to N o w s VOLUME 72 NUMBER 28 MONDAY. FEBRUARY 13, 1978 MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY EAST LANSING, MICHIGAN 48824 Nonnamaker tells RHA to resolve tax procedure By K Y O W EN The Judiciary w ill decide next Tuesday doesn’t make sense to admit guilt by If the questions surrounding the Resi­ when they hear the case, Assistant Director amending the constitution." dence Halls Association tax procedures are of Judicial Programs Jo y Tubaugh said. not resolved by Feb. 22, the University will Vatter has said he does not believe the Tubaugh said Friday a hearing date had RHA constitution violates University tax not collect the RHA tax, Vice President for not yet been confirmed. collection guidelines. Student Affairs Eldon Nonnamaker said The RHA Constitutional Amendment Friday. RHA charges all dormitory residents Committe had been working to amend the $1.75 refundable tax which the University RH A must either amend its constitution constitution so it would specifically state collects at registration each term. Also, to meet University tax collection criteria or how a tax could be changed or removed. beginning spring term RH A will charge an win approval from the Student-Faculty But Vatter stated last week the RHA additional $3 movie tax, which will be Judiciary to operate under its current board would appeal the A U S J ruling rather guidelines. collected by the University if the constitu­ than accept the amendment because, “ it tion question is resolved. Nonnamaker, who has final appellate authority, said Sunday as far as he is concerned the Student-Faculty Judiciary determination will be final and he will act pRGIM m embers scu lpt ■ nuclear pow er plant Slot# News/Pete Obee plants and th e possibility of accidents resu ltin g in according to the decision. " I have told Bob Vatter (RH A president) the thing has to be resolved by Feb. 22. If not, the tax won’t be collected," Nonnamak­ Russian flu bug •del in snow piled near th e N atural S cience er said. The business office must know by m eltd ow ns. T he project took four hours to com- reported at 'U' |rilding Saturday in an a ttem p t to d irect public that date what taxes are to be collected at p le te bu t w a s found com p letely d estroyed e tr ly tendon to alleged dan gers o i nuclear pow er Sunday m orning. spring term registration, Nonnamaker added. Nonnamaker is responsible for notifying the M SU Business Office to collect a major student governing group’s tax monies each term. IMW contract rejected By DEBORAH HEYWOOD for the Michigan Department of Public RHA president Bob Vatter said he State New, Staff Writer Health, said the A/Texas and A/Victoria believes the S F J hearing w ill be Feb. 21. If Michigan earned a somewhat dubious strains are "winding down" and shouldn't RHA loses, "W e’ll have a day to amend our distinction last week when it became the affect many more people this winter. constituion,” he said. first state east of the Rockies to report cases Adults over 25 years old have no cause for "Bu t," he added, "we’re confident that of the Russian flu. I By W. D A LE N ELSO N alarm about the Russian flu, especially those conceal his feelings about the latest table, we'll win." The influenza strain, diagnosed in a KINGTON (A P) — The bargaining development. vaccinated against the swine flu last fall. UM W Vice President Sam Church said Vatter said last Wednesday the group 19-year-old M SU student and a 20-year-old |f the United Mine Workers union The so-called Russian flu, which ori­ " I did not enumerate it," he said, when wage provisions of the proposed contract w ill not amend its constitution to fit a Jan. Lenawee County man, take its place Iningly rejected a proposed fettle- ginated in northern China and was first asked to give the vote by which the council appeared to be "generally acceptable” to 31 All-University Student Judiciary deci­ alongside the two other flu strains prevalent fthe nationwide coal strike Sunday, reported by Russian officials, last appeared rejected the pact. " It doesn't mean anything the miners but they objected to provisions sion which said the RH A constitution tax in the state. Public health officials believe I President Arnold M iller to com- anyway." in the United States between 1947 and 1967. dealing with disciplinary procedures and procedures do not meet the University Tax this to be the first time in Michigan's history I r negotiations with the soft coal Those older than 20 or 26 years should On Saturday, M iller had told The the health and retirement funds. Collection Criteria. three strains of influenza were present in the already have developed protective anti* Associated Press in a telephone interview A U S J ruled in favor of a challenge filed state. |tion came in the 69th day of the "The concept of the rejection was this: bodies from prior exposure, Hayner said. that he fears for his life. “I'm not going to by Beal Living Co-op which claimed the With outbreaks of A/Texas and A/Vic­ Vday after the Carter administra­ that we start over," Church said. "This was A national advisory panel on immuniza­ present this contract to the council under RH A constitution does not have specific toria flu in addition to the Russian strain, ted that plans be drawn up for a package deal.” tion recommended vaccination for millions of conditions of mob rule," he said at the time. provisions for change or removal of a tax. Michigan residents may feel they are under movement of coal to areas Americans, but noted an effective vaccine is Harrison Combs, general counsel of the He defended the position of the UM W RH A appealed the A U S J decision to the attack from all sides of the viral spectrum. ■critically short of fuel needed to not expected to be available for several UM W , said the contract was rejected by a negotiators, saying they "recommended the Student-r acuiiy Judiciary on the grounds It's not quite as bad as it sounds, though, plectric power. months. 1 1-6 vote with three members of the pact to the council on the basis that it was that A U S J did not interpret the Tax according to public health officials. m, Sunday’s action was only a The panel did not recommend what role, if 39-member council absent. the best they could get at this time." Collection Criteria properly. Dr. Norman Hayner, chief epidemiologist fttion of the council's initial, unoffi- any, the federal government should play in a M iller said after the vote that he notified vaccination program. During the ill-fated Jtion of the three-year pact last Joseph Brennan, president of the BCOA, 1976 swine flu vaccination program, the It the time the council conducted a and that he would ask for a resumption of federal government purchased vaccine from teinwhich 33 of 36 members voted the negotiations. Jhe contract. Because M iller was Brennan criticized the council's action on CURRENTLY EMU PRESIDENT the manufacturers and distributed it to the states. When the projected epidemic never Int for the session, the vote had to the pact, which had been described as fair occurcd and several hundred persons who Brickley joins M illik e n ticket Hized. by Labor Secretary L . Ray Marshall. had been innoculated fell victim to the potracted coal strike by some "W e are appalled at the action of the paralysis-causing Gullain-Barre Syn­ liners - the longest in the nation’s bargaining council in rejecting this agree­ drome, the program was halted. r threatening some Midwestern ment, which w ill make coal miners the By A N N E S. C RO W LEY lalachian states with critical fuel Dr. William Foege, director of the Center lit toobad," said a dejected Miller, lefused to attend Friday’s session highest paid industrial workers, guarantee their health and retirement benefits, begin the process of restoring labor stability to the coalfields, and return productivity State News Staff W riter It’s been pretty cold in Michigan the past few weeks. I for Disease Control, said the risks of influenza are 1,000 times greater than the risks of vaccination and the chances of dying Maybe that explains Eastern Michi­ from the vaccines are one in two million, or pit over what he called pressure growth to the coal industry," the statement gan Universtiy President James Brick­ less than the chances of being killed by ■ miners who massed in the lobby said. ley's decision to run for a second term as lightning. lion s headquarters here, demand- Brennan said there would be no word lieutenant governor. Jtie pacf be voted down. Sunday on when negotiations would re- Parke-Davis, a Detroit-based pharmacu- In a surprise move, Gov. William G. 1 who had been pressing for tical firm expects to have a Russian flu Milliken announced Friday that Brick­ I of the contract offered by the Following th e vote, Miller said, “ I told vaccine ready for commercial use in about ley, his lieutenant governor from 1970 f sCoal Operators Association and them (the bargaining council! I w anted three months. The National Institute of to 1974, would be his running mate for Pt Monday, made little effort to some item s to ta k e back to the bargaining Allergy and Infectious Diseases warned the re-election again later this year. company that their vaccine might cause the When Brickley decided to leave same neurological complications that led to public office in 1974, he said it would be the Gullain-Barre Syndrome that caused the “ a cold day before I run for lieutenant death of about 30 swine flu shot recipients in governor again,” the former F B I agent late 1976. i/liken to protect coal and U.S. attorney recalled Friday. "But I really feel it's the thing to do," he added, saying he could not refuse No decision has yet been made on a mass vaccination program although the federal pING UPI — Gov. William G. Milliken, eyeing reports of imminent power when Milliken turned to him with the advisory panel recommends the chronically same arguments he had used to con­ ill and elderly be innoculated first. Children ■7 ,n s^te, says he won’t allow a transfer of Michigan coal to any fuel-starved with a medical disability or chronic illness If 't is needed to preserve lives and public safety. vince the governor to run for a third full term. should have first priority, the panel | en, echoing his stand taken last year during Ohio's natural gas shortage, said recommended. ■y hewould cooperate with federal authorities seeking help for coal-hungry states, Milliken’s announcement ended ■ toa point. months of speculation and uncertainty Although the flu is expected to hit the Plainly will do whatever is needed to preserve the health and safety of citizens about his — and the party’s — future under-25 age group hardest, Hayner said ■states,” Milliken said. plans. AP Wirephoto these individuals are stronger. I ffe w° u^ object very strenously to any actions which serve to close down Ju st two hours later, Oakland County M ichigan G ov. W illiam G. M illiken (right) announces Friday at the “Children and young adults usually don’t f esand lay off workers in Michigan so that businesses in other states could stay Prosecutor L . Brooks Patterson told C apitol th a t he w ill seek a third term in N ovem ber w ith former have as much trouble with the flu as older reporters at his Pontiac office that he L t. G ov. J a m e s B rickley (left) as h is running m ate. people do," he said," so we don't expect to f a resu*t w°uld serve to discourage the foresighted planning and the sacrifices w ill run for the U.S. Senate seat being see serious complications because of the age P citizensare making which have produced the coal supply we have.” left open by retiring Republican Robert known and accepted among state resi­ become former President Richard Nix­ group in which it occurs." F ervice Commission Chairperson Daniel Demlow was told to survey the state’s Griffin. dents. on’s secretary of Housing and Urban p y now estimated at 60 days and to recommend ways to further conserve the Milliken said he met with Griffin Brickley conceded it was a "good Development. Hayner said the flu should become more fwckpiles. earlier last week, but would not say if evident this month and last well into March, possibility” he would run for governor Often criticized for his handling of the F to °n at the same time warned that temporary shutoffs to industries and he had asked the senior senator to run in 1982. PB B poisoning on Michigan farms, affecting mostly schoolchildren. ■Pa ential blackouts in the near future if the national coal strike lasts another again. Both said the EM U president would Milliken conceded it would be a cam­ | nsumers Power Co. has issued similar warnings. Several party members have asked not do any active campaigning until the paign issue. Griffin to rejoin the GOP ticket. Republican convention formally ap­ "There ought to be a wide public Milliken would become the state's longest serving governor — 14 years — proves him in August. Milliken said he expected delegates to do so "with discussion of it, and I am prepared to Deadline set take part," he said. " I only hope it will if he served out another full term, incredible enthusiasm.” be a responsible one." surpassing G. Mennen Williams’ 12-year tenure. The party’s state chairperson, W il­ liam McLaughlin, said Friday he was He said his administration’s record and proposals would be the other for nominations The governor said he had seriously pleased with the governor's decision to campaign issues. inside weather considered leaving public office late last run again and with his choice of Other Republicans in the Senate race Wednesday is the deadline for faculty to year, about the time he announced he Brickley. are current Lt. Governor James Dam- submit nominations for the presidential was not interested in running for “ A Milliken-Brickley combination man and L. William Seidman of Grand search and selection committee, according I th, It w ill be another gray, ‘vanishing hitchhiker” Griffin's seat. brings strong leadership to the citizens Rapids, economic adviser to former to Milton Powell, chairperson of the J Bigfoot •re hntaeiea u mushy Monday morning, but at " I am proud of my record of of Michigan and a dynamic ticket for the President Gerald R . Ford. University Committee on Academic Gover­ least it won’t snow. y . e - »PPl« pie end accomplishment as governor of Michi Republican party,” McLaughlin said. nance. Today’s high: low teens. Democratic candidates include State *“■s« Page 16. gan," he said. “ W e have made enormous Four Democrats have already an The governance committee w ill then Tonight's low: low 30s. Sens. John Otterbacher of Grand Rap­ progress, thanks largely to a climate of nounced they w ill seek their party's present a slate of 14 candiates to the ids and Anthony Derezinski of Muske­ trust, respect and bipartisan coopera nomination to oppose the governor in Faculty Council to be voted on at a special gon, former Congressman Richard Van- tion. Together, we have achieved a November. They are State sens. Patrick meeting Feb. 28. derVeen of Grand Rapids and Suburban better Michigan. McCollough of Dearborn and William Last week the committee had not yet Detroit publisher Philip Power. "W e have the momentum to do even Fitzgerald of Detroit, former Public received enough nominations to compose a more — and I want to help maintain it." Service Commission member William Other Democratic candidates are slate, academic governance secretary The announcement also made it Ralls of Okemos and Zolton Ferency, an University of Toledo professor Warren Gordon Thomas said. apparent Brickley was his choice to East Lansing attorney and M SU profes­ Bracey of Ann Arbor; Dudley Buffa, Nominations should be submitted on the succeed him. sor. former aid to the late U.S. Sen. Philip forms included in information recently "H e stands for the things I stand for," Milliken Became governor in January Hart; and Birmingham attorney James mailed to faculty members. Additional the governor said, adding Brickley was 1969, when George Romney resigned to Elsman. copies may be obtained from the academic governance office, 10 Linton Hall. Israel accuses U.S. in talks JE R U S A L E M (A P ) - Israel called Sunday in a joint com­ The Israeli statement said government has said repeated­ declared Sunday that the munique with Romanian Presi­ the Jew ish state “ stands by its ly that the settlements are Wh,t Isr« ' * , I United States was “ taking dent Nicolae Ceausescu for view that the settlement pro­ illegal and an obstacle to peace. sides” in Mideaat peace negotia­ resumption of multilaterhl Mid­ gram is in full harmony with offering « | f . ^ > l tions when Secretary of State east talks to prepare for a international law and that it The cabinet statement also millio " P . l e » t i ^ J Cyrus R . Vance condemned reconvened Geneva peace con­ had always been legal, legiti­ implied the Carter administra­ Pied W..< n Israeli settlements in occupied ference. mate and essential." The U.S. tion had backed down from Arab lands. R-’ erandinthecJ^ The accusation, contained in Sadat nears end of international tour an Israeli cabinet resolution, WANTS COURT APPEARANCES EARNED was the sharpest one made so far gainst Washington by PARIS (AP) — Egyptian President Airport outside Paris and was to meet Prim e M inister Menachem Anwar Sadat arrived here Sunday from Romania, where he and president Nieo- lae Ceasescu called for resumption of with President Valery Giscard d'Estaing. The communique said new talks Begin’s eight-month-old conser­ vative government. The resolution, adopted Burger renew s attack on AB) Mideast negotiations involving all parties preparatory to a full-scale Geneva peace unanimously at the- regular weekly cabinet meeting, was N EW O R LEA N S (A P ) — Chief Justice W arren E . Burger, The resolution was sparked by testimony Bum, „ . to the conflict. conference should include "all sides read afterward by Begin to already under fire for questioning the competence of half the Royal Commission on Legal Services in tZ i *"'■ Sadat is nearing the end of an concerned" and would be "useful to reporters. nation's trial lawyers, escalated his attack Sunday by declaring estimated that one half of U.S. trial lawv,™ *' international tour to muster support for solving the Middle East problem on the that all lawyers should have to earn the right to appear in court. His government declared its represent their clients. ** ««W his positions in stalled peace talks with basis of well-known principles."Sadat “ regret and protest” over Calling trial lawyer incompetence “ one of the most serious WhUe the A B A ’s powerful board of governs i Israel. A joint Sadat-Ceausescu commu­ met for 90 minutes with Ceausescu, who Vance's remarks at a news problems facing or profession,” Burger told the American Bar position on the resolution from Illinois, n.t,v,nil ” 7 nique was made public five hours after heads the only Soviet-bloc government to conference Friday. Vance said Association convention: B. Spann of Atlanta called the chief justice's E S H Sadat left Romania.' maintain ties with both Israel and the Israeli settlements in occupied “ Until we establish special standards for the right to appear in disproportionate” and “exaggerated.” “ a '| The Egyptian leader landed at Orly Arab States. Arab territories “ should not the courts, independent of admissions to the bar generally, we will Spann said A BA studies point to a figure dn», exist" and he supported a not solve our problem. I am persuaded that one of the major Here for the A BA convention. Attorney Generil Palestinian homeland on land reasons for congestion and delay in the courts. . . is the inadequate drawn into the fracas when asked on a nation*,¥ Trudeau may call summer election now controlled by Israel. performance of may lawyers who come into the ocurts." Burger, the nation's highest-ranking judge, dedicated the major interview program whether he agreed with Burge™ g Vance's comments came less than a week after Egyptian portion of his annual State of the Judicairy speech to the OTTAWA (AP) — Prime Minister Pierre election. President Anwar Sadat held controversial issue of trial law yer competence. Elliot Trudeau, his popularity waning because of Canada's economic and political woes, may call an election by Inflation and unemployment, the ques­ tion of separatism posed by the Parti Quebecois in Quebec and a recent wave talks at Camp David, M d„ with President Carter to request increased American pressure Nearly 230,000 of the nation's 400,000 lawyers are members of teh A BA , an influential trade group. Burger several times compared the legal and medical ERA supporter, summer before his government loses of embarrassing revelations are domi­ on Israel for flexibility on the prefessions, once stating, “ The needs of a modern courtroom can more popular support. Trudeau's Liberal Party government is in trouble. According to Gallup polls for nating the Canadian political scene in 1978. settlements and Palestinian questions. Egyptian-Israeli bilateral be analogicial roughly to the needs of the modern operating room of the surgeon. In each situation special training and skills are not simply desirable, they are imperative in the public interest." n e e d morale talks appear stalemated over The A BA ’s governing body w ill consider a resolution this week 1977, public backing of the Liberals The prime minister's hand was W ASH IN G TO N (A P )- S u p ­ who voted against ti,J those issues. Sadat, continuing from the Illinois Bar Association demanding that Burger either crested at 51 percent in June but dropped strengthened last week by his govern­ porters of the Equal Right The yesrs-long | J his international tour seeking "publicly repudiate" comments he made last Ju ly about trial to 42 percent in December, when the last ment's disclosure of an alleged Soviet spy Amendment are looking for a volves a simply wordei| support for Egypt's positions, lawyer incompetence or provide proof of their accuracy. sampling was taken. ring and the expulsion of 13 Russian psychological lift following set­ sal which reads "fo By law, Trudeau need not call an backs in South Carolina and rights underthelawah diplomats. The action was greeted with Virginia, while opponents are denied or abridged 1 election for the 282-seat House of cheers by the public and press and even Commons until 1979. But