Monday Mostly cloudy skies will dominate today as predicted The State News afternoon thundershowers pound upon plants and people. Highs in the lower 80s. Tonight, lows in the 60s. MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY, EAST LANSING, MICHIGAN 48824 AUGUST 20, 1979 VOLUME 73 NUMBER 121 Israel-Egypt treaty bid fails By ARTHUR MAX administration would give "very serious Associated Press Writer JERUSALEM — American Mideast U. S. ambassador admits consideration" to the Israeli and Egyptian attitudes. The subject still may come up when the mediator Ambassador Robert Strauss con¬ ceded Sunday he had failed in an attempt to Security Council sits down to debate the convince Israel and Egypt to agree to a new United Nations resolution on the Middle East. failure push in pact Palestine issue on Thursday. No details were released on the American plan, but it evidently would new have After a two-hour meeting with Prime BEGIN INDICATED HE hoped Washing discussed, but at the end of the day there sought to find a compromise on Palestinian Minister Menachem Begin, Strauss told ton would drop the idea of a new Security was no official word on a summit. rights that would have been acceptable to In Israel and the Palestinians. The American reporters he had suggested a "range of Council resolution, seen here as part of an Washington, State Department American swing away from Israel and spokesperson Thomas Reston said only, "I plan also was seen as a lure to bring proposals" regarding U.N. Security Council Palestinian moderates into the Israeli- resolutions during his three-day trip to the toward the Palestinians, have no information to confirm that (a new two nations. Israel Radio had previously reported summit)." Egyptian talks on autonomy for the occupied West Bank of the Jordan River and the Gaza "I've met with very serious questions and Strauss would invite Begin to a Mideast Begin told reporters that a new "diffi¬ reservations both in Israel and in Egypt," summit with Carter and Egyptian President culty" had arisen in recent weeks over the Strip. Strauss said. "And I shall faithfully report Anwar Sadat. Government sources said American proposal. "I do believe this Resolution 242, the foundation for all those questions and reservations" to Presi¬ such a meeting, to calm the controversy over difficulty will soon be removed as a result of Mideast negotiations since it was passed dent Carter and Secretary of State Cyrus Palestinian rights that has chilled the considering the problem again by our after the Arab-Israeli war in 1967, mentions Vance. U.S.-sponsored peace process, had been American friends," the prime minister said. the Palestinians only as a refugee problem Begins Cabinet said earlier in the day it while stating that Israel should withdraw rejected "unequivocally" the American idea from occupied Arab territory in return for for a new resolution. Cabinet spokesperson Arab recognition of the Jewish state within Aryeh Naor said the government believes boundaries. Pope calls for secure the American suggestion "contradicts the An Arab-sponsored proposal likely to be commitments of the United States to Israel" raised for debate would amend the basic that were made in 1975 and confirmed later resolution to include a call for an inde¬ in the Camp David accords and in American pendent Palestinian state, while the Ameri¬ letters attached to the Israeli-Egyptian can plan reportedly would be limited to ties with China peace treaty. Strauss, due to return to Washington Monday, spent Saturday in Egypt talking to guaranteeing the "legitimate rights" of the Palestinians to self-determination. Israel is adamantly opposed to any Chinese Catholic spokesperson in Peking a« Egyptian leaders, including Sadat, who also tampering with 242. The Israelis also fear By SAMUEL KOO saying the Vatican statement on the gave the U.N. initiative a lukewarm the American proposal is aimed at opening a Associated Press Writer bishop's election constituted "blatant inter¬ reception. door to the Palestine Liberation Organiza¬ CASTEL GANDOLFO, Italy - Pope ference" in the affairs of the Chinese tion, with whom Israel says it will never John Paul II extended his hands toward church. THE MEDIATOR SAID the Carter negotiate. China on Sunday and called for resumption of ties between the Vatican and Chinese Roman Catholics, broken when the Com¬ Tourists jump over oil from the Mexican well on a beach in South Padre Island, Tex. Beach sweepers gathered oil and sand beaches and piled it into a five-foot-high, 900-square-yard disposal. from the area for munists took over the mainland in 1949. A Vatican source called the pontiffs statement "a major diplomatic initiative" directed not only to Chinese Catholics but Dissolution of University College also to Peking's Communist government. It was the first time John Paul spoke out on the church in China. allows students to take options Meteorologists warn The pope, speaking from the balcony of the 17th century papal palace here, said the church in Chirta had been "a thriving church," of more than 3 million members By ROLAND WILKERSON State News Staff Writer to the College of Arts and Letters. The Department of Natural Science will be switched to the College of Natural Science quirements will remain the same. Henry Silverman, chairperson of the ATL department said that although he Starting fall term, students will be before the 1949 revolution. allowed to substitute University College and the Department of Social Science to the initially opposed the restructuring, he has currents may drive He said the Vatican is prepared "to take every possible means" to restore the "perfect union" that once existed between courses with general education courses as part of the disbanding of University College. College of Social Science. Students must still take two courses in Humanities, social science and natural now "accepted the reality" of the changes and is cooperating to make the transition period smooth. the Vatican and the Chinese church. science, but they will be able to substitute a Silverman said some of the faculty had more oil to coastline to "FOR 30 YEARS we have never ceased nourish the hope of linking us together The college, to be dissolved June 30, 1980, will place its four departments within three "core" colleges, said Richard J. third course with classes from outside the departments, Coelho said. The substitutions approved by the Aca¬ felt "isolated" from their fields of work in the University College, adding that the Coelho, associate dean of the University reorganization should help eradicate those Associated Press Writer again in a fresh contact, the link that had demic Council are called general education feelings. never been broken spiritually," the pope College. CORPUS CHRISTI, Texas - More than 50 miles of Texas coastline were smudged courses. told some 10,000 persons gathered for the For the first time, the fall schedule book The following departments will offer Sunday with thick crude oil from a runaway Mexican well and meteorologists warned traditional Sunday blessing. DOROTHY A. ARATA, assistant pro¬ that winds and currents may drive much more to shore. will contain a list of those courses approved general education courses fall term in vost for undergraduate education, said "Recent developments" indicating grow¬ for general education credits, which may be natural science; astronomy, astrophysics, An oil spill task force said moderate to heavy concentrations of mousse - an emulsion there would continue to be a University of heavier oil and water — were washing ashore from the Rio Grande to 12 miles north of ing religious tolerance in China, the pope substituted for a University College course. botany and plant pathology, entomology, entity over freshmen and sophomore stu¬ the Port of Mansfield Cut. said, "may allow us to express new hope The changes being instituted were out¬ food science and human nutrition and dents. The half-inch-thick swath covered about six feet of sand, stretching 50 miles up the and faith and permit our brothers and lined in a document from the Provost's physics. sisters in China to enjoy full religious Office entitled Academic Reorganization Arata said the entity would be called coast and extending about two miles into the sea. freedom." GENERAL EDUCATION COURSES in the Undergraduate University Division and Weather forecasters said winds should shift more to the south-southeast and increase and General Education. The Peking Patriotic Catholic Associa¬ social science will be offered by the would answer to the Provost's Office. to about 12 mph, joining with increasing currents to push even more oil onto the beach. Williard Warrington, acting dean of Another patch of oil two miles long and 20 feet across at its widest point was reported tion, an independent organization with no IN THE DOCUMENT, Provost Clarence departments of anthropology, sociology and beached Sunday at Mustang Island, some 40 miles northwest of Corpus Christ. State Rep. ties to the Vatican, elected Monsignor L. Winder said the reorganization "will urban planning and landscape architecture. University College, said programs offered Michael Fu Tiashan as the Catholic bishop result in MSU being better prepared to Courses that may be used as humanities under the college will continue to be offered Arnold Gonzalez imspected the site and pronounced it an "utter disaster." in Peking two weeks ago. A Vatican meet the challenges and problems of the credits will be offered by the following "virtually unchanged." Services offered by Beach sweepers gathered oil and sand from the beaches on tourist-dependent South the college include academic counseling for Padre Island and piled it Saturday into a five-foot-high, 900-square-yard area to await spokesperson called the elevation "illegiti¬ future." departments; English, German and Rus¬ mate," but the pope did not refer to it As part of the reorganization process, the sian, philosophy, religious studies, romance freshmen and sophomores and the Learning safe disposal. Sunday. and classical languages and art. Resource Center. Students may also opt for Oil-blocking booms are being readied at Pass Cavallo, the two-mile-wide entrance to departments of Humanities and American The Italian news agency ANSA quoted a Thought and Language will be transferred American Thought and Language re- a no-preference major in the college. Matagorda Bay. Numerous secondary bays and estuaries ring the bay, and grass marshes would make oil cleanup there "especially The task force also plans to use open- Protesters, water containment systems to keep oil out of the bay. First Lady of MSU: Klan march Iran A woman of variety in Georgia forces COLUMBUS, GA. (AP) - Klan and By DENNIS PETROSKEY anti-klan marchers took the mobilized to State News Staff Writer A trim woman with a friendly smile pulled open the heavy, wooden door at Cowles to Saturday morning in western Georgia for the first time in almost a decade. streets House. It had been eight years since either robed "C'mon in," she said. "Would you like some coffee?" crush revolt Walking through the dining room still cluttered with an assortment of household Klanmembers or singing black protesters had demonstrated in this western Georgia goods waiting to be put away, she picked up her cup and talked about the moving-in city, home of the Army's big infantry process which has become a familiar routine in her life. training center at Ft. Benning. By PHILIP DOPOULOS Associated Press Writer The movers were expected to arrive later in the day with the rest of the furniture from But both groups turned out this weekend, Texas. Workers were busy at that moment, completing renovations to the kitchen. and the reaction indicated times have TEHRAN, Iran — Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini ordered the armed forces mobil¬ It seemed to be a poor time for an interview, but she walked to a room away from the changed. ized Sunday to crush a rebellion in chaos, making light conversation as she went. Among other things, the Klan claimed to have cleaned up its act. Kurdistan, where he said Kurdish rebels SITTING ON A small sofa, Clare Mackey sipped her cup of coffee and spoke about her "Look at me," said David Duke, 28, of had surrounded a military garrison in new life. Metairie, La., national director of Knights fighting. of the Ku Klux Klan, one of several KKK The government banned the Kurdish "I have more interests than I can really pursue," the new First Lady of MSU said. political party, and the army cancelled all Packing up and moving north hasn't left Mackey with much free time of late. "After organizations claiming national member¬ leaves. the house is taken care of I plan to get more active again," she said. ship. "I don't have manure on my boots, I don't have a wad of tobacco in my cheek and Kurdish sources denied Khomeini's re¬ Although she doubts she will take a full-time job while living in East Lansing, she I don't weigh 300 pounds." port of a fight in the town of Sanandaj, plans to continue studying music. however, and the government later said An accomplished flutist, Mackey has also had experience as a choral conductor. With about 200 police officers watching, the town was under control. "My family was always very musical," she said. "I was in the band, orchestra and three 70 Klanmembers — half of them wearing The goverment banned the Kurdish different choral groups in high school." the traditional white robes — marched Democratic Party and announced it was about a quarter mile Saturday on the AFTER RECEIVING A master's degree in music from the University of Illinois, northeastern fringe of the city. seeking its leaders, including Secretary- General Adbol Rahman Qassemlu, for where she married her husband, Cecil, after her sophomore year, Mackey said she did "a fair amount of teaching." IHE KLAN MARCH drew some specta inciting the uprisings. Pars, the official news agency, reported 11 Kurdish rebels Recalling her teaching experience, she said, "I taught just about everything except tors, including several blacks, but ended were executed Saturday night for "causing orchestra. One time I even was in charge of a marching band — it had 16 members and I without incident about an hour before the disturbances" in Kurdistan. had to get the band together myself," she said with a smile. National Association for the Advancement "I want to get involved somehow, but I haven't been here long enough to know of Colored People held a counter-march. THE KDP CENTRAL committee, which exactly in what it will be," she said. "I'd like to find a group to sing with and I'd About 500 participants in the NAACP was reported in hiding, issued a statement especially like to study voice." group marched down Martin Luther King A sports enthusiast, Mackey tries to swim three-quarters of a mile three times a week, Jr. Boulevard through downtown Colum¬ appealing to international organizations for help to stop the government "from annihi¬ (continued on page 5) Mrs. Clare Mackey bus, also under tight security. There were lating the Kurdish people, their children i continued on page 5) and aged." Monday, August 20, 1979 2 Michigon State News, Eost Lansing, Michigan REEK, EE UJRim DENIED Ousted Cambodian State News VOA is defended WASHINGTON (AP) - The gestions by VOA critics that "IF YOU ARE in desperate regime's leaders Wire Digest Voice of America is just telling the news, not luring potential refugees into danger, when it the U.S. government agency's broadcasts could lead Vietna¬ mese to their death by en¬ circumstances in Cambodia Vietnam, you may listen to a news broadcast about the