Postal workers picket By JEFFREY MILLS of the New York City local of the American after July 20 even if the national leader* ■ WASHINGTON (AP) - Barely more Postal Workers Union, told the rally the union do not urge a strike. than a week until a negotiating deadline, Questioned later by a reporter, he said Vincent Sombrotto, head of the Ne postal workers came to Postal Service that in the absence of a negotiatin York Local of the National Association . headquarters Wednesday to protest lack of agreement, he would call a local walkout (continued on page 5) bargaining progress on a new labor pact. The slogan "no contract, no work" was frequently voiced at a rally near the Washington Monument and on placards carried by workers on a march to the Postal Service building. While local officials frequently threat Local letter carriers display ened to order work stoppages as soon as the contract expires, national leaders were more restrained, saying there is still time to negotiate a contract to replace the three support of national negotiations year pact that expires July 20. One source close to the talks said Wednesday that the two sides were making progress on some secondary issues, such as by taking their case to public work rule changes, but still had not tackled the two key issues of wages and union ByPAILCOX demands to retain a no-layoff clause in the State News Staff Writer contract. In conjunction with national efforts, members of the East Lansing National Associa Bargainers "are getting rid of some of the of Letter Carriers set up a one day informational picket line. underbrush, but nothing's happening on the main issues," said the source. Approximately seven members of East Lansing union branch 2555 walked the picket and distributed information in front of the East Lansing post office on Abbott Road. J The Postal Service has not made a pay McCaulev, president of the local union, said. offer since the talks began April 20. Three With national negotiations "bogged down" and the carriers contract set to expire . of the four unions, bargaining together, 20, local members wanted to take their case to the public. McCaulev explained. have asked for increases in wages and Postal workers across the nation Wednesday formed informational picket lines to protest the slow pace of The East Lansing branch's local contract will expire early in September and McCa cost-of-living allowances that together said local negotiations depend heavily on the terms of the national contract. negotiations toward a new labor agreement. Washington, D.C. employees turned out in large numbers for the would total 14 percent if the current 1 continued on page 51 one-day event. The current contract eapires in eight days. inflation rate continues. "If we don't get a decent contract, there is no work after the 20th," Mo Biller, head H dissident trials mentioned not Soviets get By BARRY SCHWEID may have consulted with the Kremlin U.S. arms question whether the dissident trials were plan secretary would wait until later in the talks to bring up the subject of the trials. GENEVA, Switzerland (AP) - Secretary during the four-hour break. impeding the progress of the talks. But upon returning to the U.S. arms "Trials, what trials?" he said. "I do not Vance has said repeatedly the human of State Cyrus R. Vance presented the Soviets with new American proposals to office here for an afternoon session, want to speak on the subject. You rights issue must not interfere with the limit missile systems as the SALT II talks Gromyko gave no indication of what he understand me correctly?" negotiations on a Strategic Arms Limita¬ Sometime during the two-day meeting, tion Treaty. A senior U.S. official said opened Wednesday without mention of thought of the proposals or how the U.S. displeasure over the trials of two negotiations were going. Vance is expected to give Gromyko a objections within the Carter administration to Vance's meeting with Gromyko were Russian dissidents. "We're not yet in the middle of our message from President Carter stressing U.S. concern over the trials of the dismissed because arms limitation was an Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko negotiations," Gromyko told reporters. "It called a recess after asking Vance a few is too early to make predictions." dissidents Anatoly Shcharansky and Alex¬ "imperative" that could not be delayed. Vance said: "You are right." ander Ginzburg. Vance's spokesperson added, however, preliminary questions about the American A spokesperson for Vance said the that Vance would emphasize to Gromyko plan. It was believed the foreign minister Gromyko also declined to answer a "the importance of dealing fairly not only with Shcharansky but all the dissidents." The American arms proposal is aimed at providing a breakthrough in the treaty POSSIBLE 11 YEAR INCARCERATION talks, which seek to limit new missiles and long range strategic bombers on both sides. The U.S. plan would restrict the missile modifications the Soviets could make dur¬ Ginzburg sentence asked ing the life of the treaty, until 1985. Under the plan, the United States would also reserve the right to develop the MX, a mobile missile system and also to build thousands of new silos to make the current By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Soviet Union." Carter repeated his claim that the allegation that arsenal of Minuteman missiles less vulnera¬ MOSCOW (AP) — The prosecution asked a Soviet court in Shcharansky was a spy for the United States "is patently false." ble by shifting them periodically from silo to State News Debbie Wolfe Kaluga on Wednesday to sentence human rights activist Toth said Wednesday in Washington that the statement he silo. Alexander Ginzburg to eight years at hard labor and three years in signed was a record of the interrogation by police about The source also said the Carter admini¬ Alice Leigh, a veteran East Lansing ice cream socialite, enjoys cold Siberian exile, court officials said. Shcharansky in June 1977. The statement verified the proceedings stration had made no definite decision "soup" at the annual Orchard Street Pump House event Wednesday. Ginzburg, 41, who is charged with anti-Soviet agitation and of the interrogation and that his answers were correct, Toth said. regarding production of the MX mobile propaganda, is scheduled to make his own closing summation "If I hadn't signed it, I would have been under a charge of missile system. The Soviet Union suggested Thursday. He is accused of disseminating literature hostile to the perjury," he said. "But the charge against Shcharansky is Soviet Union and running a fund to aid dissident prisoners. espionage, and there was nothing in my statement that could be In a second dissident trial, in Moscow, the prosecution Survivors describe fire ordeal used in an espionage case." introduced a signed statement by Los Angeles Times correspon¬ Toth said the investigation, conducted shortly before he ended dent Robert C. Toth as evidence that 30-year-old Anatoly his assignment in the Soviet Union, covered such questions as Shcharansky was a spy. Shcharansky faces the death penalty on where and when he met Shcharansky, how the Soviet dissident the charges. helped Toth on stories and how often they met. By FENTON WHEELER Wednesday of horrifying bur: and tourists Hospital officials said 14 persons di< President Carter, in an interview with European television TARRAGONA, Spain (AP) - Survivors scrambling madly over rock: and jumping Wednesday in the crowded burn centers Experts testified at a close-door session that the information into the Mediterranean t< Barcelona. Valencia and Tarragona, brin stations, said Tuesday the Shcharansky trial "is an attack on every Shcharansky gave to Westerners "is obviously secret and of the fiery gas-truck explosion that human being" and will arouse worldwide condemnation of the (continued on page 5) devastated a Spanish seaside campsite told leaping flames. ing the unofficial death toll to 139. Mo: than 250 were injured. The Swiss Air Rescue Service, whi< visited hospitals where of the injured are being treated, said ii ich there were riously burned who have virtualh no chances of ival." A gas tank truck carrying 1.518 cubic feet of propylene gas veered off the highway and plunged into a campsite 50 miles south of Barcelona at midday Tuesday, starting a fire and chain of explosions that engulfed Brrrrrrrrrrrng! the 500 to 600 campers, who were eating lunch in their tents and trailers. The body of the driver was not found. A Madrid propylene transportation firm. Cis ternas Reunidas. took responsibility and investigation has been ordered. Ma Bell lets it ring without coins said an Minoca Kosta Korgen. 34. of West Germany was in a trailer with her husband and son when the fire roared over the camp. the fast uld." By PAULA DYKE 'on the go' to place calls quickly," Archie D. McQueen, Michigan i : State Newt Staff Writer Bell suburban manager, explained. Korgen said. "Then I came back and pulled You're stuck downtown without a ride home. You spot a pay my son into the water with me." "But they are also an advantage to us," McQueen said, "because But somehow she was separated from phone, rummage through your pockets and voila! You find six lousy cents. "A lot of good that's gonna do me," you grumble. You find they are less costly to build and maintain than our standard pay him. She has not seen either her son or her yourself cursing Ma Beli phones." husband since. Someday this scene will be a distant memory. It appears Ma Bell McQueen said customers who try to dial a local call on the new "It was something that if you were not is attempting a reconciliation installing Michigan's first "coinless" there you could not imagine it. Terrible phones will get a recording. Local calls can be made through the from all around. I saw persons pay phones in Lansing. cries came The new "Charge-A-Call" telephones, however, are designed to operator, he said, but the customer would be charged 50 cents for burned beyond recognition." the operator's assistance. accommodate only long distance calls. But instead of scrounging One 28 year old German woman was around for 20 cents, the customer simply picks up the receiver, Four Charge-A-Call telephones have been installed in Michigan flown to Germany for treatment, along with dials "0" and then the telephone number. so far. All four are located in Lansing: two in the Capitol City 30 other compatriots. Before his call is placed, an operator comes on the line to ask Airport terminal, one at the Hospitality Inn on 1496 and one at "1 felt a heat wave on my back and Don's Auto-Truck Stop at M-78 and 1-96. how the customer wishes the call to be billed — either collect, to a third number, or to the customer's credit card. Warren B. Alexander, Michigan Bell assistant vice president, W instinctively plunged into the water." she "The new phones were developed to make it easier for people (coatiauedon page 5) Thursday. July 13. 