S e g r e g a t io n p r o m in e n t in f r a t e r n it y o r g a n iz a t io n s By BRUCE BABIAKZ State N«wzS tallW riter Prejudice definitely exists in the MSU Greek system, said J.D . Brooks, president of the NOTE.' TU» l» A * flrri M * tkm -p»rt Mrie* eum inlnf M frefitioa In tbe white fraternity Beta Theta Pi. He also attributed the problem to different cultures of 0 ^ * 1 " .tMSU. blacks and whites. ft** l?^!?bitter leuoni of the I960*, tagregttton appears to still be operating at MSU. “We’re a general fraternity. In our chapter we don’t have any blacks,” Brooks said. W ? ' 0f forced segregation of blacks and whites were repealed over a decade ago, We've had a couple in the last three or four years. Our national (fraternity) has minorities IWjJ1“Jjociai and academic barriers between whites and blacks stand u strong today in it. Regarding membership selection processes, Brooks said there is no apparent racial C ^ L.urpisDreiudlce. I think you'll find it everywhere these days. I don't feel you’ll discrimination. ittaikthere ■sp ^ Hekhju, Mgu dean „ f .radicate “I don't think blacks are interested in checking out our house,” he added. ^ 'e x a m p le of segregation on campus is in the membership of fraternities. The Last year, a black fraternity rented the Beta house for a party, though house members ^ tb w tl’ert,0°d " at MSU is clearly divided into two groups - black Greeks and white did not attend the party, Brooks said. “We plan to have a party with a black fraternity this year, but as far as other events, Gr**1, . ttie Triangle fraternity, which has one black member, white fraternities at there is no intention to have any type of integrated functions," he said. StTw noblack members. In addition, the eight chapters of black fraternities have no Sigma Alpha Mu President Geoff Weirich agreed that racism and prejudice exist on . inters in their ranks. Membership of other minorities in white fraternities is campus, and added that while his fraternity currently has no black members, non-whites side MSU have pledged in previous years. black and white fraternities on campus claim integrated membership in their “There have been non-white pledges in the past — five years ago. Our national fraternity “voluntary" segregation of the 70s. • I,h«nters. but locally integration between white and black greeks apparently only does have minorities in it,” Weirich said. He added that he believes no racial discrimination lfdace during intramural fraternity sports activities. “ Different groups, institutions and minorities voluntarily have decided that in some exists in the rush or selection processes. instances they would prefer their own organizations," said Hekhius. iwumity membership selection processes are not discriminatory, University officials “We’ve rushed non-whites but none joined. I would like to have non-whites in our jHick andwhite fraternity members agree. Discrimination and racism do not exist in “Individually I think there has been a much greater acceptance on the part of blacks and fraternity," Weirich said. Tnrograms and opportunities for membership in Greek organizations are open to whites, and a greater understanding and intermingling. But, organizationally, especially Segregation in the Greek system is largely due to peer pressure, Weirich said. in the social scene, we’re more comfortable in our own organizations." ilnth blacks and whites said. Blacks would be pressured by their friends against joining a white fraternity,” he said. A member of a black fraternity agreed with Hekhuis. ii wever lines of segregation still remain clearly etched into the foundation of Greek Bruce Mays, former president of the white fraternity Phi Kappa Psi, said he does feel iationsat MSU. Until the late 1960s, many fraternities had discriminatory clauses in •X“ f 16like 10b® with people’ or le“ toward frrouPs' that they have things in common facism or sexism are prevalant problems at MSU. Iftdividuai constitutions or code of rules prohibiting minority membership. with, he said, adding that “cultural differences" ranging from dress to music to economic “I live in Detroit, and 1find it (racism) a lot less apparent here (at MSU) than in Detroit," ■Le voluntarily changed their discriminatory clauses, others were forced to change backgrounds contribute to segregation in the fraternities as well as the overall camous he said. social scene. ^discriminatory practices." Hekhius said. “We would allow minorities if we felt a guy would help our house,” Mays said. However, jjt ,hat was once the “forced segregation of the 60s has apparently evolved into the Interfraternity Council President Ian McPherson said he views segregation in the his fraternity currently does not have any black members, he added. He also said fraternities as a “reflection of campus feelings as a whole." (continued on page 14) STUDENT GROUPS DISAGREE Barry lauds tuition act By KAREN SHERIDAN National Student Lobby, organizations that The national groups oppose the bill on StateNews Staff Writer claim the support of 2 million U.S. students grounds that it will aid middle-income ig that he represented Michigan's in their opposition to the bill, were not families rather than low-income, self- DOOcollegestudents, ASMSU President invited or allowed to testify. supporting students. tBarrytestifred before a subcommittee The two groups denounced the tax credit The proposed act, sponsored by 40 b U.S. Senate Finance Committee in hearing last week in a lobbying statement percent of the U.S. Senate, would allow kingtta, D.C, Friday. He spoke in which read in part, “We are outraged that taxpayers to deduct a maximum of $500 "tt idthe proposed Packwood-Moyni- as the largest coalition of student govern­ directly from their tax bills for tuition Mm Tax Credit Act of 1977. ments in the U.S., we have been excluded expenses incurred by themselves, their eNitior.ai Student Association and the from voicing our position.” spouses or dependents. The bill is designed to meet the needs of students whose family incomes are too high to allow them to receive financial aid, but SU officials hoping too low to meet the expenses of higher education, according to its supporters. While Barry heralded the proposed bill as “an outstanding example of progressive or budget in crease legislation” in a written statement before the committee,, the national groups claim it is “regressive and inefficient.” “An across-the-board tax credit is inferior By ANNE 8. CROWLEY to targeting grants or loans to improve State News Staff Writer access for middle-income families,” the S i's financial wizards can start making concrete plans for 1978-79 after Gov. organizations stated in a Jan. 18 press p m G M illiken presents his budget recommendation to the Legislature tonight, release. oiigti final s t a t e spending plans probably will not be ready until June, MSU's “High-income families do not need to r»priati°n u su ally is fairly close to the governor's recommendation, receive the same amount of relief as the m ’s figure is expected to be less than what University officials see as necessary, hard-pressed $12,000 to $25,000 income ingtoE x e c u tiv e Vice President Jack Breslin. family," the release read. gher education, however, is to get more money next year than in 1977-78, according As an alternative to the tax-credit .«state s b u d g et director, because Michigan is recovering from the recent recession, program, the organizations recommend ttslm, A cting President Edgar L. Harden and former President Clifton R. Wharton “Grove Street Spirits" members (from left) John that eligibility for existing Office of broom hockey on the Red Cedar River Saturday :net with M illiken and his budget officials several times over the past few months to Education student aid programs, such as Reizian, Kenneth Wenzel and Jeffrey Rowe com­ as part of the MSU Student Foundation's "Circus » how m uch t h e University needs and what the state can afford. the Basic Educational Opportunity Grant p ete against "The Family's" Clifford Mishalko in the Snow." See page 3. s request - presented to the trustees in October — was for $ 2 0 2 million in program, be expanded to include middle- and Gary McGee of Snyder Hall in a game of eral funds an d $ 1 5 and $17 million, respectively, for the Agricultural Experiment income families. and th e Cooperative Extension Service. But Barry argued before the committee year, la w m a k e rs voted to give the University $169 million in general funds and that bureaucratic difficulties associated d *15 m illion f o r the other programs. * ion and p ro g r a m changes each account for about one-fourth of the proposed $48 »increase in general funds, and more than $18 million was requested to improve y and su p p o rt programs. with the current system would be dim­ inished under the act. “There have been some who would urge Sami Esmail to have open trial, that we turn our efforts in the direction of * “ mhedfor $568,400 to start law and dental schools, but those programs have mzived much legislative support. direct aid from the federal government — '°% in g chores will switch over to the legislative branch of state en w hen House and Senate appropriation committees and subcommittees (but) we believe that the tax credit for tuition would more properly address the problem by allowing taxpayers to keep defense committee meets tonight J i mantling Milliken's plan. more of their earnings, instead of waiting in *y this y e ° bresbn’ ^®U's temporary president should help bring home more line for federal aid,” Barry told the By JEA N N E BARON stranded in Wasnington when nine mcnes of bombings, hijackings and killings. committee. State News Staff Writer snow closed International Airport. The other indictment stated Esmail had *1H arden I lik e s t h e political process — talking to legislators, making presentations However, the national groups said in the An open trial will be held for Sami Kent Cartwright, a member of Carr's contact with a foreign agent in the United and selling the program,” Breslin said. “MSU will be highly ™»gM w hile h e ’s here.” release that an additional bureaucracy Esmail, the MSU student arrested in Israel Lansing staff, attended in the representa­ States. Carr's letter indicated the second would have to be created by the Treasury Dec. 21, a member of his defense committee tive's place and read a letter written by charge may have stemmed from the Department to police implementation of the said during a brief meeting Friday. Carr to the committee. contention by Israeli authorities that Es­ tax credit, while expansion of current The National Committee for the Defense In the letter, Carr said Felicia Langer, mail was in a Libyan training camp for programs would utilize existing Office of -of the Human Rights of Sami Esmail will Esmail's attorney, said Friday’s hearing terrorists during August 1976. Education personnel and programs. hold another meeting at 7.*3&tonight in 341 and all legal proceedings will be open and In addition, the letter said Esmail signed According to ASMSU Press Secretary Union to begin planning a national strategy. the gag order has been lifted. two confessions. One, signed Dec. 26, was in John Kulczyckyj, seven persons from the During Friday’s meeting, committee “But there is some sobering news,” the English while the other, signed Dec. 27, was executive staff and the ASMSU Legislative member Barbara Thibeault said the com­ letter continued. “Two indictments were in Hebrew. Relations Cabinet accompanied Barry to mittee's legal adviser, Abdeen Jabara, told handed down during the hearing.” Both confessions were signed before Washington, D.C. her to tell the crowd “you are completely One indictment accused Esmail of being a Langer was allowed to see Esmail Dec. 28. Expenses for the trip will be paid out of responsible for the trial being open.” member of the Popular Front for the Neither the Israeli consulate in Chicago the Legislative Relations Cabinet budget U.S. Rep. Bob Carr, D-East Lansing, was Liberation of Palestine, an outlawed terror­ or the Israeli Embassy in Washington, D.C. and are expected to total about $600. scheduled to speak at the meeting but was ist organization responsible for numerous have previously mentioned the possibility of two confessions. As late as Friday, Yigal in s id e Antebi, an Israeli consulate spokesperson, said he had no knowledge of an English The choice for some tenants Israel votes not to rejoin Cairo talks statement. In fact, Antebi, director of press and is either getting married or information, never indicated the possibility moving. See page 3. JER U SA LEM (A P) — The two and one-half-month-old Alfred Atherton, who arrived here Saturday for talks aimed at of a second statement during an earlier Egyptian-Israeli peace drive, caught in a crosscurrent of distrust persuading both sides to rein in their rhetoric and resume serious interview, in which the validity of a Hebrew and bitterness, came to a virtual standstill Sunday as Israel negotiations. statement was questioned. Esmail does not decided to suspend the talks on a troop pullback in the Sinai know Hebrew. Arab newspapers, reacting to the stalemate, blamed America Peninsula. “Every Israeli speaks English and I'm for failing to extract sufficient concessions from Israel and said it The Israeli Cabinet met for three and one-half hours and voted sure that before he signed the confession in was up to Washington to do so now to get the talks back on track. not to rejoin the Cairo talks, which had begun earlier this month Hebrew it was read to him in English. I’m w eather after the Christmas Day summit meeting of Egyptian President Begin, reading a statement to reporters, left room for later confident he understood every word,” resumption of the Cairo talks, and the Defense Ministry said there Anwar Sadat and Israeli Prime Minister Mcnahem Begin in Antebi said last Wednesday. were no plans to recall lower-level Israeli military officials already It is finally warming up. Ismailia, Egypt. It has not been explained why the Israeli in the Egyptian capital for the negotiations. Today's high: low 30s. The Israeli action, coupled with Egypt's withdrawal last authorities did not give the consulate or the Tonight's low: mid-20s. Wednesday from parallel political talks in Jerusalem, brought the Begin indicated that before the Cairo talks could be resumed U.S. State Department information about peace campaign started by Sadat last November to its lowest ebb, Egypt would have to soften the tone of its public statements. the second statement. and it seemed to leave the United States with the task of trying to He said Sadat made “ultimatums that are totally unacceptable” Sami's brother, Basim, told the State resuscitate the talks. to Israel in his,speech Saturday to the Egyptian Peoples’ That job appeared to fall to U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Assembly. (continued on page 14) I Carter asks for tax reduction WASHINGTON (A P) - tax cuts for businesses and the federal deficit will require Saturday. CwMr added; "TheK President Carter, while calling individuals to keep the econ­ that Congress also approve his In the lengthy written mes­ ft°°d reason for „ < for income tax reductions, is omy growing, and urged signifi­ “tax reforms” — that is, elimin­ sage to Congress, Carter was neighbors, i„ the° r " cant changes in the tax laws to ation of some of the deductions adamant about the desirability asking Congress to take sway mic tircumstance, ' ^ deductions for state and local promote fairness, simplification available to individuals and of making tax laws more fidr, s vastly different t«* t X gasoline, sales and peraonal- and investment. businesses. key campaign promise. one has found J J I property taxes and to reduce "The average working man He proposed reducing the tax The tax cuts would be effec­ ters and loopholes" I the allowance for medical ex­ and woman pay for the loop­ top. Al Ullman r J rates for individuals and cor tive next Oct. 1. The changes In holes and the special provisions penses. porations; replacing the cur­ deductions would become effec­ long But even with those changes, in our tax laws — because when Ethiopia expels W. G erm an diplomat the Carter administration says, rent $35-per-person tax credit tive in 1979. None of the some do not pay their fair and Means Committee hJI earlier he thinks the t « J and $750-per-person exemption changes would affect the tax share, the majority must pay the president's total program “ t tax cut i, too high i ll with a $240-per-person credit; returns due April 17. The usual higher taxes to make up the proposals would mean lower about $15billion w o M "puzzlement." He withheld further com­ liberalizing tax benefits for deadline of the 15th falls on a difference," he said. desirable. • BONN, West Germany (AP) — Ethiopia taxes for virtually all taxpayers business investment in equip­ expelled West Germany's ambassador ment until after la n k e s returns to Bonn earning less than $100,000 a ment; reducing opportunities year. jrci for a personal report. Sunday after the Bonn government On Saturday, M arie Schlei, the West When the tax cuts and the for tax shelters, and slashing by ONCE OFFERED TO AID GOP confirmed that Somalia is free to use half deductions for business German economic cooperation minister, reduced deductions are com­ German aid to buy arms for the border entertainment and the “two- told a radio interviewer that this country bined, the effect would be to martini lunch.” war with Ethiopia. A West German Foreign Ministry spokesperson confirmed that Bonn's had granted Somalia an unconditional loan of $12 million. A government lower the tax bill of a typical $10,000-a-year family by $312; at the $20,000 four-member Carter said the tax cuts are necessary to offset higher So­ Horgan named top D e B, NANCY BOG ambassador in Addis Ababa, Johann spokesperson confirmed that the Somalis level, such a family's cut would SU te N e w a S t i f f T cial Security taxes and the Christian Lankes, wos notified by the could use the cash for arms purchases. be $270. A single person earn­ w t ! and general clowi effects of inflation and to help WASHINGTON (A P) - The man slated to and took a lesser role as consultant ml Ethiopian government Sunday morning Arms-short Somalia has had difficulty ing $10,000 would pay $34 less prevent the economy from slip­ become executive director of the Democratic winning Byrne campaign. Uerie for measura thot he hod 24 hours to leave the country. obtaining military assistance from West­ and one earning $25,000 could ping into another recession. Party offered to help the Republican guberna­ Now. Horgan has been selected by the) (sofFridaynight s Bon The West German spokesperson said ern nations since it expelled its Soviet aid realize a $245 reduction. torial nominee in New Jersey last year after Units'act* every turn House and party chairperson-desiput, i mission lost year. In a message to Congress on But to pay for those tax cuts working in two unsuccessful primary campaigns MSU Student Fou the move was received here with White to be executive director of the DenJ Saturday, Carter recommended without massive increases in to unseat Democratic Gov. Brendan Byrne. staged in the U, National Committee. He is expected i Dan Horgan, a professional political consultant d as judges C. appointed.after White’s formal election; „ ( professor of ecom whose most noted accomplishment waa his committee's meeting here this week. [professoroftelecomm Police disperse Basque protesters ACLU w ill reduce handling of Jimmy Carter's 1976 presidential campaign in Ohio, says the offer wasn't serious. Horgan would replace Paul Sullivan, resigned several weeks ago at the sam, | LisTomHealy. ishow, hosted by WV And New Jersey Republicans say they were outgoing Chairperson Kenneth Curtis an« (ny, was part of th PAMPLONA, Spain (AP) — Police fired rubber bullets and smoke grenades to then threw stones and firebombs at the officers and blocked streets with auto­ High Court cases suspicious of it because of Horgan's Democratic background. Nevertheless, Horgan acknowledges submit­ his resignation. As executive director, Horgan wonl White's chief aide and operationi a in' the Snow" winte gseemed to suit t disperse 2,000 demonstrators after a mobiles, police said. NEW YORK (A P) - Six echoing retreat — keeping ting s $340,465 bid to apply his political expertise Although the job is little-noticed publicly1 L.