ar¬ or sentenced to death broadcasts to Southeast Asia couraging them to flee as "boat rival of the 7th Fleet somewhat BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) — Cambodia's pro-Vietnamese that U.S. ships are in nearby people." differently than you and I waters, its director says. At a fund-raising party in Los would listen to it," he said. government found the ousted Pol Pot regime guilty of killing "When a Jane Fonda says President Carter last month more than 3 million people and sentenced its two top leaders to Angeles for refugees last week, death in absentia, the Cambodian news agency SPK said with her customary lack of Fonda said the VOA had falsely ordered units of the U.S. Sunday. FocusWorld command of the facts that we are encouraging people to leave assured Vietnamese they would be picked up within 24 hours of Navy's 7th Fleet to search for refugees in the South China The two, ousted Premier Pol Pot and Deputy Premier Ieng by giving routes and stuff, it is Sea. Sary, are believed to be somewhere in Cambodia leading a leaving land. not only a lie, it is a great guerrilla war against the regime which replaced them during Some refugees have told Vietnam's invasion of Cambodia last winter. The Pol Pot disservice," VOA Director R. STRAUS, A FORMER New reporters they left Vietnam Black Consciousness movement members arrested Peter Straus said in an inter¬ York braodcast executive and when they did because they had government was backed by China. Pol Pot and Sary were ordered brought to the capital, Phnom view late last week. publisher, said that, in fact, heard radio reports of Carter's Penh, for execution, and their property was ordered Straus commented on sug- VOA broadcasters go out of DUBAN, South Africa (AP) — Two without giving details of the arrests. A instructions to the 7th Fleet on confiscated, SPK said. The agency did not say how they were to their way to warn of dangerous the VOA. leading members of the outlawed Black spokesperson at Security Branch head¬ die. weather conditions. The refugees are quoted as Consciousness movement, including a quarters in Pretoria confirmed the two Since 1975, when Khmer Rouge guerrillas defeated an relative of the group's late founder Steve Biko, have been arrested, the Sunday were arrested last Tuesday. Biko, the 30-year-old founder of the Pope's Irish Under a congressional charter enacted in 1976, the saying they would have left anyway, but the presence of the U.S. naval vessels encouraged American-backed regime and Pol Pot emerged as Cambodia's leader, there have been persistent reports of wide-scale movement, died of brain injuries suf¬ VOA is obligated to be "accur¬ executions and deaths from disease in Cambodia. Tribune reported. Mxolisi Mvovo, Biko's brother-in-law, fered while in police detention two years visit to cost ate, objective and comprehen¬ them to leave sooner. Recently, Western aid officials have said the country also is sive" in beaming news of the suffering from near-famine. But it has been difficult to put and Malusi Mpulwana, a former research ago. His death ignited an international free world to other parts of the "WE GO TO very great figures on the suffering. protest against the treatment of political worker of the banned black community program, are being held under the prisoners in this radically segregated $4.4 million world. "We are obliged as human lengths to choose our words According to the Voice of the Kampuchean (Cambodian) People radio, monitored in Bangkok, an estimate that nearly 3 carefully," Straus said. "I do internal security act, the newspaper said country. beings and as a bunch of not think people are being lured million Cambodians have died came from witnesses at the trial. DUBLIN, Ireland (AP) - The Roman Catholic Church in professionals who are sensitive into danger by these broad¬ In addition, the government indictment said the Pol Pot Ireland will nave to raise an to perceptions in that part of casts. regime's economic policies had left 2.5 million of the 4 million estimated $4.4 million from the the world to have a kind of "All we are doing is to remaining Cambodians facing starvation. island's 3.5 million Catholics to The broadcast quoted the witnesses as saying entire units of International hashish smuggling ring cracked pay for Pope John Paul II's visit second sense of how that infor¬ mation is going to be per¬ describe with great restraint and great caution one of the the defeated army in eastern Cambodia were executed between month, authoritative 1975 and 197K. next an ceived," Straus said of the great tragedies of our time," he NEW DELHI, India (AP) — Indian three Nepalese and two Indians, none of church source says. broadcasts. added. agents say they have cracked an them diplomats, the official said. revenue Money isn't all the Catholic international hashish smuggling ring that He alleged that several Danes," hierarchy is asking of the Irish. uses diplomats to carry the drug. including one in Copenhagen who is Parish priests are calling on We can't take any diplomats, some action against the of whom are based being watched by Danish police, were involved in the operation. The Nepalese and Indians were caught them to cut back on the drink for two weeks before the pope's three-day visit Sept. 29 to Oct. Russian cosmonauts land safely, here, because they're protected by 1. diplomatic immunity," said an official, when they were preparing to send a a lot in a record-breaking spaceflight That's asking who declined to be named. He say which nation's diplomats were would not 220-pound shipment of hashish to an unidentified European country, said the country where spends more the population than $2.2 million a end believed involved in the smuggling official, who claimed it was their third on alcoholic beverages. week MOSCOW (AP) - Cosmo¬ mark Nov. 2, 1978, in the same rockets aboard the Soyuz 33 that Ryumin had gained a operation. such shipment in the last six months. The church, one of the most pound-and-a-half. A kilo of hashish 2.2 pounds — has nauts Vladimar Lyakhov and Salyut space station. spacecraft, piloted by Soviet The diplomatic connection came to — influential institutions in this cosmonaut Nikolai Rukavish- Valery Ryumin safely ended Tass ennounced that light earlier this month after the arrest of an estimated value here of more than overwhelmingly Roman Catho¬ nikov and Bulgarian Georgy HOWEVER, THE COM lic country, has no special funds history's longest spaceflight Lyakhov and Ryumin had been MUNIST Party daily Pravda five members of the smuggling team, $3,000. awarded the highest Soviet Ivanov, that prevented a linkup to meet the cost of the papal Sunday, landing in Soviet Cen¬ reported Wednesday that, medal — Heroes of the Soviet with Salyut 6. The Soyuz 33 tral Asia after orbiting the visit, the first to the Irish Union. was forced back to Earth in a despite their good health, the globe for a record 175 days, 36 cosmonauts were growing in¬ Republic, the source said. "We Preliminary medical exami¬ dangerous nighttime landing. minutes, Tass reported. Three surviving octuplets in serious condition hope to raise the money in a national collection at all Masses They had travelled nation found the cosmonauts in 26 Soviet space launched officials on June the unmanned creasingly homesick, and were discussing home and family 72,240,000 miles, the equivalent good health, and Tass said they and more in conversation. on Sunday, Sept. 9," said the Soyuz 34 to test new rockets more NAPLES, Italy (AP) — The three want to emphasize they are still in grave source, who asked not to be of a round trip to Mars when it had "withstood the long orbital Soviet officials did not com¬ condition because they are too imma¬ is closest to Earth. Lyakhov, a flight well." designed to prevent further surviving octuplets born to a Naples identified. Scientists at the Soviet space docking failures. ment Sunday on how the cos¬ woman were in "still grave but slightly ture. There should be no false hopes." On The pontiff will stop in Ire¬ 38-year-old lieutenant colonel in Tass repeatedly said during monauts were adjusting to the Soviet Air Force, and center in Baykonur, 1,400 miles better" condition Sunday, said doctors Saturday, doctors gave Valentino the land on his way to a visit to the the mission that the men were Earth's gravity after nearly six Ryumin, a 40-year-old civil en¬ southeast of Moscow, said they who have treated the infants since their best chances for survival. United States. months of weightlessness. sighted the Sayuz 34 reentry healthy, and boasted on July 13 Church authorities expect as gineer, were launched into premature birth Thursday. The five girls and three boys were born space Feb. 25 aboard Soyuz 32. vehicle shortly after 3 p.m. Physicians at the St. Paul Hospital said many as 150,000 Catholics from two months prematurely to Pasqualina Moscoe time. The craft landed Britain and Europe to come to Silvana, Anna and Valentino Chianese It (Tass) did not about 210 southeast of and Stefano Chianese. The 29-year-old Ireland for the pope's visit. All were fed milk through a nasal tube for Baykonur. mother, who lost sextuplets three years Dublin's major hotels already mention the April the first time Sunday, although all three ago, said she has taken hormones for are fully booked for that period. 12 malfunction of THE SUNDAY TOUCH¬ remained in incubators and continued to years to increase her fertility. The couple An open-air mass, to be rockets aboard the DOWN had been expected receive intravenous feeding. has no children. celebrated in Dublin's rambling since Saturday, when Tass — They said a bluish tinge, caused by lack Phoenix Park a few hours after Soyuz 33 space¬ for the first time — reported in of oxygen, had disappeared from com¬ A girl, Angela, who weighed 17,6 the pope arrives at Dublin craft . . . that pre¬ advance on the planned conclu¬ plexions of all three babies. ounces, died 10 hours after birth. Two Airport, probably will be the vented a linkup sion of a space flight. The infants are slightly better today," babies died Friday and two others on biggest gathering of the visit. As many as 1 million people, with Salyut 6. In reporting the landing, said a hospital spokesperson. "But we Saturday. Tass omitted only one event of approximately the population of "^Te'cosmonautsTescended the flight. It did not mention Dublin, are expected to attend from the Salyut 6 space labora¬ the April 12 malfunction of the service at the 15-acre site — tory in a Soyuz space capsule, the biggest gathering in Ireland and touched down 1,600 miles Focus=Nation since the Eucharist Congress in southeast of Moscow at 3:30 1932. p.m. - 8:30 a.m. EDT, the Some 150 bishops, clad in official news agency reported special white and red vest¬ ments, and 1,500 priests will 90 minutes after the landing. HWUAWfct- U. S. policy toward PLO ridiculous — Young concelebrate the special mass THEY BROKE THE endur IN £*6T with the pope, church officials ance record of fellow cosmo¬ WASHINGTON (AP) — Outgoing U.N. U.S. policy since 1975 has forbidden said. nauts Vladimir Kovalenok and Ambassador Andrew Young said Sunday talks with the PLO until it accepts the The church has ordered a Alexander Ivanchenkov on July U.S. policy toward the Palestine Libera¬ right of Israel to exist. Young's July 26 one-acre white carpet — at a cost of about $44,000 — for the 15, surpassing the old mark of 139 days, 14 hours and 48 40MMUNHW tion Organization is "ridiculous," and meeting in New York with Zehdi Labib that redefining the policy is hampered by Terzi violated that policy. Our policy is kind of ridiculous," altar area, which will be topped by a 100-foot-high steel cross. minutes. Kovalenok Ivanchenkov set the previous and VWlUyWir, a stubborn and intransigent government in Israel." Young said Sunday on CBS' "Face the tW(,lT Young, who resigned last week after it Nation." "In 1975, it may have made was disclosed he had an unauthorized sense ... But here it is four, almost five meeting with the PLO's observer to the years later and we're still not communi¬ United Nations, said the cause of peace cating with an organization that seems to The City of East Lansing Commission On Housing And Community Development is soliciting can only be advanced by opening have the support of a good part of the Imported fabrics from England & Italy proposals for inclusion in the City's 1980-81 Community Development Block Grant Progra communications with the organization. Arab world . . Approximately $670,000 will be available to fund various project activities. If you a Complete bridal department interested in participating in the shaping of the Program budget, you are encouraged t submit a proposal that is comprised of one or more of the following activities: Sewing notions & patterns 1. Construction Vogue Butterick Simplicity & McCalls o Carter campaigning along the riverbanks 2. Central Busine 213 Ann St. East Lansing ABOARD THE DELTA QUEEN (AP) - Iowa and Wisconsin were key states in 3. Park developme ion of recreational facilities. President Carter's riverboat tour of the Carter's campaign for the Democratic open daily 9:30 to 9:00 Sat. 9:30 to 5:30 r improvement of neighborhoo presidential nomination three years ago, Phone 332-0361 Mississippi took on the feel of a political campaign Sunday with Carter using every and they are expected to be just as sing blight through housing rehab opportunity to greet friendly crowds important politically to him in 1980. gathered along the Minnesota and The vacationing president acted as The encouragement of housing construction b) providing land, public Wisconsin riverbanks. though there were nothing he wanted to As the old-fashioned sternwheeler do more than meet his fellow Americans. Delta Queen made its lazy way down the In the predawn darkness Sunday, he river, Carter planned to attend on board worship services, visit a factory workers' interrupted his sleep to go ashore and Certain neighborhood public shake hands with about 150 people who picnic in Wisconsin and have lunch with Economic development activi n provide jobs for low inco Democratic Sen. John Culver at his home waited to greet him at lock and dam No. 8 City residents. in Iowa. near Genoa, Wis. Citizen participation assis TUESDAY Environmental design and ur Nyad swimming to Florida again 22£ - TOAST Ot THE TOWN NIGHT Individuals and groups wishing to submit a proposal should contact the City Community Development Program staff at City Hall (tel. *337-1731, ext. 253) to discuss their mm All liquor, Beer & Wine /i price ideas. City staff will be available to provide technical assistance for the develop¬ ment of proposals. The deadline for the submission of written proposals to the NORTH BIMINI, Bahamas (AP) - Her Nyad hopes to come ashore near Fort MMk Commission is October 17, 1979. Lauderdale about 11 a.m. Monday. mm WEDNESDAY body sprayed with latex to guard against Prese s of proposals ■ay also be made a e of the following CDBG public hea stinging jellyfish, marathon swimmer Slicing through the water at a brisk 54 mm - MUGGERS MADNESS Public Hearing Format Diana Nyad set out Sunday on her second to 56 strokes per minute, Nyad was mmm Location All Mugs of Beer Zi price try in two weeks to become the first accompanied by a boat supplied by mm Red Cedar School Neighborhood level hearing person to swim from the Bahamas to Miami radio station WINZ. Aboard were mm* THURSDAY October 11 54-B District Court Neighborhood level hearing 54-B District Court Citywide hearing Florida. a doctor, Nyad's trainers and a WINZ October 18 54-B District Court Citywide hearing on draft 1980-8 Nyad, a 29-year-old Fort Lauderdale reporter. Sffttte PITCHER PARTY NICiHT CDBG Program Application native who lives in Manhattan, entered The boat also served as a base for mm ill t three scuba divers armed with eight-foot- All Pitchers Zi price Three additional neighborhood level public hearings waters described as so calm they looked mm» 24 and October 17. The exact dates, times and locat like a sheet of blue ice." long sticks tipped with shotgun shells. mSt SPECIALS FIRE UP AT 8:00 P.M as scheduling arrangements are completed. Just over two hours later, at 10:15 The devices, called bang-sticks, detonate ft fc M ^ RUN Al I NIGHT LONG a.m., she was beginning her sixth mile in when pressed against a hard surface and tftiH what would be a swim of about 60 miles. are used to kill sharks. T.