1978 Michigan State News. East Lansing, Michigan Republican tax plan criticized WASHINGTON I AIM - / cent a for the next three ael Blumenthal used the capital gains, which are year sponsored by Sen. William V. same on tax cut plan that Republican years spur the economy enough Roth. R Del., and Rep. Jack forum to pilch for Carter's own profits from the sale of stocks insist will pay fur itself is ; to bring in more revenue than it Kemp. R N.Y., provided the one year, $15 billion tax cut and other assets. Republican pipe dream that could lead to ; would cost the Treasury. claims that the reduction would most thorough Democratic re¬ plan and to assail the Roth disastrous round of inflation Charles L. Schultze, chairper sponse yet to the bill that Kemp bill as "sheer waste." send stock prices soaring and •siden arter's chief eco son of the Council of Economic The Carter administration's the economy "border on Republicans have vowed to spur r ad vis r said Wednesday, Advisers, told the House Bud sheer make a national issue in this tax plan is "of a magnitude fantasy," Schultze said. no way" could the get Committee. election year. appropriate to the needs and of about 10 per His criticism of the plan. Rep. William Steiger, R Wis., i Treasury Secretary W. Mich- capacity of the economy," Blu menthal said. "As in most seems to have the votes to cut the maximum capital gains tax things in life, moderation is a Meeting to discuss Vietnam war dead held I'REDH THMS SA V TWO DECADES virtue; too much of a good thing from about 49 percent to 25 will produce economic indiges percent, if he can get the bill to tion, not improved economic a vote. The administration's HONOLULU AP A Vietna¬ Vu Hoang head of the Vietnamese all-out opposition to that bill Weather control sY OU-C AN>K AT! BARBEQUED CHICKEN CORN ON THE COB, SALAD »3.9S JacobBoriB, COMING NIXT WIIKt BRYAN LIB ®|p)01fi)D®lfi) No way to justify triples Tripling students in a dormitory justify tripling. But all the maybes and mights room is wrong. Even if a state Obviously, the only place to are totally beside the point. court overturns Attorney General decide whose interpretation of the Tripling students in a dormitory is Frank Kelley's interpretation of a law is correct — Kelley's or MSU's wrong. Should the University find 1917 Michigan housing code — as — is in the Michigan courts. If it itself in a court suit actually the University expects will happen should ever make it that far we defending tripling, it will find that — it is still wrong. Even if the would guess that a court would what little credibility administra¬ Michigan Legislature were to decide the attorney general had tors now enjoy would be reduced modernize the law to take into read it correctly. There really is even further in the student mind. no other Do the economies of tripling really account improved ventilation sys¬ place to catagorize a tems and decide that people need university except in a class "B" outweigh the potential alienation only 200 feet of cubic air space — it environment along with jails, — especially to those 1,000 new is still wrong. Even if it makes hospitals, retirement homes, etc. freshmen who will be experiencing sound economic sense to plan for Because universities are not enu¬ the surprise of three bunkbeds in a tripling and even if tripling takes merated in the 1917 law is beside room designed for two? care of itself in a term or two the point. They have to be Despite the tardiness and poor anyway — it is still wrong. classified somewhere, under that timing of Kelley's opinion — he We are wholeheartedly sympa¬ particular law, and "B" is the only was asked to make a decision thetic to the University's conten¬ logical category. almost two years ago — the ruling tion thai Kelley's opinion was If the courts wouldn't satisfy the does bring to the surface a poorly timed and thus places an University, then their next move condition the University has never unfair onus on MSU. But in no way could be to exert a little influence conceded as being a problem .Even v does that justify the University's on legislators in an attempt to if they do term it a problem in a You're probably wondering whv 1 m mm To call ui all together,., * continued use of tripling in its modernize the housing code. May¬ semantic sense, their actions be improved ventilation should be budgetary plans. The University speak otherwise. The fact that Worrying about America was correct in terming some taken into account. Maybe a law administrators plan for tripling provisions of the 1917 law "archa¬ should address itself to the pecu¬ during the fall to ensure full ic" and it was also right in refusing liarities of a university instead of dormitories in the spring tells to make any changes for the ignoring them as the law presently students the University has sound Nazis make us sick. streets of 1978-79 school does. Maybe humans don't need Chicago and other big through the motions of being year based on economic principles, but it also We hate writing about them, we cities. Violence, for them, is a way mortal. But is he really? Or is he, in Attorney General Kelley's opinion 500 cubic feet of air space (We did re-affirms suspicions of the Uni¬ hate talking about them, we hate of life — it has always been cool to the eyes of socially-warped inner- of the law. But again, that does not survive the tripling experience). versity being impersonal to stu¬ thinking about them, we hate beat on blacks and despise Jews. city youths, attaining immortal¬ dent needs and desires. them. What especially makes us But how do they feel when one of What is frustrating is that the sick at heart, however, is that in ity? their own verbally stands up to the Only time will tell. Except that University seems to have made a the eyes of the U.S. Constitution imagined evil to tell the world that it might not just settle with telling. conscious trade-off between eco¬ a document we — firmly believe it can't stop people from hating Time could bring shouts, de¬ nomic realities and tripling com¬ has the ultimate answer to all who they want to hate? mands, ultimatums — all of the plaints without really examining social dilemmas — we as journal¬ It is too easy for us, a couple of worst and then some. What how they could be flexible and ists are in the same constitutional hundred secure miles away, to say happens when the Ku Klux Klan satisfy both concerns. boat. Frank Collin is a flash in the pan realizes they have something in For instance, many students The First Amendment, in addi¬ that will go away when the media common with the Nazis? And then find out they don't really like the tion to being color-blind, gender- does. Frank Collin does not go freedom of off-campus living and blind and age-blind, is also philoso¬ someday maybe the John Birch away; he lives in Marquette Park. Society? God help us, where does would rather move back into a phically-blind. Nazis have as much He is now, at this minute, going it stop? dormitory. The extremely inflexi¬ right as the New York Times. In a ble dormitory contract makes this historical perspective, maybe next to impossible. Many people — even more, since the Nazi line of students, professors, administra¬ logic is a definite denial of the bemoan the decline of The tors — academic excellence, citing poor status quo — a quality of rebellion State News ] journalists are proud to lump student/teacher ratios as one themselves with. It is just that the reason. It is only a start, but 1,000 Thursday, July 13, 1978 Nazis' perception of the evil Editorials ore the opinions of the State News students could be refused admis¬ inherent in the status quo is so far Viewpoints, columns and letters are personal opinions sion for the 1979-80 school year from our perception that it is next Editorial Department without a denial of our land-grant to impossible to draw parallels. Dave DiMortino philosophy. And speaking of ar¬ But they do exist. 'Olowskl Sporfs Editor Mike Kfocfce chaic, what kind of rule is it that Nazis are a joke. Deborah Heywood ichel/e Chambers mandates 18-year-old adults will But there is nothing funny about Copy Chief Kenneth £ Porker Patricia LaCroix Staff Represeni DonielJ Hilberl live in a dormitory during their the 14- and 15-year-old toughs of Ko'hy Ki/bury freshmen year? The point is: there Marquette Park wearing White are alternatives. But they can only Power T-shirts emblazoned with Advertising Department be considered alternatives when swastikas. Sure, those type of kids Advertising Monoger Bob Shaffer Assistant Advertising Manoger the University finally concedes — and the parents who produced that, indeed, tripling is wrong. them — have always roamed the VIEWPOINT: FEMINISM Pot smokers are halls staff members who are vainly attempt¬ ing tu achieve some of the nobel educational goals of this collegiate institution. Equality is women defining woman lousy role models In the midst of a national renewal of interest in values development and values I have By ANNE FERYOK never felt that I set my standards virtually incomprehensible. Others, such as the assertion that "many women in the poetry, art, conversations, classroom dis¬ cussions) generated by this most recent, an intellectual level, but on economic, social, physical and psychical levels as well. (To. In your editorial of. tJuly 61. entitled. education in higher education, and where too high for a college publication such as the movement for the most part, ((sic)) insisted feminist movement! not to mention those of state otherwise is to remove the basis for "Furbush settled too easily," you argue that appropriate peer and adult role models are State News; if anything, my standards have on denouncing those qualities of social the past) shows this to be patently false. theories such as Marxism.) As far as Larrowe and Ferency should have pushed desperately needed, the State News strives been lowered to take into account the distinction that make equality possible.. ." Women in the feminist movement do not inherent differences go, we do not even the case to the limit since ". . . this for the lowest common denominator. Good possibility that these would-be journalists reek of ignorance. What is social distinc¬ need or desire the "social distinction" of know what is inherent — and everything (as particular case had all the potential of being Show! are "learning by doing." But sometimes I tion? Does Ryder mean plucked eyebrows, men. (Which is to say, those qualities that far as I can make out) in Ryder's article is a landmark." Your basic argument rests on wonder how much learning has been done painted faces, shaved legs, and bodies allow men to mutilate, terrorize, and not inherent. "Women who wear the the premise that "... a contract should be by both writers and editors. distorted into bras, girdles, and