Monday If you don't like Mondays try this one on for size. The State News Sunny skies and temperatures in the low 70s are expected. VOLUME 74 NUMBER 66 MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY EAST LANSING, MICHIGAN 48824 APRIL 21, 1980 Japan's oil firms reject Iranian price hike Woman awaits permission Cubans to see her hostage son offered By The Associated Press A spokesperson for Iranian militants ministers of the nine-nation European Economic Community and Japan are to holding 50 Americans at the U.S. Embassy asylum meet Monday in in Tehran said Sunday they would not allow Luxembourg and one agenda topic is Carter's request. relatives of the hostages to visit the SAN JOSE, Costa Rica (AP) — Costa captives unless Ayatollah Ruhollah TOKYO NEWSPAPERS REPORTED Khomeini gave his permission. that Japan's six major oil firms rejected a Rica told Cuba Sunday it was willing to But ABC News reported the militants National Iranian Oil Co. demand to hike its grant permanent asylum to all 10,000 said Barbara Timm of Oak Creek, Wis., Cubans still trying to leave the Com¬ crude oil price by $2.50, raising it to $35 a could visit her hostage son, Marine Sgt. barrel, and Oil Minister Ali Akbar Moinfar munist-run island-nation, a Costa Rican Kenneth Hermening, 20, if she received said he would respond by ending oil sales to written permission from President Abol- Japan. hassan Bani-Sadr and Foreign Minister known in a message to Cuban President Portugal on Thursday became the first Fidel Castro. The message also ap¬ Sadegh Ghotbzadeh. It said their permis¬ European nation to join U.S. trade sanc¬ sion "was secured immediately" and "the tions against Iran, which retaliated by pealed to Castro to let evacuation way is now clear for Mrs. Timm to see stopping oil sales to Portugal. flights ... resume immediately. her son. It is not clear how About 700 of the Cubans were soon that will Japan, almost totally dependent on be." evacuated last week before Castro cut imported oil, buys about 10 percent of its Iranian officials faced increased friction, off the flights on Friday. The Cuban supply, or 530,000 barrels a day, from Iran. meanwhile, as unrest continued on major leader said the refugees should be flown Tokyo's finar.qal newspaper, Nihon directly to the countries taking them in, university campuses and 70 people were Kezai, quoted an unidentified government instead of using the Costa Rican capital reported killed in three days of clashes in official as saying Carter would guarantee rebellious Kurdistan. Japan adequate oil from Alaska or the as a staging area. The spokesperson for the embassy mili¬ Middle East to survive an Iranian embargo. The Costa Rican government "official¬ tants had said they had decided not to allow State Department spokesperson David ly informed Havana today that it has families of the hostages to visit the embassy decided, beginning today, to authorize Passage said he could not comment on the but might reconsider that decision if the entry of all these persons in its Japanese report "at this time," although a national territory," a Foreign Ministry Showing support for Cubans attempting to leave their country a group of 5,000 Cuban exiles marched through , Khomeini asked. Ghotbzadeh told a Tehran senior department official on Saturday said the streets of midtown Manhattan late Saturday carrying signs and shouting anti-Communist news conference that Khomeini favored statement said. slogans. The Japanese rejection of the Iranian price hike march was held in defense of Cubans who have taken refuge in the Peruvian Embassy in Havana. visits by the hostages' "immediate fam¬ might help end the crisis peacefully. "We will allow them to stay here, but ilies," but did not say if the revolutionary they can also go to other countries if leader planned to force the issue. MOINFAR LASHED OUT at the they want to," a government source fered to take in a few hundred of the ment sources said Sunday that Costa Peruvian Embassy in Havana could Timm arrived in Tehran on Saturday "threats and pressures exercised by Amer¬ added. refugees. Rica was willing to take all 10,000 resume at 4 p.m. hoping to see her son. The hostages on Other nations offering to take in some Costa Rica, a poor Central American today and continue ica against the Japanese government and Cubans if necessary "for humanitarian through a series of flights, whose Sunday began their 24th week as prisoners of the exiles permanently include Spain, country, originally said it would only Japanese oil companies." He said Iran sells reasons." itineraries have been communicated to in the embassy. Three other Americans Ecuador and the United States, which about 40 percent of its daily production, accept 300 refugees on a permanent "According to the formal application the Cuban authorities for their have been held at the Foreign Ministry has offered to take 3,500. Argentina, basis because it did not have the approval estimated at below 2 million barrels a day, means made by the government of Costa Rica, and immediate authorization," the For¬ since the militants captured the embassy to Europe and Japan. Brazil, Sweden and Belgium each of- to support more. However, the govern¬ the exodus of Cuban exiles in the eign Ministry statement said. Nov. 4 demanding the return of ousted He also said Iran had recently signed Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi. contracts to sell oil to Eastern European Ghotbzadeh denied a report by President countries at the prices reportedly rejected Carter on Friday that Iran planned to hold the hostages through U.S. presidential by the Japanese, but gave no specifics. NEW PROGRAM REPLACESDEL4Y elections in November. He reiterated that Moinfar met Saturday with the Bulgarian ambassador in Tehran, who was later an Iranian parliament, not expected to convene until this summer, would decide quoted by Tehran Radio as saying that Iran, "so long as it has such friends as ourselves, the fate of the hostages. Second round need not fear ridiculous economic Judge Bell stops MSUEA lawsuit sanc¬ parliamentary balloting was postponed for tions." until May 9 pending an investigation of fraud allegations from the first round on Iran signed a trade pact Saturday with March 14. another Soviet bloc country, Czech¬ Carter, who has severed commercial and oslovakia, but at undisclosed terms. Com¬ By KARL BLANKENSHIP with the University" in its attempt to meet taken against the diplomatic ties with Iran, appeared to win munist North Korea entered the diplomatic State News Staff Writer University. equity of work distribution and the pro¬ budget cutbacks, Schneider said, but the gram's effect on the union's bargaining support in his bid for America's European frav on Iran's side, saying the "United A lawsuit filed by the MSU Employees and Japanese allies to follow suit. Foreign University has to uphold its obligation to REEVES SAID the union did not find out position. i continued on page 14) Association against the University, stem¬ bargain in good faith. about MSU's new program for position ming from a 30-day hiring delay policy, was Schneider also noted that an unfair labor management until last Wednesday, so it had indefinitely halted Friday by Ingham Coun¬ practices complaint is still outstanding no chance to bargain about the new ty Circuit Judge Robert Holmes Beli. Karen B. Schneider, MSUEA's attorney, told Bell that the MSUEA had originally against the University. Byron H. Higgins, assistant vice presi¬ dent of legal affairs for MSU, told Bell that program's conditions. On Friday, the University offered to Carter sweeps weekend caucuses bargain with certain restrictions, Reeves objected to the 30-day hiring delay, but that MSUEA's complaint about the 30-day hiring said, so MSUEA will determine tonight By The Associated Press the president maintain his popularity in In Virginia, Carter got 14 of the 17 policy has since been done away with by the delay was no longer valid as the policy is no whether those conditions are acceptable. President Carter's campaign predicted Iowa, Oklahoma and Virginia. delegates selected, with Kennedy picking up University. longer in effect. another victory Sunday as Minnesota Democrats were holding three The intent of the district three. In all, Virginia will send 64 delegates Instead, Schneider said, MSU has re¬ A new progam for position management new program is to Democrats capped the nation's weekend of conventions placed the hiring delay with what the prevent mass layoffs by cutting back on the Sunday to elect 18 Minnesota to the national convention, with Carter will go into effect today, Higgins said, political caucuses or conventions that University calls a program for position number of employees through attrition saw delegates to the Democratic National expected to claim at least 59. explaining that a new hiring policy was during spring term, when the turnover rate Convention. Carter forces were counting on Carter picked up one additional delegate management and "what we call hiring needed due to tight budgets. is highest, she said. 14 of the seats, with four expected to remain in Mississippi Saturday, where 32 national discontinuation." "The governor's new (budget) recommen¬ 30-day hiring delay on non-academic positions was implemented as part of a 1.5 dations will result in fewer positions at this University as well as other state institu¬ to "If positions are to be cut, that is the time do it," Reeves said, noting that if the ASMSU blimp uncommitted. In all, Minnesota will send 75 delegates to the national convention. delegates were selected. He already had 31 of the delegates going into the convention Carter picked up 22 delegates to Sen. and made it a sweep by picking up the lone percent general fund cutback required to tions," Higgins said. University waited until fall to make the cuts, Edward M. Kennedy's 11 with all of Iowa's uncommitted seat. pay for an average 2 percent pay increase in MSUEA President Barbara Reeves said mass layoffs would be required. faculty and administrative salaries. MSUEA IS "certainly willing to cooperate the union would decide at its meeting However, MSUEA has a number of fails to fly six congressional district conventions re¬ porting Saturday. The president opened his came On the Republican away side, Ronald Reagan with victories in Nevada and tonight whether further action would be concerns about the program, such as the re-election campaign in Iowa three months Minnesota, while George Bush won in ago with a convincing 2-1 victory over Maine. By JIM MITZELFELD Kennedy in precinct caucuses. Reagan overpowered Bush at the Nevada State News Staff Writer In Oklahoma, Carter came away with 24 of GOP state convention in Reno, where a Storm clouds have at least temporarily the 29 national convention delegates selec¬ pro-Reagan slate of 17 national delegates grounded ASMSU's plans to purchase a ted Saturday. Kennedy got three and two was selected. blimp. were uncommitted. Another 13 national In Maine, Bush claimed 17 of the state's 21 The three members of the ASMSU Blimp delegates will be selected next month. national convention delegates Saturday. Board who traveled to Champaign, 111., Friday morning to view the 16-by-6-foot, radio-controlled blimp said it did not fulfill their expectations. The blimp, which apparently works well indoors, was unable to fly in a 4 mph wind, said ASMSU Chairperson and member Bruce Studor. Blimp Board Kennedy campaign will "We were pretty disappointed," Studer said. "We had pretty high expectations for in Lansing on Thursday it, and it just didn't live up to them." THE BLIMP BOARD had By TIM SIMMONS Lansing Catholic Central will be open to perfect State News Staff Writer the weather to test hobby shop owner A1 public. Green's blimp, but said the non streamlined Sen. Edward M. Kennedy will speak Rosalynn Carter is expected to begin in Lansing Thursday night as the blimp flew better in reverse than it did campaigning in Michigan Thursday at forward. The blimp was tested while being campaigns of Kennedy and President the Traverse City airport, but Carter- Carter focus attention this week on Mondale campaign workers have not restrained by a tether. Originally, ASMSU had hoped to fly the blimp without a tether Michigan's Democratic closed caucuses. yet released a schedule of her appear¬ over Spartan Stadium at football games, as Kennedy will speak at 8:30 p.m. in ances. both a promotional and advertising tool. Lansing Catholic Central High School More than 41,000 registered Demo¬ and Rosalynn Carter is expected to "The motors just weren't strong enough," crats are eligible to vote in the closed said Bob Carr, a Blimp Board member. campaign among Michigan Democrats caucuses Saturday, and the race for on the same day. The candidates will be "It was like a big whale," Studer said. "If Michigan's 141 delegates is expected to it had done the trick we would've brought it vying for last-minute votes in the be close. Democratic closed caucuses Saturday. Kennedy has the backing of the back," Studer added. The Blimp Board said on Thursday Michigan's closed caucuses have re¬ United Auto Workers union, which has that if ceived little attention because of Penn the blimp flew without a hitch, they registered about 10,000 Democrats, would return with it and perhaps fly it for the sylvania's primary to be held Tuesday, who are eligible to vote in the closed but the two campaigns are expected to caucuses. students on Sunday. Studer said the fart engage in a three-day blitz to gain Carter, however, has the support of that the blimp support among the state's registered Detroit Mayor Coleman Young, State News Tony Dugal operated so poorly does at least temporarily Democrats. The presidential