< and alumnus. Tl funeral mass for two Basque separatist The gun battle earlier this month that months after he snared an ACLU cases out of the U.S. to Republican Ray Bateman's general election one of the most critical in Democratic poli Jthey remained spirite querrillas killed in a shootout with police killed the guerrillas also claimed the life angry young attorney’s dream Supreme Court. campaign against Byrne, who was seeking his Horgan has a reputation as one of thecom ■Becausethey had no go 10 days ago. of a police officer. job — legal director of the “It was a very conscious second term. best political tacticians. His performance hi 1 zade do with a gai The guerrillas w ere members of the American Civil Liberties Union decision,” said Ennis. “We are When the Republicans rejected the offer, in 1976 is acknowledged by Carter (om Authorities reported at least 15 arrests dfrom the ceiling. — Bruce Ennis has sounded an doing everything we can to Horgan eventually made his peace with Byrne being one of the keys to the president's but no injuries in the disturbance that group known as ETA — initials in the I » the “gong" with Basque lantuage for Basque Land and keep away from the Supreme I, sdull whack resoum began after a crowd left the church Court." ['inlls fromthe audiem Saturday night and tried to march to the liberty. street where the guerrillas w ere killed. Police cut the demonstrators off before The organization seeks independence S o v ie ts g e t Last year the ACLU was involved in 95 cases before the Supreme Court. If Ennis has Hunt to announce decision ■tiewhacksrang out su I Oil ol eleven acts, o they could reach the spot, where they for the four Basque provinces of northern anything to say about it, that I winning act — two intended to lay a wreath. The protesters Spain. s p a c e fir s t number will dwindle this year. He urges attorneys to argue sentencing of W ilm ington lers from Akers Hall Jrf29pointsfromthe pa MOSCOW (AP) - Soviet ACLU cases on the basis of Brizefromthe foundatic space scientists achieved state law becuase, “if you win RA LEIG H , N.C. (A P) - Gov. and his constituency at home. as well as the United Su| s Brown and Kevin M another first Sunday when an on state grounds, it insulates James Hunt will go on state­ Amnesty International, support of the defendu unmanned supply capsule the case from Supreme Court wide television today to an­ which last year won the Nobel In North Carotins, p docked at the Salyut 6 space review." nounce a decision on pardoning Peace Prize, has called the have been circulated u station to bring fresh supplies to two cosmonauts who have been orbiting the Earth for six "Of course I resent it," he said. “Here I am, 37 years old, I'm a constitutional litigator or reducing the sentences of the Wilmington 16, whose ease has drawn attention internationally Wilmington 16 “prisoners of conscience.” The Soviet govern­ ment has cited the case as an 46-year-old Hunt not toI vene in the case, leivhl defendants to serve «it| (in te r weeks, the official news agency and 1 face the prospect for the and become politically volatile example of human rights vio­ sentences. Tass reported. best part of my life of litigating at home. lations in the United States. The case arose out J before an unsympathetic Groups blam e each other for vandalism The supply capsule Progress 1 apparently used the second docking port on the space court." Some 5,000 attorneys across the nation volunteer their ser­ The case of those charged in t firebombing during a 1971 racial disturbance puts the The East German press has sent representatives to North Carolina to report on the case, firebombing of s grocery during racial disturbs! Wilmington, a city of I br station, alongside the Soyuz 27 first-term Democratic governor and rallies have been held in 45,666 located on an inlet" space capsule. vices to the ACLU. between international opinion Paris and East European cities the North Carolina coast! BrNANCY ROGIE EUREKA, Calif. (AP) — As a hearing Congress to add 48,000 acres of nearby StateNewsStaff Wr fh« S'of* Newt it published by 'he ttudenit of Michigon Stole University every clott approaches on whether the Redwood northern California mountain timberland do, during Foil Winter ond Spring school terms Mondoy Wednesday and Fridays wm-wielding hockey National Park should be expanded, both to the Redwood National Park. during Summer term ond a tpeao l Welcome Week edition is published in September ill anda group of Sp. Subscription rote is 520 per year loggers and environmentalists are blam­ A hearing is scheduled Wednesday on a walked away with Second class postage paid at East lo n ting Mich Editoriol and business offices a t 345 ing each other for a rash of chain-saw Student Services Oidg Michigan State University lo s t Lonting Mich. 48824 Post Office | the halftime at S&tu a bill sponsored by $en. Alan Cranston, publication number is S20260 sketball game, bringin vandalism to the trees. D-Calif. The proposed legislation has Postmoster Pleose send form 3S 9 to State News 345 Student Services Building in care of MSU Messenger Service Eost lo n ting Mich. 48823 logStudent Foundatioi The trunks of 16 state-protected giant been hailed by conservationists because redwoods in groves about 55 miles south it would protect redwoods, and attacked GERALD H. COY, GENERAL MANAGER 50* off ! West floor fi of here have been hacked and ripped by a by timber industry supporters who want ROBERT L. BULLARD, SALES MANAGER PHONKS of a 5.°° purchase ftd victorious from chainsaw's gnawing teeth the past the trees for lumber. News 'Editorial................................................................................................... . 355-8252 ■onthe Red Cedar month. Each side has voiced outrage over the Classified A d s ........................................ ......................................................... . 355-8255 111 N. HARRISON, E. LANSING p- At the same ti Display Advertising........................................................................................... . 353-4400 The rash of vandalism comes just as vandalism. And each has hinted its Business O ff ic e .................................................................................................. . 355-3447 NEXT TO QUALITY DAIRY a and University debate is heating up over an attempt in opponent could be the culprit. Photographic.................... ................................................................................ . 355-8311 I their snow sculpi )(f COUPONJEXPIRES Jo n. 31.1978 ))\ I beforea panel of ji Budges - C. Patric 9 House seats may be reapportioned PURCHASE CERTIFICATE for of economics, 50* 50* . ssor of crin ENTITIES BEARER OF THIS COUPON TO S0< OFF OF A (Kormos, assistant WASHINGTON (AP) - Nine seats in Ohio would lose two. Illinois, Michigan, •5.66 PURCHASE ______ idfirst place to an the U.S. House of Representatives will Pennsylvania and South Dakota would have to be reapportioned, giving more each lose one seat. representation to Sunbelt states, if The statistics are included in a larger current population patterns continue study, part of the Census Bureau's ii O PEN T H U R S D A Y A N D F R ID A Y E V E N IN G S U N T IL 9 0 0 until 1980, according to figures released current population reports series, to be Sunday by the Census Bureau. released soon. Bob's Philadelphia Steak Florida and Texas would each gain two seats, and Arizona, California, Oregon, Southern and western states led the JA N U A R Y Tennessee and Utah would each add one nation in population growth since 1970, representative to their delegations be­ while northeastern and north central cause of projected population changes states experiences modest population between 1970and 1980, the study shows. increases, with more people migrating New York would lose three seats and out than in. Vance ends four-nation mission WASHINGTON (AP) - Secretary of State Cyrus R. Vance returned home Sunday expecting Israel and Egypt to This forecast w as based on an ap­ praisal of Anw ar Sadat's speech to the Egyptian Parliament Saturday in which he FURTHER resume their political negotiations, pro­ bably within a week to 10 days. Direct talks may be held in Jerusalem said the peace initiative would not be dropped. REDUCTIONS or Cairo, said a senior U.S. official, who He also said he is asking the United did not wish to be identified. States to provide Egypt with "all the Alternatively, Assistant Secretary of weapons that Israel possesses." The MR. J FA LL and W IN TER A PPA REL State Alfred L. Atherton J r ., who arms request w ill be considered and remained in the Middle East, would Congress could approve delivery of some Young men's down filled and nylon parkas, shuttle between the two capitals as a Y o u'll m a k e a m o re lastin g im p re s ­ lethal weapons to Egypt, the senior mediator. sion on em ployers if y o u r resume is corduroy outerwear, wool coats, and jackets official said. distin ctive an d unique. . . .wool blend suits in solid colors and patterns. . .long sleeve knit and woven sport House, Senate may break stalem ate Insty Prints can Help with: shirts. . .sw eaters.. .casual • paper in various colors slacks. . .jeans. Fill in your immediate WASHINGTON (AP) - A trio of generally favor continued price controls congressional leaders agreed Sunday • colored ink on natural gas. A bill passed by the mid-winter wardrobe needs now at savings. that the House and Senate may be close Senate calls for deregulation, and the • various type styles to ending the natural gas pricing dispute two sides were unable to resolve their • printing photos on your resume that has stalled passage of energy differences before recessing for the legislation. holidays. Differences between House and Se­ FROM OUR M R. ,. 1J SHOP However, House Speaker Thomas P. yes we can! nate conferees over the proposed dere­ O'Neill, D-Mass., Senate Minority leader gulation of prices on new natural gas Howard Baker of Tennessee and House prevented Congress from approving Minority Leader John Rhodes of Arizona President Carter s energy program last year. said they believe Congress is moving insty-prints House members of the conference toward some form of deregulation to break the stalemate. f»3393 1821104 ttie wiz oj the printing biz1 321-7081 48S3S11 Jacobean® 145BE. Mictrign 3205S. Ceiar 43SW. Szjiuw 123 $. WashfectM e o n d fr o n t p n g # Monday, January 23, 1978 ' ong Show' tops off ircus in the Snow' By nancy r o g ie r overalls, green and white shirts, ties and with a bag over his head with holes for eyes su,eNrw>SUfl Writer slouch hats, sang an original song about and mouth. Friday night, the audience not their philosophy of studying — which is, of only saw the Unknown Comic, but his s 'r t .S T S S couse, not to study at all. grandfather — a hunched figure with a rfFridsynightV'BongShow” outdid The pair next performed “MSU Shad­ wrinkled paper bag on his head — as well arts every time. ows" on kazoos and finished up with a Both left before the judges could respond "tsu student Foundation “Bong barber-shop-style duet of the Spartan fight with a score. dand in the Union Ballroom, song. Slot®News/Debbio Ryan „ judges C. Patric Laah Other acts held in esteem by both judges Alumnus Tom H otly delays telecommunications “I like them!" Larrowe said as he gave Bong Show” at the Uoion Ballroom. C. Patric : professor of economica; Thomas and audience were an original song called professor Thomas Muth from “bonging” a mime by them a score of 10. “I think they're terrific!" “Lash" Larrowe jleft) was also a judge for the "professoroftelecommunications; and The two seniors, both speech majors, said "My Favorite Gear is Park" sung by junior “Judith and Roxanne1* daring Friday night's “The “Circus in the Snow” event. 'hi TomHealy. they plan to use their prize money for a trip Steve Young, and “Professor Eugene's ■how, hosted by WVIC disc jockey to Florida during spring break. Goony Bird” performed by junior Gene wl9 part of the foundation's Shackman. The act with the next highest score, i inthe Snow" winter carnival last entitled "String Quartet Minus One", A rendition of Barbara Streisand's featured three men from Wonders Hall on "Woman in the Moon" and a mime by “Judith and Roxanne" were among the acts NEW LAW HAS LITTLE IMPACT . seemed to suit the two faculty trombone, saxophone and drums. As the 5, and alumnus. Throughout the trio warmed up to some foot-stomping the judges “ bonged." However, students questioned said they Drunks not hospitalized theyremained spirited and enthusi- music, Healy and Berry shared an im­ BKiusethey had no gong to bong, the promptu dance. enjoyed every part of the show. mule do with a garbage can lid Trombonist Bob Schwartz said the group Lynn Hildebrandt, a freshman from Shaw i from the ceiling. Each time a had played together "almost an hour and a Hall, said she thought the show was great, bit the “gong" with his cardboard half' when they discovered their act. The especially the judges. , dull whack resounded amid booa idea came from the Juilliard String Quartet, "They deserve the highest prize," she By DEBORAH HEYWOOD Lt. John A. Peterson of the Department stance abuse coordinating agency. jails fromthe audience, he continued. said. State News Staff Writer of Public Safety said two persons have been Both Hegiin and Bannister said that they tbewhacksrang out aurprisingly few " I saw them and I thought That's us',” he Ken Gornstein, a sophomore from Snyder arrested since Sunday, but that they were are not taking the initiative to be desig­ A Jan. 15 law decriminalizing public Out of eleven acts, only four were said. Hall, said he found the admission price drunk and disorderly, which still is a nated. drunkenness and requiring police to escort Freshman Dave Svoboda supplied back­ attractive as well. criminal offense. “As far as I know," said Hegiin, “the ball’s intoxicated persons to a hospital instead of winning act - two golden-voiced up music on drums, and junior John Tanner “A quarter doesn’t buy that much these "A lot of people have been misled," he in their (the court coordinating agency's) jail has had little immediate impact on area ers from Akers Hall - garnered a played saxophone. days and it was money well-spent,” he said. said. "We rarely arrest students for being court. If any detox center is to be set up, hospitals. 129 points from the panel and a $100 No spoof of “The Gong Show” would be "It was either this show or a Hershey bar." drunk. We have always tried to get them they're the ones to arrange it." St. Lawrence Hospital spokesperson Tim ri» from the foundation. complete without an appearance by The One hundred and sixty other students home, unless they’re creating some kind of Bannister stressed that St. Lawrence has Bannister said that only one intoxicated Brown and Kevin Marlow, clad in Unknown Comic — a comedian disguised apparently felt the same way. disturbance. Then we may arrest them.” not been seeking designation. person has been brought into the hospital's emergency room since the law went into “ Lansing may have a lot of skid-row “ We think the law is a nice idea, but the effect a week ago. alcoholics that need to be taken into a ramifications of space and price are some­ hospital, but that isn’t the case on campus, thing we still need to work through," he inter carnival draw s to close “The impact (of the law) has been much less than projected," he said. “We were expecting up to 20 people a night. Either nor in most of the Lansing area.” Sparrow Hospital spokesperson Ann Hegiin said that there has been no increase said. Harold Old, an official at the Office of Substance Abuse Services, said he is people have stopped drinking or they’re in the number of persons brought in to the personally quite pleased with the change­ being taken somewhere else." hospital's emergency room. over. But other area hospitals haven’t seen None of the hospitals in Ingham County “ So far we have heard of no problems, broom hockey, sculptures them, either. Dennis LaFave, and Olin Health Center official, said the new law has not affected have been designated by the Michigan Department of Public Health to be service although we have had some calls concerned with routine aspects of the law’,' he said. providers for intoxicated persons brought Old said that police and hospitals seem to the center at all. r.