pantyhose? oppress women and other "inferiors" such armour of masculinity" are women who are worded so RA's could enjoy the same The article entitled "Rights Should Be These less disfiguring but similarly created, as blacks, third and fourth world nations.) feminine in every sense of that word as it is negligence enjoyed by the rest of us. Earned", attributed to Holly Ryder, is a enacted, and perpetuated rituals are re¬ Feminism is a celebration of differences, of defined by man. If, however, Ryder means without breaking any law." Come now. editors, if this is really the kind of landmark Oliphant garbled case in point. It is poorly written, poorly punctuated, poorly reasoned, and virtually lated to the more barbarous rituals of foot-binding, genital mutilation, and gyne¬ individuality; it is the reclaiming of women defining what women are. Feminism as by that phrase, women who do not look and act in accordance with those feminine the State News holds in high esteem. God ignorant of the issues in the women's cological and medical practices that have serts that women have never had the models, all I can say is whatever one does is help us from such lofty ignorance! Turkish society movement that Ryder considers. It is one not only maintained the legal inequality of chance to be individual, independent, and natural or one would not be able to do it. A collegiate institution is expected by its thing to express a knowledgable opinion; women, but the physical, psychical, econo¬ different in recorded history — because Self-actualization (for women and for public to be in a position to lead the society, The quite another to bandy about terms like mic and social inequality as well. Or does women have always been defined by men. men) can not begin in earnest until women to give it positive direction, to create and cartoon on Monday's (July 10) "polarity," "equality," "a balance of oppo- social distinction mean the back-breaking Women who denounce their male created are equal in the sense that men are equal: transmit knowledge which will help the "Opinion" page, depicting Turkey as a sites," "the premise of the individuality of labor women have had the "legal right" to human sexuality become independent — for sexual¬ free to define ourselves as we wish, as we rights violator and greedy arms contrasting factors," "qualities of social do for no wages, low wages, and less-than society rise above its mediocrity, to ity, like feminity and women, has been are. Only then will women earn their rights. transmit the best of the society's culture, to purchaser not only reflected State News' distinction," et cetera, in the guise of a equal wages? defined by men. This is the connection usual editorial ignorance but also was Anything less than self-definition and self- instil and to help develop within its knowledgable opinion. Exactly what does Ryder mean by between feminism and lesbianism; it is a determination is a grant from the op¬ students the higher order values that factually erroneous. To refute Ryder's opinions and miscon¬ asserting that these movement women positive experience. It is women who pressor, an attempt to buy us out, another Anyone who has a minimal understand¬ ceptions in depth and point by point would have "replaced them (qualities of social continue to be defined by male sexuality distinguish the educated and the educated token victory. And let us not forget that leaders from those who are ready and ing about the regimes of different countries take several pages. Some, such as "Inde¬ distinction) with those of men?" Even a who are joined — quite literally — to their what is earned can indeed be taken away. ' and their current governmental policies willing to settle for the least acceptable. pendence exists on the premise of the cursory awareness of the literature (arti¬ oppressors. Feryok is a Senior in the College of Arts and. would recognize that Turkey as a demo¬ What your editorial argues for is hardly in individuality of contrasting factors," are cles, pamphlets, books, speeches, music, Furthermore, equality exists not only on Letters'honors progrom cratic country with no known human rights consort with these expectations. violations can not be presented in the same What your editorial argues for and what Furbush and his supporters imply by their light as a non democratic country where DOONESBURY actions and their specious arguments is a such violations might be common practice. Letter Policy by Garry Trudeau ; level of behavior and performance on the Besides, Turkey's legitimate and modest The Opinion Page welcomes all Utters and expectations for military cooperation as a part of an employee of this institution that full fledged NATO ally do not bear any viewpoint!. Readers shouldfollow a few rules see, be way you know, player an¬ i dunno, dutch, you're oh, that's is hardly worthy of emulation. More to insure that as many letters as i figure it, whatsort alysis. whos up, who's talking about sous never right. nice relationship to unreasonable and wasteful possible importantly, the more subtle but abundant¬ appear in print mum in- of inside not, wht&playing pretty ieayy duty scam. better. tm picwrein arms purchases of certain countries. ly clear message to resident students and s«>e dope, dope, am¬ hurt, who's playing it could cost, too. HOU/s in the mob -newsweek; Furthermore misrepresentation of All letters and ine aue mi? high, that sort of your sop money situa¬ now. by the wan. to others is that if the majority of us do it, it viewpoints should be typed Turkey in terms of such tasteless and on 65-space lines and triple-spaced. Letters cleanup, thing.. tion? \ ■is perfectly OK. The archaic looking figure is both offensive and and viewpoints must be signed and include lo¬ duke- > V posturing of the State News. illconceived. For the State News' informa¬ cal address, student faculty or staff standing Furbush, Ferency, and Larrowe on this tion. contemporary republican Turkey does -if any—and phone number. No Utter or issue during the past month has certainly not have much in common even with the viewpoint without these items will be consid¬ resulted in a loss of staff moral among the ered for publication. Ottoman Empire of more than half a entire staff of the Residence Halls Program Office. And, with due respect to a great century ago. Letters should be 25 lines or Uss and may Bulent Turtat be edited President. Dr. Edgar Harden, although for State News styU and concise¬ well-intentioned, his $200 grant may have Diltek Turtat ness to fit as many Utters as possible on Allan Coner a page. Viewpoints may be no longer than 75 assuaged Furbush but it was nothing but 1206 University Village lines and may also be edited. salt in the open wounds of the residence I Michigan State News. East Lansing, Michigan Thursday. July 13. 1978 5 r<. -V Prosecution seeks 11 years in Ginzburg case Coinless (continued from page 1) constitutes a state secret of the sky "had nothing to say" about the statement. she said told her Ginzburg was suffering from high blood pres The resolution, adopted on a vote of 380 10, describes the telephones U.S.S.R.," said a court official Toth has denied he ever sure. Sources attending the three trials now under way as (continued from page 11 briefing reporters on the trial. worked for an intelligence trial said he was ill and had "deplorable events." which said about 400 of the new phones will he installed received an injection. could in major The official gave no details of agency. "impose obstacles to the Michigan cities by the end of the year. The Lansing East Lansing the statement and did not Ginzburg's wife Irina was In the United States, the building of confidence and coop¬ area will receive 55 additional barred from the Kaluga trial eration" between the United Charge A Call telephones, mention Toth by name. But he House of Representatives ap Alexander said. said it was signed by "a foreign again Wednesday because she proved a resolution Wednesday States and the Soviet correspondent, a witness, who would not promise to refrain condemning the trials of politi It also calls on Soviet leaders Eighteen of the new phones i- field t lonths ii from outbursts in the court cal dissidents in the Soviet "to seek humanitarian resolu the Bay City Midland Saginaw last McQueen said. was questioned during prelim¬ a area year, room such as the one Tuesday Union, but some members con¬ tion" to these and to work inary investigation and who cases Almost 6,000 long distance calls were made from the phones when she called a witness a liar. tinued to demand sterner ac towards improving the climate cooperated with the military during the trial period, indicating to Michigan Bell that the phones At the end of the day, she tion by Congress and the Car in U.S. Soviet relations. intelligence service of a cap uld be s •essful elsewhere. McQueen said. ■ italist state." He said Shcharan talked to a court doctor who ter administration. Soviet court official Geogry r ' A. Novikov said a total of 25 The company plans to install the phones at locations where long witnesses had been heard, in distance dialing is prevalent. This would nclude airports, bus eluding seven he said testified stations, roadside rest areas, hotels and State News/Susan Tusa No contract, no work, rally in D. C. for the defense. Ginzburg has been convicted campuses. No, it's not George ol the Jungle, but it least it's Charge A Call telephones will stand 54 twice previously on the charges. them accessible to i good impersonation. High temperatures and handicappers. Alexander (continued from page 1) dent of the 181,000 member yet," Vacca said. mostly clear skies Wednesday drove many students Letters Carriers, made the National Association of Letter to the nearest body of water for a quick dip, but Signs carried by postal work¬ same threat. Cariers, agreed. "We have ers also it appears as though some prefer to jump rather a complained about the But President Emmet An than wade. drews of the 299,000-member serious resolved impasse. We haven't one good, solid item influence of President Carter's anti-inflation program on the Owen refutes charges of Huffman APWU, when asked about the possibility of a strike, said, "Nobody knows about that. We are going to try to negotiate a Letter carriers march (continued from page Huffman also implied that 3) test before being hired into his various government jobs. n«- of Michigan" the SALT proposals given contract. . . "I have heard nothing about i continued from page 1) Owen has received several rapid pay increases which he In a telephone interview with a Lansing State Journal re [• Burea any slowdowns. I know nothing He explained that local contracts never vary much from the did not deserve. porter, Huffman said. "Any¬ ring I about that. There may be precedent set on the national level. Owen said he stands behind (continued from page 1) body else