campaigning will be Finally! After enduring what seemed to be an endless streak of bad weather, the sun shone on MSU to bring kil1 ASMSU's immediate plans to buy a forth shirt-sleeve temperatures and many students from indoors. Juniors Kennedy will make appearances almost invisible to the general public Mike Dowdall (left) and Peter blimp. But, he added, the idea is not Swenson wasted no time in renting a canoe for a completely dead, and the group will Thursday in the Saginaw area, Flint, because of the Michigan Democratic lazy afternoon cruise down the Red Cedar River Detroit and Grand Rapids in addition to Party's choice to apportion delegates by this past weekend. consider the idea if it is offered a blimp with his Lansing stop. His appearance at closed caucuses. a different design, irontinued on page 14) 2 Michigon State News East Lansing, Michigan Monday, April 21, 1980 O funis nation/world million. Reagan had spent onlv two days in the state, and will spend said in a telephone interview. Petroleum engineers make $24,000 Br^in offers military facility He said, however, he was resisting those calls because the about $150,000. As they headed to their final drive in Pennsylvania, Reagan and NAACP believed in working through the system. SOCORRO, N.M. (API Gas prices are not the only thing the WASHINGTON (API — Prime Minister Menachem Begin of — his staff painted a decidedly upbeat picture of the campaign to date. "If justice is not carried out, rest assured that we will take energy crisis has made go up. Student enrollment in petroleum Israel says the United States should have conventional military "This has been a magnificant week for us," Reagan told about 450 whatever steps are legally necessary," said Key, who had met last engineering and other energy-related fields has rapidly increased, forces in the Mideast and "if you want facilities in our country, we people assembled on the lawn of the governor's mansion in shall put them at your disposal." month with at least one of the arrested Klan members. "The too. Columbus. NAACP believes in the American system. We believe it can work. Enrollment at New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology in Begin, in a nationally televised interview, declared that in light of Ed Gray, campaign press secretary, was even more ebullient. the hostage crisis in Iran and the Soviet intervention in Afghanistan petroleum engineering enrollment has jumped 179 percent since "We do not want to take anything for granted, but we're getting "I think the United States must now consider very carefully to have 1976 and enrollment in geo-engineering has shot up 325 percent. closer to a sure thing day by day." conventional forces on the spot, not to bring them from afar in time "The energy crisis has caused all this," Virginia Marquez, of crisis." Fraser expects more layoffs registrar at N.M. Tech, said. The prime minister fell far short of recommending military action "Your average starting salary for a petroleum engineer just out of college is over $24,000," said Langdon Taylor, a petroleum Kennedv vows to stay in raee to free the Americans held at the U.S. Embassy in Tehran, despite DETROIT (UPI) - United his own nation's record of using force in hostage situations. "We feel Auto Workers President Doug engineering professor. ERIE, Pa. (AP) Sen. Edward so deeply for the American people," he said. "I understand the las Fraser says he expects U.S. M. Kennedy vowed anew Sun¬ American people want the 50 men, with their loving mothers and automakers to order more lay Ohio gov. day to stay in the race for the wives, to be back home. 1 understand it perfectly well. If force is offs and additional production cutbacks this year as the car endorses Bengali White House, even if he loses used, maybe the majority of them, perhaps all of them, will be next Tuesday's Pennsylvania sales slump continues. COLUMBUS, Ohio (API — Republican front runner Ronald killed." Democratic primary, and de¬ Reagan picked up the endorsement of Ohio Gov. James A. Rhodes on Sunday and headed for Pennsylvania for two days of intense nied that doing so would divide In an interview published the Democratic Party. Four Blacks shot in Tenn. Sunday in The Detroit News, campaigning to try to blunt George Bush's comeback hopes. Campaigning from one end of rraser said he doubted auto Previously, Rhodes had favored John B. Connally, who abandoned his candidacy, and later tried to persuade former this state to the other two days CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. (API - Four Black women leaving a industry employment would re¬ before the pivotal election, President Gerald R. Ford to enter the Republican race. tavern were wounded by shotgun blasts from a passing car, and a turn to 1979 levels "at least" Asked why he is backing Reagan, Rhodes replied, "This is the Kennedy also continued to side¬ Black leader Sunday praised police for the quick action that led to until the 1982 models begin Sabbath. Like the Lord, I love everybody." step questions on whether he the arrests of three Ku Klux Klan members. rolling off assembly lines. would endorse President Carter George Key. Chattanooga chapter president of the National Reagan said Rhodes' endorsement had enhanced his campaign in Ohio, where 77 delegates are at stake in a June 3 primary. if Carter is renominated for a Association for the Advancement of Colored People, said he had "This is going to be worse than 1974-75 and more long- In Pennsylvania, Reagan and Bush are locked in a one-on-one second term. calls Saturday night after the shootings from people urging Sen. Edward M. Kennedy retaliation. lasting," Fraser said. "I don't struggle for the 83 delegates the state will send to the GOP National Asked by a reported for UAW President Convention in July. Bush has campaigned almost non-stop in vide the party, "I had phone calls all the way from people urging me to be a little see it turning around in the WFEE-TV in Erie whether his Kennedy re¬ Napoleon and lead a rally to those wanting an eye for an eye," Key short run this time. Douglas Fraser Pennsylvania most of the last two weeks and has spent about $1 continued candidacy would di- plied, "I don't believe so." SURF'S UP MSU RJBCREATIOtf fmonday! TONIGHT with AND BEACH BOYS PIRGIM of Jenison Fieldhouse CELEBRATE GERALD H. COY GENERAL MANAGER ROBERT L. BULLARD SALES MANAGER Tickets at: Union, Sounds t Diversions, Where house Records lii, *BEST WISHES Keeping the good sounds comin' ... |T| Ui 12 for ii ❖Today's 2 for 1 dinner is VEAL CUTLETS $5.50 HI-FI BUYS is proud to help includes whipped potatoes, gravy, sponsor WfTlSN's ^ small salad and cheese bread Sound Challenge 1980 6th Annual Bring a friend, bring the family and Science Fiction Fantasy LEARN N0N «IOLENT*fiON Q)MPETiriVE*hON SEMST GAMES' definitely bring your appetite. Festivol April 18-27 mBUYS MONDAY APRIL 21 4 pm I.M. SP0FCT5 WEST • in case of pwn.the games WILL J tentatively move inside The Family Restaurant & Pub l rut i.m.to the sports Seen a 'CALL MSU P&CPEATI0N 353-3806 OR 5001 West Saginaw St, Lansing, Ml 48917,517/521-0616 PIPGIM-MSU 353-5194. FOP MOPE iNFOPMATIOM. IB Colorful Canvas FUNJUNS" Brightly topped in a variety of colors. Lightly soled in genuine rubber for durable cushioned comfort. Funjuns wear the Bass quality label with pride. Top Shoe Available in Navy and Khaki M 5%-10, N 7-10 Bottom Shoe Available in Red, Khaki and Navy. for a few good men. We pay. Learn to fly while you're still in college. The Marines will pay the bill - about $900 worth of lessons - for qualified members of the Platoon Leaders Class. You'll also be earning a Marine officer's commission through PLC summer training at Quantico, Virginia. And after graduation, you may be one of the few good men who go on to Marine pilot and flight officer training. Get the details from the Marine officer who visits your campus. CONTACT US NOW! CALL TOLL FREE AT 1800 292 5920 FUNJUNS *r OR SEE CAPTAIR DAVID B. ROCHE AT THE MSU PLACEMENT OFFICE IN THE STUDENT SERVICES BUILDING ON 22,23 APRIL '00 MSU Bootery for women The Few. The Proud. 225 E. Grand River Open M-Sat. 9:30*6 Thurs. 1 FLY MARINE The Marines Monday. April 21, 1980 3 Carr hails progress Old-timers celebrate city's heritage of earth awareness By RICK MAYDAY By LOUISE WHALL bankrupt concept." State News Staff Writer State News Staff Writer Ijong time residents of East Lansing Great progress has been made since the HE SAID THE EMB was a project of reminisced about the city's heritage first Earth Day was held, but new enormous need, so members of Congress Sunday at Local History Day, sponsored challenges will require tough decisions, U.S. tried to push it through without going by the Friends of the East Lansing Rep. Bob Carr, D-East Lansing, said through the usual bureaucratic process. Public Library. Sen. Henry "Scoop" Jackson, D-Wash., Saturday. The olden days were remembered tried to push a variety of projects through Carr, the keynote speaker in the Earth beneath sunny skies as youngsters, in Day '80 celebration, said there is a growing Congress on the same principle," Carr said. jealous awe, checked out the gleaming awareness of our environmental limitations, "It would waive a lot of substantive antiquepautomobiles on display. which has caused environmental groups to processes that have been developed over the Life long East Lansing resident Max form a solid economic constituency. years," Carr said. Phillips, dressed as the local newsboy, "What we have achieved in many respects He said the bill is currently deadlocked in distributed editions of "the East Lansing is far beyond the imagination," Carr said. a House conference committee and may Old Times." Phillips was clad in his "There have been many setbacks but, on the remain there until the 96th knickerbockers, bow tie, and golf hat. Congress ends whole, the movement has been a lasting this year. "I used to hunt pheasants where "This could affect every phenomenon." single piece of Frandor Shopping Center now stands," He said the energy crisis has been both an protective legislation," Carr said. reflected Phillips. "And I used to be able "It's a bull in a china shop. It will do opportunity and a challenge because Ameri¬ to hit golf balls out of our yard in any ca's energy consciousness has been raised, violence to the traditions of law." direction — without worrying about but it has been a slow process. hitting someone." CARR SAID THE polls have shown the ECONOMIC DISLOCATION WILL American people do not want to give an inch PHILLIPS REMEMBERED WHEN pose serious challenges as industry seeks to on environmental standards. "There are The People's Church was the only postpone its mandated environmental church in East Lansing. serious problems for our state if an EMB is code," Carr said. "It was the towns only activity center Carr also talked about the Energy passed," Carr said. back in the early '30s," he said. He said the state's natural resources are a Mobilization Board bill, which he originally Max said he feels East Lansing is "the authored, but added that the bill eventually major asset Michigan should preserve. greatest town in the world" to grow up Michigan has a great potential to make proposed was not his. tourism a major industry and would not in, except that it had no swimming hole. The proposed EMB would be a federal Pine Lake, which is now Lake Lansing, continue to be a single industry state. agency which has the power to waive state was the nearest place to swim, he said. and local environmental regulations in order "When the economy is being strained, all Muriel Kolemainen, a 1943 graduate kinds of social progress legislation is being to speed up urgently needed energy of MSU, remembered her college days. legislation. strained," Carr said. "We may have to defer "We did not have the freedom that "I wish we would have never thought of our benefits. That is a decision we have to today's students have," she said. "I lived the EMB as a concept," Carr said. "It's a make." in Campbell Hall and every night we had strict quiet hours to observe. We had to be in by 10 p.m. on weeknights. "For dinner everyone would sit down at their assigned tables and say their evening prayers," she said. "Then our Volunteer agencies dinner would be served to us, at the table. Our professors were very formal and referred to the students as 'Mr.' or 'Miss.' " banking on enthusiasm "We provide on-the-job learning experi¬ DIRTY SADDLE SHOES (the dirtier By BILL CORNISH State News StaH Writer ence," Jackson said. Many of the volunteers the better), anklets and pleated "fan Gov. William G. Milliken has declared are MSU students, though volunteers skirts" were once the "in" dress for this week Volunteer Week in Michigan in "come from all over," she said. women at MSU, according to '37 accordance with President Carter's declara¬ graduate Mary Ballard Bell. VOLUNTEERS HAVE A different out¬ State News Deborah J. Borin tion of National Volunteer Week, 1980. "The boys never wore jeans, except look today than they did a few years ago, Volunteers work in many areas, including the ones that worked in the cow barns," Mary Parsley (left) and Sarah Jenson are captivated by the extraordinary detail in a 1900 German doll house church youth groups, the YMCA, health Jackson said. she said. restored by Dorothy Ross of East Lansing, who has been collecting dolls and doll houses for display in the communitv since 1957. care, Boy Scouts, and government. "They (volunteers) are looking for dif¬ Bell remembers when the tuition at ferent One area organization which puts volun¬ things," she said. In previous years, MSU was $36.45 for a 15-17 credit hours display. teers to work is the Voluntary Action people volunteered merely because