Liberal leaders believe their fortunes could grow worse Joe Clark, leader of the opposition Conservative Party, praised "a job well Pacific Western jet disaster hoping they can stall the ratifi­ cation process for another year. Six years after Congress United States or byii on account of sea." with time and say they expect a June done." approved the ER A , the amend­ Referendum disrupting home rule legislation caused by plow on runway? ment is still three states short of the 38 needed for ratification. And with the March 22, 1979 Two ki CRANBRO O K, British Columbia (A P) - The landing to avoid that vehicle,” Fransbergen said. expiration date little more than a year away, the opponents in explosl pilot of a jetliner that crashed in flames while Six passengers and a flight attendant, seated believe time is on their side. LONDON (AP) — The 20,000 people of It has also alarmed Prime Minister trying to land in a snowstorm probably was in the plane's tail section, survived and were Thirty-five states have ap­ SYDNEY, AustraliaJ the remote Shetland Islands, thrust from James Callaghan. He is expected to visit trying to avoid hitting a snowplow on the taken to Cranbrook D istrict Hospital. proved the amendment since Two Sydney sanitiba economic obscurity by the North Sea oil the tiny, windswept archipelago soon to runway. Pacific Western Airlines officials said Investigators from A ir Transport Canada 1972, when it cleared Congress. were tilled - one d bonanza, are to decide in a unique warn islanders of the dangers of going it Sunday. Forty-one persons died in the crash. swarmed over the wreckage Sunday, and Alan Idaho, Tennessee and Nebraska “blown to bits” - wheal referendum whether to remain part of alone. Many Shetlanders fear a semi­ The twin-engine Pacific Western Boeing 737 Ja y , public affairs officer, said investigators were have sought to rescind their exploded outside a hotaf Scotland when the British northern independent Scotland will grab their overshot the runway, slammed into a snowbank studying tapes from Boeing 737's voice recorder ratification votes, but the Ju s­ 12 Asian and Pacific j region gets limited home rule. newly developed oil wealth. and broke apart Saturday. Seven aboard and the local air radio operator's office. tice Department has said that ment chiefs weregather The referendum, scheduled to start by The local authority for the Shetlands, survived. One of the dead was an infant who was He said small Canadian airports do not have air recissions are not binding. regional Commomnii postal ballot Feb. 21, is disrupting 100 miles off the Scottish coast and the not known to be aboard until the body was found traffic control towers, so each incoming pilot Supporters of the E R A are ference, witnesses sail| progress of Scottish home rule legisla­ Sunday. must receive clearance to land from a M inistry of conceding they have been dis­ Police reported 1 northernmost part of Britain, says refer­ K eel Fransbergen, the airline's assistant vice Transport air radio controller. heartened by the developments persons injured in I tion, Britain's most fundamental constitu­ endum results will be announced March president for flight operations, said investigators Brian Johnson, public information director for in South Carolina and Virginia heard four miles I tional change in five centuries, which is 16 in Lerwick, the islands' picturesque didn't know how or why the snowplow got on the the airline, said he was not sure whether the last week. But they are re­ luxury hotel. A polk1 expected to become law by the fall. capital. runway in the path of the incoming jetliner. son said none of the0 radio controller at Cranbrook had an unobstruct­ grouping and vowing to work “ The indications are that pilot did abort the ed view of the entire runway. for the defeat of elected officials delegates was injured I fh« Siofq N *w t it published by the itudenti ol Michigan Slote Unive iiy every clots day d u '"tg Foil Winter and Spring school terms M onday Wednetooy and Fridays during Summer term and 0 tpeool Welcome Week edition is published m September Subscription rate is $20 per year Second class pottage paid at East Lansing Mich Editorial and business olhces at 345 Student Services Bldg Michigan State University East Lansing Mich 40624 Post Ofhce publication number it 520260 Postmotter Please tend lorm 35 9 to Stote New t 345 Student Services Building m core ol MSU Messenger Service East Lansing Mich 46023 GERALD H. COY, GENERAL M A NA G ER ROBERT L. BULLARD, SALES M A NA G ER PHONES New t/Editorial...... 355 1252 Classified A d s ....... 355-1255 Display Advertising . 353-6400 Business O ff ic e ...... 355-3447 Southern Bell faces fraud charges Photographic ....... 3SS-B 3I I CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — For nearly The utility was indicted by a grand jury three years they've been slugging it out last August on charges that some officials — legal fists flying, and occasionally agreed to "embezzle, abstract and E ric S. B erkley landing a solid wallop. misapply moneys" by channeling funds, Although they've met before, the A ttorney & Counselor through folsified expense vouchers, into combatants — the state of North Carolina political contributions and personal use. Initial Consultation by and Southern Bell Telephone Co. — Mecklenburg County District Attorney Appointment: Minimal Fee square off today in a trial courtroom. Peter Gilchrist III, a member of the Southern Bell, which operates tele­ prosecuting team, and John G. Walker of 2b Hour A vailability phone systems in Georgia, Florida and Charlotte, one of Southern Bell's attor­ North and South Carolina, faces 25 counts neys, have been reluctant to say much of conspiracy and fraud. about the case before trial. 349-5652 House to debate environmental measure WASHINGTON (AP) - The House has scheduled three days of work on environmental legislation this week while the Senate takes a break from its Opponents criticize the cost and say the stote of Georgia is better able financially to undertake development of the park. 1A Panama Conal debate. On Tuesday the House will debate a Legislation revamping the system of In accordance w ith the Procedures fo r measure to create a federal park on the a payments to coal miners who contract Chattahoochee River in Georgia. The bill black lung disease comes before the Selecting the President of the Univer­ would authorize S73 million to buy 5,300 acres upstream from Peach Tree Creek House two doys later for what sponsors hope will be final congressional action on sity, approved by the Academic Coun- cil on January 10, 1978, and approved IML€HTIH€ v/ GIFTFrom near Atlanta. A series of enclaves would a compromise. The Senate already has be developed as recreational areas. approved the measure. by the Board of Trustees on February 3, 1978, the Council o f G raduate Stu­ Higher jail standards recommended dents is now accepting letters of application for the graduate student CIOCKEY position on The Search and Selection INTERNATIONAL! WASHINGTON (AP) - The nation's estimated 4,(XX) local jails and lockups in Committee Advisory to the Board of Tapered Boxers jails should provide each inmate with at the country. Trustees on the A ppointm ent of a Tapered construction with abbreviated legs. least 60 square feet of cell space and Commission spokesperson Sharon Packaged in a Clever Beating Heart "TO should house juveniles and adults in Winkler estimated that "not more than 5 President. Letters or application w ith MY KING OF HEARTS" gift giving box. quarters "separated by sight and sound," percent could comply fully now." Facili­ curriculum vita are requested by 5 PM Sizes: 28-40........................................... 5.5Q a professional accreditation commission ties which comply with the standards may on Monday, February 20, 1978, at the Also: said Sunday. seek commission accreditation,a process Brief................................................. 4.50 "The standards are high. Attaining that requires an investigation of up to COGS office, 316 Student Services them will not be an easy task," said the Bath Kilt............................................7,00 two years. Building. report from the Commission on Accredi- tation for Corrections. The commission, a private group The standards and the possibility of Any MSU graduate student - H0IDEN-REID winning accreditation may help, jail representing the nation's state and local prison administrators, published 382 standards for minimum conditions in the administrators and private reform groups persuade local legislatures to spend more money on jail improvements. (class level 6,7,8, and 9) is eligible. T H E A T T IC Contemporary Men's and Boy's Clothes For more informatim pbow 353-9189 P R A N D O R - L A N S IN O M A L L INGHAM COMMISSIONER BUSY rebner wotches profs, county B y DONNA BAKUN He credits political pressure to the Liberal inroads are being made as a Following that, he concentrated on the I sute News SUH Writer commission's unanimous resolution in Sep­ L 'S NOTE: Thh i« the fourth in e result of the 18-year-old vote, he continued. Morris Udali campaign and finally his own. tember to remove the county's funding of U series on MSU students, faculty Until the 18-year-old vote, this area was A self-proclaimed political "hack," Greb­ the squad if a county commissioner was not the Republican heartland," he said. ner keeps political company with the likes i n v o lv e d in local government. seated on its advisory board by Jan. 1. |k Grebner is a 25-year-old institution Now we have five non-partisan Demo­ of Jess Sobel, Larry Kestenbaum and Alan When that isn’t keeping him busy, crats on the City Council — a Democratic Fox. T,asl he feels like one. Grebner performs numerous constituent congressman, senator and a 17-4 balance of A few of the members even have T-shirts, Kflhyear senior and eighth-year services that include helping people obtain Democrats on the county commission." wjth “Hack" emblazoned on them. h a t MSU, Grebner will still publish food stamps and referring animal com­ j the Profs” and know he doesn't The city has been ambivalent toward He will publish his brainchild “ Grading plaints to the Animal Control Commission. students, but they (the students) are ho set up housekeeping in the Oval the Profs again in the future, based on "The county arrests two times as many protected by the vote," he added. student surveys from winter term. dogs as it does people," he said. Lldn'l he able to sleep 'til noon," he The road to the commissioner's post Grebner said he w ill continue the project Currently he is a consultant to two began in 1972 when Grebner worked on because “ no one else is capable." Detroit-area campaigns, offering advice for Rep. H. Lynn Jondahi's campaign. Many people say they want to take over, Jiner actually has little time to sleep a price — $10 hourly — on canvassing, voter ^ From there it was two less-than-resound- he explained, but so far, no one has done K is election to the Ingham County registration and data processing. mg successes. anything. 1 0/ Commissioners in 1976. Despite his political background, Grebner ■is also chairperson of the finance feels he is a political skeptic. Grebner still maintains his roots at MSU, Grebner managed the 1973 Margaret frequenting the Case Hall grill and chatting llee, the most powerful on the board. “ I’ve learned that almost no social McNeil-Nelson Brown bid for the East with a few residents. intervention programs work,” he said, L dull. dull, dull,” he said, “ like being LansingCity Council and the two candidates “ which is frustrating for a liberal." When asked if student radicalism was ■a high post in hell." were solidly defeated. singing a swan song in the 70s, Grebner [s responsible for computing data and And Grebner views East Lansing, parti­ replied: tation statistics for the county. Then in 1974, a mere 18 votes separated cularly M SU, as a tough political proving urebner from Democrat Jam es Heyser in “I predict that students from Brody will I Tri County Metro Narcotics Squad, ground. the race for county commissioner. march down Grand River Avenue to protest Lrioritv on Grebner's political list, “ is “ M SU really affects city politics," he said. Proposal C." |a vear off.” he said in reference to a Undaunted, Grebner coordinated the “There are higher educational qualities and .'in East Lansing marijuana ar- 1975 Larry Owen-George Griffiths cam­ What is Proposal C? higher standards of honesty because many paigns for E u t Lansing City Council and hit faculty members are influential in politics.” It would raise the drinking age to 21,” he pay dirt. said. - , _ State News/Ira Strickstein Ingham C ounty Com m issioner Mark Grebner. i tewide horse training clinic Black activities slated Black History Week celebrations will Friday: Little Brother-Little Sister Week­ Its admiration, standing ovation continue through Sunday with a variety of activities scheduled across campus. Pro­ grams slated for this week include a end begins. Activities for the weekend are ice skating, Demonstration Hall, 3:30-5 p.m. and 8:30-10 p.m. Abrams k, MICHELLE CHAMBERS Motown Review in the Brody Multi-Pur­ Planetarium show "The Last Question" The statewide horse training and riding Even when the concession stand ran out of ' sute New, Staff Writer pose rooms Thursday night and a Tuesday 8-9 p.m. and 10-11 p.m. Fam ily Swim, clinic began at 9 a.m. as mothers, fathers, soft drinks early in the afternoon, there was III (ell over the crowd of about 2,000 showing of the film "The Education of Men’s I.M . 6:30-9:50 a.m. children and students crowded into the barely a murmur of dissent. ■Meredith and her horse, Blue Ja y, Sonny Carson." Black Renaissance Ensemble presents M SU Livestock Pavilion. Multicolored flags strung above the arena lthe center of the ring. Beethoven's Black history week is a nationally-recog­ three one-act plays, Union Ballroom, 8 Sponsored by the Michigan 4-H Horse added to the carnival-like atmosphere as J-mphony crackled over the loud- nized week in February when historical p.m. Judges in cooperation with the MSU riders in the western pleasure class moved |and the finale of Saturday's horse achievements by blacks are highlighted. Party, Gilchrist Pub, 9-1 a.m. Animal Husbandry Extension Services, the their horses through the instructions given The following programs have been sched­ clinic was conducted by four professional by Ron Meredith, director of Meredith Saturday: Roller skating, Rollerworld, 10- ltd in a traditional English riding uled for this week: horse instructors from the Meredith Manor Manor, over the loudspeaker. 11:30 a.m. and 1-4 p.m. Meredith captivated the audience School of Horsemanship in W averly, West Monday: Soul Dinner, Holmes Hall, 5 p.m. The riders who participated in the clinic Bowling, Union Bowling Alley, 9-5 p.m. Itmingly impossible manuevers as Tuesday: "The Education of Sonny Carson” had been invited by John Neeper, a RH A movie, Akers Hall Auditorium, 1-3 I Blue Jay performed a "coup" (a C-106 Holmes Hall, 7:30 p.m. Spectators from all over Michigan member of the state 4-H Committee. Those p.m. liar event I — dressage style. Inter- “ W ith a Child’s Heart” buttons on sale watched the day-long demonstrations in the chosen were representative of each horse Ice skating, Demonstration Hall, 3:30-5 lonly by frequent exclamations of throughout campus. categories of western pleasure, western class, according to Richard Dunn, M SU p.m. and 8:30-10 p.m. on. the performance ended with a Wednesday: Lecture on "The Places W e’ve riding, dressage, hunters and reining with horse specialist. Abrams Planetarium, “The Last Ques­ Been," C-103, Holmes Hall, 7 p.m. an enthusiasm that couldn't be dampened. “ It takes a rider with a lot of guts to ride tion,” 8-9 p.m. and 10-11 p.m. Lecture on “ Black History; Lost, Stolen in front of an audience of this size when Party, Shaw Hall, 9-1 a.m. or Strayed," G -8 Holden Hall, 7 and 8:30 they don’t know what I ’m going to tell them p.m. Sunday: Roller skating, Rollerworld, 10- to do,” Meredith said to the audience. Thursday: Soul Dinner, Akers Cafe, 5 p.m. 11:30 a.m. Kay Meredith, the dressage expert of the D r essa g e e x p e r t K ay M eredith A rt Show, Shaw Lower Lounge, 6-9 p.m. Sneefler "Muppet" Show, 137 Akers family, conducted the English riding dem­ from M eredith M anor, W averly, “ Revelations," featuring Motown Re­ Auditorium, 1:30 p.m. onstrations. She explained the importance W .V a., in traditional E nglish view, Brody Multi-Purpose rooms, 7-9 Black Orpheus Gospel Choir, 5 p.m. of the exercises and rider movements as riding ou tfit. p.m. Erickson Kiva. Helen Schneider, an instructor at Meredith Manor, demonstrated first-level dressage riding. Schneider conducted the hunter classes and Ron Kohloff, instructor in charge of western riding at Meredith Manor, demon­ a seven day trip to strated western riding and reining. W IN : JAMAICA, The Merediths, who met through a 4-H program, started Meredith Manor because they felt a need for a qualified school in the United States for good horsepeople, Kay Meredith said. Meredith said the school was begun so that people would not have to go to Europe to learn how to ride. She described her 2 $500 SCHOLARSHIPS, husband and herself as “ native hillbillies" of W est Virginia. The school is designed to introduce the AND MUCH MORE challenge of horsemanship in a combination of Old World training with New World in innovation, according to the program catalogue. A prospective Olympic contender, Mere­ dith explained that she started out as Delta Tau Delta’s 5th Annual western rider because dressage was virtu­ ally unknown in this country. / * She is president of the United States Dressage Federation, a three-time winner MS "DANCE FOR STRENGTH" of the organization's Dressage Trainer of the Year award and a contributing editor for the national publication, Dressage & CT. Meredith said her day at Meredith Manor DANCE MARATHON begins at 6 a.m. and ends at 8 p.m. when she “collapses" after a day of riding, teaching, training and administrative work. Feb. 24, 25, 26 at Meridian Mall Other members of the school who participated in the behind-the-scenes action at the clinic were Ronnie Rozier, a Meredith Manor student, and Jeanne Dake, Kay Meredith’s only graduate student. The large number of spectators was . “ pleasant surprise," according to Dunn. “W e didn’t really expect this size of a In , State News photos/Kathy Kilbury crowd because it was the first time we had M eredith M“ ° r horse in preparation for a this program," he said. The $2 donation collected at the door will ^ h e V s U L iv t S ph.vm :o Hn 8POn8° red h° r8e tr" " i,,g “ d go to the Michigan 4-H Program. 'e injured in apartment blaze By MARK FABIAN building, then burst into flames. lernoo Sute News SUM Writer A ll flretrucks from the M SU fire station and East Lansing fire Id tinnn 'n a University apartment complex caused an station responded to the call,totaling six pieces of fire fighting paid ^ama8e Friday. Department of Public Safety apparatus. fcilv k°me lenants were evacuated from the building and Snow plows were called in to clear snow from around the fceliji,0 ,n f*>e Kellogg Center. buildings so fire equipment could get through, officials said. One I , J j a owe to the University. I ’m sure that the paid are the A SM SU board members. I feel full Nazi regalia with swastikas. It is group and they protect* P *r majority of them are not remiss in putting sorry for them. Perhaps they can now put a essential to understand that 40,000 of them to one group and this position on their resumes when job bill into effect giving them automatic pay Skokie's 70,000 residents are Jew s and that hunting. raises so that they won't have to answer to 7,000 of the Jew s are survivors of Hitler's In Nov. 1975, the United Ws^J I ’m sorry to see that they feel that they the people that elected them. I seem to concentration camps. The ACLU believes Assembly passed a re sure that all are free to speak, no matter Supreme Court established the principle are the only students who are not making recall another elected body doing the same that the constitutional guarantees of free­ Zionism with racism. The n» what their ideas. that speech may not be restrained unless it money in their positions. Perhaps now that thing. dom of speech and press would be Britain by radical campus The F irst Amendment protects even “is directed to inciting or producing they are paid they can help the other meaningless of the government could pick resolutions calling for the des those who urge the destruction of freedom imminent lawless action and is likely to SU te of Isra e l w ere passed '^ “repressed" students who volunteer their John Hayhoe and choose the persons to whom they apply. and extends to those who espouse violence. incite or produce such action." Before a time for free. Holt ties and Zionist speakers** The First Amendment was written to make In an A C LU case involving the K K K , the speaker can be suppressed there must be a campus platforms. Brita clear and present danger that the audience tion and does not have ^ w ill act illegally and do what the speaker the United States, ^ L etter policy doonesbury by Garry Trudeau urges — not just believe in what ia advocated. Speaking or marching before a Jane Fonda, and even hei W j , Chemical are .