\" BAND: RAPTURE Michigan State News. East Lansing, Michigan Monday, August 20, 1979 I By United Cress International Three MSU economists say trends toward larger farms, more mechanization and higher costs will continue in the coming decade. gasoline, Brake said. Wright said rising costs also are forcing more and more farmers to take a second job. The average price of an acre of Michigan cropland increased from $100 in 1950 to $230 These trends, however, might not mean the end of the family farm, as isoften feared. in 1965 and then shot up, reaching $960 as of Feb. 1. The three MSU specialists — Karl Wright, Mike Kelsey and John Brake — recently Another 300 percent increase in the next 10 years is possible, MSU economists see set down their predictions on the state of Michigan agriculture in the 1980s. "We're probably not going to see the 1,000-acre farm becoming 2,000-acre farms, but we are going to see more 200-acre Interest rates also are climbing and are likely to range between 10 percent over the next few years, Brake said. Kelsey said. percent and 13 operations expanding to 400 acres so they can compete more economically," Kelsey said. ALT HOUGH THE NUMBER of large farms is increasing, the number of small farms larger ,smraf higher "Total farm numbers will go on decreasing as small-scale operators retire or go out of is remaining relatively constant, he said. The number of middle size farms is dwindling. business," he said. "Small farms are relatively numerous because more and more people who work in Although 15 percent of Michigan's largest farms were responsible for two-thirds of all towns are moving to rural areas," Wright said. "They like this type of living environment sales in 1974, the figure for 1978 — not yet final — is expected to be 80 percent. and farm part-time mainly for enjoyment." The costs of items such as fertilizer, pesticides and machinery are rising faster than "Often these part-time farmers do better in total earnings than small acreage, prices in the future farm income. Narrowing the margin between the cost of producing a crop and the price it fetches forces farmers to expand their operation in order to generate an adequate income, the full-time farmers because they have another source of income," he said. The future looks especially bright for families who own large farms, experts said. "One of our most viable forms of agriculture today is the father son or immediate experts said. family farm operation," Brake said. "It allows more land to be farmed, allows for vacation time and allows peak labor ( FARM MECHANIZATION WILL continue despite the increasing cost and scarcity of demands to be met," he said. tit r/jiiiniiiiftt "iiiniimmmmiiuwni Police building opposed By MICHAEL STUART building in a way that's unconscionable," Progress on the East Lansing guide has State News Staff Writer been slow because of a shortage of The proposed construction of a new police Adado agreed with Purvis, but also volunteer help, Laux said. He said he hopes headquarters building in Lansing was conceded that Blair's argument was logical. to get more volunteers when school starts debated by members of City Council at a "One year ago the economic picture was again in the fall. work session last Thursday. much brighter than it is today," he said. Lapsing guide booklets are available to Councilmember-at-large James D. Blair In other action at the council's work campus handicappers at the Office of opposed the construction of a new building session, "Access Lansing," a handicapper Programs for Handicappers, on the fourth and said the city should wait until economic guide to the Lansing area, was presented to floor of the MSU Main Library, Laux said. times are better to consider a bonding the council with the thanks of the booklet's The council also agreed to appropriate election to get the necessary construction author, Ken Laux. $20,000 in already budgeted funds to funds. Lansing of the guide and increase was a sponsor Lansing District Court judges' "I see a lot of problems facing our city and supplied funds for its publication to the salaries. priorities must be set. The streets are Center for Handicapper Affairs, a Lansing The five District Court magistrates will falling apart, the bridges are falling apart. public-service organization. each receive a $4,000 raise if approved at The North Grand River bridge is literally Laux, Access Lansing Coordinator, make the council's Monday meeting. falling apart," he said. the presentation and thanked the council The council will discuss a new contract "Why waste our time and humongous for its support in the 18-month effort to with Teamsters local 580 which represents amount of staff time check local businesses for accessibility and studying this issue employees of the Lansing District Court when we have basic things which need availability of handicapper facilities. and Probation department at 7 tonight on doing first," he added. The Center for Handicapper Affairs is in the 10th floor of City Hall. Councilmember-at-large and President the process of making a similar booklet Also slated for tonight's meeting is a Louis F. Adado said hopes of moving city available to East Lansing handicappers, and public hearing on proposed increases in employees from the City Hall annex in Laux said it should be ready around parking ticket fines and parking meter Washington Square back into City Hall February. rates on downtown streets. proper were the driving force behind the proposed construction of a police building. He said the city could then lease out the City Hall annex for office usage and recoup some of its investment in the Washington East Lansing resident held Square facility. Should the new Police building be constructed, the present police head¬ quarters next to City Hall would be in connection with rape occupied by employees now housed in the State News Kemi Gaabo A 20-year-old East Lansing man was being held in Ingham County Jail Sunday night City Hall annex. A band scaffolding can be used for more than directing. These people found it interesting and different after he was charged with first-degree criminal sexual conduct in connection with a an Lansing Director of Administrative Ser¬ place to play. vices David Purvis said the annex building Friday morning incident. is overcrowded and needs replacement. Ingham County Sheriffs Department officials said Gary Martin, 201V? E. Grand River "We've shoehorned people into that Ave., was being held on $20,000 bond after he was arraigned Friday in District Court in East Lansing. Martin demanded preliminary examination on the charges. East Lansing police said a 22-year-old woman was walking on the sidewalk in the 400 block of Evergreen Ave. at 3 a.m. Friday when a man jumped out of the bushes and Ag-expo construction awaits financial aid confronted her. The woman told police the man pulled her into the bushes and raped her, police said. Officers arrived at the scene less than a minute after being alerted by residents nearby who heard the woman's screams, police said. By JEFF MINAHAN Kindinger cited a large number of possible contributors and sources of financial The victim was still lying on the ground when the officers arrived, police said. State News Staff Writer support which the association would be exploring. These included state and federal The woman was treated at Edward W. Sparrow Hospital in Lansing and released, Construction of an on-campus Agricultural Exposition Center could begin within a year grants, agricultural organizations and associations, alumni groups and state and federal if financial support for the project can be secured in time, said an official of the group legislators. police said. developing the complex. The group is also considering the sale of bonds to support the complex, Kindinger said. Paul Kindinger, member of the Michigan Agricultural Education and Exposition The brochure is expected to be ready by the end of September, and the association Center Development Association, said the group would like to break ground within a would like to have financial contributions secured in six to eight months, he said. year, but that that prediction was "probably optimistic." Kindinger said the association is currently preparing a brochure to present to potential financial contributors. When actual planning for construction of the ag-expo complex will how long that process takes, he said. The project, which could cost up to $50 million, will include a begin depends on multi-purpose arena, Atty. Gen. says more Although the University has offered a 65-acre on-campus site for development of the indoor and outdoor exhibition centers, a show pavillion and an auditorium. project, it will not contribute to construction costs. Financial support for the complex must come from outside sources, Kindinger said. The site offered by MSU is located on the southwest corner of Mt. Lane. The possibility of using the complex as an arena for MSU basketball Hope Road and Farm games has also police suits in offing DETROIT (UPI) — The lawsuit against been discussed by members of the association and MSU officials. the City of Philadelphia charging systematic James Anderson, dean of the College of Agriculture and Natural Resources, said the and widespread police brutality may be the forerunner of similar suits in other cities, U.S. Housing problems topic association is leaning toward an agricultural oriented facility, but that the sports complex combination has not yet been eliminated. possibility of a Attorney General Benjamin Civiletti says. "There are no lawsuits planned for other cities but there have been surveys," Civiletti said in Detroit Saturday at a convention of the GI Forum of the United States, an "This group is really working for an agricultural and exposition center," Anderson of consumer workshop said, "but we haven't ruled out anything." organization of Hispanic Americans. He said he believed the Justice Department, which filed the Philadelphia suit, was on "sound legal grounds" in the Philadelphia case and the legal proceedings could establish Housing problems and how to resolve will be focal issues at the workshop. precedents for future lawsuits. Application for proposed them will be the "In most cities where there are instances of police brutality, there is action taken by subject of a Housing The conference is sponsored by the Information Workshop to be conducted Michigan Outstate State Chapter of the local authorities, through disciplinary actions against the officer and through educational Wednesday-in the Kellogg Center. National Association of Human Rights programs and training," he said. "Where we would take action is in a situation where there are repeated, aggravated Participants will include representatives Workers and the Community Relations of government and tenant's rights and civil Bureau of the Michigan Department of Civil rights organizations. Also included will be Rights. EDC weighed at hearing incidents of police brutality and no good faith efforts to eliminate it," he said. state and local housing, planning, building The conference will be held in Room 101 of CIVILETTI, IN ONE of his first public appearances since being sworn in as attorney A public hearing on the establishment of a proposed East Lansing Economic and zoning departments. the Kellogg Center and will begin at 9 a.m. general Thursday, said he wanted to be judged by improvements in "the representation Lloyd Davis, director of voluntary com¬ An $8 fee is charged for the conference Development Corp. will be held at 7:30 tonight at the East Lansing Public Library, 950 of the rights of minorities." Abbott Road. He said 22 percent of all cases in the criminal division of the civil rights division of the pliance of the Department of Housing and which includes a luncheon. Urban Development in Washington, D.C., Developer David Krause and his associates are seeking permission to incorporate an Justice Department involved Hispanic-American victims. EDC for the city. The hearing will be held to consider his and any competing applications. The department has 117 investigations pending where Hispanic Americans are victims, will keynote the invitational conference. The EDC would help finance Krause's proposed $10 million Citgo block development he said, pledging the department would not tolerate discriminatory treatment of Hispanic- Topics to be discussed during the workshop will be fair housing and housing laws, the role of citizen advocate groups and Correction and future building projects through the sale of tax-exempt, low-interest revenue bonds. The creation of the corporation allows local communities to revitalize economic and Americans and other minorities. The effort to protect minorities' rights will include a high priority of investigations of employment bases through private funding. discrimination against minorities, including allegations of police brutality, he said. housing programs in Michigan. Assistant Vice President of Administra¬ Councilmember Larry Owen, at the unveiling of the Citgo project Aug. 2. said the Insurance redlining, the practice of tion Starr Keesler was He also said he will work to develop a national policy on the use of deadly force by incorrectly identi¬ bonds would be repaid with revenue from the complex. refusing insurance to persons living in fied as executive vice president in Friday's police officers. Krause said the bonds would pose no threat to taxpayers, and would enable developers specified areas of a city for reasons of risk, State News. "A national policy on the use of deadly force is essential," Civiletti said. "It is long to get a lower interest rate on funds for the project. overdue." VOLK8WAOBM MAZDA Good Old Days Are Back AT LAST! JOIN US FOR DINNER A COMPLETE FOREIGN ALTO PARTS N1 at Old Time Prices! Store in Lansing Tuesday & Thursday Aug. 21 and 23 Entertainment Featuring - Jack Hamilton 220 S. Howard St. Minutes Lansing 371-1752 Such as ... from campus!. SAVE NOW with Spaghetti with special tomato sauce 51.45 Vi block south of Frandor our GRAND OPENING Spaghetti with spicy meat sauce 5 1 .75 SPECIAL Manicotti or Cannelloni s2.85 NOW OPEN! 9" Pizza *1.95 20°/o OFF 8-5 12" Pizza $2.95 Monday - Friday on ALL Parts And lots SPECIAL OFFER GOOD more at prices you haven t seen in years, including your favorite soft drink and draught beer! 9-12 Saturday THRU AUG. 26th In Stock!! DON'T MISS OIJR GOOD OLD DAYS! PUOItOT Your billfold and your stomach would never forgive you! SWARM PATSUM OHL VOLVO Opinion V IEWPOINT: PERFORMING ARTS CENTER Voter registration bill Arts center should hear increases voter influence There is no time when voter participants. Several states may be moving a step closer to making their high schools. In politics, one inviolable axiom the name of its originator registration is more crucial than in the PAC. The Whartons were East Lansing's