they term. to go to church and the Lecture Concert room, filled with an array of old time cars were on wanted to, but now they are fulfilling Interviews with Center of Greater Lansing, 1801 W. Main "When I went to MSC (MSU) you had Series that the college put on for free." photos of East Lansing and yearbooks longtime residents St., Lansing. internship requirements or looking for to have at least 200 credit hours to Bell cited such past MSU performers dating back to when MSU was the were videotaped for the future. A "The center is a clearing house in Lansing experience, she said. graduate and they thought something as Guy Lombardo, Wayne (the Waltz) Michigan Agricultural College, and after videotaped interview with former May¬ that Michigan State College. or Gordon Thomas and City Manager for all ages," said June Mason, executive A drive to bring more volunteers to the was wrong with you if you did not King, Eleanor Roosevelt and opera star director of the center. museum will highlight the week's activities, Old-fashioned dresses were modeled, Jack Patriarche was played throughout graduate in four years." Lily Pons. she said. "We would make dates with the The library set up a local-history and dolls, toys, tolls, scrapbooks and the day. boys The Community Service and Referral ONE OF 13 voluntary action centers in Michigan, it placed almost 700 volunteers Center, 900 W. Ottawa St., also place last year, Mason said. volunteers, most of them MSU students "One of the largest needs in the Lansing from the School of Social Work, said Patsy area is transportation," she said. Volun¬ Barker, director of the center. The center's volunteers help solve social Sevareid: ''frugality' a necessary virtuei teers help transport and do shopping for handicappers and senior citizens who have mobility problems, she said. welfare problems, Barker said. Volunteers also work with children, THE CENTER WAS staffed totally by intervention and the free market. ica's energy needs. poor in place." shut-ins, nursing home residents, make volunteers when it opened five years ago, By DON CALDWELL State News Staff Writer A trade off between what nature can Sevareid said just as America survived Barker said. There are now three staff repairs or paint homes. "You name it," American technological advances will HIGHER MARKET PRICES of energy contribute to humans and how much nature the Great Depression it will succeed in Mason said. People are placed in long-term members and eight volunteers. help solve the energy crisis, but some of the will reduce consumption and encourage should be set aside for its own sake will dealing with its energy woes and tackling and short-term jobs. There are more volunteers now than luxuries American enjoy may fall victim to production of domestic oil, while taxes on oil have to be made, he said. As we enjoy other problems. He said in 10 years, we will there were a few years ago, Barker said. In recognition of National Volunteer the crunch, said Eric Sevareid, a former companies will provide the government nature, we will too have to use it up, he be worrying less about energy and more Week, several outstanding volunteers will "People are becoming more aware of a with income to develop a long-range energy said. about "peace," the population problem, need for volunteers," she said. reporter and analyst for CBS news. be presented awards in an open meeting Sevareid, speaking at the Michigan program, he said. hunger and the nuclear spread." Democracy Monday at Kellogg Center. The Commission for Volunteers in Michi¬ "We must allow market forces can weather these crises, he said. Educators Energy Forum at Lansing Com¬ a great THE STOREHOUSE SCHOOL of The Michigan Department of Social gan was set up by Milliken to provide munity College Saturday, said he sees no deal of freedom, but must also have a Services also places volunteers. The depart¬ technical assistance to volunteers, said thought tends to think of the economy as a "I'm always sort of a pessimist about national policy," he said. "We must produce ment's goal is to have one volunteer service Myron Mack, field representative for the escape from people having to ride the bus or finite pie which, if somebody takes a larger tomorrow and an optimist about the day walk to work, and perhaps living without more and conserve more simultaneously." center in every county in Michigan, said Bill VISTA project. slice means a smaller slice for someone else, after tomorrow." Sevareid said this country is going to snowmobiles and yachts. he said. Prince, Ingham County Volunteer Services "VIM has a referral library for all aspects "I do see virtue in self-denial," he said. have to begin making choices concerning Sevareid joined CBS in August 1939 as a The factory view sees the economy as a Supervisor. of planning and managing volunteer pro¬ The possible consequences of member of the original news team assem¬ "Only recently has it dawned on us that energy. well of unknown depth that can be pumped grams," Mack said. choosing between coal or nuclear energy, he bled by the late Edward R. Murrow. In more "WE WERE ONE of the early ones," he personal frugality is the order of the day." and primed to a virtually limitless extent, The Commission's Interdepartmental Sevareid said American ingenuity and said, are "acid rain from coal or nuclear than four decades in news reporting, he has said. The center has been in existence about he said. been a war correspondent, radio news Council estimates the future need for clouds from nuclear power." technology will meet the challenges posed 12 years, he said. volunteers in state government, Mack said. He said solar power is the ideal, but even Sevareid said a no-growth economy, as broadcaster, television commentator and by energy problems, and will provide Prince places volunteers as visitors to the They match the possible need with the by the turn-of the century it would only environmentalists espouse, would columnist, and newspaper reporter and needed energy resources. He said gains will some lonely and elderly and in children's homes. human resources available, she said. provide a very small percentage of Amer have the effect of "inevitably freezing the editor. come from a combination of government They do home repairs, hold a recreational The number of volunteers is "increasing¬ hour for adult who need someone to talk to or do something with, and serve as drivers. ly enormously," Mack said, even over the As part of Volunteer Week, the depart¬ last year. Especially now with budget, ENERGY-SAVING HOME IMPROVEMENTS ment will hold a luncheon for volunteers at salary and position cuts in government, noon Wednesday at the Social Services there will be a greater need for volunteers, he said. office, 930 W. Holmes Road, Lansing. Rep. Debbie Stabenow, D Lansing, will be the In recognition of National Volunteer East Lansing applies for $220,000 grant guest speaker. Impression 5, 2400 Keystone Ave., Lan¬ Week, the Commission put together a packet containing a partial list of various sing, a museum of science, art and volunteer agencies in Michigan. The packet different plans for their will be A second option to be studied is the Horan said. technology, hires volunteers for public was sent to Michigan senators and repre¬ East Lansing is applying for a $220,000 use The grant application, which must be relations, visitor aid, marketing, and other sentatives, various media organizations, federal grant which would be used to give considered, Horan said. possibility of using the funds to purchase The first tools used in home improvement construc¬ submitted by May 23, must first be jobs, said Charlotte Jackson, the museum's and volunteer commissions across the residents incentives to make energy saving option would involve setting up tion for the city "toolbox," Horan said. approved by City Council, Horan said. public relations director. nation. improvements on their homes. a revolving loan account, which would Marcia Horan, community development enable the city to make loans to low-income residents wanting to make home improve¬ The toolbox is the city's collection of administrative assistant, said the city is various tools which are loaned out to Expert on American family structure ments such as adding insulation and storm requesting the funds from the U.S. Depart residents, Horan said. ment of Housing and Urban Development in windows. an effort to promote energy-saving tech- The interest paid on those loans would The third option entails using the funds then be put back into the account so to set up educational programs for resi emphasizes necessity of common goals additional loans could be made, Horan said. dents interested in conserving energy. senting every congressional district in the people as an example. By MICHAEL VEH Prof talks feminist mothering image state, that Carter intends to examine the Tucker told the delegates the president on State News Staff Writer America's families should join together in strengths of families and the effects governmental policies have on them. considers families an important part of the American society and that they should common goals in order to get those goals receive special attention. The conferences were set up to uncover By LESA DOLL ings, blames the mother for the entire the literary view of maternal aggression, accomplished, the chairperson of the White House Conference on Families said Satur viewpoints of families, he said. "We have a lot of different families in this State News Staff W riter outcome of her children, even if those that focuses on sexuality and isolation in the "We wanted a conference process where country," he said, "and those families are Trends in feminist literature have cre¬ outcomes are shaped by a patriarchal mother/child diad. day. the families in the country could get part of America." ated an image of the "perfect mother" society, she said. Speaking before more than 1,100 repre In this view, the rage and aggression that sentatives of the Michigan Conference on involved," Tucker said. "There are basic values of commitment which is highly charged with emotion and Chodorow said this view states mother occurs between the mother and child Families, Jim Guy Tucker spoke at the Tucker used the snail darter, a small fish that are shared from one side of the country controversy, an associate professor of which has recently been given governmental hood "shapes all of our psychological and becomes so powerful that "having a child conference, which was designed to bring to the other," Tucker added. sociology said at MSU Friday. political positions." has to either destroy the mother or destroy governmental attention to the needs of protection as an endangered species as an He pointed out that everyone does not Nancy Chodorow, author of the award the child." Chodorow said. families across the nation. example of the side effects of governmental have the same point of view on topics such as winning book "The Reproduction of Mother¬ "BLAMING THE MOTHER is really a Tucker, who was appointed by President policy. abortion and child care and asked partici¬ "If having a child makes a woman a "We (government) should give families ing: Psychoanalysis and the Sociology of part of long, cultural tradition. We did not Carter to head the nationwide conferences, pants to set aside their differences in order mother, all powerful or totally powerless, it the same consideration we gave the snail Gender", told a large crowd in the Union invent it," she said. makes that child all powerful or powerless," officially launched the meeting by explaining for the conference to accomplish its goals. that recent splits have occurred in the darter," he said. she said. "Motherhood becomes linked to the purpose of the conference to the "There aren't many people in Congress feminist view of mothering. Mothering capacities are distorted by Tucker said governmental policies often destruction and death." delegates and urged them to join together in waiting with baited breath to see what this patriarchy, Chodorow said. A more natural upset or damage family life, but explained These trends focused the mother view of mothering would allow for the support of common goals. conference is going to do," he reminded the are on "We have, by and large, similar aspira these effects are not intentional. He said as being totally responsible for the outcome development of cultural feminism, she THESE VIEWS HAVE limited thinking some laws which are set up to do one thing delegates. lions and goals," the former Arkansas of her child the view of the mother added. motherhood, she said, and need to be He ended by telling the audience that the or as on Attorney General said. "If we can't even talk sometimes end up doing something else. aggressor in a mother/child relationship analyzed. "ultimate energy source" within a family is Blaming the mother for all her child's about these, we might as well give up." that suggests rage and violence, she said. TUCKER CITED INCOME taxes are love and said this energy source should be outcomes creates an image of a perfect "Feminists have experienced conflict and One view, seen in manv feminist writ mother, she said. This is contrasted with icontinued on page 14) TUCKER TOLD THE delegates, repre higher for married people than unmarried protected through cooperation. Opinion VIEWPOINT: NUCLEAR POWER Cubans, Haitians in the same boat Shut down Big Rock peacefully than for the rest of Michigan. Consumers residents an opportunity to express our non-violence training is being coordinated ■»: By TOM VANHAMMEN More than 10,000 Cubans jam matter. AM) STEVE GROSE Power gains only 1 percent of its generating concerns for the health and safety of the by Greenpeace and the