Tuesday The clouds should break today and blue skies are fore The State News cast. Temperatures will be in the high 40s. VOLUME 74 NUMBER 62 MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY EAST LANSING, MICHIGAN 48824 APRIL 15, 1980 Carter does not set deadline By The Associated Press the House of Lords that Britain would have only after they had been made in Washing WASHINGTON President Carter has pressed official view is that sanctions are — to consult with its European Economic ton. "This made it psychologically difficult not set a deadline for U.S. allies to initiate unlikely to work, officials declined comment Community partners before reaching a final for the allies to support the decisions," he on Carter's broadcast. sanctions or break relations with Iran, decision on sanctions. said. The conservative State Department officials said Monday. Other Western nations, including the Copenhagen tabloid, The officials said Carter left a "misim B.T., dismissed any move by Carter to try "I AM ALSO QUITE SURE we should other members of the nine-nation Common to get an EEC decision at next pression" in a weekend interview in which consult with such countries as New Zea¬ Market, were silent, apparently waiting Monday's he told European television meeting as "election bait" for the Pennsyl¬ correspondents land, Australia and Japan which have until next week's meeting. The other vania presidential primaries in which he is a there is "a specific date" by which the interest in that part of the enormous member-nations, besides the United King¬ candidate. United States expects success in "this world," he said. dom and the Netherlands, are common effort." Belgium. Switzerland cannot join sanctions be¬ Dutch Prime Minister A.A. Maria Van Denmark, France, West Germany, Ireland, cause of its neutral stance and the U.S. Western European governments, under Agt, traveling in India, said that although Italy and Luxembourg. request for that country to pressure from Washington to join the U.S. America's allies are unhappy with the assume a Bonn's conservative Die Welt newspaper sanctions against Iran, expressed puzzle¬ diplomatic caretaker role in Iran. United States taking unilateral decisions on saw Western Europe as looking for one But in a front-page editorial the influ¬ ment Monday about President Carter's the Iranian crisis, they should support its European nation to show the lead and "deadline" for them to act. ential liberal newspaper. Neue Zuercher stand, the United News of India reported. support Carter with sanctions and Official sources in most European capitals He accused the United States of asking — Zeitung, urged that ever, neutral nations suggested West Germany for the role. should take action because Tehran's con¬ said they had received no specific date. its European allies to support its decisions In Denmark, where the previously ex¬ duct threatened international law-. Only British Prime Minister Margaret - Thatcher, Carter's most enthusiastic sup¬ porter of tough action on Iran, offered quick Red Cross visit viewed formal words of support. But even she said no date had been received. In a television interview with European correspondents, broadcast Sunday. Carter said he had given friendly governments a "specific date" by which Washington ex¬ *' * pected her allies to join in economic sanctions. The United States imposed sanctions and severed diplomatic relations with Iran last week as Iranian strategic ploy w y- -tfv'■ t 7 after failure of negotiations to free the American hostages By The Associated Press who have been held in Tehran since days and this should reassure them, I am sure." The American hostages in the U.S. Embassy in Tehran received He said he had seen all the hostages, but did not say how many militants took over the U.S. Embassy there a seven-hour visit Monday from two representatives of the were visited. The State Nov. 4. Department has put the number of WEST EUROPEAN LEADERS planned International Red Cross in an apparent move by Iran to blunt President Carter's campaign for Western support in imposing captives in the embassy at 50. In Washington, the State Department dismissed the Red Cross ■ i 4, ' sanctions. visit as a "palliative," but acknowledged it could be helpful to the to consult with their recalled envoys from "To me they appeared in rather good shape," Harald Schmid de Tehran in anticipation of next Monday's hostages and their families. Gruneck, one of the Red Cross officials who visited the hostages, meeting in Luxembourg of European told The Associated Press Radio Network in a State Department spokesperson Hodding Carter said if the Red Economic telephone Cross representatives saw- all 50 Americans in the embassy Community foreign ministers. interview. "You can imagine those people have been there under Iran will be discussed then. rather difficult psychological conditions and they did appear in independently and were able to report on their status to their Thatcher told the House of Commons on families, "it will be a plus." good shape. Monday that the Western allies were "Of course there are some people, this is just human, who * conferring urgently and should make a decision on joint action at the support less than others those conditions, but still I want to BUT, HE ADDED, "it will not be anything but a palliative, mask for the central reality that they are being held," as far as the a i meeting next emphasize there is problem. A**-- no very grave Monday. "We were able to take the names of those hostages, to take the United States is concerned. "Our objective is their release." "Our job is to show our support to the address of their family in the States, and their telephone number Carter said he hoped the visit would not cause U.S. allies to lose American people and to President Carter," and on top of this — and I do believe this is most sight of the fact that "the point is not whether they are being held she said. important to in good condition, but that they should be released." Hasidic men crowd in to touch the coffin of Rabbi Levi Grunwald reassure the families in the States — we were able to get from as it She added, however, that Carter had not each hostage a message, a Red Cross message, which (will be) sent passes down Bedford Avenue in Brooklyn, N.Y., Monday. More than Iranian Health Minister Moussa Zargar accompanied the two given Britain a deadline by which to make a to his family. Red Cross officials, Schmid de Gruneck, the permanent 30,000 mourners clogged the streets for blocks for the funeral oi the 8fi decision. "We have not been set a date by representative in Tehran, and Dr. Bernard Liebeskind, a year-old rabbi. In 1939 he led his people from the shadow of the Nazi which our American allies want us to act," "THEY WILL BE sent tomorrow by a doctor delegate who is terror in Czechoslovakia to the promise of a new life in the United Thatcher said. physician. The two are Swiss. leaving for Geneva and from there they will be sent to the States, An official of the Red Lion and Sun, the Iranian equivalent of the States. Foreign Secretary Lord Carrington told so I guess the families there should receive them in a couple of Red Cross, also went with them. CITES LA CK OF COST Fit,L RES Begin pledges quickened pace Carr asks details of draft MADISON, Wis. (AP) U.S. plan for Palestinian autonomy talks - Rep. bookkeeping costs of registration, not questions," Kastenmeier said. "We By BARRY SCHWEID Bob Carr. D-East Lansing, and another the But while taking an apparent hard line on the issues, the potential enforcement costs. almost voted on it last week." Associated Press W riter prime Congress member asserted Monday U.S. Rep. Robert Kastenmeier, minister said Israel is prepared to accelerate the negotiations and that Congress is being asked to vote on Judy Goldsmith, executive vice WASHINGTON — Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin to continue them until an agreement is in hand. He said deadlines D-Wis., told a hearing of his House pres¬ President Carter's draft ident of the National Organization for pledged on his arrival here Monday for talks with President Carter have been set and then extended in the past, registration Judiciary subcommittee on courts, civil to try to accelerate the pace of citing the six months proposal without knowing its implica¬ liberties and the administration of Women, said NOW might challenge the negotiations with Egypt over an needed after Camp David to complete last year's peace treaty with tions or costs. constitutionality of registration unless autonomy plan for Palestinian Arabs. Egypt instead of the three months originally planned. justice that the Carter administration Begin said Israel is willing to keep talking as long as it takes to Carr, who sits on the House Armed has not addressed what effects draft it applies equally to men and women. With Secretary of State Cyrus Vance standing at his side, complete an agreement. And yet, indicating sharp differences with Begin Services Committee, said But she said her group would prefer to expressed sympathy over the holding of American hostages in Congress, registration will have on individual Egyptian President Anwar Sadat, Begin said an administrative which is being asked to shift appropria¬ freedom or the federal court system. see no registration at all. Iran for more than five months and said that country had council fulfills Israel's commitment at tions so draft registration could begin, "The administration, quite candidly, Camp David in September undergone "the most reactionary of revolutions" in history. Another hearing by the subcommit¬ 1978. has been presented with only the has not been able to answer these Referring also to the Soviet intervention in Afghanistan, he said tee is to be held in Washington. Sadat, who was in Washington last week for talks with Carter, is his visit comes at "a time which is difficult for the United States" pressing for a Palestinian council that has legislative and executive and that it can count always on Israel as an ally. powers. He also has called for a moratorium on new Jewish Predicting a smooth visit by Begin, one official said, "We've seen settlements and allowing Arabs in East Jerusalem to vote in them start with confrontation and end with elections among the Arabs on the Israeli-held West Bank of the agreement. This one won't even start with confrontation. Blackout now just dark memory Jordan River. But Begin, in an arrival statement at Andrews Air Force Base, agreement. I anything." Everybody is interested in an don't think there will be any sharp encounter on said. "An administrative council will be the expression of full By KY OWEN most important areas first, Nilsson said. autonomy." AS HE LEFT TEL AVIV, the prime minister was asked if he State News Staff Writer outage since 1974, when construction was Referring to the West Bank as Judea and Samaria, their biblical While there intended to go beyond the Camp David were no major problems, being done at the physical plant. That names, he said, "We shall not interfere in the agreements of September When t he lights came back on in residence daily affairs of the 1978, which omitted the settlements and Israel's annexation of some people were stuck on elevators for a outage was caused when heavy rain went halls the parties ended following Sunday's short time during the blackout, but rescue inhabitants but we shall assure the security of Israel and the East Jerusalem. blackout. through a canvas covering an opening in the future of her children." and residence hall personnel got them out. building and shorted out circuits. Begin replied: "Why should I? Why should anyone go beyond an Except for students setting off fire¬ The Library and Chemistry Building w ere international agreement?" crackers and Early Monday there was an unrelated BEGIN'S CONCERN IS that a powerful Palestinian council graffiti writers spray painting evacuated, the latter because exhaust fans A compromise autonomy plan would be based partly on power outage in some buildings, including could be the first step toward a state bent on buildings, all was quiet on campus during were not functioning. Mason Abbot and subverting Israel deferring some tough issues, such as control over water facilities the blackout and no major problems were Snyder-Phillips residence and, with Soviet support, threatening the population centers on the West Bank of the Jordan River, until the Palestinians Sunday's blackout was the first total halls. Nilsson said. reported, said Department of Public Safety nearby. themselves are willing to join the Egyptian-Israeli negotiations. Capt. Ferman Badgely. "Mostly people were just having fun and enjoying themselves," he said. "As soon as the lights went back on everything quieted down. "Thank God it wasn't a warm night," he Spring term enrollment said, adding there might have been some problems if weather had been pleasant. of 40.872 is highest ever MSI WAS ENTIRELY without power from 8:54 p.m. until shortly after 10 p.m., Students trying to find sunning space He said some people who do not have jobs when power was restored to some areas, along the Red Cedar River this spring will decide they may as well go to school and said Paul Nilsson, director of automotive . have more competition than in any previous improve their skills. services and utilities. spring term at MSI'. But there are two sides to the matter, he Nilsson said a raccoon caused the outage Ira Polley, assistant provost for admis¬ said, noting that other students may not when it touched a transformer terminal sions and records, reported that spring term have the funds to supplement their loans to while standing on the ground, which caused enrollment on the East Lansing campus is continue their education. the transformer to be short-circuited. 