would have had to fraud case in which four Michi¬ something on the local level," Better working conditions and a "fair shake" economically are the the original Free Press state lake the tests. Every state insurance in a meeting last spring that all new missile systems should be gan companies were he told reporters. major concerns of the East Lansing branch, McCauley said. ment. He said his own research banned until 1985. But the United States rejected the proposal employee should be screaming billed $6.5 million by a Califor However, when he spoke "We have to produce extra work to earn a coffee break in the also showed that Huffman vot¬ about this." because it would preclude testing the MX. rna firrr: called Central States ol later to the union members at morning, just like hack in grade school," McCauley said. "We only ed against five key amend¬ Owen American concern over the Soviet's growing missile power is said civil service America. the rally, he said, "Our policy is get five minutes to change (clothes) in the morning. Heck, that's ments which were designed to one of the main obstacles for exams were not required for He implied that the Insur completion of an arms treaty. no-contract, no work." make the lobbying bill strong- Another major stumbling block is the Soviet Backfire bomber, potty time. the positions he held, which which About 1,000 workers, most of "We just want to get into mainstream America and buy groceries include Executive Director of which the United States claims is a strategic weapon whose them from New York City, sponsible for regulating Michi- just like everybody else," McCauley said. Owen. in a counter-press the Governor's Mental Health production and deployment should be limited. attended the rally. Buses late McCauley said he does not understand why Presient Carter has conference held at the Owen for Program, Assistant Director of for the rally brought more for told postal management to hold wage increases for letter carriers Senate Headquarters in Lan¬ Policy in the Michigan Public the march to Postal Service down to 5 or 6 percent a year when other industries get much larger sing on Wednesday afternoon, Service Commission and Dep headquarters and picketing in read from a prepared state¬ uty Commissioner of Insurance charge Domestic violence bill front of the building. Andrews told reporters, our "I don't understand why he (Carter) picked us. He definitely hurt negotiating position." McCauley said. ment and distributed copies of a two-page biography which list¬ within the Michigan Insurance Bureau. • of any "There has been no agreement McCauley said he is not sure what will happen when the contract ed previously-held jobs. Owen said he was rated as (continued from page 3) on any important issue yet." expires July 20 hut emphasizes that most of the local letter carriers Huffman had charged that "well qualified" by civil service "With the amount of money this program was funded, it begins Joseph Vacca, national presi¬ enjoy their work and want a contract. Owen never took a civil service personnel officials based on his to look like a bill designed to fail so legislators can say, 'look, we job experience and education. didn't need it,' " she said. He said he was rewarded with Kathleen Fojtik, director of the SAFE House in Ann Arbor, was of 1 he pay increases over a period of i also critical of placing the program in DSS. "The advisory task force on domestic violence voted unanimous¬ Rules governing bicycle safety seven years which reasonably reflected his hard work and a politician to do ihese days is take cheap shots at govern¬ ly on more than one occasion that a shelter program should be dedication. mental employees." he said. housed in the Department of Management and Budget and not in Owen said he could not "I believe Mr. Huffman's DSS. Everyone who testified before the committee said the same (continued from page 3) bicyclists can be ticketed just as pie going the wrong way on the "DPS only gives a few tickets understand why he was being irresponsible charges prove the thing," she said. will be impounded and may be a motorist can. one-way circle drives." Zutaut and tries to keep you on the criticized for his ability to earn point that I have been making Sue Ashby, director of the Rape Spouse Assault Crisis center in reclaimed at the DPS upon "To reduce the chances of an said. paths," he said. "1 think that pay increases and become eligi¬ since day one in this campaign." Muskegon was more optimistic about the bill. ' proof of ownership and payment accident, obey all traffic laws." "The biggest safety hazard on anyone who gets a ticket from ble for better jobs through the he continued. "I was of the opinion that the DSS would not be the most of the established impounding he said. "Most bikers have campus is pedestrians getting DPS should fight it. The catch Owen claimed the state Sen¬ years. effective place to put the program if it would become another fee," DPS literature reads. never had training in how to hit. People stepping out of word in the law is useable" bike Huffman, a member of the ate is run by a small, tight club bureaucratic structure," she said. Besides what the handout ride a bike properly. buildings getting clipped is not paths. I don't think the paths .Senate appropriations commit of men of which Huffman is the However, she said the board rather than a departmental sheet explains. Zutaut had some "Our biggest problem is peo uncommon," he added. are safe." tee, called Owen at least partly leader. structure may prevent the "typical bureaucratic maze." other regulations for bike op¬ "One million dollars isn't going to go very far, but it will help us erators to follow. document the need for more money for more shelters." she said. The law requires suitable Sharon Wills, administrative assistant to the director of DSS, brakes, a white light and red slew's defended the department from criticism, saying unless the back reflectors, Zutaut said. Legislature appropriates adequate funds for programs the He added that running stop department cannot provide i signs and red lights is illegal and :MI:| I-; CHAM) HI VIA I Women's abuse center awaits vote (continued from page 3) help fund a shelter. However, they will have to "The city of Lansing has no The services include crisis EVERYTHING FOR SUMMER . . . match state funds 60 percent to money in its budget and has no support and counseling, emer¬ 40 percent. This means they funds to finance this project," he gency health care services, legal would have to put up $6 for said. assistance, financial assistance, every $4 from the state to He said if the Oldsmobile land housing assistance, transport receive state funding. Young said CADA "will be interested in applying for that is used for $6,000. a shelter that it will already cost the city $5,500 to assistance and child-care Lansing does have an ser- Open If you see it on the floor funding." Matching funds would not be Door Crisis Center which offers She added that CADA will the only problem Lansing would 24-hour counseling, but does not not know for a few months have if they want state funds. yet provide any other services it's % whether they will be able to or price or more Melinda Remer, an adminis¬ for women. need to apply for state funding. trative assistant in Rep. Wil- In discussing the proposed Ingham County Board of lian Bryant's, R-Grosse Pointe site both councilmember Blair Commissioners chairperson Farms, office explained that and CADA coordinator Young Debbie Stabenow said she as¬ any community asking for fund¬ said they would prefer the sumed CADA will be applying ing must already have not less proposed Lansing shelter site for the state money. But she than three services for women's location not be publicized. said she doubted if Ingham County would match the state Jackets Sweaters funds. "We've just submitted a HOBBIES ARE grant on behalf of the council. A BLAST Since the to county's been willing match on one grant I would / Dresses Pants sf like to see the (Lansing City) Council help out." she said. The city of Lansing, Blair said, probably will not be able to Flips Blouses Jeans ESTES ROCKETS • Radio CONTROL CILIBDATI BASTILLI DAY sQr-tt PlANES * M0DEL ELECTRIC TRAINS JULY 14 920 Trowbridge (N»«t to Hobl.t) 332-6344 Tops Shorts T-Shirts Swimsuits Halters Bags Skirts Scarves Thursday. July 13, 1978 £ Michigan State News East Lansing. Michigan Tom Robinson: gay and very glad By JOHN NKII SON ample, is hopelessly cloying, the average, middle-class, State News Reviewer and "Right on Sister" is a bit American Joe who follows Mention "political" music to hard to stomach. Also, "Glad to "Happy Days" religiously and is That uncertain urge most rock fan* and they think he Gay" is marred by its more than happy with his Styx almost immediately of the HOs sing songy chorus, which may collection. He'll write off the Dylan. Jefferson Airplane. work in concert but sounds band as a bunch of paranoids, By RKNAIJH) MKJAI.DI CSNY. peace, civil rights Black simple minded on vinyl. despite the fact that Nazis are Robinson's songs are most marching across the front page State News Staff Writer effective when they follow the of his local paper. "Frank?" they'll tell you: another music example set be Elvis Costello, Perhaps Tom Robinson could "Nngh." for another time. who always married his sexual improve his chances here by Frank, wake up." the '70s? The dealing with universals rather But what about politics to classic rock 'n roll "Nngh. mrr.." tunes. Tunes like "Don't Take than specifics, a la Dylan. On She rolled over. "Frank, what time is it?" war has not eliminated hatred No for an Answer," "I'm All- the other hand, this might "Mm. I dunno. God. my head's booming." The fact that civil and distrust. right. Jack," "Up Against the compromise his vision, which is "Frank. I hope you don't take this the wrong way. but 1 rights are guaranteed under Wall" and the title track prove the last thing he seems likely to feeling a little strange." the law has not eliminated that the TRB is a great rock do. "Huh'.'" racism and prejudice. Our soO hand that just happens to play "We want rebel music, street "Oh. God Penise got out «>f bed and ran out into I music," the album cover pro¬ . . kitehen. I stretched, opened my eyes in the streaming in political songs. afraid, and it ha- become con Even more important to this claims. "Music that breaks morning window sunlight. I heard her yell: "Omigod. it's aim. servative tothe point that even album's success is the question down people's fear of one 10:30! I'm gonna get fired for sure!" She rushed back into t fascism seems chic. Yet our of whether Robinson's lyrics another. Crisis music. Now most popular songwriters are w ill r i liste music. Music that knows who "I didn't km Well, tf yoi trying to anaesthetize u* with this side of the Atlantic. Con the real enemy is ... to stand cepts like Whitehall, the Front, aside is to take sides. If music •membered r i heated up. hey?' I reached for hi nothing but "Pust in the Wind." Notting Hill Gate, and even the can ease even a tiny fraction of feeling of desperation that per the prejudice and intolerance in past year and a hall, the lorn vades many of the songs will this world, then it's worth Robinson Band ha* made a probably be totally foreign to trying." n't party broad and u England a.