Mobilization for ? into one embassy as 50 hostages The burden then, falls on those capacity from Big Rock, yet a major people of Northern Michigan as we come Survival. Call either group for more 4 The Big Rock Pointe Nuclear Power information about Big Rock, or for a ride or await release from another on the so desperate to leave that they Station near Charlevoix will be the focal accident could spew radioactive particles together in Charlevoix with our demand to shut down Big Rock! directions to the rally. Anyone interested in would swamp a foreign embassy in for 50 to 100 miles, rendering Traverse City other side of the world . . . point of a legal march and rally, followed by and much of Northern Michigan uninhabit At about 3 p.m., civil disobedience CD should call immediately. Non-violence non-violent civil disobedience action, on Attempts should be made to search of refuge. President Car a able. The NRC has been looking at Big Rock participants will march to the plant for a training for the May 4 action will be held secure the release of both groups, ter's offer to accept 5,000 Cubans Sunday, May 4. Big Rock has been given non-violent occupation of plant territory. Earth Day, April 22, from 4 to 10 p.m. in the No. 1 ratings by the Institute for Policy as a [*>ssible future site for high-level for the desperate Cubans crowded is an admirable move. The govern¬ Studies in Washington, D.C., and the radioactive wastes. These and other serious Non-violence training and membership in East Lansing area. Call for more details. Nuclear power and weapons are risks into the Peruvian Embassy need ment of Costa Rica has since Southwestern Research Group as the most concerns have prompted numerous local, an affinity group is a must for anyone state and national groups to unite in their interested in the civil disobedience action. humanity can no longer tolerate. Mass help fast. opened its country to all the dangerous nuclear reactor in the United Seven Big Rock 14 members are from the action by all concerned people can bring a The Cubans, branded vagrants, refugees. But Carter's motives States. March organizers, NOVA and cry to "Shut down the Rock!" CCCA has filed suit to prevent the NRC East Lansing area. We hope to show the halt to this nuclear atrocity. We urge you to Concerned Citizens of the Charlevoix Area, bums and criminals by Fidel behind not granting the same and Consumers Power from increasing the people of the Charlevoix area we care with come to Big Rock May 4, and help us shut Greenpeace and Mobilization for Survival Castro's regime, have been Executive action to the hundreds from East Lansing, along with numerous current storage capacity for wastes at the another large turnout of East Lansing folks, down the Rock! for both the rally and the civil disobedience squeezed in the Peruvian Embassy of Haitians currently hitting Flori state coalitions, are calling for the site. The Big Rock 14, a group of activists who participated in a civil disobedience action. VanHommen and Grose ore members of the Cast Lansing chapter at the Mobilization lor Sur with a minimal amount of incoming da beaches after weeks at sea are immediate shutdown of Big Rock. vival and are members of the Big Rock 14 One of the oldest nuclear plants on earth, action at the plant site Dec. 2, 1978, is Transportation to the rally and to the rations for more than a week now. puzzling. The State Department and one of only two reactors to use the awaiting the outcome of appeals processes, The human tide flowed into the has declared that the Haitians are an attempt to force the Charlevoix court to deadly plutonium as fuel, Big Rock has been embassy after six Cubans seeking motivated solely by the desire for exempted from federal safety regulations, allow a presentation of information on the asylum crashed a bus through the economic opportunity. Because which, if enforced, would make the plant too dangers of the Big Rock plant in court. embassy gates. Castro subse¬ they are not seeking political expensive to operate. Studies indicate the Attempting to treat the case as a simple cooling system is likely to trespass case, the trial judge argued that quently ordered guards removed asylum as the Cubans are. State emergency core the safety issues were too complex for lay from the gates and publicized the Department officials argue the fail I Big Rock has no back up system); reactor coolant pipes have cracked and the people to decide in a jury trial. In addition move. Haitians should be turned back to to court actions, numerous small demon¬ plant operates without repairs; increased Andean Pact diplomats say the sea. levels of radiation in fish near the plant due strations against the continued operation of Castro government is fully re¬ Cuban and Haitian refugees are to release of contaminated water into Lake Big Rock have been held in the Charlevoix in the same boat and deserve to be Michigan; rates of leukemia, immature area over the past 18 months. But Big Rock sponsible for the rush of Cubans glows on. treated equally. The Haitian and infants, infant mortality, and congenital onto the embassy compound. The May 4 rally gives Lansing-area birth defects higher in the Big Rock area Some believe Castro is hoping to Cuban economies are both a alleviate the country's economic shambles. Haiti's economic woes malaise by letting the "anti-social" are due in part to U.S. economic refugees leave. The ploy certainly exploitation of the area, while the is not new. In 1965, Castro reacted Cuban economy has suffered more to a series of boat escapes by from the U.S. boycott of trade. opening a northern port as an Cuban refugees are motivated as outlet to 5,000 refugees picked up much by a desire to escape way we feel about abortion. We feel that by members of southern Florida's depression as oppression, and Do's and don'ts you must afford to an unborn child the same Cuban exile population, which now some of the Haitian refugees were right you say we as women must have, that numbers half a million people. also politically persecuted. The for safer sex is to "not have (their) lives decided by someone else's (not even the mother's) The Cubans sandwiched in the situation is not very different from In addition to your warning last term version of morality." embassy have said they wish to the trauma Vietnamese boat peo¬ concerning sexual asphyxia there should be Christine Barrett added some other precautions to sexual enter the United States, too. Some ple endured at sea. Drifting with activities in which people may occasionally A406 Butterfield would argue we have done our minimal provisions, they were Pamela Rose engage. Lansing share, and that the problem is turned away at many a port. These were learned about by taking the Castro's. But Castro has washed The issue should not be Black vs. human sexuality course offered by the his hands of the whole affair, and White or political vs. economical. family and child sciences department and the United States, by imposing For humanitarian reasons alone from a reliable sourcebook on the subject. • Be extra careful with bondage — one Coverage biased economic sanctions on the island, we should not cast those who have can suffocate on a soft surface. Also, never In reference to your April 10 article, is not exactly blameless in the braved weeks at sea adrift again. choke or suffocate anyone; many "murders" "University groups withdraw funding from are accidents. EveryW'oman's Weekend," I would like to • Never blow into the vagina as this can point out the bias presented in the article, cause air embolism and sudden death. and comment that it should have been • The use of household appliances can be recognized and corrected before the story Headlee scheme dangerous. Injuries to the penis from vacuum most cases cleaners are very common and in difficult to repair. Compressed was allowed to be printed. The coordinators of EveryWoman's Weekend have worked too long and hard and with too little money air can rupture the intestine from as far as to deserve this type of criticism. would waste talent 18 inches away, when aimed at someone's • Water at tap pressure can go up the "Deliberate exclusion" did not just happen, nor was there a private decision made concerning the groups in question. VIEWPOINT; EXISTENTIALISM One can hardly blame Farming- some extent. Nevertheless, taking fallopian tubes and do harm when directed The fact is that initial defining and voting of the power of the vote out of the Sartre lives ton Hills insurance executive Rich¬ into the vagina. the weekend's goals was open to any ard Headlee for losing patience public's hands is something that • Spanish fly is not an aphrodisiac but an irritant poison, about as strong as mustard related group. It should be understood that Right to Life and Stop ERA had just as on with state government. The man has never been seriously con¬ gas. much opportunity to shape the weekend's who brought Michigan residents sidered on a broad basis, either on By JOHN RUSSELL GILBERT existentialist thought, I rest assured that • Nothing you inhale, including Amyl goals as any other group. Their lack of the state or national level. our world has not been designed according its first tax cutting proposal has nitrate, is safe. They may produce dizziness initial participation is not the coordinator's I would like to reflect on the subject of the late Jean-Paul Sartre and his to an ultimate plan or divine code of values, yet to see it implemented, while What is most troubling about or a flushing sensation, but in many cases oversight, but the direct responsibility of the organizations themselves. These groups existentialist philosophy. Of course, he was laws or patterns of presuppositions. As the tax system that spawned its Headlee's petition is that it as¬ they have also caused death. are politically and financially established not the only person responsible for popular Sartre asserted, there should not be laws of • That these facts are not known by most mandate remains unchanged. sumes Michigan has reached the enough to understand the bureaucratic izing the existentialist doctrine, but he consciousness, but only consciousness of people indicates the need for adequate Headlee undoubtedly hopes his stage where the voters can no sexual education in our society. Sexual channels of gaining representation. was most certainly its chief exponent. laws. This means that our everyday process drive, a petition to limit of living, our "being-in-the-world" as Sartre newest longer exercise enough prudence experiences can be a meaningful part of a By deleting this and many other fine Sartre possessed one of the most fas¬ of office for governor, points of the argument, a one-sided issue cinating and emancipated minds of the 20th put it, is much more real than any eternal terms in electing candidates to the state's person's life, especially when proper cau¬ beliefs (devised by man himself). We tion is exercised. has been created and undue pressure has century. He was not burdened by any attorney general, secretary of highest offices. Limiting terms is humans make the laws, laws do not make Cynthia Brooke been forced upon those who are trying to primitive, religious belief in an omnipotent, state, senators and representa¬ more of a fail-safe device than a make this weekend happen. omnibenevolent, omniscient entity that is the humans. (Who said that?) We are 1511/2 N. Harrison tives will not suffer a similar fate. doctrine of fairness; it presup¬ Michael Siebert Ann E. Sinclair allegedly aware of us and our every action. shaped by the environments that we live in; we were not "put here" in order to serve as Michigan residents would be bet¬ poses elected officials as shiftless 236 N. Harrison 217 Burcham Drive As I dive headfirst into the mainstream of ter served however, if it did. part of an ultimate plan in the universe. and suspect. Sartre believed that we should strive to Headlee's idea says more about To be sure, the present political One party omitted create our own designs, or destinies, for the credibility of politicians than it ourselves. We are born with a free will and does about the system has produced a bevy of performance of On April 10 The State News printed a this world is meaningless until we choose to professional politicians, career- state government officials and legislators, in this case Michigan's. oriented glory seekers and media hounds bent on promoting them¬ letter from Lu Ann Beamer and Schmidt, responding to a viewpoint on Mary Helen The State News give it some meaning. Can anybody really argue with the A petition limiting public office abortion by Jim Disantis. Their letter made existentialist philosophies? Does today's selves rather than the issues. everal points on which we would like to terms grows out of disenchant¬ so-called open-minded, modern man still Their longstanding tenure, it could omment. Monday, April 21, 1980 have to ment rather than the concept of rely on the so many varied crutches be argued, extends beyond ample Beamer and Schmidt stated their beliefs of fairness. Seasoned politicians, the Editorials are the opinions of the State News. Viewpoints, religion? Are your prayers answered by hat women must have control over their someone or something up above (or below?l time to serve government. Their ultimate victims of such a bill, wn bodies in order to have control of their columns and letters are personal opinions. ability to perpetuate themselves or are we unconsciously providing the could offer strings of achievements lives. They also stated that since the Editorial DepaUment solutions? Deep down inside, we all know and the advantages of knowing probably has more to do with the woman's role in the pregnancy is so