3-5 p .m . ■ AMA V7S4 _ BUB 6 other credit plans available 930 Trowbridge, Eait Lansing C yber Loader (410*) 109 E . Allegan, Lansing Use of C y b er L oader from co n tro l c ard s a n d C O M PA SS program s Soon to Open - Saginaw & Waverly February 1, 3 ,8 ,1 0 3 - 5 p .m . |H SUNDAY, HAT NIGHT! Little done to help Fantastic Pitcher A Drink •pedals all night long to hat ByANNESTUART “We're still not fully desegregated on race. It's going to take Wear the mast unique hat and State News Staff Writer awhile to desegregate sex,” she said. get your photo in this adl Affirmative action programs have helped faculty women gain Pollock cited employee retirem ent plan programs as one recognition, but little has been w ritten about the achievements of employment area where discriminationon the basis of sex is still non-academic women in higher education, Mary Pollock said apparent. 1 MAC _____________________ Wednesday. "There is an equal pay-in (to retirem ent programs) by men and "Regardless of ranking, we all face the same problem," the women, but an unequal pay-out,*' she said. Monday - Pitcher Night C Wodnosday ft director of MSU women's programs told her audience a t the MSU “There is division by gender because women as a group live all night Thursday-9-10 Business Women's Club monthly luncheon. MSU women employees in the clerical-technical classification longer than men." Complicating the situation are the many non-working women Tuesday - Peanut Night bar Pitcher Specials outnumber men by a four to one ration, she said. However, in the ber women two to one. "There are lower responsibilities in terms of supervision for CTs who do not want retirement plans revised because their husbands higher administrative-professional classification, men still outnum­ would lose benefits, Pollock continued. “Unmarried working women are pitted against married non-working women. All women need to stay together on these 32 2700 E. Mich. Avo, 2 West of Frandor 53 (clerical-technical employees)," Pollock said, adding that many women in CT jobs are in positions where there is no chance for advancement. She described her job responsibilities as helping to develop issues,” she said. A t MSU, the women's advisory councils and women's studies programs are examples of affirmative action bringing about gradual change, she said. CLASSIC FILM SERIES r DELIVERY AVAILABLE NO CHECKS ACCEPTED affirmative action programs, investigating sex discrimination “Women have been left out of history, economics and literature. i FREE! complaints and recruiting women for promotions and upper-level Literally, it will take a thousand years to get an equitable look at positions. women in history. But you have to start with baby steps — a "It represents some of the finest work Pollock, who took over as director of the women’s programs course or two, a master’s thesis," Pollock said. office in September, said one of her priorities has been to analyze “We all need a goal or a vision, and mine is quality education for problems facing non-academic women employees. In doing so, she everyone," she concluded. Fellini has ever done—which also means that it stands with the best that anyone i said, she attempts to develop solutions which will work for others “When one group is being discriminated against, that’s not in films has ever achieved." as well as the individual complainants. quality education. We need to call on all of us to reform Michigan "I ask, 'Can I broaden this to include other women on campus,' ” State University, our institutions, and our own skills." —Time Magazine Buy any Medium YY - she explained. Sexual discrimination is still a major problem in educational and employment fields, despite the implementation of Title IX and the Start, Today INFODMATIQN 488 M M i At the regular price \ Get Identical PIZZA flourishing of affirmative action programs, Pollock said. Opan At 6:45 P.M. Two Feature, i FREE Drunkenness no crime i Little Caesars Pud 11031. Gd. River Mutt have coupon . (continued from page 3) in the area have mixed reac­ East Lansing Police D epart­ ment said that he sees no real « Coupon e ip lre t 1-29-71 337 -1631 Onw coupon per order tions toward the bill, and are problem in implementing the prepared for it in varying new law, especially because of degrees. area training sessions. Sat-Sun Through a local academy, One good thing, Hendrix At 1:00-3:45 over 500 area police officers said, is that the law will alleviate a lot of the paperwork 6:45-Late ROGER CORMRN Presents TONIGHT AND SATURDA1I have attended a training pro­ gram, Peterson said. There have been 15 training sessions and each officer has been that accompanies alcohol-relat­ ed court procedures. While police officials seem to A WOODY BRU C EU — .. ALLEN required to attend a t least one, have devoted much effort in FEDERICO FELLINI FRANCO CRISTALDI he said. preparing for the law, several BRU C EL S T H E H U H TH E R i m Screenplay and Slbfy by FEDt R1C0 FE m N l and TQNiNQGUfRRA. Director o' The training sessions inform hospitals in the area say they P L U S .. .A t 8:30 ONLY Pholojiaphy GIUSEPPE R01UNN0 • Film Editor RUGGERO MASTROlANNi Music by NINO ROTA • PANAviSlON TECHNICOLOR’ * AN ITALIAN FRENCH CO officers of the law and how to handle particular situations in­ cluding assaults, disorderly are just "waiting to see what happens." "DRAGON LADY" Sat-Sun At 2:30-S:25-8:25 P.M. R' PRODUCTION F C PRODUCTIONS (ROME i P E C f 1PAR 1S 1 Distributed by NEW WORLD PICTURES J G f f i ? — DOUBLK FEATURE Two great Woody Allen Film , on one Great Progrg, I conduct and car accidents. “The law enforcement agen­ cies are prepared," he said. leonard aimoy narrates Fri. 108 B Wells S “We have gone through exten­ Sat. 109 Anthony sive training and we are ready the last question to handle the change over." 7:15 & 9:30 Lt. Thomas Hendrix of the by isaac asimov Sun. 8:00 Union Parlors ^ Today Open 7:00 P.M. Feature 7:30-9:25- Admission *1.” m Sat. I Sun Feature At 1:30-3:30-5:30-7:30-9:30 ★ * The story of a M ale Chauvinist who could not forgive his w ife for being Liberoted. MALE OF THE CENTURY Xm rifcvT Starring Claude Barri - Juliette Berto ^gjsuuni N o b o d y c o u ld A humorous "Dog Day Afternoon" . . . Well played and increasingly funny . . . The Laughter comes in after the shock of recognition. This Areas Only Multi-Media Discotheque d r e a m h im u p . BANANAS w/Loui,e lo t,o r 2841 F Gd River E (nns 3S1-1201 H is in c re d ib le b a n k plus this second grant hit (English Sub-titled) (M Fnioy Your W eekend a t the Rainbow R o n rh ro b b e ry is all th e OPEN AT 6:45 TODAY J3 m o re b iz a rr e SHOWS AT 7:00-9:10 P.M. Sat.-Sun. at 12:30-2:40 ICHIGAN SIGM A CHI M.S. ... b e c a u s e i t ’s tru e . 4:50-7:05-9:10 P.M. n iN IF IT T O . FRI. 3*7 p.m. \ B e e r S p e c ia l til 8 :0 0 ^ D ancing a t 8 :3 0 Both N itcs TONIGHT OPEN 6:45 Show, An Aiirts fniftfanmen Urw t x F V fljd rr ; guanomvt. oowNTow 7:20-9:35 W m t lin n P iiia u iia i.. H t f t l H I ak, 'u n 0 H f< ! A 'fli: M T O r t . m CHAR [ „ D u U W ,* M» soar M n e m n iB u i.ia iin M M iM a iiM t . SAT. 8 SUN 1:00-3:10-5:15-7:20-9:35 FRANK OtHSON ■f>OTu[£o Dy MARTIN BHtGMAN and MARTIN ElfAND 1je - w tty JM re u M fT H ■ itM n S V tllM iiMuan TONIGHT AND SATURDAY PASSES '* * * SowtMeySyMAlCau MMMCMSTIMIMw — ---- t t '0* 1 MUD M S S MflO M r u WMUMmIJOII HMSCMNOM-Mew See*wMM Coateelet *,««•!