(à i VOLUME 72 NUMBER 64 THURSDAY, A P R II 20, 1978 M I C H I G A N S T A T E U N IV E R S IT Y E A S T L A N S IN G , M IC H IG A N 4 8 8 2 4 A rts ce n te r p la n s a lte r e d By JIM SMITH State News Staff Writer University funds, is being considered in A significant portion of the proposed Performing A rts Center has been aban­ E d u c a t io n c o m p le x d r o p p e d connection with the revised facility. Pledges and contributions tied to the doned by University administrators in PAC currently total approximately $7.5 favor of legislative financial support for "We made a commitment to go ahead “It’s probably closer to $20 million now," million, said Leslie Scott, vice president for higher-priority projects. with the facility . . . We have to complete he said. development. Original PAC plans called for three this project." Breslin said in explaining Ground for the facility could be broken Theatre Department Chairperson Frank theaters to be built from $11 million raised MSU’s rationale for going alone on the C. Rutledge declined to comment on the early next year if the PAC fund reaches at from private donations in former MSU project. least $10 million. Scott added. reasons for MSU's shift in priorities but President Clifton R. Wharton J r.'s $17 Breslin said rising construction costs conceded, “it is a major disappointment." Million Capital Enrichment Program. would have probably required more than Siefert said completion of the facility is University architect Robert L. Siefert projected for the end of 1981 if all plans go The additional $6 million was to be sought the planned $17 million. said a parking facility, financed with as scheduled. from the Michigan Legislature to finance educational portions of the building to house offices and classrooms for the Theatre Department. It is the $6 million state allocation which MSU has decided not to pursue. MSU administrators confirmed Wednes­ W o m e n ’s b a s k e tb a ll te a m day that new plans were being developed which would re-design the PAC minus the Theatre Department addition. Jack Breslin, MSU executive vice presi­ dent, said that due to urgent building needs file s T it le IX c o m p la in t in other areas, such as communication arts and plant and soil science, the University Clarence Underwood, assistant director to deal with compliance complaints, Under­ decided not to ask the Legislature for Substandard MSU athletic conditions are of academic affairs in intercollegiate ath­ wood said. matching funds. the basis of a Title IX compliance complaint letics, is heading an affirmative action "We just file reports and make recom­ “Our priorities have changed sub­ committee for the athletic department. The mendations," he said. filed against the University by members of stantially since 1974,“ Breslin added, re­ committee has been organized to investi­ Underwood said he has not seen the the women's basketball team, co-captain ferring to the formulation of the PAC Kathleen J. DeBoer said Wednesday. gate and address the regulations of Title complaint filed by the women’s basketball A P W ire p h o to project. The complaint has been filed with MSU IX, he said. team and cannot comment on it until he kst Guard boat battles Lake Michigan in search of Nicolle Lents, a Breslin said MSU had a commitment to However, the committee is not designed Title IX Coordinator Mary Pollock, DeBoer does. fear-old girl who was swept from a breakwater path in Milwaukee raise its $11 million share of the PAC before said. Hay. A firefighter holds a probe while watching the rescue efforts requesting matching legislative funds. Women s Athletic Director Nell Jackson “We're a long way from getting the and Athletic Director Joseph Kearney are money,” he added. both aware of the complaint, she added. The complaint charges violation of Title IX of the Federal Education Amendments Lebanese technocrats r n jo s ‘ l e t t îO M IL of 1972, which prohibits discrimination on the basis of sex in any federally-funded educational program, including sports. DeBoer said MSU intercollegiate ath­ turn over government b o ta g e q u o te r id ic u le d letics are discriminatory in the size and quality of facilities, budget allotments, coaching staffs, salaries and scholarships. The complaint is currently in a "fact- BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) Premier Salim el Hoss' government of technocrats re signed Wednesday with the apparent aim of Hoss’ government of financial experts and professionals rather than politicians was unable to restore law and order to gathering state," Pollock said. turning over leadership to politicians who postwar Lebanon or launch a significant IMA CITY. Panama (AP) — Pana- “This is craxy, he must have been on forces “were prepared to defend the canal Te a n members are forming specific might be able to take a firmer grip on the reconstruction effort after the 1975-76 I expressed astonishment Wednes- drugs," said Guillermo Endara, a leader of against all contingencies" and that “we feel questions for Pollock to take to the athletic troubled country. internal conflict. These failures largely Omar Torrijot' statem ent that the Panamenista Party, one of the country's very confident we have the capability to department for investigation. resulted from continued bickering among Official insiders said Hoss, 48. probably prepared to sabotage the Panama largest political groups. “His comments prevent the destruction of the canal." Pollock said she has approached the political factions, each with well-armed also would head the new government. ■ the treaty turning it over to were irresponsible. The canal is our About 9,000 U.S. military personnel are intercollegiate athletic department but has militias, and the lack of financial aid from ■been rejected by the U.8 . Senate. greatest asset. To even think about stationed a t several bases in the 500-square- nothing in writing yet. President Eliss Sarkis accepted the Western and Arab countries. destroying it is inconceivable." mile canal zone. resignation of Hoss' eight-member cabinet, an official announcement said. The first "Politicians couldn't do anything to A fter the Senate ratified the pact The U.S. Embassy declined to comment control the situation before or after the Tuesday night, Torrijos declared at a news on the general's remarks. shakeup in the post-civil war Lebanese government followed the March 15 invasion war. so I don't know how they will succeed conference that Panama’s “armed forces “Torrijos has been on his good behavior "M SU intercollegiate now." said one Lebanese journalist. had decided that if the treaty were not for a long time and he's had a lot of garbage from Israel and last week's bloody confront ratified, or if it were amended in an thrown at him," an embassy spokesperson athletics are discrimina­ ation between Syrian peacekeepers and Following a first time meeting of top unacceptable manner, then we would not said. tory in the size and quality Christian gunmen in Beirut. Moslem and Christian leaders since the civil negotiate. We would have started a One American official in the canal zone o f facilities, budget allot­ Sarkis, a Christian, accepted responsibili war in the parliament speaker's office struggle for liberation." said Torrijos was merely “letting off ty for the peacekeepers’ crackdown on Tuesday, the president reportedly said: "If m ents, coaching staffs, sal­ you can meet together like this, you can He also said Panama had the capability steam. Christian militiamen in the Ein Rummaneh “to destroy the canal” and that had the “Hell, he has gone through quite a lot. I aries and scholarships." — section of the capital. The action killed 115 help run the government and heal these treaty been rejected “possibly by Wednes­ would do the same thing —just shoot off my Co-Captain Kathleen J. wounds." persons and wounded 317 in five days of day the canal would not have been in mouth," said the official. D eBoer fighting. Informants said Sarkis has Syria's back­ operation.” Jose Gonzalez, a Panama City real estate ing in forming a government to cope with The United States was prepared to broker, said he was stunned by Torrijos' There was no sign the Hoss government resigned in dispute with Sarkis on policy, multiple problems of sectarian fighting, defend the canal if the Panamanian military statem ents but that he thought the Pana­ general lawlessness, unemployment, infla­ had tried to take the waterway by force, manian leader was bluffing. 'T he complaint process is an organized however. In his speech accepting the tion and rebuilding a national army that can President C arter's chief spokesperson said. “I don't think he really would have way to discuss different perceptions of what resignation, the Christian president offered re-establish authority over the entire "It is safe for you to assume we would be destroyed the canal,” Gonzalez said. “I constitutes compliance," Pollock explained. his "deep gratitude” to his Moslem prem­ country. prepared to defend American interests and know his comments look bad outside the As Title IX coordinator, Pollock is ier. One cabinet member. Health Minister the canal, as we have been," White House country, but I think they may have been responsible for advising administrators on Ibrahim Shuaito, later said the government Sarkis took office shortly before the war press secretary Jody Powell said. made more for domestic consumption. I what changes the University should make decided to "Clear the way for politicians to ended in November 1976, with the blessing think they were just words.” in order to comply with the federal civil take over responsibility under the current of Syrian President Hafez Assad and the Col. Tony Lopez, spokesperson for the Torrijoa U.S. Southern Command, said American (continuedonpage 13) rights law. trying circumstances." backing of the 25.000-man Arab League peace-keeping force dominated by Syria. In southern Lebanon, Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat had 130 radical guerrillas iebate on P an am a treaties m a y continue 9 arrested. 'continued on page 11) ByJEANNE BARON affairs. entitled to expeditious transit through the The Carter administration stance is that payments to Panama. htstc News Staff Writer The reservation gives the United States canal a t all times. the treaties fulfill the United States' Carter emphasized the treaties will ■ Senate ratification of the Panama featies Tuesday, critiea of the pact |*e an opportunity to see whether the right to send in the military if necessary to keep the canal open. However, a stipulation that the United States would not •The United States will have freedom of action to maintain the canal's neutrality. •A U.S. agency will replace the current original goals in building a canal — that it remain neutral, secure, open and efficient as long as U.S. security and commerce have reduce the possibility of armed confronta­ tion because they would transform Panama “from a passive and sometimes deeply fflW i O O ■mal predictions come true. be permitted to intervene in Panama's Panama Canal Company. Initially, the need for the canal. resentful bystander into an active and ■nile ratification will probably alow r “ Mroversy in the United States, internal affairs or violate its sovereignty was added. Panamanian and American Board of Di rectors will be headed by an American, but “We have never needed to own the interested partner whose vital interests will be served by a well-operated canal." b u lle tin Ply to continue in Panama. Though in 1990, a Panamanian will assume the Panama Canal Zone any more than we need Wings defeat Habs at Forum, The 1977 treaties mark the end of 14 to own a 10-mile wide strip of land through Members of a conservative coalition that of Panamanians took to the position. 4-2. years of diplomatic wrangling and anti- •No U.S. congressional appropriations Canada when we build an international gas opposed ratification of the pacts contended ■ cheering the agreements, others American rioting in Panama. They are pipeline," Carter said in his televised chat. that the neutrality treaty would mean Prated their opposition. designed to put out the fire — lit by the will be involved in the transfer of control. enemies of the United States could use the w e ath e r ■before Tuesday's vote, Panamanian He also said the United States never canal in time of war. jeopardizing U.S. 1903 treaty — that has subsequently raged f vowed to work towards abroga- owned the zone, since it only purchased the security. Today will be cloudy, with a between the United States and Panama. 1 * tre»'ies in favor of Panama right to use the canal through annual (continued on page 111 70 percent chance of rain. Some of the treaties' major provisions | “ !‘tro1 ,of the waterway imme- Temperatures will be in the include: 40s. Tonight will be cooler with I f . r 'ban waiting 22 years, as •The United States will have primary 1“ to the treaties. more rain. Love it. responsibility for defending the cans] until I Panamanians also fear th at a P»" placed on both treaties may the year 2000. At that time, the U.S. military presence in Panama and U.S. Basis of resentment L r - 10" in Panama and lead control of canal operations will end. Panama will receive funds from canal I ln that nation’s internal •U.S. and Panamanian warships will be revenues. •The U.S. will promote Panama's de velopment and stability through loans, credits and military sales. lies in canal history •Private businesses and nonprofit activi­ ties in the Canal Zone will be able to By JEANNE BARON continue operations on the same basis as State NewsStaff W riter similar businesses or activities elsewhere in Panama is a country about the size of Connecticut, with an estimated population in 1976 Panama. of just under 2 million. Historically, the nation’s claim to fame and primary economic •All U.S. dtisens currently employed in resource has been its geographical position — connecting the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans the tone can continue in government jobs with only 50 miles of land between the two. until retirement. From colonial times to the present, the isthmus has been a major world transportation In his second fireside chat to the route, sporting a mule trail initially, then a railroad and finally a canal. American people, President Carter said The United States completed the canal in 1914 after the French Canal Company's effort Feb.l, 1978, th at “ the only reason" for failed. For 64 years, the Panama Canal has stood as a symbol of American ingenuity and ratifying the new treaties was because it is been a source of pride and power for the United States. “in the highest national interest of the For the Panamanians, however, the canal has symbolized a loss of national dignity, Uniteid States and will strengthen our potential intervention and U.S. imperialism. position in the world." (continuedonpage13) P o lic e h u n t fo r M o ro CORVARO, Italy (AP) — Police blasted ice from a mountain lake Wednesday looking for the body of Aldo Moro and widened the hunt to roadside ditches east of Rome. But two jailed leaders of Moro’s Red Brigade kidnappers reportedly questioned the authenticity of the message that claimed the former premier had V a n c e says S A L T p ro b lem s re m a in been killed. “Don't you realize that message has been written by someone M O SCO W (AP) — Secretary of State closer together on a number of issues." else?” Renato Curcio and Alberto Franceschini were quoted as Cyrus R. Vance said Wednesday that But the secretary added: "Com plex and saying of the communique found Tuesday in Rome and bearing the "difficult problems" remain in the path of difficult problems remain in the SALT insignia of the feared urban terrorist gang. a hew U.S.-Soviet strategic arms agree­ negotiations. I hope my visit here will A lawyer for Curcio and Franceschini said he believed Moro, ment. He arrived on an evening flight m ake progress on the remaining major president of the ruling Christian Democratic Party, was still alive. from London and will meet with President The Red Brigades seized the61 year old Moro and killed his five issues . . . I view this meeting as an Leonid I. Brezhnev. guards in a Rome street ambush March 16. The message said he important stage in the ongoing quest of had been “executed” and dumped into ta k e Duchessa, 72 miles Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko our two countries for a stable strategic northeast of the capital. Two days of searching there have turned went to Vnukovo Airport to meet Vance balance and world peace." up nothing. and Soviet television showed them *'We found the message entertaining. We would like to know shaking hands warmly. U.S. officials expect no dramatic who wrote it," Curcio and Franceschini were reported to have told Reading a prepared statement, Vance breakthrough during Vance s three-day attorney Giannino Guiso in Turin, where they are being tried on said that in four meetings over the past 18 visit, and no agreement for a Brezhnev sedition charges. Guiso's account of the conversation was carried months, he and Grom kyo have "made by the Milan newspaper Corriere della Sera. summit with President Carter in the progress . . . in bringing the two sides In a later statem ent issued through the lawyer, the pair refused United States. comment. Guiso said he believed Moro was alive and that the government, which has refused to negotiate with the kidnappers, still could do "But it is necessary to do it quickly and pay a high political price,” he said. The price suggested in messages from Moro has been the release of jailed terrorists - apparently Curcio, Franceschini and 13 others being tried with them. Meanwhile, hundreds of police and soldiers set off dynamite charges to loosen the ice in snowbound Lake Duchessa and drained a nearby flooded quarry, but said they expected no results. Remo Gaspari, vice president of the Christian Democrats and acting liaison with the searchers, said in a television interview in Rome the "everyone up there is 100 percent certain that there is nothing to be found." N a tio n ’s econom ic o u tp u t fa lls Lenin outdated, W ASHINGTON (AP) — The nation's The bad weather and the long coal economy staggered to its poorest perfor­ mance since the recession during the winter, as economic output fell 0.6 strike were largely blamed for the decline in the nation's gross national product in the January-through-March Spaniards told percent at an annual rate, the Commerce period, but officials said a slow-down in MADRID. Spain (AP) Com abandon the idea*T»f revolution Department said Wednesday. consumer buying of goods and services munist leader Santiago Carril and class war in favor of Officials said the poor winter showing also was a factor. lo, launching his party's first cooperation with democratic makes it unlikely the Carter administra­ "There was some effect from consum­ national convention at home in governments. tion's goal for the year of 4.7 percent ers taking a breather.” said Commerce 40 years, said Wednesday that Continuing his long standing economic growth can be reached. But European communists must ideological war with the Krem­ Police search for the body of former Secretary Juanita Kreps. She predicted a they continued to rule out any danger lin. Carrillo insisted he was not Italian Premier Aldo Moro In the icy substantial pickup in economic activity in asking the party to abandon waters of Lake Duchessa after receiv* that another recession is imminent. the current quarter. F o re ig n o il use, Leninism, the foundation of Soviet communism, but said e n e rg y g ro w th some of Lenin's ideas no longer applied. T o rn a d o e s p lo w th ro u g h S o uth cu t, re p o rt says ‘This obliges the communists of developed countries, and F r a n c e d e v e lo p in g n e u tr o n specifically Europe, to rethink NEW YORK IAPI - The our strategy and our concepts,” PARIS (AP) — A Paris newspaper reported The test, widely reported but never d MONTICELLO, Miss. (AP) — A string of that had been parked in front of the United States appears to have the 62-year-old secretary-gen­ Wednesday that France has exploded an experi­ confirmed, was part of a series of Frenchefla tornadoes plowed through the South made a "staggering" cut in its eral told more than 1,400 dele­ mental neutron bomb at its South Pacific test improve its nuclear arsenal. Defense \ house were blown 200 feet away. A field growth of energy consumption gates here. base, but French researchers are believed far Yvon Bourges, asked last fall about i Monday and Tuesday, and one killed four between the M cN ease ond Thornhill and has pared its reliance on In a bid to expand his behind the United States in developing any bomb research, said testing covered ill tail members of a family when their farm homes was strewn with food, bits of foreign oil, the oil industry said Communists' moderate image deployable neutron warhead. weaponry but declined specifics. home was flattened, authorities said. clothing, kitchen appliances and broken The Foreign and Defense ministries refused to Wednesday. before national elections ex­ The respected newspaper Le Monde f More than 70 other persons were injured. furniture. comment on the front-page story in France-Soir, a “informed circles" Wednesday as sayingu The trend developed despite pected later this year, Carrillo "It sounded like a big jumbo jet when Edward Swartz said he was in his the failure by Congress to pass praised Prem ier Adolfo Suarez mass circulation daily, according to a long-stand­ weapons seemed within the grasp of a o it's landing — then it was just quiet," said mobile home 200 yards away and heard President C arter’s energy plan. for legalizing the party. ing French policy of refusing to disclose power like France but that research «us Gary Thornhill of Forest Grove Com­ people screaming from the house. He information on nuclear tests at the Mururoa Atoll enough along for experiments. munity near Monticello. Imports of crude oil and oil Standing under a giant ban range in the South Pacific. Franee Soir said a "senior military oflwr'l said he tried to get to them, but had to cut Four of Thornhill's relatives were killed products, which jumped 18 ner emblazoned with the ham Well-informed observers believe the France- pointed out that France was still three orl| down trees blocking the road. when a twister destroyed their home. percent in 1977 and 20 percent mer and sickle, Carrillo pledged Soir story, which followed similar reports in the years away from any deployable Thornhill said his family huddled in a to continue cooperation with Killed here were his grandparents. in 1976, are down a surprising weekly magazine Le Point and two West German weapons, but that he reportedly descriMfl bathroom. "I thought we were goners," 14 percent for the first three the centrist government to inno newspapers, stemmed from an underground recent Mururoa test as a "full-scale IT Walter McNease, 72 ond Janie McNease, he said. "Anyone who wasn't scared then rebuild democracy in Spain. until months of 1978. nuclear test last month. experiment." 