much entertainment 8 Book Editor Bill the answer to that. virtue of incumbency than ability. more immediate and involved than the Editor-in-chief R W Robinson Ho/c/shfp state government inside and out to Managing Editor. . Don Kinsley Sports Editor Ed Bradley We are now in the midst of numerous father's, hers should be the deciding vote of Opinion Page Edit MikeMegerian Layout Editor Gary Piatek support their cases for unlimited But the system needs only so national and international crises. Instead of the two. They neglected, however, to refer City Editor Susan Tompor Freelance Editor Carrie Thorn terms. And they would be right. It much new blood. If fears of to the third party in a pregnancy. Michele McElmurry Chief Copy Editor Linda Oliverio looking elsewhere for the solutions, let us Campus Editor is the lazy voter that Headlee is impropriety in government war¬ Biologically, a fetus is not a part of the Photo Editor Richard Marshall Staff Representative Roland Wilkerson now employ Jean Paul Sartre's all too mother's body. It grows within her and is obvious solution to the question, "What is it calling to the state's mind, the rant restrictive measures, the dependent on her, but its body is complete¬ Advertising Department to be a person?" and look within ourselves. constituents who vote for incum¬ imposition of more ethics — in We've had the answers here all the time. ly distinct from hers. The fetus is a bency without rhyme or reason congressional spending, atten¬ genetically unique, human and distinct Advertising Manager Ron MacMillan Asst Advertising Manager Pat Greening Gilbert is o sophomore majoring in psychology and consequently perpetuate the dance and accountability — might individual. Therefore, while pregnancy and philosophy political lives of bad politicans as better reform the system. A profoundly affects a woman's body, in well as good ones. piecemeal approach to the restor¬ deciding to have an abortion she is going As long as the state abides by ation of true representative gov beyond her right to control her own body and infringing on the rights of another the electorate's wishes in choosing ernment may root out the real ndividual. political candidates, the problem culprits in a system that has Beamer and Schmidt state their view DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau of blind voting will always exist to broken touch with its constituents. that a woman's life should not be decided by one else's beliefs and perceptions. We i don't believe i thought i pont have any thavsan well, for one it poe&tthave agree completely, but in the same way, this. they've wv sworn choice. paps im- outragei thing, a year to. just cutout ine's own beliefs should not determine sentme am off of re - p0sepa spenping howcoulp herb now the extras, man. *«£»*- cm mem VOCALPOINT terminate) another's life, even if that life exists inside one's own body. CASES of vop- ka for tonight union duty, marojs ceiling on my epu- he p0 that cation this year vyou7 costs *8,000. why, i'm only paying *3,400' without cum K To state the obvious, a woman's preg nancy is the result of certain definite Today's question: tions she has chosen to take. People who Should MSU establish a separate alumni association? are responsible for their own actions are YES also responsible for the consequences 353 3110 NO - 353 3220 Results from Friday's question: hereof. If a woman decides she would not Is the selection of RHA movies adequate? vanl to carry "a pregnancy" because it vould interfere with her life, then the YES — 92 NO - 14 responsible time to control her body would be before she takes action that would result Sponsored b\ ASMSl and Ihe State News, Inc. Michigon State News, East Lansing. Michigan Monday, April 21. 1980 5 WANT ANDERSON ON Police close Potter Park Students launch petition drive due 'smoke-in' By RUSS HUMPHREY The petition drive comes a the nomination," Muhlbach said must have tion, a national said Richard Kinkade, convert gan University, Central Michi University and the to fliers Sute News Staff Writer few days before the Congress Sunday. When he does gan By MIKE C'HAl DHL'RI "Nobody told us anything about it," said A statewide petition drive to member from Illinois is ex announce his decision to with Michigan attorney working as University of Michigan State News Staff Writer Roger Winthrop, the state co ordinator of the draw his from the advisor for the organization. attended the meeting Sunday. place Republican John B. pected to make his official name an A marijuana "smoke in," supposed to take National Organization for Reform of Mari whether he will This must be held prior to June These representatives were Anderson in the November announcement Republican ballot "we want to place Saturday in Lansing's Potter Park, juana Laws. general election as an continue campaigning for the be ready," she said. given advise on what to expect went up in smoke after Lansing officials He also said he knows the United while petitioning and what to independent candidate was Republican nomination. The plan is to petition in as Also giving legal advise for closed the park. Only police showed up. Marijuana Smoker's of Michigan did not plan kicked-off in Michigan Sunday. congressional districts as avoid to get as many valid the smoke-in. "I bet you it was a high school many Students for Anderson organ "Essentially, what happened is that we The official announcement "THERE'S A 95 percent possible, but no more than 35 izations across Michigan was signatures as possible. showed up but nobody else did," said one kid," he said. follows a petitioning drive chance he will announce his percent of the total signatures Richard Friedman who repre¬ Lansing police officer, who asked to remain He added that he was angry with Graves' Saturday by Sudents for independent status soon, prob come from any one district. sents an Anderson "flying legal Friedman offered a few- unidentified. decision to close the park. Anderson of MSU gathering ably Wednesday," Betsy Muhl- After this is completed the squad" to clarify election and words of encouragement as he The park was ordered closed by Lansing "That's not a cool thing to do," he said. about 500 signatures in the bach, co-chairperson of Stu¬ petitions will be sent to the left the meeting, saying; "make Mayor Gerald Graves and by the superinten Leave days for Lansing police were petition laws from state to MSU community. dents for Anderson, said. Secretary of State's office to state. this the largest petition drive in dent of parks and recreation, Louis New- canceled Saturday to make enough officers Still needed to get Ander The Anderson organization check each signature and make American history." house. Officials feared that confrontations available to handle any incidents in the park, "We want to start this drive son's name on the general at MSU still has no official sure the petitioners conformed might erupt between police and smokers if police said. off with a bang here," he said. election ballot are 18,336 signa¬ authorization from the national with petitioning laws. The groups' goal is to get the bash was held, Lansing police office Barricades were set up at entrances to the tures before May 5. This date is committee to seek signatures "Michigan is one of the first 100,000 or more signatures in Dennis O'Brien said. states to discover support for park, but most people turned away were the deadline set by election for an independent party LAWS FOR INDEPEND¬ Michigan to show a solid and Although officials expected up to 10,000 families wanting to use the park, police said. headed by Anderson, hut is ENT Anderson as an independent." broad base of support for John officials from the Secretary of parties stipulate that people to attend the smoke-in, there were State's office, where the signa¬ going ahead with the plan. riewly formed parties — in this Students from Grand Valley B. Anderson's tentative party only 28 officers and no partiers at the park A police helicopter also made rounds over State Colleges, Western called the Anderson Coalition. the park, police said. tures will be validated. "It's clear to me he can't win case the Anderson Coalition — Miehi Saturday, police said. The event, billed as "Lansing's First Police said their barricades probably kept Annual Smoke-in," was advertised by fliers some prospective smokers out of the park. distributed around Lansing, including some "We had no problems at all," police said. 'Raise consciousnessadvisor urges schools, police said. Police said they still do not know who has The park was reopened at about 4 p.m., after it became apparent that nobody would been distributing the fliers. show up for the smoke-in, police said. By LESA DOLL replace Bella Abzug as chair it can't be put down, only raised appointing greater numbers of "Action must be racial- and State News Staff W'ri' * person of the committee, said higher," she said. "When the to federal office, the women gender-free." Women who seek fui. equal Saturday at Kellogg Center oppressed stops being willing "old boys" club still holds, she ity must gain constitutional that although Carter has to be oppressed — as their said. This must be met with a CHAMBERS SAID WOMEN equality by joining together, increased the number of women union of women, she added. hold 75 percent of low level said Marjorie Bell Chambers, co-chairperson to the Presi dent's Advisory Committee on in administrative women on all levels must join together and "raise conscious¬ positions, "THE MOST IMPORTANT thing in the movement is that jobs, while men hold 98 percent of high level jobs. Chambers indicated that Joy ride can't cut the mustard Women. ness." women support women," she Three Lansing Township delivery truck parked near the reason. » although Title IX and affirma¬ sunbathers. Police caught up with the Chambers, who was appoint¬ "Once a consciousness has said. "There is a real network tive action programs exist, they women, wearing nothing but ed mustard, took a United Parcel When the police car arrived, truck after it traveled about a by President Carter to been raised it seems to be that building up throughout this are not totally effective. Services delivery truck for a the officer saw the UPS truck block, and arrested the women. country. What I see is women "There is no reason for ride Thursday before being being driven around a corner bonding together like men have people to work with minds and Sandra Lewis, 25; Doshaline bonded together for centuries. arrested by police. by the sunbathers. Council may make "That's the best part of the hearts full of equality if the grass roots are inequality," she Lansing Township police said they received a report of The truck was being followed on foot, by the UPS man, police McCuin, 30; and Charlene Roper, 27 all of 135 Deerfield women's movement," she said. Ave., have been charged with women sunbathing nude in said. added. "We're no longer set Chambers warned that if joy-riding and indecent expo¬ Police also noted the appointment to BWL Zimmerman, whose name against each other, fighting against each other." Chambers said "grass roots Ronald Reagan is elected as president women might lose the progress they have gained front Thursday. of the women's home At the same time a police car women's bodies, hair, were including their covered with mus¬ sure, police said. They have been released on One of three appointments to tard, for "undetermined bond, responded to the call, a UPS an police said. the Board of Water and Light is was submitted by Mayor inequality" is a barrier prevent¬ over the last 10 years. expected to be confirmed by Gerald Graves, will replace ing women from achieving full "I urge you, as a feminist and Lansing City Council at a chairperson Roland Rhead if equality under the constitution. a female, to make your vote public meeting 7 p.m. Monday, on the 10th floor of City Hall. Richard Zimmerman, a vice approved. Rhead vacated his seat Friday moving to Dewitt. because he is "For far too long we've been seen as females, an offshoot of male humanity, rather than count," she said. "If we lose ERA to — move if the country continues to the right — we will Burglars local jewelry hit shop individuals that happen to be lose all the statuatory rights we A Frandor jewelry store was Jewelers, 3220 Mall Court, were taken in the burglary, he Two other BWL board president of Long's Developing mem¬ Marjorie Bell ..ambers and former Lansing Charter bers will end four-year terms i females," she said. "It exists have gained over the past 10 burglarized of an undetermined Lansing, by breaking a glass said. because of ideas about and but large amount of jewelry at door with a cement block. The exact amount of the loss Commission member, was June 30 and their positions raised consciousness impowers our years." Chambers said women must about4:30 a.m. Friday, Lansing "Several cases of the jewelry will not be known until an interviewed by the council must also be filled by the them — then the oppressor our understanding of male/ council. cannot continue to oppress." female roles," she said. take pride in a past that has police said. were smashed and broken into," inventory is completed, he said. Thursday. "We have, in been denied, and must fight to Police said the burglars en¬ said Sgt. Irvin Ruby. "It looks like its going to be Despite Carter's continued some ways, attain the ERA. tered Thompson's Frandor Cases of rings and earrings quite a loss," Ruby noted. "mathematical progression" in come a long way," she said. NOW plans march ALL DEGREE on Springfield, El. A march on springfield, 111., has been scheduled for Wednes¬ ERA, is organizing transporta tion for local individuals who CANDIDATES iCampus Contacts 'V a complete day as a part of the "Student Day for ERA," being sponsored would like to attend the march. Anyone interested in transpor¬ tation is requested to contact and FACULTY CONTACT LENS by the National Organization Make your reservations NOW tor academic for Women. Wagner or the National Organi¬ zation for Women. apparel for Spring Term Commencement. VISION CARE CENTER Sue Wagner, lobbyist for Deadline is May 16 at the Union Store in the HARD & SOFT CONTACT LENSES Union. PERSONALIZED • EYE EXAMINATIONS Colombia rejects plan GRADUATION ANNOUNCEMENTS • TRIAL WEARING PLAN NOW BEING ORDERED • SERVICE WARRANTY of rebels holding hostages AT UNION STORE • ULTRA SONIC CLEANING Donations for the Senior FOR SPRING TERM ONLY I • POLISHING & SCRATCH REMOVAL class gift will be accepted. For Information call • LOW COST BOGOTA, Colombia (API - The government considers a large. But an official source close to 355-7676 Th» Union Store 337-7120 rebel-proposed negotiations the ongoing government-rebel OR 355-3498 301 MAC - Suite 106 summit on the Colombia hos¬ negotiations said, "This formula DEADLINE; MAY 9, 1980 tage crisis unacceptable, an is not viable Whatever (P-K v Bldg. B - Corner of Ann St.) ' OPTOMETRIST . . . official source said Sunday, the negotiations there are must be 54th day of captivity for 17 with the government." foreign diplomats the insur¬ gents hold at the Dominican Republic's Embassy. The government of President Julio Cesar Turbay Ayala made no official response to the proposal for a meeting May 1 in Panama between prominent but non-government Colombians and rebel group members still at Educational Center Oil Dan Crenlntt t Weekend: for Information About Other Centers In M? or "S Cities & Abroad Outside NY Stele 0«IL I0LL HIE: 800 2»1782 Monday, April 2). 