VOLUME 72 NUMBER 172 tat# Haws MONDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1978 MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY EAST LANSING MICHIGAN 48U24 I Guyanan troops sent to fatal ambush site GEORGETOWN, Guyana (AP) - The based People's Temple sect that established The State Department said members of Guyanan government airlifted troops Sun¬ Jonestown. the People's Temple, which claims about day into the remote jungle where a The State Department identified four of 20,000 followers in California, had previous¬ California congress member and three the dead as the 53-year-old Ryan, reporter ly mentioned the possibility of suicide if journalists were ambushed and killed as Don Harris, 42, and camera operator they felt the sect was threatened. The FBI they tried to escort unhappy settlers from Robert Brown, 36, both of NBC News and in California was alerted, the department the camp of an American religious sect. both Los Angeles residents, and photog¬ said. One of the settlers also was killed, rapher Gregory Robinson, 27, of the San The State Department said it would government officials said. Nine other per¬ Francisco Examiner newspaper. respect the Guyanese law requiring autop¬ sons were reported wounded in the attack The identity of the fifth victim was sies on all murder victims despite a family near the Venezuelan border of this South withheld pending notification of relatives, request that the law be waived and the America country. All the dead and wounded but Guyanese sources said it was an bodies returned immediately. An American were Americans, according to the U.S. 18-year-old American woman from the pathologist was flown to Georgetown and Embassy. settlement. may help with the autopsies, the depart Authorities said at least one suspect had Examiner Publisher Reg Murphy Sunday ment said. been apprehended. praised the slain photographer as someone Ryan, a Democrat from San Mateo There were rumors that 200 or more of "who represented the very best in Ameri¬ County re elected to a fourth term Nov. 7, the sect's members had committed mass can photojournalism." had gone to Guyana with aides and suicide at the Jonestown settlement in the Ryan's party was ambushed as he tried to reporters to investigate alleged abuses at aftermath of the Saturday ambush of U.S. escort a half-dozen or more People's Temple the settlement. Jones, a former San Rep. Leo J. Ryan's group. The government settlers from the sect's agricultural project Francisco city official, founded the agricul said it could not confirm that such a bizarre back to Georgetown, Guyana's capital. Most tural commune a year ago. bloodbath had taken sect members are Californians, and there Before leaving San Francisco last week at People's Temple in Guyana, South America, was photographed a few days ago by San Francisco place. Examiner photographer Greg Robinson, before he, two other American journalists and U.S. Rep. Leo have been repeated allegations that the sect the head of a 14-member delegation, Ryan Guyanese officials said the attack on Ryan's group apparently was staged by was abusing some of its adherents. said he was going to investigate conditions Ryan, D-Calif., were killed Saturday in a jungle ambush. (Right) Associate Minister Archie James members of the People's Temple sect who The State Department said it had of Americans at the settlement. He said he (dark suit! of the People's Temple issued a statement Sunday in San Francisco, denying reports that unconfirmed "alarming indications" that at had been told they "are working from dawn members of the cult planned to commit mass suicide in the wave of murders of the representative and were angered by the representative's least 200 of the outpost's estimated 1,100 to nightfall, with terrible mental and three others. interference. Jack Gelinas, a Guyanese government American settlers committed suicide after physical punishments if they don't work hard enough." spokesperson in New York, said a company the Saturday evening ambush. Department of soldiers sent to the sect's camp took one spokesperson Thomas Reston said one suspect into custody. Gelinas identified him settler from the compound walked 30 miles as Larry John Leyton, an American whose to Mathews Ridge, where the troops had ASMSU REPS CHARGE LACK OF LEADERSHIP age and hometown were not known. The stopped because of darkness, and report¬ Georgetown Chronicle said eight men and a edly said at least 200 had killed themselves woman were arrested but it gave no details. before he left. Government sources said 130 soldiers and army Guyanese authorities in Georgetown said units were in Jonestown and had not Student Board to consider ousting Jones about 40 police were sent to the area, 150 filed any reports about suicides, but miles northwest of Georgetown and about communications were difficult. Cain was also accused of fostering student unionization in the Student Worker's Union. By MICHAEL MEGERIAN 50 miles south of the border with Venezu¬ A Guyana police spokesperson said an State News Staff Writer He was acquitted by the All University Student Judiciary of both charges. ela. unidentified member of the sect and her The ASMSU Student Board will consider a bill to impeach board president Dan Jones The bill to impeach Jones requires approval by a majority of board members for referral At least seven persons, including Ameri¬ three children were found dead Saturday Tuesday, representatives said Sunday. to the policy committee. can attorney Mark Lane, had been listed as night at a People's Temple complex in a Complaints about lack of presidential input and deficiency in leadership qualities have The board must then vote on the bill, which requires a two-thirds majority to pass. missing after the attack. But State Depart¬ suburb of Georgetown, apparently a triple been lodged against Jones by board members. If impeached, Jones would step down and be replaced by a candidate elected by the ment spokesperson Tom Reston said in murder-suicide. Dan Stouffer, College of Agriculture and Natural Resources representative and author board. Washington he had information that Lane In San Francisco, a People's Temple of the bill, said Jones has not done anything for student government since taking office last That person may come from any facet of student government. Stouffer said. and another lawyer, Charles Garry, were spokesperson who identified himself as spring. alive in Jonestown. He gave no source for Archie James said sect members did not Stouffer criticized Jones, saying he has not been a catalyst in generating input and ideas his information. commit the Jonestown killings and denied for the board. He said Jones has failed to act as the board's leader. Lane, who defended Martin King's convicted assassin James Earl Ray, Luther the suicide reports. A White House statement issued in Julie Maki, College of Art and Letters representative, said she was Stouffer's legislation Sunday and was displeased with the board's actions. informed of Botha vows elections and Garry were serving as counselors to Maki said a breakdown in communication between the president, the board and Washington said President Carter was Jim Jones, the founder of the California- saddened by Ryan's death. committees is prompting the board to resolve its own problems through impeachment. "There's no problem-solving process," she said. "Committees are not relating to each other or sharing information. That's a fertile climate for misunderstanding." Maki charged the board with playing "political games" and displaying "power trips" by for S. Africa despite voicing disapproval of Jones' actions. Egyptian 'timetable9 over some Some board members were upset earlier fall term by Jones' decision to set up an advisory board to look into restructuring student government. The move was in direct violation of ASMSU's Code of Operations, representatives contended. Stouffer said he and other board members have tried to show their willingness to work guerrillas' opposition rejected by Israel with Jones, but have been met by minimal cooperation from the president's office. Stouffer said he feels Jones is "paranoid" of the board. Jones, who was informed of the prospective legislation Sunday evening, said he has not NEW YORK lAP) of the - The prime minister Republic of South Africa said Sunday that elections would be held as scheduled week next that South Africa call off the December election in Namibia and hold one spring under U.N. supervision. The demand was backed by a threat of sanctions TEL AVIV, Israel I AP) — Prime Minister Israel and Egypt have agreed that received cooperation on bills he has introduced. next month in Namibia despite the opposi Menachem Begin — hit by an egg thrown by negotiations should start in one month i "They don't want to work with me," he said. "A lack of communication would not justify tion of guerrilas. against South Africa. their action." "We have no idea of canceling it. we are It was believed that a non-U.N. super- angry Israelis as he arrived at a political the powers and responsibilities of the Jones said he was aware of rumors regarding his impeachment but had heard nothing vised election next month would be won by meeting — said Sunday Israel rejects planned Palestinian self-rule in the West going to proceed with it," Pieter Botha said about the bill. He added he doesn't see the bill as a "personal threat," and said it may be the a pro government party rather than by the timetables for solving the Palestinian Bank and Gaza. in an interview on NBC's "Meet the Press" But Egypt wants result of vindictiveness on the part of some members of the board. South-West Africa People's Organization. question in a peace treaty with Egypt. elections in Gaza to take program, taped in Pretoria. South Africa, Palestinian guerrillas struck a new blow place in six months and in the West Bank in The board's attempt at impeachment is not the first time ASMSU's Student Board has and aired here Sunday. SWAPO claims it represents blacks who Sunday when a bomb exploded . i year. Israel fears that if it agrees to such a attempted to oust its president. South Africa controls the territory, also want independence from white rule in the packed with Israelis and tourists in the timetable and it is not met, Egypt may Tim Cain, ASMSU Student Board president from 1974 to 1975, was nearly removed from called South-West Africa, under a League territory, but Botha disputed that claim. office after he violated two student ordinances. of Nations mandate that has been voided by "SWAPO was invited to take part in that occupied West Bank 10 miles east of consider the treaty nullified. Jerusalem, killing four persons and injuring Cain had requested that Union Building employees allow persons waiting for concert the United Nations. election. They preferred not to take part _ Egypt also wants its police in Gaza but tickets to enter the building, an act for which he was not authorized. because they are not interested in elections, 37. No Americans were reported among the Israel opposes this, Begin said, The U.N. Security Council demanded last casualties. they are interested in foisting their own In Beirut, the Palestinian guerrilla group ideas at the point of a gun at the majority of Fatah claimed responsibility. the people of South West Africa (Nami¬ bia!." he said. Begin said Israel was ready to sign the In another interview. Kurt Waldheim, treaty draft as it existed Nov. 11 — without a timetable — but Egypt had added "unacceptable" demands in asking for a timetable. Train repair keeps club chugging secretary-general of the United Nations, said he is to report to the Security Council by next Saturday on whether South Africa will agree to a U.N. supervised election "We will never agree to timetables," By JENNIFER DIXON 1947. The tracks became University proper- speaking from under a striped railroad cap. tors who like the idea. later next year, possibly in July. Begin declared on the first anniversary of State News SUffWriter Members are "just general people who He said on the ABC "Issues and Egyptian President Anwar Sadat's historic ty in 1957. Restoration is funded by the railroad In 1957, former MSU trustee Forrest the engine run and restored," Answers" program that the South Africans trip to Jerusalem, the first step in the MSU is the only University "in the world club's 400 members, who want to see Akers, millionaire, paid to tow Jones said. maintain that the winner in the December current peace drive. a a restoring an engine like this," Jones said, through magazines advertisements < eight people repairing the election "will be the leaders of the people of Begin Vpoke to the central committee of locomotive donated by Chesapeake & Ohio Jones is among Namibia, but the United Nations will his own Herut Party after a Cabinet to MSU because he thought the University engine. When working, he wears oiled coveralls, a blue workshirt and paint-spat continue to negotiate with South Africa, meeting opening debate on the deadlocked should have a monument to the Age of and not those leaders." tered shoes. Washington peace talks, the new Egyptian Steam. Waldheim said there is "uneasiness in Those working on the restoration have proposals and a U.S.-proposed compromise. The MSU Railroad Club has been Africa" because the function of those taken off sheet metal and three inches of As Begin arrived for the party meeting, reinsulating the locomotive's boiler, repair- leaders is unclear and also because insulation running the length of the engine angry Jewish settlers from occupied terri- ing the running gear and reinstalling the SWAPO, "the liberation movement opera¬ : tories and other Israelis pelted his ca with lubrication ..... system . of... the 1225 locomotive . to check the boiler. rocks and eggs. The prime minister v lince 1969. The club "doesn't have a time table," for ting outside Namibia, will not have the on the left shoulder by an egg. Currently the monument to steam is completing the restoration because "all possibility of participating." labor is volunteer, it's hard to work without "We have to clarify the situation," Demonstrators also threw stones and covered with a plastic canopy. Club protection, as this is the first time we've had Waldheim said, "before we can accept any eggs at Defense Minister Ezer Weizman's members recently finished installing the further involvement of the United Nations." r when he arrived. shelter around the engine so they Many settlers in the Sinai t upset by continue with restoration through the The railroad club gets no money from the the government's willingness to return the winter, University, "because MSU is not a railroad peninsula to the Egyptians. Settlers on the The club members will be able to work operator or a restoration group," Jones said. West Bank fear a treaty would lead to under lights strung from wooden beams and The engine currently sits on railroad withdrawal from that occupied p warm with an electric stove. tracks leading to the Shaw Lane power In Cairo, Egyptian Prime Minister Mus- n the engine is fully restored, it will plant. Across from the 1225, on another set tapha Khalil marked the anniversary of be one of eight large operating steam of tracks, is an ex -Grand Trunk Railway post Sadat's Jerusalem visit with a warning that engines in the country and will pull football office train purchased to serve as a storage i peace treaty with Israel would not solve fans to Notre Dame, Ohio State, Northwes car. inside tern and U-M, and be used for excursion problems in the Middle East. an The train smells of oil. Rusty chains, He said Egypt still insists Israeli »ervice. Troubleshooter is on page 3. electric saws, piles of sawdust, coils of withdrawal from all Arab lands seized in The 1225, which burns soft coal, will pull wiring and a lone hammer are strewn across the 1967 Mideast War. 1,500 people per trip, club members say. the train's wood floor. Sadat issued no statements to mark the The 100-foot engine was the largest ever weather used in the state, said railroad club member The pigeon-hole shelves that once held occasion. He met in Cairo with U.S. Today is our first school day mail now hold washers, bolts, screws, nuts Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare Dave Jones, a junior in Justin Morrill of sub-freezing temperatures. and dies. Joseph Califano, who described Sadat as College. Wrenches are lined in rows on another Cloudy today with a 20 percent being "in a very fine mood." In the early 1900s, railroad tracks crossed chance of snow and a high near wall. The Washington talks have stalled over the Red Cedar River at the dam continuing 30 degrees. Tonight the tem¬ And anyone who wants to pick up a the "linkage" issue — whether and how the over the the University's first power plant, perature will drop to 20 de¬ where the Administration Building wrench or other such tool to help out should Israeli-Egyptian treaty and Israeli with¬ now grees. Don't leave your beer drawal from the Sinai should be tied to stands, Jones said. State News/Kim VanderVeer contact the club through the Museum. outside. The C & 0 Railroad ran from 1941 to 1951, The members of the Rtilrotd Club htve built t shelter over the trsin, "We can always use 'em (new volun¬ progress in establishing Palestinian auton¬ merging with the Pere Marquette railroad in teers)," Jones said. omy in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. Project 1225, so they con continue repairs through the winter. Monday, Novombor 20, 1978 2 Michigon Stote News, Eost Lansing, Michigon World population growth slows WASHINGTON (AP) - For Between mid-1976 and mid- "The changes are small, but the report. "These things going up through the 1970s and the first time, the population 1977, 80 million people were they are very significant," said change slowly. Until the last 10 1980s, added to the world's popula Samuel Baum, the bureau's top years, the growth rate had "This is the beginning of a growth rate of the world has been going steadily up, and it trend, and it's happening a reversed itself and is declining, tion. The addition between expert in international demo- mid-1966 and mid-1967 was 68 graphy who was in charge of had been predicted to continue decade earlier than expected." population experts say. But they say the actual million. number of people being added " to the world is still increasing The total population in¬ pami t-mrn creased from 3.5 billion in and that zero growth rate will