Friday The State News Weather Clam will come out of its shell today as temperatures reach The State News the lower 80s under partly sunny skies. Lows tonight will fall to the mid 60s, with prob able thundershowers. MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY EAST LANSING, MICHIGAN 48824 AUGUST 3, 1979 VOLUME 73 NUMBER 114 Downtown complex unveiled by Owen By DEBBIE CREEMERS levels," Krause said. But he said the total private investment tops federal grant State News Staff Writer cost of the complex, and subsequent rental funding five or six-to-one -- hence, the Plans for a $10 million eight story rate of apartments, would be dependent on creation of the EDC. downtown East Lansing building complex the amount of federal funds East Lansing were unveiled by Mayor Pro-Tern Larry receives from an Urban-Development Ac submitted our application for Owen and developer David Krause Thurs tion Grant for which it is applying. eligibility determination," Krause said. "If day. Under the new federal program, local ■ligible, we'll have to compete with other The complex, at the northeast corner of communities can receive help for the cities for money." M.A.C. Avenue and Albert Street — the development of downtown areas, as long as continued on page 14) Citgo block — would combine four stories of housing for 150 persons, three floors of commercial and office space and a 300-car parking structure. Krause, an East Lansing real estate consultant and appraiser, said the project, scheduled for completion in 1981, was designed with a multi purpose concept. "It will be a people place," he said, "meant to be inspiring, but a building for shopping, dining and relaxing as well." WITH THIS VISION, Krause said ideas incorporated into the design Include an outdoor park-sculpture area, an outdoor pedestrian plaza and park, a glass encased elevator, restaurants and 20 to 80 specialty shops which open into a forest like, glass roofed atrium. The project also uses energy saving principles, Krause said. Passive solar energy features include the atrium and walls which will absorb heat into a storage Propoiad COgo Block Developmi system for heating and cooling the apart¬ ments. Owen said the city will try to create an Economic Development Corp. to help UNDERAGE!) DRINKERS SERVED? State New»/lra Strick*tein finance the project, which he termed "the A slave auction, chariot race and largest and most exciting in the history of 1,200 toga-clad high school Latin students from 40 states were on hand for the National Junior East Lansing." THE CREATION of an EDC to sell Area bars to be cited Classics League convention tax-exempt, low-interest, revenue bonds for By DENNIS PETROSKEY July 29-August 3. Bob Black, a expansion and development projects allows State News Staff Writer teacher from Grand Rapids, has local communities to revitalize economic It is expected that three area bars will receive formal complaints for serving alcohol to fashioned his wreath from ivy and employment bases through private persons under 21 years of age from the state's Liquor Control Commission within the leaves. Students line up near funding. next few days. Owen said the bonds would be repaid Dennis Hybarger, assistant supervisor of the liquor commission's hearings and Shaw Hall for a parade around appeals with revenue from the complex. section, said Dooley s, 131 Albert St., will be issued two campus. See related story page "The bonds will pose no risk to taxpayers complaints, with the Silver Dollar Saloon, 3411 E. Michigan Ave., and Coral Gables, 2838 E. Grand River Ave., receiving and will enable us to get a low interest rate one apiece. of eight-and-one-half to nine percent," Liquor control investigators found underage drinkers at Dooiey's on June 22 and again Krause said. on July 14, Hybarger said. The Silver Krause, who designed the Treehouse Dollar Saloon was cited on June 29 and Apartments at 234 Center St. and 451 Coral Gables on July 7, he said. Evergreen Ave., said the apartments in the project will be student accessible. Ken Wozniak, liquor control investigator for the compliance and education section, Gas rationing said liquor control commissioners could "WE WILL TRY to rent at competitive suspend the bars' licenses, "but it is not very likely." put on hold MALL PROPOSAL FOR THE BARS COULD be fined up to $300 ANOTHER per count,he said. WASHINGTON -- Congress abandoned Hybarger said the bars will have 20 days the attempt to send President Carter a in which to acknowledge the complaint. If standby gasoline rationing bill Thursday the bars do not acknowledge the violations, Dayton Hudson to present plans before the congressional August recess. a hearing before liquor control commis Instead, a House-Senate conference com¬ sioners will be scheduled, he said. mittee was named to work out- a compro¬ mise. Leaders said they hoped it could go to However, with more than 700 violations By DEBBIE CREEMERS countersuits, the agreement was necessary in order for an election to even take place. the president's desk in September. "The consent judgment is at the center of the whole question," Anderson said. "No one cited by the liquor control commission, State News Staff Writer The conference was named after the can do anything until Hotchkiss passes judgement, and if they go over his head, they will Hybarger said the proceedings in front of Dayton Hudson Corp. officials will present plans for a new mall on the U.S. 127-Lake the commissioner "may take quite awhile." Senate formally rejected, by voice vote, a have to deal with us immediately." Lansing Road site at Tuesday's city council meeting, East Lansing City Councilmember Gary Foltz, manager and co-owner of rationing bill approved by the House on Alan Fox said Tuesday. Hotchkiss, declined to comment on the matter. Wednesday. Fox said the Council will probably refer the proposal to the Planning Commission for Anderson said the city should not be forced to bear the blame and criticism for a Dooiey's, said he was aware that the bar The legislation would give the president had been cited by the liquor control consideration. Dayton Hudson initiative. authority to ration gasoline and take other commission, but added "given the current But James Anderson, coordinator of Citizens for a Livable Community — the group "They should ask their attorney first, because if they go ahead with this they will be in fuel-saving steps during major shortages. status of the drinking age law, it is difficult which successfully defeated Dayton Hudson Properties first bid for a north side mall — legal hot water." Anderson said. But the House saddled it with a number of to enforce." said the city would take a "real chance" if it were to pass on plans without consulting weakening amendments. Judge Ray Hotchkiss, who presided over the consent judgement signed by the three CITY ATTORNEY DENNIS McGinty has said the agreement is binding enough to "We maintain the employee did not sell make CLC's case good should they take the issue to court. SENATE MAJORITY LEADER Robert parties before the election last Novmeber. directly to the person who was underage," Fox said the council would have to schedule an election by Sept. 18 in order to get the he said. "The waitress said the person got it C. Bvrd said the House had "emasculated" the bill. He claimed there House IN THE JUDGMENT signed before the election, Dayton Hudson, CLC and the City of mall question on the November ballot again. from someone at the table who was of age was no way East Lansing agreed to abide by the voters' decision. Because of a snarl of suits and and she won't budge from her story." and Senate differences could be resolved But Anderson said that in CLC's view, without sending the bill to conference. the "rumored" proposed mall is not differ¬ ON" JULY 14, Foltz said, a person who And Sen. Bennett Johnston. D La., who ent enough to justify tampering with the will be one of the Senate negotiators on the agreement or scheduling another election. was over 21 years old placed an order at the Prediction of recession severity- Anderson said Councilmember John (continued on page 14) bar and when the waitress brought (continued on page 14> the bill, said, "we had to weigh symbolism continued on page 11 greater than previous estimation WASHINGTON lAP) — Less than three weeks after it predicted The assessment also concludes that the decline in economic Miller pleads guilty to , a mild recession, the Carter administration may concede that a output will amount to 1.4 percent this year, down from the 0.5 more serious downturn is in prospect this year and next. percent administration forecast. A task force of administration economists says in a fresh assessment of the economy that unemployment probably will rise to AND IT SAYS inflation will be slightly worse, with consumer claims he was consumed by anger 8.2percent next year, rather than the 6.9 percent forecast just last prices rising 11 percent this year instead of the 10.6 percent Bush and Marita Choquette. He will not be charged in those cases, July 12, a difference of about 1.3 million jobs. increase projected by the administration on July 12. By The State News and UPI Donald Gene Miller pleaded guilty Wednesday to manslaughter however, because his admissions came during psychiatric However, the new figures are not official forecasts. They are part of an internal charges in the deaths of two area women, saying he was treatment and police have no other evidence linking Miller to the consumed by pain and anger when he killed them. crimes. working paper prepared by a task force of Miller pleaded guilty to manslaughter in the death of Martha In a tearful voice, Miller told Bell how he killed Young and Milliken to trim budget economists. While there was one report that they were Sue Young, 19, his former fiancee, and guilty to manslaughter but Stuart. mentally ill in the death of 30-year-old Lansing schoolteacher Young had agreed to keep a date with Miller on New Year's prepared only in the past few days, an Eve 1977, even though she had broken their engagement a few administration source said they were known Kristine Rose Stuart. LANSING (UPI) — Michigan is in a recession that will require some belt tightening by days before. prior to the July 12 forecasts. He said it was Ingham County Circuit Judge Robert Holmes Bell scheduled state government, including some budget trimming vetoes, Gov. William G. Milliken said Miller said the two went for a drive after -watching television a "good question" why the administration sentencing for Aug. 29. The maximum sentence Miller can receive Thursday. for the two slayings is two 15-year prison terms, which will run for a while. "I'm carefully reviewing all of the facts affecting the state and general fund and put out the earlier, more optimistic num¬ "She was in some mood," he said. bers, knowing the outlook might be concurrently with a 30 to 50 year sentence he is now serving for budget," Milliken said. the rape and attempted murder of 14-year-old Eaton County girl "She started blaming me for all sorts of things. Over those "There is no question we are in a period of recession in Michigan and in the country." considerably more pessimistic. three years, she said ail her love was a lie." A number of things have happened to and the attempted murder of her brother. Milliken said he is reviewing possible vetoes in the $4.6 billion 1979 80 state budget. The 24-year-old MSU criminal justice graduate had been Young was just looking out the window, Miller said. worsen the economic outlook in recent "What is in order now is a belt tightening on the part of state government," he said. months. Chief among these is the 60 percent charged with two counts of second-degree murder in connection "My hand was on her shoulder - I began to squeeze her around with the disappearances of the two women. the neck," he said. "It was just the pain and anger. It was a "I'm exploring many different ways through vetoes, restricted expenditures, through increase in the price of world oil so far this However, Miller was allowed to plead guilty to the reduced reaction to make the anger stop." other actions where we can prudently acknowledge the problem that exists . . year. But recent actions by the Federal Miller said he then drove to Priggooris Park 25 miles northeast Milliken said the economic situation "is not as bad as it was back in 1973,1974 and 1975, Reserve Board to push up interest rates also charges of manslaughter as part of a plea bargaining agreement but it clearly qualifies under a precise definition as a recession at this time." have dimmed the outlook. under which he led police to the skeletal remains of Young and of Lansing where Young's body was found in July. "It is vitally important that Chrysler continue as a major competitive force in the U.S. Stuart in July. In Stuart's killing, Miller said he saw a woman walking along Miller has also admitted to killing two other women, Wendy continued on page 161 auto market." Milliken said. THE LATEST ASSESSMENT tends Milliken said it is "inappropriate at this time to suggest the specifics" he has in mind. (continued on page 14) 2 Michigan Stote News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, August 3, 1979 State News Kissinger doubtful on SALT II agreement, Kissinger said he "Every tax dollar spent for Sup/tort depends more defense on would support a motion to unnecessary military outlays Wire Digest delay Senate action until Carter fuels inflation," said Culver, a WASHINGTON (AH - For these conditions are not met I increasing the defense budget, sends Congress his plans for member of the Senate Armed cannot support ratification," for clarification of what he the next defense budget. Services Committee. He argued mcr Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger told the Senate called ambiguities in the treaty As he had done earlier in the that since the start of SALT Kissinger emphasized Thursday that he can support Armed Services Committee. and for linkage of Soviet be week, Kissinger said he was not negotiations in 1969, the United the SALT II treaty only if The conditions, spelled out havior to continuation of the advocating any changes that States has spent nearly $900 SALT process. would require renegotiation of billion on defense. certain conditions are met, by Kissinger earlier in the including a commitment from week before the Senate For¬ the treaty. Earlier, Sen. Barry Goldwa- UNDER QUESTIONING BY Two additions he R-Ariz., told the Senate he the Carter administration for eign Relations Committee and recom¬ ter, higher defense spending. repeated Thursday, were for an Sen. Henry M. Jackson, D- mended would specify that the wouldn't be satisfied with "the FoCUSiWOHLD "I would like to stress that if "obligatory understanding" on Wash., an opponent of the protocol, scheduled to expire on Dec. 31, 1981, could not be president going on television and saying we will have an extended beyond that date defense spending." without concessions from the Zimbabwe-Rhodesia government gaining strength N-plant mishap ' Soviets and a provision stating that as part of SALT III the United States could build any Carter and weapons system allowed the SALISBURY, Zimbabwe-Rhodesia (AP) but one house was reported destroyed. Kennedy to preventiblereport Soviets. — The leading domestic opponent to Zimbabwe-Rhodesia's new bi-racial gov¬ one The situation in Zimbabwe-Rhodesia is of the key issues at the Common¬ says Under SALT II, the Soviets can maintain their forces of ernment ended a long boycott Thursday wealth conference — a meeting of heads of government of Britain and its former heavy missiles which are much larger than the United States is square off and took his seat in parliament, giving WASHINGTON (AF) - The BUT WHAT ACTUALLY clean-up operations. the embattled administration a big boost colonies. accident at the Three Mile happened was that the core of The building may have to allowed, in primaries The Rev. Ndabaningi Sithole, head of Island nuclear power plant the reactor, which contains remain sealed at least through in its quest for international recognition. the Zimbabwe African National Union might have been prevented if radioactive fuel rods, was se¬ the end of this year. THE ARGUMENT THAT The report said operators at SALT should not be approved In the south, meanwhile, black insur¬ Party and chief domestic critic of the plant operators had let safety verely damaged by overheat¬ BOSTON (AP) - Massa¬ Three Mile Island misin¬ without a commitment for gents struck their first blow since the government of Prime Minister Abel equipment function as it was ing. The damage released in¬ chusetts' presidential primary designed to do, according to a tense radiation inside the terpreted the nature of the higher defense spending was election is at least seven Commonwealth summit opened Wednes¬ Muzorewa, led 11 party members into the report by the staff of the reactor building and plant oper accident as it was taking place challenged on the Senate floor months away, but an intense day in neighboring Zambia, shelling the national assembly to take their places in still unable to enter and took inappropriate actions by Sen. John C. Culver, Nuclear Regulatory Commis¬ ators are campaign between President town of Fort Victoria with rockets. There parliament for the first time since the sion. the building for inspection and to try to correct the problem. D-Iowa. Carter and Sen. Edward M. were no immediate reports of causalties, new government was installed June 1. The NRC Office of Inspection Kennedy has already begun. and Enforcement, in a report to Carter's campaign officials, the commission Thursday, said III I. DEAD. 260 l\Jl RED l\ STORM apparently concerned about the it still is investigating about 35 negative impact of a potentially possible violations of federal poor showing in Kennedy's FQCUS:|MATION rules in connection with the March 28 accident near Harris- burg, Pa. Typhoon Hope slams Orient home state early in the cam¬ paign season, are trying to get the date of the primary election cued after 11 boats in which moved from March 4 to April HONG KONG (AP) - Ty¬ Kong said more than 90 of those living sank. At least 22. "PERHAPS THE MOST dis phoon Hope slammed into Hong injured here were hospitalized, they were Indian woman wins suit over police brutality turbing results of the investigation is confirmation of . . . Kong on Thursday with torren¬ tial rains and winds up to most with injuries suffered when hit by falling debris or six pleasure craft moored at the Aberdeen typhoon shelter were The April date would set Massachusetts' primary elec¬ 130 Yellow Bird's attorney said he hoped earlier conclusions that the miles an hour. when trapped in collapsing badly damaged. tion after delegate selections in NORTH PLATTE, Neb. (AP) — An Three Mile Island Unit 2 acci¬ Five people were reported huts. Eighteen of the 124 ships Alabama and Florida and other American Indian who charged in an $8 the verdict would have an impact on dent could have been pre¬ dead and 260 others injured as Those killed included a 52- moored in Hong Kong Harbor states where Carter is likely to million civil suit that her child was towns similar to Gordon in making city vented, in spite year-old who died in a dragged anchor, and the anchor have more support than in stillborn because a police officer kicked officials more careful in their hiring of of the inade¬ the storm collapsed squatter woman quacies," investigators dis¬ huts, tore ships from their mudslide, a 56-year-old woman chains on 11 of them broke. Ten Kennedy territory. her after a barroom brawl was awarded law enforcement officers. covered at the plant, said moorings, felled power poles hit by a falling object, a ships were involved in five Kennedy, suggested as a $300,000 compensatory damages Thurs¬ Gordon, a town of 2,200 about 13 miles Victor Stello Jr., director of and uprooted trees. 