>OSUi H NtnNM M UfllM jM M CI)----- •COWS M l IM S M CM!» MO M W M 0 LMIIS •KCMKOlOM --- The Fever is Spreading ltr..g=Rr-— SHOWTIMES: Banana, 7:00,10:00 TONIGHT AND SATURDAY Love and Death 8:30,11:30 "It youronS^ert•pallSoe7o^raSw3^™,,,,^ ^ * La,t Complete Show at 10:00 Costa-Gavras combined with the luminous cinematography SHOWTIMES: 7:30,9:45 Admission to the double faotura *1. * of BARRY LYNDON on a eubject like THE GRAPES OF SHOWPLACE: 102 B W EllS WRA TH it would provide some idea of the sweep and power SHOWPLACE: Friday 105 B W ell, ADMISSION: M.'0 o f REBELLION IN PATAGONIA." on entertainment service of the beal Saturday 108 B Wall, film co-op, students, faculty ft staff REBELLIONin an entertainm ent service of the b eal film co op. Students, I* " * !! welcome. Id’s checked. S staff welcome. Id’s checked. PHTT Showcasejazz Presents ANTHONY BRAXTON mt P k l u f f s C o t fio t.iiio n A ll R i# h rs Rost*rv FRIDAY & SATURDAY, JAN. 20 AND 21 QUARTET ERICKSON KIVA 8&10:30 T IC K E T S: $4.00 at MSUnion and Wazoo Records Frontline Cinema presents A d iv is io n of th e A S M S U P R O G R A M IN G B o a rd . here Friday S Saturday A r ts in W a s 'h i n o m n ^ r ^ ^ ' ( ' 2 / ^ f! ' 3 9 r a n ' , r 0 m l h e fS,3tlonal E n d o w m e n t fo r th e A r ts in W a s h in g to n , D .C ., a l e d e i a l A g e n c y . A C C E S S IB L E Jo nuo ry13 SU * !• * * B-104 Walls 7:15 and 9: IS P le a se , n o s m o k in g , f o o d o r d r in k in t h e K iva. —1^ ^ ^ ^ iBi^D|smo^bechecl(ed |R|»E8> Friday, January 13, 1978 ] J is m a a STUDENT JUDICIARY TO DECIDE p o o L e y 'sH s a L X t IB [As right to tax questioned r FRIDRY V B y K V OWEN The hearing is scheduled for 7 p.m. Sunday in 4 Student vice-president should have •Heidi Bruce, Landon Hall inquire about labels for ID T.G. ' •specials- FTh L ce Hall A ssociation been an executive assistant representative, was unani­ cards when Valedine goes cam­ I Robert v a t t e r has Services Bldg. and is open to who would not be running for mously elected movie board pus-wide. the public. the position spring term. chairperson. Bruce had worked DOGS E freeze on RH A ta x •Also, Lane Avery asked T ti| after a h e a rin g Robert McKay of Beal Film “We’re probably naming the on the movie tax referendum. about the possibility of inde­ X e All-University stu- Co-op said the group is chal­ new vice-president now,” David •The board also unanimously pendent study credit for the I c ia ry on th e qu estio n lenging RHA's authority to tax said. “It’s just like the Univer­ passed a motion to suspend the RHA president, which he said 1 right to tax d o rm ito ry because Beal does not believe sity picking Harden as interim parking permit and movie pass "would open up the opportunity " w b a n u j j p t x 2 - 5 RHA's collection policy meets president,” David added. “They of any representative who to more people.” ■told the RHA bo ard a t University criteria for tax col­ looked for someone who was misses more than one business Avery added that this would no cover lection. RHA's constitution not interested in being presi­ le s d a y night m ee tin g I |o the freeze, resi- | l s will not receive ta x does not provide a specific tax change procedure, McKay said. “To us the key word is dent.” Lane Avery, Emmons Hall meeting per term without send­ ing an alternate. •A kers Hall representative be better than the RHA presi­ dent receiving a paid salary. Jk; . ■cations until a fte r th e representative, pointed out George Shovlin told the board f makes a decision on 'specific.' The RHA constitution there was no provision in the east complex dormitories have I RHA has th e rig h t to has a very general amendment, RHA constitution for naming had problems with the theft of L ase was filed w ith th e not a specific one. The Univer­ interim officers. student meal stickers now that f last term by th e Beal sity criteria calls for a ‘specific proviso' on how referendum may be held for tax removal or The board approved Slavin as vice-president with a 20-0 vote, and three abstentions. the Valedine checking system is being used. V atter said RHA !**» K a U ) Jnembers opposed th e will wait until next year to change,” McKay said. Ip h n h p m p ■ movie tax which w as l y dormitory re s id e n ts “RHA shouldn't spend any is week, tax money until it is deter­ am't anticipate us mined if it's legitimate income, [fatter told th e board. unless the money comes from L o m e ungodly rea so n an alternate source of income, like the movies." a bohem e J we'|| add a clause to litution." A pproval by In other RHA board action: | s of the dorm ito ry •The board elected Audrey ■ruts can am end th e Slavin, Butterfield Hall repre­ t o n to fit the ju d ic iary sentative, as RHA vice-presi­ ■ Vatter added. dent for winter term. Slavin a bohem e 1 Pope. R esidence Hall had taken over the vice-presi­ I Advisor, said sh e dent’s duties since the former J the hearing is “an vice-president resigned at the ■RHA." end of last term. Rob David, by Giacomo Puccini. ■ think we should even radio board representative, Presented by Opera Guild of Greater Lansing and said he felt the temporary I added. MSU Department of Music. F rid a y. J a n u a ry 13, 1 978 a i 8 PM S unday, J a n u a ry 15 1978 at 7 PM M SU A u d ito riu m sm us C o n d u c te d by D e n nis B urkh , A rtis tic D ire c to r of th e O pera G u ild ot G re a te r L a n sin g , M u s ic D ire c to r of th e M SU O rc h e s tra P ro du ctio n S u p e rv is o r Jo h n B a ld w in Stage D ire c to r C ynthia A u e rb a c h ■I mwrogwi ■(■(• univa rsity F e a tu rin g K ath ryn B ou le yn — s o p ra n o as M im i a c w > m j c im j L JANUARY 23. MSU AUDITORIUM J a c q u e T ru sse l — T e n o r as R odolfo S h e rry Z a n n o th — S o p ra n o as M use tta KW-JIOMPIN' MUSICAL! AVERAGE WHITE BAND C h a rle s Long — B a rito n e a s M a rc e llo S ergej K o p c a k — B ass as C o lltne T i c k e t s on s a l e t o d a y ! Ja m e s Ja v o re — B a rito n e as S ch a u n a rd jb b e r fkjdetfroor AT THE MSU UN ION, D I S C O U N T R E C O R D S , T ic k e ts on sale at M SU U n io n tic k e t o ffic e . M a-sh a l! M u s ic sto re s C e n te r to r th e A rts AND S O U N D S AND DIVE RSION S, M a il o rd e r to La B o h e m e T ic k e t O ffic e , U n io n B u i'd in q M ic h ig a n S ta te U n iv e rs ity O r C all 355-3361 ( D O W N T O W N LANSING) T icke t P ric e s $8 0 0 - $7 00 - $4 50 S tu d e n ts a n d c h ild re n h a if o n c e TICKETS $6, $7 B oo k and Lyric* by Y oung p e o p le 's m a tin e e w ith s p e c ia l ca s t. S a tu rd a y Ja n u a ry 14 ALFRED UHRY at 2 PM . $ 1 .0 0 c h ild re n - $ 2 .0 0 a d u lts Music by I ROBERT WALDMAN a«a*upontf» M ow* bf EUD0MVEI7Y D kw cttdby BARRY BOSTWICK TUESDAY, JANUARY 17 at 8:15 P.M. in the University A uditorium BROADWAY THEATRE SERIES EVENT A |uyous hoedown musical, based on one ol the popular G rim m 's Fairy Tales, and set in the Mississippi backwoods. Exuberant dancing and music, superbly performed by the ALL-PROFESSIONAL TOURING NEW YORK CAST. The Rubber Bridegroom will steal your fancy! Tickets NOW on sale at the MSU Union Ticket Office 8:15-4:30 p.m ., weekdays. pUBLIC: $8.50, 7.50, 5.00 505 discount to full-time MSU students, all locations. IJ 10 W gm Is •op. Students, ih TI ' i . 2 1 im I ■ 1 . m Also pinball, air hockey, TV tennis, table HO ST FA M ILIES NEEDED tennis.. Foreign students to visit Itonard nimoy UNIO N B ILLIA R D S lo w t r I t v f l U n io n B ldg. p h o n o : 355*3358 Youth for Understanding, a family. One group of students has ■fa narrates M o n . t h r u T h u r . 1 1 : J 0 o .m .