mid 1967 to an estimated 4.3 U.S. agrees to aid Vietnamese refugees not be reached until between the years 2020 and 2025. billion in mid-1977, the report says. PORT KLANG Malaysia (AP) - The people, most of whom are ethnic Chinese A U.S. Census Bureau report United States has agreed to help find a from southern Vietnam. Forty Malaysian released Sunday shows the The new report shows that in almost half of the world's most haven for some 2.500 Vietnamese refu¬ police officers boarded the tightly world growth rate was about gees packed aboard a rusty freighter anchored off Malaysia, diplomats nego¬ guarded Hai Hong over the weekend to document the refugees in preparation for 1.9 percent to in 1976, compared about 2 percent a decade crowded countries, the tion growth rate popula¬ declined in the fSi earlier. last 10 years. tiating the fate of the refugees said finding them new homes abroad. Sunday. Diplomats at the talks said Conada, Malaysia, a country with some 40,000 France, Belgium and West Germany have promised to take various members of the Indochinese already crowded into its refugee camps, refused to let the Vietnamese land on grounds they paid refugees. The officials said the United States has Title IX trivial, for passage on the 1,500-ton Hoi Hong offered to take some of the refugees, though no figures have been mentioned. critics contend and were not true refugees. Red Cross officials, meanwhile, sent They said the U.S. assurance was given at food and medicine to the stranded talks Sunday. WASHINGTON t AP) — A Rhode Island man complained that his son was the victim of sex discrimination because the toilet Indian air force plane crashes, kills 76 stalls in the girls' bathroom at school had doors and those in the NEW DELHI, India (AP) — An Indian air transport, was making a routine flight boys' bathroom didn't. A federal civil rights official in Seattle accused the Bellevue, Wash., schools of illegal discrimination because a statistical survey i 1 force transport plane with 77 army with 70 passengers and a crew of seven. revealed that school oficials had spanked several boys but no girls. personnel aboard crashed Sunday while All the passengers were Indian army In its own defense, the Office for Civil Rights in Washington Sacks of rice and sugar are loaded aboard a navy ship in Malaysia Sunday, for approaching an airport at Leh in northern personnel, a ministry statement said. quickly points out those cases never got very far. delivery to the 2,500 Vietnamese refugees aboard the vessel Hai Hong anchored India, killing 76 passengers and crew The ministry said an official inquiry But for some they have symbolized the federal government's 10 miles off shore. The refugees have been refused permission to come ashore members and one person on the ground, was ordered to try to determine the efforts to enforce what school officials, feminists and the National since the Hai Hong arrived Nov. 10. the Defense Ministry reported. cause of the crash. Collegiate Athletic Association call Title IX. a six year-old law that The lone survivor was in critical A report received here said skies were makes it illegal to discriminate on the basis of sex in any federally condition at a local hospital. The person clear over Leh, which is 380 miles north of assisted education program or activity. New Delhi and is the moin town in the The law unquestionably has revolutionized interscholastic killed on the ground was identified as a Ladakh region, near China's Sinkiang athletics, and officials boast of correcting hundreds of substantial LABOR DEPARTMENT REPORT civilian airport employee. Province. violations in the classroom and personnel office, if not the lavatory. The aircraft, a Soviet-built AN-12 After the toilet door matter sat around about a year, the U.S. Office for Civil Rights decided Congress did not intend for it to worry about such things and dismissed the complaint. And when he heard about the spanking case, civil rights director David Tatel Sex bias still prevails rescinded a regional finding and dropped that charge, too. Tatel's office, an arm of the Department of Health, Education WASHINGTON (AP) - A white man who many cases, job inequities between men and and Welfare, points to recent settlements, like one in which 85 dropped out of high school makes more money on women have widened, according to the report. the average than a white woman with a college Vetter is executive director of the Scientific female teachers in West Virginia shared $100,000 in back pay for past abuses, as evidence the government is not obsessed with degree, according to Labor Department figures. Manpower Commission, a private, non-profit trivia. That is one of the findings in a new report on organization formed by the country's major Some critics of the office agree — up to a point. employment prospects of professional women scientific societies to investigate employment "Has the government spent six years running after trivial and minorities. trends and problems common to the sciences. issues? I'd say the answer is definitely no." says Holly Knox, The report's conclusion: "Things aren't going The report also was co-authored by Eleanor L. director of the non-profit Project on Equal Education Rights. "It's nearly as well as one would have thought 10 Babco and Judith E. Mclntire. spent six years not doing very much at all." years ago," when the federal government had "Among minority men who get a higher just begun to commit itself to equal employment education, they are getting comparable money Despite her dissatisfaction, Knox is among the first to point to Whalers file suit opportunity and affirmative action for minorities and jobs white with the level of to stop oil drilling the sweeping changes in athletics. "In 1972, there were 12 boys for every girl playing interscholastic sports on the high school level," and women, says Betty M. Vetter, co-author of as education and men same are moving up at about the same she said. "Today, that ratio has narrowed to 21 z-to-l. the report. rates as white men," Vetter said in an interview. BARROW. Alaska (AP) — Eskimo first-ever quota on the severol-thousand- But in many cases. Knox says. HEW has not decided thorny The study found that women and minorities "That is not the case with women," she said. whalers have filed suit to stop oil drilling have made dramatic gains over the past decade Vetter gave this example based on Labor year-old Eskimo hunt of the bowhead. questions behind complaints. in the Beaufort Sea, considered by some The drilling going on now is being In June 1975, HEW exempted "contact sports" from its rule in acquiring the education required for a Department data: white men who dropped out of the most promising offshore oil area in conducted by Exxon Corp. on a human- giving girls the right to try out for boys teams if no comparable professional career. But opportunities for em¬ high school earned an average of $9,379 in 1976, ployment, advancement and good pay — particu¬ while white women with a college degree the country but also the habitat of the made gravel pad in the mouth of the girls teams existed. More than three years and many complaints later, it still cannot decide whether soccer is a contact sport. larly for women — have increased very little. In averaged $7,176. endangered bowhead whale. Sagavanirktok River, 200 miles east of The whalers fear oil spills under the ice Barrow. could wipe out the bowhead, one of the The Eskimos are suing the state, the Eskimos' major food sources. federal government and Exxon on The International Whaling Commis¬ grounds the drilling began without the sion. concerned that the whale was required environmental impact state¬ nearing extinction, this year imposed the ments and water quality certification. Experts watch for Russian flu ATLANTA (UPI) — Influenza experts at The Russian flu virus is similar to the the National Center for Disease Control so-called A-prime influenza organism are keeping a close watch on the that first appeared around the world in season's first reports of Russian flu 1947 and was the principal cause of flu for cases, for signs of any changes in the 10 years. It disappeared in 1957, surfaced virus that might make more people again in 1977 in China and the Soviet susceptible to infection. Union, and arrived in this country last The CDC said in its Morbidity and January. Mortality Weekly Report that four cases In winter and early spring outbreaks of Russian influenza had been confirmed in the United States, the virus attacked in Texas, one of them a 63-yeor-old those under age 25 almost exclusively, Houston woman. The other three cases although a few older people contracted involved children age 4 or younger. the illness in the late spring. Striking teachers reach tentative agreement WILMINGTON. Del. (AP) - Teachers in enrollment. a newly desegregated school district The strike centered on the teachers' reached a tentative agreement to end a demand that salaries be revised ac¬ crippling five-week-old strike, the New cording to the pay scale of the old Castle County school board announced Wilmington School District, which was Sunday. the highest of the 11 school districts that A ratification vote was scheduled for were consolidated this fall under a court Sunday night by the New Castle County desegregation order. Education Association, which represents The old districts paid teachers with 10 I i 2,800 of the district's 4,000 teachers. years experience anywhere from $13,336 The strike halted most public school a year to $17,945. classes in northern Delaware, affecting The board agreed to "level up" the 63,540 New Castle County students, more salaries, but wanted two and one-half than half of the state's total 113,000 years to do it. Robber leaves fingertip at scene of crime PIZZA C BREW C BAR HOPPERS NORTH ARLINGTON. N.J. (AP) — sfate police laboratories in Little Falls, New live-in styling by Nino Cerrutl Sport: Detectives usually lift fingerprints at the detective John Ronan said. naturals that encourage him to go easy on himself. scene of a crime, but rarely from a finger "It's just possible," another police- Both sized S-M-L-XL. Long sleeve brown plaid shirt left behind. officer said, "that we'll be able to get a is a "feather flannel" of cotton and wool, $36. During a robbery at the Broad National print from the finger tip which will help Bank here Friday, a robber carrying a identify one of the two suspects." Shearling-look sweater of cotton terry; collar can sawed-off shotgun shot off a finger tip The shotgun went off as the robber be a middy, cowl or turtleneck. In cream, $45. from his left hand when the weapon bolted over the counter to go through accidentally discharged, police said Sun¬ drawers of cash, officers said. day. They said the same intruder had Jacobson's "It was a real freaky thing, Lt. John terrorized a bank employee by pointing Woods said. the shotgun at her head and threatened The digit and a black glove left at the to I. if she did not open a safe, robbery scene will be sent Monday to the jers made off with $3,000. Michigon Stota News, Eost Loosing, Michigon Monday, November 20, 1978 3 HARVARD, 'I-CHICAVO PROFESSORS If you Race significance debated hove ■ problem you can't solve, or a question you can't answer, write Trouble Shooter, 343 Student Services BIdg., By THERESA D. McCLELLAN the bottom rung of the ladder." minorities received 15 to 20 percent less than their white MSU, East Lansing, 48824, or call 355-8252, between 8 a.m. and SUte News Staff Writer Willie, however, contended that blacks only made 1 p.m. Ask for Trouble Shooter, the State News service which counterparts, Willie said. Although gains have been made for the educated progress during the year of Martin Luther King's death "This shows that racism is alive and well in the United guns down problems, sticks up for your rights and shoots for middle-class black person, affirmative action does not and race is not declining in significance but becoming more States," he said. satisfy the needs for the uneducated and poor blacks, said important. Wilson stressed the fact that he did not say race was University of Chicago professor William J. Wilson in a "The death of Martin Luther King shamed the nation debate held Thursday night. into the goal of full equity for blacks and the black median insignificant but also condemned affirmative action for not Last Tuesday I bought tickets for the Bruce Springsteen concert (Friday) at Munn assisting everyone. Wilson debated the significance of race in determining income inched forward to 70 percent of the white," Willie Ice Arena. I showed up at the Union Ticket Office two days before tickets went on sale, "I support affirmative action," he said, "but it doesn't go racial inequality with Harvard professor Charles V. Willie said. "Hut we are still 30 percent short of our goal" and was the 24th person in line. A diagram put up by ASMSU Pop Entertainment said far enough." in an overcrowded Wonders Kiva. The professors debated for over two hours, Willie the first 10 rows of the center Bectionlthe best seats in the house) would be available at He also said enough blacks were not aware of the the Union Ticket Office. A Pop Entertainment representative also specified no They have conducted several public and written debates hurling statistics and Wilson comparing South African after Wilson wrote the book "The Declining Significance of blacks with American blacks. Humphrey Hawkins bill, which would improve the status of promotional tickets would be taken out of those rows. If all those seats were really Race." While both agreed that enough progress all unemployed. available, I should have ended up in the sixth or seventh row. I came away with tickets has not been Wilson debated that class has become more important made for poor blacks, neither could agree on the gains "There was more publicity given to affirmative action for the second section back. What happened? D.M. than race in determining black access to privilege and made by middle class blacks. and the Bakke decision," he said, "while there is only a power. Wilson staled that affirmative action has allowed black superficial knowledge of this bill." College of Business "There are many talented and educated blacks that are graduates to be on the same economic level as whites but While Willie stressed the need for institutional changes, entering prestigious positions at rates comparable to and in Wilson presented data that stated otherwise. Wilson concluded that there is a need for a united class some cases exceeding whites with the same qualifications," From a 1976 study that allowed for past and present First section tickets were on their way after call from Trouble Shooter to Pop movement among the poor. However, he said he did not see Wilson said. "But the poor and uneducated blacks are on discrimination, college trained black and other racial this happening in the future. Entertainment. Problem stemmed from Pop Entertainment oversight causing 38 tickets to be held in reserve. These were held back for people who lost places when rows were removed to make room for the soundboard. Ron Stump, of Pop Entertainment, said they shouldn't have been taken from the first 10 rows. Problem was resolved by promise to Trouble Shooter that tickets will never be pulled from Reactions these rows again. Since you were the one who brought problem to their attention, you saw Friday's show from best seats in the house. [CD differ over The Theta Delta Chi fraternity house, 139 Bailey St., is badly in need of repairs we can't afford. We'd like to repair our basement plumbing, have insulation, and have other work done that we don't have siding put up for funds for. The house is owned race debate by an alumnus of the Theta Delta Chi chapter at University of Michigan. It is being The students and faculty present at the purchased from him by a housing corporation formed by our own alumni specifically for that purpose. Are we eligible to receive any money from the U.S. Department of Wilson-Willie debate voiced various opin¬ ions concerning its importance and the Housing and Urban Development to help us get our house up to standard? Theta Delta Chi political implications of the topic. "The crowd seemed to be more partisan Sounds to Trouble Shooter like you weren't first to ask — and HUD money could, for Willie," Lee Meadows, guidance special¬ come soon if you get on the stick. Federal Government says HUD money can be ist in supportive service, said. "Whether received regardless of who owns your house, if primary beneficiaries have low or this was because he was more charismatic moderate income, and money eliminates slums or blight. If 75 percent of brothers in the or just because the crowd agreed with his house make less than $13,500 a year, you could qualify. But the money is administered point of view, I do not know." in East Lansing by the city's Housing and Community Development Commission. Last However, some members of the audience year you were left out of the running after no greeks voiced needs when city's said they felt Wilson's view would have a application to federal government was drawn up. Call to city planner Marty Singer negative effect on the status of affirmative revealed if you speak up before next year's application goes out, you could be included. action. Meanwhile, group of other fraternities and sororities asked same question and formed "The political implication would be very a committee. Walley Piper, director of off-campus housing, 101 Student Services BIdg., is coordinating effort, and is the one you should call to get in on the action. negative," Meadows said, "in that there would cease to be feelings of offensive guilt by the controlling majority." Lee June, president of the Black Faculty and Administrators Association said he "doesn't think Wilson has considered the political implications of the book." Sleeping Bear Dunes "look no "People could even use just the title and say, this black man feels that race is longer an issue" and begin to slack their efforts," he explained. off on "There really is no difference in their land owners oppose arguments," said graduate student Gwen Taylor. "It depends on your interpretation and your analysis of others' interprets tions." government takeover "The only difference between their arguments is the emphasis," said Ron Gizza State News Russ Humphrey a senior in James Madison College. "I can't identify the root of their Lt. John