50-year-old man electrocuted separate collisions but no in¬ possible willing-or-draft oppo¬ day by an all-white federal jury. south of the reservation, has a history of inspection and enforcement, in It was the biggest typhoon to by a fallen electric cable and a juries were reported in those, nent for Carter, wants his state The U.S. District Court jury assessed a summary of the staff report. hit Hong Kong in eight years. 66-year-old man who died when the Marine Department said. to retain the political leverage strife between whites and Indians. the damages against two of the eight Stello said the design, equip After passing quickly his house collapsed. The ty¬ At the height of the storm, two of its March primary and is defendants named by Jo Ann Yellow The four-woman, two-man jury found ment, accident analyses and through this British colony, phoon was also cited as a factor ships were grounded. exerting his influence to ensure that former Gordon where five million people live, in the death of a three-year-old Hong Kong's normally teem¬ the date is not changed. Bird, an Oglala Sioux who lives on the police officer Clifford emergency procedures at Valentine and the Three Mile Island "were ade¬ the storm moved inland into girl swept off a boat Wednes¬ ing commercial activity vir¬ A close Kennedy friend, Bos¬ Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South City of Gordon had tually stopped, and more than ton attorney Gerard F. Doher- Dakota. The jury denied her bid for violated Yellow Bird's federal constitu¬ quate to have prevented the China's agriculturally rich day night in the early stages of tional rights. serious consequences of the Guandong (Kwangtung) pro¬ the storm. 1,300 people took refuge at 191 ty, insists that Kennedy's mo¬ punitive damages. vince and weakened to At Aberdeen, an area famous special typhoon shelters set up tives do not spring from any accident, if they had been a tropi¬ cal depression. for floating seafood in community centers, sckools ambitions for the presidential permitted to function or to be res¬ carried out as planned." There was no immediate taurants, 89 people were res¬ and other public buildings. nomination. Kennedy, he said. Iacocca, Fraser to break tradition and confer He said that if operators at the facility had allowed the indication what damage or in¬ jury the storm might have plant's emergency core cooling caused in China, whose govern DETROIT (UPI) — Discarding tradition, Chrysler Corp. President Lee. A. Iacocca plans to meet with United Auto Workers A UAW spokesperson said a meeting between an auto company president and a union bargaining team during contract system to perform as it .was designed to do, "damage to the core would most likely have ment does not customarily dis tribute extensive news of na¬ tural disasters. Get Ready for a Party President Douglas A. Fraser and the talks was without precedent. been prevented." The government in Hong union's negotiating team at a main table "We're assuming that he's going to tell Let our fine quality smoking bargaining session Friday. negotiators the problems of the corpora¬ Chrysler said Thursday the meeting tion," the union spokesperson said. paraphernalia, at fa-a-ntastic was arranged at the company's request. The subject of discussion was not Talks to renew contracts for 750,000 revealed, but presumably will focus on auto workers at Chrysler, General prices, excite you! the No. 3 automaker's dim financial Motors Corp. and the Ford Motor Co. are in their third week. Contracts position in relation to pending contract now expire talks. Sept. 14. The best selection ever in: clips Effectiveness of temperature mandate unclear pipes WASHINGTON (AP) — Energy Depart¬ outside Washington to check on such ment officials say it will be early reports. bongs September before they can determine how the public is complying with The department began only Wednes¬ SHOP A LOFTY LEVEL papers day to train inspectors, more than two President Carter's order for thermostats in public buildings to be set no lower than weeks after Carter ordered the tempera¬ ture controls under authority granted by THE 541 / sr and other accessories 78 degrees. And the air-conditioning season will be Congress earlier this year. BUILDING! Somebody Eire i Cloiot nearly over by then. So far, no state has agreed to help The department has received nearly monitor the temperature rules. The Berkey Hall , p»< Wusic 349-1850 Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. has clashed an appointment Curb made to the state repeatedly with Republican Lt. Gov. Mike Curb over what legal powers Curb has Appeals Court. The issue takes on greater importance Buy L This is the time for showing her when Brown leaves California. with the announcement this week by a (wet I Free! you love her—Rene Pavot." Now their battle is going to the state's Brown aide that the governor plans to troubled Supreme Court. make a bid for the Democratic presiden¬ In an order signed by acting Chief tial nomination. Buy any Primizia bra Justice Mathew Tobriner, the court Campaigning would take Brown out of or bikini and Maiden- agreed late Wednesday to hear two suits the state and if Curb's interpretation of Brown filed last May against Curb. form will send you the constitution is correct, that would One seeks to bar Curb from exercising hand him the reins of one free. * Primizia government, sets come with a powers of the governor unless Brown is including powers of appointment. strawberry applique, packed in their own unique strawberry Flooding in Indiana threaten eorn and soybeans carton. All cool cot¬ tons or cotton blends GRIFFIN, Ind. (AP) The raging half of Indiana for two weeks. On Wabash River punched through a series Wednesday, two teen-agers died when in lots of sun ripen¬ of earthen levees in southwestern they were swept into a storm sewer while ed colors. Indiana on Thursday, flooding 10,OCX) riding a rubber raft in Mitchell, Ind., and acres of farmlard and threatening the two young girls drowned when they were Primizia for Maiden- area's corn and soybean crops. washed into a flooded drainage ditch in form Indiana National Guard Adjutant Gen. Indianapolis. Alfred Ahner said there was no threat to Although the National Weather Serv¬ •he/ore Sept. 15 i^ene PaOot ice said dry weather could be expected at life, and Griffin itself, a farming com¬ munity of about 200 residents, was least through Saturday, flooding along the Wabash was expected to continue MORGAN'S protected by a newer levee. About six families were evacuated Thursday. through Monday. The river, which sepa¬ )J*Bottoms Tp rates Indiana and Illinois, was forecast to crest near here late Sunday at 4.5 feet ■Njf University Moll-2nd Level 220 M.A.C. East Heavy rains, which accompanied vio¬ Lansing lent storms, have drenched the southern above flood stage. 117 S. Washington Ave., Lansing 10-5:30 Mon.-Sat. 10-8Thurs. Mrmbn I mr Jnir/rr- CmU Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, August 3, 1979 3 Midland nuclear facility well over half completed Because of the Harrisburg incident, about a dozen changes in a By ROLAND WILKERSON State News Staff Writer wide variety of areas are "in the works" at the plant, said Terrance Amid local and national demonstrations opposing nuclear Sullivan, chairperson of the Midland Nuclear Safety Task Force. The task force was established to study safety implications of energy. Consumers Power officials say construction on the Midland nuclear power the Harrisburg incident on the design and operation of the Midland plant is well over half completed. plant. Gilbert S. Keeley, project manager for the Midland Nuclear Plant, said the project, which currently employs 3,800 workers, Commenting on an NRC report that found the Three Mile Island accident due largely to human error, Robert W. Montross, Midland was 63 percent completed Aug. 1. He added that by July 1, the plant operations manager, admitted human errors were possible. project had cost 1.1 billion dollars, with the final cost still "I can't guarantee that operators won't make a mistake," he unknown. said. He added, however, that operators have to go through State News An estimation of when the plant would begin operation has not several months of intensive training that include work on Deborah J. Borin been made because the Nuclear Regulatory Commission has simulated control panels. Raymond Sauvage, stopped reviewing licensing procedures, Keeley said. left, and Roy Pine Storage of used nuclear fuel could become a problem in the NRC officials are examining the circumstances surrounding an future if "reprocessing" is not allowed, said Doug Richards, work by a low pres¬ accident at the Three Mile Island nuclear plant near Harrisburg, supervisor of public relations at the Midland plant. sure rotor which will Penn., leaving them no time for other duties, Keeley said. "The plant will have to be shut down in 10 years if something is be turned by steam not done with the fuel," he said. created from heat in Due to excessive settling of one of the Midland buildings, workers piled sand around the base of the structure to speed up Richards advocated reprocessing of nuclear fuel, which allows a nuclear reactor as the process, Keeley said. He said this was done to avoid fuel to be used again. He said the drawback to the process involved part of a process to excesses of plutonium, a radioactive element with an extremely produce electricity. unexpected settling in the future, adding that he did not expect similar problems with other buildings. long half-life. Union election date to determine employee Radioactive representation set gas released By DEBBIE CREEMERS State News Staff Writer at Palisades The date of an election to determine union representation of hourly employees at MSU will be decided Aug. 20, a Michigan Employment Relations Commission spokesperson SOUTH HAVEN (UPI) - Consumers said Thursday. Power Co. this week notified the MERC, after reviewing exceptions and briefs filed by AFSCME Local 1585 and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission radio University Employees Union Local 1, ruled an election may be held. active gas was accidentally released "A pre election conference will be held at 11:30 a.m. Aug. 20 in the Lansing MERC into the atmosphere at the Palisades office," Marge Paquet, a spokesperson in the Detroit MERC office said. Paquet said the nuclear power plant. conference, between MSU, UEU-1, and AFSCME officials, will determine how and when R. J. Fitzpatrick, a Consumers FEASIBILITY STUDY the election will be held. spokesperson in Jackson, said Thursday small amounts of xenon and iodine gases The decision settles a long debate between UEU Local 1 and the American Federation escaped June 28 as a valve on a holding CATA board considers millage of State, County and Municipal Employees, a government workers union affiliated with the AFL-CIO which currently represents MSU employees. The conflict began when 800 union members signed cards expressing their desire for a tank in an auxiliary building was removed for repair. "The amount of radioactivity in the be done to allow for consistent planning." union election to determine who the exclusive bargaining agent for employees By JEFF MINAHAN gases that were released amounted to State News Staff Writer The millage would allow for more direct and predictable represented by Local 1585 would be — AFSCME or UEU Local 1, Michael Kluck, an attorney with the law firm representing UEU-1 said. only 0.097 percent of the xenon and 1.22 The CATA Board of Directors voted Wednesday to consider the funding. Leonard said. The people would be voting into law a- percent of the iodine that the Palisades certain rate of local subsidy based on the value of their property. An attorney for AFSCME subsequenty filed a blocking charge with MERC alleging possibility of a millage to replace current methods of local revenue i continued on plant is authorized to release at any one collection. page 16) Leonard said funding through a millage could time," Fitzpatrick said. The board authorized Capital Area Transportation Authority result in lower fares or an increase in the level of service. Such "All nuclear plants routinely release staffers to conduct a feasibility study of a millage to provide changes would small amounts of radioactive gases," revenues based on property tax assessments. depend on citizen input, he said. The final word said Jan Strasma, a spokesperson for on fares, however, would be up to the board, The feasibility study would consist of a market-type survey to check the response of Lansing area residents to the proposal. CATA currently receives subsidies from local governmental Leonard said. In other action, the board approved two route changes directly Climate cycles may the Nuclear Regulatory Commission in the Chicago area. Strasma described the release as a units which the agency serves, in addition to state and federal affecting MSU riders. "routine accident" and said only very funds. The route changes eliminate stops on Spartan Avenue in East low levels of radioactivity were re a Richard Leonard, planning and grants manager for CATA, said millage would replace the local subsidies. Lansing along the Towar Gardens route, and switch the campus access from Shaw Lane to Service Road on the Burcham-Hagadorn affect human events leased. "The idea is an infant," he said. "We know something has got to route. By JANET HALFMANN State News Staff W riter Columbus, Shakespeare, George Washington, the Industrial Revolution and Einstein Traffic violations get new status have a lot in common in Samuel Howard Bartley's book. The book is an eight-feet-long, thick black ledger, chock full of data about climate, culture and human behavior. Myth lovers And with it, predictions can be made on the course history will follow based on recurring By DENNIS PETROSKEY going to jail still was very small," he said, "but the new law State News Staff Writer Challenging traffic citations should be a little less painful for eliminates that possibility completely." Common traffic offense like parking meter violations, running cycles in climate and human behavior. Columbus, Shakespeare, George Washington, the Industrial Revolution and Einstein have day of are all products of warm-wet periods, with favorable rainfall and temperatures. violators in the future due to a state law which went into effect red lights, careless driving and improper lane usage will all be civil infractions in the future, he said. Such a climate results in periods of prosperity and produces dynamic leaders. Many of Wednesday. these have come down through history as "Golden Ages" and over 90 percent of the toga-therness eras The law makes most common traffic violations civil offenses However, drunk driving, reckless driving, failing to present a rather than criminal acts, as they had been in the past. valid operators license and driving on a revoked or suspended sovereigns who have been given the title "The Great" have reigned under this climatic license will still be misdemeanors, Ebersole said. condition, the data shows. The change is designed to do away with cumbersome court If a person commits a misdemeanor, the procedure will be The next transition from the cold to the warm side of the 100-year cycle is expected By JAMES KATES proceedings for persons who contest their citations, said Robert around the year 2000. And that should mean prosperity. State News Staff Writer Ebersole, MSU Department of Public Safety court prosecutor exactly as it has been in the past, with several appearances before a judge and an option to have a jury present, he said. "Animal House" it was not, but for 1,200 liaison officer. OTHER TEMPERATURES AND moisture combinations used to predict behavior are: bedsheet-clad junior-high and high-school The violator will now have an informal hearing in front of a Persons issued a citation charging them with a civil infraction have several options, he said. hot-dry, cool-wet and cold-dry. classics students, it was a "toga party" in magistrate, rather than having to appear several times before a Bartley, a former MSU psychology professor for 24 years, inherited the "Big Book" from the grandest Roman tradition. judge, he said. Violators can admit being responsible for the civil infraction, and will be told the amount of the fine, Ebersole said. his graduate school mentor, psychology professor Raymond Holder Wheeler, under whom During the informal hearing, only the violator and the police The occasion was "A Day in Old Rome," a he worked almost 50 years ago at the University of Kansas. officer will give evidence to the magistrate, without lawyers Violators can also request a hearing. They will be granted an Thursday afternoon filled with fun, games, informal hearing before the magistrate, unless a formal hearing is "Wheeler rebelled against the common belief that climate and weather affects plants and present, Ebersole said. animals but not people," Bartley said during his recent visit to MSU. and food, part of a week-long national In the past, violators had to hire a lawyer or defend themselves specifically requested, he said. convention of the Junior Classical League. A new option available to violators, Ebersole said, is admitting The "Big Book," dated 1936, lists 96 graduate