c VOLUME 72 NUMBER 158 TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1978 MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY EAST LANSING MICHIGAN 48B24 ] DECISION A COMPLETE SURPRISE' ' PBB By UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL ruling to be appealed Kokx. system was never designed to handle these kinds of disasters. We have a basic and "If I had were thought any of our witnesses lying. I would not have put them on Falmouth farmers Roy and Marilyn U.S. Attorney James S. Brady did not substantial disagreement with the severe the stand." Greer said. Tacoma. already facing staggering legal indicate if Peterson's ruling would influence his office's consideration of felony charges standard of proof that was applied." Meanwhile, in Lansing. Farm Bureau costs, said Monday they will appeal a judge's Schenk and co-counsel Paul Greer pledged President Elton R. Smith called a news ruling that contamination from PBB did not against the two firms. They pleaded no to continue their fight for hundreds of conference to comment on the decision. contest last May to federal misdemeanor destroy their dairy herd. charges for the contamination. farmers who claim PBB destroyed their "Perhaps now. Michigan can regain its Wexford County Circuit Judge William Schenk and Greer said Peterson should herds. stature as one of the best, most diverse, Perterson said in a 155-page opinion have ended the state's longest trial if there "I intend to keep trying these cases for the most productive agricultural states in the following the 14-month trial that the nation," Smith said. Tacomas failed to prove that low-level was not "a shred of credible evidence" that rest of my career," said the silver-haired low levels of PBB are harmful, as the judge Greer, who also owned a PBB ravaged farm. "We're hopeful, too, that this issue will contamination of the toxic fire retardant is "This is just one man's opinion. I would be now be removed from the political arena, said in his ruling. dangerous. where it belonged in the first place, Peterson said the 1973 accident, in which They also questioned Peterson's state¬ willing to sell some of my land to continue to never ment that government agencies acted finance the fight." and where it has been used ruthlessly, to the polybrominated biphenyls made by Michi¬ In his opinion, which was filed Monday but detriment of our agricultural industry." gan Chemical Co. were mixed with livestock responsibly in dealing with the situation. "We have been to these farms and have released early Saturday. Peterson said he Smith, however, refused to say exactly feed distributed by Michigan Farm Bureau the damage," Schenk thought some of the witnesses who testified who he believes has exploited the issue for Services Inc., had been exaggerated. seen said. "One has to recognize that the court for the Tacomas lied. political gain. "There is not any question that it (the See related story page 8. decision) lawyer Gary conference. came as a surprise to us," Tacoma Schenk said at a news Group charges AFL-CIO made "We expect it (the case) to proceed Sen. Robert P. Griffin (right! attempts to back away from his statement, during a debate Sunday with challenger Carl Levin, about Michigan as the dumping site for nuclear waste material. Instead, Griffin said he through appellate channels." Peterson said five years of wholesale slaughter of cattle, the resulting financial illegal contributions to candidates is opposed to the storage of nuclear waste "in areas where the people losses for farmers and fears of public health By OWEN ULLMANN the Federal Election Commission on Mon¬ Alpert said the Right-to-Work Committe or their state government don't want it." hazards from PBB were mostly a waste of AP Labor W riter day. As of late afternoon, however, the FEC could file similar complaints against the WASHINGTON (AP) A group opposed said it had not received the complaint. more than 1,000 "right-wing and corporate" time and money. - to compulsory unionism accused the AFL- Committee President Reed Larson said political committees that make contribu¬ He said there was no proof that low levels tions to candidates both through trade U.S. Senate seekers CIO and its affiliated unions on Monday of the complaint represents "the first batch" of PBB were toxic to animals or humans, associations and individual corporations. making nearly $731,000 in illegal contribu¬ of nearly 200 congressional candidates who thus rejecting the Tacomas' $250,000 suit tions to Michigan Democrat Carl Levin and they charged had allegedly received illegal Alpert said COPE has contributed about and ordering them to pay all legal expenses contributions from organized labor. He said $800,000 to $900,000 to congressional candi¬ 17 other Senate candidates. from the trial, which some attorneys other complaints would be filed shortly. dates this year. Overall, organized labor But an official of the federal agency that square off in Detroit estimated could exceed $20,000. No time for filing the appeal was revealed. Word of the appeal came as a group of monitors compaign spending said the contributions were not in excess of federal regulations. An AFL-CIO spokesperson Federal campaign financing laws prohibit unions, trade associations or other special interest groups from contributing more will have contributed close to $8 million to candidates, he said. In its complaint, the Right-to-Work Committee named 17 Democrats and one By KIMGAZELLA Newaygo County residents opened their $4 called the charges "harassment." than $5,000 to any one congressional State News Staff Writer million lawsuit in Kent County Circuit Court The National Right-to-Work Committee candidate. Republican Senate Candidates. The largest DETROIT - U.S. Senator Robert P. Griffin and his Democratic opponent Carl Levin said it was filing a formal complaint with Larson said the AFL-CIO and its member single amount cited by the committee was against Farm Bureau and farmer Myron for Sen. Dick Clark. D-Iowa, for nearly took opposite stands on nearly every issue debated before the Detroit Economic Club unions "beat the $5,000 limit" by consider¬ $94,000. Monday. ing themselves as separate groups. Thus, a were: Sen Wendell Ander¬ The candidates spoke to about 1.200 people in Cobo Hall here about inflation, national candidate could receive $5,000 each from Also named health insurance, unemployment and nuclear waste disposal. the AFL-CIO and dozens of unions that son. D-Minn.. $52,250; Don Barnett. D-S.D., Inflation was a main topic. Griffin blamed the problem on massive deficit spending by the federal government. Soviet agents given belong to the federation. Larson com¬ plained. $33,100; Rep. Max Baucus, D-Mont., $49,750; Sen. Edward Brooke. R-Mass., He said he would introduce an amendment in Congress to require the federal An official at the election commission said $22,700; Sen. Floyd Haskell. D-Colo.. government to balance its budget. FEC regulations clearly allow separate $54,825; Sen. William Hathaway. D-Maine, "If we have constraints on an amendment to balance the budget." he said, "it would impose Congress and force it to make hard decisions about priorities." He called President Carter's anti inflation program "better than nothing" and said 50 years in U.S. jail contributions from the AFL-CIO and its affiliates. The official, declining to be named, said Congress specifically had the $35,650. Sen. Walter Huddleston. D-Ky.. $17,950; Carl Levin. D-Mich. $17,250; Andrew Congress should be called back into session after the election to deal with the AFL-CIO in mind when it allowed for such Miller, D-Va.. $17,450. Sen. Claiborne Pell. NEWARK, N.J. (AP) — Two Russians policy to allow the Russians to remain out of D-R.I.. $26,250; Sen. Jennings Randolph, program's results. convicted of trying to steal U.S. defense jail. multiple contributions. The official added that a previous D-W.Va., $55,400; Charles Ravenel. D-S.C.. Levin said he supported Carter's appeal to the people and called it "creative and secrets were sentenced to 50 years in prison Lacey said that the defendants, Valdik A. $56,000: Bill Roy, D-Kan., $38,400; Donald challenge by the committee on similar helpful" in reducing government expenditures. Monday. The judge said he had no doubt the Enger, 39, and Rudolf P. Chernyayev, 43, Steward. D-Ala., $15,400, and Jim Guy He slammed Griffin's intent for a balanced budget amendment by saying the senator Soviet Union was "fully and completely grounds had been dismissed by the commis- obviously were acting on orders from "a Tucker. D-Ark., $71,550. needs only vote for a balanced budget, not amend the constitution. behind what occurred here." The committee, based in nearby Fairfax, very high level" official when they engaged "We are aware of no violations." said Ben Levin also disagreed with the amendment idea because he said it only allows for a 10 in the activities for which they were Va., is an outspoken opponent of state laws The defendants were allowed to remain Alpert, a spokesperson for the AFL-CIO's percent increase in the budget during times of emergency and war. free without bail in the custody of the arrested May 20. that allow labor contracts to make member¬ "We can't constrict ourselves safely during times of war to only 10 percent spending political arm. the Committee on Political Soviet ambassador pending appeals, but Education COPE. He said the complaint ship in a union or dues payment a condition over the budget," he said. "That the Soviet Union is fully and U.S. District Judge Frederick B. Lacey "smacks of harassment." of employment. To fight inflation. Griffin said, legislators need to battle "taxflation" — inflation and completely behind what occurred here is restricted their movements to "secure the nation against the danger to the community beyond doubt," the judge said. Lacey said "People are pushed into a higher tax bracket by inflation," he said. He co-sponsored a the New Jersey scheme was part of a larger these people pose at large." tax indexation bill to automatically adjust the income tax rate each year to the inflation They could have been sentenced to life in network and said the stiff 50-year terms could serve as a deterrent to others. Detroit man arraigned Levin coupled inflation with unemployment and said citizens must oppose them jail. FBI Director William H. Webster said in At the urging of the federal government, together. Lacey signed an order limiting the Soviets Chicago last week that the number of unemployment He supports the Humphrey-Hawkins bill which sets a certain percentage as a goal to reach in a set number of years. to a section of the Bronx, in New York City, where the Soviet residential complex is Soviet block personnel working in the United States had doubled in the last 12 in Holmes Hall shooting "It sets reasonable goals for the country," he said. "Having people unemployed costs located. He also required them to surrender years to about 2,000. The FBI in Washing¬ money and is inflationary." ton said it believed the number of Soviet The women were not injured when their drivers' licenses. ByRUSSHUMPHREY "unknown fragments" fell from the ceiling, Griffin said the original Humphrey-Hawkins bill intended to solve unemployment by U.S. Attorney Robert J. Del Tufo said spies increased proportionately to the State News Staff Writer (continued on page 12) number of Soviet employees. A Detroit man was arraigned Monday striking them on arms and heads, police U.S. Attorney General Griffin Bell had decided it was in the interest of foreign (continued on page 12) morning on attempted murder charges in connection with a shooting in West Holmes Hall Oct. 15. Damon O. Baker, 19, of 2707 W. Lafayette St., demanded a preliminary Voucher aims to provide choice examination and was lodged in the Ingham County Jail in Mason after being charged with assault with the intent to murder West Holmes Hall resident Valerie Wilson and two other women with a 12-gauge shotgun. By MICHELLE CHAMBERS Currently, public assistance to non-public schools in the state is limited to State News Staff Writer transportation, auxiliary services and time-sharing of public school courses. District Judge Daniel L. Tschirhart set Baker's bond at $10,000 and the hearing for inside Second of four parts Proponents of the voucher plan whieh closely resembles the controversial proposal of Nov. 7 at 1:30 p.m. in 54B District Court. 1970 requesting state aid for private schools, contend that property tax should not be used A directory of Unsing-oren Three tax proposals will appear on the Nov. 7 ballot and the Michigan voter may be Baker will receive a court appointed doctors will be coming out noon. baffled as to'what it all means. to finance education. attorney for his defense, court officials said. Read obout it on poge 14. From the time the petitions to place the proposals on the ballot were validated, the media has been packed with arguments on pros and cons of each. They do, however, state property taxes should continue to be used for the financing of Baker turned himself in to MSU Depart¬ other units of local government, including community colleges. ment of Public Safety officials at 8 a.m. Legislators and candidates have given their support to one or two of the prospective Opponents to the proposal insist that the petition drive was initiated by the Michigan Monday. weather amendments to the state constitution, but usually with reservations. The Michigan voter can only be confused at this point — what will be best for Michigan? Catholic Conference and, if passed, would create "total chaos" of the public education Baker told police he turned himself in Indian summer will be a little system. because his sister, a Columbus, Ohio, Of the three, one tax proposal deals primarily with the direct funding of elementary and on the cool side today. It will be woman, convinced him to do so. The two secondary schools. Known as the voucher system, or Proposal K, the "Citizens for More A council against parochiade has been established to oppose the voucher plan. It consists mostly sunny today with tem¬ drove all morning Monday in order to arrive Sensible Financing of Education" came of educational and civic organizations including the League of Women Voters and the in East Lansing, police said. peratures in the mid 50s. The NAACP. forecast for Wednesday is the together to represent the interests of Police said Baker denied any involvement parochial and private school interests. Those who support the proposed amendment have also pointed out how much better it in the shooting. A1 House and Garland Wood, MSU would be if a student's parents could choose the school they want their child to attend. Police had traced him to Cedar Rapids, professors of agricultural economics, ex¬ House and Wood explain that some reorganization of school operation across the state Iowa, after he sent a note to Wilson which plained in a staff paper entitled "Michigan would be necessary if the plan is adopted because most schools are operating close to wished her a happy birthday more than a Taxes and Proposed Changes" that the capacity now and many problems would arise. week after the shooting, police said. school finance proposal would make three Wilson and Baker had broken off their For example, what would happen to demands for schools above current capacity and major changes in financing the state education system. It would: those underutilized and how would operational expenses be paid? relationship about two weeks prior to the • prohibit the levying of general ad valorem property taxes for use in local school School transportation systems would also have to be redesigned, House and Wood shooting and she had refused to see him, operation, intermediate school districts, vocational, special and compensatory education police said. Wilson received a telephone call explain, because the pattern of school attendance could become scattered. And cross purposes; from him Oct. 14. At that time she thought bussing for purposes of integration could also be threatened if the voucher system is • require the Legislature to establish a program of general state taxation to support Baker was not in town. elementary and secondary education; and approved. Early the next morning, Wilson and two • require the Legislature to provide for the issuance of an educational voucher to each Though the proposal's property-tax-cutting clause would assist overburdened property friends were shot at when they walked child in attendance at state approved public and non-public schools of their parent's or owners, "the cost of owning and enjoying the use of property would diminish considerably, down the fifth floor of West Holmes Hall to guardian's choice. and abruptly," House and Wood explain. Wilson's room. The proposals would cut property taxes by 65 percent and the lost financing would come They added that future purchasers must also be willing to pay higher prices for such Police described the shooting as a from increases in income tax, Single Business Tax and others. "television type trick" because the assailant properties as apartments and open land. "Citizens for More Sensible Financing of Education" have stated that parents of The proposal raises other questions including the constitutionality of state support for apparently dropped to his knees and fired non-public school students are supporting two school systems. With the continual increase one quick shot in the direction of the of property taxes and higher costs of private education, these parents feel they are paying religiously affiliated schools and the adoption of a uniform system for state approval of too much. schools which will also have to be examined if the voucher system is approved by voters. 2 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigon Tuesday, October 31, 1978 analysis fear worse .recession alfni Stock NEW YORK lAP) - They're prices decline drastically from mid-October through trends. worst post-^ 1. But probably over for the market, calling it the October Massacre Monday noon the Dow Jones But like most other forecas¬ they also experienced some and that smart investors now on Wail Street — a devastating industrial average fell more ters, the market has a mixed sharp drops in the 1960s that should be buying, not selling, market decline that has cut the than 11 percent, from 897 to record. The last time stocks turned out to be false alarms. nearly all agree that there are Somalia severs Ethiopian key rail line paper over value of stocks by well $100 billion in just a little below 800. Behind the slide, most ana took a bad beating — in 1973 and 1974 — they accurately While some Wall Streeters plenty of problems in the present economic picture to more than two weeks. lysts agree, are widespread foresahdowed the nation's maintain that the worst is trouble investors. NAIROBI. Kenya (UPI) - Breaking a issued by the Somali government since By Monday analysts had be¬ fears among investors of two-month silence in its shadowy war early August and signaled that the gun comparing it to the other worsening inflation, and specu¬ great market debacles of this lation that another bad reces¬ with Ethiopia. Somalia announced Mon¬ Mogadishu government was lending its full moral backing to the war after weeks century — the 1962 showdown sion is on the way. day that insurgents have severed Addis between President Kennedy What remains to be seen, Ababa's key rail line to the sea. of hesitation. and the steel industry over however, is whether those Mogadishu Radio said guerrillas of the It appeared to indicate that President Mohammed Siad Barre has given up his prices; the fall of France in the fears are justified, or whether Western Somali Liberation Front cut the this is of those emotional early days of World War II, and one railroad from the capital to the seaport of efforts to persuade the Carter adminis¬ even the crash of 1929, which periods of over-reaction for Djibouti on Oct. 8 at a point between the tration that he was honoring his pledge to led to a drop of some 80 percent which the stock market is so towns of Hadigale and Aysha near the keep Somali forces out of Ethiopia's in stock prices and the Great famous. Djibouti border. Ogaden region in order to qualify for Depression. The market is widely fol¬ The war communique was the first American military aid. The recent selloff hasn't lowed as a kind of crystal ball, reached crash proportions. But foretelling future economic Arafat. Gromyko plan talk opposition peace Joint research MOSCOW (UPI) — Palestine Liberation situation and objectives of struggle for a Organization chairperson Yasser Arafat just solution of the Palestinian problem met with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko Monday on a Moscow visit aimed at mustering opposition to the within the framework of a comprehen¬ sive Middle East The Kremlin has settlement." Tass said. joined the PLO in plan threatened U.S.