Peterson, of the Department of Public Safety, shouts out drill instructions to 15 students in Mason By PAULCOX recommendations. disagreement and I don't understand their recently during police academy training procedures. Mary Dahlstron, sponsored by the Weberville Police State News Staff Writer These comments and suggestions from perception of their differences," he said. Department, clutches her night stick. Land owners seeking to keep or regain the public workshops will be used to create The topic of debate was relevant to the concrete management plan, Brown events that are occuring today, said their northwest Michigan property domi¬ a more nated National Park Service workshop to said. Following more public comment, freshman Clarence James. Future police officers learning a Brown said he hopes to formulate a final "It brought out a lot of questions about help develop a management plan for Sleeping Bear Dunes. management plan by next summer. affirmative action that haven't been rais While the land owners — many from the Brown said attendance and the amount of ed," he said. Lansing area — expressed a need to comment has been high at the public "Contrary to what Wilson the maintain protected wilderness areas, they said they have a right to their personal "havens." About 150 persons attended the workshops. A recap concluding the MSU workshop says even so-called elitist are experiencing racism," James added. "It may be more subtle but 'real life9 roles during training it's there." fourth and final workshop, which was held brought out a number of common concerns. included in the training. These Sentiments of returning the land to its Since the drilling was completed the The Department of Public Safety and ty were in MSU's natural Resources Building Thurs¬ East Lansing and Lansing police depart¬ included a mock crime scene, civil original owners drew applause. group of police trainees mingled to¬ day. gether and forgot, for a moment, the ments have had officers undergo the disorder, vehicle search and fire arms In 1970, the U.S. Congress designated the Sleeping Bear area a National Lakeshore, Persons also strongly opposed "scenic corridors" which are long, thin parcels of Black Affairs strenuous workout. "Oh fearless leader, what do you have training procedures, and also have had either officers or detectives involved practice, which helped develop the proper attitude of the trainee. and the land is now being obtained by the land which would link various separated with some of the instruction. to sayi" one asked his squad leader. federal government, Dune Superintendent Hendricks said the academy tried to areas of the National Lakeshore. Her eyes rolled back as she pleaded The class went through a rigorous make the students familiar with not Donald R. Brown said. Residents owning land designated as part of the National Lakeshore are required to Opponents said these corridors "put a noose" around the entire area and are a meets today with him to stop joking. "That's enough," she commanded. 11 week training period which concen¬ trated on various problems and pro¬ cedures faced by a patrol officer. only the problems people present to a police officer on duty, but also the sell their property to the federal govern¬ National Park Service effort to expand the By RUSS HUMPHREY Possible situations encountered by an correct way to proceed with an investi¬ ment. boundries of the federally owned land, The Office of Black Affairs will be holding State News Staff Writer gation. officer were presented to the group "We're being overpowered by the federal infringing on the rights of more land- a meeting concerning the need for an MSU Mary Dahlstron, of the Weberville after several hours of class time. The In the ninth week of the term, officer government," said Walter Bierkamp, a black student coalition at 8:30 tonight in the City Police Department, did not get the situations were designed to be as near trainees were drilled using military Lansing resident who owns Dune property. 334 Union BIdg. response she wanted from the man in Opponents also said existng historical OBA has called the meeting to discuss her squad. Though it was break time as possible to the real thing. techniques in Mason for several hours a "I'm just a little guy. I wanted to keep it structures and dune rides should be black survival at MSU after such things as then, she would soon be obeyed when Interviewing problems, investigating night. The drills were used to make the (property) for my children." maintained. the drilling resumed. techniques and report writing were trainees familiar with riot action, and No industrial development will be allow¬ restructured affirmative action program, John V. Polomsky, MSU assistant profes¬ some of the class work at the academy. their enforcement responsibilities when ed in the National Lakeshore but a plan MSU divestiture from South Africa and the Dahlstron was one of 27 police sor of Metallurgy, Mechanics and Materials Bus Stop discrimination issue have taken trainees graduated Friday from a East Lansing Lt. Tom Hendricks said. a crowd becomes violent. must be develoDed as to what degree of said while he feels maintaining wilderness Lansing Community College sponsored "We taught them to use their heads in A mock riot, full of violent people, wilderness will be maintained, Brown said. place this term. all circumstances," Hendricks said. He is important, he would not want to see a A national Park Service team divided the "There is an extreme need for all black police academy. gave the trainees the opportunity to use national park made inaccessible to senior factions to unite and form a black student Twelve of the police graduates were taught some of the various techniques the techniques they learned. Dune into six areas and formulated manage¬ of report writing, and has been involved citizens and handicappers. ment alternatives for each area, which are coalition if we are to regain our identity and sponsored by a county or city police Each platoon was divided into squads with some of the other aspects of the listed in a workbook. The public comment workbook is avail¬ political awareness," an OBA spokesperson department, while the rest paid the school in previous sessions. which could surround a building or said. tuition themselves in order to become a The workbook explains the alternatives able by writing Sleeping Bear Dunes "Real life" episodes of criminal activi¬ group effectively. and has a detachable section, which can be National Lakeshore, 400 Main St., Frank¬ Refreshments will be served after the qualified officer in Michigan. used to mail in personal comments and fort. Mich.. 49635. meeting. Lansing board choice: coal nuclear. The board will announce which with coal. They insist that nuclear technol¬ owned nuclear or generation plant, which is nuclear power? The article focuses on the experience of cured at nuclear plants, the Brown's Ferry ByPAULCOX Commonwealth Edison in the Chicago area, Ala., plant and the Fermi I plant in Detroit alternative it will pursue at a special under construction. Current estimates indi¬ State News Staff Writer ogy will not work efficiently, creating both close to having a "core melt" occur. A cate the plant will be "on line" by 1981. which is the nation's largest nuclear user. came First of two parti meeting Dec. 5. economic and environmental burdens. melt releases large amounts A great amount of politicking has Edison figures show savings of 10 percent core of The Lansing Board of Water and Light Engineers and scientists have uniformly radiation into the environment. favored going with the nuclear technology. R. W. Beck and Associates, an indepen¬ surrounded the issue, but it comes down to in 1977 to consumers on their electric bills will be making an energy decision in the near future with potential effects on many. They say it will provide economic advan¬ dent engineering research firm, was con¬ what is best for the Lansing area. because of nuclear energy usage. Large reactors contain about 1,000 times tracted to study the situation and condi¬ Coal is a known technology with regard But nuclear opponents point to the the amount of radioactive material as the The decision basically comes down to tionally recommended then nuclear alterna¬ to its economic and environmental ramifaca- Consumers Power Palisades nuclear plant, bomb the United States dropped on choosing between the traditional energy tive. The board should buy into the which has produced at only 33.8 percent of Hiroshima, Japan during WW II. coal tions. source — — or going with a newer Consumers Power Midland nuclear genera¬ Little attention has been focused on the technology nuclear power. Nuclear energy is potentially better in its capacity. — tion plant, "unless the business risks terms of cost to consumers and safety to the People often oppose nuclear energy coal alternative because it is a tried and Roaland F. Rhead, board chairperson, normally associated with nuclear energy" environment. Because of its relative infancy becauseJ hey think of it as a bomb — it could well known method of electrical generation. said the board will require more power to are too great, the report said. explode. Coal has had a recent rebirth as an energy meet increased consumer needs by about as an energy source, it is not known if it will source in this country. 1984. A decision must be made soon to meet The board currently generates power live up to its potential. Explosions are not possible at nuclear The coal supply is not controlled by a these needs so negotiations or construction with coal at its Erickson plant located in An article in the August 1978 issue of power plants because there is not enough can be completed in time to fill them. Delta Township. The Beck study indicated Science magazine stated that 12 percent of Uranium-235 in the fuel used to produce an foreign country and it appears an adequate tages over coal and be safer for the that these facilities could be the nation's electricity was generated by explosion. supply exists. It has been estimated that The decision will have an economic effect expanded, the United States has enough coal to last environment. nuclear plants in 1977. Since the country's This is not to say there are not potential on power rates in the Lansing area and along with the use of oil-fired turbines to 300 to 400 years. environmental effects on Michigan. Area environmentalists, consumer meet the area's power needs. first nuclear plant went on line 20 years dangers from the radiation associated with ago, the total volume of nuclear energy has nuclear energy. Coal is the most widely used energy The board's narrowing process has groups and governmental units are set The Midland alternative is to purchase been growing by about 30 percent a year. Although no major accidents have oc- source used in this country. whittled the alternatives down to coal and against the nuclear option and want to stay about 7 percent of the Consumers Power ®[pfaD®lfi) VIEWPOINT: AMERICAN FOREIGN POLICY Boeings don't mix Human rights: joke of the century well with Cessnas By MARCELLA TARDY point is reached that life itself is not so important for the oppressed as deliverance from I was mortified by recent statements from the U.S. State Department and other their oppression, when the tyranny itself becomes life-threatening, then that tyranny will be overthrown at whatever cost. I doubt it will be soon forgotten by those who struggled With the approach of the holiday season many members of the MSU members of our government indicating U.S. support for the Shah of Iran and his that the United States supported their oppressors. community — not to mention millions of Americans — will be taking to "temporary" military government. Although the shah and his supporters would have us The United States needs friends, and though our government is banking on hopes that believe the present and past unrest has been the doing of a handful of Muslim extremist the air to travel home. In doing so, they exhibit tremendous confidence the Iranian military can maintain the shah (or failing this, impose another leader friendly and leftist guerrillas, television and radio news coverage, movies smuggled from Iran, that t he government. air carrier companies and their personnel will get and the accounts of Iranian students within the U.S. indicate this is a popular uprising to U.S. interests), I think it important to remember that a government is only as strong them there safely. long in the making. Moreover, contrary to most media reports, the grievances of the as its backing — ".nd this backing must ultimately come from the general population. I And lor the most part the confidence is well-earned. Aircraft builders, Iranian people are not limited to unwanted reforms from the shah and a desire for Islamic firmly believe thai the shah will be overthrown. The question is one of time and cost in human lives. airlines and the government, through the Federal Aviation rule, but also includes excessive military expenditures while basic needs of the population Administration, have done a fairly credible job over the years in go unmet, corruption at all levels of government (the shah's arrest of members of his Iran is not just a valuable and strategic piece of real estate. It is a nation. And as a government is little more than a futile attempt to disguise his own involvement), and the nation it is her people who should determine the future of Iran, not the United States, and providing for the safety of airline customers. In fact, the safety record of shah's brutal repression of opposition to his regime. not a privileged and corrupt monarchy. We, as dues-paying members of this republic, air travel supercedes that of any of its land-bound counterparts. Few, I think, have failed to notice the downplay of the human rights issue, once such a should demand our government cease meddling in the internal affairs of Iran, withdraw But, while the record has been good it could and should be even favorite when speaking of the U.S.S.R. Yet it is well known that Iranian jails are full of all military and verbal support from the shah (though he will probably get refuge in San better. Less than two months ago over 140 people died when a political and that systematic torture and murder are common methods of dealing with Clemente anyway), and maintain the hands-off respect that we demand of other nations toward ourselves. We have been caught with our greedy little fingers in the pies of other commercial jetliner collided with a private airplane in a confusing set of opponer. ,4 of the monarchy. Amnesty International cites Iran as perhaps the worst violator of human rights in the world today. While the great economic and strategic nations too often and frankly, I would not like to feel ashamed of my citizenship in the circumstances in the skies over San Diego. U.S., a place where "integrity" really means "hypocrisy" and "hum*n rights" is rapidly importance of Iran for the U.S. is clear, filling American gas tanks with the equivalent of Wnile the investigation into that particular accident continues, there Iranian blood is unconscionable for a nation whose leaders blabber about human rights. becoming the joke of the century. exists one nagging fact. The mixture of commercial and private aircraft In our paranoia of communist expansion, the U.S. has repeatedly supported not only Incidentally, (to those who find this issue devoid of relevance) I think that disco-football stinks. at large metropolitan airports is inherently dangerous. Western style "democracies," but corrupt and dictatorial regimes as well, often damning our nw. long term interests. Tyranny can only be tolerated for so long and when the Tardy is an Owen Hall senior majoring in Linguistics Pilots, through their professional organization, have complained for years about the increased congestion and the resultant dangers associated with mixing ever-larger and more crowded commercial aircraft — complete with expanding schedules — with the increasing proliferation of slower, smaller aircraft associated with private aviation. VIEWPOINT: PROPOSAL D It's not only pilots who have voiced negative opinions about this lethal mix of aircraft, either. Air traffic controllers, on whose shoulders and earphones falls t he task of safely sort ing through incoming and outgoing traffic, also have expressed their dissatisfaction with current airport 18 is no good? traffic situations. The solution seems simple enough — move private air traffic to outlying smaller private airports. But the politics of the situation are not quite so easy. Businesses who own their own planes obviously want close access, as do the weekend flyers who live in metropolitan areas. why don't we try But before the stark reality of the recent San Diego tragedy becomes anothercold statistic the FAA should move strongly to investigate, but more importantly implement, the separation of two very different kinds of aviation. Continued inaction by the FAA on the complaints of raising it to 65? By CINDIDl BEY professional aviators is only an invitation to another disaster. Proposal D has passed, much to the dismay of legal adults under 21. Many students are angered, frustrated and confused as to how 'they' can strip them of their privilege to purchase and consume alcoholic beverages. "It shows the ignorance of the older people. Nineteen would have been fine; people didn't even give it a chance to work out. They didn't even pay attention to the facts," asserted Mike Schaefer, Shaw Hall resident. Many groups, such as The Three O'Clock Lobby, a youth advocate group, are seeking possible litigation. Their argument is based on the theory that Proposal D is not only unenforceable but discriminatory. But one Wayne State University student has another alternative. Dave Menard, a Wayne State sophomore, feels, "What's good for the goose is good for the gander." Menard's proposal is to raise the drinking age to 65 and link it to the benefits of retirement. He says his purpose is ". . . to show how ludicrous it is to strip us of our rights." Menard originally conceived the idea the night before the election when he and his friends were discussing the fact that they were about to lose their privilege to drink. Initially Menard wasn't serious about the idea until the Wayne State student newspaper and Detroit's Channel 7 picked up on the story. Accidentally, Channel 7 publicly broadcast a telephone number where Menard could be reached for further information. Surprisingly, the response was overwhelming. As Menard put it. ". . the switchboards lit up like Christmas trees." . YEAH, I'M UN PES 2A - SO WHAT! Now, backed by numerous supporters, Menard says, "I'll take it as far as I can." However, he was quick to add, 'I don't actually want to see it raised to 65." Currently, Menard is in the process of meeting with University of Detroit law students petition because, like Menard, they believe that Proposal D is an infringement on to straighten out 'egal technicalities. Within the next week, petitions should begin privileges and responsibilities granted to legal adults under 21. If Menard's proposal does make it into the 1979 ballot it is almost guaranteed not to circulating in an attempt to get the proposal on next year's ballot. Although Menard doesn't really want to see the drinking age raised to 65, his campaign pass because of its absurdity. However, Menard will have had the opportunity to show the public how ridiculous Proposal D is. may succeed in proving his point. At the same time it will be a blatent '-ery of Students interested in helping to promote Menard's cause are asked to write to him at Proposal I). A seller's market It's a possibility that Menard may be successful in acquiring the required number of signatures needed to get his proposal on next year's ballot. Many people will sign his 672 Putnam. Detroit. MI 48202. Dubey •s a Show Hall sophomore mojoring m Journalism DPS, never known for its prosecutorial discretion, has been arresting "scalpers" for selling their football tickets outside Spartan Stadium. This has all come at the request of the Athletic Department, which would rather sell their $8 tickets than have potential customers buy A victory for the E.L. community unused student tickets. Three cheers to everyone in the MSU and Detroit. They helped rob our sense of Ticket scalping is the perfect victimless crime. Nobody is hurt by the East Lansing communities for voting community. down the construction of the Dayton It's great that you haven't taken for selling a ticket. If a person wants to see an event, that person is either Hudson mall. You have just taken a giant granted what you have in East Lansing. willing to pay the price or not see the event. And it's a great feeling for an alum to know To many people, a Spartan football game is worth more than $4 but step toward preserving the sense of "community" not to mention preserving the that it will be there to enjoy on return trips less than $8. Who do they hurt by buying an extra student ticket? The Independents love pledge raid tales environment. to campus. 