students who worked with Wheeler Since Monday morning, the delegates have against the prosecuting attorney or city attorney, he said. collecting data to prove his theory that recurring cycles in human behavior parallel "The informal hearing is designed to make it a little easier for responsibility for the civil infraction, but offering an explanation been holed up in Shaw and McDonel halls, for why the law was violated. rhythms in the world's climate. violators to get through the court proceedings," Ebersole said. Wheeler and his assistants traced clues to the climate that prevailed for every decade in polishing their skills in Latin oration and However, the violator can still request a formal hearing with "The court now must consider the explanation, and it has the sharpening their grasp of ancient option to reduce the amount of the civil fine," he said. history from 600 B.C. to 1950. Information was drawn from myriad sources such as tree lawyers present, he said. mythology. law also eliminates the Ebersole said the new law "will take some time to get used to." rings, weather station reports and data on lake levels and crop failures. Ebersole said the new possibility of going Other researchers collected data on various human activities such as architecture, But Thursday afternoon, they agreed, "While we're learning, it's going to take a little longer to write to jail for violating most commong traffic regulations. i continued on page 11) i continued on page 16) "When traffic offenses were misdemeanors, the possibility of tickets." he said. □pinion MIKE MEGER1AN McGoff's dealings need scrutinizing Rationing may be the only way Panax Corp. President John McGoff failed to show up in federal court Tuesday to answer questions surrounding an alleged $11.3 million loan given to him by the South African government. U.S. District Judge President Carter's initiative to develop a compromise, whereby all existing conserva Sehlesinger failed to give them one. At the different problems persist in different Charles Renfrew imposed a $10,000 fine on McGoff, accusing him of gas rationing bill has been met with tion measures would remain intact, while time, the issue of fuel conservation was a states, and the problems of allocation, price academic than pressing issue. We had and availability are all too obvious. deliberately violating the court's orders. But the judge's decision leaves the more congressional disapproval. That's nothing president's reserved power to impose already come out of a shortage that taught But I see no other direction for this new; rationing does not set well with many rationing in emergency situations becomes many questions unanswered regarding McGoffs intended use of the members of Congress. Nor does it set well law. us a few lessons. We realized our depen¬ country. We have been asked to practice a funds. with their constituents. dence on fuel sources overseas. We also number of conservation measures, but have That way, the possibility of ending up in We hope the McGoff query has not become a closed case. McGoffs Which is probably why the bill, if passed, dire need of gasoline and oil would be realized that simple conservation was easier not really given our all on any of them. If we must be forced to cut our consumption even lawyers attempted to sidestep litigation on the issue by asking Judge will include so many amendments aimed at reduced. We would use less fuels, and would than investigating oil companies and trying further, perhaps rationing is the only to uncover price-fixing schemes or hidden Renfrew to reconsider his order. But a fair amount of South African appeasing opponents of strict conservation, have the security of knowing that the answer. reserves. other energy restrictions currently in effect funds — $6.35 million to be exact — is still unaccounted for. The money, president could step in whenever consump Now that the country is entrenched in a Opponents of rationing may cite synthetic might be relaxed. according to South Africa's Erasmus Commission investigating the That would be a setback for this country, tion reached the point where a shortage was serious energy situation, the action that was fuels as a viable alternative. But the panacea imminent. scandal, was intended for the purchase of the Sacramento Union considering that many of those measures merely debated a few years ago needs of synthetic fuels is a myth. Even if the newspaper, a deal which surfaced after McGoff tried unsuccessfully to have not taken their toll on American The country seems to have wanted such implementation. fuels were to be supplied in abundance, lifestyles the that rationing would. an arrangement all along. Energy Secretary This country needs a gas rationing plan. they would not erase the overwhelming buy the Washington Star. way This is not to say that we are in need of it demand for energy, which would only grow The commission's allegations have led to a shakeup in the South There is nothing so traumatic about James Sehlesinger was harshly criticized for lowering thermostats to 65 degrees in the his mismanagement of the energy situation. immediately. But we must develop legisla¬ greater if more fuel — of any kind — was African government's administration. South African President John tion with the future in mind, and should not available. winter, and raising them to 78 degrees in the Surely, his opponents were not calling for Vorster reportedly resigned after the committee accused him of summer. But it is a measure that the U.S. Congress to allow runaway consumption of be dissuaded because of a sudden abundance There is no sense in arming ourselves with covering up the multi-million dollar scandal, which was supposed to House is willing to do away with — should it fuel. They wanted Sehlesinger to push for an of gas at the pumps for the month of August. fuel alternatives if we plan on using them as clean up South Africa's image in the media. accept Carter's gas rationing plan. energy package that would put some limits Michigan suffered less than other states an excuse to consume at gluttonous rates. It would be nice if someone could strike a on the country's intake. during the most recent gas crunch. Yet Unfortunately, whatever measures the McGoff s guilt has yet to be determined. But the evidence against him Governor Milliken had the foresight to sign president takes will be unpopular. But as the is quite convincing. McGoff s alleged transaction was the tail end of an into law a bill delegating himself emergency decade winds down, the energy problem international network of channels used for funneling South African powers to deal with any more arising energy continues to snowball into an issue that funds into McGoffs hands. McGoff reportedly received the funds as a shortages. The bill is hailed as one of the warrants increasing attention. Carter is most significant achievements by the being asked to shoulder the burdens caused foreign loan through a Swiss bank account, making it difficult for authorities to determine where the loan originated. Michigan Legislature this year. by other administrations. It cannot be done Although I am not totally in favor of giving if Congress continues to weaken his efforts. But the U.S. Justice Department, now investigating the allegations the governor almost dictatorial powers for The gas rationing plan is a perfect against McGoff, should not let up on its inquiry. So far, all we know is any situation, I feel the governor should example of Carter's attempt to implement that McGoff failed to appear in court. We have yet to find out where he have the power to force us to cut energy his energy goals. Congress may succeed at is, or what happened to the loan. consumption in emergency situations. stalling the proposal for now, but it will come I see no reason why such thinking could back to haunt them when the gas lines We also know, however, that the scandal has led to the resignation of not be applied on a national basis. Of course. reappear. a man who governed South Africa for 12 years. If the accusations made by the committee were that damaging, perhaps the improprieties they discovered need a closer look. McGoff may have avoided a subpoena, but the Justice Department undoubtedly still wants answers to the questions surrounding McGoffs dealings. Letters Ratify SALT II We've reached adequate growth I would like to put into writing and to clarify a number of points I raised at the Planning With reports of Soviet military build-up continually creeping across Commission hearing July 11.1 appreciate the opportunity to be heard in this fashion as I American newswires, former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger has have valued working on the Environmental Quality Advisory Committee. stated his support of a SALT II ratification. He has given his approval to Most important, I believe we cannot equate development and planning with expansion. the controversial agreement, but with three important stipulations. Development may imply balancing what is already there or even decreasing quantities or elimination. Expansion in East Lansing should not take place simply because of the While we agree with one of these, we find the other two most demands of a few. for personal benefit. The criterion should be what is best for the distressing. community as a whole; what do its members want. I believe that before we go to fill all sites deemed available' with housing or business or parking, we should ask whether such Kissinger has stated he favors the SALT II agreement if Congress amends the treaty that was signed by President Carter and Communist growth is desirable. Perhaps this is all obvious; yet I believe this question is not raised often enough. It is my own feeling that East Lansing has reached a point of growth which Party Leader Brezhnev in Vienna last June. His call for amendments is adequate, and that we should work on balancing resources and facilities which are stems from the ambiguities he said leaves the United States in a poor available. bargaining position. Second I do not believe that public funds should be used to promote private benefit. I We feel these concerns are not appropriate at this time. The treaty, as do not think that business should be given tax or other benefits. If a commerce cannot survive on the merits of its work, then so be it. It is delusion to allow citizens to pay for negotiated by Carter and Brezhnev, should be passed expeditiously by the combined legislative components of Congress. Compromise, if one goods via taxes rather than directly. I also believe that commerce and automobile driving consumers should pay for parking rather than the public in general. The rest of the should use that word in reference to such a delicate debate, should not population already pays' by the pollution, accidents, and ugliness produced by detract from a worthy attempt at peaceful co-existence. automobiles. Kissinger's comments, though, on the necessity of a linkage provision This brings me to my third point: the blight of automobiles. I believe that users of between the United States and the Soviet Union regarding the Soviet's private automobiles should be taxed for the harm they do to others, per mile and per gas "geopolitical conduct" throughout the world are relevant. The Soviet's VIEWPOINT: EDGAR L. HARDEN mileage. The harm is measurable in accidents, pollution, and public inconvenience and ugliness. I do not expect you to raise such taxes, but I would hope that you do what you expansion of influence in various parts of the world must be somehow can to promote other, less dangerous and offensive means of transportation while tied to a lasting arms treaty. The sorry situation in the Middle East leaves too much to one's imagination; encounters of the Communist kind are abhorrent to pro and con treaty advocates alike. Harden left some discouraging use of automobiles. Our city will be a more pleasant place to be. Robert A. Hahn But it was Kissinger's comments on increasing defense allocations in All of one better than half of two this country that do not sit at all well with us. The status of our armed forces has not adequately been determined. The volunteer army experiment seems unsuccessful considering the reported fact that problems intact I am writing to suggest that the Daily TV Highlights be expanded to include the day The State News is not printed. It would be helpful if Tuesday's schedule would be Warsaw Pact conventional forces outnumber ours by 2 to 1. When one By REGINALD THOMAS employee and was not necessarily eligible included in Monday's paper, likewise, Thursday's schedule in Wednesday's paper. considers the highly-trained and efficient nature of these forces, our for grievance procedures. But considering It would also be nice if the comics which are continued from day to day, (ie Peanuts, Now that Edgar L. Harden is preparing Harden's "concern" for affirmative action, it Doonesbury) were printed in sequence. We would miss a whole new episode toward the defense troops seem to be destined for destruction when a war-like to step down as president of MSU, various would s that she would have been end of summer, but I feel it is better to get everything of one episode rather than half of encounter arises. members of the MSU community have been granted grievance. Allowing two episodes. Nevertheless, the increased defense allotment Kissinger calls for lauding him with kudos. Harden has been grievance procedure to take place would Rachael Warden should not be implemented at this time. We have too many other urgent credited for doing everything from raising have shown the University's commitment the morale of the University to bringing the to affirmative action, concerns, and too many more important priorities to allocate limited funds for complex weaponry triple crown in basketball, football and There are only two blacks in executive that will become out-dated before they can baseball. But no one to credit level be relied upon. positions and after Sept. 1, neither of Harden with pushing one of the only three those two will be around. The University top black executives in the administration out of his office. claims that although there are no top level black executives, they are still committed The State News When Harden recommended that the to affirmative action. It is just that the Nobody's home Board of Trustees hire Lou Anna Simon as Affirmative Action director, he demoted Human Relations Director Ralph Bonner. people who exist at the executive level do 'at the pleasure of the president." Meanwhile, Harden is being praised for Editorials ore the opinions of and letters are personal Friday, August 3, 1979 opinions the State News. Viewpoints, columns Meridian Township's recent letter campaign to verify voter No longer does Bonner have any major the great job he has done at MSU. the way registration totals in some MSU residence halls is another episode in a input on the University's Affirmative he slammed dunked for two. The great Action Program. In fact many now wonder block he threw. And the no-hitter he Editorial Department long and unnecessary political fiasco. The letters were sent to spring what Bonner's title and job entail. And Editor-in-Chief / Robins term students who signed petitions calling for the annexation of portions pitched. If you're wondering when they Photo Editor Kim VanderVeer some far as to speculate whether Managing Editor Sheila Beachum go as happened. I'll tell you. The slam dunk was Entertainment & Book Edi or Bill Holdship of East Complex to the City of East Lansing. Meridian Township's Bonner w:ll be around much longer. Opinion Editor Michael Megerian against disgruntled minority group mem News Editor Janet Halfmann Sports Editor David Janssen strategy was thoughtfully conceived, calling for the sending of those Meanwhile Lou Anna Simon, whose bers who protested Lou Anna Simon's Wire Editor Paul Cox Layout Editor Paula M Mohr Chief Copy Editor Sandra Sweeney letters at a time when the township should have known all of the signees appointment was temporary, has received appointment. The block was against Mary Staff Representative Mchele McElmurry would be at other addresses. Meridian's shenanigans, however, may an extension on her job and a $10,000 salary Pollock's request for grievance procedures. increase. Harden had earlier said that a And the no-hitter was his recent support of have overstepped legal boundaries. Advertising Department nationwide search would be conducted to Banks. The campaign, begun by Meridian Township officials without RonMacMillan Asst Advertising Manager Pat Ore fill Simon's temporary position. But con¬ Thomas is (he editor-in-chief of People s Choice consulting township Clerk Virginia White, is that community's most sidering Simon's job extension and magazine recent response to the annexation question. Officials there have stated monetary increase there is doubt as to a their reasons for opposing the annexation of parts of East Complex, but new search. She seems to be firmly none of them seems justified. When all the political rhetoric is brushed entrenched in her new position. And this aside, one can determine the underlying motivation for the negative wouldn't be so bad if the racial minorities on DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau campus didn't complain about the change. feelings — money. Representatives of the black faculty, I'M SURPRISED 70 HEAR THE PRESS D/PNT STOP VIETNAM, If the property in question is turned over to East Lansing, Meridian black students. Native Americans, Asian YOU QUESTION YOUR OWN ALL TT DID WAS REELECTA GROOV¬ GATE ALIVE. BUT TT WAS THE COURTS WE BETTER CALL IT A NIGHT, JOAN, Township will lose approximately $120,000 in state and federal Americans, Chicano students and other POWER, DICK. AFTER ALL, MW ING NATIONAL CONSENSUS. WALTER AND NIXON'S OWN TAPES THAT ,^A,,nro I THE PRESS STOPPED CRONK1TE MAY HAVE FACE HE'S STARTIN6 TO ITS ALL CHER, revenue-sharing funds. So, Meridian Township has decided to fight for groups protested Simon's appointment. ULTIMATELY FORCED CON- ^r\ BBLE-. HONEY. HES PUBLIC OPINION, BDT HE \ their financial security. They said her appointment for was a "victory" white women at the expense of racial ■ vmssr* sr NEVER LED IT! TO MOVE. NOT IHE DAMN PRESS! / > TV 1 LEAVING.. \ Ingham County Commissioner Mark Grebner, who has faithfully minorities." represented the students of MSU in this instance, claims the letters are Harden claimed the appointment was an illegal. In the letters, Meridian Township asks student voters whether attempt to improve the spirit of affirmative