« p r o ^ hostile audience is not the same as inciting a Amendment when they The Opinion Page welcomes all letters and 1M ONMID-TERM OH..OH- sympathetic crowd to engage in illegal acts. viewpoints. Readers should follow a few rules ' KNOCK*. HEi, DIDN'T UNCLE. DUKE! ZONKER! BREAK, UNCLE RJ6HT! OF AUNT YEAH, SORRN campus. kNOCKi' youhear m e ? dontskoov. tts m /n m SANOfS It is a common practice for speakers and to insure that as many letters as possible DUKE! DONT YOU COURSE, I ABOUTALL THIS. appear in print GOAWAf, DAM- ME,ZONKER! HELL ARE REMEMBER* WU DID! COMB A m ,I MY PEACOCK'S demonstrators to carry their messages to The publicity Mn, OR I'L L YOVDOINO ASKEDMEOUT RIGHT ON SEE.. BEEN SICK. hostile audiences — to attract attention or totalitarians is not prod^ All letters and viewpoints should be typed on OPENFIRS! HERE? HERETO GO SK1- H BON! to test the potential for restraint or for free speech rights are defen" J $$-space lines and triple-spaced. Letters and /' /; ugliness in their adversaries. Speech is The attempted supr'-, , viewpoints must be signed and include local often intended as an act of provocation. press coverage Ithey . would address, student, faculty or staff standing—if Skokie hP That is one reason why the militant Jew ish receive. The march o n - - any—and phone number. No letter or view­ occurred, yet the a empw^ Defense League demonstrated in front of point without these items will be considered/or publication. the Soviet Embassy and why the opponents stop the march has g* of locating project Seafarer in Michigan publicity. , Letters should be S6 lines or less and may carried their views to a m ilitary base. . faithful ^ 1 be edited for State News style and concise­ In a society of laws, the principles We cannot remaJ"r,0.nurbacks*] ness to fit as many letters as possible op a established in dealing with racist views Amendment by turning (j, i puge. Viewpoints may be no longer than 75 necessarily apply to aU. The A C LU defend­ line#, and may also be edited. ed the right of a suspended Catholic priest to give a racist speech in Chicago and was Administration: MSU’s growth industry ‘LASH’ LAKROWE . l'WENS and MARY TOMKINS ■era of increased class sizes and ESSAY organization empowered by law with the authority to share responsibility for deci­ [ loads, declining faculty salaries ie ravages of inflation, and general ktrenchment there remains one strative staff per 100 faculty members has came up with 30 additional administrative, sion making within the University. Groups with unequal power cannot deliberate democratically on matters of fundamental L et’s not be l a . University which has shown grown from 33.0 (about one to three) in 1965 staff, and clerical appointments at an annual importance. Given the complex structure of fu n d sustained growth. W e refer, to 44.2 (almost one to two) in 1978. salary of $500,000." our University, unified faculty representa­ ■ to MSU's administrativestaff. K 96S the increase in administrative llS U has been at a rate of almost Exact data on the total M SU administra­ tive costs are impossible to obtain. Given the spectatular rise in administrative It is obvious regarding the above data, for instance, that much of the increase in clerical-technical personnel is directly re­ tion provides our best hope for effective faculty participation in the decision-making beastly to Israel process. It is not a mechanism to usher in I , half times that of the general salaries in recent years (see, for instance, lated to increases in the number of utopia, but it does guarantee that faculty I ’m over in the corner with these stonies, Palestinian refugee problem. They say he Ite of faculty, and at a rate of more the January, 1976, Newsletter on this administrators to the extent that in many members and administrators can sit down getting set to try out their brand-new went to Libya in August of 1976 for training I tni a half times that of the subject) and the large number of hidden departments on campus the amount of as equals and work out problems of mutual gatling bong, this earnest student butts in. in a P F L P terrorist school." Lte of clerical-technical personnel. administrative costs which are often secretarial services available to faculty has concern. "Can I speak to you for a minute, D r.?" he I administrative sU ff has almost charged off to the University’s instructional “What’s Esmail himself, say to that?” I actually declined during recent years. asks. asks. L number since 1965 - increasing program (e.g„ faculty members who are M SU Faculty Associates has worked Administration is, according to Freeman, "Can’t you see I ’m busy?" I snaps. I been “ He denies it,” he says. i to 1,334 persons - while the harder and longer than any other organiza­ I f MSU faculty members has only looking forward to seeing how the gadget “W ait a minute!" I says. "Didn’t I read tion on campus to bring the benefits of works, now this creep has to move in and lb y about one-third. Clerical-tech- somewhere he signed a confession, ad­ unified faculty representation to this Uni­ mess me up. Lnnel showed a growth rate of mitted those charges?" "I once did o conservative calculation of this metastasis for versity. As an affiliate of the Michigan “ I wouldn't bother you if it weren't “ W ell, yes," he admits. "But that was Lrcent during this 18 year period, Association for Higher Education and the ■uent years between 1966 and 1970 the appointment of some system officer through one reporting urgent,” he says. after they tortured it out of him in jail." national Society of Professors — and | growth years at M SU with an line on one campus alone, and came up with 30 additional through these organizations an affiliate of “ O K," I says, getting up off the floor. I "Hold it right there!” I barks. "That’s a figure I ’ll give him a quick brush-off, get mighty grave charge you’re making against j ,tudent enrollment of about administrative, staff, and clerical appointments at an annual the M EA and N EA — we are part of a total back to the stonies before all the s-t is gone. Lo ts and an almost 40 percent Israel. You sure you aren’t just anti-Zionist, salary of $500,000." professional educational association repre­ “ What’s so urgent you have to talk to me you’re using this Esmail case to make Begin £1 the number of faculty members, senting more than 90,000 teachers in iis period, however, there was a —Donald Freeman right this minute?" look bad. Michigan and almost two million teachers “ It’s about Sami Esm ail," he says. i rger increase in administrative nationwide. "Anyway, name like Esmail, I suppose ■bout 45 percent. But since 1970 "You’re always up front in the fight against he’s an Israeli citizen, right? You don’t Enrollments have leveled off (in- given released time to perform administra­ Both on the basis of our own experience injustice. Lash, but you haven’t said seriously expect me to stick my nose into the real "growth industry" within the I by only about seven percent tive tasks while being counted in depart­ and expertise and on the basis of this anything about him. The National Commit- the judicial processes of Israel just because University. L entire eight-year period), and mental budgets as instructors) these total organizational support we believe that L r of faculty members at MSU administrative expenses are surely rising at M SU FA can provide the faculty of this How did M SU get into this situation and ledined by about 3.4 percent. The almost a geometric rate. University with a pwerful voice in the 1 of the administrative bureau- There is also what Donald Freeman what can we do about it? One thing appears State Legislature and the Congress while at "Why do you accept the idea that Israel has any right to put certain. Reliance upon the present system him on trial at all?" I asks. "He's an American citizen, right, he _ continued unabated, however, (Chronicle of Higher Education, Jan. 9, the same time assuring that educational of advisory governance bolstered by the ■growth of administrators from 1978) has termed a "Malthusian Multiplier occasional moral pronouncements of the objectives on this campus are given priority hasn't committed any crime in Israel, and everything you tell Tore than 1,000 in 1970 to a total of Effect" involved here. Every high-level to administrative concerns for uniformity, A A U P is an ineffective and outdated way of me he's charged with is perfectly lawful under the First ■50staff members in 1978. Thus, In administrative appointment in the Univer­ efficiency, and empire building. E t eight year period the admlni- sity inevitably leads to multiple appoint­ coping with this precipitous spread of Amendment." administrative bureaucaracy. After all, it is Bill Evans is an associate professor of htsif of the University has grown ments all the way down the line. As these very institutions which have been sociology at M SU and president elect of Arming 26.1 percent. Stated Freeman observes: “ I once did a conserva­ responsible in large measure for getting us M S U Faculty Associates. M a ry Tomkins is tee for the defense of his human rights sent ^differently, in recent years while tive calculation of this metastasis for the some Israeli happens to be an M SU student. into this regrettable situation to begin with. an Am erican thought ond Language p ro ­ me over to find out why you haven’t been E y /stu d e n t ratios at M SU have appointment of one system officer through "That’s just it. Lash,” he says, "Sami’s a fessor and a former president of M SU Increased, the number of admini- one reporting line on one campus alone, and heard from." native-born American citizen, same as you What is needed is an effective faculty Faculty Associates “ I never speak up until I have all the and me. Bom in Brooklyn. He only went to facts, sonny," I says. "W hat’s the story on Israel during Christmas break because his this Sami Esmail of yours?" father had moved back there, he was sick ■column about hugging, and why have passed, but American men are still not "He’s the double-E grad student who was and Sami wanted to see him. ■or you. But first, a word about: RENALDO MIGALDI supposed to hug each other in public. This is arrested by the Israelis last December "O K," I says. "W hat's your committee nhhAtio n s . an obviously archaic taboo which should be when his plane landed at the airport at Tel want me to do?" t heck are we so hung up about done away with as soon as possible. A viv," he explains. “ He's been in jail over "W e're trying to put pressure on Israel to leach other, anyway? In some there ever since." hold an open hearing, make sure Sami gets \men hug men just like nothing nwalk arm in arm on the street. Inerica, if a man’s elbow should On hugging Of course, the biggest reason why many American men are afraid to touch each other is because someone might think “So what's the problem?" I asks. “ Israelis certainly wouldn’t throw him in the slammer like that, he didn't commit a a fair trial," he answers. "W hy do you accept the idea that Israel has any right to put him on trial at all?” I -brush against another man’s they're GAY. Women don’t seem to have serious crime. Israel isn't one of your asks. "He’s an American citizen, right, he usually say something like, this inhibition, however. Clearly, it is the backward Middle Eastern countries, they hasn’t committed any crime in Israel, and ^e," and lurch away. men who need to liberate themselves here. cut off your hand, you steal a loaf of bread, everything you tell me he’s charged with is i guilty of this as anyone, I Here’s how to do it, men: Start out by you know. Israel’s a democratic country, perfectly lawful under the First Amend­ I. Social conditioning. But a little hugging something comparatively safe, like respects human rights, same as we do." ment.” bear ago. I rediscovered the inadequacies of human language? You may Hugging is healthful. I’m convinced that your girlfriend or a large dog. Make it a " I’m not so sure of that, Lash," he says. "Gee, Lash," he beams, " I told ’em at the 1 world of hugging, with the help have finally said to yourself: “aw, the hell hugging helps keep blood pressure down, non-sexual hug; that is, enjoy it for itself, “They grabbed him soon as he got off the Committee you’d go right to the heart of the Inlightened free-thinking friends, with it," and left something unexpressed reduces nervous anxiety, and has an not for what it may lead to. After you’ve plane. He never had a chance to commit a problem, once you had the facts. (hat I found out: which might have made your friend’s whole invigorating effect not unlike that of a good enjoyed this for a while, you can ask female crime." " I know what to do now,” he goes on. warm. I mean, physically day. W ell, you could have said it all with a (legit) massage. A natural high. friends for hugs. This w ill help loosen you "W hat’ve they charged him with, then?" I "The Committee ought to call up President Kple's bodies are warm by nature; HUG. Yah! up for the supreme act of courage: asking a asks. Carter, demand that he stand up for the Hugging is inexpensive. You can be a male friend for a "bear" hug. (It may help to "They say he’s a member of a terrorist human rights of one of our own- lay they give off heat. A pleasant Hugging helps bring you closer to people. generous and giving person, make your show him this column first.) Once you get group called the P F L P ," he says. "W e should tell him to explain to the , especially during the winter It helps break down social barriers, even friends and yourself feel better — without used to it, you'll find there is such a thing as “What's their basis for that?" I asks. Israelis if they suspect Sami of being in the with friends you’ve known for years. spending a cent. No empties to return to the a "masculine” hug. It invokes a feeling of "They claim they have a report from here P F L P and they don’t want him running a form of communication, store, either. camraderie, of fellowship. in East Lansing that he was recruited into around loose in their country, OK. But they f ever wanted to express some- Hugs are reassuring. Try this: next time So what the heck, everybody — hug a the P F L P by another student on the don't put him in jail for that, they put him la friend — some sort of good you get high with some people and one of Hugging is rebellious! The Puritans friend today. Don’t be afraid. He/she won't campus. They say they have reports he on the next plane back to the USA , way we Jerhaps gratitude or appreciation your friends gets an attack of the PA R A — considered physical contact —sexual or bite you. went to meetings here at M SU, passed out do with aliens we don't want to let into our ■s. and found yourself face to face NOIDS, give him/her a hug. Maybe even otherwise— vile, because they considered M igaldi is State N e w s copy chief leaflets, criticized Israel's handling of the country!" 1 staggering inherent functional tell him/her you like him/her. IT W O RKS. the human body vile. Three hundred years Guns, butter , budgets , brickbats: a crumbling Great Society aide. “is acting like the kid who after opening 15 presents Christmas By DAVID MISIALOWSKI morning turns around and asks, "is that all?" State News Opinion Editor The president's budget contains no comprehensive urban [of 1964 Lyndon Baines Johnson, seven months into his strategy. Education — another vital element of Johnson’s Great By. stood before a class of graduating University of Society — is slighted as well. 1 seniors and delivered what many recall as the keynote “Our society," L B J said in his famous speech, “ w ill not be great Vthat decade. A photograph of the event tells the story. It until every young mind is set free to scan the farthest reaches of n day, a day of dazzling sunlight and cotton-candy clouds, thought and imagination . . . Most of our qualified teachers are Ison’s presidency was still fresh with the promise of early underpaid, and many of our paid teachers are unqualified . . . Poverty must not be a bar to learning, and learning must offer resident, his mortarboard tilted jauntily and his gown an escape from poverty." [majestically in the breeze like the robes of an emperor, Today our public schools are in a shambles. SAT scores are ping with confidence and vision that day. He wowed the plummeting and teachers are striking. Educational Institutions all pbed, short-haired, patriotic graduates as he blueprinted over the country are going bankrupt. In 1976, Chicago's schools «for the future. were forced to close 16 days early due to lack ol funds. Philadelphia ■yourtime," he hollered, his voice a thick stentorian drawl pink-slipped 3,000 teachers and nearly closed its schools. In Jthe tape), "we have the opportunity to move not only Detroit, voters finally gave approval (after a long string of f er> chsociety and the powerful society but upward to the rejections) to a miniscule millage increase that salvaged sports and liety. The Great Society rests on abundance and liberty for music programs. And on and on. piands an end to poverty and racial injustice, to which we Jimmy Carter's State of the Union message was a bland P committed in our tim e." reiteration of the platitudin ous mumbo-jumbo of years past. ‘T o P enumerated three places — the city, the countryside and those who say we cannot afford guns and butter," he said, " I say we ^oms — where he envisioned the Great Society taking cannot afford one without the other" - or some such thing. The | ere are*" he concluded, "those timid souls who say this exact words are not important. The response — “clap, clap, clap,” pot be won, that we are condemned to a souless wealth. I writes Meg Greenfield in Newsweek — was the thing. P * ' We have the power to shape the civilization that we There is something almost poignant about the death of the Great TJ we need your will, your labor, your hearts, if we are to Society. For many of us, the Nixon-Ford era was an historical F hind of society." aberration, spawned by the accidental conspiracy of Johnson’s •msset many times since that day. It has set on the urban dissembling personality and Vietnam's bloody divisiveness. Surely sof Watts and Newark and the jungle battlefields of Ke passions would cool and people would see through Nixon, we ( Hue. It has set on Columbia and Chicago, on Woodstock thought. Surely a good democrat, a George McGovern perhaps, otate. It has set on campaigning politicians eating would pick up the pieces and actualize the Great Society. It did not Ponat county fairs and on demonstrators hurling epithets happen. i nasseton the halls of Congress and the W hite House and Early this year Hubert Humphrey died. Humphrey was a Pure p rows of Arlington tombstones. Liberal, an old-style New Dealer, the one who hunkered down and r ° 8t surely, it has set on Lyndon Johnson’s Great Society. took the knocks and plugged relentlessly for the Great Society. Jim m y Carter, by contrast, is a Free Form Liberal: he spouts Huberterisms when it suits him, and japes against everything Humphrey stood for when it does not. COMMENTARY Prior to Humphrey's death, Humphrey and Carter had, by all accounts, cultivated a warm friendship. HHH had Jimmy s ear, at least for awhile. Now Humphrey is dead, and Carter s ear w ill be blown into by who — Tip O’Niell? Russell Long*? Ham Jordan? W alter Mondale? Robert Byrd? Who? luotlier Southerner ie president. He I, e slight men, hie F*"® , hi, word, more tentative. Hie vision ie diatinctly a snarling wolf, which represented the war. To sate the animal's 1977 hit a record high. Last fall Jimmy Carter toured the South Lyndon Johnson sought to build a city on a hill. Carter has a p-1o one would accuse him, as they did Johnson, oi being voracious budgetary appetite, L B J tossed it one of the babies he Bronx and arched his eyebrows at the rubble and desolation. But blueprint as well, but it is still on the drafting board. What he seeks dried FDR, He disdains ten*gaUon hats and offers no was holding. The baby was labeled “ W ar on Poverty." the concern he showed then is not reflected in his budget proposals ■ — the legacy he hopes to leave America when he leaves office in , f»r*War on Poverty. To his credit, he sees no merit in Today in our cities things are worse than ever before. The now. 1985 — is unclear. What is clear is that the long-range budget 4 w ile peasants, either. problem is largely a racial one. Since the end of World W ar I I whites Today we speak of the dangers of red tape, red ink and priorities he has developed will postpone social justice in this guns and butter. 3immy Carter wants to build more have steadily gained economic status to the point where they are government trying to do all things for all people. Carter has country for yet another decade. Balanced budgets, as congressman Li® mothballs, just in case we need them later. He wants able to move out of central cities and nestle comfortably in the submitted to Congress a budget thumping to the muted pulse beat John Conyers pointed out, do not add up to balanced lives. suburbs. Left behind are the poor, a sizeable number of whom are he hears when he puts his ear to the ground and listens to the f kntf t*le'r own *>rel<*' >n<* not e*Pect government to “ How do you fight creeping paradise?” a Republican Senator minorities. As the whites flee with their loot, the tax base shrinks: conservative rumblings of people Out There. Half a trillion dollars lamented when Johnson was riding high. Several presidents later 8 *ealth that Johnson feared is coming to pass. “ Our but it is those who are left behind who have the greatest need for ooze between the fingers of his tight fist. the question no longer seems relevant. The Great Society has been W er be great." he told the U-M grads, “ until our cities costly social services. The Pentagon w ill get more, though Carter ran for office put off, at least for a couple decades. Let the sun set some dozens of |,|. Mtalouged urban ills: not enough housing, a Between 1961 and 1969 the Income gap between races closed promising to give it less. Oceans of ink, courtesy of U.S. Printing years more, we are telling people, and maybe we’ll get back to your I t nI?^ortat'on’ vanishing open space, a fading sense of dramatically. Since that time it has opened almost as fast. The Office, details a welfare reform proposal that is faintly punitive and problems. Meantime the collective pulse beats slowly, and the ink I'- Urban renewal became a top priority, but lurking unemployment level among black teenagers sticks, like the hand a tax cut plan that obscenely benefits big business. Still, the leaders on J immy Carter's budget dries. Now Congress w ill consider it, and on the eleventh hour on a busted watch, at the 40 percent mark, w,s Vietnam- of corporate America are not satisfied. “Business," says one Carter they are an even more conservative bunch than he. I " “ block cartoon of the time depicted Johnson fleeing even as overall unemployment declines. Black unemployment in STEVE SZILAi jteNewsRavtei could anyone Braxton: very special evening Recognizing wome00l By JANET HALFMANN State New, Reviewer Jhapin? all, everything Building Auditorium Saturday talents which are merely extra­ until they scream); finally end­ hearsal time (less than two By REN ALD O M IG A LD I event. A rt by women has usually been exclude It is difficult to say all the night. ordinary. But genius is the only ing in the same unison tone the hours per piece). art because “ aesthetics" Has been u ~ - ‘ - fro® State News Reviewer things that beg to be said about Genius is a word which gets word that seems adequate to thing began with. First was an uptempo num­ perception, This is not so much a review n, said feminist painter Miriam S c h . . ^ what happened in the Music thrown around a lot to describe describe Anthony Braxton. He Brilliant. Stage three was a ber with a traditional structure The content of a concert as a chronicle of an radiates intense waves of crea­ revelation: Braxton on sopra­ reminiscent of Duke Ellington mode, so it is not considered essential"or univL?.