1 look forward to those trips Athletic Department thinks it should be a crime because those people I live in Detroit, an if you're not tuned back to the East Lansing "community." You people disappoint us! How can you investigative mission to search out more of into it there truly is a renaissance going on Len Bokuniewicz '69 won't buy from them. It is a selfish attitude to take, and is especially harmful to students who can't make it to all the games but don't want to possibly limit your fine coverage of pledge these brilliant anecdotes from among the in this city although we do have a long way Detroit raids to just one involving Chi Omega and Greek system. We G.D.I.'s certainly find to go. But my point is this: Besides the let a ticket go to waste. Psi I psilon? Surely there are many these stories to be entertaining reading, flight to the suburbs, crime, pollution and Besides, how can DPS establish how much a ticket costs (retail) when humorous and noteworthy tales of raids many other factors that contributed to the Placers are OK no prices are printed on student tickets? Surely they don't think an Iowa among the other fraternities and sororities. Michael Richards demise of the city, the erection of shopping ticket, for a game to be played in the cold on a holiday weekend, is as Perhaps the State News should send their Chris Bramer malls helped to destroy neighborhoods and I have been here three years and have ace reporter (Jennifer Dixon) on a special 1330 E. Grand River #18 valuable as a Notre Dame ticket, a game played on a sunny afternoon. the sense of community in many areas. gone through lots of red tape and confusion Walk down the streets of East Lansing, — from parking to registration — but only Folly? Yes. But DPS started it. Ann Arbor, Traverse City, etc. There is a recently have I encountered the other end DPS, in enforcing an ordinance requiring selling permits, is great feeling about passing down the street, of the spectrum. I am referring to the discriminating at the request of the Athletic Department. DPS does not Soviets are illiterate buffoons mingling with people, turning into a pub for Placement Officers. I've been going there send an officer to Wells Hall to copy down the names of students selling a beer, dashing into the news stand to catch for job interviews and I was amazed at how a glimpse of the New York Times or some well things were organized. Not only are ski equipment, used cars, or textbooks. But when the Athletic With my whole heart I share the humane when comrade Secretary General ap¬ favorite magazine, stopping off at the donut they well-organized, but everyone I have Department tell- 'hem to come out to the stadium and suddenly start views expressed by Iftikhar H. Malik in last proaches the next perfidious word. Now, shop to escape the cold and enjoy a cup of contact with has always been helpful, enforcing the ordinance, they come running. Thursday's State News, but one of his this time he's going to overcome it... But coffee, bumping into a friend on the street knowledgable and friendly. The Athleti- Department, like any other component of this statements struck me as evidently wrong. he always fails. and talking over last weekend's big victory, So to Jackie, Sharon, Tammie, Toni and University, is s .pposeb to serve the student body. Sponsoring athletic Malik says: "All of the leaders of the world I am afraid that torches borne by Soviet etc., etc., etc. everyone else I don't know or see there, events is a fine form of entertainment and brings revenues to the school. in politics, economics or military are the leaders are of different kind. The Northlands, Eastlands, Wonder¬ thanks. Lev Lifshitz lands, Fairlanes and so forth helped rob Bob Bloom Rut calling DPS to arre-t students for selling their extra tickets is not highly-educated people of the present Visiting professor of Arts and Letters those great things from the streets of 202 Mason Hall century. They are all torch-bearers of the benefiting the students ,n anv way. entire heritage of human progress, spread , over all these centuries of our past." The sad truth is that, on the contrary, it is astonishing how small the number of the educated The world leaders there are who are DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau State News appropriately. mcemnuuxan6 Wfcmeowto As a Russian, I can witness that the top forward to our date tare aid toad/sco, ITS REALLY CHAN6CDMY /cndoy November 2u, 1978 leaders of my country are poorly educated are you sua imn. t0ni6ht. sir. the other YOU&tf HAIR A LITTLE, r or the Sfu e News Viewpoints, columns people. They received their degrees from 6iasiNmomsAn IM DOT SURE IE1HATS fit THAT HAY BE special institutions for young Soviet bu¬ THE HI6HTLFE HERE AWOUEO. TDHARETO reaucrats. In those schools the major 15 REALi Y \ CHECK WITH \ Editorial Department somemm/ THE EMBASSY i requirements are the "proletarian origin" Kathy Kilbury and blind obedience to the party discipline. Dave DiMarhno Their fabulous ignorance in the history, Mike Klocke culture and literature of their own country City Editor . Scott Wierenga is a source of numerous anecdotes. None of Campus Edit' Deborah Hey wood them can speak grammatical Russian. Such Wire Editor Kenneth E Parker words as "socialist," "capitalist" or "dif¬ Slatt Representative JoyL I ferentiation" (i.e. Latin borrowings with Advertising Department Russian endirgs) are always a challenge for Advertising Manager flob Shatter Assistant Advt Brezhnev as a speaker. It is a peculiar mg Manager Gina Spaniolo Russian fun to watch Brezhnev's TV speech Michigan Slat* N«wi, Eo»t lonting, Mlchigon Monday, Novambar 20, 1978 5 E.L. Ebony Reflections present fashion show seeking consultant By THERESA McCLELLAN State News Staff Writer she sang "This Is Your Life." formed on the floor, instead of guest - Mystery. The local around one singer's leg. Daryll Hibbert ignored the the stage, singing group that sounded like for service facility The performers enter the darkly lit room and the narra¬ tor begins, "This is a play about band as he sang "Hold Onto The World," while the band played their own song. The best scene in the fashion show came when the man nequins came to life in robot the Dramatics quickly ap¬ proached the audience with vigorous movements almost too After an embarassing mo ment of unwrapping the mike cord the group performed sev our time... when houses didn't A modern dance by a brother style and exhibited their ap quick for the eye. eral songs which were met with The East Lansing Housing The study group has been up the consultant job for bid get robbed quite as much." and sister act could barely be parel. At the delighted squeals from the au and Community Development given five candidates for the because the city can engage in From that point on the Black viewed by the audience in the Ebony Reflections also treat ments were too quick for the dience. Commission has directed a sub¬ consultant position. Reference professional contracts, he said. Rennanisance Ensemble stole back because the dancers per ed the audience with a surprise microphone as it coyly draped committee to find a consultant checks are currently being In addition, a proposal to But the BRE stole the show. the show. for the proposed Human Ser¬ made on these persons. acquire open space property Their first selection dealt with vices Facility by mid-Decem- north of Red Cedar School for The United Blacks of Akers the time when being called "One problem in hiring a ber. preservation as a natural area Ebony Reflection presented "black" was negative. The dra consultant is that we don't have location for the human matic troupe The city has allocated $15,000 Three honored or as a their fourth annual fashion and reflected this with in federal monies to conduct a a defined task yet," said Brad services facility was included in talent show Saturday night. at ceremony the portrayal through childrens feasibility study for a multi-use Pryce, group manager for the a commission report. eyes. Planning, Housing and Com¬ Along with fashions furnished $1.5 million human services Any action to purchase the MSU President Edgar L. the recipient of the Milliken. wife of Gov. William munity Development Depart¬ by Hosiers and the background The audience roared when facility or facilities for Spartan property is pending the result music from a Muskegon Harden, Attorney General 1978 Distinguished G. Milliken, received the Distin¬ Carl Gilliard, a junior majoring ment. Village and Red Cedar areas of of the feasibility study and an Heights 9-person band, the Frank J. Kelley and Helen Award, a bronze sculpture by guished Woman of the Year in telecommunications cried East Lansing. Commissioner Nanette Rod- estimated cost of the property, Milliken were honored at an Award. BRE performed three skits Michigan artist Marshall that he was not "black" but a The study committee, a sub¬ gers suggested hiring a consul¬ which has not been determined. awards ceremony and banquet Fredericks. Milliken has actively cam¬ dealing with blackness. "colored-Negro." committee of the commission, tant from MSU, but Pryce Dean N. Click, 1037 Daisy The award read: "Of all men given by the Michigan Associa¬ paigned for the Equal Rights was ordered Thursday to find a objected the idea. Lane, owns the property, which tion of the Professions Thurs¬ he (Harden) has served the Amendment. The prom night selection consultant for the study by "There is a potential bias he said is being looked at by a Although the models strut¬ day night. professions best." Harden, Kelley and Milliken brought sympathetic "awws" number of potential buyers. ted to the music well and the Dec. 14 so the commission can with (hiring) anyone associated The dinner was held at the Kelley was awarded the were chosen for the awards at from the audience after the "It's my feeling the land fashions were "sharp" as one submit the consultant's name to with the University," Pryce Great Citizen Citation for his the Congress of the Professions hero told his date he invited her woman stated in the audience, University Club on Forest said. would be used for a public City Council at its Dec. 19 but the BRE was the highlight "exemplary service and conduct held at Boyne Moutain ski because he respected her "even meeting. The city does not have to put facility," Click said. Harden, an association in public and private life," and August. though she had three kids". of the show. Rhonda Hughes won the battle to stay in tune though Loans, judges on agenda the band almost defeated her as Monday Night for Lansing City Council PIZZA 'N PITCHER A proposal authorizing Lan¬ Improvement Program are increasing the city's sh SPECIAL sing to submit applications for available through the Michigan supplemental funding to dis¬ low-interest loans designed to State Housing Development trict court judges to $4,581 per rehabilitate residential proper¬ Authority for purposes of pro¬ judge. plus .... ty will be considered by the viding additional home im¬ City Council at 7 p.m. Monday provement funds. The proposed increase would REDUCED PITCHER on the 10th floor of City Hall. bring the city's total share of district court judges' salaries Low-interest loan applica¬ PRICES ALL NIGHT! tions for the Neighborhood up to $16,225 per judge. Tuesday is Floral show set Dec. 1 Doubles Night fessional florists as far as lights of the show, the financial Double shots for It's beginning to look a lot like Christmas and it will management, marketing strate¬ delights may appeal to those on single drink prices . . . a tight budget even more. look that way even more during gies and actual design are concerned," instructor of the Creations will be sold only 5 This coupon is good for a free glass of the Country Christmas Floral Design Show Dec. 1. course and this year's program to 10 percent above cost oi orange juice when you try our new The show, to be held at 7 p.m. director Robert Hoernsch- materials to cover the bills for Bacon & Cheddar Cheese Omelette. in 206 Horticulture Bldg., is put meyer said. those materials. Anytime of day, Monday through Visit Our Centers On sale will be centerpieces, on annually by MSU students And See for Yourself Thursday. The show will consist of two door swags, novelties and wall enrolled in the Flower Design Why We Mike The Difference Coupon expires November 30. III class — a course that is part parts: a floral design show, plaques which will be on sale at Can Days f«es & Weekends of the agricultural technology which will feature demonstra¬ the show's conclusion. commercial floriculture pro¬ tions on how to assemble Refreshments will be served 9191. Grand Rivtr Wine and draft beer served I gram. Christmas arrangements, and and entertainment provided by I. lonting. Mi. 4112} I with lunch and dinner In the two-year program, an open house. the Okemos High School Madri (517)3122539 students "train to become pro¬ Aside from the visual de- gal choir. Tickets for the show are 50 Ovt.il,»v Sill. Ml> "I til cents and available at 109 CALL TOLL FREE Horticulture Bldg. 800-223-1782 Oil for heart? 