-sponsored Egyptian-Israeli peace virulently condemning the Camp David MOSCOW lAP) — The touchy issue of psychiatric treatment of talks. accords and the Egyptian-Israeli peace Soviet political dissidents has surfaced again in U.S.-Soviet The official Soviet news agency Tass talks, saying that they fail to solve the discussions on joint medical and health research, scientific sources basic problem behind the Middle East said Monday. said the talks were held in an atmos¬ conflict — Israeli occupation of Arab Critics say Soviet authorities for years have been declaring phere of cordiality and mutual under¬ territories and the future of the Palesti- some political dissidents to be mentally unstable and placing them standing.'' in psychiatric institutions, in some cases administering drugs to They concerned the Middle East make them more subdued. The issue arose after a Honolulu conference of the World Psychiatric Association in September 1977 considered such allegations and adopted a resolution condemning "the systematic A school bus currying 44 children careened out of control on a sharp curve in Israel undecided about increasing settlements abuse of psychiatry for political purposes in the U.S.S.R." McHenry. III. and hit a tree, overturned and split open Monday. Four children The Soviets deny the accusations. were hospitalized. During a review meeting last year on a six-year-old accord on TEL AVIV. Israel (AP) — Israel has not nounced last week that Israel intends to research cooperation, a Soviet official hinted that Moscow might increase the population of several of its refuse to continue the joint program unless the Americans agreed developed specific plans yet for increas¬ 50 West Bank settlements. President to issue a statement condemning Western attacks on Soviet ing the population of Jewish settlements in the occupied West Bank of the Jordan River, the Gaza Strip and the Golan Carter and Secretary of State Cyrus R. Vance criticized the Israeli decision. psychiatry. U.S. officials flatly refused to include such a statement in the official protocol of that meeting and the two sides agreed on a Whites flee Zimbabwe Heights, a government spokesperson Naor said the governmental commit¬ blandly worded statement that appeared to smooth over the said Monday. tee. headed by Begin, would have to in increased numbers dispute. Cabinet Secretary Arieh Naor dis¬ determine a budget for any additions to Sources say the issue was raised again at this year's discussions missed as mere speculation" reports the settlements before planners could and, after some initial disagreement, it was sidestepped a second that Israel had decided to add more than start work on expansion plans. Israel radio reported earlier that the The research accord work in cancer, heart diseases, SALISBURY. Rhodesia (AP) from the record net influx of with the prime minister over 500 new housing units to Jewish settle¬ covers environmental health, arthritis, influenza and respiratory More whites fled embattled 9,407 whites two years before. plans for holding the country's World Zionist Organization, which is — ments in the Israeli-occupied Arab diseases. Currently. 53 separate research projects are going on Zimbabwe (Rhodesia) last first elections based on univer¬ territories. partially responsible for carrying out month than in any month since But since 1973, the pattern sal suffrage. settlement activities, released plans that under the accord. "No decision has been taken yet," has dramatically reversed until Prime Minister Ian Smith Naor told the Associated Press. called for adding more than 500 units to broke relations with Britain in in the first three quarters of Smith told a Salisbury news Prime Ministor Menachem Begin an¬ existing settlements. 1965 and declared the colony this year there has been a net conference on Sunday that the China journalists independent, government sta¬ tistics showed Monday. A total of 1,490 persons from loss of 7,522 whites. Meanwhile, a moderate black ballot, scheduled to be held before Dec. 31, probably will have to be delayed for "purely the 260,000 white population member of Smith's Salisbury mechanical reasons" until early left Zimbabwe in September. government publicly differed 1979. study Americans There are 6.7 million blacks in the country. Only 286 new white settlers (nMflMn). TOKYO journalists (AP) - Chinese who toured the United States found Americans bourgeois lifestyle is "eat. drink and be merry" and though Americans call themselves a entered a said. during the past month, monthly statistical report Unwed minors' to he friendly, strangely- consumer society, there is no In August, 1,245 whites left, dressed consumption without produc¬ and in September hard-working and abortion rights , a year ago. tion. 1977, the total was 1,024. scientifically skilled, but ques¬ Sources say Cuba supplied with Soviet planes tioned why so many turn to drugs or religion. "Without the diligent labor of Smith's unilateral declaration of independence led to United a great many workers and Other things that made an Nations-ordered economic sanc¬ WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court said Monday it will scientists, you can't imagine not be learned whether the new jets sent tions against Rhodesia. It also decide whether states may require unwed females under 18 to get WASHINGTON (AP) — U.S. intelli¬ impression: joggers, dirt in America's production rising to to Cuba are designed for ground attack New York City, tipping, order¬ led to the outbreak of the the consent of parents or a judge before undergoing an abortion. gence sources believe the Soviet Union today's levels or how America has furnished Cuba with advanced as well as for air-to-air combat. ly traffic and "annoying" televi¬ could send a man to the moon," guerrilla conflict that has torn A three-judge federal court in Boston struck down the sion commercials. he wrote. at the nation for six years. Massachusetts law after ruling that it unconstitutionally infringed high-speed MiG-23 jet fighters for the first time. Intelligence sources say an estimated "We should study their sci¬ The white exodus has in¬ on the privacy rights of "mature minors." 18 to 20 MiG-23s arrived in Cuba earlier ence but refuse their philoso¬ In the offices and factories he creased steadily as black Under the invalidated law, parents always had to be consulted The MiG-23s substantially upgrade this month aboard a Soviet freighter. The phy," Wang Jo-shui concluded visited, Wang said, "there was nationalist guerrilla leaders when an unwed minor wanted to abort a fetus in any stage of her Cuba's air defense force, which has been not one idle person, or any idle planes were shipped in crates and it was in a series of articles in the have pushed ahead with their pregnancy. equipped with less sophisticated MiG-21 s not until they were observed flying that Communist Party newspaper chatting." For Americans, he war against Smith's govern¬ If the parents refused to consent, a state judge could allow the and other, older MiGs. wrote, "play is play and work is which in the past seven abortion if ruling that it was in the minor's best interests. If U.S. intelligence identified them as People's Daily. The articles ment, the U.S. intelligence officials say they were based on a three-week work. They are divided very months has been biracial. parents and judge refused consent, the abortion would not be MiG-23s. believe some types of the MiG-23 tour of America by Wang and clearly." In 1973, the first full year of allowed. Everywhere they went, he the conflict. Zimbabwe re¬ ' Flogger" ore copable of firing tactical U.S. fellow journalist Feng Hsi- Massachusetts authorities told the justices that their state law intelligence is uncertain whether nuclear weapons as well as conventional liang. said, they encountered good will corded a net gain of 1,928 was not an absolute consent statute but one that merely required Russian or Cuban pilots have been flying arms on ground-attack missions. It could Wang also said that the and friendly smiles whites. This was down sharply parental "consultation." the MiG-23s. Missouri brings suit against NOW KANSAS CITY. Mo. (AP) — A boycott by been approved by 35 states, four of which the Notionol Organization for Women have tried to rescind approval — an has damaged the economy of Missouri, action whose validity is in question. an attorney for the state said Monday as NOW has urged a boycott of the 15 an antitrust suit against NOW went to states that have not ratified, and has said trial. the boycott has caused conventions and Roger Bern, assistant attorney gen¬ travel business to go elsewhere. eral, said the "economic pressure came The suit, filed by the state in Februory, as a result of a trode boycott" against alleges that the boycott caused the loss of dbout that fever, states that had not adopted the Equal at least $1.1 million in convention Rights Amendment. business in the Kansas City area alone. The amendment, which would outlaw Missouri Attorney General John Ashcroft discrimination based on sex. must be said the organization had claimed losses ratified by 38 states by June 30. 1982. to become part of the Constitution. It has of $8 million in Kansas City and $11 million in St. Louis. ^ Disco? & \si$\ Learn at make Smoking shortens women's lifespan SDcMellios Robert 0ISC0 Classes For Couples WASHINGTON (AP) - Increased ciga¬ have a harder time quitting than men. And the number of women who smoke is Holmes rette smoking among women may soon reverse the trend that women live longer than men, according to medical experts increasing while the proportion who smoke has been of men declining, he said. your first choice for quoted by the American Council of Life Insurance. Circuit "It is possible to predict that by the Dr. G.H. Miller, a researcher at early part of the next century, the trend Edinboro State College at Edinboro, Pa., of women living longer than men will said studies have shown that women ore more susceptible to the dangers of reverse itself and women will be about two to four years earlier than dying Jteflellip smoking than men, and female smokers men," Miller said. Paid for by the Students for Bell/Committee to Elect Robert Holmes Bell □ Circuit Judge, 400 W. Miller Rd., Loosing Ml 48910 I Pair discovers love in music By JENNIFER DIXON State News Staff Writer because of the richness It's a way of the material. of self expression." JJ#0lld Irani | Tuesday, October 31. 1978 Editor's note: This is the second of The two express themselves on stage five interviews with MSU faculty and in their offices at a music lesson. members who are married and work at Elsa has been playing the clarinet the University. since she was in sixth grade. Walter Since the Depression. MSU's policy against married people working togeth¬ began playing the violin when he was 10. LETTER CAMPAIGN TO INFORM er has become less stringent and more couples are taking advantage of the Now they tour together with their University's latest rules allowing them trio and also play separately. Every to work in the same department. she plays at the Grand Teton ASMSU hits tax proposals summer The Verdhers are such a couple. Music Festival and is part of the Walter Verdher, associate professor Richards Wood String Quintet. Ho of music, and Elsa Verdher. professor of plays first violin with the Beaumont music, both teach music majors on a String Quartet. one-to-one basis — he the violin, she the has made presentations on campus in some Black added the some value judgments on spending, but clarinet. University would have to Both feel being musicians helps the of the residence halls and at last week's make up for the loss, which would more probably against higher education." RHA meeting. tnan equal the amount taken in from Black said the letters, which cost $450 to marriage. ASMSU will circulate 5,000 letters voic¬ "It might be hard for a non musician The letter, which mentions the Tisch, student fees. send, are just part of ASMSU's campaign to understand why I devote so much of ing its opposition to Michigan's three tax Headlee and Voucher proposals, states the against the proposals. Representatives proposals, said Dan Black, director of the three would be amendments will "endanger "Cutbacks would occur assuming the from the Legislative Relations Cabinet will my time to music." Walter said. "I doubt I could have married Legislative Relations Cabinet. public education in the state of Michigan " state does not assign funding priorities," also continue presentations in the residence Black said. "If they assign priorities, higher halls and take out advertisements in local other than Black said the letters, addressed to the if approved in the Nov. 7 election. said. MSU stands to lose about one third of its education in the past has always been cut newspapers. parents of in-state students only, will state-funded revenues, Black said. back considerably." The two met at MSU. were married attempt to enlighten voters to the amend¬ ment's effects on state-supported institu¬ Since student fees only account for $50 Although the letter condemns all three Black said the idea to send the letters was in 1971. and started the Verdher Trio in million of the University's budget, Black holdover from four years ago when tions. proposals, Black said he feels passage of any a 1972, because they love to perform, said a one-third cutback in the total budget one amendment would be damaging. ASMSU opposed the repealing of state I and e well. "There's a lot of confusion," Black said. would result in about a $70 million deficit "Theoretically," he said, "passing one of taxes on food and drugs. And t "Once the proposals are explained, many the proposals may force the state to make "That set the precedent." Black said. during the first year alone. "Teaching is very satisfying and very people feel the legislation is not for them." frustrating." Walter said, "because I In addition to the letters, Black said he know the students on a one-to-one basis. I know their musical and personal attributes and problems." Elsa said she enjoys teaching and performing equally because both are Elsa Verdher is music. a professor of Section forms Divestiture repeal may be interesting, challenging and worth the work she puts in to it. "Something has to be worthwhile." The Verdhers have made four pean tours Euro¬ with their trio, covering 11 still available urged at council meeting she said and for the Verdhers, music is worthwhile. Winter term schedule books and section "The music we have is wonderful." requests forms are still available to stu¬ Walter said. "It's like a great drama dents living off campus and may be picked Elsa played for President Carter and up today and Wednesday at the Student A motion to repeal Academic Council support of the University's Boonstra, Student Council representative, and Robert Green, dean Services and Union buildings, the Interna¬ resolution to withdraw its business interest in South Africa may of the College of Urban Development. Vice President Walter Mondale at the tional Center and 150 Administration Bldg. be introduced at the next council meeting, Carl Page, a council Gordon Thomas, secretary for academic governance, told the White House last summer, with her quintet. member, said Monday. Steering Committee the motion can be reconsidered only through a motion to repeal the resolution involved. A schedule supplement, providing infor¬ The MSU Board of Trustees approved a resolution in March To perform well and teach well, the mation on late course changes, will be Verdhers have to practice about three calling for "prudent divestiture" of University stock holdings in r told the committee his "maximum objective is to reach published in the State News Friday. It will hours a day, but not together. Then also appear on closed-circuit television firms doing business in South Africa. le's heart" and have the motion supporting the divestiture they practice with their groups, teach, channels 8. 21. and 34. Nov. 6 through 10. Academic Council voted to support the trustee resolution at its plan be reconsidered by the council. perform and have to plan their time Oct. 3 meeting. Frederick Home, professor of chemistry, told Weaver to not be together. Students may turn in completed forms, After hearing from Leon Weaver, professor of criminal justice, at the Academic Council Steering Committee Monday, Page said "too optimistic" since the council could deny him the right to speak "Or else it gets all filled up," Walter according to an alphabetic schedule, begin¬ and may not debate the motion. he plans to introduce a motion to repeal the council's support of the said. ning Nov. 6 between 8:15 a.m. and 4:45 p.m. divesture plan. For Weaver to speak on the motion at the Nov. 21 meeting, the They entertain seldomly and do not The locations Conrad Page said the council "needs to reconsider its decision," because council must vote to suspend the rules since he is not a council regret being busy. are: Lobby. Union Concourse. Brody Northeast Upper Lobby, of the "biased" presentation on the motion, which was led by Mark member. Chores around the house are divided South Case Lobby, Erickson Lobby, Stu¬ where he does the dishes and she mows dent Services Lobby and 150 Administra the lawn. tion Bldg. And when they are home and not busy, they love to romp with their dog, The schedule for turning in section Lady. request forms is as follows: A-G - Monday. Nov. 6 H-M - Tuesday. Nov. 7 N R - Wednesday, Nov. 8 SI - Thursday, Nov. 9 U.N. talk V Z Friday, Nov. 10 presented - All students are encouraged to take advantage of the early enrollment process U.N. have influenced U.S. policy and U.N. and are asked to consult the latest closed By C ATHERINE RAFTREY actions, he said. section list before turning in their section State News Staff WRiter Robert Ratner, national president of the "We have an impact on the United request forms. United Nations Association of the United Nations." Ratner claimed adding that States of America, concluded Michigan because UNA is not a self-interest group, International Week Sunday with a speech the U.N. takes their information seriously. on the importance of UNA involvement Ratner emphasized the importance of business and labor leaders working togeth¬ New status with the United Nations. er on programs beneficial to the United UNA is an independent, non profit organ States as well as other countries. ization formed to provide the public with information on current U.N. issues. "Unless we can find some way to other countries States economically, the United help will suffer in the long run," he said. for pediatrics Speaking at a dinner in his honor at the United Ministries in Higher Education, Ratner placed his largest emphasis on the The MSU College of Osteopathic Medi 1118 S. Harrison Road, Ratner outlined to a need for UNA to increase its membership cine's pediatrics division was raised group of 100 UNA members and guests the stating this will be a major objective during departmental status by the MSU Board various programs in which UNA is in the 1978-79 year. Trustees Friday. volved. He said an effort should be made to The unit will become effective Jan. 1 a He commented on the variety of informa¬ inform the public of the operations of UNA, a search and selection committee will tion gathering, education and research which presently has less than 100,000 a chairperson by the first week of that which the association is involved with and national members. month, said Bernard M. Kay, professor of outlined its