major links to the an election year. Throughout the themselves increasingly more is that areas with a higher voter By REGINALD THOMAS arts. Dolores Wharton often displayed local art pieces at Cowles for the Performing Arts. country, voter participation in politically active, thanks to a bill participation are more politically The Clifton R. Wharton State Center That is a rather long name for a performing arts center. But for House during the Wharton's stay there. And the couple allowed elections varies; some states have signed into law last week by Gov. active and therefore influential in MSU it is the most logical name. Especially when you look at what students to come and view their collection of Picassos and other a high turnout while others show William G. Milliken, allowing deciding elections. These areas fine art works. he did to get the center. an exceedingly low percentage of 18-year-olds to register to vote in also serve as target points for The Whartons came to MSU in 1970. From that time until they The Whartons were a big plus to this University and this candidates, who usually flock to left in January 1978, they worked hard and diligently to get a new University owes them a bit of thanks. To list the numerous things districts where voting power is Performing Arts Center built. Wharton traveled around the that Wharton did to improve MSU would be obvious. But even his critics, when they seriously and objectively look at Wharton, must strong. The new law, sponsored by country raising funds and giving presentations to possible backers. He organized the University's first enrichment drive and invited agree that he did more for this University than most people will Sen. Jackie Vaughn, D-Detroit, admit. many people to his home to discuss the PAC. will undoubtedly boost the number But his work on the enrichment drive is not the only reason the And now the MSU Board of Trustees must decide for whom the of high school students currently PAC should be named after him. PAC will be named. They have already considered Margaret Wharton came in at a time when campuses throughout the McGoff but have not brought Wharton's name up. And the thing registered to vote in Michigan, the nation were in turmoil. Blacks were protesting for greater about it is they have been approached about it. I learned that first state to adopt such a law. But representation in the academic and social community. Students Trustee Aubrey Radcliffe sent a letter to the board in July, more important, the bill will make were questioning the Vietnam war. suggesting that the board consider naming the PAC after the it even easier for students to In his first six months Wharton had to deal with student Whartons. As of yet they have not responded to Radcliffe's letter. obtain voting eligibility, a right demonstrations, sit-ins, the student strike and a phenomenon that The board will be meeting again on Sept. 8, and should take that is available to everyone, but is is referred to as People's Park. When he arrived, three of the Radcliffe's suggestion into consideration. If the board does not sadly — or embarrassingly — not University's trustees openly stated that they did not want him to name the PAC after the Whartons, then they will have welched on come to MSU. a great debt. The Whartons tried to give this school a better exercised enough. He overcame his adversaries and met with students on the steps image, an image that goes beyond the one we now have. This is Vaughn's bill says something of the Union to quell an episode of window smashing and one of the country's largest institutions, but it is one of the about the state of voter registra¬ vandalism that was sparked by the Chicago Seven trial. He smallest when it comes to art appreciation. The new PAC tion in this country. In a time when worked day and night to cool tempers that came as a result of the represents a shift to a more cultured image. And the Whartons deaths at Kent State and Jackson State. While other universities initiated that cultural shift. voting is considered a burden were shutting down because of student unrest, Wharton worked Former Trustee Pat Carrigan said it best: "Michigan State instead of a privilege, the legisla¬ to keep the school open. University has grown in size and stature under his (Wharton's) tion acts as a potentially effective "He worked endlessly during the student strike of 1970, meeting leadership and all of us in the MSU family owe a debt of gratitude preventive measure, insuring that with student groups. The flow of information to and from his office to both Cliff and Dolores for their untiring efforts on behalf of the the vast majority of young people kept everything together. Consequently we did finish the school University." with the right to vote do not go year while other universities were shut down," Jack Breslin, And on Sept. 8, the Board of Trustees can pay a portion of that executive vice president once said. debt. unregistered. The fact of the matter is that regardless of how much you like or dislike the man, it is logical that his and his wife's name should don the editor-in-chiel of People's Choice magazine Nowhere is increased voter participation more needed than in the cities. The legislation can only stregthen the voting power of urban residents, including several minorities, whose voices are not always heard. Across the board registration may, however, politi¬ cally motivate these groups and consolidate their voting power, forcing electoral candidates to listen to their concerns. A wives shelter needed Women have doubled as punching bags for men dismay that an overcrowded facility could spawn yet since the beginning of time. In many cultures, another Lansing slum area. The very fact that the house would be a crowded partner abuse is considered an honor — a way of displaying affection between a man and a woman. In facility is testimony enough to the great need for a American society, partner abuse is viewed as a fact battered wives shelter in the Lansing area. Area of life — something that is often tolerated out of love. statistics are sketchy and left to little more than And while some realize that spouse abuse is not a intelligent estimate, but national figures from the personal matter between a wife and a husband, most FBI claim there are over 7 million battered women in citizens seem content to turn their backs on these the United States today. Domestic assaults happen women and keep them scarred, behind closed doors as frequently as births, but they are not nearly as and away from the public limelight. well recorded. On Nov. 4, 1977, every eye in the state watched What Lansing citizens must consider in their the trial of one Francine Hughes, a battered wife who appraisal of the shelter is whom the facility would had murdered her deranged husband. For on that benefit. The house is not just there for poor, day, Hughes was found not guilty by reason of uneducated women from across town, but for women insanity, and for the first time, courts in Michigan like their daughters, sisters, mothers and close ruled that battered women have a right to defend friends. Domestic assault does not have any favorite themselves against their attackers. age, race or economic background — it strikes In the months following the trial, the verdict gave indiscriminately and with little warning. If citizens new life to groups devoted to women's dignity and would view the house — no matter what the location as a facility which could one day protect their safety. — Last week, The Council Against Domestic Assault loved ones, perhaps all smaller concerns about brought its proposal to establish a shelter for these parking and the "neighborhood image" would be put women to Lansing citizens in a public hearing. in their proper perspectives. If citizens are Directly across from the clinics editorial, handling of the news. In this connection, Homeowners and business people alike shared their concerned about overcrowding in the house, let them Give corrections your editors should learn that when a which called for better state regulations, views on the subject — their fear of irate husbands help raise funds for more houses and more rooms in possibly injurious report has been printed was an ad for one of the clinics in question. wandering the city in search of their wives, their hopes of providing more safety. Lansing will protect prominent display which is later found to be untrue, nothing less than an all-out effort to set the record This ad has been running in The State News for weeks, even before you ran your series support of the principle involved, the concern for its own women with the establishment of a shelter, straight is in order. I take this to mean a of investigative reports on this very clinic. lack of parking space near the proposed site and the and that is where social welfare begins. On Aug. 1, The State News falsely As to the sculpture, you ran on page one, reported that a local citizen, John McGoff, clearly identified retraction at least as prominent as the damaging story, ac¬ a few weeks back, a photograph of a boy had been punished by a heavy fine imposed companied by apologies to persons whose skateboarding inside part of it. Did you by a federal judge. On Aug. 6 you printed a know this is just what Professor Leisero- 911 expands its service second story telling that this report was not reputations might have been injured by the error. This should be done, of course, witz does not want, and that he spent much true. whether or not the editors happen to agree time chasing skateboarders out of it before The original story, 14 column-inches in with their victims' political or personal its dedication? The 911 emergency system is expensive. While four MSU stu¬ the system. length, was given the prominence of a place dents have purchased the units, attitudes. In journalism, there is usually a rush to still a source of controversy in We further hope that through on the front page. The retraction, by no Richard M. Roppel print, and always a deadline to meet. But I means clearly labelled as such, was given Ingham County. Some communi¬ they are only four in a group of federal, state and University Biomechanics Department would be glad to see a faithfulness to honor. three and-one-half column-inches on page ties have decided to pull out of the over 100 orally- and aurally-im¬ funds, more units can be pur¬ Some newspapers I know will not accept five. Worse yet, instead of frankly admit paired students at MSU. Perhaps chased and stored in convenient ads from firms they find questionable. I am service, which they feel fails to through a network of unit owners, locations for easy handicapper ting having published a calumnious false¬ Edits were good, sure your writers and advertising staffers respond to the emergency medical hood, you merely attributed the erroneous would profit by thinking together about needs of its citizens. Others have handicappers will have access to a access. While some problems still story to an AP bulletin, ignoring the but inconsistent what is printed. And I would also be glad to well-founded convention that a newspaper opted to stay in the system for lack machine at all times. One club of need to be ironed out in the I hope won't mind two small see your news staffers look behind an of something better. But all com¬ unit owners has been formed in management is liable for all that it prints. you system, the 911 idea for handi¬ The Michigan State News exists for the comments on two of your recent editorials, obvious story or picture, in this case a munities are keeping a watchful Lansing. We urge this club to cappers represents the only those on the licensing of abortion clinics and skateboard scarring up a sculpture, and primary purpose of training students in eye over the service and the communicate with handicappers in county-wide emergency system on the vandalism of Professor Leiserowitz's think, "What's going on here?" newspaper production. An essential part of David Jones benefits it can offer county resi¬ hopes of incorporating them into we have. that training, it seems to me, should consist sculpture. I entirely agree with both, but Okemos of instruction in the fair and equitable believe you have been inconsistent. dents. Until last week, one group of citizens could not utilize the service. Ironically, this group is DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau one which may need the system I'M SORRY, MY imrn-UPINJMS I'M SORRY, SIR. WIS THANKS. HEY, WHAT more than any other — handi- Monday, August 20, 1979 SIR, WE CAN BUT I AM A UJHffTS "PAGO PAGO POST!'I CUPPING IS OVER NICE TAN, IF I TOLD YOUI cappers. But due to the installa¬ Editorials are the opinions of the State News Viewpoints, columns ONLY ADMIT CELEB, I TELL WIS? WAS WE YOUNGEST LI TWO YEARS OLD. WE OH.. THOUGH- KNOW GEORGE HAM¬ tion of a teletypewriter unit at the i CELEBRITIES YOU! TVS QOT GOVERNOR EVER AP- CAN ONLY ADMIT YOU ILTON PERSONAM ? and letters are personal opinions ' TONIGHT. PROOF! POINTEDTO SAMOA! IF YOU'RE STILL HOT. . 911 Emergency Dispatch Center in Lansing, aurally- and orally- Editorial Department impaired persons may now be able / Robin so Photo Editor Kim VanderVeer Sheila Beachum Bill Holdship to get in touch with 911 operators Entertainment & Book Editor Michael Megerian in emergency situations. Sports Editor David Janssen Janet Haltmann Layout Editor FaulaM Mohr Paul Co* fhief Copy Editor Sandra Sweenev This new development within Stall Representative Michele McElmurry the 911 system may not see a great deal of action, however, as the unit Advertising Department which a handicapper must use to ising Manager RonMacMillan Asst Advertis make contact with an operator is Michfgon State News, East Loosing, Michigan Monday, August 20, 1979 5 LOCAL ISSUES YET UNRESOLVED Detroit police nab 85 GM possible target of strikes in narcotics ring raid DETROIT (UPI) - Mini- right story Sunday, said the involve national negotiations in journal said sources said, but produces the Chevrolet Cita¬ strikes UAW planned to call the mini- shape or form," he the plan has already been set in tion and Pontiac Phoenix, two were being considered any way, strikes at some GM facilities on said. motion. of GM's four X body cars that DETROIT (UPI) — Eighty five persons, 45 by the United Auto Workers Mini-strikes are walkouts of Lipton said the mini-strikes have been the com of them younger than 17, have been arrested The organization has been in existence for Union against some General Aug. 30 and 31 to spur local among Motors Corp. plants if contract talks at the new GM assembly short duration, usually one or are "only one of the possibili¬ pany's biggest sellers since by Detroit police in raids authorities say have three years and grossed $100,000 a week, talks on local issues at those division plant in Oklahoma two days, at specific plants ties" and said no strike action concerns over the gas crunch crippled a highly organized narcotics opera¬ Hale said. was definite. first slowed sales in tion on the West Side. "When we got out there, it was so easy to plants remained unresolved, a City. The walkouts, the news¬ operated by an automaker. new car The union was to announce The Oklahoma City plant May. The arrests began July 27 and police said make arrests it almost pathetic," said paper said, would also show the was union spokesperson said Sun¬ unions' strength to GM. its strike target Aug. 30. thousands of dollars from the sales and Sgt. James Spivey. "They were selling dope day. The spokesperson, however, "The mini-strikes are one of Earlier, the UAW ruled out hundreds of small envelopes containing