62: their daughter, Christine McNease wasn't human." IcK a Polk, 46: ond their son, David, 18. The S tate N ew t it p • I'udini« of Michigan S'oi* Univ#»»ity »vary dot* The M cNeases’ form home collapsed and their bodies were found on the His home was heavily damaged, as doy during Foil Win' durm g Summer term ' Ond Sprir I »(hoot ifimt Monday Wadnatdoy ond Friday* W*l- 482. 499A, 990. ALL INTERESTED Muntz said if the city’s current spending million in the general fund would not rate continues, Cleveland will run out of 351-8880 ARfi!iT rS ^ c J NVITED T 0 ATTEND TO D AY'S MEETING FOR IN FO R M A ^ have to be tapped. 1139 E. Grand River Z n i l l u FIELD TRIPS' a CCO M M O D ATIO N S. TRAVEL OPPORTUN ® ’ money in mid-September, ending ¿he In that case, Cleveland would not run A N D FINANCIAL AID. FORMER PR O G RA M PARTiriPANTS WILL BE calendar year with a $23.5 million deficit. out of cash until mid-November, Muntz Fast, Free 351-7100 Muntz said the projection included said in the report Tuesday. 966 Trowbridge FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT Delivery ' don’t foraet to i OPPICI OP OVNKSIAS STUDY _________ |0 I INTERNATIONAL CENTER 153-1920 ism issal n o t e x p la in e d , >ed s e rv ic e s h e a d says BvBKGINALD THOMAS immediate dismissal as supportive services the counselors duties would no longer be V u t ( N , w « S U I T Writer program director and her termination from offered through their program. dirrrlor of MSU’» «upportive the University on June 30, Wilson said. However, the new counselor, who is not U ra m . w h o ««» relieved of her The letter did not give reasons for her related to Jesse Gonzales, was hired to the idrninistrator» last week, »»id »he dismissal, she said, but added that it was supportive services program following pro­ " the d»rk »bout Her future not related to the controversial Chicano tests by Chicano students. inivprsity. , counselor case. Ljciipe Wilson said she has not Wilson said she has asked Hamilton and L e d hv the MSU Board of Wilson’s dismissal came one week after Winder for specific reasons why she was President Kdgar L. Harden or the hiring of Chicano counselor Dorothy dismissed and has sent a written request 'larenre I- Winder about her Gonzales to the supportive services pro for an administrative review of her case. I ihnuvh she did receive a letter gram. Gonzales was hired for the position [slant Provost Jatnea B. Hamilton vacated by former counselor Jesse Gon Neither Winder nor Hamilton has yet zales, who was not reappointed last year, responded to her request for a review, ;trr from Hamilton called for her because supportive services officials said Wilson said. Wilson said if she cannot settle her dispute with the office she will “go to a fo correlation 9 place of higher education where my talents can be appreciated." “I am not about to roll over and play dead." she said. PBB studies Winder refused to comment on the case, but said Wilson will receive an administra­ tive review. Winder added he must wait until after the review to make a public I By DeLINDA K A R L E A health department study conducted in statement. jjtate News Staff W riter the summer of 1974 examining 165 persons •elation exists between levels of who lived on quarantined farms and 133 "Dr. Wilson has asked for a review of the J health complaints of Michigan who lived on non-quarantined farms found actions Dr. Hamilton has taken and a I with the chemical in their blood, results similar to the latest study. review will take place as soon as possible," 1 to preliminary results of a study The 1974 study concluded that no acute Winder said. Hamilton was unavailable for 1 by the Michigan Department of disease could be attributed to PBB. comment, kith. "But nobody believed the results in 1974." |dy was started in April 1976 and Hafs said. Wilson said she is not the first person to S H O E S . B O O K S S E L L 1 S G W E L L J.545 Michigan residents from 65 He said the latest study may make the be dismissed by Hamilton. In the past, ¡including Ingham. It found PBB results more widely known. there have been many personnel problems ethe highest in Michigan Chemical "We anticipated there would be no in the program, usually involving minority Irs and their families, quarantined i their families and persons who i food directly from quarantined correlation of symptoms and PBB." said John L. Isbister, disease control officer at the Michigan Department of Public Health. groups, she said. Wilson said she was the only minority Jogging grows in leaps, bounds |wer levels of PBB were found in "We have said right along the symptoms woman to hold a director’s position in the prom low-PBB level farms and didn't correlate with PBB." By GERRY SKOCZYLAS The biggest reasons for the recent jump ning shoes range from the $20 to $42, t niversity. She had been director of the a of food from these farms. (continuedonpage 18) State News Staff Writer in the popularity of jogging are probably Wiersma said. office since November. 1976. •r. the preliminary results show ran be anybody's sport. that running requires little skilled athletic ’‘We've stocked up on the Dragons ($20 Iho lived on farms where low-levels ability and does not call for large invest­ model» because they’re reasonably priced lere detected and who consumed ment in expensive equipment. and really popular among the college Ebony editor urges urban plan ■these farms complained the most Once joggers buy running shoes, they are students." Wiersma said. plated symptoms such as fatigue, ready for hours of running without having After finding the proper pair of shoes, , nausea, joint pains and numb- to pay for uniforms, court fees, or gymna new joggers next need to develop a e symptoms were reported as the sium space. workout suitable to their current physical | e blood level was lowered, But the right shoes have to come first. As condition. mple: 41 percent of the people who krms where PBB levels were low, like T V A for inner-city blacks one jogger put it. "If the feet aren’t comfortable, then running just isn't any fun." MSU Women's Cross-Country Coach Mark Pittman notes that too often someone I who ate food from these farms, jogging for the first time will run too hard i of fatigue. Only 36 percent of By REGINALD THOMAS Bennett said in 1962. $820 million was The brands, styles and prices of shoes and become exhausted. The result is a to speak before the G reater Lansing Urban King on a quarantined farm and 32 State News Staff Writer available to the jogger are almost limitless, negative attitude toward running in gener­ League and scholarship fund. He told a used to subsidize housing for the poor, If the people eating food produced The only solution to problems faced by ranging from specially-designed running al. Pittman said. small audience in McDonel Kiva that plans introduce new theories are needed, he prantined farm had similar com- urban blacks is the establishment of a added. shoes to department store "specials." "A good rule of thumb for beginning comparable to the Tennessee Valley Au national comprehensive urban plan similar But. regardless of the brand chosen, joggers is that they shouldn’t set any thoritv are necessary to eradicate the while $2.9 billion was given to middle and ■esults are contrary to what to those used during the 1930s. the senior several runners and storeowners agreed a particular distance goals." Pittman said. national urban crisis. higher income families through tax credits, I expected," said Harold D. Hafs, editor of Ebony magazine said of MSU potential jogger can expect to pay between Pittman also explained that joggers The TV A was a federal hydro-electric subsidies and direct payments. ltm of MSU’s Department of Dairy Wednesday. $20 and $30 for a good pair of shoes. should warmup both before and after their dam project designed to stimulate agricul "Blacks are still shockingly undersubsi­ jid PBB researcher. "It was as if Lerone Bennett Jr.. who is also a Mark Elliott, a junior quarrer-miler on workout to increase physical conditioning. tural and economic conditions in the dized compared to farmers and rich people." lented the symptoms." well known black historian, was in the area the varsity track team, said a comfortable He suggested “static stretching" exer­ Tennessee Valley. he said. In addition, many black profession fit is the most important thing to look for in cises. such as sit-ups and light leg-stretch­ 'The TV A was to stimulate industry and al people have come to the conclusion that a pair of running shoes. ing. rather than the traditional "dynamic” endow local currency." Bennett explained. the struggle of blacks is primarily a class "People should try on different shoes for exercising. lo v ie p a s s e s u p s e t fe w "The TV A was an experiment in total rather than a racial struggle, he added. reconstruction of the Tennessee Valley." comparison until they find one that has Elliott said the correct attitude is always Bennett said such well intentioned" some toe space as well as a secure heel." a big factor in learning to run. He said the only solution to solving the said Elliott, who also works part-time as a ! By NEAL HALDANE program has not affected planetarium crisis of the spreading black slums is the people should realize the onflict is still one "Beginning runners should always start salesperson at Frank Shorter Sports. earlier cries that the new audiences. implementation of a TV A type program on of race for the black community. If not for Ric Wiersma. salesperson at the Ath­ out running less than they're capable of, i Hall Association movie program "Our attendance has been average." she a national scale. the demands made by black student because if it really starts to hurt they’re lete’s Shop, emphasized the importance of ^ate an on campus entertainment commented. "It hasn’t gone up and it hasn’t The same conditions that existed in those radicals, he added, many would not have choosing the right shoes from the variety going to equate running with pain. It , most competing businesses are gone down." states exist now in the black community, reached the positions or gained the benefits doesn’t have to be that way." he said. available. kmplaining of dwindling crowds. A State Theater spokesperson said he he said. In the 1930s, President Franklin I). they received. Yet hostility and indifference "People who buy running shoes or flats' Many of MSU’s student joggers choose to Innot really tell and assess the has not noticed any change in the size of the Roosevelt said the government should to the plight of urban blacks continues, he should only use them for jogging or run throughout the campus area not only because of the beauty, but also because of lintil the end of the term," said crowds flocking in to see "Saturday Night create a public corporation to handle the said. walking, because many of these shoes aren't IcKay. spokesperson for the Beal a lack of cars — often a hazard to joggers. Fever." problems of poor people. Bennett said because of the retreat from built for the lateral movements of basket W- Pittman warned joggers in city areas to "If there is a picture on they want to see. Bennett said Roosevelt’s attitude set the the radicalism of the 1960s and the ball or racquetball.” he said. Kay added Beal is still not happy run towards on coming traffic in order to they will go see it." he said. precedent by which government should act depression of the 1970s blacks are currently The Athlete’s Shop’s most popular run­ pew program. He said it "hurts" Bob Merando, manager at Dooley's, said to solve the problems facing the urban ■continued on page 18' 'continued onpage 11) pince they have to arrive an hour people are still coming to the bar even with crisis today. 1 movie begins and wait to be the RHA program.He said the only time "We used to hide poor people and black Bn upsetting situation," he said, ¡students have to stand in line people stayed away from the bar is when the MSU basketball team was on television or playing at home. people and keep them down." Bennett said. Bennett said the black population had to 6U’ input sought | n limn most people." But he said the movie pass program may "beat down" the stereotypes and myths 1 said that Beal expected the new be affecting the time crowds come to the associated with the lower economic classes. To change the system, more people who w ill A meeting to solicit input from the University community on ¡P'5 Pass program to have some bar. "We might get a later crowd than usual » \a not!ced and Pre taken o f m o n ste rs Innocent unborn child into "monster," B o y c o t t s ta tio n s blizzard this past winter. working relationships with these people. The only explanation I have been given to 1 artisti \ 68 to 3 healer inty a maker of “monsters.” Abortion We have been hearing a lot latelyil I exactly — is there really no alternative? Due to the recent rash of DPS initiated Were it not for these blood donors, it t his problem is that il is c h e a p e r to hire and Paraquat's association with lung di* perhaps s Dr. William Waddill Jr. is on trial in towing of illegally parked vehicles, I have would have been impossible to ensure an rehire new assistant coaches over and over As yet, is there any data com •ncy as a | John E. Wilson California, charged with killing a baby girl been prompted to voice my opinion. adequate blood and blood component supply again. There is no serious consideration Paraquat's effect upon the digestive *y* pning w; Professor or Biochemistry who is said to have survived a saline Although my car hasn’t been ticketed or to those hospitals totally dependent on the whatsoever as to whether the assistants are if ingested? 1 Senator 2831 Still Valley Dr. abortion. Dr. John Menkes, a defense towed, I sympathize with others whose services of our Red Cross Blood Program. the best qualified and available persons. |ed when witness, testified (State News, April 14) East Lansing The only matter considered is an economic MelanieGidd have. There needs to be a change on this To my knowledge, no medical services one. that Dr. Waddill or any other physician requiring blood, during or immediately Kathyft campus, namely, more visitor and dormi would have been justified in letting the following the storm, were unable to be met. 284 W. AkersS] tory parking spaces provided. Obviously infant die since, due to the effects of saline One might say that the reason behind JoanneC poisoning, the infant would have had no brain function were it to have survived. Dr. N e u tra l the administration of MSU feels otherwise and opts to ticket and tow. There isn’t much This blood program is fortunate to be insufficient funding for women is because our program is still a basically young one. 6150 Hardy A * J East L you can do about the tickets but there is associated with a student body so respon­ Menkes stated : “We call these babies A recent analysis of the ASMSU presi something you can do about the towing. sive to human needs. monsters. The monsters are bom and they dential elections mentioned the coalition Since the University tends to use trucks continue to live for awhile . . . They finally against the Dayton Hudson mall, of which die, of course." from a few select service stations, the Garson H. Tishkoff PIRGIM is a participant, as the type of boycotting of those stations (who reap the \ There was no evidence of physical or organization that can turn out votes to influence the outcome. profits of all the cars that are towed) will G reat Lakes Regional Red Cross Blood Director Furbush ease needs student eietfl sooner or later detrimentally affect their Program mental defect in this baby aside from those profits. It is hoped the station owners will resulting from the purposeful saline poison Although this was used as an example, The principles which underlie John then cease supplying trucks for the DPS ing. She was from ail indications a perfectly and did not specifically mention it as having hurbushs appeal, questioning the com­ and the administration will be forced to healthy infant with all the potential of any other human being at this stage of occurred, it may lead some people to question PIRGIM’s role in electoral politics. confront the problem instead of trying to run away from it. I t ’s ‘c h e a p e r ’ position of the Departmental Review Board, would seem to have impact development. Her only defect was in being As a point of clarification. I would like to beyond the immediate situation. Guilt unwanted. And the remedy for this defect point out to your readers that PIRGIM’s Thomas E. Gurka or innocence aside, it is essential for included being turned into a "monster" then As a female student and athlete at by laws prohibit our endorsement of any 583 S. Wonders Hall Michigan State University, I feel it is my effective judicial process to be pre right - rather duty - to express my reeded by a fair and impartial hearing, a feelings, and those of my fellow athletes, basic requirement being hearing before concerning the funding of the MSU wo a representative sample. Since John DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau Furbush's appeal is based on the belief men's athletic program. I have no intention of ridicule or harrassment, for that would that Ihe composition of the Depart OKAy, Fans, IF YOU'VE simply be an act of ignorance. I do wish to mental Review Board (as prescribed in I 'M SHU. TALKING TO PR. GOT ANY QUESTIONS FOR University regulations) was inherently DAN, I WONDER IF present an objective look at one of the PAN ASHER, AUTHOR OF THE MEUOW EXPERT DAN ASHER, biased, the Wilson Hall Student Associ­ WESHOULDHTOPEN FROM HOW V 6 E T IN TOUCH MELLOW Her, WILL YOU consequences caused by the lack of suffi BEST-SELLING ’MELLOW: HOW UP THE UNES NOW, cient allotment of funds to the women's ation IWHSA) would like to recommend T0 6ETIT; ANDA FELLOWAT CUIJH YOUR FEEUNGS TO HOTUNE! gu ys ju s t s h u t AND 6IITE OUR LIS­ program. that the composition requirement of the f THE CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE FOR HOWTO J M THESIERRA WHERETS u p a n d p l a y a TENERS A CHANCE CLUB, WHY PONT YOU Y0URHEAD HISS RECORD? Departmental Review Board be re- THE MEUOW.. 10 RAP WITH TOU. viewed and strong consideration given GIVE US ARINO I RRH AT? \ Having recently been given the honor of tv r . representing MSU on the softball team. I to the possibility of including a repre­ have also been introduced to the discrimina sentative from the general student body lion and disadvantages of falling victim to (i.e., a student not employed in the the "system." The “system" being that capacity Resident Assistant). women's athletics are second rate on the We feel this is a reasonable proposi­ University athletic priority list, Because of tion, since valuable insight may be this, a serious, unjust policy is being gained by inclusion of the student practiced. viewpoint. Wilson Hall Student Association J o h n F u rb u tk As a consequence of insufficient funding, S W P O IN T : N E U T R O N B O M B 1 ‘L A S H ’ L A R R O W E amage Ungers Round B .B R I'C K C U R T IS estimate would be that 32,000 people have j r(.r(.nt history of Ihe atomic o that brought the Japanese sur- I? Aucusi of 1945, Gordon Thomas ■" 11 Witta write their died of long term radiation effects in the 32 years from 1946 to the present. In addition to the guilt feelings, survivors began to suffer from a social stigma that the flag L Morgan (h.,l "Hiroshima today is a continues — from widespread fear that, W hen you re into physical fitn e ss th e w ay I am . you spend a lot of tim e w a itin g in line to hodgepodge of a city with a even if they are not obviously ill, survivors re s e rv e a c o u rt. T im e isn t a lw ays w a sted , th ough. Som e d ays, co n v e rsa tio n s on th e line I! „ear 900,000, almost three times are nevertheless carriers of a virulent a re heavy. | L before Ihe bomb. The citizens "bomb disease." Finally, studies whose full Like last Monday. 11ilk of August 6. 1945. Those who results necessarily lie in the future have W hat do you th in k of th is e d ito ria l h e re in th e S ta te N ew s on C a rte r's a n ti inflation L Mgns of their injuries tend to been initiated to determine if nuclear p ro g ra m , L a sh ? th e g u y n e x t to m e a sk s. i themselves. often suffering guilt radiation has caused genetic damage that I h a v e n 't re a d th e ed it y e t," I sa y s, " b u t I can tell you this. Jim m y 's g o t a b e tte r | y lived while so many died.” will result in mutations among future u n d e rs ta n d in g of inflation th an folks realize. And w ith his ch arism a, he'll have it licked Ihow the writers’ tone suggests that, generations. Nuclear waste among the b e fo re h is te r m r u n s o u t, you bet!” bnie few people continue to suffer Japanese obviously extends beyond August "S tate N ew s e d ito rs d o n 't think so.” he tells me. "L iste n to w h a t th e y say h e re : T o a aftereffects of the atomic bomb, in 1949. a r g r d e g re e a ny rea l successes in rig h tin g the econom y d e pend on p resid e n tia l kn such awful wounds heal for a city And what of Americans? Surely many lea d e rsh ip - and th e p re s id e n t's ab ility to lead is still an open q u e stio n .' " fcple. The cycle of death and rebirth Americans have suffered, not entirely W hat do th e y know .’ I hark s. "H ow m any econ m ajo rs do th e y have on th a t edit ■complete, then, and the reader. unlike Japanese survivors, from feelings of b o ard ? “ especially the American reader, guilt. Even if they had nothing to do with "OK. L ash , O K ," he sa y s. I d id n 't m ean to g et you u p se t. I ju st w a n te d to find out w h a t d comfort in the conclusion. But the the decision to bomb or with the bombings, you th in k , you rself, about C a r te r 's inflation pro g ram . W h a t is his sta n d , a n y w a y ’ " K,ut nuclear warfare, 33 years after many Americans have somehow taken on W age and price co n tro ls a re out." I says. "H e sa y s th e only tim e for th o se is w hen utSi hardly allow us to live in peace, the burden of the fact that America has we re a t w a r.” broximate facts are these: been the first and only country to use I dunno." he says. " If C a rte r d o e sn 't go for controls, how 's he gonna g e t prices dow n?” ■where between 120,000 and 402,000 nuclear weapons. The present discussion, f isral re s tra in t." I explains. "H e's r u t th e bu d g e t to th e bone. The g o v e rn m e n t's only women and men (plus military however, is not concerned with the question going to he sp e n d in g $61 billion m ore th is y e a r th an it ta k e s in in tax e s. On top of th a t, Leli died immediately or within a few of collective guilt or with asking whether he* s told fed e ra l w o rk e rs th e ir pay hikes c a n ’t go a bove 5.5 p e rc e n t." Etpr the Hiroshima and Nagasaki the sacrifice of Japanese lives to save T h a t s im p re ssiv e , he sa y s, b rig h te n in g . “W h a t a b o u t w a g e s a n d p ric e s in th e p riv a te American lives was justifiable. Rather, it se c to r? ’ bet it is imperative to recognize that seems important to recognize that past things of Hiroshima and Nagasaki events are irrevocable. As such, they are X term effects that continue to the useful primarily to suggest — as the , not only for the Japanese but for continuing effects of the atomic bombings of Y ou w o u ld n t b e s a y in g t h o t if y o u w e r e a n e c o n o m i s t / 1 I as well. As for the Japanese, one 1945 suggest — that history is not limited to I has pointed out that “It is grossly immediate cause-effect relationships. Espe t e l l s h im . " Y o u ’d r e a l i z e t h e e c o n o m y is a d e l i c a t e m e c h a n i s m , preserve property while obliterating only months without falling behind schedule. ■ing to describe nuclear weapons cially nuclear history. people? g e t s o u t o f a d j u s t m e n t , y o u p u s h it t o o h a r d a n d t o o f a s t . L o o k In terms of TNT tonnage. Radiation Simple self interest should force us to Obviously, the wounds of the American w h a t h a p p e n e d w h e n N ix o n p u t c o n t r o l s o n in 7 2 . H e t o o k ’e m ■cannot be translated into anything recognize, in an era when nuclear weapons Then, pressured from all sides — report­ atomic raids of 1945. like raw radiation » the effects of ordinary are literally dozens of times more "effec r ig h t o ff a f te r h e w a s r e e le c te d , p ric e s s h o t u p , w e h a d d o u b le ­ edly including our own neutron weapons sores, do not heal so easily as Thomas and tive" than in 1945. that it is truly insane to advocate, Representative Bob Carr — Witts intimate in Enola “Enola Gay." d i g it in f l a t i o n . " lically speaking, this means that project past assumptions about the meth President C arter "postponed" production of Indeed, they can never heal for Americans Y o u g o t t a a d m i t , L a s h ," h e o b j e c t s , " N ix o n 's c o n t r o l s k e p t j an average of 1,000 people known ods and aims of warfare into the future. neutron warheads. Concurrently, however, so long as essive administrations con p r i c e s d o w n e n o u g h s o 's h e g o t r e e l e c t e d . " Itigators have continued to die each That recognition has sharpened recently he apparently ordered continued prepara­ tin u e to foste and intensify a policy of radiation aftereffects. In 1976, because of the neutron bomb" issue. Would tion of a “delivery system," which is a re lia n c e on th r e a ts . if nuclear devastation. Jmately 1.153 people died of causes President C arter decide to develop a longer term project, so that he could d to be related to the bomb. A simple neutron weapon that would protect and Corfu u o professor of Amer,con Thought postpone warhead production for about six ondLonguoge Jimmy s telling unions and employers wage and price increases have to be less than they ve been the last two years. That’ll shave half a percentage point off the rate of inflation.” “How's it supposed to work?" he asks doubtfully. son gave for this hike, I find extremely They want the personal freedom and social "Last couple years, prices went up 6 percent a year," I explains. “Wages went up 7.5 non gays alike. In providing these services, difficult to sense as the pinpointed answers. rights which they deserve, not only as percent a year. OK. So if union and employers cooperate, prices will only go up to 5.5 we must constantly question and re­ percent, instead of 6." I feel that the MSU officials owe the contributing members of our society, but examine our own behaviors and values, students more explicit facts instead of also as human beings. Does that make sense to you. Lash?" he wonders. "Sounds like a lot of mumbo-jumbo along with those of our society. This can be to me. Doesn't seem like much of a goal to be shooting for, either, half of one percent." beating around the bush. These movements are occurring in many a difficult process at times — but the Faye LeMekise places — the ASMSU Gay Council being one "You wouldn't be saying that if you were an economist.” I tells him. “You’d realize the rewards are countless. These rewards are economy is a delicate mechanism, gets out of adjustment, you push it too hard and too A116 Butterfield of them. The members are working to be realized in our increased self awareness and T u i t io n recognized as individuals who have some thing valid to contribute to society. We also resulting personal growth, from which fast. Look what happened when Nixon put controls on in ’72. He took 'em off right after he was reelected, prices shot up, we had double-digit inflation." to the $500 tuition hike that C o u n c il w o r k s want to help other gay men and women society will ultimately be the benefactor. In order to provide an environment which You gotta admit. Lash, he objects. "Nixon's controls kept prices down enough so's he got reelected." financial Aid Department informed achieve their full potential as human beings, would help to facilitate this process, the Now you re sounding like those State New s editors," I scolds. "How's Jimmy going to kindreds of self supporting students Gay Liberation, the Women’s Movement, helping them to work toward healthy and MSI Gay Council has been undergoing a whip inflation, everybody and his brother's nit-picking, undermining confidence in him?" will be drastically debating Black Liberation, and other civil rights happier lives. These goals can best be met collective reorganization. We would like to I hadn t thought of it that way," he admits. “But what if companies and unions don’t tor not they can afford to return to movements are present in our society by offering support, education, and in some become more involved in MSU and the cooperate? What happens then. Lash?" |xt year. today. These groups of people are working cases counseling. We would like to make surrounding area, while simultaneously Jimmy s prepared for that. 1 answers. "He's got a new commander for the battle »cure reasons Harden and Wilkin to make society recognize their presence. these services available to gays and becoming more attuned to the needs of the against inflation. Folks get out of line. Robert Strauss'l) be doing some rough gay community. We reject the stance of arm twisting, you can bet on that!" martyrdom because it does little to enhance “Strauss!" he yelps. Isn't he the guy who got the coal strike settled by giving the S W P O IN T î P A N A M A C A N A L our self esteem, or gain the respect of others. We invite other gay people and the miners that 13-percent a year wage boost for three years? He's gotta be some inflation fighter. And isn t he the one who cut a deal to protect the steel companies against foreign community in general to share their ideas competition so they could raise their prices?" mal opera well expected with us. Meetings are every Friday night at 7:30 in the Gay Council Office, 310 Student Services Building. Please come to contrib­ ute or just to listen. “Strauss is a good soldier." I explains. “Jimmy tells him get the coal strike settled, he settles it. He tells him hold the line on prices, he’ll hold down prices, ail right." I hate to say this. Lash, he says, “you being a highly-respected ccon prof and all. But after listening to your explanation of Carter s program, if I have to choose between this By LEON WEAVER and then cast the 67th and deciding vote. a unanimous-consent motion that the arias Gay Council editorial and your blind faith in Jimmy Carter. I have to say the State News makes a |on my opera critic's hat and got an Such exquisitely timed choreography must will appear in the Congressional Record 310 Student Services Bldg. whole lot more sense than vou do." ' seat for the second gala per- be recorded as a new high in the annals of anyway as if they had actually been sung. t of the Panama Canal treaty epic. political theater. The performance was also marred by some Jigh the extravaganza was con- However, and regrettably, some hitches of the actors taking themselves and the Ind staged and grand opera, there must be reported. Senator DeConcini, script seriously, which accounts for the moments when inept performers I t to lapse into a vein which opera instead of remaining in the rear rank of the chorus where a freshman Senator belongs, dressing-room scenes reported below. A fter the performance this reporter FRED VAN HARTES VELDT usually associate with opera bouffe, insisted on moving downstage and inter­ dropped in for just a few moments at the ^ opera. polating a solo, necessitating some feverish What’s u p ?It’s all party and celebration that was in progress undeniable that the Senators, last-minute revisions in the libretto and at the White House. Chief librettist, | exception, were in excellent voice, staging. Senators Long and Scott in a composer and producer Carter was all e you can make such a statement beautifully executed pas de deux, refused to smiles. White House staffers were running h opera the conclusion is inevitable go along with a unanimous consent move to up and down the corridors shouting "We’ve | performance could not be all bad. allow an extra hour of debate, thus got a hit! A smash hit! A smasheroo!!!" more, the ballet during which the depriving several senators of the oppor­ In the losing team's dressing room there ^ M en was executed with con tunity of delivering to a national TV and running up a debt which has to be paid was no party, but players went about APPEAL: Okay, who cheated? I artistry. Particularly effective radio audience arias which would enable up. Looking up makes sense also, until slapping each other on the back in quiet would like to write a column on cheating. 68 to 32 vote in which senators them to display their virtuosity, a word you think of things looking up or looking congratulation for a game well played. John Not cheating on spouses, but cheating in [exactly as they had on the first which in modern usage is considered to up a word. Chancellor interviewed the Captain and classes to obtain higher grades. I need all »erhaps suggesting the discovery of mean not quite the same thing as virtue. Looking up a street makes sense, but Coach, Strom Thurmond, and it went like you cheaters' help. I would like at least a pcy as a political virtue. The star of The Scott-Long bit thus deprived the so does looking down one. Look up a nose this: report of cheating and at most a first ?ning was clearly the Majority national audience of a final act not in the make sense too. Blow your nose: the UP name and a phone number. Please I senator Robert Byrd (D-W. Va.) original scenario, an omission which the Chancellor: "How about it, Senator, are remain anonymous; I don’t care who you wind blows up the street. But then so p when his name was first called, Senate quickly moved to remedy by passing you gratified or disappointed that you came might a bomb. are, only what you have (or someone) so close, only to lose by such a narrow Fire up. Light up. Burn up. Pucker up. has done. All names will be changed margin?" Stand up or sit up. Confess up to the i " anyway to protect the guilty. I will not hN X -w e b a n d p l a y n e a r e r m y g o o -to -w s e '. . Thurmond: “A little bit of both, John. It’s reveal my sources. Address to me c o stick up. Up for election. always tough to lose a squeaker, but ah’m the Stale, pardon me, State News. I Sew up your pants. Soak up a spill. have no idea what form or viewpoint Show up to a party down, but party it up. really proud of the close, hard-fought such a column may take. Have enough up? No? Then procreate. game mah boys put up. They done good — real good." I thought up was a direction. Ya know, Make up. Bear up. skyward, I was wrong. So I decided to Time itself may one day be up — Chancellor: “Do you think the best team won?" work up a list about up. I got all fired up. woops, it already is. Time’s up. but in the end. burned up. I wasn’t up to Why stop up? Jeez, what a heavy duty Thurmond (after a moment’s hesitation): word. Why does it have to mean up. "No, ah don't think they’re any better team Up is a little semantic elevator. Not skyward? Down with up! I mean, we than we are. They jest happened to git beef up and ham up. right, so why not going up. but just going. more votes. We wuz je st out numbered, vegetable up? Let’s vegie up for a I can be up, and then I can be one up. I I dress in the morning, maybe at night that's all.” change. Accessible up, ya'U. Basin up. can also be up to. as in up to no good. I I dress up. I lock my car; I lock it up too. Tub up. I can dirty up, but then I can can come up and go up. Y’ou bet. come It needs a tune up. In the winning team’s dressing room it clean up. too. Viable up. Feasible up. and go. Hmmm. Decision can be left up What else can I do with up? Well. I can was quite another story. Corks were Hey, you farmers: Horse around. Pig to me. Left up. but also step right up. tie up and beat up and touch up and popping and the bubbly was flowing. and chicken out. Egg me on. Cow up. I can wake up. but I’d rather sleep in. shake up and set up. I can line up. I can Players were gathered in little groups Wise up? Naw, salient up instead. If I do wake up, I get up. Once I’ve creep up and crawl up; coast up and slide pounding each other on the back and Sagacity up. gotten up, I can give up, put up up. I can wind up each day (but down whooping it up. W alter Cronkite inter Anyone care to conceive up? Y’es? somewhere, and maybe keep up. If not, each night). If I'm not up to it, I can even viewed winning Coach Bob Byrd: Then you have to bring up and raise up. I take up. That makes sense, give and make believe I am by acting up. I can mix Cronkite: “Did you have any idea the Unless you’re into produce: then you’ve take. up or be mixed up; I can stir up. score was going to be so close?’’ got to raisin up instead. Apple up, But then do I slow up or down? Hey. w o w , I communicate! I call up and type up and write up and read up and banana up. turnup. Byrd: “We sure did! We knew that Opposite directions, but they mean the draw up and speak up! I sign up. too! Thirsty? Seven-up. opinion in the country was so evenly same. Maybe I should hasten up, hurry Hey, teens! Acne up! Then Clearasil divided that we’d be lucky to squeeze out a up, quicken up. or speed up instead. I foul up and goof up. I can even up. Pimple up. pizza face. Double cheese mere 2-to-l margin." I brighten and lighten, and then I f(ornicate) up. Now, that’s intriguing. and anchovy up. Pineapple upside down Cronkite: “So you must have a pretty brighten up and lighten up. I fix and Hurtgry? Work up an appetite. Then cake, bottoms up. high opinion of the other team even thought polish, and then I fix up and polish up. 1 serve up dinner: What’s up for dinner? Anyone want to be absurd? Syzgy up? the score was pretty lop-sided?” think, therefore I am — or I think up. Up is for dinner. Y’ou guess it — UP! Eat Cumquat up? therefore I am up. Is thinking up like up and drink up. Reef up and ham up. Byrd: "Absolutely, Walter, absolutely. What's up? Just an exasperating thinking summer? Who knows? Meet up. Those guys have all the technical skills, and redundantly obnoxious uppity little The sky darkens up. Then it clears up. they have great desire. They hustle every Stomachs fill up. So do gas tanks. word which ususally isn't necessary in How ominous. the first place, and which almost never minute. You just have to respect them. If dinner “disagrees" with me (great They're pro’s. Could I say more?” Shops open up, then they close up. euphemism) I spit it up or throw it up. At means skyward in the second place. I Cronkite: “And that’s the way it is, sports Drains stop up and clog up, then they least that direction makes sense. mean, it doesn't add up, y'know? fans. Good night!" open up. Traffic blocks up. Mouths open So does building up. So might running It's true, It's all up. 1 just can't put up up. Put up or shut up. up, as in stairs, but then try to figure up with up. W eaver is a p ro fe s s o r in Ih e M SU » (oM M S sonm w tp School o f C rim in a l Justice B a r r o o m Heatwave K.O.s Rufus at Mun By REGINALD THOMAS The way they moved across ft State News Reviewer the stage stimulated the most Heatwave came on stage clad favorable response seen in a in black jumpsuits with fluores long time by this reviewer. B o o g w a b a z h cent stripes, the light glaring They rocked the Munn Ice off their costumes as they Arena like the hockey team began singing and jumping never could. By RENALDO MIGALDI around the stage. The audience shouted for an State News Staff Writer The group opened with a A rt's Bar and Grill encore and Heatwave came ’laxed tune that did little to back playing "The Groove 809 E. Kalamazoo stimulate the audience. After Line" and the audience joined Lansing playing this they broke into in. This was the climax of the On one of the walls in this place, there’s a giant mural done in "Super Soul Sister” off their concert. It was all down hill blazing paintcolors: It's a baseball action picture; the batter is last album Too Hot to Handle. from there. M'i i stepping back as a hotshot runner steals home, sliding in on a cloud From the first note of this Rufus took a long time before of brown summerdust; the catcher is rushing to make the tag and tune it was plain to see that taking the stage and when they the ump is crouched low. — I feel like summer, lookin’ at this Heatwave would control this finally did they left the spirit of picture; even though the artist is hardly LeRoy Neiman caliber. ecstatic audience. The group their show in the dressing Sports! Fourteen trophies on display (and they’re all big ones)! went into their new tune “The room. The group opened with Giant television screens! Pool! Foosball! Pinball! Shuffleboard (a Groove Line” and had the “Midnite" and played it louder 'T I miniature bar version you play on a long polished table)! Electric basketball! .audience singing with them. than ever heard before. « w u j.. The talent of these per They followed with "Street I sure wonder what they do here when the Tiger ballgames are formers was accentuated by the Player" and “Everlasing Love." on. Probably raise the roof! vocals of lead singer Johnny The audience responded lack But tonight is Monday and the small crowd is having a good time Wilder. The response received adaisically as Chaka Khan up by the bar. They re in their late 20s, or early 30s; drinking beer. on this tune demonstrated why seemed to not be totally into One guy is yelling in a drunken voice, but I can’t understand him — Heatwave is one of CBS's her performance. except when he growls, "hey brin' me another beer!” All right; the hottest groups. waitress carries him a 40-cent Schlitz draft. Rufus continued its sorrowful The group then broke out “Schlitz” is written all over the motionless (fake) Bogart with "Ain’t no Half Steppin' ’’ performance playing many of Casablanca ceiling fans over my head; an interesting twist on the its older tunes, finishing with and clearly established the beersign idea. On the far wall, a sign: "WARNING: Anyone caught "Once You Get Started.” It was concept that Rufus would have stealing a Shooper mug will be prosecuted by the law.’’ plain to see Rufus was having Shooper? to put on one of their best performances to satisfy the problems getting underway. Ingo Schraft, my old highschool buddy, told me about the one and The concert started late and audience. only Shooper before I ever set foot inside Art's Bar and Grill. It ended early since Rufus refused costs 80 cents (for Schlitz; $1 for Miller). The group then played "Al to play an encore number. The bartender says it holds "about two and a half drafts." He ways and Forever" and the takes the mug out and shows it to me. It isn’t the elephantine flagon women went wild with desire Not until "Once You Get Ingo'd led me to expect, but it’s a good size. There is only one of as Wilder hit notes that seemed Started" did the audience re them, however. The rest have all been ripped off by furtive patrons. to shock many of the ardent spond favorably. There were a Hence, the sign. listeners. Wilder later said he few people who appeared to be The drunk with the raucous voice yells: "Hey, Thomas Hardy was able to do this because he enjoying the concert and hop been dead damn near a hundred years!" I go over to the jukebox and lets himself go when he's per ing for more. But most of the put a quarter in number 100 - George Benson "On Broadway." The forming. He said that might people were leaving before bartender remarks to the waitress: "They put George Benson on account for the bad notes. Rufus got into their last tune. this jukebox?!?’’ In spite of what he called bad Rufus originally planned tc Well, I guess they don't listen to much jazz around here; not even notes his voice created a mel end with "Hollywood" as an George Benson’s pop variety. But Ingo tells me they do have live bluegrass music here on Sunday nights. low madness amongst the audi encore, but after the response ence. From this they went into they received they decided He says the band that plays it is good. too. Ingo is himself a pretty hot mountain mandolin player, so I guess he should know. Boogie Nights" and left the otherwise. It is safe to say audience standing and rocking Rufus might have wished they on their feet. were in Hollywood rather thar Slot*» News Robsd3 East Lansing. And if not Holly Johnny Wilder of Heatwave enchants Rufus St Munn lee Arens MwU wood maybe even Kalamazoo. the audience with his funky disco night. sounds. Heatwave performed with M T M p r o d u c e s n e w P B S s e r ie s MTM Productions, noted for such successful television series as complex social events of the '60s. The Miry Tyler Moore Show and Lou Grant, will produce Going Hone Again for premier this fall on PBS. Created by Daniel Gregory Browne lone of the creators of Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman), the series will be directed by Norman T h e G re a t W ra p The series will be the first to be produced specifically for Public Lloyd. W riter will include Browne, and Oliver and Mary Hailey. Broadcasting by an independent Hollywood producer. PBS will air 15 half hour episodes next year. Production will begin According to MTM producer John Gamble, the show's format will resemble that of E.L. Doctorow's novel Ragtime, with fictional in Hollywood May 15. "We hope to pave the way for other Hollywood production S k ir t a t a characters playing against a tableau of real events. companies to become more involved in Public Television,” Gamble rrf-fV The series will portray a family living throught the turbulent told the State News. "We are not having the problem we thought period of the 1960s. Dan O’Herlihy and Academy Award winner Teresa Wright have been signed to star as the parents. The other casting has not yet been set. we would in securing talent. Actors and talent are working for very little money," he said. G r e a t P r ic e "W'e're excited to be able to explore the period of the ’60s," O’Herlihy wUI play a well-known writer. John Davidson White. Gamble added. "Jane Fonda's new movie Coming Home does, but His experiences and those of his family will be set against the it hasn’t really been done on television yet." J u s t $1 6 CA M PU S H ig h F ly in g a t P IZ Z A 2 H o b b ie s C a n ’t s t o p f o r l u n c h ? E a s t L a n s in g C a ll in y o u r o r d e r a h e a d , W e w o n ’t m a k e y o u w a i t . 3 1 0 W . G r a n d R iv e r N e x t t o t h e E. L a n s in g b u s s t a t i o n r a w P U I V H T 3 3 7 -1 6 1 9 D o n ’t k e e p y o u r E v e n i f M a th i s n ’t y o u r m a j o r , y o u ’l l f i n d G r a d u a t io n a S e c r e t .. . a ll k in d s o f p e r m u t a t io n s , c o m b in a t io n s , a n d h u n d re d s a n n o u n c e m e n ts a re o f w a ys to w o rk w ith n o w a v a ila b le at th is s k ir t. T h e f a b r ic is m a c h in e w a s h a b le p o p lin th e M S U B o o k s to re a n d it is a v a ila b le in d a rk o r c u s to m e r s e r v ic e desk. lig h t c o lo r s f o r s iz e s 5 to 13. D e s ig n e d b y R T J U N IO R S O rd e r y o u rs n o w !! a n d r e a lly a tr e m e n d o u s f a s h io n f in d fo r th is p r ic e . W h ile s e le c t io n Supply Lim ited la s ts , le t u s w ra p on e u p fo r you. 3 0 c each or 10 fo r $ 2 .5 0 I'.inll Lansing Stare only Clapton sparks ‘Slowhand’ M S U ‘I n n o c e n t s A b r o a d ,’ . b iia b b ie n * * irony left the old nickname. and “May You Never," by John sidelines to a band of lesser Clapton sing it is like watching i t N«*» Bevtew« Another rock 'n roll casualty - Martyn, a country-flavored lights, did not shun the spot­ Dylan do “Like a Rolling Stone” the Yxrdbird» were Morrison, Hendrix, Joplin, song with acoustic rhythm bast, light, didn't perform diffi­ before Cream came Jones . . . Clapton. get particularly sensitive dently. as so many reports (of or the Stones “Jumpin' Jack d o w n a n d o u t in L o n d o n r beforr he played the Not Clapton. Slowly, method­ readings from Clapton. Hash. History often has a way this and past tours) has sug­ of seeming dull. “Layla" sur­ ted solo on the Beatlea' ically, sometimes painfully, he But the dramatic moments By KIT CARLSON gested. He was anything but an passed expectations, sounding great British band from The Who to Pink My (¡uitar Gently tried to work his way back when Slowhand finally steps Special to the State News enervated ex addict, resting on fresh and vibrant. Floyd. " b e f o r e he met Delaney toward his old capabilities, to out in front, says, "I’m ready," Editor’s Note: this is the first of a series of his reputation. nnfe. before "Layla — reclaim what had been his and takes off are literally T h e dispatches from the State News Reviewer Kit He was up front and wailing An audience expecting to see Sex Pistols paraphernalia was in evidence ds, even before “Lay alone. Core” of this album. It’s on this Carlson in U ndon, England. almost ail night, playing all the the bent got what they came to everywhere. "Pretty Vacant" badges and ally.” Kric Clapton was Clapton has called his new eight minute song that Clapton LONDON — Punk lives. Here in England, "Anarchy” T-shirts prevailed, although cos­ lead guitar anyone could ask see from Erie Clapton, Slow legend. He waa quite album Slowhand — he could catches fire and plays as well, punk rock and New Wave music is the for, and his voice was strong. tuming ranged from a leather vest embedded the fastest, flashiest hardly have proclaimed it hand, a glittering persona. And dominant sound on pop stations and the as fast and clean as he ever did. "Layla" has an aura of his with studs spelling out the word "PUNK," to slayer anyone had ever louder. The title is not a boast, saw perhaps a little more — the biggest seller in the record stores. . . . and that is a thrill to hear. tory about it. It is as pure a thin black ties and ratty blazers in a run-down heard. Admirers, with but a promise. It has been eight drama of a very human being Punk rock is music for the young, Aided expertly by sax player classic as rock has! Seeing Elvis Costello style. living dangerously. particularly the young working class. For tn a touch of intended long years, dating back to Mel Collins. Clapton creates ailed him "Slowhand" "[jayla" since Clapton played one of the few longer cuts these most, punk is better than school. It belongs to the workers, or rather, those that can't get The punks as a whole were very willing to like this on a record. Certainly, days that doesn't sound tired work. This "Blank Generation as they have strike up conversations with us, as Ameri­ areer since reads like a he's had hit songs in that period and lost halfway through. This cans, most of which proved enlightening, if „frock in those y e a rs- of time — “I Shot the Sheriff," is propulsion. come to be called — have no real motivation other than punk music. It is a way of life, not downright amusing. In the rest room, two was at, or close to, the from 461 Ocean Boulevard, an “Lay Down Sally," which, girls asked whether it was true that the dress and thought. from its ambling intro, has an United States was going to ’•eplace George amazingly loose feel for a big Despite their recent break-up. the Sex Washington's picture on the doHar bill with hit record, contains a compact Pistols still reign as the kings of punk. In a one of Elvis Presley. They were very solo which has more ideas than bar. all the deejay has to do is slip the SP’s concerned with punk's so far uncertain pton hot c a lle d h is new a lb u m a record full of most “New Anarchy in the U.K." on the turntable, and acceptance in the States, and wondered how -whand"— h e c o u ld h a r d l y h a v e p r o c l a i m - Wave" guitarists. The slick the place goes wild with madly pogoing kids they would be treated if they were to come to ¡t lo u d e r . T h e t i t l e is n o t a b o a s t , b u t backup vocals of Marcy Levy who jump frantically, disregarding bystand the United States. (co-writer of “The Core") and ers and their beers. ro m ise . It h a s b e e n e ig h t lo n g y ears, Yvonne Elliman balance Later, another man related the entire story Ing b a c k t o " L a y la " s i n c e C l a p t o n p l a y e d against the otherwise rough A recent night at a Slaughter and the Dogs of the Sex Pistols’ rise to popularity and the th is o n o n a l b u m . edges of the song for a good concert proved interesting for some of us development of punk to an MSU student who tension. r----g---- ■ti MSU students taking humanities and social had never heard of either the music or the “Cocaine," the J .J. Cale num­ J ■ science courses here in London. It was held at phenomenon before. When she asked why the the storm At its album billed as his comeback ber, is as dirty as it should be with Clapton's slurring and IS - i i ± ï T, o o o I. •- the Marquee, a kind of an institution in London, having seen performances by every punks all wore safety pins, he replied, "they're cheaper than diamonds." st. It carried him to effort. But that album and the sliding through the vocal — j 1 *1 • only a handful of others others were mainly vocal exer­ (sounding like what Jello looks ttain. The guitar was cises, showing Clapton's voice like) over a tasty, economical in rock and he was the to be sweeter and richer that interplay of guitar lines (pardon guitarist. But when we remembered, but with none the expression) of Clapton and jrlwind passed, Clapton of the old guitar pyrotechnics. George Terry. e woman he loved He had mellowed and was Slowhand is the most well- to his good friend feeling better. rounded album from Clapton Harrison and became That was nice, but not too in a long time. addicted to heroin. A exciting. Most of Slowhand is in Even more exciting is his e, shy man. the pres this mold —soft, slow and much renewed power and stamina in uperstardom was more of it lovely. "We're All the concert, as evidenced by his could stand, Way," by Don Williams, with recent appearance at Detroit’s gs eroded his talent, its shimmering smooth guitar, Cobo Arena. He didn't play T I E F E A T ’S N E W D IS C o t h i n g ' s u n ’ s o u n d JOYL HAENLEIN of Little Feat's music. Unlike however, are Little Feat, as it News Reviewer Marshall Tucker. Lynard Sky they should be. The honky-tonk first time I heard the nard, the Allman Brothers and piano of Bill Payne, along with Little Feat was about Charlie Daniels, Feat doesn't synthesizers on “Tripe Face ears ami in a Rolling rely heavily on the southern Boogie" and “Spanish Moon," ■interview with Jimmy rock image, probably because it provide the spiritual foundation where Page chose the really isn't a rock act. It's along with the bass of Ken las his favorite American boogie music with an occasional Grachery. ring the devoted Zeppe- screaming guitar lick by Lowell I was at the time (as George and Paul Barrere. It's And then there are the ■descent high-schoolers good time, lying-on-the-beach- vocals, lead by Lowell George thought the group was passing the-Coppertone music. and Paul Barrere. On the r heavy metal rock n roll The easy going, flowing barroom renditions of "Willin’," ge. quality of the album is reason "Time Loves a Hero," "Don’t 1 was wrong. I dis- enough to listen. But Feat adds Bogart That Joint,” and a series last summer while a few more pleasant surprises. of blues numbers, the har­ g down the back roads of First and foremost are the monies are reminiscent of the Harbor with my friend horn parts, supplied by the heavily bass-laden barbershop that Little Feat is funky blues sound of the Tower quartets of old. g but heavy metal rock of Power. The Tower is at its best with Little Feat, supplying It is about time for Little Feat is one of those tasty, but never overdone, horn Feat to break big north of the you can listen to at parts in songs like “Mercenary Mason-Dixon line. But as Little in any condition, Territory" and “Spanish Feat themselves will attest: makes the double live Moon." "They say time loves a hero/ For Columbus (Warner The real stars of the album, But only time will tell." s 2BS-31401 a real treat, albums can be very aging, for they capture a which is suitable for g only in a stuporous here "Da Feat's" live ■or however, is simply th. classy performance sually cohesive yet in- ,y spirited, which makes priate for just about ne. album opens with the t / ¡f« ,^ at Man in the I t ’s a ga r ee sa t t i m e r You immediately feel ny Southern hospitality o rre ctio n • • § • • • Mondays State News it “correctly reported that Jazz Council acting direc- y Busch said, "There are kly a lot of people (in the TH U RSD A Y DOUBLE IDIGIT NIT* to g ex T h e N e w s. Department faculty) who O U A E^ ^ CHANGE B A C K FR O M YO U R DOLL ON PITCHE PITCH ERS & P I Z Z A Like Kitchen Talk. Accent on L ic ing. Motor on your doorstep. Every morning. By 7 a.m. Good Morning, jazz is not an art form and not be studied." Busch World. Friday, our weekend tun guide to It's a great time to get The News. not referring to Music • • • • ►Mr C lù k what's happening in the state. Sunday jnent faculty, but to •n general. Lansing! Magazine. TV Magazine, with statewide listings. And on and on and on. On your doorstep at 7 a.m. The Detroit News To start home delivery, just send us this AMPUS L IV IN G Right now, as a special introductory offer, you can get 13 weeks of The Detroit News coupon or call 349-5029 and we II have it AJVf. Edition. A.M. Edition for just 90C a week. That's ITERNATIVES . . . a weekly savings ot hlK off our regular ■ | Please deliver the next 1.1 w eeks ot the Daily and Sunday Detroit News A M Edition e , ■ subscription rates. And The News will for just 9(K a w eek | ° n ig h t o n E llip s is th e d ire c to r of o ff- arrive on your doorstep at 7 a.m. I w npus H o u sin g a n d r e p r e s e n t a t i v e s fro m The Detroit News is Michigan's number I ®j°P L i v in g , In te r-fra te rn ity C o u n c il, I one newspaper, with the largest staff of Name I A, a n d P a n H e ), w ill d i s c u s s liv in g s it- I reporters in the entire state. We print our I J ! T “ • " th e M ic h ig a n S t a t e R a d io N e t- I papers three (3) hours later than The Free P h o n e i n y o u r q u e s t i o n a t 3 -4 4 1 1 . Street Apt. « I Press, so you get the most complete, I up-to-the-minute coverage available ever y I I 6 4 0 A M morning. Including all the late-breaking I City S ta te Z ip Phone I sports scores. And, of course, you get all I 8PM TONIGHT the columns, features, ideas and special I Mail to: 1 he Detroit New-, A M I dition P O B o< k i. V L anuiu). M a h 488Z.I sections The Detioit News is famous for. k - l J WBRS WMCD WMSN TO M SHANAHAN B a ts m e n w in t w in b ill o v e r B u lld o R a te F a lls By MICHAEL KLOCKE second round tripper of the year and Tom Schultz added a two run one hit In his three inning relief stint. MSUINGS: State Newt Sports W riter shot in the fourth. MSU head baseball coach Danny Litwhiler got pretty much a n d D e t r o it exactly what he wanted out of Wednesday's doubleheader with Ferris State — two wins and a chance to get a lot of players into After Bastien's leadoff homer in the nightcap. Schütz' double, a single by Kirk Gibson, and sacrifice flies by Spada and Kirk Haines The Spa ru n s will return to action Friday with against Wayne SU te beginning a t 2 p.m. at Kobs the games. staked winning pitcher Rob Campion to an early 3-0 lead. also host Detroit Saturday at 1 p.m. The Spartans used four pitchers who haven't seen much action The doubleheader against Central Michigan whi,k Spada also stroked a two-run single in the sixth inning which out Tuesday will be played Monday, May 15. Reporters are coming out of the woodwork to cover MSU football this season. And they certainly responded well as MSU swept the raised his batting average to an even .500 (32 for 64). and basketball. doubleheader, 11-3 and 7-1. MSU is now 16-11 for the year while Campion's win was his first decision of the year. And he got The MSU JV team split a doubleheader with Mithin, u. Monday afternoon press conferences with football coach Darryl Ferris State drops to 5-5. some impressive relief help from Jay Strother, who only gave up ......... Rogers in the fall and basketball coach Jud Heathcote in the winter Wildness by all three Bulldog pitchers in the opener aided the Coach Tom Smith's squad will return to nest : , used to be quiet little get-togethers of Lansing area media. Spartans* cause. In the fifth inning alone — when Litwhiler used Now reporters come from Grand Rapids, Flint and Detroit. UP1 eight pinch hitters — MSU drew five bases on balls. MSU pushed sends a photographer just to take pictures of Rogers sitting at a across four runs in that inning. table talking to the press about spring practice opening. First baseman Jerry Weller had the big blow of the game with a Even writers from the Chicago Tribune and Sun-Times came to two-run triple in the fourth that made the score 6-2. Tony Spada the basketball games regularly. continued his torrid hitting with two singles. V A. A reporter from the San Francisco Chronicle called the State Eric Rosekrans, who had not given up an earned run in 14 1/3 News one fall afternoon to talk about the football team. Why he innings entering the contest, worked four innings to get the win wanted to talk to us instead of the coach, I don't know. and even his record record at 11. And sophomore hurler Gary , In Detroit, MSU fans saw an overnight change in the way MSU Tyler, up from the JV squad, turned in three innings of shutout basketball was covered by the Free Press and News. relief. Suddenly we saw the Spartans featured at the top of the page The Spartans went to their ace in the hole in the second game — with stories about Michigan underneath. the long ball. Shortstop Rodger Bastien led off the game with his I think the overnight change came the night MSU whipped the University of Detroit, 103-74. When Joe Falls started going to the games and writing more about MSU, people kept asking me, “Did you read Falls today?" If it was a favorable story they had big smiles. It seems getting to read favorable stories about your team by the Heathcote lands big reporters is almost as good to some fans as beating Michigan. What Falls and the Free Press say seems to be the focal point. (Can you believe they cut Falls back to four columns a week from five?) Nobody asks what the News has to say. And when Falls let his MSU readers read about Darryl and Jud, another recruit instead of “My boy Bo," the Spartans’ rebuilding program seemed Midway through the MSU Gonzalez should give the even more credible. men's basketball team's highly Spartans additional depth on But it wasn't always that way. When MSU had its NCAA football successful. 25-5 season, head the frontline — which has been problems and basketball its walkout problems, Detroit paid little coach Jud Heathcote confided depleted by the graduation of attention to the Spartans between negative stories. that the top three Michigan high Jim Coutre and the return of MSU fans became irate when they had to read MSU criticized in school recruits he was after Sten Feldreich to Sweden. the black and white of newspaper print while everything remained were Gerald Busby, Rob Gon­ rosy a t Michigan. zalez and W alker D. Russell. Especially one warm spring afternoon in 1975 when Falls and Well, so far the Spartan Slot, tow, twfl Howard Erickson drove to East Lansing to pick up football player mentor's recruiting efforts MSU’« Tony Spada (right) la caught loaning the first contest 11-3, and winning the nightcap 7-1.0, Joe Hunt after a spring practice to ask him a few questions. The wrong way and ia picked oH first base by Ferris the season, Spada is now batting an even .500 IK ht seem to be paying dividends, as next morning it was exposed all over the sports page of the Free Press that Hunt and Mike Cobb used a credit card from an MSU two-thirds of the elite three State's Mark Nfcwcom in the third inning of the first M l, including a two-run single in the sixth ianiagaf have signed to play their college game of the donbleheader Wednesday. The Spar­ the first game. booster to buy items at various stores. basketball a t MSU. tans won both games from the Bulldogs, taking the Then in January 1976 MSU was handed a three-year probation The MSU Women's Varsity Gonzalez, a 6-foot*7 forward for NCAA recruiting violations and the next morning another Free Club is sponsoring an “Athletes from Detroit Catholic Central, Press columnist, George Puscas, wrote a story calling MSU “A Do It Best” party a t 8:30 p.m., signed Tuesday with MSU. He disgrace to the state." on Tuesday a t the May Fair Bar was a first-team Class A All- DETROIT (UPI) - The De All through spring training second home ffame thea One State News staff writer, who must be MSU's most loyal fan in Haslett. State selection, while averaging troit Tigers are fast becoming we heard the phrase “Surprise the press box typically s because he went to every miserable MSU hockey game he could this The party is for the indoc­ more than 27 points per game the “media darlings" of base team of the season“ atached to winter, still walks around the other end of the newsroom vengefully muttering, “I'm going to write a letter to Puscas." his senior year. trination of new members and everyone is invited. T h e T ig e r s : ball. "Detroit Tigers." like the money in your v Now it's as inflated u i Heathcote has already signed A national sports magazine The press box has been quite year's dollar. After the successful basketball season he walks around asking, “I May Fair’s is on Park Street wonder what Joe Falls thinks about Michigan now?" There must be many more like him out there. And there must be Busby, a 6-foot-5 Class C All- Stater, who led his Buchanan off of Marsh Road. The MSU rowing-crew team 1d a r lin g s ? 