40,872 — 1,003 more than the enrollment for The raccoon was electrocuted immedi¬ spring term of 1979. The colleges which reported the largest The previous high mark for spring increases over last year were ately when it touched the terminals, which was engineering, carry 46,000 volts of electricitiy. 40,808, set in 1976. with a 10.4 percent increase; business, with Nilsson said animals often climb on the Polley credited the increase to what he an 8.8 percent increase; and communication transformers looking for a warm place to called the "pipeline effect" noting that the arts and sciences, with a 7.2 percent sleep, but this time the raccoon went too far. enrollment for fall term 1979 was the highest Restoring power is a slow process, Nilsson fall term enrollment ever, and the students said, because the generator cannot be who enrolled then are continuing their Polley noted that those increases reflect recent trends in enrollment. brought up to full capacity right away. program. Therefore, power was not restored to the Fall term enrollment was 44,756 — 176 Slate News Helen Street Currently at MSU, there are 21,085 men entire campus at once, Nilsson said. Bob more than the previous high enrollment of enrolled compared to 19,787 women, but the Wyant of the Physical Plant sandblasts spray-paint graffiti from a wall of the Administration 44.580 in fall 1975. gap is closing as there are 3.4 percent more Building. Vandals took the opportunity to paint various messages on buildings and sidewalks on "There is some speculation the economic THE PHYSICAL PLANT has a priority campus during women at the University this spring than system under which power is restored to t he Sunday evening's blackout. slowdown may have stimulated the enroll last, while there are only 1.7 percent more men!Polley added. 2 Michigan State News East Lansing Michigan Tuesday, April 15, 1980 against Edward W. Sparrow Hospital in Lansing and Dr. Scott Knife misses Indira Gandh Pringle. the Midwest. At least nine people had been killed in storms which brought a Stapeiia was a resident of East Lansing when the sterilization weekend deluge to Dixie, record NKW DELHI, India iAI'i - April cold to some towns in the operation was performed Nov. 18, 1977. The suit alleges Pringle Southwest, and the heaviest snowfalls ever to come so late in the Indian Prime Minister Indira performed the procedure because the woman "desired to protect Gandhi escaped assassination year in Missouri. against any risk whatsoever of any further fertility." The abnormal snowstorm brought traffic to a halt on some Monday when a spring On Jan. 26, 1979, a Milwaukee doctor informed the woman she actuated stiletto knife, hurled interstate highways in the Midwest, closed schools and knocked was pregnant. by a man standing six feet away Ten days later out power in scattered areas. Stapeiia underwent a "complicated" abortion in in a crowd outside Parliament Milwaukee. House, narrowly missed her, authorities said. Cuba blames U.S. for exodus The six inch knife grazed one INBG will not show Olympics SAN JOSE, Costa Rica (API — Cuba's official newspaper said of Gandhi's bodyguards without NEW YORK (API NBC-TV will not broadcast the Summer Monday the flocking of more than 10,000-Cubans to the Peru and wounding him. they said. — Venezuela embassies in Havana were "Yankee provocations." It The man. identified 37- Olympics from Moscow, network sources said Monday. But the as official announcement will be delayed until called for mass protest rallies, including one at the U.S.' company lawyers are year-old Ram Bulchand certain NBC can recover some $57 million on an insurance government office in the Cuban capital. Lalwani, of Baroda in western policy. In Washington, White House press secretary The $57 million represents the 90 percent recoverable portion of Jody Powell India, was charged with announced the United States would accept up to 3,500 Cubans NBC's Olympic payment to the Soviet attempted murder and illegal Olympic Organizing A woman keeps her eye on her partially-submerged from the Peruvian Embassy and called on the Cuban government Committee and the International Olympic Committee, possession of a weapon, the Indira Gandhi according to car near the downtown section of New Orleans Mon¬ to permit a "prompt, safe and a policy the network placed with Lloyd's of London in September peaceful" exodus from the commissioner" said. The maximum sentence for attempted murder 1977. day after heavy rains caused massive flooding. The communist-governed island. He welcomed Costa Rica's offer to is a 10-year prison term. An NBC statement issued pumps which normally keep city streets free of serve as a staging area for refugees going on to other countries. Monday said: "NBC has repeatedly- water could not keep The front-page editorial in the Cuban said it would be guided by the policies of the United States up with the deluge. newspaper Granma suggested it was no accident the asylum-seeking Cubans crammed "Sterile" woman becomes pregnant government and we reaffirm that. We are discussing alternate into the Peruvian Embassy only weeks before the U.S. armed advertising plans with our Olympics' advertisers." forces planned exercises at Guantanamo, an American GRAND RAPIDS tUPI) - In a suit transferred to federal court The policy with Lloyd's calls for NBC to recover if the Games are Storms kill 9 in South base on Cuba's eastern tip. military , Monday, former Michigan woman who became pregnant a year not held, if the Games are terminated, or if the U.S. a Olympic "The coincidence of these events is not casual. Nor after she underwent a sterilization operation is suing a Lansing Committee doesn't sent a team. (API— Bloated rivers poured over their banks across the South maybe is the coincidence of epidemics and plagues in doctor for $250,000. NBC had contracted to pay $87 million — $64 million to the Monday, routing thousands of people and snakes, while up to a pork, tobacco and Ethel L. Stapeiia. Soviets for facilities and rights and $13 million to the IOC. sugar-cane, since as in the past the hand of the CIA could be who now lives in Mequon, Wis., filed suit half-foot of snow smothered spring flowers from Arkansas through behind all that," Granma said. YOUR COLLEGE MUG COLLEGE OF BUSINESS GERALD H. COY GENERAL MANAGER ROBERT I. BUILARD SALES MANAGER PMONfS SUMMER TERM, 1980 PLUS ACAgH REBATE! Classes offered will include: AFA 201,202,230,391,392 CAMP TAMARACK When you trade-in your men's *Ai ^^ BOA 341,440,441,442 Offers good summer jobs 10K gold high school ring for .. $8G.Ov on a Lustrium college EC 200,201 available at Brighton ring, America's newest fine MGT 302,306,310 and Ortonville Mich. jeweler's alloy MTA 300,301,317 INTERVIEWING APR. 16 Your rebate Sign up at Placement Services. Open House for 1980 Staff Trade in your woman's 10K gold high Students who have school ring for $32.00 and buy your experienced difficulty in obtaining 7:30 pm at Hillel Lustrium college ring for only $37.95. College of Business classes will be interested in our Summer course offerings. With the assistance of the Office of the Fresh Air Society 313-661-0600 10K gold high school trade-ins also apply Provost, a particularly wide range of courses will be 6600 W. Maple Rd. West Bloomfield Mi. on all Josten's 10K gold college rings. available. Call or write for further information OFFER GOOO THRU AMHLOMX Please remember that you must have attained junior $opliia Jwi'iis Jostens Rin«s Sold Only At standing to take 300-400 level courses in the College of Election Business. Also, course prerequisites are enforced. Campus Book S tore EARLY ENROLLMENT FOR SUMMER TERM, 1980, CONTINUES THROUGH APRIL 30 IN ROOM 150 ADMINISTRATION Across From Berkey Hall BUILDING. 507 E. Grand River 9:00-5:30 Call 351-5420 Co-Optical 351-5330 BLACK NOTES MKDIA I'KODl (HONS HOME FINANCING join the fox hunt tonight wishes ta ex/tress a (i/tolovy for the technical sincere SEMINAR ★ $50 cash prize to the person chosen Foxeyest by the audience difficulties during the SPEAKERS KIM BUNKER JOHN DRAPER ★ $25 Finders fee to the person hraadensi of the Miss lilaeh Officer. Residential Mortgage Division oan American Bank & Trust Graham Branch Manager Mortgage Corporation nominating the winner MSI I'ageant last Thursday. (know a shy fox it could pay...) The I'ageanl trill lie re/tlaved ★ 2 For 1 special as usual. Door open 8:00 WED. APRIL 16 • 7:30 P.M. tl'lilL 17. at (t:0() /tin an ★ Rock to ITV Channel ."> on-campus MSU CREDIT UNION flyweil Channel 20 & 21 Qualifying for a mortgage • Types of mortgages off-campus • Buying or selling homes in today's economy Sincerely. \nrnmii t.olr A QUESTION AND ANSWER PERIOD WILL FOLLOW THE SESSION I'res. It WW A division of the A SMSU Programming EVERYONE WELCOME Board funded by student tax money. Call REFRESHMENTS WILL BE SERVED • RESERVATIONS ARE NOT REQUIRED the PB Hotline 353-M10 for more info on PB events. Tuesday, April 15, 1980 3 Michigan Slate News East loosing Michigan N. Case Hall residents weigh alternatives By RUSS HUMPHREY The students asked management to consider gradually filling the State News Staff Writer floor with Honors College students or perhaps phasing the given priority over other students during residence hall sign ups. The selection of third floor Case Hall as the Honors plan in was discussed in an open meeting on College floor Things are looking brighter for North Case Hall students who over the next two years. It was their last chance to discuss the White said she is not sure how many students are affected by the April 3, White said. Students had enough notification and opportunity to address the proposal. have been told they must find proposal before hall sign begin new living accommadations next ups on April 22. year. After the Case Hall Resident Association decided on the plan, all IN ADDITION, THE students suggested Honors College "They (management) told us last Thursday that we had to leave," students affected were notified Case Hall management announced April 10 that the third floor said Jeffrey M. Humphreys, a freshman majoring in pre veterin "shortly after," White said. would be changed to an Honors College student students be given the option of selecting any student as their Ann Kolasa, living area. ary medicine. "We have hardly had any time to look for alternative a freshmen majoring in pre law, said she was roommate. The students who may accommodations." concerned that management never asked for student be displaced were given an opportunity to input in the Angela White, Case Hall manager, said Case Hall management matter. express their concerns Sunday night before a special meeting of management personnel and students. personnel, are "exploring" these ideas as possible alternatives to THE PROBLEM OF finding alternative housing seems to be the W hite said a committee of seven the present plan. people from management and overriding concern of those people who are affected by the possible students involved in the hall government asked for responses to the housing change. proposal but received only She said any student being affected by the proposed plan will be a few. Sosa presents against ASMSU Board By JIM MITZELFELD was binding. about procedural things, nothing was done State News Staff Writer relevant to the issues of the students," ASMSU Student Board member Henry THE FIRST CASE involved Sosa's Studer said. Kemi Goabo Sosa testified Sunday at an All-University charges that the board was not following its Two - year - old Student Judiciary hearing that the board code of operations regarding the way in STUDER ARGUED THAT as long as all Grant Bailey has been operating in violation of its code of which bills were passed by the board. It also the members of the board gave their of East Lansing operations and that he was unfairly involved the length of time Studer took in consent by not objecting, the code could be dismissed from the board in February. (right) confronts making interim appointments to fill vacan ignored in some instances to speed the Cookie the puppet Sosa was dismissed from his seat on the cies. board's procedures. Sosa said the code was after a