- in by area police. be adjusting to the law fairly well. ByNANCY ROGIER bear sitting in the snow. The judges Kim Stuut, a graduate student in "It’s not going to make that much Seven hospitals in the area that have "There is some activity throughout the StateNewsStaff Writer christened the entry "Dancing Bear-in fisheries and wildlife, provided the group difference for us," he said. DPS usually just 24-hour emergency rooms have been tem­ state, but I think it will be six months urn-wielding hockey team from Repose." with tips on bear anatomy. takes students who are really drunk back to porarily designated until one can be before we really have a feel for the law and i anda group of Spartan Village Second prize in snow sculpture went to "This bear represents a community their dorms." recommended by the Ingham-Eaton sub­ its ramifications," he said. $walked away with first prizes "Seal in Equilibrium," which depicted a sea) effort," Ferency said. the halftime at Saturday night's balancing a ball on its nose. The seal was Other sculptures examined by the judges sketball game, bringing to an end a built by 9 West Shaw Hall. were “ Pachydermititus,” an model of a ngStudent Foundation winter car- “Dancing Bear in Repose" was the work small elephant and “Offal Elephant Traces,” COM PLAINTS CALLED UNFOUNDED of seven students and University em­ a free form sclupture at the Union. ■West floor from Shaw Hall ployees who originally intended the project All sculptures were dubbed the titles by d victorious from a broom hockey nthe Red Cedar River Saturday g. At the same time, a group of to resemble an elephant. However, after three hours’work, the sculpture ended up looking more like a bear. the judges. The sculpture contest and the broom hockey competition were part of the MSU Trustees unworried over recall and University employees dis- Kathy Stuut, Connie Dorin and Craig Student Foundation “Circus in the Snow," By PATRICIA La CROIX Only one of the trustees contacted requested an across-the-board increase of their snow sculpture at Spartan Hudson, all Development Fund employees, which began Jan. 18. State News Staff Writer Sunday was aware that the students had $8,500. The administrators, because of beforea panel of judges, said they entered the contest to add to the The carnival ended Saturday night, when The seven Lansing Community College initiated the action. Once made familiar budget restrictions, could only counter with judges- C. Patric “Lash"Larrowe, campus-wide participation. trophies were presented at the basketball trustees who are the subject of a recall with some of the students’ complaints, the an increase of $800, she explained. r ^ economics, Zolton Ferency, They enlisted the help of sophomore game halftime. petition do not seem too worried about their trustees called many of them unfounded. “The students' fears that classes will be isor of criminal justice, and Debbie Schiffel, junior Shelley Erickson In addition, both winning groups were futures on the board. The petition was The recall action was announced by the disrupted if there is a strike are unfounded. Kormos, assistant registrar — and freshman Karen Kloc, residents of treated to a pizza party at Dooley’s Sunday announced last Friday by nine of the Students' Rights Coalition, a group formed That will not happen," she said. first place to an eight-foot circus Shaw Hall. night. college’s students. recently for the primary purpose of removing the trustees from their elected lt is likely the teachers and administra­ positions. tors will appoint a mediator for arbitration, McKesson said. Approximately six weeks Students on east side The students have to gather signatures of 25 percent of the people who voted in the last gubernatorial election, or about 25,000 will be needed for a decision to be handed down and even then McKesson said that neither party was bound to accept the persons. results. Generally, the students claim that the violate zoning codes trustees have not been fair in their contract negotiations — begun with last June — Trustee David Froh said he was not concerned about the recall drive because of the small number of students involved. teachers, thereby holding up a settlement. Froh also said the students’ claims were By MARY NICHOLS The students are suffering because of this, “unfounded." About 50 houses occupied by students on the east side of Lansing have been cited for said members of the group, since teachers violating occupancy limits of the zoning code, a Lansing zoning officer said recenty. are not concentrating on teaching while “I’m not at all concerned," he concluded. William Dunlap said his department has received over 60 complaints since last negotiations continue. Several trustees, including William Hol­ November about over-occupied houses in the northeastern section of Lansing. lister, John H. Dart and James L. Reutter, Phyllis McKesson, chairperson of the said they were not familiar with the action "W e’ve always had problems on the east side with college kids," Dunlap said. trustees, said she was out of town when the Under the Lansing zoning code, in areas zoned "A-A" one family district, "A ” one and did not want to comment. announcement was made and had not heard family district and “B” residence district, not more than three unrelated persons may anything about it since. Trustees David Deihl and Carol Harding occupy a dwelling unit. could not be reached for comment. In all other districts, not more than four unrelated persons may occupy a house. “If any of the charges could be sub­ Some of the specific claims made by the When a violation is found, the property owner is notified. The owner then has 60 days stantiated. then the group would un students include: to bring the occupancy within the limits defined by the code. doubtedly stand a good chance," McKesson Charles Ipcar, director of the Tenants Resource Center, 855 Grove Street in East said. “ But none of the claims are true at all. •The apparent lack of constitutional and Lansing, said the Lansing Planning Dept, is taking action to enforce the code more civil rights. systematically due to pressure from homeowners on the east side of Lansing. “I would have to summarily disagree with •The belligerent attitudes directed to­ He estimated that 2,000 MSU students live in eastern Lansing. all of the complaints just off the top of my wards instructors, teachers and students. “Basically the ordinance is there because some homeowners believe that living next to head," she said. “There is a problem. The •Repeated violations of the Michigan unrelated tenants is less desirable,” Ipcar said. “They have been backed up by the students don’t realize what is involved in Auditor General’s report. courts." the negotiations." •The absence of bargaining in good faith. Ellen J . Moore, vice-president of the Mid Michigan Rental Property Association, said •The irresponsible use of funds. McKesson said the teachers had initially her organization has received inquiries about the ordinance from landlords as well as concerned tenants. She said the 210 members of her organization have just recently become aware of the Lansing ordinance. There are hundreds of landlords outside the association that do not know about it, according to Moore. "There is tremendous lack of communication," she said. "It's a problem for those not Rumors deluge police aware of the ordinance. I think it’s going to get worse before it gets better." Moore also questioned the timing of the Planning Department’s move to enforce the Local police were deluged with telephone calls over the weekend from citizens code more strictly. , reporting rumors of additional stabbings in the wake of three recent attempted knifings. “Why now? Why not a crackdown in July or August before the students moved in? It’s Officials have labeled the reports “ fictitious and erroneous.” very hard for them now," she said. “Many will have to move out. Where are they going to go?" There have been no attempted knifings since a week ago, police reiterated Sunday She said the ordinance poses problems not only for landlords but also for college afternoon. students who have limited financial means. "Many students have rented four or five bedroom houses,” Moore added. “If only three Police received rumors that a woman was fatally stabbedy and others were being held can live there, the cost is way out of their range and the landlord is stuck with a four- or in intensive care at Sparrow Hospital under armed guard after being knifed. Police said tingBetr . -j State News/Ira Strickstein five- bedroom house.” all the rumors were unfounded. 11 the Mqit l 8P°8e” *°°k Hrit place in the enow sculpture compe* Shannan L. Wilber, a senior, said the five tenants at her house at 315 S. Francis, in The Department of Public Safety said a few concerned parents have called about last "The sci.i * Foundation's second annual “Circus in the Lansing, first learned of the ordinance after they were notified by a city building Monday’s attempted knifings. One parent even threatened to call the governor’s office to Netted in « w t8 directed by University employee Kathy Stutt inspector that they were violating legal limits for occupancy. get something done about the recent incidents, a DPS official said. Ihtl P*rlt*n Village. Members of the winning “team” are (left “A neighborhood association had given her (the building inspector) our names," Wilber 0c‘ Shelley Erickson, Kathy S tu tt and Debbie Schiffel. said. “She explained the ordinance to us and the intent and the essence of it was that they East Lansing police have increased patrols by marked and unmarked cars in the area were trying to maintain the family atmosphere in the neighborhoods." since the attempted knifings, and DPS officials said they have every available car (continued on page 11) patroling campus. Smith piece praised Carter and America, 1978: Re: “The Smith Case,” by Michael w in Wednesday's State News. J I truly appreciated Winter's tC01B account of the events surroundin, lethargy, lowered expectations RHA tax defies In a world where there is not safe, effective, free birth control for all, nor adequate, free child care for all, abortion is appointment of Ken Smith as asmJ attorney. I couldn't have said it u l myself. I only hope my fellow ( J our right. members have taken the time to read! student opinion Pamela Jennings assessment of how they're doing in Jimmy Carter’s State of the year of hard political knocks, has little resemblance to it. 1312 Haslett “official duties." Unfortunately, Kent Bn Union address was laden with either abandoned or modified his The president lobbied Congress East Lansing A story in last Monday's State News and his entourage of nine will have to ll symbolic overtones. Delivered be­ expectations. “Government,” he to ratify the Panama Canal trea­ concerning the RHA movie tax referendum until they return from Washington, D.C| fore a joint session of Congress, told Congress and a nationwide ties. Prospects for the treaties indicates that the referendum was passed Scott SchreiM Carter’s message came on the eve television audience, “cannot be the appear to be brighter now than by the majority of 4,500 dormitory resi­ ‘B utcher’ the poor ASMSU representative, college ofartssJ managers of everything and when they were originally nego­ dents who voted on the proposal. This of the first anniversary of his 501 Sunset L everybody.” tiated. That is encouraging news, seems to be a rather small minority of the Contrary to Paul Wilk's pretentious inauguration. The ideas Carter student population to determine an issue East I Indeed, some analysts noted not only for the nation — which claims of “deep concern for the problems of expressed Thursday night provide that could affect every student at MSU. the poor” (Letters, Jan. 17) and “the human an interesting counterpoint to that Carter’s address could have cannot afford the possibly violent Put aside for a moment the arguments rights of the unborn child,” he knows those which he put forth a year been delivered, with minor revi­ repercussions resulting from the that this tax constitutes a monopolistic nothing of poverty and rights. Poverty is Plaudits to Humphr ago. With acouple of expectations, sions, by former President Gerald treaties’ rejection — but for venture by RHA. Should this tax decrease real, unlike his moralistic “arguments." Ford. Carter’s political fortunes as well. the number of films available on and off Rights are (or should be) equal, and safe Many thanks for your wonderful edit, they constitute a retreat from campus as has been proposed, the decision The president, haunted by the abortion is a right; no safe abortions for the on the passing of Senator Hubert H will have been made without the consent of rich and “butchering” for the rest. phrey. It was, indeed, an excellent d legacy of Bert Lance, stalled those of us who live off campus. RHA might and I enjoyed every word ot it. energy legislation, plunging opi­ just as well have turned the idea over to How profound of him to say “N EV ER” to “Government . . . cannot be abortion — he will N EV ER need one! Wilk watching the special funeral services tf nion polls and diplomatic gaffes, another student organization so that it honored Mr. Humphrey, one cannot ed the managers o f everything and might benefit non-dormitory studenta also. should save his philosophical mutterings for needs a major political victory gerate the amount of love, respect, J everybody. . . ” Nathan Towne himself and hia friend Jimmy Carter and common decency this man commanded.! Jim m y Carter badly and soon. Lansing leave the problem of social injustice to those your editorial points out that (act1 The balance of C arter’s speech in touch with reality. beautiful passages. was bland and predictable. Gone Oh — I am deeply moved by Wilk's I also enjoyed Joe Pizzo's article oil was the fiery rhetoric of days past. Abortion a right concern over the possibility of his tax Humphrey constituency and goodwill, if The president saved his harsh­ pennies funding poor ^women’s abortions; did a great job, Joe, keep up the • Gone were the high goals and none of the rest of us have ever let our work. Once more, thank you for show] est rhetoric to condemn govern­ hopes of days past. The president However early in the year it may yet be, taxes be used for something we didn't your compassion and devoting your end ment’s failure to deal effectively sought to mollify wary legislators, (letter to the editor, Jan. 17), Paul Wilk advocate. page to this truly great individual. with the energy crisis. “On energy Colleen M. Hanlon reassure the American people and gets my nomination for this year's “Keep Gary B. Mite legislation we have failed the Her in Her Place" Award. (As some may 209 Abbot Hall Did scale down expectations. That is American people,” he asserted. recall, in 1974 the National Organization of his objective for the year ahead — “Not much longer can we tolerate Women bestowed this honor upon Paul a bland one indeed. Anka and Seals & Crofts for "Having My this stalemate.” Baby” and "Unborn Child" respectively.) Not much longer indeed. The Politically speaking, the days of president diplomatically withheld assigning blame for the energy the Great Society are dead. Carter's political antennae detect Curious, is it not, that so many men naturally assume they have the right to The S ta te News morass where it belongs: On the an America turning inward, be­ control our bodies On second thought, considering the nature of the prevailing Monday, January 23, 1978 responsibility. reactionary elements within the coming more wary and circum­ power structure, it is not unusual at all. During his presidential cam­ Senate who insist on deregulating spect. The president, whose initia­ Let me remind Wilk, nonetheless, that a Editorials are the opinions of the State News. Viewpoints, columns paign, Carter struck a distinctly natural gas prices and on giving tives during the past year were woman's uterus is not state property. and letters are personal opinions. populist note, condemning uniden­ massive tax breaks to Big Oil. The shredded by an increasingly con­ Editorial Dopartmonf tified “special interest groups” energy bill Carter originally pro­ May I suggest that the ‘‘simplest under­ Edltor-tn-chlaf.................... Mlchoal Tonlmura Photo Editor................. Richard Poliiom servative Congress, seems con­ Managing Editor.......................... Kot Brown Entertainment and Book Editor.. Kathy Esseh| while promising to balance the standing of biology** is hardly adequate to posed last April has been evisce­ tent to drift with the prevailing deal with the question of human rights? Opinion Editor.................... Dava Mlslolowskl Sports Editor......................... TomShonal budget, slash unemployment and rated; what finally emerges from a tides of the era. Instead of Perhaps if W ilk availed himself of some Spatial Profacts Editor ............... Dabble Wolfa layout Editor......................... KimShandl City Editor.................................. JoaScolas Copy Chief..........................RenoldoMijT | thanks go out to re| dampen inflation — all by 1980. It joint House-Senate conference leadership we will have fellowship serious study, Philosophy 460 for example, if the meeting en Campus Editor........................... Anne Sfuorf Freelance Editor................... MichaelMftfl isclearthepresident, sobered by a committee will undoubtedly bear — and a Union awash in lethargy. he would learn that neither the clergy, the Wlra Editor....................... Joealyn Loskowskl Staff Representative............. ChrisKucxynj dby the Lansing i legislators, the jurists, the biologists, nor Advertising Department I hitM a y evening the physicians have been able to agree upon DeniseI wffriday, Jan. 13, i Advertising Manager.................Sharon Sel/er Assistant Advertising Manoger questions dealing with personhood of the i/iniftary budget di fetus. Idbeusedto meet hu [federal budget for fisca CAPITOL r a t io ! FOLLIES ThyPresident Carter or I increasedallocations t< f Tuesday, Jan. 24 di The Esmail affair: oSquare. The Mob eettheater performt comeand encouraged nCenterhas more ini Jd ahand. the move would fail, he should | Mobilization For Surv Land use: have made his own stand on the issue clear. As party leader, he McCollough two sides to a coin Isand organizations ofthethreat to human Ireactorsandthe intern should have encouraged other I toward providing for Democratic senators to support Wtaofour destructioi questioned by the U.S. official Esmail sity are writing to express our deepcone profiles in efforts to halt the abuse of our natural resources. violates indicated that he had not been mistreated. So far as we now know, the claims of that Mr. Sami Esmail, U.S. citizen, te«lj assistant and honors student in our defj ment, has been imprisoned in Israel. The bill now remains in com­ torture made by his brother and other We have been informed that Mr. E« supporters have been deliberate distortions mittee in the grip of Mack, who was arrested when arriving at the TelN own law for political purposes. cowardice although he is committee chair­ person, is violently opposed to land use legislation. By keeping Sami Esmail If we believe in Democracy and if our desire is to further the atmosphere for airport on Dec. 21,1977, while traveling visit his dying father. He has III imprisoned since that date, his father| peace, let us all be patient as the wheels of subsequently died, prolonged intem- the bill in committee and subject to tions have occurred, and charges aga Land use legislation has failed his personal whims, Mack will be Last week the Secretary of Esmail: case unclear justice are allowed to turn. In Israel, as in the United States, one is presumed inno­ him have not been made clear. again, thanks to the narrow­ able to kill the bill. State’s office ruled that .oans cent until proven guilty. This week Esmail We know Mr. Esmail to be a frieiil mindedness of our state senators. received by gubernatorial candi­ People of good conscience affirm here and will be arraigned. If Israel releases him for outgoing person, concerned (as we all4 It is outrageous that the state In the meantime, the Senate date Patrick H. McColh f:. vio­ around.the world the human rights behind lack of evidence of wrongdoing, let us proper treatment of suspects and due for a just and peaceful settlement ofj remains apathetic to the need for late the state’s new campaign applaud the fairness of Israeli justice. Senate voted 22-14 not to move a process of law. Jews have long been in the Mideast problems. It is not compreheni" much-needed land-use bill out of this vital legislation. Now, for the finance law, a law which McCol­ If instead he is bound over for trial, let us to us how he can have committed anycn forefront of maintaining these standards Sen. Joe Mack’s Conservation forseeable future, Michigan’s land lough himself sponsored. and will continue to do so. watch carefully together to see if the Israeli We urge you t,o use every possible mem resources will be vulnerable to government can prove its case. If not, let us bring about the immediate release ofSI Committee onto the Senate floor. The law treats loans — except In the case of Sami Esmail, we must take further exploitation and misuse, care to be factual. The following are the all work together for Esmail's release. If, on Esmail so that he can return to hisacadej It is even more perplexing and those from regular lending institu­ available facts which have been confirmed the other hand, Israel does prove its case, work here. outrageous that Senate Majority with no state legislation to stand in tions, such as banks — as if they by independent American sources. let us condemn together the recent distor­ Facui Leader William Faust of West­ the way. If this trend continues, are campaign contributions. tions and misinformation propogated on Esmail was arrested by the government Department of Electrical Engine land, long a supporter of land use, perhaps one day there won’t be Therefore, any loans exceeding of Israel as a security threat. He is accused Sami's behalf, the purpose of which appears and SystemsSc» betrayed his personal convictions enough unspoiled land to protect. the law’s limits are illegal. of being a member of an organization whose to be as much the destruction of the state of JohnB. Kreer, Chai by voting not to move the bill. State Sen. McCollough, a Demo­ avowed aim is the destruction of Israel. Israel as the release of Esmail. RobertO. Bar. This group was responsible for such Jes Asmussei j crat from Dearborn, said that Rabbi Daniel R. Allen JamesS' terrorist crimes as the hijacking at Entebbe Faust and his colleagues should when the loans were procured, he Hillel Jewish Student Center and the hijacking of a Swiss airliner which H. BoImS! collaborate on a book — “Profiles didn’t believe they were consi­ lead to the deaths of innocent civilians. 