* 1 1:0 0 p . m . nonprofit educational organiza­ Program fees and the stu­ already arrived in the United tion, is searching for qualified dent's natural family take care States, and another group will the ☆ * F rl. 1 0 :0 0 o . m .- 1 1 :0 0 p . m . S o t. f t S u n . 1 2 p . m . t o 1 1 :0 0 p . m . of medical insurance, clothing arrive Monday. A final will families to host high school last question m ► exchange students arriving this expenses and spending money. arrive Jan. 31. month. Students must have had two Ronald Thomas, a represent­ The students, ages 14 to 18, years of English and have ative of Youth for Under­ will arrive from all parts of passed a proficiency examina­ standing in Ingham County, South America to attend tion before coming to the said four families are needed second-semester classes in area United States. They will under­ immediately for two male stu­ t h e l a s t q u e s t i o n schools. Host families in Ing­ go two days of orientation dents from Brazil and two from ham county are needed to programs. Argentina. provide students with room and a science fiction classic by isaac asimov board for six months. The program is designed to help students adjust by making narrated by leonard nimoy them a part of an American fri. & sat. 8 & 10 pm CL05G ENCOUNTERS OI TFt* T H IN G K IN D sun. 2 & 4 pm Public access OUTDOOR OBSERVING AFTER 8PM SHOWS (continued from page 5) ^ t T j t 1. , 11.1 - I itr m c u ri - r L ir « -j ^ In the meantime the public ALBUM 8 LIGHTSHOW AFTER 10PM SHOWS access directors can only en­ courage people to be careful, f c n n ll£ K 3 2 1 -2 6 0 3 and tasteful, with the language «. IM IM -U N U M and visual aids they use in their shows. VanDalsen said most Showtime, Men thru Frl. 7:00 • 9:00 users comply willingly. Wad. matinaaat l:00adm . '1.25 Channel 11 offers a crash P L A N E T A R IU M Sat. 8 Sun. 12:00,2:30,0:00,7:30 8 10:00 course in production to aspiring Sorry advance tickets net available stars who come in to use the 3 5 5 -4 6 7 2 facilities and make their own m tH A M im auL shows. Use of the studios or of portable cameras and audio equipment to check out is done on a first come first serve basis, P R ISIN TS but reservations can be made BONNIE AND "M EL BR O O K S’ COMIC M ASTERPIECE" well in advance for a certain " ‘CATCH'22’ saysmanythi* time slot. that need to be said againif VanDalsen said most open one again! Alan Arkm's perforti, space now is during the day ance as Yossarian is great!' because more people seem to be -Jofph M orgenstern. NrvvSwQ interested in evening shows. [*#■ Programs range from wo­ THEYAIN'T. men's talk shows to political forums and just about anything in between. One thing a cable user cannot do is advertise for a product or a political party, group or entity during the public access time. Again, VanDalsen said, that has not been much of a problem for Channel 11. In addition to the programs produced by East Lansing resi­ dents and MSU students, Chan­ nel 11 also televises several C O L U M B IA P IC T U R E S FVev-n special shows and sports A T E D K O T C H F F F F " A B A R T /R A l FV S K events. Currently the station is tele­ vising MSU home hockey GEORGESEGAL JANEFONDA games and women’s basketball. Last term the station broad­ FUN WITH D1CK&JANE HWmiUUlM KHWIflUMM. '«* WML U casted a major energy forum. *rr. ED McMAHON voi \ii n ( \ w : \ s m \ <,k \ f:h i i .dki ; i -i rn; n n m NRItnrat MMTRBBI,jniNI! I y w ’Kiv DAVIDC.ilEw ifkRv 6(in< N, Rni\A,«,i hl i .. II urn KKI.DM\N ( I.0HIS 11 \(mi W II I,’I 8RS0NVVB.1ES ttwwf m m m : SI r, t.yGffiaLDGAiS! H-v Fri 118 Physics Astronomy 7:30 & 9:30 Sat Conrad 7:30 8 9:30 t Sun Wilson 7:00 * le Frl Conrad 7:30 & 9:30 Fri Wilson 7:1589:30 Sat Wilson 7:30 & 9:30 If l Sot Brody 7:15 8 9:30 Sun Wilson 9:00 * Sun Conrad 9:15 0J( DEEPTHCC4T A D U L TS O NLY IN COLOR P L U S S IC O N D G R E A T H IT T O N IG H T "The D evlin Miss Jones’ is Unique, Surprising, SATU RD A Y Provocative! S H O W T IM IS t EXCEPTIONALLY WELL f u m e d a n d a c t e o - a s w e u a s l u s t il y p e r f o r m e d , a n d G O ES ANOTHER BIG STEP TOW ARD BRIDGIN G THE G A P BETW EEN SERIO US ART DEEP THROAT AT FILMS AND THOSE PREVIOUSLY LABELED SEXPLO ITATIO N .- 7:00,9:30,12:00 Bruce Willaimon/PLAYBOY DEVIL IN MISS JONES 8:15,10:45 LAST COMPLETE SHOW AT 10:45 SHOWPLACIt 100 lag Ineering ADMISSION TO THE See the best of Leave It To Beaver, Star Trek, The Three DOUBLE FEATURE: Stooges, Twilight Zone, Sergeant Bilko, and Alfred Hitchcock *2.50 STUDENTS '3.50 FACULTY A STAFF Presents; over3'/2 hours of fantastic film flashbacks. R A T IO X on ontertainmont service Fri. Conrad 12 Midnight Sat. Wilson 12 Midnight *1 of Beal films. Students, faculty and staff welcome. ID s checked [ i i SA U f ? nA S l i 0A U | Ty f t l^ a t t W e l c o m e - I D ’S m a y b e c h e c k e d * A A A Aww'k'k'kir'kA A A^ ^ 'k'kir'kitkirkirk A ick ifid tit* THE STATE NEWS XLASSIFIED ADS PHONE 355-8255 MON. THRQ FRI. 8:00-5:00 C t a M lM A A v o H if f a H I L. Employment J f f l 1 frrtq — t 1B 1 | Employment ji [ Aparhaxts n p irtiH ts y n ------- MSB *■* sc Information TWO POSITIONS-Mother's helper•$1.50/hour, cleaning- COOKS, DISHWASHERS COMPUTER OPERATOR- FEMALE NEEDED to share 3 person apartment. Winter- GRADUATE OR married stu­ ROOM FOR rent-Quiet neigh­ FRANDOR NEAR newly dec­ and Waitresses wanted. Ex­ IBM Systems 3. Experience dents. New East Lansing two borhood non-smoker pre­ orated, partially furnished 2 147 ttudort ScrvteM IM f. $2.50/hour. Call days after 10 perience necessary. Apply Spring. Non-smoker. $85/ fttONE MJ-MM required. Supervisory back­ bedroom apartments with ferred. Call Jerry, 351-0664, bedroom home. $225/month. a.m., 337-0022.2-1-17(4) month. 337-2429 7-1-13(3) M-78 Restaurant. 7149 E. ground helpful. 485-48900 carport, on bus route. No evenings. 8-1-16(3) 425 South Hayford. 484-0363. Saginaw, E. Lansing. 8-1-16(5) pets. Start at $230. Call 8-1-19(5) CLEANING HELP part time, DUPLEX-LOWER half, one full time. Call 482-6232 for 7-!-13(5) bedroom, air conditioned. 351-9483 or 351-9195 after 6 CLOSE TO campus. 3-man 14c, "tCpcrlin* 2 BEDROOM near MSU. interview. 8-1-24(3) COLLEGE STUDENT needed Newly redecorated. Garage, p.m. 0-19-1-31(6) house. Phone Julie, 482-6231 Jd ayi-M K per line BABYSITTER. TEACHER as live-in, part-time attendant Carpeted, comfortable, $175/month plus utilities. days; 337-2120 evenings. 44*y> -7S(p*rlliw needs motherly care in Oke- for male quadrapelegic own cheap! $195/month 372-8164. COORDINATOR FOR Rape 351-7063. 8-1 18(5) TWO BEDROOM apartments 8-1-16(3) I days • 7(K per line mos home for 3 month and 4 room. 487-3082. 8-1 20(4) 8-1-19(3) Crisis Center. Applicants year old. Starting January 30. from $196. UNIVERSITY must possess a degree in line rate per Inicrtion social work, sociology, psy­ 8 a.m.-4 p.m. References, REGISTERED NURSE- 1,2,3 bedroom VILLA APARTMENTS. 635 NORTH HAGADORN - Two HURRY - 2 rooms left. Room own transportation 6654132. SUPERVISOR 3-11:30 p.m. apartment* Abbott. 351-3873, 351-8135 bedroom house. Unfur­ and board cheap. 351 -7283 or chology, administration, or 337-2381. Z-3-1-13(3) related fields, must have 8-1-17(7) shift. 186 bed long-term skill­ or 351-1957. 0-7-1-13(5) nished. Large rooms (nice). managerial skills and must ed care facility. Progressive $200/month. Days 482-2911. EcohUm . ' 3 line* ■‘4 00 • 5 doyi. 80" per line over • fu lly carpeted SM ALL MOBILE home. C-19-1-3K4) TWO BEDROOM house for have some experience in SOCIAL W ORKER, full time, and innovative programs. Ex­ i got heat and cantrol air I j No odjusfmsnt in roto whon cancollod. Close campus, furnished. rent, shown by appointment Crisis Intervention. Previous M.S.W. required. Therapy ceptional benefit package. conditioning Price oi itorn(l) must bo stotod In ad. Moximum $120/month. 