importance. osteopathic medicine, who will work in the UNA is funded completely by contribu¬ new department. One example of this involvement is a tions from individuals, foundations, busi¬ newly-formed Economic Policy Council, ness and labor organizations and by income The new pediatrics department joins the which has brought together leaders of U.S. from various publications. college's original departments of Family business, labor, agriculture and the aca¬ Medicine, Biomechanics and Osteopathic demic community to study and make "Some Medicine. The college also jointly adminis¬ corporations contribute up to $1 recommendations on current international million a year," Ratner said adding that ters some departments with the College of unions are also instrumental in funding the Human Medicine. of UNA reports association. (continued on page 8) s presented to the MSU By JOANNE LANE students, faculty aid world's "We disadvantaged managed to teach the blind people in their home environment to adapt themselves State News Staff Writer MSU students and faculty are working together to produce an internationally dispersed Program object to rehabilitate to working with farm machinery," Kundo said. "Through IRSEN," he added, "I feel I can disseminate the techniques we used in India to network of information, research and training concerning disadvantaged persons. help other developing countries in their problems with teaching the blind." The program, known as the International Rehabilitation and Special Education "Attitudes have to change," Kundusaid, "if the world expects to learn from one another. Network, is located in Fee Hall. "The objective of IRSEN," Director Donald Galvin said, "is to promote a mutually through special education use "Some of the major world powers are each other ways to help rehabilitate." too self-involved to see that they can learn from beneficial relationship to agencies associated with rehabilitation and special education through the use of information, research and training." training and/or experience in areas related to rehabilitation or special education. Owen Daily, a doctoral candidate from Costa Rica studying in the field of learning IRSEN's final goal, Galvin said, is to substantially improve the services to tue physically, "The degree program hopes to prepare individuals to assume leadership positions in disabilities, hopes to return to a Costa Rican university and work at preparing future mentally and socially disadvantaged throughout the world. research, administration or rehabilitation counselor and special education teacher teachers to work with students who have learning disabilities. The international network includes the regions of Africa, Asia, Eastern Europe, training," the director said. Western Eruope, Latin America, the Middle East, North American and the Pacific, "I will receive my training at MSU." Daily said, and take that information back to Costa The network was set up in part from a J477.000 grant from the Rehabilitation Services Madan Kundu, who worked with the blind in Calcutta, India for 12 years before coming Rica with me. "However, even after I leave MSU I will still untilize the IRSEN services to Administration of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare. to MSU, said his positive results in India can be used to implement programs in other keep up with new developments in the learning disabilities field." developing nations. The director of training for IRSEN, Ron Wolthuis, said the program hopes to expand .J?6 College, of Osteopathic Medicine and Education have provided office space for IRSEN and still assist the program whenever needed. "While working in India our biggest problem was training the rural blind to work on the into other regions of the world within the next few years. The farms," Kundu said. training unit of IRSEN focuses on the development and support of degree and "The world has a mutual problem in trying to help the disadvantaged. Therefore they non-degree granting programs in the United States and internationally, Galvin said. The blind farmers, he explained, needed to learn how to use power-driven machines to The IRSEN degree program is designed, Galvin said, for individuals with previous cultivate and irrigate their land. should work together in finding solutions to those problems." he said. 6th 8th Grebner input Juengst deserves vital for county county Board seat Juengst Bunka Mark Grebner. for all his eccentricities, is one of all times. Grebner the most vital members of the Ingham County Board Larry Gordon, Grebner's Republican opponent, is : In the 6th District commissioner race we support In social services, Juengst would like to see the of Commissioners. For that reason, he should be a newcomer to politics. Though fresh faces are Democrat Dotty Juengst. Juengst opposes the county encourage private sources of financing to re elected to represent the 8th District. sometimes good for government, Gordon's inex-; Metro Narcotics Squad on the grounds that some eliminate much red tape and the "restrictive Grebner led the fight to kill the Ethics Code perience would not be an asset to the county. In measures of government. Bunka wants closer squad members have "overstepped their bounda¬ proposed last year, not because it was too strict, but short, Gordon would be treated like the naive ries" with unreasonable searches and seizures. She evaluation of the system to eliminate unnecessary because it was not strict enough. It did not deal youngster he is. Gordon has taken the time to favors a withdrawal of funding for that group. Drug and "duplicate services." become familiar with the issues, but has no concept completely with financial disclosure nor did it have laws, she maintains, must be enforced, but not at the Juengst believes the jail renovation project is mandatory attendence provisions. of how the board of commissioners work. expense of constitutional rights. necessary and feels the .5 millage increase for Grebner has led the local fight to make the On the issues, Grebner and Gordon are not that far Donald P. Bunka, the Republican opponent, funding is reasonable and probably the "least Tri-County Metro Squad accountable to citizenry. apart. In fact, Gordon seems to have taken positions displays a major flaw in his support of the Metro painful" approach. Bunka believes the project has He has been extremely vocal in demanding a from Grebner's stances. Gordon seems to be Squad. He opposes more out side controls, saying the gone "too far. too fast." He favors a longer planning workable rehabilitation program for county jails and campaigning on his winning personality, but there is squad is doing a "good job." span and consideration of a "regional jail." has provided innovative ideas in that area. little substance to his convictions. Grebner has been strongly in favorof county social Gordon might be better liked by fellow commis¬ services, but has been hard-headed enough to sioners — Grebner has had his unpopular moments 7th recognize some programs are wasteful of taxpayer's money. Grebner is extremely in-tune with needs of student constituents and works for their benefit at — but people listen and respect Mark Grebner's words because he seldom proves to be wrong in his decisions. Finkbeiner should remain on Board Finkbeiner Anderson 10th Incumbent Sherry Finkbeiner has our support in the Tth District County Commissioner race. in preparing initial social services budgets. Finkbeiner has worked on getting the necessary- Sobel's presence Finkbeiner, a Democrat, strongly opposes the Metro funding to establish a domestic abuse shelter in Squad and favors abolishing it. She feels the county has no need for a narcotics unit, and that the Metro Ingham County. She says health services should be more accessible to the people and supports the benefits county Sobel Squad is not effective in policing drug trafficking. integration of services with outside agencies. Finkbeiner would like to see an intake diagnostic Jess Sobel, Democratic incum¬ standing of the issues is deep. His Sobel's quiet perserverance is Republican opponent Gary Anderson is "unhappy" with the squad, saying they have more power than center and a day release program implemented for bent for the 10th District, should understanding of the working of definitely needed in county politics be re-elected to the Ingham the Board is even deeper. Though and his victory over Girard is they should have. jail inmates. Anderson would like to divert money Anderson feels there is too much "irresponsibility" away from "frills" and into rehabilitation. County Board of Commissioners rather understated at times, necessary. Sobel's continued pre- on Nov. 7. Sobel's opponent Fred Sobel's convictions are strong and sense on the county board will go a Girard did not win the last August the strength of these convictions long way in guaranteeing students are felt bv other board members. are represented in this country. primary, he was selected by the 9th Republican Party after Cathi Lu- ten dropped from the race. Though Girard describes him¬ self as a liberal, he is convinced the Torielli would be Tri-Countv Metro squad has done many good things and should be an asset to Board maintained. Obviously Girard has only a cursory understanding of Editorials ai i Tuesday, October 31, 1978 the opinions of the State News Viewpoints, columns the issues. and letters c e personal opinions Gina Torielli, candidate for the 9th District County In social services programs, Torielli sees a specific In fact, Girard declined to Editorial Department Commissioner seat, has our support in the Nov. 7 need for rape counseling and spouse abuse the county comment on jail reno¬ James L Smith Photo Editor Kofhy Kilbury election. programs. vation project because he did not Anne Stuart Entertainment & Book Edi Dove DiMartino Kim Shonohan Mike Klocke Torielli, a Democrat, would like to see a civilian Brennan would like to see currently subsidized feel informed enough on the issue. Sports Editor Nui ,t Edit, Scott Wierengo ethics board regulating the Metro Squad. If the programs switched to volunteer staffing with one or Girard campaigns strongly for the Deborah Heywood squad fails to comply with its orders, Torielli favors two paid directors. need of an ethics code, but fails to Kenneth E Porker abolishing the narcotics group. Torielli supports an intake diagnostic center ior say what kind of provisions are Thomas Brennan Jr. would also like to have jail inmates and day parole. Brennan's main concern needed. greater civilian participation in the Metro Squad. He centers around the cost factors of the jail Sohel. on the other hand, is a smg Manoger Gmo Spomolo does not favor disbanding the unit. construction project. full-time commissioner. His under¬ in empty classrooms, and in houses. And. among places with many people in them, an BRIC K (.I TII1UI assault will occur where it and the resulting confusion are least likely to be noticed; in bars, stadiums, and on street corners. Not in popular study lounges, co-ed or not. Actually, considering males may be more confident of getting away with an attack in a 1 Lounge room full of women than in a room mixed with men, there might be more assaults in a lounge reserved for women than in a co-ed one. The issue of assault is a phoney one. A co-ed study lounge would probably be safer ihan a single sexed one. But then there's the question of harassment. State \ews movie ads blasted breaks law To argue about harassment is to argue on grounds that I can understand. I've been harassed by different people throughout my life. I would think all men and women have. The harassment varies — from the people who call you names they never In response ?<> your editorial "Women shown and 1.000 people see it. if even one understood to the guys who sit in the bathroom stalls at the Union and stare at the men still need a separate place" .i.e. the Union person out of that 1,000 goes out and Ed. Note: Last January, Bruce Guthrie filed a romplaint with the Anti-Discrimina¬ using the urinals on the other wall — yet everyone gets it from people of both sexes Women's Lounge) to be safe from sexual sexually harasses women as a result, then is tion Judicial Board to eliminate the Union Building's Women's Lounge. The complaint although certain types of harassment maybe peculiar to one sex. To isolate women harassment, let me say that the State News it worth it to show that movie? If your was handled by Mary Pollock, the Unitersity's Title IX coordinator, who was fired in completely from men would reduce but not eliminate harassment. In fact, harassment is partly to blame for this situation. The answer is still yes. then how do you explain June after recommending that the lounge be integrated. Tomorrow afternoon, the is bound to occur unless all people are isolated from all other people, yet this doesn't State News movie advertisements heavily your reasoning to a woman who has been ADJB will conduct a hearing on whether or not to maintain the Women's Ix>unge. appear to me to be a worthwhile policy to pursue. promote X rated and many R rated movies sexually harassed? Especially if that woman which depict women as mere sexual The Women's Lounge. It rests in the Union behind an opaque door. It has couches, The Women's Lounge neither protects women from assault nor from harassment. toys is your sister, mother, daughter, girlfriend, desks, tables, and desk lamps upon its carpeted floors. It ha- minor> a;.d Women like the lounge, of course. It's a fairly quiet place to study and it's comfortable. who are always ready and eager to have or wife. Sexual harassment is a covered on special two walls by large windows. Don't mistake the name for a bathroom, the lounge is a Is there anything wrong with keeping it the way it is? Yes. erotic sex with any man. anywhere, concern of mine because some time ago my study room in a building short of study space. And i: The Women's Lounge is partially responsible for the problems which it is said to anytime. Example: the ad for the movie "If sister and her exHu>iveiy for women. girlfriend were walking The Women's Lounge i> illegal. Title IX. thai do-- :-:i. i.t which mandated women's ameliorate. Women are harassed and assaulted by men because men assume women you don't stop it. you'll go blind" shows a across a field when, suddenly, up popped a athletic programs be funded equally with men's, also states that federally-subsidized are defenseless and men must assert their "masculinity." It's hard to not think of man exposing himself to two nude women. I man exposing himself from the waist down. universities may not "provide different aid. benefits or services" to students on the women as helpless and hopeless when people are told women "need" their lounge for defy the State News to tell me that this ad. A sensible solution is to do as the Detroit not to mention the movie itself, doesn t News has done basis of sex except for toilets, locker rooms and shower facilities. The Elliot-Larsen protection against men. Men, with no lounge, are left to think it "unmanly" to desire a put list the X rated movies, lounge; men must be independent and strong. Women are weak, men are strong: the — ideas into the heads of some Civil Rights Act (1977) of Michigan prohibits educational institutions from denying people. but without the erotic ads and the heavy Witness the huge increase in the number of services to individuals on the basis of sex, and also forbids using signs which indicate stereotypes which serve to perpetuate oppression are all reinforced by the existence of promotion. That way. instead of simply that facilities will be denied to a person on account of their sex. the Women's Lounge. rapes coinciding with the increase in the writing editorials, the State News would Yet the arguments over the lounge usually gloss over questions of legality. Laws are There are several things which could be done with it. The Women's Lounge could availability of pornography, as shown bv actually be doing something to make the often wrong. The drinking age will almost definitely go up to 21 by the end of the year become a co-ed study lounge or a combined Women's Resource Center/Reading Room. FBI campus safer for womeirat night. The latter suggestion would put reading materials which relate to women into a large And radical Fu but I doubt many "under age" people are going to obey it. Similarly, slavery was lend- Paul F. Murray mentists. I ask \ banned only after 1865 but that didn't mean it should have been supported before that part of the current lounge. The rest of the lounge would be left as it is although men E253 Owen Hall would be given access. Most of the people using the lounge would still be women and, Instead of surrounaea oy tne reading material, the women would be encouraged to take amore legality, the debate about the lounge usually centers on its protective Bus Stop is more than penny>pincher value to women. Women in this society are harassed and assaulted by tnen.Inside the active role in their own protection instead of relying on such artificial defenses as the lounge, there are no men and women are safe. That's logical, isn't it? Maybe not. Women's Lounge. The resource center/reading room would encourage self-reliance and While I don't have a vast array of figures to support this claim, it seems most begin to destroy the oppressive system which the current lounge perpetuates. Donna letter of And it would be legal. attains! . .. fJ „ , mplaint th- R.j. ,t.,p disc, f„r not serving greatly increases the chance of people assaults will occur in places with few people around, along lonely stretches of side walk, driving horn, intoxicated, water on request really caught my atten lion. If the acru.at.on is true, the Bus Slop Come on Mr. Ginsberg, aren't the safety IS guilty of more than penny pinching, I and lives of your customers worth the cost would venture that a large majority of the of providing water on request'' Letter Poliev clientele drive to the Bus Slop. The Rianne Anderson DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau irresponsible policy of not providing water i40 Campbell Hall The Opinion Page welcomes all lettir» and viewpoints. Readers should follow a few ; MM BACK AND TALKING MILES, you ARGUE IN TOUR- wrsurcu rules to insure that as many letters as pos¬ 1 WITH MARATHON RUNNER BOOK THAT WIN THROUGH theresa mrsmm, sible appear in print. Is Holdship really that ignorant? ' MILES POTASH. AUTHOR OF RUNNING IS NOT ONLY GOOD threshold, zonker. v0u THE BEST-SELLING "TUB FOR THE BODY IVSGOOP a break- jusremsw AU letters and viewjmnts should be COMPLETE BOOK.OFPAiN" FOR THE MIND. TOO, RIGHT* /no point? enom about ' In Kill typed on 65-space lines and triple spired. pain! Holdship's article on the Bus Stop of radical that looks for trouble? Are you Letters and mewpoints must be signed and Nite Club, he mentioned the subject of really ignorant as your article makes dress more than 10 separate times. and as your friend appear? you include local address, student, faculty or staff standing— if any-and phone number. H Along with the tickets that came from the It is unfortunate that the State News saw No letter or viewpoint without these items Bus Stop, (that Holdship used), came an fit to publish Holdship's heavily biased will he considered for publication explanation of what is expected in way of account of the new disco, but then I guess attire. everyone is entitled to their opinion; no Letters should be 25 lines or less and may Also, if Holdship would have read the matter how wrong it may be. be edited for State News style and concise¬ paper that he writes for. he would have ness to fit as many letters as possible on known that the club has Hey Holdship! — a what are dress code. you, some sort I 202 Dan T. Flory Campus Hill Apts. a page. Viewpoints may be no longer than 75 lines and may also he edited jf Tuesdoy. October 31. 