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Monday, November 20, 1978 6 Michigon Stote News, Eost lonsing, Michigon The By JOHN NEILSON was HOT; and the audience demanded — and received — Boss proves and then did a simply excellent rendition of "Fire," a catchy again. It was a all night great show — a all those who really love rock, Bruce Springsteen did put a State News Reviewer REALLY great show and for little "magic in the night." To explain WHAT Bruce one of the best rock events this pop number that he wrote for — town has seen in years. Robert Gordon's second album. Springsteen did in Munn Arena Then came one of the evening's last Friday will be easy — it's a Springsteen, for his part, simple matter to just run down a list of the songs he did and played with a dramatic fire that was totally unexpected. The highlights — a stunning "Can¬ dy's Room" that literally ex¬ Coke odds file to . . . make note of the most interest¬ only previous time 1 had seen ploded with rock 'n roll passion ing solos and raps he went through. To explain HOW he did it will be another matter him he had put on a joyously exuberant performance, but the authority and majesty that and screaming distorted guitar, as did his stellar version of "Because the Night." Another CAMPUS / * < entirely. To capture the rush that accompanied the opening notes of "Badlands," or the characterized his last two al bums was sadly missing. This time there was an "edge" to the new song, "Point Blank", fol¬ lowed, and if it is any indication of what his next album will PIZZA gut-wrenching tug of Bruce's music that greatly enhanced sound like, I want to reserve free cups of Coke everydayI guitar solos, or even the looks the performance. Despite his my copy now. 2 cups with any 12" pizza v> *y of wide-eyed awe and euphoria superstar status, Springsteen The extended version of on the faces in the crowd when played as if he had to prove "She's the One" featured the lights finally came up after himself to his audience, and by Springsteen's usual oldies jam, 3 cups with any 14" pizza three hours... well, you really the look of things he succeeded this time including both "Mona" 4 cups with any 16" pizza should have been there. admirably. and "Gloria." Springsteen's live Friday night's concert gave Another major change was show builds upon the oral you don't even have to aek Stote News Susan Tusa MSU a taste of what the big that the show has been tight¬ tradition of rock 'n roll, as he fuss is all about. Springsteen ened up considerably. Gone are never fails to include a variety 1040 E. Grand ffit>er337-1377 Bruce "I'm just a prisoner" Springsteen was HOT; the E Street Band the rambling introductions and of classic '50s and '60s tunes in "stories" that used to be woven around almost every song, and amongst his own songs. In this i this i opinion respect he is reminiscent of the just as well. Sure, they were early Rolling Stones, who interesting, but after hearing brought many great-though- Springsteen's thrill is them once on stage and reading unknown blues songs to a gone of the canon's of classic rock them in countless magazine features the novelty in them had all but disappeared. This general public that might never a have heard them otherwise. At time when many young fans rock turning up their noses THANK YOU boxed himself into a cumber¬ at all if Springsteen broke into one time Springsteen let the music are By DAVE DiMARTINO "Down in the Boondocks" Fri¬ 'n roll. And yes, I know, there's speak for itself. at songs they consider old- TO ALL State News Reviewer some lyrical stance, typified by The first set was dominated it's good to hear "Prove it All Night," that not day night. That's certainly a good deal of my own rock fashioned, I'm sorry, folks. — Bruce romanticism involved in a state¬ who can make this The Springsteen is NOT the Boss, only is adolescent but exploi where he's headed, lyrically if ment like that, but I'm willing by material from Darkness on the Edge of Town, which was someone participants and helpers at not literally. music sound fresh and new tive. What's he exploiting? All the East not by a long shot. the stuff of rock romanticism, to take my chances. rendered with great passion again in his concerts. Lansing State Bank But sure he DUES put on a and dynamic playing on the 10,000 Meter Run. At this point I've seen the James Dean/Loner/You- — By the time "Rosalita" (one of If I were Springsteen. I'd and against - a - f d- great live show, and yeah, I part of the band. "The Prom the two pre Born to Run songs Springsteen four times: three me • really do enjoy watching him stop doing what everybody ised Land" and "Prove it all years ago in Ann Arbor; at the up-world ethic that's responsi¬ wanted me to do and just do he played) capped the set MSU Auditorium half a year ble for the soppy excesses that play wacko frenzied lead gui¬ Night," especially, contained nearly every person on the tar. and sure, he really is to be whatever I pleased. No more power that was only hinted later; at Detroit's Masonic Rolling Stone prints when commended for putting on such oldies, no more James Dean raw at on the studio versions. The main floor was standing on Special thanks to Stu Bartlett and Auditorium during the sum¬ somebody like Keith Moon dies. their chairs or in the aisles. the East Lansing State Bank. a long show, and so on. I really crap — jeez, if he had any extended guitar introduction on mer; and now here, Friday Instead of rock as an art form, Their thunderous applause can't justifiably say a word brains he'd kiss it all goodbye the latter tune, meanwhile, night, at Munn Arena. I don't Springsteen's music now aims brought the band back for a sound like trendie, but for rock as a lifestyle — with against Springsteen's obvious and record Asbury Park Ma¬ re-affirmed my belief that wanta a concern and care for his audi¬ chine Music. Forget the image. powerful "Bom to Run" encore, the ultimate result new songs Bruce Springsteen would be yeah. I've been listening to him ences; plain and simple, he's a Bruce, forget the expectations considered one of today's rock which he followed up with a since his Greetiaca Fran At- like "Point Blank." real crapola real nice guy who probably and get back on the right track. medley of Mitch Ryder hits and that sounds like it belongs in guitar heroes were it not for bury Park, since he was hailed wouldn't hurt anybody for the Springsteen still hasn't re the fact that he is so good as a his perennial concert-closer, as the "new Dylan" (an honor?), West Side Story. "Quarter to Three." This last world. The manipulation I'm corded his own Astral Weeks, and yeah, back then I thought singer writer. Sure, I like Darkness on the talking about isn't purposeful, and if songs like "Point Blank" Good as the first set was. it tune was turned into a real he might turn into a major Edge of Town — but but it's happening anyway. and "The Ties that Bind" are was the beginning of the second audience-participation number, artist if he canned cutesy lyrics like Springsteen is exploiting rock's any indication of what's coming set that really put the show into with the entire crowd jabbing romanticism, using it instead of up. Van Morrison STILL isn't high gear. Springsteen kicked their fingers in unison and checkin" out the weather chart because it's damned depres- rightfully letting it use him — gonna have any real life con¬ so off with "Ties That Bind." a demanding "You! You! You!" safe to go mini-stories about losers and there's truth to that — and, tenders. Sorry, Bruce, but while Bruce repeated the song's frank shorter sports outside'And Little new song that is reminiscent of re,(ly won't win in the end to make things even more that's the truth. Graham Parker's best work, chorus again and again and yet 217 Ann St. by in her curly- j faj] for jjj the romantic problematic, the audiences are ;c- implications simply because I responding to it wildly. Who can't see any happy ending in knows what's next — a remake And I guess he HAS turned into "major artiat," timogh tfes tunes; most "true" soppy of "I Got You. Babe" with Patti SMoismizeRs:.. maxelin a romanticism involves one sort Smith or Ronnie Spector? God, not for the right reasons. A lot of happy ending or another. I I don't know what would be of it has to do with the fact that Springsteen's replaced the like most, probably, the album's overwhelming air of bleakness. KttPM mCM of 10W cutesy lyrics with even mere tepidly melodramatic ones — i.e. "Born to Run," "Racing in But, my God, everything's so self-consciously calculated in So don't get me wrong. enjoyed Springsteen's concert I FROM (ItmiN is one hour better Springsteen's act these days — especially his version of the Street" and possibly, M prmt — that there simply isn't any "Fire," his guitar intro to quite possibly, Springsteen's room for spontaneity left. And "Prove It all Night" and his contagiously enthusiastic live version of "Rosalita" — but I'm spontaneity, not "meet me in performances have slowly, by SSBBSSB* feWOKKMB large following. is what REAL rock 'n roll not sure that means anything at all. When he's not singing ofimm. is all about. When I hear "Prove "Summer's here and the time is But Springsteen's status as a it All Night" I don't think wow, right for racin' in the street," major artist is disturbing. He's yet to do a better record than what great rock 'n roll, I think, wow, that reminds me of great he's singing the same rock rave- ups I saw him sing in Arbor three years ago. Ann And 'CAlLfOMY The Wild, the Innocent and the E-Street Shuffle; rather than rock 'n roll — and there's the major difference. There's an here, two years ago. And this summer at Masonic. And prob¬ m A exploring new territory he's unspoken element of manipula¬ got an "I'm just a prisoner of rock 'n roll" rap down that tion involved, by Springsteen, by his bellowing voice, and by the songs he synthesizes and ably the same tunes he'll sing NEXT time I will, believe see me, him - which I 'cause I know SKIN CARE We'll give you a excuses him for playing other people's tunes ("Quarter to eventually "creates" as his own. Springsteen's worth it, one way another. Appomm: NEW UD-60 FREE with the purchase of 3 new UD-90's. or Three", "Mona", "Gloria", There's no variety anymore; "Chimes of Freedom" and a the happiness of "Rosalita," the Springsteen isn't the Boss, whole Mitch Ryder mini-set) so unbridled innocence of "Sandy" though he'd like to be. Maybe most people won't notice the or even "Kitty's Back in Town" he's "the Boss," but those simple fact that most of his newer songs all sound the is now replaced by a blaring quotation marks change the NOW $1295 trumpet on "Meeting Across term's meaning considerably — the River" and a contrived to a contrived image, a turning- and related to "Promised Land" stance. Jeez, away from what's real to what's Worse still, the above point, Springsteen's I wouldn't have been surprised ideal, by nature defying what is ONLY (Limited Quantities So Hurry!) Also, With Above Purchase Maxell Cassette Case FREE * North Door of Frondor Fron Sat 9:30-6 p.m. Sun. Noon-5 Michigon Stoto News, Eo»t lonsing, Michigon Monday, November 20, 1978 "7 Dejohnette follows new £ ftak DISCOUNT Directions _llL-W_ JLTK We II match anyone s • A, _ LOCATIONS prices •mialth a biauty aids • PHOTO HMItHIMO By DAVE DiMARTINO SUte News Reviewer hesive sound that's a Direction in itself. 0 EASJ 545 E. Grand River • SCHOOL SURPLUS • ALBUMS A TAPIS Lester Bowie with Jack De¬ A friend commented Satur¬ OPEHi otco.. from Olln PHONI: 337-3380 johnette? day night that it was the first Man-Sal 9-9 W EST - 1' 1 *■ Grand River Sure, maybe in the '60s when DeJohnette/Abercrombie show Sunday ll-J acrott from M.S.U. Union PHONI: JJ7-1 J11 the A.A.C.M. was starting up in he'd seen that hadn't put him to Chicago; but now, a decade- sleep, and he's got a good point; and-a-half later, the pairing Bowie's presence has livened WI'RI SAYING THANKS TO YOU WITH seems quite curious. With up the music considerable. Act- Bowie's inclusion in the ECM ually, the trio of DeJohnette/- Abercrombie/Gomez is such i SPECIAL PRICESonSPECIAL stable, and an Art Ensemble of Chicago disc on the same label, there's an interbreeding of tight, well practiced their music at times seems as one that MUSIC music forms going on that's not effortless as it is enjoyable. The BARBRA STREISAND K only fascinating, but entirely end result of watching such a workable. tightly-knit group in action is GREATEST HITS VOL. II E All this was demonstrated either complete fascination or this weekend by Jack DeJohn- ette's Directions, brought here else boredom from the sheer flawlessness of the perform¬ BILLY JOEL sand STREET l',:; by Showcase Jazz for two sets ances involved. Bowie's pre of concerts that showed Bowie's sence, on the other hand, lends CETLE FEATURING THE SINGLE inclusion in the group was no mismatch. Featuring drummer DeJohnette, guitarist John Abercrombie, bassist Eddie to the music an element of unpredictability that makes audience inattentiveness near-impossibility. a CHIC 3.99 Gomez and Bowie on trumpet, DeJohnette himself was su¬ ALICIA BRIDGES perb Saturday night, inventive 3.99 Directions plays an interesting drums and always blend of styles — freeform, as ever on ERIC CLAPTON structured and even a little bop willing to take a few chances. (Bowie did a quickie "Autumn He and Gomez work well to¬ BACKLESS Leaves," no kidding). gether, of course, and it was It's no fun assigning stereo¬ interesting watching them both types to music, but it's probab¬ ly safe to say that Bowie and bassist Gomez are coming from totally different jazz scenes — make room for Bowie. Occas' ally DeJohnette used an elec trie melodica, and the addition¬ al voice was quite welcome. It's .- Jack DeJohnette brought his new band Directions to Erickson weekend for a series of performances sponsored by Showcase Jazz. Kiva this KANSAS TWO FOR THE SHOW 6.99 ""^^"TPnTreeSSSoN"'"™™™" Bowie from the relatively unre¬ funny — DeJohnette seems strained Art Ensemble, Gomez much more concerned with though he seemed CIGARETTES 10% OFF from a stint somewhat more melody than most drummers, actly complex, yet it had a Sometimes, ing: though he plays many and it really shows in his bare-bones melody that was as at a loss with Bowie, as he's notes, his inflection and rhyth "disciplined" with both Bill Evans and Jeremy Steig. playing approach. I can't think elegant and nonpretentious as probably used to playing with a mic approach combine to make our discount mhci on 2/99" Drummer DeJohnette, how- of another drummer with his anything else played that night. partner with a more consistent his style seems so low-key it sthec n link, pulling melodic gift; his piano solo, ; Gomez was impeccable on playing approach. Gomez' few seems as if he's underplaying. PHOTO FINISHING 15-minute interlude, m't bass but then, he usually is. solos were uniformly excellent Which, of course, he isn't. •verything together into £ v < — In all, Directions seems and my only quibble with his a performance is the fact that he tight quartet that, if it manages LIMIT 1 PACKS RXPIRES 11.10*70 to stay together long enough, simply wasn't playing more. TBrecoupSr"™™™™1 During several of Bowie's might develop into something avant-gardisms he just sat back and watched, apprently prefer extraordinary. Sometimes things weren't quite together BATON'S COMASIDLIDOND GANNON Ashkenazy concert superb ring being a spectator to stick¬ ing his nose in unfamiliar territory. Saturday night, certainly — the extended "free" improvisation seemed a little directionless at TYPING PAPER 77 YOGURT By DORIS TISHKOFF State News Reviewer Although the English Cham¬ ber Orchestra would seem from and even the cadenza, empha¬ sized all the nuances, the carefully pauses, placed and the fluent taunting runs, stated by the cello with each variation completely new and surprising. Under Ashkenazy's most inspired conducting of the And, strangely, it was John Abercrombie who stayed in the background most of the night. Generally, he spent most of his times — but the inherent humor in Bowie's music merges superbly with DeJohnette's own approach and provides a <34 *410*10 VALUE OMIT EXPIRES 1I-1G-7S JL 3/99" EXPIRES 11-30-71 its title to be as British as tea with the subtly of a still small evening, the orchestra captured time romping behind Bowie, freshness that more "cerebral" STATU STATE OUPON "TS51SRT and crumpets, its performance voice. the essential mood of each soloing a regrettable few times. (read clinicall jazz foolishly DURACELL KLEENEX TWIN II in the MSU Auditorium Thurs¬ Mozart's Violin Concerto No. segment. In one, violins and His tone sounded strangely disregards. A nice concert, day evening had a distinctly 5 in A was also delineated with cellos teased one another in close to that of an electric piano certainly. What the future will I VOLT A"*""1 FACIAL TISSUI SOTIQUIDOX 5 SLADI CARTRIMIS international flavor. Vladimir the same great care for its madcap playful exchange, while at times, especially during his bring for DeJohnette's new BATTERY Ashkenazy. conductor and pia¬ musical intent. Garcia's solo the two basses, outstanding comping. Abercrombie has an group will indeed be interest¬ no soloist. Russian born and trained, now resides in Iceland, and Jose-Luis Garcia, concert- master and violin soloist, is violin passages, which dominate this concerto to the point that the orchestra became less a partner than an accompanist, throughout the evening, added their deepest tones to the jesting. Others went from catchy syncopation to long sus¬ interesting quality in his play ing. STEREO 1.441.S* VALUI 58* 115 CT 15'VALUI 88*1.4* VALUI LIMIT! IXHHt 11-14-71 LIMIT 1 ■X.I1II 11.14-71 IT I IX.IXit11-14*74 Spanish. always had a beautiful, natural tained lyricism, to eerie Hallo¬ CASSETTE As combination soloist and conductor in Mozart's Piano Concerto No. 17 in G, Ashkenazy and easy singing tone. The audience was constantly aware of dynamic contrasts and an ween-like mood, to the deep sensuality of Britten's delibe¬ rate exploitation of traditional FREE RECORDER CLINIC AT STATIC TRYLON —TfSSBOSr— MARCALL THBBBY PERSONAL TOUCH displayed the meticulous atten¬ expressive quality that gave the harmony. SHAMPOO NAPKINS tion to musical detail, the music just the proper degree of Composer, orchestra, SHAVING SYSTEM crispness and clarity that cha¬ emotion, highlighting its lyrical con¬ ductor, and soloists all shared HI FI BUYS racterized both his solo perfor¬ mance and his conducting throughout the evening. The beauty, and evoking from a single bridge such exquisite harmonies in the double stops as the heartfelt applause that ended this totally satisfactory musical evening. THURS. NOV. 30-NOON TO SEVEN E. LANSING FRI. DEC. 1-NOON TO SEVEN-LANSING ar 58* I1CT. M' VALUE 1.99 2.9S VALUI concerto, one of Mozart's brigh¬ to create new admiration for the LIMITS EXPIRES 11-10*70 IT1 EXPIRE! I1-3A-7S LIMIT. >1.1.71 11-14-74 test and sunniest, is remarkable for the unadorned, almost child¬ violin as a multi-voiced instru¬ ment. * * TONIGHT IS* * * J FOR M< )RK IIKTAILS AND M< )NEY ST ATI COUPON ishly simple melody that under¬ The opening Stravinsky, Con¬ Pizza 'n Pitcher I SAVING C( )I P( INS. SEE THE WED. lies the work. Unassisted by certo in D for String Orchestra * Night at the • NOV. 2!)th EDITIONS OF THE STATE CREST AGREE massive chordal combinations of early work which does not an NEWS ANDSX • CONDITIONM ,"V4m harmonies to stun the listener, the pianist assumed the difficult startle the listener with the unusual tonalities and intensity VARSITY INN SWTCJontNAI^ TOOTMPASTI 99 .nauiAB task of breathing musicality into the bare, exposed lines of this work. This Ashkenazy did with sensitivity and dedication to the of his later output, was con¬ trolled and meticulous almost to the point of understatement. The orchestra brought out the 6 MINT 7oi 1.45 VALUI 4RXT.AS0.T 1.38 RXPISIS 1MO-TS ■KPiMS 11-10*71 poetic qualities of the music surprises and contrasts in the which, especially in the Adagio work, moving from the tenta- tiveness of repeated stacattos, SPICIAL DUDCHASI 11 GS through syncopation to smooth, AGREE 1.SS almost waltz-like passages, as DIAL SOAP SHAMPOO VALUI Jazz show set Ashkenazy demonstrated his COMMJXIONSIZI respect for detail and precision, The MSU Jazz Bands I and II will perform a joint concert tonight at 8:15 in the Music and ensemble. However, audience involve¬ ment seemed to be at its highest during Benjamin Britten's 23*... GIXTKA SIMTU 1.69 IXPIMS 11*10.71 Building Auditorium. The con¬ Variations on a Theme of Frank cert will be the first appearance Bridge. This extraordinary WAWCSSS STATS COUPON f TAT, COU.OII this year by both groups on work is certainly one of the most MLON CABLI STYROFOAM AFRO campus, and will include pieces original tours de force in terms KNEE HI'S by Ray Brown, Toshiko Aki- of the amazing freshness of the CUPS COMBS yoshi, Phil Woods, and Lyle 10 different ways in which Mays. The concert is open to the public and admission is free. Britten plays upon the most basic of three note themes, first 99* 55* 19' SI CT*S'VALUI Chart your Biorythm MIT I HH.mi-14.TI MIT a EXPIRES I MO-IS ARTHUR TRERCHER'S