W o n d er! Two wiretap bills fla b b e rg a ste d By DIANE COX killed by Senate SUt« News Staff W r it e r f a j, a world within ittelf LANSING (U PI) - The Senate baa But Sen. Robert VanderLaan, R-Grand apparently dealt a fatal blow to House- M i language w e a l t e n d e n t a n d Rapids, said privacy and other liberties "are passed legislation permitting Michigan too hard fought to start giving them away H i m egeal o p p o r t u n it y police officers to wiretap the telephones of piece by piece." ifilllo m g . f a * * * and c lo p t h e ir h a n d t. suspected drug profiteers. .•Sir Duke" Cooper added: "These are things that our Hit'saeongby Stevie Wonder," J . J . Jackson told “Clarence" Two bills setting forth strict limits under people died for." . i computer sang the song. “Have you heard of him?" which wiretaps would be allowed were sent ItatJacksondid not know was that “Clarence" was, in fact, his back to the Senate Judiciary Committee on In another development, the Senate (jtid, singer uomposer Stevie Wonder. a 25-12 vote Tuesday. approved by votes of 23-7 and 23-9 two , i computer programmer in the Artificial Language minor bills in the drug package. One would “They’re dead,” said Sen. John C. Hertel, of the MSU Computer Science Dept., Jackson had a guarantee that persons convicted under the D-Harper Woods, a judiciary committee yl challenge Tuesday. He had to teach a student who is both penalty bill would be denied parole. member who supported the wiretap provi­ judspeech-impaired how to use the talking computer to aid sions. Another is a technical bill extending the j communicating. higher penalties to the criminal code. gtjoQ, who is blind himself, said the laboratory had never Ostensibly, the measures were referred gged by a person with that combination of handicaps, back to committee to gather further rg really worried," he said before “Clarence" arrived in a information on the overall effect of wiretaps Lchsir for his lesson. “This is a first." iXlirence" turned out to be a fast learner and especially mted in Jackson's relationship with Stevie Wonder, on civil rights and in the fight against drug trafficking. But few Senate members ex­ pected there would be further committee D istrib u tin g foknown Stevie for 15 years," Jackson told “Clarence.” hearings. ossider him one of my best friends. 1stbetween you and me, Clarence, 1think the computer sings “I'm not even pretending there should be gter." Jackson said about the computer's rendition of "Sir another hearing," said an opponent, Sen. Daniel S. Cooper, D-Oak Park. "They porn to kid s a" should be killed.” stioi tried to show “Clarence” additional marvels of alogy, but the student was tired of learning. He arose bom Earlier, the Senate had approved and ibeel chair, took Jackson's hand — and began to laugh, tbm stood befuddled for a few moments. And then it finally returned to the House another key portion of the drug crackdown package — a n o w ille g a l ■don him. “Stevie?” Laughter. “Stevie!" measure providing stiff mandatory penal­ kveyoumet Clarence?” Jackson jokingly asked his old friend, ties up to life imprisonment for top echelon heroin and cocaine dealers. LANSING (UPI) — Gov. William U. idbehad. for "Clarence"was Wonder's creation, enabling him Milliken has signed into law a bill banning I upthe surprise visit in honor of Jackson's 28th birthday, the distribution of pornography to minors dan said he was genuinely surprised, q i _ State N ew s/Ira Strickstein But the sponsor of the package. Rep. Paul Rosenbaum, D-Battle Creek, had said the — a measure seen as the opening shot in an dinkhe didn't know," Wonder said. “He doesn't have much singer composer Stevie Wonder surprises his former Michigan School for the Blind class- all-out state attack on smut. l f 0^s by dropping in from Los Angeles Tuesday at the Computer Center’s wiretap provisions were crucial for an (continued on page 12) Artificial Language Laboratory to help celebrate Jackson’s 28th birthday. effective assault on the highly profitable The law will prohibit the dissemination of and well-insulated world of the drug sexually explicit materials to persons kingpin. younger than 18. It includes a three-part Senate backers had taken up Rosen­ standard for determining whether the baum's argument that the wiretap authori­ banned materials will be “harmful to MJiwrf nixes police promotion plan minors." zation had adequate safeguards to assure privacy rights would be protected. That standard, officials hope w ill | court tests and become t if. basis for Currently federal offirials are authorized controlling ?,rnog:apV' A v By DIANE SILV ER to use wiretaps but Michigan police available to adults. practiced against blacks and it does not an emergency appeal to the 6th U.S. Circuit by the equal protection clause of the 14th agencies are not. The bill would have JROIT lUPI) —A federal judge, says become ‘reverse’ because it is practiced Court of Appeals in Cincinnati. Pending Amendment," Kaess said. allowed state-operated wiretaps if all other "This law . . . can help government deal nit PoliceDepartment’s affirmative against whites,” Kaess said. that appeal, the city will make no promo­ Kaess conceded the goal of equal oppor­ investigative methods failed, if the state with one particularly offensive aspect of promotion program is unconstitu- Under the ruling, Kaess said the city tions to the rank of sergeant. tunity "is a laudable one," but he said it attorney general petitioned for a warrant pornography — its effect on children — because it discriminates against must appoint its police sergeants in In his ruling, Kaess said discrimination — “cannot be achieved by use of a racial quote and ii a three-judge Michigan Court of while we search for a more sweeping dicers and could “sow seeds of accordance “with strict, numerical ranking even in the name of equality — is not which necessarily runs counter to the Appeals panel approved the warrants. solution to the larger problem of pornog­ Hatred." and without deviation” from the current constitutional and will not work. constitutional mandate of the 14th Amend­ raphy and its existence in society in frjage ruling Monday by Chief U.S. eligibility list. "The most stringent safeguards that have general," Milliken said Monday. "The racial preference promotional prac­ ment." (Judge Fred Kaess marked the first Kaess ordered a second trial to determine ever been recommended by the courts in tices of the Detroit Police Department “Inevitably, race quotas do not accom­ federal court has labeled a big city if awards should be ordered for 200 white this state are in these bills,” said Sen. Hal. Under the law, visual and verbal mater­ cannot withstand a constitutional assault, plish the result of equal employment fepirtment's affirmative action pro- officers passed over for promotion. and violate the rights guaranteed to whites opportunity,” he said. W. Zielger, R Jackson, who led the floor ials will be considered harmful if they Konstitutional. “The judge is wrong, and what he is fight to win approval for the legislation. appeal to the prurient interests of an o *n angry reaction from Detroit saying flies in the face of affirmative action average minor, if they are patently offen­ ColemanYoung, and city attorneys decisions handed down across the country," sive to standards of suitability for minors, 9wouldappeal. or if they lack serious literary, artistic, uid the program, aimed at said Young, who was in Washington when the ruling was handed down. CLUBS APPEAL COURT RULING political or scientific value for minors. thenumber of black sergeants in “If the judge is saying that there hasn’t Persons who violate the law could be •rtfflMt, violated “the rights guar- been past discrimination in Detroit, then I fined up to $10,000. It exempts parents or towhites" by the 14th Amendment, discrimination is as indefensible IMiced against whites as when want to know what country he's been living in.” City attorneys said they were preparing Pigeon River drilling disputed guardians, teachers, administrators, librar­ ians or persons distributing material for legitimate medical, scientific, educational, governmental or judicial purposes. By TOM CIPOLLONE Despite these drilling restrictions, the the forest. Various sport and conservation clubs Environmental Action Council and others, Still before the high court is a suit A recent Michigan Supreme Court ruling filed a deposition with the Michigan including the Sierra Club, the Northland brought against the NRC in 1972 by the struck down local obscenity ordinances and Supreme Court Tuesday appealing a Decem­ Sportsmen’s Club and the Detroit Audubon Michigan Oil Company to acquire a permit put the state under pressure to enact a ark hopes to clear ber lower court ruling upholding the state's right to allow limited oil drilling in the Pigeon River County forest area. Society, are appealing the December deci­ sion saying pollution will nevertheless occur with the intrusion of the oil industry into for independent and competitive drilling in the Corwith Township area of the forest. The NRC earlier denied the permit. statewide standard which the court said is needed as the basis for the regulation of pornography. The West Michigan Environmental Ac­ tion Council and nine other groups charge ir with testimony that the Michigan Natural Resources Com­ mission has sanctioned environmental de­ struction in the lower peninsula's largest W harton b la sts N C A A in testim o n y wilderness tract and wildlife refuge. The state has until April 4 to file a WASHINGTON (UPI) — Rep. Jim Santini, D-Nev., said ISHINPTn By TEBBENCE HUNT displayed "a hostile attitude” and violated basic fairness. L , J *AP) — Tongsun Park, saying he hopes to clear the air and let "the deposition countering the charges. Tuesday the National Collegiate Athletic Association exerts "There was, in my estimation, a very pervasive attitude in the F 0 ;"ls country get back to its normal life,” began giving secret testimony Roger Conner, attorney for the Action "abusive and arbitrary power" that destroys college players, whole proceeding that it was the University’s obligation to prove its . s sieged efforts to buy favors from U.S. lawmakers. Council (a group of state sport and coaches and schools, and alumni supporters. Iniis innocence, rather than for its guilt to be established." rePresntatives said the initial interrogation of Park by investigators for the conservation clubs dedicated to preserving ►tthics And a t a second day of testimony into the policies and practices of Even more disturbing than the NCAA's attitude, he said, is that committee elicited “no surprises." One source described the questioning the wildlife refuge), said the Ingham pious. the NCAA, former MSU president Clifton R. Wharton J r. charged no one has devised a means of curbing abuses in college athletics. County Circuit Court failed to consider all NCAA denied MSU due process before imposing probation on the Athletes are suspended from competition for violations, but r °f the committee, asking not to be identified, said Park answered all the effects drilling will have on the University. coaches found guilty can move on to another college and are free to * e three-hour opening session but covered only basic details before 145-square-mile forest. keep making money. ^roke f °r lunch. Conner said his group is appealing the Wharton, president of MSU when it was placed on two years U?, * ®rst names to come up at the closed-door session were those of former decision on the grounds that the state football probation, decried the evils of big-time college sports, but "And the values imparted — ‘You are nothing if you are not No. 1’ l ^ Hanna. D-Calif., and Edwin Edwards, who is now the governor of violated the intent of the Environmental lashed out at “NCAA concepts of justice and due process" in its — hardly fit an academic mode," he said. Protection Act. He said the group feels the probes. He said the stakes are too high to call college sports “amateur," •uhC° r iUee .mem^)ers said. * been indicted on criminal charges of conspiring with Park to try and buy earlier ruling threatens the effectiveness of and “when you need a book of more than 280 pages to tell you how to ist? |on^ress f°r the South Korean government. Park is scheduled to testify at the act. During the investigation of MSU, Wharton — now chancellor of conduct intercollegiate athletics, you are no longer talking about j.j 1scheduled to begin on March 20. Edwards, a Deomocrat, has denied any Stewart Freeman, representing the NRC the State University of New York system — said the NCAA ‘sport.’ ” hut acknowledged he and his wife got $20,000 from Park. in the case which began in 1976, said the ,nR escorted into the committee room, Park told reporters he wanted to Pigeon River County issue involves “a f t the American people put the influence-buying affair beind them. question of values.” l.. of both countries involved and for my own personal sake I hope the The NRC believes state royalties from & (investigation) would be terminated as soon as possible,” Park told the drilling project, estimated at $100 ■■moments before he went behind closed doors to appear before the House million over the next 30 years, justifies its decision to allow drilling in the lower third "fetleirtk6 ^m t*lere an<* ^ em a®k any 4uest i°ns they want to and I’ll do my of the forest, Freeman said. L . the air so the Congress of this country can get back to its normal life and ee e happy ending coming to us very soon,” he said. Gerald Thiede, of the DNR Office of Forest Management, said that under cur­ inside rent plans all the oil companies involved but Today is the last day to have Vte^p11 ^aworshi. a former Watergate prosecutor, House investigators one, Michigan Oil Company, have agreed to license tag renewals in the mail % ° n &heR&tions that he lavished gifts and substantial campaign a cooperative drilling effort in the forest. io„J , on. elected members of Congress to win favorable treatment of to the Secretary of State’s "Under this agreement, only one com­ ectmg the Seoul government. office. Miss It today and you will pany, Shell Oil, will actually drill," Thiede have to stand in line. A ^ h y rice dealer and onetime Washington socialite, was under heavy said. “ Shell will then distribute the profits ,„e arrive(l on Capitol Hill. The committee is trying to determine whether to the other companies like Amoco who also hold leases in the forest.” L *Wd n rece‘ve(l Park’s gifts should be punished for wrongdoing. ,ln" uence buying scheme has put a heavy strain on U.S.