1970 5 Michigan Stole News, Eost Lonsing, Michigon The situation in Iran begs for our understanding The revolutionary Iranian Islamic movement has been perspective as it relates to Iran. subjected to gross confusion, both accidental and intentional. Though the Iranian situation has been dwelled upon at The following viewpoint by the Spartacus Youth League is considerable length by both local Iranian student groups, we ask you to consider the arguments made in the following two . .typical of liberal Western analysis of Moslems, however it is presented from a communist standpoint. The accompanying viewpoints. Despite its distance, Iran's problems are our viewpoint by the Organization of Iranian Moslem Students is problems, especially since U.S. support of the Shah is consider¬ able. The situation does indeed beg for our understanding. an attempt to place the Islamic movement in its proper Islamic rule as bad as Shah Only Islam can topple Shah from becoming free by plunging them into immorality. It is against so-called Islamic governments has broken with capitalism and Recently, political developments in Iran have taken an this that Islam rears up. This regime has destroyed the freedom of The streets of Iran are aflame with mass protests against the unprecedented rapid pace. General opposition to the Shah's women as of men. Women as well as men swell the population of brutal terror of the Shah. The urgent tasks of revolutionary imperialism. U.S.-backed regime has evolved into a nationwide militant struggle internationalists in the l.'.S. are 1) to actively oppose U.S. In seeking an alliance with the mullahs the Stalinists offer Iranian prisons, and this is where freedom is threatened. We want by Moslems — over 95 percent of Iran's 36 million people. Moslem's to free them from the corruption menacing them." themselves as the most active suppressors of left criticism of the imperialist support to the Shah and 2) to initiate the urgently mullahs. They have not raised one word of protest against the popular struggle entered its new phase after the bloody massacre in The sizable participation of Moslem women (in Islamic veil) is a needed discussion on the revolutionary proletarian strategy to Qum (center of Islamic theological schools), on Jan. 9,1978. It has clear and overthrow the Shah. To facilitate this discussion, particularly mullahs' advocacy of the brutal suppression of women symbolized strong rebuff to the Shah's propaganda and those who since spread all across Iran, including even small towns and by the veil and the chant of "Death or the veil" which resounds accuse Islam and Moslems of harboring "anti-women" tendencies. among Iranian students and exiles, the Spartacus Youth League villages, and gained momentum to the point that it has effectively Moslem women joined their militant brothers to prove to the whole the anti-Shah protests. They remain silent on Ayatollah (SYL), a Leninist and Trotskyist group, sponsored a forum "Iran in shaken the Shah's dictatorial rule. Khomeini's denunciations of communism and opposition to world that they are deeply aware of their revolutionary ideology Turmoil" last Wednesday night. The Shah's sole response to such a challenge has been bloodshed In an attempt to prevent just such a democratic discussion, an communist participation in the movement against the Shah. and intensification of repression in different forms. The regime has and are ready to fight for its cause. Khomeini's call on the army to help overthrow the Shah (quoted • Such propagandas that Islam is against minorities is another unholy alliance of Iranian Stalinists and Muslims mobilized to also unleashed an intensive campaign of distortion against the in the Washington Post of Oct. 16) is not a call to split the army plot by the Shah's regime aimed at separating the people. Once the disrupt the forum. Barely 10 minutes into the speaker's Islamic movement and Moslem leaders. The U.S. mass media, Islamic along class lines as the Bolsheviks did in Russia in 1917 but a call government is established all the people will be treated presentation they began to heckle and slander the presentation as which is content with faithful reproduction of the Shah's official for a wing of the reactionary officer corps to seize power. If the equally, as long as they are not against the movement. "CIA propaganda." When these disrupters persistently refused to propaganda, has played an important role in misrepresenting the Shah cannot contain the masses it is not at all unlikely that a • No Moslem believes that cinemas, or T.V. are bad. A cinema hold their comments until the ample and democratic discussion truly revolutionary nature of our people's Islamic movement and its itself is not good or bad. It depends upon who is using it. At the section of the officer corps — the same officer corps which is the period provided for after the presentation, the SYL supporters Shah's last bastion of support in Iran, which suppresses the humane ideals. time, the Shah is using cinemas as a means to destroy our had no choice but to demand that they leave the forum. A large ... While the Islamic movement in Iran is struggling for struggles of the national minorities and the national liberation culture, to brainwash and to spread corruption among our people, in part of the audience which had been mobilized precisely to disrupt independence, freedom, and the establishment of an Islamic order to make them ignorant of the fact that while the majority of the forum then left the extremely crowded room. Only the quick struggles in the Arab Gulf — would seize power and establish an government based on social justice and equality, it is depicted as the people are lacking their basic foodstuff and shelter, the Shah'i "Islamic state" based on a brutal military anti-working class and disciplined action of the SYL supporters discouraged any "anti-modernization, anti women, backward, fanatic, feudalistic, dictatorship like that of Pakistan or Libya. regime is spending billions of dollars of the people's money to buy physical confrontations by the disrupters. fundamentalist ..." Instead, the Shah and his corrupt and arms to safeguard the interest of U.S. monopolies. This is the The tragic results of such alliances can be seen clearly in At Wayne State University we were able to conduct a lively, unpopular regime are hailed as "promoter!s) of modernization, reason that attack on cinemas take place. Indonesia. The Indonesian Communist Party tied the working democratic discussion on the same subject with Iranian students of progress, and democracy." It is true that in the popular demonstrations, Moslems have class and peasantry to the "progressive" bourgeoisie (represented • varying political viewpoints. But as in East Lansing, almost Such labels are used against the Islamic movement because it is burned gambling houses, liquor stores . . . because these ar by Sukarno) which left the working masses totally disarmed in the heading for a unique social revolution which aims at liberating the centers of social corruptions. everywhere else in the country, there have been attempts to face of the 1965 right wing military coup. The coup unleashed a disrupt our forums on this topic by Iranian Stalinists and Muslims. whole society from the Shah's dictatorial regime, social injustice, Destruction of government buildings. Zionist and imperialist The disruption of our democratically organized forum at MSU savage pogrom by fanatical Muslims which left over half a million and foreign domination. The current propaganda campaign in the • worker and peasant militants dead. property by the people, shows the movement's anti-regime, must be condemned by all those who defend free and open political U.S. mass media aims at keeping the American people ignorant anti-Zionist, and anti imperialist nature. debate among the left and pro working class opponents of the Shah The Spartacist League Spartacus Youth League seeks to win about the real situation in Iran, distorting the just cause and Iranian militants to the prospect of forging a Trotskyist party in • On the contrary to some reactionary propagandas, the Islamic and his ally, U.S. imperialism. In particular the gross humane ideals of the Islamic movement, justifying the United Iran that would lead the working class in the struggle for the States' all-out support for the Shah, and finally, psychologically government that the Iranian people are fighting for, does not have irresponsibility of these disrupters in exposing trade unionists, overthrow of the shah on the one hand and against the ascension to any similarity, whatsoever, with the reactionary regime in Saudi students and particularly foreign students to arrest must be preparing the American people for whatever direct action the U.S. Arabia or any other of the so-called Islamic states. All of these condemned. Only last year the police arrested Iranian students at political power of the mullahs and their reactionary social code on may take to save Shah's shaky throne. the other. Such a party would fight to bring the current wave of governments are hiding their true natures behind the mask of MSU on trumped-up charges arising out of a campus protest. For Here are some facts about the movement: strikes by the Iranian proletariat beyond simple economic issues to Islam. While their people are oppressed, they are selling their Iranian students, arrest can mean deportation to the Shah's • The main slogans in the demonstrations show the Islamic nature countries' wealth to their imperialist masters. The Saudi become an all-sided political assault on the shah's bloody torture chambers and possible death. of the movement. To name some: "Independence, Freedom, Islamic dictatorship. government is as Islamic as the Shah's regime is. And why are these Iranian Stalinists, nationalists and religious government;" "Down with the Shah;" "Long live Khomeini;" "We • Our people have realized that there is no way to fight such fundamentalists united in attempting to silence us? It has nothing want the establishment of an Islamic government led by Khomeini;" Genuine Leninists Trotskyists would struggle to win the well-equipped regime with bare hands. They have realized that the to do with the slanderous accusations of "agentrv" against the SYL • There has been massive reactionary propaganda against the only way to overthrow the brutal regime of the Shah and to cut the Iranian masses from the influence of the mullahs and their which neither they nor anyone else can possibly believe. It is Islamic movement by claiming Islam is against women's freedom. foreign domination hands off Iran is through the long-term armed Stalinist sycophants through the demands of land to the tiller, a precisely because in our opposition to the Shah and to the constituent assembly based on universal suffrage, and through the To clear the position of the movement, it is enough to quote from struggle. capitalist/imperialist chains which bind the Iranian masses we Ayatollah Khomeini that: "As for women, Islam has never been seek to tell the truth about the mullahs. fight for an agrarian revolution against the Shah's phony "White Therefore, no matter how long it will take, no matter how much Revolution" and for the expropriation of industry. Simultaneously, against their freedom. It is, to the contrary, opposed to the idea of The Stalinists and their allies do not seek the overthrow of woman-as-object and it gives her back her dignity. A woman is a blood our people have to give, they are determined to gain victory. we are fighting to construct a Trotskyist party in the United capitalism but instead seek an alliance with the "progressive" States to overthrow the one last friend the Shah has — U.S. man's equal; she and he are both free to choose their lives and their The Iranian people will, finally, establish the just Islamic mullahs and "national bourgeoisie" who are today calling for an occupations. But the Shah's regime is trying to prevent women government. "Islamic state" in Iran. Not one of the states today ruled by imperialism. The versatile dress shirt that NDU'U pulls off a triple play with style. Something new for you at Hobiefs SPECIAL SAYINGS DAILY ON OUR GREAT MR. HOBIE SANDWICHES AND SOUP In less time than it takes for an instant replay, EACH DAILY SPECIAL INCLUDES- you can have a new look Two interchangeable collars in the new 2V width let you switch from The Mr. Hobie Sandwich off the day: matching fabric to crisp white. Or, for a complete change-up. wear it collarless! A comfortable blend ★ Tuesday: Corned Beef ★ Soturday: Roast Beef of polyester/cotton, in blue chambray. 15-16''? neck ★ Wednesday: Pastrami ★ Sunday: Ham sizes, in 33" and 35" sleeve lengths. $25. ★ Thursday: Turkey ★ Monday: Roast Beef PLUS ★ Friday: Ham & Salami a cup of soup 930 Trowbridge . 109 E. Allegan * W. Saginaw at Waverly of your choice Jacobsons Tuesday, October 31, 1978 6 Michigan Stote News, Eost Lonsing, Michigan Van the Madman in concert hear, a legend. It wouldn't be who remained stationary 'til By DAVE Di MARTINO keyboards; Bobby Tench, elec¬ Bruce "The Boss" paying trib¬ "Caravan" jumped up strangely State News Reviewer tric guitar; Mickey Feat, bass; The first time I saw Van Peter Van Hooke, drums; Her- utes to the greats LIKE Morri¬ during the encore, in a combina¬ son, rather than his own older tion of joy, showmanship and Morrison was during his Street bie Armstrong, rhythm guitar; and two backing vocalists material. And it wouldn't be what appeared to be self-con¬ Choir tour 70 or 71, near Mick and Keith with their disco sciousness. And those three Miami, Fla. Following the com¬ whose names escaped me. And it was interesting, very lip service their reluctance to characteristics are the three mercial success of Moondance main impressions I perceived in Great Scott! at and a new and very happy interesting. Everyone — the accept their own middle-aged- audience and the band itself Morrison's live performance: marriage, Morrison was sup¬ — continually watched Morrison, Joy, the kind of joy that posedly at both his personal and commercial peak. Or so I waiting for cues, recognizable produces happy songs like "Wild Night" and "Caravan," By KIMSHANAHAN thought at the time. The con songs and, at least to my eyes, to see whether he'd actually the kind that simultaneously is State News Reviewer cert's unexpected climax came P so fierce and fragile that it can Looking like a first-chair at the end of the set, when STAY UP THERE and not walk off the stage. Which, most be shattered and parodized by band student from Small¬ Morrison left the stage and, in town High School, Tom full view of the happy, cheering definitely, he is very prone to one uneasy glance from Morri¬ Scott showed an apprecia¬ crowd, vomited his guts out on do. son onstage; Showmanship, the kind that made his spot in Last tive Dooley's crowd that the floor. Clutching the microphone, Si Waltz so intense and capti¬ some white boys can indeed I remember the fact that he looking very much the figura¬ blow a very mean saxo¬ did an encore immediately tive "possessed" artist, Morri¬ vating; Self-consciousness, the kind that puts a saxophone son seemed to both glare at and phone. afterward impressed me onstage next to Morrison on¬ The saxophone has an greatly. * * . totally ignore the audience interesting history, full of while he sang. The songs? stage "in case he wants to play Sunday night, behind the it." Sunday night, he didn't myth and misconception. In¬ stage at Masonic Auditorium, a Surprising, actually — aside want to. vented in Germany, the first friend and I went backstage to from "Moondance," he did of and Van Morrison is one of the was made wood talk with Nick Lowe and Dave "Wild Night." "Into the designed for church music to Edmunds, who, with Rockpile, Mystic," an encore of "Cara¬ The original angry young very few TRUE ARTISTS in¬ j/r"-' * van" and, a real surprise, a new man from the Angry Young volved in rock 'n roll. And supplement the sound of opened Morrison's first Detroit whatever he wants to do is OK pipe organs. Apparently Lutherans never could ac¬ -» concert in years. I spoke with a fellow who'd been working with "Brown-Eyed Girl." Wisely, he chose to sing the best cuts from Them, Morrison remains eter¬ nally cryptic. He speaks to the by me. throw up. Even if he wants to cept the sound, since its use Morrison on the tour since it Wavelength, including the title audience rarely, and when he faded until the early part of track, "Kingdom Hall," "Check- does, it's an unrecognizable POSTSCRIPT: Not really began two weeks ago. this century. in' it Out," "Natalia," and mumble. He won't look anyone enough room to write about the "So how have things been so During the '20s it became "Hungry for Your Love." And, in the eye. He looks like he's Edmunds, Lowe and Rockpile, far?" I asked, expecting the very popular among the white rowdies. Even Fred B- * usual "just fine" and fishy handshake. Not so. oddly, he left the stage while one of the vocalists sang her standing on the edge of some¬ thing he doesn't want to look down at or fall into. Sometimes and they deserve an entire review of their own. Let's just MacMurray started playing "About as good as they can own version of "Crazy Love." say that it was a mis-matched one. But puritanical ethics And what does it all mean, I he does — and when he does, he booking; though they put on a be, I guess" he replied non-com- REALLY? Sure, I loses faith in himself, he scraps fine show, the energy they being what they are, the mitally, a knowing look on his mean saw saxophone soon became as¬ face. Dylan, I saw Springsteen, I saw an already-recorded album, he draw their music from comes sociated with illicit hooch, I asked him what he meant, the Stones . . . but. somehow. puts off touring, he vomits from an entirely different red-lipped floozies, slicked- Tom Scott proved that his horn-playing can hold its own. and with the same expression Morrison impressed me more during a concert. Or something source than Van Morrison's. down sheiks and backseat than any of them. And he else. They were excellent, as usual, he looked downward: "Well, In case, Scott has moved into the big time — rhythm riffs. Their flawless Clearly, the audience boudoir. In short, the sound any Van's a pretty moody guy, ya always has. Maybe it's his role and if I didn't enjoy them as become the white knight for writing scores for TV series. presence is what made the LOVED Van Morrison, stood of the saxophone was ac¬ know?" as an artist, maybe it's the fact much as I have in the past, saxophone lovers. Every¬ So proud of that work, group a band and not merely it's solely because of Van Morri¬ cused of making people hot. Then he walked away. that Morrison isn't limited to up, cheered, made noise and Scott even included Baret a vehicle for Scott's rising They were right — it did body has heard Scott's mu¬ just rock 'n roll — as Astral jeered when the lights came on son. Rockpile rocks, and Van sic, but very few are aware ta's theme song in Sunday's star. and prevented a second encore Morrison ROLLS. And that's then and it does now. And no Every review I've ever writ¬ Weeks and Veedon Fleece have of it. During the late '60s and show. Scott obviously enjoys the one knows this better than ten, every time I've even proven — but when he does Sunday night. And Morrison, the difference. Scott's band, nameless as band and they are obviously Tom Scott. early '70s, Scott was defi¬ rock, he's the king. The un¬ yet, have only been behind infatuated with Scott. But spoken about Van Morrison, Tom Scott has got to be nitely the most oft-used I've always talked about him in spoken king. studio saxophonist around. him for a short time. He said even more important is that the most unappreciated sax¬ his neuroticism. Which Up on stage with Peter MSU orchestra and terms of He played for everybody Sunday was only the second they are all obviously in love ophonist around. Hopefully, time they had performed with the music they are is pretty presumptuous, I Bardens, his old mate from it is a mere oversight on the who wanted a hint of jazz in But very applicable. Them, he could've done the backgrounds, including together, but this is hardly making. Rightfully so, be¬ guess. part of the biz and not really believable it is great. "Gloria," "Mystic Eyes," or because he is white, but who such non-entities as Richard — obviously there cause "Baby Please Don't Go," he knows? There have been very few "famous" white and Karen Carpenter. Scott's stint with the well- is more to the story. Steve Khan, also a Colum¬ Tom Scott