heroin on almost every corner." have been confiscated. Teen agers were recruited into Young Boys said "nothing has been final¬ ized" and the mini-strike stra¬ the things being considered in local negotiating problems but financially ailing Chrysler, limiting the strike target to GM Blind couple to lose The narcotics ring, called Young Boys Inc., is allegedly led by two men who were once Inc. by the intimidation of peer pressure and the lure of big money, he said. tegy "has nothing to do with nothing has been finalized," and Ford. Most analysts believe national negotiations." said UAW spokesperson GM will be this year's strike defendants in Recorder's Court murder trials, "We're talking lucrative business here, so moneys if they wed Howard police said Sunday. recruitment isn't haphazard. Someone al Contracts covering some Lipton. target. A major breakthrough in "After we began the arrest sweeps, the ready in the organization has to recommend 750,000 hourly workers at GM, Ford Motor Co. and Chrysler "THE PROBLEMS IN national negotiations could organization began falling apart," said you, but not before you did an apprenticeship, expire Sept. 14. VOLVE certain local issues and cause the UAW to change its BELLEVILLE (UPI) — A blind man and woman who chose to get Deputy Chief Gerald Hale. "We haven't put so to speak, by acting as a general flunkie or The Flint Journal, in a copy¬ certain GM plants and does not mini-strike strategy, the Flint them out of business yet, but we've got them runner for a probationary period," Spivey married will lose $138 a month in Social Security benefits but to on the run." said. Charles Lott and Sharlene Sanders it was more than a question of Police said Young Boys Inc. used a fleet of The teen-agers were paid $250 a week in monev. vehicles aided by a loose network of street salary plus a commission for the heroin they "If others want to do it," Lott said'Saturday after the couple was Publisher to give paper married, "it's their business. I think they're going to have to answer to God for it." lookouts to deliver heroin to homes in the area. sold, he said. "They're in it for the money, not the dope," The drugs were then distributed to street he said, adding the pushers were not narcotics Combined, the couple has been receiving $502.09 a month from sellers, often by youngsters who carry the users. "A lot of these kids are making the government. As a married couple, Lott and his wife will receive profits to workers heroin stuffed in plastic garbage bags, police considerably more money than their parents." trust only $363.44 a month. "It would be different if we just lived together without getting married," Lott said. "Then we could probably continue to receive CONCORD, N.H. (AP) - Loeb said he would not be a paper's board of trustees Fri¬ what we do now before marriage." Conservative newspaper pub¬ trustee of the trust nor have day, had any connection with a "But if I go out and shack up with somebody," he said, "I'll get control over it. recent U.S. District Court or¬ kicked out of the church, and Bea's mother would kick her right out lisher William Loeb said Sun¬ day he has turned over owner¬ ship of 75 percent of the "After I die, I want the paper to be run by people who share der that wil cause him to lose control of 25 percent of the the door." Lott is a member of the Ithaca Baptist Church and his wife and Girl refuses to accept Manchester Union Leader to a the same philosophy that I do, newspaper's stock by the end of her family are members of the Haggerty Road Missionary Baptist that of public service," Loeb the year. Church of Belleville, where the couple was married. trust for the sole benefit of his "While I always thought I custody suit settlement employees. said in a telephone interview Marriage is "arbitrarily set aside for penalty under the SSI from his home in Prides Cross¬ was immortal, I realized that Supplemental Security Income program rules," Lott said, adding Loeb, 74, whose editorials now that I am 74,1 should make the decrease in benefits resulting from their marriage violates the have proved a major force in ing, Mass. He said he had been planning jt official," Loeb said. First and 14th Amendments of the U.S. Constitution. presidential primaries in New Ellen said. "He (the for "the past 30 years" to turn After the death of the next to He said he wrote President Carter about his dilemma and DETROIT (UPI) - Fifteen-year-old Mary judge) asked me why, a Hampshire, said the stock will be held by a trust, administered over the paper, largest in New the last trustee, the surviving received an answer from an aide, saying, "Thank you for your Ellen Sheldon says she will continue to live with couple of times. And I told him, 'Hey, I love member will oversee the distri¬ letter. We appreciate your views." the "mother" who raised her rather than live her.' " by his wife, Nackey Scripps Hampshire, to employees in a bution of all the stock held by "They have no right to expect us to just live together to maintain with her natural mother despite a court ruling. Carnes said she will appeal the ruling by Loeb, with the profits going to profit-sharing plan. He denied that his action, approved by the the trust to the employees of our benefits," Lott said. Wayne County Circuit Court Judge Roman Gribbs in order to gain legal custody of Mary the paper's employees. the newspaper, Loeb said. Gribbs Friday ruled Mary Ellen must live with Ellen. If appealed in the Michigan Supreme Loeb's action came a little Constance Ward, her natural mother, instead of Court and upheld, the case would set a precedent more than a month after he with her father or the father's live-in girlfriend of for the state, Gribbs said. Movie for children agreed to settle a suit charging pension law violations by sell¬ Klan, protesters march 12 years, Bonnie Carnes. But Sunday Constance Ward said she will "MARY ELLEN TOLD the judge I was her ing 25 percent of the news¬ allow her daughter to continue to live with first choice and that she'd run away to come back to be shown today paper's stock. Under the agreement, the (continued from page 1) brotherhood in Columbus . . . Bonnie Carnes because the girl said she would be happier. to me if she had to," Carnes said. "As long as she wants to stay with me, I'll find a way to keep court said one quarter of the no incidents, police said, no Brotherhood is lost somewhere "I told the judge I was more interested in what her." "The Lion and the Horse," a one-and-one-half hour movie for newspaper's stock — owned by Klanmembers were in in the valley of hate. Let us Mary Ellen wants," said Ward. "I just want to When Carnes lost the civil suit she filed April children, will be shown at 1:30 today at the Valley Cpurt the pension fund of the Union dence. walk together out of the val¬ make her happy." 24, seeking custody of Mary Ellen and property Community Center, 201 Hillside Court. Leader, but controlled by Loeb Duke, dressed in a tailored ley." Mary Ellen has lived with Bonnie Carnes since rights, she also lost the home she says she helped The fast-paced thriller about a ranch hand, the horse he saves — must be sold to outside business suit, told the Klan A teen-age couple who had 1967, or since Carnes began living with the girl's pay for nine years ago. and the cougar they run into, costs $1 with proceeds going to interests by the end of the year. rally he would run for president been holding hands during a father, Charles Sheldon. The judge ruled the house in suburban Pooh's Place Drop-In Center, 4930 S. Hagadorn Road. The sale, coupled with Loeb's of the United States in 1980, speech by the visiting Ku Klux Belleville belonged to Sheldon, so Carnes and her Pooh's Place is a free short-term, drop-in child care facility. age, and the newspaper's lack but said he had not yet decided Klan leader strolled over to a THE SHELDON-CARNES household broke young daughter, Samantha, 14, will have to move Because the center is privately incorporated and not sponsored by of dividends, had caused specu¬ what party affiliation, if any, he KKK recruiting table when the up last spring and Carnes filed a civil suit seeking out within the next month. any organization, the movie is one of several necessary lation that other interests would choose. rally was over. custody of Mary Ellen and a property settlement Sheldon and Carnes both were separated from fund-raising projects. might try to acquire control of The Rev. Johnny Flakes, As the boy began to sign up, on the house the couple shared. Sheldon opposed their spouses when they started living together the newspaper that has a head of the Columbus NAACP the girl began to weep. Carnes in court and Ward also filed for custody of in 1967. Carnes said they intended to marry circulation of 68,000. chapter, told the group, "We "One of my best friends is the girl. when her divorce was finalized but when that It is the only statewide are marching for the brother¬ black," she said. "I can't. I just "I'm not going away from Mrs. Carnes," Mary happened in 1977, no marriage occurred. MSU's new First Lady newspaper in New Hampshire. hood of man. There is no can't." (continued from page 1) as well as playing tennis as often as possible. Why not "I wish I would have taken up tennis earlier, because now it is a real passion of mine," she said. ice skates," she said. "Mom and dad always change "I ALSO GREW up on belonged to figure skating groups. I haven't really skated since we lived in Washington, but I'd love to start doing that again." An advocate of the women's rights movement, though she is not flRar*1, involved politically, Mackey said she has seen many positive results from the movement. your image "Humans need to be respected and developed," can't imagine people trying to stop this." she said, "and I with HOWEVER, MACKEY SAID women who choose to be mothers "have to give special care to their children." "It is so vitally important for us to give children a strong emotional background," she said. "People have to realize how rim'fl terribly significant it is to be with their children when they are growing up." And she does not limit this role only to women. "Men should be around their children as much as possible also," Mackey said. "In many homes, it is perfectly logical for the woman to be the breadwinner." "CECIL HAS TAKEN our children to school with the other wives while I was working," she said. "And I've always done the electrical Brookfield Plaza work around the house." 351-5330 Miss J is dressing "We feel all work is dignified if it needs to be done." in a slender cloud "One year Cecil bought me a lawn mower and the next year he bought me a gas can," she said good-naturedly. "I can't say it was of lustrous velour. my favorite job." Hobie's One job she does not get involved with is offering suggestions to her husband on how to run the University. Glamor can truly be -Rii < "I help with entertaining and ceremonial roles," she said, "but he this easy. Just a is the one the University hired." soft, plush column W / j of jade velour with m a- f f ARTHUR TREACHER'S N1CKLE PICKLE fine-ribbed cowl and cuffs, satiny cord belt, and side slit. B| Mf Jjj j ) THE ORIGINAL Tisl) & ur e K WEEK By Vicki Vaughn in polyester/cotton, 5-13 sizes, $46. WmJ m£j (HEjT • JW /] '4m [1 // Only on Ibesday OUR BUDGET BANQUET \S 1\v \ iv' ; Great Dills i$l 99 COLE SLA\A BEVERAGE ARTHUR'S FISH & CHIPS only 5C with any purchase through Saturday. It's Mr. Hobie's Birthday — \\ / rll® 1$ : Bring the Family and we're celebrating! III EAT HERE 1001 E. GRAND RIVER Hobie's- Jacobsoris || II and DURAND more than just sandwiches! ACROSS FROM CAMPUS • Hobie's Olde World on M.A.C. • Trowbridge at Harrison Monday, August 20, 1979 (y Michigon Stote News, Eost Lonsing, Michigan 'Apocalypse Now': ENTERTAINMENT Coppola's dark epic By BY RON BAKER 'THE ME NOBODY KNOWS' State News Reviewer The second of two parts. "Here's a work that gives A musical celebration of life at the Barn On opening night, the cast tion with such touches as tinues at the Okemos Barn audiences all the goodies of an By ROSANNE SINGER movements, she does not aban action-adventure movie, then State News Reviewer don herself to the character's seemed somewhat subdued in ladders, a bicycle wheel, a trash Theatre through Sunday. Cur- comes to a place that just deals Theater critic Clive Barnes emotion. parts, lacking a concentration can and a tire swing. Use of the fain time is at 8 p.m. with the with ideas. And the big mo¬ Mark Cade is excellent as and energy required to make various levels that the Barn exception of the Sunday show termed the musical, The Me ment, the big scene, is not William, singing and moving the show work. Perhaps the Theatre affords heightens the which begins at 7 p.m. Call Nobody Knows, "the New York restraint will lessen as the show's visual excitement. 349-4340 for ticket reservations another helicopter battle, but with ease and power, particu¬ nobody wants to remember" The Me Nobody Knows con- or information. it's a guy, a face, alone in a dark larly for someone so young. He production continues into its when it opened in 1970. Based room, telling the truth." is especially effective during second week. on the writings of New York Francis Coppola, the "Light Sings" number. ghetto students between the - The cast also has some diffi¬ as quoted in Mark Holley has a solid stage ages of seven and 18, the show culty overcoming the limita¬ The New York Times. deals honestly with drugs, sex, presence as the character tions of the small stage which being black and youthful hope Clorox, but he does not always interferes with full-cast num¬ The first three-fourths or so in the midst of poverty and seem to know what to do with bers. Part of the problem seems of Coppola's Apocalypse Now — his body. During his "Rejoice" dealing with the dark, eerie ugliness. to be the choreography which ■ by Gary William number, he performs rather occasionally positions the 12 voyage of military assassin nonchalantly considering the Friedman and lyrics by Will actors in straight lines that Captain Willard (Martin Sheen) song's title and also the under¬ and his crew in search of the Holt capture a variety of styles emphasize the stage's restric¬ Cambodian jungle hideaway of from rock to folk to gospel. lying pain of the words. tions. Too much reliance on Diane r Primarily music, the show is Rodriquez possesses a clapping and unchoreographed the renegade Colonel Kurtz charm and sincerity as Rhoda, (Marlon Brando) — are bril¬ interspersed with comments moving to the beat detracts such as "I'm growing old so fast using her expressive face effec¬ from the visual interest of liantly crafted and carefully structured. As Willard and his there's really no time to do tively. Her voice, however, is certain numbers, such as "Take somewhat thin which takes men and, by extension, the anything." Hold the Crutch." — Colonel Kurtz (Marlon Brando) and Captain While cynical and bitter at away from the sweetness of the audience — make their perilous Willard (Martin Sheen) discuss philosophies in times, the musical is finally number, "Something Beauti¬ way downstream through the ful." combat zones, the ambiguous Apocalypse Now. exuberant and life-affirming. The Okemos Barn Theatre disquiet and menace associated saucier than a soldier (He was with their destination deepens. consciously arty," "adolescent," production of The Me Nobody and "ridiculous," — it's because drafted out of cooking school); Knows features 12 relatively Throughout the journey, Wil¬ lard obsessively reviews his dossier on the extraordinary the remainder of the movie provides such strong evidence that the