* an overtly political the liner notes, band. Their first impact was ster who can't get felt in gay circles when Robin id a glass of orange juice in her hand. The ■aster, littered with empty beer bottles, abort i< yer best mate getting Paki bashed (similar to album i whos deal Morris the cat dies the furniture. She 'ooked at me, smiling. queer bashing hut aimed at swers will ultimately make or up with anthem* such England's Pakistani minority I. to be Gay." A top of break the band in this country. CHICAGO lAP) -- Morris, the orange-colored alley cat who Hi. What time did everybody finally leave?" hit with "J -I H s Mot. or sent down for possessing one The first of these is whether became known in the trade as the Clark Gable of cat food television She chuckled, laid her head back. "Hell. I have no idea in the oint of marijuana it's the pointed and controversial commercials, is dead at the age of 17. the same time helped . . . wor id I went to bed early and told everyone to just turn off the everyday life for rock fans lyrics detract from the rock n The tomcat was found by pet handler Bob Martwick in 1966 in a claim a national follow . . lights when the last person left. I think that was about 3:30." With the A merman : The TRB has encapsulated roll, or. to put it differently, Chicago humane shelter. Martwick was looking for a cat to be i his vision of the way things are whether the music on Power in trained to star in 9-Lives cat food commercials. the TRB's first album, in almost every song that the Darkness is merelv a vehi¬ "Morris had been picked up by humane officers in a Chicago the Darkness Harv.e "No'"' they've put out. most of which cle for Robins* teal har 11778). audience* in t alley. He had been in a fight and was disturbing the peace," said .ire included in their new al Pamela Talbot, spokesperson for Star-Kist Foods Inc. "No one fina; never get that upset about being a halt hour late, don't you?" i Robinson A. t o. f. bum. i A second disc containing For the the claimed him. and no one seemed to want him because he was Hm. I guess you're right." both sides of the "Motorway" scarred up. One ear had been bitten and was a little ragged and s. And judge thi You know what it is? It's you. It's not you. it's herself. She must, because the TRB i* not *ingle. the four songs from there was a cut on the inside of one eye. But all this gave him his keeps putting herself in situations she can't deal with. To her band one can listen to v ■hout their Rising Free LP. and one interesting expression, a certain jauntiness. It made him the Clark vou're a friend, but when she gets a little drunk, she forgets other song has been included second disc. "Martin." for i Gable of cats." committing oneself f vbe thos against Robinson's p No aid. A few points should I i differ lear from the -tart, "What '! I've been trying for years to understand all these irst off. Tom Robinson hangups women seem to have about who they sleep with . . but Punk. His background i* mid the heli with you anyway, it's between me and Penise." die class, his music is '70* hard Yeah." Ponna grinned and threw a newspaper in my face. I rock, and he definitely wants t<> laughed. The water in the bathroom was still running. Ponna be a star if he can do it by leaned forward and lowered her voice: "Frank, it might be good singing about what he feels is for you to leave before she's out of there," Also. Robir impc I thought for a moment. "You think so. really?" She nodded. eake - I sighed. "Yeah, all right." I went back into the bedroom, put on my shoes and threw my shirt over my shoulders, and headed back into the front room. "Ponna. make sure and tell her I'll call her tonight, all right?" "Sure, don't worry." Ponna said. I liked her. she was OK. I went to the door, opened it. "G'bye." I said. CELEBRATE "Bye Frank." I stepped out. squinting in the morning sun. BASTILLE DAY JULY 14 ACTION AUTOMOTIVE BRAND NAME AUTO PARTS, DISCOUNT PRICES, AND PARTS PEOPLE WHO KNOW PARTS "Make ¥ it easy on yourself" BRING YOUR FAMILY & FRIENDS * FOOD SPECIALS ALL DAY * FOLK ENTERTAINMENT I Action Coupon B * DIXIELAND: THE GERIATRIC SIX PLUS ONE ■ i * Delco THE BARRIE BROTHERS ■ ■ Freedom Battery | ■ ■ ■ * MAGICIAN * FOLK AND BELLY DANCING * PHOTOGRAPHER * OUTDOOR SIDEWALK CAF£ * FRENCH FOOD BEGINNING IN THE STREET AT 4 PM ACTION AUTOMOTIVE ( wsi 1 j hm s I....I cm., s. ( •-> j BASTILLE BLOCK 1 MAC 351-3535 > Michigon Stote News, East Lansing, Michigan Thursday, July 13, 1978 British Open and St. Andrews: they always fit together perfectly One By BILL MOONEY day a number of years ago, in 1946 to be more precise, Sam Snead was riding a train from London to St. Andrews, a rustic little courses The he had ever played, he respected St. Andrews the most. British Open, undoubtedly the most prestigious golf tournament outside the United States, is being held there this week Ross looks toward NHL Scottish town bordered by the unpredictable expanse of the North — for the 22nd time. Sea. Snead was enjoying the trip, noting names, until inexplicably There's something about St. Andrews and the British Open that By JERRY BRAUDE leagues in hope of making it to "When I came out of MSU. I stronger, probably because perfectly fit together, and I suspect that it has a lot to do State News Sports Writer the National Hockey League. decided to give it a two-year they're older," Ross said. he found himself passing some acreage that was so ragged and seems to After taking most valuable "There is more strategy in¬ beat-up that no self-respecting Virginian would ever consider with the Scottish attitude toward golf. Compare it on a Ever since All-American attempt to make it there (the NHL)," Ross said. "I missed the volved and tighter checking. In championship level with golf in the United States. AH of the great Tom Ross left the MSU hockey player honors last year for the planting even cow beets on it. He was even more surprised to note Kalamazoo Wings, last half of my college, we used to shoot the that there was what appeared to be a fairway amongst the weeds. and famous courses in this country, Augusta, Merian, Pebble scene after the 1975-76 season, Detroit first year when I Beech, Oakmont, Winged Foot and so on, require either Spartan fans haven't had much Redwing's affiliate in the Inter hurt my knee, and I didn't start puck in and then go in there like "Say," said Snead (who was on his way to play in the British crazy. But in the IHL, you have membership or sponsorship by a member before you can play on to cheer about in Munn Ice national Hockey League, Red playing last year until Christ¬ Open) to a gentleman sitting across the aisle. "That looks like an old, to pick up certain players." abandoned golf course. What did they call it?" them. Augusta, where the Masters is played, is particularly known Arena. Wing General Manager Ted mas. So, I've played a year so far when you combine the two." The tighter checking in pro The gentleman, who as it later turned out was the Duke of for this attitude - hell hath no wrath as that directed toward the The only thing that keeps the Lindsay is giving Ross a tryout uninvited who dares to take a divot from its consecrated fairways. fans in good spirits is recalling this fall. When Ross left the Spartans, hockey isn't something that Something-Or-Other, was indignant. "My good sir!" he replied. Ross he was drafted by the St. Louis would work to Ross' advantage "That is the Royal and Ancient Club of St. Andrews, founded in With due regard to Snead's distinguished acquaintance on the the memories of the glorious hopes to get a contract Blues and was sent to their because of his 165-pound 1754. And it is not now, nor ever will be, abandoned!" train, St. Andrews is different. The links are open to anyone who years when Ross, Steve Colp, to move up to Kansas City, part wants to play, with the stipulation that ladylike and gentlemanly John Sturges and Daryl Rice of the Red Wing's farm system. Port Huron affiliate where he weight in only a 5-foot-6'/z Aye, that would seem to be the case. In an area of the world that frame. behavior be observed at all times. It is not surprising, during a walk rewriting the Spartan A contract from Kansas City tore ligaments in his knee. His has withstood foreign invasions, plagues, famine, drought and were "I wouldn't mind across the four courses that make up St. Andrews, to come across a record book with their potent will bring him more security. contract was then traded to the being a few three Parlimentary bans on golf (during the 15th century), the links inches taller, but I have to retired captain of the Cunard Line, school children, elderly matrons offensive abilities. With an IHL contract, a player Detroit Red Wings at the close play of St. Andrews survive. Bobby Jones once said that of all the with the out "for a bit of sport" and a young lord or two who matriculate at Ross led the nation in scoring only gets paid when he is on the of the season, who then sent height I have. team. But with a Kansas City him to Kalamazoo. "But I can't let what other the local university. Entire families can be seen on many of the tees. in 1974 75 and 1975-76 and took It's pleasant, and reaffirms one's faith in such Scottish traditions as All American and Western Col¬ contract, if the team disposes of Ross finds himself playing people say bother me. It all close-tied communities and parent-children relationships. him, they are still obligated to in the IHL than in college, depends on how you look at legiate Hockey Association more smaller players. They may be (WCHA) first-team honors dur pay him for the remainder of and he feels the players are more susceptible to injuries, the contract. better. Weiskopf loses his ing both seasons. While the hockey team has been displaying its own version "Right now. it's like a and see type deal." Ross said. wait "There are only three lines and five defensemen, and so but they usually are quicker and can slip away from hard checks. of the "Ice Follies" the past "If I don't play well at training you're always out there con¬ "I have been on a weight early lead to Aoki couple of years, Ross has been venturing into the minor camp, then I won't gel a contract. stantly skating," Ross said. "The players are bigger and program, and, hopefully, it will make me stronger," Ross said. "I go up to Minnesota once in By MORLEY MYERS UPI Sports Writer a while to visit Tim McDonald and Mark DeCenzo," Ross