is definitely going places — places he The concert "Moondance," a opened with little blast from could've done "T.B. Sheets" or "He Ain't Give You None" from Juilliard exciting team acclaimed but marginally bia recording artist in his should already be, and saxo¬ the past, a recognition and saxophonists, aside from acknowledgement of things his days with Bang Records — By DORIS T1SHKOFF than losing their separate iden¬ popular L.A. Express, own right, provided a su¬ phone stars had better make Gerry Mulligan or Boots for him. Because done before. and hey, he DID do "Brown- tities, each has enhanced and served him well by giving perb backup to Scott. Al¬ some room State News Reviewer Randolph, and the saxo¬ On the stage stood a short, Eyed girl." And it wouldn't be enriched his individual talents. him an opportunity to devel¬ though the group did play a Scott is providing a sound — The Juilliard String Quartet phone did become relegated stocky man who looked ex¬ pretentious. It wouldn't be Bob to smoke-filled inner-city op his own stuff, but his couple of Khan tunes, and typically associated with is a musical entity that has However, their residency at Khan did play numerous blackness for the masses tremely nervous clutching his Dylan, eye shadowed and sing¬ basements after the wild backgrounds for Carole — ing "the answer my friend is earned its fame by virtue of a MSU has permitted them to well-articulated solos, his to consume. And if Dooley's microphone. With him was his and crazy '20s, but it King's Jazzman seemed to new band, the same people blowin' in the wind" while blending into a complete orga¬ expand in ways that even they couldn't have really been be the turning point in his forte on Sunday was the is any gauge, he will defi¬ thousands of Olympiads are nism four of this country's themselves had not anticipated, career. After that success he funky syncopation of his nitely be eaten alive. responsible for Wavelength, based on race, could it? (continued on page 12) the new LP: Peter Bardens, craning their necks to see, not outstanding musicians. Rather VOTING REFERENDUM TO AMENDED THE ASMSU CONSTITUTION This amendment would increase the ASMSU voluntary assessment by fifty cents ($.50) per term. This increase would go to the Programming Board, which is the section of ASMSU which provides entertainment and informational programming; ie, Neither the Student Board or SMAB will get any increase. YOUR ASMSU ELECTION COLLEGE OF BUSINESS, Your tax will still be refundable the first ten class days of STUDENT BOARD REPRESENTATIVE each term. THIS TAX WOULD SUPPORT- RIGHT! Candidates BOB DEZIEL are- CONCERT COUNCIL AUDIO-VISUAL COUNCIL Pop Entertainment Video Workshop JAN MCKILLOP Ebony Productions Video Waves Mariah Folk & Blues Coffeehouse Black Notes Media Production ED WOOD Showcase Jazz Intermediary Ten Pound Fiddle (This election is College off Business TRAVEL COUNCIL students only) SPEAKERS COUNCIL Great Issues ASMSU Travel FILM COUNCIL IT Classic Film Series SPECIAL PROJECTS Homecoming THEATER COUNCIL College Bowl Student Foundation The Answer Place (TAP) The Company STUDENT UNION PROGRAMMING NOVEMBER PROGRAMMING BOARD COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEM 1..! CAST YOUR BALLOT AT BESSEY, BERKEY, WELLS AND EPPLEY CENTER FROM 9:00 AM TO 4:00PM Michigon Stole News, East Lonsing, Michigan Tuesday, October 31, 1978 7 Young men's harriers hope to improve in upcoming Big Ten's worst they have done for over 20 years. would qualify MSU for the NCAA district expected by Gibbard to do great things in By CHERYL FISH the future. White is psyched up for the Big State News Sports Writer None of the individual team members had meet in Minneapolis, Minn, on Nov. 11. In Ten meet, as is the rest of the team. good enough times to qualify for the district addition, the top six individuals from teams With the Big Ten meet coming up on meet, either. that do not make the top five are eligible for "I have been improving as the season Saturday, the MSU men's cross country the district. team has a chance to prove that although But that shouldn't be the case t his year at progresses. I didn't have the confidence the meet in Bloomington, Ind. "If we don't before," White said. they are a young team, they can run with "We'll definitely get some people quali¬ the best of them. do better, I'll walk home," said coach Jim fied," Gibbard said. "I'm sure they will come However, all the practicing and actual 1* Gibbard. It shouldn't be too difficult for the through." experience has increased his belief in what harriers to improve on last year's showing. The he can do. "I have more confidence in myself goal that Gibbard has for the team is Freshman standout Martin Schulist ran and I look forward to each race," he said. They came in 10th place, which was the to place in the top five of the Big Ten. That his best race on Saturday in the double loss to Minnesota and Miami. This is Gibbard's 10th year as coach of the men's cross-country team. He was a He feels good about the way he has been distance runner for the Spartans as an running lately, with the exception of the undergraduate. Three of his teams have JOE CENTERS recent Eastern Michigan meet. "Things won Big Ten titles, the most recent coming have been going good. I'd like to shoot for in 1971. the top five in the Big Ten meet. That way B. Bumble Berry: our team would have a good chance in the districts." Schulist said. Even though the harriers have only a 2-6 record, Gibbard has been pleased with their efforts. "They're a young team, and it takes a while to get used to the pressures. But In the race Saturday. Schulist used the a number-one fan "know how" that he has been accumulating this team has been steadily improving, and next year they should be even better," he since the season began. "I was pushing to keep up with the two Minnesota runners. said. They opened up, and I was right behind Martin Schulist. a freshman from Whitehall, finished third in MSU's Although he doesn't claim to be a "live-or-die Spartan fan," Bob "B. Bumble" Berry, them," he said. "Once you learn how to run The Big Ten meet is one stepping stone disc jockey at WVIC, would have to be mentioned if someone was ever picked as MSU's that has been double-dual meet with Minnesota and Miami Saturday at Forest Akers these races, it's not so bad." anticipated all year, and could number-one fan. provide the young team with the boost that Golf Course. Schulist has been the most consistent performer for the Berry, who says that his favorite spot in the world is on the 50 yard line in Spartan Another freshman, Michael White, is will get them on their way. Spartans all season. Stadium, graduated from MSU in 1975, but he didn't forget his school once he left. He spends much of his time promoting the Spartans, whether it's on the air playing the fight song or at a pep rally before a game. "I don't make much money so I can't contribute monetarily," Berry said. "But I contribute with my heart. My greatest thrill was last year with the student foundation MINNESOTA WINS BIG TEN TITLE when I put together pep rally for the Michigan game." In fact, it was after the Michigan-MSU game in 1973 when the Wolverines defeated the Spartans, 31-0, that Berry became such a loyal fan. The first couple of years I was here I wasn't a big Spartan fan," Berry said. "I went to maybe half of the games. It was the *73, 31-0 loss to Michigan. It rained and rained and rained — I was never so upset in my life. They played the alma mater and I started bawling. I went home and told my dad I was going back to school." Berry had dropped out of school for a while, but he went back after that and has been Spikers knocked out of tourney Ohio State had beaten Minnesota in pool play on Friday, but the Gophers came back a loyal fan ever since. By ADAM TEICHER State News and won the final match, three games to one, to become the Big Ten champs. "I don't know if I'm a live-or-die Spartan fan, I'm 28 years old and I haven't died yet in Sports Writer MSU volleyball coach Annelies Knoppers said that the results of last weekend's Big The Spartans opened up play Friday against Purdue and lost in straight games, 15-9, nine years,'' Berry said. "Once, though, I'd like the Spartans to be 12-0 with a win in the Ten championship tournament at Champaign, III. were "not quite what we wanted", but 18-16. "In that first game, we were too excited and played too cautiously, but came back Rose" Bowl." well in the second game." said Knoppers. Mental errors hurt the Spartans late in the the Spartans will still have to settle for their 2-2 record in pool play which failed to qualify Berry said he didn't start promoting the Spartans on his radio show until the fall of them for the finals of the tournament. match and MSU had its first loss of the day. 1974. A narrow loss to Minnesota in the final match of the Next up for the Spartans were the Buckeyes. "Ohio State has some real strong hitters "It was the week of the Ohio State game," Berry said. "I got a chance so I started pool play kept MSU out of the and we were able to neutralize them real well which was something we did not do against championship round, which was eventually won by Minnesota. pumping the game. I got on the air and played the fight song and read poems. That was Ohio State and Minnesota qualified from pool one, which also featured MSU, Purdue," Knoppers explained after MSU took the Buckeyes 15-11,11-15, 16-14. top seeded Purdue, and Iowa. Pool two sent Illinois as their number-one team and "Iowa was a complete contrast to both Purdue and Ohio State. Both of those two teams Northwestern as the number-two representative while Wisconsin, Indiana, and Michigan are real tall and real strong and Iowa was not either of those," commented the MSU "I don't know if I'm a live-or-die Spartan fan: I'm 28 years old missed out and went home early. coach. Her team had an easy time with the Hawkeyes 15-10,15-9. In Saturday's semi finals, Ohio State had an easy time beating Northwestern and The narrow 14-16,15-12.14-16 loss to Minnesota was the last match of the tournament and I haven't died yet. Once, though, I'd like the Spartans to be Minnesota defeated Illinois, setting up a final between the Buckeyes and the Gophers. for the Spartans and according to Knoppers, it showed in their play. "We played all four 12-0 with a win in the Rose Bowl." — WVIC disc jockey Bob "B. matches straight through without any rest. All of the other teams in our pool played with Bumble" Berry. rest in between some of the matches. This definitely hurt our chances of beating Minnesota. We showed signs of fatigue in the last match. "Our serve reception was bad and we had people out of position and made other mental Injured foot bothers Ertl errors that winning volleyball teams don't make in big situations," Knoppers said the year that Denny (then coach Denny Stolz) told everyone to wear green. Everyone afterwards. did and we won the game, after that it was all over." This was the fourth annual Big Ten volleyball championship. The Spartans won it the Berry stuck with the Spartans throughout the lean years, and now it is all becoming first two years and Ohio State captured the title last year. Minnesota becomes the third worth while for him. Berry feels that it is coach Darryl Rogers who has made all of the difference. in Tulsa tournament school to cop the crown. "Darryl is a great man," he said. "He cares. He cares about winning but more important he cares about his players, his school and his family. Playing as an individual in the Nancy said her foot didn't hurt her that much "He is probably one of the three or four people I respect most in this world." Ix>pez Invitational in Tulsa, Okla., late last during her swing, but it was hard to walk It is Rogers, along with Berry's father and high school football coach, Ron Holland week, MSU's Sue Ertl was in pretty good on." MSU's women's golf coach Mary from North Farmington, who he says he respects the most. shape after the first round. Fossum said. Her 77 was good enough for a fifth-place Ertl ballooned to a 90 in the second Berry also has praise for all Spartan fans because he says they also care. tie in the prestigious tournament after the round, which pretty much took her out of "I think Spartan fans give a darn about the school," Berry said. "I think they care as first 18 holes. the competition. She did come back with a much about the score as a Rhodes Scholar or the Medical School." But the senior suffered a nasty cut on her strong 77 in the final round, though, for a foot after the first round from a fall. "She tournament total of 244. That proves where Berry's priorities lie and that's what makes him such a great fan. He also made it clear that he wanted to come to MSU and not Michigan, in fact like any The tournament was won by a strong The MSU Judo Club finished third in the 10th annual Tri-State Judo Championships in Arizona State team, which defeated South¬ Hamilton, Ohio, over the weekend. good Spartan fan, he said he "never liked Michigan." ern Methodist University in a sudden-death Individual finishes for MSU were: Loretta Pulley, second place, women's heavyweight, Berry said he works closely with two other Spartan loyals. Bob Merando, manager of [ DM trfeife-g ] playoff. brown- and black-belt division; Cathy Florian, third place, women's lightweight, brown Dooiey's, and Jim Maclntyre, who is the adviser of the student card section, work along with Berry on many of his projects. Vicky Singleton of Arizona State was the and black-belt division; James Peacock, first place, men's middleweight, brown belt tournament's medalist. division; Bill Rader, second place, men's middleweight, brown belt division; Ramon "The three of us each try to contribute," Berry said. "Jim works with the University, "Sue isn't one to make excuses, but I'm Ricardo, third place, men's middleweight, brown-belt division; David Wilson, I have the media and Bob has the facility." The second IM Disco Skating session of sure her foot did bother her," Fossum said, second-place, men's heavyweight, brown belt division; Shunny Naganuma, third place, There is no doubt Berry enjoys what he is doing and he, with the support of his the term will be held Thursday from 9 to 12 adding that Ertl had to play without golf men's lightweight, black-belt division; Richard Matis, third place, men's heavyweight, bosses at WVIC, and the help of Merando and Maclntyre, could easily be considered as p.m. in 216 Women's IM Bldg. (upstairs shoes for the final two rounds. "It was a black-belt division. one of the Spartan's number-one fans. gymnasium). Skate rental is 75 cents per good experience for her, and she said she Also competing for MSU were: Jan Zakarzecki, David Bentley, Sharon Quon and hour. had a wonderful time." Sandra Harden. BELL'S PIZZA HOUSE Costume Contest! Famous for pizza, spaghetti, and at hot oven grinders, FREE DELIVERY FROM BOTH LOCATIONS 1)35 E. Grand River Ave. nsing, Mich E. Lansing, Mich. . 33z-5027 Tel, 332-0151 Plenty of Free Parking TONIGHT-TUES. OCT. 31 First Prize—'25 cosh Illfsil.is Nile is iCAMPUS Second Prize-M5 gift certificate for llforno Room Restaurant I I Ml Mil I PIZZA Third Prize—lOfreepasses for Coral Gables >1 11*11 ll.lAI' I it I if - < < I (I I hill'. | Tuesday: The best costumes judged by the band nillPAU wins! ( lit .in I i.ills V ■ FREE ITEM NIGHT I 11 tl limes I ON ANY SIZE PIZZA It iiile .il lilt- lilt' Dance all night and enjoy I Sorry, no coupons I great liquor prices at jl 1040 E. Grand River Coral Gables 2 blks East of Hagadorn free delivery 337-1377 I 8Michigan State News. Eost Lansing. Michigan Tuesday, October 31, 1978 Police crackdown Jailed Soviets fast for one day results in arrests MOSCOW (AP) - Scores of jailed Soviet dissidents, includ¬ Soviet Union." Alleged mistreatment of po¬ "Johns" is a descriptive term dealer and four Oldsmobile ing Yuri Orlov and Alexander litical prisoners cited by the By Rl'SS HUMPHREY SUte News Staff Writer for customers of prostitutes. workers to an MSG student, Ginzburg, observed a one-day group includes lack of adequate "We must get them off the police said. fast Monday to mark the fourth medical care, confiscation of Lansing Police Depart mail and other property, perse¬ ;teude streets and made. Gleason said, but Ingham ment agents will travel to Cuba was a news camera by an undercover reporter, William Becktenwald, who worked as a labor and five years internal 'ounty pros have in the ence for Western correspon¬ East Michigan Avenue, police coming weeks to screen sured police the lett€ the prisoners named in the new guard. dents by the Moscow "Helsinki" exile at his May trial. violate anv law lists. The purpose is to ensure human rights group at the -aid. Mayor Gerald R. Graves Orlov is supposed to be said at a Monday morning press The letters would be sent out that no spies, terrorists or apartment of Nobel Laureate allowed to write home twice a conference that venereal dis¬ shortly if incidents of prostitu¬ common criminals are among $2.3 MILLION FOR SALVAGERS Andrei D. Sakharov and his month but his wife has received tion on Lansing's east side do activist wife, Yelena Bonner. eases are becoming a problem them. Family members of the no letters, Mrs. Ginzburg said. decline after recent The hunger strike, organized in the city and suggested those not start to prisoners will be allowed to arrested should be checked for :t while in prison. crackdowns. Gleason said officers observe emigrate with them. Florida yields treasure by the prisoners to protest "cruel measures" at the labor The Shcharansky family ceived a letter Monday from re¬ Graves and Police Chief at least 40 persons a night Cuban President Fidel Cas¬ camps where they are being the Jewish activist, who is soliciting tro has indicated that about April, but that order too was held, marked the fourth anni¬ Richard Gleason said district pros TALLAHASSEE. Fla. (API giving Florida 25 percent of the allowed to write home once ranged 1.000 prisoners may he allowed Under a federal marshal's treasure, but a U.S. Supreme appealed. versary of the first such news every two months, telling of his court judges seem to be too - conference in which the lenient in sentencing prosti at ion fror i East I to emigrate before the end of threat to look him up, the Court ruling later placed the The appeals court blocked it plight transfer from Vladimir Prison firefighte the vear. wreck outside U.S. territorial temporarily, but referred the of "prisoners of conscience" was about 100 miles east of Moscow. tutes. pimps and "johns." director of Florida's archives waters. The firm claimed the case back to Mehrtens — who discussed. yielded possession of a $2.3 million Spanish treasure Mon ruling invalidated the state's two weeks ago ruled the state Many dissidents who partici¬ contract, but the state, which would have to post a $1.5 pated in the 1974 news confer¬ day. and the treasure hunters who found it began hauling has had custody of the treasure million bond while it continued ence and subsequent ones have Mayor-for- PBB issue dropped from suit away the gold and doubloons. since 1971. quish control. refused to relin¬ appeals or else give the treas¬ back. On Friday, the ap¬ been convicted and sentenced on such charges as "anti-Soviet the-day ure "It's going home for the first time in seven years." said Bleth On Monday, Archives Direc peals court lifted another tem¬ agitation and propaganda," GRAND RAPIDS. CPU - tor Ross Morrell did yield after porary stay, opening the way "slandering the Soviet state," in Leuven said the case McHaley. executive vice presi¬ the state failed in its latest for Treasure Salvors to claim or provisions of the country's SEATTLE t AP) - When iher the herding of some I. dent of Treasure Salvors. Inc.. the treasure. treason laws. Paul Schell lost the race for ml- Mil the Kokx farm creati of Key West, the firm that attempt to have a turnover order staved, and after a threat Assistant The Moscow Helsinki group, mayor he decided there was •garded the rights arid sensitivities" of recovered the booty. It is part Attorney General Myron Kokx from I'.S". Marshal Bill Joyce to organized to monitor Soviet nothing wrong with buying his ■ owners. The suit asks damages for odor and of a $100 million to $600 million Marty Friedman said the state Robt rt J. Van L* treasure that sank with the arrest Morrell if he continued had feared Treasure Salvors compliance with the human way to power. Neither did > pollution from the Kokx farm, rights provisions of the 1975 before Kent County Circuit Judge George R. iris Hensig. who represents Farm Bureau Spanish galleon "Nuestra to refuse to give back the would sell the coins while state Helsinki accords on European Cook, revealed ihat the toxic fire retardant Senora de Atocha" in a storm attorneys continued to appeal Kokx. said the animals quarantined on the security and cooperation, called Schell. an unsuccessful apparently had not threatened farmers using < firm were properly tended. He also said off the Florida Keys in 1622. In 1976, U.S. District Judge Mehrtens' order. But McHaley W. 0. Mehrtens had ruled the said the firm would hold onto for the repeal of those charges mayoral candidate, purchased water from Martin Lake. The controversy over who I landowners should expect certain odors. under the Russian criminal for $30 the right to be mayor owns 1,847 silver coins and state was not entitled to the the treasure until after the "There ha- been ) dat< ion of • and an abundance of flies, code. for a day. The sale came during artifacts dates to 1971 when treasure, a ruling upheld by the appeals period. Mar Lake and his is principally an agricultural, rural and U.S. 5th Circuit Court of would be unfair and The group said the charges a League of Women Voter's Treasure Salvors found the Ap¬ "It said. veloped area. The operation was well-run. do "are incompatible with the pro¬ fun-raiser Sunday. Politicians untiy supervised and fenced in. The animals wreck and recovered the treas- peals in New Orleans. Mehr immoral to anything to it The -nit originally involved the Farm Bureau s tens ordered federal marshals until the appeals are over." she visions of the covenant of donated items and services to herding of contaminated cattle on Kokx s maintained exclusively on this property," human the auction. The firm signed a contract to pick up the said. rights signed by the Diamond K Ranch near Fremont until the ag said. "The plaintiffs sustained no dam animal.