319 Hillcrest Ave. Gerald in Cowardice.” dered contributions, providing He is accused of voluntarily taking Kun-Mufl they were paid back during the terrorist training in Libya as recently as Paul® The vote — which left the bill in How they voted 1976. He has legal counsel in the person of 1.0.J the hands of Mack's hostile com­ campaign. Felicia Langer. He was allowed to attend Support requested Dennis P. W jl mittee — was not unexpected, but This seems a rather feeble his father's funeral. A member of the U.S. D.K.l Following is a breakdown on the excuse for some $40,000 in loans Embassy staff has seen Esmail repeatedly the “nay” vote by Faust was. Senate vote not to discharge the Senate We, the undersigned faculty of the that McCollough received from six during his imprisonment. The staff re­ Department of Electrical Engineering and Faust has long been a supporter of Conservation Committee from further ported no signs of mistreatment. When land use legislation, which would consideration of the land-use bill: or seven individuals, particularly Systems Science at Michigan State Univer- Erik D. ( provide for the maintenance of in light of the fact that the senator Democrats for (9) — Corbin, Derezin- was a principal sponsor of the law. much of Michigan’s open land in its natural state. His partisan vote — ski, DeSana, Fitzgerald, Hertel, Ram­ As pointed out by rival candi­ DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau! mer, Otterbacher, Plawecki, Snyder ostensibly to maintain unity in the date Zolton Ferency, MSU asso­ M I HAVBNT I KNOW,SIR. Democratic Party — was a be­ Democrats Against (14) — Cart­ ciate professor of criminal justice; ill HAP A CHANCE ICAUEDTHE wright, Cooper, Faust, Faxon, Guastel- “If it were fair to accept those YES,SIR. trayal both of his own stand on the THEBVP6ET THAfs RI6HT, TOPRICE ANY­ department SECRETARY lo, Hart, Holmes, Huffman, Mack, MINUTE-1 issue and his position as a repre­ loans, it would defeat the whole IS PUB MR. PRESI- THING YET! I SECRETARIESi, BROWN'S AL­ McCollough, Miller, Nelson, O'Brien, dontth m sism m | sentative of the people. purpose of the legislation. You tooay? cm . HAVENT even AND THEY'LL READY HERE. Scott. I'M VP TO SEEN THIS YEAKs BE BRIN6IN6 “As a leader, I felt my vote was correct, but as a senator I felt it Republicans for (3) - Allen, Bursley, Geake. could get money from wealthy special interest groups and use it as front money to hire a staff, run U / CXTAW&JES! THEMAROUND / TODAY 1USENP HIM IN.. / STARJINE IU 7 H ..\ was wrong," Faust said later. This Republicans Against (8) — Bishop, ads and send out letters to raise statement is incredible. By placing Byker, Davis, Toepp, VanderLaan, money, and then repay the loans Democratic party solidarity above Welborn, Young, Ziegler. with the money you raise." the critical need for further pro­ Absent or not Voting (4) - Brown, McCollough must take imme­ tection of Michigan’s open lands, DeGrow, DeMaso, Zollar. diate steps to repay these loans Faust was not only wrong, he was and all candidates must be wary of hypocritical. Even though he knew any future violations. MICHAEL CBOFOOT Mount Union, Ohio, who sang foster a symbiotic relationship I figure if I know handfuls of Mmaelf and ourselves to and armfuls and armfuls out there. between my third world and student and professor mystics from class in a thunderous vour United States through the and futurists and artists and So maybe next time all the wntone. I met a budding unseeing faces on the sidewalks Cuftipus study vats cutulyzcd young soil scientist who was j j * back from Hare Krishna itudiea in Brazil. Wandering between class gets you down and lonely and you start to feel that the only one who's got the mountains of New York, I your number is a computer became friends with a student somewhere - take to the trails who is kibbutzing now amidst where the odd crowd walks. It's the Mideast debate and plana to just another macroscene scan­ long retnnt In the woods. sidewalks beside me. Soon took take up singing and farming in ning trick. them you get to tell them apart. Everything in the dty seemed to walking the trails listening a Waldorf school in England. Besides, I'm a student now. strange to me those first few and watching instead. But that And in the campus gardens Coming up: The internation­ And there are quite a few months. Almost made me dissy was in upstate New York c*n the most unusual al Sun Day celebration; the ► .kVm- *>me Kurry' one-of-a kind gentlepeople on K v e d oat of »nto- to ait on a bench and watch the where trade were easier to folk. Inspecting the flowers, Mobilization for Survival; our campus, wouldn't you agree? city to by in its uptown tempo. come by. rve encountered a faithful agri­ Common Good; Mystical en­ In amongst the budding r i kairds and painter s All the noise and smells and Now I'm cruising a megsver- culturalist who goes both ways; counters and an anti-nuciear accountants, advertisers, politi­ off-on lights confused the hell sity campus and the students a really jolly giant; a communi­ campaign to beat the devil. Got Rto rodents. S Be>^- out of me. don’t look so much the same. cal scientists, energy experts, cations major who brought to any ideas? Send 'em in. econometricians, and nurses It took me a while to learn to Just like “ niggers" and “China­ mind the singing Ohio man For MSU eyes only: Slices is ■ L*, it is inthe F,u ®f there are some pretty wfld cats Seattle we nrnt, see through and merely hear all men” and “farmers" and “fag­ while she observed an ant running out of human energy and cattettes. t y just eome out of ■ the study rats pacing along the gots” - when you get to know tucking juices from the jewel and may fail for the lack I knew an English major in plant; and a little tiny elf, no thereof. We need your help to bigger than your arm, found edit, copy, fold, staple, muti­ me. late, research, network, etc. When all the deadheadedness United Nations." Now that's social changers and alternative Terms negotiable. Call the of the frat boys and sorority what I call anti-study rat mate­ technicians out of a thousand State News and leave your girls, the career seekers, young rial. study rats, there must be name, interest and number. hippies and straight-as-lace Students (with a capital S) begins to dishearten me, I share space with the foreign students. Them furriners ain’t talking ’bout sports or bands or who got laid last night, you know. Chances are they're talk­ ing about friends who are prisoners of state or solidarity or revolution or the NEWS. Hanging out with grad stu­ dents can refresh me too. When they're not into themselves, they’re into some pretty flippy stuff. Why even the professors can be a great source of relief from the study rats. Teachers say the darndest things. I ’ve got one landscaping teacher friend who says teach­ ing is learning and “the older I get the more I know how much I don't know.” I know at least one teacher who professed on the first day of his introductory sociology course, “I joined the SDS way back and I’m a VMfONE SBN W R W E ?' Marxist myself but sociology is something anybody can under­ stand and everyone should." Believe it or not, even some of our campus administrators are attuned to a different tune — talking up a lifelong, global education, alternative energy/ arve war’ coverage praised The average student is just as deserving of the right to check out specialized material as is the astute grad/honor student. In reality, agriculture rather than truth, this discriminatory policy is a seedy insult on the integrity agribusiness, or extraterrestri­ | thinks go out to reporter Beth Tuschak for her fine of the majority of MSU students. Rectification of such policies al intelligence. I asked an India of the meeting entitled “Starve War; Feed Peace" should be immediately forthcoming. Indian man what he was doing 4by the Lansing area coalition of Mobilization For while administering a college DanReim iHutTwday evening. Her article, which appeared in the and he replied, “ I am trying to 103 Williams Hall mffiiiy, Jan. 13, accurately pointed out .the fact that vLf. limitary budget directly drains communities of money Idbeusedto meet human needs.” Cartoonist Carleton lauded , M IC H IG A N S T A T E U N IV E R S IT Y S P E C IA L IfedenJ budget for fiscal year 1978 will be released to the Jl^ President Carter on Monday, Jan. 23. And, as a voice Ibtrtued allocations to the Pentagon, a demonstration will pTuesday, Jan. 24 during the noon hour downtown in i Square. The Mobilization For Survival is planning a settheater performance along with some leafleting. All i m writing to thank Gordon Carleton for the grin I get every day from “MSU Shadows.” It's great to see a local boy make good, but with his talent and wit I'm sure he won’t be with us for very long (witness another MSU artist Phil Frank). Carleton has a keen Come to a FREE bne and encouraged to come. The East Lansing Peace boCenterhas more information about rides and how folks Idahand. eye for campus events and fads as well as public ones. His cartoon is a mirror of our times and culture and always good for s laugh at ourselves. I'm especially fond of “Pop Cultur” and the talking food SPEED READING LESSON | Mobilization For Survival is a nonviolent movement of Isand organizations whose purpose is to make people ofthethreat to human survival posed by nuclear weapons, machines. Remember, Carleton's Coke machine had a personality long before C3PO and R2D2 were winning our hearts. Good work, Gordon. Thanks for a bngut .put in an otnerwiae Increase Your Reading Speed 50-100% reactorsandthe international arms race, and to re-channel bleak winter day. Our Average Graduate Increases Their | toward providing for social services rather than these nentaof our destruction. Leanne Waite Kathy Neidbala Williamston Reading Rate 9 Times 711 W. Grand River East Lansing Let meassist you in the purchase of jfpur nextngw or used car, trick or van. wary hit as discrim inatory f *“ * transfer student to MSU, I first visited the library And Comprehension 11%. I con holp you soloct a T ~ “ ddiscovered it to be dark, poorly laid-out, crowded Chovofto. Novo. Comoro, “ quately furnished with the educational materials which Z-M. Molfeu, Impale, C O M PA R E AND DECID E r, * Prominent four-year university. Now, mid-January, Mont# Carlo, Caprice or inidequacies have surfaced, particularly the dia­ Corvotto’ from our oxcol* D y n a m ic R e a d in g S y s t e m s Inc. Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics Inc rycheck-out policies. lont Inventory. D.R.S. guarantees in writing to at least triple your Partial refund ol the price of the *nt review of a scientific journal had taken me to the DYNAMIC READING SPEED or you will receive a FULL course if you fail. wofthelibrary, a full two hours earlier than the closing refund. ■«berBigTen university libraries. When I sought to check Advanced Course No known advanced course known at this lime ■l*mal for the night, I was told this fo'bidden because I S e a o r c a ll m o a t Lifetime membership enables our graduates to retake the r agrad student, nor enrolled in Honors College. Their graduates are required to pay “ Jvas I frustrated by leaving an assignment incomplete, M Kots Ctawolet course to extend their skills at no additional charge. a registration fee to retake the course iJIn j ^ eloter*c policy. I am just as responsible 2101 E. Michigan Our professional instructors are required to do extended NO exams given. ■culalv grad/honor college student, have similar 409-6533 research after the initial training period for further insight, I™ needs, and have paid equally for the right to use the and take written exams. I'nnuted resources. Our Instructors are required to lake reading proficiency NO reading proficiency evaluations given evaluations. 20-50% discount on books NO discount on books. D o o ie y i ARTHURTRERCHER'S Tuition Assistance Payment Plan NO FINANCE CHARGE!! Contractual obligation with finance Charge THE ORIGINAL I Tiirf) ATTEN D A FR EE LES S O N : PISH SANDWICH, Monday January 23 12-NOON 2.00 4:00 6:00 CHIPS, AND A Tuesday Wednesday January January 24 25 12-NOON 12-NOON 2:00 2:00 4:00 4:00 6:00 6:00 DRINK Thursday Friday January January 26 27 12-NOON 12-NOON 2:00 2:00 4:00 4:00 6:00 6:00 *1.25 A ll M e e tin g s H e ld A t T h e Any day from 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Coupon oxpiras Jan. 29,1978 UNIVERSITY METHODIST CHURCH Eat Hara ■Taka Home 1120 South H arrison Road o ff the com er of Trowbridge* and H arrison "K n o w le d g e is a re fle c tio n o f re a d in g Offer nIM will this r a p D y n a m ic R e a d in g S y s t e m s Inc. olyittke A company established by a group ol former Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics' Instructors, utilizing totally new concepts. East Lacsiif stoi rt 1721 CROOKS RD„ TROY, Ml 48084 (313) 366-1230 IN I L Grad River 'L Copyright 1977 Dynamic Reading Systems Inc. Lar Lubovich Company expressive By CONSTANCE A. loosely termed neoclassical, and equivalent of that modern Lubovich said, W ARNER the second of which defies classic,, the two-character the idea of creating*^*' In last week's performance at labeling. “Exultate, Jubilate,” living-room play in which 1 man and a woman explore t love- profundity by gestuv the University Auditorium and the first work in the program at ine Wright lecture-demonstration at the the University Auditorium, fits hate relationship and the point­ dentlybeiutiful^ri^ Center for the Arts, the Lar neatly into the neoclassical lessness of modern existence. this lovely work Lubovich Company of Dance category. It was a fluid dance The work was dsnced, to t H ope com es to L a n s in g lived up to its reputation as one for three soloists and a chorus of four, with a Mozart score, Stravinsky score, by Susan Webar and Charles Martin, in strongly resembles 'th»l riving works of Isidorer! of the brightest of the new Fragments of another >, young dance companies. and based aa much on natural what looked like a nylon aUp Progress. “North Stsr", By STEVE S2ILAGYI Whether the company con­ movement as on ballet and and pajimn bottoms, re­ promising, but it's »,» State News Reviewer tinues its development into one “traditional" modern dance. spectively. While the work got early to tell. 111 of the great or near-great dance The Dancera appeared to be its point across well and even These pieces were w i, Thanks for the memories, Bob, . Despite foul weather, a flight to Lansing on a borrowed jet, and companies of this generation either worshipping or exulting contained s few striking stops, b y * l»rge' heavy livinga a less than full auditorium, veteran comedian Bob H op left his depends upon whether Lar or both, and seemed, with one it is difficult to rouse much set left on the stste J audience with memories of a fine performance Friday night at the Lubovich, its director and exception, curiously discon­ enthusiasm for such a stale and Center of the Arts. As, J choreographer, expands upon nected from external reality tired old theme. Neither the the company was fon, Lansing Civic Center. . . . » It was an evening of reverence and appreciation for Americas his own kinetic vision in future (earthly or spiritual.) The dancers nor the choreography cancel the program th. best-known comedian. Double-knit suits and fake furs from all over works, or whether he continues exception was the astonishing looked is though they really planned and substitute si the state converged on the Civic Center, their owners paying from to venture down choreographic Mari Ono, who danced the meant it. which contained verv I $8 to $12 dollars a ticket to sit in the same room with a man who blind alleys. “Recitativo" section with a “Lea Noces" had, in places, a dsnce - about twelve J has probably spent more hours in the living rooms of America than Most of the works shown sense of weight and power. weird and perhaps not Wholly worth, to be exact. It isl here can be divided into two “Time Before The Time After unintentional resemblance to say who was more trust™ anyone else. _ L It was Bob Hope Day in Lansing, by order of the city council, groups, the first of which can be The Time Before" is the dance photographs and drawings of the sudience, who hid e and the assembled multitudes never ceased their adoration for the the original Nijinska choreo­ see dancing, or the A venerable Hope. To not love Bob Hope would be like not loving the graphy (1928) for the Ballet who wanted to perfa^ Super Bowl. Or apple pie. Cookie Monster to Rome Ruiae. As in ‘ “Exultate, Jubi­ late" and “Time Before," could not because of th J geroualy small stage sp» All this would have seemed very corny and sentimental had it Lubovich's choreography was “Marimba," the final* not been for one inescapable fact: Bob Hope was pretty damn ness for the state-run national meticulous, well thought out, first - ““ " ROME (A PI - Sesame tho program at the Unh funny Friday night. television network. varied, and interesting. Like If , Ike Adventure of I Street, the world's most popu­ Auditorium, was eights, Taking his cue from a drum roll after the orchestra struck up It has negotiated sales rights the preceding works, it never L Mess'Smarter Bro lar children's program, makes utes long, but I coiiy! P*W - D in t “Thanks For the Memories" the blue-suited, perpetually young for Sesame Street puppets, really “jelled." The tone of all its debut on Italian television witched and enjoyed it I Hope strolled on stage and kept his audience enraptured for over records, books and T-shirta that three works w u cod, de­ Monday — and program direc­ longer. The beautiful, ■ an hour. tors are braced for criticism. will flood Italian shops. The tached, and cerebral. In “Les unison and canon pm_ The routine was Hope at his best, with those jokes we’ve all In a country where one in commercial overtones of the Noces,” (or example, peasant this work show Lubovidjl heard a hundred times but still laugh at when he delivers them. every three persons voted venture can be expected to characters in the grip of some choreographic best - ud| Neither Poles nor politicians, the weather nor Watergate, crime Communist in the last national arouse the anti-capitalist in strong emotion — grief at best he is formidabl, j nor Chrysler escaped Hope's barbs. election, the commercialism many Italians. parting, drunken laughter — The subject matte! associated with the program The leftists who control the seemed removed, as though "Marimbe" was, simplyI The sacrificial lamb sent out to warm up the audience before Channel 2 network, which will here and its Madison Avenue- they were behind t glass case in in quiet, relaxed, rtpd Hope's entrance was Patricia Price, a forgettable singer air the program, may be fur­ an anthropological museum. style teaching techniques are motion, in groups, pah , ft. World's Gr« introduced as a “sweet singer of soft ballads." With only a low-cut ther embarrassed by the fact expected to anger leftists. Two of Lubovich’s works had alone; the dance simulti gown in her favor, the poor woman had to warm up a crowd that L wilder has obvic The U.S.