director knows exactly Albert Hall, tbugh-minded as one of the many blacks that somehow invariably ended up inexperienced actors, whom have never before per¬ 11 of earn $80.00 Kurtz, studying the officer's formed at the Barn. The deci¬ exemplary service record, his gradual, even radical disaffec¬ what he's doing. There are such powerful things in Apocalypse Now that it seems almost at the front; Larry Fishburne, playing an incredibly young enlistee and Sam Bottoms, ap sion by director Judy Milstein to cast fresh, unaffected actors a month tion with the way the Vietnam yields positive and negative for 2 3 hours week of your spare time. conflict was being waged and unreasonable to cavil overmuch propriate as a fair-haired results. Several of the cast or a about his ambitious ideas for an surfer. Dennis Hopper turns up his strange retreat into the members are forceful and re¬ as a lost photographer. depths of the jungle to build his own army, fight the war his way. The accumulated tension, ending. No movie has ever seemed to capture so much of the flavor, the fear, the moral Technically, Apocalypse Now is one of the most accompished freshing onstage; others are ill at ease and detract from the show's power. donate You may save a plasma life! incongruity, even the sensual¬ movies ever made. The cinema¬ Sameerah Shareef, who por¬ expectation and sheer piqued tography by Vittorio Storaro, ity of war — let alone such a trays Melba, moves with assur¬ It's easy and relaxing. Be a twice-a-week curiosity regarding the inevit¬ in a relatively new wide-screen able encounter between Wil¬ complex, still hotly debated and exhibits excellent war as Vietnam. process called Technovision, is ance control both vocally and physi¬ regular. *9 cash each donation, plus bonuses. lard and the as yet unseen fluid and gritty and handsome, "It was my thought," writes Kurtz becomes, after a while, while the sound, supervised cally. When onstage, she pro¬ enormous — almost tangible. Coppola in the film's program vides a focal point for the cast notes, "that if the American and designed by longtime that tightens certain scenes. But none of Coppola's elabor¬ ate structuring really prepares audience could look at the heart Coppola/George Lucas as¬ Brian McCarthy as Donald of what Vietnam was really like sociate Walter Murch is pos¬ the audience for the movie's has an imposing, grating stage — what it looked like and felt sibly the most complicated — sudden metamorphosis from a like — then they would be only and affecting — aural track presence that detracts from moody, largely kinetic, visceral what the other actors are one small step away from ever designed for a movie. experience to a heavily ab¬ Their efforts put the war in the trying to do. He consistently stract, verbal and frequently putting it behind them." It's postures and mugs in a manner impossible to say, of course, laps, as it were, of the audience. that is inappropriate and exces¬ mystifying reflection upon whether the director can Richard Marks deserves special sanity and madness, good and sive even for his supposedly evil, truth and fantasy. When macho character. His nervous Kurtz finally appears to Wil¬ "It was my thought that if the American strutting and gestures are too lard, he emerges as a shadowy, much for the intimate Barn audience could look at the heart of what poetic, ruminative and mythic stage. v Vietnam was really like — what it looked Steve Walter enacts an ap¬ presence. As portrayed by Brando, the character is some¬ like and felt like — then they would be only pealing Carlos although he is how both larger than life and one small step from putting it behind them." occasionally too mild onstage mysteriously insubstantial — when his character should be and, at times, far too strange to — Francis Coppola one of the strongest. Vocally, really understand. Walter has control except in Kurtz and Willard converse actually show us the heart of credit for his cutting: the 147 "How I Feel" during which both blpnkly, discussing issues of life the war — we're talking about minutes of Apocalypse Now he and Allison Fine go flat. in; seemingly non-directed pictures flickering on a screen, was edited down from over a Walter does not make the most ways. Oh, Eliot is quoted, and after all — but there are scenes million feet of printed film, of his monologues to his guar¬ at; one point, Coppola cuts and moments running through¬ reportedly a record for a major dian which should be more out Apocalypse Now which American production. Marks' affecting moments than they importantly to a copy of The Golden Bough sitting on Kurtz' seem awfully convincing. work — he supervised an army desk, but it's hard to immedi¬ The picture's opening, for of editors, and cut much of the Allison Fine carries herself ately fit the literary references instance, is absolutely master¬ film on a new video deck — is stiffly as Catherine, Carlos' into the scope of the director's ful: a fantastic visual/aural tight, spare and hugely effec¬ girlfriend. Facially she under¬ evocation of Willard's gut tive. concepts. goes little change and ex¬ Certainly, the last reels boast memories of the fighting, with The question that I'm most presses little of the pathos of some strong scenes and vivid helicopters in loopy flight, en¬ asked lately about the movie — her song, "How I Feel." Her moments, and Brando and tire palm forests going up in which, by the way, won't open voice has a rough quality appro¬ Sheen are fascinating to watch napalm blasts, The Doors' "The in Michigan until sometime in priate to the number's cyni¬ and listen to, but to be frank, I End," reverberating in and out October — is whether it was cism, however, her eyes convey can't honestly say whether or of limbo, mixed with the echoes worth all the well-publicized no message. Because Fine not the final scenes of Apoca¬ of 'copter blades on the (multi- trouble and money and pain. seems to predominantly con¬ lypse work the way Coppola track) stereophonic soundtrack. Well, yes. It's very much worth centrate on her words and intended. While a good deal of Later on, a scene in which seeing. It's ambitious, challeng¬ personal reservations con¬ Colonel Kilgore (Robert Duvall) my ing, enthralling, flawed and cerning the picture's ending leads a major helicopter assault worthy. have receded given a week's upon a 'Cong beach — all, mind worth of thought and reflection, you, to capture the beach for the last twenty minutes or so of surfing — is at once one of the Apocalypse Now remains a most mad, frightening, exhila kind of hazy, almost irksome rating and tragic scenes in delirium in my memory. I'm not movies. sure I fully understand or The cast is mostly first-rate. appreciate the ending, but it Sheen is excellent as Willard, has left its mark upon me. and Apocalypse may well bring Perhaps only time and further him the recognition and star¬ viewings of the film can resolve dom he so richly deserves. my ambivalence. Brando is intriguing as Kurtz, If it seems that I'm bending and Duvall is very funny and over backwards to accom¬ somehow believable as a half- modate Coppola's ending for crazed Lt. Colonel. Also line Apocalypse — an ending that are the young crew on Willard's others have already publicly boat: Frederic Forrest, just labeled as "pretentious," "self- right as a guy who'd rather be a J. Ross Browne's Whaling Station invites you to lunch. . . Fresh Fish Lunch $1.95-4.25 IS CUIST NIGHT Daily Special $1.95 Kelly's Heroes Never have so few.. .taken so many Reduced Prices on Bloody Marys and Martinis ...for so much. 5 minutes Ftt|v THE COMEDY WITH NO RESPECT. Metro-GokJwyn-Mayei Presents a KaUka Loeb Production starring from Campus Corner of Marsh R!H| "AMERICATHON" Clint Eastwood Telly Savalas. Don Rckles, Carroll O'Connor and Donald Sutherland mKELLYS HEROES: Written by Troy Kennedy Martin Produced by Gabriel Kalzka and Sidney Becker man nr: ©«» /ftv and Grand River 1938 Grand River DOUBLE TALK WED. ONLY 8:00 100 0 WELLS Okemos 349-1932 Monday, August 20, 1979 Michigon State News, Eost Lansing, Michigan FRESHMEN SHARP Big Ten titlists workouts start By ADAM TEICHER Illini more Senior fullback Wayne Strader experienced, still weak As much as Moeller is con¬ the Fighting Illini will be hurt ward to this season, but don't be fact, if Moeller cannot find a way State News Sports Writer By DAVE JANSSEN surprised if it ends up much like to strengthen some of his team's The day that all football players dread the most — the day State News Sports Writer figures to be one of the toughest cerned about his offense, he is by the loss of All Big Ten of the Illini backs. Strader, who still a defensive-minded coach at selection John Sullivan, the the last two for the Fighting weak spots, Illinois may be in that practice begins — is on hand for 92 MSU Spartans. Editor's Note: This is the ninth serious trouble this season. The has gained an average of 5.2 heart, having worked as a team's defensive Most Valuable Illini. Their schedule shows all The Spartans begin preparing today for their Sept. 8 in a series of ten rundowns on yards per carry the last two defensive coach for University Player last fall. But Illinois still of the teams that should make Fighting Illini, who managed , meeting with the University of Illinois in Spartan Stadium that Big Ten football teams. Today: only a tie with Northwestern seasons, has never been of Michigan Head Coach Bo promises to have some strength up the upper division of the will kick off MSU's 83rd season of football. the Illinois Fighting Dlini. stopped for a loss in 142 tries. Schembechler for eight seasons. in that position, in returning conference standings when the University last fall, may be While MSU doesn't actually don their pads and begin full The University of Illinois One of the most important "The key factor is still our starters John Gillen and season ends — Purdue, Ohio playing their season-ending contact until Thursday because of an NCAA rule allowing for football team may have a defense," Moeller said. Earnest Adams, and Jack State and Michigan State uni¬ game against the Wildcats, for three days of non-contact at the start of drills, this is the second number of weaknesses in 1979, improvements that the Illini will the bottom spot in the Big Ten Moeller claims the reason his Squirek. A fourth starter and versities and universities of have to make in their offense, week of work for the team's 20 freshmen. but Head Coach Gary Moeller standings. will be that of protecting the defense was so weak last depth are the question marks Michigan and Minnesota. In Under another new NCAA ruling which allows freshmen to insists he is more enthused here. report for practice a week early, Spartan coach Darryl Rogers about this season's team than While the Fighting Illini de¬ able to get an early line his newest bunch of football either of his last two. was players. on Of course, after compiling a ILLINOIS fensive line and linebacker areas will be adequate, their "I think the first thing I'd have to say about our freshmen 4-16-2 record in his first two last line of defense, the Ixtcation: Champaign, 111. class is that I'm very pleased with their athletic ability," said years with the Fighting Illini, Head Coach: Gary Moeller secondary, will be suspect. that's not saying too much. Rogers, who is beginning his fourth year as the MSU football 1978 overall record: 1-8-2 Returning starters Lloyd Levitt coach. "Now it's up to us as coaches to get them placed in the "One of the main reasons I'm 1978 Big Ten record: 0-6-2 and John Venegoni are talented proper positions and to have them be a player as soon as looking forward to this year is (ninth place) athletes as are Dave Kelly and possible." that we're starting to have 7i/jifi«u} I(Li Enrollment: 33,684 Bonji Bonner, who also figure to Because the freshmen practice lasted only four days, Rogers upperclassmen who have grown 1978 game with MSU: lost 59-19 be regulars. However, Illinois said it was too early to tell which freshmen have the best up in our system of football," has no depth whatsoever, at Moeller said. "In the final game opportunities to play this season, but added "this is the best season (Illinois gave up 317 that position. crop of freshmen that I've ever had the opportunity to handle." at Minnesota last year, 32 of the quarterback. The return of The kicking game could prove 54 players we had on the experienced players at the points to opponents 103) was equally costly to the Fighting Rogers liked the new rule regarding early freshmen practice. sidelines were freshmen and tackle positions should help because of the ineptness of the Illini. Inexperience will again be "I totally agree with the philosophy of bringing the freshmen in Illinois offense. "The thing that sophomores. What you'd like to Illinois in this regard. Tim the cause as a freshman and a four days early," he explained. "I think that in all honesty it's a hurt last year defensively have is your program at the Norman and Mike Priebe, who us walk-on are competing for the tremendously -traumatic experience for a young man to be was that our offense didn't help moved from his high school into a college program and it's (the point where the seniors and played nearly every down last placekicking responsibilities. A season, have prompted Moeller out as much as it should in new rule) something that is really needed. juniors are the regulars and freshman will likely be the your underclassmen, for the to say, "Our strongest point in keeping our defense off the punter for Moeller this season. "This way you have a chance to get them prepared and in the field." most part, having to wait for the offensive line is at tackle." Moeller may be looking for¬ proper position so when the varsity does show up, he (the Lee Boeke, a sure-handed pass their turn to start. We're not freshman) is not so far behind. Before this time, the freshman ILLINOIS' STRONGEST COUPON SAVINGS ******* quite at that point yet, but we're catcher, will make Illinois solid that came in was involved with 70-some of our other young men SPOT on the defense will also closer than we were two years at the tight end spot. Moeller is and he wasn't quite as important as he would have liked to have be at tackle, Moeller said. uncertain, however, who he will been." Quarterback Jon English, MSU's most highly-touted fresh¬ ago." Still, the Fighting Illini will be start at the guard positions and There he will have Stanley NEED MONEY? * * has indicated that the talent at Ralph and Dennis Flynn, both NEW PLASMA DONORS ONLY couldn't agree with his coach more. "I liked it a lot," the young in '79, with only six man, seniors who are expected to be flanker and wide receiver lacks returning starters and All Big CENTER WILL PAY * graduate of Birmingham Brother Rice High School said. experience. Ten candidates. At linebacker, "Especially because I'm a quarterback. There's just so much to regulars. One of those six is * learn and if I had come in with the rest of the varsity, quarterback Rich Weiss, who IMMEDIATE CASH everything would just have been a blur." holds the key to much of the Illinois success this fall. Weiss The Simple Way FOR YOUR TIME will be responsible for making Precision cutting is the only way his team more explosive of¬ EARN $18 PER WEEK fensively, as Moeller said his to really get full advantage of to¬ team plans to put the ball in the HOW?...just come in and relax in our reclining chairs and listen to your air about 25 times per game. day's shorter "Wash and Wear'1 favorite music while donating lifegiving Plasma. Ex-Spartans star on "With all sincerity, Rich can be a great I think quarter¬ Hairstyles — Why not stop in — Give it a try! We will pay you $8.00 for your first plasma donation and $10.00 for your second donation within the same week...PLUS we will give you a Free physical back," Moeller boosted. Free shampoo w/all exam and over $60 worth of free lab tests. Q Tiger farm clubs BECAUSE OF THE Fighting style cuts - only 9i0 IF YOU BRING THIS AD WITH YOU. YOU WILL DONATION COME TO: , RECEIVE AN ADDITIONAL $4.00 AFTER YOUR 1st Three of the brightest pros- rently has a 7-6 won-lost record Illini experience in the back- AMERICAN PLASMA DONOR CENTER ampus pects in the Detroit Tiger farm and a 3.42 ERA with Lakeland, field, Moeller believes his team A national organization dedicated to the extension of lives to others. system are from Michigan col- Rick Leach, also an All- will have a more potent of¬ fensive attack. He said Illinois 2827 E.GRAND RIVER * EAST LANSING leges, including two from MSU. American in football and base- ball at the University of Michi- may finally have some backs Hours: Tues., Wed. 9 a.m.