LIMITS EXI STATIC —SRSBSS— STATE COUPON THE ORIGINAL Tbl) KNIT HOCKEY LBOO WARMERS CRAZY CAPS GLUE Get the Kosmos 1 Biorhythm computer 1.17 1.66 1.33 Only on ASSMT1D 2.91 COLMS VALUI to plot out the new LIMIT I HHMl I I-14.7I LIMIT I IX.IMf 11-14-71 Ihiesday OUR BUDGET BANQUET year. Only $37so IT'S HIRE! CHRISTMAS WRAP A DECORATIONS 100 MINI TISSUE 34< 5.66 89 COLE SLAVI >59.95 LITE SET i$l reg BEVERAGE 35 MINI ARTHUR'S FISH & CHIPS only 10 in stock 39* LITE SIT 2 38 Bring the Family. CHRISTMAS CARPS ICICLES 33c tOOt E. GRAND RIVER ondDURAND ACROSS FROM OIFT I. cr CARPS A TAOS 59" S PT. CHRISTMAS Till 2.99 CAMfUS RAO of JUMBO . TAKE HOME ^ BOWS ikt 59l WRAP 1.29 Michigon State News, Eost Loosing, Michigan Monday, November 20, 1978 MIKE KLOCKE Spartans bomb Northwestern S By JOE CENTERS Smith to Kirk Gibson, who later yard field goal, Steve Smith got one of four Spartan tailbacks of the game, but he was pulled State News Sports Writer in the game became the Big a second chance as he scored who has seen considerable ac¬ down on the four yard line after Poor Rick Venturi Evanston, III. seem like much of — It doesn't an accom¬ Ten's all-time leader in pass receiving yardage. from 12 yards out and Schramm wrapped up the scor¬ tion this season. "It makes it a lot easier for me when I get in picking up 14 yards. The Spartans missed many plishment to beat Northwest¬ The Wildcats scored their ing on another one-yarder. there because I know what's chances to put more points on ern. But MSU's 52 3 romp over only points of the game on a The real excitement of the going down." the board, but no one seemed to the Wildcats Saturday, com 36-yard field goal by Sam game came when freshman Hughes has been making it a mind because MSU accom bined with Michigan's 24-6 vic¬ Poulos to make the score 7-3. Derrick Hughes got to run the habit to break at least one big plished what it set out to do. Evanston, III. — In Rick Venturis first year It will take talent. tory over Purdue, leaves the But they were completely out ball. Hughes, who generates run per game, and he didn't Now, the Spartans have a say as coach of Northwestern, his team went Venturi is likable and impressive, but the classed by MSU and never got excitement every time he disappoint any of the Spartan in their final destiny. A win without victory. When Ara coached the fact still remains his team finished the year Spartans in a position they have wanted to be in for a long any drive going after that. touches the ball, gained 106 fans who were at the game. On over Iowa at Spartan Stadium Wildcats, it took him two years to get a team 0-10-1. Still, you have to believe this man can time — on top of the Big Ten. "I think they played hard yards in the seven times he ran his third run, he took a pitch- next Saturday assures MSU of that went without a win. do the job ... if indeed anyone can. The Spartans are tied with through the whole game," said in the second half. out and galloped 46 yards at least a share of the Big Ten "I guess you're one year ahead of To say Venturi is looking forward to next title. Only a tie between U-M U-M and Ohio State for first Spartan coach Darryl Rogers, "Standing on the sidelines before being dragged down on Parseghian," a reporter joked to Venturi after season, would qualify as the biggest under place, and next week one of who gave a lot of credit to watching everyone else play, the one-yard line. He came and Ohio State would give the MSU had destroyed Northwestern 52-3 statement of the year. A good portion of his those teams will fall by the Northwestern's first year coach you pick up a lot of little close to scoring on the last play Spartans the crown outright. Saturday. post game press conference Saturday dealt wayside when the two hook up Rick Venturi. "I don't think things," said Hughes, who is "I guess at this point, that's a dubious with the type of athletes he will be recruiting in their annual battle, which they ever folded up." distinction," Venturi replied. "But Ara went on to accomplish great things with North¬ next year. And after the game, a group of mammoth size recruits, most of them clad in will take place in Columbus. MSU added three more I REGULAR BICYCLING I FASHION: ITS WHAT in the first half, includ¬ RAIN OR SHINE western football, and I hope to do the same their high school varsity jackets, made their MSU was the heavy favorite going into Saturday's game, but scores ing short touchdown runs by MEETS THE EYE! thing. We will establish a winning program at way through Dyche Stadium football offices Northwestern." on a tour. the Spartans had a rough time Bruce Reeves and Andy THE SCHWINN So getting started before the Schramm. Gibson also fell on a The 32 year old coach's job is not an recruiting has already begun, and the DELUXE sparse crowd of 14,157 at windy Reeves fumble in the endzone enviable one. Amid cries that the school current season has just ended. See what I should withdraw from the Big Ten con mean by Venturis drive? Dyche Stadium. for a touchdown. EXERCISER ference, and confronted with apathy from the The two major obstacles that Northwestern "The hardest part about it Smith, who is about the only fans from the greater Chicago area, Venturi is has in trying to become respectable are was that we were supposed to person that had the potential to do so well." said offensive create some excitement in this trying to build a winner at Northwestern. admission restrictions and paltry atten¬ And, he has to make the Wildcats even dances. tackle Jim Hinesly. "But the game, had problems with a respetable. The admittance restrictions really make pressure was on us to score a gusting wind and didn't have lot of points and hold them to one of his better days, going 12 Northwestern football is in trouble, but if it Venturis job of recruiting difficult. He not nothing. I think we got some of 24 for 180 of MSU's 601 total Co-optical 331-S330 is going to be revived, Venturi is the person to only has to find talented athletes, but he has to do it. He played at Northwestern in the mid find smart talented athletes. thing accomplished today be yards. Brookfield Plaza 1960s, when the Wildcats were a respectable Before the season began, Venturi went on cause the young guys got to "Yes, it did," Smith said Behind E. Lansing State Bank. football team and not a patsy that everyone his play. They're the ones that when asked if the wind both¬ "Expect the Unexpected" campaign, Mon-Thuri II a.m.-8:30 p.m. could look forward to playing. have to play next year." ered him. "More mentally than hoping to bolster attendance. Despite the fact Tuai Weds Fri 9-5 He knows that Northwestern football has that students get in free, the attendance As it worked out, the Spar¬ anything else. Just the thought of it bothered I Sat 9-noon. been successful; he knows "things go in tans have had the easiest me. Saturday was 14.157 — and a good portion of those were MSU rooters. It is quite obvious — schedule of the four teams — shouldn't have even thought ot cycles" and that the university can once again have a successful football program. MSU. U-M. Ohio State and it. Really, it wasn't that bad." although sad - that it is going to take wins to • Easily adjusted handlebar The drive and enthusiasm this man has is incredible; but he was a bit subdued, maybe put people in desolate Dyche Stadium. So you see. Venturi really has enough Purdue — fighting it out for the Big Ten title. And as far as The second half gave Rogers and his staff a chance to use • and saddte. Non-slip rubber pedals. "THE HAIRCUnERS ARE BACK" several • Control panel with even relieved, after Saturday's season finale. problems as it is, without having to worry Hinesly is concerned, that's just players. Tailback Steve fine. Smith, who rushed for 109 speedometer, mileage "You obviously get frustrated God. about people crying for Northwestern to leave Indicator, timer and . you've got to get frustrated," Venturi said. . . the league. "1 pretty much like having yards and added 66 more on adjustable resistance YES! We are back the easier teams at ihe end of four punt returns and a kickoff "But I'm not discouraged at all. Still, though, the cries will persist. Let's control. with the latest in "I'm very proud to be the football coach at hope the athletic officials at Northwestern the season because you are so return, scored on MSU's first Northwestern, because there are no kids that ignore the cries, and keep trying to build the beat up by that time," the offensive play of the second half $156" F„, cutting, perming 6 foot 2, 254 pound senior said, 45-yard run, but it was Rentals Available As5emblec giv e a better all out effort than ours do. You'll program. on a and haircolor for never see a Northwestern team give up." Like Northwestern athletic director John "sometimesyou have to piece called back because of a pen¬ Effort is fine, but Venturi admits it will Pont said a year ago. "Northwestern is good yourself back together just to alty. the man and After that, though, every¬ take more than just desire and intensity on for the Big Ten, and the Big Ten is good for play." women with a flair the part of the players to rebuild the program. The Spartans scored the first thing counted as Iin uNoewoNjra fuu. ME MOOinson cclob and CrnAOCX-J or anu-a« lev 34-HOUaTOU.nSl _ Swimmers win opener . EMOOWD ID 44.95B-OS 76 KWAWE ANB HANOLINBtlnkM. >44 HorUUfcTCCHAAbC ou*iuftV*Aoe I MSU jumped out to an early I ioaexu. _ —, cenoNEVC««»TO HM6TULHAM I 2-0 lead on Craig Lakian's first . I continued from page 8) ney is also a freshman. WMU did not enter any goal of the season and Joe • _ _ .score BOMDPOS1EK 5l7AWllshireBtai. . j i divers in either the one-meter Omiccioli's sixth. But Meredith 5«ta Homes, ttlWX iSS>)79?3I2D I) I i ended the first period's scoring Other winners for MSU were or three-meter diving competi¬ and Ted Weltzin tied it at the freshman Becky Stanley in the tion. As a result, the four MSU 5:14 mark of the second period. 50-yard breaststroke, Lorie divers staged an exhibition in The Spartans, though, went Bird, another freshman, in the those events. into the locker room with a 50-yard freestyle, Sandy Sar- In the one-meter, Jeannie hatt in the 200-yard freestyle, Mikle came out on top, then and Mary Ellen Mahoney in the finished second to Patty Mc¬ 100-yard breaststroke. Maho- Donnell in the three-meter. TWO FOR ONE! SPRINGSTEEN BRUCE "Darkness on the Edge of Featuring the single.'BacSancis' town: Timberland Come in to Shepard's Shoes just to touch these beautiful leather boots. These fine leathers are silicone impregnated to be ft completely waterproof. And the deep cushioned insole adds insulation to the soft glove leather lining, eltectively in¬ sulating to well below zero. And Shepard's has your size! Give your feet the insulated comfort they deserve this winter. Give 'em Timberland boots. You'll be glad you did! Smashing blowcuts for both-of-you. When one has a cut, the other is free. $14 Mon., Tues. & Wed. only 326 S. Washington Downtown Lansing OhegardV 317 E. Grand River East Lansing 485-7215 332-2815 onoes ReGIS HAIRSTYLISTS Lansing Mall Meridian Mall 323-9393 349-1113 10 Michigon Stote News, East lonsing, Michigan Monday, November 20, 1978 HRI class hosts feast Citizens sought Announcements for It's Whets Happening must be received in the Hurry, seniorsl Red Cedar Log senior picture program ends soon. State News office, 343 Students Stop by 337 Union between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. or By JENNIFER DIXON around and be quiet, talked on Services Bldg., by noon at least call; two days before publication. No SUte News Staff Writer The Friends of Wine Club in a monotone. "Great, great, looks real for committees announcements will be accepted by phone. Food Science Club sausage runs today through Wednesday, sale came dressed up for a $20- good, excellent, excellent," he MSU Dairy Store only. said, checking out his "em The East Public Relations Students Soci¬ apiece dinner planned and put Lansing Planning Lansing Planning Commission ployees." of America meet at 6:30 p.m. ECKANKAR, a way of life, on by a Hotel. Restaurant and Commission is seeking citizens in identifying city objectives ety Institutional Out front the manager told help them in the revision of and examining functional ele- Tuesday, 331 Union. Professional presents "The Key to Spiritual Management o Freedom." An introductory talk at the waiters in a whisper to he city's Comprehensive Plan, ments of the new city plan. guest speaker. class. Thursday night at Kel 8 tonight, 111C Wells Hall. logg Center. check the water when they Persons are needed to serve They will work with outlines Advertising Club meeting at 7 Every Thursday six of HRI cleared the tables. Waiters in the Commercial Committee, prepared by the commission, tonight, 335 Union. Mike Moran of Parks and Recreation majors! 435's 32 seniors plan and put on returning with trays of dirty he Public Facilities Committee Each committee will be com Volunteers needed to study man¬ Kenyon and Eckhardt will speak a dinner in the Kellogg Center dishes discussed what members md the Environmental Com- posed of nine to 11 members, on the college/career t agement practices, planning and cafeteria. of "Les Amis du Vin" were nittee. Representatives of the Plan- recreational policy. Details 26 Stu¬ The revised Comprehensive ning Commission, other city History of Science and Medi¬ dent Services Bldg. The planners requisition the talking about. proper china from Kellogg and Plan will replace the existing commissioners and citizens will cine presents a brown bag lunch With their manager they from 12:15 to 1:30 p.m. Tuesday, Natural Resource majorsl Vol¬ write job descriptions and the plan which developed in be on the committees, needed to study existing talked about the proper posi Members will be on the "Flexner Report of 1910." unteers menu. Everything is done be¬ 1967, and intended to appointed and proposed management plans tion for steak knives and ser¬ Those interested contact Jean forehand so the night of the project the city': growth by the Planning Commission for Great Lakes shoreline. Details ving the next wine. Fickes in the Medical Humanities dinner they simply have to through 1980. The Dec. 13 and a general orienta- in 26 Student Services Bldg. Office for meeting place informa- supervise the workers. They were testing most of proposes to present policies and tion meeting will be held (continued on page 12) Two supervise the reception, the skills they had learned in programs to guide future ac¬ two the kitchen and two the their two-year HRI program, tions and allocation of com¬ dinner. Allen said. munity resources. Thursday's dinner was "our It is hectic, putting on these The committees are being song for the HRI class dinners, they said, but fun. formed to assist the East " Craig Allen, i HRI major, said. Cheese and crab meat fon due. asparagus tip crepes and quiche cups were nibbled be¬ fore the dinner in the Big Ten Room. The Friends of Wine chatted while sipping cham- 1 first time an side group has been in- ed." Don Bell. HRI instruc id. Two hostesses whisked the guests downstairs in groups of six just when the hors Presents The d'oeuvres supply started to dwindle and the word from the kitchen was go. The purpose of the dinner is Tommy Dorsey to demonstrate how to start a restaurant. Mike Hryciuk, a member of the management ence It's the best learning experi¬ because we're actually Orchestra doing it." senior Dian Boshears Directed by Buddy Morrow were lined up against a railing in black pants and tuxedo vests, ruffled white shirts and a bow Sunday-November 26th tie. a white towel c their left forearm. In the kitchen, cooked identical quails and •Dancing 8 p.m.-l a.m. strip steaks waited on trays. The waiters served the first •A Great Post-Holiday Evening and poured the first •Your Favorite Beverages Available course bottle of wine. A very expensive brand, •Limited capacity-Only lOOO tickets id. The guests sat on one side of will be sold-All Guests will be seatedl the partition laughing at can¬ dle lit tables. On the other side the waiters talked about find¬ Tickets Only *5°° each, and are available at ing trays and the opportune time for clearing the tables. Bus Stop Box Office, All Knapp's Stores, "The veal's coming out at Landmark Restaurant, and Pro Bowl East & 7:30," a messenger from the kitchen relayed. West. While supply lasts—Sorry, No Like a football team huddled around the quarterback, the Telephone Reservations s gathered for the scoop . They then dispersed and did their as¬ signed job — clearing tables SALLY ANN HOWES EARL LOIS WRIGHTSON & HUNT THE SOUMI Off MUSIC Muse BY RICHARD HOOGERS lyrics by OSCAR HAMMERSTEINII HOWARD LINDSAY anoRUSSEL CROUSE TERRY SAUNDERS Known and loved the world over, THE S^^-0 OF MUSIC first opened on Broadway, November T£,*J»h Mary Martin in the starring role. Since tha* \ story of a family united against all^*SSm|(^/™ millions in its stage and motion picture set new creative heights for movie musicals. W3fent touring revival, with an all-star cast, sets new creative heights in every theater it plays. BROADWAY THEATRE SERIES MONDAY, NOVEMBER 20 at 8:15 P.M. in the University Auditorium Tickets on sale NOW at the Union Ticket Office, 8:15-4:30 p.m., weekdays. Phone 355-3361 for ticket availability. PUBLIC: $10.50,8.00,5.00 STUDENTS OF ALL SCHOOLS: 50% discount GASLIGHT J£ DIRECTED BY GEORGE CUKER TONIGHT 7:30 » 9:30 * Monday. November 20. 1978 11 Michigon Stole News, Eost Lonsing, Michigon rmmM 1 EepUft Iflil f &pH|H» IfiH Employment f| Classified Advertising WORKON CALL-IN FORD LTD, 1970. Good ra PLYMOUTH FURY 1973 2 MASON BODY SHOP, 812 E. TYPIST PARTTIME - Must AREA RACQUET Ball Club Information dials, extras, needs exhaust, door, runs well, air condition¬ Kalamazoo, since 1940. Auto be able to type 60 wpm. Must looking for desk help. Full AT YOUR OWN painting collision service. be student with evenings time positions are available. CONVENIENCE $200,332-3830. 5-11-20 (3) ing, good tires, 54,000 miles. - ION! 355 1255 347 Student Services lldg. $1200.355-1157. 8-11-29 (4) American - foreign cars. 485- free. 10-15 hrs. per week. Apply at 5000 Marsh road T shirt chain expanding in the 0256. C-20-11-30 (51 Apply in person 301 MAC across from Meridian Mall. midwest offers opportunity in NURSES GRAN TORINO, 1972, fair P-K Bldg. State News Com¬ 3-11-20 <61 NURSE AIDES TRIUMPH TR7, 1976 green, management & sales. Pre¬ condition, new tires, $350. NURSING AM/FM, good condition. Call posing Dept. vious retail experience helpful 351-3687. 