351-1711. 1-2 p.m. Saturday only. 393- Rape Crisis Center experi­ experience and knowledge of Must have supervisory expe­ • swimming pool HASLETT AREA. Working 9871.3-1-13(3) sole price of *30, ence helpful. Person hired abuse/neglect dynamics pre­ rience. B .S . preferred. Con­ 8-1-19(3) male, grad student or married • 24-hour maintenance I peonuts Personal ode • 3 lines *2.J5 - per insertion. must be capable of securing ferred. Duties include individ­ tact Dolores Nagle, RN, Di­ • play ground for children couple to share 3 bedroom LARGE HOUSE in north Lan­ 75' per line over 3 lines (prepayment). funding for the centers’ third ual, group and family therapy rector of Nurses, 349-1050. • no pots ROOMMATE NEEDED - One house on 3 acres. House is sing. Own room for 4-6 tummoje/Gerepe Sole ode • 4 lines - *2.50. year of operation. Salary and outreach work. Own 3-1-13(11) or two females. Okemos, 349- like brand new, $175/month. students. Adequate study 1 43 ' per line over 4 lines • per insertion, $11,130. Submit resume to transportation required. Send 4238. 8-1-20(3) 339-1613 after 6 p.m. coll for information 349-3100 space. Utilities paid by own­ Mary C. Shepherd care of resume verifying these quali­ PART-TIME service person S-3-1-16(6> j 'found Town eds - 4 lines - •2.50 • per insertion. 10-5 Tuesdoy-Frldoy er. $80/month. 323-2977. SAGINAW COUNTY RAPE fications to Ann Hailock, for lunch hour. Down Under PERSON TO share two bed­ I 63' per line over 4 lines. 10-2 Saturday 8- 1-20( 6) CRISIS CENTER, 1626 North ACSW Supervisor, CATHO­ Restaurant: (BONNIE Er room apartment, MSU stu­ ONE BEDROOM near M.S.U. I tost I founds edi/TrempoiteHeneds-3 lines - ’ 1.50 - LIC SOCIAL SERVICES, 300 CLYDE'S) 316 East Michigan, Call 349-3546 or 351-4032. Michigan, Saginaw Michigan I per insertion. 501per line over 3 lines. 48602. Deadline, February 6, N. Washington, Room 301, 2-4 days per week. Apply in Knob Hill dent preferred. Quiet, nicely 8-6-1-24(3) EAST LANSING - Large car­ peted 3 bedroom duplex. person. 5-1-17(5) furnished, reasonable. On 1978.2-1-1-13(21) Lansing, Mi 48933. E.O.E. 3-1-13(13) Apartments bus line. Phone 351-8238 Available immediately. Ap­ FEMALE NEEDED for winter proximately 1 mile to cam­ Deadlines W AITER AND Waitresses full weekends. 10-1-18(6) and spring term. Duplex, $90/ pus. Call STE-MAR MGT. MALE TO assist in care of six I Adi •2 p.m. ■I doss day before publication. FULL TIME CETA position at time days 7 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. month. Close to campus. handicapped adults. Even­ 3 BEDROOM duplex, private 351-5510. X7-1-13(6) I Conciliation /Chonge • I p.m. ■ I doss day before EAST LANSING ARTS Part time hours variable. Ap­ garage, carpeted. Available TWO BEDROOM FURNISH­ 353-5547. 5-1-18(3) ings and weekends. Must J publication. have transportation. 655- WORKSHOP. Carpentry, ply BURCHAM HILLS RE­ immediately. $370 per month. ED Apartment available im­ I One* od is ordorod it connot bo cancollod or changod 2005.2-1-16(5) painting, fix-it and general TIREMENT CENTER. 2700 After 5 p.m. 351-6567 or 351- mediately. Call Collingwood MALE ROOMMATE needed until oftor 1st insertion. upkeep. Must meet CETA VI Burcham Dr., E. Lansing. 3209. 8-1-16(4) Apartments 351-8282. for house, 2 blocks from Ro m s unemployment and income 8-1-17(6) 2-1-13(4) campus. 351-7241 6-1-19(3) | Thoro is o '1.00 chorge for 1 od change plus 50' per WORK STUDY student for typing, for Impression 5. Call requirements. Apply at additional change for moximum of 3 changes. M.E.S.C. office, 3215 South YOUNG MOTHER needed to NEEDED-ONE female to sub­ FEMALE - TO share luxury NEED FEMINIST wimmin for 2 NICE rooms $55 each plus |The State Nows will only bo responsible for the 1st 882-2437. 2-1-16(3) let Twyckingham apartment apartment. Pennsylvania, 373-3600. care for 20 month girl two Reasonable huge old house near M.S.U. utilities. Celia or Kris after 7 doy's incorrect insertion. Adjustment claims must 3-1-13(10) mornings a week. Prefer your Available now. Call Glenda, Phone - 694-6773. 8-1-24(3) $100 includes gas. 332-1798 p.m. 374-0390. Z-8-1-16(3) bo mod# within 10 days of expirotion date, E. Lansing home. 332-8190. 351-2213. 3-1-13(4) 3-1-16(3) hills oro duo 7 days from od expirotion dote. If not EXECUTIVE SECRETARY LABORATORY TECHNI­ 8-1-17(4) MALE NEEDED to share bed­ ROOMMATES WANTED for young Real Estate de­ EAST LANSING, close in, 3 room in 2 bedroom apart­ YOUR OWN furnished room West Lansing vicinity of Sag­ paid by duo dote, o 50' lote service chorge will CIAN for doctor’s office. Part velopment company in East rooms unfurnished. Prefer ment. Winter, Spring. Close. in house with all the extras, inaw and Logan. Call 372- boduo. time. Call 349-3300.8-1-16131 FULL OR part time • Couples Lansing. Very interesting married couple. $190. Phone Call management 351-8282. Frandor area. Really superior. 5486 evenings. 10-1-19(4) or individuals for business of work with government assist­ 332-5988. 0-8-1-20(4) 1-1-13(4) Male. $85,372-7574. your own. Local Amway ed housing project in the Distributor assists you for 1-1-13(4) OWN ROOM in house. $80/ FIFTEEN MINUTES from month plus utilities. 332-8725 State of Michigan. Typing ■Automotive 'W Aitomotivo A and dictaphone required as splendid opportunity. Call 1-723-6055. 2-8-1-18(6) campus. Country setting. CAMPUS NEAR. Nice 3 bed­ after 5 p.m. Z-3-1-13(3) Two bedroom, all carpeted, BURCHAM WOODS CK SKYLARK Coup, TOYOTA COROLLA 1971, 2- well as a desire to learn. Excellent advancement pos­ sibilities. Call Tom Runquist a w — H I HALL SUPERVISORS for EAST LANSING HIGH appliances furnished. 322- 9532. 8-1-16(5) room furnished home. Wo­ men preferred. Plus utilities. ONE ROOM in nice house. Call Marilyn, 349-9603, even- Share with two female stu­ has a few apartments ready % ings, 332-3402. X-8-1-18(6> dents. January rent negotia­ i-Automatic, power door, 4 speed, redial tires, 394-1340 for details. ...cm4 Mm MwiI JiMittif, Mm SCHOOL 7:30 a.m. to 2 p.m., HMntfity waulattar for fovoramant FEMALE NEEDS to share 1 for immediate occupancy ble, $85/month. 2100 E. ■ring and brakes. Sharp. 6800 349-1913 after S p.m. 5-1*13(14) and 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. For 13-1-1314) (corttaln* very oatomlvo further information call Per­ bedroom close to campus. 3 BEDROOMS, dishwasher, Grand River Ave. 484-1913. 8-1-20141 Hating of corront foHorol $105. 351-1283 or 351-7623 finished basement, 7 min­ Z-4-1-13(4) COGS. DAYCARE scholar­ sonnel Office 337-1781. pY IMPALA, 1973. Two- TOYOTA CROWN, 1968. 4 ship applications are being aocondoa. oil groMo lotrola. oil occo* goMo$w). Trio) wbocrfptlon roto: 8-1-17(6) after 7 p.m. Z-2-1-13(3) *175-*280 per month utes from campus. $300/ j , hardtop, air condition- accepted at 316 Student •S.Wpor month (plooao Indkoto two month Call 351-3594 or 332- FURNISHED ROOMS availa­ door, standard. 2 new snow- to olamonths). I power steering, brakes, HOLMES ST. near Sparrow OttMMTW_____ ble in a large house. All | fm radio. 487-6228 after tires, $535 or best offer. 355- 0956. X-5-1-16I3I . Services during office hours through January 13.353-9189 WASHINGTON RtSIARCH ASSOCI­ ATE. P.O. (OX 3WN. Woahlogtow. CHORAL ACCOMPANIST for EAST LANSING HIGH Hospital. One room efficiency upstate, includes utilities. 