-produced program, that the non-commercial the energy, fire, and in­ changed and remai wanted to see the King of Comedians, not an unexpected pop L] totighten snd polish which has spread to some 90 Sesame. Street of the United definable qualities that the rest same. If you were union balladeer. She even had to sing without an onstage monitor — and ), ends which marred countries in the past decade, States was financed by grants lacked. The high point of the enough to miss it. don't) that’s suicide in an echo chamber like the Civic Center. jjou effort. His stor will go under the title Open from American big business. lecture-demonstration at the with material like this,( pier u inept Milwai Sesame in the Italian version, One newspaper even asked Center for the Arts was an Lubovich Company 0 But that really didn't matter, because it wasn’t Patricia Price er(played by Wilder) and Ernie and Bert will be tongue-in-cheek whether some untitled solo to two short should be around for a Day. It was Bob Hope Day, and the audience seemed more than up in s nation rebaptized “Ernesto e Berto." CIA money was involved. pieces by Scriabin “baaed,” as to come. happy to put up with momentary discomfort before Hope j»ood talent search f appeared. Judging by the applause, and the standing ovation when The hour-long shows familiar | Valentino snd packs Hope left the stage, his audience emerged grateful for this to millions of American kids aid bemused wife 1 memory. have been boiled down to t) |ohead for Tinselto' tri weekly half-hour segments. The stress on letters and num­ DISCO SKATING Ijs approach, too, is sin bers remains, but most of the he has slowed down A lle n G i n s b e r g c o m i n g social comment has been cut as too specific to the United Free Admission 'e rr? States. Allen Ginsberg a major force in American poetry for over 20 th* night your hall )• foaturod years, will present a reading from his works on Tuesday, January As Big Bird, Kermit the 24 at 8 p.m. in Rackham Auditorium on the University of Michigan Frog, the Cookie Monster, Ann Arbor campus. State Newt/Ira Strickttein Grover and the other Muppet ■very M onday With Jack Kerouac and William Burroughs, Ginsberg was a monsters become part of the It was Bob Hope Day in Lansing Friday. Hope re­ fantasy world of Italian child­ father of the “Beat Generation" literary circle in the 1950s. Ginsberg first gained notoriety in 1957 when his published ceived the keys to the city and a standing ovation in ren, the sales of their toy if Super Sp artan Nite r r collection of poems, Howl, was the subject of an obscenity trial U s evening appearance at the Lansing Civic Center. models will become big busi- which resulted in his vindication. Geveral admission tickets tor Ginsberg’s appearance are $1.50, 8 - 1 1 pain. . .’J R . V and are available at the Michigan Union box office in Ann Arbor. 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Each component brought to us tor evaluation by a manufacturer must meet our rigid Finally, all products at The Stereo Shoppe must represent a fair value to you. Our pricing structure is such (youdon't ovon have to ask I ) Temperature and requirements ot reliability, performance and value B E FO R E we will put it on our shelves. that the price asked bears a solid relationship to the value and esteem of the product itself When we have found a product which meets our Complete Forecast For a product to be deemed reliable by us. it must have intelligent engineering, imaginative design and exacting criteria of reliability, performance and value, we are pleased to recommend it to you. 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Yamaha's thorough understanding of the traditional compromises in speaker design and construction has enabled them to develop a significant new speaker without compromising quality. - PLUS - The third component in this all-Yamaha sy stem is a new turntable, the Model YP-211. It's a belt-dnve. semi-automatic table that can track nearly any cartridge. In ALL D ILU X I fact, the system includes the famous Audio-Technica ovamaha o Yamaha O YAMAHA OPTIONS F M I 'WHITE GOLD • FULL NAME ENGRAVED encrustings • SUNBURST STONES 10 to 9 Mon. thru Fri. 10 to 5 Saturdays College Jewelry Representative will be here. Complete In-Store Service tor Everything We Sell MONDAY- JAM.23 TIME: 10:00TO4:00 UNITED TECHNOLOGIES * • * .« . R O O K S T O R I An Equal Opportunity Em ployer/M ale & Fem ale Brkovichs touch lifts cagers By M ICHAEL KLO CKE Hawkeyes in the second half. and control of the game. After lackluster. The Spartans' pat­ Heathcote will take hi. State Newa Sports W riter “Well, it seemed like a typical making a steal, Terry Donnelly tern of playing intensely on to Ohio State Thuraday J l When a team is having Saturday night game,” MSU spotted Gregory Reiser for a Thursdays and coming out flat Indiana Indiana Satn»st... Saturday-, “ 1 trouble attacking a tone de­ head coach Jud Heathcote said. slammer over Iowa's Steve on Saturdays continued. testy road games. p fense because it is standing, “I was disappointed in our Waite. - “I don’t know whether we're around and can't get the ball lethargic play in the first half, Reiser and Earvin Johnson having trouble with fatigue on MSU (68) inside to the big men, what do but we came out and played led MSU with 13 points each, Saturdays, or if it is just a Reiser 13, Johnson 13 Vm, they do next? Answer: They start shooting from outside. much harder in the second half." After Brkovich's clutch bas­ while Lester paced the losers with 20 tallies. But once again the Saturday mental letdown after big Thurs­ day games,” Heathcote said. “But the Big Ten schedule is S JftSiSr- IOWA (58) That's exactly what fresh­ kets, a brilliant three-point play still Thursday-Saturday, and Waite 7, Olsthoorn 5, H>nJ man Mike Brkovich did after gave the Spartans a 54-44 lead, win for MSU seemed to be a bit that's the way we'U have to 10, Peth 6, Lester 20, D rriJ coming off the bench in the play them." Fouled out: C h a p e l second half to lift MSU to their sixth straight Big Ten win “It looked like we were flat fouls: MSU 19, Iowa 18 i f dance: 9,886. ' Saturday, a 68-58 decision over again — every Saturday we Iowa. . seem to come up flat," said With the Spartans holding Donnelly, who scored six points BIG TEN STANDINGS] onto a slim 41-40 lead midway and garnered eight assists. Big Ten through the second half, Brko­ Iowa coach Lute Olson said MSU ( 0 vich hit three consecutive 20- MSU will be tough, but he isn't Michigan 1 foot shots. The Spartans then convinced that the Spartans Purdue 2 ran off eight unanswered points will be that successful on the Minnesota and the game was theirs. Illinois road. "W e don't do anything differ­ Ohio State “When they go to Minnesota, Indiana ent when I get into the game," Purdue, Indiana, and hopefully Iowa said Brkovich, who totalled Iowa City, they'll find out what Wisconsin 1 5 eight points in only 10 minutes playing on the road is like," NVestern 1 5 of play. “ Shooting in the thing I 51 Olson said. If! Thomas beat Seth do best and I'm just out there to SATURDAY'S RESULTS:! MSU 68, Iowa 58 fuund weight divisio help the team. Olson added that Illinois and |wedwitha6-5decision Northwestern (which is where Purdue 77, Indiana 67 . “While I'm on the bench, I try 1 134 pound weight di MSU played its two road Minnesota 61, Wisconsin!| to get into the feel of the game games) are "the easiest places Illinois 73, NVestern 64 and I always can feel the to play on the road in the Big Michigan at Ohio State, i pressure. I’m more than satis­ Ten” and that “the schedule has ponned until tonight fied with my playing time, been good to MSU.” But no­ THURSDAY’S GAMES: because I really didn’t expect to where in his oratdry did the MSU at Ohio State play at all this year." Hawkeye mentor mention that Indiana at Michigan IgU’s women’s basket Iowa had jumped out to a Illinois at Iowa Iowa had just dropped a 62-59 Ernestoproveit can wi 31-30 lead at halftime behind Minnesota at Purdue decision at Northwestern ■road after traveling the 11 points of smooth-as-silk NVestern at Wisconsin guard, Ronnie Lester. While Thursday. La State andIllinois S I theweekend. the Spartans were shooting a frigid 38.7 percent from the floor in the first half, Lester put Iowa ahead with his long jump­ ers and some deft assists. M eets canceled But the Spartans used their State Newt/Bunny Moison zone defense, along with an The MSU men's swimming team had both of its Friday! occasional experimental man- Saturday meets canceled due to bad weather. Because ofj Ron “Bobo” Charles slams through a dunk over Iowa’s Larry Olsthoorn 150) after to-man defense, to shut off the bad weather, Illinois and Purdue were unable to makeit to| taking a pass from Earvin Johnson# Lansing. “We have a meet scheduled every weekend and it isn't that we will be able to make up the meets we lost," John Freshman guard Mike Brkovich (12) puts in an 18- ! Spartans also pla Problems continue for the icers foot jump shot over Iowa delender Dick Peth (20) in Saturday’s 68-58 MSU win. Brkovich came o il the MSU diving coach said. The MSU men’s track team also was unable to make itsl and the meet at Ohio State was postponed. Due to a h| at LoriHyman this we lafier sheunderwent k bench in the second hall and hit three clutch baaketa ■ 7 HW/iesday, and fa disc last spring and rejoined the team in December. He had schedule, the track meet cannot be made up. By JO E CENTERS to help lift the Spartans over Iowa lor their sixth isState'sCharlotte Lei State News Sports Writer apparently recovered but in last weWend’s series with Michigan inofthe 1976 Olym; Tech, he experienced more pain and decided to call it quits. straight Big Ten win without a loss. Considering the luck the MSU hockey team has been having this season, coming out of Madison, Wis. with a tie isn’t all that bad. "It's really too bad, Dougie is a great kid," MSU coach Amo The Spartans and Wisconsin played to a 5-5 tie Friday to end Bessone said. “ But he's making the right decision. There’s no sense MSU's three game losing streak, but the Badgers stormed back taking a chance on further injury to his back. His loss is a big one Saturday to take an 8-2 decision and add another notch in the to the team.” Spartans' loss column. In the 10 games that Counter played in this season, he scored The real bad news of the weekend came Thursday when Junior one goal and added five assists but his biggest asset to the team defenseman Doug Counter decided to give up his hockey career was his defense and his leadership. because of continuing back problems. In Friday's game, five different players scored for the Spartans The 23-year-old Counter had undergone surgery for a ruptured (continued on page 9) f t ifft ANNOUNCES AN EXHIBITION F r id a y F e b r u a r y 3 , 1 9 7 8 Union Billiard Room o ^ Two Shows Daily 3:00 p.m. and 8:00 p.m .Winner of more tournaments in the Last five years than any other player CflNCUN S p r in g B r e a k March 20-27 from *389°° non-stop from Detroit Cancun is an island of 14 miles of unspoiled beaches in the Mexican Caribbean. 1,000 years ago, Mayan kings vacationed here. Today you can swim and surf SCUBA D IV IN G , on these same unspoiled beaches. SNORKELING A I M I U T R A V IL 3 5 3 - 5 1 5 5 3 0 7 S t u d e n t S e r v ic e s 3 5 5 -8 2 6 6 niichig®! ymnasts give Wolverines long day I leers tie Wisconsin, 5-5 a .m By m i8 JOHN iN n ijn SINGLES n._ j ?_____ « SUtc Newt 8p*ft( Witter d iS S M r : rOSter, r 0,uld * * ™ «on.ble equivalent to (cootinneed from pan fit dencounter of the woret kind for the Univereity of eyranuticn t a r n SSSttX*Zn"POn,lble f0r MSU’8 P p ^ T * ? SCOres ar* starting to match his potential and the second place* Sen'° r ***** * 91° TOUtine ° " the hi*h bar' ^ {<* en route to the 5-5 tie. ou‘*tandi"g f»<* about all of this is that the and Ted'H,!p!ini°en C8mpb? U' dimm7 J °bnson, Tim McDonald fctii**" a ,r»ed ntraoephere of Jenison Field Howe, the l b ^ c>me face to ftee with u emotional MSU squad, a C ^ S lI J .*?thout two front line performers. Doug weeknwp»Hntain, Je fuRud? lph' who paraded around practice last lead Ihree^dffferen* times ‘n gime WhiCh MSU M d th" week wearing a tee-sh,rt that read “Beat Michigan-Yes We Can," ■ahrenne tine, nearly to a man and sent the visitora back . ^ ^ ^ “^ “ d D A ris o u t^ yelping from a 208.86-200.70 luhlng. vaulting. " r° U" d w“ h 8 52'45' deluding an 8.95 In in his " 8t gime in t i L h George siypula'a |r iw were grinning. in Fafi-w™^dM^ in floor exercise (9.26) and was third scorings 9 10 d9.°6. Tom Tomkow won the still rings, th3 h? „ f U wo.men'5 t? m' r8nked ninth nationaUy. lived up to l e a d ^ K t o f c w ^ " Wi5“ Min * m<*d - t to a 4 0 1^ mnmenturn started at the Big Tan inviutional last If , ,egjjd. "Then we scored nicely at Western Michigan (a 131 25 1 2 0 * « tben ,“ m* in beating Michigan handily, Kevin Coughlin and Jeff Barr were the only Spartans to get the paced MSU s ' * " ‘T (9'20’ 8nd Brian Sturrock <»•“ > threTnf t f ' he Spartans Beth Eigel won the all-around and Friday night). Here, it was beyond my fondest respectively * * m “ “ "d “ d puck behind Badger goalie Mike Dibble. vaulMnJenrf , r * hde tea">niate Chery, captured vaulting and the crowd with a difficult and well-done 8.55. MSU still find itself at the bottom of the WCHA with 5-14-1 iJitions." records end 5-18*1 overtll. [iVresf/ers lo se o n r o a d r a n k s in ti l e r By LARRY U L U S matches for both Thomas and Walsh because it State News Sports Wrttar was the first time that either one has been able to HSU mpplers lost its third meet of the beat the Grenkys. n,e Spartans were upset by North- The Spartans' only other win came from min«Big Ten meet Saturday at Evanston, Dennis Brighton who bested his opponent 7-2 to keep his unbeaten record of 8-0-1 alive in the most of the way, the Spartans 160-pound weight class. their last three events to get edged Both Doug Seigert and Jim Ellis had to come the Wildcats. from way behind to earn draws in their Sraruns started out like a house on fire, respective matches. Seighert got a 10-10 draw in I ttappeared for a while the Spartans were the 168-pound division, while Ellis earned a 6-6 Li.bio* the Wildcats right out of their own draw in the 177-pound division. ilium Inail. the Spartans won four of their MSU coach Grady Peninger thought this was a U i alongwith two draws for the night. disappointing loss, but was confident that his ha«nWhite got the Spartans off to a good wrestlers would be able to bounce back. eetting a 10-2 superior decision in the This was a disappointing loss because we I ,It .eight division. The Wildcats' best should have won," Peninger said. “We had a Sera are the Grenky brothers, and the couple of guys who performed under what they tan beat both of them. are capable of and this hurt us. We got draws in L Thomas beat Seth Grenky 11-6 in the the 158- and 177-pound classes, but we should r uBd .eight division and Mike Walsh have won them both." (wedwitha6-5decision over Brent Grenky in The Spartans' season record drops to four wins Impound weight class. These were big and three losses. fomen sw eep road w e e k e n d felTs women’s basketball and 1977 Pan-Am Games. with 14 points both nights. fouestoproveit can win on Lewis only scored 10 points ■road after traveling to and it was the second time DeBoer’s 19 points led the La State andIllinois State MSU stopped her as the Spar­ team at Indiana State and I theweekend. tans limited Lewis to 12 points guard Diane Spoelstra also last year in another MSU win. scored 19 points on Saturday in Spartans defeated the Illinois State win. Spoelstra j State Friday, 70-89, Kathy DeBoer was MSU’s had nine points Friday. Ithen moved farther down high scorer for the weekend as I road Saturday to beat isState, 84-74. she tallied 18 points Friday and 19 Saturday. MSU has one more road game left on its five game road trip at Central Michigan Tues­ Shepard's Campus Prclnventory Sale |SUisnow6-3and has built MSU’s entire front line, day. The Spartans return home inningrecord while play- which had to be realigned with for only their second home light ofthe nine games on the loss of Hyman, was produc­ game of the season Thursday tive both nights. against Grand Valley State. Buy one pair of shoes ! Spartans also played itLoriHyman this week- lifter sheunderwent knee Jtrj HW/iesday, and faced (is State'sCharlotte Lewis, Mary Kay Itnyre replaced Hyman in the starting line-up and scored 14 points Friday and another 17 , points Saturday. Forward Jill Prudden was the The game will be at the Men’s IM Building Sports Arena at 8 p.m. The women’s team* has eight home games scheduled in* the month of —pick up a second pair . . . (boots too!) FREE! inofthe 1976 Olympics third high scorer for the team February. c ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ ^ ^ h e p a r d ’s Campus Shoe store has hundreds o f shoes and boots in current Fall and Winter patterns for you to choose from. When you buy one pair at regular price, you can c pick up a second pair absolutely FREE! Bring along a brother . . . bring along a sister . . ■URGER C BMW bring along a friend . . . pick and mix! GBARHORKRS If shoes or boots are priced different!!, you pay for the higher pair. O ur new special is BU RG ER & BREW & B A R H O P P I.R S . Beginning at 5:00 p.m. on M ondays y o u ’ll he able to enjoy one o f our delicious quarter- pound burgers and a i old draft beer for only i 1.00 all night! Beginning at . . . Bass . . . Zodiac ... Famolare .. . 