8-12-1 131 DAYS I day W« per lino 3 days MC per line 355-9039. Z 5-11-22 (3) Nrtorcycles ' fo MAINTENANCE MAN, part- ASSISTANT MANAGERS for large apartment complex, but not necessary. Interviews to be held Wednesday, No¬ STUDENTS HONDA CIVIC 1975. Sporty married couple, no children. vember 22.12 to 4 pm. immmrn 4doyi-75< per line time. Experience necessary. Please excellent condition, new tires VEGA HATCHBACK, 1973. Free one bedroom apart ■raciuim • days >70C per line YAMAHA, 1977 - RD400D, Call 351-8135. 0-7-11-20 13) bring resume to Spree T 28,000 miles. Must sell. $1800 Good condition, some rust, ment, all utilities paid and Shirts, (next to Hot Sam'sl in ■rnnnmm 1200 miles, excellent condi¬ Call before 2 pm. 355-3973. $500. 332-3020. 3-11-20 131 wages in exchange for help in movie theater wing Work only on the days and ■mnnianm tion. $700 or offer. 485-9734. ATTENTION STUDENTS Line rote per insertion Z-3-11-22 (5) all phases of apartment man shifts you want to work, imnnnrim 2-11-20 (3) ALL STUDENT CLASSIFIED VEGA, 1975 22,000 miles, agement, including main¬ SPREE competitive wages training HONDA CVCC, 1975. Radio, - ADVERTISING will require tenance and office proce¬ excellent. $1450 or best offer. "an expression of you" program available for nurse PREPAYMENT beginning dures. Ideal for students and iconolines 3 lines • *4.00 • 5 days. 80* per line over tough coated, new tires and Call 351-0972 after 5 pm. 3 11 22 (191 ji • Monday, October 30. 3 lines. No adjustment in rate when cancelled. exhaust. Generally excellent. 3-11-20 (4) Employment Sp-22-12-1 (5) retirees who wish to work Price of item(s) must be stated in od. Maximum $2475. 323-1699. 8-11-23 (41 part-time Phone 694 8147. UNIFORMED SECURITY of¬ 9-5 pm, weekdays. For information contact sole price of MOO- VEGA WAGON. 1972. New WAITRESSES - PART-time NEED EXTRA money for 8-12-1 (151 ficers full or part time Call Peanuts Personal ods ■ 3 lines • '2.25 • per insertion. IMPALA, 1974, V-8. Power exhaust, tuned up. Best offer. Christmas? Come see us for 641 4562 OR-22-11 -30 i3: for night times and week¬ PROVINCIAL HOUSE. 75' per line over 3 lines (prepayment). steering & brakes. Excellent. 489-7016. 4-11-22 (3) $1650 or best offer. 351-0972 ends. Pleasant working con¬ long and short term job EDITOR - NEWSLETTER - WHITEHILLS Rummoge/Garage Sale ads • 4 lines • *2.50. ditions. $2.65/hour plus tips. assignments. MSU EMPLOYEE'S AS¬ WAITRESS BARTENDER. 332 5061 after 5 pm. 3-11-20 (41 VEGA 1976, AM radio, belted Floormen Positions 63' per line over 4 lines ■ per insertion. Apply in person 10-5 at SOCIATION. Permanent po now PROVINCIAL HOUSE EAST radials, 3 speed, Excellent MARVELANES & LOUNGE 5 MANPOWER INC. open. Apply in person. 2 4 'Round Town ods • 4 lines • '2.50 • per insertion. condition. $1700. 482-3217. sition of 25 to 35 hours per 332-0817 MAVERICK 1971 - 2 door, THE RAINBOW 63' per line over 4 lines, miles east of Frandor on 601 N. Capitol month, including writing, pm vinyl top, new tires. Very h '121 (41 M-78. BL 5-11-22 (7) 372-0880 editing, headlines, layout, RANCH. 2843 E G'and River lost I Founds ods/Transportation ods - 3 lines - *1.50 - dependable. $700. 321-3158. 5 11 21 i5i per insertion. 50* per line over 3 lines. 3-10-21 131 graphics, sorting, and atten- V OLKSWAGEN, 1972 BARTENDER NEEDED - no dance at meetings. Must experience necessary. Part- FULL OR PART time host Snowtires, rear defrost. have access to transportation PROVINCIAL HOUSE MERCURY, 1975 - Monarch 60.000 miles, $1000. 332-1623 time and full-time positions ess 7 am.-3 pm shift. Apply Deadlines Working hours flexible, but SOUTH Ghia. V-8, all power, air, 6 8-11-22 (3) available. Apply in person, PART-TIME employment for includes some weekday time. in person between 2 and 5 882 2458 Ads • 2 p.m. • I class day before publication. AM/FM stereo tape. Plus HUDDLE SOUTH, 820 W. M.S.U. students, 15-20 pm LANDMARK RESTAU Salary negotiable, depending . Cancellation/Change • I p.m. • 1 class day before other extras. $3000. Randy at VW SCIROCCO - 1978. Miller Rd. 10 12 1 (6) hours/week. Automobile re¬ on skills & background. Send RANT. 5400 W Saginaw. Call Monday-Friday, 8 am publication. 332-2457 or 351 8192. AM/FM, 4 speaker, 23 chan¬ resume 6 two writing sam 11 12-1 (5> quired. Phone 339-9500. Once ad is ordered it cannot be conceited or chonged 8-11-28(51 nel CB, cobalt blue, tan WAITRESS-NO experience C-11-11-30 (4) pies by December 1. 1978 to until after 1st insertion. interior. $5500. Call 655-2048 necessary. Part-time and full- MSUEA. Box 825, East Lan¬ FULL OR PART time bus WANTED. GENERAL class¬ There is TOO after 8 pm. 8-11-20(5) time positions. Apply in per¬ STATION ATTENDANT sing. Ml, 48823. For more boys. 11 pm 7 am. shift. room a charge for 1 od chonge plus 50' per MERCURY MONTERAY. '68. substitute teachers for additional change for maximum of 3 changes. Good engine. Needs trans¬ son, HUDDLE SOUTH, 820 Part-time. Nights and week¬ information, call 355-1903 Apply in person between 2 elementary, middle and high W. Miller. 10-12-1 (5) ends. Phone 694-4613. 6-11-29 (19) and 5 pm.. LANDMARK schools. The State News will only be responsible for the 1st mission. $250 or best offer. VW BUS-1974. Excellent Subject areas in 5-11-20(3) RESTAURANT 5400 W day's incorrect insertion. Adjustment claims must After 6 pm. 351-5939. condition, 53,000 miles. elude Band. Math. Industrial 8-11-22 (4) $3200 negotiable. 351 8999 EARN $75-$100/week. Part BABY CARE, our home, start Saginaw 11 12 1 <5i arts. Human ecology and be mode within lOdoys of expiration dote. x 8-11 22 (3) time, immediate openings. OVERSEAS JOBS-Summer January, 7:30-12, 2-4. own Bills ore due 7 days from ad expirotion date. If not Physical education. Call or MERCURY COMET. 1964, Call 4:30-7 pm. daily. 332- full time. Europe, S. America, transportation, 485-0813. FULL OR PART time wait¬ write LAINGSBURG COM paid by due dote, o 50' lote service charge will $195. Dependable, cheap 7404. 0-5-11-22 (4) Australia, Asia, etc. All fields, BL 1-11-20131 11 pm 7 am shift VW SUPERBEETLE - 1971. resses MUNITY SCHOOLS. 351 E be due. $500-1200 monthly, expenses transportation, good heater. Good condition, best offer. Apply in person between 2 Grand River, Lainsburg 349 1373, 353-3869. 349-4121 after 5pm. RESIDENT MANAGER for 55 paid, sightseeing. Free infor¬ MOUNTAIN JACK'S REST¬ and 5 pm. LANDMARK 8-11-28(4) unit condominium in East mation. Write: International AURANT NOW ACCEPTING RESTAURANT 5400 W. 651:5767 9 12 1 110) 311-20 (3) Lansing. Part time work: Job Center. Box 4490 Me. APPLICATIONS FOR: SECURITY POSITION avail Saginaw 11-12 1 5 Aitnitiii A Automotive MGB. 19741 2 - sharp, dual VW71. Runs Good. Heater, minor repair. Lawn care, Berkeley Calif. 94704. 17-12-1 (7) COOKS, BARTENDERS. ABLE part time, nights and weekends Apply in person snow removal. Salary plus BUSPERSONS. DISH¬ EARN MERRY money for the carburetor, Michelins, best stick, good condition. $600. residence. Call John Fry, WASHERS. AND HOSTES holidays sell AVON Good MERIDIAN MALL offer over $2500. 355-3053. 332-0452. Z-2-11-21 (3) ATTENTION STUDENTS CONVERTIBLE 72 Super 351-2794, after 7 p.m. DRIVERS, PART-time to SES. APPLY IN PERSON earning, flexible hours East 5-11-22 (3) ALL STUDENT CLASSIFIED 3-11-20 (7) start. Must have excellent ONLY, MONDAY THROUGH Beetle. New-top, radials, Lansing-Okemos ama For ADVERTISING will require brakes, AM/FM. $1700. MUSTANG, 1967, automatic' WANTED. CLEAN used, im¬ driving record. Apply VAR¬ FRIDAY - MOUNTAIN details, 482-6893 PREPAYMENT beginning 332-5547. Z 6-11-28 (31 port and sub compact cars. SITY CAB 332 3559 JACK'S 5800 W.SAGINAW C 22-11 30 (51 ■AftT LANSING power steering, performs effi¬ Call WILLIAMS VW, 484- 8-11-23 (4) EOE. 8-12 1 (111 Monday, October 30. STUDENT ciently. $400. 355-8198 after 1341. OR-20-11-30 (4) Sp-22-12-1 (5) CUTLASS S, 1977, buckets, 5:30. 8-11-21 (4) BE YOUR own boss Feel APABTMIMT Excellent FULL AND part-time jobs, console, AM/FM radio, excel¬ GAME ROOM personnel. better & earn money. Do it AMC GREMLIN X, 1976 counter help. ARBY'S COMPLEX References required. Power steering, AM/FM, cus¬ tom interior. Navy and white. lent condition, 14,000 miles. 351-5161 after 4:30 pm. MUSTANG - 1968, automa¬ tic, excellent body, new tires. ( HHSffriB ](7| wages. Call after 6 pm 8-11-27 (6) , 351-8949 Young ladies preferred. Good pay ($180/week and up), ROAST Grand River. BEEF. 1010 East the SHAKLEE way 882 6513 after 6 Call 5-11-20(41 benefits and pleasant work¬ Z 4 11-22 (41 Good condition. 351-8733 af¬ 332 8924. Z-3-11-20 (3) 5-11-28 (4) Looking for married couple BRAKE PARTS; pads, shoes, ing positions. Exceiient posi¬ r resident monogers. Ideal ter 6:30. S-5-11-22 (5) DELTA 88-4 door, good STORE DETECTIVES junior CONTINENTAL CABLEVIS- and hydraulic kits for your - trons for student, full opd ROOM. BOARD attending school condition, power steering NOVA, 1966, $800 or best and senior CJ majors prefer¬ - negotia ION is currently taking appli¬ r man offer. 327 Corvette V-8 en¬ foreign car at CHEQUERED part-time. Apply in person ble wage, in Christian home AUDI FOX - 1975. Four and brakes. Air, new exhaust, FLAG FORFjGN CAR red. Full or part time. Call cations for permanent part- only. CINEMA X. 1000 Jolly ork.ng or going to schoc door, automatic. Great car, muffler, and tires. Must sell, gine. 371-2276. 10-11-27 (3) PARTS, 2605 cast Kalama¬ 641-4562. OR-22-11-30 14) Road. OR-20-11-30 (9) Exchange for care of two time positions in their conver $2800. 485-7171. 12-12-8 (3) school children, some house¬ asking $1200. 882-0846. zoo Street. One mile west of ter retriever department. Ap- NOVA, 1972, automatic. KITCHEN HELP. Cooks work. Close to MSU and bus e'er mamed couples onl 3-11-20 (6) campus. 487-5055. DESK CLERK - full time, Needs work. Best offer over line. 332-2730 after 6 pm. BOBCAT 1976, V-6, automa¬ C-1-11-30 (7) wanted. Experienced only. if the a i, and a $200. 353-2280 between 9-5, evenings and weekends. Ap¬ 511-28 161 Free Apartment tic, 12,000 miles. New bat¬ DODGE TRANSPORTATION SEAHAWK RESTAURANT. ply in person at HOWARD 4-11-22 (4) tery, snows, professional re¬ special. Good tires, brakes, FOUR UNIROYAL steel- 655-2175 for appointment. JOHNSONS MOTOR basis Applications being tak MODELS $10 hour. Apply en at 333 Washington Square paint. $3485 for showroom exhaust, heater. $100/best OLDS CUTLASS S, 1975. 2 belted radials. Good condi¬ Ask for Gary or Robbie. LODGE, 6741 S.Cedar, be¬ Small Salary VELVET FINGERS. Call 489 car 484-4741. 8-12-1 (4) offer. Must sell. 337-2672. door, power steering, power tion. Best offer. Call John, 8-11-20 (5) tween 9 & 5 pm. North, downtown Lans.ng. 2278 OR-31 -12-1 (31 Z-E-5-11-20 (4) 351-3972 after 5 pm. 8-11-27 (6) EOE 7 11-29'13) brakes, automatic, AM/FM FOR ADDITIONAL BUICK APOLLO, 1974. Excel¬ radio. Excellent condition, Z-3-11-21 141 AFTER KINDERGARTEN FULL TIME hostess -11 pm. - Tired of being broke?- Get INFORMATION. lent condition, $1875. Call DODGE VAN, 1974, custom 35,000 miles. $3750 or best care needed. Begin January, ATTENTION: MARRIED 349-5533 after 2:30 pm. housing students! Save your 7 am. shift. Apply in person fast cash by selling things CALL LUKE interior, good condition. offer. 355-7793. 3-11-20 (6) JUNK CARS wanted. Also noon-3 pm daily. Phone 332- between 2 and 5 pm., LAND¬ you no longer use with a AT 321-6373 $3500 or best offer, must sell. selling used parts. Phone 321- 2254, 373-7465. 3-11-20 (4) money! Join our wholesale MARK RESTAURANT. 5400 fast-action Classified Ad. Call Call 485-6070. 3-11-21 (4) OMEGA - 1973, 6-cylinder, 3651. C-20-11-30 (3) buying service. Call 355-3021. Z-B-1-11-20 (4) W Saginaw. 11-12-1 (5) 355-8255 CAPRICE. '75 - I stick, sound automobile. DENTAL SECRETARY. Pre¬ DUSTER - 1974 Vinyl roof, GOOD USED tires and snow fer experienced. Neat, intelli¬ 485-5040 anytime. 4-11-22 (3) striping, good condition, best tires, 13-14-15 inch. Mounted gent, sharp. Good pay. Mod¬ offer. 349-1363 or 349-4121. free. Used wheels and hub West side. Box F-6, State PINTO, 1972-4 speed, 52.000 EVEN SANTA CAN'T DECIDE ern CHEVY CAPRICE, 1969, air miles, good engine, rusted, caps. PENNELL SALES, 1825 News, East Lansing, Ml, There's something for every¬ $250. 332-6030 after 6 pm. E. Michigan, Lansing, Michi¬ 48824. 8-11-29 (6) conditioning, runs good, $350 332-6798. Z-3-11-21 (3) one in today's Classified Ads. 3-n-2i (M gan, 48912, 482 5818. WHAT TO GIVE EVERYONE Check them out for super C-20-11-30 (6) BABYSITTER - OKEMOS. CHEVY IMPALA 1969. Front buys. PINTO RUNABOUT - 1975. 2300 cc engine, automatic, USED SNOW tires: 7.00-13. Own transportation. Several afternoons, occasional week¬ FOR CHRISTMAS. end collision, reliable trans¬ FIAT, 1974, 124, 4 door, Toyota rims, good tread, $30 no rust, gas tank repaired. ends. 349-1620. 5-11-22 (4) portation. Best offer, automatic, rear window de¬ $1200. 349-3238. 8-12-1 (4) for pair. 355-0900. 374-8791. 5-11-20 (3) froster, Michelins, runs excel¬ lently. $1350 or best offer. Z-E-5-11 -27 (31 WAITRESSES, WAITERS BUT NOW HE's FOUND THE CHEVY IMPALA, 1971 350 PINT01977. Sharp. Excellent Don't store things you can't needed for 78-79 bowling 394 6588 after 6 pm. PERFECT ANSWER! - V-8, $900 firm. 676-3238 be¬ 8-12-1 (5) condition. Low mileage. Ex¬ use. Sell them fast with a season. HOLIDAY LANES. fore 5 pm. 694-0847 after 5 tras $3200. 669-8012. hard-working Classified Ad! Call Judy, 394-0477. pm. 8-11-28 (4) FIATSlT 1975,"perfecincondi¬ 8-11-22(4) Phone 355-8255. 8-11-20 (4) tion all over, runs perfect, CHEVETTE 1978. 2 door. 4 $2150. Must sell. After 5:30, CHRISTMAS PEANUTS speed. Under warranty. 485-2746. 5-11-22 (3) 351-4176. 2-11-21 (3) CHRYSLER NEWPORT 73. FIREBIRD ESPIRIT Loaded. V8. air, AM/FM ster¬ 76. PEOPLE REACHED PERSONALS Good condition. Must sell. On December I, the last day of classes, eo cassette. All power. New $1500/best offer. 337-0432. If your house has become tires, Low mileage. Mint car in Lansing area. 1-313- con¬ dition. Call collect. Will show WANT AD the State News Classified will be print¬ ing the special Christmas Pages. Includ¬ overrun with pets, you need a 646-1849. $4,500. ed will be gift packages printed with fast-acting Classified adl Z-3-11-21 (8) Just complete form and your favorite Holiday message. . , A mail with paument to: perfect gift for your friends here at Stale News Classified Dept. MSU. To order your Christmas Peanuts 347Student Services Bldg. Personal, Just complete this form and fAake -Lhe payment on the car East Lansing, Mich. 48823 mail or bring with payment to the State News Classified Dept., 347 Student Services. earn$10,0 Address City . DEADLINE: month —— a Daytime F for 2 or 3 hours a week ol your spare time . Preferred Insertion Date DAY PHONE NO. Wednesday, Nov. 22 donate plasms 25 characters in a line, including punctuotion and spaces between words. ZIP STUDENT NO. NOON You may save a life! Print Ad here 25 characters in ———— a line, including punctuatic It's easy and relaxing. Be a Iwice-a-week regular and spaces. $10 cash each donation, plus bonuses. PRINT AD HERE. 4 lines-$3.50 this ad worth $5 extra CIRCLE RATE WANTED 3 LINE MINIMUM New donors only. Phone for appointment. Mail bring to: OtLJJtOLLuJLOlPIIjBCn or inrnnrimmrnFi State News Classified Dept. L AMINO PLASMA CORP. fniiHi impirnnnm 347 Student Services Bldg. aiiiioiiiEnEnnirti E. Lansing. M! 48823 3026E.Michigan Ave. □mmcDEnEnniiiJ Lonsing, Mich. 41912 □ioitieiiijedehi] 3*34914 I |M|K«|U|& Monday, November 20, 1978 1 2 Michigon Stole News, East Lansing, Michigan Employment li i*Mrtmwts W\ Rooms For Sole ^ I Typing Service ^H>i f RmrtTowe If] 2 FEMALES-sublease winter GIRL, CLOSE to campus, PIONEER SX 1250. 1ft COPYGRAPH SERVICE, GREEK NITE OPEN HOUSE! CHEERY. TOP notch individ term in Cedar Village. private entrance, refrigerator, months old. 2 year warranty. complete dissertation and re¬ SPORTS ILLUSTRATED ual needed for permanent full 337 9409. Z 13-12-1 (3) Reasonable offer over $375. COURT CLUB. Okemos. (continued from page 10) Chess Club meets at 7 tonight, time lunch bus boy position no pets, no lease. Available sume service. Corner MAC Engineering and Business stu¬ 104 Bessey. 111:15 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.) December 15th. 351-8415 Kurt, 332-2563. S-5-11-21 (5) and Grand River. 8:30 am - Sunday, November 19, 8-10 dents: Applications now being Great pay and benefits. Call 1 BEDROOM available in after 4. 8 11 27 (5) 5:30 pm, Monday-Friday. 10 pm. No guest fees, free court MCINTOSH TUBE equip¬ taken for career-related summer Mr. Solomon after 4:30 p.m., apartment next to campus. am - 5 pm, Saturday. 337- time. Munchies, B.Y.O.B. jobs in 110 Student Services Bldg. "Feminism and Graduate 332 7981, ask for Mark. ment. 1 c22 and 2mc 225. 1666. C-20-11-30 (7) Come check it out! Must Work" discussion at 4:30 p.m. 372-4300. JIM'S TIFFANY PLACE. 4-11-22 18) ZX-7-11-20 (3) EAST LANSING, 1 and 2 [_ For Sale Mint. $800 or offer. 616- 455-4657. Z 6-11-29 (3) PROFESSIONAL EDITING have Greek ID. 2-11-17 (7) Learn to build and use a greenhouse for your home. Intro solai Tuesday, Eustace Library. Re¬ freshments provided. MEDICAL AFFAIRS. Associ¬ MSU DAIRY CLUB is having ductory lectures open the bedrooms. Includes central SEWING MACHINES - new. MICROSCOPE OLYMPUS, its Christmas Cheese Sale, ate. national health organiza¬ Typing arranged. 332-5991. public will be given at 7 tonight, International Folkdancing meets air, car ports, dishwasher, Free arm machines from lOx, lOOx and oil immersion November 20-December 8. tion, strong patient rehabilita¬ 0-2-11-2013) Unitarian Church, East Lansing from 7:30 to 10 tonight, Bailey tion and continuing educa¬ drapes. From $220. Some $99.50. Guaranteed used ma¬ lens. Movable slide stage. Five different selections. Call pets considered. 332-3900. H 300. 485-0502 after 5 pm. Elementary School, corner of Ann tion background. Prefer RN, chines from $39.50. All makes 355-3699 or drop by 122 O-11-11-30 14) EXPERIENCE TYPIST. Fast/ Single Parents Group meets Street and Collingwood Drive. send resume to M E. DeNan- repaired. EDWARDS DIS¬ 3-11-22 (5) Anthony Hall. 4-11-22 (6) accurate. Dissertations, term from 6 to 8 tonight, MSU Day Beginners welcome. tier 1205 E. Saginaw Street, TRIBUTING COMPANY, MALE ROOMMATE for win¬ 1115 N. Washington, 489- papers, etc. 339-3575. Care Center, Spartan Village. Nur¬ Lansing. 48906. 8-11-29 (10) ter and spring. 