351-3118 utilities included from $851 MSU • SPARROW Hospital month. Call Equity Vest, 351- ). 5-1-13(5) 5-1-13(5) O.C.MM7 SCHO OL For further infor- . Share bath, $7$. 351-7497. near Sharp 3 bedroom, dining 1500. 0-19-1-31(5) mation call 337-1781. 745 Burcham 0-4-1-17(4) room, large kitchen with 8-11-17(4) 1M MROtad r r * r u ^ 'l ^ a U M E R - HELP WANTED sales experi­ appliances. Full basement SUNNY ROOM in great ence not necessary but de­ MEDICAL AVON REPRESENTATIVES HAYFORD SOUTH, 2 bed­ with washer and dryer. Vi house friendly roommates - t t S e S t -16? E S K Z vw T ™ sired. Apply Monday from TECHNOLOGISTS NEVER LOOKED SO GOOD. room apartment. Partly fur­ block from bus. $295/month. close - 351-5381, after 5 p.m. |DGE 1971. Best offer VOLKSWAGEN 9:30 a.m. — 6 o.m. 2862 East 1969 Grand River 2-1-13(5) MT (ASCP) preferred. Imme­ diate openings, part-time You will too, selling world- nished, utilities included. A- Houses Available now. Tom Brooks 4-1-17(3) 669-3834 or 484-2556. y-5W8_1-1-13(3l famous products. Flexible dults, $150. 351-7497. FOR RENT private room Squareback automatic. Re­ midnight shift. Must have 0-4-1-17(4) 7-1-13(8) hours, high earnings. Call close to campus in nice 11975128 SL. New paint. built engine, new brakes, new HEAD NURSE, INTENSIVE clinical experience in all NEW DUPLEX, two full 482-6893. C-7-1-13(6) NICE 4 bedroom house, 3 house $85/month + utilities ' clutch AM/FM radio. battery. $650. 489-7957; 351- CARE UNIT areas. Excellent starting rate FEMALE NEEDED winter, baths. $125 per person. Call 1 or best offer. Phone 2511. 8-1-18(41 An excellent opportunity is and benefit program. Contact FEMALE masseuse wanted. spring 1 -bedroom 2 man 339-2600. 8-1-19(3) baths full basement. 2 car 351*91*15-1-18(3) 03030 after 5 p.m. available with an active, ex­ Personnel LANSING GEN­ $8/hour. We will train. 489- furnished, balcony. Call 351- garage near MSU. Rents for 1 BEDROOM in a 3 bedroom |7 W I _ _ VW BUS, 1968 from Califor­ panding 488 bed hospital. We ERAL HOSPITAL. 2800 $320/month. 487-5539. 2278. Z-19-1-3K3) 3196 after 5 p.m. Z-2-1-13(3) HOUSE FOR rent, 834 ranch, 10 minutes from cam­ nia. Engine just rebuilt. Heat­ are seeking a head nurse for Devonshire. Phone 372-8220. 8-1-25(4) |T 1972 124 Special rear- Johnson, Two bedroom, pus near Rose Lake. $125 er workal $850. 487-6534. our 10 bed surgical intensive X-10-1-20(9) COOK WANTED. Lunch and PRIVATE ROOM available, Immediate Occupancy. No i, $100.00. 372- month. 675-7305 10-1-20(4) 8-1-23(4) care unit. Candidate must evenings. Apply in person. $76 + utilities, 1 'h baths, pets. $185 per month plus FOR RENT 127 N. Hayford 3 1after six p.m. 8-1-23131 bedroom, furnished. $285/ have at least 2 years medical/ INCOME TAX PREPARERS 309 North Washington. nice house, Haslett and utilities. Deposit required. NEED CASH? We buy im­ surgical experience, ICU ex­ NEEDED- Fully computerized 5-1-16(3) _ Hagadorn. 351-9347 after 5 Call 372-5375 for appoint­ month plus utilities. Available OWN ROOM in house, close |RD LTD 1971. Power now. 1-623-6357 after 5 p.m. to campus. 351-7113 or 485- ports and sharp late models perience preferred. BS in tax preparation - we need p.m. 5-1-18(4) Tering/brakes, rebuilt en- BABYSITTER NEEDED ment. 8-1-16(6) X8-1-16I4) 7307. 2-1-13(3) compacts. Call John Da nursing desired but will con­ 12-15 people to staff the |e, $450.00. 351-6289 or East Lansing area. Two after­ Young. WILLIAMS V.W. sider those in process of newest tax service in metro­ TWO GIRLS need roommate r 7-1145.3-1-17(3) noons, two evenings per 484-1341 or 484-2551 obtaining degree. Leadership politan Lansing. Do you to share town house. $88/ | )lD 1977 Club Wagon C-19-1-31I5I know taxes? Does working week. Own transportation, experience required. The hos­ month plus electric. Call Lynn Pteau AM/FM, Power, with people and a computer 332-3454. 8-1-18(5) pital offers an excellent at 489-1404 before 6 p.m. or part warranty. $5,900, best salary and out standing fringe excite you? Call COMPUTER 393-9197 after 6 p.m. ADMITTING CLERK |r. 353-3216, 351-6547. 1-13141 Auto Service ] [ / benefit program that includes TAX SERVICE, 337-7234. We need both part-time and full­ A PERMANENT part time 5-1-18(6) 3 weeks vacation and tuition time people. X7-1-13(12) position is available for the reimbursement after one year OKEMOS, WASHINGTON person who wants to work employment. For confidential Heights Apts. Beautiful 1 GOOD USED TIRES, 13-14- consideration submit your re­ UNIFORM SECURITY offi­ Friday and Saturday nights LEASE 15 inch. Mounted free. Also sume to: Lois L. Lyons RN, cers part time. Call 641-6734. 11 p.m. to 7 a.m. Must have bedroom, all modern appli­ good typing skills and able to ances. Call Rob, 337-1418 A good supply of snow tires. Personnel Department, E.W. OR-20-2-7(3) work well with the public. before 11 a.m. S-3-1 -17(4) PENNELL SALES, 130114 Sparrow Hospital, 1215 E. MAZDA East Kalamazoo, Lansing. Michigan Ave. Lansing, Ml CASHIER WANTED- Neat Apply Personnel Office, E.W. SPARROW HOSPITAL, 1215 FEMALE NON-smoker to 48910. A non-discriminatory appearance a must. Experi­ share furnished. Own room, (GLC Hatchback) 482-5818. C-19-1-3K5I ence nice, but not necessary. East Michigan Avenue. affirmative action employer. close. $96'month, no lease. Male Female/Handicapped Good pay and benefits. Apply A non discriminatory Your ongogomont on Volontinos Doy 353-9710. 8 1-24(3) M SO per month MASON BODY SHOP 812 E. 8-1-23(27) in person only CINEMA X affirmative action employer. Male-female/handicapped. is the perfect way Kalamazoo since 1940. Auto ADULT ENTERTAINMENT to onnounco your lovo to the world. Kithapaa and plustoi and 8-1-16(15) MALE NEEDED, non-smoker painting-collision service. DEPENDABLE, NEAT ap­ CENTER, 1000 W . Jolly Fill out the coupon below and moil or a lermlnollon uolua *1,100. close to campus, cable TV, American-Foreign cars, pearing persons for food and Road. OR-7-1-1817) P * hljhway rated 42 m .p .|. FEMALE ESCORTS wanted. $96 per month, 351-4534 bring to: 485-0256. C-19-1-3K5) cocktail waitress. Part or full 5-1-13(3) k Herrlman time, flexible hours, good HOLIDAYS DEPLETE your $6/hour. No training neces­ Engagement Ad finances? Need extra in­ sary. Cali 489-2278. fW VOLVO MAZDA working conditions and tip CLOSE TO Union, spots in 2 Stot# News Classified JUN K CARS wanted. We come? Call 374-6328 week­ Z-19-1-31 (3)________________ possibility for lively and ener­ *HRW. Saginaw 321-0000 pay more if they run. Also days, 4-6 p.m. 18 and older, bedroom 4 man apartments. 347 Student Services | **•*■I Thun. HI0(claitdSat., getic person. MARVEL PART-TIME secretarial posi­ Males only. $90 per month. buy used cars and trucks. Call car needed. 8-1-16(5) MSU LANES. Call for appointment tion in Haslett. 8am -12 noon, 337-2669. 5-1-13(4) tm ir r u bud 321-3651 anytime. Mr. Bertrand 337-1383. 019-1-31(4) BODYSHOP MANAGER Monday-Friday. Office skills |» SOWNTOWN 3-1-16(10) and experience required. 339- Your announcement will appear in the Valentine's I LAKSIUe AND trainee Six hours a day M-78 TWO BEDROOM furnished CUSTOM MADE ignition BODYSHOP 337-1486. 9500; 339-3400. C-3-1-16(5) duplex for 2 or 3 people. section of the State News on February 14. •n d m t. RECEPTIONIST NEEDED wire sets for your imported with out-going personalty, 8-1-19(3) 669 9939. 8-1-18(3) PART-TIME bookkeeping for car. Checkered Flag Foreign well groomed, wanting an GAME ROOM personnel. accounting student, graduate Nome __________________ Car Parts, 2605 East Kalama­ afternoon evening shift 5 EAST LANSING Two bed­ Young ladies preferred. Good student or experience pre­ )?1 MERCURY, good body zoo St., One mile west of days a week and Saturdays. ferred. Nancy. 