“ ?M,» tive energy which inspire other nino sax (a tiny instrument) and (excepting the atonality), and predominantly female audience crowded 'N l musicians to do things they a very eager Newman on piano wonderful multilayered effects Center Gallery on Thursday. I never thought possible. He in a duet improvisation. Brax­ with the trumpet lines swing­ Mary Cassatt was one of the great artist ol the... generates sounds the like of ton had earlier said that he ing in angular counterpoint to wasn t recognized because the dominant theme ini, which have seldom been heard would not be playing Saturday, the trombones and reeds. The the relationship between a mother and a chad on this tiny planet. but apparently he had time to only trouble spot was in an Women in art programs have very few role - • Saturday evening's concert fill. A ll to the benefit of the 300 intricate 15-note vamp where said. climaxed Braxton's four days as or so people in the audience. the rhythm section got com­ “ No information has been handed down at*,,,, ,i . . artist-in-residence at M SU. It was a classic moment: the pletely lost. But as they went women's art,” she said. wtal^l Four days of constant hassles, dark piano mood slow, tender, all over the place, Mike Lutley Schapiro, who received her master of fine art, a I lectures canceled to make time searching. . . Braxton stooped got up and played an excellent the University of Iowa in 1949 and has a s u c c e u w l for emergency rehearsals, and over, grim acing. . . alternating alto sax solo anyway, and it New York, hasn’t always made art which sd d m jjj frustrated student jazz musi­ incredible flowing cascades came off very hip and avant- prim arily to women. cians struggling with difficult with the most heartbreaking garde. She said that inspiration came when she was wort' J atonal material. phrases. . . leaning IN TO those The second number was an feminist artist Judy Chicago in develop™ the tv .- 9 Yet the concert was a tri­ notes, dammit. . . and when the interesting thing with soloists Program at the California Institute of the Arts 1 umph. Braxton conducted three music reached what sounded improvising while Braxton con­ She collaborated with Chicago and 21 t . . Ttl l . student ensembles in perfor­ like a logical conclusion, New­ ducted the band through a program to transform an old abandoned mansion inta ll mances of his own breathtaking man didn't want it to end. He series of tone cluster attacks. into “ Womanhouse” with its lipstick bathroom, excesS compositions, and played his kept playing. But that was all closet and menstruation room. 1 soulful guts out in a brilliant right. W e got to hear more of He was fun to watch as he waved his arms and jumped “ W e shared our ideas, enthusiasm, and skills to m ui duet with M SU Jazz Lab Band Anthony. first female art environment," she said. director Ron Newman. Stage one of the concert was a piece for chamber orchestra It is no overstatement to say that the inventiveness, depth and feeling of Braxton's impro­ back and forth at irregular intervals, the band jumping with him. Schapiro said she had been very confused uptothatpjJ to who her audience was. "Women were sensitive to all the nuances in ‘Womanl™ w entitled “ L-J-637." It is a piece vising places him on a level Finally, Braxton and the she said. which reflects Braxton's inter­ with such giants as Charlie band closed the show with a Men easily dismiss women's art, she said, but theaudi est in contemporary classical Parker, E ric Dolphy, and John parade march, the writing of of women keep growing. mind-music: interm ittent in­ Coltrane. He is simply the which Braxton says was in­ There are many women artists who need to be reinlmJ strumental lines propelling a greatest sax player alive. Peri­ spired by Sousa's “ Stars and woman's art, according to Schapiro. rapid series of contrasting mu­ od. That may sound like hyper­ Stripes Forever." The trumpet Since becoming actively involved in the women'sn sical textures. bole, but when he leaned his lines were a bit off, but they got in art, Schapiro's paintings often incorporate >» Stage two was Braxton, seat­ head back and tilted his horn up through an incredibly difficult traditions such as lacemaking, embroidery and quilting. ^ ed hunched over with his back for that crazy note, he had a polyrhythmic vamp without When asked if she could see a time when images wedll to the audience and his dark link with heaven, and the tears screwing up, Rob Ward blew a express either maleness or femaleness, SchapinJ fuzzy head bobbing in concen­ in this reviewer’s eyes were hilarious solo on muted trom­ “ Womanness is an issue that's never been dealt with. Whl tration, directing four wood­ real. bone, and the band stomped to deal with it now?" r wind players through a “ cell a rousing finale and a standing The fourth and last stage of Schapiro advised female artists against relocatingI structure," which is something ovation. the concert consisted of three because they want to be where a strong women's art mom more loose than a “ composi­ exists. pieces of Braxton’s big band Afterwards Braxton, the Jazz tion" but tighter than an open- music. The pieces, which ap­ Band and other hangers-on "You should be the organizer,” she said. “You shouldha ended improvisation. alternate show. It needs to be done here, now." pear on Braxton's award-win­ adjourned to the Starboard From a single long unison ning album Creative Orchestra Tack restaurant for brew and By 1988, women should have made a substantial« tone, it moved to a series o f. to the culture, she said. Music 1976, were performed by more creative jamming. Brax­ weirdly yowling dissonant the M SU Jazz Lab Band func­ ton, wiped out, left early, but Schapiro was on campus Thursday as part of the Won chords, above which the musi­ tioning as what Braxton called the jamming went on for hours. Contemporary A rt series. cians took turns soloing; then to a “ creative notated orchestra.” The program also included showings of the films Wj a pied piper march which It seems Braxton left the house and Judy Chicago and the California Girls and11 Singer-Compi brought laughter from the au­ Mind you, the M S lf Jazz Lab local jazz people with some­ show of art by women of the past and present namtif dience, again with individuals Band is no clomp-along outfit. thing which w ill remain for a Schapiro. soloing; through some more They are hot. Accustomed to long time to come: a new shot of Linda Stanford, assistant professor or art, said thepur dissonant yowling (with an especially gutsy solo by sopra- such straight-ahead m aterial as Thad Jones/Mel Lewis, they energizing enthusiasm for mu­ sic making. As one of the the series is to provide students with varied viewpointsJ bite News Stote News ly n A. Howes Marcia Tucker, critic and New York art museumcunta noist Dave Kay, who likes to managed to pull off some very musicians put it: “ I don’t know M in e 1-3382 A nthony Braxton plays th e sopranino M usic B uilding A uditorium Saturday be the second participant in the series on March 30. take a few lengthily sustained difficult Braxton charts with a exactly what he did — he just saxophone during his concert in the night. notes and slowly twist them loves music, that's all." total of only five hours re- V A L E N T IN E ’S DAY _ FLOW ERS m i Delivery Ord.r Now 351-6256 hi H STUDENT WORKERS! R EA D THIS!! The Council of Graduate Students has resolved to support the actions of Dr. Horace King, the Registrar of this University, in his attempts to humanize and to expedite the process of registering for classes. WE LABOR RELATIONS IS ON CAMPUS TO HELP Y0UI BEDUCATIONAL I CENTER URGE THAT ALL GRADUATE STUDENTS PARTICIPATE IN EARLY E N ­ ROLLMENT, the first step in total registration system, as a m eans of in­ If you fe e l "s c re w e d " by m anagem e nt at MSU, le t us know. Our staff I [Million Spfcutiiit Ssncf 1931 dicating their support for the changes that should be m ade in the near ■ Information future We believe it is important that it be possible to early enroll for k n o w le d g a b le students w ill inform you o f yo u r rights as a university I * MJJtOreh.nl our classes, early register tor those classes, pay fees by mail or in p er­ JOSF.rmlngto, son after registering but before classes start', and receive an itemized e m p lo ye e . 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LABOR RELATIONS Is a cabinet • f lic t of ASMSU. i*l°n.#or furthe ^ The Marines. Lhinnn Stale News. Eost lontlng. Mlchigon p a rry C h a p in m akes his m e llo w 'Ju lia ': luminous look at friendship By BYRON BAKER spread of Fascism in Western after all, several generations •STEVE SZILAGYI does, he does to be likeable. State News Reviewer Europe. stop world hunger make him removed from its roots — Lt* News Reviewer Nobody could argue that the of a part of a paying mob — was a repeat of the Greatest There are flaws in the Fred When news comes of Ju lia’s downright lovable, or that his filtered through years of Heil­ [could anyone not like appeal for social justice in his makes him cute and cuddly like Stories Live album, showcasing Zinnemann film of Lillian Heil­ injuries in the Florisdorf Riots, stage manner - which makes man’s reflections and thought, song lyrics makes him a really a teddy bear. Chapin s big AM hits - 'T ax i," man’s brief memoir Julia fchapin? everyone in the audience feel Lillian finds her in a Viennese through her efforts to write fall, everything the man nice guy, or that his pleas to Pop music's favorite story­ "W O LD ," “Cat’s in the Cradle," (Twentieth Century-Fox; at the hospital. But the political atmo­ like his personal friend instead down her experience, through teller came to the Lansing Civic — as well as the other songs Meridian 8 Theatres), but con­ sphere is ominous and Lillian is scenarist Sargent’s screenplay, Center Friday night, leaving a that made it big off Live ■*- sidering the ambitiousness of warned to leave abruptly. Wor­ through Fred Zinnemann’s di­ clapping and stomping audience Circle," “Mr. Tanner,” "A the project, they seem unim­ ried and disappointed, she re­ rection. singing in the aisles after a Better Place to Be," and the portant. turns home to finish her play — Nonetheless. Zinnemann three-hour concert. favorite of the night, "30,000 Playwright Robert Anderson The Children's Hour — which is makes most of the story impor­ Pounds of Bananas.” once wrote: "death ends a life, subsequently produced with And all but a handful of tant in a semi-subjective man­ hardcore cynics could go away but it does not end a relation­ great success on Boradway. The success of "Bananas" is ner — he leads us to care in kind of puzzling, since it never ship, which continues on in the A few years later; the now saying that Harry Chapin is the way Lillian cares, about such a really nice guy and, gosh, . saw much airplay except for a survivor’s mind toward some celebrated Lillian is invited to a what Lillian cares for. Simple resolution, which it may never Moscow theatre festival. While wasn't that the most wonderful little time on FM when the live friendship — particularly this concert you've ever been to? album started making the find." Julia deals with Lillian in Paris prior to leaving for kind of childhood friendship, rounds two summers ago. Heilman’s beloved relationship Russia, she is approached by This probably has as much to which flourishes into a kind of with her childhood friend — a the strange yet sensitive Mr. do with the audience as with Yet Bananas ’ is Chapin's idealized love bond through relationship dating from school­ Johann (Maximilian Schell), Chapin's particular talent. Cha- most requested song. It was the infrequent meetings — is ex­ days of 1918 and renewed from who brings news — and a tremely difficult to portray on time to time until Ju lia’s mur­ special request - from her film, but through this subjec­ der by the Nazis in the late friend. tive framework, and with the 1930s. Lillian is asked to route her help of the excellent perfor­ Her memoir (published in Moscow trip through Berlin and Chapin fans are fantastic - part of the 1973 in her book Pentimento) is mances of Jane Fonda and carry - illegally - $50,000 into Vanessa Redgrave, it comes squeaky-cleancolkge crowd that goes wild over colored and imbued with Heil­ Germany for the release of across meaningfully. the "upper”music he plays. Without punk rock man s thoughts and reflections, Jew s and political prisoners. Fonda is very, very good as or outright violence to turn to, this audience accumulated over the ensuing Carefully warned of the possi­ Lillian; it is her most complex decades, of her friend and the ble danger of smuggling the figures anything old Harry plays is all right by and intelligent characterization period - something which the money — Lillian is Jew ish — them. A fter all, he's such a "nice guy." film, much to its credit, sensi­ since her Nora in the Joseph she weighs the decision Losey film of A Doll’s House. tively approximates. Julia is thoughtfully. Eventually, out of She shades the character’s less about the ideal of friend­ friendship and a gradual under­ stubbornness, sense of fear, ship as it is about friendship standing of the importance of sensitivity, concern, outrage, pin fans are fanatics — part of one everybody knows the words remembered: about the refrac­ what she is being asked to do, politicalization and her exultant the squeeky-clean college crowd to and sang along with Friday tive timbre of memory, how one Lillian finds the courage to do and weary moments with great that goes wild over the “upper” night, Chapin looked at bananas comes to recollect the people, it. perception and versatility. music he plays. Without punk on big yellow posters, accepted events and settings of one’s After a long, tension-filled But Redgrave illuminates the rock or outright violence to turn a huge plastic banana as a gift past and the personal impact of train journey, she arrives in screen as Ju lia. On screen for a to, this audience figures any­ remembrance. Berlin with the money and is at from a member of the audience, relatively small amount of the thing old H arry plays js all right, and faced a hail of bananas Accordingly, Alvin Sargent’s last reunited with Ju lia. Their running time, she succeeds in by them. A fter all, he’s such a before doing an encore. screenplay is structured almost meeting is brief and heartfelt. symbolizing someone decent, nice guy. wholly in terms of Heilman's Shortly, Ju lia is murdered by unselfish, honorable and impor­ So what makes him so like­ recorded memories and impres­ the Nazis. Lillian spends sever­ tant to both Lillian and to us. Chapin even plays the music able? Call it charisma, hype, sions — events in the film are al fruitless years in search of Director of photography everyone wants to hear, instead folksy appeal, an ability to be viewed and understood from her late friend's daughter, and Douglas Slocombe, who often of using a concert or a road tour entertaining without being her perspectives. In turn, Zin- tries to come to terms with the prettifies the films he lenses, to plug his latest album. Nota­ M EL LO W (sorry, B ill). W hat­ nemann’s direction attempts to death of her friend. has settled down and filmed bly absent from the nice guy’s ever it is, it makes a Chapin infuse the picture with the Ju lia in moody and evocative concert was music from his There are some interpolated concert more of a mass love-in tone and feel of what it is like to gauzy flashbacks of the young tones. Many of the period sets latest, Dance Band on the than a musical event. remember something personal by Gene Callahan, W illy Holt Titanic, an album that has not Ju lia and Lillian (played respec­ been particularly well-received and important. tively by Lisa Pelikan and and Carmen Dillon have that Hell, Chapin has crowd ap­ by the critics or the public. Susan Jones, who bear remark- "just built" look that expensive peal down to a science. Instead It is 1934. Lillian Heilman of crowds throwing beer bottles albe resemblance to Redgrave movies sometimes exploit; i Jane Fonda) lives with writer One of the best songs of the and Fonda) which work awk­ here, with the accent on mem­ and firecrackers to show their Dashiell Hammett (Jason Ro- night, though was from Dance wardly when they work at all, ory and the past, they merely appreciation. Chapin fans throw bards) off Cape Cod, and is in Band. "Blues Man” gave the and very occasionally the tone seem right. W alter Murch, who bananas — which won’t blow the process of completing her whole band a chance to show off of the picture (particularly has worked with George Lucas your ears out but might leave a first play. A t an impasse in her their stuff, demonstrating what when Lillian is on the train to and Francis Coppola on their trail of dark mushy bruises. writing, Lillian travels to Paris a really tight band Chapin Berlin) is overflowing with best films, has superbly edited Sta'e News/Debbie Ryan to write and to see Ju lia, her records and travels with. I ’m sure Harry Chapin "intrigue" and "suspense." the film: the time and pace feels childhood friend. Meanwhile, Singer-Composer H arry Chapin Friday a t Lansing Civic Center. doesn’t mind. A fter all, he’s appropriate. Georges Delerue However, most of the show Ju lia is in Vienna, studying and The film is sometimes too such a really nice guy. has contributed a spare but working to fight the rapid literal, largely because it is, well used musical score. MeNews Newsline ARTHUR TREACHER’S DISCO SKATING 1-3382 TUESDAYS j THE ORIGINAL T i ^ l ) & C b i f A Free A d m is sio n (m . 'ip ? the night your hall is featured I N K FOR: iB Iue fira ss B a n d s O n ly o n Every Monday • DAT • LSAT • 8RE : « 'Super Spartan Nite f f AT • VAT * SAT IMB 1 , 1 1 ,1 , 8c T U e sd a y OUR BUDGET BAN Q UET 8*11 p.m. |FMG*FLEX*VQE l DENTAL B O ARD S (USING BOARDS Cheap B eer COLE SLANA N b . 13 S h a w A M cD o n al H a lls $ 1 79 R h o g n iiM iH M r a •Hfjtrtntt!!! Feb. 20 Brody Halls BEVERAGE P[MPUN 27 Akers, Giltner Halls _ EDUCATIONAL I CENTER -iH AT Bring the Family ARTHUR'S FISH & CHIPS i March 6 All College Appreciation Skate April 3 Win a free party with the largest dorm turnout. 7/ [Million Spfdjiiiit Siw t 1931 EAT HERE HOBIE’S ■ Information l»«: JIB* Orchard 1001 E. GRAND RIVER Just 50' with college I.D., General and DURAND .^•JWtermlnrto, ACROSS FROM Admission 11. ” Skate Rental 75' I Roil (JU) BI-MI3 CAMPUS ipLLE H W Q R H 930 T r o w b r id g e ,B M‘ i»' us c . t « TAKE H O M E - $ ALU- 2751 E. Grand River across from Coral Gables THE LATIN AMERICAN STUDIES CENTER ANNOUNCES THE FOLLOWINO COURSES D o n ’t keep your DISCIPLINARY FOR SPRING, 1978 INTRODUCTION TO Thomas m 212 oology 419 LATIN AMERICA III Contemporary TU 7-9:50 MWF 11:30-12:20 (coordinator) Graduation a Secret. . . 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MSI/ ahead The win came nine days after the Wolverines had pinned a heartbreaking 65-63 loss on MSU at never miss . . . I wish he * « . M'G| Heathcote said he planned T,01” ' man-to-man defense the whole Jenison Fieldhouse. in the end “We were a lot looser today," said Johnson, who scored a game-high 25 points. “We came out teams matched up well m d i,K , Johnson, two quick foul,, tk. ? „ rehed on the zone most of the m! ? 