-South Korean Freeman cited the oil industry’s conces­ w eather ites;* (,Sonie congressmen threatening to withhold aid to Seoul unless it sions to reducing noise levels in the forest Today's weather is oatmeal. n*eS investigation. The South Korean government has’refused to turn to the lowest ever agreed upon by the Florida, meanwhile, is having " Korean officials whom the House committee views as key witnesses in industry and restrictions placed on drilling steak and eggs. Today’s high: close to ground water sources, as exampled mid-20s. Tonight’s low: near 5. of the control the NRC will exercise over the drilling operation. Record education budget a$|J WASHINGTON (A P) - money more directly to “those this year. This include* nearly ment will fund more research President Carter asked Con­ so often shortchanged in our gress on Tuesday for a record $12.9 billion federal budget for educational system because of social problems or poverty." $3.4 billion In aid for compensa­ tory education for poor chil­ dren, which funnels money to and demonstration programs in these areas. He said the push on basic SSWftAl money going t„ , 25^*1 education and promised that The president, whose first 14,000 of the notion's 16,000 skills also would include federal some of the aid will go toward public office was as a school school districts. support for “increased use of reviving the three R ’a — read­ board member in Sumter Coun­ He proposed targeting $400 icnievement testing and the ing, 'riting and 'rithmetic. ty. Ga„ said his proposals “will million in extra aid to 3,500 support ^ fcr’J participation by parents in If adopted by Congress, the focus our nation’s resources on districts with large concentra­ teaching their children.” Spanish arm y postpones actors' trial hike would be the biggest helping our children master the tions of poor students. Two- And he said the government increase in federal aid to educa­ basic skills — reading, writing third* of this money will go to will try to link schools “with tion since Lyndon Johnson's and arithmetic — which remain hard-pressed center-city employers and other resources S S B K a BARCELONA, Spain (AP) — Under trial date was given. administration. critical to their ability to func­ schools, while one-third “will in the surrounding commu­ Health, Educate I obvious pressure from on embarrassed One day earlier, 34-year-old troupe Carter's message to Con­ tion in a complex society." flow to rural and suburban government, the Spanish army on Tues­ day postponed the trial of six pantomime director Albert Boadella escaped from police custody, and the army said then gress restated his fiscal 1979 budget request for a 24 percent He also reaffirmed his inten­ tion to ask Congress to set up a school systems which have similar needs," he said. nity,” and basic skills also will be emphasized in adult educa­ tion programs. tssF w l actors accused of insulting military that it would try him and any others who increase in spending on educa­ separate Department of Educa­ The extra money will in­ Congress, which has pro­ officers by portraying them as prejudiced did not show up in absentia. Friends said tion. It also revealed his propo­ tion. crease from 6.0 million to 6.5 vided more for education than sals for reshaping the Elemen­ Carter asked for $6.9 billion ‘This drunks. he had fled to an undisclosed place in million the number of poor Republican presidents wanted tary and Secondary Education for elementary and secondary students who got remedial edu­ •from 1969 through 1977, is education budget A lieutenant colonel announced in the France. Act in order to channel federal education, up from $6 billion cation. expected to be receptive to dented since 1965 ' military courtroom that the trial of the Four of the six accused were in court those moments in w Ll 3 In his effort to improve Carter's request, although a mimes — members of a Cotalan group Tuesday, and defense attorney Jose Lyndon Johnson"^''11 steadily declining basic educa­ split is developing on aid to called the Jugglers — would be delayed Maria Loperena shouted at the lieutenant tional skills such aa reading and * * "h»t President c J college students. because the defendants were not all present to answer the charges. No new colonel that they were ready to stand trial. FDA approves writing, Carter said the govern­ Carter wants to increase aid done for the federal i i j ment that began 12 j e, ^ l Sweden concerned over Soviet patrol subs anticonvulsant WASHINGTON (A P) — The government gave its approval STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) — Sweden since it is a new weapon in the Baltic . . . Tuesday to an anticonvulsant drug that experts predict will help will express concern to the Soviet Union We plan to take up this question on a more than a half-million victims of epilepsy, some of whom are about six Russian submarines that patrol diplomatic level.” incapacitated by hundreds of seizures a day. the Baltic Sea carrying nuclear missiles, But Bertil Lagervall, a spokesperson The drug, valproic acid, is chemically similar to sodium the Swedish Foreign Ministry said Tues­ for the National Defense Staff, said: "This valproate, a drug that has been available in Europe for a decade and day. does not alter our strategic situation. It that has been the subject of a campaign in recent months by the "Wedon’t like it," ministry spokesper­ would hardly be of ony importance from Epilepsy Foundation of America to win U.S. approval for its use. son Lars Rohmert said. military aspects." Valproic acid will be marketed in this country by Abbott He said the flotilla was stationed He said it made no difference if a Laboratories of Chicago under the brand name Depakene. permanently in the sea between Sweden missile armed with a nuclear warhead Dr. Julius Richmond, assistant secretary for health in the Department of Health, Education and Welfare, called the Food and and Russia about one year ago and is was fired "from the Baltic, the North Sea Drug Administration's unusually quick approval of Abbott's new "significant from o point of security policy or from ashore in some Eastern state.” drug application “an excellent example of the FDA's scientific regulatory process working efficiently and objectively in the face of strong emotions and partisan pressures.” Buses in South A frica drop segregation policy CAPE TOWN. South Africa Cape Town's bus services, IA P) — White bus riders in began removing apartheid signs Cape Town are rubbing shoul­ from buses and bus stops one by ders with black, Indian and one and area by area. mixed race strap-hangers in a In the past, all buses were new crack in South Africa's designed for use by one racial system of apartheid. group or else had segregated UMW lead ers ready radio promotions The quiet revolution began seating. But the company was A candlelight vigil around Akron, Ohio, city hall began Monday night in mpy of legislation to regulate abortion! voted on Tuesday morning by Akron < about six months ago when City losing money by operating seg­ regated buses. council. The outcome waa n 7-6 victory (or the nnti-abertioniat Citizen* I Tramways, which rank all of (AP) — The proposed contract that could days to discuss and be briefed on its Informed Consent. end the 85-day nationwide coal strike provisions. T**e State N ew t n published by the students of Michigan State Unive ity every class goes before a split union membership The UMW leadership in Washington day during Foil Winter and Spring school terms Monday Wednesooy and Fridays this week, and United Mine Workers readied a half-dozen television commer­ The Union Cafeteria during Summer term end o speciol Welcome Week edition is published in September. Subscription rate is S30 per year president Arnold Miller is taking to the cials and more radio spots to promote the Second closs postoge paid at Eost lontm g Mich Editoriol and business offices a t 34S airwaves to encourage the membership pact, at a cost of $40,000 in air time alone. Stuitent Services lld g . Michigan Stote University lo s t lonsm g Mich 48834 Post Office publication number is 530380 to ratify it. Postmaster Please send form 35 9 to State News 345 Student Services Building in food at its best... and fantastic selection I As copies of the proposed new contract A majority of local union presidents in care of MSU Messenger Service East lonsm g Mich 48833 — reached by negotiators last Friday — circulated in coal country Tuesday, UMW members and local union leaders 15,000-member District 6 in Ohio and northern West Virginia denounced the agreement Monday as a step backward GERALD H. C O Y , GENERAL M ANAGER ROBERT L. BULLARD, SALES M ANAGER PHONES SA LA D BA R . 3SS-83S3 scheduled meetings over the next few in such areas as medical benefits. Classified A d s .......... Display Advertising . Business O ff ic e ........ . 355-8355 . 355-3447 * 1 . 7 5 /person Photographic ................ . 355-13II Every WEDNESDAY and FRIDAY lunch AFL-CIO to lobby in support of farm strike LUNCH 11:15 a.m. to 1:15 p.m. ■dtabout CLOSED SATURDAYS MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) - The hood, and that their farms would fall into N O W !! BBC CATERING DINNER 5:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. SUNDAYS 12 NOON to 2 p.m. AFL-CIO will lobby Congress in support of You can afford a mote the hands of corporations or foreign 355-3445 the nationwide farmers' strike, a spokes­ investors," said Albert Zack, director of uwra UVR OF MSU UtlON - C O M MWfT 1 0. BVB person for the labor organization said public relations for the AFL-CIO. G REA T haircut! Tuesday. He said the labor group would The AFL-CIO Executive Council, which concentrate its efforts on Congress in an * 7 .0 0 ended meetings here on Monday, had attempt at new legislation to support the HAIRCUTS STYLING issued a statement Sunday in support of farmers. the farmers' movement for higher prices. It said the farmers had adopted the "There's a lot of foreign capital and corporate capital going into farm land," Ga ry 's 35 1 -6 5 1 1 strike as a last resort. W e felt there must be government Zack said. "If the family farmer is driven out of business, the American consumer Campus Beauty Salon programs to assist these people in acute would be at the mercy of the corporation 549 E. Grand River -across from Berkey Hall danger of losing their farms and liveli­ farmers or absentee landlords." S E IK O : Senators impatient with canal d ebate pace THE SEIKO LC DIGITAL QUARTZ WATCH/CALCULATOR. It's almost like having your office on your wrist. WASHINGTON (AP) — Senate leaders Howard H. Baker Jr. of Tennessee, said indicated Tuesday they ore growing he plans to try to get senators to agree to impatient with the slow pace of the limit the time spent on each amendment. Panama Canal debate and may move "I'd like to finish it well before Easter," soon to speed the process. said Baker. About everything that can be said, The Senate voted twice Monday to has been said," Majority Leader Robert C. reject amendments offered by treaty Byrd, D-W.Va., told reporters before the opponents, and both leaders said they start of the 10th day of debate. were encouraged by the results. But Byrd declined to say whether he was going to clamp down on senators But many observers felt the votes “ DRESS FOR SUCCESS” ! who have begun going over and over the demonstrated only that there are still no same arguments. clear signs how undecided senators Byrd's Republican counterpart, Sen. eventually will vote on the pacts. No. FMOO 1M~ $350.00. Whether it’s time for that imP °rton' j LC Digital Quartz Multi­ function Calculator with view or graduation, let the sta o 1 memory Features hours, mmutes. seconds, day and dale Displays up to B digits answer your big question of w a a Missouri tiles suit against NOW with floating decimal Stainless steal case and Today's look is both conservative ai adiustabla brae el el Stylus included ful, all in the right proportions, at ■ The watch continuously displays seconds, minutes, hours, day we can help you balance yourc 0 I and date. The calculator displays answers in up to eight digits JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) — Missouri intentional economic harm to our state the occasion. Face it, s o m e tim e s i | (with a Floating Decimal Point) in the four basic arithmetic functions, filed suit Tuesday against the National and its citizens, and the inability of those plus constant calculations, raising numbers to a given power, dress like your Dad. 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EAST IANSINO, » • 9:30-5:30 jf w p i n v 319IA S T GRAND RIVER AVENUE 305 EAST P * llY EAST LANSING, MICHIGAN 4*133 lfrl.lll*:30 on-academic employees honored ByPETE BRONSON M SU Brazil project • State News Still Writer The awards are the first presented to honor MSU staff members F . t . h i i . k o a k ,k I s*MSU staffers - in clu d in g I b U c k .m it h , I fo re ste r and . c u s t o d y - w ill be I I Mfl advisory committee a year ago to “bolster university j Z , S i - . J Ushed by the [ I .,,this year. • excellence and highlight staff contributiona to u n fre m '^ o M rttiZ r''« w T ag? / b f e " R « i S “ 'e e U d _ -,rsn and tw o w om en r e D ra se n tin v th» i * «T ‘ "wuajr rtav«ory co m m ittee. Cords, advisory committee chairperson. * operation,, said Geraldine inspected trustee president CliftonR. Wharton Jr . toadviseadmmistratnZn.k . former MSU |p MhUngeno^*^. IMl,Ungenb*che r .