339-9500. room lower duplex. Fur­ Address ____________ pay, benefits, and pleasant nished, carpeted, clean. 351- f need apply 2-5 p.m. VAR­ Monday-Friday, 8:45 a.m.- after 5 p.m. 349-3220 Check them out for super after 7 p.m. 351-3397 I m 7|3| 6'10 P * SITY INN 1227 East Grand 8-1-19(4) River. 1-1-13(4) 5:15 p.m. 371-3627. 8-1-19(5) 8-1-16(4) Inrys. Bt S Service 1 B p Rooms Fir Sals For Sale For Sale [ Lost I Fort 31 Personal l / j i lii 100 USED VACUUM clean­ LOST - ORANGE backpack AVERAGE WHITE BAND - LAINGSBURG-NEWS- MATH 108 problems? DIS- EXPERIENCED is m . WOMEN'S DOUBLE $60-65 ENGLISH SADDLE excellent DUAL 1225 turntable, 1 year PAPER and printing business COUNT CALCULATORS ha» Dissertations old, without cartridge $110 or ers. Tanks, cannistsrs, and Contains 3 books (ATL & MSU you've got itl January answer. 2nd level, Univer- FAYANN, 48983SB 1,1,1 includes utilities, kitchen fa­ condition. 161$ inches. Call ottered. Broken into 3 parcels the best offer, 355-9939 after 5 uprights. Guaranteed on full Anthropology), and note­ 23, MSU Auditorium. Tickets sity Mall. 51-19(41 C-151-31-I3I cilities. Christian atmosphere. evenings, leave message. buy one or all. $6,000 to p.m. 51-13(4) year, $7.88 and up. DENNIS book in 213 Ag Hall. Call on-sale now at the MSU Call Meg 337 0343 or 351- 353-6558. Best offer. DISTRIBUTING COMPANY. Union, Discount Records, GO000. Two buildings, living 2-1-1613) Paul, 3557048. 2-1-13(5) 4950. 8-1-20(4) and Sounds and Diversions, quarters. Machinery tor pro- - , TYPING TERM~pap^j'' 316 North Cedar, opposite USED-RECONDITIONED $6, $7. A Pop Entertainment, duction. or nostalgia tourist J « | | | SirVlCB 4 0 theses, I.B.M. expert*^ City Market. C-151-31-I7I ONE FEMALE, Cedar Village, SEWING MACHINE CLEAR­ color T.V.'s. Large selection. Ebony Production. Don't attraction. Four residential I ------- — fast service. Call 35189«' $60/month, utilities paid. Call ANCE SALE. All floor sam­ RON HEINZE T.V., Potterville MINOLTA 100 mm F3.5 Mac­ Malili Homes p ? miss itl 51-16(11) lakes, including Sleepy Hol- EXPERT TYPING by MSU 517-1-31(3) Jill at 351-8043. 3-1-13131 ples and demonstrators used 6457676. 7-1-17141 low State Park. 65187151 o ro lens excellent condition grad. 17 years experience. during our X-mas buying $200 355-8311 ask for Rob 1966 VINDALE, 12 X 60. 6 HOW TO buy tax forfeited show appointment. 8-1*23(9) Near Gables, call 337-0206. COPYGRAPH SERVICF HOUSE CLOSE to MSU, season. Up to 50% discount. complete dissertation 3-5 p.m. S-5-1-1313) miles to campus. Furnished, wilderness land for low 517-1-31(3) own room 4834 S . Hagadorn, Guaranteed used machines ICE SKATE BONANZA prices, at public sales. Free MOVE RIGHT into two bed­ resume service. r C from $39.95. KEN ED­ children and pets allowed. M.A.C. and Grand n*. 337-0364, $87/month. $4,9004852241. 7-1-13(5) brochure mailed. TAX SALE room carpeted Ranch, with Don't store things you can't WARDS DISTRIBUTING CO 8:35530 p.m., Mo„ C Z-2-1 16(3) 1115 N. Washington, 489- we hove men's and women's figure and Animals Vl DIRECTORY, Box 682, Ells­ full basement and appliances. use. Sell them fast with e Possible land contract hard working Classified Ad! day, 337-1666. C - I ^ J @448 C-19-1-31-H0) KING ARTHUR'S COURT worth, Wise, 54011. NICE FURNISHED room- hockey skates. Z-3-1-17I5I $18,900. Phone Judy Holm at Phone 355-8255 j close to campus super 2 Campus close. Cooking, NEWFOUNDLAND PUPPIES 655-2597 or HDI REALTORS washer, dryer. 1 female, $85: APARTMENT SALE - Filing Over 100 pairs starting AKC shots, wormed. Phone bedroom mobile home in at 349-3310. 8 1-20(6) UNIGRAPHICS OFFERS Waited cabinet, $35; women's and great condition. Price to sell 2 females, $60 each. For details, call 337-2640 after 6 girl's clothes, under $10; mis­ at *3.9f 6752089. 51-17(31 at $8900. Call Gloria Pocock listrictiei COMPLETE DISSERTATION SALE BY owner. $42,900. 3 AND RESUME SERVICE- cellaneous household items. 3453118 MOORE/JENSEN p.m. X6-1-17I6) we still have a good GERMAN SHEPHERD pups, bedroom brick, all carpeted. typesetting, IBM typing, off­ RELIABLE NON-smokino j 355-9750. 1612 G Spartan ASSOCIATES INC. 351-3900. selection of snow tires AKC, $150. Female AKC 2 East Lansing, 337-2504. set printing and binding. For non-drinking couple wish, I DAY EMPLOYED, graduate Village. E-5-1-16151 2-1-13(8) CALIFORNIAN MUSICIAN 4-1-13(3) to houae-sit or pay iow fefl) I starting at * lt« 9 9 a pair years $250. 337-2504. estimate etop in at 2843 Eeet student. $60. Call for details. and can fit most cars. willing to teach guitar with a while husband I C.B. RADIO - 40 channel 1-1-1313) Grand River or phone 332- 372-7973. 6-1-13(3) If you need it, we've got NEW MOON 1973 12 X 50. guaranteed method. Call 485- Cooley. Wife in M.A. w I slide mount and 2 micro­ 8414. C-151-31-17) it. We buy, sell and trade GOLDEN RETRIEVERS AKC Completely furnished. New 6513. B-1-1-1314) gram. 393-5175. X-1O-1-20 Today’s best buys are in the phones included. Call 355 registered. $150. Call 393- carpeting, water softener. 9 PROFESSIONAL EDITING Classified section. Find what 5368 after 4 p.m. 4-1-13(4) M tk a rfte a a l 9625 after 6, weekends. XIOshed. Completely skirted PLAY GUITAR, banjo, fiddle, FOR QUALITY stereo service papers, thesis, dissertations. TYPING EXPERIENCED !* | you’re looking lor! 1701 South Cedar 8-1-18131 and set up. 646-0492 or mandolin, dulcimer, auto­ THE STEREO SHOPPE, 555 Minor correction* to re-write and reasonable. 371-4635 G.E. STEREO and 8 track 4$7-3$$$ 394-1123. 5-1-17161______ harp, harmonica - over 25 E. Grand River. C-19-1-31-I3I 332-5991. C-14-1-3K4) C-151-31-I3I unit. Records and tapes. Also different group classes offer­ For Sale ||5| Coronado cassette player. BEDDING-SAVE $10-$200. [ lost I Found J C ^ j FOR SALE or rent mobile ed every term by ELDERLY WE HONOR the GM prog­ ANN BROWN TYPING Die- Check today's Classified I Like new. Phone 351-5788. Sets $69.95, l?unk mattresses home 2 bedroom furnished INSTRUMENTS School of ram. OPTICAL DISCOUNT, sedations * Resumes - term columns for the parts ^ I 8-1-19(5) $29.95, sofa beds $79.95, close to campus available Folk Music. Winter term 2617 E. Michigan, Lansing, papers. 601 Abbott Road. supplies you need to get ysy I NEW AND used down hill roll-aways $49.95, hide-a- LOST SATURDAY on immediately. Call after 5 p.m. classes (8 weeks) start Jan­ Mich. C-7-1-13-14) 351-7221.15-1-31(4) cat ready lot the cn | skis Clearance Sale. $5 and M.A.C. Gold and white male 3551029. 51-1614) SOFAS AS low as $30, chairs beds $179.95. WILD BILL'S uary 16. Register now at weather ahead. up. AERO REALTY AND as low as $10 , call after 1 BEDDING WAREHOUSE cat, amber eyes. Reward 332- ELDERLY INSTRUMENTS FREE LESSON in complexion TERM PAPERS, first-draft DISTRIBUTING, 339-9523. p.m., 332-0052, Beechwood OUTLET, 4216 S. Cedar, 2518. 8-1-19(3) 541 East Grand River. Call care. MERLE NORMAN 7-1-13141 Apartments. 8-1-24(3) Personal / 332-4331. C-3-1-17113) COSMETIC STUDIO, 351- theses/dissedations. Judith, 393-1722. Sun. hours 12-6 LOST LADIES gold watch on 5543. C-19-1-31-I3I 393-4672 Keep this ad. ^ O IN D T o J EPIPHONE FOLK guitar and p.m. 10-1-18(81 Grand River Wednesday. SINGLE MALE 30 seeks fe­ B-1-1-13(3) case. Excellent condition. HEAD 360 Downhill skis 190cm $100, Lange boots size WE PAY up to $2 for LP's & Please call 349-5245. male interested in serious BIBLIOGRAPHIES AND li­ New strings. Good sound. 