- could be destroyed and buried. tor which compensation is required." The plaintiffs feared PBB would seep from the fore reading his opening statement. Hensig cattle waste and from dead animals into the ;l for a directed verdict of acquittal. Cook ground water feeding Martin Lake, their Dayton-Hudson. Facts, not fears #2. Pediatrics gets departmental status division of the Department of Osteopathic Medicine. A new post graduate pro¬ in the field will be started Planned Development. gram PASS YOUR MID-TERMS Strip development doesn't just happen. Somebody lets it The MSU and Student Bookstores now have happen. Study Guides for Meigs Intermediate That won't happen in the case of The Cedars because both Accounting & McConnell Economics. Dayton-Hudson and the City have and will continue to carefully review and plan development. TO GET YOU Lake Lansing Road is The Cedars' front door. Dayton- THROUGH: Hudson owns this land and will only permit development TiEIGS ""CWre ftCCoUMriHCrfe ★ ACCT 300 that meets the most stringent design and environmental McC0NNELl_ restrictions of The Cedars' own master plan. In fact, at least ★ ECON 200! PK.KtiPces OP ecowt'cs 7/t one third of the site will remain as open space - much of it in its natural state. Buy one now . . . and make life easier Through its review of The Cedars, the City has set new, You have something to very high standards for quality development. These stan¬ share with the people of the rural South and Appalachia dards can be made to apply to any future development. The yourself. Find out how City has both zoning and site plan review authority for any — you can help, as a Catholic Brother, Sister, or Priest. such development. Because only the basic center has been ap¬ Your request will be treated confidentially. proved, all future development must come up for review and ■ I'd like information about approval. opportunities with the Glenmary Missioners and the free poster. ■ I'd like a free copy of the poster only. Glenmary Missioners Room Cincinnati, Ohio 45246 Name_ Box 46404 Proposition 1 — YES. Michigan State News, Eost Lansing, Michigan Tuesday, October 31, 1978 9 Doctors, patients cause Weekend thefts hit Lansing area prescription drug habits Armed robbers got away with a total of $639 this ment and demanded money. Police are looking for a male in By LINDA WOLOHAN asked is who is responsible for Hospital. "Patients expect to weekend in three separate inci¬ his 30s, with black hair and Valium, a prescription drug causing these dependencies. get prescriptions as a finaliza- dents in Lansing, police said. brown eyes, standing 6-foot-1, that is comparatively easy to Some area experts maintain the tion of the doctor's care, so Michael Preston. 2l, of 1516 and weighing 180 pounds. fault lies with both doctor and sometimes doctors are a little get, has been under consider¬ N. Hyde St., was robbed of $62 able scrutiny lately. patient. lax." when he arrived at 1125 King- Walgreen's Drugstore. 3717 The foremost concern is that "Physicians are remarkably It is easier for the patient to ley Court late Saturday night to W. Jolly Road, was held up Valium and other common pre¬ insensitive to the real problems ask for drugs to cure a problem deliver a pizza. Friday at 2 p.m. for $127. The scription drugs are becoming of their patients," Oberlin said. than to attack it at its root, said A delivery driver for Mr. D's store manager was confronted too easily available and that "Because of the short amount of Dennis Lafave, head of the Pizza, Preston was held up by in the parking lot by an armed repetitive users have devel¬ time they have to spend with MSU Office of Substance three men with a rifle. Police man wearing a dark ski mask. their patients, they don't take Abuse. As a result, many users are searching for the offenders, Police are looking for a male, oped dependencies. Prescription drug depen¬ enough time to describe under have developed a psychological all in their early 20s. standing about 5-foot-8 and dency is caused by overzealous what conditions the drug need for these prescriptions, he Taylor Blocker, 33. of 1023 weighing 140 pounds. prescription-users who demand should be used, why they are said. W. Hillsdale St.. was robbed of their prescriptions be refilled prescribing it, possible side "Our society thinks there are $450 Friday at 1 p.m. when an whether they really "need" effects and what can go wrong. armed male entered his apart- 'bad' drugs and 'good' drugs," them or not. This dependency is "On the other hand, patients Oberlin said. "It's easier just to reinforced by doctors who, can be just as much to blame. take a 'good' drug than finding The demands on doctors are State News through oversight or careless¬ ness, allow users to constantly unbelievable. Patients put pres¬ out what the real problem is. Plant health refill prescriptions. sure on them to prescribe — so "Though therapy is best, Newsline Users often develop a psy¬ they do," he said. mild tranquilizers (common 355-8252 chological rather than a physio¬ "Patients take the whole prescription drugs) are good for Orson Welles IULI directs the historic broadcast of War of the Worlds advice today logical dependence on these thing rather lightly," said emotional disorders. It's a good idea, both medically and psy Oct. 30, 1938. ft was the most colossal Halloween prank ever perpetuated Tired of sickly-looking drugs, said Bill Oberlin, educa¬ George Lafkas of the Lansing because it caused a million Americans to panic. tion director at the East Lan¬ Substance Abuse Office. "But choiogically, to prescribe them plants? Jesse Saylor, Horticul¬ ture specialist with the Cooper¬ sing Drug Education Center. do doctors. Some doctors are for a short-term period. Patients can become depen¬ so not as knowledgeable about the "But most of the time, the ative Extension Service, will speak on Plants, Pests and 'IFREE Lv£J] t0 anyJewish \ dent on prescription tran¬ new drugs as they should be." people who get them don't have Problems today at 3 p.m. in 206 quilizers and mood-alterers, most commonly Valium, Libri¬ "People more or less bug you for drugs like mild tranquil¬ short-term disorders. Most of Election inspectors still needed Horticulture Bldg. LITERATURE □ is Worid Peace Possible' these drugs can actually in¬ um and Darvon. izers," said Jamie Dacus, a Saylor will give advice and crease stress over a long period answer questions concerning □Can Mid East Peace last' A relevant question being resident physician at Sparrow of time," Oberlin said. "But the Twenty election inspectors of polls the entire day. tered East Lansing voters and □Will life end at the grave? house plant problems. patients don't realize that, and all party affiliations are still Inspectors will be paid $40 may apply in person at the city The lecture is open to STUDY COURSES: needed to work on election day for working Tuesday, plus $5 clerk's office, 410 Abbott Road, all □ Understanding the Torah. still feel they need them." students. Oberlin said he has found that next Tuesday. for attending a one-hour school East Lansing. □ understanding the Unknown assailant the number of prescription drug-related calls has risen The hours required are from 6 a.m. until 11p.m. and workers of instruction at 3:30 p.m. Thursday, New Testament, NEW TESTAMENT: □ English □ Yiddish □ Hebrei over the past three years. are expected to remain at the Applicants must be regiis- Send to: attacks woman, 27 Though many claim the prob¬ lem is over-rated, there seems *********** ******* CHRISTIAN INFORMATION SERVICE*7 (Baptist) PO Box A 27-year-old womam was ment. She was treated and to be a movement to make both * \U)48. Rochester. NY 14603 doctors and patients aware of sexually assaulted Sunday released later at Ingham Medi¬ the tendencies toward depen¬ * night in her apartment after cal Hospital, Lansing. she returned from shopping, The victim was unable to dency. ¥ Meridian Township police said identify or describe her attack- "Doctors are becoming more ¥ Groups applying for funds of alternative methods of Monday. "She did not know the assail¬ aware treatment," Dacus said. "For ¥ from RHA's Alternative Movie Police said the woman was ant," Sgt. Carl Gallagher said. example, they are suggesting ¥ Fund may pick up applications attacked about 8 p.m. by an "A search of the area did not that the patient seek psychi¬ ¥ at the RHA office, 323 Student unknown assailant when she turn him up." atric help instead of merely unlocked the door to her apart¬ Police have no suspects. prescribing a mood-elevator ¥ Services during office hours: drug." ¥ Mon& Wed-1:30-4 "We're trying to get people ¥ Tues -2:00-4:30 Voter info list ready drug cards listing what to carry drugs they've used," Lafkas ¥ said. "Pharmacists would also ¥ keep their own records of what ¥ Deadline for turning in applications ¥ For those who are having a difficult time keeping up with familiarize residents with this year's long ballot and reduce the patient has been receiving. ¥ is Wed., November I, SlOO p.m. * It's a check system," he said. all the pre-election news, a free voting time. "List of Candidates and Issues" is being offered by the East They are available at City Hall, 410 Abbott Road, and will People also need to be edu¬ cated about these drugs and the \***************** also be available at the polls on alternative methods to using Lansing City Clerk. them, Oberlin said. The lists are designed to election day, Nov. 7. The "But&ifitUTttfaiwJ Stereo Shoppe presents Nov. 35th* at Long's Nov. 3rd to 5th * Michigan's 3rd Annual Stereo Show and Sale! PUBLIC TELEVISION Showi«7:ll-f :25 pm TONIGHT AND SAT. This is the uncut version. Spend Spend Halloween with the HAU9WE&N LIVING DEAD with the PQUNt Far and away the finest and (take warning) most frightening production of the classic thriller-novel. Louis Jourdan stars in a Great Performances encore. • It's a Dracula spectacular! 2^2 hoars 'I with fimtlfflNILEn Dracula" TONIOHT AND SATURDAY There Is more than one secret at.. 326 Nat. Sci. 7:00, 8:45,10:30 £ FOSTER • MARTIN SHEEN ALEXIS SMITH . . MONT SHUMAH TJAC0RY "THE UTTLE GIRL WHO LIVES DOWN THE UUIE" * T0M6HT Caend 7:30 & MO ADMISSION •!.50 MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY TELEVISION I Tuesday, October 31. 1978 10 Michigan State News. East Lansing Michigan pra«gres*sive (pre gres'iv), adj. 1. fav¬ JfOOA) NON-Ofc«K.* - If* YOUR oring or advocating progress, improve¬ ment. 2. progressing or advancing; mak¬ At OUfc HOU$(,... ANt> ing progress toward better conditions; YOU'LL Ni\li^ K>^^t 11 more enlightened or liberal ideas, the use t>AH*.U<\OUS t^OPLt Ah t> tOOA, 1!' of new and advantageous methods. W*AK VOURtOOA^ IF YOU 3. THE MICHIGAN STATE RADIO NETWORK UMKSt><0 1,500 'TlLZ'SOAM 640 AM „ • SZ.OOAWIS^IOM AU-W<\NK$2F0M • WMCD • W1 lN*0fclfr fry IVVIC ■i£M « Tuesday, October 31, 1978 11 Michigan State News, East Lonsing, Michigan gBLv.. V Auto Service / Employment it FRANKLY SPEAKING .. by phil frank KEEPING IF WITH THEJCNESES? PRODUCTION MACHINE Classified Advertising TWO SNOW tires for sale BOOK STORE attendant WAITRESS - NO experi¬ FUNO RAISER • Sales per with steel rim. F-78-15, $40. wanted. Apply in person WE'RE HAYING tNOUStl TROUBLE ence necessary. Part-time Operator, part-time, days. Ex¬ son. Good pay. Work-Study Information Lorraine. 371-3564. only. CINEMA X ADULT KEEPING UP WW THE WAUD*/S! and full time positions. Apply perience unnecessary. Has- lett area. Call 339-8223, Mr. ONLY! Steve, 487-6001. Affirmative Action PIRGIM. ENTERTAINMENT CENTER, in person. HUDDLE SOUTH, E-5-11-1 (3) 820 W. Miller. 5-11-2 15) Buck for appointment. Employer. 12-11-8 19) IONI155 1255 M7 Student Services Sldg. 100 W. Jolly Road. 8-11-7 (5) 0-7-10-31 15) HELP WANTED COCKTAIL WAITRESS - - babysitter No experience necessary. CLERK-TYPIST. Excellent in my home, full time, 2 small RATES ONE MAN'S TRASH is an¬ 1 day • W« per line Part-time and full time posi¬ opportunity for person seek¬ children, must be reliable and DAYS other man's treasure. So - 3 days • I0« per line tions. Apply in person, HUD¬ ing a variety of tasks. Flexible have own transportation. rrrm turn your trash into cash with DLE SOUTH. 820 W. Miller. hours, prefer 10-2 pm. Pos¬ Good pay. Call after 6:30 pm., HLJiiicnm 4 doys • 75c par line a CLASSIFIED AD. Call 5-11-2 (6) sibly full time later. Perfect 393-7285. 5-11-6 (61 namumEa I days-70C per line Peggy at 355-8255. for housewife or mother ■pjittjiium SX 33 12 1 15) WANTED- MATURE babysit¬ BABYSITTER-Housekeeper, desiring to re-enter business ■fnmnmrn Line rote per world. Call 482-5555 between ter, 11:30 to 6:30 with car. insertion McDONALD'S RESTAUR¬ Tuesday & Thursday from 8 ■mirrinp'inn 9-5. Carriage Hill north Call ANT Of East Lansing (next to to 4. 1 girl. 4 1/2. Glencairn 8-1J-6 M1|_ 669 3540 12-11-15 (4) area. area. Own transportation. People's church) is now tak¬ KIDS BACK in school? Sell Ecenollnes • 3 lines ■ »4.00 • 5 doys. 80' per line over May bring own child. ing applications for full time, AVON. Good earnings, flexi¬ PART-TIME children's 337-2532 after 4:30. art 3 lines. No adjustment in rote when cancelled. 8am-5pm-close shifts. Apply 8-11-7 (6) ble hours that let you come teacher. East Lansing Arts Price of item(s) must be stated in od. Maximum from 9-11am, or 2-4 pm. home when your kids do. For Workshop. Contact Theresa, sale price of Monday-Friday. 8-11-2 (8) details. 482-6893 MOO. FRONT DESK Clerks and 332-2565. 8-11-9 (4) Peanuts Personal ads • 3 lines - *2.25 • per insertion. C-17-10-31 (5) FULL TIME Clerk typist posi¬ pm midnight bellman. Full and 75* per line over 3 lines (prepayment). tion open in general office for part-time. Apply in person. THE PERFECT part-time job. For Rent Rummoge/Caroge Sale ads • 4 lines ■ *2.50. person with legal and'or real HOSPITALITY INN. 3600 Evenings. Top pay. Must be 63" per line over 4 lines • per insertion. estate background or inter¬ Dunckel Road, Lansing, neat, dependable, have own GARAGE, $25 per month. 'Round Town ods * 4 lines • '2.50 • per insertion. est. A-1 typing skills essen¬ 8-11-7 (6) transportation. Call between Outdoor space, $15, Near 63' per line over 4 lines, JUNK CARS wanted. Also tial-accuracy is vital! Contact £) COLLEGE MEDIA SERVICES box 4244 Berkeley CA 94704 4-6 pm. 655-3931. 8-10-31 151 LIVE-IN aide needed Dooley's. Sue. 332-3398, lost I Pounds ods/Transportation ods • 3 lines • '1.50 • nurse Mr. Thomas at 676-2900 selling used parts. Phone 321 • for holiday 1 10-30 (4) relief. Excellent per insertion. 50* per line over 3 lines. 3651. C-22-10-31 f3» 8112 (8) BABYSITTER WANTED 6:30 CLERKS-ADULT bookstore, Employment f| Employment ft salary. Must have good ref¬ erences. Please call UPJOHN p.m. to 4 a.m.-Monday thru Deadlines Matarcycles jfao; VELVET FINGERS. 489-2278. WORK ON CALL-IN RN - MATURE and experi¬ HEALTH CARE SERVICES. Thursday in my South Lan¬ sing home for 2 girls ages 1, Apartants W 25 10-31 (3) 694 1250. E.O.E. M F AT YOUR OWN enced decision-maker 3. Live in possible 394-2272. Ads • 2 p.m. • 1 doss doy before publication. 3-10-31 (8) NEED FEMALE ' SUZUKI. 1978 - GS 400. CONVENIENCE needed now for staff relief in 8 10-31 (6) Cancellation/Change • 1 p.m. • 1 class day before ATTENTION STUDENTS industrial setting. Good Winter term only, 337-1482. Less than 200 miles. Kick & an publication. ALL STUDENT CLASSIFIED HOSTESS, DINING rooms. DENTAL CHAIRSIDE Assis¬ 8-118 (3) electric start. Loaded. $1900. RN'S orientation. Please call San¬ Once od is ordered it cannot be cancelled or changed ADVERTISING will require Experience helpful, day and tant - full time. Busy east side Cathy, 355-8960 after 7 pm. LPN'S dra Machtel, RN, UNJOHN until ofter 1st insertion. PREPAYMENT beginning night shifts available. Full and office. Experience necessary. NEED FEMALE roommate for 12-11-6 141 NURSE AIDES HEALTH CARE SERVICES. There is a M.00 charge for 1 ad change plus 50' per Monday, October 30. part time. Must be respon¬ Fringe benefits. Send resume Van Hoosen. May be from off 694-1250. E.O.E. M/F odditionol change for maximum of 3 changes. Sp-22-12-1 151 3-10-31 (9) sible and willing to take to Box B 2, State News campus. 355-1665. 3-11-1 (3) The Stote News will only be responsible for the 1st charge. Call for an interview Classified, East Lansing. day's incorrect insertion. Adjustment claims must 1 fapUfwt II til UNIFORMED SECURITY of ficers-full or part time. Call WAITRESS - PASQUALE'S RESTAURANT, 916 W. Sagi¬ before 11:00 A.M. Monday Friday, The Starboard Tack, - 8-11-2(7) QUIET COUNTRY living. 2 bedrooms, air, heat & water be mode within 10 days of expiration date. Work only on the days and 641 4662 0 9 10 31 <31 351-8720 8-11-6(11) HELP WANTED - NEWS¬ included. 10 minutes from 1 block east of Logan . Bills are due 7 days from ad expiration date. If not WAREHOUSE MECHANICS shifts you want to work, naw, LETTER editor, including campus. Call days, 372-9230, paid by due date, a 50' lote service charge will to work on and maintain PART-TIME employment for competitive wages, training and Saginaw. Apply in per¬ WANTED: BUSINESS Office 5-10-31 (4) production and distribution extension 238. or 489-7239 be due. rental equipment. Experience MSU Students, automobile program available for nurses son. Manager. 34 hours week for responsibilities. Good pay, after 6. X-510-31 (61 preferred. Phone 339-9523. required. 339-9500. downtown Lansing health Work-Study ONLY! Steve, 1-10-31 <5t C-22-10-31 (3) COOK - PASQUALE'S RES¬ care professional office, Send PIRGIM, 487-6001. Affirma¬ BIRCHFIELD APART¬ TAURANT 916 W. Saginaw, handwritten resume to the tive Action Employer. MENTS. Sharp 1 bedroom STORE DETECTIVES-iunior For information contac 1 block east of Logan and 1 Ait—uiivt Ifg] TYPIST-EXPERIENCED, for part-time work in her own and senior C.J. majors pre¬ ferred. Full and part time. Call PROVINCIAL HOUSE, Saginaw. Apply in person. 5-10-31 (41 State News, Box E-5. 5-11-2 (6) 12-11-8 (7) for rent. 394-6943 after 5 pm. 12-11-3 (3) home on a regular basis for ATTENTION STUDENTS IMPALA 1973 - reliable 641-4562. 