9:00 p.m. the low cover of only 50 C will get you into the Alle-Ey free too! So on Monday nights stop on out to the Rainbow Ranch for B U R G E R A BREW A BARH O PPERS, and then hop on over to the Alley-1.y for free 317 admission Rainbow every Ranch M onday, and the from AI ley-E y the r o s E. Grand River 2843 E. Gd. River, E. Lans. c a m p u s 332*2815 Monday. Jonuory 23, )978 i II I M il \to LOCKIRROOM Mondale's role unprecedented I T phrey became vice president. presidents in a more productive Reserve Board. rule to have an evening meal WASHINGTON (AP) - One Humphrey had been Mondale's way," said A1 Eisele, Mondale's One of his first chores for with the Mondale family, either day last month, Vice President political mentor and Mondale press secretary. “They are 1978 has been work on a at the White House or at Walter F. Mondale, beginning a saw at close range the agonies building a model for the vice INTERVIEW WITH trip to the West Coast, flew to domestic policy agenda, setting Mondale's official residence, a Humphrey suffered during presidency." K X N U M M U JI out the administration's priori­ Victorian-style mansion atop a Offntt Air Force Base in Neb­ Lyndon B. Johnson's years in Mondale said recently of his ties and key dates for present­ hill about two miles from the MSU Women's Basketball Coach raska aboard the jumbo jet that could aerve as an airborne ing them. White House. Mondale is very familiar with the White House. That experience, along with relationship with Carter: “I think our relationship is deep­ \\i command post in the event of a The vice president spends his first year in the vice ening and broadening. If any­ Tonight at 8 p.m. on M O was about nine hours every day at the problems that can befall a threatened nuclear attack. vice president. In 1964, he presidency, will mean that in thing, we are working. . . in a Phone in your questions 3-4411 He could have flown in the the White House. His predeces­ broader, deeper way than moved into the Senate seat the the future, "presidents will much smaller, two-engine jet he sors were banished to ornate, ceremonial offices across the vacated when Hubert H. Hum­ be expected to use their vice M k h l f H etsB eO te M o tw o rfc _ uses for his travels around the country. But he and President street in the Old Executive W M M NM COW BM Office Building, but Mondale is BUONOAPPETITO Carter decided it would be wise for the vice president to sam­ ensconced in quarters about SO SHOES ‘H’ STUFF ple, as did the president last feet from the Oval Office. His February, Ufe aboard "the office is smaller than the one doomsday plane.” available to him across the It was one of many examples street. But, because of the access it gives him to the Authentic Italian that demonstrates the role Carter gave Mondale in 1977 president, he considers the Sandwiches & Dinners when the two men created a trade-off worthwhile. EMnaMiM 217 E. Grand River special link unusual in the It is not unusual for Mondale across from the Union history of the vice presidency. During his first year as vice and the president to spend several hours together every day, and Mondale has a stand­ SPECIALTHISWEEK president, Mondale became directly involved in the daily affairs of the White House. ing invitation to any of Carter's Oval Office meetings. Carter made every effort MOSTACIOLLI DINNER Among his more recent mis­ with Salad 8 Garlic Bread sions was a flight, secret at the during his first year in office to time, to pick up Arthur Burns from a Florida vacation when Carter decided to replace Burns be home in time for a private supper alone with his family. So it is significant that more than *1.29 as chairperson of the Federal once he broke that personal Mon.-Thurs.: 11:30-9:00, Fri.-Sat. 11:30-10:00 Sunday: 5:00-10:00 1045E. GRANDRIVERat 6UNS0N PH. 3370549 • '.V SOCIAL tC IIN C I A ll Footw ear is Now 59 1097-*1597 IN >. ! • LONDON LONDON •• • *• A * , -* R2l J U L Y 1 f t- A U G U S T 1 7 ,1 * 7 1 •• s •• • • • P R O G R A M IN F O R M A T IO N M II T I N O S • TONIGHT JANUARY 23 133 AKERS 7:30 ML $1 H 4" - PIZZA C BREW TUESDAY JANUARY 24 &2 WILSON 7:30 p * C BARHOPPERS ii.- ■ > ci//\ iti'iu \ % WEDNESDAY JANUARY 25 115 BESSEY 7:30 p j . SHOES-BOOTS-SANDALS COURSES OFFERED: SS 241,242,243,300. STUDENTS MAY ENROLL FOR 8-12 CREDITS. ATHLETIC FOOTWEAR FOR MORE INFORMATION ABOUT COURSES, AS WELL AS ACCOMMODA­ TIONS, TRAVEL OPPORTUNITIES AND FINANCIAL AID, ATTEND ONE OF THE A ll Fam ous Brand N am es: ABOVE MEETINGS. SLIDES WILL BE SHOWN Bass, Sandler, Zodiac, FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: D e x te r, Bort C arleton, etc. OVPICI OP O V n t lA S STUDY 2070 pairs - not all sites MM 108 INTERNATIONAL CENTER 353-8920" available in all styles EVERYTHING! P r o d u c e ^ In S to re C o u p o n s Florida Tampla Oranges ITS WEIGHTWATCHERS A Luxury Eating Orong# 10/77C Country Frash Cottago Chaasa ._ Lg. or small curd-15 ox. e a rto n 4 7 Sava 30' 15th ANNIVERSARY Fresh Green Cabbage 15* lb. BUT YOUGETTHE GIFT. Washington Rad Dalicious Applas Crlsco Oll-Puro vagatabla 38 ax. bottla $128 Sava 41' On east side of MSU at 1109 125ct. sixa 8 / * l 00 East Grand Rlvar. $ 3 0 0 • G e n e ra l M e r c h a n d is e . Kraft Macaroni 8 Chaasa Dlnnar _ 7'/. ox. box 9 Sava 22* Open Man.-Thur. 9am-10pm | F r l.iS a t . 9am-10pm Palmolive Dish Datargent Ecko Handy Kitchan Halpars Special Label-22 ox. bottle 66 Save 17' OFF Con Opaner-Tongs-Paalar ■M e a t■ Juicer-Stralners-Paror Limit 1 please Your cholca with *5.00 Good Purchase Please 6 6 ' _______ All Beef Hamburger-Fresh Ground 67*.b reg. *8°° You get the discount-and you - B a k e r y ---------------------------- USDA Choice Grand Prize get more. You get our six million Spartan Buns 8 ct. pkg. Both Goodrich's 8 Larry's Beef Aged Boneless Sirloin Tip M5,b hours of classroom experience Hamburg or Hot Dog 2 / 77* have Package Liquor ft worldwide. For fifteen years USDA Choice Grand Prize we've been teaching people how to control their weight. Ovan Fresh - Diet Bran Broad 59' full selection of your Favorite Beer ft Wine Boneless Cube or Sizzle Steak n79* And Today's Weight Watchers* Scholar's Hillbilly Bread -1 '/> lb. loaf 59* Program teaches you to enjoy foods you never thought you Spartan Hot Dogs-Reg. or B eef-1 lb. pkg. 79' could eat and still lose weight. So drop everything. Join Weight Watchers today and 'F r o z e n & D a ir y Farmer Peet Braunschweiger-Ch'irk 69' l celebrate with us. Heatherwood Fruit Sherbets All Flavors — 1 qt. Carton — 2 / 1 00 Holly Farms Fryer Combination Pack 79' ib- Losing weight never ^ A f E I G H T tasted so good. WATCHERS Country Fresh Milk A The Authority. 2% Low Fat 1 gallon Container S 1 28 Koegel Ring Bologna 99'Y b Country Fresh Orange Juice 'A gallon container 98* Fresh Frozen Red Snapper Fish Fillets * l 9 9 ib I’M THIS CLOSE TO LOSING WEIGHT. East Lonsing Okomos ■ G ro cery- University UnitedMethodist Capital Savings &loan Church 1118S. Harrison 2119Hamilton Rd. Tues. 9:00a.m. Spartan Tomato Sauce — 8 ox. Can — 6/*l°° Mon. 7:00p.m. Okemos Community Church Spartan Fruits Thurs. Weds. 7:00p.m. 1:00p.m. 4734N. Okemos Rd. Fruit Cocktail-Poor Holvos-GropofruHSoctlons-Poochos 1 6 to 1 7 OX . Cans 3 /* l00 Mon. 10:00a.m. E. SaginawCapital Savings 8 Loan Meridian Mall 5 /* l00 250E. Saginaw Knapp'sCommunity Room Spartan Corn or Peas — Mon. 7:00p.m. Tues. 1:00 7:00p.m. Spartan Jumbo Towels Assorted — 39’ Naw Class: Okamos: Edgewood School, Osage Dr. (Tacoma Hills) Spartan Chunk Lite Tuna 6 Vs ox. Can — 57’ SJ 2 4 GOODRICH'S Wed. 3:30p.m. (please usefront door) 7 up — Regular or Sugar Frae — 6 pack cans— on watt aid* of MSU at 1 Spartan Vegtobles — Open Monday ■Thuradoy 9 am- P no contracts ft no checks please Cut Croon Boons-Kidnoy Boons Pork ft ftoens-Chlll Ml«-Croon ft Whfto lim aa 15 to 16 O S . COR8 4/*l°° 9 am-10 pm Friday t Saturday lor moro information about other clattet, call Lanalng 11 am-5 pm Sunday 393-5740 or toll Iree 24 houri. 1-800-572-5727 351-5760 Students, as unrelated tenants, violate zoning code in Lansing “We've been trying to crack ants in court” cupancy re q u ire s re se a rch in g fro® I"*® ® he determined in each case. City Attorney McGinty said down aince the beginning,” he each use o f in d iv id u a l p ro p e r­ Court ordinances restricting “disturbing noises,” "increased aaid. “There ere one or two The East Lansing zoning the East Lansing unrelated the number of unrelated per­ L live te"»nts ,ignef * tie s , sin ce re n ta l p ro p e rty lice n ­ “If four occupants take on a persons code was aimed at traffic" and the hazards of cases now that we think we code contains three classifica­ ses in e ffe ct a t th e tim e th e fifth to help pay the expense, sons that could occupy a dwel­ “moving and parked automo­ have the goods on.” tions of residential districts. In limiting the number of students ling did not violate any rights code w as adopted w ould s t ill be without the owner's know­ biles." “R-l” and “R-2” single tamily in some neighborhoods. He said protected by the Constitution. le g a l. L a n d lo rd s th a t d iscon­ ledge, the occupants are in McGinty said landlords who Over-ocenpnncy has to be districts, no more than four limiting traffic, health hazards The zoning ordinance for the tin u e th e ir re n ta l lice n se s fo r violation,” he said. “If the lease dwellings to more than proved beyond a reasonable unrelated persona can occupy a and preserving economic values Village of Belle Terre, N.Y. one y e a r and w ish to o b tain n owner is renting to more than the number of unrelated per- doubt, McGinty said. Circum­ house. are legitimate zoning objec­ restricted land usage to one- new one m ust th en fo llo w th e the limit, the owner is in tives. sons allowable are fashioning stantial evidence, such aa the family dwellings. The ownera of code. violation." illegal leases and, in such cases, number of cars parked at the In an “R-3 district, which is r * Wilber said. “We're trying to balance the a house in the village leased students may legally break residence or the number of also zoned for duplexes, no Normally, he said, the de­ The penalty for violations of need for students to find living their house to six unrelated those leases. ,.t_o .tudents were forced names listed on a mailbox is not more than three unrelated per­ partment is not very aware of the code could be aa much aa quarters against the need for college students. "A lease isn't enforceable if , the remaining th ree sufficient proof. sons can occupy a dwelling. over occupancy cases. $500 a day, for each day of the homeowners to have a moder­ In a 7-2-decision, the court it is an illegal lease,” he said. E f t * afford the re n t. Robert F. Jipson, Director of violation, or 90 daya imprison­ Neighbors are usually the ate density in their neighbor­ upheld the right of communities "They couldn't escape paying j BI! to Wilber, who ques­ The city attorney's office has the East Lansing Department ment. Jipson aaid that the most frequently-used alert we hoods," he said. to enforce such ordinances. The rent and live in a house for free, ts, effectiveness of the in begun subpoenaing bank re­ ^ . “family" neighbor- of Building and Zoning, laid the burden for the penalty has to have,” Jipson said. court commented on the desire but it could be grounds for cords of landlords to get more In 1974, the U.S. Supreme code has been changed several to keep residential areas free of breaking a lease." substantial evidence, he said. times over the years. In 1966, a -Thefamily houses don't look “In this way we can prove single family was allowed to DELIVERY AVAILABLEI different from the student that five people paid checks on house up to six roomers. The NO CHICKS ACCEPTED >shc said. “In fact, some a property licensed for four,” present standards were estab­ M IC H IG A N STATE .hefamily houses aren't u McGinty said. "It's a way lished in 1976. Jlept upas the students. around producing ail the ten­ Jipson said proving over-oc- UNIVERSITY FR EE! « indeed, the condition of louse is a factor here, if DEPARTMENT O F THEATRE -Jls are renting, part of 9 Enjoy bousesreponsibility is the P R E S E N T S Jlord's" but “if it is a matter the Buy any Medium Kty|es, that's pretty arbit- ; Wilber added. Ride! At the regular price \ X fjU fo O SCAR W IL D E ’S DELIG H TFU L C O M E D Y . Keep Your Car In Get Identical PIZZA ,athecity of East Lansing a effective method of prov- overeccupancy is now used Top shape with help from FREE TH E IMPORTANCE enforce zoning code occu- limits. Bank records of L ittle Caesars Pizza rdsbelieved to be violat- occupancy limits will be The Beetle Shop 1203 K. Od. River O F BEING EA R N ES T >nied, according to East Ditsn Volkswagn Toyota I — 3 3 ? - 1 6 3 1 | ( City Attorney Dennis l _ , Coupon oepfroo 2-2-71 0 " » coupon per orr4- ' McGinty. HDO E. Cavanaugh Ph 383-1590 Efforts to limit over-occu- (I are not new to East ing. There are about four involving overoccupancy pending, according to JANUARY 24 • 28 FERRUARY 1 ■ 4 -inly. M on is 8:15 p.m. udent Council Pitcher Night ARENA THEATRE tin g set for M iller & Labatt Ale J A C K : I have lost both m y parents. ip,m, Tuesday i from student rnem- LADY BRACKNELL: Both? To lose one d Academic Council e o n - parent m ay be regarded as a misfor­ are scheduled fo r th e tune — to lose both seems like careless­ Council m eeting Tue is ness. US p.m. in th e B o e rd i the A d m inistratio n The meeting la open potfe. Tequila Night 9 BOX OFFICE PRONE 1/2 off liflfifitUTtaatwa 355-0148 .o TONIGHT V A W l i y IN N G O O D FO O D • P IZ Z A • D R IN K S BOpon M-F: 11 a.m. Sat.-Sun.: Noon f c 1 ,H C H r! n / Ym and •nelhot 1227 E. Grand Rivor | f I Adult Bdmittsd . •*** fir (hi price jl Blk. Watt of Hagadorq Of IM . 332-6517 • • «t Ihese kwau The National Tour No odju«tm< All the sorority members were Interfraternity Council. But here it's just fun and games. I price of ilem(s) must asleep during the attacks. fraternity men are apparently ■ lolepriceof *50. About two hours later, a not too worried about theft. “Most of the time we run "Our best security is the fact over and haul someone down IfMMtl "* woman living in a duplex three I ' 75' p#rl*F*eov»r3line only to be told he’s a Sigma Chi blocks away from the sorority was also beaten. "It could happen here to­ morrow," Lt. Donald Hewson of that there are so many men in the house," McPherson added. "Who would have the guts to break into a fraternity," asked or a Phi Psi or whatever and that’s the end of it," he noted. Hal Galper Quintet Ili^ /G o rsst Sole « 1 jj- per line over 4 ltn< J f o d T e m i o * - 4 line; I 43' per line ovwr 4 lin< the East Lansing Police De­ Rick Beamer, a member of ■[■Ifotindssdi/Trenapi partment said. "You take a Sigma Chi. "But people do need I per insertion. 50' per college town - it's very suscep­ to be more aware and more tible to this. Take the popula­ tion and square area — put more people together and cautious." Co-ops and apartment are not havens of safety either. cRandy & Michael Deai 2p m ■I class day h something can happen." "The more expensive apart­ mllotion'Chongw - 1 Soroity women at MSU are ments have buzzers and keys,” publication. police Sgt. Kiersey said, “But in nod is ordered il conn concerned about security, said Mary Morgan, president of Panhellenic Council. Sororities most student apartments, any­ one could walk in, out, up and cB R EC K ER j untilofler1st insertior ■mis o *100 charge lo keep the outside house doors down the hall." It is possible to additional changw fo r i locked, and each member has a break into an apartment by wStole Newe w ill only SUNDAY JANUARY 29 8:00pm 10:30pm day's incorrect inswrtie „ bt mode within 10 day: Bill, are due 7 days fro m ALBUM CRED ITS: HAL GALPER - NOW HEAR THIS paid by duo date, a 5 RANDY AND MICHAEL BRECKER - BACK TO BACK, bedot. BRECKER BROTHERS, DON'T STOP THE MUSIC - ELECTRA 1973, mower, good condition, V 655-2316.8-1-3013) WG 1965 and 1966 any condition, ,of cars. 371-2476. 1913 360 V-8 bade. High mileage, p condition, best offer .4 pm., 349-3816. M l/ROLET NOVA 1973, I V-8, Automatic, Air, 3492,011 MtBMUUI MALI V Radials, New snow s. i a r s e a r a n s ? «tw-cmwas t o ss ss»a s *s s I o%. 321-3648. > 41 - H i- W—t t o g fro m “ f U IVSLER STATION W ag- Richord PreyfuM I 1912. Air, AM/FM, full Marsha Mason t shape. $1100. 52.8-1-31(3) |SUN Z 2 + 2 197415, ent condition, many ex­ s M 8 & " “ '/best offer. 394- 1 8-1-30(31 -R q im iH a U I Twilit*M »15tettfc15 ■ ■SUN 240Z ft, 39.000 mi t, excellent 351-4960 BUN UL I 1 Long Hurry Endi Soon I t 1S*15TwllitoMWS WH’I* , whitt made. P From tha Outrageous No. 1 Bast Seller THE iE COLT \ Ntic, luo lO lM ■ *.'i CHOIRBOYS s e ts Twilit*53W frits '1*___________ _ • very c 1)12(0 or be |5!-23I4! Karim— ■—>earoae I n n O w lia “ mpg, 1 tiimWilMIL P'RD 1969, mechanically labVfeMK new tires. feEOEfflflVEIt t e 03 a ,,e r 5 p m I G s a Sooty MSU Twtllti 5:15-545 Mills ’1* - J PAIRLAN I ' 6cylinder, | H b o it u t r o l d s |9 *d shape U lSK M STOm iSO N 18-1-31(3) “SEMI- AVERAGE WHITE BAND M with special guest stars Hurry Ends Tues. — Next 'The Turning Point” Newt & the Salam anders CHARLES LEE and comedian Bob Shaw BRONSON REMICK M O N D AY, JA N U A R Y 23 Iga Mufay5* 7:4$Tnillti 5»SX mits 't.» Seorgc^urnsJoFmTJenveT 8 PM MSU AUDITORIUM “Oh,God!” Tickets $6 & $7 at M SU Union Is it Funny! Discount Records, Sounds and D iversions im h f 5*70445 Twlliti m M mm. d o tiW td A d v e rtM * * M P “ H r m n r t M lli |j » tm n a n tt ? [ * * M | | H ose 'j f i f a Sale ]f t y iMfOHMtiON CLEANING HELP part time, INTERESTED IN pursuing M APARTMENT FOR one man, full time. Call 482-8232 for BLUE SPRUCE. Brand new 1 SUBLEASE APARTMENT, 3 ROOMS for rent in home. SUBWOOFER - EXCELLENT career in Retail Sales-Man- partly furnished. $150 per and 2 bedroom. From $185. $205/month, electric only, 1 Convenient LCC, MSU loca­ 347 Student Snrvlcus lldg interview. 8-1-24(3) agement? If you are unem­ month, garage. 482-5104. and large, very reasonable, 10 minutes to campus. 351- bedroom, very quiet. 393- please call 485-3672 after 8 WOHtW**155 ployed-underemployed and 7-1-27(3) 6866. 8-1-26(4) tion. Warm atmosphere, pre­ HEAD NURSE, INTENSIVE between the ages of 16-21 1645. 7-1-26 (3) fer couple or males. Call p.m. 5-1-23(3) CARE UNIT and live in Eaton, Ingham or 484-1913. 4-1-25(5) STUDIO 2 blocks campus, IdeyfOC per line An, excellent opportunity is Clinton County you may FEMALE NON-smoker to YOUTH SKIS Solomon Bind­ fireplace, furnished, $110 in­ available with an active, ex­ qualify under CETA require­ share furnished. Own room, ACROSS FROM Fee Hall- ings, Henke boots 4%M and 3 day,-MX purlin* panding 488 bed hospital. We ments and be eligible to cluding utilities. 332-0376. BURCHAM WOODS close. $96/month, no lease. Own room in 3 bedroom, poles. 339-2161. E-5-1-2313) tdnyt-7S4,00 • 5 days. W per line over ICCU 243 bed acute care pus. Call STE-MAR MGT. utilities. Call 349-5690. sider those in process of hospital has immediate full FEMALE NEEDED for 4 per­ 351-5510. 