“T executiv«seCTeUryfortheDep : u ,i w]Schneider, a graphic technldan faul J" rine ^epwtment of Communication and W in en t0fC0minUnic«tion technician for the Department of Resource Development Develo and ’ are women employees, and to atrengthen affirmative action p r o ^ r " ” during tw o -w e e k tour kj] “ J, members of the he derieal-technical diviaion division and will alao also receive award, awards An MSU trustee is currently on an f i-.r< ka labor the uhnr classification, classification, the the committee committee rhna* chose neawa. Georges rLambrett, __ a -"-M ian at tional affairs programs," Higbee said. inspection tour of the controversial Ljge Art Center and Norman Oswald, a blacksmith for University Farms. Bruff is scheduled to return around Brazil project and other MSU programs Ijje Distinguished Staff A ward findistawere selected from more than 200n - i . f , the Z T r 'lT T e i they were ’ “ P "* * 114 being selected for the award in South America. March 12. Smuckler will remain in C m , committee chafrpermm Marilyn Bna mud. Nomination, were .u b m S fro m .il South American a few more weeks to John Bruff, D-Fraser, is making the oi the university commumty, including students, faculty and adminMrata" u observe MSU-connected programs, Hig­ two-week tour on a grant from the bee added. is staff. Midwest University Consortium for He called the trip “a routine adminis­ International Activities. No MSU funds trative inspection trip." were used for the trip, according to University officials. But Milton Taylor, professor of economics and one of the most severe iondidacy not valid, Opponents of the project have often and vocal critics of the Brazilian project, voiced criticism to Brazilian involve­ took a considerably different view. ment because of alleged tortures and J Paul Srhn ?7 s and m“ huM»- 8**d tbe grandson and son of blacksmiths Taylor said he believes Bruffs trip human rights violations carried out by the Brazilian government. condones what he calls exploitation of Homer D. Higbee, assistant dean of the people by a "fascist Brazilian ii diciary tells student international studies and programs, said Bruff is being accompanied on the trip by Ralph H. Smuckler, dean of the dictatorship." “He'll only see what the dignitaries of program. the Ministry of Education want him to see. He won't see the poor people or the minvalidation of Kathy Lamb as a The trip is needed to acquaint she was eligible to run for representative in ghettos. All he will see is the inside of a i of Business candidate for the members of the board with the interna­ plush hotel," Taylor said. either college, the judiciary based its ruling J Student Board was upheld this on the fact that James Madison College has jty the All-University Student Judi- sole jurisdiction over her academic records. mbscandidacy was invalidated by the “In no manner does the College of Sveraity Elections Commission ear- Business monitor her or other dual majors, FORESTRY CLUB PLANS ANNUAL PARTY Jtbis month on grounds that she was have control over their academic programs, Initially registered as a student in that or take appeals from them regarding their ,,Jiag to a written statement re- J by the judiciary Tuesday, Lamb is academic careers at MSU," the judiciary statement said. Tie-wearers beware: foresters may attack The judiciary also noted in its ruling that ^enrolled, with a major in James By M ICH ELLE CHAMBERS while Lamb is an economics major the accessories in the halls of the Natural onCollege and s major in economics. LoUege of Business also lists her as a major State News Staff Writer Resources Building. chosen to publicize the "Shindig" party Prizes will also go to the participants of JfUmb thought that as a dual major of James Madison College. Tie-wearers will be in peril Thursday and because “all foresters, in their flannel shirts The MSU Forestry Club is holding a the beard-growing contest, which started in r riday if they choose to wear their usual and hobnail boots, have an inherent distaste January. tie-cutting" on those two days to publicize for anything allowed to get a stranglehold the club's annual “Shindig" to be held on the neck.” The six Forestry Club members still in Friday night. Tie-cutting has been a tradition at the contest are competing for awards in the The victims will be mainly professors. categories of "most coverage," "best look­ Band director Forestry Club president Jim Champion predicted. Headquarters for the tie-destroyers will Shindig and we decided to extend it," Champion said. "We’re trying to drum up a little interest with the professors," he added. ing" and "shouldn't have tried," Champion said. be the Forestry Department office, 126 Forestry Dept, chairperson Lee M. "Shindig," featuring square dancing, will James will be honored and new club Natural Resources Building. begin at 8 p.m. Friday in the student center to becom e n e w All victims who do not remove their ties members will be announced at “Shindig," he at St. John's Student Parish. All agriculture added. • upon request will be escorted to the office and natural science students are invited. where two club members will be waiting During the events, awards will be But the main focus of the evening will be with axes and a chopping block. presented to commemorate the 75th an­ eating, drinking and funning," one club ^The members of the club performing niversary of the Forestry Dept. member said. music chairman this task were chosen because of their high level of eye-hand coordination," a club Other awards will go to the best-dressed male and female foresters. Formal attire is totally inappropriate for this occasion," he added. Kl spokesperson explained. 3 0 1 Dan Stoufier, chairperson of the tie cutting committee, said that the event was "We’re all coming dressed to look like old-fashioned foresters with wool pants and Tickets are on sale for the dance in the Forestry Dept, office at $8 for students and M UM Kenneth G. Bioomquist, professor of music and director of suspenders. Champion explained. $6 for alumni. bands at MSU since 1970, wifi become chairperson of the MSU music department July 1. He wilt succeed James Niblock. A native of Iowa, Bioomquist holds degrees from the University of Dlinois. He was a United States Army Band leader before beginning his college education. Board favors decriminalization He taught and supervised music programs in Taylorville and By ANNE MARIE BIONDO health board is not addresing the correc­ State News Staff Writer Medical facts cited by Holbrook show Urbana, 111., public schools, then served on the faculty of the tional aspect of the bill but rather the public University of Kansas from 1958 to 1970. health concerns. that alcohol and nicotine use have definite Seeing marijuana as no threat to public short- and long-term effects on the body. During those years, he was professor of trumpet, director of health, the Ingham County Board of Health The Ingham County Board of Health now Vet alcohol and cigarettes are legal, she bands and brass ensembles and organizer of a brass choir. has come out in support of a Michigan bill joins the American Health Association, the added. Bioomquist was named Outstanding University of Illinois that would decriminalize possession of small American Medical Association, the Ameri­ Alumnus in 1966. can Bar Association and the National However, all recent studies done on amounts of the substance. He has also written articles about trumpet-playing, marching Commission on Marijuana and Drug Abuse marijuana use report "no conclusive evi­ bands and brass choirs for educational and music journals. As a Currently in the Michigan Senate is a bill in supporting marijuana decriminalization. dence of physical damage," she said. conductor and contest adjudicator he has traveled throughout the that'w ould remove criminal penalties for Reading from a report issued by the Recently, the Michigan State Medical United States as well as Southeast Asia, Australia, Mexico and the private possession and use of small National Commission on Marijuana and Society and the American Public Health Europe. amounts of marijuana from a one-year jail Drug Abuse, Holbrook said, “From what is Association issued statements in favor of Bioomquist will give up his directing duties when he assumes sentence and/ or $1,000 fine to a misde now known about the effects of marijuana, removing criminal penalties for possession, meanor punishable by a $100 fine or less. its use at present level does not constitute a Holbrook said. Kenneth Bloomqnitt major threat to public health.” Elinor Holbrook, chairperson of the As a result, the Ingham County Board of According to recent studies about 26 Health decided to research the medical Ingham County Board of Health, said the million people in the U.S. smoke marijuana. effects of marijuana, she added. hr. l- H o is o g s You’ll eat our {o u t rCREj5rr union ■••‘w h e r e l o a n s Every Monday and W ednesday from 3 p.m . • grilled dogs, plus a a r e in s ta n t larg e selection of draught beer. ft) MSU EMPLOYEES C R E D I T U N IO N *°0 E Cfwcant Wi 363 22*0 i «dSeDrink M r^ cor— r M .A .C . Around the World Bablukthnwjntj F all 1 9 7 8 words. ■ V IR Y W I D N I f D A Y O u r n ew menu has some of the most savory reading around. Steak and shrimp. Sirloin strip. Elaborate salad bar. Four U.S.D .A . C h oice m eat items. Chicken. A nd a w h o le lot more. But don't just |AW H O P P ER take our words for it. Drop by, and try our n ew menu today. of a special! 5 pm till do*e m S9< ^ ,n* W h o p p e rs no limit Join the Semester at Sea of the University of Colorado for an unparalleled International educational experience. Sail from Los Angeles Sept. 9, by way of the South Pacific, Indian Ocean, and Africa. Applications now being accepted. in ^ * r* a t S e t l i For Free Color Brochure, call or write: Semester at Sea. Taj Mahal Building, 600 N. Homer near Frandor Shopping Center, Lansing | *1 ■•StandRiver RO. Box 2488. Laguna Hills, C A 92654. Telephone (800) 854-0195 (toll-free outside California) (714) 581-6770 (In California). SS. Universe is fully air- 5001 W. Saginaw across from the Lansing Mall, Lansing conditioned, 18.000 Ions, of Uberian registry. and SOI 2 1. Saginaw © Ip iilrifein l A p p o in t in g ju d g e s t o h ig h c0J b e s t s e r v e s in t e r e s t s o f justice In an age when judicial review of key legislative justices for as long as six months of an decisions is expected rather than feared, Americans live under a government of men, not laws. large scale and exposes judicial c S H The appellate courts, particularly the State favors - and later pitfalls Supreme Court, have the power to negate any group support. sPecial I legislative action with the sweep of a robed arm. And ft is not in the interests of jusfe , I this is being done with frequency. candidate to accept funding from ! orl High courts have issued rulings that set the legal that will, in all probabSy* [ b standards for everything from abortion to education, before that court and judge. glng! leaving legislators and executives frustrated in defeat. Lawyers, in the past, have been prime1 Because of this method of selecting high court tors to judicialcampaigns, but this too arrJ justices, the method often becomes the floor for a the appearance, if not the certainty, 0f imjl political battle rather than a forum for those And state lawmakers cannot be coikIh. J concerned with justice. campaign fund sources for judges £ 1 In Michigan, State Supreme Court judges are pet legislative proposals go to the court J popularly elected, ideally without partisan alle­ giance. The candidates, however, must be nominat­ Under the current system, judges nnmi ed at one of the major party conventions. political parties, cannot escape a narti There are two moves underway in the state to ti°n both before and after the electio? change the selection of high court judges; one in the legislature and the other within the law profession. The primary method proposed bv Rnl The State Bar Association, with the vocal support would somewhat alleviate this but would all of Gov. W illiam G. Milliken, has taken to the streets twice as many candidates than judicial vad with a petition to have their plan voted on by the thus stepping up the vigor of the c a m p Z public. While appointment of justices surely I The Bar is backing appointment of high court weakensses — the most important of whil judges by the governor. We agree with this plan. THE MAN WHOWXU> IETROT THE TAX-DEDUCTIBLE LUNCH The state legislature, however, is the setting of an the bench would be left at the m ercy of thd party in power at the executive level -1 effort launched by House Judiciary Committee being backed by the state bar shows ml Chairperson Paul Rosenbaum, D-Battle Creek, to concern for a rational selection process, f change the system of electing justices. Rosenbaum's bill, unanimously approved last Appointment of Supreme Court justice! week by his committee, would eliminate the party vents needless political sales pitches andlei nominations and have would-be judges run in a danger that a man or woman could beseat? non-partisan primary. Afterwards they would face state’s most powerful body because of aV The S t a t e N e w s off in a similarly non-partisan general election. smile or the innate capacity to sell his orfl The faults in this plan are very similar to those in the people. Wednesday, March 1, 1978 the present system. Popular election of high court justices demands campaigning, which in turn Both political parties are now more i, Editorials are the opinions of the State N ew s. Viewpoints, columns and letters are personal opinions requires funding. about any change in judicial selection b e l Editorial Department The seven Supreme Court Justices in Michigan high court will undoubtedly rule on legislatl Ed/for-in-chief............ . M ich ael Tonimuro Campus Editor A n n e Stuart Sports E d it o r .. currently serve six-year terms, with two up for pointment after the 1980 census. Tom Shanahan M an a gin g Editor ............ Kot Brown Opinion E d ito r.................. Dove M isia lo w ski W ire Editor Jocelyn Lasko w ski Layout Editor . . Kim Shanohon re-election at the same time. But political fears and am bitions asl Photo Editor P ich a rd P o lilo w sk i C opy C h ie f. R e n o ld o M ig a ld i Special Projects Editor Debbie Wolfe Entertainm ent and Book Editor Kolhy Esselmon Staff Representative C h ris K ucxynski Since the judgeships are state-wide offices, appointment of high court justices is 1 City E d i t o r ............... M ichael Winter Freelance Editor Dan S p ickle r campaigning has to be vigorous and take up time that available method of insuring th a t qualified,] Advertising Department incumbent judges should be spending on the bench. ly interested men and women with judl A dvertisin g M anager A ssista n t A d v ertisin g M a n a g er D en ise D ear With two incumbents campaigning at once, the political, aspirations will be seated. In this] Supreme Court is often left with only five active government of men and women will best b V IE W P O IN T : N A T U R A L S C IE N C E CO URSE tion of the fact that the leading physical and suppositional base of megael biological scientists who began the profes­ who believe in explos sion of science did so within the world view spontaneous generation event! or metaphysical presuppositional base of "dissipative structures" with n theism. My students throughout the year origins. learn of the clear-cut difference between May I hear from you at yl O p e n l e t t e r : t e a c h i n g c r e a t i o n a n d e v o l u t i o n the presuppositional disposition of Coperni­ convenience in the form of j cus, Kepler, Newton, Clerk-Maxwell, Fara­ outline or course prospectul day, Linnaeus, Pasteur, Nuttall et al and planned course as I have requel By JOHN N. MOORE scientists generally, but I would have generation of life on the earth and has given me a sense of intellectual growth, the usually unstated metaphysical pre­ M oo re Is a professor of noturol jc « Open letter to Dr. Robert L. Anstey, expected that the Scientific American evidences of order and complexity, which a feeling that something valuable and MSU Department of Geology, and coi- writer would have determined the following make creation of life circumstantially productive has occurred." leagues in the Department of Natural more adequate representation of my credible — even in the 20th century. Other objective evidence of positive Science: courses: In my general education natural Rigorous application of cardinal principles evaluation of the careful teaching technique Professor Anstey, I am very interested in science courses at Michigan State Univer­ of science and illustrations of aspects of that I have developed is found in the fact your proposed course in geology that “will sity I definitely teach about the nature of scientific methodology is also characteristic that over the past five years I have lectured serve as a counter-presentation to other scientific knowledge, and I explain the of classroom work throughout this term. (entitled, "A Scientific Case Against Evolu­ MSU courses, in which a biblical viewpoint scientific processes throughout the year as In the spring term (N.S. 122) I engage in tion"), on invitation, before graduate zool­ is presented as a part of the subject matter three specific themes are implemented: (1) a week by week, even day by day, ogy classes, zoology honors course classes, of natural science" (State News, Feb. 6). explication of observation versus explana­ confrontation between evolutionist and science college classes and other natural Please send me an outline or prospectus of tion, (2) discussion of the structure of creationist views regarding origin of human science classes (over 30 times to this date), H q vy iV aL I ^ your planned course that I might compare it theories, and (3) attention to interaction of kind and other forms of life (plant and than my own. All the above occurred at to my own course structure. science and society. animal). Again the three main themes Michigan State University. Also, in recent As I mentioned in our telephone conver­ In the fall term (N.S. 135D) subject already stated above are implemented years, I have taught in the College of sation of Feb. 9 , 1 would like you to have a m atter (selected from astronomy, chem­ through use of selected scientific subject Education, on invitation, a special instruc­ brief prospectus of my teaching at MSU. istry, and atomic physics) utilized to m atter (from geology, comparative biology, tional module, “Evolution and Creation,” for You related in that conversation that your implement these three themes involves molecular biology, population genetics, and senior education majors in three separate impressions of my courses in natural treatm ent of changing scientific ideas or paleontonogy). Again rigorous application terms (continuation was interrupted by my science at Michigan State were based in concepts of the universe. And for about 10 of cardinal principles of science and illustra­ second Sabbatical, spring term, 1977). part upon your reading of paragraphs in the days near the middle of the term I help tions of aspects of scientific methodology is Further objective evidence of positive December 1977 Scientific American in the students realize limitations of the big bang a particular characteristic of classroom evaluation of both on-campus and off- "Science and the Citizen" section. Let me idea of cosmogonists and itemize circum­ work throughout the third term. campus professional work by me has been state emphatically that that writer dis­ stantial support for creation of the uni­ I have taught these courses during each receipt of special merit raises to my annual played an inordinate lack of objectivity of verse. Rigorous application of cardinal academic year for the past four or five years salary, as awarded in two separate years by reporting since I was neither contacted principles of science and illustrations of with the full knowledge of my departmental departmental peers, for what was stated in directly nor interviewed by telephone. aspects of scientific methodology is a colleagues, and they have received good reports of the Natural Science Department Upon direct inquiry of me the writer particular characteristic of classroom work student comment and support. Survey of Council as “ 1. Scholarly work in the area of could have ascertained that I do not teach throughout the first term. student reactions at the close of classwork the Creationist-Evolutionist debate,” and 'the Biblical view of creation" by teaching In the second term (N.S. 115D) students has regularly resulted in student agree­ ”2. Public service in the presentation of religious dogmas. As far as I can determine study subject m atter (selected from cell ment that: (1) The instructor discusses Creationist-Evolutionist issues" on May 30, the Scientific American writer based those biology, aspects of knowledge of sexual points of view other than his own.", (2) "The 1973; and “For continued scholarly work in paragraphs upon a California newspaper reproduction, and genetics) to implement instructor contrasts the implications of the area of the creationist-evolutionist story, which in turn evidently was contrib­ the three main themes stated above so as to various theories.", (3) "The course stimu­ debate," and "For continued public service uted by a freelance w riter in Detroit, Mich. clarify scientifically the nature and con­ lated me to examine new ideas or re ­ to a wide range of groups in presentations (I will add parenthetically that claims th at I tinuity of life. For about a full week I help examine ideas and values previously held.”, on the issues of the creationist-evolutionist do not teach science have been made students realize the confrontation possible (4), "I was stimulated to ask questions that i debate" on March 28, 1975. unjustly and without any substantiation.) between the unscientific concept of sub- would not have thought of or asked As you know, newspaper writers are not You should be informed also that I have microscopic, sub molecular spontaneous before. , and (5) The total class experience presented scientifically-based lectures be­ fore sessions of AAAS and numerous science teacher conferences and conven­ DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau tions (state, regional or area, and national - including NABT and NSTA), on invita­ TOIJ SURB THIS PHREDPY, but the that's very au tion, during the past six years. In fact I was 15MAT THEY'RE TRUSTMB1 SHOULDERS COURAKT, PHRBD! scheduled to participate in the 1978 NSTA U/BARIU6ATU.N. I GOT TUB tDHATSA 1 WINK national convention in Washington,D.C.on ARB SO YOU'LL BE CORRECT f£ACLY?.. PLATA 1HESB DESI6N FROM WETHER YOU'RE DISCO? SOMt April 10. However, I was informed (Feb. 7, \ PAYS, MORI? AN'‘ESQUIRE" \ sour of AT AN EMBASSY 1 iNDocn. 1978) by the national program chairperson \ Less THAN I PARTY OR J v l® WO YEARS M rxbt that he was "not able to find someone to A P/SCO! present the other side of this issue” OLD! (Creation and Evolution”), and therefore, “it is necessary that I cancel this session.” Amazing to me is the fact that from a national organizational membership not one evolutionist can be found to engage in a face-to-face confrontation with one crea­ S T T Y 'v i , U , tionist science teacher. .r - .y c Finally, I would inform you that my classwork in each of the three courses mentioned above includes clear presenta­ F em in in e id e a s The authors lean toward a verbose style S a n d Jose Argueiles more reminiscent ofadoctoral thesis rather Gals Publications tkH" V popula.r work of non-fiction. Al­ though fluent in their use of English, the t , farlson persistant use of multisyllabic words „Bd the realm of feminist literature makes The Feminine difficult to read. ,l,uvinistic works from members of Its content, however, is concise. It 'saes. exists a study of the more progresses logically toward its discussion of natures of the feminine and mascu androgyny and proposes that men and women can learn to balance their feminine an exploration of the traditional and and masculine natures. "The union of -- trite ideas of yin and yang, The feminine and masculine as the insepara­ ia e examines the idea of the feminine b ly of discriminating awareness and )5evidenced in cultures, literature skillful compassionate behavior could be 'lit around the world. developed as a life-embracing discipline," {feminine is described as the open, the authors suggest. jring. all pervading space; the mascu irises from within the feminine, h.A'“ n.g, * i‘h tbe artwork, the text is L g it, and providing an active power highlighted by the inclusion of appropriate is its open spaciousness, quotations which emphasize the authors' ibook traces the idea of the feminine points. An appendix of additional quotes is ill pervasive space, the unborn force, used to give authors, sages and saints from 35I1its glorification and expression in phy history the chance to reveal their philoso- of the feminine. aid history. aeauthors. both artists themselves, use The dense style makes this a difficult inis amount of a rt to illustrate their book. However, The Feminine is an a pleasant touch. Paintings by interesting and beautiful book. It's probably ■ O'Keefe. Indian sculpture, and best suited to be a “coffee table" book(albeit Laphs and drawings by the authors a paper bound onelbecause of the incredible , ft* Feminine almost an a rt book, art included. It is, nonetheless, informative .[than a philosophical work. and perceptive work. The w e e k 's B e s t- s e lle r s NBC loses 'C hange' The Publishers Weekly UPI Elvis look-alike! NON-FICTION Best-Sellers List The Complete Book of Running — James p YORK lAP) — Because of some A deluge of calls kept Bess from solving Fixx FICTION M ^ o n T o o W= k reC? rd Pass 1,50 (with * buUa‘» l» Billboard •work on the part of a network the problem immediately, he said, and then The Second Ring of Power - Carlos aician. almost 17 minutes of the wrong The Thorn Birds — Colleen McCullough Castaneda S T 4 5 c l t T y "0^ ^ E“ ‘ La" Sin*'S R« ° rda P-toim the proper reel had to be brought out, the Bloodline — Sidney Sheldon of NBC's Loose Change was aired projection system set up, and the commer- All Things Wise and Wonderful - James the eastern two-thirds of the nation The SilmariUion — J.R.R. Tolkien Herriot cials replaced. iv night. The Honorable Schoolboy — John le By that time, 16 minutes and 36 seconds Carre My Mother, My Self - Nancy Friday had elapsed. The Amltyville Horror - Jay Anson nes Bess, operations supervisor for The Black Marble — Joseph Wambaugh I don t think I like him, said the bewildered winner of an Elvis noster “GoH The fumbling will cost the network Coming Into The Country - John jcwork. said the technician — whom he Illusions: The Adventures of a Reluctant McPhee thousands of dollars in overtime to em­ Messiah — Richard Bach Mnot identify — went to the wrong ployees who must stay on the job until the Looking Out for Number One - Robert for the second episode of the The Woman's Room — Marilyn French Ringer network day ends and in time leased from The Immigrants — Howard Fast part series, and instead cranked up affiliate stations - all for what Bess called Gnomes — Wil Huygen fail show. Dynasty — Robert Elegant "a human error." Dispatches — Michael Herr Daniel Martin — John Fowles Essays of E.B. White - E.B. White NEW YORK (AP) — ABC tightened its grip on Generally, CBS or NBC slips a show into the first place in the networks’ ratings race, claiming 111 'Laverne' s the five most-watched programs of the week Top 5, but in the most recent survey, NBC's best was No. 6 Little House on the Prairie, CBS' was 'WK'RE MORE THAN JUST NUTS. . . f f ending Feb. 26, A.C. Nielsen figures show. the Grammy awards show, No. 7. It was only the slightest twist on an old story. Laverne and Shirley was the week’s most- All the succulent Fried Fish you can eat, with French Fries ABC is almost routinely first in ratings — 22 of 25 and Cole Slaw only 2.15 every Wednesday Nielsens again weeks this season - and the network's Laverne and Shirley, Happy Days and Three's Company watched program, with a rating of 31.9. Nielsen says that means of all the homes in the country with TV, 31.9 percent watched all or part of the seem to swap the No. 1 spot from week to week. show. D ESSERTS 9t30>1t30 H A W A II SWING INTO Wednesday-Sunday call 353-5255 The Peanut Barrel 521 E. Grand River 307 ilvdinl orvic«s 351-0606 NOUNCINOt RESIDENT ASSIS- Mr POSITIONS FOR TNI 1978- / UCEDMIC YIAR ■'■tompuj students and studonts interesting In phfingfor Resident Assistant positions in halls other f1^e'r P^oc* residency may submit on applica- BE R EA D Y ,0 the Head Resident Advisor in the hall of their NOW IS THE TIME TO SHED •beginning Wednesday, March 8,1978. THOSE UNWANTED POUNDI II plications and additional information will be avail* •THE EASIEST MOST EFFECTIVE WEIGHT LOSS PROGRAM • of the Office of the Hoad Resident Advisor and YET FOR MEN AND WOMEN p reception desk in ovary hall. •DOCTORS WEIGHT LOSS MEDICAL CLINIC GUARANTEES pels interested in Resident Assistant positions YOU WILL LOSE 7 TO 14 POUNDS THE FIRST WEEK OF OUR WEIGHT LOSS PROGRAM AND 22 TO 30 POUNDS J / ^e'r Present residence halls will be notified THE FIRST MONTH, WHILE EATING ONE FULL MEAL A Cities 03 z f M S II I O ■ S S i a n s a. B O hi f • a co o § o CD 3 a - SB A9 8 ° ° ® S « 03 X 01 3 8- a r ! *•! 