-7 p.m. Fri., Sat. 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Leading the way is Kirk Gibson.anAll-Americaninboth gan, is Lakeland's leading that can elude tacklers and get O yardage tfieir.pwn. football and baseball at MSU, hitter, on $4 ++++++++++++++++++++++++ $4 some 621E. Grand River, L losing 337-9881 or 337 1144 who is playing with Evansville. After struggling under the .200 mark for most of the season's first half, Gibson has surged to a batting average of .280 with 10 Tonight & Tomorrow home runs. In addition, he has EMERALD CITY Sou" stolen 17 bases. The other ex-Spartan that Progressive- Rock figures prominently in Detroit's plans is Larry Pashnick, a right- 300s handed pitcher. Pashnick cur- Wednesday - Saturday BIG CITY BOB & HIS FAMOUS BALLROOM GLIDERS GREEK PIZZA at BELL'S NOW, Greek Salad too! Eat in or Take Out Both Locations open ot 9AM 225 M.A.C. 332-5027 :h& ^ '487-66551 1135 E. Grand River 332-0858 naiRcuttens FREE DELIVERY from 4:30 PM 7 days 1417/2 E. MICHIGAN AVE. Daily a tor 1 Brinks 3-8PM LANSING, MICHIGAN (Above Bancroft's Flowers & Gifts) tizapd'i, ^ndepgpound a< Abbott fttLUnwB Ml mperorde, 9 3/79 I 300s:Bass 2830 E.Grand River ■ 2 blks. west of Frandor I when you're ready to move up delivery west of Harrison I Our new Bass 300 collection is career tailored to success. A 485-4406 I perfect merger of daylong comfort and high-heeled styling. Beautifully crafted in fine leather. Available in Narrow & Medium Widths. DSN r p Buy any LARGE ^ P'"a tor the I PRICE of § a small PIZZA! 8 BOOTERY FOR MEN: e roupon pet ordei 9 3/79 J FOR WOMEN: 1203 Grand River 2830 E. Grand River | 217 E. GRAND RIVER delivery eost of 2 blks. west of Frandor a 225 E. GRAND RIVER List delivery west of Harrison I frank shorter sports* Harrison 337-1631 East Lansing Lansing 217 Ann St. 351-8550 \ 8 Michigon State News, Eost Lansing, Michigan Monday, August 20, 1979 For Sale \\^\ | Typing Service Classified Advertising FULLY FURNISHED house DISCOUNT, NEW-USED 3 TWIN size mattresses extra EXPERT TYPING. Term pa¬ BABYSITTER-WILLIAMS- ROOMMATE SEPT. 1 non- Information STUDENTS NEEDED to smoker in 2 bed¬ with semi-private bedrooms, desks, chairs, files. BUSI¬ firm. Almost new 1 baby crib pers, letters,. RESUMES. work part-time in Kellogg TON-Okemos area Sept. 1 own room 2 bath apt. $135 mo. for 2 quiet men to share with NESS EQUIPMENT CO., 215 plus mattress. Walnut frame, Near GmBLES, 337-0205. my home or yours 349-4199. room PHONE 355-8255 347 Student Services Bldg. Center Banquet Dept. Must East side Lansing, E. Kalamazoo. 485-5500. full size. 1 hair dryer. Call C-11-8-24 (3) 5-8-24 (3) includes heat. Year lease. Call owner. be able to start in August & OR-2-8-20 (4) 355-7801. 2-8-22 (6) RATES Jeff 393-9575 or 52248. close to MSU and buses. work term break and fall EXPERIENCED TYPING. Ac¬ PART TIME- be neat Z 3-8-20 (5) $125 each, share '/a utilities. DAYS term. Apply rm. 115 Kellogg must BARN SALE- miscellaneous KENMORE 30" gas range. curate, fast and reasonable. Deposit and references. 485- Center 8-11 am or 1:30 pm-5 dependable hard worker with 323-9039. 5-8-24 (3) 3 6 8 1 day-90' per line own transportation. Ideal for NORTH PENNSYLVANIA - 5724 (9-5) or 371-1394. household goods, furniture Like new, used only 8 inas 1 3 days-80' per line 353 8893 Ask for Supervisor. and equipment. Everything months. Moving, must sell. upstairs, one bedroom, partly 3-8-24(10) -3 2.70- 7.20 13.50 1680 3 8 20 (8) students. 485-5741. 5-8-24 (5) $95 694-7319. E-5-8-20 (4) EXPERIENCED IBM typing, must go! 5095 N. Zimmer 6 days-75* per line furnished, no pets, adults. 4 3.60 9.60 18.00 22.40 5 GRAD Students for 6 dissertations. (Pica, elite) $140/month. 351-7497. Rd., Williamston. Aug. 25 Et 8 days-70' per line CONCESSION STAND PSYCH AND Social Work s 4 50 12.00 22.$0 28.00 OR 11-8-24 <4) bedroom house, 3 blocks to 26, 10am-6pm. 4-8-24 (6) SCHWINN CONTINENTAL FAYANN, 489-0358. workers for all home games - students needing experience C-11-8-24 (3) 6 5.40 14.40 27 00 33.60 with mentally retarded and campus, 3 baths, 2 kitchens, 10 speed bicycle. $100 good -7 6.30 16.80- 31.50 39.20 Line rate per insertion Sept. 8,15,22, Oct. 6,20, and 3 BEDROOM house Magnolia 2 living rooms, dishwasher, USED BIKES. All sizes, $15- condition. 337-1871. Nov. 10. Call 353-2005 or mentally ill adults in foster rent $125. 352-0761. TERM PAPERS, disserta¬ Street, 12 month lease start¬ $100. Also used parts. We E-4-8-24 (3) MASTERCHARGE C VISA WELCOME 355-4550 after 12 noon for home. Full-time or part-time S-2-8-20 (5) tions. Close, fast, experi¬ Call for interview 339-3265. ing September, carpeted gar¬ also buy used bikes. Call information. Or apply in per¬ enced. 351-1345, 332-8498. EconoLines 3 lines-M.00-5 days. 80' per line son at Crossroads Cafeteria 5-8-24 (7) age, no pets, references re¬ CHARLIE'S BIKE SHOP 393- Animals quired. $340 Mr. Kay 339- NEEDED: ONE female to 2484. 4-8-24 (5) 7-8-24 (3) over 3 lines. No adjustment in rate when in the International Center. PART-TIME janitorial posi¬ 3407, 641 4493. C 7-8-24 (7) share large 3 bedroom house cancelled. Price of item(s) must be stated 6-8-24 (8) TYPING: IBM selectric. Term for fall. $95 plus utilities and in ad. Maximum sale price of MOO. tions available early evenings. SOMEBODY ELSE'S CLO¬ deposit. 372-7117, Cathy. papers, resumes, plus editing. THE INSTRUCTIONAL Call Mr. Grossi 482-6232. SET featuring gently used No Commercial Adi Z-3-8-24 (5) Close to campus. 351-5694. $2.25 Media Center is now hiring 5-8-24 Campus View clothing. 541 East Grand OR-11-8-24 (3) Peanuts Personal ads—3 lines - - per student projectionists. You 324 Michigan Ave. E. SIDE Lansing - 1 mile River. Open noon to 6 p.m. I Mobile Homes H»| insertion. 75' per line over 3 lines (pre¬ must be enrolled for fall term, DAY WAIT persons (5 days Take-ins by appointment. EXPERT TYPING, IBM, dis¬ across from MSU. Clean modern 2 bed¬ payment). have large blocks of hours Mon-Fri) and night cocktail 332-1926. C-11-8-24 (6) CROWN HAVEN- 1973 12 x room unfurnished, $200 + sertations, term papers. Fast, open from 9 a.m. until 3 p.m. Williams Hall Rummage/Garage Sale ads 4 lines - *2.50. wait persons needed. Apply utilities. 332-1800. RECORDS! Thousands to 65 MSU close. 2 bedroom, accurate. Editing and graphic and have at least 2 terms left Mon-Fri 2-4 pm 116 Bailey St. 2 bedroom furnished laundry room, many extras. 63' per line over 4 lines-per insertion. OR-3-8-24 (4) choose from, 75£ and up, all designing services available. 'Round Town ads—4 lines-l2.50-per insertion. before graduation. Audio East Lansing 3-8-20 (4) apartments available Shown by appointment. 485- 372-2098. 5-8-24 (4) Visual experience is desirable for fall. quality guaranteed, WAZOO 0293 or 339-2629 evenings. 63' per line over 4 lines. E. LANSING - 1 block MSU, RECORDS, 223 Abbott, 337- but not necessary. Contact DAY AND night host persons 4-8-24 (5) EXPERIENCED TYPIST- for Lost & Found ads/Transportation ads Showings Monday-Friday 3 bedroom duplex. Fur¬ 0947. C-11-8-24 (5) 3 Fred Moore, in person at needed. Apply Mon-Fri 2-4 nished, $360 + utilities. Year term papers. Holt area. 694- 4pm-5pm. or call for lines-M ,50-per insertion. 50' per line over room 26 IMC from 8-5. pm 116 Bailey St. East Lan¬ 6104. 5-8-24 (3) 6-8-24 (15) sing. 3-8-20 (4) lease. 332-1800. PIANO, UPRIGHT, Kings¬ Real Estate 3 lines. OR-3-8-24 (4) 351-5275 or 351-8135 bury. Good condition. $125. Deadlines Call 332-0003. S-5-8-24 (3) PROFESSIONAL EDITING KAPLAN CENTER needs KITCHEN HELP needed at 5 GRAD Students for 6 PERRY AREA - 3-4 bedroom Corrections to rewrites. Typ¬ LSAT course instructor, 332- Kellogg Center. Must be Ads-2p.m.-1 class day before publication. bedroom house, 3 blocks to SOFA BED, $35. Complete cedar chalet on 3 acre lot. ing arranged. 332-5991. 2539. 6-8-24 (3) MSU student. Apply in per¬ LANSING: NEAR Capital Cancellation/Change-lp.m.-l class day be¬ campus, 3 bath, 2 kitchens, 2 1,675 sq. ft. living space. 20 OR-5-8-24 (3) son at Rm. 116 Kellogg area. One bedroom includes single bed, $25. Two chairs, minute from MSU. Call fore publication. CROSSROADS CAFETERIA living rooms, dishwasher. $5. Call 372-7426. Good con¬ Center from 8-5 pm. stove, refrigerator, all utilities, Rent $125. 332-0761. 625-3520 or 625-3566. SNCD COPYGRAPH SERVICE Once ad is ordered it cannot be cancelled or is now accepting applications dition. E-3-8-24 (3) 3-8-20 (5) parking and laundry. Avail¬ 3-8-17 (5) completed, dissertations and changed until after 1st insertion. for fall term employment. able September 1st $195. EAST LANSING, by owner, resume service. Corner MAC Applications will be accepted 482 9266. OR-5-8 24 GIRL'S 3-speed bike. Huffy. There is a M.00 charge for 1 ad change plus 50' per additional change for maximum between 1 and 3 pm, Mon¬ I Apartments ~| \^\ EAST LANSING and East side houses for rent duplexes 26". Good condition. 337-7295. E-3-8-24 (3) $45. 2814 Roseland Avenue, 3 or 4 and Grand River, 8:30 a.m. - bedrooms, attractive Cape 5:30 p.m., Monday - Friday, day-Friday. See Dennis. FEMALE NEEDED own room Cod. Okemos schools, beau¬ 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Saturday, of 3 changes. 4-8-24 (7) 2 bedroom apartment starting Sept. 15th. Call NOW - leasing 1 and 2 in weekdays 9-4. STE-MAR tiful, large fenced yard with 337-1666. C-11-8-24 (7) The State News will only be responsible for bedrooms from $150. Utilities $132.50 Lorie 394-1079. MAN'S 10-speed bike. Ex¬ REALTY 351-5510. 3-8-24(5) many trees, fireplace, new the 1st day's incorrect insertion. Adjust¬ PRESSBOX WORKERS for 5-8-24 13) cellent condition, $65. Call parking. Newly remodeled. insulation, roof, heating sys¬ EXPERIENCED TYPIST - ment claims must be made within 10 days all home football games. 485-8525. 8-8-24 (3) Bruce, 337-7550. 3 BEDROOM house on Lake tem, walk to MSU. Principles IBM, dissertations, term Must work every home game, LANSING-LARGE upper un¬ E-Z-5-8-24 (3) of expiration date. Lansing, $350 monthly. No only. Phone 337-0243 or 374- papers, etc. Ellen, 393-1530. call 355-3495 or apply in NEED 3 girls for fall. $98.75.2 furnished minutes from Bills are due 7 days from ad expiration date. pets. 339-3825 or 485-1731. 4378. 3-8-24 (11) 3-8-24 (3) person at the UNION GRILL bedroom, very nice. Sandy, campus. Stove, refrigerator, WILCOX TRADING POST - If not paid by due date, a 50' late service 3-8-24 (4) between 7:15 am and 4:30 351 5529, 349-9219 after 5. married couple. No children/ used musical instruments, OKEMOS- 1929 Oneida. 4 10-8-22 (3) UNIGRAPHICS OFFERS charge will be due. pm. 4-8-24 (7) pets. Including utilities. $225 DUPLEX AVAILABLE Sept. stereo components, car bedroom 2 1/2 baths, 2 story COMPLETE DISSERTATION deposit, references. 482- equipment, TV's, cameras, house on lovely large lot. 1st, students only. Bedrooms AND RESUME SERVICE, ROOMMATE WANTED for 1727, 663-4345. 5-8-24 (7) jewelry, bicycles, albums and Family room with fireplace, 2 furnished. $115 per student. typesetting, IBM typing, off¬ 1979-80 school year. Wood- tapes. Much more. Buy sell car attached garage. Many Call Diane at 372-5669. Automotive 1 Auto Service [ [7 ] ALL mere Apartments over look¬ LAKE LANSING-brand new 3-8-24 (4) and trade. 509 E. Michigan. extras, $84,900, SCHRO- set printing and binding. For estimate stop in at 2843 E. ing river, with own parking 2-3 bedroom units some with 485-4391. C-11-8-24 (8) EDER REALTY 349-0560. '69 BUICK LESABRE power MASON BODY SHOP. 812 E. STUDENT space. Non-smoker, respons ible. 332-4535. Z-3-8-24 (6) fireplaces, $285-330. Call 339- 3 BEDROOM house for rent. 105 MM Soligar lens with 5-8-24 (7) Grand River or phone 332- 8414. C-11-8-24 (8) 2325 or 349 3839 Z 5-8-24 (4) brakes power steering factory Kalamazoo since 1940. Auto $225 month. $250 deposit. air, Jenson coaxial speakers painting-collision service. ADVERTISING FEMALE GRAD student RED GIANT has a large NO pets, no lease. You pay filter $45. Call after 5 pm 351-3603. Ask for Kathy. Recreation m\ TYPING, EXPERIENCED, needs work $270 call Mike American foreign cars. 485- selection of houses, apart¬ utilities. 627-3618. 4-8-24 (4) S-5-8-24 (3) fast and reasonable. 371-4635 needed for fall, $127/month 351-2611 before 5 pm. 0256. C-11-8-24 (5) MUST BE SKYDIVING EVERY week¬ C-11-8-24 (3) plus utilities, fall thru spring, ments, duplexes, studios etc. S-5-8-24 (6) Most areas, sizes and OKEMOS- brand new 1445 ONE DRESS overcoat, $40. end and late afternoon. First ' PREPAID 332-0631 after 6 p.m. . . CHEVROLET IMPALA '73 Motorcycles ~~|[ate] 3-8-24 14) prices. Call and see if we have what you're looking for. Be¬ square feet, 3 bedroom ranch with attached two car gar¬ One raincoat with lining, $25. Color TV needs a tube, $75. jump instruction every Satur¬ day and Sunday starting at 10 Wanted 4-door, good condition, August 6fh through tween 9-9, 349-1065. age. 2-baths, full basement, 349-1808 E-5-8-24 (4) a.m. and weekdays by ap¬ SUZUKI T250,1970,2-stroke, 2 BEDROOM apartment bal¬ clean, extra snows, high mile¬ the end of the term. OR-11-8-24 (7) fireplace, deck $1000 security pointment. Free skydiving cony, heat included, air con¬ HALF FARE airline coupons. age, $300 or best offer, $250, helmets sold separate¬ deposit with one year lease. TWO SEALY twin beds com¬ programs for groups, MSU 355-7818. Z-8-22 (5) ly. Call Linda 332-4489. ditioning, fully furnished, Top dollar. Call Mike 332- dishwasher Available Sept. SUMMERHILL APART¬ $600/month. 349-0562. plete. Like new. $95 each. Sport Parachute Club and 7977 morninqs. Z-7-8-24 (3) Z-5-8-21 (3) 5-8-24 (8) Charlotte Paracenter. 372- WOMAN NEEDED for occa¬ 10 Connie 351-5620. MENTS. Be first tenant in Ratan rocker, $45. Two CHEVY NOVA-74. Excellent wicker lamps, $10 each. 332- 9127, 543-6731, condition, well maintained KAWASAKI 250-1974 Prime sional daytime sitting in my 8-8-20 (6) tastefully decorated new 1 WANTED-2 bedroom hous¬ 3 BLOCKS from campus 5349. E-5-8-24 (5) C-11-8-24 (10) Lake Geneva home. Own bedroom, Some with fire¬ ing in Red Cedar district. must sell, $1300 or best offer. condition with helmet. transportation, references. places, car ports. 10 minutes Excellent condition, 3-5 per¬ 332-3126 non-student. 337-8287 evenings. 4-8-24 (3) OVER 3000 cheap albums, FOR CHARTER: Pearson 26, Z-5-8-20 (4) 669-5396. 3-8-20 (5) Haslett Arms from MSU via I-496 and sons. 351-9538 or 351-8135. 3-8-20 (3) Waverly road, 3313 West Mt. Z-OR-7-8-24 (3) 25b and up - all types, hits to sleeps five, sails from Luding- 135 Collingwood 2 CUTLASS SUPREME- 1974. door 32,000 miles. Air, I" Employment |[jj] PASTE-UP PART-TIME. Must be MSU student Fall across from Student Hope. Call or come by 1-6 p.m., 485-7111, 351-6471. FRANDOR AREA, 4 bed¬ the obscure. FLAT, BLACK AND CIRCULAR. 