353-217T 5-1-1913) 8M, $35. Call 3558197. cassettes - also buying 45's, 2-1-16(3) long term relationship. Rich Real Estate A brary legwork done for you. LOOKING FOR A| Z-2-1-16I3I 337-1861 5-1-13(3) Compiled and typed in 3-5 GREAT JOB?-get a head t jjp BOOK - VISIT Mid-Michigans songbooks, magazines. FLAT days. Only$10-$20. 323-7940. start on that first impres­ LOST TENNIS racket (Wil­ largest used bookshop. CU­ BLACK Er CIRCULAR. Up­ B-1-1-13I4I sion by having your resume WATER BEDS are bedder at stairs 541 E. Grand River. son). Reward. 355-4165. Contact Lam Wearers RIOUS BOOKSHOP, 307 E. SOUNDS AND DIVER­ Open 11 a.m., 351-0838. Z-1-1-1313) »ove inofwy on your brand name NEW IN town? Let me help typeset. The Typecutter Grand River, East Lansing. SIONS. Open till 9 p.m. hard and soft ig p p liti tand lor Ir w you find a place to call home. COMPLETE REPAIR service can make your credentials 332-0112. C-19-1-3115) C-19-1-31-16) FOUND-TENNIS racket. 393- illustrated catalog for stereo's, TV’s tapes, gui­ stand out in any stack of weeknights Downtown PAUL COADY, 332-3582 across from Knapps. 484- HENKI LADIES Ski boots- 5071 after 6 p.m. 1-1-13(3) Contact Lons Supply MUSSELMAN REALTY. tars, banjos band instrument. resumes. Looks much bet­ DISCOUNT, NEW, used 3855. 0-1-1-13141 MARSHALL MUSIC, 351- ter than typing. Give MSU ICE Arena Demotatal Size 4 Vj M, $25; Ski rack, Center C-1-1-1614) desks, chairs, files. BUSI­ LADIES BLACK purse lost 7830. C-1-13 1(4) a call -we’re vary, tion Hall Monday - Satgiftl trunk mount, $15. 339-2161. 1411- Camelboclt evenings 8:30 p.m.-IO ; . l NESS EQUIPMENT CO., 215 ELECTRONIC REPAIR on Tuesday afternoon. Reward. M io a tili, Aritewe M 0I1 very reasonable. 487-9295. E-51-1713) NEW IN town? Let me help ASMSU TAX refunds avail­ Friday, Saturday, Sundal E. Kalamazoo, 485-5500. stereo, T V., C.B., camera, Call 351-6424. 2-1-16(3) 8-1-16(4) guitars and amps. All repairs HEAD SKIIS - Model 360 A pet can warm your heart on you find a place to call home. able at room 334 Student afternoons 3:30 p.m.-5 ; - | guaranteed. WILCOX TRAD­ with slalom bindings and LOST LADIES watch, silver a cold winter evening. Look PAUL COADY, 332-3582 Services. Bring validated I.D. PROMPT TYPING. Twelve Students with I.D., 75AR n| SINGLE BED with bedboard, ING POST. 4854391. Seiko with blue face. Re­ to the Pets classification of MUSSELMAN REALTY. Deadline is Thursday, Jan­ years experience. Evenings, al 606 Adults-childran IIj l case, Size 180, $75,339-2161. $20. 332-4041. Z-E-51-1613) C-19-1-31I6I ward. 353-2585. 3-1-16(3) today's newspaper. C-3-1-1315) uary 19. 5-1-16(4) 6757544. C-151-31-I3I Rental 756 BL-1-1-13(8i 5-1-17(31 Carter accuses USSR of supplying arms to Africa (continued from page 1) to send either soldiers or fano J r. of the Department of energy, the top priority of with this position, said, “It’s not weapons into that area and Health. Education and Welfare, Congress when it retu rn s Jan. for me to decide a specific hope for and achieve a rapid opening an anti-smoking cam­ 19 from its winter recess. Announcements for It’s What's Hear members of Great Lakes University Apartment residents: Wimmin's Rap Group a settlement." development of negotiations." paign, was acting responsibly “I believe we do have the Happening must be received in the Life Community speak on "Project Walt Disney film, "Gus" will be women and men. Discuss Carter, in response to a The president did not say to point out the dangers of resolve and national will to deal State News office, 343 Student Seafarer Update,” at 7 p.m. shown at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Red sexism, feminism, liberation| whether the Russians in tobacco. "I do not think it is his with the energy problem," the Services Bldg., by noon at least Sunday at Abrahamic Commun­ Cedar School. Sponsored by at 7 p.m. Mohday, Roe question, accused the Soviet Ethiopia were technicians, mili­ responsibility to tell an in­ president said. "Our proposal is two class days before publication. ity, 320 M.A.C. VARC/Community Education. Student Services Bldg. Union of “unwarranted involve­ No announcements will be accept­ ment in Africa." tary advisers or troops. dividual American whether he fair and well-balanced. - ed by phone. • * * Tolkien Fellowship wilt discuss AIKIDO, martial art for self- Michigan State Junior B “They, in effect contributed On other topics, C arter said: can or cannot smoke," the “My guess is th a t Congress is European Association of MSU the annual atrocity contest at 8 defense and personal growth, ey Team versus Northwoodl to the war between Somalia •He hopes lower interest president said. beginning to realize the impor­ tonight in the Union Tower Room. tute at 6 p.m. Saturday at f Carter opened the news con­ meets at 7 p.m. Sunday, study meets from 1 to 3 p.m. Sunday, 9 and Ethiopia," he said. "They rates can be achieved. tance of this legislation," he lounge, second floor West Owen Ice Arena. *•• ference with a statem ent on Friday the 13 is a Zen Druid to 10:30 p.m. Tu ena y and Thurs­ have sold excessive quantities •Secretary Joseph A. Cali- said. Hall. holiday) Come celebrate with us at day in the Judo Rfom, Men's IM Student Homebuilder's I of arms and weapons to both, 7 tonight in the Union Tower Bldg. meets at 7 p.m. Monday| shipping some men and they "Job Possibilities: How to Find Natural Resources Room. * •• also dispatched Cubans, per­ haps to become combatants themselves." Milliken proposes new building for MSU Them," will be presented by Anthony Rogalski, MSU Place­ ment Services, at 7 p.m. Monday in 335 Giltner Hall. MSU Episcopalians gather to celebrate the Eucharist at 5 p.m. Sunday, Alumni Chapel. Dinner OREMUS Informal worship ser­ vice held at 5 p.m. Sunday led by MSU students with special violin sermon. Supper follows, 1020 Dallas trip preparations * made. ### Gays can discuss topiafl follows. #. * interest from 3 to 5 p.m. Suf The subject was discussed (continued from page 1) Harrison Road. farmers are not going out of business next year," Mormon folksinger Marvin Learn the hows, whys, and Room 4 Student Services j frequently during Carter’s what they can do to ease the financial plight of Bonnen said. Payne will be in concert at 8 p.m. advantages of becoming a Regis­ Use door nearest Hortio( meetings last week with farmers. Anti-Rape Collective meets For the most part, older farmers currently in Saturday, Latter Day Saint Insti­ tered Professional Engineer at 7 Bldg. Accessible. from 4 to 6 p.m. Sunday in 320 foreign leaders on his seven- Milliken, chairperson of the governors’ group trouble added to their land holdings when prices tute of Religion, 4908 S. Hagadorn p.m. Monday, 100 Engineering Student Services Bldg. Open to all nation tour, and C arter told the this year, said he will consult MSU faculty Road. Bldg. REACH needs volunte«| were high in 1973, he explained. Now prices have women interested in trying to African history project in Li news conference: members for help in drawing up proposals. fallen below their expectations and the only way prevent rape on campus. MSU Fisheries and Wildlife Club Retrospect, a magazine focus­ schools. Interested people^ “I hope that we can induce But, according to James Bonnen, a professor in to pay off their loans is to sell the extra land, he sponsors movie, "Song of the ing on MSU events, invites to 26 Student Services B the Soviets and the Cubans not the department, not much can be done. added. Aliyn Rickett will speak on Northern Prairie," by A J . King at writers, photographers and artists information. Farmers across the nation have joined togeth­ "Freedom and Thought Reform in 8 tonight in 109 Anthony Hail. to meet at 7 p.m. Monday in 13 er to protest low prices for products and their “Agriculture markets have the greatest uncer­ China" at 2 p.m. today, 201 Linton Hall. • * • tainty of any industry in the nation,” he said. “It's International Center, Asian inability to make more than their operating Pharmacy, radiology, physical Hotel and Restaurant majors: a feast-or-famine business." Studies. *** costs. They have demanded prices comparable to therapy, occupational therapy, General Foods presentation will be As a result, he added, even the most successful Instructional Developer's Lun­ Drinking law those in more profitable days. nurse anesthesia, discussions with held at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in 73 farmer should plan to “lose his shirt” every four Wayne State Allied Health from Kellogg Center. cheon: Dr.Chapin discusses "Im­ But a stable market would be the biggest boost plications of 1976 Copyright Act" years. 