0-9-10-31 141 WHITEHILLS MERRY CHRISTMAS! MSU scientist. Call 337-9651. ALL STUDENT CLASSIFIED transportation - needs muf¬ 332-5061 WAITRESS - LUNCHES HAPPY HOLIDAYS! ADVERTISING will require PREPAYMENT beginning fler and body work. $250. 351 2802 after 6 pm. 1-10-31 15) MOTHER'S HELPER. New UNIFORMED SECURITY of¬ ficers-full or part time. Call only, including Saturday. Per¬ manent full time position. SEASON'S GREETINGS! Wanted 8-11-9 (4) 641-4562. 9-10-31 (31 Great pay and benefits. Apply Immediate openings for part- Monday, October 30. York City, Single household. Starting to wonder how you in person between 2:30 - 4:00 time registered or registree- are going to afford your Sp-22-12-1 (5) 2 school age boys. Light LEMANS 1973 - Sport. Air GAME ROOM personnel. pm. JIM'S TIFFANY PLACE. eligible. certified or certified- "Christmas Cheer" this year? $300 down. housekeeping. Till the end of eligible technicians. AUDI FOX, '75 - conditioning, rally wheels, June. Starting salary, $80. Younq ladies preferred. Good Downtown Lansing. Eligible person take over stereo. $1100 or best offer, pay-l$180 week and up)- 8-11-3 17) We have the solution. Call or write. (212)831-4621. Sparrow Hospital is a mod¬ payments. 485-7171. 337-8331. 12-11-814) benefits and pleasant work¬ 185 E. 85th Street, NY, NY, ern, growing, 488-bed Lan¬ 12-11-8 NURSES-RN'S. LPN'S, 3 to available to work (32 __ 10028. Evelyn Silbergeld. ing positions. Excellent posi¬ sing hospital with an expand¬ If you are MUSTANG HATCHBACK- 12-11-15(8) tions for student, full and 11. Charge nurse position in FULL TIME, we have numer¬ 1972 CHEVY Caprice. Ail 1976, excellent, low mileage, skilled nursing facility. Oppor¬ ing cardiopulmonary depart¬ ous temporary job assign¬ part time. Apply in person power. 49,000 miles. No rust. ment. The responsible posi¬ 355-3354; night 351-0395. GERIATRICS WOMAN in¬ only. CINEMA X, 1000 Jolly tunity to develop and utilize ments just waiting to be Excellent condition. 323- tions offer opportunities for 12-10-31 (3) terested to assist in care of Road. O 22 10-31 (9) your assessment skills. Com¬ filled. 2451.6-11-2 (3) individual growth. senior citizen lady. Help with petitive wage scale, excellent PINTO - '72. Automatic, gas CHEVETTE, 1978. 4 door, 4 speed. 9,000 miles. $3100. tank fixed, new battery. Rus¬ ted, $200 353-2882, Mike, or supper through bedtime, Monday-Friday. 12:30- PERSONAL SECRETARY for morning work. Expert typist. Problem solving ability. Ad¬ COUNTER TIVE for am- 3 car pm REPRESENTA¬ rental office. 7 Weekdays. benefits. Join the growing field of geriatric nursing by calling Mrs. McFall, 882-2458. Apply personnel office, E.W. SPARROW HOSPITAL, 1215 We need: General Clerical Workers (40 hours/week) delivery 8:30 pm. Open occasional E. Michigan Ave., Lansing, Call 627-9896. 12-11-1 (4) 353 0524, Sue. 3-11-1 (4) weekend. Must be self em- vertising skills helpful Own transportation Non smoker. 489-1484. 7 118 (41 9 to 5, Monday thru Friday. 8-11-3(131 Mich., 48909. A non-discrim¬ Clerk Typists persons CHEVY DELRAY, 1958. V-8, PINTO 1974, 4 speed. 38.000 ployed.church reference re¬ inatory, affirmative action Call 351-3617 between 8:30 WAITRESSES PART-time. (7am.-3pm. shift) Part rime or full time automatic. Body good, $400 miles, $1300. Excellent condi¬ quest, like pets, share hobby employer. 8-11-8 (20) and 9:30 a.m.. Saturdays & No experience necessary. RELIABLE PERSON to stay (3pm.-11pm. shift) Flexible hours or best offer. 372-5337. tion. 353-3412, Jeff. interest, read stories aloud. Sundays351 1881 until 6 pm. Apply in person. 2-4 pm, with 2 boys while father is (Steady work until Must be at least 18. 8-11-913) 12 11-6 13) YORK STEAK HOUSE needed. Call 332-1907 be¬ X-8-11-6 (81 ALLE' EY NITECLUB. working midnight. Live in has part time day January 7!) Should be able to work __ positions in 6 & 10 pm. 3-11-2 (4) situation possible. Refer¬ all areas of restaurant. Broil¬ Friday or Saturday CHEVROLET HALF ton, TWENTY-FIVE cars under tween 351-6131 before 2 p.m. 5-11-6 (14) JOBS TILL Christmas. $5.25 ences. Hourly salary plus 1976,4WD pick-up, 350 V8,4 $500 for sale at ALL CAR 8-11-1 (5) er, Busboy, Hostess, Line and tips Hour for interview. Appoint¬ NURSES-RN LPN. GPN. commissions speed trans. Positraction LEASING AND SALES.INC., girls. Apply in person Mon¬ Can make $4 00/hour LOCAL AMWAY Distributor ment call 4-6 p.m. daily. Join the growing field of Tonneau top, undercoated, 3216 S. Logan. Call 394-3152 PART-TIME short order cook day-Thursday, 2-4 pm. only. Salaries start at $3.30/hour, L78X15 tires. 34,000 miles. for appointment. 4-11-3 (6) is helping many persons earn 374 6328 8 11-8 (4) geriatric nursing. Charge YORK STEAK HOUSE in nurse positions, 11 pm-7 am. positions available. Evenings. commensurate with skills Apply in person after John, 353-4390, weekdays 9 money working 2-4 hours a Full time, Meridian Mall. E.O.E. FILE CLERK-Typist. Excellent benefits. Individual Apply BACKSTAGE RES¬ and/or experience, and sev¬ 4:00pm at your nearest am-3 pm. X-3-11-1 (7) VEGA, 1973. Runs good, day. We can help you, For 7-11-3 (9) permanent only. Excellent orientation or refresher avail¬ TAURANT, Meridian Mall. eral positions require little or Domino s Pizza store appointment, call 1-723-6055. good condition. $450 or best 8-11-9 (5) spelling ability required. Du able. Outstanding team 2-5 pm., Monday-Friday. MODELS-$10'hour. Apply no training at all. DATSUN. 1972 yellow wa¬ offer. 882-5579. 12-11-1 (3) ties involve some statistical awaiting your leadership. 8-11-3(6) VELVET FINGERS. Call 489- gon. Best offer, call Larry 394 2499 after 6:00. PART-TIME receptionist typing, photocopying, work Contact Mrs, Siddal at 2278. 25-10-31 13) VEGA HATCHBACK, 1977-4 distribution and much per¬ PROVINCIAL HOUSE COOKS - DAYS & nights 3-11-1 13) needed from 1-5 pm. Five speed, air conditioning, AM/ sonnel contact. Own trans¬ SOUTH 882-2458. Monday- Grill person. Apply in person, WAITRESSES. FOOD and days per week. Good typing COVENTRY INN, Cedar FM cassette stereo, power skills required and pleasant portation necessary. Apply in Friday, 9am-5pm 8-11-9 (12) cocktail, experience helpful. DODGE MONACO, 1968. steering. Rust proofed. Excel¬ person 9 am to noon. SIM Street and Harper Road, MANPOWER,INC. Dependable. $200. 394-3198. condition. $2250. telephone manners. Call 353 Mason. 676-1021. 8-11-2 (5) Full and part time. Apply in lent PLIFIED BOOKKEEPING Et 601 N. CAPITOL Call after 3 pm. 353-6579, ask for Kathy. 5500. 5-11-1 (7) TAX SERVICE, INC.. 4305 S. ATTENDANT NEEDED - 7 person before 11 am, Mon¬ 372-0880 am - 3 pm week ends and 1 EXPERI¬ day-Friday at the STAR¬ 12-11J5 (31 5-12*3 (6) TAXI DRIVER - Must have Cedar Street. Lansing. week day. Supervision of the WAITRESSES - BOARD TACK RESTAU¬ © Copyright 1 DODGE ROYAL Sportsman, 3 11-1 113) ENCED. nights. Apply in excellent driving record. Full mentally retarded & mentally RANT. under new owner¬ 1974. W-Van, B-200, 360-V8, VEGA GT. 1973. Hatchback, ill. Job description: cooking, person. COVENTRY INN, ship. 8-11-6 (8) 4 speed, $175. 351-5882 after and part-time. Apply at GRILL COOKS experience Cedar Street and Harper PS-PB.AM/FM, air. 393-0304 - 6. 3-10-31 (3) VARSITY CAB, 332-3559. helpful, full & part-time. Ap¬ cleaning & supervision. $2.65 Road. Mason. 676-1021. 5-11-3 (4) 3-11-2 (4) an hour. 339 3265. ply in person at HOSPITAL¬ 7-11-7 (10) 8^1-2 (5) PEOPLE REACHER __ DODGE VAN, 1976. Excellent VEGA WAGON, 1974. ITY INN, 3600 Dunckel Road, MAN OVER 18 to work 2 or 3 condition. Customized interi¬ Automatic. Very Dependable. HOSPITALITY INN - NOW Lansing. 8 11-8 <51 HIRING FULL AND PART- JANITORIAL. PART-tim* nights a week in Party Store. or. Loaded. $5000. Evenings, 44,000 miles. $850 or best NURSES AIDES Experience evenings, must have car. Call Apply in person only at 1920 323-4315 or 321-4236. offer. 394-0725. 12-11-1 (3) TIME, ALL SHIFTS. KIT¬ N.Larch, Lansing, 9 a.m.-2 preferred however we will 5-11-1 (5) EL CAMINO 1974. Steel VW SUPER Beetle, 1971. Sun roof, automatic, many CHEN, UTILITY, PANTRY, GRILL COOKS. APPLY IN PERSON, 3600 DUNKEL train on the job. Openings on all 3 shifts. Apply at PRO¬ VINCIAL HOUSE SOUTH, a.m. References. 12-10-31 (6) WANT AD belted radials, AM/FM radio, new parts. Runs well, body ROAD, LANSING. ACCES¬ 2100 Provincial Drive, off power steering, brakes. Runs excellent. Body power fair. $800 negotiable. SIBLE TO BUSSES. Aurelius Road, 9 am-5 pm. MICHIGAN NATIONAL BANK Just complete form and 337-2284. 12-11-1 <4) mail with payment to: 8-11-1 (8) Monday-Friday. 8-11-9 (8) good. New exhaust, brakes. NEEDS 50,000 miles. $2500. 339- VOLVO 1974-144, automatic, 2625. 5-11-1 17) air AM-FM stereo, 8-track, State News Classified Dept. Michelin tires, excellent con-' 34? Student Ser rices Bldg. FIAT X-19, 1974. 23,000 dition. 487-3984 after 5 p PROOF OPERATORS East Lansing, Mich. 48823 miles, $2600. Fine condition. X-12-11-2 (4) 349-2786. 14-11-13 (3) FIAT 1976, Front wheel drive, WANTED, CLEAN, used, i Immediate full time position open in 37 000 miles. Must sell. X-12-11-10 (3) Radials* $2000 337-9598 after 5 port and sub compact a Call WILLIAMS 484-1341. O 14-10-31 (4) V earn$10,0 our proof department dor. Shift begins 11 a.m. located in Fran- until work is r;*w 7.n CnAo FIAT 850, 1972 Wed maintained, Convertible. $1250. niwinTl amontn time completed at night. Experience pre¬ ferred but not necessary. Must have 486-6127. 3-11-2 (3) for 2 or 3 hours a week of your spare some typing skills. GOOD USED tires and snuw XL 1970, Well kept, tires, 13-14-15 inch. Mounted Apply line, including punctuation and spaces between words. donate plasma free. Used wheels and hub 25 charoeters iii a res, low mileage; Air. best offer. 355-3914. caps. PENNELL SALES, 1825 E. Michigan, Lansing, Michi¬ MICHIGAN NATIONAL BANK Print Ad here —. gan 48912, 482-5818. You may save a life! FORD GALAXIE 500, 1969. Automatic, good condition. C-22-10-31 (7) It's easy and relaxing. Be a twice-a-week regular 2nd floor Personnel Dept. $500 or best offer. Call BATTERIES AT reasonable $10 cash each donation, plus bonuses. 349-4374 after 5:30 pm. prices for your imported car. 124 W. Allegan, Lansing 5-11-3 (51 FORD TORINO 1971 - 47,000 CHEQUERED FLAG FOR¬ EIGN CAR PARTS. 2605 this ad worth $5 extra or call CIRCLE RATE WANTED miles, $200. Call Rob Free¬ East Kalamazoo Street. New donors only. Phone for appointment. nratniniraranc! 487-5055. One mile west of 374-1233 aminiocn coram man, 332-0666. Z-8-11-9 (3) campus. C-2-10-31 (7) oininEiiiiiiiEntii GRAN TORINO, 1974, power LAMINO PLASMA CORP. □cjiamEriEFiFnm steering and brakes. Air, MASON BODY Shop. 812 E. 3026 E. Michigan Ave. for appointment acacoto coco coco AM/FM, brocade seats,'ma¬ Kalamazoo, since 1940. Auto Lansing. Mich. 48912 TuoCDEOEOEOOaCl jor engine overhaul and painting-collision ser 1314*14 Equal Opportunity Employer M/F brakes, 60,000 miles. 627- American-Foreign cars. 485- 2910, evenings. 12-11-317) 0256. C-22-10-31 (5) Tuesday, October 31, 1978 Michigan Stole News East Loosing, Michigan 'ipsftNitslV] »ms |^] f fw till ||51 VISIT MID-MICHIGAN'S tost t Found HELPI LOST my calculator, , (Wif j«r»j«J(a] EXPERT TYPING Term pa- U.S. Senate candidates in debate Griffin denied the statement, TWO BEDROOM apartment. PRIVATE ROOMS in modern Tl SR51 A. Reward. Call Deb (continued from page 1) Levin said the country needs largest used bookshop CURI¬ pers, letters, RESUMES. near campus. Fur¬ saying he is opposed to the , $205 month. Call 351 8135. house, 355 8078. 5 11 3 (3) Near Gables. 337 0205. putting everyone on a public a national health insurance nished, carpeted, kitchen. OUS BOOKSHOP,. 307 E. at 5 11 6 13) C 22 10 31 (3) but it should be storage of nuclear waste wher¬ 393 7368. 0-15-10-31 (41 Grand River, East Lansing, payroll — a move he opposes. program, ever people don't want it. He 332-0112. C 22-10 31 (5) LOST ST. BERNARD cross, "We must try to generate administered by private insur¬ FEMALE NEEOED 2 man. TYPING TERM papers, IBM, said he introduced legislation to neutered male. Dunkin' Do- ance carriers and not the feder¬ near campus, furnished. Call ATTENTION STUDENTS experienced, fast service, Call jobs in the private sector rather ALL STUDENT CLASSIFIED* Applet-Cider nuts-Michigan Avenue area. 351 8923. OR 22 10 31 (3) than the public sector," he al government. protect people's decisions on Nancy. 337-0425. 3-11-2 (31 Much missed. Call 353-9631, the matter. ADVERTISING will require Honey commented. He said he sup¬ Nuclear energy waste dispos¬ 374 6379 after 5 pm. PREPAYMENT beginning al also threw the opponents to PERSON TO share four man Monday, October 30. BLOSSOM ORCHARDS 4 113 (6) Nlltll ports tax incentives to encour¬ He said more energy is duplex, own bedroom, excel¬ 2 miles N. of Leslie age expansion of industry in opposite sides. needed in the United States lent condition $110. month. Sp 22 12 1 (5) Levin said nuclear waste HulIRd high unemployment areas. and should be developed $110 deposit, plus share or FURNISHED SLEEPING on (Old U.S. 127) r Persiul / BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN tick He also said a "youth differ¬ disposal is unsafe and Michigan through solar, wind and nuclear utilities. Non smoker prefer¬ rooms for rent in private HOURS: 9am-6pm ets desperately needed. ential in minimum wage" is should not be used as a dump¬ power. red. 1736 Burcham. close to home. Laundry and kitchen CLOSED MONDAYS ATTENTION STUDENTS Please call collect after 11 needed to reduce unemploy ing ground because the state right off buslines. Nuclear energy is clean, and campus, privileges. Near Capitol City PHONE: 1-SI9-S251 ALL STUDENT CLASSIFIED pm. 13131 662-0686 Barry. ment by giving unskilled teens Legislature banned its burial Immediate occupancy possi¬ Airport. Phone before 4 pm., Gift Packages ADVERTISING will require 3-11 214) here. it's safe," he said, citing as the ble. Ask for Chris at 337-1666 Shipped UPS jobs at about 85 percent of the or 332 1260 after 6 pm 321 2552. 5-11-1 (7) PREPAYMENT beginning minimum wage. "Griffin's not hearing what biggest safety factor the deaths Monday, October 30. CRAFTSMAN AND artist of 100 coal miners this year as 3 11 2 mi wanted for show at Frandor The candidates differed on a the people have to say," he said, 2 ROOMS. 1 for resident BLUE SPRUCE, nursery, in¬ Sp 22 12 1 (5) "because he voted for dumping compared to no deaths among Mall, Lansing. January 4, 5,6. national health insurance pro¬ 2 ADJOINING rooms, each manager (about $65-month), spected, 3!4-4 ft. $15. Larger the waste in Michigan." workers in nuclear energy. other for $145'month. Real trees on order. Box C3, State KEYPUNCH "TRAINING 1979. (3131 229 6285 gram. Griffin opposed it and furnished for light house¬ Z 1 10 31 (4) Levin close to campus. 351 3820; News, or call 332-0340. Day time or evening classes. supported it, but both keeping. Private entrance, XE 5 10-31 (4) DATA ENTRY ACADEMY preferred private rather than leave message and phone share bath Parking. Senior or 2 STEVE Martin tickets. Will number. 12-11-6 (5) Phone 694-2424. 18-11-17(3) total government funding. grad males. Central Lansing. pay top dollar. 353 1156. ELECTROPHONIC AM'AF "It's the wrong way to go," Both rooms for $135 month, includes utilities. Deposit re¬ turntable stereo. Two speak ers included. $60. 485-0862 Real Estill A 12 11-10(31 USED micro Griffin said, drawing laughter from the crowd by adding Soviet spies sentenced quired. no lease Call E 5-11 3 (31 WANTED 485 9281 1 4 30 Dm or after scope Need by Summer "maybe those who advocate 10:30 pm 3 112 >11) MASON. 4 bedroom. 2 bath 1979 or before. 489 1774 9 national health insurance MEN'S 23" ten speed, Ven- , Cape Cod. $49,500, will con (continued from page 1) dants to 50 years for cbnspiring am 5 pm 5 11 2 0) should look at the post office. Is turi, $100; snowtires, H7814, sider 9 3.4 land contract. to transmit defense secrets to EAST LANSING 1 bedroom Lacey said he wanted to apartment for rent. Across For Sale ^ $40; 3-drawer dresser, $30; evenings ft weekends, Built 1973. EACO Realty. Musicians to form rock, jazz, that how you want the program prevent the Soviet Union from the Soviet Union. They were from MSU Call 332 0792 or 676 5660 or 676 2743. also sentenced to 10 years to be 676 5387 E 3 10-31 (4) disco group. He supports instead contin doing "what one of their leaders 351 5631 4 11 3 14) MUTRON PHASOR II phase 12 10-31 (5) 337 9361. evenings. once said he would do served concurrently on two ued use of the private insurance — bury shifter. New: $135. Cost:$50. 10 11 10 (3) other counts — conspiracy to NEW AND used guitars, ban¬ us." referring to remarks once SUBLEASE UNTIL June 15. Call 337-8085. E 5 11-6(3) HASLETT CONDO as system with government as¬ jos, mandolins, etc. Dulci¬ sumable mortgage on this make by former Soviet premier obtain defense secrets and ac¬ Spacious 2 man Cedarview PORTUGUESE TUTOR sistance coming in after the mers and kits, recorders, neat 2 bedroom. All appli¬ Nikita Khrushchev. tually obtaining the secrets. Apartment Call 332-4005 WOOD-GRAINED Formica wanted - native speaker pre¬ insurance company pays a cer¬ thousands of hard to find 8 119 (3> kitchen table with gold ances, carport, across from ferred. Call 339-3693; leave tain amount. The The defendants declined to albums, and books. Dis¬ judge rejected argu¬ chairs, car bicycle rack, regu¬ high school. Full club house message. 6 111 (3) He also advocated education count prices. Expert repairs ments by defense attorneys speak on their own behalf, EXCEPTIONAL MENT 1 bedroom -. excel lent location Available De¬ APART¬ lar or queen size headboard, dresser & chest. Also 8x10 indoor, outdoor carpeting & 2 - free estimates. ELDERLY INSTRUMENTS. 541 E. privileges with pool. $29,000. Call WM. MARTIN COM PANY, 323-7100. or Peggy Round Town M to make produce more more doctors, and services available to that the FBI may have been morally wrong to use a double telling the judge they con¬ curred with the arguments of Grand River. 332-4331. cember 1 Couple preferred. serviceable chairs. Best offer 351 7084 after 5. 3-11-2 (5> 321-8284 after 6 pm 3-11-6 (10) C-7-10-31 (10) Cook. 351 7328. B 1 10 31 (9) CHRISTIANS INTERESTED 00 people. than "I'd go in that direction more toward socialized medi agent to investigate the possi¬ bility of a Russian spy network operating in the United States. their attorneys that the United States should not use "vindic- tiveness and hostility in its MOST LP'S priced $1.75- in forming a conservative NEED TWO female room¬ $2.50. Cassettes, $3 quality 10-20-30 acre parcels avail¬ able. From $5,500. $1000 Baptist Church in East Lan¬ 1 cine," he said. Lacey sentenced the defen¬ sentencing." mates starting December, AMPEG STUDIO Guitar sing, are invited to the first smokers. $85. Allison. amplifier 35 watts, 12 inch guaranteed. Plus 45's, song- down. $60;month. 9% land non services Sunday. November 332 6881 6 11 7 -4) CTS reverb and tremalo. $100 Call 337 8085 books. more. FLAT, BLACK & CIRCULAR, upstairs. 541 E, Grand River. Open 11 a.m. contract. 351-7136 Call or D. McKENDRY Nagel. 5. 10 00 am 1303 E Univer¬ sity Village. 355 6080 W MSU Orchestra, Julliard ONE FEMALE needed for E 5-11-6 14) REALTY. 646-6229 C-4-10-31 16) 3 112 (7) furnished apartment next to 8-11-1 (7) campus 332-4432. 10 SPEED Bike with lights & (continued from page 6) neated by the two soloists drew spiegel's Merry Pranks. The SMITH CORONA Coronet X OR-1 10 31 (3i lock. Contact Odessa even¬ the audience into the vortex of strings skillfully articulated the | Rummage Sale~j[5] teaching experiences Super 12. Electric. Like new. Their ings. $90. 694-8473. Excellent Condition. $150. here have been so rewarding its rich emotion, building to the narrative, while woodwinds and NEED FEMALE to share 4 E-5-11-6 13) Call 353-5151 5-11-1 (3) brass created the .various man apartment. Twycking- QUEEN SIZE bed. frame ft that Ann Carlyss, who joined fever pitch of the climax, and ham. Leslie or Tanya. GIRL'S 27-inch Schwinn box plus linens. Best offer: her husband here this weekend, once more evoking enthusiastic moods, of his capricious pranks 351 2440 4 11-3(3) ATTENTION STUDENTS bike. 5 speed. Like new, Also art books, records, etc. describes him as returning to applause. as Eulenspiegel alternately $100. ALL STUDENT CLASSIFIED never been ridden. 