2 bedroom. FOR QUALITY stereo ser¬ 12-11-23 (3) ICE SKATING lessons for any sery provided. Learn how Christianity heals at 6448 C-20-11-30 (7) vice, THE STEREO SHOPPE. interested university adult. the Christian Science College Close to M.S U. $97/month. COCKTAIL WAITRESS - 555 E. Grand River. EXPERIENCED IBM, term pa¬ Adult classes begin Novem¬ Pre-Dental Club meets at 7 p.m. Organization meeting at 7 tonight, 332-4004. Z-5-11-20 (4) ALL TYPES of optical re¬ C-20-11-30 (3) ber 20, 7:15-8:30 pm, skating C101 Holmes Hall. no experience necessary. pers, resumes. Near Silver Tuesday, 116 Bessey. Dr. Nolan Pan-time and full-time posi¬ pairs; prompt service! OPTI¬ Dollar, 351-5694 afternoons, dance lessons begin Decem¬ will speak. MALE ROOMMATE needed CAL DISCOUNT, 2617 E. ber 1, 7:15-8:30 pm. 8 lessons tions available. Apply in per¬ $100/month, furnished plus DISCOUNT, NEW, used, evenings. 8-11-22 (3) Volleyball Club meets at 9 HUDDLE SOUTH, 820 Michigan, Lansing, Michigan. for $18. Rentals available. son. utilities. 485-7398. Mike. desks, chairs, files. Business Foods and Nutrition Association tonight Gym III, Men's IM Bldg. W. Miller Rd. 10-12-1 16) 372-7409. C-7-11-30 (5) UNIVERSITY SKATING 5-11-22 (3) Equipment Co., 215 E. Kala¬ UNIGRAPHICS OFFERS potluck dinner at 6:30 p.m. Tues¬ mazoo. 485-5500. COMPLETE DISSERTATION CLUB, Demonstration Hall. day. Sign-up sheet and directions Aikido, martial art for self-de¬ Fir Roil ||$] Houses £ BUNK BEDS with in good condition. $60. 0-2-11 20(4) AND RESUME SERVICE • typesetting, IBM typing, off¬ 355 2380. B-1-11-17 (11) w on club bulletin board in Human Ecology. fense and at personal growth meets 7:30 Tuesday, Judo Room, 355-8198. E-5-11-27 (3) Men's IM Bldg. TWO HORSE stalls for rent, 2 BEDROOM, east side Lan¬ Animals set printing, and binding. For estimate, stop in at 2843 E. N Women's Consciousness Rais¬ # EPI 110 speakers. Very good Grand River, or phone 332- ing Groups are forming. If interes¬ Are you interested in China and on 5 acres in Haslett area. Each $35 a month, 337-9327. sing. $190. Call 372-1801. OR-8-11-25 (3) condition. $170. 332-3568. Z-3-11-21 (3) NEEDED SOMEONE to board 8414. C-20-11-30 18) 00 ted, attend meeting at 7 p.m. Tuesday, 328 Student Services want Come to to know more about meeting at 7:30 tonight, it? 7-11-22141 Labrador. Winter and spring 1 107 S. Kedzie Hall. SINGLE IN rooming house. terms. All expenses paid. LOW RATES - ferm pa¬ WINTER STORAGE space in Kitchen, bath, furnished. Util¬ GREY SUEDE jacket. Zip lining, leather collar. Size 8. 337-1765. Z 3-11 21 (51 pers, Resumes. Fast, expert typing, day and evening. Call ift new garage. Williamston ities paid. Starting now, lease $40 Evenings. 337-7054. area. $25/month. 349-4959 E-5-11-20 (3) to September. 372-1801. OR-8-11-25 15) $85-100. 5 11 27 (3) "G" TYPING. 321-4771. 0-20-11-30 (4) IA 3 4 MAN. Very close, MOST LP'S priced >2.50. Cassettes, $3, quality $1.75 - LIBERTY 1978. 14' TYPING TERM papers, IBM, W AportMits furnished, fireplace, good condition. Start now, lease to guaranteed. Plus 45's, song bedroom. 339-2135. experienced, fast service. Call 351 8923. OR 20 11-30 (3) books, more. FLAT, BLACK 6-11-27 (31 September. 372-1801. 6 CIRCULAR, upstairs, 541 MALE ROOMMATE needed. OR-8-11-25 (41 EXPERT TYPING. Term pa¬ E. Grand River. Open 11 am. Luxury, two bedroom, two bath apartment Complete 4 BEDROOM House fur¬ C-20-11-30 (6) 1 tori I fmd A pers, letters, Near Gables. 337-0205. RESUMES. clubhouse and spa A mile and a half from campus. nished. Near Sparrow. Evenings. 332-5622. $230. USED HI-FI equipment with warranty. Kenwood 45 watt LOST BASKETBALL Medal¬ C-20-11-30 (3) V $147 50 month. Call for fur¬ ther details 351-1385. A-3. 1-11-20 (3) receiver, $225. Teak inte¬ lion, on Alle-Ey stairs. Re¬ ward. 353-1027. Z-5-11-21 (3) TYPING. EXPERIENCED, 0) Edited by Roger Dean, 9-12-1 '7l grated amp, 40 watts, $128. fast, and reasonable. 371- IP* HASLETT, NEED 2 people to AR amp and tuner. $249. share 3 bedroom home. 4635. C-20-11-30 (3) Donald Lehmkuhl, and Martyn Dean FEMALE NEEDED, luxury. Country setting. $100 plus Garrard turntable $50. BIC FOUND: BICYCLE. Identify *4 In 980 turntable $169. HI-FI and pay for ad. 332-5193 or IP* mythology wh«\ Icarul't vrlngi mated!» pftMUMM* 96.50/month - December free. Call Connie. 351-6010 share utilities. 339-3151 evenings. Days, 694-4613 BUYS. 337-1767. 353 9533. Z 4-11-22 (31 Instructions > earth.The Images that might have flashed tfu before 5 5-11-28 (51 0-6-11-22 18) LOST - WOMAN'S Clinton RIDING INSTRUCTION, East (ft during his fall are brilliantly pictured In tMt a book. Here is fantasy art at Re flneat,aiMMMi if Z-8-12-1 (41 ONE GIRL needed for house. USED ITEMS: couch, $20; stuffed chair, $10; natural gold chain watch. Great sent¬ imental value. Reward. Kathy Lansing. English hunt-seat, indoor facilities. Beginning {ft visionary flights of fancy by top contampo-^ rary artists. Outer space, magical land- Own room, close to campus. { NON-SMOKING MALE for 4 man. $80/month. Mile from $85 and utilities. 337-0876. Z-3-11-22 (3) wood table. $20; bed frame and springs, $20; gas stove. 337-9411. Z-3-11-21 (4) through advanced. Contact JEAN CARN STABLES, 337- (0 scapes, cities of the future, monsters, dragons, wizards, robots and more-stun- _ campus, dishwasher. $10. For more information, nlngly raproduced In over 200 full-color LOST - ONE pair black and 2794 or 371-3926. Illustrations. 12x12. 112.50 paperback. 337-2013. Winter & Spring. call 482-8507. E-5-11 22 (6) Z-12-11-28 (4) SPACIOUS DUPLEX, three red gloves along Shaw Lane QRJ3J1-3PI7I S30 00 cloth near stadium. 355-8738. bedroom, fireplace, very ' ICE SKATING lessons for any close to campus. December ATTENTION STUDENTS Z-3-11-30 (3) FEMALE OWN room, nice interested university adult. - ALL STUDENT CLASSIFIED three bedroom townhouse, 21,1 year lease. Call 351-4717 Adult classes begin Novem¬ ADVERTISING will require LOST - SMALL red Irish evenings. 8-12-1 (5) ber 20, 7:15-8:30 pm, skating air. 393-6664 8-12-1 (3) or 394-6154. PREPAYMENT Monday. October 30. beginning Setter, Logan Street near dance lessons begin Decem¬ {ft GRADUATE STUDENT, own Bishop Road. Reward. 393- ber 1. 7:15-8:30 pm. 8 lessons NEEDED sublease - 1 or 2 girls to Campus Hill. $80/ room, no 351-9373 or 351-8779. X-Z-2-11-21 (3) lease. Linda, Sp-22 12 1 (5) NEW AND used guitars, ban¬ 0257. 5-11-27 141 RED DOBERMAN, female, 8 for $18. Rentals available. UNIVERSITY CLUB. SKATING Demonstration Hall, The only effort you hav» cash art to find a buyer for items » At all bookstores month. 349-5873 after 10. Z-B-1-11-20 (3) jos. mandolins, etc. Dulci¬ months. Reward. Call 489- 0113 or 882-3016. 4-11-21 (3) 355-2380. BL-1-11-20 (11) you no longer need is 0) HASLETT AREA, large mod¬ mers and kits, recorders, dialing your telephone! ROOM. BOARD - negotia¬ ern home, nice neighbor¬ thousands of hard to find albums, and books. Discount PRIVATE INSTRUCTION That's right. Just dial the number shown here Z ble wage, in Christian home. Exchange for care of two hood, 5 minutes to campus, $340/month. 351-8247. 6-11-21 (4) prices. Expert repairs estimates. ELDERLY - free IN¬ Personal f/ available. ments. All major instru¬ MARSHALL MUSIC, and we'll do the rest! Your ad will appear in (Delivery Available) No checks accepted school children, some house¬ work. Close to MSU, and bus line. 332-2730 after 6 pm. PROFESSOR'S HOUSE for STRUMENTS. 541 E Grand River. 332-4331. ATTENTION STUDENTS ALL STUDENT CLASSIFIED Frandor. 337-9700. C-1-11-20 (4) print and is sure to attract some reader v 0*?%}./) Medium Pizza Bu*any 5-11-2816) rent. Winter quarter only. C-20-11-30 (9) ADVERTISING will require looking for the very item you have to sell. Faculty or grad couple. Rent PREPAYMENT beginning Transportation gJg ^ at the Regular NORTH PENNSYLVANIA - flexible 351-8413, afternoons. 3-11-22 14) APPLE CRATES $2.50 each. 332-5091. Monday. October 30. Sp 22-12-1 (5) (0 Price . . get the Large, two bedroom down¬ Identical Pizza riiEC E-5-11-22 (3) AAA AUTO DRIVEWAY. stairs. Partly furnished. Avail¬ able December, prefer adults. STUDENT WANTED for 1 Cars to all points. Top gas $160 485-6919 or 351-7497. OR-8-11 -22 16) bedroom in family house. $75 plus utilities. Call evenings, 1 COUCH, 1 chair, 1 ottoman, 2 end tables, 1 coffee table, 4 Real Estate « allowance. River, 13116 Grand Detroit, 1-313-933- to it hove coupon e o e coupon per order 12-4-rs I 489-3454. 3-11-20(4) months old. Sharp. Strong 5600. Z 13-12-1 (41 | 1203 E. Grand River 2830 E. Grand Rlvar < EAST LANSING - Colonial, durable, contemporary. 4 bedroom, close to schools, delivery east of 2 blki. wait of Frandor I State LAKE LANSING, on the lake. 2 & 3 bedroom, some with DUPLEX - 3 bedroom. Very Whole group 8012. 5-11-22 16) for $900 669- excellent condition in resi¬ NEED YOUR car delivered? Harrison dalivary west of ffarriion I close to campus. 349-1620. dential $69,900. By ap We deliver anywhere in the fireplaces, available now! 5-11-22(3) area. pointment only. 332-2330. U.S. within 48 hours. 337-1631 483-4406 J $290 to $340, short term lease SCIENCE FICTION, comics, 5-11-22 (6) 332-8480. 4-11-22 (31 option. 351-0997 after 5. CHARMING 3 or 4 bedroom baseball cards, Hardy boys 8-11-29 (8) 1 FEMALE-sublease winter term in Cedar Village. 332- house; tenants responsible, caring only. December 20- September 1. 351-7285. and Nancy Drews wanted1 CURIOUS BOOK SHOP, 307 E. Grand River, East Lansing, EAST LANSING room - 3 bed¬ ranch on nice sized lot. FHA and VA terms available WMtii News 3-11-20 (4) 332-0112. C-12-11-30 (6) 0344. Z-5-11-22 (3) on this $35,500 home. Call WORKING SHOW band WM. MARTIN COMPANY, needs bass player and drum¬ FEMALE NEEDED, LARGE HOUSE for rent. RED WORMS - excellent 323-7100. Steve Slater. own or mer. 332-4787. 10-11-29 (3) Near Brody on East Mich¬ food for fish, snakes, turtles. 372-3975. 1-11-20(7) room. December-September. 339-1075. 8-11-29 (3) igan, for 5 persons. $475/- Pesticide, insecticide free. WANTED - GOOD photos month, plus utilities. Phone 882-4222. 8-11-22 (4) HOLT, CUSTOM built four of John Denver at M.S.U. TWO MALES needed winter 332-3900 0-20-11-30(5) bedroom home in lovely 646-0895 after 5:30 pm. term. Christian Co-op. Close IDEAL CHRISTMAS gifts 16 wooded setting. Convenient 2-11-20(3) 332-1437. LANSING-EAST SIDE-3 bed¬ to campus. 4-11-22 (3) room house. Newly carpeted. X 20 inch mounted color photos of beautiful scenes in to schools but on a quiet street. Central air, Jenn-air In a rut with your present job? ■must 1203hove • onecoupon couponRlvar Grand 2830per order 11.Rlv.r E.Grand 4-70 PHI 355-8255 Call 351-5510, STE-MAR Europe, Alaska and Michigan range, first floor laundry, and I dalivary aaif of dalivary wait of 2 blki. wait of Frandor The best place to look for the MALE NEEDED to sublet 2 MANAGEMENT. 8-11-20(41 Call Tony 353-8165. many extras. Beautiful family man apartment. Pool and Z-8-11-20 (6) home in a family location. job you're seeking is the Help Wanted classification of ffarriion Horrl.on^^J ^337063^ m 485^406^J dishwasher. Close to cam¬ Call Barbara Hoopingarner, OWN ROOM in clean 2 today's newspaper. pus 337-0092 Z-2-11-20 (3) bedroom on CATA line. SELECTRIC TYPEWRITER, 699-2428, or BROKERS. INC. used, excellent condition. Pi¬ 351-1880. 3-11-22 (14) 489-2653 or 1-743-4057. TWO BEDROOM mobile wide 3-11-21 (3) ca, carriage, carbon home, furnished, close, pets, ribbon. $450. 353-0905. PRICE REDUCED. $30,900, 2 $180. 332-8498. Z-5-11-21 (4) bedroom home in East Lan¬ 2-11-20 (3) EAST LANSING. 2 bedroom, 6034 Porter. Large yard. $225. WALNUT BUFFET for sale, sing. near MSU. 1 1/2 car garage Shirley Romano, Don't keep your FEMALE TO sublease. Own 349-3939. 8-11-21 (3) $60. Call 393-0620. 349-1254 or 351-1880, THE room, immediate. $103.33/ E-5-11-21 (3) BROKERS. INC. 4-11-22 (6) month. 5-11-27 (3) 394-5228. after 5 pm. TWO ROOMS to excellent location, starting sublease, SKI BOOTS - Caber, Men's Graduation a Secret. FEMALE TO sublease spa¬ winter. Call 332-3392. 9ft & 10 Kastinger, Ladies' Strvice 5-11-21 (3) 6ft Humanic, Ladies' 6ft, cious apartment. Very close about ft price; phone 332- to campus. 337-0925. 2 8807. Z-8-11-28 (5) FREE LESSON in complexion FEMALES, winter only. Z-3-11-21 (3) Close to campus, double or TEAC 33405 4 track studio care. MERLE-NORMAN COSMETIC STUDIO. 321- announcements are WOMEN NEEDED for 4 per¬ single room option, $85, 351- • 5543. C-20-11-30 (4) 3607. 5-11-21 14) tape recorder. $640. 353- son. Non-smoker. Cedar Vil¬ 6339, 485-0915. 8-11-28 (3) lage, winter and/or spring. Rent Negotiable. 351-2429. NEED FEMALE to share large CHILD CARE in my home, Haslett full or part-time, now available at 10-11-2014) 3 bedroom home. $125/ ELECTRONIC REPAIR - Fast work, reasonable rates, 339-2793. between 8-5. month. 394-7579, evenings. 5-11-2713) 2 FEMALES men • needed for 4 apartment in Twycking- 5-11-21 (4) all work guaranteed, WIL¬ COX TRADING POST, 509 E BLUEGRASS EXTENSION the MSU Bookstore ham. 332-1976. Z-5-11-21 (3) Michigan. 485-4391. SERVICE plays weddings, Unas C-15-11-30 (6) parties. 353-9695, days; ONE MALE needed for 4 apartment. $80/month plus man PRIVATE ROOMS, near INSTANT CASH! We're pay¬ 372-3727 C-20-11-" or 339-1119. (4) customer service desk. utilities. 394-7017. ing $1-$2 for albums in good campus. Furnished, carpeted, shape. WAZOO RECORDS, Z-5-11-21 (3) nonsmokers. $90'month. FEMALE NEEDED for 3-man. Available 332-2489 after 5:30 December or week 1. 223 Abbott, 337-0947 C-20-11-30 (4) I TfUsi SwictM Order yours now!! Twyckingham Apartments, ends. X-8-11-21 (5) winter or winter & spring. SOFA BED-$45, 6 ft feet. EXPERIENCED, IBM typing, Rent negotiable. 332-8293. Folds flat, herculon, excel¬ dissertations (Pica FEMALE ROOMMATE for 4 Elite). 3-11-21 (4) bedroom house. Many ex¬ tras, no car preferred, 1 1/2 lent. 332-6663 after 5 pm. X E-5-r 21 (3) FAY ANN, 489-0358. C-20-11-30 (3) Supply Limited ONE MALE needed winter blocks to bus line, 371-3641. and spring. Close to MSU, BASKETBALL TICKETS $96 plus utilities. 337-9530. 3-11-23 (4) A or B series. Best offer. - TYPIST - TEN years' secre¬ 35* each or 10 for $3.00 tarial experience. Laingsburg Z-8-11-30 (3) 355-9954 Z 1-11-20 (3) EAST LANSING - Male area. 55 4 /page. 651-6424. students, single rooms, 2-11-21 (3) LARGE TWO bedroom. One APPLES - CIDER - Honey 332-5791 after 5:30, week at BLOSSOM ORCHARDS, 2 block to campus. Available December 15. $314. 332-7332 ends anytime. 3-11-21 (4) miles north of Leslie on Hull "ATTENTION STUDENTS Z-5-11-27 (3) Road (Old U.S. 127). Hours: 9 ALL STUDENT CLASSIFIED PRIVATE ROOMS in modern am-5 pm. Closed ADVERTISING will require Mondays. Today's best buys are in the house, near campus. Fur¬ Phone 1 589-8251. Gift pack¬ PREPAYMENT beginning Classified section. Find what nished, carpeted kitchen. ages shipped UPS. Monday, October 30. you're looking fori 393-7368. OR-20-11-30 (4) 1-11 20(7) Sp-22-12-1 (5) i Michigan Slot# Naw«, Enit Lansing, Michigan Mondoy, November 20, 1978 HAGAR the Horrible (t)WJIM-TV(CBS) (IQ)WIIX-TV(NBC) tSv y§yif (H)WELM-TV(Cabla) (H)WJRT-TV(ABC) (23)WKA8-TV(PBS) by Dik Browne Competition 11:00 Monday (10) Doctors * (23) Over Easy (23) MacNeil/Lehrer Report (6-10) News 9:00 3:00 8:00 (23) Dick Cavett (6) Bobby Vinton 11:30 (6-12) Phil Donahue (10) Another World (10) Marcus Welby.M.D. (12) General Hospital (10) Little House On The (6) Rockford Files (23) Sesame Street (23) Julia Child & Company Prairie (10) Johnny Carson 10:00 3:30 (23) To Be Announced (23) ABC News 9:00 12:00 (6) All In The Family (6) MASH (10) Card Sharks (23) Villa Alegre (6) MASH (12) News 4:00 (10) Greatest Heroes of the 12:30 (12) Dinah! (23) Mister Rogers (6) New Mickey Mouse Club Bible (12) Rookies (12) NFL Football 12:40 10:30 (10) Munsters (6) Price Is Right (12) Star Trek (23) Movie (6) McMillan & Wife PEANUTS This holiday look your best 9:30 1:00 with a Sans Delour (10) Jeopardy! (23) Sesame Street (6) One Day At A Time (10) Tomorrow by Schulz manicure. Coll 337-8290. (23) Electric Company 4:30 11:00 10:00 1:30 (6) My Three Sons (6) Lou Grant (12) News (10) High Rollers (10) Gilligan's Island 10:30 2:00 (12) Happy Days (I W0NPER UJHAT\ (23) Villa Alegre 5:00 (23) Turnabout (10) News I REMEMBER WHEN I LOVED THE RUNNING FENCE 11:30 (6) Gunsmoke CHRI5TO HUNS THE tALLEY IN CALIFORNIA ANP THE I HE'LL PO NEXT J 3St MSU SHADOWS .. (6) Love Of Life (10) Bob Newhart ran mat CURTAIN IN COL0RAP0 WRAPPED UALKWW5 IN (10) Wheel Of Fortune (12) Gong Show with this comic! <3 KANSAS Cm... (12) Family Feud (23) Mister Rogers by Gordon Carleton New Pete s! Albert ai MAC under Moon's (23) Lilias, Yoga and You 5:30 SPONSORED BY: 11:55 rarsALL psts-s (10) Mary Tyler Moore (6) CBS News (11) WELM News 12:00 (12) News (6-12) News Htv, UMnT MsflftWtC To RouR covt#' (23) Electric Company (10) America Alive! 6:00 T06A PARTY. 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B.C.- SPONSOREDBY: ?!LL°™J*LK - FURNITURE Frondor Shopping Cent*. by Johnny Hart 351-1747 Bean Bag. 'IMS CAMPUS DINE IN TUMBLEWEEDS® PIZZA 0,CAU by Tom K. Ryan 1040.. I"*"" LIBERTY BELL PRESENTS: ' aiaa® sua HHia CROSSWORD C3HHH sraa HiVJti SPONSORED BY: f ;■ Something iX-. Big ... Coming PUZZLE iliiDBS r .'Y Soon To Long's tttOSS 26. Limited 28. Pitchers 9QBSS 32. Water bottles i3Q@ rasa Hfflaa 36 Smckor_ BBSra 0SS3 S1BB 37. Palmyra palm tree sdHEB rati® 38 Wtthm ®IMB BRUSH 40. Platitude 41. Feudaii 00ISEHBB BBnE 43. Oriental Christian nraa auira Bam® aan mss hbsh Alo WoMDO. you CAMT HOLD AM ihrraxia&^r coNi/a*sATiou,... 1&fcncnJlit}©—. J 1 4 Michigan Stote News. East Lansing, Michigan Monday, November 20, 1978 Herman's WORLD OF SPORTING GOODS SALE Here's exciting Sports News. Herman's newest Reach store opens in the Lansing Mall tomorrow, Football Jerseys for the Drat 100 youngsters and Herman's Fairlane, Twelve Oaks and Lakeside stores join the Celebration Sale. at the Lansing store. narkdowns have been taken. WORLD OF SPORTING GOODS LANSING Lansing Mall, Saginaw Highway Ph. 323-4701 «Monday thru Saturday 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. • Sunday 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. * * ££!2.4*Nf-Falrlan® Town Can,ar'1 Whine, Deerborn • Monday thru Saturday 9:30 to 9:30 • Sunday 11 a.m. to « p.m. ^!ce,En9*K®?7500 Novl Road' Novl * Monday thru Saturday 9:30 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. • Sunday 11 Ia.m. a.m. to> Sf p.m. ■■H AMERICAN 25? a noad' s,arllJJf> EXPRESS* VISA* & He^hta !R CHARGE* thru Saturday 10 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. • Sunday 11 a.m. toto 6 p.m. • MondayACCEPTED