or not they want their registration continued. Grebner's attorney, action. Rut he supported Robert F. Banks for assistant provost. Ranks' affirmative Richard Kinkade, said a 1971 Supreme Court decision prohibits treating action track record is less than impressive. students differently for voting purposes. The constitutionality of this Harden also refused to allow Mary Pollock most recent development has not yet been determined. use of the grievance procedure after she The seemingly simple issue of efficient voting at MSU, in the had been dismissed by the University. meantime, will have to be settled at a later date. It is true that Pollock was not a full time Michigon State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday August 3, 1979 5 <()\WREHi;\SIVE PLAN PHASE TWO E. L. planning continues By JEFF MINAHAN As an example, Owen cited housing in East Lansing as an State News Staff Writer active-constrained issue. He explained that resources available for student housing in the The second phase in the formulation of East Lansing's new Comprehensive Plan began Wednesday as the Planning Commis city are constrained, necessitating a change in policy on that issue. sion began scaling down eight advisory committee reports. In addition, the city would take an active role in promoting the City Planning Administrator Robert Owen presented the development of this housing in the city. commission a set of proposed scenarios to be used as "working Owen told the commission the advisory reports contain a great documents" from which the commission will formulate the actual deal of information which "has to be put together into something scenarios. we can act on." The final scenarios will be used to classify issues and The commission asked the city planning staff to put together a recommendations from the advisory reports to facilitate the system identifying areas of conflict between the reports in commission's efforts to scale down the reports, Owen said. addition to issues not covered in any of the reports, referred to a: The terms used to define the scenario categories relate to the gaps. role of city government in carrying out the recommendations and Owen said the basic intent in this phase of the process is the availability of resources. The terms "active" and "passive" twofold; to come up with a system in which the commission can take define the government's role, while "continued" and "constrained" the large number of recommendations in the advisory reports and describe available resources, Owen said. group them into categories, and at the same time maintain a high The proposed scenario categories into which a recommendation level of public interest in the process. would be place are "active-continued", "active-constrained," Owen advised commission members they were only at the first "passive-continued" and "passive-constrained." step in the process of developing the scenarios. "We are in stage one," Owen said. "This is the first step, not the end product. This is an attempt to convey to the commission what the staff is thinking. It is a focus for building the scenarios." ERA requires no According to commission members, the immediate task is to clearly define the scenario categories in order to efficiently classify the recommendations. Various commission members expressed concern about the vagueness of the "continued" and "constrained" terms defining The 1979 MSI' basketball team gets recognition again. The East Lansing City limit sign at the corner of Haga- re-ratification available resources. Ralph Monsma, chairperson of the commission, need to clarify the meaning of the two terms. said there is a dorn Road and Grand River Avenue bolt on the new sign. has a new addition as of Wednesday, as Jud Heathcote tightens the final "We've got three or four suitable definitions, and different are using different ones," Monsma said. Kelley indicates people Monsma said he expects the commission to have the problems By United Press International Attorney General Frank Kelley was praised by women's rights worked out within a week. Commission member Daniel clarify the terms. Chappelle agreed there is a need to 77/// fiasco' quickly blows over activists and condemned by conservatives Thursday for saying the "There is no way of determining which resources are scarce," he So for the foreseeable future, things will be well-ventilated, if said. "There is a lot of room for doubt." By JAMES KATES Legislature need not re-ratify the embattled Equal Rights State News Staff Writer not cool. Amendment. "I think we're going to be a little more comfortable now," said For 60.000 steamed-up state employees, today marks the end of Critics of the amendment say congressional action extending the David Winters, acting executive director of the Michigan State a long, hot week. But things are expected to cool down a bit. deadline for adoption of the ERA invalidated its approval in states Employees Association, which lobbied against the "fan ban." The office workers, already sweltering under 78-degree heat as such as Michigan that mentioned the original time limit in their ratification resolutions. Divers recover per the president's guidelines, have also been without electric fans since they were confiscated about a week ago. "But I'd like to see a comprehensive state policy dealing with high temperatures." Winters said. "Perhaps we'll have to accept Kelley rejected that argument, saying the Legislature did not But state Department of Management and Budget officials, who different standards of dress, like they do in countries where air condition its approval of the measure merely by mentioning the conditioning isn't common." discovered that there is no "fan ban" in the president's guidelines, deadline. "This is certainly a victory for those who have been working for equal rights for all members of our society," said Rep. Perry ship's propeller have decided to allow personal fans in the offices once again. A memo authorizing the return of the fans was sent out Wednesday, said Herbert DeJonge, DMB deputy director. Bullard, who requested the opinion. PARADISE (UPI) — U.S. Navy scuba divers have recovered The "fan fiasco" began July 24, when an anonymous author in "We can now concentrate our energies on those states that have the two-ton propeller of the pioneering steam ship Indiana, which the Department of Transportation sent a memo to DMB officials, yet to ratify this amendment," the liberal Ann Arbor Democrat sank in Lake Superior off northern Michigan more than 121 years complaining that the fans were noisy and unsightly, defeating the said. ago, a Smithsonian Institution official said Thursday. "The attorney general is full of crap," said Sen. John Welborn, The divers are part of a 50-member team, representing a half purpose of energy guidelines by using just as much electricity as ADVENTURE SEASON J air conditioners. the outspoken conservative who headed Ronald Reagan's 1976 Michigan primary campaign. dozen federal and state agencies, which is working 20 hours a day this week to take apart the Indiana's propulsion system, and haul Apparently, the memo's contents were taken at face value. IS HERE A Maintenance workers moved through state office buildings that at it to the surface. night, confiscating both state-owned and personal fans. "HE'S TOTALLY OFF the wall," the Kalamazoo Republican The Smithsonian Institution in Washington became interested Workers who arrived the next day to find their offices fan-less GREAT LAKES J. said. in the wreck of the Indiana after its rediscovery four years ago, were hot and bothered by more than just the temperature. MOUNTAIN SUPPLY "There's absolutely no way Congress can pass an extension and, because the ship was known to have one of the first steam engines "I thought the action represented confusion and was irritating a because Michigan ERA was ratified earlier, then include it," he in commercial use on the great lakes. lot of people." said Howard Tanner, director of the state we can make your next adventure said. The 350-ton Indiana, commissioned in 1844, was the first known Department of Natural Resources. "I thought there hadn't been the best ever with some of these "Kelley, who is supposed to represent the state of Michigan on vessel to use the Ericcson screw propeller. Up until that time, thoughtful consideration of the issue." exclusive items at G.L.M.S. states' rights issues, is totally taking a cop-out on this opinion." steam boats used side wheels for propulsion. Tanner and others went to bat for the irritated employees, GORE-TEX < 1'itiiing. >le»'pingtiags& -h.-lt.-r- Michigan ratified the ERA in 1972 — only months after it was Salvagers working from a barge five miles off remote Crisp ♦ are asking that fans be allowed at least around copy machines and in ♦ SYNERGY WORKS t »«,>, k-.v park;.* proposed by Congress. Point on the southern shore of Lake Superior, which was anchored . "dead spots" lacking ventilation. The temperature in those spots, ♦ CARIBOU MOUNTAINEERING Last fall, when it appeared the women's rights measure would in place earlier this week. not be fully ratified by the original 1979 deadline, Congress gave the they said, could soar up around 90 degrees, affecting productivity ♦ M.S.R. Madeleine Jacobs, a Smithsonian information officer, said and causing havoc for workers with health problems. ♦ MARMOT MOUNTAIN WORKS amendment an additional three-year lease on life. Thursday that good weather has allowed divers to make rapid After a hot and heavy meeting Tuesday, DMB officials Check < )ur Spring Specials The Legislature's ratification vote "approved the substance of progress on dismantling the eight-ton drive plant. relented. Personal fans would be returned to workers and would the proposed amendment," Kelley said. Once the entire drive system is recovered, it will be hauled by be allowed in offices again, they said. State-owned fans would be "While the ratifying resolution made reference to the procedural barge to the Army Corps of Engineers dock in Sault Ste. Marie, allowed around heat generating equipment and in poorly-venti¬ element stating the time for ratification, the Michigan Legislature loaded on railroad flat cars and transported to the Smithsonian in lated areas. acted within that time and was not required to approve the time for Washington, Jacobs.said. Placement of state-owned fans is to be determined by an other states to give their approval," Kelley said. In addition to the Smithsonian, Navy and Army, agenices "energy coordinator" in each department, DMB officials said. "Thus, its simultaneous action of approving the time frame for participating in the salvage operation are the U.S. Coast Guard, ratification was not a necessary element and in no way conditioned Bowling Green State University of Ohio, and the historical division its ratification of the proposed amendment. of the Michigan Department of State, which has donated the "It is, therefore, my opinion that re-ratification of the proposed engine to the Smithsonian. constitutional amendment is not required." Perhaps THE stereo savings event of the summer! 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Jacobson's Across From Berkey £) Michigon State News, Eost Lansing, Michigan Friday, August 3, 1979 'Frisco 'daiKwitty delight 1NTERTAINMENT By BYRON BAKER State News Reviewer In the wake of a series of particularly mediocre movies, The Frisco Kid (Warner Bros.; at the Meridian Eight Thea¬ tres) is especially welcome for Outdoor musicals premiere this week its wit, originality and gentle By ROSANNE SINGER costumer. who would not ordinarily at¬ new season tonight at 8 with humor. The picture is exceed¬ three one-act plays. These in¬ State News Reviewer The cast of West Side Story tend the show. Among these ingly winning and pleasant — in Outdoor Lansing will provide will perform across Lansing groups are the elderly, handi- clude: The Zoo Story by Ed¬ fact, thanks to an off-beat and ward Albee, The Marriage Pro¬ the setting for two upcoming rooftops and up and down fire cappers and the poor. exceptionally funny perfor¬ musical productions, escapes. The production will Showtimes all nights are at posal by Anton Chekov and Camelot mance by Gene Wilder, a solid and West Side Story. take place at the 100 block of 8:40 p.m. Home Free by Lanford Wilson. supporting turn by Harrison Camelot opens Washtenaw next to the City Other happenings in theater The plays run through Sunday Ford and the deft, skillful tonight and will take place along the river¬ Fish Company. THIS WEEKEND INCLUDE: and from August 10 to 12 at the direction by the veteran Robert front next to the City Market The show is being produced Lansing Center for the Arts. Aldrich, the film is among the Arts Encounter opens on the south side of the Shia¬ by Tom Thompson, the presi¬ their For information call 484-4403. most charming and sweet-na- wassee Street Bridge. dent of Ca Capo Inc., which is tured Western comedies ever Director Robert Burpee, the Michigan Theater Restora made. acting program director of the tion Project. All proceeds from It's an admittedly ambitious LCC theater department, said the production go to the ARTS ENCOUNTER THEATRE TROUPE and, well, different kind of A ceto funded project Western. Michael Elias and that his stage crew has con¬ project. presents The first performance of Frank Shaw's original screen¬ structed an elaborate castle for THE marriage proposal the production and that the West Side Story that took place ANTON CHEKOV play deals with the adventures in the costumes will be elegant. city setting occurred in and varied fortunes of a novice "I think because we're an 1974 and was inspired by HOME FREE! THE ZOO STORY Polish Rabbi as he braves his LANFORD WILSON EDWARD ALBEE educational institution, we can Thompson. Only a couple of the way across the American fron¬ AUG 3-5, 10-13 at 8 pm tier of 1850. Unlike most of the put more money into it than original participants appear in other groups in the area," he the present production. CENTER FOR THE ARTS pictures in the genre of the last This production is different decade or so, The Frisco Kid said. Burpee, who started out as from the original in that several 425 S. GRAND, LANSING. isn't interested in tearing up or making light of the conventions an actor, said he now finds members of the Latino com¬ ^ FOR INFO CALL 372-4636 ADULTS $2.25 STUDENTS AND CHILDREN $1.00 of the Western. Instead, Elias, directing more thrilling. At munity appear in the musical's* LCC he directed The Children's Puerto Rican roles. Shaw and Aldrich — who has Polish rabbi Avram Belinski (Gene Wilder, right) poses with Tommy (Harrison Hour and a local version of "We're helping each other made some impressive West¬ erns in the past — try to work Ford), a kind-hearted outlaw, in Warner Brothers' comedy-western, The Frisco Meeting of the Minds. During out," said Tammy Ison, publi¬ within the genre, albeit by Kid. the summer of 1978 he directed city director and cast member. means of a new approach: The No, No Nanette. He staged a "They teach us words to use Frisco Kid is possibly the first World with his customary wide on screen: while Avram has his raffish and charismatic in the production of The Last Meeting when we're screaming and Jewish Western. and innocent eyes. Granted, he moments of buffoonery, he is manner of the young Warren of the Knights of the White fighting." is beaten and robbed soon after never seen as a fool, or as a Beatty, and the camera, as Magnolia for the BoarsHead West Side Story opens Tues¬ Wilder plays Avram Belinski, his arrival in Philadelphia, but joker. He makes Avram a Howard Hawks used to say, Theater in the fall of 1978. day and runs through August a recent graduate of a Warsaw he's undisillusioned. Avram whole person. Aldrich, too, has "likes him." Ford handles the Camelot tonight 11. All seats are $4 and are Yeshiva. His rabbinical training runs ! hasn't come eaily — of a class of isn't sure exactly where San never made such a nice, gently rounded comedy before. The comedy fairly well, and is through Sunday and Aug. 10 general admission tickets. They J J"obd & J)rink "Establishment] eighty-eight, Avram ranked a Francisco is (near California, he particularly effective in relat¬ through Aug. 12. In case of rain can be purchased at the Lan¬ close eighty-seventh. He's fair¬ thinks), but he doggedly sets film's tone is never too harsh — ing to Avram. When he comes alternate performances will sing Center for the Arts or at Corner of M.A.C. Albert ly naive, a little slow, and a out for it. Ill-equipped for the a problem for the director in to realize how important the take place the following Mon¬ the Meridian or Lansing Mall 1 bumbler, besides — but there's journey — to look at Avram, the past four or five years — or bond between the Rabbi and days, August 6 or 13. One Knapps stores. SUNDAY SPECIALS too tough, or morbid. him has become, it isn't a trite, hundred reserved seats are Each night of the show a something oddly endearing one might question whether The picture feels just right — forced or maudlin moment. It different Lansing restaurant is 1 about him. Something holy. As he tells a young Amish he's equipped for any journey — he comes close to starving un hurried, dependable, trust¬ seems about right. available each night and cost $5. General admission seats are offering a 10 percent discount Brunch (10:30-1:30)—all you can eat of until he meets up with some¬ worthy like a movie of thirty Terence Marsh's production $4 and are available on. a first off on their menu with the an arrav of great breakfast favorites boy early on, "God made me a and forty years ago — but design is good looking and purchase of a ticket. The rabbi." When the boy asks why, Avram can only wistfully and time gun-fighter and bank-rob¬ ber Tommy Lillard (Ford). never slows. After all, Elias, faithful to period detail, while come, first serve basis. Student and senior citizen admission is schedule is as follows: Tuesday, I '3.95 It was perhaps a calculated Shaw and Aldrich have plenty Robert Hauser's camerawork is $2. Showtime is at 8:30 p.m. Jim's Tiffany: Wednesday, resignedly reply, "God had Dinner risk to team Wilder, who is of surprises up their sleeves. first-rate, evoking sepia tones The three main roles Alex's; Thursday, Clara's; Fri¬ (4:00 to close)—our famous all enough farmers." This trace of are holiness, added to his slight probably the most original and Wilder has a great deal of fun of Western photographs with¬ being played by Dick Hill as day, Hobie's; and Saturday, i' you can eat spaghetti, special feature homemade grasp of English, is