501 MAC 2 10-31 14) teased the court and cried for its 2 BEDROOM unfurnished 372-0080 after 3:30 pm. ADVERTISING will require New York City "happy and Inspired in their accompani¬ townhouse 106 Bailey PREPAYMENT beginning refreshed". ment of their famous guests, the sympathy, when the percussion MSU SALVAGE yard is now Monday, October 30. MSU Symphony orchestra un¬ menacingly announced his exe¬ Street. $275 month plus utili¬ open to the public on Tues¬ Availing themselves of Satur¬ Can 351 0359 4-11-3 (4) BLACK AND white TV. 15 Sp 22-12-1 (51 1:00 der the direction of Dennis cution. ses days and Fridays. 7:30 day's gorgeous fall weather, the inch, good as new. Am am. 1330 S. Harrison. Burkh came into their own in a It was a rousing conclusion for SEWING MffCHINES-new. distinguished foursome sat on moving, must sell. $115. 8 11 3 (4) 627-4608 anytime. Free arm machines from the 50 yard line cheering the smooth and balanced perfor¬ an evening that was dramatic $99.50. Guaranteed used ma¬ of Strauss' Till Eulen- from start to finish. Spartans on against Wisconsin, mance MARTIN D-28. Excellent chines from $39.50. All makes repaired. EDWARDS DIS¬ Transportation gJg and on Sunday evening donned their familiar tuxedos •8 Im TRIBUTING CO. 1115 N. once sound, Harmony mandolin, 6-string banjo. 351-4467. 6 Washington. 489-6448 NEED A ride to Chicago more as they appeared on the C-ZMO-31 November 3 and or return pm *. 3-11-2 (3) (7)_ _ MSU auditorium stage as so¬ November 5 Scott, 355-6906. loists with the MSU orchestra in Want to enrich your life? Why 10 SPEED English bike. $38 2 BEDROOM. Stoddard St. FOR SALE 1 series B Z-5-10-31 (3) - Excellent condition. Call two double concertos. w ot Adopt-a-Grandparent in 26 15 minutes from M S U.. 2 basketball season's pass. $15 State News office, 343 Student Student Services Bldg. 355 5980. E-5-11-2 (3) In Mozart's Sinfonia Concer- ca- garage. 3 people mini¬ or best offer. Tom. 337-2758. Services Bldg., by noon at least mum 332 6962 after 5. E-5-11-6 (4) INSTANT CASH! Were pay¬ Service tante, violinist Robert Mann two days before publication. No The Medical Technology Club •ss and violist Samuel Rhodes dis¬ announcements will be accepted will be teaching Blood Drawing MARSHALL MUSIC'S ing $1-$2 for albums in good new shape. WAZOO RECORDS. WATCH AND JEWELRY RE played their consummate skills by phone. etc. at 7:30 tonight in 146 Giltner EAST LANSING 1 bedroom modestly priced Some pets store hours: Monday-Friday, 9:30 am- 9 pm. Saturday. 9:30 223 Abbott, 337-0947. C-22-10-31 14) PAIR PRICES AT REASONABLE THOMPSON'S (0 at packing into the refined style of Mozart every possible ounce Brown Bag Lunch sponsored by Hall. considered Phone days. 351- am 6 pm MARSHALL JEWELRY, 223 MAC, EAST Railroad Club meeting at 7 3172 0-15 10-31 (4l MUSIC, Frandor. 337-9700. C I 10 31 (61 AT OUR LANSING. 5 11-1 (41 <0 of drama and meaning without Women's Resource Center is noon to 1 pm. today, 334 Union, tonight, Union Oak Room. Discus¬ sion of Restoration, future plan¬ prices get that ever losing their impeccable Pine Lake MANS GENUINE " ,7 leather emergency OPTICAL peir of glasses at DISCOUNT. 2617 BLUEGflASS SERVICE plays EXTENSION weddings (0 sense The of ensemble. Sinfonia Concertante, Topic is "The Nature of Clerical Work: A Changing Workforce" by Karen Cottledge of MSU. ning, slide show and more. Apartments coat Baretta. saddle b,own E Michigan p3mes 353 9695 da*s: containing one of the most WSI and Senior Lifesavers needed. Volunteer to lifeguard 6080 Marsh Rd. ;S Call 372 7409 c 71™ 151 27''''19 beautiful dialogues between Baptist Student Union, Bible blind students, afternoons or 393 3987 3-11-2 15) evenings. Details in 26 Student Meridian Mall Area F"0R VhE "biT 7n~ s«7eo two instruments in the musical Study and Fellowship meets at 6 Services Bldg. *170 plus utilities F|REBIRD~ 1963 ~ 7969~Am iE2 service. THE STEREO SHQPPE1 555 E Grand River, DISCO AND SOUND rem- forcement systems for rent, literature, brings out the su¬ tonight, 340 Union. . D peg. 1969 LetI Paul, Ampeg . A SH°PPE Call S0UNDS GOOD AUOIO perb contrast as well as the MSU Jugglers will meet at 8:30 100 watt top, $1700 or will sell C-22 1031IJI at 372 5278 3-11 2 131 harmony between soprano and United Students for Christ tonight in the Union Tower Room. alto string voices. In some All jugglers welcome. in 210 Bessey ZTn6 if'4670 a"C' 4 WOMAN'S TLAsVNGER' sk, ----- - meets at 7 tonight pm5"®'51 boots, size 8 V,, used only one SAVE MONEY. SAVE ENER (0 passages one would echo the other's statement, in others Hall. We sponsor and workshops. gospel concerts Attention Juniors/Seniors! EXCELLENT" CONDlflON. seaso", S40. Call M2-6167 GY Win,etiae doors. w.n they played in unison, and in Academic intern needed at the 339-8191 white Gibson, side by side refrigerator-freezer, 351-8761 2-11-1 (3) $225. after6pm.5:10-31_l4l_ SANSUI - 350A receiver amplifier. Garrard turntable. 2 _ _ dows, and minor repairs Tax e*emPt- Free estimates. Call ^ 3204 12J1-2J5) & still others they moved into The botany complex harmonies. Yet at ical Greenhouse is now open! We every point they were involved are located next to Horticulture department's Trop¬ Council for the Prevention of Child Abuse and Neglect. Contact Dave Persell. College of Urban Devel¬ Evenlngi KLH speakers. $300. Call rnrr i re com■ m„uwnn 0> in something akin to a lovers' greenhouses. Hours: Wed. 12 to 3 opment. zzsxzzsz dialogue, tender and sympa¬ pm., Thurs. 11 to 1, Fri. 12 to 2 Chicano Students For Progres¬ %\\o_ UNFURNISHED 1 bedroom house room with and shower large in finished base¬ SrrrdSS STASH oven, and lower broiler unit, STASH CASH be enjoyed. sary expenses Meet low? Life CASH,owrLileisto by selling un¬ is to your neces¬ FREE STORAGE until spring ill? z thetic, spontaneous and exuber¬ pm.. Sat. 12 to 3 pm. ant, and sometimes penetrating into the utmost reaches of one You are invited to attend a sive Action will meet at 6:30 tonight, concerning the student publication. Meet in Lab B Wilson $175 351 8761. 2-11-1 (6) S meeting of the Christian Science ment for possible rental unit. wanted items with a highly effective Classified Ad. 'Call with every tune-up. $12.75 3 2.* another's souls. Organization, North Campus at 3 1 car garage, on 1 acre lot. approximately 4 miles from RECONDITIONED, REFIN- Jill. 355-8255. 27-12-1 15) plus parts, CIRCLE R CY- CLERY. 104 S. Main, Eaton o. o f The profusion of gorgeous 6:45 tonight in 332 Union. MSU undergraduates - for free MSU $325 - all utilities and 1 month ISHED upright piano. and delivered. Tuned $595. PIONEER SX434 receiver, ul¬ Rapids. 663-2320. 8-11-3 (5) III melodies throughout the entire work sustained the audience at Campus Crusade for Christ is legal advice, visit the Legal Ser¬ vices in 325 Student Services deposit. Refer¬ ences required. Call 337-7586 371 2499 5 11-6 (3) tra linear 100-A speakers. HARD WORKING, depend¬ tSil holding leadership training classes Bldg. for an appointment. a high level of involvement. from 7 to 9 tonight in 100 Superscope 8-track, PO-12D ahe- 5 pm 6-10-31 '10) HI-FI EQUIPMENT. Demos turntable. $450. 332-7771. able college student seeking work. East Lansing-Okemos- •N However, in the exquisite duet Engineering Bldg. Club Managers Association will and trade-ins, all with warran¬ 6-10-31 (5) meet at 7:30 pm. Wednesday at of the second movement caden¬ '.'r.JEa\ "0-.se 7 bedroom Furnished, carpeted ty. Intrigal Systems pre-amp, best offer over $50 takes it! area. Experience in outdoor labor, youth activities. Call (0 za Mann and Rhodes reached a MSU Go Club meets at 7 tonight at Hedrick House Co-op, MSU Faculty Club on Forest Road. New members welcome. anytime. 332-4474. vea- \ear Campus 7368 O 15-10-31 >4) 393 Aiwa cassette: $150 B.I.C. Mills 1-10-31 (6) -N peak of musical sensibility, 140 Collingwood Drive. Beginners Natural Resources Seminar: Formula 4 speakers $150/ descending imperceptibly into welcome. Hoists Ijjfc pair tuner AR mt-amp $125. Dual 1216 turnta ble $75. HI-FI BUYS 337-1767 $140. AR AKC REGISTERED black labs, seven weeks old. Excel¬ lent breeding, call 332-7041 Typing Service CI) the exuberance of the exciting finale, when the audience spon¬ Theatre majors and ers! Interested in providing enter¬ Jorgen Randers and Lars Lon- nstedt of the Resource Policy Group of Oslo, Norway speak on or-1-10-31 (ID after 1 pm. 6-11-1 I4l taneously broke into a demon¬ tainment for pediatric patients or "Transition Strategies for the iAST LANSING, 1 and 2 COPYGRAPH SERVICE, stration of their own pent-up senior citizens? Volunteer in 26 Scandinavian Forestry Sector" 2 bedroom,s. includes central COUCH.CONVERTABLE, HORSE BOARDING - Oke- complete dissertation and excitement. Student Services Bldg. pm., Wednesday, 225 Natural ideal lor student S40 Cell service. Corner Resources Bldg. air. car ports, dishwasher, mos. Indoor arene. Box stalls. resume Brahms' "Concerto in A Mi¬ drapes From $220. Some 361 2802 alter 6 pm. s80 349-2094, 349-2172. M.A.C. and Grand River. 8:30 Would you like extra job skills? a.m.-5:30 p.m., Monday-Fri¬ nor for Violin and Cello" opened Volunteer and learn to use power Find out what Women's Studies pets days considered. 332-3900 332-7461 evenings. E;6-"_-»_®_ 12 11-6 (3) day. 10a.m.-5p.m. Saturday. with a strong statement by Joel tools. Details in 26 Student Ser- is 7 pm. tonight, Gilchrist Main INSTANT CASH, Top dollar 337-1666. C-22-10-31 (7) Krosnick's cello, answered al¬ Lounge. 0-15-10-31 7. WANTED 1 female eos, d for c , T.V.'i guitars, or jewelry, at Milili Hinn IH LOW RATES Term pap¬ most immediately by Earl room- WILCOX TRADING POST, Carlyss' violin, establishing ma"? m *ouse. near campus. ers, resumes. Fast, expert Own bedroom 337 2244 509 E. Michigan. 485-4391. HILLCREST 1978 - 14'x 70'. typing, day and evening. Call from the outset the intense NOTICI OP PUBLIC MARINO 2 bedroom, 10' x 20' porch 8-H-1 )3) Open 9:30 am - 6 pm. and feeling of this lush and richly ■AST LANSINO PLANNINO C-3-10-31 (6) awning. 394-3215. 12-11-8 (3. melodic work. Like the Mozart, LANSING. EAST side - 3 the Brahms bursts with song¬ COMMISSION BALDWIN ORGAN. Two ATTENTION STUDENTS bedroom house. Newly car¬ VW CAMPER. 1974. Excel¬ like melodies. Both artists dra¬ manual rhythm and percus¬ ALL STUDENT CLASSIFIED peted. Call 351-5510. STE- lent condition. New radials, sion. 339-3141. 12-11-10(3) ADVERTISING will require matically articulated their sepa¬ MAR MANAGEMENT fold out bed. sky roof, sink, PREPAYMENT beginning rate lines, but remained in NOTICE IS HEREBY given of a Public Heoring to be held by the East 8-11 1 (4i SERTA MATTRESS, springs quad 8 track. 74,000 miles, Monday, October 30. Lansing Planning Commission on Thursday. November 9. 1978 at and frame. Full size. Like 351-6461. 3-10-31 16) responsive communication as 7:30 p.m.. in 54B District Court. 301 M.A.C. Avenue. East Lansing. Sp-22-12 1 (5) NEED PERSON to take over new. 339-3141. the themes played through and for room in house on The hearing will be for the purpose of reviewing Ordinance [TosiHeiiiJ^ against each other, simple and lease 12-11 10 13) EXPERIENCED. IBM typing, edge of campus. Call #449. an Ordinance to amend Chapter 55 of the Zoning Code dissertations, (pica-Elite) rhetorical at times, approaching of the City of East Lansing by adding new Sections 5.3(1) and 337 9587 3-11-2 (4) VALDEZ STEEL string acous¬ FAYANN, 489 0358. melodrama at other. LOST MALE, short hair 5.28 to permit child core organizations and repealing Sections tic guitar. $90 with case. C 22 10 31 (3) 5.45(2) and 5.60-1 (2) (b). 328 EVERGREEN, near cam¬ white cat. White flea collar. In the lovely Second Move¬ Lorraine, 371-3564. pus. Extra clean 4-man house Missing about one month, TYPING THESES, reports. ment. Carlyss' serene violin A report and other information ore available in the Department E-5-11-1 (3) has carpeting, drapes, re¬ Pennsylvania/Michigan Ave. Low rate. Experienced. Call opened the dialogue while Kros¬ of Planning, Housing and Community Development, East lonsing frigerator, stove. Call area. 337 8231 or 332 7262. 351 9561. 12 11 9 13) nick's deep throated cello res¬ City Hall. 410 Abbott Road. 332 4060.8-11-9 (4) MAHOGANY OCTAGON 8-11 8 (5) table. Genuine slate top. PROMPT, EXPERIENCED, ponded with the kind of agita¬ All interested persons will be given the opportunity to be heord. FEMALE TO share lovely Original price, $379. Asking LOST SMALL, female, tion that maintained the essen¬ typing, evenings. 332-3492. - home. South Lansing, $150/ $90. 882-6345. E 5-11 1 (3) grey, short-haired cat 110-12- tial contrasts of the work C-22-10-31 (3) month. 394 6555, evenings. 78). With white flea collar. throughout. 8119(3) BASKETBALL TICKET for Hagadorn/Saginaw area. TYPING, Experienced, fast 337 8231 or 332-7262. The thematic beauty of this sale, Series A, best offer, call and reasonable. 371 4635. Tired of the tuba? Sell it 332 8852. 3-11-1 (3) 7-11-7 (5) C-21-10-31 (3) movement so artistically deli¬ easily with a Classified adl Michigon State News, Eost Lansing, Michigan HAGAR the Horrible by Dik Browne (t)WJIM-TV(CBS) (IQ)WILX-TV(NBC) (ll)WELM-TV(Cobl.) 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(12) One Life To Live (11) Black Notes (23) Music From Michigan (12) Mary Tyler Moore State (23) MacNeil/Lehrer Report ."THA** 10-JI THE DROPOUTS sponsored by: CAMPUS "~ PIZZA by Post 1040 E.Grand River 337 1377 0H,Y6AH.?/ WHY Y~\~ bONW Mi M0 YEP OWVBUHM/Stl,*' ^ PILLOW TALK «* — B.C. ■ sponsored by: p|j rnit |j g by Johnny Hart •1f.fl TUMBLEWEEDS5 sponsored by: f HOW DOES THE BWVEK ^ TRADE METTMEEP PIZZA 331.13*1 Vt/O CCNT by Tom K. Ryan 1040 E. Grand Rivar ^SY^TfeW WORK ? WANT.FCK5CMETHIN& FARRAH F/WEETr- YfuNeep. [moors /wycre\ w. RARTER\ Hn3n1 SAM and SILO® -sV, LIBERTY BELL PRESENTS: by Jerry Dumas and Mort Walker CROSSWORD At TEMPTATIONS A Nuv. 12 at LONG'S PUZZLE ' ' 7& pm Ticket* *8.50 SPONSORED BY: reservations: 17 Australian bird 41. Violet ketone 19. Chinese pagoda 43 Breathrm 20 Possibly 4a ho'.vS levers 22. Ladies' 46 Calked undergarment 24 Near 47 Meddles 48. Stoat .iTmust ae rr HALL°WeeAI ...Vou^oo/^ 4 FRiGHT! Ttow oo'Jk 01978 Universol Press Syndicote f 3/ Tuesday, October 31, 1978 1 4 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan DECEMBER DELIVERY DATE Doctors' directory due By KEVIN BOGGS tains background information, Fedewa said. In fact, the doc¬ The second edition of the and a variety of helpful facts to tors themselves have total con Lansing Area Doctors' Direc¬ the consumer in need of a trol over everything included in doctor. their entries, he said. tory will appear on area news¬ stands and in drug stores in late Data such as fees charged, Of the area's 750 doctors, December. type of staff employed, whether only 300 were sent a six-page The $1.95 medical directory, the physician provides after- questionnaire by Fedewa be¬ one of 24 nationwide, includes hour coverage, whether house cause of their involvement in in-depth information on 200 calls are made and whether a primary health care. area M.D.s and osteopaths, as doctor accepts new patients or Fedewa received responses DAILY DOLLAR DEAL SPECIALS well as 17 health clinics. It was charges for a phone consulta- from 200 M.D.s and osteopaths. • Breakfast • Sandwiches The 100 non-respondents are put together by Jerry Fedewa • Beverages • Salads and Deana Anderson of the listed in the directory with the • Snacks • Desserts Impression Five museum in The doctors real* basic information found in the • Home-style soups and chili Lansing. Yellow Pages of the phone ^ ize the directory Impression Five, a non-profit book. museum that introduces school helps consumers Fedewa said he is very Halloween Special children to technology and sci¬ make a better pleased at the doctors' coopera ence, picked up on the publica¬ choice — Jerry tion and is considering putting ice your own tion of a medical directory together a similar directory for where the Public Interest Re¬ Fedewa of Impres¬ dentists. donuts ... allday sion Five Museum. "The doctors than search Group in Michigan left were more off. willing to provide the necessary free cider PIRGIM put out the first information. They saw the first witn pu.rcliAse edition of the directory in 1976. tion, is also included. edition and realized the direc¬ Because of a lack of interested Surgical procedures per¬ tory helps consumers make a TODQ.Y ONLY personnel at the PIRGIM office formed, the hospitals a physi¬ better choice," he said. in Lansing — the people inter¬ cian works out of and his billing Fedewa said he hopes that by CONVENIENT HOURS Mon.-S»t. 7:15 a.m.-11:00 p.m. ested in health care having policy — the acceptance or giving consumers the informa¬ nonacceptance of Medicare, tion to select a doctor more Sunday 9:00 a.m. - 11:00 p.m. departed — it was left up to Impression Five to compile the Medicaid and Blue Shield — are wisely, it will make them more recent edition. also listed in the directory. conscious of doctor fees, per¬ LOCATED: Main Lobby, Union Bldg. "We get these things started The directory doesn't try to haps helping to slow the sky¬ State News Bob Stern rate the rocketing costs of health care. for others to pick up on because competency of doctors, Have you ever tried holding nine boxer pups (or a family portrait? Well, they're a big help to the Glenn and Becky Deckinga of Lansing have, and it's not easy. The pups community," PIRGIM office occupy the master bedroom while the couple sleep in the living room. Eight manager Jan George explained. In addition to listing name, of the boxers will be sold as soon as possible. address, phone number and specialty, the directory con- Election analysis airs WKAR-TV fcdion on art series designed to help the American Three political specialists with contrasting points of view will • he issues and candidates involved in the serve as commentators — Marilyn Berger, former NBC White <>n. is being shown this week on Channel House correspondent; Kevin Phillips, syndicated columnist; and Ken Bode, editor of "The New Republic." The Nov. 5 pre-election wrap up will detail the positions and focu anticipated voting strength of minorities throughout the nation, the c and will focus on the political aspirations of Sen. Edward Kennedy, s and D-Mass., and Robert Dole, R-Kan. me of the key issues to be discussed are the energy < nal defense in Texas, the tax revolt and the anti-homosexual "If I am Elected." a series of interviews on the Michigan mi nt in California and how proposed labor reform will effect candidates, will be shown immediately after each of the Elections enate races in the South. 78 programs this week at 8:30 p.m. e regional shows will also focus on prospective 1980 Tim Skubick, WKAR-TV capital correspondent will conduct the dential candidates such as Gerald Ford, Ronald Reagan, • Brown. Daniel Moynihan and President Carter. THE BLDEGRASS EXTENSION SERVICE TONIGHT-9:00 fKodftD** BaUishnwnt! \\J"/ ^lA\ MAC & ALBERT 351 -2755 If you want a college ring that's different from traditional rings, come see ArtCarvcd's outstanding SUPER SUPPERS at BURGER PRICES collection for men and women. Kver since Art Carved Tues: CHILI & FROSTED SCHOONER introduced these distinctive styles, thousands of Hottest chili & coldest beer in town - mild chili for the timid) $'*59 Vi PRICE special college students have chosen to wear them in college and long after. Come see the whole collection. TIKKTIRVED \COU_EGE RINGS Wed CHICKEN CACCIATORA A CHIANTI for a frosted beer) $1.89 __ on EVERYTHING! the 7IRTQ1RVED representative has a large collection of traditional as well as fashion rings Ask to see them. Deposit required Ask about Master Charge or Visa. Thur: BARBEQIIID RIM A a RRIW with Corn Bread ^ _ $1.99 All night long! With a low 50 COMPLETE DINNERS WITH ENTREE. FRESH cover. So whether you re look¬ VEGETABLE & SALAD FROM $1.95 ing for a cold refreshing droft ARTCARVED REPRESENTATIVE ON CAMPUS THIS WEEK. or a tropically taste-teasing mixed drink RAINBOW LUNCH BUFFET RANCH is the place to half a including Veal STUDENT BOOKSTORE Five entrees M.S.U. BOOKSTORE . ' Parmesan-menu changes daily eon ifSDAY NIGHT International Center 421 E. Grand River Downstair, by Service Desk 9-4pm 9-4pm PH.337-1755 Ut W. Grand Blvar Im« Umtiiif