said. ST. ANDREWS, Scotland I UPI) - Tom Weiskopf. heading for a tournament record, lost his concentration over the last "I get along really well with four holes Thursday and surrendered the early first round lead Amo (Bessone, MSU's hockey of the $225,000 British Open Golf Championship to unheralded coach I. It certainly didn't hurt Isao Aoki of Japan. playing under him." If Ross doesn't make it to the The 35-year-old Weiskopf, who won the event in 1973, covered the 6,933-yard St. Andrews Old Course in a NHL, he would like to get into three-under par 69 after threatening to break the championship coaching. This summer, he is round record of 65, set by fellow American Mark Hayes last completing his bachelors de¬ gree in Health Education with a year. minor in coaching. With 54 of the 155 player field back in the Victorian club "I enjoyed the schooling at house, Aoki held the early lead with a 68, one stroke ahead of MSU," Ross said. "It gave me Weiskopf. Ray Floyd, Australian Jack Newton and Seve Ballesteros of Spain. something else to do besides hockey. At Kalamazoo, we Weiskopf was left to reflect on his possible shot at the record would skate in the morning, after posting five birdies in an outward 31 and picking up and then I would have the rest another stroke at the 10th to go six under. of the afternoon with nothing to The 6-foot-3-inch American from Columbus, Ohio, covered the next four holes at par before collecting his first bogey with a do. I know a lot of people in 5 at the 413-yard 14th hole when he landed on a divot with his Kalamazoo, including my sister- eight-iron and then chipped 25 feet past the flag. in-law. which fortunately gave But it was at the 461-yard 17th where Weiskopf really suffered with a double bogey six — all because of a lapse in me something to do." Ross walked into the concentration. Jenison weight room to get in State News Robert Kozloff shape for training camp this fall, continuing his endeavor to Former MSU hockey great Tom Ross, shown scoring against Wisconsin in 1976, impress upon someone in the Former MSU standout playing in the minor leagues, hoping to eventually make the NHL. NHL that he has enough talent » his lack of size. paces NationaVs win SAN DIEGO tUPI) - The 15th defeat in 16 seasons. All American boy delivered the all-important base hit and that, Garvey's triple leading off the eighth inning ignited a essentially, was the story of the 49th All-Star game. four-run rally and snapped a 3-3 tie. The former MSU football Steve Garvey, the Los Ange les Dodgers' superstar first player also had a two-run single baseman lived up to his image in the third inning and was voted the All-Star game's MVP once again Tuesday night in for the second leading the National League to a come-from behind 7-3 victory, years. In 1974, he was the MVP dealing the American League at Pittsburgh after a 7-2 Na¬ its seventh straight loss and tional League triumph. Thursday. July 13. 1978 g Michigon Stole News, Lost Lansing, Michigan ' 'r- "''SSSfflBI a. . ■' - " • Clauifitd Advertising Employment M Apartments Apartments For Sale % Animals . V [Typing Service Wan!Kl X EAST LANSING Fall, 1 bed 100 USED vacuum cleaners, ANGLO LIPIZZAN horses, COPYGRAPH SERVICE FEMALE ROOMMATE want¬ Information lOOKS AND dishwashers Neat, clean and de RESPONSIBLE MATURE room furnished, air, utilities, 1 year warranty, $7.88 and bred for dressage and jump¬ Complete dissertation and ed. own car, $87.50 plus . i"T(.ii non smoking male for apart 332-1758. X 8 7 17 balconies, parking. $220, up DENNIS DISTRIBUTING ing. Call 349 1574. 8 7 13 (4) resume service. Corner MAC utilities. Call after 9 p.m. PHONE 355-9255 347 Student Services Bldg. n'l'il.ibie Apply in person merit $230. 374 6366. 0 17 7-31 14) COMPANY. 316 North Cedar and Grand River. 8:30 a.m.- 332-5713. 8-7-21 (3) 3 BEDROOM 482 2677. C 17 7 31 15) FREE KITTENS: 7 weeks old. 5:39 p.m. Monday-Friday. apartment, $215 month till September. 332 2210 after 5:30 p.m. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Saturday. Give your basement a break! 1 day • 90c per I 1137 Albert Street 332 8353 CEDAR VILLAGE MOST LP'S priced $1.75 E 5 7 20 131 337-1666. C 17-7 31 (71 Sell those extra items you no 3 days • I0£ per or 351 1500 4 7 19 (41 APARTMENTS $2.50. Cassettes, $3 quality longer use for fast cash. Call Ham i j 4 i guaranteed. Plus 45's. song MIXED COON hound, 1 year, EXPERT TYPING by MSU today to place your Classified 11.so 14.00 6 days • 75« ptr Now Leasing for Summer housebroken, grad. 17 years experience. J J70 7.20 NEAT. NONSMOKING books, more. FLAT, BLACK Family dog. ad! 4 340 1100 m40 Idoys-70C per C 17 7 31 13' BOOUE AI RED CEDAR RIVER AND CIRCULAR, 351 0761. 4-7-17 (3) Near Gables, call 337 0205. roommate for 1 bedroom upstairs, (too woo Near MSU. $110 332 1312 or 351-5180 541 E. Grand River Open 11 C 17 7 31 (3) DAY CARE in my Southside i 17 00 M40 HiFR WANTED a.m. C 16 7 31 161 FOR LEASE Arab mare rid¬ home. Prefer pre-schoolers. 1± 332 3744 between 5 9 p.m ~t~ ♦ » 14.00 Jl SO WW 3 7 17 15) den English. Experienced TYPING TERM papers. IBM 882-6218. 5-7-19 (3) -■ nice but r FURNISHED APARTMENIb BLACK DIRT, sod farm soil. rider. 332-8277 evenings. experienced, fast service, Call and benefits. Apply available for summer. Swim 8 7 21 (3) 351 8923. 0 17-7 31 (3) WANTED TO exchange: I 1 Approximately 5' > yards de¬ EconoLines ■ 3 lines '4 00 5 per Thank you for mmg pool, 2 month leases at livered locally. $40. 641-6024 Four bedroom house in Can¬ i only CINEMA X AFGHAN PUPS- 11 weeks. 3 lines. No od|ustment m rate when ENTERTAINMENT very reasonable rates. CAM¬ or 372 4080. Fill, sand, gravel, berra. Australia for similar Price of item(s; must be stoted m od cominq back to PUS HILL 349 3530. 3 7-1415) With AKC papers, $70. No Garage cluttered? Sell those available also 0 17 7 31 (6) extra bicycles fast with a house/apartment near MSU 1000 W Jolly papers. $35. 669 9419. sole price of ''00 17 7 31 <13) during period November 1978 FURNISHED APARTMENTS 10 7 27 (3) quick-action Classified ad! Peanuts Personal ads • 3 l.nes *3 25 per OVER 25 years to July 1979. Please contact COCKTAIL WAITRESSES. available for summer. Swim¬ OPTICAL DISCOUNT. 2617 Dr. John Eulenberg, Com¬ 75' per line over 3 Imes (.prepayment Rummage Garage Sole ads •2 50 :-iv I or 2 positions available. ming pool. 2 month leases at E. Michigan. Lansing. Michi L lost I Found UNIGRAPHICS OFFERS puter Science Department, 63'per line over 4 l.nes per .nser»o< Aoply RAINBOW RANCH, TERRACE very reasonable rates. SEVEN THIRTY ONE, 351-7212. gan C 4 7 14 14) COMPLETE DISSERTATION MSU. 355-5210. 5-7-19(11) 2843 E Grand River, East LOST CAT- small, male, AND RESUME SERVICE 'Round Town ods • 4 lines '2 50 per i 03 7 14(5) 63* per line over 4 l.nes Lost t Founds ads Transportation ods • 3 Lansing 2 7 14 l5» LAWN CARE and odd ROOMMATE FOR 'fully fur JULIETTE STEREO, 2 walnut speakers, good condition, orange tiger. Albert Street between Division and Bailey. type setting, IBM offset printing and typing, binding. Round Town £j jobs. $50 or best offer. 332-8260. Reward. Call 355 2361 days, For e !, stop ii t 2842 50' ( mshed. Pool, sauna, air. 882- per.r . $3 50 -our 349 1620 E 5 7 13 (3) 351 2754 eveninqs. 4 7 14 (51 ASMSU PREPAID Legal Ser¬ 8 i 26 :3) 8556 10 7 26 13) vices plan now makes legal MINOLTA SRT 101. Body FOUND WOMAN'S watch services available without fee Deadlines TELEPHONE solicitors ROOMMATE NEEDED for to undergraduate MSU stu¬ and case. $85 353 8918 or near Delta Street. Call 355- EXPERIENCED. IBM typing, 59 Salary DUPLEX ONE room, central carpeted, air conditioned, 2 Ads • 2 p.m. • I class day before publicot.on I time P m 349 3827. 5 7 20 (3) 4505 days; 351 3808 even dents. Office open 9 a.m. -12 bonus EASTLAWN immediately, furnished bedroom apartment. Close to dissertations, (pica-elite). Cancellation Change i p m - 1 class day before m air ings 2 7 1314) FAYANN. 489 0358 p.m.; 1:30 p.m. - 5 p.m. MEMORY GARDENS, 349 669 3719 or 351 0829 campus $90 including utili¬ Monday-Friday. For informa¬ publication BRUBECK DIRECT to disc C 17 7 31 (31 9-56 8 7 21 '5) 6 7 14 (31 ties 332 7514 4 7 14 15) tion or appointment call 355- Once ad is ordered .»cannot be cancelled or changed recording Brand new, in stock. MARSHALL MUSIC, 8266 0-8-7-21 »9I until after 1st insertion SFlF SERVE gas station 2 BEDROOM, furnished, Houses East Lansing, C-1-7-13 15) THESIS, TERM papers There is a M 00 charge for 1 ad change plus 50 per a"endants neat polite, hon from $205 month. Available typed, Quick Quality. 332- MSU SALVAGE Yard- open additional change for maximum of 3 chonges est with retail cash handling fall. UNIVERSITY VILLA. SEWING MACHINES slightly 2078. 0 14-7-31 (3) to the public every Wednes¬ FURNISHED DUPLEXES for The State News will only be responsible for the 1st Apply at 315 E experience. 351 2044. 351-8135 used, guaranteed, $39.95 and day from 11:30 a.m. day's incorrect insertion Ad|ustment claims must 0-16 7 31 141 2. 3 c 4 persons. Available up Open arm chairs from Recreation [fi 3:30 p.m. 4-7-19 14) summer and Or fall 669 9939 It's time to think about be mode with.n 10 days of expirot.on dote $89 50. EDWARDS DISTRI 08 7 14 .3) summer fun! You'll find the Bills are due 7 days from ad expiro'.on date If net BUTING CO 1115 N Wash STRAWBERRIES-PICK your boat you've been searching Thank you for own 35c per pound. Open 7 paid by due dote a 50' la'e service charge will be due s JMMER a* EMPLOYMENT ROSELAKE WILDLIFE coming back to ATTENTION dents large GRAD spacious quiet 4 stu¬ ington 489 6448. C 13 7 31 161 a.m. on picking days. Well behaved children welcome. for advertised in today's Classified section! ADVERTISE your Oarage Sale bedroom newer house. research CENTER GIBBS BERRYLAND. South tbroucjh work study program. BURCHAM WOODS Immediate occupancy, $390 VISIT MID-MICHIGAN'S of Onondaga, 1 -628-2663. 3^3 9358 7-7-17 151 Now filled for month 669 5513 0-5-7-13(51 largest used CURIOUS BOOKSHOP, 307 bookshop. 3-7-14 161 Wauled X IN THE kitomtive ^ summer-Just few HASLETT. 2 blocks from ^ Auto Service legal SECRETARY East La"s.ng law office Legal left for fall. a beach 3 bedroom, furnished, E. Grand River, East Lansing. 332 0112. C 13 7 31 15) RUMMAGE SALE1 Ai TWO ROOMS for two wom¬ in house for fall, have CLASSIFIED ADS four or five adults. $360 en exp-'nence only Good skills. Make a month 332-4076 8-7-20 (4) DOUBLE BED. mattress, dogs, prefer country setting. AUSTIN small MARINA economical 4-speed 1974 Can 351 6200 7 7-21 (4) reservation now foundation. & frame, excel¬ MOVING SALE- 13161 Uni¬ versity Village. July 13-14,9-6 Please call 332-7356, keep Call 355-8255 AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY, lent condition. $100. Kitchen trying. 8-7-26 15) $800 Call 321-4417 8 7 26:3' WORK IN exchange for flying Baby furniture, clothes, at CHEQUERED FLAG FCC JEWETT AIRPORT in efficiency $175 own room in 3 bedroom table & 4 chairs. $35. Couch p.m tir-eat modem duplex Near Forest fabric, other items. 