sufficient distinctive comic actor in mo¬ with his on-again, off-again out over-statement. The pic¬ King Arthur, Susie Breck as Famous Taco. meat & mushroom sauce, includes salad & roll for the Chief Rabbi to make vies today, with Aldrich, best Polish dialect, yet the film's ture's flow is a bit choppy — Guinevere and Kent Vander- A special performance of arrangements to send Avram known for his tough, dark keystone is Ford, who has to most of Aldrich's films run long, kolk as Lancelot. Mitzi Carol West Side Story takes place i for only '2.25 to San Francisco to spread the actioners and dramas, but it has react to all of Avram's unortho and there's every chance that has choreographed the produc¬ this Saturday for those people wisdom of the Torah. Frisco, in paid off handsomely — the dox Orthodox ideas. The prom The Frisco Kid was at one time tion, Attila Farkas is musical the midst of the gold rush, can talents of the two seem to have ise shown by the actor in Star much longer than its current director, Marilyn Pierce is the use all the spirituality Poland rubbed off on each other. Never Wars and his memorable bit as 122 minute running time — but vocal director, Ruth Long has can spare. before has Wilder displayed Bob Falfa in American Graffiti is here finally redeemed. He's it's no real problem. The film works pretty well. designed the sets and Susann A SUMMER PLACK Avram greets the New such emotional range or depth Imshaug is the show's SATURDAY NIGHT Davies' Kinks are mediocre on Budget Rum Special 2 Complete ft OFF Steak Dinners By JOHN NEILSON The Kinks' return to rock 'n sixties is considered "old- number (and one that promises easily transcends the disco plus Vt Carafe State News Reviewer roll songs on the Sleepwalker fashioned" by an audience that to sound great in concert). classification with its intelligent All Your Favorite of House Wine The impact made by Ray album was greeted with wide¬ has grown up on epic, high- The other, "National Health," (continued on page 7) Davies and the Kinks on rock 'n spread enthusiasm by long-time Rum Drinks production extravaganzas, roll as we know it cannot be fans, and that album is easily bone-crushing heavy metal and Perhaps THE stereo savings event of the summer! overestimated. Uncounted their best in recent years. Their disco, and the commercial pres¬ waves of rock guitarists have borrowed from the gritty sound 1978 follow-up, Misfits, was pleasant enough, but it proved sure to conform to the expecta¬ tions of this audience is no IZ, 2Z, 3Z HMHV Mi pioneered on such early Kinks insubstantial in the long run, doubt very high. A compromise GOOD FOOD • PIZZA • SPIRITS hits as "You Really Got Me," and my personal copy hasn't would seem to be in order, but Open M-F: 11 o.m. Sot.: 12:00 Sun.: 2:(H and the song itself was recently a major hit for Van Halen (for what that's worth). Later, dur¬ left the shelves since I re¬ viewed it in this paper. Still, the Kinks are a long-time the problem with compromises is that more often than not they fail to satisfy either extreme. -i i 4TTv 1227 E. Grond River 1 Blk. W. of Hogodorn 332 6517 ing the mid-sixties, the Kinks personal favorite, and I look Low Budget is loaded with put out a string of classic forward to every album with compromises. Three of the WAREHOUSE SALE albums that were equal to anything the Beatles, Stones and Who were producing — high hopes. Unfortunately, the higher s'ongs are disco tunes, which in itself is a surprise coming from a band that rarely cashes in on HUGE SAVINGS on 1, 2, and 3-of-a kind receivers, turntables, decks & speakers NIVERSITY_ albums that still rank with the one's expectations are, the more disappointed you become passing trends (psychedelia, Item (fatten all-time best in rock 'n roll. After their success in 1970 when those expectations are blues, glitter, etc.). Even more FRI. AND SAT. ONLY not met, and such is the case surprising is the fact that two with "Lola," the Kinks began to put more and more of their with the Kinks new album, Low Budget (Arista AB 4240). Low of these songs are among the best on the LP (the other is THE SUNDAY Nrui fork effort into ambitious concept instantly forgettable). "Super¬ Budget is not a bad album, it's albums. Some of these, like man" is the latest attempt by just depressingly mediocre for Soap Opera and Schoolboys In Disgrace, were clever stories a band that has done such great things in the past. Davies to capture the feelings of the "little people" he is so $1.30 that were carried by the kind of fond of — in this case, "a rock 'n roll the band is famous Part of the problem is that nine-stone weakling with for. On the other hand there Ray Davies seems to be having knobbly knees" who wishes he was their Preservation series a hard time coping with the could fly like the Man of Steel. •USED BOOKS — an uneven three-album rock rapid changes that rock music The humor of Davies' lyrics and album that stretched leader has been and is undergoing. the underlying crunch of The classic rock style that STORE HOURS •PAPER BACKS Ray Davies' creative powers to brother Dave Davies' guitar the breaking point (and occa¬ Davies helped pioneer in the Mon. thru Sat. 8:00 a.m.-10:00 p.m. make this a very entertaining •MAGAZINES sionally beyond). Sunday 7a.m.-10p.m. 517 W. GRAND RIVER •HARDCOVERS Rock & Roll now to Saturday Just W. of the bus station special order service! First time at Lizard's 332-6685 TRADING POST DESSERTS yy established e. lansing 1976 BUY SELL 6r TRADE STKRKO GOODliS used Uanmstfitifl center; inc. Free pregnancy test *on a walk-in basis, confidentialM Magnepan Tympani IC speakers individual care from trained specialists: OHM F speakers *papsmear, breast exam, b.c. pills Phase Linear 400 amp •diaphram fitting, pap, breast Teac Tascam 40-4 •IUD, pap, breast Beogram 1900 •pelvic exam—any reason turntable •pregnancy termination by vacuum aspiration Pioneer 8282 Cassette •advanced termination thru 20 weeks will be discussed \ Deck Sun. Salt Creek C-R at our centers. Next Wk. Vanessa Davis R&B Mcintosh 110 Pre-amp •counseling no charge tuner — blue cross, medicaid fizapd'i Stereo systems from • free VD testing $75 up 927 E. Grand River 4737 Marsh Road 509 E.Michigan (Mrpdepgpound Restaurant & Bar atBogueSt. across from Mac s nr. Grand River behind Meijer's Lansing, Mi. 48833 Ph. (517)485-4391 224 Abbott 351-2285 riday August 3, 1979 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Youngs tribute to 25 years of rock n roll "ood to r brilliant LP of his career. Rust all. By BILL HOLDSHIP us State News Reviewer Never Sleeps (Reprise HS Romantic desperation is the "Our motto is 'Rust Never 2295) is a "live" LP taken from key term to describe the music Sleeps.' The thing is to con¬ Young's '78 fall tour, and the on Rust Never Sleeps, the stantly fight the decay that is soundtrack to his forthcoming album. While it's somewhat going on. Musically, the prom¬ "fantasy concert" film of the disappointing that the album ise of the '60s was that we were same title. Young brought the isn't a triple set including the going to put out. Now, most of show to Pine Knob last Septem¬ entire concert intact, the selec the people who were capable of ber, and it remains one of the tions included here work better delivering are just rusting." — weirdest-yet-greatest rock 'n in conveying Young's "Rust" Ned Young, 1978 roll concerts this reviewer has themes — death, the loss of Throughout this decade, ever experienced. idealism, and the betrayal of many people have anxiously The much-discussed "Rust the promises rock 'n roll once been awaiting the "new Dylan." Never Sleeps" tour was the one made. Several performers have ini- that featured an extremely Like the concert, the album is surreal stage on which Star divided into acoustic and elec initially been given this dubious title, running the gamut from Wars Jawas, Close Encounter trie sides. Side one is the Springsteen to Costello to scientists, and Saturday Night acoustic side, and it opens with David Forbert (?!?), but it has Live Coneheads served as Young's legendary "My My, always been much to the re¬ Young's roadies and techni¬ Hey Hey (Out Of The Blue and cians. It was also the show Into The Black)," from which spective artist's chagrin and disadvantage. While it seems to which featured Jimi Hendrix's the "Rust Never Sleeps" con me that we really don't need a "The Star Spangled Banner," cept is derived. Also like the "new Dylan" (after all, would the Beatles' Sgt. Pepper's al¬ concert, the tune is reprised as he or she become a "Born bum, old Beach Boys tunes an electric one at the LP's Again" impersonation of Neil (with the vocals filtered out?!?), conclusion, and it will be dis Diamond in the late '80s), it also seems that the '70s equivalent with a bit of esoteric nonsense been captured on vinyl before. of Bob Dylan has been right in the typically eccentric Young His phenobarbitol riffs and Even more than a grand celebration of rock under our noses all along. This vein: "And maybe Marlon brilliant use of feedback recall artist, of course, is Neil Young. romanticism, the "Rust Never Sleeps" tour Brando/Will be there by the Hendrix at time, while at other This isn't to say that Young is had an eerie aura of romantic desperation, fire/We'll sit and talk of Holly¬ times it's reminiscent of Steve a generational spokesperson or wood 'And the good things Jones (the Sex Pistols) and as Young explored the major dilemma of Mick Jones (the Clash). the symbol of a countercultural there for hire/And the Astro¬ lifestyle in the same sense that rock 'n roll — growing old while trying to dome and the first tepee/Mar¬ The music alone on the LP's Dylan was during the '60s. The remain young — that is, trying to avoid the lon Brando, Pocahontas and second side is a grand celebra¬ '70s have been far too divided me." Young also provides tion of rock 'n roll at its purest, rust which invades us all. and complacent (what an ob¬ another bit of nonsensical-yet- and the lyrics to the reprise of scene that word!) for anyone to fill role. Nonetheless, Neil DEVO-like ideas (DEVO is cussed in more detail later in esoteric lyricism elsewhere on the LP when he comes up with "My My, Hey Hey" Young's message home crystal clear: "Hey hey, my my/rock 'n bring THE GREAT SUMMER Young has been one of the most the classic line — "Welfare reportedly featured in the film), this review. roll can never die/There's more important figures in '70s rock, a mothers make better lovers." fact documented on his three LP anthology, Decade, released and stage announcements from the 1969 Woodstock festival as Side one's highlight is the beautifully tender "Thrasher," "There's nothing under¬ ground or rebellious about most to the picture than meets the eye Hey hey, my my . . . The DINNER SPECIAL in which Young metaphorically two years ago. an integral part of the concept. rock anymore. That's why I dig king is gone but he's not The concept, according to looks at what happened to the Like Dylan, Young has the punks. What's healthy forgotten/Is this the story of Mid-summer madness has inflicted itself upon the PanTree worked and experimented with Young, was to put rock 'n roll hope and youthful idealism of about them is that they know it Johnny Rotten?/It's better to every primal form of American into a grand perspective. "It's the '60s. The tone is sorrowful uAU piss off the Eagles. It's so burn out 'cause rust never Restaurant — your favorite spot for eggs prepared oh,so folk, country and rock about American rock 'n roll, the ("They were lost in rock forma sleeps/The king is gone but he's music — whole trip," he told Newsweek tions or became park bench healthy to take potshots at many ways, and scrumptious desserts. The management 'n roll — giving new and music that's supposed to be not forgotten." Despite the wants you to know they have good things to eat on magazine. "When I play the mutations ."), but it ends melancholy tone of this tune — original dimensions to each. . . anti-Establishment and isn't Like the '60s Dylan, Young has Woodstock announcements, I with a bit of classic Young anymore." - Neil Young, 1978 and the LP as a whole — it is their dinner menu and some new dinner items you may not refused to give in to popular want the audience to be aware optimism ("So I got bored and The second side of Rust nonetheless heartwarming to know about, like delicious chicken enchiladas topped with commercial whims. And while that something really did hap¬ left them there, they were just know that a jaded yet-romantic Never Sleeps demonstrates Young may not be the spokes¬ pen, that we started something deadweight to me . . . But me once and for all that Neil Young optimist like Neil Young is an original guacamole sauce and served with retried back then." But even more I'm not stopping there, got my beans, soup and salad. person for an entire generation, new and Crazy Horse stand with the keeping the faith. he has perhaps been the fore¬ than a grand celebration of rock own row left to hoe.") It is Rust Never Sleeps is not only Ramones as America's greatest most poet-philosopher to a cult romanticism, the "Rust Never stunning! current rock 'n roll band. In one of the greatest albums of of rock romantics who have Sleeps" tour had an eerie aura The side continues with fact, the chord structure to this year or even this decade. It Present this month's coupon you can easily find in your viewed this decade with vary¬ of romantic desperation, as "Pocahontas" which looks at "Sedan Delivery" — one of the is one of the greatest tributes State News and, as a special offer to you and your friends Young explored the major the betrayal of the American the glory of rock 'n roll in the ing degrees of ambivalent hope four powerhouses included here to during the month of August, order three identical dinners and cynicism. dilemma of rock 'n roll — Indians, and which may or may sounds like nothing so much music's 25-plus year history. and the PanTree will give you the third dinner absolutely — And now as the decade growin old while trying to not be an analogy of what Avoid it at your own loss! as a Ramones tune. draws to its close, Neil Young remain young — that is, trying happened to the "free genera The music here is the most FREE!! This means you can get a Steak and Quiche dinner has given us the best and most to avoid the rust which invades tion" of the '60s. The song ends primal rock n roll — loud, or Veal Lorraine dinner or Fish dinner or any of the thundering and deafening with Mexican and Italian dinner choices free with your coupon! a backbeat that hits the listener The PROTESTANT at the gut level. Young — one of The coupon is good Mondays through Thursdays between The Kinks' mediocre LP the few pure guitar heroes left REFORMED CHURCH 4 p.m. and midnight all month long, so take advantage of — wails in a way that has never a terrific deal whether you prefer an early meal or enjoy (continued from page 6) successful attempt to capture ly, that instead of subtly is meeting for worship at merging of rock, disco, reggae, some of the energetic bluster of philosophising as he once did, the University S.D.A. dining later in the evening. and oddball electronics. It is the new wave rock. "A Gallon of Davies is now content to preach CENTRAL Church, 149 Highland in one number where Davies Gas," meanwhile, is a straight to the listener. Where he once East Lansing. Services are blues number, and there's only used to beautifully understate METHODIST The PanTree serves beer and wine and honors your Visa stretches out and creates some¬ Bible based setting forth so much you can do with the his message, Davies now makes CHURCH and Mastercharge cards. This is the special you can't pass thing new and different, and it the distinctively Re¬ shows that — when he knows blues. The otherwise enjoyable it painfully obvious, and ob¬ what he's after — Ray Davies is "Catch Me Now I'm Falling," vious records are the ones we formed Calvinistic doc¬ up, so see you at the PanTree for dinner this summer! tire of the quickest. trines of historic Chris¬ still a great songwriter. meanwhile, suffers by being Sunday 5 built around the Stone's I still have faith in the Kinks. tianity. Some of the other com¬ Evangelism, Why? "Jumpin' Jack Flash" riff. Given a clear direction, I think promises are not so rewarding. For example, "Attitude" starts Of the rest, only "Little Bit Ray Davies can still give most Worship Services Sunday 10 a.m. 6 p.m. the album off on a guitar riff Of Emotion" is really satisfy¬ rock songwriters a run for their 9:45 and 11:00 For now, though, Wed. Studies in Bible that would feel much more at ing. Even so, this song high¬ money. there's only one fitting descrip¬ Nursery Available Doctrine 7:45 p.m. sponsored home on a Ted Nugent album, lights a problem that occurs while "Pressure" is a not-too- throughout the album — name¬ tion of Low Budget: low rent. 485-9477 LANSING CHURCH OF CHRIST **** NEW RELEASES **** 882-0046 Services Sunday 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m. Wednesday 7:30 p.m. Communion Service Every Sunday 515 Samantha Ave. Southside Johnny & The Asbury Jokes The Clash bo Pat Travers Band - Go For What You Know Common Cup Acapela Singing by Congregation NO SUNDAY SCHOOL NO MUSIC In the International Center Coll Off To These Hot for Summer Savings Coffee EASTMINSTER PRESBYTERIAN Dine Out CHURCH 1315 ABBOTT RD (North of Saginaw) Part Free on Sunday Nit Tonight East Lansing August 5 WHERE h Hours: M-TH 7:30-4:00 M-F CLOSED WEEKENDS God's Impartiality PEKING RESTAURANT Worship: 8:30 & 10:45am * 220 m.a.c. mon-sat:9-9 ■ - Paul W. Green 337-0893 univ. mall. 332-3S2S »nn: 12-7 ***•:. ; • • If 637E.MICH. AVE. cocktails South Baptist Church jam jut FOODS - "DRESS FOR SUCCESS" DOWNTOWN, LANSING .... 