9 recently sent one of its w riters to follow the Tigers for a few crowded —at least for the few games Tiger Stadium has host This current Detroit team has captured the in High team to state champion­ games. The result was sup­ ed so far — with more people tion like the World Cha many more like me who like and have read Falls since grade school. will host Michigan and the ships in his sophomore and posed to be either a cover story than recent seasons saw. ship squad of 1968 wasitil So for fun I'd like everyone to write us with their opinions of how Detroit Boat Club 11 a.m. senior seasons. or a decent-sized inside story. From opening day to the do. Falls and the Detroit media report MSU sports. Write what you like Sunday a t Grand River Park. Russell, an All-State selec­ or what you hate and we'll print the most creative ones. There must Grand River Park is at the tion from Pontiac Central, may be a lot of opinions out there so be imaginative. corner of Moore River Drive not have good enough grades to Address opinions to the State News Sports Department, 345 and Mt. Hope. The course runs play in the Big Ten. Student Services Bldg., MSU, 48824. parallel with Moore Drive. Soirv. but no prizes are in our budget. lE B E R M A N N 'S “ “ “ A C T IO N A U T O M O T IV E •RAND NAME AUTÓ PARTS, DISCOUNT PRICES, AND PARTS PCO PII WHO KNOW MHS B E L L 'S C o m p a c t! “M ake i t e a sy o n yourself"1 P IZ Z A H O U SE C o n v e n ie n t! >N ^ ^ A C TIO N CCXJFONM ^ A CTIO N COUPON* T R I-F O L D W A LL E T S p a g h e tti H o t O v e n G r in d e r s L l ■ SHELL X - 1 0 0 , 1 0 W 4 0 M U L T I-O R A M 1115 E. G rand River Ave. 225 M.A.C. Ave. E. la m in g , Mich. E. la m in g , Mich. Tel. 3 3 2 4 S 5 S Tel. 3 3 2 4 0 2 7 MOTOR OIL ■ M U A N T CHROMI ™ ■ WIRE WHEEL LOOK ■ ■ Motor 01 /;i N am e .O m O h H o r in itia ls em b o sse d in g o ld FREE 50*. 1 1 J I per m m M DAILY DOLLAR DEAL SPECIALS A f a v o r i t e in o u r c o l l e c t i o n o f f i n e p o c k e t NOUMH Walcom, _Æ w a lle ts . C a rrie s c re d it c a r d s , p h o to s , id e n ti­ • Breakfast a Sandwiches f i c a t i o n , d r i v e r 's l i c e n s e s o t h e y 'r e e a s y t o ■ ■ ■ U P • Beverages a Salads • Snacks s Desserts fin d . D e e p c u rre n c y p o c k e t fo r s e c u rity . A n d IACTION COUPOÄ it f o l d s f l a t t o p r e v e n t p o c k e t b u l g e . m * Home-style soups and chili Q U IE T RIDER I In l a s t i n g l e a t h e r m u ffler s - Id by Kofle lahovtt P ro d u c ts 5.00 to 12.50 B e s t C o ffe e In T o w n ! s i t e Made fresh a pot at a time - A ls o : P r e - m a d e S a n d w ic h e s f o r th o s e in a h u r r y CONVENIENT HOURS A C T IO N A U T O M O T IV E Mon.-Set. 7:15a.m.-11:00p.m. m3 H. GrandRiver Sondny 9:00n.m. -11:00p.m. Ph. 4M-SM0 P h , 0 2 6 -6 7 9 6 LOCATED: M a in L o b b y , U n io n B ld g . D O W N T O W N — 1 07 S . W a s h i n g t o n EAST L A N S IN G — 2 0 9 E. G r a n d R iv e r _ O p e ^ 7 _ c jq y s ... N ig h t s a n d S u n d a y s . c.M . New». Eo»t lontlng. Michigan M N F , E D S H E R P E R F O R M A N C E a rn é s re la x e s w ith r u n n in g JjBBY BRAUDE with times of 4:58 and 10:02.1 distance runner) will be able to started training seriously.“ Running in Canada is fun ¡ , „ Sport. Wrtt*r respectively. qualify for nationals in this meet Warnes finds cross country to because it is a big thing over The women's track team is because of the competition,” be harder, but she does like the there in the summer while here, hr it is ('roSS f0Untr7 °,r fcuno- runner Lil depending on Warnes to pull a Warnes said. “The injuries will team togetherness that comes it is in the spring, Warnes said. I | kl,s to run for the couple of upseta during Satur hurt our team a great deal, but with it. also get to see a lot of my friends fcn nnd enjoyment. day's meet with national powers we're still psyched up to do our “The hills make cross country in the track clubs." Itho mental relMition Tennessee and Penn State. best." harder, and I have to plan my • Warnes stid- “ft Warnes will go up against Warnes began running for races more," Warnes said. “I ■in shape, which is one Penn's Kathy Mills, the AIAW her high school’s girls' cross like to pass up people a t the top always concerned national crosa country champion country team just to see what it of the hill because that is where L io n s s ig n r , also do love recing and Tenneasee's Brenda Webb, was about. the runners usually let up.“ t k,.,.ps me going, end the national indoor record hold- “In my first meet, my coach Knowing all aspects of the k more enjoyable when thieve a goal. Once I er in the 3,000 meter event. “These runners are definitely told me to do my best and finish the race, Warnes said. He also race is important to Warnes. She likes to know her competi­ tw o p la y e r s Lpetition, I will still of higher caliber, but I am still told me to start in the middle tors and then figure out her A P Wirephoto fairly optimistic," Warnes said. and pick a person at a time to strategy for the race from PONTIAC IUPI) - Line­ No, it's not follow the I a junior from South “Since they are better than me, catch up to. At first there were there. backer Charlie Weaver, voted leader, it’s the start of I, Ontario, has quali- I have a chance for a good time if like 30 people ahead of me, but “If somebody has an advan­ most valuable defensive player spring practice for nationals and holds I can stay with them." I then cut it down to 15 and tage over me, like a good kick at the last two seasons by his Iidoor record in the "I also think th at my team- ended up in the top three with in the end, then I will try to break teammates, and guard Mark the MSU football land two-mile events mate Lisa Berry (who is also a a close race. From there 1 away earlier in the race," Markovich signed multi-year team. Practice will Warnes said. “If somebody is a contracts Wednesday with the run for five weeks much better caliber than I am, Detroit Lions. capped off by the then I will try to stick with them Alnmni-Varsity game imen’s tennis comes for as long as I can and be satisfied with a good time." Warnes also likes to keep a Safety Dick Jauron and mid­ dle linebacker Ed O’Neil have reached verbal agreements and May 20. good pace in mind, so she will were expected to sign when e with fresh look have a kick at the end. She only likes to set what she feels to be realistic goals and they checked in for the start of Detroit’s four day orientation camp designed to familiarize doesn't like to explicitly state the veterans to new Coach ;RRY BRAUDE Carolina 6-1, 3-6 and 6-4 in the then lost to Julie Dunn 2-6, 6-4 them because she is afraid of Monte Clark. lews Sports W rit« first round, but then lost to and 6-2 in the consolation finals. jinxing herself. ie crucial part of the Karen Smith 6 4, 6-0 in the “We got some good experi­ The Lions' other free agent, “I just set my goals for one forthcoming, the semifinals. During the tourna ence from the tournament, but defensive lineman Jim Mitchell, day at a time, and let them be tennis team is pre ment, Mascarin re-injured her we still did not do quite as well was proving harder for Russ stepping stones for me,” she ■a fresh start in what pulled leg muscle. as I expected," Rutz said. Thomas to sign, however tl e said. I just go out there and do io far a dismal season. “The injury is preventing The Central Michigan match my best." general manager said he ex­ Debbie from getting the match will be the Spartans' first home pected an agreement to be it of the crucial meets When Warnes ran in Canada, toughness that she needs." appearance since their first reached before the players left 3 p.m. today on the she was a former All-Ontario Rutz said. “She is struggling to match of the year, a 9 0 victory this weekend. itadium varsity courts cross country champion and was over Purdue on Feb. 25. ntral Michigan. just get through a match. But an All District League Champ in None of the players had a she has the desire to win, and it "Coming home will give us a >wseason for us now, high school for three years. She firm offer from another team, nice rest and a chance to imis up for it," coach showed with her victory over also ran for three years with the which would have had to give Black." recover.” Rutz said. "This said. "Each player is Canadian and Ontario track and the Lions a first round draft match will be our first test." fend getting better and field teams, and the Canadian choice had Detroit not matched Fourth position singles play­ Central Michigan edged out give it all." er Jennifer Brielmaier and AAU team during high school. the terms. MSU for second place in the ia) season continued sixth position singles player state last year, but they had an lend at the Buckeye Heather MacTaggart reached easier draw than the Spartans, lal where the Spar the consolation finals. according to Rutz. last of eight schools, A fter losing in the first After the meeting with the kies and doubles play round, Brielmaier defeated Jodi Chippewas, MSU will travel to Mascarin, who re- Spiegel of Wisconsin 3-6, 6-1 Iowa City, Iowa, for the Big < the lineup after and 6-3, before losing to Susie Ten Championships, April 27- from a pulled leg Walton in the consolation finals 29. >nd the flu, couldn’t 60, 6 2. “I am still optimistic in the fference. MacTaggart defeated Cindy Big Ten," Rutz said. “I think we upset second Kearney of Kentucky 6-0,6-2 in are better than what the season Black of North the first consolation round, but has been indicating." [CAA probe deepens iletes d e s e rv e C o n s t it u t io n a l r ig h t s 0M WHITFIELD accused of violating NCAA dom of choice.” f l Sports Writer rules. The subcommittee chairman, ilNGTON IUPI) - As “We have to identify athletes Rep. John F. Moss, D-Calif., e Subcommittee on as persons under the Constitu­ also fired some salvos a t the and Investigations tion for the maintenance of due NCAA, which has not had a >er into its investiga- process rights," said Santini. chance to rebut before the |legiate athletics, more subcommittee. Twice Moss re­ “They presently lose standing verbal brickbats are as citizens . . . they forfeit that ferred to the NCAA’s rules i» | most of them directed as a privilege of participation." enforcement procedures as a CAA. "kangaroo court” and at one Asked about the standard point said: 'T his cries for some lim Santini, D-Nev., a argument that a school's mem­ sort of attention from Con­ littee member who bership in the NCAA is volun­ gress." ■for the investigation tary, he replied: “It’s not Santini and Moss spoke dur­ fevada Las Vegas was voluntary. They’re the only ing and after a two-hour hearing fen NCAA probation, game in town, and if you want to in which the subcommittee Is week for legislation play in it, you subjugate to the heard testimony from a former I the rights of athletes rules. There is really no free- Oklahoma State football player, Mike Edwards, and his atto r­ ney, Lana Tyree of Oklahoma City, Okla. Tyree charged that [whiler, Fetters Edwards was never given a hearing before the NCAA de­ clared him ineligible for rules violations. mer prospects The NCAA was “judge, jury, investigator, prosecutor, wit­ nesses and hangman” in the investigation that led to Ed­ Bn baseball coach Danny Litwhiler signed Ruben Luna J r ., wards being declared ineligible, Br outfielder at Flint Southwestern High School, to a according to Tyree. She said h e , T eUer of intent to enroll at MSU next fall, was charged with riding in a car fats and throws lefthanded and was the Most Valuable five miles with an Oklahoma ►the Saginaw Valley League last spring as well as a first State assistant coach while still I-state selection. in high school and paying for Icoach nick Fetters signed Bob Lundquist of East Grand airplane tickets bought through ■ tieorge Kruggel of Grand Haven to compete at MSU. a travel agency on a credit plan. r ls ll)c 1978 State Class B champion in the 100-yard “If there are any violations, ■ ,n" 200-yard individual medley. Kruggel was the they're caused by the unreason­ PP mthe state Class A 200-yard freestyle and the 100-yard able rules of the NCAA,” she said. rO R R K K E D IWILDERNESS CAMPtNO If yo ur idea of camping includes back-packing, biking, and clim bing, w e have the equ ip m en t und experts to help you get the m ost o ut of roughing it! F^A U P P Campfitters - lM l Michigan 484-1 Fiddlers bring mountains to area Webberville town hall was overflowing with hand-clappin', the only fiddler in ihe association who had been performing for foot stompin', head bobbin', grinnin' fiddle lovers last Saturday. more than 50 years. And he first picked up a fiddle after his 40th Country long hairs, bib overalled farmers with smiling wives birthday. and more than a few old timers came together to appreciate some Ironically enough, the players w ho looked closest to "breathing their last" played the meanest fiddles. One fellow's hands shook so pure mountain music. The afternoon was spent listening to one fiddler after another bad the audience was preparing itself to be embarrassed for the get up and play his three or four best tunes. poor guy. By nightfall people could no longer sit in the folding chairs and What a surprise. The old timer channgled all his uncontrollable just listen — they had to get up and dance. From the stage came a shaking into some very controlled fiddling. Even the young bouncing rhythm that pulled folks up like marionettes into a circle "whippersnappers" couldn't match the pureness and sureness of of square dancers. his sound. Most of the musicians were members of the Michigan Fiddlers No one in Webberville seemed to miss the electrified Association, a group of old-style fiddlers who meet every month in instruments that were noticeably absent. Everyone was too busy little farm towns in mid-Michigan. appreciating the good old time mountain music — unpolished, The Webberville get-together was the second annual meeting of unchanged and great. It had to have been; everyone was keeping the association at that little burg, located about 15 miles west of time with a smile and a tapping foot. East Lansing on M-43. Almost everyone played something besides a fiddle and most people picked up another instrument after they had their turn on the fiddle. At one point three different people were hammering on three different dulcimers along with a piano. A string bass, a dobro, a couple banjos and a half a dozen "gee-tars.’ One "good ole boy" had to be helped up the microphone because his old legs were not what they used to be. He was introduced as R E S I D E N C E H A L L S So ilin g our bodies: THE POLITICS OF WOMEN’S HEALTH FALL TERM '78 SIGN-UP ( S P R I N G 1 9 7 8 ) »4.** 24 female writers, investiga­ RESERVE CU RRENT R O O M O R A P A R T M E N T tive reporters and scientists discuss various aspects of T u e s d a y , A p ril 2 5 a n d W e d n e s d a y , A p r il 2 6 8 :3 0 a . m . - 4 : 3 0 p . m . Olivetti's Lexikon83Di what is wrong with the A m er­ W o r l d ’s o n l y e l e c t r i c portaW*** ican medical system and su g­ i n t e r c h a n g e a b l e t y p i n g I*" RESERVE A N Y U N RESERV ED R O O M IN CU RR EN T H O U SE gest how we can change it. T h u r s d a y , A p r il 2 7 8 :3 0 a . m . - 4 :3 0 p . m . 12" CARRIAGE - AUTOMATIC RETURRl e Quick Ribbon ANSELFBOOKSTORE 220 M A C A v o ., Edit lon sing 3. D ISPLA C ED BY IN TER N A L R E L O C A T IO N S ( A k e r s , C a s e , W ils o n f t W o n d e r s o n ly ) T u e sd a y , M ay 2 8 :3 0 a . m . - 4 : 3 0 p . m . Change e Repeater Keys University M oll FIRST, p ic k u p tra n s fe r cords from y o u r c u rr e n t h o u s in g c le rk RESERVE A DIFFEREN T R O O M O R A PA R T M E N T IN O W N HALL • Carrying Case lis» ‘ii» ." *29! W e d n e sd a y , M ay 3 a n d T h u rsd a y , M ay 4 8 :3 0 a . m . - 4 : 3 0 p . m . L eonards F ine J e w e lry Store .•■ V p e r t RESERVE A N Y U N RESERV ED R O O M O R A P A R T M E N T IN A N Y HALL T u e sd a y , M ay 9 6 :0 0 p . m . - 7 : 3 0 p . m . M o t h e r ’s R in g * W e d n e s d a y , M ay 10 8 :3 0 a . m . - 4 :3 0 p . m . The P ick u p tra n s fe r ca rd s fro m y o u r c u rr e n t housing c le rk M onday, M ay 8 8 : 3 0 a .m . - 4 :3 0 p .m . O R D E R N O W ! A P P LE K O R E P LA T E R S For "Mothar's Day” May M'h STU DEN TS LIV IN G O F F -C A M P U S A N D P L A N N IN G T O M O V E O N -C A M P U S NOTE ■ H o u s in g re s e rv a tio n s w i ll b e ta k e n o n ly fo r freshmen a n d sophomore s tu d e n ts w ith up th ro u g h 84 c re d its as o f fa ll te rm 1978 T u e s d a y , M a y 16 & W e d n e s d a y , M a y 17 K A T EV EIH L 8 :3 0 a . m . • 4 :3 0 p . m . S u n d a y • A p r il 2 3 M a t in # # • 5 :0 0 R e s e rv e a n y u n r e s e r v e d ro o m o r a p a r tm e n t a f t e r fir s t m a k in g a h o u s in g ■A J— A . .11 *1A i.f lf l _ _ d e p o s it a t th e R e s id e n c e H a lls A s s i g n m e n t s O f f i c e , W -1 9 0 H o lm e s H a ll 10K & 14K G o ld - O n e t o F o u r t e e n S to n e s SO PH O M O RE W AIVE R FOR THE 1978-79 A C A D E M IC YEAR: A l l sophom ore s tu d e n ts , in c lu d in g tra n s fe r For individual or group reservations call 337 1741 ALBERT PICKMOTOR HOTEL-1427 W SAGINAW E LANSING stu d e n ts, w ith 41-84 c re d its a c c u m u la te d a t fhe b e g in n in g o f f a ll te rm , 1978, a r e n o t re q u ir e d to re s id e in a U n iv e rs ity re s id e n c e h a ll o r in U n iv e rs ity s u p e rv is e d housing. This w a iv e r is g r a n te d a u to m a tic a lly , il *3 3 ” to *250 w ill n o i b e n e c e s s a ry lo c o m p le te any p a p e r w o rk w a n t g ro u p , Joggers must get good shoes, develop routine (MflUatMd frompage3) supported by Elliott, who said that "Women’s Running," by legs and lungs." see the cars, be careful at that sales of sporting goods to jogger who epitomizes this m e in s h a p e , m ak es m e feel Dr. Joan Ullyot, and “Running "When you run regularly, intersections because of the women a t Frank Shorter's have attitude toward running is b e tte r, a n d e v e n h e lp s m e to X ask E .L . right-turn-on-red law, and to wear bright or luminous cloth­ increased dramatically in re­ for Health and Beauty: A Complete Guide for Women" by you feel lithe, springy, and energetic. You have a sense of Shaw Hall freshman Mark Van Remortel, found jogging s tu d y b e tte r ," V an R em o rtel said. cent months. Kathryn Lance are among their ing when running a t night power obtainable from few around the intramural track Elliott estimated that a t least biggest selling health and exer B e sid es, I h a v e to d o som e Pittman said that running on other sources," Fixx says. last week. b oo st fu n d s concrete may injure some jog­ 50 percent of Shorter's sales of warm up suits and running cise books. “If it’s anything like last Perhaps the MSU student "I like to jog because it keeps thing, to m ak e up for all of the b eer d rin k in g a nd p a rty in g !” gers’ feet or legs, so they shoes are to women. Some of year, we expect a big demand should consider running on the their salespersons are from the mended. for women’s running books," LenUtiv*» o t the artificial surface of the intra MSU women's track team as Resource Center Despite the cutback«, the King said. mural track. _e Drug Education proposed budget would re p well, he said. “Women seem to be more H A L L M A R K O F T H E ^O s ■urged East Lansing resent a total increase of 9 Pittman also said that the “Physical fitness isn’t only a interested in athletics than percent from 1978, City increase of female joggers cor­ male thing,” Elliott said. before," she added. Touncil Tuesday to | their funding for Manager Jerry Coffman u id . responds to the general up­ swing of interest in women's “Consequently, many of the sporting goods manufacturers Linda Covey, who was jog ging at the intramural track J o g g in g s ig n a ls s p r in g sports in the United States. are sending us more and more last week, said women's inter­ -¿quests came during In other action, the council sweats and shoes designed est in jogging might be just The first sure sign of pus area bookstores find i t hearing on the denied a request from B a r re tt IV, s ta r of E rich “Women are realizing that part of what she termed the spring on the MSU campus that books about running budget for fiacal Whilehills Development S e g a l's p o p u lar novel "L ove running is not a male sport," specifically for women." "natural, 'w heatgerm ' atti­ is not necessarily the first have also sold well. m which was pre- Company to rezone lot num­ S to ry , ta k e s up jo g g in g in Pittman said. In addition, books on jogging tude of the entire country. robin, the ice-cream man, Some attribute the in­ 4to the council April ber 11 of Whitehills Center are selling well a t area book­ th e seq u el "O liv e r's S to ry ." Overall, jogging is physically the rising level of the Red creased interest in running ■ budget is expected Subdivision from B-l Buti- “They’re finding that it’s an stores, especially those