weekend board as representative of the College of "We have ignored the rules and regula¬ indeed meant for strict interpretation. Arts and Letters by ASMSU Chairperson tions that guarantee our student body fair performance of The remaining argument centered Bruce Studer. Studer dismissed Sosa for play," Sosa said in his closing remarks. around Studer's failure to make "Michigami." as failure to pay the $3 ASMSU tax. "I don't view the code (of operations) as a appoint¬ sophomore theater ments for vacancies. Sosa was re-elected to the Student Board ball and chain to restrict the processes of major Laura spring term. business," Studer said in defending the "There were seven vacancies and no Silverston looks The AUSJ hearing consisted of two violation. Sosa argued that the board had appointments were made," Sosa said. on. The puppet separate cases. failed to waive the code which specifies a AUSJ Chief Justice Dave Belanger said show, which Much of the hearing centered around standard waiting period before voting on the judiciary met Sunday night to consider whether the ASMSU Code of Operations, a depicts folk tales several bills. the two cases but added that AUSJ's of booklet that states the procedures the "The problem the past boards had were Michigan, will written decision and explanation would be board must follow in conducting business, that they spent so much time nitpicking performed this probably not be released until next week. weekend in the Arena Theater. AFRICANS HIT APARTHEID POLICIES' Panel tells of freedom struggle By ELYSE GOLDIN Ernest Simela, representative of the Patri¬ forced natives to work for the colonies in SUte News Staff Writer otic Front/Zimbabwe African People's agriculture. This inevitably made the A representative of the African National Union said. peaceful attempts of Blacks even more Congress of South Africa said Sunday night Problems confronting southern Africa fruitless, he said. he would not be surprised if the current have affected that region as well as the Andrew Mtetwa, representative of Zim¬ situation in South Africa led to U.S. military entire world since the late 19th babwe African National Union, said the century, intervention in that apartheid country. when Britain economically colonized Zim- problems in Zimbabwe-Rhodesia could not Apartheid is a policy of segregation which be overcome using peaceful methods so politically and economically discriminates against non-European groups in the Repub¬ natives learned to measurers rely upon of the Patriotic Front. the military 'U' employees to start van pooling plan; lic of South Africa. It must be uprooted and cut¬ Johnson Makatini said Americans must out ALTHOUGH THE BALANCE of arms support total divestiture from South Africa . . . disappear forever if natives are to attain genuine independence there. Makatini was among four panelists and be a memory in the minds of our people so was not in their favor, and Zimbabwe- Rhodesians lacked the political machinery needed in battle, "the war of liberation was payroll deductions to finance program who spoke on ways to liberate southern when victory comes won on the battlefront," he said. Africa. they By KARL BLANKENSHIP confident it will grow. Theo-Ben Gurirab, representative of the State News Staff Writer In the dim lumination of an emergency will know. We "The state of Michigan's (van are fighting South West African People's Organization, A van pooling program for University employees may be off and each pooling program) keeps growing light which worked during the campus-wide to liberate ourselves said battles being fought in South Africa are year," Winn said. "I'm anticipating that the same thing will rolling in the . next six to . . blackout Sunday, the panelists spoke on the eight weeks. happen here." the struggle is strengthened not new, nor are they limited to that country Janna Winn, administrative assistant in the eve of Zimbabwe-Rhodesia's inauguration alone. University Services ceremonies. They explained the status of when we see our comrades Division, said van pooling has been successful with organizations WINN ADDED the program is already receiving "tremendous "This is not a new struggle. We are that are using it. southern African countries to a patient in response." audience of about 125 people in the arms succeeding. merely continuing the patriotic struggle of The state of Michigan, Chrysler Corp. and the University of So far, the main delay in getting the program started has been — Theo-Ben Gurirab, our forefathers against racism," he said. International Center. Gurirab said the current situation in Michigan all have van pooling programs. deciding whether the vans should be leased or bought, Winn said. representative of the South But even though MSU's program will be small to start with southern Africa cannot be successfully — High interest rates make leasing the vans less economical, she THOUGH THE DISCUSSION was sched West African consisting of only three vans — Winn, the program organizer, is said, while lack of capital makes purchasing vans difficult. People's reformed or amended, and must probably be uled for the Con Con Room, the group met in "This has to be totally supported by the people who participate," the lobby of the International Center, Organization overcome on the battlefront. Winn said, "so we don't have that much money to buy vans." "It must be uprooted and cut out following a 45-minute wait for maintenance disappear forever and be a memory in the . . . MSU Employee Van pool However, Winn said she is confident the program will be cost personnel to open the door. minds of our people so when victory comes competitive with automobile travel, particularly on longer trips. It was obvious from their persistence to babwe-Rhodesia, he added. "With the anticipated rate increase in fuel, it's going to be even they will know," he said. meet and the nature of the discussion, that Simela explained that native Zimbabwe- more cost competitive by this fall," she added. "We are fighting to liberate ourselves . . . the panelists were accustomed to battling Rhodesians made unsuccessful peaceful the struggle is strengthened when we see problems. Sunday night's struggles with the attempts to regain their home since 1894 THE EXACT COST of participation in the program will not be our comrades in arms succeeding," Gurirab known for a couple of weeks when it is decided whether to buy or lights and such were seemingly miniscule when British colonies apportioned them 47 said. compared to problems of which they spoke. lease the vans, Winn said. The starting date of the program will be percent of the land which was non-produc¬ The discusion was co sponsored by "The time has come to deal with the tive. Additionally, a tax which had to be known at about the same time. paid MSU's African Studies Center and Southern situation as it is rather than go around it," in European currency satisfied Britain but Only University employees are eligible to participate, since the Africa Liberation Committee. program will be financed through payroll deductions, Winn said. Until the program starts, Winn said she is organizing Nearest major cross streets responsive people into groups according to where they live. No one Inflation takes on small business; toll Campus Phone Number Leave work Start work (time) is obligated to participate simply because they fill out a program application, she added. Winn said one person in each group will be selected as the driver Work Location (Building) for that group. soaring interest rates increase prices People who want to participate in the van pooling program may fill out the attached form and return it to the University Services Division by April 30. For more information on van pooling, contact Winn at the USD. By MICHAEL VEH the increase on to the consumers. State News Staff Writer high interest rates, including inventory reduction and elimination of customer Rising interest rates affect everyone, but HIGH INTEREST RATES also increase credit. small businesses are hit harder than most, prices and reduce spending, Suits said. said Daniel Suits, an MSU economics professor. If inflation slows, prices will fall but the interest on the loans remains high and small Rising prices can be attributed to attempts by Americans to maintain their standards of Markov address willASMSU When small businesses purchase their businesses are forced to keep their living, Suits said. high inventories with money they have bor¬ prices, the economist explained. MSU President Cecil Mackey will address The meeting will also serve as an open forum seven members of the board who rowed at high interest rates, they are HE POINTED TO two different prob were "The problem of inflation is a the ASMSU Student Board at 7 tonight in 4 for board members and interested students elected during spring term registration forced to increase the price of their goods. very lems in the American economy which most to tangled one," Suits said. Student Services Bldg. to question Mackey. represent their respective colleges. Suits said. people think are directly related — inflation Smaller businesses and oil prices. ASMSU Chairperson Bruce Studer said "It will be the first time MSU's president are forced to keep If the Carter administration is able to the board invited Mackey to the meeting to has spoken to ASMSU in more than 10 The new session of the board may also their prices higher than control inflation the small businesses will be larger businesses When oil prices rise, he said, the standard ask him what role he thinks student consider its choice for ASMSU chairperson which have not taken out years," Studer said. seriously affected, he said. high-interest of living drops. This loans and are then unable to drop in the standard of government should play in the University. Tonight's meeting will be the first for for the upcoming year. compete in the living is often countered by increases in If prices stop increasing and interest marketplace, he added. rates continue to climb, he said, small prices. Suits said. Suits suggested several methods for business will not be able to continue passing small businesses to balance the effect of "We've got to slow down the rat race," Suits said. "We're all running as fast as we can to stay in the same place." Research association honors '{/" prof Suits explained that Americans refuse to An MSU assistant research article while professor of educa on "Teacher's Reports of cesses teaching. accept a reduction in their standard of tional psychology, Christopher Clark, has The article, co-authored with Penelope L. Cognitive Processes During Teaching." The Tax deadline tonight living and, by raising prices in an attempt to negate this decline, they increase the rate of inflation. received the 1980 Palmer 0. Johnson award from the American Educational Research Association. AERA award carries a $500 stipend and is the highest honor for basic research. Clark also worked with MSU's Institute Peterson of the University of Wisconsin, was published in the American Education Journal in 1978. Clark received the award Clark, the first MSU faculty member to for Research on Teaching. He said his at the annual AERA meeting in Boston on Remember, midnight tonight is the manager of retail services. be honored, received the award for a research studied teachers' thought pro¬ April 8. deadline for mailing income lax returns. The collection boxes wil| be located Someone needs to convince the American The Lansing post office will have a around the Federal midnight mail collection so those last- Building, 315 W. people that their standard of living cannot minute income tax returns will make the Allegan St., Lansing, and the General Mail keep going up. he said. Suits said he sees a deadline. The Lansing post office will set up Facility, 4800 Collins Road, Lansing. need for a real change in governmental leadership and not simply a change in Commissioners to review funding for jail Customers are cautioned to observe the several collection boxes so people will not schedule on all other boxes, as some are political parties. Requests for funding and implementation t the county courthouse in Mason. The board will also consider resolutions h»ve to wait in line, said Vern Wieferich, emptied only once a day. The public has to learn to do with less. of a new energy system for the Ingham iroposed system, which would to use money from the county contingency Suits said. Until then prices will continue to County Jail will be discussed by the Ingham both heat and electricity for the fund for the improvements to the county's climb. County Board of Commissioners at 7:30 d cost between $1.1 and $3 million, computer system. Opinion VIEWPOINT: EVERYW'Offl AN'S WEEKEND Not a weekend The controversy is nothing new for every woman By ANN McPHAIL Bonner has evidently changed his position Human Relations and Family Ecology, the be Is this a choice between the First since then, having concluded at our a trump card for many anti-feminist and The controversy behind the April University College and the Honors College non-choice coalitions who have female points simply because they are on Amendment and the right to an abortion? 