489-2445 1518 S. Washington 372-7120 MA.n'rn"13 Whether it's time for that important inter¬ Sunday, 7:00 IT view or graduation, let the staff at Marty's sponsor God and you answer your big question of what to wear. Today's look is both conservative and color¬ your c ful, all in the right proportions. At Marty's, restaurant! we can help you balance your clothes to fit 9:45 a.m. College Fellowship the occasion. Face it, sometimes it pays to call I Taste Trial Collage Bible and refreshments Class in the dress like your Dad. 353-6400 Mo*owiJI"3n*s«^a^ Fireside Room 8:30pm SUNDAY, 8:30 A IllOO GREAT IMFERWL GARDEN everything for the man FOOD 24 nere conies tomorrow MfiRTYS Hours • Day FREE BUS SERVICE Morning and Evening 349 2698 Call 482-0754 for information 2080 W. Gr. Rv. Okemoi Dr. Howard F. Sugden, Pastor 305 E. Grand River East Lansing Rev. Lewis Wood, College Minister V Michigon Stote News, Eost Lansing, Michigon Fnday, August 3, 1979 Ingham County Fair not just for farmers Corn dog concession trailers blare out polka music as children tug week of the fair, awaiting their "judgment day." Criteria on which reluctant parents toward the inevitable ride on the rollercoaster. the animals are judged include size, shape and market value. On the other half of the fair grounds, the midway and grandstand Youngsters nervously parade stubborn animals around a corral dominate. Tattooed men holler at passers-by in hopes of persuading while judges calmly assess the animal, and parents just as calmly them into making a "small investment" to reap "beautiful" stuffed assess the judges from the other side of the fence. So goes another day in Mason at the Ingham County Fair. animals. What started out way back when as an event for farming families "Throw a dime on a dish, not a dish on a dime and you win a prize, to show off their produce and animals, has mushroomed into a your choice . . . take a chance," says a man hugging a microphone multi-faceted week of entertainment for the masses. with both hands. About 150,000 people go to the Ingham County Fair annually, but Stomach turning rides such as the "tobbogan" or "twister" stand this year's attendance is down slightly because of poor weather, along side such classics as the ferris wheel or merry-go-round. said Lanelle Beil, treasurer and publicity director for the fair. Although the fair opened its gates Monday, time still remains for There are two major aspects to the fair, the agricultural related those wanting to attend. events and the midway and entertainment portion. Tonight bluegrass groups will be performing for those who enjoy Those curious enough to brave the "aroma" of the livestock barns homespun folk music. On Saturday, a demolition derby at 3:30 and 8 p.m. will cap the get a close-up view of animals only seen as one drives past a farm. week with "the world's greatest traffic accident." Pigs, horses, cows, sheep and poultry all live in the barns the Photos by Deborah ./. /torin Text by Roland Wilkerson H0LDEN REID ROCK ON! THE ATTIC Contemporary Man's & Boys Clothiers uuomancjare 14k gold with oi LansinG FREE FALL • Free Pregnancy Tests • Gynecological Core 20% off at E.L.'s Rock Spot sfgis • Pregnancy Termination • Free VD Testing and Treatment all chains fy&yk! • Pre-natal Counseling and Referral ALL THESE SIZES AVAILABLE' ■suidaio. 2 blocks west of Hagadorn 28 79 Neighborhood Offices 36 j^mm| on Grand River 37 29 30 FRAND0R E32A IO it Eost Lonsino Office 201' E Grand Rivet West tonsino Office West Side Action Cenr« \ 'Him 39 31 32 M-1H L 1 Eost Lansing & 428 W Lenawee LANSING □MM WfBfH 332-1066 Lansing 487-0609 MALL A°G' It h DON'T PAY MORE! DON'T PAY MORE! V° TIRE INC AND GET THE BEST! PLUS CHECK YES WE HAVE OUR LOW PRICES ON: ROAD HAZARD AND A FREE MIC X ill 5 z REPLACEMENT [giant midway STEEL BELTED POLICY RADIALS FIREWORKS ^ 40,000 Mile Warranty 155 -13 42.95 165 13 - 165 15 - 44.95 44.95 [FREE KIDDIE SHOW aug. 7 185 14 - 53.95 195 •14 61.95 205 14 - 65.95 205 -15 71.95 215 15 80.95 225 15 83.95 F.E."r. 1.41 TO 3.29 \ Ph. 332-65451 ALL MAJOR BRANDS super stock AVAILABLE modified HORSE PULLING — a^0 5 8 to tractor MAMMOTH PARADE - aug 6 pulling HARNESS RACING - aug 7 8 9 aug. 3-4 STOCK CAR RACES - aug to demolition derby MOTORCYCLE RACES - AUG ,, aug 5 8 12 10,000 METER RUN- AUG „ jJtfOIV AVd ltNOQ S3 HOW MicHigon State News, Eost Lansing. Michigan Friday August 3, 1979 9 Yankees' star catcher dies in light plane crash AKRON, Ohio (API — New York Yankees catcher Thurman Munson and another man were killed Thursday afternoon in a fiery plane crash near an airport runway, a federal official said. The crash of the Cessna Citation occurred at 3:02 p.m. about 1,000 feet short of the runway at the Akron-Cantun Airport, said CORSO'S JOB MAY BE IN JEOPARDY William Nantz, a Federal Aviation Administration duty officer in New York. Nantz said the 31 year old baseball star, a native of Akron and a resident of Canton, was with a flight instructor in a Cessna Hoosiers suspect Citation twin engine jet which Munson had recently purchased. in crucial areas three conference games on the A spokesperson at Children's Hospital burn unit here said one person was admitted from the jet crash, and that the person was not severely burned. But it was not immediately known if the person was the flight instructor. No injuries were reported on the Indiana, Corso has come out the admits that his own team is Joe Norman, is now playing receiver Mike Friede among ground. By ADAM TEICHER weak in the areas he feels are professional football for the others. road, including a battle with State News Sports Writer victor just 19 times. Seattle Seahawks. Six other On the line, guard Joe Phipps Ohio State University. Later, Editors Note: This is the se¬ crucial for winning games, the Is this the year Corso can and tackle Gerhard Ahting are cond in a series of ten rundowns team has its problems. In other defensive starters are also on Big Ten football teams. push his club over the hill and into the promised land of a words, it appears Corso is gone, other including the unit's only all-league selection, de¬ the two returning starters. Corso said he thought Phipps Sail Today: the Indiana Hoosiers. winning season? Let Corso looking to 1980 as the year he of great value to the Boa Lee Corso is lead his Hoosiers to a fensive back Dave Abrams. was beginning his answer that one himself. can Hoosiers. seventh season as head football winning campaign. Of those slated for starting *Sailboats * Canoes coach at Indiana University. He "Basically, when you get positions this year, only sopho¬ "We beat a pretty good right down to it, you win more cornerback Tim Wilbur football team in the University sfc Lessons sjc tereo actions, decisions and duties as a Teamster official and for obtaining and retaining labor ioppe peace and labor benefits ..." The payments were allegedly made in 37 monthly install¬ ments of $2,100 each from January 1976 through March 1979. Fitzsimmons also was ac¬ cused of accepting more than $25,000 from Ronald Prebenda, a labor consultant for three trucking companies operating in the Detroit area. Prebenda was not indicted, however. AT THE TIME the alleged payments were made, Fitz¬ simmons was employed either as a business agent, recording secretary or vice president of Teamsters Local 299 in Detroit. The indictment identified Wolfe as chairperson and chief executive officer of F.C.S. In¬ dustries and an officer and employee of a subsidiary, Freight Consolidation Services. Freight Consolidation Ser¬ vices, the indictment said, rou¬ tinely referred truck business to three related Detroit area trucking firms that employed DISC SHOP SUPER SPECIALS THIS WEEK: Supertramp "Breakfast In America" "The Main Event" Soundtrack featuring Barbra Streisand Maxell blank cassettes UD C-90 on sale $3.49 ea. or 5 for $16 323 E. Grand River, next to Jacobsons Michigan State News, Eost Lansing, Michigan Friday August 3. 1979 1 1 EXAMINING AMERICAN MEDIA Former energy adviser makes African journalist at Bv ISONORE OUEDRAOGO The purpose of the U.S. tour is to help employees in charge of predictions of energy-less future won't be alone in its energy problems. CRANI) RAPIDS (UPI) — Former presidential energy Editor's Note: Isonore Ouedraogo is a journalist employed with explaining U.S. politics in their respective countries gain a better adviser Samuel M. Dix rejects 21st Century visions of "The Russians are going to be under the same restraints that the U.S. Embassy in Ouagadougou, Upper Volta. He visited The knowledge of the United States. robot run households and backyard helipads. Instead, he says, we are," he said. "Just consider that. They are going to need I feel I have acquired new dimensions regarding the enormity State News Thursday as part of an internship for African more oil and gas than they have. We need more oil and gas than and complexity of the United States. life in the year 2000 may be much like it was in 1900. journalists and librarians sponsored by the MSU African Studies In Washington, where I visited the offices of the International we can produce. What we could wind up with is a global conflict, Center and the U.S. International Communication Agency. Dix, an industrial property appraiser and former energy Communication Agency, I participated in a press briefing at the adviser to President Gerald R. Ford, said Thursday there will scrapping over bits and pieces that are left. Ouedraogo wrote the following account describing his job and the State Department and at the White House. be more electricity by the end of this century than at its program. It was written in French and translated by a State News "I DON'T KNOW what we're going to do with the race riots," staff member. At the next stop in Memphis, I toured radio and television .beginning but there will not be nearly enough to run all the stations and saw the production departmeat of a black newspaper. Dix said, "when the people who happen to be black find In Upper Volta, I publish a weekly magazine, "Progres," which high-technology devices inventors keep dreaming up. themselves disadvantaged in this situation." At the University of Michigan, the group heard several lectures stresses cooperation in development projects between the United on U-M sponsored projects in Africa. "The thing that intrigues me is that we have to find energy," Dix said by the year 2000 most of our oil and gas will be States and Africa in general, and Upper Volta in particular. said Dix, who has been studying the problem for six years. "If synthetic and there will be just enough to keep the most At MSU, David Wiley, director of the African Studies Center, My job also involves materials such as the "Voice of America" on discussed the University's African programs: Dr. John Hunter, this country doesn't wake up we'll be in total chaos by the turn fuel efficient vehicles running. national radio, putting American films on Voltic television, and of the century." "As long as Washington is telling us the energy problem is professor of geology and community medicine, discussed the placing stories in both private and public press. under control, that we have no problem, we're not going to get organization of the colleges of medicine — osteopathic, human and DIX SAID WHEN President Carter recommended we use 20 started producing synthetic fuels because we think we have veterinary; and August Benson, adviser to foreign students and percent solar energy to meet our fuel needs he actually was enough. It takes 20 years and a trillion dollars to set up faculty, talked about the programs and services available to recommending the lifestyle we had in 1902. conversion plants. Climate affects events? foreign students at the University. Each of us also had the opportunity to enjoy the hospitality of an "When you go back and look at the period of time when the "... When we start it's going to be too late," Dix said. "The world has never seen this nroblem so there's no American family, when we were invited into a home for dinner. economy was 20 percent solar it was 1902. There were 23,000 The group, now on its way to Seattle, is made up of 10 Africans cars and trucks registered in the U.S. It gives you some precedent," he said. "There's an awful lot of ignorance involved. (continued from page 3) Bartley has contacted some of Economists dominate our political thinking and the economic the people listed in the ledger in who work for U.S. embassies in their individual countries. Five perspective. depressions, rulers and wars. librarians and five journalists who work for the International Dix said that by thr turn of the century, the Western world advice to the president is totally insane," Dix said. "Wheeler gathered data from an effort to continue Wheeler's work, but has received no Communication Agency are participating in the program. anyone under the sun," Bartley said. response. The data was listed under "Although a lot of folks 18-column headings in the worked with him (Wheeler), I think a lot of people ended up _All MANUFACTURERS' COUPONS 9INCLUDING Face Value/ ledger and compiled by decades — a pre-computer way of thinking he was a fanatic," Bartley said. m storing relevant information, Bartley said. In addition to the ledger, BARTLEY, ,78, WHO took a another long chart listed inter¬ position as a distinguished national wars, insurrections, research psychology professor More. at Memphis State University uprisings, internal wars and local wars — 10,000 battles in following his retirement, is not sure how he will carry on history — together with the climatic conditions at the time. Wheeler's work, since the task will require more than one GIVEN ON smms THE CHART SHOWED that person's efforts. ap prices 7 ao& satau& ? if the world could pass 1950 He has considered putting the thru yAHUFACWft/# coupons? without an international war, material into a computer. one wasn't expected during the Whatever Bartley does, he •330\ EASTMIGHI&AW wants Wheeler to be remem¬ last 50 years, Bartley said. Wheeler also observed that bered as the force behind the > lOZO W &EAKJ RlVEZ momentous events occurred at project, because he feels in¬ OKEMOS (tJBCT ro K-MARfJ the beginning of 100- and debted to his mentor. "Wheeler had some very 500-year cycles. "We are back to a time when fundamental notions about the CUP THESE SUPE1& job of science that were supe¬ we can expect a lot of things happening," Bartley said. rior," he said. "He was ahead of BOMUS COUPONS western;- "Changeovers can be expected his time." AW D SAVE 6-7 LBS.AVEr &KAINJ FEP at the end of 1,000 years." Wheeler died of cancer in WHOLE 1961, after having worked 27 BELL'S years without satisfactorily proving his theory. "He was so discouraged that he told his wife to burn up the GREEK PIZZA SMOkS? stuff," Bartley said. But Wheel¬ A taste FRESH,GRDUWg CHUCK PICNICS er had mentioned Bartley's name on his deathbed, so she that made wrote to him and asked if he East STEAKS wanted the material. Lansing One part of Wheeler's mas¬ Famous sive collection Bartley would POUMtP have liked to have inherited was Greek Salad a file of thousands of art too! reproductions, but they had l?8 Both locations already been sold. The repro¬ 128 ductions could have been strung Open at 9AM out chronologically to see if forms of art came and went cyclically, said Bartley, who does a great deal of painting in 225 M.A.C. 332-5027 1135 E. Grand River 332-0858 n y his spare time. FREE DELIVERY Perhaps THE stereo savings event of the summer! IZ, 1Z, 3Z Pipe, Plump home west/ •Home, Qrxmrru sweep HUGE SAVINGS on 1, 2, and receivers, turntables, decks & 3-of-a-kind speakers BLUEBERRIES ka/ FRI. AND SAT. ONLY _ V UMirt-ONC COUPON PtR FAMU.T I PIMT 555 E. Grand I jV GOOD TORU SAT. AUG 4 1979 | I...J tereo River Ave. oppe &UY3-SAVE UPT campus. Beginning mid or square feet, 3 bedroom GERMAN SHEPHERD pups, 63' per line over 4 lines. late August. 351-5096 from ranch. With attached two car 485-4391. C-11-8-24 (8) MOVING SALE, must sell. FIGHT INFLATION, sell AKC, champion Cassey's Lost & Found ads/Transportation ads 3 6-9 p.m. 3-8-3 (6) garage. 2-baths, full base¬ bloodline. Cassey was of Friday 10:00-5:00 Saturday — AVON, increase your earning ment, fireplace, deck. $1000 SOMEBODY ELSE'S CLO¬ 10:00-5:00, 2943 Mt. Hope, lines-M ,50-per insertion. 50' per line over TEACHING POSITION power, for details call 482 fered $7000. Pups, $125 $250. EFFICIENCY APARTMENT security deposit with one SET featuring gently used Okemos. 2-8-3 (3) 3 lines. 6893. C-11-8-24 (4) Call 337-2504 489-6609 Schedule will be Monday, in older home. Common year lease. $750/month. 349- clothing. 541 East Grand 5-8-3 (5) MOVING TO California sale Deadlines Wednesday, Friday following shower. Utilities included. No 0562. 3-8-6 (8) River. Open noon to 6 p.m. the '79-'80 DeWitt Public SUMMER EMPLOYMENT Furniture and lots of mod- lease. $115. 614 Michigan Take-ins by appointment. with Michigan's largest multi- STUDENT RENTALS - 708 FREE KITTENS in need of Ads-2p.m.-l class day before publication. School calendar. Apply to PO Ave. 351-6566 for appoint¬ 332-1926. C-11-8 24 (6) - °rately priced items-Saturday Box 247 DeWitt, Michigan, manufacturer distributor, W. Grand River, 3 bedroom loving homes. 8 weeks old. 9-5, 5938 Bois lie DMA (Lake CancellationChange-lp.m.-l class day be¬ Automobile required. Guar¬ ment. 2-8-6 (61 house. Excellent condition. 371-4727 after 5 p.m. 48820. 7-8-6 (7) OLD FASHION desk, excel o the Hills). Z 1-8-3 (5) fore publication. anteed income. 339-9500, E-5-8-3 (31 $425/month, references re¬ lent condition. $75 or best Once ad is ordered it cannot be cancelled or C-11-8-24 (5) FEMALE GRAD or profes¬ UNIFORMED SECURITY of¬ quired. 393-9293, or 371-3710 offer. Matching nightstand, MOVING SALE- 632, 633 sional non-smoker needed to changed until after 1st insertion. There is a M.00 charge for 1 ad change plus ficers and store detectives or part-time. Call 641-4562. full APPLICATIONS BEING tak¬ share two bedroom in East Lansing for September first. 5-8-10 16) 3-4 HOUSEMATES needed 4 $10. Single bed with box spring and frame, $50. 337- rMobile Homes \[^\ Baldwin Ct., off Wildwood, E, Lansing. Antiques, maho¬ C-11-8-24 (3) en. Must be 18 and over. gany dining set, sofa bed, 50' per additional change for maximum Flexible hours. Starting rate 315-492-4470 after 9:00 pm. bedroom house. 1 1/2 baths. 9400Jl5"_8l°J6! 1979 28 foot travel trailer. other furniture. Ping-pong of 3 changes. $3.05, FAMOUS RECIPE Z-10-8-24 (5) Share rent 6- utilities. Start RECORDS! Thousands to Fully self-contained. Double HANDYMAN IN Haslett, table, china, books, miscel¬ The State News will only be responsible for FRIED CHICKEN. 1900 E. 9/1. Call Tony 351-2438 after choose from, 75£ and up, all bed, many extras must sell, part-time, flexible hours. Mi¬ laneous items. August 4-5 the 1st day s incorrect insertion. Adjust¬ Kalamazoo or 2755 E. Grand UNFURNISHED 2 bedroom, 6 pm. 3-8-10 (5) reasonable, this week. 5339 nor repair, maintenance and quality guaranteed, WAZOO 9am-9pm. Z-1-8-3 18) River. 11-8-24 (6) Open Sept. 1 $265 with heat South Aurelius Road Lot ment claims must be made within 10 days electrical work. Phone Mr. RECORDS, 223 Abbott, 337 £t water. 