1980 Michigan State News. East Lansing, Michigan A fantastic night of the living Dregs Entertainment By ROSS BOISSONKAl State News Reviewer Saturday night East Lansing was treated to an evening of excellent music, as the second night of the blues and jazz festival presented the Dixie Dregs and Alive! The diverse styles exhibited by the two bands ranged from he bop to Southern boogie, with the full spectrum in between. Both bands were vibrant and brought Bromberg: By BOB FONOROFF a versatile stylist the crowd to its feet again and again. Alive! entered the darkened kiva banging away on a variety of percussion instruments, half singing and half chanting. Eventually winding their way onto the stage, they proceeded to play some of State News Special Writer If anyone wants to know, the David Bromberg Band's first show the freshest sounds these ears have heard in a long time. Vocalist Rhiannon held the spotlight much of the time. Her vocal A stylings bring to mind such people as Ella Fitzgerald, A1 Jareau in Erickson Kiva Friday night was more of a soundcheck. The real and Urszula Dudziak by turn, as she synthesizes these and other performance — and the beginning of the First Annual East musical influences into a sound all her own. Lansing Blues & Jazz Festival — began at midnight. The other members of Alive! were certainly not relegated to Bromberg's first show suffered from technical problems mere background status, however. Bassist Suzanne Vincenza was concerning his acoustic guitar pickup and monitor because the brilliant, whether laying down the foundation for the others or State News Richard Marshall band didn't have a chance to do a soundcheck. Although the band soloing herself. Barbara Borden, Janet Small and Carolyn Brandy still provided a good set, there were problems. Nothing was quite all were featured by turn, and all acquitted themselves ably. The Allen Sloan of the Dixie Dregs, who appeared in together. When Bromberg tried to offer the audience some of his standout tune was a little ditty entitled "Wild Women Don't Get Frickson Kiva Saturday night. witty anecdotes, the words refused to come out of his mouth. He the Blues," Rhiannon belting out the lyrics with a gritty, earthy was constantly bumbling with his stage presence, as if he were a voice. With bassist Andy Ward and drummer Rod Morgenstein laying little too high. Alive!, like Gil Scott-Heron, mixes politics and music. They down a super tight base, guitarist Steve Morse and violinist Allen dedicated a tune to Native Americans and Indians, and thanked Sloan took the crowd on flight after flight of warped-out fantasy. I don't know what happened between sets, but when the David Afro-Americans for their contributions to our music, especially "Night of the Living Dregs," "The Bash" and "Punk Sandwich," all Bromberg Band took the stage for the second show, it could do no off the Night of the Living Dregs LP, showed off the band at their blues and jazz. Their feministics show through on most all of their wrong. Everything suddenly fell into place. Bromberg got a hold best. Morse's guitar, hooked up to a variety of electronic tunes, and if they do get a bit heavy-handed at times one cannot on his showmanship, and the audience refused to let him go until 3 question their sincerity. synthesizers, phasers and flangers, made enough sounds for an a.m. Following Alive!, the Dixie Dregs presented us with their style orchestra, and the keyboards of Tee Lavitz gave the sound a rich Versatility is the key to this band. They do it all from electric of Southern boogie jazz. Originally formed for college credit at the background. "Punk Sandwich," in particular, was outstanding, rock and blues to a lively acoustic set as well. The show began with University of Miami, the Dregs are beginning to break free of their with Sloan and Morse dueling away. a snappy acoustic number which featured three mandolins. Then cult status. Their appearance here turned more than a few heads, Called back by the crowd for an encore, the Dregs played the band swung into one of my personal favorites, "If You Don't mine included. "Happy Birthday" for Morgenstein, who was celebrating his Want Me, Baby." The number gave the audience a feel for what The Dregs combine the aforementioned Southern rock and jazz, birthday. Ending with "Dixie," the Dregs shifted into overdrive, would be in store during the next 100 minutes. The song is a as well as throwing in a healthy dose of country and blue'grass, taking the tempo faster and faster, aid coming finally to a Bromberg trademark combining humorous lyrics with solid guitar producing a vibrant, exciting, and wholly original sound. While screaming, screeching end. work. At that point Bromberg began to loosen up the crowd and "fusion" has become a dirty word in musical circles these days, the Bassist Ward correctly gauged the mood of the crowd, lead it down his own musical road. Dregs remain true to its original principles, combining jazz fluency introducing "Disco Dregs" with "... and disco sucks, and don't you and improvisation with the energy of rock. forget it!" The only louder audience response came when he The David Bromberg Band takes the audience through all types They welcomed the audience to a night of the living dregs with off handedly mentioned that it was sounding more and more like a of music. Tfiis puts a demand on the musicians to be able to tunes from their three Capricorn LP's, as well as some samples Georgia bar. It was a Dregs crowd for sure, and whether a Dregs perform a smooth transition from a hot blues number to country of their soon-to-be-released Arista album. They ranged form the fan from way back, or a new convert like myself, by the end of the swing. But it also makes a demand on the audience as well, because bluesy to "Disco Dregs," complete with chroeographed dance show we were all on our feet, clapping, listening and dancing to just as you get up and get going with the music, the band suddenly steps. Throughout, they rocked, swung and broiled with energy some of the most innovativ. music heard in these parts for quite switches gears, and you're forced to readjust. During the first until 2:45 a.m. and even then the crowd pleaded for more. some time. show there were holes in the transitions, making for some boring moments. The second show had no such moments. Bromberg's band is superb, especially Dick Fegy. If he could sing, this might have been the Dick Fegy Band. Promo material states that he plays "string instruments." Little did I know that this includes guitar, violin, mandolin, polymoog and banjo. He did a nice guitar solo of the "Mapleleaf Rag." The horn section, Homecoming 1980 consisting of John Firman on saxophone and Curtis Linberg on trombone, showed its versatility as well, playing arrangements Organizational Meeting from ragtime to delta blues with a strong, forceful sound. The rest of Bromberg's band includes Dan Counts, bass; Jeff Wisor, fiddle; and Lance Dickerson on drums. They all did a fine job of keeping April 22, 1980 Bromberg's music together. As for Bromberg himself, there is no doubt he plays a hot guitar, 5:00 p.m. both electric and acoustic. He plays violin and mandolin as well. During the second show, his jokes were humorous, and his stage presence put Bromberg in control. The vibes were good and they State News Eileen Blass Oak Room, Union Bldg. stayed that way. The versatile David Bromberg and his band opened Sippie Wallace opened both shows, taking the audience back to EVERYONE WELCOME another musical era. Appearing in an outfit designed for a night the First Annual Fast Lansing Blues & Jazz out in Siberia, complete with a wrap-around fox and a hat beyond Festival in Frickson Kiva Friday night with their description. Sounding like a timeless 78 rpm, Sippie turned the unique blend oi folk, country, rock alnd blues. More audience on with a delightul selection of ragtime blues. reviews and photographs of the festival will appear in Tuesday 's State News. Sippie has a deadpan look that is entertainment in itself, as she sale (sal): the transfer of ownership - sang her wav into the audience's hearts with classics such as "Up The Country Blues," "Say It Isn't So," and her trademark, "A Mighty Tight Woman." I loved her standard introduction; "Play it, maestro!" For her second encore, David Bromberg came out to and title to property from one person play some acoustic slide guitar with Sippie and the Easy Street Jazz Band. Bromberg didn't really fit in with the thought that counted. her music, but it was to another for a price; a selling of GRADUATED It was nice to see two acts that complement each other the way Sippie Wallace and the David Bromberg Band did. It gave the late night crowd an evening (morning?) of fine entertainment that was NURSES goods at bargain prices worth staying up for. 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Besides the basic * tree pregnancy testing & counseling una walk-in basis services one would expect, Hurley serves the area with May 12 - May 17 Tote Bag Sale 20% Off many highly specialized programs. Orientation for new employees is a minimum of 6 weeks. The May 19-May 23 Stuff Animals 20% Off WHY IS EVERYONE length of the program is COMING TO SUNTANA? determined by the adapt¬ ability of the individual. May 27-May 30 Warm-up Suits 20% Off • Exclusive Reflective Material Hurley offers competitive For A Super-Even, Ail-Over Tan. wages and an excellent benefit package. For more • Sophisticated Control Equipment Ensures Safety And Reliability. information, contact: June 2 - June 7 ^ERgYTH'N^'n in% Off • Cool-Light v Tanning System Nurse Recruitment HURLEY (Finals Week) THeSpiritShop |U/0 Ull For Moximum Comfort - Uses No Heat. MEDICAL CENTER • Sanitized Booths One Hurley Plaza Flint, Ml 48502 • Sterilized Eyewear or. phone collect: "In the center of campus. (313) 766 0387 HIUH 355-3454 International ('i nter KUzSLMtf BOOH 1TORE The Professional Tanning Center MEDIGIL CENTER v> On G'ond River Open Mon Sal 10-8 0(1 o>s f«om the Union 332*3200 An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F f Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Monday, April 21 1980 7 Into the 1980s with Gil Scott-Heron DISCOUNT Hollywood Babylon »HOTO FINISHING -SCHOOL SUPPLICS By JOHN NEILSON State News Reviewer By JAV ARNOLD Associated Press Writer "It's 1980 and there ain't even no way back to '75, much less 1969 HOLLYWOOD — At Hollywood and Vine, the famed EAST- 545 I. GRAND RIVER intersection of the world's "movie capital," a strolling tourist The last time the decade counter clicked over, the counter ACROSS FROM OLIN MONDAY-FPIOAT 9-9 cultural wave of the '60s had reached its high tide before suffering today is more likely to bump into a teen age prostitute than a movie star. PHONE: 332-5580 " * *U" the shock of Kent State and the prolonged political psychosis of the Hollywood police seized 50 male prostitutes in one night's Watergate exorcism. Idealism and hopes for social change ran WEST 23 1 E. GRAND RIVER sweep last month. Over 4,000 vice arrests were made in 1979. — high, and for political street-rap poet Gil Scott-Heron this hope "It's just gotten beyond us," says Los Angeles Police ACROSS FROM MSU UNION MON- SAT-9-9 was the belief that songs like "The Revolution Will Not Be Televised" and "Whitey's On The Moon" revolved around. Department Capt. Jerry Feinberg, who heads the Hollywood PHONE: 337-1521 SUNDAY u s The complacency of the '70s soon dealt a death-blow to much of police division. Even the most unabashed Hollywood-booster will admit the the social activism in popular music, as "We" gave way to "Me" in the music industry. Ten years later, however, Gil Scott-Heron is town has big problems. "It's time to blend the myth and the reality," says Chamber of MflLBUfTl SPECIALS!! still writing about the problems he sees around him and trying to Commerce Executive Director Mike Sims. "Tourists come here spread a little hope for political change and social sanity