0 Js 3 J z0 I I I a < Z. BN ••3 r U • o lo o - J S S « «o*- a i « s |« S2 f •0 9 ! i i * J r a» D n • 2 u a• -■ <3 I •M ,s.3s ?. 6g M ca * ^ i i S S SS« a o 18 • r I HI < 0 < ® ■ ' HI i o 2 u a = > n ° > m 5 L H m ; If 0 m Is f 9 r ? • £ « r0 Q I . m ; 0> ! Our Econol w »“ !S 3I I2 > s if ji 5> rs u ■COI Items priced < w * i &n a. g vi * • t t i f 3> 30 « « Sis I a I Oi n 03 Q 30 —4 S m eia i i e i 3 3) T i 70 ■n in S?1 3 a < r“ 30 •*N» CD *< M 58 s I _ » , I t CO css X x 2 E a o m m C 30 a © M « ft o TJ * o 3 • 5 n N 18 I *2 * i u HI a £ 5 f a. 1 * a. i n < o * 2 # - o • = « 2 0 © n ■2 * 2 ® 0 o. a « B " i t r 0 5 * s S ■J « 3* * M I w O - B > 55z ■ < 2 V 99 A. P I 08 *« d I **5 I **2 oH — « 2. ° ° OB o a I o o * u .° o ■ > - 2 3 o in o ** *0 • So > ■< o. * "s B H r ° 0 b i I w w 1 58 H » o 01 • 2 s. 2 0 2 0 * 1 r n > 0 > *0 2 * * <* c «l 1 e• If 5© e • 0 < a, 5 ; 5 X Z f 3 i ■0 0 I d a y -F r id a y G irl Scouts and ng - Sunday N G ARTS G em an 0 0 0. 425 S. G r a n d I . -* ® H 1 Presents • » o r 1 0 0 a. 0 2 . ~ 2T S’ © r I H JO «< z0 n cr ••mi/* X O9 , o y * A C| S o = Z «e w S’ D o *o 3? «♦ ® o- Z • *. p /t 5 Q0 0 "* * D X* CD • * ; 3 - - — CO r O f i C 0 cr x LA V zm •e mS 0 5 88 o O n U ? z O o « o 0« * * c 0) ^ 1 1 If w 9 « a k » „ n — to '5 D 0) o f 3 B f t- 1 si o a.2 co T f i < D~ 'D (D rt 0 * Oi « P X cs a - O s m3 Ia* o M < « o’ rt $ 'S’ o - 0 > 0 5* < <0 < n k (/> — (c c3 » (A * < 5.* V *• • cr o u0 O c 2 • a n> cr CO a3 o 9 2 ® -1 C 1 ^ *H» College coaches hoping for calls from N C A A NEW YORK (UPI) — Watch the sale of at-large bids. tranquilizers jump at the local campus drug­ stores during the next week. The most nerve- To fill the 15 at-large berths, the NCAA also is likely to select the runners-up from some of the TICKET SITUATION IN UMBO stronger conferences. The Southwest, Big Ten wracking days of the college basketball season is and Atlantic Coast Conferences probably will here. have more than one team- With the start of the NCAA tournament only 10 days away, teams will be battling their hardest this week as they seek to land one of the 32 berths in the prestigious and lucrative Here’s a look at how the NCAA regional pairings shape up: The East Tournament bid not locked postseason tourney which will culminate at St. ACC champion vs. at large and Southern do in the last two games," said Chancea are the Big Ten will Louis March 25-27. Right now only one coach can rest easily this Conference champion vs. at large, Charlotte, N.C., March 12. By M ICH AEL KLO CKE State News Sports W riter Heathcote, reiterating his be­ get two bide. Although Min­ the Mideaat Regional at Indi­ anapolis, Ind. The aemi-finala , Ke*fncyalsosaidJ week, knowing his club has already locked up an automatic bid to the tournament. Gary Cunning Ivy League champion vs. at large and Eastern Eight champion vs. at large, Philadelphia, March At the last two MSU home basketball garnet, the crowd of lief that the Big Ten is the best basketball conference in the nesota la on probation, it seems likely that MSU and either and finals of the regional will be held in Dayton, Ohio March 16 weak ticketswiexpllpublaboicin.iavai ^®an announcement h i ng Ui3wl ham, in his first year as head man at UCLA, watched his team capture the Pacific Eight 12. Winners of these games advance to East 9,886 went delirious when it was announced that Minnesota country. “But I talked with Je ff Elliot (director of the Big Ten Purdue or Indiana will get bertha. Should,Indiana get an and 18. MSU Athletic Director Joe general 'I championship for the 14th straight year Thurs­ day night and can relax until March 11 when the semifinals and finals at Providence, March 17-19. The Mideast had lost. But, as Jud Heathcote has pointed out, the real worry for MSU is still Purdue. Service Bureau) and he said nothing is definite.” Heathcote was a little irate at-large bid over Purdue, MSU would go as the champion, due to its overall record. Kearney said the ticket situa­ tion for the NCAA tournament g®i”gwitol atrytourname/J we As soon as to ' l 4 I Bruins play a West regional first round game at Big Ten champion vs. at large and Mid-Ameri­ is atUl unclear. Kearney said can champion vs. at large, at Indianapolis, March With its 13-3 conference that "everyone" asiumes the But, as Heathcote said, a win each team will be guaranteed » »» Possible," Eugene, Ore. Atlantic Coast Conference will over Wisconsin Thursday Mid Monday. “The n«J H. record, MSU has clinched a tie 250 tickets for the first game at For the rest, though, the NCAA tournament is automatically get two bids. SEC champion vs. at large and OVC champion for the title and it has a would certainly simplify mat­ Indianapolis. “^ " e g e t h a a a J still a dream. There are still 16 automatic bids “How can they say the ACC ters. with how they will be ail vs. at large, Knoxville, Tenn., March 11. commanding two-game lead But spacious Market Square awaiting conference champions and another 15 will get two bids and not say We h»vc a lot of s j Winners of these games advance to Mideaat over Purdue. But with only two If MSU does get a berth, it Arena holds over 17,000 people, bids to be extended to at-large teams, and they commitments to peojul semifinals and finals at Dayton, Ohio, March games left on the schedule, the same thing about the Big will play March 11 against the so MSU should get consider­ will be determined on the court during the next Ten?” Heathcote asked. instance the p, ^ . 1 16-18. MSU still has not wrapped up a fourth-seeded at-large team in ably more tickets. seven days. ers. ■The Midwest bid to the NCAA tournament. Ten of the major conferences conduct post­ Big Eight champion vs. at large and MVC Should M SU loao its final two season tournaments to determine their NCAA champion vs. at large, Wichita, Kan., March 12. games (Wisconsin and Min­ representative and they will begin as early as today. The Atlantic Coast, Southern, Ohio Valley, Metro 7, Big Sky, Eastern Eight, East SWC champion vs. at large and Metro 7 champion vs. at large, Tulsa, Okla., March 12. nesota) while Purdue wins its final two contests (Northwest­ ern and Illinois) then both Skaters losing a colorful play, Coast. Big Eight, Southwest and Missouri Valley Winners of these games advance to Midwest semifinals and finals at Lawrence, Kan., March teams would finish deadlocked By JO E C EN TERS season and it was a tough second full season for the Conferences all select their NCAA representa­ “One time we wen I tives through postseason tournaments. 17-19. with 13-5 conference records. State News Sports W riter position for the two of them to seniors.- orado and we I TheWeot MSU head coach Jud Heath- When the 1977-78 MSU take. Even though DeCenzo didn't Other conferences which will be decided this missed the plane M, Pacific Eight champion UCLA vs. at large and cote is quick to point out this hockey team ends its season "It was hard because no one see much action on the ice his week are the Big Ten. Ivy League, Western could very easily happen. landed in Colorado Big Sky champion vs. at large, Eugene, Ore., Saturday in Ann Arbor it will was picked as captain at the first two years, along with Athletic, Mid American, Southeastern, West “Wisconsin has been playing Amo made us hold hid March 11. mark the end for seven seniors. beginning of the year,” DeCen­ Campbell and McDonald, he Coast Athletic and the Pacific Coast Athletic. follow him through thel WCAC champion vs. at large and WAC very good basketball recently But more than that, it will end zo said. “ As far as the team always seemed to get into Among the independents who should lock up “ We followed him fori champion vs. at large, Tempe, Ariz., March 11. and it’s almost impossible to the era of the “Grand Rapids went, it was hard to be a leader enough action off the ice. bids to the NCAA by the end of next week are but he stopped to talk f Winners of these games advance to West win at Minnesota,- Heathcote Boys.” because we were all in the same “For the first three years we Marquette, DePaul, Notre Dame, Utah State and guy and we kept gojl semifinals and finals at Albuquerque, N.M., said. Mark DeCenzo, one of the boat." were always in the dog house Detroit. Illinois State. Pan American and North stopped to talk to a steJ March 17-19. Should MSU and Purdue members of the group, (along One of the biggest problems, with Amo,” DeCenzo said. “We Texas State also are under consideration for and we got lost. finish in a tie, one of two things with seniors Joey Campbell and according to DeCenzo about were always late for every­ “We were lool I will happen. Tim McDonald) probably won’t this year's team, was that the thing.” when we found To] The at-large berths for the be remembered at MSU as a seniors really didn't have the Campbell, from East Lan­ (former MSU AU-Ad NCAA tournament will be great hockey player, but he’s experience that most seniors W alsh gets b etter w ith tim e picked March 5 — the day after the regular season ends. If the the kind of person that won’t be quickly forgotten. usually do. The first two years that sing, related a story about Besspne and the "Grand Rapids Boys." who was also lost, found the bus. It L * , with us, Amo would havl Big Ten is given two bids, MSU “Mark's probably got more DeCenzo played for MSU, the “Cotch (DeCenzo) and Mc­ there for sure." By LARRY LILLIS Walsh responded with 21 wins try to be quicker than his will go as the champion. spark than anyone else,” coach Spartans were loaded with Donald were from Grand Rap­ It has been l State News Sports Writer and only five losses. His season opponents. But if the Big Ten only gets Amo Beaaone said about the upper ciasamen so the fresh­ ids, Minn., and I used to hang years for DeCenzo, sail MSU’s Mike Walsh has been hasn’t ended yet with the Big "I go out and try to get my its one automatic berth, there Grand Rapids, Minn., senior. men and sophomores didn’t see around with them so Amo the Wisconsin series I wrestling with the Spartans for Ten meet and a chance a t the points early in the match/* would be a playoff Tuesday, “That makes him a leader. He's much playing time. started calling ua the Grand uary, he made sure thitl two years after transferring NCAA meet coming up. Walsh said. “Once I get the lead March 7, between MSU and well liked by his teammates and This year is retlly only the Rapids Boya,” Campbell said. out in style. from Ohio's Cuyahoga Junior then I just wait for my op­ Walsh is one of the top Purdue. The game would be he's a hard worker. College and has led the team in ponent to make a mistake. played at Illinois. victories both years. conference wrestlers in his DeCenzo was named captain weight class and should be the “ You see, once I get ahead, " I’d like to think we would along with senior goalie Dave Walsh, a junior from North Olmstead, Ohio, is a hard working scrappy type of wrest No. 2 seed in the Big Ten Meet this weekend in Ann Arbor. the other guy tends to try too hard to get back in the match get a bid regardless of what we Versical half way through the W o m en's ten n is w ins mat ler that gives his all to win. He before he falls too far behind, “I think that I have a good MSU's women's tennis team won an early career at No. 6. is a smart wrestler who tries to and this is where he hurts chance of winning in the Big season meet over the weekend with Purdue and not let his opponent get the himself. They will try so hard, Mascarin and Bogdonas teamed up tosi upper hand on him and force Ten meet," Walsh said. "There are a couple of guys th at will that they leave themselves M SU signs tailback easily defeated the Boilermakers, 9-0. Debbie Mascarin, who returns at No. 1 singles, doubles, Selke and Krueger won No. 2 g him to wrestle his opponent’s open and I step in and take Asher and Brielmeier won No. 3. give me some real competition, won her first match of the year, as did four other game. advantage of this. Before too N IL ES (U PI) — Niles Brandywine back Tony Harris signed a but I can’t worry about them. I veterans in the first four matches. The team's scheduled meet et the J It seems to have worked as long the match will be over.? national letter of intent Monday to enroll at MSU next fall. have to go out and w restler one Diane Selke won at No. 2, Cindy Bogdonas won Tennis Club Invitational this weekend h Walsh has racked up a total of Walsh hasn’t set any goals The 6-foot-3, 200-pound prospect, who will be tried at person at a time.” No. 3 and Mike