8-1-25(6) Open 11 a.m. 351-0838. vTliM i NO adjustment in rat* when cancelled. Price ai ilem(s) mult be staled in ad. Maximum obtaining degree. Leadership experience required. The hos­ and part time, night shift intensive care, coronary care son Campus Hill Apartment. 351-3118 Z-5-1-26(4) C-11-1-31(7) $82a month, free bus service. 1 BEDROOM furnished, nice, NORTH HAGADORN - Two pital offers an excellent positions. Salary range $607 • Spring. 349-2072. 5-1-27(4) OUAL 701 turntable with I A S l S . ■3 linas ■*2.25 • par insertion. salary and out standing fringe $648 plus .564 per hour shift 745 Burcham very close, $220 heat paid. bedroom house. Unfur­ cartridge $250. Altec Santana I * t r wr lino over 3 linos (propoymont). benefit program that includes Call 332-6744. 3-1-23(3) nished. Large rooms (nice). speakers-$325. Pioneer 10-10 differential and an excellent TWO BEDROOM unfurnish­ Bllijnoir r -"f°gs Solo ads • 4 linos • '2.50. 3 weeks vacation and tuition benefit program. Contact ed -close to campus. Imme­ $200/month. Days 482-2911. receiver $350. After 6 p.m., ■ t f p s r lin t over 4 line* • per Inoertlon. reimbursement after one year Personnel, LANSING GEN­ 2-3 MAN furnished apart­ C-19-1-31(4) 332-3863. 8-2-1(5) diate occupancy. 332-0111. MSU NEAR 4 bedroom un­ town ods • 4 lines • ‘2.50 - per insertion. employment. For confidential ERAL HOSPITAL 2800 0-7-1-31(3) ment available on lease until consideration submit your re­ Devonshire. Phone 372-8220. furnished, $225/month 349- June 15, 15 minutes from EAST SIDE, four bedroom BOOKS- VISIT Mid-Mich- I ' U'osrlintovor4 lines. 0394, after 5 pm. 5-1-27(3) sume to: Lois L. Lyons RN, 8-1-27(14) campus, please call 351-7212, house, $240/month plus de­ igans largest used bookshop. ■lostI founds «dt /Trenspertetlosi eds ■3 lines *1.50- Personnel Department, E.W. ONE FEMALE needed to CURIOUS BOOKSHOP, 307 I pwinstrtion. 50' per line over 3 lines. sublease winter and spring, 731 Apartments, 731 Bur­ posit, neat and clean. Phone Sparrow Hospital, 1215 E. PART-TIME positions for HOUSEMATE WANTED - cham Drive. 0-11-1-31(6) 675-5252. X-8-1-2614) E. Grand River, East Lansing. Michigan Ave. Lansing, Ml Capital Villa. $65.25/month. own room, $75/month, 'h 332-0112. C-19-1-3K5) MSU students. 15-20 hours/ 48910. A non-discriminatory 351-7189 evenings. 3-1-24(4) block from bus. Pets, good NICE 4 bedroom house, 3 week. Automobile required. Deadline* affirmative action employer. Phone 339-9500. people. 484-7254. S-5-1-27(3) 1,2,3 bedroom baths full basement. 2 car FIREWOOD FOR Sale. ONE MAN apartment, $150, $17.50 face cord split regular i. 2p.m.•t classday before publication, Male Female/Handicapped C-19-1-3K4) nice neighborhood, garage apartments garage near MSU. Rents for dilation/Chang* • 1 p.m. • I doss day b*for* 8-1-23(27) NICE APARTMENT, very $320/month. 487-5539. wood. $20.00 face cord split publication. privileges.482-5104. 5-1-25(3) 8-1-25(4) cherry wood. Split dry wood BABYSITTER AND house­ close to campus, on Beech • fully corpeted nodisordered it cannot b* conceded or changed UNIFORM SECURITY offi­ St. Call now 337-0819. available, $35, delivery avail­ keeper. Professional couple- • got heat and cantral air untilafter 1stinsertion. cers part time. Call 641-6734. FEMALE OWN ROOM, 1850 3-1-23(3) conditioning SHARP 3 bedroom. Campus able. 647-2115, 647-6675. 3 blocks from MSU campus „.*iso*1.00charge for 1 od change plus 50' per OR-12-1-3K3) Abbott Apt. C-3, Kings Point • swimming pool near. $225/month plus util­ X8-1-3K7) with 3 sons. Reliable car and North Apts, or 313-349-0392 odditionolchangefor maximumof 3changes, ONE OR two women to share • 24-hour maintenance ities and deposit. 487-2031. DRIVER WITH light truck for references required. Prefer weekends. 6-1-26(4) 8-1-27(3* INSTANT CASH We're pay­ t StateNews will only be responsible for the 1st East Lansing 2 bedroom. On • play ground for children newspaper cartage. Run early wife of student. Excellent ing $1-2 for albums in good day’sincorrect insertion. Adjustment claims must busline. 332-0905. 6-1-2-26(3) • no pots morning hours. Call 349-0254. salary. Call 351-4795 or 372- JUST EAST of MSU. Unfur­ shape. WAZOO RECORDS, I bemode within 10 days of expiration dote, 3-1-25(4) 2960 ask for Heidi. 8-1-31(9) nished or furnished. Parking, Rooms 223 Abbott, 337-0947. coll for information 349-3800 0-1-1-23(4) ps oredue7 days from od expiration date. If not Laundry. 351-9549. 3-1-23(3) GAME ROOM personnel. MALE WANTED for four- 10-5 Tuesday-Fridoy paidbydue date, o 50* lot* service charge will BABYSITTER WANTED. Couple days/week and some Young ladies preferred. Good ONE BEDROOM unfurnished man apartment. $88 a month. 10-2 Saturday LARGE HOUSE, own room, bedue. 349-5930. 8-1-31(3) THORENS 160c turntable evenings. Mornings 349- pay, benefits, and pleasant apartment, one mile to cam­ near Sparrow. $75/month. with micro acoustics. QDC-le 1620. 8-2-113) working conditions. Excellent pus. Pets and children al­ Knob Hill Check it out. 484-8532. cartridge. $100. 332-0928, positions for students. Full lowed. Call 332-3900. FEMALE WANTED Spring 3-1-25(3) KEY PUNCH operator. Sec­ and part-time. Apply in per­ 3-1-23(4) term. Excellent apartment Apartment* Paul. 5-1-26(3) btiiliw A ' | totewetive ond shift. 3942 experience son only. CINEMA X, 1000 close to campus. $85 per ROOM IN nice house, behind Dooleys. $93/month, plus PHILIPS 2-12turntable $135. required. Good working con­ W. Jolly Road. OR-16-1-3K8) BEAUTIFUL ONE bedroom month, heat and water paid. FEMALE - TO share luxury 351-2567. 3-1-24(4) utilities. 351-9322. 1-1-23(3) Rectillinear 3-A classical ditions. Apply in person 485- apartment across from cam­ apartment. Reasonable I k - ELECTRA 1973, SAAB SONETT 1973. AM/ 8900. 8-2-1(5) LPN CHARGE NURSE speakers $365 or both $475. pus. Call evenings 332-1806. Phone -694-6773. 8-1-24(3) nowtf, good condition. FM, excellent condition, fiber 3 days per week with full 6-1-26(3) QUIET, MATURE, non­ Like new, call 332-5552. TWO BEDROOM furnished I t 656-2316 8-1-30(3) glass sports car. 332-0916. TYPIST PART TIME 9am- benefits. Call J. Maples, RN, smoking women, own room. 8-1-31(4) duplex for 2 to 3 people. 6-1-26(3) 1pm, 50 + wpm, familiar PROVINCIAL HOUSE EAST, AVAILABLE FEBRUARY 1- 669-9939. 8-1-31(3) Houses £ Close. 351-5362 evenings. hNG 1963 and 1966 332-0817. Equal Opportunity Upper 2 bedroom. Stove, 3-1-25(3) with dictaphone, call Miss any condition, SAAB-961969 V-4, AM/FM - Lewis at 882-2495. 5-1-27(4) Employer. 8-1-25(5) refrigerator, carpeted, dis­ SEWING MACHINE CLEAR­ ROOMMATE NEEDED 1ROOM in 3 bedroom duplex ROOM IN house near cam­ ANCE SALE. All floor sam­ I of cars. 371-2476. 8 stereo, good mileage, reli­ posal, garage. $160 + depos­ $86, East Lansing. 485-4361 Okemos, 349-4238. 4-1-25(3) pus. Prefer grad or profes­ ples and demonstrators used able $800. 351-2368. TAXI DRIVERS wanted. BABYSITTER-NIGHTS, 393- it and lease. Adults only. days, 351-5832 nights. Jeff BL-1-La(3)_____ Must have excellent driving 8379, phone days. 8-1-27(3) 372-3714. 8-1-27(6) sional. Call 337-1495 after 6 during our X-mas buying 1973 360 V-8 Jarvis. 5-1-24(4) p.m. 8-1-30(3) season. Up to 50% discount. record. Afternoons and mid­ NEAR CAMPUS. 1 bedroom hatic. High mileage, THUNDER0IRD 1§74 - load­ nights to start. Apply VAR­ SEX THERAPIbTneeds’ sub- “' Furnishing thaT^firsP*apart Guaranteed used machines furnished apartment near ROOM FOR reritlfi house for P condition, best offer ed, new tires, sharp. $3200, SITY CAB. 332-3559. jects to assist in production ment? Find what you need in Brody, bus stop^Call Cedar SINGLE ROOM, utilities paid, from $39.96. KEN ED­ quiet student. Kitchen use. .4 p.m., 349-3816, 882-2290. 8-1-25(3) 5-1-23(5) of video tape programs for the Classified section of to­ Greens Apartments, 351- close to MSU, $105/month WARDS DISTRIBUTING CO $60/month. 931 Cleveland. NHI immediate occupancy. Cali 1115 N. Washington, 489- VOLKSWAGEN 1973, COCKTAIL therapy. Reply to Box E-5, day's paper. 8631. 0-8-1-31(5) Phone 484-0994 5-1-24(4) 6448 C-19-1-31-110) J9R0LET NOVA 1973, WAITRESS; 332-0903. 5-1-23(4) orange. $1100. 482-9426. weekends. Apply in person. The State News. Z-8-1-3K6) IV-6, Automatic, Air, 3-1-23f.ll V , Redials, New snow s, COVENTRY INN, 676-1021 VW BUS, 1968 from Califor­ for appointment. 8-1-31(4) WAITRESS; NIGHTS. Apply ■offsr. 3213648. fill nia. Engine just rabuih. Heat­ in person. COVENTRY INN er worksl $850. 487-6534. PIZZA COOK wanted. Exper­ 676-1021 for appointment. JVSLER STATION W ag- 8-V23(4)_ _ ience necessary. Apply in 8-1-31(3) |9?2. Ait, AM/FM, full person. ALLEY-EYE 220 t shape. $1100. NEED CASH? We buy im­ MAC. 2 p.m. -4 p.m. FIRST CLASS hotel seeking 52.8-1-31(31 ports and sharp late models 2-1-24(4) aggressive Food and Bever­ compacts. Call John De age Management trainees. |SUN Z 2 + 2 1974!$, Young. WILLIAMS V.W. AMAZE YOURSELFI Even if Salary commensurate with sot condition, many ex­ 484-1341 or 484-2551 you've never sold before, just potential. Excellent fringe ist offer. 394- C-19-1-3115) a few hours a week can bring benefits. Send resume to the 1.8-1-30(31 you excellent earnings when Director of Food and Bever­ you sell AVON Products. Call age. SOMERSET INN, 2601 JSUN 240Z 1972, 4- f , 39,000 miles, new Motorcycles J f a j 482-6893. C-5-1-27(6) West Big Beaver, Troy, Mich­ igan 48084. Z-8-1-26(10) sir, stereo, sport Jjs, excellent condition, YAMAHA ENDURO 1973, PEACE CORPS Africa has 250cc. 543-7366. 8-1-30(3) positions open in many fields- Apartments lii P- 351-4960 evenings. Math and Science, teaching, B it! engineering, agriculture, vo­ cational education, and liber­ WOMAN-2 bedroom, own |SUN LIL Hustler Pickup Auto Service I / al arts, the time to look into room. Edge of Okemos, I hong 8ox, camper these opportunities is nowl country, campus. 332-6829 I step bumper, wagon Come to the AFRICAN after 6 p.m. 5-1-20(3) I t , white letter tires, GOOD USED TIRES, 13-14- STUDIES CENTER, Inter­ p k . Very Nice! 15 inch. Mounted free. Also national Center, 353-1700. NEED QUIET mature girl to PRFELT-STAIR CHEV- good supply of snow tires. 8-1-23(10) share townhouse with 2 “ *343. 4-1-25(6) PENNELL SALES, 1301K others. Rent negotiable. 351- FEMALE ESCORTS wanted. 2798. 8-1-30(3) P COLT Wagon 1974 East Kalamazoo, Lansing. $6/hour. No training neces­ T » c , luggage rack, 482-5818. C-19-1-3K5) sary. Call 489-2278. GRADUATE OR married stu­ f j , l erv ' leon, good Z-19-1-3K3) dents. New East Lansing, two ■ *1200 or best offer. 487- MASON BODY SHOP 812 E. *6-1-23141 bedroom apartments with Kalamazoo since 1940. Auto PHOTOGRAPHERS MODEL, carport, on bus route. No painting-collision sen/ice. female, Lansing. Experience pets. Start at $250. Call p 4 Spyder, 5 speed, American-Foreign cars, not absolute must. FOREVER 351-9483 or 351-9195 after 6 gauges, steel P rsdials, custom hard- 485-0256. C-19-1-3115) FOTQ, Box 51, Shiller Park, p.m. 0-9-1_-3J(6)_ _ Illinois 60176. Z-8-1-2615) I owner. $2695 FEMALE TO share. Close to N&6-1-25I5I JUNK CARS wanted. We pay more if they run. Also WAITRESS, PART-time, 10- campus. $100/month. Call piRD1969, mechanically buy used cars and trucks. Call 20 hours/week. Cocktail and Sandy, 351-6712. 3-1-25(3) [S ^ Jio n , new tires. 321-3651 anytime. dinner. Apply at the DODGE | ®4203 after■5 p.m. C-19-1-3114) HOUSE. 5-1-23(4) HAYFORD SOUTH. 2 bed­ 1-1-23(3) room lower apartment. Partly furnished. Includes utilities. _ 3 FAIRLANE 1969- 4 Aviation FEMALE masseuse wanted. $8/hour. We will train. 489- $150/month. 351-7497. cylinder, power stear­ 2278. Z-19-1-3H3) 0-4-1-26(4) in # ! shape. $500. 482- LEARN TO fly in exchange IH -31I3I for work (during week). Call 676-4860. 8-1-23(3) ™ ttom''■6 au,omat- « v ° t best Offer. There's something for every­ ALPHA ™ 6-1-30(31 one in today's Classified Ads. IjJERCURY good body Check them out for super K A PPA buys. l 1*'lamed, loaded, ah I am!!S windows and PSI , 900d trans­ ATTINTION i t Call 349-9574. MID STUMNTS PROFESSIONAL BUSINESS FRATERNITY I »370nblUe*900d co" di- Lowest prices on would like to recognize the pledges K °[ offer. diagnostic instruments for Wintor '78 ,?m er6. X-5-1-2316) t V 975' AM /FM * stethoscopes X "aw tires and * otoscopes BrwdaRector BittyBoms C i | S , s 8,eat- Body • othalmoscopes CnwieRidge GaryHacker • blood pressure cuffs Richanl Oaferowski CathyKJmum L ' ! ? ' 3 door, limited MICHIGAN JodyRaffle WilliamRoid J'% F M S,0Win9 8nd K Stereo’ aa" Patti Ronum AdairSchwartz condition. 351- MIDICAL CathyKiealo Trossa Sloaa SUPPLY PMlodii TimaRasahrook ■Us?*: I . . . 1975 Stick S laA looks and 485-4658 MaryJoConey I? 332-'805' $•5 Mon-Fri; 9-12 Sot. t Sun. J For Sale ] l $ | For Sale 5 ) [ w l R ^ I S ] 1~P— bPorso»alj[j|! P s w to \\*j | T ffig S e n ic e ]^ |TypUg S m rlf |S i For Silo LOST-BLACK cockpoo with WELCOME TO Tri-Delta, JOURNALISM GRAD Stu­ UNIGRAPHICS OFFERS EXPERIENCED IBM typing. NEW AND used down hill 100 USED VACUUM clean­ AMPEG BASE amplifier - white chest in the Spartan naw InWatesI We re glad you dent. Will help write or edit. COMPLETE DISSERTATION Diaaertationt, Ipica-elite). skis end boots. Clearance ers. Tanks, cannisters, and good condition — cail, even­ Village area Saturday Night. mada itl Delta-love, you-all. J. Rockwood, 230E. Owen. AND RESUME SERVICE- FAYANN, 4894)358. sale $5 and up. AERO REAL­ uprights. Guaranteed on full ings, Doug — 371-1198. Answers to "Spade". $25- Z-1-1-2313) 3-1-24(3) typeaettlng, IBM typing, off­ C;19-1-31-(3) TY AND DISTRIBUTING, year, $7.88 and up. DENNIS 8-1-30(3) $50 reward. 372-0404 after 5 set printing and binding. For 339-9523. 8-1-27(5) DISTRIBUTING COMPANY. 316 North Cedar, opposite p.m., no answer (313) 239- HIRE A professional D.J. estimate atop in at 2843 East for your dance or your wed­ Grand River or phone 332- rframspoftitiom ][&] City Market. C-19-1-31-17) [ Animals jV t] 6134 anytime. 8-1-26(7) [ Hal Estate A "HOW TO Scheme your way ding reception. Book early. 8414. C/19-1-31-17) ASMSU PREPAID UgalSl, into law school." Guide for 371-1657.8-1-30(41 CARPOOL; NEED ride to and wc<*» Plan, now make the average student. $2.95. AFGHAN PUPPIES, black INVESTMENT HOME near TYPING TERM papers and from MSU-Ann Arbor cam* Lancaster Publishing. Box AKC, 5 males 1 female $150- [M okilt Homes j w campus. Price reduced in FOR QUALITY stereo service theses. I.B.M. experienced, puses, weekdays. 356-8153. services available without?^ This Week's Special $250. 393-7577. X-5-1-2313) to undergraduate MSL „ 5423 Madison, Wisconsin good rental area. Call Kim THE STEREO SHOPPE, 556 fast service. Call 351-8923. Z-5*1*23(3) dents. Office open 9 53705. Z-E-5-1-24I5I WANTED ROOMMATE to Watson, LA NOBLE REAL­ E. Grand River. C-19-1-31-I3I 0-17-1-31(3) 12 pm, 1:30 pm-5nm M Avanti 2.5 cubic foot refrig­ COCKER SPANIEL AKC share a nice mobile home TY, 482-1637, evenings 351- day-Friday. For infor'ma°* LADIES DOWN parka, blue, erator. new $100. Champion Sire, papers. 1 $120 a month includes every­ 4104.1-1-23(5) size large. Excellent condi­ year old. Black. $150. Even­ thing. Phone 224-7605. FREE LESSON in complexion LOOKING FOR Al W «M orap p o jn tm e n te e'U K .^ care. MERLE NORMAN GREAT JOB?-get a head-1 tion. $50. 351-8688. Thisweek only $50. ings 339-3056. 6-1 27(3) 8-1-25(41 WHITEHILLS-JUST listed. COSMETIC STUDIO, 351- itart on that first lmpres-1 E-5-1-24I3I Perfect for dorm room or Stately four bedroom south­ 5543. C-19-1-31-I3I ilon by having your resumel RELIABLE NON-amoking, apartment. KING ARTHUR'S Court ern colonial with formal din­ typeset. The Typeeutten non-drinking couple wishes Shop the super buys i„ VOu, BASS HIKING boots, good ( jo k il* Homes ][“ * ] close to campus super two ing, family room, three fire­ SQUINTING CAUSES wrink­ to house-sit or pay low rent Classified section ,M can make your credentials! condition size 7, $25, 351- places 8nd many extras. On a les. Help prevent with pre­ while husband finishes Tomorrow you'll be pteJ i See us for any of your house­ bedroom mobile home in stand out in any stack ofl with the money y0u, 8688. E 5-1-24(3) hold needs. great condition. Price to sell beautifully landscaped scription ground sunglasses, resumes. Looks much bet-1 Cooley. Wife in M.A. pro­ FOR SALE or rent, mobile double lot. Paul Coady 332- OPTICAL DISCOUNT 2617 gram. 393-5176. X-10-1-20 saved. ve If you want it, we hove it. $8900. Call Gloria Pocock ter than typing. Give! NEW, USED and vintage home, 2 bedroom, furnished. 3582 MUSSELMAN E. Michigan, Lansing, Ml Close to campus. Available 349-3118, MOORE/JENSEN a call -we're veryi guitars, banjos, mandolins, REALTY. C-5-1-25(9) C-5-1-2715) very reasonable. 487*9296J ARTISTS, SCULPTORS, etc. Dulcimers and kits, re­ Immediately. Call after 5 p.m. ASSOCIATES INC. 351- POTTERY C L A S S E S atYu Photographers-erotic art WHEEL W O R K S , beJ , * corders, strings, accessories, DICKIR o»d M AL 356-1029.2-1-24(5) 3900. 2-1-23(8) FREE NEEDLE check. Bring LAINGSBURG-NEWS- wanted for sale on consign­ this week 1035 E. Sagina books, thousands of hart-to- 17 01 S o u th C e d a r in your record player needle TYPING EXPERIENCED feet Persomal i/| PAPER and printing business ment. Reply to Box D-4, The Lanong. 6 week session ™ find albums. (All at very low 4 1 7 - 3 8 8 6 ____________ for free check at anytime. and reasonable. 371-4835. prices). Private and group [ Lost I j o i r t j H J offered. Broken into 3 parcels XC-19-1-31(3) State News or phone 616- 4 5 4 -2 2 6 1 .8 -1 .1 -2 3 1 4 1 “ buy one or all. $6,000 to Special prices on new need­ 947-0235. Z-8-1-3K7) lessons on guitar, banjo, STEREO DISCOUNTERS 60,000. Two buildings, living les. MARSHALL MUSIC, EXPERIENCED TYPING ser­ WORKSHOP A N D p , i mandolin, all styles. Gift cer­ ELECTRONIC REPAIR on Our rtom* tails tha story! Sov* $S on quarters. Machinery for pro­ East Lansing. C-1-23-K6I NANCY DREW, Hardy Boys bon pottery at THE whfp tificates. Expert repairs -free stereo, T.V., C.B., camera, FOUND -14 carat gold men's Morontt. Pionoor, Sonsui, K onwood. vice- dissertations, term estimates. ELDERLY IN­ guitars and amps. All repairs ring in Spartan Village in late S .I.C and 75 mora brands. Sand (or duction, or nostalgia tourist papers, Call Carolyn 332- end Oz books wanted. CUR­ WORKS January 28 and2 attraction. Four residential EXPERIENCED HANDYMAN STRUMENTS, 541 East guaranteed. WILCOX TRAD­ December 355-9920. our FREE cotolog. 5674. Elite and Pica. 11-2-313) IOUS BOOKS, 307 E. Grand Call for registration u lakes, including Sleepy Hoi- attending MSU wishee to Grand River. 332-4331. ING POST. 485-4391. B-1-1-2313)____________ STEREO DISCOUNTERS. DEPT. C-17E River, East Lansing, 332- 2261. 2-1-24(4) 6730 SANTA BARBARA CT. low'State Park. 651-5715 for contract for repair work. Rob. C-10-1-31I13I C-19-1-31(6)___________ SALTO . MO 31337 THESIS TERM papers typed- 0112. C-8-1-31(5) LOST PUPPY-black with show appointment. 8-1-23(9) 351-1563. 0-1-1-23(31 MACINTOSH C-26 preampli­ .50$ per page. Call 485-4858. DANCE BLO CK-Ballet, t~, SOFAS AS low as $30, chairs fier, excellent condition; white chest, thin tail. Ann St. 10-2-2(31 BASKETBALL TICKETS jazz for adults-men, woman Area. 351-9248. 7-1-31(3) FEMALES NEEDED to share as low as $10, call after 1 $350.00serious inquiries only. hotel expenses in Florida over trade. 