1 loose and ready to play, but not too fired up. M SU hit 60.8 percent fromthefeu “We just wanted to get this *W and stay on top a good thing they did. The Sparta, ANN ARBOR - In the end it was all very easy. M SU 73, of the Big Ten." Michigan 62. Kelser, who scored 21 points and had 12 And in the end Michigan coach John O rr was a gracious loser rebounds, echoed Johnson’s feelings saying, and even admitted, "W e are very lucky, actually, that we split “Maybe we built too much pressure on ourselves with them." the last time we played Michigan. We took a more Maybe it was best for the long-suffering Spartan fans that M SU Michigan coach Johnny Orr said *». relaxed approach this time." ball over a couple times and the; did lose that last-second game at Jenison Fieldhouse nine days MSU is now 10-2 in Big Ten play, 18-3 overall before winning Saturday's second encounter at Ann Arbor. while Michigan drops to 7-5 in the conference, ™n!nen8ibleu F “ ,tr,i8ht P0” *1 It left a sweeter taste'in the mouths of M SU fans until the two 12-8 on the season. Coupled with Purdue's 91-77loss schools go at it again next year. Jud Heathcote said the game wasn't completely the Spartans now lead the Big Tea After all, in rivalries of this kind it is difficult to pick up a sweep a “two-man show," but it was Johnson and Kelser over Minnesota and two over the regardless of the talent differential. who led the way for MSU. Some Michigan fans In the M SU lockerroom, “Mane Even Michigan's NCAA tournament teams had a hard time the who carried around a banner proclaiming, “Magic “just happy to get the win,” But hi last two years against M SU squads. The Spartans took U-M into is an illusion, McGee is for real" may have felt a win over Michigan - the first fori overtime at Ann Arbor last year and led 41-26 at halftime at Ann little different at game’s end. meetings - has a little extra signi Arbor two years ago before losing both games. With a little under a minute to go in the first ‘This is a big game to the wholeit But this time there were no comebacks. Freshman Earvin half, MSU held a slim 31-28 lead. . . then Johnson said while signing an autograph, Johnson's 25 points and junior Gregory Reiser’s 21 points made went into his act. He hit a jumper, dished off an campus w ill go wild and there will sure of that. M SU broke a streak of six losses to the Wolverines. assist to Kelser and then hit a “rainmaker” at the partying tonight." MSU coach Ju d Heathcote said the team may have been to high buzzer. Suddenly the Spartans’ lead was nine. MSU (73) emotionally in the first meeting and termed the team's state “We were very fortunate to be up by nine points Kelser, 21; Johnson, 25; Vincent,! Saturday as "determined.” "We were so high emotionally before the last game that we after the first half," Heathcote said. “After Donnelly, 4; Brkovich, 2; Charle Earvin got two quick fouls at the beginning of the Totals 28 17-23 73. could hardly talk. We told the kids to approach the game game, I almost had a heart attack." MICHIGAN (62) (Saturday) as professionals.” The win was a big step closer to a Big Ten championship for the The Wolverines narrowed the gap to three McGee, 24; Hardy, 14; Thompson, Spartans as Purdue lost to Ohio State to give M SU a two game several times in the second half, but MSU would Baxter, 6 ; M arty Bodnar, 6. Total lead. Minnesota is only one game back but is ineligible for always counter with a bucket. post-season play because of NCAA probation. With the Spartans holding a slim 45-42 lead, BIG TEN STANDINGS Orr took a moment to warm-up when he mumbled, " If there’s a Bob Chapman and Ron Charles hit long jumpers to Big Ten Own! better team in the country, I haven’t seen it.” But then he was put MSU on top by seven. Kelser and Johnson M SU 10 2 181 generous with his praise. then converted two straight dunks on fast breaks. Minnesota 9 3 13 1 "I thought Purdue was the best team in the conference until The same slowdown tactic that didn’t work for Purdue 8 4 13 today," Orr said. MSU the first time the two teams met, was Michigan 7 5 12 "Earvin plays guard, forward and center — I think he even effective this time around. The Wolverines Indiana 14 coaches a little and doesn’t do a bad job. He's a great player and I ’d couldn’t force any turnovers and MSU was deadly Ohio State 13 I like to see him go pro," he said with a smile. from the free throw line. Illinois 11 1 So the fear of losing two basketball games to Michigan is over After it took a 13-6 lead in the first half, MSU Iowa 10 11 and M SU fans heaved a sigh of relief. turned frigid going 6.48 without a score. In the Wisconsin 7 But more importantly, the Spartans have already won two meantime, Michigan freshman forward Mike Northwestern 3 9 7 games on the crucial three-game road trip that began with a win at Iowa Thursday. The Spartans still have to play at Purdue Thursday, but they seem to have made it through a critical part of the schedule. MSU TOPS BIG TEN " I think the Indiana win put us over the hump,” Heathcote said, Balance earns ti explaining the psychological moods of a team trying to hold onto first place in the Big Ten. "Losing the Michigan game was a tremendous psychological State News/Robert Kozloff setback. W e were lucky at Iowa and this was a big win so maybe we MSU forward Gregory Kelser jackknifes his way through two Michigan defend­ have the momentum back with us." There are six games left but more and more it looks like M SU ers for two points in Saturday’s 73-62 win over Michigan. Kelser, who combined By JOHN SINGLER 8.76, to go with an 8.57 in floor exercise. has the momentum to carry it to the NCAA Mideast Regional at with Earvin “Magic” Johnson for 46 points, said the Spartans took a more State News Sporta Writer Vaulting specialist Cheryl Bellaire el Dayton, Ohio. “relaxed” approach toward the rematch with the Wolverines. W in or lose, these Big Ten Championships are an 8.80 and finished Saturday's individ getting to be a real nuisance ior the M SU in third place. women's gymnastics team. In addition to Steckroat’s individual Last year it was Illinois' disturbing one-point Spartans bring back so m e fun to M u n n Saturday, Eigel grabbed third place or win and the loss of Diane Lovato to a knee injury bars and floor exercise, Lovato was s; that had M SU stewing. beam and Laylin fourth. This weekend in Iowa City, the Spartans The lightly-used beam specialist isst By JO E C EN T ER S weekend series. th e Fighting Sioux’s Mel D on­ “T h a t w as long overdue,” got to keep a good frame of thumbed their noses at the rest of the Big Ten gain a little more consistency and be! State News Sports W riter The biggest difference be­ nelly for a 2-0 lead. said B essone. “They (th e S p ar­ mind. I work hard in practice and, despite a less than efficiently run meet and Mike Kasavna is relying on specialists_ It was like old tim es again at tween Saturday’s game and the F reshm en K en P araskevin tan s) played to g e th er for a and do the best I can.” queries about the scores judges were handing more to supplement his solid corps Munn Ice Arena. way the Spartans have been and Leo L y n e tt upped the change. W e stay ed o ut of th e If there is one area that out, won the team championship and crowned arounders. At one point in Saturday’s playing this season is the way Spartans* lead to 4-0 and it box and w e did alright." Bessone hasn't had to worry Pam Steckroat with a title on the uneven parallel “ Our all-arounders have been c game, the MSU hockey team they passed (Earvin Johnson looked like MSU w as going to "M azz (M ark) Mazzoleni about this season it has been his bars. Laura) did a great job in the finals, p had a 4-0 lead and the fans style) to set up their goals. ru n aw ay w ith th e gam e and played an o th er g re a t gam e. goaltending. Friday, Versical W ith all the distraction, don't be too quick to the way our specialists should comethr were begging for more. The Senior Mark DeCenzo set up give coach Amo B essone th e And freshm an Brad Wilkinson turned in another one of his fine undermine M SU’s win. For the most part, the said. “ It was important that this was Spartans played like they w ere the Spartans' first goal with a re s t of th e n ight off. But ea rn e d a sp o t on th e team ," performances and kept the victory and now we’ve beaten the Unr Spartans performed in a meet all their own. in first place and they w eren’t pinpoint pass to Ted Huesing consecutive goals by N orth B essone added. game closer than it could have Massachusetts (seventh nationally) and M SU earned its team championship Friday going to let anyone take it away who was cruising in front of the D akota's M ike S tone, Mike Mazzoleni, who w as voted been. night on the strength of Lori Boes’ season high in Ten back to back.” from them. But n.ost of all, North Dakota goal. The sopho­ B u rg g raf and Doug Small M SU’s player of th e week in th e M SU is now 6-19-1 in the Freshmen Boes and Bellaire were™ vaulting, 8.70, and a pair of 9.00s on the uneven MSU won an exciting gam e and more from Detroit sent it home brought th e F ig h tin g Sioux W estern Collegiate Hockey A s­ W CHA and the Spartans are bars and balance beam by Steckroat and Diane impressive in Kasavana’s eye. everyone had some fun. for a powerplay goal to give within one. sociation (WCHA) last w eek, still five points behind the “ The beam team helped us and i Lovato, respectively. A fter dropping a 4-2 decision M SU a lead that it never lost. A t th e 17:39 m ark of th e w as th rilled about th e victory, Fighting Sioux for the eight • — surprised with Lori’s vaulting," hesaid, Beth Eigel's consistency surfaced as the to N orth D akota F riday for the On the second Spartan goal, second period, L y n e tt took a and even though he doesn’t see and final — playoff spot. and Boes were fourth and.fifth in theBig Louisville freshman scored 8.60 in vaulting, 8.70 Spartans' sixth straig h t loss, Tim McDonald set everything perfect pass from R u ss Welch as much action in th e n ets as "W e'll have a better attitude on uneven bars and 8.63 in floor exercise. vaulting, not bad for two freshmen. MSU put everything to g eth er up by keeping the puck in w hile MSU had a m an in th e team m ate D ave V ersical, he going to Denver," said Bessone A hectic schedule this week kickson The beam offered two big boosts to the Saturday — goaltending, de­ North Dakota's end while M SU penalty box and L y n e tt skated has no bones to pick. about M SU's next opponent. “ night at Western Michigan UniversitjMJ Spartans’ effort with solid routines from special­ fense, passing and scoring — was another power play. He in all alone to give th e S p arta n s "I can understand w hen D ave “ Maybe we'll catch Denver ist Laural Laylin and all-arounder Amy Spartans meet the Broncos and Ewers and turned back th e Fighting then sent a pass to Kevin th e ir fifth goal an d first win in plays again after he has a hot (which is in first place in the Thompson. Laylin, a sophomore from Okemos, gan before returning home to Sioux 5-3 to gain a split of the Coughlin who rifled a shot past o v er a month. night, said Mazzoleni. "You ju s t W CH A) a little cocky." stepped to an 8.83 and Thompson put together an Saturday. ENJOY THE EXCITEMENT THAT ONLY SKIINO CAN OIYE SKI A LP IN E V A LLEY AT 1 .5 0 o r e re g u la r lift price WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 15 fro m 5:30 - 1 1:30 p.m. WHILE YOU'RE THERE, WATCH THE MSU SKI TEAM IN ITS QUEST FOR THE DETROIT NEWS SERIES TROPHY, TO BE AWARDED WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 15 BRING THIS AD TO ALPINE VALLEY WEDNESDAY FEBRUARY 15 AND RECEIVE A 51.50 DISCOUNT g COUPON G O O D FOR ONE DAY ONLY SECOND WIN OVER WOLVES G rapplers roll U-M Thinclads dominoto own r©/ovs By By MICHAEL KLOCKE coach Jim .coach Jim Bibbs' team probably . . . . u 1. Bibbs' team n r„h ahi„ m probably _ . . enroute to a first-nlnro ^ State News Sports Writer first-place finiek finish. t xt/t a a . . him for th e NCAA indoor meet, " would have won the 23-team Unfortunately for M SU’s Defending champion Dan King Bibbs said one of the most m eet if learn scores w ere kept. March 10-11 a t D etroit's Cobo men’s track team, no team jum ped 6 feet 11 inches, giving pleasing performances was By LARRY LILLIS Freshman high jum per Den­ Hall. “Today I felt real good and scores were kept at Saturday’s MSU a one two finish in the turned in by Flowers in win­ SUte New* Sports Writer nis Lewis „f Ypsilanfj was I was a little m ore psyched up.” 55th Michigan State Relays. event. ning th e 300-yard dash. It was eMSU basketball team wasn't the only undoubtedly the standout of O ther S partan firsts were: Four Spartans tracksters “In all the previous m eets I the first tim e the sophomore that beat Michigan - ■tiers beat the Wolverines Friday, 2915. the M SU “ 3 copped first-place finishes and th e m eet as he cleared 7 feet 1 one inch - an MSU record - jum ped p retty poorly," said Randy Sm ith with a 6.2 in the 60-yard dash, Tim Klein with a from Saginaw has ever run the Lewis, whose jum p qualified event. X e Spartans started out as if they had m O ? ^ alsh: “ p next for MSU, won the 1:11.6 in th e 600-yard run, 134-pound weight class on a forfeit. J eff “I wasn’t surprised I won. Kghts of shutting the Wolverines out. Ricky Flow ers with a 30.7 in Theman then won his first match of the year but I was surprised by the the 300-yard dash. I took the first five matches before iigan was able to get things started. It Jfreshman Mark Churella, who pinned his class"* man 155 in the 142 P °u" d -eight Dennis Brighton made it five straight for Spartans capture Invitational Sm ith's tim e was a little slow er than expected, but the margin, said the versatile Flo­ wers, who usually runs the q u arter mile. “Randy i.Smithl iand helped Michigan save face. sophomore from Jackson was MSU, pinning his man at the 7:31 mark The MSU women tra c k ste rs has helped me a lot with my This was a good win for us,” M SU Team victories included a still happy with his second Before the pin, Brighton had built up a 19 finishers as well. Lynn Barber s ta rt and my leg muscles are Jtling coach Grady Peninger said. “ It is continued to keep th e ir clean straig h t MSU Relays champion first place in the two-mile relay startin g to get back in shape record intact, by w inning th eir was third in th e shot put; ship in th e 60-yard dash. ■dally good because we beat Michigan. I A t th a t ,15° ‘f Und wei« h t 'la s s match. with a time of 9:39, and the after my injury.” A t that point in the meet the Spartans held own home invitational F riday Brenda Givens came in third for I was a little disappointed Vd that this would be a closer meet then one-mile relay in 4:14. Indivi­ Senior captain Klein was a a 23-0 advantage. The Wolverines then night a t Jenison Fieldhouse MSU in th e 60 y ard dash; and with my time, because I was dual winners for the S partans little disappointed that he with 143'/t points. The win C hristy W agner took third in running 6.2 in th e prelim inaries Y ? r t,me t0 start -restling and w ere Debbie Laraway in the didn't qualify for the NCAA lalways helps to win right off the bat like they took three of the last five matches makes th e S p artan s 3-0 on th e the one mile. 1,000 yard run in 2:46.7; K athy when I wasn’t pushed," said ■d because it puts the other team in the winning two with pins. ' season. The S p artan s will p u t their meet, but he was still pleased Miller in the 300 yard run at Smith, who has already quali­ ■I was disappointed in our 190-pound and unbeaten record on th e line with his win in the 600 yard i A ftw Clmrella won the 158-pound weight C entral Michigan took the fied for th e NCAA m eet with a run. 37.2; and Lisa Berry in the Tweight matches, because I thought that cUss, M SU’s Ron Cramer won the 167 pound runner-up spot in th e seven again S aturday when they tr a ­ 6.0 time. two-mile with a winning time of It wasn t the best time I've |ould have won them. eight class, 3-2, and insured a Spartan team match-up w ith 92 Vr vel to Champaign, III. to face Shot p u tte r Schneider ob­ 11:14.6. Ellen Dempsey won the fighting Illini. ever had. but it still may have victory Jim E llis followed with a 6-5 wYn in points. The C hippewas w ere viously delights in settin g r e ­ f edid have a couple of guys who did real the 177-pound weight class. th e high jum p at 5-feet-6 and MSU was able to win the been my best race," Klein said. followed by Bowling Green cords . . . and then breaking jor us like Thomas, W hite and'Brighton, th e long jum p at 18-feet. As captain I enjoy setting a It was the second time this year that the with 60 ’/a. invitational w ithout distance them again. His toss of 58 feet ■ton did super for us. He completely Second place finishers for the sta r Sue L atter, who ran a t the good example for the other Spartans have beaten the Wolverines. MSU The S p artan 's came away 3/4 inches broke his own school Toyed his man." MSU women w ere Lisa Berry Toronto Maple Leaf Games, guys. The team 's overall perfor evens its record at 5-5 on the year while with seven first place finishes record by over a foot. nWhite got the Spartans off to a fast Michigan drops down to 4-8. in the 1,000 yard run; Pam and o ther team m em bers that mance is very pleasing to in th e ir only indoor home m eet “I w ant to make it to Cobo night." Swainigan in the 600 yard run; traveled with coach Cheryl of th e year a fte r w eath er and Lil W arnes for the 1 mile. Hall, and I need 60 feet to do Flanagan to the Mason-Dixon Keith Moore of MSU a l s o canceled th e first one. it, said an elated Schneider, The Spartans had third place Games in Louisville, Ky. finished third in the 1,000 yard who finished second to Central run and a trio of pole vaulters Michigan’s Bruno Pauletto. “Af­ - Jim S tew art, Bruce Temby te r tonight, I know I'm going to h'O 5fate Stops w om en again ^Fencers survive trip and Mark Zuverink — cleared do it." 15 feet. By GAYLE JACOBSON Ten Championship. State Newt Sports Writer SchmYteyrthing C0U' d ’ Went Wr° " g’" SaW head coach Charlie ■ I tough, hard fought battle S aturday, but when the MSU lost to Ohio S tate in th e second round of th e Big Ten tournam ent afte r defeating Illinois S atu rd ay morning, 57-44 OHE ■entered its last few m om ents of play, it was evident th a t theT firfiPrnni!IStSplit ,their, ‘ wo m eets the identical 18 9 score. In II women ca g ersh a d lost out again in th e ir bid for th e Big an d k e m Ih°‘S T Y ' ? ' th e S Pa rta n s jum ped to an early lead, in a r , Y agai nst Wlsco" s>n. MSU ended up on the short and k ep t it th roughout th e game. A t half time MSU led 34-12 The Illini w ere never in th e game. Wiscon.sinepar°kseideef0re ^ baCk l ° Uke the nightcaP ° ver fmnasts shocked MaTrhve gY di? f SCOrerif0r MSU Was D ianc S P°elstra with 12 Points. On th e weekend only th ree S p artan s finished with more wins SW OOSH .-Czyr,far* *—■**>-** M ary Kay U nyre, playing in only th e first half of th e contest, C hrL ThY™ T ak 1 nished W' th a 4 1 mark in ‘ " " e p e e collected nine points and led in rebounding with 12 K aren Langeland was pleased w ith M SU's first outing in the ournam ent, although she felt th a t th e women could have done a H e ll put it to g eth er,” S chm itter said. "The one good thing IS B E T T E R OSU surprise b e tte r job defensively in th e second half of the game. THAN usYn us in theiY Y b i Y t ^ ' m 31 thC m ee‘ agai" St Wisconsin w on't h u rt Big Ten. When we go to Ohio S tate for the Big Ten Round tw o for th e S p artan s brought on th e Buckeyes, and M SU s dream s of a shot a t th e Big Ten championship dissolved. tournam ent, everyone wil s ta rt out with a clean slate." fiends like the Buckeyes, who needs enemies? Ohio S ta te sen t MSU on to a consolation gam e match-up, 66-61. ISU men's gym nastics team rode into Columbus this as the nation's 17th-ranked team , victors over six of the Infoes and boasting a lifetim e m ark against Ohio S tate of 24 The gam e w as a well-played one for both team s. The S p artan s w ere ju s t outscored in the second half. A t halftim e MSU led by two, £0-14. 3S T R I P E S *28meetings. U nyre was th e gam e's high scorer w ith 19 points. Also in double side the trip back to E a st Lansing a little longer with a ligures for th e S p artan s w ere K ath y D eBoer with 12 and K aren .1.10 win, which s e t S p arta n head coach George Szypulato Santom with 10 points. Itn y re led in rebounding also, g rabbing off labout how nice it’ll be in Jenison Fieldhouse for Saturday's Langeland was a little more than slightly ruffled by the a p a rta n s loss. relOSU) tough and they beat Michigan, too," he said. “The PRESENTS PAT ANSTETT o were in home te rrito ry and we knew it'd be tough away “That was very disappointing. We finished second tw o years in a i(. It'll be great if we can beat Illinois 'cause if we do, w e're row because of Ohio S tate," Langeland said. "We ju s t had some THE CHICAGO SUN TIMES ■lit.” apses defensively. This was simply a prestig e tournam ent, on career obstacles and challenges ini the •captain Jeff Rudolph earned a pair of victories, scoring though, th e regionals will mean more. It would definitely have P rin t Media. fclh the still rings and horizontal b ar. He won th e all-around been nice to win th a t gam e, though." ■.50. In the consolation gam e Sunday afternoon, Indiana m et th eir match, as MSU topped them to ta k e th ird place in the TOMTE 335 Union Iran Marvin Gibbs earned second place on th e parallel bars ikird in floor exercise and w as fifth in all-around. Charlie championships, 79-58. MM! frank shorter sports was upset in vaulting, finishing second, and H ubert S treep led the MSU effort on pommel horse. 217 Ann St. ■h. Tom Tomkow and Tom M eagher constructed a Wiree sweep on rings. The S partans still miss high bar I Doug Campbell and all-arounder Craig M acLean, both ■lVansmission ■CUP AND SA VE 1 Maintenance Special H a v e v o u r a u to 1Change transmission fluid. • Adjust bands. in s u r a n c e r a t e s • Clean screen. • Replace pan-gasket. 1095 in c r e a s e d ? ■ Complete road test. plus fluid le n t r y h a s h e l d t h e l i n e l [C A L L fFF WILLIAMS 6026S.Cedar 393-7540 CatMiller) 332-1838 4 0 1 W . G ra n d R iv e r I E a s t La n s in g I j A t t e n t io n W o m e n ! ir- SENTRY I i I Appearing in person to autograph the ir books w INSURANCE i I i CLIP AND SAVE 11 ■J ™ n y .r * * - Barbara Seaman Tbr.Hast I ui|Ntrtmil Medical Stur,v t ot’thclifTirs Free, i W »E V c and. Fbmae^ i lim it in ' i CKLSLS I: inSEX M Z Z A C BREW 1 tmmsa 1 u o w k » n :s 6 BAR HO PPERS <>'» :uin',( ,1,1, ,,| / / A ^ ({K| w ^ Om.KS Ur.;irnnnt; .ii S 00 |i in mi in’!- h//.,v .u n i 11> . 1,1 (i,,i11 Gordon »\1' 1 u I' i" °" In >11,(1 -ill mull!1Ht'nmumi; ,il Hu luw , „ ( ,, „ K K MMSOW KAN< II ln< SO ( nil Mini,1,1V infills si.||1 ml cinwl) 111 AHr I,,, i i // a A m.lU A |iAK will Seaman, M.D. "1 1KV .............. ........ K.milniw ''.ini... iiI iii, , i;,-,- ,,|r,ussimi t\i-r\ A i, , k.un |, (mm ihr -MU-I \ .m,I iln K.un TODAY, 2 PM. at PARAMOUNT NEWS CENTER EAST LANSING Paramount Newscanters 213 ANN ST. - EAST LANSING Mondi'ay. Febi 10 Michigon Stote News, Eost loosing, Michigon ruary 73 INGHAM GROUP ONE OF FIRST M O N D A Y SPECIAL Therapy helps abused women FREE 01. OF COKE! • • By DIANE COX competent person," Thome get a job and do not want to be ‘Hey, I'm not making it as a Winderschaman's office, S H E State News Staff Writer said. financially dependent on go­ vernment programs. She said woman with a man. I'm not successful.' ” and other community agencies. Thome w ill request all counse­ with every pizza Kathy is tired, lonely, con­ "There is a lot of loneliness. fused, and has no positive Therapy can help them get in most would rather build up their lors, lawyers, doctors and emer­ Thome said men are also self-image of herself as a wo­ touch with this and help them skills so they can get good jobs. under “amazing pressure" be gency room physicians to give (you d o n 't even have to ask! ] man. She grew up in an get in touch with their compe­ They also do not leave because any woman they suspect of cause of what society has environment where her father tencies by building better self- they fear for their children's being abused by a man the traditionally expected of them. safety if they are left with their information she needs to get CAMPUS beat her, yet has the ingrained images.” She advocates therapy for men belief that one must love one's Thome said she and Renee husbands, yet they cannot af­ too. into her group. parents no matter what they do. Swanson, a counselor at Sisters ford to pay for day care while “The men are operating un­ “ If a woman is in serious Society taught her that to be for Human Equality, try to get they are job hunting, she der the social stereotype that enough condition to be in a successful, a woman must have the eight women in their group explained. hospital, she is probsbly ready a man. She found a man, whom she vowed to love, cherish and obey 'til death do them part. Now this man may be the death to focus on their strengths, work with their feelings of anger and helplessness and find ways of expressing them. She She noted that most jobs unskilled women can get pay only minimum wage — $2.65 an hour — not enough to support the man is supposed to be dominant, strong, aggressive and successful," she said. “W ith this kind of pressure, there are to seek help," Thome said. Any woman interested in therapy should call Windersh- PIZZA of her — yet she still is haunted said they also try to get the themselves and their children. not many safe outlets for their man's office or S H E , Thome "Even though they are in bad anger.” by her childhood lessons. That is a picture of many women to share their feelings about each other, including relationships, they have securi­ said. She said she w ill open up 1312 Mich. Ave. For women finding them­ two more free therapy groups, battered women, painted by anger they may feel towards ty ," Thome said. She explained meeting from 1:30 to 3 p.m. and FREE D ELIV ER Y: 337.137, selves the brunt of this anger, Maxine Thome, a trained thera­ women in the group. that women have been taught to 6:30 to 8 p.m. on Wednesdays, Thome asks that the police give pist at the Marriage and Family "W e try to get them to open believe that security and suc­ as soon as she receives enough them information they need to Counseling Clinic in Lansing. up about their abuse and lean on cess are dependent upon having referrals. get help. Such information in­ Thome has started a therapy each other," Thome said. " It ’s a a man. cludes how to prosecute, where __________________ no cou pon s necessary group for battered women in supportive group." "Many of them have never Thome, who is working on a to find temporary housing and Ingham County, which she Thome said a main problem in had friendships with other wo­ Ph. D. in counseling psychology the phone number of SH E, believes may be the first in the getting women into the group is men," she said. "Women com­ at M SU , w ill also be teaching a where they can get counseling. country. lack of transportation. pete with women to get a man. class called “ Domestic Abuse: They should also be referred to While not discounting their " If the woman uses the family To feel pretty and good about the Silent C risis," Spring quar­ importance, Thome said a lot of car once a week, the husband themselves, they need a man. Diane Winderschman, the do­ mestic abuse co-ordinator in the ter at Lansing Community Col­ Got Mid-term publicity has been given to gets suspicious,” she said. It's not the same to have a lege from 6 to 8 p.m. Tuesdays. legislation and shelters for bat­ Most of the women don't tell woman tell you you look really prosecuting attorney’s office, Thome said. From 8 to 10 p.m. Tuesdays she Quakes? tered women. Not enough ther­ their husbands (about group nice today. So' women turn to w ill teach a class at LCC called apy attention has been given to participation) because of fear. men for that kind of feedback. She said most of the women in “ Choosing to be Single,” which Here's Helpl these women to help them feel I've become increasingly aware "W ith battered women, there her therapy group, aged 18 to she said w ill examine alterna­ secure as capable, independent of how terrified these women is a feeling of shame. It says, 33, came to her on referral from tive lifestyles. Summaries of assigned people, she said. are of being killed.” "So many women, as a result Thome said most abused texts for these courses. of these beatings, have been women do not leave their husbands because they cannot A fr ic a n ALL DEGREE M ath: 1 0 8 ,1 0 9 , 111, 1 1 2 ,1 1 3 . tP th e FLOWER CART I* bock... ah V io le ts fo r your ‘‘Valentine". CANDIDATES SOC: 2 0 1 ,2 0 2 ,2 0 3 ,2 1 1 ,2 1 2 ,2 1 3 . FR EE DELIVERY for only $2 at Horticulture Bldg & and FACULTY N at S c i & Hum: A ll th re e te rm s . V A LE N T IN E ’S D A Y International Make your reservations N O W for roses...carnations... daffodils...daisies... Center academic apparel for Winter Term Chem: 1 3 0 ,1 3 1 ,1 4 1 . order now... we may run out 9 a.m. -5p.m . Commencement. Deadline is Feb. 21 T H IU T A L P U S H M * Feb. 10.13 & H at the Union Store in the Union. •P 331-6256 3 M SU Hortit ultwre Club P h y s ic s : 2 3 7 ,2 3 8 ,2 3 9 ,2 8 7 , Marketing Research Pre|ect Donations for the Senior PERSONALIZED GRADUATION class gift will be accepted. ANNOUNCEMENTS NOW 2 8 8 ,2 8 9 . BEING ORDERED AT UNION STORE. FACULTY! For Information call SUMMARIES FOR ALL BASIC COLLEGE WAIVER E1UI Hood* from othor universities must 355-3498 Th# Union Storo bo ordorod IA R L Y ! FULL PAYM ENT MUST A C C O M P A N Y RESERVATION Now Gibsons Book Store Available At College Book Store Notice: Student Book Store Last Week for Winter Term Books Beginning next week, we will begin setting Ireen Onion tonight thru Satu rd ay up books fo r Spring quarter, 1978. We 7/ still The one kdRadishes New Earth Rhythm Band try to help yo u fin d your winter term book, The only. fS D D PARK BMW PITCmn f PHIAL The original Restaurant Special but we suggest you don 7 delay. Thanks. IH R n in IA A ll the fish, french fries and salad you can eat * 2 * s The innovative and now famous casuals, created by Bass with tough leather ®izapd^ uppers and bouncy sole of natural gum rubber that wears the Bass name proudly and leaves a fashion footprint wherever you go Comfort, durability ®ndei°gpound MSU and great good lo oks... combined with shoemaking know-how and tradi­ tional craftsmanship 224 Abbott 351-2285 BOOKSTORE A v a ila b le in N-6-10 M - 5 - I0 W -6-9 A career in law— without law school. Roses are red. What can you do with only a bachelor’s degree? Now there is a way to bridge the gap between an Violets are blue. undergraduate education and a challenging, responsible career. The Lawyer’s Assistant is able to do work tradi­ tionally done by lawyers. Three months of intensive training can give you the Pfeiyfor one Olga, skills—the courses are taught by lawyers. You choose one of the seven courses offered—choose the city in which you want to work. Since 1970, The Institute for Paralegal Training has A nd we’ll give you two! placed more than 2,000 graduates in law firms, banks, and corporations in over 80 cities. If you are a senior of high academic standing and are interested in a career as a Lawyer's Assistant, we’d like Student o to meet you Union )|( O u r O lga is su ch a ro m a n tic ! Contact your placement office for an interview with our Grand River She said, “ T his V a le n tin e 's Day O L G A ’S " 7f i representative. K ITC H E N I w an t to d o s o m e th in g special We will visit your campus on: fo r s w e e th e a rts !" BUY I O L G A , G E T I F R E E ! *01 O ffer good a t O lga’s K itchen, 133 E. G rand ■ Tuesday, March 7 A nd, as we all k n o w , w hen Olga I River across fro m th e S tu d e n t U nion. B Wednesday, March 8 w ants to d o s o m e th in g special, she | C ou p o n good F eb ru a ry 14, 1978 o n ly . | WSJ. does it rig h t! So, fo r S t.V a le n tin e ’s D ay bring y o u r tru e love to O lga's T h e In s titu te fo r P a r a le g a l T r a in in g 235 South 17th Street, Philadelphia. Pennsylvania 19103 (215) 732-6600 Operated by Para-Legal. Inc K itc h e n a n d get tw o O lga's for th e p ric e o f one! Now, isn’t that a sweet deal? iOtgasi ^kitcheni MSU BOOTERY 225 E. Grand River East Lansmg | l BH _ H I B ■ ■ coupon “A WM wsm m m m m » Open Thurs. & Fri. til 9 p.m. istory of South A frica struggle to topic of tour V volunteers sought By JEANNE BARON State New* Staff Writer added. Subsequently, more progressive movements were formed, using the techniques of boycotts, demonstrations and armed model nation in Africa because it has a stable government and a for African village jobs . . ,j0„ 0f Africa dispossessed the country's people of land successful capitalistic system with black leadership. struggles, he said. Lnle and made them into slaves, starting the bloody chain of “ Western imperialists don’t mind color,” he said. "They want Operation Crossroads A f­ Crossroads Africa main­ _ ® ne w jjli progressive movement in South Africa is the Black allies.” rica is seeking students to tains "the experience pro­ still ccn,i" lli" f •” South Africa> * viaitin8 8out*>African Peoples Convention, which has joined with other groups to create volunteer for work in vides a brief but intense the Black Consciousness Movement. If*Bntheleii. founder of the Black Peoples’ Convention and The movement is now preparing for the possibility of battle and French- and English- speak­ immersion in African village r ° a convention representative to it from Botswana, was in has been severely repressed he said. New fire station lacks equipment ing countries during the life and pushes individuals to Jlinsingaspart of a national speaking tour. He added that armed struggle has been waged in Zimbabwe and summer. The nonprofit, volunteer re-examine basic values, at­ titudes and beliefs in rela­ I T . most of Saturday meeting with organizers on South KA N SA S C ITY, Kan. (A P) were being served by depart­ Namibia for many years. Now the United States and Britain are issues, and later presented a lecture outlining the history — Residents of Prairie Town­ ments some distance away. community development or­ tion to people with contrast­ suddenly interested in finding a peaceful solution, he said. ganization has sent over ing values.” the liberation struggle in South Africa. ship think they’ve got a pretty Since those departments were A peaceful situation really means setting up neocolonial 5,000 American students The program is tenta­ with the colonization of Africa more than 300 years ago nifty new fire station for a required to protect their own regimes,” he said. “ A t first, tribal chiefs were at the forefront of and faculty to 34 African tively planned to extend Dutch East India Company at a time when capitalism was community their size. Now communities first, residents of resistance wars, but now they are being used as puppets for kninr in Europe, Buthelezi said. they d like to have a fire truck Prairie Township were some­ nations over the past 20 from June 27 to September 2 Western imperialism.” Valong there were wars of resistance by Africans against to go with it. times without fire protection. years. and will cost about $1,600 Buthelezi said during the question-and-answer period that the per person. istion,” he said. "And between the Dutch settlers and the But perhaps it's just as well After an orientation pro­ problem in South Africa w ill eventually take the form of an armed Township fathers said they r government, there was another struggle over emancipa- there's no equipment available, gram, volunteers w ill live in Applications must be struggle. The role of other African nations w ill be limited, he said, purchased land for the fire- for the building has no floor, no African rural villages in mailed before the end of j the slaves.” since many are economically dependent on South Africa. house first because of rising Lid after the Dutch defeat, South Africa was formed in 1910 lights, no plumbing, according groups of 8 to 10, working February and are available The current strategy taken by the Organization of African Unity land costs. And they built the with communities on self- Umpromise. to Fred Farmer, a member of from Dave Persell, 34 W. is a geographical approach, where Zimbabwe will fre liberated building because “ you can’t put ■was a struggle between traditional pastoral farming, which the board of the Wyandotte Owen Hall. first, and Nambia and South Africa later. a pumper truck in an unheated . s|aves, and the new imperialistic capitalism,” he said, County township, population “ But South Africa is the main imperialist base in Africa, so the garage or barn." e same struggle took place in the United States during the 978. real problem is colonialism,” he said. “ Ian Smith (primesminister of I War. 11 was over siavery- ^>ut slaves were not really Zimbabwe) survives because of South Africa.” Bosrd members voted in 1976 Officials hope the area's fi­ ttlarly. Buthelezi said, Africans were not involved when the U was formed. They responded by creating the African The W est also favors the geographical approach, he said, because it w ill give Western imperialists time to create a black to use federal revenue-sharing funds to start their own fire department, since residents nancial plight w ill ease soon so they can finish the station and get a truck. The Peanut Barrel elite class that are allies. kal Congress of Southern Africa in 1912. This has not been possible because of the very rigid oppressive , form of the struggle was a protest struggle until the policy in South Africa,” he said. “There has been no free ■VERY MONDAY: he continued. ‘There was some demand for the right of development of this class, which could be used as a buffer against A ll the Golden a people to participate in colonial politics.” M5 he said, the new demand of national independence was the progressive revolutionary class.” According to Buthelezi, the W est is pointing to Nigeria as a The Buck Fried Chicken you con eat, served with French Fries SO* O F F ■ay large Sub Tune for Repairs? Stops and Cole Slaw. Only *2.9S w ith coupon mm -Modi We specialize in the Big Three From Across the Sea Here 521 E. Grand River 351-0600 *11™ ^Sub \ Datsun Volkswagen Toyota MtllT1 m n r 349-2700 MERIDIAN MAIL m . djf-am OT im-Twi un wowZoultSi iruoti^ ^ lr The Beetle Shop roc c a m Shop j RHLOwdlm / ■WONWMIWWW ncuMM _ _ _ a>arjdlaMWa«t Actom f r —i "Tbp noKfcatw fo ” \ m„* CarolGaWas uiw m / 1400 E. CAVANAUGH Ph. 393-1590 Tw o women, life lonf friends, arc reunited in an act of heroism 1 M m ., S good Mon. Feb. 13.1971 It is the immensity of their risk and sacrifice. |and the enormity of their courage and commitment to each other, j .1 a h a 'ft 'lla /i that will fill the screen as no story of war e»er has before! the Promised One of til tges, is uniting the entire human race SOt III froo pinball noaoooaaaoaooooooooooooaooooooaooai with any lea cream ...you are invited to investigate... purchase and this ad BOB S MINI CHEESE STEAK o Mon. Feb. 13 8:00 P.M. W2 Owen Hall Mon. thru Thurs. The Oneness of Mankind AND SMALL COKE Now fsalvring f rozsn yogurt and organic good from Mon-Weds Wed. Feb. 15 8:00 P.M. 210ABerkey Hall flavor,. Expires 2/15 The Spiritual Solution to the Economic ftw&U- :5 Problem Thurs. Feb. 168:00 P.M. l.C.C. A S S Bldg. Bob’s Philadelphia Based on a true story. acroi, from Barkay Hall 337-1131 The Equality of Men and Women Fri. Feb. 17 8:00 P.M. Mason Hall Library Steak Sandwiches Ifte a Rota! B U Iwllltz 5JH B HQIts M* t y im m Christian Prophecy and the Soul 1040 E. GRAND RIVER 337-0195 A . , 'Produce In Store Coupons' F RICHARD DREYFUSS MARSHA MASON Pascal Celery 30 ct. size 29* Spartan Donuts I iMIMJMJO Twilit* M6M5-HW:15 Milts 'P I Plain o r Sugar 1 doz. pkg. 3 7 ’ Save 10* bene Wilder IneMountain Firaplaca Logs 99* $ ess Upton Cup-a-Soup . . , v per cate Ire e n O n io n . A ll Flavors 2 / 8 8 ’ Save 34* pdRadishes } 5 /* 100 Shop-Rite Vanilla Ice Cream 1 gallon t l i „ I Save 51* On oast side of MSU at 1109 East Grand Rivar. Open Mon.-Thur. 9 am-10 pm fe jO O T b V R W l■ >W MotorH5H5Twilit*£45-615Mite‘I* ^ M erM to i le s t fro m W eek e General M erchandise-. Fri. t Sat. 9am-10pm m n n Jltfy Cake Mixes c /%. 00 _ __ 5 fla v o r. 9 as. box Sava 25 “The One and Only" (lockingTankards */$*00 1-Assorted Colors 12 os. size w / I M eat is Funny, Hilarious and Hysterical (We’re very serious about this) ■quid Sponge D lth w a th e r 88 ’ Limit 1 please with *5.00 Food Purchase Please U.S.D.A. Choice Sirloin Steak 1 77 IBakery- U.S.D.A. Choice T Bone 207ib. JtenFraih. 100% whole Both Goodrich's & Larry's I Wheat Bread-1'/, lb. loaf 59* have Package Liquor & full selection of your U.S.D.A. Choice Porterhouse Steak 2 17 ib. Psfer’s Split Top Stutter Bread-1% lb. leaf 59* Favorite Beer t Wine Former Peet Luncheon Meats A ll items except Boiled Ham rrocery- I Creen Giant Niblat Corn 12 oz. can 24* 12 oz. pkg. 77* A Carl Reiner Film I Thanh You Canned Puddings A ll Flavors 2/77* Fresh Frozen Ocean Perch 139 lb. H E M WINKLER I Muellers Specialty Noodlas Klaskl • Manchon • or Klaps 8oz. pkg.3/M 00 2 2 9 is I Moyol Crown Cola Vanden Brink Ham Loaf 2 Ib. pkg. I keg. or Diet Set. pkg. 16oz. 1 ° ’ plusdep. | % Frosting Mixes Coramel-Choc or White 4/$r° Eckrich Sausage 149 I Ireeiweet Orange Juice 6 p k .c a n s 88 * Roosted or Polish Ib. b a Mudq HS788MC Twilit* 4:»5M Adslts ’I* SHIRLEY ANNE AB 1 frozen & D airy MacLAINE BANCROFT y 1 ■Country Fresh '/. % Lew Fat M ilk iTuming point it V 1 gal l on J b h Bfshf M M J Twittts 5JMW Milts T | ll,s Slow Yogurt kly'* En9ll,h Muffins S oz. pkg. 29’ aa. 6 ct. pkg. 37 « “Oh,God!" GOODRICH'S Is it Funny! { Pizza-10" size iQ jjq ' SuWy5:157:15801Tsilill <455:15Milts’V Miusogo or Papparoni 77’ on west side of MSU at 910 Trowbridgo Rd. Open Monday • Thursday 9 am-9 pm BURTREMOLDS “ S E M I ­ [ S*«nson Chicken TV Dinners 11’/: oz. pkg. 69’ 9 am-10 pm Friday I Saturday IRISiRisTormsoNtqugH” 11 am-5 pm Sunday 351-5760 Qgy Miaday545U0Twilts&15445MiltsM" Olin complaint group formed ★ ------------------- ABBOTT R O A D HAIRCUTTEBt Suite 201, East Lansing State Bank Building i. plaint committee is to take a plaints are due to misunder­ them. numbers. By JO E PIZZO The complaints are tran­ complaint and steer it to me, so standings or problems in com­ For someone discussing a H a ir s ty lin g f o r M e n & State News Staff Writer munication. procedure for actively seeking scribed onto a standard form, that I can correct the problem,” Along with dorm food, hold complaints to further fill the which includes all pertinent said Dr. John D. Siddall, medi­ He predicted the types of cards and the pit at registra­ complaints taken would include tight schedule of a medical W e ts ty lin g & B lo w d r y in g as /0 ((, information as well as the cal director of Olin Health tion, the Olin Health Center personality conflicts between director and staff physician, complainant's suggestions for Center. often occupies a top position on Siddall was cheerful. resolution of the problem. "There are some complaints physicians and patients, claims the M SU student's gripe list. Perhaps it is because, in But unlike the other pro­ The committee does not have we never know about,” he of misdiagnoses, or dissatisfac Siddall's own words, " I want OO blems of student life, com­ any actual authority, and can added. "The primary purpose (of the committee) is to find out tion with billing. “ Some complaints w ill be students to know there’s some­ 6 . plaints about the health center not even advise the medical what students are dissatisfied trivial,” he added. body over here that wants to may now have a better chance director on the handling of about, but I think it might also Though Siddall is currently listen to them, and wants to of quick resolution, due to a complaints. improve their service. new committee which will seek "This is a big step right here,” Towers maintained. “Dr. show students the purpose of the student advisory board." reviewing all complaints him self, he eventually hopes to "Improvement. That's what Call 332-4314 and act on them. have a physician or nurse we strive for every day," he 1 555-1255 Siddall (Olin Health Center Siddall said on the basis of Now, students dissatisfied with any health center services medical director) has given us a past experience that most com­ assigned to assist in reviewing added. for appt. need only pick up the telephone real opportunity. to reach members of the com­ "W e’re serving as a liason plaint committee of the Student (between students and Siddall). It's a lot easier for a student to mmmwmwimmm/ or walk-in Advisory Board to Olin Health Center. talk to another student (about ^ATRUE [\ The number is 355-4510, ex­ tension 257. Calls will be taken health matters),” she said. Many members of the com­ LOVE STORY... plaint committee have had ne­ For ro m 'w who bcliein from 8 to 11 a.m. Monday; from 3 to 5 p.m. Tuesday and from 6 gative experiences at Olin in Inippy endings to 8 p.m. Thursday. Health Center that were not “The purpose is to make it brought to the director's atten­ easier for students to register a tion and went unresolved, complaint.” said Mickey Towers explained. Towers, chairperson of the She said she had such an experience, but did not pursue r complaint committee. The al­ ternative was appealing direct­ the matter further. ly to the medical director, and “ If I could have picked up a DELIVERY AVAILABLE' " I "a lot of students would rather phone, I would have," she said, i I adding that she hopes students NO CHECKS ACCEPTED_______ FREE II forget it," she said. Towers said students who do with gripes about treatment or not wish to give their names billing at the health center will can just provide their student numbers because the health respond to the more convenient telephone service. “ The purpose of the com­ ‘T H E i I i center uses those as chart OTHER SIDE OF THE Disarmament film shown M O UNTAIN' PART I i B uy any M edium A t th e re g u la r p ric e Vizza i A film about nuclear disarmament w ill be shown at 7:30 tonight Get Id e n tic a l P IZ Z A by Mobilization for Survival at the United Ministries for Higher Education, 1118 Harrison Road. FREE ! The film, "The Last Slideshow,” w ill be followed by a report on a recent Searfarer demonstration put on by group members and a review of future activities. A ll are welcome. i Little Caesars Pizza I 1 203 E.6d. River I G R C M E R RHA movie Let me assist you in the purchase of I J« 3 3 7 -1 6 3 1 1 a programline your next new or used car, track or van. H SN cow,.. ..pirn 1-13.7S O ne coupon per order W A S H IN G T O N JR hive ■"ol 355-0313 If you re tired of driving that old sled that doesn t start or stay running, call me for an TONIOHT! M U ST ID IN M T M O IT BUT B IA L IS BM O W IN B IT UNCUT. SPECIAL GUEST S1AR appointment to see our excel­ lent inventory of new Chev- rolets. Many new Cameros, Caprices. Chevettes. Monte T N I U S T M O ST B U S T ID BO BN O C O M ID Y OP 1977 RAMSCY LEWIS Carlos. Molibus and one Corvette, along with an excel­ “It’s a comical farce which upgrades MONDAY FED. 10 -0RM lent selection of recondition­ ed used cars. the porno genre. See it!” nsrusmi.MM LANSING’S CIVIC CENTER AUDITORIUM Bud Koats Chevrolet R t m r sw ung icoo b $7 no new is A t c i v i c c e n t i r box a n a d iv c u u m rfc o rd s b o o g i e r e c o r d s in mi o a . 