Krueger won her No. 4 match. cancelled. MSU will take its 10 42 career victories in two years for himself. He just likes to take defensive back, runs a dressed 4.6 40-yard dash. Jennifer Brielmeier won No. 5 and freshman Tennessee during spring break where t| at MSU. In his first campaign When Walsh wrestles, he things as they come. And if he Heather McTaggert won her first match of her face six teams. with the Spartans last year, doesn’t do anything fancy. He keeps up the pace he is on right Walsh had a 2110 record. He doesn't use unique holds or try now, he could earn All-Ameri­ fought at the 126-pound weight to finesse his opponents with can status at the NCAA meet Wednesday Special THcnnctT H O M E B U IL D E R S class completing his season technique. What he does is to before he graduates from MSU. try aim with a third-place finish in the Big Ten meet. In order to bolster MSU's IDQUALITY U M TERBC D S EXPO WNOU WHIAT CRUST lineup, Walsh has moved up to N o w th ru S u n d a y PIZZA the 134 pound weight class this (NOIXTKA COST) TAKE A CAM PUS year. To some w restlers it might pose problems, but Walsh took it all in stride. LITTLE W EIGHT (sLEERSHOpj \ T H 5 « IB T I I OUfiUTTUMTONM# PIZZA FOREIGN AFFAIRS Q. OFF M 0OUND6 C DfYCA6ION<5 DOWNTOWN LANDING East G ra n d R iv e r an d M a rsli R d .O k e m o s . M ic h ig a n 1312 Mich. Ave. m i l M U V IIT 337*1377 How can you help improve the image of YOUR P C fiO ii rOOH KNAPPd _____________ ssseepeesMieMsrr American's abroad? _ A ^S H O U L D E R S Switch to the Olympus 0M-1 35mm SLR System Camera A. Yo u probably carry enough weight on yo u r shoulders already. So Have your w hy not own a camera that's easy on y o u ? The O M -1 is over 1/3 Instant Color Passport smaller & lighter than comparable cameras. Y o u 'll have to hold it to believe it A n d after yo u get over the initial sensation of weight­ Portraits made by lessness, consider these down-to-earth advantages: B O O K R E T A IL IN G • Open Aperture metering with a big, bright viewfinder that's easy on your eyes. DOUGLAS Proven dural: ty to withstand 5 frames per second m otor drive ELBINGER operation. PHOTOGRAPHY Whisper quiet and shock free. Backed up by the entire O M system of accessories from macro to m otor drive, includ­ ...a Career with The book business has a special appeal — and Waldenbooks is an up-to-date large scale retoiler. 220 Albert St. ing 27 impeccably sharp W e have entry-level, career-oriented openings, East Laming 332-3026 Z u ik o lenses. 50mm f 1.8 O n ly *239.95 the Nation's largest with some choice of location. We offer able men and women fast-track advancement to no appointm ent necessary with 50mm f 1.4 55mm f 1.2 O n ly O n ly *21995 *35995 Bookseller P L U S these special savings on len ses.. . 'WALDENBOOKS operates over 450 modern book­ STORE MANAGER stores throughout the U.S... .and keeps growing. N a t io n a lly Z u ik o 3 5 m m Z u ik o 2 8 m m 'WALDENBOOKS brings modern multi-unit retailing DISTRICT MANAGER f2 .8 f3 .5 methods to the book business. ra n k e d W ide A n g le Lens ONLY W id e A n g le Lens 'WALDENBOOKS offers extraordinary room to ad­ vance along a variety of pathways. 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(414) 966-7215 j$partBm?iBtrr Mail Order Specialists Bankcards accaptad TOP GV. CA$H nKay McKeever Duckett pre- nt to smosh one to t lower right cor- FOR MOLTS 0M.V Pillow t ornltifro EUROPE RENT or BUY CAR Rated X L O W E S T P R IC E S SlateNews fo r X-tra co m fo rt! FOB STUDENTS. TEACHERS soft and sexy EU RO PE BY CAR Newsline furniture on Sale Now 45 Rockefeller Plata New York, N Y. 10020 Phone (212 ) 581-3040 353-3332 P illow T alk Mail this ad for Special Ou, J F u rn itu re Studant/Taachar Tariff. □ RENTAL □ LEASE □ PURCHASE I is m f J® jM J[M tM a llJF ra n d o r IN K FOR: rni I ■ l- L S A T * GRE IAT • VAT • SAT 541 E. Grand River (across from Barkay Hall) FOR 1 ,1 ,1 , •FIEMQE YOUR PI DENTAL BOARDS WISING BOARDS ilt Program! A Hour* BOOKS n lS aH ffertn c e W -H. KAPUN frfMrition Specsuits Since 1938 • Velocipede Peddler 0 Nautilus 'VInformation 0 ; Elderly Instrument* (antiques A crafts) |» < A IW * Orchard 0 Jo-EI Com es A Gifts 1 Jox Copying )!! Suit# 305 Farmington 0 Flat, Black A Circular | Kitchen Cupboard ■WOMII (JI3) 051-0313 (used records A topes) 0 Family of Man 0 G reat Lakes Mt Supply 0 Bresler's Ice Cream (wilderness outfitters) Param ount Nows ABBOTT ROAD HAIRCUTTERS Suite 201, East L ansing State Bank Building, on Abbott H a ir s t y lin g fo r M e n & W om en A If e ts ty lin g & B lo w d n in g a s lo w as *6 . O O Call 332-4314 for appt. V or walk-in panf to stretch your vacation? Hy/Drive w ith National “ WE RE BUYING & ,e? incl“ ded-Extra miles 9< 5Lullass or similar-size car $995 YOUR BOOKS BACK p e r day TODAY AND EVERYDAY I eoH??.?m '“ ’i0" limeM flolla,s D,ivea I MlchiOan to any National location inthe MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY, I Wis • " W Indiana or Ohio. Entoy the I talltm ? and use ,he caI 10 11al131 to n FROM 8:30 to 5:30. I ittaiiZJ ,lyl)aclas' Non-discountable GET THAT EXTRA CASH FOR I '978Rbm a* Lansln0 airpcxt April 1. YOUR SPRING BREAK i c i dd,™'sl,«nse I ™cr«Wqualifications. Weryeyour Sln9 Airport N ation al C ar Rental We feature GM cars and offer S&H Green Stamp cer­ tificates on rentals in all 50 U.S. states. S 8 S Across from Olin at 421 i. GRAND RIVER 351-4210 ] Q Michigon State News. Edit loming^JAjcMgon J^«<*OY. March I, |,?8 Ron Hendon in'Association with __________________ SHOWCASEJAZZ PRESENTS Thi ASMSOPnpMiRf BMvi Announces Open Audltloni for the Company Production of featuring Hairstyling for Men JOSEPH JARMAN n a m m o iv B A m t Tennessee Williams and Women Saturday, March 4 I Conveniently located at the corner ot I M.A.C. end Grand River 8 41030 pm I Call for your appointment today thwer Room, 4th floor-Msu-^ Ph. 332-8191 J TICKETS: 3 M « k » u I l ! r T l ! n r o ! ^ , 1K| WlI00 „ w . | 208 M.A.C. below Jones Stationery A division of th« A SM SU Programming Board Thit . possible, in part, by • grant from the National Fnrinv?. made Directed by Peter J. Vaccaro - N O . In Waihingion. D.C.., w J ! » »* AUDITION DATES MICHIGAN STATE FOR FACULTY, ALUMNI, STUDENTS UNIVERSITY MARCH2J m r.HL MARCH4,5 2 0 p .* Department of Theatre MARCHU S URim presents MARCH4 W n S n P n l OH, DAD, POOR DAD, MAMMA’S HUNG YOU IN THE CLOSET AND I ’M FEELING SO SAD Feb. 28-Mar. 4;Mar. 8*11 GOCOVMN ARENA THEATRE 8:15 p.m. BOX OFFICE PHONE DOOIEYS 355-0148 TONIGHT DIRECTED BY STANLEY KUBRICK 1975 COLOR 3hrt 5m.r WINNIRt BEST FILM OF THE YEAR • lt»rr year-round. Europe, S. Amer­ ica, Australia, Asia, etc. Alt COOK NEAT appearing per­ son for cooking with know­ ary 13, 1978. Bring or mail to TWO BEDROOM includes River. $90/month. 351-2141. stove, refrigerator, parking Z-4-3-2(3) Rooms 347 Student Services. MINK PA W coat, size 15, I “ best. 882-0727 before 4:30 fields, $500-$1200 monthly, ledge of grills and food and all utilities. 5 minutes to S-20-3-1018! raglan sleeves, Appraised at w. 5-3-3(31 campus $215 available March M ALE NEEDED spring term, IT IS the policy of the State expenses paid, sightseeing. preparation. Flexible hours. $795, will sacrifice $350. 655- IT IS the policy of the STATE Apply in person M ARVEL 15. 482-9226. 0-8-3-10(6) News that the last 4 weeks of I Cutlass 1974, power steer- Free information-write BH P Cedar Village Apartments. 2600 after 4 p.m. 5-3-3(4) N EW S that the last 4 weeks LAN ES 2120 East M69 See term all Student Classified Co., Box 4490, Dept. ME, "S, brakes, automatic, air, of term all Student Classified Berkeley, Ca. 94704. Mr. Bertrand 8*3-7(7) Apartments ] ® FEM ALE NEEDED spring- 353-5565 after 3 p.m. Z-5-3-3(3) Advertising must be paid for BROW N CASHM ERE coat, I : ,,| ,op' 9 °°d condition. Advertising must be paid for quiet, non-smoker. $79/ in advance beginning Febru­ | weekdays call Rex at 373- Z-15-3-6(8) mink collar, size 10-12, cost in advance beginning Nov­ M EDICAL LABORATORY month. Close to campus. Call ary 13, 1978. Bring or mail to » evenings 393-5248. FEMALE NEEDED spring ONE FEM ALE for 4-man. $150, sell $25. 655-2600 4 ember 14,1977. Bring or mail Technicians MLT: ASCP. 351-5988. Z-3-3 3(3) 347 Student Services. 15:7 5 HOST-ASSISTANT MAN­ term. Very close, nice room­ Spring (summer optional) p.m. 5-3-3(3> to 347 Student Services. Edward W . Sparrow Hospital S-20-3-10(8> AGER. Permanent, full time mate. 1 bedroom, $100. 332- $78.75/month, Michele 332- Sp-23-12-9(8) has immediate openings for ONE M ALE needed. Spring. KENWOOD 15 watt R.M .S. CUTlASS SUPREM E 1976, _ _____________________ position. Excellent opportun 0363. Z-8-3-3(3) 1127. Z-8-3-713) ROOM FOR rent, walking Medical Laboratory Techni­ First 20 days rent free. Free stereo receiver BSR 510X « « J Green and white with ity for advancement. 5 even­ heat + water. $92. Charlie distance to M SU, $86/plus JU N K CA RS wanted. Also cians in its clinical laboratory. turntable, new cartridge $95. » and power. pau| G 339 . ings, HRI majors, must have utilities. John 353-5537. selling used parts. Phone The hospital offers an excel­ 332-5669. Z-8-3-1014) ONE MALE, spring term. 355-0871. E-Z-5-3-K3I °' 349-1898. A sk in g minimum of 2 years restau­ C ID A R V IL L A O I Z-8-3-613) anytime. 321-3651. lent fringe benefits package Across street from campus, 1 ® Z 6 3 8(4) rant experience. Call JIM 'S C-8-3-10(3) that includes two weeks paid A P A R T M IN T S M ALE, FOUR man 2 bed­ rate negotiable, 351-8498 QUALITY, USED equipment, TIFFANY PLACE, 372-4300 room furnished. Spring term Z-5-3-313) SPRING/SUM M ER term pri­ vacation after one year em­ starts leosing for sum m er at a fair price with a service 2 “ 1974 « . standard for appointment. Ask for or sooner. 332-4165. vate room in large house, on GUARANTEED REBU ILT ployment. W e also offer hos­ and fall M ARCH H t warranty. ^dependable and clean, Michael, Angie or Ann. Z-8-3-10(3) busline $82.50. 485-4891. starters generators and alter­ pital paid health insurance, M ALE NEEDED to share Dual 1219 turntable $125 * * Ca» 489-6847. 8-3-3(11) Z-4-3-K3) nators for your Foreign car. tuition refund and pension bedroom in 4 man. Furnish­ Advent Dolby System $125 CHEQUERED FLAG FOR­ 351-5180 FEM ALE TO share 1 bed­ ROOMS AVA ILA BLE spring plan. Apply to: 847-9180, ed, $70/month plus electrici­ McIntosh C24 Pre-amp $180 EIGN CAR PARTS, 2605 East COMPUTER OPERATOR, E.W . SPA RR O W HO SPITAL room apartment spring term. ty. 351-7843. Z-8-3-2(3) term. 3 bedroom house Nikko 6060 Receiver $140 fM 0 G RAN ADA, 1975, De- 2-door. AC, power, low Kalamazoo St. 487-5055, one full time second shift-IBM 1215 E. Michigan Ave., Lan­ FEMALE TO share bedroom Close, nice roommate. 332- ($107); 2 bedroom condomin­ Tandberg 310 Cassette $275 mile west of campus. system 3 model 12. Good sing, Mich 48909. A non in 4-man, Spring. Good 4954. Z-3-3-30) ium ($91). Call 332-6815/482- HI-FI BU Y S, 337-1767. J a9e. Beautiful. 42995 or ONE PERSON needed to 181337-130) days, 321-2002 C-8-3-1016) pay, excellent benefits, op­ Discriminatory affirmative ac­ roommates, location, $80. 2309 after 6 p.m. X-Z-8-3-3(4> 8-3-10(9) portunities for quick ad­ M ALE NEEDED, spring term. share spacious one bedroom ’’"'"gs. 3-3 2151 tion employer. 5-3-1(21) 351 3174. Z 9-3-10(3) vancement. Some data pro­ Cedar Village, $75/month. apartment. $85/month, good M ASON BODY SHOP 812 E. Kalamazoo, since 1940. Auto cessing education or exper­ CHILD CARE W O RKER MALE NEEDED to share 351-7979. Z-3-3-2(3) location. 353-3946. Z-5-3-3(4) RENT ANY 1978 FORD 22000 LT^ 1973 Bro u 0 ham ience preferred but not re­ Part-time. Duties include rec­ " * s- Florida car. painting-collision service. bedroom in spacious 3-man 25% DISCOUNT reation supervision and tu­ CLOSE-LARGE furnished 2 TWO BEDROOM furnished, 627-2559. 5-3-6(31 American-foreign cars. 485- quired. Call 371-5550 for ap­ apartment close to M SU. toring emotionally impaired bedroom $280 includes utili­ Abbott, close to campus. 0256. C-8-3-10(5) pointment. AM ERICAN $90/month plus electricity ties, very nice. 353-3108. Spring term, balcony. 351- EDUCATIONAL SERV IC ES. children. Hours per week to ,973' 8 c Vlinder 351-3050. S-5-3-2(4) Z-3-3-3(3) 9513. Z-6-3-3(3) transmission, eco- GOOD USED TIRES, 13-14- 5-3-3(11) be arranged. Send resume to . ^ s L 351-6557. Z-5-3-313) 15 inch. Mounted free. Also Box C-3, The State News. good supply of snow tires. SUM M ER GIRL Scout Camp 5-3-1(9) TO MSU STUDENTS SZ eJ ,977T°w h a"cou'pe, PENNELL SA LES. 1301 Vi positions available for nurses, CO UNSELO RS, MICHIGAN U to T V ' ,2 '500 "Tiles, East Kalamazoo, Lansing, W .S.I.'s, food service per­ (w ith ID) sonnel and counselors. 18 boys camp, 23 miles N W of IW k '?ke over Pavment. 482-5818. C-8-3-10(5) . . " M a t t e r 6 p.m. 4 .3 .315 ) 1973' ^ e lle n t year old minimum age. For further information write: MITTEN BA Y G IRL SCOUT Grayling, Ju n e 20 to August 12. Positions open; judo, waterfront, crafts, biking, OFFER GOOD FOR 30 DAYS | EwployniMrif| COUNCIL, 107 S. Washing­ nature/pioneering. W rite giv­ 83-7|3°W m 'lM 9 9 ' ing experience, background. ton Avenue, Saginaw, Ml, WORLDS »mSI ang 11 1974 Mach Neerinn automat'c * pow er IT IS the policy of the State News that the last 4 weeks of term all Student Classified 48607. 3-3-1(8) WANTED STUDENT hus­ FLYING EAGLE, 1401 North Fairview, Lansing 48912. 8-3^319)^ _ FALS j FORD AUTHORIZED LEASING SYSTEM I URCEST LEASING excellent condjtion# Advertising must be paid for band and wife team to i:un- BA BY SITT ER NEEDED 1,817after 5 p.m. 8-3-3(4) age and maintain 30 unit in advance beginning Febru­ weeknights. 7pm-3am. Close 1969, 351 horse ary 13,1978. Bring or mail to student apartment building. to campus. Call 332-2625. S U P E R S A V IN G S ! 