1979 meeting that the EWW collective was does not have its ramifications for the withdrawal of funds from Every the domestic end of the feminine Regarding the policy of the EveryWoman's membership and claim to participate in the justified in limiting participation to a collective's ability to exercise control over Woman's Weekend is more than Weekend tEWW) collective toward the limited space event which had specifically struggle for a liberated future. So what if spectrum smacks of blatant dis¬ exclusion of anti abortion and anti ERA the content, and thus the quality of this the conference title is changed? Will this just a question of semantics. defined objectives. crimination — which all women factions from a pro-choice organizational event. symbolize a further fragmentation of an One wonders also on what grounds Lou University funding was with¬ have fought against and still face fair, I support and commend the responsible Anna Simon interpreted the As most conference planners, we share a already fragmented women's movement, drawn following the project's The denial to express alternate appropriate responsibility to exercise a working defini¬ which struggles within itself, in face of decision they have made. ness of an denial of access to EveryWoman's already legit imiate provision to tion of those forces which work for us, and strong resistance? And the issue is not a viewpoints is also a violation of new one. Last organize a program from a particular point those which do not. Who, then would expect Weekend to two special interest year's EWW collective faced this of view. Is this University policy with regard to decision the anti-abortion same a provision which applies a pro-choice organization, clearly defined in Again, I commend the EWW collective groups. That denial of access, as coalition only on an ad hoc basis? She raises the for knowing where the issue lies, and for the First Amendment, which sti¬ funding applications, to invite a non-choice reached after the project's coordi¬ approached the University — Ralph Bonner question as to whether the control over the organization? foregoing funds, to the tune of more than pulates universities serve as a in particular — in hopes of pressuring content of an event is indeed linked to its The issue for many women $500, and maintaining consistency. The nating committee revamped the marketplace for the free exchange University officials to secure them admit funding but regarding the derision could not have been easy as it sources, implies that the anti-abortion coalition is the historical and EveryWoman's Weekend "pro- of ideas. That two private groups, tance to a fair at which they had no place. retraction of support . by the Department of current support means that additional energies and time woman" they maintain with other policy, discriminates the Lansing Community College anti-women and anti-minority policies. Is it must now be spent on securing the against Michigan Right to Life and Women's Resource Center and the sheer coincidence that these larger coali necessary additional fuqds to cover their Stop ERA, the women's groups Ingham County Women's Commis¬ lions overlap in personnel and share costs. barred from the event. common financial support? sion, have also elected not to The McPhait is o junior majoring in Justin Morrill The pro-woman policy advo¬ legitimacy of the title EWW seems to support the event, lends credence cates freedom of choice for women to charges that the exclusion in taking complete control of their violates freedom of speech as well minds and bodies. The event's as academic freedom. coordinators argue that the right The withdrawal of funding in no to life and anti-ERA appears to ring frighteningly of misogyny, groups deny way jeopardizes the event, as the Work women the right to choose the way University will still house it, and eligibility and I personally doubt that Zevon is a misogynist. they would like to live their lives. the lost funds amount to only $600 unlimited Carol Help me out, Holdship. Is it parody, social They assert at the same time that of a $7,000 budget. At issue is the satire or what? What do you come up with the right to choose is a "very basic event's credibility and stature. when you tie the remark in with its Dear Ms. Kalwaitis: original right." EveryWoman's Weekend coordi¬ After reading your letter of April 9 in context in Taxi Driver? Or was it merely The Zevon's gratuitous stab at argument is flawed. nators claim the project's title The State News, I decided to do some firing up an audience? If so, then I am worried. I Granted, anti-abortion and anti- implies that every woman is able checking. It is my job to monitor student men near saw earnings. Upon reviewing your financial aid my seat cheer that remark, and I ERA groups advocate a lifestyle to attend not that every issue think — package for this academic year, I did not they were cheering its literal, surface very different from the one ex¬ and viewpoint will be represented. find any earnings limitation placed on you. meaning rather than what Zevon was horted by feminists. But freedom (hopefully) trying to say about violence in They say their point of view is The only time a student's work eligibility is America. If Zevor's fans are of choice would limited is when he or she has accepted a getting off on presumably in¬ "pro-woman" instead of "anti- his violent stance clude the freedom to have children choice." form of federal financial aid, i.e.: work purely for the vicarious thrill of it, they are not any better off from and be homemakers. The denial of Whether the study, National Direct Student Loan, event is headlined listening to his music than they would be a forum to Supplemental Educational Opportunity present alternative EveryWoman's Weekend, Pro- Grant or a Health Professions Loan. watching Starsky and Hutch reruns. lifestyles is a denial of the right Woman's Weekend, or Some According to your file, you have not What's more, aren't these legitimate to make an informed choice. concerns of State News entertainment Women's Weekend, it is one¬ received any of these aid types. Your That the women's movement award letter does state "Campus Employ¬ reviewers? Last term. Bill Holdship saw fit sided. The event's coordinators has splintered since ment" otherwise known as "your own job" to interpret and balk at Johnny Thunders' suffragists may find alternate viewpoints but this does not imply a limit. That figure drunken Afghanistan remarks at Gang won the right to vote is a War's appearance in Dooley's. Whether or "disturbing and offensive," but was plugged into your package to fulfill the development which was to be they are just as important to our need in your budget since every student is not I agree with Holdship's interpretations of that incident, I certainly expected. But the denial of a right to express and hear differing expected to work and earn a portion of his agree that it was his journalistic responsibility to make them. chance to present competing view¬ educational expenses. If a limit had been opinions. Speaking as a fan of Zevon and one who placed on your earnings, your award letter would have stated "This award limits your enjoyed his concert Monday, I can not help but feel that Holdship earnings to " Incidently, had you ignored such re¬ The last stand been limited and asked to terminate your employment by this office once that limit was reached, you would no sponsibilities this time in reviewing War¬ ren's concert. The result is that what have been as insightful piece of might journalism longer be able to was instead a work on or off campus due to the federal pretty superficial report. for the Olympics regulations governing the use of those federal funds. 202 Charles Hertz, Collingwood If someone in this financial aids office In refraining from voting its own proposed the best compromise of informed you that you could no longer work conscience, the U.S. Olympic all. Why not participate in the "on campus," that information was incor¬ VIEWPOINT: ALUMNI ASSOCIATION rect in your case. This office is in charge of Committee helped President Car¬ Games and boycott the prelimi¬ handling work-related programs when fi¬ ter save what face he has left in his nary pomp and glory?, they asked. nancial aid is involved and I assure you that We need Jack attempts to rally the world in Such action would not rule out support of his symbolic sanctions competition against the Soviet Union. After a would still be a show of opposition completely, and had you come into our office with your problem we could have helped you and explained that it is perfectly all right for you to work on campus. By BRIAN J. SOLARIK resignation is not and cannot be in the best Kinneyand the alumni associaiton. We, therefore, few masterful strokes of I have spoken with Dr. Mackey, Trustee govern¬ toward the host country. The If your have any other questions concern interest of the University or the alumni want to express to you our 100 mental arm-twisting, the commit¬ administration, Barbara Sawyer, Dr. Westcott and have percent association. MSU has recently gone through however, appar¬ ing your financial aid and eligiblity to work, met and conferred with the officers and support of Jack Kinney, and are looking tee voted what Carter had asked it somewhat turbulent periods, and at this forward to working with Jack and the ently felt this issue, like the Iran we will be happy to answer them for you. board members of our alumni club. I would critical time, MSU is in need of true to do all along — keep the Mary Elizondo like to present our thoughts and feelings University for many years to come. American Olympic team at home Spartans; whose loyalty and faithfulness I would like to add my belief that the Work-Study Monitoring regarding the current controversy between are needed than Office of Financial Aids now more ever. Jack alumni association, by its very existence for the 1980 Summer Games in the University administration and the Kinney is a true Spartan — and to give up and membership of fellow MSU alumni, Moscow. alumni association. We would like each of walk away or from MSU when it is not in does, and will always, seek to promote the you to know that our first and main concern the University's best interest, is something Symbolism seems to be the As well-being of MSU, its traditions, reputa¬ cornerstone of Carter's foreign blimps float in this, and any other matter University or the alumni association, is affecting the a true Spartan cannot do. Jack Kinney has tion, and academic excellence with the given MSU 25 years of loyal and faithful utmost loyalty, pride and conviction. It is policy these days. No one, not even over the Moonies wholeheartedly for the well-being of MSU, service. He is regarded by his peers in the for these reasons that individual alumni and proponents of an Olympic boycott, as is evident by our membership in the highest professional terms and his name is their alumni clubs from around the United would assert that alumni association. abstaining from They have all gone a little too far. We have examined both the Feb. 4 letter synonymous with MSU and the alumni States are voicing their opinions and the Games will turn the Soviet The organization called CARP is association. concerns at this time. MSU will always be a really a from Mackey and the Feb. 12 letter from To lose Jack in this manner can onslaught in Afghanistan's favor. part of Moon's Unification Church. Change only part of us, and we a part of it. Westcott. We strongly feel that the cause the undermining of moral And there is no doubt that those your life if you want to make him some and Solarik is president of the MSU Alumni Club ol "revised proposal," for the "Principles and financial support for both the who reluctantly cast their vote in money. CRAP. Policies Governing The Agency And Oper¬ University Phoenix Aril and a 1974 graduate of MSU Why is PIRGIM allowed to place itself on favor of the administration's our student fee cards for a yes/no ating Relationships of The Alumni Associa¬ funding tion, Inc., and MSU," submitted to the wishes still theoretically vote? It does not represent the MSU oppose Executive Committee on Jan. 16, is a fair mixing sports with politics. Yet we student body as a whole and it is not part of and more just arrangement for not only the have enmeshed them with the MSU. We might as well add the Red Cross committee's vote, and subse¬ and the Republican Party. President Mackey, why do you feel it alumni association, but for the University as well; both now and in the future. It is our "The State News quently rendered moot any more necessary to take away professors' rights, view that to place the immense power of the discussion about the role of politics Executive board