2801 E. Michigan I A F A Y ET T E R A D IO IN 1A C K S O N ROCK A R O tA R E C O R D S IN H IN T SAGINAW O M S K 374-0900 Two Blocks West of Frandor A RECORD STORE Sfarring HRS.: MON.-SAT. 9-9, S h a ro n 220 MAX.. UNIVERSITYMALL SUN. 12-5 M itchell ABOVE ALLE'EY • • PH. 332 3525 *2-22(4) TONIGHT IS GUEST NIGHT! ALLHI HEN RELEASES SHOWTIMES: 7:30,9:00.10:20 TONIOHT W i l l I I H SHOWPLACE: 102 B WELLS Saturday Night Fever ADMISSION: $2.50 student* Two record set by $3.50 faculty & staff the BeeGees Reg. 12” an antartalnmant larvlca of tha boat Aim co-op *tudont», faculty I ctaff welcome. 1 0 * checked V a le n tin e S pe cial M o n . & T u es. o n ly MICHIGAN STATE T U StM W C - I Mans 1976, all UNIVERSITY ■ |M, 26,500 miles. P 5 p.m. Faatura ol 7:15-9:30 HAROLD ROBBINS’ PERFORMING m m im m ARTS COMPANY PRESENTS im iI ft& d W U L W illiam Saroyan's Paula Roily Company of 22 ENOS TUESDAY Tonight Opan 7 p.m. The Time of "A Salute to Glenn Miller" is a show of beautifully nostalgic music that has lived in the hearts of millions for Show, 7:30-9:30 over thirty years. Songs about the moon, and moonltjjnt. SATURDAY NIGHT FEVER Our new special is BURGER & BREW & BARHOPPERS. Beginning at Your Life and shades of blue and green and tangerine. Romantic places like Berkeley Square, the Santa FeTrai and Kalamazoo. Les Brown’s own great hit songs^ A Paramount Picture 5:00 p.m. on Mondays you'll be able are also featured: "Sentimental Journey,” "Laura,^ 4 m to enjoy one o f our delicious quarter- "The Way We Were" and the Theme from "Rocky. pound burgers and a cold draft beer Fairchild Theatre Start* Wad. for only $1.00 all night! Beginning at ^ T U E S D A Y , F E B R U A R Y 28 at 8:15 P.M.^, "HIGH ANXIETY" PG 9:00 p.m. the low cover o f only 50 .5 0 , 5 .0 0 . M SU S tu d e n ts 2 Charlie Chaplin Hits! admission every Monday, from the ‘ S O D d i s c o u n t , .ill lo c a t i o n s . “ MODERN TIMES” Rainbow Ranch and ' the Alley-Ey. Shown at 7:45 only I I'rn rn ifJ In the PLUS 2843 E. Gd. River, E. Lar I I C IO R l.t O M I R l SI.RII-'S BOX OFFICE PHONE "GREAT DICTATOR' 351-1201 Shown at 9:IS only! 355-0148 HE STATE NEWS CLASSIC PHONE 355-8255 MON. THRO FRI. 8:00-5:00 Advorllstag L J S ffL H S S & J f f l 1 j f r j g j j j j j m 1 * P » r t i« t s W\ [ _ * p a r t iM i| t s "] { ^ j lasts | For S t lt IT IS the policy of the State lifor News that the last 4 weeks of WANTED PART time deliv­ ery, mornings. Must be reli­ NEW GROWTH Company has openings for secretaries, SPRING TERM- 1 man for TWO BEDROOM unfurnish­ furnished 2 man apartment, ed -close to campus. Immed­ INDIVIDUAL OR couple to share house with politically 100 USED VACUUM clean­ ers. Tanks cannisters, and term all Student Classified able and good driving record. key punch operators, mag own room, utilities paid, good iate occupancy. 332-0111. 1 4 7 Student Snrvkni M g . active people. $66/month uprights. Guaranteed on full HUM * Advertising must be paid for Call Bob Aldrich at 882- card operators, general office location- urgent! 351-2645. 0-20-2-28(3) plus utilities. Near St. Law­ year, $7.88 and up. DENNIS in advance beginning Febru­ 0208.1-2-13(4) clerks. Professional attitude 6-2-15(4) rence. 484-5105. 6-2-15(5) DISTRIBUTING COMPANY. ary 13,1978. Bring or mail to in your skill a must. For UTIS 347 Student Services. COLLEGE GRADS interview, phone Florie, 321- MALE ROOMMATE needed, 316 North Cedar, opposite I day*!•*pnrOne n »W Ideyt'MKperllnt 5-20-3-10(8) PEACE CORPS AND VISTA THE PEACE CORPS and 6878. 8-2-17(8) NEWLY FURNISHED large apartment, % block from campus. Haslett Arms, NEED ROOMMATE-own City Market. C-20-2-28(7) room in house, Harrison- Michigan. $68.75 plus utili­ PIONEER SUPER -tuner FM C lB 3 t t L iH n n m u i3 E Q tdnyi -7 5 < par line Ideyi-TtKperljne AIDS NEEDED East Unsing Vista offer unique opportuni­ ties for qualified individuals to $SALESOPPORTUNITY$ (PART TIME AVAILABLE) APARTMENT Call Craig, 332-0053. 5-2-17(3) ties. 351-0053. Z-3-2-13(3) 8-track 1 year old. Excellent Public Schools. Music aid 8 at car stereo $100. 699-2805. a hours a week. Pool aid 30 use their knowledge and skill Expansion plans and record 1 OR 2 males to sublease ROOM IN farm house. Lake, £-5-2-14(3) lin e rate per Interflon hours a week. Male, must supervise boys locker room. to help in developing nations in AFRICA. SOUTH AMERI­ breaking sales have created sales positions for honest, Bnrcham Woods spring. $87/month, one block animals, resources! Respon­ CA, ASIA and all over the ambitious young men and from campus, 353-4578. sible people. 351-8231, even­ HOOVER DELUXE portable . } line, • *4.00 • S days. 80' per line aver Call Personal Offic 337-1781. 6-2-20(8 ) UNITED STATES. Build a woman. Extremely high com­ *250 3-2-15(3} ings. 3-2-14(4) washer and dryer, excellent condition, only 1 year old. better future for others as missions and opportunity for immediate occupancy No adjustment in rate when cancelled, you enhance your own. advancement. Phone Mr. QUIET, 1 bedroom apart­ NEW YORK Street-2 bed­ Harvest gold, $300 or best el item(i) mutt be stated in ad. Maximum 3S1-3 1 18 ment. Close to campus. room house, garage,4 pets. offer. 374-7919. 5-2-14(5) TELEPHONE WORK for con­ Openings in a variety of fields Snyder at CHAPEL HILL struction company. 5 p.m.-9 745 Burcham Spring, Summer. $215/ $175/month. 489-7800. price o f‘50. living expenses travel and MEMORIAL GARDENS, 321- p.m. evenings $3/hour plus month. 337-1169. X-1-2-1413) 2-2-13(3) BOSE 301 speakers 1 year ertonel id s • 3 lines • ‘2.25 ■ per insertion. other benefits are provided. 3000. 8-2-14(13) commission. Apply in person SOUTH LANSING - 1 bed­ old. Excellent condition, $165 line over 3 lines (prepayment). For more info on how to only. 2600 S. Cedar, Suite C. apply. Contact volunteer re­ BOOKKEEPER TO handle ac­ room, living room, study. WALK TO campus. 4 bed­ pair. Mike 351-1227. - / G e r a ge Sele ndt - 4 lines • *2.50. RELIABLE CONSTRUCTION cruiters on Campus. February counts receivable and related Furnished. Heat included. C IO A R VILLAGE room house with fireplace. ,Z-3-2-13(3) lin e aver 4 lines - per insertion. COMPANY. 8-2-20(7) 13-16 at the Placement Of­ journals. Some light typing $160. 487-2166. 4-2-16(5) A PA RTM EN TS Discounted to $395/month, „ ids . 4 lines • *2.50 ■ per insertion, includes garage with studio. AMPLIFIER FENDER-twin fice, 9-4:30each day. Sign up required. 484-2578 ask for starts leasing for summer line over 4 lines. SENIOR KEYPUNCH opera­ now for an interview. Mrs. Marris. 8-2-13(5) FEMALE ROOMMATE need­ Call EQUITY VEST, 351-1500. revreb $475 like new. Call , eds/Traniportstton e d s • 3 lines • *1 .50 • ed for spring term, 2-bed­ and lo ll MARCH 1st 0-13-2-28(7) 355-0136 or 371-3895 after 5 tor, operates IBM 129 key BL-1-2-13<23) insertion. 50* par llna over 3 lines. CAREER OPPORTUNITIES room, 3-man Eden Roc; adja­ p.m. 5-2-13(3) punch machine to record alphabetic-numeric data on FOR qualified, motivated cent to campus; $90/month, 351-5180 3 BLOCKS from campus-4-6 351-1645. 6-2-17(4) bedroom homes. Furnished, WE PAY up to $2 for LP's & tabulating cards. Performs people. Training provided. Deadlines ENGINEERS Prior experience not essen­ ONE BEDROOM, furnished, fireplaces, and in excellent cassetts - also buying 45's, related clerical work. Salary tial. Strictly commission. 1 ,3 ,3 b e d r o o m close to campus. $120. 332 condition. 351-8135for show­ songbooks, magazines. FLAT ,m. - 1doss day before publication. $6100 - $8400. Send applica­ BLACK & CIRCULAR. Up­ Part-timeand full time people 8805. X-5-2-1413) ing. 0-8-2-21(5) ion/Chonge ■ I p.m. ■ 1 d a n day bafara tion to: Ms. Marilyn Cady, Goin valuable experience in a p a rtm e n t! stairs 541 E. Grand River. MICHIGAN TECHNOLOGI­ your field overseas os o needed. Call MICHIGAN otion. FIRE ALARMS, 349-5453. EAST SIDE, four bedroom Open 11 a.m., 351-0838. CAL UNIVERSITY, Unsing PEACE CORPS is ordered it cannot bo cancelled or changad office, P.O. Box 18006, Lan­ volunteer. 8-2-17(8) a fully carpeted FEMALE FOR four-person house, $240 month plus de­ C-20-2-28(6) after 1st insertion. a g a t hoot and central oir apartment -Spring term very posit, neat and clean. Phone sing, Ml 48901. Equal Oppor­ Sign up today at the Place­ close to campus. 351-2814, NEW, USED and vintage 0 *1.00 charge for I ad change plus 50' par tunity Educational Institution- CLERICAL FULL-time posi­ conditioning 675-5252. 8-2-14(4) ment Office for a talk with # swimming pool Kathy. 6-2-1313) guitars, banjos, mandolins, lonal change for maximum of 3 changes. Equal Opportunity Employer. recruiters on campus: tion in our customer services etc. Dulcimers and kits, re- 1 Newt will only bo responsible for the 1st department. Challenging a 24-houf maintenance 3-2-13(15) Feb. 13-16 at the Placement ^___ corders, strings, accessories, I incorrect insertion. Adjustment claims must Office, 9-4:30 each day. opportunity for individual • ploy ground for children a no pots Houses ROOmS y® books, thousands of hard-to- lodo within 10 days of expiration date. WAITRESSES - 11:30 a.m.- Sign up NOW for an with ability to handle tele­ —--- find albums. (All at very low 4m 7 days from ad axpiration date. If not 1:30 p.m. and 5 p.m.-2 a.m. interview. phone orders. Own corre­ prices). Private and group (by due date, a 50‘ late service chorge will Apply at SIR PIZZA after 7 spondence and filing. Must call for information 349-3100 IT IS the policy of the State IT IS the policy of the State lessons on guitar, banjo. p.m. 122 N. Harrison. type55wpm. Excellent fringe 10-5 Tuesday-Friday News that the last 4 weeks of News that the last 4 weeks of mandolin, all styles. Gift cer- 8-2-20(3) SUMMER EMPLOYMENT benefits. Send hand written 10*2 Saturday term all Student Classified term all Student Classified tificates. Expert repairs* free for IROQUOIS HOTEL letter and typed resume to Advertising must be paid for Advertising must be paid for estimates. ELDERLY IN- WANTED- PART TIME em­ MACKINAC ISLAND, Mi. JOHN HENRY CO. P.O. Knob Hill in advance beginning Febru­ in advance beginning Febru- STRUMENTS. 541 East ployee 11 pm -7 am; 4 nights Open early May to mid- 17099 Lansing, Ml. 48901. ary 13, 1978. Bring or mail to ary 13, 1978, Bringor mail to Grand River. 332-4331. Kin Ifal Automotive ] !» P6r week. Call 694-9823. 3-2-15(4) October. Send resume and dates available to Sam M. Attention: Personal Director. 5-2-15(16) Apartments 347 Student Services. 5-20-3-1018) 347 Student Sen/ices. S-20-3-10(8) C-20-2-28U3) ------------------ Mclntire 801 Lakeshore Drive _________________ — FOR SALE - waterbed ele- of the State RABBIT 1977. Champagne MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIST 1 FEMALE needed to sub­ TWO BEDROOM furnished SPRING GRADS - Career #602, Lake Park. FL., 33403. SINGLE. MALE student, vated frame and headboard, st 4weeks of Edition, rustproofed. FM ste­ MT (ASCP) preferred. Imme­ lease Cedar Village apart­ duplex for 2 to 3 people. search made easier: Employ­ 5-2-13(8) ment, spring term, call 332- block Union, cooking, park- t be paid for reo optional. $4500 or best diate opening, four days per 669-9939. 19-2-28(3) ment professional provides 2092. 5-2-13(3[ ing. 322 Evergreen. 332 3839 f l 8.™ , v after 6 nning Febru- offer, 656-1640 after 6 p.m. week on the afternoon shift. effective tips in easy-to- MAKE GOOD money selling LARGE BEDROOM near X-8-2-14(31 _ _ _ _____________ " ng or mail to 8-2-20(4) Must have clinical experience understand guide. Revealing quality AVON Products. Call CEDAR VILLAGE 1 bedroom MSU. Spring and/or sum­ in all areas. Excellent salary facts! How to get job offers! 482-6893. C-5-2-17(3) apartment. Sublet spring and mer. 351-7326. 3-2-13(3) t-2 MALES- Mult"be la in . ^ lN nI ° SH,ML1C 8peak| S l WILLY'S JEEP, 1962-Great Rush $2 to BOMAR ENTER­ and benefit program. Contact Cozy, excellent location by MQ102Equalizer, Koss ESP9 Personal. LANSING GEN­ summer. Call after 9:30 p.m. condition. New engine. Best PRISES, Box 865-MS, Alli­ DOG CENSUS - Persons 351-0270. 2-2-13(5) Holmes Hall Won t last. 351- | lac" ° s!?!‘c,s’ 355 2443 \ 6cylinder, cus- offer. 882-1036 evenings. ERAL HOSPITAL 2800 SMALL FACULTY family. ance, Ohio 44601. wanted to take dog census. Spring-Summer. 3-bed­ 5515. Z*6-2-16(31 ______ _ [ AM/FM, auto- 3-2-14(3) Devonshire. Phone 372-8220 ZX-3-2-1319)___________ Piece work - 506 per dog. rooms. $300/month. 351- .349-1405after 6 4) REAL ESTATE-116 class­ Own transportation. Call 676- 2431, ext. 270. 9-5 Monday - E.O.E. 8-2-16(10) EDUCATION GRADS 8816. 3-2-14(3) EAST IaNSING,"close"to campus, unfurnished with U IS P °licY ° f 0 1976. Un- hostess. Apply at BACK­ Related retail experience, although a plus, is not necessary. AS AN ALTERNATIVE FOR TWO YEARS OF YOUR LIFE. ot condition, STAGE, Meridian Mall, after * . $3900. 351- 5 p.m. 8-2-16(3)___ Salary will be commensurate with individual background. W e offer an ex­ ovenings. cellent benefit package including major medical, life insurance, profit WANT AN exciting job? Storer Camps needs summer UiXus 1974, 4 counselors, male and female. sharing, paid relocation, paid vacation and retirement plan. SEE RECRUITERS: •Med, 34,000 Call 332-4875. X-3-2(3) Schedule an interview with the Venture representatives when they visit "J. 52000, AM/ your campus on Monday and Tuesday, February 20 and 21,1978. For more information or to arrange an interview Phone 35M078 MALE COMPANION- per­ .3-2-14(4) sonal aide-roommate, want­ Or submit a letter and resume to: contact recruiters at the Placement Office Feb­ ed for young wheel-chair ruary 13-16,9-4:30 each day, sign up NOW !ir- 28,000 person. Downtown Unsing. Recruitment Coordinator „ .. rust- Urge high rise apartment. •349-4977, Automobile necessary. Sala­ ry plus complete living quart­ ers. Well built and healthy. JALINA, 1968 Call 485-2122 or 482-2221. - JOIN THE "“"swell. New 8-2-21(9) ’"ss end bat- 615 Northwest Plaza • St. Ann, Missouri 63074 NEW WANTED-PART time cook. o,,9r- No experience necessary. A Division of The May Department Stores Company Apply in person. HUDDLE Tempest, NORTH. 309 N. Washington. An Equal Opportunity Employer MtF S°od condition, Next to LCC. 5 5-2-15(3) 8-2-21(5) j ^ Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigon " " ' ‘v '* * " » < i m Fir Salt f For Salt > For Sale <3>| [ For Salt ^ [ M ih H o M S \m TypiRf Sirvici Pinball tournament SYMPHONIC CONSOLE 1974 SKYLINE mobile home EXPERT TYPING by MSU NEW AND used children's FOR $92 you can get every­ APARTMENT SIZE refrigera­ grad. 17 years experience. thing for a $300 speaker tor. Freezer compartment Stereo BSR changer AM/FM 2 bedroom, 2 air conditioners, downhill ski boots and new and used adult’s downhill skis clearance sale, phone AERO system at the SPEAKER with ice trays. $50. Good SHOPPE. 351-8724. 8-2 13(3) condition. 675-5523evenings. radio. Like new. Early Ameri­ can Cabinetry. $410. 694- drapes, appliances, shed, skirting, wooden deck. Cozy Near Gables, call 337-0205. 5252-28131 to aid cancer dinic Z-E 5-2-15(3) 2959. 2-2-13(3) living in a small park in Holt. RENTALS, 339-9523. Asking $5500. 694-5684. PROFESSIONAL EDITING, 5-2-13161 TOP DOLLAR paid for cam­ papers, dissertations. Minor SEWING MACHINE CLEAR­ 52-16(71 B j- DONNA BAKU N era, stereo and guitar equip­ corrections to re-write. 332- ANCE SALE. All floor sam­ SKIS 150cm with bindings ment. Phone WILCOX ples and demonstrators used Animals 10x50 2 bedroom, close to 5991. C-20-2-2813) State Ncwi Still Writer Sarah Boling ia up to her neck in T-shirts but „ . $65. Ski boots, size 6 and 10, TRADING POST, 485-4391. during your X-mas buying 0-12-2-28(4) campus, skirted, partly fur­ The 150 shirta are free to anyone who re e is J.k !j keeP*im $15 each. 351-5196. season. Up to 50% discount. nished, $2000. 361-5531. COPYGRAPH SERVICE FREE! AFFECTIONATE cat for a pinball tournament March 1-30 at Pau| E-5-2-1413) Guaranteed used machines complete dissertation end re­ Auto iM u ranc* from $39.95. KEN ED­ desperately needs home, 52-17(31 sume service. Corner M.A.C. MCINTOSH MC2505 power otherwise to be destroyed. A ll proceeds from the tournament will be toward i * amp, C26 preamp, best offer. h r Students WARDS DISTRIBUTING CO Please call 351-3439. and Grand River, 8:30 a.m.- Call 337-2075 evenings. A t Reasonable 6448. C 13 2-17(10) 1115 N. Washington, 489- E-5-2-1313) [ lo s t t Found ] ( ^ j 5:30 p.m. Monday-Friday, patient costs at' the Oncology Center for can J, a pi" * ^ Z-SP-3-2-1413) 337-1666. C-20-2-28I6I treatment at Edward W . Sparrow Hospital in I . • ttf Rates! A PUPPY for your valentine. Since Sparrow Hospital cannot solicit funds w lL LOST BROWN tan boxer, PROMPT TYPING Service. TEAC-160A cassette deck TEAC 3300, good condition. Lovely long-haired cocker- Boling said she hopes the number of registrants win e name Rocky in vicinity of Term papers, resumes I.B.M. Price includes tapes and ac­ who have signed up. e,ce«l th( |j with Dolby, equalization, bias. $105. 351-7255. Call Greening cessories. $325. 355-1571. setter cross. Golden or black. Free to good homes. Call Cedar Village. Please call 694-1541. 0-3-2-13(3) 351-3321 ask for Paul Boling, coordinator of teacher education proeram.r , I Z-Sp-3-2-1413) Insurance Agency SP-3-2-1313) Linda B. Room 9 355-9656. Kennedy. 3-2-14(4) is a self-professed “ pinball freak" who his up on th e id , r THESIS, DISSERTATIONS, GARRARD G30 turntable, 2 4 89 -5 7 0 5 35 mm Camera with every­ Nights 1-769-6639. E-52-1417) term paper typing, IBM-II Call W tournament while dropping quarters in to th e m ..? >**1 LOST GLASSES in Blue Revere's. raachm« it Pig microacoustics FRM3; Nikko thing. Hate to give it up. Ask 332 2078. 0-14-2-28(3) amplifier 55 watts. '353-8246. 533 S. Washington for Mike J. 482-0025. BRITINY SPANIEL Male case. In or near Engineering Building on Tuesday 2-7-78. W It was two weeks before Christmas w h e n B oline h Z-3-2-14I3I Lansing, 48933 8-2-20(3)_____________ Born Oct, 77. Call after EXPERIENCED I.B.M. typing. transcriber from Sparrow was playing p in b a ll a t t h e ' t ' 91 Reward. 337-7474. 2-2-13(5) SHERWOOD 5-7100A Re­ midnight, before 8 a.m. Joe Wright 353-9338. 52-17131 Dissertations, FAYANN, 489-0358. (pica-elite). N mulling over a way children could benefit from a fund a • center. “ "“ roe ton, BLIZZARD OF '78 Survivor PROJECT ONE Turntable, ceiver. Excellent Condition. LOST - GOLD bracelet; C-20-2-2813) T-Shirt. $5.95 including tax and shipping. Please state excellent condition, new car­ tridge. Best offer. 351-7191. $130 or best offer, 353-1473. Z-3 2-14(3) IRISH SETTER - male; 9 2-578 Engraved letters C.L.W. Union Building, Re­ 00 "She said some of the letters she transcribed mad k Boling said," and I thought/why can’t we do it?1" 'I size. Make checks or money months. AKC; Call Claudia, PROMPT TYPING twelve I 5-2-15(3) ward 371-5716. 3-2-15(3) Since then, Boling has been collecting various psizej orders payable to "Blizzard", 482-0158. 5-2-17(31 years experience. Evenings - DISCOUNT, NEW, used from various merchants. ' Box 1978, Napoleon, Ohio PORTABLE TV in excellent desks, chairs, files. BUSI­ Personal j/ j 6757544. C-20-2-28(31 10 Prizes include everything from trophies, free haircut 43545. Z-10-2-2217) NEW JENSEN speakers 15" condition; $28. Phone 484- 8783. E-52-15131 NESS EQUIPMENT CO., 215 E. Kalamazoo, 485-5500. 0-2-2-13(4) Mohile Horms H IT IS the policy of the State ! Wanted ]jg w decanters and veniaon steaks donated by an MSI! * * professor. Four of the five trophies came from I r e n e a n d C arl Morel “* 0 1 PIONEER RECORDING 8- woofers, 2 tweeters, mid­ range. $325. 349-2072. track deck. Excellent condi­ BACKGAMMON SETS de­ IT IS the policy of the State News that the last 4 weeks of term all Student Classified SEEKING WORKING female « • Crystal who owned a motorcross track until they sold it wh t u tion $90 or best offer 355- News that the last 4 weeks of or graduate student to share discovered Irene had a brain tumor, Boling said . | 3-2-15(3) luxe, medium and small sizes. Advertising must be paid for 1571. SP-3-2-1313) term all Student Classified house in East Lansing, Call Wholesale prices $15-30. 351- in advance beginning Febru­ u Advertising must be paid for Thet4 million center, slated for completion th is sprine »aik. SPEAKERS-2 way, hand 7663. E-5-2-HH3)________ ary 13,1978. Bring or mail to 351-8349. B-1-2-13(4) FISH TANK-accessories, 29 in advance beginning Febru­ one of few in the nation. It w ill house such equipment u built, under warranty and 3 347 Student Sen/ices. z gallon with fish, $80. 485- CABINET STEREO AM/FM ary 13, 1978. Bring or mail to MALE STUDENTS of faculty source, a $ 4 6 0 ,0 0 0 linear accelerator, and a $690,000 CT so I way Sound Research. $100 S-20-3-1018) 4597. E-5-2-1513) radio some plug ins. $100. 347 Student Services. to participate in a cholesterol En try fee for the tournament is $8, and p a rtic ip a n ts must S i I per pair, 355-5435. 882-2010 or 694-0474. S-20-3-1018) Study planned for spring to play the four “ rounds" conducted on Tuesday, Wedneid,, a I Z-E-5-2-17I3I DINING ROOM table and 4 E-5-2-16(3) term. All meals provided free Thursday from 7 p.m. to 12 a.m., and Saturday a n d Sunday (,«,, 2 WOOD Lacrosse sticks defense man, and mid field- chairs $20, buggy stroller $20. A pet can w arm your heart on Bathroom sink $10. Argus a cold w in te r evening. Look WINDSOR, 1974, 70 X 40, excellent condition, com­ AG MAJORS it you are eligible. For further information call 353-3183 or 0 p.m. to 12 a.m. Participants can register by calling Paul R e v e re s Tavern o th I “I s man. Both $35. 