on H e m e e ts a w o m a n -jo g g e r beneficial in many areas, partic Cedar or even Florida Uns. to extensive media coverage ¡led on May 16. ness to B-2 Business. area where any individual can women and jogging. a nd th e s to r y 's rom ance ularly in the rardio-vascular It is the jogger. of the sport, particularly [ service allocations gsin personal self-esteem as develops. Lorrie King, salesperson at system. James R. Fixx, author From all walks of life, during the Olympics. Other s L i t their 1978 level The rezoning would have well as enjoyment." H ollyw ood, too. h as g o t­ the Womanself Bookstore in of “The Complete Book of wearing running uniforms in point out that the sport is ioposed 197» budget. allowed for commercial Pittman's observations are the University Mall reports te n in on th e jo g g in g craze. Running." claims that jogging a rainbow of colors, joggers convenient because it can be | r efforts to trim development in the area. D u stin H offm an, w h en he's can also act both as a “natural can be found criss-crossing done anytime with little V cuts in additional The council also author­ not g e ttin g his te e th d rilled tranquilizer and enhancer of the campus or circling the f improvements pro- ized the implementation of a F irm s re c a llin g h y d ra u lic ja c k s sexual pleasure." intramural track in ever- special equipment. Because of the vast at ten by a fu g itiv e Nazi d e n tis t, J capital outlay ex- Fioodplain Management does his s h a re of jo g g in g in Fixx’s book, according to increasing numbers. tion given to running ir the | were also recom Program for the city. (AP) — The National High­ being urged to initiate recalls. th e re c e n t m ovie "M arath o n Paramount News Center week Where tennis was the “in" 1972 Olympics in Munich M an." way Traffic Safety Administra­ Owners of the jacks or simi­ end manager Gary Hudgins, is sport of the early ’70s, and in Montreal in 1976. tion h u reported that three lar ones or persons who have currently the hottest-selling jogging seems to have runners like Lasse Viren of If th e r e is a ny obvious il debate continuing? firms are recalling about experienced failure of a running book in the country gained rapid popularity Finland, Alberto Juaniorena tre n d in jo g g in g , it is th a t of 100,000 defective hydraulic hydraulic floor roller jack are and is considered by many to be among students, becoming a of Cuba, Kipchoge Keino of w om en ru n n in g a t lea st as floor roller jacks that could fail asked to contact the NHTSA, the "Jogger's Bible." daily habit for some. Kenya and Frank Shorter of m uch as m en. T h e N ew York suddenly snd injure mechanics 400 Seventh St.. SW, Washing Fixx sums up jogging's popu Several local sporting the United States h a v e all and B oston M a ra th o n s have (eoa tinned (roan p«ce 11 or car owners. ton, D.C., 20590. The toll-free larity when he writes that goods shops report that become folk heroes in their re p o rte d d ra m a tic increases ja m a gains control of the canal, the group argued, Involved ere Hollywood sales in jogging suits and telephone number is 800-424- “running helps your entire respective countries. in w om en p a rtic ip a n ts in In dictator Omar Torrijoa H errera will raise tolls. It also Acceaeories of Compton, Calif., shoes are booming and cam­ body feel better — not just the Even the fictional Oliver rec e n t vears. j most Latin American nations, fearing a toll increaae, Model 646; G.I. Joes of Port­ (tifiration of the treatiee. land, Ore., Models J-204 and lelieved Latin American countries view the treaties as an W1629, and Midland Inter­ I U.S. intentions in Latin America. They point to the national Corp. of K ansu City, I nations, mostly from Latin America, attended the Mo„ Medallion Model 62-219, ting ceremony in September to urge ratification, the government said. jument that canal tolls may be raised once Panama gains In addition, officials said (the waterway h u justification, since the Panama Canal several other firms manufac­ Indicated months ego this step may be necessary whether turing similar products are (treaties were approved, icrvative coalition, which waged a national campaign ■ treaties on television, stressed the pouibility that legime might turn communist after gaining control of the I t. MSU economics professor Milton Taylor agreed with Lebanese I diplomats and journalists who have said whOe Torrijoa (continued (rsu page 1) j Cuba, he h u not embraced communism, Wednesday. Palestinian sourc­ worked in Panama intermittently for 10 yeara studying es u id the fighters wanted to |unian tax system. During th at time, he said, he became defy Arafat's pledge to U.N. d, with the Panamanian dictator, Secretary-General Kurt Wald i is not a communist o r socialist, he’s non-ideological," heim to honor a cease-fire and cooperate with U.N. peacekeep­ ■to think of himself u a friend of Castro but he's not ers who are separating guer­ I to Cubs. He feels Panama should be Panamanian- rillas and Israeli forces in the south. ) came to power to 1968 during a bloodless roup and h u At U.N. headquarters in New icaceful social revolution since th at time. He h u used York, a letter from Waldheim u a tool to spur social reform, and increasing to the Security Council w u Panama h u meant increased anti-American made public Wednesday u y in g the completion of the Israeli ■described Torrijoa u a paternalistic, populist dictator, withdrawal “will be arranged in ■weekends visiting villages talking to the poor. the near future.” | i distaste for his own bureaucracy and the rich, Taylor The letter w u seen as an idded that the oligarchy, though no longer in power, h u attem pt to defuse the pouibi­ | intact with opponents of Torrijoa exiled rather than lity that the General Assembly, at a special session scheduled log to Taylor, Torrijoa believed Panamanian resentment Thursday and Friday, might luce nationalists to sabotage the canal if the treatiea were demand the Israeli withdrawal take place immediately. When the meat’s real juicy, the more you add the better it tastes. Trowbridge Road Just North of Harrison A ls o L a n s in g : S a g in a w a t W a v e rly • S . C e d a r a t 1 -9 6 E n v ir o n m e n ta l s u p p o rt s o u g h t Y earbook jobs open By SABRINA PORTER ward the death and violence This power is yours and yours "Not all backpackers are and recreation. The Red Cedar Log is quires applicants to have akills. State Newt Staff Writer that occur naturally in nature" alone." saints and not all corporations "Wild areas." generally have currently seeking students some knowledge of organ Positive environmental atti­ has insulated humans from the Evans cautioned the group to are devils," he said. "If we fight the same features as wilder­ to fill editorial, photographic izing and supervising a ma tudes backed with generous character of wilderness, he research facts and learn as hard enough and don't make it ness, but with lower overall and managerial positions for jor publication. Applicants •Or^ini/an, amounts of public support could said. much as possible about issues easy for the opposition, we can environmental quality, he said. the 1979 yearbook. should have some under editor. decide the future of wilderness Brock Evans, director and — and the arguments of the convince America that there is The biggest problem in the Eight positions, including standing of creative writing, •Assistimi preservation in the United chief lobbyist of the Sierra opposition — to wage an effeo no contradiction between gran federal system is overuse, said editor and assistant business news feature writing, photo l>Mogra|>hir <| States. Club's Washington, D.C., office, tive campaign. Endless pres ola and martinis." Merwyn 0 . Reed, supervisor of manager, are open to stu graphy and design, along SÌRil. ' ‘ «HI That was the basic messag e told the conference audience sure endlessly applied is then A state lands panel discussed the Ottawa National Forest, dents with creative writing with some experience in who sat on the federal lands experience, journalism back editing copy. • !,arkr"""' tw h,*J from the G reit Lakes Con­ the “politics of wilderness" can the key, he said. administration and policies of •Hfpuri,-r, anj ■ ference. on Wilderness helc’ be intimidating. But public “If you are willing to really wilderness protected areas in panel. Natural wearing-out of ground and business or ac •Assistant editor copy. 8T.ph.Ts. H recently in Erickson Hall. Spon­ support and perseverance can commit yourself, there is a good the state system. the land, coupled with poor counting skills. Major posi Requirements for the posi chance you can save the areas Thomas Gregg, State De management, is taking its toll. t ions are salaried. Reporters tion will include supervising ,n ,l m s W Mudraul sored by the Mackinac Chapter triumph over financial andlegis » r#‘suni»i and ¡1 4 of the Sierra Club, the Wilder­ lative odds, he added. you love," he said. partment of Natural Resources and photographers are paid reporters, rewriting and application t<, j afL»JP "Our management goal is to on a commission basis. ness Society, and MSU’s Con­ “The right information at the Rep. Bob Carr. I) East regional supervisor for state editing copy and coordi control human use and in Applications are being ?chr l tinuing Education Service, the right time can turn an issue Lansing, said developers and parks in the Upper Peninsula, nating story ideas. '."itnnllal! Sl„„ M fluence to preserve natural accepted at the School of two-day event attracted about around,“ he said. “Lobbyists "land grabbers" are damaging pointed out that wilderness •Assistant business man conditions, but it is difficult 200 group members, students, know where to get the crucial the environmental movement areas often have a sensitive Journalism until April 28. ager. Applicants should Rraphi-rs when everyone wants to see Yearbook positions in foresters and citizen activists. information, but more im­ by convincing citizens they ecological balance that can be have a background in busi mited £ every area," he said. T a "f «,,«3 Paul Risk, professor of wild­ portantly. how to use the vote must choose between pro easily upset by human activity. elude: ness and sales along with erness survival in the Depart — the real power of the tecting the environment and "It is necessary to keep the Conference speakers agreed •Editor. The position re bookkeeping and accounting is Aprii jn ¡¡S I ment of Parks and Recreation, people." rebuilding the economy. 'greatest use for the greatest that the wilderness designation examined prevalent attitudes He cited a congressional "We don't have to choose number* principle in mind, but process has a long way to go. governing wilderness use and battle his staff of nine waged between jobs and the environ it must not destroy the purpose for passage of the National ment," he said. "We must tell for which the land was set "We don't really need wilder policy. MWe now require a sanitized Timber Supply Act. In four the American people that the aside," he said. ness, you know," Risk said. wilderness," he said. "We want days, 150,000 telegrams from real return to the Stone Age Board member Ronald Kapp “For that m atter, we don't need the thrills but not the risks. club members across the coun will come with overdevelop explained three categories of universities or a rt galleries or Being completely safe while try flooded offices of their ment. and real progress will state land protection. "Natural great literature, either. We can E x c itin g having a wilderness experience legislators who were undecided come with reasonable growth areas" are essentially undis continue to live without these is based on total unreality." on the bill, he said. and preservation of our en turbed places of high environ things," he continued. Risk said many citizens have Before the opposition could vironment." mental quality and contain "But existence is not the a lack of respect for and a regroup, the tide had turned Carr emphasized that en unique natural features. "Wild question. Quality of that ex learned fear of animals which and the act passed, Evan said. vironmental activists can make erness" usually refers to areas istence is what we must debate may eventually make it im- "That is why we ask for enemies when they make de of 3,000 acres or more and and discuss. We have reached jxxssible for them to enjoy a phone calls and letters and mands and do not follow islands, which show little im the stage in this culture where tru e wilderness experience. An unrealistic attitude "to­ telegrams," he explained. "We know how influential they are. through with an appropriate response. pact by humans and show potential as places of solitude quality can and should be important to us.” n e w cool B e fo re y o u g o o n y o u r ta s te ! f i r s t in te rv ie w le t u s d o a jo b o n y o u . CO O L T h e r e m a y b e 50 o th e r g u y s g o in g a f te r th e jo b y o u w a n t. PE PPE R I IT SCHNAPI A n d w i t h c o m p e t i t i o n t h i s r o u g h , y o u 'd b e tte r m a k e a g o o d im p r e s s io n th e m in u te y o u w a lk th r o u g h th e d o o r. R e d w o o d & R o s s h e l p s y o u d o t h i s a s fe w o ih e r c lo th in g s to re s c a n . W e h a v e t h e c l o t h e s t h a t s u c c e e d in b u s i n e s s . N o th in g o u tla n d is h . O n ly t h e fin e s t tr a d itio n a l Experience s u its , g r e a t lo o k in g s h irts , tie s , a n d e v e n s h o e s . A n d w e ta k e th e w o rk o u t o f Lively Brisk m a tc h in g th in g s u p . O u r e x p e r ie n c e d s a le s m e n k n o w ju s t w h e r e t o f in d t h e Flavor... r ig h t tie s to h ig h lig h t a s h irt. O r th e b e s t s h irts to c o m p le m e n t a s u it. straight or O f c o u r s e , th e w a y c lo th e s lo o k h a v e a lo t t o d o w ith th e w a v on the rocks t h e y f it . T h a t 's w h y o u r t a i l o r s a r e a lw a y s o n h a n d . T h e y tr im . s n ip , a n d a l t e r u n til e v e r y th in g lo o k s l i k e it w a s m a d e f o r y o u . B y th e tim e y o u w a lk o u t o f R e d w o o d & R o s s , y o u 'l l l o o k l i k e y o u a r e re a d y to c o n q u e r th e w o rld . W h i c h is n o d o u b t o n e o f t h e b e st q u a lific a tio n s f o r la n d in g y o u r fir s t jo b . C JJ Zÿ'COOL in th e new hip-huggersize $«24 ?00 ml 1 6 flu/ Alt TAXES iNClUDf I' PRODUCED AND BOTTLED BV MOHAWK LIQUEUR CORP., DET . MICH l i l t f ’HOOE The "Cool One" Is On Campus! Cool Peppermint Schnapps T -S H IR T S .. .*1.95- f ine qiirìhiy cotton, bright green loger No COD send cher k or money order ReàuiooàëRoss CITY. STATE. ZIP_ OLJAN111-Y_____ M e r id ia n M a ll a n d 2 0 5 E . G r a n d R iv e r O rdur lio m RUBEN CO CHECK I I MEDIUM U xlA ,lL ’ All major credit cards honored 156/0 W 10 Mile Rd RI7ES f"! LARGE S ou th,ie ld . M l, 4 80 /b S IZ E S 0 ^ Q I)A N„TV esentment basis lies in canal history jaurdlroBilN«*1) tive interested in recouping stepped his authority to negoti presented his credentials at the ratifie d tho t re a ty . A n n o u n c e m e n ts f o r I t 's W h a t's L e a rn a b o u t M S U 's s u m m e r r , rfe „( Panamanian losses from the bankrupt ate by not waiting for a C h ris tia n S c ie n c e O rg a n iz a tio n White House Nov. 13 and U.S. H a p p e n in g m u s t b e re c e iv e d in th e s tu d y p r o g r a m in th e a tr e a n d ■toward the paat treaty French Canal Company and in Panamanian delegation to ar Most (if (h e s u b s e q u e n t re S ta te N e w s o ff ic e , .343 S tu d e n t m e e ts a t 6 :3 0 t o n ig h t , 337A C a se lan d the reason the two completingthe French dream of Secretary of State John Hay sent m em g rew out of the p u p p e tr y in L o n d o n . M e e t a t 7 H a ll. rive in Washington before sign S e rv ic e s B ld g , b y n o o n a t le a s t to n ig h t , 4 9 A u d it o r iu m . a canal in Panama, succeeded in drafted a treaty two days later. ■tins were negotiated go ing the treaty. t r e a ty ’s provisions g r a n tin g th e t w o c la s s d a y s b e f o r e p u b lic a tio n . getting the United States to The Frenchman rewrote it, U nited S ta le s co n tro l of th e N o a n n o u n c e m e n ts w ill b e a c c e p A ik id o , J a p a n e s e m a rtia l a rt, Ir k as the creation of a The almost unprecedented U n iv e rs ity C o m m itte e o f A c a ­ m e e ts a t 8 :3 0 t o n ig h t a n d T u e s ­ decide to build a canal in and the agreement was signed ( anal Zone 'in p e rp e tu ity " and te d b y p h o n e . lian nation. speed with which events leading d e m ic E n v iro n m e n t in v ite s c o n t r i­ d a y , 1 p .m . S u n d a y , J u d o R o o m , Panama rather than in Nicara and ratified two hours before a s if it w ere s o v e re ig n .” | a was not a sovereign to the 1903 treaty took place is b u tio n s t o its d e lib e ra tio n s c o n ­ M e n 's IM B ld g . gua as previously planned. the Panamanian delegation a r­ T h e R u s s ia n f ilm " T h e T w e lv e c e rn in g c o r p o r a te m e a s u re s to Etil 1903. when a small part of the reason President rived. Both the U n ited S ta te s and C h a ir s " w ill b e s h o w n a t 7 :3 0 • Panamanians staged a In exchange for Hunau w it h d r a w fr o m S o u th A fr ic a . H a v e a q u e s tio n ? C a ll T A P , T h e Teddy Roosevelt declared I The fact that no Panamanian Pa n a m a have g ain ed su b s ta n tia l t o n ig h t , 100 E n g in e e rin g B ld g . 1 «-eking independence Varilla's political and financial took Panama." b e n e fits from th e can al. P a n a m a F ilm s p o n s o r e d b y R u s s ia n S t u ­ A n s w e r P la c e , 3 5 3 -8 1 1 4 . aid, the Panamanian rebels ever signed the 1903 treaty and R o w in g R e g a tta . M S U r o w in g inama's union with On Nov. 2, 1903, the Pana h a s received a new n atio n , w as d ie s , R u s s ia n D e p a r tm e n t, a n d gave him special diplomatic its advantageousness to the c r e w m e e ts U o f M a n d t h e D e tr o it V o lle y b a ll C lu b m e e ts a t 9 T Panama received aid manian revolt began and inde rid of \ ellow F e v e r a n d m alaria J a m e s M a d is o n C o lle g e . status to negotiate a treaty with United States are two reasons B o a t C lu b a t 11 a .m . S u n d a y , to n ig h t a n d M o n d a y , G y m III, i I'nited States in the pendence was proclaimed Nov. a n d en la rg e d its tre a s u ry from G ra n d R iv e r P a rk , L a n s in g . M e n 's I M B ld g the United States. Panamanians have consistently N a tu ra l S c ie n c e S tu d e n t A d v i Ehr warship Nashville, 4, while two days later the m oney sp en t by A m erican s. Panamanians have stated sought renegotiation. Though s o r y C o u n c il m e e ts a t 7 :3 0 to prevented Colombian United States recognized the The United States h a s re P a rk s a n d R e c re a tio n m a jo r s 1 M e d -T e c h m a jo rs a n d o th e rs Em landing and quelling they feel Runau Varilla over Panamians contend they were n ig h t, 104 N a tu ra l S c ie n c e B ld g new republic. Bunau Varilla trapped, the fact remains they ceived a strategic link between J a m e s B ru c e s p e a k s o n in t e r n ­ in te r e s te d in a d m is s io n t o M e d - ■lion. two oceans, a substantial mili s h ip s a t 7 t o n ig h t . A c t iv it ie s T e c h ju n io r le v e l a p p ly in 100 L e a rn g ra s s ro o ts c o m m u n ity o r Lied States drew upon R o o m , N a tu ra l R e s o u rc e s B ld g G iltn e r H a ll. tarv presence now consisting g a n iz m g f ir s t h a n d w h ile e a r n in g Lreement with Colom Cliliration for the aid. lenient gavp the United Torrijos blasted for canal remarks of 14 bases tolls. and inexpensive shipping because of low canal a c a d e m ic c re d it t h is s u m m e r C o n ta c t D a v e P e rs e ll, C o lle g e o f U rb a n D e v e lo p m e n t M S U M e n 's G le e C lu b is lo o k in g f o r g o o d s in g e rs . M e e t a t 4 p .m . T u e s d a y a n d T h u r s d a y , 2 0 6 M u s ic W o m e n 's S tu d ie s G ro u p s h o ld s o p e n m e e tin g a t 3 :1 5 p .m . M o n ­ d a y , U n io n S u n p o rc h . | e right oftransit across I n t h o p a s t, t h e I ’ n it e d S ta t e s Tius and in 1903 the (continued from ptge 1) pacts failed in the Senate we were going to take R e n a is s a n c e D a n c e C la s s c o n ­ B ld g . S e e u s b e fo re p r e - e n r o ll­ h a s u s e d r i g h t s g iv e n it in t h e m ent Jgtates took steps to the route of violent intervention." v e n e s a t 8 :3 0 t o n ig h t . U n io n S tu d e n t O rg a n iz a tio n a l m e e tin g Torrijos "neutralized a good deal of negative 1 9 0 3 t r e a t y t o in t e r v e n e in T ow er R oom . lurh transit was not reaction, especially among students," in making He said he and his associates never considered P a n a m a 's in t e r n a l a f f a ir s , and f o r S u n D a y a c tiv itie s h e ld a t 4 G re e n p e a c e m e e tin g f o r v o lu n ­ to d a y m B 1 0 2 W e lls H a ll. the harsh remarks, Gonzalez said. the possibility of renegotiating the two treaties, Ted. o n s o m e o c c a s io n s s e n t t r o o p s In f o r m a t io n a b o u t M S U 's S o ­ te e rs a t 5 to n ig h t , S tu d e n t O rg a n i­ ■ea of a Panamanian which were approved 21 by the Panamanian z a tio n s O ffic e , U n io n Some student groups have demanded rejection in t o t h e c o u n try to m a in t a in c ia l S c ie n c e p ro g ra m s in L o n d o n A p p r o v e d P la c e m e n t S p e c ia l people in a plebiscite last fall. ■as supported by the by the Panamanian government of the two canal o rd e r. a n d S to c k h o lm 7 3 0 to n ig h t , 111 E d u c a tio n . W o r k w it h m e n ta lly Bates partly because a The second pact, approved 68-32 - one more B e s s e y H a ll treaties, the first of which was ratified March 18. M a jo r r e v is io n s t o t h e 1903 G u id e lin e s a n d G o a ls , P u rp o s e im p a ire d a d u lts . P ro g ra m s f o r th e Jth Colombia