in the hands of one alumni control of the alumni association, person^ in the Olympics. What Carter has or just a few persons is not, in many Tuesday, April 15, 1980 (say that again?), and maintenance workers' cost of living increases? These make circumstances, in the best interest of the not done though, is tell the up the Editorials are the opinions of the State News. Viewpoints, crisis, had no room for compro¬ heart of this fine University. University or the Alumni Association. We American people just exactly what mise. Monarchy believe it is to everyone's advantage that columns and letters are personal opinions. road we are heading down. went out long ago. the entire 17-membcr Executive Board be And their actions have indeed ASMSU Blimpers, I heard you have to Editorial Department To conduct a entrusted with the power to hire the foreign policy on reflected that stand. Carter possess a quality product before you can go executive officers of the alumni association. Editor-in-chief R W Robinson Entertainment & Book Editor Bill symbolism may appease some as around promoting it. Bloopers. . Holdship threatened to revoke the commit This is a more democratic and Managing Editor Don Kinsley Sports Editor Ed Bradley well as bolster Carter's re-election Michael Carlson just tee's tax-exempt status, procedure that has the consensus of many Opinion Page Edit Mike Megerian Layout Editor Gary Piatek chances. It will also making it A222 Armstrong Hall City Editor Susan Tompor Freelance Editor Carrie Thorn the harder than it already is for the persons, with their collective and indepen¬ . open Wche/e McElmurry Chief Copy Editor dent viewpoints and recommendations. Campus Editor Linda Oliverio opportunity for other countries to committee to garner funds. Grants Photo Editor Richard Marsholl Staff Representative Roland Wilkerson We have a great sense of concern and a boycott our Games in 1984 on from the government were as good No interpretation grounds of our own political and deep feeling of pride for our alma mater. It Advertising Department as revoked in Carter's view. is of paramount concern to us all, that we do military immorality. And who Carter seems bent on getting in Zevon review what is in its best interest. Therefore, we Ron MacMillan Asst Advertising Manager Pat Greening could blame them? feel that Mackey's call for Jack support for his crusade to counter In his review of Monday night's Warren Kinney's ✓ If Carter wanted symbolism, he Soviet aggression at any cost. He Zevon concert, Bill Holdship makes much of should have listened closer to the has succeeded with the athletes. In discussing the issue boycott. Zevon's "artistic violence" and use of But who really made the decision gun/phallic images in his songs, yet fails to DOONESBURY with the president, the athletes to withdraw? venture a guess as to how the artist's "guns by Garry Trudeau and decadence" might best be interpreted by the audience. From the looks of some of the folks I in attendance at the concert, ZEKE, EVEN THOUGH VOCAL POINT saw MERE STILL TALKING WITH , „ TELL ME, they could YOU HAVEN7 HAP A mi, I GUESS ITS use some help in deciding what 2EKB BRENNER, (Aim US ( mrmilP NO SECRET THAT to make of Zevon's violent CHANCE V READ YOUR lyrics and stance. T0PAY TO PLUG HIS RE BOOK YET, AS PUKE'S YOUSAYTUAS THE MAN BOUGHT The most glaring eopuut in CENTLY PJBUSHEP MEMOIR, " Holdship's CARETAKER, YOU MUST 7C%f- PUKE'S WORST HARP PRUGS BY review concerns the remarks Zevon made "PUYtPomArroTA QUALITY? THE PLANE-LOAP. | Today's question: during "Poor Poor Pitiful Me" about ' , MENTOR "mm, Should an Honors College floor be established in any reside! ' hall? "shooting her in the p like Marty YKS - 353 3110 NO 353 3220 Scorcese" I which not to Peckinpah incidentally is a reference much as to lines from #kv a Results from Monday's question: as Should the United States Seorcese's small acting role in Taxi Driver. apologize to the Iranian governmi for atrocities committed by the shah? Holdship claims he does not know how to YES 20 NO 102 interpret the remark aside from not ing that it's "awfully weird," but 1 think he has Sponsored bv ASMS! and The State News, Inc. something of a responsibility to go further with it than that. Otherwise the remark Michigan State News. East Lansing, Michigan Tuesday April 15. 1980 5 Mailer wins Pulitzer for fiction By ARTHUR EVERETT THE STAFF OF the Phila of the shah of Iran. The won the Pulitzer Prize in bio¬ Associated Press Writer Swenson Orsini of the St. delphia Inquirer won its sixth Associated Press had dis¬ graphy for Edmund Morris, a Petersburg, Fla., Times, won NEW YORK - Norman straight Pulitzer, this one for tributed the same picture when Kenya born, British educated the national Mailer won the 1980 Pulitzer reporting prize, for general local reporting of the it was taken. American citizen. a 14-part series on the Church Prize for fiction Monday for nuclear accident at Three Mile "Because of the present un¬ The prize for poetry was of Scientology, a story four The Executioner's Song, the Island. More than 80 staff rest in Iran, the name of the awarded to Donald Rodney years in the making. story of Utah convict Gary members worked on the story. Gilmore and his execution photographer cannot be reveal Justice for his Selerted Poems, The prize for international by a Don Wright of the Miami ed at this time," UPI drawn from earlier explained. many reporting went to reporter Joel firing squad. The author had News won his second Pulitzer books. He is won in 1969 in the non-fiction a professor of Brinkley and photographer Jay for editorial cartooning for a THE PULITZER PRIZES English at the L'niversity of Mather of the Louisville category for Armies of the 1979 portfolio that had among were founded by the late Jo¬ Iowa. Courier-Journal, for their Night. its targets Ayatollah Khomeini, seph Pulitzer, publisher of the Douglas Hofstadter's Godel, series of articles and pictures Talley's Folly, Lanford Wil¬ the death penalty, and Three old New York World. They Escher. Bach: An Eternal Gold son's romantic comedy about a on Cambodian refugees. Brink Mile Island. He won previously have been awarded since 1917 en Braid, won the prize for Jewish accountant from St. ley, 27, is the son of NBC in 1966. by Columbia Louis, won the prize for drama. University on general non-fictton. It was television commentator David Three Mile Island also played recommendation of an advisory described as "a work of mathe¬ In journalism, the Gannett a role in Ellen Goodman's Brinkley. prize board. matical philosophy." Robert Bartley, editor of the News Service won the gold for commentary. Her Boston medal for meritorious public Except for the gold medal in In Memory of a Summer Day Wall Street Journal, won the Globe column regarding social the category of meritorious won the prize in music for Pulitzer for editorial writing on service for an 18-day series of values and appearing in 200 public service by a newspaper, David Del Tredici, a member of such articles on the Pauline Fathers, subjects as defense, poli newspapers dealt during the each award carries a prize of the music faculty of Boston tics, economics and business. an order of Catholic priests, and year with the nuclear accident, $1,000. University. The work for solo Erwin "Skeeter" Hagier's their mismanagement of gifts as well as with such subjects as In the field of history, the soprano and orchestra was Dallas Times Herald 23-picture and contributions intended to medical ethics, Iran and birth 1980 winner was Leon Litwack, commissioned finance a shrine. by the St. Louis series on the Texas cowboy control. professor of history at the Individuals cited in that Symphony for its 100th anni¬ won the Pulitzer for feature The name of the winner of University of California-Berke award were John Hanchette, of versary. photography. the spot news photography- ley, for Been in the Storm So The television critic of the Gannett's Washington bureau, award was kept a secret. The Long, a study of the end of A FOUR MEMBER team of Boston Globe, William A. William Schmick, state editor picture, submitted in the con¬ slavery from a slave's point of Boston Globe reporters won the Henry III, won the prize for of Gannett, and Carlton Sher test by United Press Interna¬ view. prize for special local reporting, criticism for columns dealing wood, of Gannett's national tional, showed a government The Rise of Theodore Roose with an investigative effort with new video technologies, a staff. All three are themselves firing squad executing nine velt, the first full history of the that exposed mismanagement profile of a major network Roman Catholics. Kurdish rebels and two former pre-presidentia! career of the in that city's transit system. executive and an analysis of police officers following the fall nation's 26th chief executive, Charles Stafford and Bette network values and ethics. Supreme Court ruling Council to discuss limits campaign spending academic calendar By RICHARD CARELLI lower court's ruling apparently titled to receive $20 million, The Academic Council will from the standing committee Associated Press Writer is binding on all general welfare meet at 3:15 p.m. today in the plus adjustments for inflation, chairpersons. WASHINGTON This programs in California, Alaska, Con Con Room, International Winder will - for the general election cam¬ clarify any year's Democratic and Repub¬ Arizona, Idaho, Montana, paign. Center. questions council members lican presidential candidates Nevada, Oregon, Washington The council will begin dis¬ ask before But those candidates who beginning an open cannot spend more than $29.44 and Hawaii. cussion of the discussion on the proposal. agree to public financing are proposed million in their general election change to the early semester The council will also con¬ • Refused to strike down as prohibited, as are their cam¬ campaigns, the Supreme Court system. Provost Clarence L. tinue discussion on the Course ruled Monday. racially biased against Whites paign committees, from accept¬ State News Tony Dugol the admissions policy of the Winder will open the discus¬ Formats and Credits Docu¬ ing any private contributions in A State Police helicopter circles over the First National Bank of East sion and then hear comments ment. The justices unanimously University of Washington's addition to those taxpayer Lansing, 3332 Lake Lansing Road, in search of a robbery suspect Monday upheld federal laws attacked by medical school. afternoon. the Republican National Com¬ Frederick McDonald. a mittee and others. White man turned down by the Returning to a busy day on medical school in 1976, had We're your contact Man robs Lansing Twp. bank the bench after a two-week recess, the court also took these charged that he was a victim of "reverse discrimination." He actions: asked the justices to rule that the school's admissions policy for CONTACT LENSES! • Left intact former Maryland .' A Lansing Township bank 3:45 p.m., Lansing Township fit the description of the robber. extended beyond the affirma¬ Gov. Marvin Mandel's political was robbed of about $2,000 police reported. The robber was described as a tive action standards enun¬ corruption conviction. He, and ♦Soft Contact Lenses ♦Hard Contact Lenses ■ Monday afternoon and a suspect Police said the robber walked 5-foot-10, 175-pound White five of his political associates, ciated in their "Bakke" decision "js being held in Ingham County into the bank shortly after a male, cleanly shaven and with could be ordered to start feder¬ of 1978. (including Bausch & Lomb jail in connection with the local gas station employee de¬ dark hair. He w as also described Soflens) ♦Trial W earing Plan al prison sentences within a robbery. posited $2,000 in the bank. as being "highly intoxicated." month. UNDER THE FEDERAL Brett Harrington, 21, of De- The robber then said "Give Election Campaign Act and the ♦Eye Examinations ♦Ultra-Sonic Cleaning Several local police depart witt w'as arrested in a near-by- me the money," police said. Presidential Campaign Fund ♦Service Warranty abandoned garage where the The incident is being called an ments sent officers to the scene MANUEL FACES A four ♦Polishing and Scratch of the crime to prison term for partici¬ Act, presidential candidates ♦Low Cost Removal $2,000 was recovered, police armed robbery by police be¬ help track down year nominated by the two major the robber. pating in a favors-trading said. cause the robber had his hand in scheme that reportedly parties may finance their gen¬ The First National Bank, of his pocket, possibly concealing a The Michigan State Police eral election campaigns in one East Lansing, 3332 Lake Lan¬ and the brought him some $350,000 Dr. D.M. Dean, Optometrist weapon, police said. Lansing Police Depart¬ worth of gifts, vacations and of two ways. They may raise sing Road, was robbed at about The suspect was reported to ment each sent helicopters to the funds through private con¬ 301 M.A.C. East