through his music. His first show at the First Annual East Lansing Blues & Jazz Festival Saturday, meanwhile, proved that mixing politics to see the myth and when they see Hollywood Boulevard they're disappointed." The Best Of Only one major studio, Paramount Pictures, remains in with music doesn't necessarily produce either lousy politics or lousy music. Quite the contrary, in fact. The music of Gil's Amnesia Express Hollywood. The rest moved out long ago. Even last Monday night's Academy Awards bash — Hollywood's annual Big Event — was held elsewhere, six miles JOIIRHEV band was both moving and powerful (and occasionally even •■VOLUTION away in downtown Los Angeles. brilliant), a fluid amalgamation of jazz and soul with a little reggae What's left of the movie business in Hollywood are small, thrown in at appropriate moments. His political stance, on the rundown studios and post-production facilities where films are other hand, avoided the narrow-mindedness that ties many performers to a single issue (witness the proliferation of "feminist edited, dubbed and processed. H88 A 49 88 musicians") in favor of an overriding humanism. Whether he's It's ironic then, says Sims, that the Hollywood myth has been singing about illegal aliens, apartheid, dangerous drugs or kept alive by the movie and television producers themselves. nuclear power, Scott-Heron manages to make the message a joy to They were creating an image that really wasn't here." Nonetheless, Hollywood still packs 'em in, to the tune of 3.5 hear. After a few introductory words concerning his preference for million to 4 million persons a year. By Sims reckoning, music that deals with "what it is" rather than "the way we were," Hollywood is second only to Disneyland, 40 miles south, as the Scott-Heron led his band into "Willing" from his latest album, top tourist attraction in Southern California. But he admits that beyond a cursory look at Hollywood •OROVER 1980. After "Willing" came that album's title track, whose keynote Washington 140 Boulevard, there is little to hold the visitor. lines tell how "God will continue/to look out for the children/but "SKYLADKIN" 7.9B UST ALBUM the fools will have to look out for themselves." This was followed State News Tony Dugal "They usually drive down Hollywood Boulevard, spend 15 Gil Scott-Heron brought his excellent band and his minutes in the Chinese (Theater) forecourt and then head to by a haunting "Winter in America" that features some evocative Anaheim or Beverly Hills. There's nothing here to see. That's keyboard textures by Glen Turner. enlightened brand of humanistic politics to Erickson WE CASH MSU PAYCHECKS Everyone in the Amnesia Express got a change to shine at some Kiva Saturday afternoon. probably the saddest reaction we get: 'This is Hollywood and Vine?' " ■TATB COUPON point or other, and it was clear that Gil Scott-Heron is lucky to It's difficult to pinpoint when Hollywood's decline began or have such a crack performing unit behind him. Guit arist Ed Brady of Lou Rawls. His complete lack of pretensions and his ielivered solo after sensuous solo, while drummer Kenny Powell unwillingness to operate on the level of mere rhetoric also helped what caused it, but most observers agree it came with OANNON ind especially bassist Robert Gordon kept the songs bounding this engaging singer to break down the barrier between himself America's economic and demographic shifts in the 1950s. CIGARETTES ilong. The horn section of Kenny Sheffield, Herman James, and and his audience. The wealthy fled west to the open expanses of Beverly Hills YOGURT "Racetrack In France" — which was dedicated to the Montreux and Century City, taking their tax moneys and buying-power larl Cornwell was also extremely hot, and Cornwell's frequent ill" 3-r7 Festival there — was one of the most spirited songs of the show, with them. axophone excursions provided some of the afternoon's best loments. but the highlight was the show-closer "Johannesburg," which had Saturday night movie-going also shifted west — to Scott-Heron himself made the best of the intimate atmosphere the audience joining the band for the song's call arid-response fashionable Westwood Village near UCLA where more chorus. "Johannesburg" also gave the performers a chance to show exclusive film engagements are available. >f Erickson Kiva, chatting affably with the audience as if he were LIMIT 1 UP 4-17-M LIMIT ] IXB4-H4I in his own living room. His warm personality also shone through in off with an explosive round of solos that earned them a standing Hollywood High, which once graduated the likes of Jason ovation and a well-deserved encore. Robards and Jean Peters, is now crumbling. Hotels have gone •TATB his singing, which at many instances sounded remarkably like that to seed or closed altogether. Hot dog stands and coffee shops now stand where expensive shops once catered to the cream of CREST Nicarauguan folk perform benefit 99' film society. group to Hal Biard, a CBS publicist who arrived in 1952, remembers Hollywood becoming "very touristy, so the stars didn't want to TOOTHPASTE SOZ. 1.33 VAMM Free Nicaragua's first cul¬ test music won it a top award at Working from outside the coun¬ evening of folkloric music is do their shopping there." LIMIT 1 IXP 4-37-M tural exchange to the United the 1979 OTI Folk Festival in try where it was safe, in Spain sponsored by the Committee But even then, Biard adds, "It was perfectly safe with no States, the folk group Los de and Mexico, the Los de Palaca for Education on Latin America •a. tCHOii's wopon Spain. hookers or teen age prostitutes. Getting mugged was no Palacaguina (with Otto de la Los de Palacaguina helped guina became the musical voice and the Peace Education Cen¬ problem. You felt very nice walking up to the Pickwick book Rocha and El Guadalupano), for the Sandanista National ter. The concert will be pre EXERCISE 1 1 88 inspire the Nicaraguan people shop. It wasn't all that glamorous, but it wasn't as seedy as it is u m is making its way to MSU for a through the darkest years of Liberation Front. The current sented with a $4 admission benefit concert for the Nicara- the Somoza dictatorship, as it U.S. tour is being organized by charge which will go directly to SANDALS guan Literacy Campaign. This toured the countryside per¬ the National Network in Soli¬ help the Nicaraguan Literacy 17.00 VALIM ■ ■ renowned and award-winning Crusade. LIMIT 1 MM B PA-1T-M forming for small church darity with the Nicaraguan ensemble will appear at the groups and urban organiza People in cooperation with the ★ OTATIDItlCOUNT WIST* Union Parlors B and C at 8 p.m. tions, until it was so famous and Nicaraguan Ministry of Cul THE LOWEST PHIICES IN TOWN ON Tuesday. even Somo¬ HAIR CONNECTION popular a force not ture. Los de Palacaguina is consid¬ za dared to ban its music. Here in East Lansing, the ALL YOUR FAVORITE ered to be the foremost inter¬ INTRODUCING LIZ AS A preter of traditional Nicara- guan folk music as well as skilled performers of protest music that has made other NEW MEMBER OF THE HAIR CONNECTION STAFF. JWHmm Latin American groups so fa¬ mous in this country. Its pro¬ She specializes in perms, colors, hennas and LANDER'S Imported fabrics from England 8 Italy Complete bridal department design cuts. She is offering an introductory special: perms '25.00 colors '20.00 50% ■CIALLY M BABY OIL Catch A Wave, Sewing notions & patterns hennas '18.00 i* ex. Sloop John Bi RIVLON 09 With the Vogue Butterick Simplicity & McCalls and men you'll love her prices on design cuts and women. Call for for i .so l BEACH BOYS 213 Ann St. East Lansing an appointment. LIMIT 4 UP 4-17-M open daily 9:30 to 9:00 Sat. 9:50 to 5:30 372-4649 Phone 332-0361 Aoooene i oz. tizis A f 1912 MICHIGAN AVE. - CANDY BARS §01 MR OMCIAL DISMAY .51 B LIMIT* IXP 4-17-M AUIITTB GILLETTE WAIIW»PON TORONTO DRY IDEA DOLL-ON DOOOORANT 1.5 OZ. 2.25 VAMII R29 E UMIT 1 ■XP 4-17-M WEEKEND AGREE HAM CONRITIONEE 109 • OZ. 1.75 VALIM ■ LIMIT 1 UP 4-17-M May 9-11 $65.00 ASPIRIN NIVEA 8KIN LOTION ,#I- V 1 29 Includes: 1.M 2 INiglits Deluxe Accommodations 44 at Loew's West bury .tatb'oupon MR. MITT VIRI-TNIN •i*6 xV8 Koundtrip Rail Transportation 10 OZ. 1.10 VALIM 77* from Windsor TStl ■AVtWALVHW SALINE SOLUTION 1 • OZ. 3.50 V ALUS B TONIGHT - 8:00 Call Now: 353-5255 JENISON FIELDHOUSE ■W^Un Special Guests: Brewer A Shipley VIDALSASSOON 69 ASMSU TRAVEL TICKETS: $9.00 & $10.00 ALL $EAT$ TICKETS AT THE MSU UNION WHEREHOUSE RECORDS I & II. SOUNDS & DIVERSIONS. , RESERVED I 1an-it-w Koom 333 Union llldg. AND JENISON LOX OFFICE TONIGHT Trarassr A DIVISION OF THE ASMSU PROGRAMMING BOARD FUNDED BV STUDENT TAX MONEY. FOR 24 HR. INFORMATION ABOUT PROGRAMMING BOARD EVENTS. MIOHTY MATCH A Division of the ASMSU Programming Hoard funded by student tax money. Call the Programming Board Hotline 353-2010, for more info on P.B. events. CALL THE PB HOT LINE 353-2010 gSEATS STILL AVAILABLE^ WHIMMUI 88' 0 Michigan State News. East Lansing, Michigan Monday, April 21, 1980 INDIANA BIG TEN SOFTBALL CHAMP Bad road trip MSU ,esolc but still By EL) BRADLEY State News Sports Writer came No back when we had to." one can doubt the Spar¬ "Our hitting was pretty good all the way through the tourna¬ MSU made up the 3-0 deficit with a run in its third and two for MSU batters There was no home-away-from-home for the MSU baseball team Though the MSU softball tans' ability to come back from ment," Becksford said. "We more tallies in the fourth as this weekend. team had just fallen to Indiana defeat. They advanced from the just didn't get them (the key reliefer Greenwood shut off the The Spartans dropped a pair of doubleheaders to Big Ten University in the final game of losers' bracket in the weekend hits) in the end." Hoosiers' attack. opponents, losing Saturday at the University of Wisconsin, 3 2 and the Big Ten Championships, tournament Old at College MSU began its tournament The Spartans broke the game 3-1, and at the University of Minnesota the following day by scores head coach Gloria Becksford Field and Ranney Park and to trek Friday with a 3-0 shutout of 6-2 and 5-1. open in the fifth inning. MSU was convinced her team was up come within a game of the title. of the University of Iowa. The quartet of losses dropped the Spartans' overall record to loaded the bases on a single, hit to par with the victorious Nancy "Izzy" Forester blanked batsman and fielder's choice on 5-21. MSU has lost all four of its games in the conference. Hoosiers. IN THAT FINAL, a 5-1 loss the visitors on three hits and MSU got good pitching performances from seniors Jay Strother which all runners were safe. "Indiana is a strong team — I late Saturday, MSU had plenty had two safeties of her own. and Brian Wolcott on Saturday, but the Spartan bats could only don't want to take anything Reynold's then singled sharply of chances to score, but left the Third baseman Michel Van- total nine hits and three runs. to right center field, scoring away from them," the first-year bases loaded once and had its Howe had three hits to aid the Vanllowe and Forester from In Saturday's opener, MSU got off to an early 2-0 lead, but the coach said. "But I think we are only scoring rally shut off by a Spartans' cause. third and second, respectively. Badgers tied the game in the last of the seventh on a two-run just as good. double play with two runners The victory set up the first of A third run scored on a ground- single by Craig Zirbel. "We hit the ball well, and aboard. three games with the Hoosiers. out by freshman Donna Zirbel put the Spartans away two innings later with a Indiana knocked MSU into the Thomas. run-scoring hit, dealing Wolcott his fourth defeat in five decisions. loser's bracket with a 3-2 vic¬ An RBI single by junior designated hitter Ken Mehall gave the tory Friday night, scoring three MSI' ADDED A seventh run Spartans their only run in the nightcap. The Badgers' Kirk Magec Senior Welch leads runs early and then withstand¬ ing a two-run surge by MSU in the seventh. Senior Laurel Hills an was inning later, and Greenwood able to deter a late Hoosier slammed a three-run homer in the second inning off Strother, who allowed just four hits but saw his record fall to 1-5. In the fourth inning of Sunday's lidlifter, senior first sacker Kirk rally as the two teams prepared Haines hit his first home run of the season. But the Gophers had pitched well, allowing just four hockey awards list to play the final game of the hits in a losing cause. already scored five runs and were on their way to the 6-2 win. tournament. Junior Phil Magsig (1-3) took the loss. Senior forward Russ Welch Defenseman Ted Huesing, a THE SPARTANS Forester started on the The Spartans outhit Minnesota, 7-5, in the nightcap, but lost three awards at MSU's won the Joe Finnigan BOUNCED back to defeat the mound for MSU in the cham¬ won senior, anyway. Junior second baseman Jim Buterakos drove in MSU's annual hockey banquet Friday- Award as the team's outstand¬ University of Michigan, 4-2 in pionship game, but left after only run with a second-inning double. night in the University Club. their first Sunday contest. three and two-thirds innings at Freshman Terry Johnson saw his teammates commit three ing senior, and freshman for¬ The Minnesota-born Junior a 3-1 deficit. In came Green¬ team ward Ken Leiter won the Wendy Greenwood costly errors behind him and sustained his third loss in five captain won the team's Most team's most improved player fanned seven Wolverines while wood again, but she could not decisions. Valuable Player award (for the hold off Indiana's bats as the honor. allowing two unearned runs. The Spartans' next action will be Wednesday at Kobs Field, as second year in a row), the Dr. The award as outstanding Senior