2 MSU - Indiana for call 321-3862 for registration p.m., 332-0052, Beechwood Call 485-1258 after 8 p.m. spring break, 351-5643. [te c r e a tim ijg d s trie tiii ANN BROWN TYPING Dis­ MSU •Ohio State. 373-9555. Studio in Frandor. CARON’S Apartrrjpnts. 0-8-1-24(41 HEART SHAPED gold neck­ sertations — resumes — term 1-1-23(3) DANCE STUDIO. 20-21! 3-1-2514) lace in Student Services. 8-1-25(3)______________ CB ANTENNA 5 element Identify, pay for ad, claim in ENGLISH AS a second lan­ papers. 601 Abbott Road, 2 TICKETS to see Marcel CONGRATULATIONS TO SKIS ■DAIWA comp, 205cm room 6 Career Resources guage, tutoring: Call 351- North entrance 361-7221 Tired of being bro'e> beams with or without coax. 543-7366. 8-1-30(3'______ with Solomon 505. Heierlings Center. B-1-1-2313) our new actives. Beth, Sue, Barb,Amy, Jan, Lynne and ABDO’S LOUNGE 9020 between 9-11 a.m. or C-9-1-3114) Marceau, January 24. Celt Bruce at 353-0033 or 355- fast cash by selling th you no longer use wn size 13. Sportcaster jacket 351-3815 after 9:30 p.m. Lindsay. Love your Alpha Chi PROMPT TYPING. Twelve 8252. S-2-1-24I3I fast-action Classified Ad COCKTAIL TABLE, Riverside size large. Make otter 351- LOST SQUARE, gold watch Coming February 1 6-1-2714) 5848. 5-1-27(5) sisters. 1-1-23(4) years experience. Evenings, 355-8255 pine, 2'x5'xV, formica top, case and insides, between Reservations only $115. 374-7903. 5-1-24(31 Union and Womens I.M. 675-7544. C-19-1-31-13) WE BUY Newspapers, any DISCOUNT, NEW, used Much sentimental value. Big OVERWEIGHT? TRY the one WRITING CONSULTANT 9 quantity. Monday-Friday, 8 CHILDREN, C LA S S E S a t* desks, chairs, files. BUSI­ reward. Marty 332-4716. that works! Famous U.S. Tickets on Sale for years experience in profes­ PROFESSIONAL EDITING a.m.-5 p.m., Saturday, 9 able in acrobatics, ballet, up, SKI BOOTS, excellent condi­ NESS EQUIPMENT CO., 215 5-1-25(51 Women's Ski Team Diet. sional editing. 337-1591. papers, thesis, dissertations. a.m.-1 p.m. TIMELY IN­ and baton twirling. For reqs tion, sizes 7Vi -$15, 8 - $10, 0-2-1-23(3) E. Kalamazoo, 485-5500. Lose weight fast or money Minor corrections to re-write SULATION MANUFACTUR­ tratkm call CARON’S to - $85. Hockey skates size 0-1-1-23(4) GLASSES IN UNION. Brown back. Order today. Send $3: Gary asd the U.S. Bonds 332-5991. C-14-1-3114) ING. 916 Filley Street, Lan­ DANCE STUDIO in Frando, 8 -$10. Phone: 332-4015. FEM-ART, Box 3351, Logan, sing. 8-1-27(5) plastic frames. Squarish- 321-3862.20-2-10(61 E 5-1-26(41 NEW TOYO quad auto 4/2 round lenses. Green vinyl Utah. 84321. 6-1-25(6) channel cartridge stereo tape case. $5 Reward. Mary 355- 882-0595 [rjp iig Service H COPYGRAPH SERVICE* DANCE AND trim for younjj STEREO, TECHNICS, re­ player, 20 watts R.M.S. $85. 7685. 8-1-25141 3400$. Logon complete dissertation and Rake in the extra money you ceiver SA5660. Technics IP w ts P m W lfM , adults. Day and night classes 349-1861._5-1-27(4)______ Lonsing, Ml EXPERT TYPING by MSU resume service. Comer can make by selling no- turntable, SL23. Speakers, available. Studio in Frandor. A pet can warm your heart on next to grad. 17 years experience. M.A.C. and Grand River, longer-needed items with a Ultraiinear 225. Excellent con­ ROYAL ELECTRIC typewriter K.W. WANTED for moon- Call 321-3862 for registration; a cold winter evening. Look Dykstra Ford Near Gables, call 337-0205. 8:30-5:30 p.m., Monday-Fri­ low-cost, fast-acting Classi­ dition, best offer after 4 p.m., model 550. Good condition, dance, phone T Er J Sports CARON'S DANCE STUDIO.! to the Pets classification of 0-17-1-31(3) day, 337-1666. C-19-1-31-<6) fied Ad. Phone 355-8255 20- 2 - 10(6 ) 349-3816. 4-1-24(5) $125. 339-3089. Z-3-1-23(3> today's newspaper.___________ and Recreation. Z-5-1-2713) Segregation plagues fraternities w ln® ^ (continued from page 1) voting seat on the ASMSU Student Board. Undergraduates will discrimination does not exist in the rush programs. vote next month to grant or withhold that power from the council. "They (the black Greeks) don’t have their own office. They just Announcements for It's What's Young Americans for Freedom Undergraduate members of Phi Wimmin's Rap Groupisan “Rush is an open house, yet no minorities, to my knowledge, share an office with IFC ," said Dan Stouffer, College of Happening must be received in the and Intercollegiate Studies Insti­ Kappa Phil Apply for a $3,000 discussion for and about s checked us out,” Mays said. “Blacks and whites just want to live one-year graduate fellowship. Ap­ and men. Meeting tonight Agriculture and Natural Resources representative. State News office, 343 Student tute joint meeting at 8:30 tonight. together with people they can relate to.” A contributing factor in Services Bldg., by noon at least Union Sunporch. Roundtable dis­ plication forms available in 514 S. Student Services Bldg. segregation in the fraternity system may be due to different The National Pan-Hellenic Council is a coeducational black Kedzie Hall. Deadline is Jan. 31. two class days before publication. cussion of Marx's early writings. pledging methods, Mays continued. organization, while Panhellenic Council governs white sororities Volunteer for Listening No announcements will be accept­ “I’ve seen a few black pledges dress up in tuxedos and do a song and the IFC governs white fraternities. ed by phone. Attention black psychology ma­ Venereal diseasedfree and con­ Orientation meetings Feb. 2: and dance routine in the middle of campus. Black fraternities Black Greeks at MSU do not have fraternity or sorority houses jors! Black Student Psychological fidential treatment, 1-4 p.m. Mon­ p.m. and Feb 4 at 1-3 p.m. ini parade their pledges around," he said. due to lack of money, Combs said. Black Greeks have a central Video Workshop invites people Association will meet at 4:30 day, Thursday and Friday; 8:30 Olds Hall. Call for more inf; Wanda Dean, adviser to the black Greeks, said black students number at the office of Residence Halls, which serves as a liaison interested to a small format work­ today, 455 Baker Hall. a.m. to noon Wednesday at tion. between the members and their adviser, Robert Canada. Canada is shop at 7 tonight in the Union Community Health Services, 701 joined black fraternities or sororities over predominately white a graduate assistant in the biophysics department. second floor. New Environmental Organiza­ N. Logan St. Communication voce ones because they may be more familiar with the black Canada refused to comment on segregation. He also refused to tion will elect officers and ap­ seminar, Tuesday Jan. 31frort; organizations. Sierra Club meeting at 5:45 prove/amend by-laws at 7:30 to­ Folk dancing at 8 tonight Bailey p.m. in 116 Auditorium, ‘They are more exposed to them before they come to MSU. Some give out the names of black fraternity presidents, because he said Street Elementary School, corner tonight in the Capitol lobby. night, 221 Natural Resources Bldg. sored by undergraduate st students may have received grants from these organizations," it was not his job to do so. Program: "Utilizing Legislative of Ann and Bailey Streets. Every­ board. Dean explained. Hekhius was asked for a list of black fraternity presidents, but Services." Knowledge is power! Save money on home heating. one welcome. said he had no such list and to obtain that informtion he would •• • “It seems it would be more natural to join a group you have things Non-members welcome. Ask questions about insulation at Several dayshift IMCsue* in common with and a greater understanding of," Dean added. have to contact black Greek adviser Dean. 7:30 Tuesday and Wednesday Learn about the summer social clerical volunteer pla" Dean said last week she would contact the president of Phi Beta MSU single parents meeting at nights, 469 N. Hagadorn Road. science program in London. At­ available for students with Ira Combs, president of the MSU chapter of the National Sigma, Andre DuPerry, and ask him to call the State News, 6 tonight in the Spartan Village tend the meeting at 7:30 tonight in vious hospital experience. In, Pan-Hellenic Council, said “cultural differences" are the basic 133 Akers Hall. at 26 Student Services 6 because he did not like his number given out. DuPerry did not call MSAU Daycare Center. Guest Lansing General Hospital orien­ reason for the segregation in the Greek system. He said speaker scheduled. tation will be held at the hospital at “generally speaking,” most blacks come from lower income levels. to comment. Despite repeated attempts, other black fraternity 6:30 tonight. If you need a ride, Women's Studies group wel­ Gain valuable hospital c. Such differences cause misunderstanding and a “lack of presidents could not be reached. Council of Graduate Students come at 6 to 26 Student Services comes your input into MSU's ience in physical therapy« communication. Students prefer to stay in their own groups, The only black member of a white fraternity at MSU is Jeff will hold a regular meeting at 6:30 Bldg. expanding Women Studies pro­ Ingham Medical Center, rather than attempt to bridge these gaps, he said. In addition, Rodgers, a member of the Triangle fraternity. tonight in the Con Con Room of grams. Come to the meeting at volunteer placements svt there a language barrier between blacks and whites, Combs “It doesn't faze me,” he said. Rodgers added that he has been the University Apartments adults: 3:30 Wednesday in the Union the International Center. weekdays and Sundays Inquf said. only black member of an otherwise all white organization before. Open basketball at 7 tonight in the Mural Room. 26 Student Services E “The majority of whites I’ve talked to don’t understand blacks Rodgers joined Triangle fall term, because, unlike other Red Cedar School. Meet new fraternities, Triangle is more academically oriented, he said. Russian and East European people! Come dressed to play. and the majority of blacks I’ve talked to don’t understand whites," “Black and white fraternities are socially-oriented. Blacks like to Studies Programs presents the MSU Tai Kwon Do Club meets Handicappers need friends, Combs said. “The integration process is a very slow process." he Czech film "Carriage to Vienna" at party with blacks — that’s a known fact,” he said. Segregation in Explore U of M law school Tuesdays 6:30-7:30 p.m., Thurs­ Enrich your life and theirs V-, added. 7:30 tonight, 105 S. Kedzie Hall. Friday. Information and forms days 7-8 p.m. in the turf room teer with AID. Training andft Black Greeks at MSU are under the leadership of the National fraternities may occur because blacks and whites are uncom­ English subtitles. available in the Business Law arena and 10*11:30a.m. Saturdays portation available. Comeft Pan-Hellenic Council, a national black Greek organization. The fortable with each other, Rodgers said. office, second floor Eppley Center. in 16 Men's IM. Student Services Bldg. for council was recently granted major governing status, which gives "Peer pressure is great up here at MSU," he said, adding that he it authority to recognize campus organizations as fraternities or feels peer pressure may be a deciding factor in whether a person Christian Science Organization, east campus, welcomes students, Council for Exceptional Children sororities. In addition, the council now has comparable status to will join a fraternity or not. meeting at 7:30 tonight, 104 Specializing in faculty and alumni to its meeting the long established Interfraternity Council and the sorority Rodgers does not currently live in the Triangle fraternity house at 7 tonight on second floor Baker Bessey Hall. All are welcome. governing organization, Panhellenic Council. and does not intend to in the future. Members must attend. MEXICAN STYLE FOOD Hall. However, the black Greek organization does not yet have a "I'm an independent guy,” he said. featuring these specials MSU Retailing Club meeting Sat. A Sun. Come play GO! MSU GO Club tomorrow at 7 p.m. in the Union meets at 6:30 tonight. Call Ken or EVERY OTHER FULL MEAL AT % PRICE Trial for Esmail to be made public Gold Room. "Competitive Mar­ kets 4 Merchandising Trends." Mike at 332-6353 for information. Man. TACOS T o o*. TOST A DA S • M .H K M U IA S Ttiun. MMRfTOS M . C a m b . FLATS w tw iv ix o m n COUNTRY 4 . . T h u r ’ ' F” . A Original Okinawa Karate Club M IA L A T '/% PRICE f l ig h t s O t 9 :W (continued from page 1) rights defense committee hopes Basim attended a meeting him a consular official said the meets at 5:30 tonight in Gym 34, 5:30 p.m. Thursdays, 218 Wo­ News Wednesday that Langer told him Sami had been re­ to send Jabara to the trial. They are also requesting that with State Department officials in Washington Friday and he earlier State Department re­ ports denying torture were men's IM Bldg. and 8 p.m. State News complete menu available daily a lo n g with beer, w ine 8 your favorite cocktails Wednesdays in 16 Men’s IM Bldg. turned to solitary confinement Carr be allowed to attend. Additionally, members of said two important points were substantiated. mistaken. Masterson said Jabara also Newsline FREN CH IE’S BAR and the authorities were trying Discover check with the MSU to get him to sign statements in MSU's Department of Electri­ cal Engineering and Systems The State Department did said the letters from Basim and Langer never arrived at the Chess Club at 7 tonight, 205 353-3382 400 B o k .r S t / M l, la m . wmt of South Codar St. S u n 1pm tp" English. Horticulture Bldg. Please bring o n . block 4 1 2 -0 7 3 3 Science have expressed a de­ not receive the letters from Another sobering portion of State Department. your own set and board. sire to attend. Basim and Langer, and Sami’s Carr’s letter concerned infor­ mistreatment during the soli­ ■CUP AND S A V E 1 mation about Sami Esmail's "We feel we can speak to the tary confinement was con­ movements in August 1976. question that Sami's charactier firmed, he said. Have vour auto Carr's office, as well as Basim, is not similar to a terrorist in John Masterson, coordinator have knowledge of statements by friends of Esmail’s in Colum­ any way,” Robert Barr, associ­ ate professor said. of the committee, said Jabara, insurance rates who attended the meeting, told bus, Ohio, that he was in that city during the time Israeli increased? authorities claim he was in Libya. Sentry has held the line I However, those friends are of CALL Palestinian ancestry and some have families residing in Israel. Fearing reprisals, they may not J E F F W ILLIAM S wish to sign a statement con­ firming Esmail was in Colum­ bus, the letter said. Furthermore, Carr’s letter indicated such confirmation 332-1838 i may not be enough to clear Esmail, since the evidence is 401 W. Grand River I given by pro-Palestinians. “But I can assure you I’ll do East Lansing j everything in my power to shed I light on the facts and ensure his (Esmail’s) human rights,” Carr -SENTRY I wrote. Esmail's trial will be held in INSURANCE about four weeks. 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Dayton Hudson must receive a national pollution discharge of Grand River Avenue, Saginaw Street and US-127 should be present runoff rate from the property. •| hot irons which elimination system permit from the state Department of Natural reviewed. To m eet this requirem ent, Dayton Hudson plans to construct letters or nymb Resources before construction may begin. According to state guidelines, a full environmental impact 10% OFF two storm w ater retention ponds on th e property. S torm w ater >Wbat they do js v Dennis Tierney, DNR environmental specialist, said the planned statement shall be prepared for construction which required a from the large parking areas will be directed to th e sm aller of th e Krttive about It.” skimming device will sufficiently handle grease and oil problems. state license and may result in significant degradation of two ponds. The w ater will then flow under a skim m er and through HeI F C follows the' Suspended solids will settle to the bottom of the detention ponds, he environmental quality. DNR Director Howard D. Tanner is soon a channel to the larger pond. From there th e w ater will flow through another channel to the Sanderson Drain. This channel will contain tw o dam-like stru ctu res which will Tierney said chemical treatment of the stormwater for dissolved expected to rule that a full environmental impact statement will not be required for the proposed mall development PHOTO FINISHING 'efinition of hazing; “T !ten or situation a Tierney said the mall development will not result in significant raternity premise,, t control the runoff ra te into Sanderson Drain. pollutants will probably not be required by the state. The effect of environmental degradation. ubirrassment, harass They have exceeded county requirements two-fold, said Ingham water runoff from future commercial developments will not be ‘It's changing now,” S T A T E O ISC O U M T smt i oist0u>. hapter of the National KODAK lick fraternities-and s ■Therewas, in the pa: 1-STOP SHOPPING SAVES MONEY, TIME, ENERGY COLOR CONTAC imeacertain fraternity FILM C O LD CAPSun 10 » 7 1 .3 3 V ALUt I IM I T 1 ( X PID ( S 1 l m G IJE R j S T A T E D IS C O U N T s t a t e coupon M A G IC U B E S BAYER thrifty acre 1.59 A S P IR IN LIM IT fflipflash T 1.49 EX PIR ES 1 29 78 I LIM IT ! 39 I 14 » 63 VALUE EXPIRES ItaU SEAT D IS C O U N T By ANNE 8. State N e w s! Bov, William G. Mil k W tbit the Legia BAM D-AIDS iMSU'inewcommui J improvements 0 1.22 49 MngUm1178-79 fisc h i total state bu IN billion. [bough Milliken's I 3 0 $ 1 .6 5 V A L U E V included an i lease over fiscal 1 LIM IT T EX PIR ES T 29 78 I l,M ,T 1 EXPIRES' le 192 million lei dill hadrequested W ood groirt p o tte rn . 2 5 ' j " x 19" x [hegovernor'splann S T A T E D ISC O U N T 14 ' i". Easy to assem ble. iport for the Agrii SW EATSHIRTS lion and Coopera' lever*only about 2f REG. SB.97 SW EAT PANTS lount MSU had requ ■Bken's capital out lion to begin const: Heustwsrti Dept. Mingand $2.2 millii 4 * 7 9 e ach [housefilters at the 6 . 0 0 V A I UE ■citedfor excessive MEUER FINEST IB M CHOKE ntylvw teandfederal air p< S T A T E D ISC O U N T ha lower figures Iter than disappoit REGULAR OR SPO RT-CASUAL ROUND STEAK *W iott G. Ballard, ass THIN CABLE & FASHIO) it, because MSU ha •stantial” increase ir KNEE SOCKS Mng President Ed SLICED M A C •day night he ci possibly on the gov H be reviewed it, 1 .5 0 1 A L U E PERFECT TO WAKE UP EARLY MORNING APPETITES •sure that the c PINK OR WHITE FRESN GRAPEFRUIT 5 |k 78 * ST A T I D IS C O U N T MINI S T A T E O I S C 0 VN' KIRI ax c i I HAIR BRUSH LOTION 494 WELCH FROZEN APPIE-RASP 8ERRY, „ 79 CHOCOLATE, G R A P EJE U Y , O R GLAZED DONUTS V 9" J SAVE 30 -J 7 5 VALUE LIM IT 4 22 1.91 EX PIR ES ‘ 1 29 78 65 0 1 . LIM IT i 3.00 VALIN IXPIR** KMFT MACARONI I CHEESE DINNER 7-1/4oz. « i. bo« 24 * B IC P E N PR O P A P 5 PACK VAN CAMP 16 tz. Ml. can PORK & BEANS 25 * 7 7 1.25 V A L U E -------------------------------------- LIM IT T EX P IR ES I 29 7 8 I L II M I T I ** S T A T E D IS C O U N T S T A Y FREE FRESH ROLLON M A XI PADS 1.66 69 30 « 2 . 8 5 V A L U E to., 100 VMUl t % L IM IT T EX PIR ES I 2 ' 78 I L IM IT I 11 S T A T E D ISCO U N T G Y M SHORT* 5125 W. SAGINAW - 2055 W. GRAND RIVER - 6200 S. PENNSYLVANIA HOLIDAY HOVMII 4 .5 0 V A L U E 2.67