2:30 ,to 5 p.m. Tuesday in 104 to the minority of farmers facing financial ruin, Natural Science Bldg. at noon today, 1961 Room N. Case Bonnen said, and th at would have to be done on Seniors! Interested in Peace Farm ers would not like a federal program Hall. Corps programs in Africa? Talk to (continued from page 3) the federal level. designed to even out high and low price peaks by Listen to Women's Voice from returned volunteers at African State officials could design programs to give keeping reserves, Bonnen said. 4:30 to 5 p.m. Sunday on WKAR 541 E. Grand RivRr East Lansing City Council AM 89. Topic this week is abor­ Studies Center, 106 International has proposed a new ordinance new farmers a credit break and intensive But selling reserves when prices are high and Programs. (oeross from Barkay Hall) tion. to change their old intoxication management training, he added. supplies low — and buying up excesses to store violations to match state law, Only about 3 percent of the nation’s farmers for such times — would stabilize the market and are in financial trouble, and newcomers in the allow more accurate money planning, he ex­ but has not yet discussed it. Alan Fox, councilmember, ob­ jects to the new one because he fields have the most serious problems, he said. "Everyone likes to have the biggest income they can get, but 97 percent of the nation’s plained. “A small change in supply or demand can have WEATHER?? very dire consequences," he added. thinks the law should not just cover alcohol but intoxication State News Newsline Call induced by other drugs as well. Specializing in 349-9560 353-3382 M E X IC A N S T Y L E FOOD FOR THOSE LATE NIGHT featuring these specials Sal. S Sun. MUNCHIES EVERY OTHER FULL MEAL AT V, PRICE Mon. Tuas. Wed. Temperature and O • Velocipede Peddler Elderly Instruments ^Nautilus (antiques ft crofts) Yes! There IS someplace 9 Jax Copying Thurs. TOSTADAS ENCHILADAS Fri. Complete Forecast • O Jo-El Gamas ft Gifts Plot. Black ft Circular (usad records ft tapas) ^ Kitchen Cupboard # Family of Man BURRITOS COMBINATION PLATE • Great Lakos Mt Supply Oftroslar'slcaCrsom OPEN EVERY FRIDAY AND complete menu available daily (wilderness outfitters) Paramount Now* SATURDAY TILL along with beer, wine & your favorite cocktails A From H w tiig a n V ilio n a J Ita n k w f m k 99 3 A .M . BURGER F R E N C H IE ’S BAR 400 Bo k.r Street. Io n ., Sun 3121 E. SAGINAW and KING one block west of South Cedar St. 482-0733 1141 E. GRAND RIVER Tonight Thru Saturday BRYAN LEE BLUES BAND ART SUPPLIES Select Sunday - Native Sons - PAINTS Jeans ♦9 .** Next Weak - BRUSHES Jeans 2 0 % off Duke Tumatoe - CANVAS Sweaters 2 0 % o ff r v J » d tfca A l l S T ★ R F R O G S Coats 2 0 -2 5 % o ff | w e4 / - DRAWING t iz a p d i STAINED C l ASS WE A VINO-WOODCARVING-MACR AM I -MOSAICSLOTS MORE 11! I ®ndei°qijp o u n e [ 2224 E. Michigan Ave. I To-, or(7 n>7xt | - 4 '* V A L L . ax ^ 224 Abbott 351-2285 5 BLKS W. of FRANDOR J ‘ 337-1109 403 E. GRAND RIVER (next lo comput thootro) d M y tfv y § y Sft a by Bill Yates SPONSORED BY: Ln IB I K Y AVERAGE WHITE BAND Jon. 23 MSU Auditorium Tickets ot MSU Union, Discount Records, Sounds ft Diversipns (i)WJIM-TV(CBS) (lO)WILX-TV(NBC) (ll)W ELM -TV(Coblv) (12)W JRT.TV(ABC) (23)WKAR-TV(PBS) I H p A 3:00 I.OTI J o o FRIDAY (23) Over Easy AFTERNOON (10) Another World 8:00 & A .V 7:00 (6) All Star Comedy Ice 12:00 (23) Arts Billboard (6) My Three Sons Revue A 1(6.12) NEWS 3:15 (10) Mary Tyler Moore (12) General Hospital (10) There is No Panama < 2 ,i K L f ■10) To Say the Least (11) Dossier Interpol Canal 123 Firing Line 3:30 (12) Brady Bunch (6) All In the Family (11) Controlling Political I 12:2: (23) Off the Record (23) Villa Alegre Surveillance I ■6) Almanac 12:30 4:00 7:30 (6) Wild, Wild World of (12) Donny &Marie L_ H I | 6) Search For Tomorrow (6) New Mickey Mouse Club (23) Washington Week in Animals Review IlO ) Gong Show (10) Green Acres (10) Family Feud 8:30 ■12) Ryan's Hope (12) '/.bonanza (10) Rockford Files (12) Price is Right c l e a n ERS I 1:00 (23) Sesame Street ■6) Young and the R estless 4:30 (23) MacNeil / Lehrer Report 74o (23) Wall Street Week 9:00 PEANUTS SPONSORED BY: M wCW CCO LA UN D RY In t. Mini liva (ASTLMSlNfi CALL US FOR REPAIRS 1 10) For Richer, For Poorer (6) Doris Day (6) People's Command [ by Schulz AND ALTERATIONS 332-3537 | |2 ) All My Children (lO)Gilligan's Island (11) Ages of Violence Performance 123 Music 5:00 J y As the World Turns 1:30 (6) Gunsmoke (10) Emergency One! MSU SHADOW S ® IM AFRAID I'M 60IN6 TO BE A DISAPPOINTMENT I WENT OVER TO THE RINK TODAY TO 6ET REVENGE BUT THEN THEY ASKED ME TO PLAY CENTER IlO ) Days ot O ur Lives (12) Rookies b y G ordon C arleto n spo n so red b y : TO SOU, MARCIE... ON THOSE HOCKEY PLAYER5 ON THEIR T E A M ! , |23 Over Easy (23) Mister Rogers' J 2:00 Neighborhood P X N B A L L P E T S 'S ■12) Love, Am erican Style 5-30 Present this re ally funny comic for 25‘ p3) Over Easy (11) NEWS worth of free p la y ! Not valid fh . t sot. Night. (23) Electric Company 1:30 6:00 V M GLAD YCU’RE. EACK T o f e f t y O L TyW T . b ) Latino Consortium (6-10-12) NEWS [ 2:30 (ll)ln so d e the CIA |S) Guiding Light (23) Dick Cavett ,r w r t to 10) Doctors 6:30 \ T H £ . R6/MT. ^ * 1 ? 12) One Life to Live (6-10-12) NEWS Today’s Special: 3) French Chef (11) NFL Football Follies f TUAT -f".__ ST H A T J O O . . . yN i i| Enchiladas Jocoque FRANK & ERNEST SPONSORED BY: 2.75 I by Bob Thaves IL AZTECO RESTAURANT 203 M.A.C. 351-9111 W N I QUALITY 3.75* x m o x *io o c o n n * NOW ACCEPTED BY MSU GRADUATE APT© WE ask rut OFFICE FOR DISSERTATIONS / C u S T O M t/? IF HE W ANTS TO 5 0 FoP JAX COPYING SPECIALISTS FOR DISSERTATION B RESUMES 7 es 5 RiDft, E R N IE ... NOT |F HE WSHMT5 541 E. GRAND RIVER UPPER LEVEL T o BE T A K E N ACROSS FROM BERKEY ABOVE PARAMOUNT NEWS CALL 331-SSPO ■ H G U IA I FOR ONE. '/is ■©1978 SoR£»J CAtfLiTcK, - Low gas prices COM ING SOON: Plus Service THE DROPOUTS CAMPUS by Post [RAVELS WITH FARLEY* ReeJe't little t m w iy l i nrlce HrHee SPONSORED BY: PIZZA 2 1301 E. L»r River i Phil F ra n k sp o n so re d by: < N e it to Varsity Inn We Appreciate Your Business CHIEF/-THE PEOPl£ KEEP 7 i d o / tknow TALKIN G A e o M T Y O U R ” t? X 3 « l m , 00 YOU FEEL L lW NOT A T A L L , r F E L IE V E INCREDIBLE CDRltUFTtoN, YOU'RE CAPITALIZING OFF A/HERE WOULD H E MADE IT 7D WHERE -THE/ SAy THEi& NEVER THE FACT rU A T YOUfZ Y£