541 E. ton, MI.'KT Charter 759-8596, 845-5432. Z-7-8-24 (4) MATURE, PROFESSIONAL woman wishes to rent mod¬ Services X-C-8-8 24 (9) Grand River, above PARA¬ Term. Experienced only. Ap¬ with basement and estly priced home in E. regular gas. 339-9988. 4-8-24 (3) HOBIE'S OLD WORLD on MAC is now accepting appli¬ ply in person Monday noon Fall Leasing ACROSS FROM rooms garage. One year lease start¬ MOUNT. Open 11 a.m.-6 p.m., 6 days. X-C-11-8-24 (6) | Service ~] [^] Lansing area. Beginning in to 5 p.m. 301 M.A.C. P-K 2 bedroom furnished opts campus. ing September at $400/ Sept. 641-6995. 3-8-20 (5) cations for part time employ¬ HOW TO beat multiple GRANADA GHIA-1977 Bldg. Suite 501. Showing Mondoy-Friday Large two bedroom furnished month. 323-4407 evenings. MARSHALL'S GUITAR ment. You must be available choice exams. Easy, effec¬ loaded. Nice car for nice 2-6PM apts. Heat and hot water 5-8-24 (5) to start now and continue SHOPPE. Everything you included Fall leasing. Call tive, detailed report. Be pre¬ price. 394-2277 any time. 8-8-20 (3) throughout the school year. DIETARY AIDE- home. Assist cook, dish¬ Nursing Stop by Resident Managers 351-1957, 351-5275 or 351 need in guitars, amplifiers, pared, order today. $3.00. (( You can take Apply after 2 p.m. 2-8-22 (8) Apt. =3 3 BEDROOM house. 6 miles P.A. and lighting systems, washer. Full or part-time. 8135. OR-9-8-24 (5) General Publishing Report 17, or call for appointment northwest of campus on Park lessons and service. MAR¬ P.O. Box 351, Manitowoc, Wl my ad out HORNET 1977 - 6 cylinder, Morning shift. Apply in per¬ GIRL TO assist invalid lady Lake Road $200 per month SHALL MUSIC COMPANY of the paper. red 4-door, power and air. son. NHE LANSING, 1313 351-1957 or 351-8135 FEMALE NEEDED 9/18. Own 54220. Z-8-8-22 from 8 a.m. - noon, week¬ plus utilities. Call 332-5555. 540 Frandor Shopping I got the 17,000 miles. Ziebarted, 484- Mary, Lansing. 393-6130 room in 2-man apartment. 3 Ask for Jeff. 4-8-24 (6) days, no weekends or holi¬ Center. C-5-8-24 (8) results 8636. 3-8-24 (3) 2-8-20 (6) blocks from campus. $122 PEOPLE'S CHURCH pre¬ days. Hospital experience school East Lansing, has fall I wanted. MERCURY MONTERY 1971 preferred. Close to campus. COOKS WANTED. Must be 2 MILES west - 1 and 2 plus utilities. Deb after 5 pm. Z-3-8-20 15) 374-7722 Rooms MOVING MUST sell-sofa, openings for 3 and 4 year JJ $4.00/hour, 332-5176. bedrooms. Clean, carpeted, matching recliner and coffee Good shape, runs well. $350 neat No experience neces¬ olds. Call 332-5073 or 351- 2-8-22 (6) air, quiet, $180 and $220 + table in mint condition. $450 353 5956 or 351-4750 after 5. sary. Apply in person, be¬ 323-4469 after 5:30. 3-8-24 (4) 0671. 6-8-24 (5) Z-3-8-20 (3) TEMPORARY HELP wanted for cleaning apartments, from tween 2 and 4 pm. AMER¬ ICA'S CUP RESTAURANT 2 BEDROOM basement w/ Houses m FALL - LARGE singles in beautiful rooming house. Call 351-4687. Ask for Millie. S-5-8-24 Instructions We get calls such as - $100-$130 including utilities. MUSTANG II- 1975 4-cylin- 220 MAC. 4-8-24 (5) fireplace. 2 blocks MSU. $250 HOUSEMATE NEEDED im¬ this every single day. Sept. 14-18th. $3.50/hour, Furnished, kitchen, parking, NEW AND used guitars, ban¬ der, 4 speed, black, excellent 351-9538, 351-8135. including utilities. 332-1800. mediately, prefer over 25, very close. 332-1800. TENNIS- certified teaching condition, runs great, AM/ PART-TIME EMPLOYMENT OR-3-8-24 (4) jos, mandolins, etc. Ducimers OR-3-8-20 (4) own room in townhouse, OR-3-8-24 (6) and kits, recorders, thou¬ pro will give private, semi- FM tape LN radial tires, with Michigan's largest multi- fireplace, basement. $162.50/ sands of hard to find albums private, or group lessons. Call extras. 29 mpg. $2,200.00 call manufacturer distributor, 15- MATURE WOMAN to share DO YOU have sales ability? month Et % utilities and and books. Discount prices. 351 7504. 19-8-24 (4) 487-3096 S-5-8-20 (5) 20 hours per week. Autd- OLDS DELTA 1971- Runs We have opportunity, repeat sales, pleasant work advancement. For interview, and mobile required. 339-9500. C-7-8-24 (6) 2 bedroom. $100 and low utilities. Jodi, 339-1560. 3-8-24 (3) deposit. 337-2466 after 6. 6-8-24 (6) ROOMS campus on Michigan ue. New carpet and ACROSS from Aven¬ paint. Expert repairs - free estimates ELDERLY INSTRUMENTS, DID YOU know that. STEREO SHOPPE is the . . THE State News great. New radials. $300. 541 E. Grand River. send qualifications to Aiyi- TWO FEMALES needed. Call 351-5275 or 351-8135. place to buy your stereo 349-2349 after 5 pm. FIGHT INFLATION, sell C-11-8-24 (9) WAY DISTRIBUTOR, FEMALE ROOMMATE Own room nice 4 bedroom OR-9-8-24 (4) equipment. C-11-8-24 (4) 5-8-24 (3) AVON, increase your earning Margaret Bellinger, or call wanted to share expenses. house. Close. $105. 351-0628. 339-3950. 3-8-24 (9) power, for details call 482 Southside near 496. $112 plus Z-4-8 24 (3) SEWING MACHINES - new TUTORING FRENCH- all PORSCHE 911-1968 For parts 6893. C-11-8-24 (4) EAST LANSING, Female utilities. Call Jill 373-8674 or free arm machines from levels Tutoring English to or restoration. $1200. 694 EAST-SIDE. Students only. Close to campus. Share $99.50. Guaranteed used ma¬ or French speaking students. 355-8255 PEACE CORPS offers 2-year 393-8017 after 5 pm. 5037. Z-2-8-20 13) PHONERS NEEDED for poli kitchen and bath, no pets, 3-8 22 (5) working group. 2,3 and 4 chines from $39.50. All makes Call 351-7504. 19-8-24 (4) positions in over 60 develop¬ $95, 332 5988. OR-3-8-24 (5) tical fund raising. $3 per hour bedroom houses. Neat and repaired. EDWARDS DIS¬ ing countries. Programs are Auto Service available in Asia, Africa, plus bonus. Contact Tom CEDAR STREET 196 area clean. $220 - $320. Lease and TRIBUTING COMPANY, RACQUET STRINGING and South and Central America. Page 487-5413. Z-6-8-20 (4) deposit. 675-5252. 4-8-24 (5) ROOMS - MALE student. 1115 N. Washington. 489- Lovely 1 and 2 bedrooms. restringing. All repairs. Wil¬ Private entrance, bath and 6448. C-11-8-24 (8) REFILLABLE WIPER blades AGRICULTURE, HEALTH, Carpet, air, appliances, util¬ son steel racquets. One day for your foreign car in stock NUTRITION, BUSINESS and APPLICATIONS BEING tak¬ Must be 18 and over. ities except electric. $220-250 4 BEDROOM farmhouse. 8 shower, telephone, refrigera¬ service. Call 351-7504. CAMPUS many other fields. Further en. month. $385-$415 to move in. minutes east of MSU. Lease, tor and cooking facilities. BOOKS! 3 floors of books, 16-8-24 (4) at CHEQUERED FLAG, 2605 Flexible hours. Starting rate East Kalamazoo Street. One information and applications $3.05, FAMOUS RECIPE 393-3648. 4-8-24 (6) security deposit, references, 485-1945. 3-8-24 (4) magazines and comics. HILL available. Call 355-0282. required. Outbuilding for CURIOUS BOOK SHOP, 307 mile west of campus. 487 FRIED CHICKEN. 1900 E. 5055. C 11-8-24 (6) 1-8-20(11) Kalamazoo or 2755 E. Grand MALE TO share pad. quiet luxury Prefer non-smoking horses. Family preferred. 349- 4178 between 6pm-8pm. Classified advertising can sell that camping equipment. Call East Grand River, East Lan¬ BURCHAM '2 Bedrooms sing, 332-0112. C-11-8-24 (5) River. 11-8-24(6) 4-8-24 (61 355-8255. 'Furnished Apts. JUNK CARS wanted. Also WANTED-FULL-time sitter graduate student or young professional. Call 351-8296 WOODS selling used parts. Phone for 4 year old in S. Cedar area RN OR LPN- Several good 'Free Roommate Service 321-3651. C-11 8 24 I3> home. 7pm-3am Must be 18 fall positions available. Take after 7 pm. 4-8-24 (5) EAST LANSING APARTMENTS 731 'Dishwashers or over. Experienced, good references. Call after 12 your pick. Apply at 2100 Provincial Drive, off Aurelius 3 females needed to share CEDAR Leasing For Fall 'Central Air Conditioning CHEAPEST PRICES in the state. UGLY DUCKLING noon 394-0176. 8-8-22 (6) Road. CAN 882-2458 hiring apartment close to campus NORTH POINTE 1 bedroom only RENTa-CAR, $7.95/day, MATURE LOVING person to day. Or 627-4264 after 7 pm. Ask for Director of Nurses. $110/month. Available Sept. 16. (313) 798-8230. GREENS APARTMENTS 9 monfh rate 'Swimming Pool 372 7650. C-11-8 24 (4) care for 15 month old and 8 58-24 (8) Z-4-8-24 (4) • ONE BEDROOM NOW LEASING APARTMENTS $260 'Unlimited Parking GOOD USED tires, 13-14-15 year old girls in our Okemos FURNISHED APARTMENTS 'Pleasant Landscaping home Sept. - mid June. Must 9 and 12 month leases fur 12 month rate Ctopctungljam inch. Mounted free. Used • AIR CONDITIONING wheels and hub caps. PEN- have own transportation. • SWIMMING POOL nished and unfurnished, dishwi $220 'Special 12-month rates NELL SALES, 1825 Michi¬ 349 2618 8-8-22 (61 nicely decorated Efficiency, • PRIVATE BALCONIES 'luxurious Furnishings 1 or 2 bedrooms, fully car gan, Lansing, Michigan, • WITHIN WALKING 'Shag Carpeting Includes: FREE BUS 48912, 482 5818. UNIFORMED SECURITY of¬ 2 BEDROOM FURNISHED LUXURY APTS. peted air conditioning, heat DISTANCE TO CAMPUS 'On-site Management C 11-8-24 (6) ficers and store detectives full washer, disposal and water. Furnished spa 'Private Balconies SERVICE 'private balconies cious part-time. Call 641-4562. rooms. Large Laundry or 'swimming pool facilities swimming pool. 'SWIMMING POOL Model Open 9-9 ATTENTION!! WE buy late C-11 8-24 13) NOW LEASING FOR model imported and domes¬ FALL From M80 and up. Call Jan NOW LEASING Everyday 332 6354 Close to Campus tic compact cars. Contact John DeYoung. WILLIAMS PART AND full time jobs delivery packaging, mainten¬ SPECIAL SUMMER RATES NORTH POINTE FOR FALL 351-3118 Leasing for and sales men. Must Summer & Fall VW, 484 1341. C-11 8 24(5) ance 351-8631 have own transportation. Car APARTMENTS 351-7212 3:30 p.m. • 5 p.m. CALL 349-3530 expense paid. Call 694 7947. CALL 351*7166 NexttoBrody 1250 Hoslett Road atl-i 3-8-20 16) located ot Hogodorn just south of Service Rood Monday, August 20, 1979 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan HAGAR the Horrible k Johnny Mathisat SPONSORED BY: Pine Knob thru by Dik Browne lH Wednesday night. Daily Tv Highlights T. 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Yd by Johnny Hart SPONSORED BY: TUMBLEWEEDS SPONSORED BY: by Tom K. Ryan ACROSS 34. SAM and SILO8 SPONSORED BY: by Jerry Dumas and Mort Walker 1. Navychaplain 36. 6. Relay of 38. horses 40. 12. Adapted 14. Tar Heel State 42. 15. Stalemate 43. 16. Heather 45. 17. Young doe 47. 19. Palm fiber 49. 21. Worldwide 51. workers' 53. group 10. Capable of 22. Tennis stroke 54. rotting 24. Canon 57. 11. Girl's name 26. German spa 13. Ground grain 28. Deodar 58. 18. Deity 30. Empty talk: 20. Dillydally slang 23. Bark 32. Mixed type 25. Part of be 33. Gold in Heral¬ 27. Quaff dry 28. Quill for wind¬ ing silk 29. Flushed BEETLE BAILEY SPONSORED BY: 31. As it stands: music by Mort Walker 35. Grow 37. Lanolin 39. Preserves with salt 41. Petulant per- 44. Head: French 46. Good-by 48. Energetic person 49. Congrega¬ tional Association: abbr. 50. Reluctance unit \ ] Q Michigon State News. Eost Lansing, Michigan It's What's Heart By MIKE SHANAHAN patients running for therapyDr. Allan Ross, director of the hospital's cardiology division, Each runner has been carefully screened. All took part earlier federally funded exercise program at the university and Happening says that until recent years, it was medical doctrine for heart Announcements for It's What's MSU Volleyball Club meets 7 to Associated Press Writer attack patients to be sent home and told to do little but stay in so were in relatively good shape when they began running with Happening must be received in the 9 tonight and Wednesday in the WASHINGTON - Tom Leckey, 45, is convinced that Cox in July. State News office, 343 Student Sports Arena, IM Sports-West. bed and rest. running 25 miles a week actually eased the effects of his second The results, he says were softening of the bones, a tendency Leckey, the accountant, says he is resigned to whatever his Services Sldg., by 12 noon at least heart attack. He intends to keep running. two class days before publication. Get into the good book this Boris Bell, 58, another heart attack victim, says his doctor, toward blood clots in the legs and lungs and generally poor medical future might be, but says he is convinced running will No announcements will be accept¬ summer. United Students for once reluctant to allow him to jog, now finds his physical health. improve, not impair his health. ed by phone. Christ non-denominational Bible condition "remarkable." In many cases, doctors say, the best thing many patients Leckey suffered his first heart attack in November 1975. A studies at 7 p.m. Tuesday, 111 jogger, says the possibility of could be told, in effect, was "maybe you will die in your sleep." Warrick Ross, 49, also a friend told him of the exercise program at George Washington. The new belief is that if the rest of the body is kept in good T'ai Chi Club meets at 6 every suffering another heart attack "doesn't faze me." MSU Chess Club meets at 7 even one seriodsly damaged — will work evening, tonight through Friday, Leckey, Bell, Ross and five other men who have suffered condition, the heart — HE BEGAN RUNNING and by the summer of 1978 was an Beaumont Garden or Union Tower p.m., America's Cup Restaurant. serious heart attacks run five to seven miles three mornings a with less exertion and more efficiently. unregistered entrant in the Marine Marathon here. He Room if bad weather. Come to Bring your own set, board and week. Their "track" is the Washington Mall, from the Lincoln Ross says there is also a new emphasis on quality of life. That completed 15 miles, dropping out only because of leg pain, and learn or exchange ideas. clock. Memorial to the bottom of Capitol Hill. is, even if a coronary victim's life span is shortened by the was proud he outdistanced his 15-year-old son, Colum, by five They represent a growing medical conviction that vigorous attack, running, or some form of physical exercise, will improve miles. MSU Jugglers meet at 8:30 and sustained physical exercise is good therapy for heart the patient's physical and mental well being while he is alive. Six weeks later he suffered his second attack, a mild one. tonight and Tuesday in the Union MSU Igo club meets tonight in Tower Room. disease. The mall runners call themselves the Dawn Patrol and shove "Running did not cause the second attack," he says. "In fact, Owen Hall to play Go. Beginners off from the George Washington University campus about 6:30 it made it less severe. I am convinced of that." and Dan players welcome. Summer hours for Tae Kwon THE EIGHT MEN, who range in age from 32 to 61, are led by a.m. each Monday, Wednesday and Friday. After a second period of recovery, he resumed jogging. Now Do Club are 6 to 9 tonight, Paula Cox, 28, an experienced marathon runner and a he runs six days a week. His doctor has advised him to cut Wednesday and Friday in the Turf physician's assistant at George Washington University Hos¬ Every 10 minutes, the runners stop and each man takes his down, advice he has so far ignored. "My wife is the one who Aikido, martial art for self- Arena, IM Sports-West. own pulse. If it is too high, he quits running. The mall course is pital. defense and personal growth, Each of the runners, she says, "is aware that he has a disease, plotted to include drinking fountains and telephone booths, for gets worried," he said. Campus Hunter Coalition will meets 7:15 p.m. Tuesday and use in a possible medical emergency. So far no one has needed His goal is to complete the 26 miles and 385 yards of a full one of the symptoms of which is sudden death . . . but it's a marathon. 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