353-5123. 8mm auto load projector $15. to the Pets classification o f pletely furnished. $12,000. 355-7723 week day 1-7 p.m. sending their name, address and telephone n u m b e r to Sm m . I E-5-2-17I3I 393-2803. E-5-2-13(4) 372-0149. 8-2-20(3) If your field is Agriculture 4-2-13(9) Hospital, 1215 E . Michigan A ve„ Lansing. ‘ today's newspaper you can work overseas as o Boling said the call-in deadline will be e x te n d e d in order a PEACE CORPS Volunteer. TWO NEED ride to Fort distribute the 150 T-shirts. Sign up today at Placement Lauderdale. Will share cost. Office fo r a talk with recruit­ Leave 3/18, return 3/29. 332- er on campus: 2687. S-5-2-15(3) Feb. 13-16 at the Placement Author speaks on hea/fj I Office 9-4:30 each doy. Sign up NOW for an interview. ^ ound Tovy\ Barbara Seaman, author of the books “The Doctor's CmI Against the P ill" and “ Free and Female,” will speak at 7tonightii I Erickson Hall K iva as part of Great Issues “Women's Week." I Service | [^ H Both books sounded early warnings of the since-proven sideI effects of hormonal drugs prescribed for women, Great Issual spokesperson Fred Jones said. I (0 < Jones said Seaman's work has been cited by the SecretarydI Health, Education and W elfare as a major reason for consututl IT IS THE policy of the State CALENDAR OF Events labeling on oral contraceptives. I News that the last 4 weeks of CABERFAE SKI RESORT He said Seaman has also been cited by the Library of Congresl L IG H T N IN G L IT H O term all Student Classified Printing Advertising must be paid for in advance beginning Febru­ Cadillac Michigan. February 12 -2nd Annual Sweethearts Race. Urn as the first author to make sexism in health care a worldwiltI issue. Her books have been translated into several languages. I Seaman has also w ritten for such magazines as Ladies Hootl Quick As A Flash ary 13, 1978. Bring or mail to February 19 -1st Annual 347 Student Services. Journal, Woman's Day, Fam ily Circle and Ms., and for newspaptnl 2711 South Cadar Caberfae Downhill Race. 394-2995 S-20-3-10(8) February 25 -7th Annual Schlitz-Nastar Cup Race mi including the New York Times and the Washington Post, J omI said. Appearing with Seaman w ill be her husband, Gideetl PROFESSIONAL RESUmES L.E. LI6KTHART ft CO. EXPERIENCED HANDYMAN attending MSU wishes to contract for repair work. Rob. March 4 -Caberfae's Winter Sno-Fest Carnival. mi Seaman. He is Director of Graduate Medical Education tall Director of Psychopharmacology at the Creedmoor Psychiitnl Typewriters; manual All events open to all MSU Center in New York, Jones said. He has published in a numberf 16m Typing .Typesetting, 351-1563.0-1-2-13(3) students. For further infor­ u professional journals, including the American Journal of Psychiaj DOUG ELBINGER and electric, portables. ‘ FREE NEEDLE check. Bring mation call 616-862-3400. try and the Journal of Experimental Psychology. High quality onset in your record player needle Z-5-2-13(14) (0 The talk is free and open to the public. prlntinq on uour choice of PHOTOGRAPHY Electronic Calalators for free check at anytime. "SUPERMAN, I Love You", INSTANT Color Dictating Machines Special prices en new need­ Lois Lane. Valentine special paper. and Black & White: passport resume 2 f o r ‘ 9 .5 0 Sales S Sovica les. MARSHALL MUSIC, East Lansing. C-2-13-K6) this week. Superman comics number 200 and later, 251 10,000 comics in stock at (0 •ALSO * ID portraits 416II C nd Irn r LOBMf SAFETY, HARDEN b coated lens. OPTICAL DISCOUNT THE BOOK EXCHANGE, 0 Announcements for It's What's Happening must be received in the Correction: Women's coffM haus rescheduled for Feb. 22nd■ 220 A lbart Sf. 2301 E. Michigan. 1 mile 2617 E. Michigan, Lansing, West of Brody. Parking. 485- State News office, 343 Student 8 p.m. in UMHE lounge r a 332-3026 3 2 1 -0 1 8 5 372-7409. C-5-2-17(4) Services Bldg., by noon at least featuring dichotomy, woman* COmPLETE DISSERTATION 0416. 5-2-17(8) u two class days before publication. music collective, Kathy Cowkf SERVICE INTERVIEWING? ENERGY CONSERVATION Consultant, will make house DAVE MASON with special guest BOB WELCH. Lansing M No announcements will be accept­ ed by phone. and Catherine Madsen. calls. Call Harry Hepler at Better see the resume ace! 394-5520 or 394-3444. Civic Center. February 24. Tickets available at Campus u$ Volleyball Club meets Monday "W hy Does Willie Run Amokr, a Fassbinder film, will be prf PHOTOCOPIES 8-2-13(4) Corners II. B-1-2-13(4) M 11 p.m. to 1a.m. and Thursday 10 p.m. to 1 a.m. in Gym 3 or sports ed at 8 tonight at the East Lans Public Library. CHILD CARER in my home, Today's best buys are in the arena, Sundays 11to 1p.m. sports located downstairs at the Put your best foot forward! Bring us the basic mature mother has immedi­ Classified section. Find what (0 arena. Juniors, seniors: Energy Educ comer of MAC %Gd. River information and we'll do it all - Typeset it, ate openings, reasonable you're looking for! rates, call now for more 00 Video workshop invites people tion Program needs intern < help you write it, and print it. See the problem evaluate program progress information. 394-5391 or 355- interested in city council proceed­ spring. Contact Dave Persell. solvers today at Abbey Press, 547 East Grand 2860. 8-2-14(6) ings to participate. Meetings are lege of Urban Development. TH IS COUPON I S GOOD FOR A 1 0 * r = cablecast live. For information DISCOUNT ON RESUME -PRINTING AT \ V - _ River, East Lansing FOR QUALITY stereo ser­ contact Union activities. ICE COPYORAPH S E R V IC E S. DOES NOT % V People Against Sexism in APPLY TO TYPING , TYPESETTING OR OTHER S E R V IC ES. EXPIR ES n vice, THE STEREO SHOPPE, 555 E. Grand River. mi Come play GOI MSU GO Club junction with Wimmin's Rap, ating men and women 1 1 /2 8 /7 7 . 0-20-2-28(3) meets at 8:30 tonight. Call Ken or Mike at 332-6353 for information. tonight at 7, 4 Student Si DISCOUNT COUPON | ^ 332-8668 FREE LESSON in Complex­ ion care. MERLE NORMAN COSMETIC STUDIO 351- TIME Original Okinawa Karate Club meets at 5:30 p.m. Mondays in Gym 34, 5:30 p.m. Thursdays in Bldg. NOW members: Attend Lege tive Day party at 5 p.m. Tuesdjjj bu 5543. 0-20-2-28(3) 00 218 Women's IM Bldg. and at 8 the Michigan Room of the w p.m. Wednesdays in 16 Men's IM Plaza. SUPIR RISUM IS Bldg. : TYPESETTING RETYPING : Instructions "Religion and the Arts 'toW WIDE SELECTION OF PAPERS 6th Annual Theological Co> Discover check with the MSU | OFFSET PRINTING WRITING CONSULTANT 9 Chess Club at 7 tonight, 205 Horticulture Bldg. Please bring ence at University Church with Joseph Sutler, z years experience in profes­ versity of Chicago professor I (A VARIETY OF PAPERS W ITH WE FEATURE THE MIRACLE XEROX 9200 DUPLICATING your own set and board. SYSTEM. WE WILL SHOW YOU A SAMPLE OF ITS "SUPER sional editing. 337-1591. • M A T C H IN G ENVELO PES) QUALITY” C 1-2-13(3) Christian Science Organization, University A p a rtm e n ts acW i BORDERS & ART WORK \ Dissertation Specialist east campus, welcomes students, faculty and alumni to its meetings Open basketball tonight at'*1 Red Cedar School. k » * \ FREE CONSULTATION \ JAX UNIGRAPHICS OFFERS u tonight on 2nd floor Baker Hall. Venereal disease: free and con­ people. Informal, 903 come dressed to play WHATEVER YOU NEED FOR YOUR RESUM E. fidential treatment from 1-4 p.m. WE'VE G O T IT ! COMPLETE DISSERTATION H Monday, Thursday and Friday; Competition swmnning A T THE M O S T R E A S O N A B LE R ATES IN TOWN IT H E PAPER EATER 1 COPYING AND RESUME SERVICE- typesetting, I.B.M. typing, offset printing and binding. < 8:30 a.m. to noon Wednesday at the Community Health Services, 701 N. Logan St. gram for men andw> over. McDonald Monday Ihrough T fl H 541 E. GRAND RIVER (UPPER LEVEL) For estimate stop in at 2843 10:30 p.m. AAU Masters There are people 211 A B B O T T EAST LANSING M-F 8:30-6:00 Sat. 10-3 East Grand River or phone, around town who M -F 8:30 - 6 Folk dancing tonight at 8 at Mobilization (or SuMj1J NEXT TO STATE THEATRE ACROSS FROM BERKEY ABOVE PARAMOUNT 332-8414. C 20-2-28(7) will celebrate 351-4321 SAT 1 0- 5 CALL 332*5300 ANN BROWN TYPING Dis­ sertations - resumes - term the coming of winter by taking. up skating. 00 Bailey Street Elementary School, corner of Ann and Bailey Streets. Everyone welcome. sents Michigan prem®1* Last Slideshow tomglJ 1118 Harrison Road. A 1 1 Reasonable Quality papers. 601 Abbott Road, If you have North entrance, 351-7221. Microbiology Club presents Cost skates. . . or any Darrell King, Institute of Water WorVmanship C 20 2 28(4) type of winter Agriculture and Research, MSU, speaking on source students! S m a ll Unigraphics FOR A SHARP TYPING TERM papers and theses, I.B.M. experienced, sports equipment you no longer use, sell them quickly waste water renovation by biologi­ cal systems. Day chairperson need tion in 121 Agriculture fast service. Call 351-8923. and easily. Use a RESUME SPECIALIST O w n e r O p e ra te d RESUME 520-2-28131 EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Classified ad to attract buyers Black Students Psychological Association will meet tonight at 6:30 in 421 Baker Hall. Peace Corps four host court*** 16 A griculture Hal sw* 9 ^ IBM TYPING, IBM TYPESETTING for the things you n PLSL I TING LOR THAT E X T R A SNAP Fast accurate. Thesis, term a.m. and every ho" no longer need. OFFSET PRINTING papers. 339-3575. 3-2-14(3) Armenian Student Organization welcome. I P \PLR SE LEC T IO N TO SET THE R IG H T MOOD seminar with Rev. Rubien on COMPLETE DISSERTATION SERVICE Armenian history at 9 tonight in TYPING, EXPERIENCED, Recreational , O F F S ET P R IN T IN G FOR C R ISPN ESS McDonel Hall's '63 Room. All fast and reasonable, 371- welcome. children at clinl“ n{ngs I A w id e se lec tio n of p a p e rs* p h o to -sc re e n s» c o lo re d in k s* b o rd ers tvvo volunteers o ^ j •c h a rt-p a k le tte rin g 'm a tc h in g coverr,heels a n d en v e lo p e s . 4635. C 15-2-28(3) State News 2843 E. Grand River prlnlt-ln-o-mlnlt PAPERS, THESES, resumes. Classified Women's Survival Coalition meeting at 6:30 tonight on 3rd Come to Roomi * Slu0t vices Bldg. for * » ls 332-8414 WE'RE PROFESSIONALS IN RESUME'pRINTING Prompt, reasonable. IBM floor Union. All women welcome. k C i ' mh’i mI MAC & Ann in East Lansing selectric, choice of types. Prompt Riflh’ Acro>* From Coral Gobles COUltSOUS Campus pick-up and delivery 355*83 55 ASMSU Great Issues presents meet Thetonight Br! i,Vat88:»* ii’^lheU Houis 8:30-6:00 M-F; 10:00 5:00 Sal. until 10 p.m. 339-3873. Barbara Seaman tonight at 7 in Oak Room. Sendee 72-13(5) on upcoming sp«aK Erickson Kiva. Hf|„n Stote New*. Eo»t Longing, Michigan Monday, Februory 13, 1978 15 on a n_ o D D ly tw professor p h u m b le by Bill Yates • SPONSORED BY: THANKS FOR THREE GREAT SHOWS. MORE TO COME |||M-TV(CB5) (IQ)W IIX.TV(N BC) (ll)W ElM -TV(C oblo) (12)WJRT-TV(ABC) (23)WKAR-TV(PBS) MONDAY (12) Bonanza 8:00 (23) Anyone For Tennyson? I AFTERNOON (23) Sesame Street (6) Good Times 10:00 £ £ A P 12:00 4:30 (10) Bob Hope Special (6) Lou Grant lews (6? Doris Day (11) MSU Hockey (12) love Boat ay the Least (10) Gilligan’s Island (12) Six Million Dollar Man (23) Onedin Line t te r p M T lO fc lo cate s 5:00 (23) Dialog 10:30 12:20 (6) Gunsmoke 8:30 ' fcnac (10) Emergency One! (6) Baby, Cm Back 11:00 12:30 (12) Rookies (6-10-12) News 9:00 Jth For Tomorrow (23) Mister Rogers' (6)M*A*S*H* (23) Dick Cavett f i / S A z -/j | Gong Show Neighborhood 11:30 (10) King n's Hope 5:30 (6) Movie (12) Honeymooners 1:00 (23) Electric Company (10) Johnny Carson igond the Restless Valentine Special Richer, For Poorer (6-10-12) News 6:00 (23) Great Composers (12) Forever Fernwood (23) ABC News PEANUTS • in I mw ina u:t timu IP O * CBH pw lyChildren (11) TNT True Adventure 9:30 12:00 by Schulz WONSOttO.Yi. 332-3537 Iln'Over Trails (6? One Day at at Time (12) Movie 1:30 (23) Dick Cavett ke World Turns 6:30 6 0 0 0 ! I LIKE TO I LIKE TO KNOW \| L of Our Lives (6-10-12) News MSU SHADOWS ® CHECK OUT THE UlEEK IF THERE'S ANYTHING t gt Composers (11) Impressions (23) Over Easy by Gordon Carleton spo nsored av: I HAVE TO O R E A P y= 2:00 |ti(e to Live }Eosy (6) My Three Sons 7:00 P IN B A L L P E T E 'S (10) Mary Tyler Moore Present this really funny comic for 25' 2:30 kg Light (11) The Bible's View worth of free play! Net valid Frl.« Sat. Nights prs (12) Brady Bunch (23) Spartan Sportlite IS POP COLTOR S H U . C tL tB R A T lM fo ) I lin g w ith 7:30 J - ^ C O L A i'S S |R T HDAH) — Jtal Flavor 3:00 (6) Gong Show TODAY'S SPECIAL Jlhe Family (10) Hollywood Squares Hw Five. P ^ . a dua b il l CHILI M LU N O S |Alsgre (U )A lger Hiss on truly a gaurmat traat I American Diplomacy I 4:00 Rickey Mouse (12) Mary Tyler Moore FRANK & ERNEST u e (23) MacNeil/Lehrer by Bob Thaves IIA Z T IC O RESTAURANT n Acres Report SPONSORED BY: 203M.A.C. 351-9111 HOSPITAL ADMINISTRATION THE OPB/MTlNfi ROOM. THEY’D u Kb ADVERTISE US TO TUftN OPF IN THIS SPACE r®~i in 'S f e n r ‘’th e F lig h t o f th e BuM gLEfEfi" ON CALL353-6400 th e IN TERCO M . iHAtlef 2-15 rs M P iic • in b in a t lo w gas prices Plus THE DROPOUTS P IZ Z A I IVELS WITH FARLEY® Service LHtie pTM vey by Post SPONSORED BY: IF ro n k l i nrln H mM— 1301 f. Cr. liver T H IS STUFF a V I O tH E H tu H A / C oO dH 6> SPONSORED BY: Nest to Versify Inn AWFULyC H B F / ( fiAMILy WITH A U 3 N * \ w S # / W e Appreciate Your Business you o p o x k w tr LBARNnCOCK,7/ HOWARD THE DUCK!® P ’LLO W TA LK F U R N I T U R E ••*»,"™itura by Steve Gerber and Val Mayerik SPONSORED BY: I W. Moll Frondor Shopping Center 351-1747 Nolr Styling for Mon and Women SAM and SILO ® SPONSORED BY: 7JT|«p m»as Ben Call for appointment today by Jerry Dumas and M ort Walker ° 201 M A C Selow Jonot Stationery SSWORD 0® Now open Saturdays VZZLE 00 SPONSORED BY: b h e p Q fd i WOW.' I IT'S BEEN I COULD 6 0 ON 24. Defective 25. Alone B0 a s s 00000 00® compus DIPNT Y e a r s .1 LIKE THIS ALL DAY/ GOT A N Y L lN lM E N T ? J 26. Extended 00 00 ® 0 TfJlNK I M j 27. Member of 0a F21S0 0 COULD Parliament 29. Fabulous birds H0 SBE0 STILL 31- Check ® 0 0 ® ® DO Maw 33. Previous night 00 00 00! 34. Northern bird 00 0 0 001 TfilS / - 35. Ireland 36. Nimble 0® 0 ® 00! 38- Unit ol work 43. Scottish dairymaid Complied with 39. Speaker Interlaced 41 Burbot genus Balsam 42 .Distant 1. Hors d’oeuvre Relative rate 6 [7 \A 0 10 Mature Chemical suffix Prejudiced GROVER WASHINGTON 15 Upshot Oversee BEETLE BAILEY* SPONSORED BY: and RAAASEY LEWIS TONIGHT-TICKETS •8 Exercises by M ort W alker AT THE DOOR Hackneyed 21 Affliction Resentment Bouet p ip you ^R 1 WELL, I Outlaw m op it? L SWEPT IT Spotted cat P Korean soldier Embittered 3 T Copiousness Spree Convex molding Short spoon to Austere Babylonian god w ~ Hole in one; golf Countless years 1 Peacock butteriy 0)978 Universol Press Syndicofe ^m r\ From ghostly hitchhiker to Bigfoot, fantasy lives I I ( . i i n i r l Fivt.f Ph 33, By JE A N N E BARON continued, most horror and science fiction films were low budget He added that in addition to the morbid faacination for fantasy, 3', J?l and equal to pulp publications. there is also the joyous fascination, in which miracles help us to State News SUfl Writer cope with life. O PRN "But “2001: A Space Odessy," “ Close Encounters of the Third A young couple picks up a hitchhiker on a toll road, who In relation to science and technology, he said, fantasy is sort of a Kind" and “ Star W ars" are slicks, with high budgets and mass M O N D A Y thru r R |D A Y , o proceeds to discuss the second coming of Christ. Later, the the working backlash against the elite intelligensia. audiences," he said. hitchhiker vanishes - leaving his seat belt still buckled. He said television offers a wider range of fantasy fare, from "Sometimes scientists are called fooia for not taking certain S A T 9 6 SU N n.q When the couple arrives at the next toll booth, they excitedly fantasies seriously, but the same people who curee scientists w ill documentaries on Bigfoot and astrology to prime-time shows such tell the toll collector what happened. He tells them he has heard s ta te COUPON as “ Star Trek” and "Bewitched.” In one week, TV Guide magazine use science to affirm their beliefs," he said. the same story many times in the ten years he has worked her^ listed 104 television shows with fantasy content. Another role Johnson mentioned deals with the economic aspect Perhaps the story of the vanishing hitchhiker sounds familiar. It should, according to an MSU folklore expert, because variat.ons of it can be found throughout the United States. A version of the tale In addition to the dissemination of fantasy through the media, there is also a cultural, oral tradition, which is the urban folk of fantasy, and he used “ Bigfootology"as an example. Not only do Bigfoot hunters and towna near Bigfoot stomping CIGARETTES legend,- Johnson said. grounds rake in money, he said, but so do documentary film t, is also included in the Book of Acts in the New Testament. John Johnson, instructor of African folklore and hterature, recounted several such "urban folk legends Thursday in a lecture “Some have spread across the United States like w ildfire," he said. "Slumber parties and Boy Scout campfires are especially books and restaurants selling“ Sasquatch” aandwiches. "The bionic Bigfoot (a regular on "The Six Million Dollar Man) A ll 2/99* fruitful.” has led to the production of several toys for children, Bigfoot on "The Role of Fantasy in American Society." T a x In c lu d e d Some unusual precautions have been made to explain the games as well as a pair of Bigfoot snow shoes," he said. Johnson said urban legends are just one aspect of fantasy hitchhiker legend. Americans indulge in. ,, One role of American folklore seen in Bigfoot and hitchhiker Such patterns of behavior exist, because beliefs, more than "Indeed, it's hard to find a part of our lives that is not affected by legends, he said, is to make a synthetic order out of chaos in the S T A T E COUPON so-called facts, are most naturally involved in influencing certain horror and ghouls." he said. ,, . Universe. Johnson explained that fantasy is anything dealing with the parts of humans, he said. "Fantasy entertainment offers an escape from the dull, "And if you think you're all academic and immune, you’re not,” supernatural - things which cannot be explained, or the supranormal - things which are possible, but do not occur in cvervdsy life. everyday life; it's adventure by proxy," he explained. “ W e have a morbid fascination for it. It verbalizes our fears and makes us more he said. However, in case he angered any spirits, Johnson hastened to 1 0 % O F F 0URD,sc^ " PBIClr "W e float in a sea of fantasy of all ages." he added, “and fantasy secure in our precarious lives." include at the end of his lecture an old Scotish prayer: Fantasy also plays a role in wish fullfillment, such as legends is on the upswing." , . Johnson said fantasy themes can be found in films, television, ■ about buried treasures, and in justifying the unjustifiable, Johnson “ From ghoulies and ghosties and long leggety beasties, and things that go bump in the night, good Lord deliver us.” P H O T O FINISHING books, magazines, the theater and oral legends. In the past, he said. STATE COUPON U lk 1-STOP SHOPPING SAVES MONEY, TIME, ENERGY L IS T E R M IN T rD fC y M O U TH W ASH ' & G ARG LE TOOTHPA! f A SAMPLE t°hfe SAVINGS! 1.07 11 ox. 1.59 V a lu e 1 o i. 1.06 1 .6 1 Value L IM IT 1 ( X P IU IS Z - l» 78 I L IM IT 1 im eiJERj STATE COUPON S T A T E COUPON P tK BG O O O T M U SATURDAY H I. I I , 1971. M IM t l RESERVES THE WORT TO LIMIT SAUS ACCORDING TO SffC lfllD U M IB . CONTAC HALLS thrifty acres | NO SALH TO D UURS, U BTim tO RS OR DBTtflUTORS. COLD C A P S U L E S MENTHO-lYPi Acting MSU lealor Heatlu Hardens at K 1.27 1 0 's 2.0 C V a lu e 3 0 'j T 9 ' Valve it least two h llinc L IM IT 1 E X P IR E S ? .1 0 .9 8 I L IM IT 1 IXPIRIS S T A T E COUPON T W O FOR SALE FLA N N E L SHIRTS MTA PRO 2000 2/7.99 equ WOMEN'S I HONORABLE MEDAL PINS ALUMINUM By JIM 81 State NeweSt SHIRTS RACQUETBALL RACKET DRAWING TABLE LONG SLEEVE SWEATSHIRTS? vibrant epaxy calored decorative pins Royon/Creslon blend, long sleeve pull- 1 Eoch boxed with copy to exploin the With leather grip, braided nylon string THERM AL & link was barely di^ istees-approved pi ■urea before the •Cleoroncel and a plostic string guard. Color: Irown. DRAWERS I over crew neck in assorted solid colors. ( mooning of the medal. poard intentions ot • While Quantities last I Sizes S-Xl. REG. $21.95 RE6. S9.97 • 2/5.99 page related and minoritii ittee waa ques Sporting Coeds Dept. Dance committi Jewelry Dept. Furniture/Hear Covering Dept. Women's Sportswear Dept. document ci STATE COUPON the atudent: a included wi | A R M O U R y WHOLE PORK BUTTS OR PORK BUTT /statement wai to mean th mewoman and PENS PORK ROAST snted in the fo V \i.miu :sr \ ittee. Trustee Jc 2/29* M e d . P t. an amendn which adde lent. He said 1 2 5 ' V A L U E EACH ledto ensure m; TRY SOME FIOMM SUNSHINE W U eASE0Fi7-*4.» # f M L IM IT 6 E X P IR E S 2 I 9 T8 dictate the nu ! were not tryi THIN SKINNED INMMIRNER WHITE GRAPEFRUIT**/*! STATE COUPON STATI C0H9W !added. e issue of mand JE R G E N S LO TION M IL D EDGI MACARONI* CHEESE 7-1/4 u. «t. b« SOAP SHAVE CR f onad THIS WEEK'S MEIJER 1 STOP SHOPPING DINNER 5/95 3/59* 1.D )r ra 7 o i . 1.S3 Vote 1 GUIDE H AS AT LEAST WORTH OF Food Club mW CREAMY OR CRUNCHY ]« 4 .7 5 o i . L IM IT . 3 5 ' V a lu e l a . IX P IB IS l l . TB L IM IT 1 PEANUT BUTTER 59* [ S T A T IC O U P O N j COUPONS... GET YOUR FREE COPT IN THE STORE! B R E C K SHAMPOO j R e g u la r , O ily g f 1 A & D r y F o r m u la s 1 X I 1 15 o i . 1 .9 8 V a lu e I V/// s r. I I n « » ": 5 L I M IT 1 ^ 1 S T A T iC O U P O N j R E V L O N FLIX j FOOD cun CR EM E RINSE cow 11 # 5 l I1 CHEESE SPREAD MIDGET FOOD CUII R eg. A E x tra B o d y 12 o x . 1 .9 5 V a lu e ^ 1 LONGHORN GELATIN i ** 0*1 I SUCED AMERICAN 1. pkg. •Individually 12 ox. wt. Individual! wrapped 14 os. wt. pkg. ) os. wt. box L IM I T 1 STATE COUPON 1---- j,AH10 j J 30* oh ATHltTI | 22* IO C MTU COUPON tub£ I Sun 30* WTRCORFOR MMTMOtnsitl W ATT tOOtKMilWn 50£K5 a L IT E B U L B S 8 8 5125 W. SAGINAW - 2055 W. GRAND RIVER - 6200 S. PENNSYLVANIA 6 /1 .0 0 , ,5 Valve | S H fl K'""‘ G L IM IT 6 E X P I R I S ? 1 9 -7 8