347 Student Services. Maintenance experience re­ 8-3-10(3) S t!'Go°d CA LL D ICK A C K ER AT C U RTIS FO RD , 351-1830, S-20-3-1018) quired. Call 351-2211.5-33(6) ! ^ er' 353' 4147!' FO R A N Y A N D ALL O F Y O U R REN TA L OR PART-TIME positions in ATTENDANT - WOMAN W E NOW have spring and interview training program, L EA SIN G N EED S. ^.1971 AU/fmCellenl throu9h- preferred, 3-11, domestic summer openings. Excellent approximately 4 hours a COOK ■HERMMAN V.W . INC. W« rtqwlr# on* of *h« following credit cards a t a m eant work and supervising mental­ earnings. Ext. 5 weekdays. week. Must have young of depotlt: M atter Charge, BankAmericard. Carte « Stock™ s,ara° cassette 6135 W. SAGINAW 332- ly retarded and mentally ill 374-6328, 4 pm-6 pm, week­ children under five. Call Mar/ Blanche, American E xprett, Dinars Club. You m utt be 21 adults. 339-3265. 7-3-6C5) days. 2-8-3-615) Black at 353-4583. 3-3-3(6) WEST OF LANSING MAIL ye a rt of ago. f h r!* |» i taints |V l lost t Fill! q NrttaiL | | / Servica [IriispDrtatloi A f o il! Servica MCINTOSH MODEL- ML1C stereo speakers mint condi­ SEW IN G M ACHINES, slight­ ly used. Re-conditioned, IT IS the policy of the ST A TE N EW S that the laat 4 weeks LOST: 3 ft. Boa from 201 Natural Science. Reward for YOUR SON or daughter could live free while attend­ PIN BA LL M ACH IN ES repair­ ed and overhauled. Greg NEED RID E fronvPSrry M l to E. Lansing Afternoons. 625- PRO M PT TYPING twelve WaU 18 tion! W ILCOX TRADING guaranteed (39.95 and up. of term ell Student Classified Information. 353-3331. ing M SU while you're getting Evenings - Berger. 351-7547. 8-3-313) 3520. S-14-3-KX4) 875-7644. C-8-3-1013) POST. 485-4391. C-8-3-1014) ED W ARD S DISTRIBUTING advertising must be paid for Z-5-3-3(3) some tax relief. For details CO. 115 N. Washington. 489- in advance beginning Nov­ T H E SIS EDITING, p ap *, S24112. write to Jim Barrett care of RESEA RC H SERV IC E: Reli­ NEED RIDE to Northern PIONEER PL117D turntable, 6446. 2 0 ( 5 )_____________ A pet can warm your heart on ^ - ember 14,1977. Bring or mail EQUITY VEST, 1500 Kendale able, quick, expert. Free esti­ Jersey finals week. Need van, articles, resumes, letters, IBM Dynaco amp, Design Acous­ a cold winter evening. Look to 347 Student Services. Suite 200, East Lansing. mates. 332-1311.4-3-213) will pay good money. 366- 10-SPEED bike, excellent to the Pets classification of tics speakers. (500. After 5 p.m., 337-9933. S-5-3-7I3I condition, (50. Call 332-8953. Sg^a-rcjfjM______ today's newspaper. m B LM W _____ 6448 evenings. Z-B-1-3-113) AFGHAN PU PS. Black AKC. EXPERIEN CED HANDYMAN Z-E-5-3-713) M ED ICAL SCH O O LS in TYPIN G T H ESES,~ "term attending M SU wishes to Partially Housebroke. (100. papers, former college ad­ W ATER BED S A RE bedder Mexico start fall 4 year WHO- contract for repair work. Rob. at SOUNDS AND DIVER­ S K IS K A STLE Slamon 393-7577. 5-3-213) [ Pirsual / Hew recognized. 219-996- 351-1563. 0-1-3-113) fo ilf Strvict ministrative secretary. 333. 195cm, Salomon 502 bind­ Announce « n y t£ M SIO N S. Open till 9 p.m. weeknights. Downtown ings, (95. Lange Flo Boots, NOW BOARDING horses. 5-9, (45. Dan, 332-1160. Excellent facilities. Box and 4210. Z-8-3-313) PREGN ANT? NEED help? FOR Q U A LITY stereo ser­ EXPERIEN CED TYPIN G ser­ vice, dissertations, term 2 8 !6 J;3 - 1 (3 l_ C O PY G R A Ph " SERVICE sis openings, CN across from Knapps. 484- tie stalls available. Indoor and LOSE WEIGHT Nutritionally- vice, THE STEREO SH O PPE, E-Z-5-3-7I3I Complete dissertation and 3855. 0-1-3-114) 372-1560. PREGNANCY 555 E. Grand River. papers. Call Carolyn, 332- ADS R° UN“ ^ outdoor arena. Exercise pad­ th e s a fe a n d n atu ral way. resume service. Comer MAC SER V IC ES. Tuesday. W ed­ C-8-3-1013) 5574.8-300(4)___________ ----- , , , NEW , U SED and vintage dock. Located in Mason area. Supplies m ost n e e d ed nu­ nesday, and Thursday, 1-4 G' an? , River *30 am- C A U » T ~ Channel reel to reel, guitars ban]OS, mandolins, Call 663-2073 or 1-726-1372 trients w ithout excess PRO M PT TYPING Service. 6.20 p.m Monday-Friday. 10 p.m. 5-3-314) AT OUR prices get that sp- j o -s jw b " , ® ” m ll;eoffer' 332:3435- etc. Dulcimers and kits, re­ before 10 a.m. or after 6 p.m. calories o r carbohydrates. Term papers, resumes I.B.M . a.m.-5 p.m. Saturday. 337. 8-3-3(81 Satisfaction g u aran teed . emergency pair of glasses. 694-1641.0-3-3-3(31 1666. C-8-3-10I6I s' 3' 6131 corders, strings, accessories, O PTICAL DISCO UNT 2167 --------------------- books, thousands of hard- w « P te n RnE^ Al^ J FEM ALE BLACK Lab, very | Recreation ][fjjjj] E. Michigan, Lansing. 372- ANN BROW N TYPIN G DIs- PRO FESSIO N A L EDITING, QUEEN SIZ E waterbed, liner to-find albums, (all at very loving, 8 months, must sell, This is NOT a liquid 7409. C-3-3-3I4) sertations-Resumes-term pa­ papers, dissertations. Minor services availsbi^J" | and stained frame. $75 or low prices). Private and best offer. Jim 351-6418. group lessons on guitar, ban- $100 negotiable. 355-6939. protein diet. pers. 601 Abbott Road, North corrections to re-write. For­ Z-E-5-3-113) FREE LESSO N in complex­ Entrance. 361-7221. eign students welcome. 332- Z-5-3-613) jo, mandolin, all styles. Gift 12pma1a30nm R- ' _________________________ certificates. Expert repairs- C A LL JIM , a v a n ln g t ABDO’S LOUKfit ion cere. M ERLE NORMAN C-8-3O0M) _ 5991._C-8-3-10(4) FridaT For h g j* ssssr-? GOLDEN RETRIEVER pups. CO SM ETIC STUDIO - 361- h ft <5 SPflRT-whitA 10 free estimates. ELD ERLY 372-3050 EXPERT TYPIN G by M SU EXPERIENCED. IBM t^ iJig speed, fair conditio* (50 or IN STRU M EN TS 541 East AKC OFA. {125. 676-3718. Good in field, water, and LOWIST MMCIS 5543. C-8-3-1013) grad. 16 years experience. Dissertations, ' (pica-elite) home. 3-3-3(31 INTOWN Near Gables, call 337-0205. FAYANN, 489-0358 ^ 3 ,1 3 ,° Her- 332'4515- C - ^ lS 332' 433 IT IS the policy of the State TUIMAY listrictin C-8-3-10(31______________ C-8-3J0I3I_____ 3:00-10:30 p .m . S n 'N D IG F r i^ M --------------------- to o USED VACUUM clean- Newa that the last 4 weeks of TYPING, QUICK, reasonable, TYPIN G TERM P e p irf and COLOR TV, G.E. table, (89. ere Tanks cannisters, and List I Foul [f(^] term all Student Classified near campus. 332-6042. theses, I.B.M . experienced, f ° r square dancing Good Picture, 882-0520. uprights. Guaranteed on full Advertising must be paid for LA D IIt NIOHT G U ITAR, FLUTE, banjo and 5-3-3(31__________________ fast service. Call 351-8923 6 fu„. E-5-3-713) --------------------- year, $7.88 and up. DENNIS D ISTRIBU TIN G COMPANY. IT IS the policy of the State News that the last 4 weeks of in advance beginning Febru­ ary 13,1978. Bring or mail to and drum lessons. Private Instruc­ tion available. M A RSH A LL UN IG RA PH IC S O FFERS C-8-3-1013) r ’,8Kp-m a n u Jn s,u‘h" ' 5 "io*?c T hursday M U SIC . 351-7830. C-1-3-K4) CO M PLETE D ISSERTA TIO N MAC. Tickets MINOLTA SRT 101 35 mm 316 North Cedar, opposite term all Student Classified 347 Student Services. AND R ESU M E SERV IC E - «ble at door. Sponsor camera with case and filter, city Market C-8-3-10I7I Advertising must be paid for S-20-3-1018) S p e cia l P rice s type setting, IBM typing, (110. Phone 332-3178 after- _________________________ in advance beginning Febru­ Lad ie s O n ly offset printing and binding. z y j n r °lub noons. Z-3-3-313) W E PA Y Up to $2 for LP s & cassettes - also buying 45's, ary 13,1978. Bring or mail to 347 Student Services. ADULT SIN G LES. Still look­ tSM IN Traispirtatin & For estimate stop in at 2B43 GOING HOME? W e buy Nancy Drew, Hardy S NG. FASHION'si 3400 S. Logan East Grand River or phone INSTANT CASH W e're pay- songbooks, magazines. FLAT S-20-3-1018) ing for that certain someone? Wednesday M,rch, “ Laming, Ml 332:8414. Cf-3-1017)_____ Boys, comics, science fiction ing $1-2 for albums in good BLA CK & CIRCULAR. Up- W e can help you. W rite: n ext to NEED RID E TO Rochester and much morel CURIOUS P n T Kr Soons^ shape. WAZOO RECORDS, stairs 541 E. Grand River. FOUND-SILVER bracelet in Starlite Club, P.O. Box 27186, Dvkltro F o rd . New York, Leaving March 9, TYPIN G EXPERIEN CED . Fast Pan Hel. Admission » BO OKSHO P, 307 E. Grand 233 Abbott, 337-0947. 0pen 11 a.m., 351-0838. Library, 2nd floor. 372-8177, Lansing, 48909 Membership 10 for 2 girls. W ill pay gas. and reasonable 351-4635. A» proceeds win g0 a River, East Lansing, 332- C-8-3-1014) C-8-3-10(6) must identify. Z-2-3-213) Free. 9-3-10161 355-2118. Z-4-3-3I3I C-8-3-1013) New Student Enrichn 0112. C-8-3-1017) Fund. S-2-3-H6) ’ Stevie surprises J.J. Social work undergraduatesi Student Advisory Committee meets at 5:46 today, 566 Baker "Energy: Present and Future" will be discussed by Allen Camiener at 7 tonight, 146 Engi­ "The greatest thing in all my life it knowing H im l" Jo in us at Adopt-A-Grandparent ■ male volunteers to sharj Campus Action Christian Fellow­ ship with elderly. Contacttf Hall. W e'll be planning Social neering Bldg. Everyone welcome. ship at 8:30 tonight, 335 Union. (continued from page 1) Work Month. Volunteer Programs, 261 Announcements for It's W hat W hat is a sorority? Find out at sense." Happening must be received in the Services Bldg. 7:30 tonight, Yakeley East Lounge Dr. Richard Snider will speak on But Wonder later echoed much different sentiments about the State News office, 343 Student and Thursday, C102 Wonders Important Advertising Club Eastside residentsl Attend a "Private Nature Centers" at 8 man he lived with for two years while both were attending the Services Bldg., by noon at least Hall. meeting held at 7:30 tonight, 5 meeting of the Eastside Neighbor­ The MSU Cycling Cl| tonight, Natural Resources Activi­ meet at 7 tonight, 215 h Michigan School for the Blind in Lansing a decade and a half ago. two class days before publication. Journalism Bldg., to discuss the hood Organization. Discuss neigh­ ties Room. Bldg. “I ’ve always admired his brilliance," Wonder said. “I always No announcements will be accept­ Wom en's Brown Bag lunch will New York trip. borhood problems at 7:30 tonight, •* • Resurrection Cafeteria, comer of envied his always getting the best marks in school and along with ed by phone. be held from noon to 1 p.m. today, Peace Corps presents a slide Cheerleading try-outs are com­ Jerom e and Custer Streets. Justice Coalition foruntl that keeping a firm stand on the basics in life. If you get good grades in school you can become an introvert or conceited. Not so with Minority Pre-Med Association Room C Crossroads Cafeteria. Joanne Hamacheck w ill discuss ing spring term. First organiza­ tional meeting held April 5 in ■how of Dr. Kieibaso's Asian travels at 7:30 tonight, 128 Natural tude of church toward less" crimes held at 7:1 f will meet at 7 tonight, 335 Union. ''Passivity in W om en." Science Bldg. him.” * •• Jenison Fieldhouse. See you Last chancel Attend the Legis­ •* # Thursday. 215 N. Capiil For information contact Carol For Jackson, the feeling was mutual. “I think the reason Stevie there. lative Aide Orientation for spring Central Methodist; withRi| Crouch. •• • Baptist Student Union Bible feels that admiration for me is that it mirrors a lot of himself a term placement at 4 p.m. Thurs­ Volunteers are needed for gar­ Jondahl. ' ### Study Fellowship held at 9 to­ thousand fold,” he said. “He has always kept his feet on the M SU undergraduate studentsl Dairy Club meets 7:30 tonight, day, 4 Student Services Bldg. dening project for mentally im­ night, 940 S. Harrison Road. * •* Big Brother/Sister i ground." You can receive free legal services 110 Anthony Hall. Election and paired and autistic students, May Refreshments available. Everyone role models for needy I through A S M S U 'S prepaid plan. final sign up for the spring trip will Attend W est Circle Wom en's through August, in Detroit area. The men agreed that what they cherished most about each other welcome. area children through i For information call 355-8266. be held. W eekl "Relationships" ditcuited Contact 26 Student Sen/ices Bldg. was that their friendship has remained intact over the years. Contact 26 Student Servi tonight, Wllliame Hall. "H ealth" Wonder, who is producing the soundtrack to a new movie called Aikido, martial art for self- Come learn about "Unconven­ Episcopalians will gather at 5:15 discussed Thursday, Yakeley Hall; defense and personal growth tional Aspects of Genetics" at 7:30 “The Secret Life of Plants,” said Jackson was “instrumental with tonight, Alumni Chapel, for even­ "Fem inism ," Friday, Campbell meets from 1 to 3 p.m. Sunday, 9 tonight, 205 Horticulture Bldg. A me becoming familiar with and finding some of the units we use.” ing prayer. Jo in us! Hall. All held at 7 p.m. The units are synthesizers which can accurately reproduce sounds. One example Wonder gave of their use in the soundtrack to 10:30 p.m. Tuesday and Thurs­ day at Jud o Room, M en's IM Bldg. Horticulture Club Seminar. Busi­ ness meeting held at 7. •• • Acareer inlaw- withoutlawschool; was a bird singing in pitch. Meet the A SM SU Candidates “The whole purpose is to make people aware of the capabilities of the synthesizer, not as a gimmick," Wonder said. ‘To me, a synthesizer can aid in speech for those who are speech-impaired.” STIG M A meets at 7 tonight, 339 Case Hall. Everyone interested in handicapper issues is welcome to attend. from 6 to 8:30 p.m. Thursday, 332 Union. If you are concerned you should attend. h kbrm kh What can you do with only a bachelor's degree? Wonder said ifpeopie hear the synthesizer in his music, they may Gay Studies course meets at 8 i Now there Is a way to bridge the gsp oetwi wonder how he created the real-life sounds. “It is a way of using music for education, to encourage the enlightenment of things that are available," he said. Come square dance with the M SU promenaders from 7 to 10 p.m. tonight, 332 Union. Everyone welcome. tonight, 106A Berkey Hall. Come hear interesting lectures and dis­ cussions. Free to anyone. L e v is undergraduate education and a challenging, respi career. The Lawyer's Assistant Is able to do v tlonally done by lawyers. While in the Computer Science Building, Wonder created a new •• # Three months of intensive training can give you I version of a recent song: “Blind people got no reason/ blind people Ecumenical (Protestant-Ortho­ W ould you