2-7-13(4) E'GN CAR PARTS 2605 E.v Mason 1 bedroom $210 & chair. $25 End table. $10. BUICK REGAL. 1975- cru.se Openings Sunday, Akers. $110 month plus utili¬ 38,000 miles, power steering, Kalamazoo S' 487 5055 o- Wednesday and Thursday. 7 2 bedroom $290 Fall 337;0627 5-7-19J6I YARD SALE 6235 E Lake 394 4494 A career in law— ties option. brakes, & windows AM EM. dm 3pm 676 4860 YAMAHA FG110- 6 string Drive, Haslett. July 15 and 16, Call between 12-5 10 7 24 16) 5 7 19<6) 9 a.m. - 6 p.m. Books, games, air. $3250 355-5988 8-7 24i5i acoustic guitar $65. 349- 351-3118 2650. 5-7-19 13) miscellaneous. 2-7-14 (4) SOMEONE NEEDED to share CADILLAC. must be seen. Best 355-7913. 3-7-14 <31 1974- loaded, otter 321 3651 C-17 7 31 3 PERSONS NEEDED to code surveys, work study required. Sec Man'een Murphy, Room SUBLET JULY 30 • Septem house Own nea' room, Meridian Mall. $90 month. WANTED: USED albums. $1-2 a disc Bob or Mike, Service 'S, without law school. ber 13.1 bedroom apartment, Phone 349 2866 e 7 14 (41 MASON BODY SHOP 812 E 8 Student Services. 353- 332 8457 or 351 1225 furnished, pool, air, close to What can you do with only a bachelor's degree' 4414 FREE LESSON in complexion CAMARO. 1974 blue, must 4-7--17_W campus $150 332 7121 EAST LANSING- semi fur 8 7 24 13) Now there is a way to bridge the gap between an sacrifice. Steering, brakes Ui.-•.-r.-coiiisio mshed for 3 or 4. Call Craig. care. MERLE NORMAN 332-3478. 3-7 14 (3> SUMMER CAMP positions 8 7 19(41 COSMETIC STUDIO 321- undergraduate education and a challenging, responsible stereo American foreic 655 1255 after 6 p m LIVING ROOM furniture 2 career The Lawyer's Assistant is able to do work tradi¬ Male counselors, specialists 0256 C ' 7 7 3 6 7 14 13) chairs, one with ottoman; 1 5543 C 17 7 31 141 for waterfront b arts crafts, SOUTH SIDE 2 bedroom tionally done by lawyers. CHEVETTE. 1976 automatic sofa; 2 end tables. $85 com¬ secretary CAMP TAMA¬ apartments, dishwasher, air WEDDING FLOWERS, low Three months of intensive training can give you the excellent condition, 38,000 GOOD USED t HOUSE FOR rent Okemos plete 351 1820 after 5 p.m. RACK. Brighton. 1-229-9166. conditioning, carpet. Call cost top quality, full service. skills-the courses are taught by lawyers You choose miles. $2750 355 8025 -nth Mounter Bnarwood. Unfurnished 4 E 5-7 19(41 4 7 '7 17' 394 5369 noon to 9 p.m. 623 6545 R 7 17 (3) of the seven courses offered—choose the city in bedroom, references and de¬ which you want to work. X 10-7 21 15) dog let s OF East Lansing posit required. Available DINING TABLE wood- FOR QUALITY stereo ser Since 1970, The Institute for Paralegal Training has CUTLASSS 1972 automatic September 1. 9-12 month chrome, $75; chairs $45; TV ivrmg kitchen personnel for vice, THE STEREO SHOPPE. placed more than 2.000 graduates in law firms, banks, Vinyl top, radio. $950. 2 door 351 3625 7-7-14 <3> fad starting July 17. Apply in Only a few left!! lease 349-9162. 7-7-21 l7l antennas $10; speaker en¬ closures $35; dishwasher $10. 555 E. Grand River. and corporations in over 80 cities person 131 Albert Street. C 17 7 31 (31 It you are a senior of high academic standing and are 332-8050 E 5-7 19(4) interested in a career as a Lawyer s Assistant, we d like DATSUN. 1974 260Z 2-2 air. 4-speed. 49.000 m..es Motorcycles 5 7 19 Waters Edge Rooms INSTANT CASH We're pay WILL BABYSIT in my Haslett home, prefer 4 years or older. to meet you $4000. 351 4025 8 7 19 4 COUPLE TO manage apart - • Reduced Summer rent SHARE BEAUTIFUL home, YAMAHA 350 road b'ke. ing $1 $2 for albums in good 339 2793 5-7 13 (3) e for an interview with c DATSUN B210. 1974 great from *160 own room, close, non- shape. WAZOO RECORDS, 351 1690 2 7 13 U No experience required. 337- smok.ng. 332 2170. 5-7 19 (31 223 Abbott. 337 0947 shape. $1850. 374-6067 aher tior • Two and four person 5 p.m. X-8-7-21 13' 1846 3 7 14 |4> apartments C 17 7 31 141 Typing Service ii We will visit your campus on ROOM FOR RENT for rest of DODGE DART, 1971- 6 cylin¬ Employment ji EAST COAST RANT recruiting July 18, 19 RESTAU¬ • Walk to campus summer, close to campus, FOLDING CHAIRS- we have PROMPT, EXPERIENCED, TUESDAY, JULY 18 Call Bob. 351 6472. 5-7-19(31 70-80 folding wooden chairs typing, evenings, 332-3492. der, automatic, 2 door, air. manager trainee • a Excellent opportunities in the 1050 Watersedge Dr. to sell. They would be great C-17-7 radio, runs beautifully. $750 restaurant profession. Sign (next to Cedar Village) CAMPUS NEAR, summer for first apartment furniture, 31J3) ^0586 8-7-24^31 i^yree willing to relocate up now at Placement Bureau 331-4432 From $65 month. 485 1436. porch furniture, church ANN BROWN typing. Disser¬ DODGE VAN 1971.8passen Student Services Bldg. 0-6-7-14 (3) bazaars, community rooms or tations-resumes-term papers. The Institute for Cnet Aasko Meridian "n-j Z4 7 19 (6> 601 Abbott Road. North en¬ ger, V-8, automatic, power EUREKANEAR Sparrow, meeting halls. A real buy at steering and brakes 337 r-s 349 2702 Monday Friday one bedroom upstairs apart¬ CLEAN. QUIET, close, no cooking, parking available. $2 each. Call LANSING trance. 351 7221 Paralegal Training between 1pm and 4 30 pm at 321-3534. C 17 7-31 (4» 1594_317J4J3: FIAT X' 19 1974 Excellent 6 7-77 For Rent £ ment, parking, available now. $135. 351 7497. 0-3 7 14 141 135 Beech. 351 0631 3 7 13 (4) MALL OFFICE 3-7-17 (10) TYPING, EXPERIENCED, ?3f« South 17th Street Philadelphia Pennsylvania l Operated by Paralegal Inc stereo, special exhaust, extra BABYSITTER CARE «o- 2 -EfRlGERATOR. STEREO. fast and reasonable, 371- FLAT TOP guitars, largest wheels, asking $2400, 332 t \ Rentals, free delivery ROOMS FOR rent, close to selection ever. WILCOX 4635. C-17-7-31 (3) 351 1816 before 2 pm or 372 1795. 8175,_351-4484 4-7-17 i3i aft..-' 8pm 8 7 13 4 r on Off campus Thank you for campus, $60/80 month. Call TRADING POST. 485 4391. FIAT. 1975 128SL. 35 mpg STE MAR MANAGEMENT. C 15-7-31 (3) $1500.1-313 733-5629 after 5 MFDiCAL TECHNOLOGIST. coming back to 351 5510 4-7 14 (4) p.m. FORD Z-4-7 17 (3) STATION wagon reasonable Apartments ROOM IN deluxe townhouse. ^ BEECHWOOD MEN, WOMEN- summer, cooking, parking, campus There are tion plenty of good buys in the automotive sec¬ of today's Classified PEOPLE REACHER 1972. 4-door. ling ! Filled for s close. 327 Hillcrest. 337 9612 pages. You'll find the car 337 0086 you've been searching for! WANT AD pr.ee, must sell pool air. 5 minutes campus, or 332 6118. 3 7-14 14) Apply at Per A few left for foil. between 6 p.m 7:30 p.m. sonnet Office LANS'NG summer fall option. 393- 4-7-13 (41 8622 8 7 19 '4t ROOMS FOR rent, $98/ COMPLETE STEREO system, GENERAL HOSPITAL 2800 month utilities included, close excellent condition, best FORD GRANADA 1976 Ghia Devonshire, Lansing. Mic:hi to MSU and busline. 489 offer 332 1806 8 7 20 (31 must see to appreciate. qar, 48909 372-8220e*t 267 Just complete form and 5025 5-7-19 (4) $3500 393-0013 4-7 19 <3| 5 7 13(111 Thank you for If your house has become mail with payment to: OLDS DELTA Royale. 1974 EXECUTIVE LEGAL sec* cominq back to FALL; NEED two females to overrun with pets, you need a convertible excellent condi¬ •arv Have ability to com¬ Call 12-5 fast-acting Classified ad! Stale Sews Classified Dept. . share large double room. municate with public, excel tion, loaded, original owners, ten' skills Legal experience 332-0053 Excellent house, location. ,14? Student Services Bldg. $3600 663-3182 3 7 14(4) helpful not essential $11,000 DELTA ARMS 337-0590, Ann. Leave mes Hast Lansing, Mich. 48823 -age. 3-7-17 15) NOW LEASING TR 4 1965. Body nice, runs to start Submit resume to SOUTH HOLMES- near $220, 332 1856 after 5 p.m. Bo* A 1 State News, 347 PGR SUMMER A Student Ser.vces, East Lans now filled Sparrow, one room upstairs FEMALE, OWN room, bright 8-7 2413) efficiency. Cooking, share clean house, huge yard PALL TRANS AM. 1976 FM 8 bath. Prefer male. $75, 351- Close. Available n~- 1142 for summer 7497 0 4 7 14 15) Albert. S-5-7-20 (3) City cassette, rust-proofed. $4200. AUDIO TECHNICIAN exper _ 351 5714 3-7 17 (31 lericed, full time Apply at and fall THE STEREO SHOPPE. 555 Doyltr VAN. 1970 Ford Custom Club E Grand River C 4 7 14 '41 1978 MAZDA GLC Preferred Inieftion Date Wagon 123 Automatic, V-8, clean interior Excellent care. STORE DETECTIVES call SHARE 2 bedroom with (Great Little Car) 641 4562 between 10 a m male. 32. $125 plus utilities, $1250.349 1568 3 7 14 (4) *3395 freight and dealer prep additional and 3 p.m Monday Friday deposit. 332 7343, keep try- 25 characters in a line, including punctuation and spaces between words. 0 17 7 31 (3) ing. 3 7-14 14) EPA rated highway 44 mpg Don't be deserted VEGA. 1974, Notchback. Standard shift, $600 or best Check out Print Ad here offer. 349-4458 4 7 17 (31 location Location COUINGWOOD ARTS! VEGA HATCHBACK 74 3 *oir conditioned speed, 49,000 miles good CEDAR GREENS APARTMENTS 'dishwasher condition, $800 Evenings Now Leasing 'shag carpeting 351 6996. BL-2-7 14 «3» 'unlimited parking 3 LINE MINIMUM • furnished apartments • swimming pool '2 bedroom CIRCLE RATE WANTED VW SUPER Beetle 1973 month 'model open 6.000 miles on rebuilt engine, • » or 12 leases available • air conditioning • within daily cioEraintniininic! 332 2349 238 walking amine] crimca en dean, no rust. distance to campus 9 month leases only *320 amocnracDEaco Kedzie. 3 7 17 141 special rates available for fall COOK-HERRIMAN, INC. mmnnmEOEnEnm VW RABBIT. 1977 green. 1135 Michigan Avenue call 351-8282 6135 W. Saginaw - West of Lansing Mall AM'FM, C3 unit, S3500 (behind Rollerworld E. Lansing 351-8631 371 3671 atler 5 p.m 321 - 6900 the river) I |?Z | Mi I Ml IMI Si IIIIOJI Ml I 8 7 14 131 (next to Brody) on Michigan State News, East Lonsing, Michigan Thursday July 13, 1978 HAGAR the Horrible RV (12) Emergency One! (6) News (23) Mister Rogers ^ A Cat r . T^k) ^ TODAY'S SPICIAL (10) Sanfordand Son 5:30 (23) Poldark II 12:20 (23) Electric Company FRANK & ERNEST SPONSORED BY: (6) Almanac 6:00 by Bob Thaves iL AZTICO RESTAURANT 12:30 (6-10-12) News (6) Search For Tomorrow (11) TNT True Adventure (10) Gong Show Trails (12) Ryan's Hope (23) Dick Cavett FRANK and ERNIE'S -this ONE COMfii 1:00 (10) For Richer, For Poorer (6) CBS News 6:30 WATERBEDS with a Foam (6) Young and the Restless (10) NBC News (12) All My Children (23) Classic Guitar of (11)Willie Tyson mattress... GuillermoFierens (12) ABC News 1:30 (23) Over Easy it's Full op (6) As The World Turns 7:00 BEER. (10) Days of Our Lives (6) My Three Sons (23) Herb Gardening (10) Adam-12 2:00 (11)TeeVee Trivia TH».