353-4400, 394-5313. Mary Webb. 3-8-8 (7) | [3*1 46 B of expiration date. Bills are due 7 days from Kay 339-9500. C-3-8-6 (5) Z-2-8-6 (3) I Rooms 0947. C-11-8-24 (5) Service ad expiration date. If not paid by due date, a 50' late service BARTENDER, full-time days. Experienced only. Apply ALL RED GIANT has a large selection of houses, apart¬ ROOMS CLOSE to campus. $21 per week. Call 332-0834 LARGE SELECTION frames, glasses for everyone. of | lost & Found "jf"n MSU FOREST Rd near charge will be due. OPTICAL DISCOUNT, 2617 Licensed child care in my Monday through Thursday, 2:00-4:00 p.m. 116 Bailey St. STUDENT ments, duplexes, studios etc. after 5 p.m. Ask for Jon or E. Michigan, Lansing, 372- LOST MINIATURE poodle, Virginia Street. An¬ silver home Call 393-7766 after . . . Most areas, sizes and Jim. 3-8-3 (4) 7409. C-2-8-3 (5) 4:30. 3-8-3 (4) East Lansing. 3-8-6 (5) ADVERTISING prices. Call and see if we have NEAR BUSLINE, own room swers to Bridgette. Reward if found. 332-8705. Automotive Automotive SECRETARY IN Haslett, full what you're looking for. Be¬ NEW AND used guitars, ban¬ X-Z-8-8-13 (3) DIRTY HOUSES are our tween 9-9, 349-1065. in house, $108, utilities paid. business. Professional house or part-time. Office skills MUST BE jos, mandolins, etc. Ducimers OR-11-8-24 (7) Charlie, 485-6042, 8 a.m. - 2 and kits, recorders, thou¬ cleaners. Big and small jobs. AMC JAVELIN 1973 required. Nancy, 339-3400. LOST - small black male - 54,000 VEGA WAGON 1973. New PREPAID p.m. 3-8-3 (4) Both inside and out. Free C-11-8-24 (3) sands of hard to find albums sheep dog with Midland tags. original miles. Dependable, exhaust, battery. Runs good, HOLT AREA, lovely one and and books. Discount prices. Estimates. 393-9199. $950 or best. 372-6728. Call 487-8625 or 351-8043. $400. 373-7807 days, 337- two bedrooms, carpet, air GOOD HOUSE good room 3-8-3 (3) SEAMSTRESSES NEEDED. August 6th through Expert repairs - free estimates REWARD. 6-8-13 (3) 3jm5) 9537 evenings. 3-8-6 (4) utilities, "$220-250. $385-415 good deal $50 August only ELDERLY INSTRUMENTS, $3.25/hour. Call 355-7712. the end of the term. to move in. 393-3648. 532 Park Lane Call 351-2448. Moving to a warmer climate? Leave name and number. 541 E. Grand River. AUD1100 LS automatic, 1971 Z-7-8-17 (5) S-3-8-8 (3) Sell your snowblower now 34 mpg, good condition, Auto Service 3-8-6 (3) C-11-8-24 (9) with an ad in our columns. must sell. Asking $1350 or CONCESSION STAND 2 BEDROOM apartment bal¬ E. LANSING. Close to cam¬ BABYSITTER in my Okemos workers for all home games SEWING MACHINES - new best offer. Call 332-5278. REFILLABLE WIPER blades cony, heat included, air con¬ pus. Female only, partially free arm machines from for your foreign car in stock home beginning September - Sept. 8,15, 22, Oct. 6, 20, furnished, cooking, $90. 332- 6-8-15 14) ditioning, fully furnished, 731 and Nov. 10. Call 353-2005 or $99.50. Guaranteed used ma¬ CHEQUERED FLAG, 2605 5. Two year old; infant; light 1966 BUICK LA SABRE. at East Kalamazoo Street. One housekeeping. Approxi¬ 355-4550 after 12 noon, for dishwasher 10 Connie 351-5620. Available Sept. 5MB_OR15-8-jOJ32 chines from $39.50. All makes CEDAR Runs good. Low mileage, mile west of campus. 487- mately 20 hours/week. Own information. Or apply in per¬ 8-8-20 (6) FEMALE STUDENT needs repaired. EDWARDS DIS¬ TRIBUTING COMPANY, $200, Call evenings, 372-1658 Z-5-8-10 (3) 5055. C-11-8-24 (6) transportation, 349-5854. 3-8-6 (7) references. son at Crossroads Cafeteria in the International Canter. LANSING- COZY one bed¬ room for fall term. 351/8272. 3-8-8 (3) Anne 1115 N. Washington. 489- GREENS CADILLAC 1971 Eldorado - JUNK CARS wanted. Also selling used parts. Phone ORDER PROCESSING clerk. 6-8-10 (10) room ator includes stove, refriger¬ washer, dryer, all utilities ROOMMATE WANTED for 6448. C-11-8-24 (8) • ONE BEDROOM APARTMENTS townhouse. $100/month in¬ BOOKS! 3 floors of books, FURNISHED APARTMENTS $1100 or best offer. Strong 321-3651. C-11-8-24 (3) Bright, ambitious person for "Air ConHitionec For Rent and parking. Prefer single cludes utilities. By Sept. 1 magazines and comics. • AIR CONDITIONING car. Good condition. 372- full-time position in young "All Appliances including 6728. 3-8-3 (4) graduate student. Available Linda 355-1063 after 5. CURIOUS BOOK SHOP, 307 • SWIMMING POOL dishwasher Attention growing company. Adding September 1st, $195/month. 3-8-8 (4) East Grand River, East Lan¬ • PRIVATE BALCONIES machine experience helpful. PARKING SPACES for rent. 'luxurious Furnishings "AT 482-9226. OR-11-8-24 (7) CAMARO - '75. 350 V-8. owners Excellent benefits. Apply in $15 per month, 517 West sing, 332-0112. C-11-8-24 (5) • WITHIN WALKING 'Shag Carpeting TWO STUDIO rooms DISTANCE TO CAMPUS Air, AM/FM stereo, Automa¬ Why hove we become person. AMERICAN EDU¬ Grand River. Call 332-6685. 'On-site Management tic and power. $3200 or best CATIONAL SERVICES, 419 campus near. 351-6471. BRAND NEW 135 Dejur Tele- 'Private Bolconies 'Lansing's largest Fiat re¬ 8-8-8 (3) C-11-8-24 (3) photo lens - $40 - Call Lentz Court, Lansing. 'SWIMMING POOL offer_484-3627_ 9-8-6J3) _ pair shop over the past few 3-8-6 (8) 355-8311 or 332-3645. years? Call us the next FEMALE OWN room in du¬ S-5-8-10 (3) CAPRI 2-S, 1976. Black and f NOW LEASING gold, 2.8 L, excellent condi¬ time your car needs repair and you'll know the ans¬ WANT TO earn extra money? plex. September to Septem¬ ber. $93.75 plus utilities. 351 - For Sale [ [51 FOR FALL tion, $3000. 332-5649. Build your own Amway Dis¬ STEREO: SANYO receiver wer. You'll be pleased with 3329. 10-8-17 (3) AIR BRUSH and compressor and 2 Tamon speakers. 2-8-3^1 tributorship. Call 372-1693 351-8631 and leave message. 7-8-3 (4) with regulator. Paasche Good, clean, strong sound. Next to Brody 351-7212 CHEVY VAN, 1977-305 V-8, model AB. Excellent condi¬ Start talking at $175. Call carpeted, AM/FM cassette. ALL WHO APPLY will be | Apartments ]pp] tion, $225. 353-0857 or 393- Jerry, 371-1415. X-Z-4-8-6 (5) Excellent Condition, Asking $4500. 353-2609. 7-8-3 (4) / lAtMHMN accepted and paid $18 every week as a twice weekly ROOMMATE SHARE apt. 0292. 10-8-3 (4) donor. Must have ID, have W/Grad, Haslett area. Super PEOPLE REACHED 1206 Oakland CORVETTE 1971, 350 LT-1. eaten within 8 hrs., be 18 yrs. place, reasonable. Non- Call for Appt. T-top, air, automatic. Yellow old, weigh 110 lbs., and be smoker, 349-5048. 4-8-3 (3) - with tan interior. 394-7787. IV4-4411 OVER 3000 cheap albums, able to pass a physical. Come 256 and up - all types, hits to to AMERICAN PLASMA ROOMMATE - male. Sep¬ 1 FEMALE roommate needed the obscure. FLAT, BLACK GOOD COLLEGE CAR - '67 Cutlass. $300. Good condi¬ tion. 332-8621 or 332-4639. CHEAPEST PRICES in the state. UGLY DUCKLING MANAGEMENT 2827 Grand River, E. Lansing. Near the BUS STOP. Phone 351 E. tember 1. $130/month plus 1/2 utilities. Deposit. 332- 7343 evenings. 8-8-17 (3) Fall-Spring for 3-man, Rent $126/month. Capitol Villa. 332-4773 after 7 p.m. AND CIRCULAR. 541 Grand River, above PARA¬ MOUNT. Open 11 a.m.-6 E. WANT AD RENT-a-CAR, $7.95/day, 2620. B-1-8-3 (12) 6-8-13 (4) 3-8-6 (3) 372-7650. C-11-8-24 (4) 1 BEDROOM apt. close to p.m., 6 days. C-11-8-24 (6) RESIDENT MANAGER campus, quiet, $225 month HELP! NEED 2 or 3 people Just complete form and DODGE OMNI - 1979, 30 lights. 332-2495 after 5 now-9/15. Close to campus, USED BIKES. All sizes, $15- ATTENTION!! WE buy late needed to manage 30-unit + mail with payment to: mpg, rust proof. Call Gary, model imported and domes¬ p.m. 8-8-10 (4) nice place. Rent negotiable-lf $100. Also used parts. We 373-0208 or 321-3478. apartment building within tic compact cars. Contact I don't rent, landlord sues. also buy used bikes. Call X-7-8-15 (3) walking distance to campus. FEMALE GRAD wanted. Fall John DeYoung. WILLIAMS Call 351-0847, Z-3-8-8 (5) CHARLIE'S BIKE SHOP, State News Classified Dept. Pay to be reduced rent on Whitehall Manor. Semi-fur¬ VW, 484-1341. C-11-8-24 (5) 393-2484. 8-8-15 (5) 1-bedroom unfurnished nished. Close. 337-2638. 31*7Student Services Bldg. MASON BODY SHOP. 812 E. apartment, plus hourly. Mar¬ 5-8-10 (3) Houses ried couple with some main¬ DISCOUNT, NEW-used East Lansing, Mich. 48823 Kalamazoo since 1940. Auto desks, chairs, files, BUS¬ FIAT 1974. Automatic, rear tenance experience prefer¬ LAKE LANSING - on the 7 BEDROOMS, duplex appli¬ defrost, radials, AM/FM radio painting-collision service. red. 351-2211 from 10-4 pm. lake. 2 and 3 bedroom apts. ances, $600 plus utilities. INESS EQUIPMENT CO. 215 Excellent. $1100, 355-0997. American foreign cars. 485- 3-8-8 (12) E. Kalamazoo. 485-5500. 0256. C-11-8-24 (5) Fireplaces 339 2325 or 349- Lease, references. 1522 Sny¬ OR-2-8-6 (4) 3-8-3 (4) 3839. Z-10-8-8 (3) der, 482-7094. . * 14) TEACHER POSITION open¬ Address FIAT X-19, 1975 New radial GOOD USED tires, 13-14-15 - inch. Mounted free. Used ing, preschool cooperative NOW LEASING tires, 58,000 miles, AM/FM. Best offer. 353-3600 or 355- wheels and hub caps. PEN- nursery in Haslett, Michigan NOW LEASING CAMPUS FOR SUMMER City _ Zip Code (near East Lansing). 20 hours NELL SALES, 1825 Michi¬ 1110^3-8-3 (4) gan, Lansing, Michigan, per week. Call 339-2161 or FOR SUMMER HILL AND FALL Daytime Phone Student Number 349-4508. 3-8-3 (6) GRANADA GHIA-1977 48912, 482-5818. AND FALL loaded. Nice car for nice C-11-8-24 (6) HARDWORKING individuals *2 Bedrooms Preferred Insertion Date _ No. Days Ordered price. 394-2277 any time. needed for permanent full •Furnished Apts. 8-8-20 (3) time lunch busboy positions. Free Roommate Service Classification MERCEDES 1977-Excellent I Motorcycles ||o^| (11:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m.) Great condition. Must sell. 2750 pay benefits, experience pre¬ •Dishwashers 3 line minimum 1976 HARLEY DAVIDSON ferred. Call Mr. Solomon 355-8150. 7-8-17 (3) -super Glide - Liberty edition - 372-4300 after 4:15 p.m. •Central Air Conditioning 25 characters in a line, including punctuation and spaces between words. $2,800-Firm, 676-3713 after JIM'S TIFFANY PLACE. THEY WENT MERCURY MONTEGO MX 1975 Brougham. Vinyl top, 4 5:30 p.m. S-5-8-10 (3) 2-8-3 (7) THAT A WAY...TO •Swimming Pool door all extras AM/FM. Ex¬ COLLING WOOD •Unlimited Parking cellent condition. 43,000 APTS!! •Pleasant Landscaping Ctopctungftam miles $2500. 337-7099. C'mon over 2-8-6 (5) _ _ 'air conditioned •Special 12 month rates AND CHECK OUT 'dishwasher MUSTANG II - 1975 6 cylin¬ COLLINGWOOD APTS! 2 BEDROOM FURNISHED LUXURY APTS. 'shaft carpeting FREE BUS der 4 speed, hatchback. 'unlimited parking * air conditioned 53,000 miles, Like New. 694- "dish washer, disposal 'plush furniture SERVICE *shag carpeting 'model open daily * shag carpeting 'on sight maintenance Model Open 9-9 a unlimited parking Please use rate chart for proper rate. OLDS '88 ROYALE, diesel 1979. Must sell. Loaded 699 Call 351-8282 Everyday * plush furniture 2450. 8-8-20 (3) SPECIAL SUMMER RATES Leasing for * model open daily If special rote ad, which one? Call 351-8282 Summer & Fall Amount Enclosed $ Hatchback, four (behind the Bus Stop (behind the Bus Stop VEGA 1974 - brakes. CALL 351-7166 light club on the river) CALL 349-3530 speed, 28 mpg, new Located at Hagadorn just south ot Service Road nightclub on the river) $495, 374 6826. 3-8-3 (3) 14 Michigon State News, Eost Lansing, Michigon Friday, August 3, 1979 1 f^] | Instructions f Typing Service ||^j| Typing Service I Downtown 1 Service CERTIFIED EXECUTIVE TENNIS certified teaching : Typing Service EXPERIENCED IBM typing, UNIGRAPHICS OFFERS TYPIST- per page, 50fc complex plan proposed per 50 (continued from page 1) Owen said the EDC will be presented for housekeeping manager ex pro will give private, semi dissertations. (Pica, elite) COMPLETE DISSERTATION page over pages. 651-6424. B-1-8-3 (3) Krause said federal funding decisions would be approval at Tuesday's City Council meeting. perienced in all phases. Ref- private, or group lessons. Call FAVANN, 489 0358. AND RESUME SERVICE, 1 8 24 (3) typesetting, IBM typing, off based on design, need, past spending of federal s, 372-4783. X 2 8-3 (3) 351 7504. 19 8 24 14) set printing and binding. For Wanted "The project is just what this city needs," funds, and merit of the project, which Owen COPYGRAPH SERVICE estimate stop in at 2843 E. estimated would create 300 jobs. Owen said. "It will strengthen the tax base and Instructions DID YOU know that THE completed, dissertations and Grand River or phone 332 WANT TO rent 2-bedroom in provide extra housing and parking along with a STEREO SHOPPE is the resume service. Corner MAC 8414. C 11 8 24 (8) E. Lansing for faculty couple. place for the public to gather and shop." place to buy your stereo and Grand River, 8:30 a.m. 332 4537. 4 8 3 (4) KRAUSE SAID HE is still open to changes TUTORING FRENCH- all levels Tutoring English to equipment. C-11-8 24 (4) 5:30 p.m., Monday - Friday, EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Fast and suggestion for the project, which involved 18 1/2 fare airline coupons top months of THE 20 TO 30 specialty shops will include French speaking students. 10 a.m. 5 p.m. Saturday, accurate dissertations, term preparation with community leaders, 337 1666. C 11 8-24 (7) dollar. Call Mike 332-7977 crafts, art and leather shops, Krause said. He Call 351-7504. 19-8-24 (4) papers. 339 3575. city officials and developers. added that the park and pedestrian plaza will be | Typing Service \\^\ TYPING, EXPERIENCED, OR 11 8 24 (3) mornings. Z-3-8-8 (3) "I would like more input from students and the used for city cultural events. community-at-large," he said, "and would like to RACQUET STRINGING and restringing. All repairs. Wil¬ EXPERT TYPING. Term pa¬ fast and reasonable. 371-4635 C 11 8 24 (3) TYPING: IBM selectric. Term Transportation -JLl finalize plans with them (interested persons) at Owen said he expects little opposition to the son steel racquets. One day pers, letters, RESUMES. papers, resumes, plus editing. DRIVE A diesel to San Jose. project. service. Call 351-7504. Near GABLES, 337-0205. Close to Leave anytime. References. campus. 351-5694. 16-8-24 (4) C 11-8-24 (3) OR-11-8-24 (3) (408) 926 9886. 4-8 3 (3) Dayton Hudson to present proposal The State News Yellow Page (continued from page 1) issue and the consent judgment mall on the same site was first Czarnecki and Mayor George L. guarantees that decision." initiated. Griffiths told him that Dayton Fox said he would attempt to Hudson is making a revised FOX SAID DANIEL force Dayton Hudson officials proposal which would scrap Swantko, project director of to reveal their intent to go with peripheral development. the proposed mall, mentioned rumored land options in Lan¬ "But we weren't voting on Dayton Hudson officials were sing Township if the city re¬ Business — Service K3 peripheral development in the election," Anderson said, "we were voting on two immediate major department stores with still considering a third major department store with addi¬ tional smaller shops, a future development project Fox said jects the mall again. "We want people to know that we are not flip-flopping on the issue," he said. "They W5 60 to 100 smaller stores. In our opinion the election settled the they had originally given up when discussion of a "smaller" implied or said they would go Lansing Township." N Area bars to be cited BARBER HAIR SALONS HEALTH FOOD ee I continued from page order to the table she did not 1) check identification of everyone "I've been sitting with people who are 21 at a table and the waitress hasn't even bothered tempting to get a free drink on her big day, she gave her identification to the waitress THE NEW LOOK 10% DISCOUNT at the table. to check my identification be¬ who brought it to the bartender UNION BUILDING BARBER SHOP BEAUTY SALON •Specializing In Quick Service for Men & Women OPEN 5 DAYS A WEEK Perms and 4°%\ food oooplbikory on to all MSU students purchases of $2 I bar, The waitress in question has not been fired, he said. "Given the atmosphere of the things like that can hap¬ fore serving us," said one underage drinker. During spring term, a Mason to verify that it was her birthday. The waitress hurried back with the drink and the I.D. As Whole grain breads & goodies. or more, yogurts Hall resident had a different THURS., FRIS. EVES. and breads excluded pen," he said. "She admitted the woman began to down the Specialising In experience. RK Products 1404 W.SAGINAW Dannon that she screwed up at that drink, she remembered some¬ ond S Saginaw ALL NATURAL Yogurt - 39' Haircuts *5.00 ,n VECETERI AN PIZZA > time, but beyond that she's one thing. •Layer Cuts OPEN: M-Sot. 10-6 RANDALL HEALTH FOOD of the best waitresses we've THE WOMAN WENT to Being 20 years old does not •Latest Styling PHONE: 372 5760 qualify a person to drink in 9 Thurs. 6-8 got." Dooley's with some friends to •Women's Haircuts 'a.m.-5p.m. Mon.-Fri. 355-3359 BAKERY: Thurs. 5-8 Fri.-Sat. 5-10 2013 E.MICHIGAN Brookfield Plaza 1381 E.Grand River 332-6892 W "We're not knowingly and willingly violating the law," he said. "We want to enforce the celebrate her birthday. At¬ Michigan. 482-0038 TOBACCONIST GUN SHOP M law, but it is difficult." Foltz said he is not worried Gas NOW HEAR THIS FROM THE TOP that Dooley's will have its license suspended or revoked. rationing plan held HINGE AT THE STORE WITH THE Largest Selection of Handguns However, he said he is "very concerned about similar inci¬ i continued from page 1) ,. , We have in stock- "We got the dents happening in the future. against practicality." He indicated practicality prevailed. *C\garetts by: "We teli all our employees to At the White House, presidential spokesperson Jody Powell also Sherman - Dunhill - Sobraine best year re nd • guns called the House-passed bill unacceptable. He expressed hope that v check identification all of the *Pipes by Savinelh prices in Southern • rifles the objectionable parts could be smoothed out in conference. time," Foltz said. warninc *^ H°or P'Pe t0bacc0 blends Michigan' • handguns What exactly does the administration object to in the bill? Tkr "BIT SOMEONE'S GOT to "I don't have time to list them all," Powell said. Generalizing, he SurgMD Central knt drltrmintd Ihtt cigarette (molting ii dangeroue to vour koaith said it had many "ill-advised, unenforceable amendments." BOB'S GUN SHOP recognize the law, as it cur¬ We buy. sell rently stands, is unenforceable "The one that's brought over from the House has been riddled and trade •PW from a strict standpoint. But Sho|D 332-4269 C?xm|DC>eLL with loopholes," said the Senate Energy Committee chairperson, we're doing the best we can." Henry M. Jackson, D-Wash., of the House-passed bill. "It has all Alex Vanis, owner of Coral the appearance of a rationing plan but it's really not a rationing Gables, said "it is a little too COUNSELING SERVICES TRAVEL AGENCY PROMOTION plan that makes any rational sense." Free •m early to tell what is going to happen." Pregnancy Testing WOMEN'S COUNSELING ZOOM IN ON BYRD URGED THE House and Senate negotiators on the bill to He said it is the first time the Counseling Services "get together during the recess and try to work out this thing." Pregnancy Terminations CENTER BUSINESS! bar has been cited and said But other congressional leaders said they didn't expect formal 927 E.GRAND RIVER employees usually don't have conference sessions actually to begin until early September — Gynecological Core Family Planning (across from Rogue St. TOURS • CRUISES HOTEL RESERVATIONS I ADVERTISE ft too much trouble enforcing the drinking law. although they said staff sessions to develop ground rules on the bill were likely during August. 