like to investigate skills— the courses are taught by lawyers. You chc got no reason/ blind people got no reason to live/ they got little dox-Catholic} charismatic prayer the unexplained Spirit Law or one of the seven courses offered— choose (he c bitty eyes that do not work/ everytime they run into something it truly hurts." Everyone laughed. Why such a need for a sense of humor about blindness? meeting, sponsored by Work of Christ Community, held at 8:15 p.m. Thursday, St. Jo hn Student Center, 327 M .A.C. Ave. so-called Law of Nature and Power latent in M an? Jo in us at 6 tonight, 104 Bessey Hall. GAL’S which you want to work. Since 1970, The Institute for Paralegal Training ll placed more than 2,000 graduates In law firms, baif and corporations in over 80 cities. “Because so many people are so serious about it," Wonder said. Criminal justice majors! Earn If you are a senior of high academic standing andl “If people knew more about it, they wouldn't be so hung up. It may Phi Gamma Nu, professional business sorority, meets at 6 credit while evaluating State Bi­ cycle Safety Program. Contact Levi’s • Jean s • Slacks Interested In a career as a Lawyer's Assistant, we d I to meet you. not be normal, but it's still a part of life." tonight, 117 Eppley Center. Year­ Dave Persell, College of Urban book pictures taken. Development. New Styles Contact your placement office for an interview with ( representative. Hubcaps stolen? O nly borrowed WIs will visit your campus on: MIDDLETOWN, R.I. (AP) cover the hubcaps, so it looked Platoon in Tuesday, March 7 — If there is such a thing as an as though Kluba was out of luck. Leaders Wednesday, March 8 honest thief, Jerry Kluba has found one. But he went out to his car and Class Spring Fashion found a paper bag with — guess Kluba's hubcaps were stolen from his car parked outside his what — his hubcaps. The Institute for apartment in Middletown. Po­ lice said they could not help him In the bag was a note which said “ Sorry, they don’t fit. But Paralegal Training and his insurance policy did not thanks anyway." •IheB R M KH * 235 South 17th Street. Philadelphia. Pennsylvania 191031 (215) 732-6600 Operated by Para-Legal, Inc COLLEGE GRADUATES 220 M.A.C. University Nall Ph. 351-4620 D 0 N T TAKE CHANCES WITH YOUR PARALEGAL CAREER- Marine Corps NOT ALL LAWYER’S ASSISTANT PROGRAMS ARE THE SAME Wed. is A Roosevelt University Lawyers Assistant rep­ resents the mark of quality and acceptance in today's legal community. College if you are a college graduate and qualify, why not give yourself an advantage by attending Roosevelt Univer­ And The Vodka Night sity's Lawyer's Assistant Program which is fully ac­ credited by the American Bar Association. Since the Fall of 1974, 745 graduates representing over 160 colleges and universities have chosen Roose­ Corps V2 off velt's Lawyer's Assistant Program for their career trainirw. Specialize in: Corporations — Estates, Trusts and W ills — Litigation — Real Estate and Mortgages — Employee The Platoon Leaders Class (PLC) is tho prim ary college oliicer com ­ Tlmr. is Benefit Plans* -r- or become a Generalist*. m issioning program of the M arin e Corps. It is a leadership program Over 225 law firms, banks, corporations and govern­ mental agencies throughout the United States have hired Roosevelt graduates. SESSIONS and the positive chorocteristics developed during training as o con- diaate will bo of great value to yo u throughout your career — be it civilian o r military. 6Come see This A r e a s O n ly M u l t i - M e d ia Discotheque 2843 E G d R iver, E. Ia n s 351-1201 □ Spring Day/February 13—May 5, 1978 W h at d o e s it take to complete PLC train in g ? It takes strength, a gil­ W ed n esd ay Special □ Spring Evening/March 14—August 26, 1978 □ Summer Day/June 12—September 1, 1978 ity, coordination, endurance, intelligence, m oral and physical cour­ age. It takes desire, determ ination a n d grit. If you think you've aot w hat it takes find out for su re w hile yo u 're still in college. A n d d o it what a Buck’ll Boozers Baz oar □ Fall Day/September 25— December 15, 1978 with n o obligation. □ Fall Evening/September 12, 1978-March 3, 1979 'evening program only. Recruiter in Placement Office F r i . March 3rd You can |oin the PLC program in your freshmon, sophomore or junior year of college. O n campue you will not have to wear o uni­ Buy’ 35c — SEND TODAY-------------------------- form participate in drill or attend any special d o sse s because all training takes place O N LY IN THE SU M M ER . Freshm en and sopho­ | Uwygpi Assistant Program v m ores attend two six w e ek training courses. Juniors take one ten T h u rsd a y Special . | ROOSEVELT UNIVERSITY 430 South Michigan Avenue Chicago, Illinois 60605 (3121341-3SS2 • A O k* w eek course. O nly otter you graduate from college and accept your com m ission ore you required to serve on active duty. Before then V A C S IT y INN I r ? V * “ hF m* on R o o u v tlt'i PanKeal Procram you m ay disenroll ot ony time. PLC training is tough and w e dem and the best. Find out if you men GOOD FOOD • PIZZA • DRINKS Suds 'n Subs I □ Sprint Day Prosram □ Sprlni Evening Program sure up. Contact us, N O W ! Call 372-1910 ext. 334/5 or see: • □ Summer Dey Program 1Op»n M-F: 11 a.m. Sat.-Sun.: Noon | ^ ^•ll □ Fell Evening CAPTAIN TOM RYAN 1227 E. Grand Riyor G reek Night I Address --------------------------- CORR BLDG. ilB lk . Watt of Hagadorn; | City------------ — — State___________ zip ________ _ | 332-6517 300 E. MICHIGAN WvSm i honJkoo *w 10 "* * • c" * d- "* • °* 1 LANSING, Ml PROFESSOR PHUMBLE * caught irrw nN th i longing by Bill Yates FORLOVE...ANDTNI STIUGGU FORTHI LiOAL TINDflt WEDNESDAY (12) Movie M E t 1' afternoon (23) Sesame Street (11) Impressions 9:30 8:00 -O j I T H tM ^ 4:30 (11) Shintowa: Hearts in 12:20 (6) Doris Day (6) Goldie Hawn Harmony GOT IT— A Llmonoc (10) Gilligan's Island (10) Grizzly Adams T 12:30 (12) Eight is Enough 10:00 C tm iC fK T 5:00 (10) Police Woman I Search for Tomorrow (23) Nova TO M W E (6) Gunsmoke (12) Starsky 8 Hutch l)GongShow lilIron's Hope (10) Emergency One 1 (1 1 ) S o u n d -O ff (23) Fever oe&’A^lC (23) Mister Rogers' Neigh­ 8:30 10:30 I 1:00 borhood (11) Wednesday Night (23) Book Beat IglFor Richer, For Poorer Fever 5:30 11:00 nYoung and the Restless (10-12) News (23) Electric Company 7-1 El All My Children 9:00 (11) News (23) Dick Cavett BQuePaso, USA? (6) Movie f 1:30 I Ai the World Turns (6-10-12) News 6:00 (10) Black Sheep Squadron (12) Charlie's Angels (6) News 11:30 PEANUTS (10) Johnny Carson by Schulz E|nays of our lives (23) Dick Cavett (11) TNT True Adventure (23) Jerusalem Peace (12) Forever Fernwood SPONSORED BY: UU U1H inn - U• H_____ E IO M sksss nw A U TQ W | 2:00 Trails (11) Won Chuen (23) ABC News 332-3537 IjOne Life to live 6:30 YES, SIR, MR.PRINCIPAL... K|0verEasy f 2 :3 0 (6) CBS News (10) NBC News MSU SHADOWS M Y TEACHER SENT ME TO SEE YOU BECAUSE JU S T A UTTLE FRENCH T O R E , SIR, TO KEEP ■Guiding Light (12) ABC News by Gordon Carleton HOU ON YOUR TOES... ■Doctors I'VE BEEN FALUNS ASLEEP (23) Over Easy IN C L A S S A 6 A IN ... ■iVYhot’s Cooking? ( U ) Black Notes SPONSORED BY: n if B A L L P E T E 'S f 3 :0 0 Presentthisrcollyfunnycomicfoe25* ■Another World 7:00 ^ ___ worthoffretploy! nsiiaim.iu.tr•- (6) My Three Sons - ■General Hospital (10) Mary Tyler Moore Pointalong with (12) Brady Bunch nKominsky (23) Tele-Revista 3 :3 0 (11 (Fifteen with Spira I Allinthe Family 7:30 ■Villa Alegre ^4$T£A3 ^ C . U **yT Today's Special: (6) Price is Right I 4:0 0 ■NewMickey Mouse (10) Hollywood Squares (12) Mary Tyler Moore FRANK & ERNEST T e p e p e S e la tf 1 H ■Green Acres (23) MacNeil / Lehrer Re­ by Bob Thaves A G ourm et Treat I port SPONSORED BY: I b .u n c o uoTAwuurr 203 M.A.C. 351-9111 CCPyiNG o ca MIRACLES Y »u Hflve TbLD mb 5 h o u Lp 3 .9 ” EA. N O T T O OO \ th u t. prinit-in-a-mlnlt COPYING'DUPLICATING IS OUR BUSINESS Corner of AAAC and ANN ST. Open 8:30-6:00 M-F; 10:00-5:00 Sat. - ® H 7 « <3eRft»4MRL£RnO . RAVELS WITH FARLEY low gas prices Plus Service THE DROPOUTS CAMPUS COMING l f h i l F ra n k 5y Post SPONSORED BY: PIZZA 2 SOONI t w t i ' i Uwte treew«v \ I s n rlw l t i U n SPONSORED BY: 1)01E. Gr. River HCW Q3HE V 0(4 never H M K lE D .S J W W Ne*ttoVortityInn We A ppreciate Your Business X WANTED 1 & HARRY A LOT OF G iR LS AS WE m v / M G SECTION 3 A M IN REFER­ •AND fW W ERM O RE B U T ltg Y W K E h T r INSPECTOR,I HEREBY ENCE TO SUBSTRUCTURE7 UNDER SECTION P g c o d E n o u g h PCH CITE LOU FOR £REAK- A N D 6R AD /NS. SEC T/O N fO V RTH -Bm TECA/ WG 35 CODE RB00IRE 5 4 2 IN REFERENCE TO m i /N THE CON* D RN BIM S A ND SIDE N A(J$ STRUCT/ON OF THI6 Aor ^ PILLOW TALK B.C. ■ by Johnny Hart CAMPUS Free Delivery: SPONSORED BY: thovwWCmHt w *7 fc»"»Mur* (UMBLEWEEDS PIZZA 3*1-1747 VomK. Ryan SPONSORED BY: 1312 Mich. A vt. 337-1377 ' ...ito HAVE A H ic k e Y h e r e ! W H A tLl You me HEf? PHCN& MUMBE/? ? NO, I W IL L N OT T A K E T H IS WOMAN TO B B M Y W IPB.'/ ------- 4nr SAM and SILO ' Hair Styling lor Mm and Women tiki J (jf Cell lor eppointmattt today BBSM B EJB H a POSSWOftD IH B B S E E H E IIS SPONSORED BY: by Jerry Dumas and Mort Walker sp o n so re d by: in a s S t n p* *-*3 3 m W*MChta.*^,IW W r i »i IJ M Z L E s a is s s B D S B I bhepord’s Now opan Saturday 1 JtoOudah 24. Careen B B S SO BS a s s B B S S S B E S S fflfl campus I SEE THE PRESIDENT FLICKlE FLA KES s il o , i w is H Y o u 'd s e t ■Btcws C oNG R E55 WANTS AN _A R E MADE FROM 25. Wraparound jj^wtcafls 27. Apis h b s s b so s 15 P R E 5 5IN < S CORN AND S O M E T H IN © B E S ID E © c e r e a l advisers 28 Winter month □ SB S H S S a FO R T Ai B oxes to r e a d a t a s s s s a o a so a s BARLEY, BREAKFAST 30. Plunger REFO RM FORTIFIED 33. Spotlight S B B B S B B G3B0 & jj-tnumhr 34. Counter 35 Evans B H D S IS S S B H B S S B B B S BBH SSSi V W ITH .... A JkMllirt, 36. Heavy hammer B S B S S BH BBB I 38. Iconoclast w 40. Vaulted alcove 41 Whatnot 44. Romany-------- 2. Wiser Si* 42. Requisite OOVN 3. " t i l " 43. Fasten 1. Dainty food 4. Eaton 5. Chord of four tones 6. Low bench 7. Newt TO M C H A PIN 8. Harangue 9. Sour ale 10. Shrewder BEETLE BAILEY ito r of "Make a With" 12. British author jy Mort Walker SPONSORED BY: SUNDAY AT OOOlfY’S T ick.tl ’4.1*, In a dvanc. Fleming 18. By no chance f .A A 21. Scale SOMEONE BROKE INTO THE (fO /- ( gre at stu ff 22. Bom TOOL ROOM AND SAWED AU. - vM li U// THAT NEW 23. Seaweed 25. Mexican shawl THE RAKE HANPLE6 INTO ~ „V M IR A C LE 26. Point the finger LITTLE PIEC ES l /f\W y 1 LJ SLU E ( > )V v / A 1 27. Chastise 1 Juff ^4 J [ 28. Cony 29. Oivulges tk % 30. Snake 31. Wing-shaped 32. M r-up 35. Detve 38. Managed 39. Crackle W o 0 “V 1 4 Michigan Slot* Newa, Eoat tonilng, Mlehlgon COUNCIL DELAYS PLANS Fund transfer defeated OPEN By D A N IE L H E R M A N sing area which includes reland­ for “written proof" from the City Council should change its* M O N D A Y thru FRlD fty , „ State Xewa Staff W iter scaping much of the downtown “business community of their meeting time from 7 p.m. to 6 S A T 9-6 SUN U s A move to transfer $1.6 million from Lansing's general and capital area. The opposition was lead by commitment." p.m. Councilmember Richard Pitchtr.Night, All 4 Brands m i i m ill,j ,, Also voting against the trans­ fund for the South Washington councilmember James Blair. Baker complained that fer of funds were council mem­ Blair reiterated his past objec­ changing the starting times of Square project was defeated at Monday's Lansing City Council tions to the project. “The dty bers Richard Baker and Robert Hull. meetings would interfere with the “dinners of members of City Rsstaaraat Spatial CIGARETTES meeting. has an $8 million surplus this Council." Further planning on the proj­ ect will be delayed because of fiscal year, but what about next year? I'm interested in what In order to transfer funds, it is necessary to have six of the Adado commented that, 4-1lpm BBQ Bm I Ribs, frits, the fund transfer defeat. happens if we don't have a eight City Council votes. “maybe if some councilmem- 4 . 3 9 CARTON The project's purpose is to rejuvenate the downtown Lan­ surplus.” Blair also restated his desire One city official, involved with the council, commented bers would do without dinner, we might get through earlier.” Salad Bar All Yta Can Eat! A ll T n . 1 ,- d u d o d A ll B r a n d . that, “the mall is just stalled for The proposal, however, was He's running on a farce platform a week. Tm sure next week the funding will be approved." The official explained that defeated. The council also approved a resolution echoing Governor $3.95 » T A T I COUPON Blair was just “grandstanding," Milliken's request that Lansing LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) - The candidate for student body president at the University of party called ARF, which stands for “A Real Farce.” George said if he is elected, he would do the adding, "Blair’s major problem is that he acts on the spur of the moment." be reimbursed for the snow removal costs for January 26- 27. To date, the federal govern­ £ iza i« d i 10 % O F F s r * Nebraska-Lincoln says he’s least amount of work possible In other developments, coun­ ment has only reimbursed a n d e ra ro u n d p h o t o fin is h in g ready to give the voters just and would "represent people cil member Louis Adado sug­ areas for snow removal from S i SAbbott M d V «■ 224 361-2216 what they want — nothing. who think the whole university gested that to save energy January 28 through February N O L IM IT Lyle George is a member of a is a farce." because of the coal shortage the 1. • T A T I COUPON U L T R A BR ITE WIN to H 000 IN W O CASH BONANZA I lO V o lu o Ebefhard C>£T YO U R F & E O A M E T fC A r e r A /£ C G fS A fiV / u ltr a b rite M P 2 * nooo “ c a sh w in n e r s / * 1 0 0 W IN N E R S : “ ______ I l - J . I Linda Loian 4%______ Grondvllle *50 WINNERS: John R. Smith Grand Rapids • T A T I CO UPO N Nancy Herrygara Muskegon Delores H. 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