Lansing interests in business deals. aid in the search. Suite 106 -Lower Level tributions, limited to $1,000 • Left intact a ruling in a from each individual or to The State Police also sent its California case that I ^^0* (next to Prinil-in-a-Minit) persons $5,000 from a political commit¬ eanc eled canine unit to the scene, and an Speech East Lansing police officer brought his dirt bike. applying receive for welfare full hearings being denied benefits. must before tee, or they may accept public financing. jCampus Contacts Under the two laws, each A road-block was set Israeli Ambassador to the up at Monday's action does not set major party candidate who United Nations Yehuda Blum Lake Lansing Road, between a national precedent but the seeks public financing is en¬ 337-7120 will not speak on campus to¬ Coolidge and Abbott roads. night as scheduled. Blum's appearance was spon Three bank employees and The lecture, slated for 8 p.m. sored by Hillel Jewish Student one customer were present at in South Kedzie Hall, has been Center as part of "Israel Week" the bank when it was robbed, canceled due to an unexpected celebrations. police said. I MISS J ENTERS THE SUMMER SCENE IN FUN TUESDAY] PRINT SLACK DRESSING. SPRIGHTLY. SASSY AND > LOOKING GOOD WITH PORTHOLE HANDBAGS. Two-piece cotton sets feature ALL straight leg slack with pull-on YOU| elastic waist, matching cuffed tube top. In 5-13 sizes. S35 A Polka dots on -ed seersuckei B. Navy with sail boat print C Seersucker Polynesian print. CAN EAT Barbecued Beef Ribs and/or Breaded Shrimp $5.95. D Rectangular straw-look bag with vinyl trim Facile closing, zippered inside pocket 8*11" In lively solids of red, navy, royal, taupe or natural SI0 includes salad, steak fries and cheese bread. * After 5 p.m. (Alcoholic beverages not included ) Offer void to anyone over 750 pounds. L The Family Restaurant & Pub 5001 West Saginaw St., Lansing, Ml 48917,517/321-0616 J Jacobson's £) Michigan State News. East Lansing. Michigan Tuesday, April 15. 1980 Bonnie Raitt to this month Entertainment Country-blues singer Bonnie Raitt comes to the MSU appear Raitt tradition country — a mixture of blues, early R&B, tions of material by James Taylor, Joni Mitchell, Allen Auditorium Monday, April 28, for an 8 p.m. show. interpretations of material by Toussaint and John Prine. new songwriters as well as Raitt's roots can be traced Home Plate was recorded in back to such influences as her originial compositions. L.A. during 1975, where she It was with her next album, Broadway singer father, John has lived since Takin' My Time. GKRRY SkOCZYLAS Raitt, and her early attraction 1972's Give it Up, that Bonnie A reunion of sorts with the to the country blues music of began to get serious favorable musicians from that album, it notice. The album was recorded John Hurt, Muddy Waters and combines the production with members of the Wood¬ John Hammond. Born and talents of Paul A. Rothchild stock and Cambridge musical with her growing family of More MSU raised in Los Angeles, Bonnie communities, and brought to graffiti headed east for college, enter¬ musicians and friends. Along light the relatively undis¬ with new tunes by Toussaint ing Cambridge in 1967 when covered songwriting talents of venues like the Club 47 nour¬ and Kaz, much of the material Eric Kaz, Jackson Browne, ished a healthy folk and blues was written and custom- Chris Smither and Joel Zoss. scene. It was in Philadelphia 1973 s Tikio' arranged for the album by the My Time musicians themselves Back by Burn Iranian for heat this year that Bonnie first took her — among popular demand, we present some more original an . . . UM #410." brought Bonnie back to the "desk top" guitar and distinctive blues them, John Hall, Fred Tackett, graffiti that you the student have worked so hard to "Long live the Space Cadets of Wilson Hall... 'It's better to West Coast to work with new Bill put together during those boring lectures. burn out than fade awav' Neil interpretations onstage. Bonnie Raitt found friends Lowell George Payne and J.D. Souther. — Young.. Whatever happened . Once again, the graffiti is from Berkey Hall because the desks to asparagus Initial success led to club and Bill Payne from Little Feat, For Sweet Forgivenew. worship? . . . Bring back Willie Horton." there are still wood, so they lend themselves to the following "We don't need no education . . . Party for the relief of engagements in New York, at material from Robert Johnson Van Dyke Parks, and John Hall Bonnie and Paul Rothchild types of writings: glaucoma — smoke dope , . . today is yesterday's tomorrow . .. Philadelphia's Main Point, and and Sippie Wallace as well as of Orleans, who produced the teamed up again, utilizing the how can we cause each other pain? at the Philadelphia Folk Festi performances close-knit feel of Bonnie and her "Econ 318 died here on 2/6/80 ... the Greeks don't want no . . . Everybody must get sex by Chicago album. On this album, Bonnie val. Thanks to the introductory bluesmen Junior Wells and freaks... Graduate — I can't waitl... rock lobster... Econ is a ... Ronald Reagan is the man for the '80s — the 1880s!. . . Stud introduced some new elements touring band as the focus of the service here." efforts of Dicx Waterman, A.C. Reed. The sessions were into her repertoire — a salty sessions. Along with works by drag ... I think. I think I am. Therefore. I am. il think?)." was "CAPTAIN: Scotty, beam me up — there's no intelligent life who's managed most of the held in a garage on Lake Browne, Kaz, and Karla Bonoff "Ipso Facto!... 'To be is to do' — Camus. 'To do is to be' — calypso tune by Calypso Rose, Sartre. 'Shoo-be-do-be-do' Sinatra 6 9 79 out into the here.' SCOTTY: Aye ave, Captain! Transporter beams in blues musicians during the past Minnetonka, Minn., and as is an exciting revamped version — . . . — Randy Newman's "Guilty" and 10 years, she learned from Son noted in the liner notes, of Del Shannon's real world .. . you sweet transvestite you!. .. killing for peace operation sir — but the phasers are zeroed in on you, also.' a bluesy rendition of Mose "Runaway," is like screwing for virginity . . . Delta Scagi a Maggot . . . SPOCK: 'Mr. Scott, beam up the Captain's ashes.' " House, Mississippi Fred "reflects the difference be¬ Allison's "Everybody's Cryin' featuring Norton Buffalo on Exhume Oswald." "Sex and drugs and rock 'n roll and God McDowell, Arthur Crudup, tween music made among Mercy," featuring Taj Mahal on harp and Mike McDonald from . . . Long live Eric Howlin' Wolf, and her special "Here's to me and here's to you, and here's to love and Severeid ... You can't always get what you want — God, how I friends living together in the harmonica. the Doobie Brothers helping laughter. I'll be true, as long as you, but not one moment after!" know it! ... I wish I could beam to Manitoba . . . Get wasted mentor, Sippie Wallace. Bonnie country and the kind squeezed 1974's Streetlights brought out on vocals. Her latest album, "Patti Smith is God. and God is dead ... this prof is a maniac . 1NE Wonders . . . One day I'll be famous SJM 3/5/80 ... Phi signed with Warner Brothers in out trying to beat city traffic Bonnie to the uptown R&B The Glow, was recorded in '79. Coke adds life land numbness!!). 1971. and studio clocks." Produced by talents of . . . . . Buy dope — send me Zappa Crappa." producer Jerry Tickets for the concert are "Fred Flintstone + Wilma = Pebbles Fans initially attracted by Willie Murphy and engineered through school for free . . . The fear of living for nothing . . . Jesus saves, but Ragovoy, who assembled the $7.53 and $8.50 and are avail¬ Moses invests Bonnie's blues performances by Sylvia and Dave Ray of best New York session strangles the will. . . God isn't dead, he just got the hell out." . . . Why don't we do it in the road . . . Often, men on able at Sounds and Diversions, "Kiss my body there are only two things that smell like fish, and one isn't fish weren't dismayed with her Koerner, Ray and Glover fame, . .. Luke Mucus and the Phlegms ... I'm in a a variety of new tunes by New WhereHouse Records, Campus debut album. Bonnie Raitt. The the album also covered a range York songwriters. The album Michigan State of mind . . . rub my tummy! . . Bing Crosby- . . . Florida is nice, but why can't girlfriends stay home?" Corners II and the Union ticket plays sudden death golf.. Today is the first day of the rest of . "Zappa is watching... I'm gonna leave whatever is left of my program included traditional of styles that would become a featured some fine interpreta¬ office. your life, but so was yesterday ... A fool and his self respect luck to the losers, bend me down, and kiss the world goodbye are soon parted." . . . I've got what it takes, but nobody wants it . . . Oops! — "It's true — Lassie kills chickens!... this class gets a person wrong planet . . . Charles Manson for MSU President." nowhere fast... A man of knowledge was here 9/30/76 ... God is, it is. soul is, who am I? I You're nothing, buddy)... Clean out the zoo — vote Republican!. . . George Washington slept here." "Thou shalt not kill, unless it's Contrary to popular belief, God's last am a victim of boredom ... a In commie name or an Iranian is not 'damn'... I Berkey 216, there are . . . 1Grease' closes after 3,388 performances " 'Magic' was here 10/21/78 . . . nuke Ohio State . . . The approximately 487,620 holes in the ceiling, give or take 1,000 ... NEW YORK (API - Grease, Broadway's longest-running authors to revamp it as a full-scale musical destined for Broadway. Russians are coming — thank God! II thought they were You know you're in trouble when your rent payment, car musical, rocked, rolled and sang of high school life in the late '50s With Pat Birch choreographing and Tom Moore directing, it Iranians i... This class is so boring Kilroy wasn't even here ... payment, and girlfriend are all six months late." for the last time on Sunday. It closed after 3,388 performances. first ran three months downtown — under a Broadway musical Grease opened Feb. 14, 1972, and survived critics, a royalties contract with the unions — at the old Eden Theater before moving dispute and occasionally slow box-office business. It took the uptown. long-run record from Fiddler on the Roof with its 3,243rd At a cost of only $150,000 to produce, Grease cashed in on the performance on Dec. 8. '50s nostalgia craze of the last decade that also gave America CBS presents Guyana drama tonight Grease also helped boost the careers of a number of young hopefuls who went on to stardom, among them John Travolta, Happy Days and the rock group Sha Na Na. It grossed more than $8 million, according to Waissman — from Richard Gere Barry Bostwick, Adrienne Barbeau and .Marilu the show itself, a cast album, touring companies, and a 1978 movie By JOAN HANAl'ER inherited pet store, that Whites and Blacks may all be God's Henner. that starred Travolta, fresh from success in Saturday Night Fever. CPI Television Writer The show died primarily because of New York's 11-day transit children, but "God ain't the only one looking." NEW Y'ORK — The degeneration of the Rev. Jim Jones and the The Klan also has been keeping its eye on Jones, and after strike, which ended Friday, according to Lynne Guerra, the deadline:^. horrifying mass death to which he led his followers in Jonestown, several incidents the White church leaders put out a call for a new musical's production stage manager. Guyana, evokes the inevitable question: How could it happen? minister. She said Grease drew a predominantly young audience, many of That's the story Ernest Tidyman tells in the CBS two-part That's when Jones goes into what has become a Black ghetto to whom live in New York City and takes buses and subways to the show. But they stayed away from the box office, apparently dramatic special Guyana Tragedy: The S»ory of Jim Jones, to be found his People's Temple and dedicates himself to helping poor because of ATTENTION BANDS!!! shown tonight and Wednesday 9 to 11 p.m., EST. Blacks with both faith and a hatful of social services. uncertainty over when the strike would end. The highly dramatic, absorbing and powerful drama is based on Money to support his vision is a steady problem — according to "People weren't buying tickets in advance, and with no advance, Tomorrow, Wednesday, April 16th is the Guyana Massacre: The Eyewitness Account, by Charles A. Krause we couldn't continue," she said. Ritchie, who was to become his business manager, he was deadline for registration for Sound and the staff of the Washington Post, and stars Powers Boothe as Grease, in trying to survive, had offered half-price ticket spending $2,000 a month more that what was coming in. A visit in handsome charismatic Jones in a taut, compassionate perfor¬ another striking cameo coupons, good through April 27, in Sunday's editions of the New Challenge '80. by James Earl Jones — and he begins to mance. see the light. York Daily News. But its closing had been expected. Interested