*S 7-/3 (12) One Life To Live (12) Partridge Family 7/t* (23) Over Easy (23) Turnabout THE DROPOUTS NOW OPEN' CAMPUS PIZZA's TRAVELS WITH FARLEY by Post New Eost locotion by Phil Frank doc- My eye are tearing,, ite 60T A RIMS/MS IN My BARS, My nosb ncH&s, AND My I THROAT HURT'S,,.ARE VOU AN'e/E-EAR-MOSe-AA/b- THRCAT' MAM ? PILLOW TALK B.C. FURNITURE Soft and ( w wan F'ondor by Johnny Hart Tmiw" j#xy pillow furniture Bean Bogs'19.95 ro t&UTiAlMK I'M PEAUTiFUL r £EAL)fY UH. e PEFiMEP LETS KEAS IPC PEF/ME IT" IM MANY' WAYS, tAY PEA£. WHILE riLrUKlML YOURSELF ' IN A HXX L~\sr nilijr \ V j/ ' ' / i -, /'.ut ~ SAM and SILO ' CROSSWORD KQB 0HSG1 by Jerry Dumas and Mort Walker Eiaa ama auras PUZZLE aaasBDa fflsrasi lOheoard'si KflBS <3. Commercials nan uasHns sanjira fflsa DSSI BSHHHEIS i ohgesl Banaaaa aas Bras aaaea aaaasa HSH an®® nassisiGiB Basra a®a ana aaiBB ana aaii Live at Dooleys BEETLE BAILEY BRAND X Tickets *2.00 by Mort Walker Thursday, July 13, 1978 ] Q Michigon Stote News Eost Loosing Michigon New county nature area Civil rights commission Announcements for It's What's Happening must be received in the features hikes, canoes against voucher plan State News office, 343 Student Services Bldg., by noon at least two class days before publication. No announcements will be accept¬ take part in interpreti all free of Nature Center, a small rustic cabin. ed by phone. By MAR* LI CILLE HOARD LANSING tUPI) - The Michigan Civil through an increase in the statewide income State News Staff Writer charge. The park is located at the intersection of tax and the single business tax. Established to protect and preserve the Kinsman and Nichols roads pasl Mason. Rights Commission has taken a stand against Observatory Open House will be Five miles south of Lansing, in an area the so-called "voucher" proposal for school Parents would receive a voucher from the intouched by encroaching houses, lies the natural environment, the area is strictly Two hundred and twenty acres of state, which would be redeemable at the held from 10 a.m. - 12 p.m. finance reform that would permit state Saturday at the MSU Observa¬ lew River bend Natural Area. off limits to hunting, trapping and motor parkland bordered hy the (irand River school of their choice — public, private or include more than five miles of hiking trails. funding of private and religious schools. tory. Weather permitting, the 24- Opened in February by the Ingham ized vehicles, Clearly marked, the trails vary in lentfth "After studying the pros and cons for the parochial. inch reflecting telescope will be ounty Parks Department. River bend of Parts of Riverbend are .« ild be voucher system, I feel we must oppose it if Backers said the freedom to select schools used. ers the public a place to hike, canoe and construction, including displa; spel t hikir we are to remain constant in our commit¬ and funding reform are the major points of the voucher proposal, but opponents — ture walks held ment. indeed our mandate, to eliminate discrimination in education." Commission including most school officials — equate it NPS Public review of Pictured I 2:30 p.n Saturday during the sumr with parochiaid. Rocks National Lakeshore by park naturalist Steve Doming and chairperson Gilberto G. Ibarra said Wednes¬ Management Plan is at 7 p.m., The civil rights commission study said it is assistant park naturalist Rima Goldman, day. July 17. 158 Natural Resources both MSC graduates. The commission accepted a position paper likely the voucher proposal would be de¬ drafted by its own staff that criticized the clared unconstitutional if voters approved it Every Sunday at 2:30 p.m. different and if it were subjected to a court test. voucher proposal on several points. topics are explored. This week natures "The religiously-oriented and private Twelve credit academic intern¬ edibles will be investigated. "The commission supports tax reform but do believe that it should be combined schools would clearly derive the quickest and ship available fall/winter working An examination of Riverbend ferns and a we not with Chicano community in Lanq-< on the ballot with the voucher system for clearest benefit from the adoption of the short canoe trip down the Grand River are proposition." the report said. ing. Contact Dave Persell, College also planned for July. financing education," Ibarra said. "These are of Urban Development. It also said that the voucher system could Sunday explorations of outdoor survival, separate issues, and the public should have the opportunity to respond to each." have an adverse effect on the rights of weather forecasting, learning to dye with minorities and on enforcement of antidiscrim¬ Interested in a medical career? natural plants and a river walk are planned Voucher education proponents filed peti¬ ination laws. Gain valuable hospital experience. for August. tions Monday to place the proposed amend¬ ment to the state constitution on the "There is a serious concern for minority Morning shifts available at Ingham In September, a 7-hour canoe trip from Medical. Inquire in 26 Student Baldwin Park in Onondaga to the Grand November ballot. It must be certified by the programs in this tax reform issue," Ibarra Board of State Canvassers before it can go on said. River Park is planned. the ballot. "We must be careful to preserve the rights Riverbend also offers environmental and of the protected groups the It would drop local property taxes for outdoor programs for grades kindergarten mandated to serve." Local elementary age youngster through 12 and encourages area teachers to school support and raise educational funds needs tutoring in math and read¬ get their classes involved. ing. Help him turn his educational This summer, nature study and photog¬ life around. Contact 26 Student Services Bldg. raphy classes for young: schools have been meetir the Nature Center. Fur winter nature lovers, plenty of space Couple wives up jobs for cabin Horseback riding program for mentally impaired children needs for cross-country skiing and abundant Ll'TSEN. Minn, t API Jo Bronk Both had worked more than the cabin her sister Alice had students to assist as leaders and Michigan snow promise a year-round treat. and Loretta Williamson had 20 years, and they found them¬ near Lutsen about the birches sidewalkers. Volunteer now in 26 Riverbend is still largely unknown to the selves getting restless, wonder¬ and the pines and the cool air. Student Services Bldg. quite respectable jobs with public. major firms in Rochester. N.Y., ing if there was something So they moved to the Minne¬ "Most people don't know of anywhere hut they gave it all up for a better and more meaningful. sota woods and bought a gas Make your free hours count. this close that's not crowded." said Gold¬ little gas station grocery store. Bronk told Williamson about station grocery. Volunteer to supply short-term man. "And this is the place." community manpower needs. Contact Volunteer Action Corps in 26 Student Services Bldg. Students for ERA return to E.L. Legislative Aid volunteer posi¬ tions available with Press, and Students for ERA. an MSI' group supporting money from a fund-raising dinner covered all Speakers included Jo Freeman, author of Agricultural Tourism. Contact 26 "The Politics of Women's Liberation." and Student Services Bldg. today! the resolution to extend the deadline for expenses except food. ratification of the Equal Rights Amendment, actresses Jean Stapleton and Marlowe Thomas. A NOW member living in Maryland provided returned to East Lansing early Tuesday after Marron said about 200 anti-ERA supporters weekend lodging for the students. Plant enthusiasts! Children and also held a prayer-chant against ERA near the participation in the National Organization of Saturday, some of the students attended a adults in local hospital need your Women pro ERA march and rally in Washing¬ march site. Washington NOW chapter meeting, at which the help with plant projects. FUN for ton. D.C. this weekend. members discussed plans for the march. Marron Monday was spent lobbying, Marron said. The fall! Details in 26 Student Services students talked mainly to legislative aids, she Aubrey Marron, a Justin Morrill College said. Bldg. senior, said, "It was really exciting to have all said, since some legislators were still on vacation those people in one place working for the same The march started at noon Sunday at 14th and while others were in a House of Representa¬ Independence streets, turning on to Pennsyl¬ tives session. Fourth grade girl in special thing — anywhere you walked in the city people e Wolfe wore ERA buttons." vania Avenue and heading toward the nation's "We want to keep working on people until education needs tutoring in read¬ Nine area members rented a van while several Capitol Building. they are willing to say where they stand or if ing, math, writing. Ideal opportun¬ A natural beauty, the Grand River, flows along Riverbend Natural The first marchers to complete the 1.7 mile they're leaning negatively. We talked to ity for special education majors. members now living in Detroit traveled to Area's western flank. Two canoe trips are planned for the public, a short Inquire in 26 Student Services Washington separately, Marron explained. route began with a rally at the west side of the everyone from Michigan several times," said float in July and a seven-hour trip in September. Capitol at approximately 2 p.m. Marron. An ASMSU allocation to the group, along with CELEBRATE CELEBRATE Auto Sound BASTILLE DAY BASTILLE DAY JULY 14 JULY 14 CAMPUS 2 DAYS PIZZA try a «•< WESTIAND SHOPPING CENTER CORNER W SAGINAW AT WAVERIY SALE ONLY! CANADIAN-BACON Mon. thru Sot. 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. SUBMARINE Sun. 12 noon Limited Quantities to 5 p.m. All Components & Accessories 5% to 50% OFF Leonards Low Price at our new location 1040 E. Grand River 337-1377 C1_D CAE Featuring: Premium Highest pressure hot wax Unlimited Strongest hot water detergent GRAND RIVER AND NORTHWIND DR. NEXT TO ROLLERWORID 5J5 SANYO AUDIO SPEC CAR SPEAKER DEALS LAKE IN-DASH IN-DASH AM/FM STEREO •Sanyo 'Sound Fox »Lake Get Into Our Shorts AM/FM STEREO CASSETTE WITH DOLBY CASSETTE DECK 1 WAY-3 WAY-4 WAY For running hiking climbing or backpocking — we Sanyo FT-1490A has a solid 12 watt R.M.S. per have shorts for you. channel and can reach up to 20 waffs per channel The Lake in-dash AM/FM stereo cassette has a 6X9 30 OB. KITS maximum. Giving you all the power you'll ever Complete selection of camping, backpocking. climb¬ locking fast forward, full range tone and balance ing & mountaineering equipment. need. Having outstanding features like, Dolby controls, L.E.D. FM stereo light and push button noise reduction system, loudness compensation, Save up to 'XO00 on your favorite poir ot speakers. eject. Economy with great sound. All ore complete 6X9 20 oz. kits with wire ond tone controls, auto reverse with locking rewind and fast forward makes this deluxe hi-powered deck grills. the best buy! 88 *59 88 Reg. 88 *179 *39 •79" YOUR GREAT LAKES 2 DAYS CHOICI! Save 2 DAYS MOUNTAIN SUPPLY *40M ONLY! ONLY! drop by upstairs above Paramount News 2 DAYS ONLY! 541 Bid., across from Berkey Hall 351-2060