332-3554 WEEKLY £ lit INFORMATION CAll COLLEGE TRAVEL "We police the place pretty 4737 Marsh Rd. Suite B II IN good, so it isn't much of a Byrd also dismissed the symbolic importance of producing a bill, Okemos (behind Meijers) OFFICE saying "symbolism is not the issue. There is no gain in passing a THE problem," Vanis said. uuomerKjdre 349-1060 # PREGNANCY TESTING 130 W. Grand River BUSINESS When asked to comment on plan for the purpose of symbolism if the plan isn't going to work." White House and congressional energy specialists met most of of LansmG • CONCERNED COUNSELORS East Lansing 1 the citation by the liquor a BIRTH CONTROL COUNSELING DIRECTORY control commission, Bob the day trying to devise a strategy for rushing a compromise bill e PREGNANCY TERMINATION 351-6010 Brown, manager of the Silver through Congress before the beginning of the four-week recess. 3401 E. Saginaw "WOMEN HELPING WOMEN" 355-8255 Dollar Saloon, said, "We don't Unjing. Michigan 40912 THE TRAV EL PROFESSIONALS But they gave up in mid-afternoon after realizing it couldn't be give out that information." done — especially in light of House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill's PROMOTION BICYCLE SHOP OPTICAL SERVICE REAL ESTATE assertion that he intended to stick to his plan to recess the House gene's CO-OPTICAL SEVERAL AREA SIDENTS said they have been RE¬ at 6 p.m. EDT. bicycle shop East Lansing's Larges OVER 400 QUALITY BIKES Since 1946" SERVICES lEait laming'! Only Xsti u served at various area bars, without being 21 years of age. SENATE LEADERS SAID one of the House amendments they object to the most is one allowing businesses to ignore the 78-degree national thermostat-setting requirement if they can save an equivalent amount of energy in other ways. Cooparative Optical) The House passed its version of the rationing bill by a 263-159 WHY PAY MORE? Let Us Save on all models* 10 5 & 3 speeds PANASONIC • COLUMBIA • • • EYES EXAMINED GLASSES CONTACT LENS Do Your * ITS What'S Happening vote late Wednesday, but saddled it with so many amendments that Senate leaders said there was no way they could deal with it on the last day before the recess. Johnston predicted that Congress would reach agreement on a ft 4972 Northwind Dr. light E. of Hagadorn Rd off Grand Rv. Just E. of BusStop NiteClub & Pro-Bowl 1331 f. Grand River Brookfield Plaza 3S1 - S330 Homework a Announcements for It's What's standby rationing bill that the House, the Senate and the president would find acceptable. Happening must be received in the Z State News office, 343 Student THUS CONGRESS HEADED for its August recess without IMPORTS CATERING AUTO CLINIC PROMOTION Services Bldg., by 12 noon at least approving any pieces of the new energy plan the president two class days before publication. unveiled on July 15. SPARTAN The Yellow Pages No announcements will be accept¬ Committee action on his windfall profits tax and proposals for an MSU UNION ed by phone. Energy Mobilization Board and Energy Security Corporation was MUFFLER CENTER CATERING * BRAKES ARE MSU meets Simulations Saturday, 334 Society Union. also delayed until after the recess. The basic rationing bill before the House-Senate conference 'SHOCKS Modern armor miniatures and committee would give the president standby power to order 'FRONT END WORK WHERE board games will be featured. rationing in the event of a 20 percent fuel shortage during a 30-day 20% v MSU Badminton Club meets 5 period. If invoked, Congress would then have 15 days during which either house could reject it. •Bar Set-ups STUDENT DISCOUNT ITS AT... hi to 7 p.m., IM Sports-Circle's upper All welcome. The bill would also give the president the power to impose a Featuring Our Line of || "Take-out Service 'Meeting Rooms and ON ALL WORK gym. are number of other energy-conservation steps in states that did not meet specified federal energy-conservation targets. WITH I.D. to advertise Apparel from India « i Equipment Botany Plant Pathology Depart¬ 717 S. PENNSYLVANIA call Sally ment's Tropical Greenhouse now 355-3465 355-8255 open noon to 2 p.m. Thursday PHOTOGRAPHY 487-9332 hi through Saturday. Located behind the Horticulture Building. Recession prediction (continued from page 1) he would be flexible on the Preparation for the commemor¬ to narrow what could be an question of a tax cut if unem¬ WIN $1000 ation of Hiroshima and Nagasaki - Monday and Thursday — with embarrassing difference tween the administration's July be¬ ployment increased sharply. A rise to the area of 8 percent film, readings, reflection at 7 p.m. BE THE NEW POSTER GIRL FOR 12 official forecast and a forecast would be considered a sharp Sunday, Abrahamic Community, 320 M.A.C. Ave. issued by the Federal Reserve rise. Board just a few days later. Instant Color and and White: PASSPORT Black AX CTION PHOTOGRAPHY , The 500-ton Locomotive ti 1225 is open to visitors 10 a.m. to 4 p.i .. Saturdays and Sundays. Located south of the Stadium. The board said unemploy¬ ment could rise to 8.25 percent by the end of next year and that THE BEST GUESS is that the administration might back a tax cut in the range of $20 billion to $30 billion, with Social economic output could drop as RESUME much as 2 percent this year, Security taxes being the first to Readings from the 'Living be reduced. ID PHOTOS Master' Sant Darshan Singhji on with inflation also being slightly 220 Albert St. 332-3026 Contest ends Nov 30 the yoga of the inner light and the worse than the administration Meanwhile, the Commerce celestial sound current at 11 a.m. forecast. Department said Thursday that Sunday, Oak Room, Union. rising oil prices more than offset If the latest assessment of a decline in the volume of To List Your Business Call Sally 355-8255 Episcopalian Eucharist 5 p.m. Sunday, 1705 Gay Lane, Lansing. economic conditions proves cor¬ rect, it imports and pushed the nation's undoubtedly will in¬ trade into a $7.6 billion deficit in Potluck follows. Call All Saints crease pressure on the Carter the second quarter of the year. Church for rides and information. administration to cut taxes next The deficit compared with a State News Classified help end the recession Platform tennis tournament at 9 year to $6.1 billion deficit in the first a.m. Saturday, Riverfront Park by putting more money in the three months of the year and courts. Only teams registered. $2 pockets of business and con¬ was the worst since the third sumers. fee per person. Open to any quarter of last year, when the Lansing residents. Carter had recently indicated deficit was $8 billion. Michigon Stole News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, August 3. 1979 HAGAR the Horrible The Cars Rock Castle Farms by Dik Browne Sun. Aug. 5 Daily TV Highlights See you in Charlevoix (6)WJIM-TV(CBS) (lO)WILX-TV(NBC) (11 /26)WELM-TV(Cable) (12)WJRT-TV(ABC) (23)WKAR-TV(PBS) I'M JdST PRACTICING Friday ference 10:00 JUMPING 2:30 (6) Guiding Light (12) Mary Tyler Moore (10) Eddie Copra Mysteries 9:00 (10) Another World (23) MacNeil/Lehrer Report (23) Bill Moyers' Journal (6-12) Phil Donahue 8:00 11:00 (23) Run With The Sun (10) Mike Douglas (6-10-12) News 3:00 (6) Movie (23) Sesame Street (23) Dick Cavett 10:00 (12) General Hospital (10) Diff'rent Strokes 11:30 3:30 (12) Operation Petticoat (6) All In The Family (6) Hawaii Five-0 (6) MASH (23) Washington Week In (10) Card Sharks Review (10) Johnny Carson (12) Dinah! (23) Villa Alegre 4:00 8:30 (12) Movie (23) Mister Rogers (23) ABC News 10:30 (6) Archies (10) Hello, Larry 12:40 (10) Battle Of The Planets (11) Anthony And Cleopatra (6) Whew! (12) Welcome Back, Kotter (6) Movie (12)Bonanza (10) All Star Secrets 1:00 Recipe of the Week: (23) Electric Company (23) Sesame Street 4:30 (23) Wall Street Week 9:00 (10) Midnight Special PEANUTS SPONSORED BY: Soft Yogurt 10:55 (6) CBS News (6) Gong Show (10) Rockford Files 1:25 by Schulz Ice Cream (10) Adam-12 (12) Movie (12) News 11:00 2:30 5:00 9:30 (6) Price Is Right (6) Movie (10) News (6) Guncmoke (10) High Rollers BUT I MI55ED THE (12) Laverne & Shirley (10) Mary Tyler Moore I KEPT MY PROMISE, (23) Villa Alegre (12) Odd Couple MSU SHADOWS DIDN'T I? I DIDN'T BALL, AMD KICKED YOUR 11:30 (23) Mister Rogers Neigh¬ PULL THE BALL AWAY HAND...I DON'T KNOW (10) Wheel Of Fortune borhood by Gordon Carleton y#WSALL PETE'S WHAT TO SAY. 15 THERE 5:30 ANYTHING I CAN DO? (12) Family Feud SPONSORED BY: HuTD P'"*M ,MD€4 (23) Electric Company (23) National Geographic 6:00 RIS/^6 CA)C£ THfc \j^l 12:20 (6-10) News (6) Almanac (11) Christ Temple Bible 12:30 (6) Search For Tomorrow Study (23) Dick Cavett FRANK & ERNEST SPONSORED BY. (10) Flollywood Squares 6:30 by Bob Thaves (12) Ryan's Hope (6) CBS News 1:00 (10) NBC News (11) Community Anti-Crime (6) Young And The Restless Program (10) Days Of Our Lives NOW WHAT (12) ABC News (12) All My Children (23) Over Easy (23) Cover To Cover 7:00 WpON&>/.... I (6) Six Million Dollar Man 1:30 (10) Newlywed Game Looked up ALL (6) As The World Turns (11) Urban Scene (23) Explorers (12) Bowling For Dollars ThE WOPDS, so I 2:00 (23) Off The Record (10) Doctors 7:30 KjqOw IT AIN'T (10) Joker's Wild (12) One Life To Live (11) Mormon World Con¬ TUB spelling. (23) Over Easy 'fa.. Th»w«s 8-i THE DROPOUTS SPONSORED BY: Tki. wain by Post Not Too Early TRAVELS WITH FARLEY by Phil Frank SPONSORED BY: r m tS? To Start Thinking About Fall Service Station OW/ (AV HEAPn"BURN\ vJUSTTHE THIN6.' IS WLUN'ME.bCC.' j YOU LLft«£T YOUR >ous^a=He- / B.C. MARTIN Affordable LEGAL SERVICES Le9al Services by Johnny Hart SPONSORED BY: TUMBLEWEEDS Spaghetti Tree f £1. SPONSORED BY: Y: by Tom K. Ryan JL 220S. Howard 371-1752 V H * INSTEAP OF MOP\ne AROUND IN UmR PORBPQM/ WHY VONT YOU PO SOMETHING OF BENEFIT FOR ^ MANKINP?] SAM and SILO mm by Jerry Dumas and Mort Walker CROSSWORD PUZZLE |i|g|£|§PP|S SPONSORED BY: SPONSORED BY: ■HV BBS2 00SE1H ACROSS fflaaanioi HHHaii 1. Method 24. 5. Burning 27. 10. Orally 11. Exclusive 28. 29. QQS'DBS □□□ 13. Writer Loos sasui sanaa 33. 14. Ornamental □bhshii BEBHB BSESESBH HSHEIEI neckband 15. Equal: comb. 34. 35. W/,„ form 36. 16. Chisellike tool 38. 4. Springy 18. Metric mea- 40. 5. Spore case 6. Feudal estate: variant 7. Unfavorable 18. Appertain 9. Card game 10. Country: law BEETLE BAILEY SPONSORED BY: 12. Cornered -|17. Work persis¬ by Mort Walker tently "|20. Seed covering 0\N' _21. Formerly ~ 23. Herb and ...iTrtiNKi'VS Bee/U ZERO, WHY WELL, I GREW MY FOLKS WERE VERY flower DO YOU HAVE ) UP ON A FARM POOR AND X HAD TO WORK 24. Zodiac sign genus Cassia 26. Last syllable PUTohholo// TO BE SO STUPID?/ j v MILES FROM ANY SCHOOL SO HARP THERE WAS NO TIME FOR BOOKS OR OTHER LEARNING EXPERIENCES 125. Plantsof but one 27. Blue grass 29. Battles 30. Indignant 31. Enclosed 32. Attributes 34. Cheek 37. Coffee 39. Streak in mahogany h ik Friday, August 3, 1979 ] 6 Michigon Stote News, East Lansing. Michigan MADISON, Ind. (AF) — The Marble Hill nuclear power plant could be something akin to Watergate for the nuclear industry. There are the charges of cover up and of bugging — and the Pennsylvania — this is the first time the NRC has specifically asked for an investigation of a nuclear power plant involving an alleged cover up. And the NRC has never permanently halted Latin students toga-clad denials — all set in an atmosphere of suspicion fueled by Three construction of a nuclear plant. I continued from page 3) Mile Island. Marble Hill's problems began in June with a deposition by was just for fun. The Ohio River Valley plant has been in the middle of a Charles Edward Cutshall, 22, who worked at the site as a "The academics are over," said Isaac Neeley, a Latin teacher at a tug-of-war since June when a former construction worker concrete finisher's helper for about two months until he quit in Florida high school, who brought a delegation of two to the leveled charges of shoddy construction and deliberate cover up April and headed for Texas. convention. "Now they can let their hair down." by Public Service Indiana, owner of the plant, and Newberg And that's exactly what they did, beginning at 3:15 p.m., when Marble plant: Construction Co., its builder. Since then the controversy has mushroomed — blown out of proportion, say PSI and Newberg; just the tip of the iceberg, say BEFORE HE LEFT, Cutshall gave Save the Valley the deposition detailing improperly patched honeycombs or air each of the 40 state delegations gathered on the lawn behind Shaw Hall, giving the occasion the flavor of a Roman political convention. "I'm Pan, the god of fertility," crowed a costumed student with pockets in the concrete walls of the containment building that Save the Valley, one group opposing the plant, and Rep. Joel would house one of the twin nuclear reactors — patching that he horns on his head. "I'm also the god of nature, field and stream and Deckard, R-Ind., who has called for a congressional probe of the said was ordered by supervisors to hide the defects from all that. I eat grass but no clover." He stuffed a handful of weeds focus of alleged facility. This week, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission plans to inspectors. "He (Cutshall) told us he believed in nuclear power into his mouth as the Instamatics clicked and befuddled spectators shook their heads. complete an investigation of the plant and submit its finding to generation. He only wanted to make damn sure they were as safe the Justice Department, asking it to investigate possible as they could be." recalled Save the Valley chairperson Robert Then it was on to Ralph H. Young Field next to Spartan Stadium, where the delegates competed in events ranging from cover-up and criminal charges. Gray. "We would have to consider very seriously whether we could the 100-meter dash to races between Roman chariots pulled by The NRC knew of problems in April, but "Cutshall's teams of students in slave tunics. allow construction to continue (if) there had been past cover-up allegations focused on the extensiveness of the honeycombing by the utility," said Jan Strasma, an NRC spokesperson in and an intentional cover up, which we had no knowledge of," BUT THE HIGHLIGHT of the afternoon was the authentic Chicago. Strasma said. nuclear debate Meanwhile, concrete pouring for structures that might leak radiation during a nuclear accident has been halted for the A susequent were NRC inspection revealed that 170 of 550 voids improperly patched, and concrete work was stopped for 12 Roman banquet held on the banks of the Red Cedar grand gluttonous Roman tradition, bloated Brutuses and Athenas lolled on the grass while slaves bought at auction fed them chicken River. In second time. The first stoppage was for defective concrete work, days. the currect one for allegedly failing to take sufficient precautions After the first work stoppage. Newberg fired two workers and peeled their grapes. to prevent defects. and transferred a supervisor who had failed to comply with It was feast fit for the gods; an eloquent finish for a convention with a purpose deeper than just having fun. company standards for "vibrating" concrete, a process that DESPITE THE CURRENT concern over nuclear power — forces the concrete tightly between steel reinforcement bars to - Latin is alive and following the near disaster at the Three Mile Island plant in prevent voids. 'U' union election held (continued from page 3) Patrick Fleser, president of unfair labor practices charges AFSCME Local 1585, said his which delayed the election, unit met with the MSU man¬ Kluck said. agement bargaining committee MERC dismissed the char Monday to begin the year's round of negotiations. ges, but then began reviewing "It was mutually agreed and briefs and exceptions filed by understood that the collective both sides, Joseph Bixler, MERC administrative law bargaining agreement between AFSCME Local 1585 and MSU judge said. will continue In full effect until In frustration, MSU union u new contract can be settled," members picketed the state Fleser said. AFL CIO building July 18 to Kluck said he was pleased protest the olection delay. the employees' contract will be The full time hourly workers extended until the Issue of — including food service staff, representation is settled. grounds crew and maintenance "By maintaining the status workers — contract with the quo, the University is maintain University expired July 31, but ing neutrality," he said. Miller pleads guilty l continued from page 1) Bush, 21, was last seen the side of the road last August walking near the MSU Library which he believed was Young. on June 27, 1978. Miller said he was angry at the Choquette, 27, was emptying time because he believed he trash outside her Grand Ledge was being followed by police. apartment June 14, 1978, the Miller said he hit Stuart with last time she was seen. his car and lifted her into the Miller led police to Bush's For IntormatlonAboutOtherCantars In Major US Citlis & Abroad front seat of the vehicle where body in July. Choquette'a body Outside NY State he strangled her. was found two weeks after she CALL TOLL FREE: 100-223-1712 "I felt very hurt and angry," disappeared. he said. "I thought it was Martha. I . . . had, like tunnel vision." Miller said the woman was "semi-conscious." "it was Martha at the time," he said. "! asked her why did she make such a stink. There was no response." "My hand was on her shoul¬ der," he said. "Everything hap¬ pened so fast — there was movement, her legs. I squeezed her on the neck." Miller led police to Stuart's Take an idea, make a plan. remains in a drainage ditch near U.S. 27 north of Lansing the same day he led them to Bring it to life at Riderk Young's body. vblnAI Police theorize Miller killed Bush and Choquette last sum¬ mer because he believed they, Young. Savings too, were TROWBRIDGE at 9 30-9 Sat 10-6 • 332-63 Kung Fn Shoes upto PHOTOGRAPHY I ELECTRONICS ■ MEN'S CLOTHING Department ■ SPORTING GOODS I FINE JEWELRY Men's 4 Pc. 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