to build a vote than needed, gives Panama control of the a n d P a tte rn s , T h e B ib le in Y o u r m e n ta lly re ta rd e d . C o n ta c t 2 6 Federico Ponce, a Panama University student t r e a t y c a m e in 1 9 3 0 a n d 1 9 5 5 . ■anama was not ratified canal by the year 2000. The first treaty, also In g h a m C o u n ty E q u a l O p p o rtu L if e " I n te rv a rs ity C h ris tia n F e llo w ­ S tu d e n t S e rv ic e s B ld g . lender, said Torrijos’ comments “made me H o w e v e r, P a n a m a rem a in e d lolombian Senate, and approved 68-32, guarantees the canal's neu- h o stile to I S. co n tro l of th e m ty C o m m itte e c o n d u c t s a p u b lic s h ip d is c u s s io n a t 7 to n ig h t , 3 3 5 smile.” Hut he said he and others would trality. h e a rin g a t 7 :3 0 to n ig h t . C o u n c il U n io n Wause of the political "demand" that the treaties be "submitted to a ('a n a l Zone a n d its m ilita ry U n ite d M in is trie s h o ld s a w e e k ­ Schools, offices and stores were closed in C h a m b e rs . L a n s in g C ity H a ll. Jomatir maneuvers of new plebiscite." p re s e n c e , which th e y feel in e n d w o r k s h o p o n " C o p in g w it h Panama Wednesday, and debris littered the V o lu n te e r t w o h o u rs a w e e k a t ■BunauVarilla. v ite s a tta c k on th e n atio n it is S tre s s : th e P ro c e s s o f L o s s a n d Before the news conference, Torrijos told his M S U R o d e o C lu b m e e ts a t 8 M S U 's C lin ic a l C e n te r. C o m e t o 26 lVarilla, a French na streets after a night of celebrations. d esig n e d to d e fe n d . t o n ig h t in th e L iv e s to c k P a v ilio n . G r o w t h . " C a ll t o re g is te r M a y 19 people in a nationwide telecast that "had the S tu d e n t S e r v ic e s B id g . a n d 2 0 th . M o u n t a in e e r in g #1. OosK WhVkir. I W A P R IL ÿ t C o n c e rt 8 * 1 0 jjö FUNDAMENTALS OF MOUNTAINEER*« -K l- 1 W h a t is m o u n t a in e e r in g a ll a b o u t? F u n n y y o u s h o u ld a s k . B e c a u s e w e j u s t h a p p e n t o h a v e a n a n s w e r . ( A h - h , l i f e ’s l i t t l e W C £W >, c o in c id e n c e s .) M o u n t a in e e r in g is a s k i l l , a s c ie n c e a n d a n a r t . Y e t a n yo n e j ^ w i t h a t h i r s t f o r e x c e lle n c e a n d n o r m a lly d e v e lo p e d / ^ ▼ m o t o r s k ills c a n m a s te r it . S im p ly s t u d y / C ttjc k e fe ö * b b t h e s e / ’V f u n d a m e n t a l s a n d f o l l o w t h e m f a i t h f u l rl KAC. àVC^E .L â M iru j W m t ît t K T IT H U R S D A Y A N D F R ID A Y E V E N IN G S U N T I L 9 On S te p o n e . I • a p p r o p r i­ O k a y , h e r e 's a te ly e n o u g h , 2 • w h e r e th e p in b e - s ta r ts b y s e le c t ­ g m s . H o ld th e m o u n ta in in g th e c o r r e c t s it e . fir m ly in y o u r le ft h a n d , T o d o s o , p ic k u p g ra s p th e m o u n ta in a b o ttle o f B u s c h to p w ith y o u r r ig h t T h is is c o m m o n ly h a n d a n d tw is t c a lle d h e a d in g fo r th e ■ th e little f e lla o ff. m o u n t a in s . T h e re y o u g o .O n c e p o u r e d , p a c in g b e c o m e s p a ra m o u n t. A s a n y s e a s o n e d > • m o u n ta in e e r w ill te ll y o u . th e o n ly w a y to d o w n a m o u n t a in is s lo w ly , s m o o t h ly a n d s t e a d ily - s a v o r in g e v e r y s w a llo w o f th e b re w t h a t is B u s c h . I f y o u 'r e a b it a w k w a r d a t f ir s t , d o n 't b e N o w f o r th e ! 3 d is c o u r a g e d P e r fe c t io n ta k e s p r a c tic e . S o o n e n o u g h , h a v in g " ' • t r ic k y p a r t' e m p tie d y o u r g la s s a n d f ille d y o u r s o u l,y o u tQ O w ill b e a N e o p h y te s , lis t e n m o u n ta m e e r /fft u p : th e p ro p e r p o u r is s t r a ig h t d o w n o th e c e n te r o f th e g la s s . O n ly in For th e d ire c to r. th is w a y w ill Classic director's chair for use inside or th e c o ld , in v ig o out. Seats and backs made of sturdy canvas r a t in g ta s te o f in blue, brown or yellow . with white or th e m o u n ta in natural finish hardwood frames. Rust resistant c o m e to a h e a d . hardware.allows chairs to be easily folded away for storage, or moved conveniently, S30. For personalization, there is an ad ditiona l charge of $1 'J a c a b B o n '0 { f e e ? Q D d c b D q c d d d q ® D o n ’t j u s t r e a c h fo r a b e e r. BUSCH H e a d fo r th e m o u n t a in s . Chili-fest to raise fu n d s * RHA TUUM MOVII »M ||| , AVAILAMJ WIIKDAYt PROM u l Mm battered women in the greater the week of April 24 to any Tickets may be purchased * RHA o n ic i 111 S T W D IR t All the chili you can eat-and all the beer you can drink for $<3 lo s in g area. interested group. from the Lansing YWCA, the « AND AT A U R H A M D V IIt. will be offered at the home of A co ck tail p a rty will be held Chandler said the council is I1 N IS it: I 1n STAKE UU.< UMK Scanner .............. 8 1 . 2 5 I.'M \Y 111- I HKI Kt-!' Royce 608 Dlx 40 Ch S te re o Digital Mobile CB R e c e iv e r s Regency 10 Ch. 3 Band C O M IN G F R I D A Y Programmable TH I I T A I T S Sony 18 Watt Police Scanner HST-70 T u r n t a b le i Regency Touch D A Y FOR A IG H T BIC 920 Belt Drive Digital Police THURSDAY, APRIL 20 C O M IN G S A T U R D A Y Technics 30 Watt SA5070 117“ Changer* BSR 20BPX Belt Scanner. 16 Ch Drive Automatic 7:30 & 10 pm W r . 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AM/FM Stereo Belt Drive Pioneer 70 Watt Radio w/push Changer" IHeBoysInCommnyCa SX650.................... buttons 10300 Garrard In-Dash Cassette HH Scott 84 Watt DD75 Direct AM/FM w/push H is w h o l e lif e R336 (floor D riv e "___ buttons 613 samples) i r Dual 1245 Dlx Audiovox In Dash w as a m illio n -to -o n e Ok ICHIGAN *> w e A R € NOT ALON€ Lafayette 110 Watt LR5555.................... 249“ Belt Drive Changer" 'base, cover, cartridge all opt. ex­ Cassette/AM/FM «nth fast forward and rewind ID600 TODAY« FRI. s h o t. OPEN At 6:45 P M CLOSE technics 130 Watt tra "Includes base & cover-car­ Pioneer In Dish Cas sette/AM/FM tridge opt extra ‘"includes SH O W S 7:00. 0:20 6NCO UNTEFRS SA5470 (floor samples) .............. base, cover and cartridge KP4000 ................. WINNER Audiovox In Oash Cassette/AM/FM Technics 170 Watt OF2 ROCKY SA5570 (floor with auto samples) .............. reverse, CAS500 ACADEMY Pioneer Supertuner. Unitati Affìtti IP fil AWARDS! AColumbia 6MIFeature Lafayette 180 Watt LR9090 w/Dolby. 1 349“ D e lu x e 4 0 C h a n n e l In Dash Cassette /AM/FM w/push- buttons KP8005 Today Opan 7:00 P.M. D ig ita l C B Thur*. Wilson 8:15 & 10:15. Brody 7:00 & 9:15 C T 5 A I G . A M /F M A M /F M Electron*| Faafura At 7:20-9:30 The Fever is Spreading S te r e o R e c e iv e r C a lc u l a t o r s Tl Money Manager___ 16“ 16988 ^ "IT IS A JOY!" —Judith Crnt. New Yc.-» Mogn/me JOHN II Dataman learn­ ing Aid ........................ IN TI 2550-111 Re­ 19" Canadian DOC approved] TRAVOLTA S * T u p in g m e te r, chargeable w/Memory. GOT IT! Tl Business Analyst P ro fe s s io n a l c o m m u n ic a tio n m a g n e tic p h o ­ B r ig h t L E D nu­ q u a lit y R F g a in , d e lta tu n e . ! — — n o in p u t. A F C Rechargeable .............. A N L , n o is e b la n k e r. m e ra ls ► p Sharp ELI 108 Desk SATURDAY Calculator .................. 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A p p ly a t ro o m n e a r M S U - $127 - p aid b y d u o d a te , a 50* la t e s e rv ic e c h o r g o w il l C R E S T D R IV E IN b e tw e e n 12 a ls. 2 s e a te r, 2 w a y re a r d o o r. 1 9 7 3 B M W 7 5 0 w it h W i n d ­ L IT T L E C A E S A R 'S t o d a y a f ­ p r e fe r g ra d . C a ll a ft e r 6 p .m . be d ue p .m . a n d 6 p .m . 1 0 9 6 W e s t P A R T - T IM E s e c re ta ry in H a s- 6 3 ,0 0 0 m ile s $2000 351 ja m m e r , $ 1 5 0 0 . A lw a y s s e r­ te r 4 p .m . 3 -4 -2 0 (4 ) 3 3 7 -0 1 6 9 . 2 -4 -2 1 (4 ) G ra n d R iv e r, O k e m o s . M u s t le t t 9 a m 1 p m M o n d a y E F F IC IE N C Y , IM M E D IA T E 3 8 2 3 e v e n in g s . v ic e d , p r o fe s s io n a lly . P h o n e b e 1 8 8 -4 -2 6 (9 ) F U L L - T IM E s u m m e r re c re a ­ F rid a y . S h o r t h a n d a n d o ff ic e occupancy. $185. BUR­ S 13 4 2 8 15) 3 5 1 -1 5 1 5 b e t w e e n 9 -1 1 a .m . tio n d ir e c t o r , M a y 1 s t-S e p - e x p e rie n c e re q u ir e d . N a n c y C H A M W O O D S . 745 B u r­ o r 4 - 6 p .m . 4 -4 -2 1 (4 ) G R E M L IN 7 2 , 6 c y lin d e r . A ir L O T M A N f o r C R E S T D R IV E te m b e r 3 0 th . M u s t h a v e W S I 3 3 9 -3 4 0 0 C 1 2 -4 -2 8 (51 M m la k e c h a m . 3 5 1 -3 1 1 8 . 0 -2 0 -4 -2 8 (4 ) liteeetiH " Ä Aitouotive Ä c o n d it io n in g , e x tr e m e ly d e ­ 1 97 2 Y A M A H A 6 5 0 c c . $ 7 0 0 . IN . A p p ly in p e r s o n C R E S T a n d te n n is e x p e rie n c e a lo n g E X P E R IE N C E D HELP Apartm ents p e n d a b le , $ 5 7 5 . N e g o tia b le . A f t e r 5 p .m . 6 7 6 -4 1 7 2 . D R IV E IN b e t w e e n 12 a n d 6 w it h p o o l m a in te n a n c e a n d S U B L E T O E L U X E fu r n is h e d 3 5 1 -8 6 6 4 d a y s . 6 -4 -2 7 15) s u p e rv is io n A p p ly m p e r s o n W a n te d - W a itre s s e s , b a r ­ 5 4 2 4 13) p .m . 1 0 9 6 W e s t G ra n d R iv e r, 6080 Marsh Rd. 2 b e d ro o m , n e a r c a m p u s , a ir, p i FOX 1975, s u n r o o f, 4 C H E V E L L E '7 3 . A u t o m a tic , te n d e r s , busboys, d is h ­ O k e m o s . M u s t b e 18. o n ly . H O S P I T A L IT Y IN N , b a lc o n y 6 4 6 -6 2 6 3 , 3 5 1 -3 6 9 2 I, A M /F M , 3 3 ,0 0 0 m ile s , g o o d c o n d it io n , 7 0 ,0 0 0 m ile s , J A V E L IN 1 9 7 0 , 5 5 ,0 0 0 , n e w ^ 0 0 _ D u n c k e t._ 8 ^ -2 1 _ (8 l _ w a s h e rs . c o c k ta il w a itre s s e s , Meridian Mall Area S U Z U K I: 1 9 7 5 5 0 0 R o a d b ik e , 8 - 4 - 2 6 ( 8 ! ______________ a fte r 5 p .m . 8 -5 -1 (5 ) i 393 7844. X 8 -5 -1 (3 ) $ 1 6 0 0 . 6 4 5 -2 5 0 2 . 7 -4 -2 5 (3 ) c lu t c h . G o o d c o n d it io n . 3 49 - Et ja n ito r s . A ls o e x p e rie n c e d v e ry n ic e . FLU M ER FELT FEM ALE M A S SE U S E w ant * 1 A S plus utilities 2 7 5 3 , 3 5 5 -5 9 2 3 a ft e r 6 p .m . S T U D E N T H U S B A N D w if e c o o k s A p p ly in p e r s o n b e t B l FO X 1975, 3 8 ,0 0 0 C HR YSLER NEW PORT S T A IR C H E V R O L E T 665- 1 BEDROOM to w n h o u s e . 8 -4 -2 0 (3 ) e d . $ 8 / h o u r . W e w ill tra in . te a m t o m a n a g e & m a in ta in w e e n 1 -6 p .m ., 1 14 6 S o u th ¡ 1, A M /F M , e x c e lle n t c o n - 1 9 7 5 , c u s to m , e x c e lle n t c o n ­ 4 3 4 3 . 0 -4 -4 21 (4 ) * o n * b e d ro o m u n fu rn is h e d C a rp e t, g a s , h e a t in k itc h e n . 4 8 9 -2 2 7 8 . Z 2 3 4 - 2 8 ( 3 | _ 3 0 u n it s t u d e n t a p a r tm e n t W a s h in g t o n . P E R R Y ’S O L D E i $2700 b e st o ffe r . 4 8 9 - d it io n . $ 3 6 0 0 . K im , 3 5 1 -4 5 5 9 . * G E a p p lia n c e s $ 1 4 5 3 9 3 -5 4 0 1 8 -5 -1 (3) L E M A N N S P O R T 1972, ex b u ild in g . O n e b e d r o o m a p a r t ­ C O Z Y IN N , f o r m e r ly t h e 1 8 -5 -1 14) 8 -M J 4 J HONDA 550 1977, 1 40 0 C O LLE C TO R 'f u ll y c a rp e te d c e lle n t c o n d it io n , $ 7 0 0 o r m e n t liv in g q u a r te r s . M a in t e ­ G ra n d Z o o k . N o p h o n e c a lls m ile s , w in d s h ie ld & fa r in g . P A R T - T IM E * A ir d ra p e s 4 B E D R O O M d u p le x . $ 2 6 0 H i 1974 S u n r o o f, A M / - C O U G A R X R 7 , 1973. N e w best o ff e r . 3 5 1 -7 0 3 5 . n a n c e e x p e rie n c e re q u ir e d . p le a s e 8 -4 -2 8 (1 1 ) 'o d ia c e n t t o n e w c o u n ty C u s t o m s e a t, c r a s h b a r £r T h e B a n k o f L a n s in g h a s a n m o n th . J u n e 12 S e p te m b e r |s te re o -8 tra c k . N e w ra - o ra d ia is , A M / F M s te r e o , v in y l 8 -4 -2 7 (3 )_ _ 3 5 1 -2 2 1 1 , 9 a . r n . - 4 p .m . M o n ­ ro a d p a c k 3 9 3 4514. o p e n in g f o r a p a r t- tim e c o l­ p o rk d a y t h r o u g h F rid a y . TAXI D R IV E R S w a n te d 12 3 5 1 -3 7 2 8 . 8 -4 -2 8 (3 ) E xcellen t c o n d itio n . t o p . G o o d c o n d it io n . M a k e 8 -4 2 7 (5 ) le c to r . M u s t b e a v a ila b le to 8 (4) 337 7680; 3 5 5 -0 1 7 8 . an offer. 332 0993 7 4 2M4) M O N T E C A R L O , 1 9 7 1 , v e ry g o o d c o n d it io n , g o o d m ile ­ K A W A S A K I/7 2 B H 350 w o r k 5 p . m . -9 p .m . , M o n d a y - F rid a y . A p p ly in p e r s o n a t 1 5 - 4 -2 8 (8 ^ _ F U L L T IM E , s e c re ta ry , b o o k ­ M u s t h a v e e x c e lle n t d r iv in g re c o rd A p p ly V A R S I T Y C A B eee-eies N IC E . E A S T L a n s in g h o u s e (r i 2000 '7 3 . 5 2 ,0 0 0 , n e w C U T L A S S S U P R E M E , 9 seat w a g o n , 1975. L o a d e d . In ­ a g e . C a ll a ft e r 6 p .m . 3 5 1 - 1 7 2 5 . X -8 -4 -2 1 (4 ) s t r e e t / t r a il. E x c e lle n t s h a p e , r o o m 9 0 2 B a n k o f L a n s in g , k e e p e r p o s it io n in s m a ll c o n ­ 3 3 2 3 5 5 9 1 0 -4 -2 6 (4 ) ■vMiagt fo r re n t. 5 b e d ro o m s . S u m ­ m e r s u b le a s e , f a ll o p t io n . 3 51 - c lu d e s c ru is e , s te r e o , ta p e , lo w m ile a g e $ 5 5 0 . 3 5 1 -6 8 9 5 . 101 N . W a s h in g t o n , L a n s in g s u lt in g f ir m in E a s t L a n s in g . 1768. 8 -4 -2 8 (4 ) J p y , just tu n e d , s n o w s , C L E R K . E A S T L a n s in g la w M U S T A N G 1972, g o o d c o n ­ 3 -4 -2 4 (3 ) o r p h o n e 3 7 2 -9 2 3 0 e x t. 3 30 . E x p e rie n c e p r e fe r r e d - sa l ille n t ru n n in g c o n d itio n , u n d e r c o a t. E x c e lle n t c o n d i­ o ff ic e . P a r t- tim e m o r n in g s E .O .E . 5 -4 -2 6 (1 3 ) a ry n e g o tia b le . C o n t a c t C h a r ­ 124 C E D A R S T E a s t L a n ­ f t or best o ffe r. 3 4 9 -0 4 4 7 t io n . $ 3 3 0 0 . 3 4 9 2 8 2 9 a ft e r 6 d it io n . $ 5 5 0 o r b e s t o ffe r . N e e d c a r C a ll 3 5 1 -6 2 0 0 N E E D U P t o 4 w o m e n to K A W A S A K I, 1974 - 750. lo t te , 3 3 2 -0 8 4 1 8 -4 -2 1 (5 ) s in g 2 -m a n . 1 b e d ro o m , f u r ­ 1 6 p m 3 -4 -2 M 5 )_ _ p .m . 8 - 4 -2 8 (6 ) 351 0 9 6 0 . 5 - 4 - 2 0 ^ _ 8 -4 -2 4 (4) s u b le a s e s u m m e r te r m . S p a ­ E x c e lle n t c o n d it io n . $695. T R A V E L ! F O R E IG N S H IP S ! n is h e d a p a rtm e n ts . H e a t in ­ c io u s h o u s e . C lo s e t o c a m ­ VY V A N 1976, b e a u ti- C U T L A S S 1 9 7 2 A u t o m a tic , N O V A 1 9 7 4 . 3 3 ,0 0 0 , A M / F M , C a ll 3 9 3 -9 4 2 6 . X 8 - 5 1 (3 ) G O O D P A Y ! N o e x p e rie n c e . c lu d e d $ 1 9 5 m o n th . Y e a r A V O N - B E s u c c e s s fu l in GAME ROOM p e r s o n n e l. p u s . $ 6 0 p lu s u tilitie s . 3 5 3 - p u sto m in te rio r. F a c to r y r a d io , p o w e r s te e r in g , g o o d a ir, $ 2 1 0 0 , e x c e lle n t c o n d i­ M e n /w o m e n . S ta m p e d lo n g s a le s w it h o u t e x p e rie n c e . C a ll le a s e s o n ly . J u n e 15 o r Y o u n g la d ie s p re fe rr e d . G o o d 5 5 2 0 . 8 -4 2 8 (5) ms, Z ie b a rte d . 3 51 1 66 9. c o n d it io n . A f t e r 5 p .m . 3 3 2 - t io n . 3 5 1 -1 9 5 7 . H O N D A C L 3 5 0 1 9 7 2 , lik e e n v e lo p e . G L O B E T R O T T E R , S e p te m b e r 1 1 29 B u r c h a m 4 8 2 6 8 9 3 C 5 -4 -2 1 (3 ) p a y , b e n e fits a n d p le a s a n t 7 (31 4 7 3 8 . 1 0 -4 -2 0 (3 ) 8 -4 -2 7 (3 )______ n e w , h e lm e ts , e x tr a s , $ 4 0 0 . B o x 1 2 6 6 C 4 . K a n s a s C ity , D r. E ffic ie n c y $ 1 6 0 m o n th . w o r k in g p o s itio n s . E x c e lle n t 3 2 3 2 3 6 7 . 3 -4 -2 4 (3 ) D a m a g e d e p o s it re q u ir e d . 6 O L D S F -8 5 ’6 9 , p o w e r s t e e r ­ M O 64141. Z -B L -1 -4 - 2 0 (6 ) A M E R IC A N Y O U T H A c t iv i­ tie s n e e d s y o u . L a n s in g 's p o s itio n s f o r s tu d e n ts , fu ll a n d p a r t tim e . A p p ly in p e r ­ p .m -1 0 p .m . 8 8 2 -2 3 1 6 NOW LEA SIN O in g , a u t o m a tic , c ru is e , tr a ile r S U Z U K I 7 7 G S 7 5 0 , f u l l d re s s , 0 -2 0 -4 2 8 i9 ' n e w y o u t h c e n te r n e e d s v o l­ s o n o n ly . C IN E M A X , 1 0 0 0 W aters Id g t IC A M P IN G h it c h , ru n s w e ll. 8 8 2 -4 0 0 4 . X -8 -4 - 2 7 <4>_ e x c e lle n t c o n d it io n . 6 7 6 -9 7 3 7 . 8 4 21 (3 ) H U D D LE W EST. lo u n g e , a c c e p t in g a p p lic a ­ t io n s f o r b a r te n d e r, w a it ­ New u n te e r s t o h e lp in v a rio u s a re a s ; f r o m p u b lic r e la tio n s t o W . J o lly R o a d . 0 -2 0 -4 -2 8 (81 109 N O R T H C le m e n s , 4 -m a n u n it , $ 3 5 0 , n e w ly d e c o ra te d , Apts. O P E L 1 9 0 0 M a n ta , 1 97 3 4 - w o o d w o r k in g . P le a s e c a ll B U S B O Y S . F O R S o r o r ity , H O N D A 7 50 -1 9 7 1 , c h o p p e d . fu r n is h e d , u tilitie s , a v a ila b le speed, A M /F M , c u s to m re s s e s . s h o r t o r d e r c o o k s a n d 3 9 4 -5 1 4 6 o r s t o p in a t 5 2 2 0 w o r k e v e n in g s in e x c h a n g e 3 3 2 -4 4 3 2 3111 S h e ffe r A v e n u e . L a n ­ n o w . 4 8 5 -6 5 1 3 5 -4 -2 4 (5) E Q U IP M E N T p a in t, n e w c a r b u r e to r , c a m s in g . 3 2 1 -0 7 2 2 . 5 -4 -2 1 (3 ) b u s b o y s . A p p ly in p e r s o n o n ly . 9 a .m .-5 p .m . M o n d a y - S o u t h L o g a n . 8 -4 -2 6 (8 ) f o r d in n e r. 7 d a y s w e e k . 3 37- a n d lif t e r s , P ire lli P 3. L e a v in g 0 7 1 9 . Z -8 4 2 4 (4 ) S a tu rd a y . 1 38 S . W a v e r iy , FEM ALE R O O M M A T E need­ 1 O R 2 fe m a le ro o m m a te s c o u n try - $ 1 3 0 0 o r d e a l - D U C A T I 2 5 0 a n d a c c e s s o rie s S E R V IC E S T A T IO N a tt e n ­ needed sum m er a n d n ext L a n s in g , M l 1 0 -4 -2 8 (8 ) e d f o r n e x t y e a r. C e d a rv ie w MPER 10% f t . r s le e p s 4 , 6 2 7 -2 2 9 4 a ft e r 6 p .m . $ 2 7 5 . M u s t s e ll. 3 9 3 6 9 9 4 d e n t. $ 2 .6 5 /h o u r + c o m m is ­ D IC T A P H O N E T Y P IS T f o r J A N S P O R T T E N T S , paks, A p a r tm e n ts . 3 5 3 6 2 7 8 y e a r, C h a le t A p a r tm e n ts . C a ll [contained, > 1 20 0 o r b e s t 3 -4 -2 4 (8 ) 3 -4 -2 1 (3 1 s io n . A p p ly a t 5 0 2 0 S . P e n n ­ b u s y in s u r a n c e o ff ic e M u s t H e le n e , 3 5 3 -8 0 9 4 . s te e p in g b a g s . N o n e b e tte r . 3 -4 -2 0 13» A T T E N T IO N JO G G E R S ! s y lv a n ia , L a n s in g . M ik e C la re , ty p e 5 5 w p m s te a d y a n d “ *-8407. S p-1 4 -2 0 13) S P O R T S M E IS T E R S H O P S . 8 -4 -2 7 (4) P IN T O R U N A B O U T 1972, P a s s o u t fly e r s w h ile y o u g e t 8 8 2 -5 7 2 6 . 5 -4 -2 1 (5 ) a c c u r a te . S a la ry c o m m e r- 4 8 6 -3 7 0 0 - 3 5 1 -2 1 0 0 . M O N D C A N V A S p ro - S P - 1 - 4 -2 0 141 3 1 .0 0 0 m ile s , $ 1 0 0 0 o r b e s t o ff e r . S a n d y 3 2 1 -7 0 4 0 a ft e r L M i S avia !/ in s h a p e a n d m a k e e x tr a $. 4 8 5 -1 1 3 5 n o o n t o 5. E L E C T R O N IC R E P A IR M A N s u ra te w it h e x p e rie n c e . F u lly p a id c o m p a n y b e n e fits . A n CHALET APARTMENTS S U M M E R L E A S E . 2 -m a n 2 J s N ew s to c k o l te n ts N e x t to c a m p u s s p a c io u s b e d r o o m a p a rtm e n t. P o o l. 5 :3 0 p .m . 5 -4 -2 1 1 4 ) X 8 4 -2 61 4) w a n t e d . H o u r s f le x ib le , e x ­ a ff ir m a tiv e a c tio n e m p lo y e r. ( p a c k s at S P O R T S M E IS - C A M P - 7 s le e p in g b a g s . t w o b e d ro o m a p a rtm e n ts T w y c k in g h a m a p a rtm e n ts . 1 SHOPS S P - 1 4 -2 0 [31 P E N N E L L S A L E S is m o v in g p e r ie n c e n e c e s s a ry . W IL C O X C a ll M . K in g . 4 8 2 5 5 6 6 f o r fu r n is h e d a ir c o n d itio n e d Down, p o la r g u a r d , s e m i- E v e n in g s . 3 3 2 -6 2 7 5 . P IN T O 1 9 7 6 - L im it e d e d i­ M o n d a y , A p r il 1 7, t o a la rg e r , L E A S IN G A G E N T - p a r t- T R A D IN G P O S T . P h o n e 4 8 5 - a p p o in t m e n t. 8 -4 -2 1 (1 2 ) 4 -4 -2 1 (4 ) r e c ta n g u la r , m um m y, I flF T H -W h e e l R o o m e r, t io n m o d e l, 3 0 ,0 0 0 m ile s , m o r e c o n v e n ie n t lo c a t io n , tim e , p o s s ib le f u l l t im e . O f fic e 4 3 9 1 . C -5 -4 -2 1 1 5 ) Summarfrom *165 S P O R T S M E IS T E R S H O P S . F E M A L E E S C O R T S w a n te d . e x c e lle n t s h a p e . 3 9 4 -4 4 9 4 1 8 2 5 E a s t M ic h ig a n , L a n s in g , a n d / o r r e n ta l e x p e rie n c e n e c ­ co n d itio nin g , a w n in g , S P - 1 - 4 -2 0 (41 Fall from *384 ■ I >4980. 6 4 6 -6 8 8 9 . a fte r 6 p .m . 4 -4 -2 4 (4 ) M ic h ig a n , 4 8 9 1 2 . e s s a ry . B IR C H F IE L D SUMMER W ORK. M ake $ 6 h o u r . N o tr a in in g n e c e s ­ Now renting. Open 3-6 MAY OPENINGS M - 2 0 131 C 1 0 -4 -2 1 (6 ) APARTM ENTS. 3 9 3 -0 2 1 0 . $ 3 0 0 0 t h is s u m m e r. F o r in t e r ­ s a ry C a ll 4 8 9 -2 2 7 8 . C A M P IN G A C C E S S O R IE S P L Y M O U T H F U R Y 1975, 4- Z 2 3 -4 2 8 (3 ) H p ric e . S a w s , m e s s k its , d o o r , g o o d c o n d it io n , $ 1 4 0 0 J U N K C A R S w a n t e d . A ls o 8 -4 -2 8 (5 ) v ie w c a ll 3 7 2 -8 3 0 3 . 5 -4 -2 1 (3 1 Monday thru Friday. BURCHAM WOODS V P IN G A C C E S S O R IE S J tric e . S aw s, m e s s k its , a x e s , s h o v e ls , e tc . S P O R T S - o r b e s t o ff e r . 3 51 -2 4 0 5 . s e llin g u s e d p a r ts . P h o n e L E G A L S E C R E T A R Y . F u ll O VERSEAS JO B S - S um 332*6197 2 b o d ro o m o po n ( .s h o v e ls , e tc . S P O R T S - M E IS T E R S H O P S . S P - 1 - 4 -2 0 (31 5 -4 -2 4 (3 ) a n y tim e . 3 2 1 -3 6 5 1 . tim e , le g a l a n d d ic t a p h o n e m e r / y e a r - r o u n d . E u ro p e , S. For Rest M a y 1 - ‘ 180 C X 2 0 - 4 2 8 (3 ) e x p e rie n c e a m u s t. C a ll 3 7 4 - A m e r ic a , A u s tr a lia . A s ia , e tc . I b e d ro o m o pe n 1STER S H O P S . O N E B E D R O O M a p a r tm e n t P LYM O U TH S A T E L L IT E , 8 8 9 0 . 8 -4 21 (4 ) A ll fie ld s , $ 5 0 0 $ 1200. P -420 131 n e a r M S U . c o m p le te ly f u r ­ M a y 15 • M 50 E X P E R T B O O T f it in h ik in g 1 9 7 1 . E x c e lle n t. C a ll B o b 8 m o n th ly , expenses p a id , S U M M E R . A IR c o n d itio n e d * b o o t s . T ir a h , D a n n e r, o r P i- A ID S , A L L s h ifts , p a r t a n d n is h e d , a v a ila b le A p r il 2 2 a .m . t o 6 p .m . 