MSU student oriented bands The drama is unusual in its effectiveness and also in that it Increasingly Spokespersons for the show last week said unless there was a now, he is becoming more ruthless in accomplishing dramatic upturn in box-office business this weekend, the musical may pick up band info registration makes a serious effort at explaining how Jones changed from a his mission. devout Christian devoted to social justice to a paranoid drug user Here is where he makes the decisive wrong turning. He literally probably would close Sunday. packet at WMSN, in Room 8, Student who sexually abused members of his congregation and led his throws down his Bible and tells his adoring congregation to have Grease, which had been running at the 1,655-seat Majestic Services Building. followers to their death in a jungle clearing. their faith, not in printed words but in him. He is above the law of Theater, began in 1971 at a basement theater in Chicago, where Bands wishing to compete, must be The story starts in Guyana, where a drug-drained the husband-and-wife producing team of Ken Waissman and Jones is God. He has been troubled by the temptations of adultery. Now he putting his people through a suicide death drill, a precursor to the finds himself an exception to the Commandments. Maxine Fox first saw it. registered by 5:00 pm tomorrow night. real thing. The tragedy is told in flashbacks, a counterpoint of past The moral inferred is that in religion as in politics, man must be Written by Warren Casey and Jim Jacobs, it originally was a SC '80: It's not just another contest! and present. ruled by laws and not by other men, and no one man can hold play with music, not a musical. The producers persuaded the There's little Jim growing up in Lynn, Ind., toting his Bible and himself above the law. Now that has a familiar, post-Watergate berating his peers for gambling when they play marbles for keeps. ring and suggests an interesting comparison. His piety comes from a motherly neighbor, played in a cameo The result is a moving documentation of good twisted into evil, appearance by Colleen Dewhurst, to whom he flees from the fights an attempt to illuminate the inexplicable. It also is strong MASON-ABBOT 5,000 METER ZAK'Si within his own home. entertainment, not recommended for children but compelling adult The boy retains his piety into manhood. He has a vision and a fare. mission. He marries a nurse, works his way through school and becomes a minister. Although raised in the cradle of the Ku Klux Klan, Jones RIVER RUN believes all men are brothers. In 1953 Jones is called to an R.N. PROGRAM Fine Mediterranean and Indianapolis church where the changing neighborhood has Vegetarian Foods resulted in an almost vanished flock. He goes out to find new A CAREER IN NURSING Saturday, April 19 11:00 a.m. members — among the new black residents of the old area. TUESDAY SPECIAL! He is warned by Clayton Ritchie, the animal-hating owner of an MERCY SCHOOL OF NURSING OF DETROIT is a TWO KABAB STEAK SANDWICH Team and Individual Divisions YEAR hospital based diploma program to be a SALAD AND SOFT DRINK REGISTERED NURSE. 5.00 per Team 1.50 Singles LARGE OR SMALL ! FREE WE'VE GOT EM ALL! Direct patient continues until care graduation. experience begins early and ONLY ^ 1 #99 For more information call Jim or Ken at I SMALL COKE ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS: High school graduation MON-SAT: 10am-7pm 355-2031 — Residence Halls and Greeks I with o C+ average, Biology, Welcome. Chemistry and 2 years NEXT TO THE SILVER DOLLAR SALOON I WITH PURCHASE OF of Math, I ANY LARGE OR SMALL First year at Samaritan Health Center St. I SUB (WITH COUPON) - Joseph Mercy Hospital Unit, Detroit. I I OFFER GOOD: APRIL 158 160NLY Second year at St. Joseph Arbor and orPontiac. Mercy Hospital, Ann Give Skin A Healthy Student residence available. Student parking pro¬ Glow with BUF-PUF s# vided for commuter students. igalle/ ; Sub DAILY SPECIALS ON i FOR EXT. 376. FURTHER INFORMATION CALL (313) 923-5700 nonmedicated cleansing sponge i*\mm Shops SOUPS & SALADS * 1040 EAST GRAND RIVER Ponce ot the Wedding BUF-PUF plexion. The dramatically improves secret of your com¬ beautiful skin is J core, although you wash your face regular¬ ly, neither your favorite soap nor your washcloth can truly provide proper deep It is not too late Jtefflelfip cleansing. BUF-PUF can! A medical special¬ ist developed this unique product to pro¬ vide professional skin core. BUF-PUF gently to spend next year in Denmark. Finland Norway buffs away dead skin cells, frees dirt and or Sweden debris and reveals the new, fresh layers • live and study in a small residential school /chool of dancing beneath. among Scandinavians FIND • become fluent in a new OUT language • discover another way of life and gam HOW You are invited to meet with our buf-puf perspective on yoursel' new EASY FREE GIFT beauty consultant who will have a special For further 1980-81 pro- IT showing at our brookfield plaza store with any gram (cos credit, etc.) LEARN Wednesday, April 16 from 11 am to 4 pm. BUF-PUF 'BALLROOM* DISCO*LATIN ATIN I Purchase! SGINDINIW?^ SEMINfkR M DISCOVER THE FUN THE DEMELUO we *01 locally owned independent school no contracts serving lansing sinciIl#6J 0 WAYI cmool WAY! iss2 II I Exclusively at 100 E 8r;th ',! (212) 734-834C •Special Offer MUIR Brookfield Plaza M&uir. Drug Stores Michigan Slate News. East Lansing. Michigan Tuesday. April 15, 1980 7 Itnyre, Gibson honored Mary Kay Itnyre and Nan¬ have been named to the All- ette Gibson, members of the region 5 team selected recently MSU women's basketball team, by the National Scouting As sociation. Double headers The NSA regional and nat ional awards were presented rescheduled initially after the 1978-79 ADAM TEICHER son. Itnyre has been named sea All-Region both years. Today's baseball double- School time for header with Western Michigan University has been canceled due to unseasonable weather. in Itnyre and Gibson led MSU scoring and rebounding re¬ The twinbill is rescheduled spectively, in 1979-80. for May 7. Waters, players In addition, the twinbill scheduled for with last Thursday Aquinas College will be A learning process. understand. We may run the last year can see the light at the played at 1 p.m. Wednesday at That's what spring practice Kobs Field. same play from seven different end of the tunnel and it's not a will be to the 90-odd football formations. Admission is free to all MSU train." students. players and nine coaches on the Defensively, there also will Stote News Tony Dugol MSU campus as drills begin "WE'RE GOING IN very be a philosophy change. today. multiple." Pendry continued. New head football coach Frank "Muddy" Waters (center) discusses his 1980 New coach Frank "Muddy" "After we see these players, "BASICALLY, WE ARE Waters and all but one of his then we'll plug them in and run Spartan team at a Monday press conference in the International Center. going to simplify things," Flanking him are assistant head coach Sherman Lewis (left) and offensive co¬ assistants — Sherm Lewis, who what is best. My background is Lewis, the defensive coordin¬ has been an aide at MSU since ordinator Joe Pendry. strictly in the veer offense and ator and the only holdover from 1969, being the exception — this is the way we may wind up. Rogers' staff, said. "We will know nothing about these I don't know." come with more people up players save the little they've front. This will allow us to rush been able to scrape off the films up a little more in pass cover¬ of last year's games. Likewise, Muddy Waters age, but hopefully, we will the players are going to have to learn a whole new system. knows his football. Even though he make up for this with a better rush. Trackmen seek sunshine "The key to our defense is IT TOOK MORE than doesn't know much one injuries," he added. "We won't By WILL KOWALSKI BIBBS PICKED OUT spe- cited Flower's 20.8 time in the spring practice for the MSU about his players, do as much hitting defensively State News Sports Writer cific performances which he second leg (220-yards) of the players to learn the Darryl he does know that in the spring as we've done in MSU men's outdoor track thought were superb at this spring medley as one of the Rogers system when Rogers the past. Our first 11 are as team coach Jim Bibbs was not took over four years ago. It Darryl Rogers early point of the campaign, highlights at the meet, and good as we've had here in a too happy when he awoke and was especially impressed Thomas's 46.9 time in the took well into Rogers' first didn't leave him while, but we just can't afford Monday morning to find snow with junior hurdler Ken Ea¬ 440-leg of the same event as season and the learning process much talent. to get anyone hurt." covering the East Lansing ton's time of 14.45 seconds in another. under Muddy Waters may last Lewis will build around line¬ landscape. the 110-meter high hurdles. Additionally. Bibbs said he into next season. Bernard Hay, man linebacker His tracksters had just re¬ "That was Kenny's personal was pleased with Williams' and But while the new coaches What the new coaching John McCormick and defensive turned from Knoxville, Tenn., best time even though he didn't Smith's times as the starters in may not know much about the regime is going to have to do is back Jim Burroughs, who in¬ after participating in the Dog¬ place in the event, and we're the mile relay and spring personnel, there is no shortage get the maximum out of MSU's credibly was left off the all-Big of ideas. three talented runners — Steve wood Relays there, and Bibbs expecting big things out of him medley, and Kenney's 1:51.6 Ten team last season. in the had hoped to return to some future," Bibbs said. time for the 880 in the last leg "The Michigan State Smith, Derek Hughes and Elsewhere, the story on nice weather so his team could The sprint medley unit of of the spring medley race. offensive philosophy is very Bruce Reeves. They teamed up defense is the same as on the for more than 1,500 yards in run outdoors. Randy Smith, Ricky Flowers, The Spartans will next see simple: to put our kids at the other side of the ball: very little Calvin Thomas and Tim Ken- action when they host the best possible advantage and to 1978 and over 1,800 last season. proven talent. And linebacker BUT EVEN THOUGH Bibbs had the highest finish for utilize their talents the best," But there is precious little ney Michigan State Invitational this George Cooper will have to knew that Monday's practice the Spartans, with a time of Saturday. Preliminary races new offensive coordinator Joe else as far as proven talent. As miss all of spring practice with would again be held indoors, he 3:20.59, good for fifth place. will begin at 10 a.m. Pendry said. "We'll use differ¬ a result, many of the positions a chipped bone in his back. Sixth's were taken by Smith ent formations, motions, shifts, are was happy with the way his open. "Hopefully, he'll be back in the in the invitational 100-meter lots of things to confuse the "Each kid thinks he has a Spartans performed at the in¬ fall," Lewis said. dash (10.68) and Flowers in the defense to give us the ad¬ chance to start and that is the > dividually scored Dogwood's. "For our first time being Invitational 200-meter race vantage. But this doesn't mean way we are going into spring MUDDY WATERS KNOWS outdoors for more than one day (21.51), while a seventh place our offense will be complex. It practice," Pendry said. "A kid his football. Ever, though he will be simple for our players to that may have been third string at a time this spring, I thought was produced by Keith Moore doesn't know much about his in the 1,500-meter run. Moore we did a real fine job," said players, he does know that ran 3:51.59 after a 3:40.8 in the Bibbs, who is starting his sixth Darryl Rogers didn't leave him outdoor season at the track preliminaries. with much talent. Vincent wins 2 MVPs "We've got some freshmen coming in," he said. good helm. "We had three good days of TWO OTHER EVENTS in which the "But you can't always count on outdoor work down there, and I Spartans partici¬ Jay Vincent won two "Most Valuable Player" awards Friday think we made a lot of progress pated but did not place was the freshmen. We're going to need night as MSU's basketball team staged its annual banquet. in mile relay, made up of Tyrone some young players to perform our conditioning." Williams, Kenney, Smith and Vincent, who averaged 22 points per game and won UP1 All-Big or it may be a long season. Ten honors as the league's top scorer, won the Although none of the limited- Thomas (3:12), and the high Chicago Tribune "This is going to be a year of squad tracksters finished in the MVP Award given by vote of the team, as well as the Charles S. jump, in which Paul Piwinski discovery for us, which is top three in their events, a cleared 6-feet-10. Phillips Award, granted to the MVP by vote of press, radio and another way of saying a