3 5 3 -6 3 5 0 . s ig h ts e e in g . F re e in f o r m a t io n u p s ta irs o f d u p le x 2 b e d ­ «51*31 IS FLAN NEL, ra g g , v e tta . S P O R T S M E IS T E R f u l l tim e . A V O N N U R S IN G t h r o u g h J u ly 3 1, p re fe r g r a d ­ 8 -4 .2 6 (4 ) F I A T O w n e rs - W r it e : B H P C o ., B o x 4 4 9 0 , r o o m . n e a r c a m p u s , q u ie t kol^etw eei^O -^jnJ^ l A t S P O R T S M E IS T E R H O M E , 4 8 9 1701. 8 -4 -2 1 (4 ) u a te s tu d e n t. C a ll a fte r 5 p .m . S H O P S . S P - 1 - 4 - 2 0 131 D e p t. 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U tilitie s in c lu d e d , p i c re frig e ra to r, f u r n a c e and packs M E IS T E R S H O P S . at SPO RTS- 7 0 .0 0 0 m ile s , g o o d b o d y , $ 6 0 0 . 3 4 9 3 6 7 2 o r 3 5 3 -9 4 6 4 . t im e y o u r c a r n e e d s r e p a ir b e a g g re s s iv e , w e ll o r g a n iz e d P le a s e s e n d re s u m e t o H O S ­ Apartxeits m e n t. $ 1 0 5 m o n th . 3 9 4 -3 7 0 4 . $ 1 4 0 p e r m o n th . 3 5 1 -1 1 7 7 7 -8 T co nd itio n, $ 11 60 . 373 - o n d y o u 'll k n o w t h e a n s ­ a n d c a p a b le o f d e a lin g e f ­ P IT A L IT Y IN N , 3 6 0 0 D u n e 8 -4 -21 (4 1 p .m . X 5 -4 -2 5 (6) S P - 1 - 4 -2 0 (31 3 -4 -2 0 (5 ) P. 393-3461 S P -1 -4 -2 0 (4) w e r . Y o u ’l l b e p le a s e d w it h f e c t iv e ly w it h p e o p le in a k e l, A tt e n tio n : P. M c C a rth y . o u r s e rv ic e . b u s in e s s -lik e m a n n e r. 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W a x o r furnished apartments — fu r n is h e d C heck o ut • H e a te d p o o l Down polarguard, semi- 3 s tu d e n ts TOYOTA COROLLA 1977 K a la m a z o o S tr e e t. O n e m ile — c a rp e te d C O L L IN G W O O D A P T S I * A ir c o n d itio n in g p R ^ PS * ™ T S - rectangular, mummy. L iftb a c k . D e lu x e , p e r fe c t c o n ­ W e s t o f c a m p u s . 4 8 7 -5 0 5 5 . CED A R VIEW • c o m p le te ly fu r n is h e d — b e s t lo c a tio n in t o w n *10* b u s t o c a m p u s |'-4 -2 0 13) SPORTSMEISTER SHOPS. d it io n . $ 4 0 0 0 f ir m , 3 2 1 -3 4 6 6 . C 1 1 4 - 2 8 19) * a ir c o n d itio n e d NORW OOD • carpeted-air * A m p le p a r k in g SP-1-4-20 (41 X -3 -4 2 0 (3 ) * d i» h w a s h e r G O O D U S E D T IR E S , 13 14- c o n d itio n in g as low as *s h a g c a rp e tin g • N ic e ly fu r n is h e d RIVERSIDE • 3 la r g e d o u b le c lo s e t» • $ B lk s . t o c a m p u s JANSPORT TENTS, packs, 15 in c t i. M o u n t e d f r e e . 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S C H W IN N V A R S IT Y 10 S E IF T S T E R E O M tc ro e c o p e N E E D E D - O N E o r 2 g ir ls f o r M S U 1 b lo c k , 2 la r g e b e d -, S E V E R A L 5 p e rs o n h o u s e s for q u a l it y N E E D 1 fe m a le n o w . S h a re NEAR SPAR R O W . 1 bed­ M o d e l 9 0 . E x c e lle n t c o n d i­ 4 b e d r o o m h o u s e a d ja c e n t t o s p e e d , 21 in c h fra m e , 2 7 in c h 1 b e d r o o m in 2 m a n . F u rn is h ­ ro o m . F u rn is h e d . $155/ s u m m e r in 4 m a n . L a rg e ro o m s . 2 b a th s , fu r n is h e d . f o r r e n t s t a r t in g fa ll. 1 y e a * tio n . W i t h c a s e . $ 1 6 6 . 3 7 2 - THE STERtntí » I c a m p u s . I n c lu d e s fire p la c e , w h e e ls . $ 75 . 3 9 4 2 9 7 3 . e d . R e n t n e g o tia b le , A s k f o r m o n th . 4 8 2 -5 1 7 1 . 8 -4 -2 8 (3 ) b e d r o o m . O n e b lo c k t o M S U , S u m m e r o n ly . 2 -4 p e o p le . le a s e r e q u ir e d , n o p e ts . 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O n ly $ 1 0 3 . 3 3 9 -8 4 5 0 . 6 -4 -2 1 (4 ) L a rg e 2 b e d ro o m • p u s . 1 b e d r o o m fu r n is h e d . O rc h a r d S tr e e t. 3 3 2 -0 4 1 2 . F E M A L E N E E D E D fo r h o u s e $ 2 6 6 . 351 7 4 9 7 0 - 4 4 - 2 1 I5 I o r 3 7 2 -4 0 8 0 O R 8 4 2 8 (41 B R A N D N E W . m in t c o n d i­ t io n S o n y S t r 6 8 0 0 S D r e ­ [’»Pili Sinici n N o w le a s in g fu r n is h e d n e a r M S U . G re a t lo c a tio n . B O T T E C C H IA 10 s p e e d , c e iv e r a n d S o n y S S U 1 2 5 0 8 -4 -2 6 (4 ) C a ll 3 3 7 -2 1 2 7 o r 3 32 5 8 2 2 . FEM ALES 5 b e d ro o m a lu m in u m w h e e ls , a n t i- th e ft PRO M PT, PXPFOlti I fo r s u m m e r a n d SU M M ER S U BLET 2 bed­ S p e c ia l s u m m e r r a t e s s p e a k e r s $ 5 0 0 . 3 5 6 -9 0 7 3 . 7 -4 -2 8 (41 h o u s e . 1 b lo c k c a m p u s , s u m c a b le . 3 51 0 1 2 0 1 4 2 0 (31 ty p in g Eventngs Ä l ro o m , c lo s e t o c a m p u s . F u r ­ ACROSS FR O M cam pus, 3 -4 2 0 (5 ) fa ll n is h e d p lu s e x tr a s . C a ll 3 5 1 - 2 b e d r o o m u n its MSI s p a c io u s a p a r t m e n t , a v a ila b le A C R O S S F R O M B ro d y , n o w m e r s u b le t o n ly , b y r o o m o r C 2 0 4 28(3) e n t ir e h o u s e . F u rn is h e d . 3 5 5 - F IS H E R 1 75 r e c e iv e r 2 0 w a t t s Capitol V illa 8 6 0 0 a fte r 6 p .m . N o w la o i in g f o r s p r in g te r m . R e d u c e d re n t. a v a ila b le , 4 m a n . re fe re n c e s . 729 1 o r 3 5 5 7 2 8 8 3 4 2 0 15) L E IC A /L E IT Z 1 9 3 7 I lia $ 5 0 . l ll f , th r e e le n s e s , • fin d e r , p e r c h a n n e l, s u p e r F . M s e n T Y P IN G t e r m P a , * : ; 8 -4 -2 4 (4) C a ll 3 5 1 -8 1 3 5 ; 3 5 1 -1 9 5 7 o r Apartm onts f a l l a t lo w a t C a ll a ft a r I p m ’ 270 3 5 1 -2 0 4 4 . 0-1 0-4 -2 8 (1» ) 4 8 9 2 6 8 1 . 8 4 2 6 (3 ) m e te r , m o re , $ 3 0 0 ; W e tz le r s it iv it y $ 1 5 0 3 5 5 -8 9 9 7 th e s e s . I B M * T W O J U N E le a s e s a v a ila b le m ic r o s c o p e , c a s e $ 7 5 ; P o n y 5 4 2 5 (3 ) fa s t se rvice 1 -5 O f f I c e h o u r s L A R G E 2 p a r ty f u r n is h e d S O M E O N E T O s h a re h o u s e 332-5330 e ffic ie n c y , c lo s e c a m p u s , a ir 332-0052 in O k e m o s . M u s t lik e c h ild 5 3 2 G ra n d R iv e r, $ 6 0 0 / P re m o N o . 4 , s e v e n h o ld e rs 0 2 0 4 28(31 c o n d itio n e d . $ 1 9 0 fa ll, $ 1 4 0 s u m m e r. 3 5 1 -1 6 1 0 . a ft e r 5 HASLETTARMS re n . O w n r o o m la u n d ry fa c ili tie s , $ 8 5 / m o n t h . 3 4 9 2 8 6 6 m o n th a n d 1 13 7 A lb e r t , $46 0-' m o n th . D riv e b y a n d c a ll u s $ 7 5 . 6 2 7 2 2 9 4 a ft e r 6 p m 3 4 2 4 (7 ) Aaiaals P R O M P T T y p ,ng , T e rm p e p ers ,esum" * l , p .m ., 4 8 7 -4 4 5 1 . 0 1 3 -4 -2 8 (6 ) N O W L E A S IN G 5 1 3 H illc re s t, 3 b lo c k s f r o m c a m p u s . 1 a n d SIMMER l FALL X -8 -4 -2 L X 5 ) f o r a n a p p o in t m e n t a t 351 a te i, I B M 694 1541 2 M A L E ro o m m a te s n e e d e d 1 50 0. O R 9 -4 2 8 (6 ) W E P A Y u p to $2 fo r L P ’s b f o r O ld C e d a r V illa g e . S u m ­ 2 b e d ro o m s . Q u ie t re s id e n tia l LEASING N O W L E A S IN G f o r s u m m e r c a s s e tte s , a ls o b u y in g 4 5 's , B O U V IE R D E S F la n d re s , n ic e p e t a n d p r o te c t io n . B la c k , 10 06421131 a re a . 6 5 5 -1 7 1 7 . R ic k . m e r o r F a ll 3 3 7 -0 1 6 1 . 8 -4 -2 0 (3 ) UNIVERSITYVILLA 8 -4 -2 7 (51 351*2044 a n d fa ll. 2 -6 b e d ro o m h o u s e s . 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C a rp e te d , a ir, 3 5 1 -5 1 4 4 . 8 4 -2 8 (4 ) 351-2044 p o o l. 3 4 9 -0 5 6 8 a ft e r 6 p .m . m o n th . C a m p u s H ill. 3 4 9 - c a m p u s , b u s c lo s e b y . $ 90 3 B L O C K S fro m c a m p u s . 4 5 b e d r o o m h o u s e s R e n tin g f o r s h o ts $ 1 0 0 3 21 3 4 2 8 hi 4 5 7 6 a ft e r 9 :3 0 p .m . 3 3 7 0 6 9 0 . 3 -4 2 4 (41 G U IT A R A M P L IF IE R - P ee 8 4 2 0 131 re s u m e service Come ¿¡I 2:00 FEM ALE ROOM M ATE 351*8135 8 4 -2 5 (5 ) 8 4 21 I3 I s u m m e r a n d fa ll 3 51 8 1 3 5 v e y C o n c e rt M u s ic ia n . 2 0 0 a n d G ra n d River 830 |J life lo Live 0 11 4 2 8 (4 ) w a t t R M S , f u l l e ffe c ts , c o n 5 :3 0 p m Monday F i ^ J MSU SEC R ET AR Y needs w a n t e d t o s h a re 2 b e d ro o m E A S T L A N S IN G . N O R T H r o o m m a te ( s ) M a y 3 1 . H e lp O N E R O O M in 4 b e d ro o m s o le 3 4 9 1 01 8. 5 4 2 4 131 limati Sik -w a m 5 p m Saturday 33? h» gfosy a p a r tm e n t. N ic e c o m p le x . 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E f­ 6 -4 -2 6 (5 ) 2 3 10 a m 7 p m L a w n a n d D lM e n a lim ,5 ,J » J | O NE BLO CK FRO M C A M ­ o r J a c k ie . 1 0 -5 -2 (4 ) p u s C a ll 351 4 1 0 7 b e tw e e n A b a lo n e . p la in a n d d e s ig n s , In f ic ie n c y a n d 2 b e d ro o m g a rd e n to o l» , p a t io and F A Y A N N , 489 035# 1 P U S . 1 b e d r o o m a p a rtm e n t. a p a rtm e n ts . N e w ly r e d e c o r ­ FEM ALE ROOM M ATE 5 B E D R O O M house. S par 5 9 p .m o r S a tu r d a y c o m p le t e s e ts . P ric e s $ 15- nor Life h o u s e h o ld it e m s . C lo t h e s a n d C 2 0 4 28(3) H eat in c lu d e d . P a rk in g . a te d . 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M o r le y R o ta tin g IN F O R M A T IO N A L M E E T IN G S u n d a y , A p r il 2 3 , 5 p .m . W A H , $ 7 5 . X -8 -4 - 2 5 (6 ) T w o t r ip s t o G h a n a , N ig e ria , h g j W e a c E a c ; ACMI BUMMCO. SPARTAN R O O M F O R r e n t in h o u s e . L ib e ria A u g u s t a n d D e c e m ­ D E S P E R A T E L Y NEED C o rn e ll a n d B e e c h . C a ll 3 3 2 - p la c e t o liv e fa st 1 LansnjH M C TC U W M / M a ttre s s « * & Box S prings Q U A L I T Y U S E D e q u ip m e n t b e r, 1978. S p o n s o r e d b y m o d a h e ro in Lansing M UFFLER CENTER 6 4 4 1 . 8 -4 2 7 (3 ) a re a . W ill p a y $80 373® | (T l a t a fa ir p r ic e w it h w a r r a n ty . N A A A A . C a ll 3 1 3 -8 6 9 -1 5 6 3 . 9 a .m .-5 p .m 371 1566e * | T«M locations Now t ‘ BRAKES S U M M E R S U B L E T , 2 ro o m s P E 3 0 6 0 t u r n t a b le . $ 7 5 Z -4 -4 20(51 in g s . 5 -4 2 5(4) TW IN ’ S 4 . e s OVER 400QUALITY BIKES Buynow4 sow*on all modal» 4 nit •SHOCKS in h o u s e . 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G u a ra n te e d o n e fu ll S T E IN W A Y BABY G ra n d B o a rd in g , le s s o n s , h a y rid e s . sala; 1 p.m. sale t»™ rm l s u a l p illo w f u r n itu r e , la r g o T V 2for *50 T h e f e d E s ta te P l a c e y e a r. $ 7 .8 8 a n d u p . D E N N IS p ia n o , f r u it w o o d fin is h . F u lly r e s to r e d , r e b u ilt a n d re ­ 6 7 6 -3 7 1 0 . B L - 1 -4 -2 0 14) c a s h o t c lw c k „ AIIJ î ! J t | 16111. Mich. Ave., Lanting f lo o r s it t e r p illo w s . ■patito K X O s hagadcrn east Crsng D IS T R IB U T IN G C O M P A N Y . fin is h e d b y M ic h ig a n P ia n o W O U L D Y O U lik e t o s p e n d m u a i re g is te r. Noi PH. (617) 486-2508 Frandor 391*1747 220 Albert St. 332-1026 3 1 6 N . C e d a r, o p p o s ite C ity C o $ 5 6 0 0 . 351 4 8 9 2 . A u g u s t in t h e R o c k ie s in e ib is f o t a c c id e n ts day » " J I M a rk e t. C -2 0 -4 -2 8 I7 I w h ile o n prem ises, « I 8 -4 2 5 (5 ) T R IP L E A D IN G A N D W I L D ­ CATERING SERVICE PHOTOGRAPHY CARPET CARE E R N E S S S K IL L S C O U R S E ? a ft e r a o ld . M el W I * * M tio n e e r . P h on ® , NEW APPLECRATES F IL E C A B IN E T S , R e m in g to n - If y o u h a v e b a c k p a c k in g e x ­ S C O T T 'S a t W A Z O O . 2 2 3 A b b o tt . R a n d , 6 d ra w e r , 5 % x 8 p e r ie n c e c a ll D ia n a . 3 5 6 -0 9 4 7 . L a n a in g . 4-4 201221 THE YELLOW PAGES s 1 2 -4 -2 8 131 In c h e s , c h a r ts o r re c o rd s . C a ll 2 -4 -21 171 S p e c ia liz i n g Priceless Memories 4 8 7 5 4 1 1 . 7 -4 2 4 141 M A R IJ U A N A T s te a m ARE THE PUCE TD B O O K S -W E S T E R N A M E R I­ sored by the - I N - C A N A O Z b o o k s , n e w s e le c ­ I at a reasonable price. ’^ e x t r a c t i o n - t io n in s t o c k . 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X -8 4 2 5 14) d a y - F rld a y . For or appointment, | S E W IN G M A C H IN E S , s lig h t ­ B a s s - w it h h a r d s h e ll c a s e $ 2 9 6 . 3 2 3 -2 3 4 7 . 5 -4 -2 1 131 8266. 0-1-4 20 (91 ly used. R e c o n d it io n e d , H O R S E S H O E IN G - COR g u a ra n te e d . $ 3 9 .9 8 a n d u p . Y A S H I C A 12.8 le n s . K o d a k R E C T IV E s h o e in g a n d t r im ­ E D W A R D S D IS T R IB U T IN G I r lm lin e in s la m a tlc 2 8 . L ik e T o d a y'» beet buys i « 1^ m in g . A ll w o r k g u a ra n te e d . C O . 1 1 1 5 N . W a s h in g to n . n e w . $ 3 8 . 3 5 5 -7 9 6 3 . Classified section- | T o m L o g a n 6 6 6 -1 5 8 8 . 4 8 9 -6 4 4 8 C 2 0 4 28(61 E -5 -4 -2 4 131 8 -4 -2 5 I4 I y o u 're lookinfl *°f State New», to»* la m in g , M ichigan O PROFESSOR PHUMBLE cE ë m f y t ìv Ih iífIh iD íft e by Bill Yates SPONSORED BY: ri V P u th e t a s tie s t s o u th e r n ROCK BA N D W i l l RETURN I .1 WJIM-TV(C>S) M j ) j ^ j ^ ( ^ j _ _ ( l [ j VVELM-TV(C«ifale) ( I 2)W JRT-TV(ABC) ( 23)W KAR-TV(PBS) T. HURSDAY 4:00 7:30 (6) New Mickey Mouse (11) Christ's Teaching in tE R N O O N (6) Wild Kingdom Club Our Violent World 12:00 (10) Adam-12 (10) Green Acres 9:30 *8 (12) Mary Tyler Moore (12) Bonanza (12) A.E.S. 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(23) Electric Compony (10) Block Sheep Squadron (6) M 'A 'S 'H 332-3537 1:30 (11) News (12) Barney Miller (10) Johnny Carson he W o r ld T u rn s (23) Ch 23 Great TV (12) Forever Fernwood (of O u r L iv e s 6:00 Auction Continues (23) ABC News (6-10-12) News 2:00 l i f e t o L iv e (23) Ch. 23 Great TV Auction M SU S H A D O W S IS * r a il M A T R E osy (tl) TNT Ture Adventure by G ordon Corleton with this comic1 New Pete's1Albert at MAC 230 Trails under Moon's SPONSORED BY: gLight 6:30 W W A L lP C rg S In (6) CBS News lo r Life 'AT SoRfiV, U t D c a J 'T T R i A j H 4PPŸ FEET' (10) NBC News V/O_________________ 300 (12) ABC News I t e r W o r ld (11) Paving Poradise J r o l H o s p ita l i T h J¡ Today t Special; | e t t s V ic t o r y G a r 7:00 (6) My Three Sons (10) Mary Tyler Moore FRANK & ERNEST M > ■ U M IT O H A T I 3 30 (12) Brady Bunch by Bob Thaves SPONSORED BY: J " 11 * m t o m btaurant lie Family & L 203 M A C 351 -9111 Aleqre (11) Teevee Trivia ...A N D NOW , p o p A LU \ you « M f_ ADVERTISE peo ple w h fo O D , 5 0 M E D IS T u R ilM b IN THIS SPO T N E W 5 FR O M TH E Fo ^ D ICALL 353-6400 A N D D R U G A D M I N I S T R A T I O N . .. ® ® ^ , * H-20 " ! ?7 ':' .-'V fe t C AX lS T r,f ; VELS W ITH FARLEY L o w g a s p ric e s Plus THE D R O PO U TS CAM PUS - ml S ervice by Post SPONSORED BY: P, 737- 1 * 3 . Frank SPONSORED BY: I f ë i ' t tittle F reew a y • e r w le a I t e t i e e 1)01t Or River wouldyouetuFve n; savc* ? -* ■avt Si«d Child's plaything DOWN 4 Particular item *8 Interstices b Spike 41 Bone iN p R e rry g o o p s n a p s 1 Spotted cavy 6 Make lace 48 Assuredly 2 Eidoion 7 Thin layet ol gold 49 Plus . . F O R T H e S H A P 6 V O U 'R e i N !! 3 Chemist's vessel 8 Daughter ol Minos 9 flickering 10 Uraeus 12 Betel pepper 17 19 Tight Interprets BEETLE BAILEY 20 Flexible plant by M o rt W alker shoot 21 Strength 23 Yarn measure ( Am, G O O D / 24 Sayings MY ?S Opal FAVORITE.' 26 Adroit escape 34 Shadow comb form 36 Hawaiian doth 38 39 Tropical herb Ardor fe y - t 'W 40 Plantain, tor example 41 Asian gafflie 42 Author Clarence 43 Lind measure PBB levels Why (continued (rom page 3) He said the two studies question whether symptoms the participants have are a t all related to PBB. “If PBB is toxic the higher levels should show more symp­ toms," he said. Isbister said the fewer com­ plaints from the persons with higher PBB levels does not mean PBB prevented the symp­ toms. Tech Hifi. “We would have to use different tests and survey ap­ proaches to test for this," he said. “We would have to include some with no exposure to PBB and then see how it affects them." The studies also found that PBB levels were slightly higher in males and children. Children age 10 or less had more PBB in their blood than adults, while males showed significantly higher levels of PBB than females. The average age of the participants ranged from the early 20s to early 30s, with an equal number of men and women tested. The department’s field staff is continuing to visit the study participants to gather updated information about their health, public health director Maurice S. Reizen said. Additional blood We guarantee You can play in our samples will be drawn from a portion of the study group to recheck PBB levels, he added. “The data have only begun to everything. soundroom s. be analyzed and interpretation will be done after further analysis is completed,” he said. Reizen added that a final W e o ffe r y o u a s e le c t io n o f 1 0 0 q u a lit y b r a n d s . W h e n y o u b e g i n s h o p p i n g f o r s t e r e o , i t ’s i m p o r ­ report will take some months to prepare. A n d w e b a c k e ve ry o n e o f th em w it h o u r o w n t a n t t o f i n d a s t o r e t h a t w i l l le t y o u p l a y w i t h e q u i p ­ PBB, or polybrominated bi- pheynl, a toxic fire retardant, B u y e r P r o t e c t i o n P l a n . Y o u ' l l g e t it i n w r i t i n g , r i g h t m e n t . n o t j u s t l o o k a t it . A t T e c h H ifi w e e n c o u ra g e was accidentally mixed with Michigan livestock feed in the o n y o u r s a le s s lip . y o u to c o m e in t o o u r s o u n d r o o m s a n d p l a y a n y o f th e summer of 19?3. The error was not discovered until nine O u r 7 - D a y M o n e y b a c k G u a ra n te e p ro te c ts y o u 1 0 0 b r a n d s o n d is p la y . T e l l o u r p e o p le w h a t p r ic e months later. Since then, thousands of contaminated cat­ i f t h e r e 's a n y t h i n g y o u d o n ' t l i k e about how your r a n g e y o u 'r e i n t e r e s t e d in . T h e y 'l l s e t u p l o t s o f tle and chickens have died or been killed and residents claim e q u ip m e n t s o u n d s o r l o o k s in y o u r h o m e . W e g iv e s y st e m s fo r y o u to p la y a n d co m p a re . to have suffered illness. The consumption of food you s e v e n d a y s to re tu rn th e c o m p o n e n t s a n d get containing PBB has gradually declined since May 1974 as yo u r m o n e y back. N o q u e s t io n s a sk e d . animals and milk supplies were withdrawn from the market, O u r B u y e r P r o t e c t io n P la n a lso in c lu d e s a but almost all residents of the Lower Peninsula probably have had some exposure to PBB through food. 1 2 - M o n t h L o u d s p e a k e r T r ia l, a n d a 2 - M o n t h D e f e c ­ t iv e E x c h a n g e G u a ra n te e . O ur brand-nam e Bennet talk “packages” (continued from page 3) in a worse position. The Carter administration is doing little to correct the situation, he contin­ ued. We even g u aran tee E ve ry w e e k w e o f f e r s p e c i a l “ p a c k a g e '’ v a l u e s f e a t u r in g f a m o u s b r a n d c o m p o n e n t s . Y o u can buy a Carter is not working to help the people who put him in office, Bennett said. He com­ our prices. T e c h H i f i p a c k a g e f o r a s lit t le a s $ 1 6 9 , o r a s m u c h a s s e v e r a l t h o u s a n d . T h e p a c k a g e s h o w n h e r e is o n s a le pared Carter’s urban plan to “shooting a BB gun" at the t h is w e e k f o r $ 4 1 9 . It c o m b i n e s a r e f in e d N i k k o 315 problem. H ow lo w are T e c h H i f i 's p r ic e s ? S o lo w we s te r e o r e c e iv e r , p h a s e - a c c u r a t e O h m E lo u d sp e a k e rs, “We need a national urban development plan to eliminate gu a ra n te e th e m in w r it in g . I f a n y a u t h o r iz e d d e a le r poverty and change the face of urban areas. We need a Mar­ b e a ts th e p r ic e y o u p a y at T e c h H i f i w it h in 30 days shall plan for the cities," he said. a f t e r y o u r p u r c h a s e , w e 'l l r e f u n d t h e d i f f e r e n c e t o y o u . Bennett is author of numer­ W h ic h m e a n s , i t 's i m p o s s i b l e fo r a n y o th e r sto re ous historical works as well as senior editor of Ebony, a na­ to u n d e rs e ll T e c h H if i. tional black magazine based in Chicago. m ila CAMP SOMERSET FOR GIRLS CAMP COBBOSSEE FOR BOVS IN BEAUTIFUL MAINE O ur salespeople know w hat they’re '•'psm iCt.o^'T>0(Ultonsin(]!)enf ft'i t&eipf'tficea counselor *«th Pfflw ¿ny o' t0'i0*ing S*i"i Tiing AS': Silling Canoeing Altr Sluing SfuDa During Aichery Rrfgiry Tfnn.s ,(.'1 leamspo'ts fencing ijy"inastics ('ids & Aoodnno'lnng D'i'nal :s T•>pp.ng Photog'ipfiy ham Radio Hiding -fngujhi Can o' *>rtf try inIf)mation &application Act * a' ■pfnmgs til’ qutCWy1 Aftnttnum Age Required 20 ta lk in g about. *419 CAMP OPPICI, t o p » . 13 a n d a p r e c is e Sanyo T P 6 3 6 b e lt - d r iv e n s e m i-a u to ­ '5 l i 7 i l . N V . N V 10022 I) 7S2-SW W e ’r e h i f i h o b b y i s t s , n o t j u s t s a l e s p e o p l e . A l l o f m a t ic t u r n t a b le , w it h A D C c a rt rid g e . B IO T I M E u s k e e p u p w it h h if i t e c h n o lo g y , a n d w e e n j o y t a lk in g W e t h in k t h is c o m b in a t io n o f f e r s b e t te r a ll- W R E S T L IN G a b o u t it. S o w h e t h e r y o u ’r e a n e w c o m e r t o h i f i , o r a n a r o u n d p e r f o r m a n c e t h a n y o u ’ll f i n d a n y o t h e r p l a c e a u d i o e n g i n e e r , y o u ’l l f i n d u s g l a d t o t a k e t h e t i m e t o l o r t h e m o n e y . B u t d o n ’t t a k e o u r w o r d f o r it . C o m e e x p la in a n y t h in g y o u w a n t to k n o w . B e f o r e y o u p ic k p l a y in o u r s o u n d r o o m s t h is w e e k , a n d j u d g e fo r y o u r ste re o , p ic k o u r b r a in s . y o u r s e lf . $ M IR R B « s a n y o BOBO B R A Z IL TH E S H E IK d ||c O hm nu ou N p in v iiriin in '* ' U b ila a a s M M ii a te c h h if i Co-ilarrlng Iwcllla OwprM lu lld e g l o » r Maothar Faattiar Magnifican* Zulú Jim Olivar Tim Homton Cepf. Id C ao ig a O í la k a r M srk Scrlraa lu li M artlnat Tickst, 2, 2 ,4 1 5 .0 0 6 1 9 E a s t G r a n d R iv e r A v e ., E a s t L a n s in g 3 3 7 -9 7 1 0 I . lam ing Campai C a rn ai! 2 In M ic h ig a n : A n n A rb o r, D e a rb o rn , D e tro it, E a s t D e tro it, R o y a l O a k , M t. C le m e n s , R o c h e s t e r , S o u t h g a te a n d L iv o n ia . MSU Unían S t o r e s a ls o in O h io , N e w Y o r k , P e n n s y lv a n ia , N e w J e r s e y , a n d N e w E n g la n d .