re¬ number of Spartans did es¬ Other than Eaton's fine per¬ television representatives. building year." tablish some good times. formance in the hurdles, Bibbs Forward Ron Charles won the "Most Improved Player" accolade for the second time. The St. Croix, Virgin Islands, senior won the award in 1977 as a freshman. Fellow senior Terry Donnelly won the John E. Benington Award as the best defensive player. Donnelly and Charles received the Captain's Award as outgoing team captains. Back up guard Mike Longaker won the Stephen G. Scofes Sportsmanship award for the second straight year. OPEN TO THE PUBLIC Ham & Broccoli with cheese sauce Tues April 15 potatoe salad mixed fruit cup $2.75 SHOT & BEER NIGHT EVERY TUESDAY NIGHT Money Makers — 9:30 pm Offer good with this ad. All You Can Eat: Rest. NO SUBSTITUTIONS Hours: M F 11:15a.m. Vegetarian Special: $3.95 5:00 p.m. - • 1:15p.m. 7:00 p.m. Sun. 12:00 noon -2:00 p.m. In Celebration of the BEACH BOYS April 21st Appearance POP ENTERTAINMENT PRESENTS A MSI BEACH PARTY Thursday Night, April 17 at Dooley's Swimsuit Contest (men and women) Ten Finalists will receive: pair of tickets to the concert BEACH BOYS album pair of passes to TANFASTER plus GRAND PRIZE to the winner: Backstage passes to the BEACH BOYS CONCERT A division of the AS MSU Programming Board funded by student tax money. For more info on Programming Board events, call the PB Hotline 353-2010. Michigan Slate News East Lansing Michigan Tuesday. April 15, 1980 Fossum happy after finish Bv ADAM TEICHER Edwardsville third at 787. The Boilermakers Softballers fifth in tourney played consistently (384 over were scene for them. But they've State News Sports Writer The Spartans had a one the first 18 holes, 386 over the eighth in the Big Ten last year, added two freshman that can The Spartan softball squad Illinois State University, 7 0, "Against Texas A&M, The MSI' men's golf team stroke lead on Purdue going second I, but their second round but may challenge for the really play as well as the played hot and cold as it and Ohio State University. 8-0, Laurel (Reynolds) started to finished second in the Illinois into the final 18 holes, but the conference this time was a great one." crown players they have coming back. finished tied for fifth in the before falling to eventual tourn get into trouble and they ended Intercollegiate Tournament Boilers shot a sparkling 373 Purdue also had t he lourna around. They're solid and I think they fourth annual Redbird Invi winning 5-0. ament champion Texas A & M up Saturday in Champaign, III. over the last round to win going ment's medalist. Guy Wollet "They just ran into a problem ran contend with us and Ohio tational Softball Tournament at Purdue University won the University, 5-0. "Indiana was much better," away. look the honors with a 145, (last year at the Big Ten State. I feel we are more Illinois State University in Nor The Spartans and Texas Becksford said. "They were tourney with a 36-hole score of "Purdue just played super," three strokes in front of the match)," Fossum explained. consistent than Purdue. We nial. III., last weekend. A&M advanced from their pool 758. MSI1 was next at 770 and MSU coach Bruce Fossum said. strong on offense and defense. second place finisher. MSU's "They had two kids that were would probably beat them over The 16 teams in the touma into the single elimination play Southern Illinois University- "They deserved to win. We Dave Belen. pretty sick. It was just a bad four rounds, but ment were divided into They got something like nine they really pools of offs, but the Spartans were runs and scored 11 runs. They popped us Saturday. four teams. Each team played drubbed by Indiana University, "I think we're on a progres really hit the ball. one game against every other 11-0. sive trail," he continued. team in its pool with the top "In the first two games, our Weather permitting, the 9 8 Linkswomen place sixth "We got into the hardware two single teams game advancing to a elimination playoff pitching was great," said MSU head coach Gloria Becksford. Spartans will face Western Michigan University today in (trophy) business and I think it to determine the championship. "In the first game Wendy Kalamazoo to play a scheduled By BII-l. TEMPLETON Host Ohio State won the tournament with a team score of 955 to means something to the kids The Spartans easily handled iGreenwood) gave up, I think, double-header and finish a tie State News Sports Writer beat the University of Georgia by nine shots. when you bring something their first two opponents Fri¬ hit, When and if the sunshine and warm temperatures which usually Because it hosted the event, the Buckeyes entered a second one so we were very strong game that was rained out here home," Fossum said. day, shutting out both Eastern on defense. April 8. characterize spring finally return to Michigan. MSU women's golf team which placed third, as well as boasting the medalist in the After Belen's 148, Monty coach Mary Fossum will be a whole lot happier. individual competition in Karin Mundinger. James was MSU's next finisher "I just think the girls are tired of playing in the bad weather." Mundinger fired rounds of 75, 80 and 73 for a 228 total. at 152, Tom Mase was third Fossum said Monday after returning from the Ohio State "We just had a bad second day in the rain," Fossum said. "We PORNO TONIGHT 5 DAYS ONLY with a 153, Hill Herrick fourth University Invitational held over the weekend in Columbus. had hoped to place in the top three or four." with a 159, Rick Grover fifth AT LAST! !! The TRUTH About the The linkswomen braved the cold, rainy and windy conditions in Fossum said the tournaments her squad plays in aid in giving with a 161, and Mike Thomsen, the sixth renewal of the OSU tourney to finish sixth in the 17-team her an indication of how MSU can hope to do in the Big Ten after his 225 for the 54 holes MARCHING BAND! field with a score of 1,012. WALL TO WALL SEX tourney. last week, slipped to sixth with - IT'S HOT "That is a long golf course," Fossum said about the fabled "I think we can place second in the Big 10." Fossum said. a 165. SCREW MAG Scarlet Course in Columbus. "It's 5,900 veards long but it's the BRIMMING WITH SEX -PLAYBOY longest 5,900 yards you could ever see. It plays more like 6,200." Fossum noted the quickness of the greens, even in the rain the Showtimes: 7:30/9:00/10:30 the cold, which she said helped contribute to her team's high Showploce: 111 Olds scorers. "We didn't putt at all well," Fossum said, "except for one girl, Starring JOHN C. HOLMES sophomore Lisa Speaker, who did a lot of things well." ABIGAIL CLAYTON MIMI MORGAN Speaker fired rounds of 81, 85 and 78 for a 244 total and a ALAN MALAPROF KEN SCUDDER 12th place finish individually. Freshman Allison Sellers was next for the Spartans with a 251 MEI LING CHAN XXX total, sophomore Nina Spatafora finished with 258, freshman Lisa Brown had 261, sophomore Beth Sierra had 263, senior co-captain Ann Atwood had 264, and freshman Sid Wells finished with 265. 1H6G1BLS IN THE i&ISgML TWI-LITE SHOW $1.75 1 MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY fX>5CFElDERJ|l» MARTIN 1H4T? MUU ^ cA:r TUESDAY WELD § V WjkU 1 1 DEPARTMENT OF THEATRE I SERIAlY® PRESENTS *15 , ng Public Library « LOOKING FOR fall housing? $69,900. thousands of hard to find E-5-4-16 (4) Can assume mortgage at 4-4 18 (4) Call Mid-Michigan. They have over 400 properties to albums and books. Discount 81$%, $366/month. Call 694 EXPERT TYPING. Disserta ********** *******\ choose from, and they spe¬ prices. Expert repairs free WOOD DESK. Typewriter 5739 after 5 p.m. 5-4-15 (9) * rnMi nccoon cialize in the MSU area. Call estimates. ELDERLY IN¬ stand. Vertiflex file cabinet. Hons - theses business COMING SOON r STRUMENTS. 541 E. Grand $90 for everything 676 5460. EAST LANSING-Price re¬ legal. MSU grad 337 0205. today and see if they have what River. 332-4331 C-22-4-30 19) E-5-4-16 (4) duced on lovely 3 bedroom C-22-4-30 (3) you're looking for. 349 flpssflub 1065 C 22-4-30 (8) Colonial. Unique interior. DISCWASHER $10 new. EXPERIENCE TYPING of dis¬ DESK, MAPLE, Six drawers Large living room with fire¬ FLAT BLACK b CIRCULAR. sertations and theses, editing SUMMER SUBLEASE plus file drawer and typewri¬ place, formal dining room, Above Paramount News. and graphic service available Beautiful New Duplex, close ter storage tray in top. $60 den, large kitchen, 2 car C 12-4 30 (3) 485 8299 evenings. 372 2098 after 5 p.m. to campus. Call 337-0907 garage. 50x148 lot, partially 8-4-21 (5) after 5:30. 8-4-21 (3) E-5-4-16 (4) fenced. Super location. Mid DICKER AND DEAL 70's. 332-0142, Open Sunday SECOND HAND STORE MARSHALL MUSIC CO. TYPING FREE pick-up and DOWNSTAIRS IN THE SUBLET FOR summer - Own 2-5. 10-4-17 (101 WITH 90 DAY Your headquarters for pro¬ delivery. Fast, experience, L UNIVERSITY MALL oom, 1, 2, or 3 females low rates. 676 2009. * needed to share new Spartan GUARANTEES fessional P.A. gear, electric NORTHEAST, MINUTES keyboards, guitars and amps. OR-13-4-30 (4) St. duplex. Call 332-4612 or from MSU 3 bedroom, brick 332 8765. 8 4-21 (5) Top quality pre-owned mer¬ Call 337 9700 or stop in. and aluminum ranch, built in chandise Large selection of Frandor Mall, 3 blocks from UNIGRAPHICS OFFERS china closet, enclosed patio, stereo equipment by Pioneer, west campus. Free parking. COMPLETE RESUME SER¬ Ttpus, country 10 miles, 3 home, Marantz, Mcintosh, Sanyo, C 22 4-30 (7) mature trees and bushes, VICE: typesetting; offset State priced in the sixties. Call adults, available SAE, and Kenwood • plus Louise Sabiano 485 3144 or printing; and bindery services KILIMANJARO IMPORTS 151 7497 many more! We have a wide 484 5474 8 4 22 (7) Approved dissertation print featuring India Apparel, variety of cameras: Yashica, oriental robes, and more. 220 ing and binding specialists. For estimate, stop in at 2843 News Cannon and Vivitar, Kodak crm\ MAC. 10-4 17 13) MSU ONE MILE EAST LANSING, 1-4 bed and Pentex. Sporting goods. E. Grand River or phone Fireplace accents sound room, unfurnished duplexes. Large assortment of tools: RECORDS! THOUSANDS 332 8414. C 22 4 30 (91 Appliances. Available Sep mechanic's to household. We choose from 751 and up, to all three 2232 bedroom located at Forest Road. $99.00 Classified tember, Ste-Mar Realty 339- have diamond rings Lowest LOW RATES COMPUTER quality guaranteed WAZOO down, $350 per month Dave 3512. OR 8-4-17 (5) prices in town! RECORDS, 223 Abbott, 337 TYPING Resumes, Thesis, Fry Realty 641 4512 IF YOU would like a place to WE BUY. SELL AND TRADE 0947 C 22-4 30 (5) 8 4 24 (6) Term Papers. Call "G" Typ¬ ing 321 4771. C-22 4 30 (4) 355-8255 rent, but don't know where BOOKS! 3 floors of books, After you place a classified ad to look, call GREAT LAKES DICKER AND DEAL magazines and comics. in this newspaper, the calls NEED A library search or a today for sure, there's hun¬ SECOND HAND STORE, CURIOUS BOOK SHOP, 307 will start coming in fast! You computer produced biblio dreds in our book. 394 2680 1701 S Cedar St., Lanisng, East Grand River, East Lan¬ may find it hard to keep track graphy? Call GATEKEEPERS, C 22 4 30 (5! 487 3886 C 12 4 30 I29> sing. 332-0112 C 22 4 30 (5) of interested parties. at 349 6886 8 4 23 (4) Michigon Stole News. Eost tonsing Michigan Tuesday. April 15, 1980 1 1 HAGAR the Horrible CHAKA KHAN RUFUS SPONSORED BY: by Dik Browne WITH THE Daily TV Highlights Brothers Johnson Weds., April 30 (i)WJIM-TV(CBS) (lO)WUX-TV(NBC) (11/26)WELM-TV(Cable) (12)WJRT-TV(ABC) (23)WKAR-TV(PBS) TUESDAY (10) Big Show 11:00 (23) Sesame Street 10:30 (11) The Michigon Senate (6-10-12) News 4:30 (10) Hollywood Squares (6) Brady Bunch Majority Report (11) Tuesday Night (12) Odd Couple (10) Gilligan's Island (12) Three's Company (23) Dick Covett (23) Villa Alegre (12) Gunsmoke (23) Mystery! 11:30 10:55 5:00 9:30 (6) Barnaby Jones (6) CBS News (6) To Be Announced (11) Capitol Area Crime (10) Tonight 11:00 (10) Sanford And Son Prevention (12) Phil Donahue (6) Price Is Right (11) TNT True Adventure Trails (12) Taxi (23) ABC Captioned News (10) High Rollers (23) Mister Rogers 10:00 12:30 (12) Laverne & Shirley 5:30 (11) Talking Heads (12) Star Trek (23) Electric Company 11:30 (10) (D Mary Tyler Moore WELM News (12) Hart To Hart (23) Opera From San Fran¬ (6) Movie 12:40 PEANUTS (10) Wheel Of Fortune (12) News cisco: La Gioconda 10:30 1:00 by Schulz SpartanTriPlexJ NOW SHOWING: (12) Family Feud (23) Electric Company (10) Tomorrow (23) Footsteps 6:00 (10) United States 1:30 "Cool Miner's Doughter" 12:00 (11) Minority Derelict Wrestling (12) News Tittle Miss Marker (6-10) News "Little Dorlinqs" (6-10-12) News (11) Home: Buying Or Selling (23) Firing Line In The 80's MSU SHADOWS 12:20 (23) Dick Cavett (6) Almanac 6:30 by Gordon Carleton P1SBALL PETE'S 12:30 (6) CBS News (6) Search For Tomorrow (10) NBC News SPONSORED BY: (10) Password Plus (12) ABC News (12) Ryon's Hope (23) Over Easy 1:00 (11) Woman Wise UJWAf 's THE. (6) Young And The Restless 7:00 MATTER, Z£j6 p