shortstop Joan Fer¬ Hoosiers captured their second State News Tony Dugal non-league foe Ferris State College comes into East Lansing for a 1 James Feurig Award for all- rookie went to Mark Hamway, guson and junior first baseman straight Big Ten title behind MSU's Gayle Barrons connects for a p.m. twinbill. around team play, and the Amo a freshman from Detroit, while Laurie Reynolds had two hits the pitching of Pam Amabile, single in the softball team's first-round win over Iowa in the Aquinas College lets the Spartans play host to it two days later, Bessone Award, named after senior goaltener Mark Mazzo- apiece, for MSU. who had three hits to help her Big then the University of Detroit comes here for a doubleheader this Ten tournament this past weekend. The the retired MSU head coach leni won the President's Award Still one loss away from own cause. Spartans Saturday. finished second in the competition. and given for leadership on and for outstanding scholastic elimination, the Spartans then With three victories in its off the ice. achievement. met unbeaten Indiana and came five games, MSU stands at Junior center Leo Lynett MSU finished 14-24 overall, with 7-5 win. won the Herb Price Award for 12-16 in the Western Collegiate away a Hills started for the Spar¬ 12-10 overall for 1980. Ferguson hit at a .389 clip Forester hit .357 in the five games, VanHowe .333. and Calvin College are Sched- MSU team wins race tans, but left after allowing uled Tuesday and Thursday, being the team's leading scorer Hockey Association, under the (7-for-18) during the tourna¬ Home double-headers against The team of MSU senior Christoff with 26 goals and 36 assists for leadership of first-year coach three tallies in the third inning. ment to lead Spartan hitters. respectively, at 3 p.m. on Old Meingast and New York Central Michigan University native James Ochowicz won the overall 62 points. Ron Mason. College Field. competition during last week's six-day National Indoor Cycling League bicycle race in Demonstration Hall. The pair tallied 174 points from Monday through Saturday, while the second-place Canada team had 130, and Spartans get by Wooster, 6-5 third-place Indiana 93. Meingast is a physics major who is Austrian-born but hails from Detroit. Ochowicz is from Lake Placid, N.Y. The MSU lacrosse team evened its Midwest Lacrosse tremendous. This was the best game I've seen them play." Association record at 2-2 with a 6-5 win over Wooster Offensively, MSU had its chances. "We just couldn't capitalize College FREE! Saturday at Old College Field. on our man-up situations," Hendrickson pointed out. The Spartans The Spartans never trailed as they raised their season record to scored one extra-man goal. 5-4. Art Berry's goal, his eighth of the season, at 11:25 of the fourth "It was more of a defensive battle than offensive one," coach an period turned out to be the game-winner. It gave MSU a 6-4 lead. Boku Hendrickson said. "Mark Pinto (MSU's Wooster's Mark Munzert scored at 14:20, but MSU second-leading scorer ran out the who is sidelined with an injured ankle) was out and that's a couple remaining seconds. Munzert scored four goals in the losing effort. of goals right there." MSU goaltender Jim Sanford stopped 15 shots. "The defense and Sanford were excellent," Hendrickson said. "They should get The Spartans, who led 4-3 at the half, got goals from six different players. In addition to Barry, Kevin Willitts, Duane Andersen, Shawn Grady, Greg Helgemoe and Dan McNulty ■ Buy PizzaANYPizza goes SIZEallPizza the way!!At the credit." "THE DEFENSE JUST scored. Willitts, MSU's top scorer, now has 26 goals and 32 points on the season. I The Regular Price... Russ Welch Leo Lynett sparkled," co-coach Nevin Kanner said. The Spartans host Kenyon College Tuesday and travel to Ann "Mark Purcell, Ken Horan, Greg Purcell and Mike Morgan were all Arbor for a match with the University of Michigan on Wednesday. | Get The Identical Pixza Ocsa/j. FREE! I Must Hive Coupon TWO Big Ten foes defeat netmen When you look your best Good, Good, Good I COUPON LIMIT ON DELIVERIES NO CHECKS The MSU men's tennis team went on the road for the first time this season and came home thrashed 9-0 by Northwestern and 8-1 by Wisconsin. Jeff Wickman came up with record Drobac to 2-16. shuffled Coach Stan his doubles You are the best — 8:00 p.m. ■ SNArea ACCEPTED' Expires 5/5/tO pairs but it is not likely that the so see the best first Jettison Fieldhouse | 1203 E. Grand River, E. Lansing. 337-1631 losers from both of its weekend -- the Spartans' lone victory shakeup made much difference matches. with the Saturday at Madison as he won as the Spartan duos managed to , 2830 E. Grand River. Northwestern University Lansing... exciting, yet inconse¬ fB an take just two sets all weekend. and the University of Wiscon¬ sin provided the opposition, and the Spartans were able to take quential, 5-7, 5-4, 7-6 match at No. 4 singles. The Spartan doubles' play Freshman Steve Yorimoto and junior Matt Sander, along with Check us out! BEACH BOYS 485-440^^ juniors Scott King and just one match against either continued to be less than per¬ Wickman, were paired for the squad as they were soundly fect as they ran their season first time this year. The two losses dropped the Spartans' Big Ten mark to 2-4. Crew team at regatta Their next match is against defending conference Tuesday BARBERS 621 E. Grand River. E. Lansing champion University of Michi¬ 337 9881 or 337-1144 open 6 c MSU's crew team competed The crew team also came up gan at Ann Arbor. next to lech Hifi; across from Student Services at a regatta against the Univer¬ second in a mixed-eight event sity of Notre Dame at South race in which four men and four SAVINGS Bend, Ind., over the weekend. women compete. The men's crew won two of The team travels to the three races, while the Spartan Midwest Collegiate Champion¬ women lost the only race in ships at Madison, Wis., this which they competed in. weekend. TIPS $op/wiJoien's Xelection FOR YOUR NEW OR USED HOME SPEAKER JOHN VEENSIRA Solar Sc Insulation Co-Op of Lansing Enjoy TWO Chicken Teriyaki Dinners for the price of ONE! Broiled WED. APRIL 23* 7:30 P.M. Marinated Chicken with fresh vegetables... Delicious! Only $4.50 OR MSU CREDIT UNION TWO PanTree Casseroles An Gratin for the price of ONE! Lightly seasoned fresh vegetables and Swiss Cheese.. .A new specialty! Building an energy-efficient home Only $3.75 Doubling the energy efficiency of older homes Available Monday through Thursday 3 p.m. to midnight. Offer ends The promise of solar heat May 1, 1980 Also A QUESTION AND ANSWER PERIOD WILL FOLLOW THE SESSION serving Beer and Wine Co-Optical between 11:00 a.m. and midnight Brookfield EVERYONE WELCOME REFRESHMENTS WILL BE SERVED • RESERVATIONS ARE NOT REQUIRED Piazo behind Now thals East Lansing a healthy food restaurant. 351-5330 Offer good only with this coupon. Michigan Stole News, East Lansing, Michigan Monday, April 21. AT MSU INVITATIONAL Eight firsts fo By WILL KOWALSKI the meet," Spartan coach Jim formances on the track were by the shot put; Jerry Judd, third State News Sports Writer Bibbs said. "His times in both Gerald Cain, who took a first in in the triple jump; Mark Zuver A beautiful spring day and the 100 and 200 meter races the second heat of the 400 me ink, third in the pole vault; and eight Spartan first-place fin were very close to qualifying ter dash but did not place in the Daryl Dismond, who finished in ishes made the first annual times for the outdoor NCAAs, final results because of better a tie for second in the high Michigan State Men's Track so once again we're looking for times turned in from heat 1; Invitational jump. quite a success big things from him in the next Calvin Williams, Tyrone Wil¬ ' Saturday at Ralph Young Field. few weeks." liams and Rob Murphy, who Leading the way with three The Spartans' other two All- placed second, fourth and sixth BIBBS WAS ALSO happy of those firsts was senior All America performers, senior in the 400-meter with Don Muhammed's fourth ' hurdles; Eat America Randy Smith. Early in Keith Moore and freshman Paul on, second in heat 2 of the place finish in the 400-meter the day he ran the leadoff leg of Piwinski, also looked impres 200 meter dash (:21.6) and third as Muhammed run, has had the 440 yard relay team, made sive in their first place finishes. in the finals of the 110-meter little time to practice with the op of Ken Eaton, Andre Wil Moore ran a 3:49.2 in the high hurdles (: 14.46); Martin track team due to his involve Hams and Ricky Flowers, and 1,500 meter run while Piwinski Schulist and Scott Brasington, ment with the Spartan football the unit took first in a time of cleared 6-foot-10 in the high second and third, respectively team as a receiver. .-40.73. jump. in the steeplechase and fourth Then, after relaxing an hour, The rest of the firsts were by "All in all it was a great way and sixth in heat 2 of the Smith came back to win the Calvin Thomas in the 400-meter 1,500-meter run; Ted Unold, to open up our home outdoor 100-meter dash in a time of dash (:47.61); Tim Kenney in season, and I think we should fifth in heat 1 of the same : 10.47 and took first in the the 800 meter run (1:53.4); and do quite well this spring as long event; and Jeff Lewis, sixth in 2d0 meter run with strong time the mile relay team of Tyrone heat 1 of the 800-meter run. as we stay healthy," Bibbs said. Of:20.8. Williams, Kenney, r lowers and Other strong finishes in field The tracksters Will next see Thomas (3:11.99). events were turned in by Dave action Saturday when a "1 WAS VERY, very pleased full Prieskorn, who placed third in squad travels to the Drake with Randy's performances at OTHER STRONG MSU per the discus throw and sixth in Relays. Royals rip Tigers again, 9-6 High jumper Paul Piwinski clears the bar Young Field. at the MSU men's track Invitational tournament Saturday a^Ihbh DETROIT (UPI) Willie Kansas City Royals to 9-6 the Tigers. Renie Martin bailed him out Women - a Mays Aikens and Pete LaCock, both struggling with batting averages around .200, con¬ tinued their two-man assault victory run over the Tigers. Aikens and LaCock had two- doubles in a five-run Kan¬ run George Brett hit a solo home in the second inning, his second, and U.L. Washington and recorded his first major league victory with three two-thirds innings of three-hit and whip EMU, Michigan sas City uprising off loser Dan hit his first of the year in the relief. against Detroit pitching Sun¬ day by knocking in five runs Schatzeder, 0-3, in the first inning. LaCock drove in his fourth inning for Kansas City. Clint Hurdle doubled home the Alan Trammell doubled home two runs in the second for the in first outdoor home contest between them and pacing the third run with a sacrifice fly in Royals' ninth run in the eighth Tigers. B> BUN WELMERS break the string in the the fifth inning. Aikens has now inning. The Tigers' loss 440-yard relay at :47.02. dropped State News Sports Writer driven in all eight of his runs Kansas City starter Larry their record to 2-8. Five of the The weather was not the only Spartan middle-distance specialist Kelly Spatz dominated the Ex-Wolverine this season against Detroit Gura was only able to get one thing that was hot Saturday as 3,000-meter and 1,500-meter runs with first-place finishes. Bengals' defeats and both their the MSU women tracksters tallied 212 Spatz while LaCock has driven points for a first-place in recorded a time of 10:01 in the 3,000-meter, followed in out in the second inning and victories have come against the front of University of Michigan with 170 and Eastern by Spartans Dufek eight of his nine Michigan Sue Richardson and Mary Ann Opalewski in third and fourth resigns runs against surrendered five runs before Rovals, who have a 5-5 record. University with lit) in their home opening triangular meet. places. In the 1,500-meter registered 4:33 to beat out second-place As usual the women were consistently KENT, Ohio (UPI) - Donald strong in the track finisher Spartan Ann Pewe by a full second. events as they captured 10 Dufek has announced his resig- first-place and seven second-place Richardson and Candy Strobach captured first and second i i the finishes in overall competition. 5,000-meter run. natipn as athletic director at Kent State University. Lions 'bury''79 season poor In the 100-meter dash, the Spartan trio of Diane Williams, Cheryl Gilliam and Desiree Pritchett finished 1-2-3 with respective SPARTAN'S JUDY BROWN and Barbara Douglas also School officials said during times of: 11.82,: 11.99, and : 12.19. Williams' best effort in the event the weekend Dufek will official¬ contributed first-place finishes in the 400-meter hurdles and to date is : 11.5. PONTIAC (UPI) Most of Monte Clark. well 800-meter run respectively. ly-step down June 30 from the - as give them a chance to job he held since 1976. the Detroit Lions' veterans Last year, the Lions finished meet the coaches hired since Lynn Barber brought the Spartans the only blue ribbon in the IN THE 200-MF.TER dash, Gilliam was first to cross the finish turned out for a weekend with a dismal 2-14 record. field events in the shot put, heaving the Dufek has not disclosed his last December. line with a time of :24.2, one-tenth of a second ahead of eight-pound orb 43 feet mini-camp at the Pontiac Clark said he scheduled the Clark is paying particular Williams, two-and-one-half inches. future plans. who took second. Spartan Carol Charles was third with :25.3. Silverdome. camp to get an accurate attention to the players injured Wolverine Deb Williams outclassed the competition in the Dufek was athletic director Gilliam owns the MSU outdoor record in the event with a time of at Grand Valley State In addition to physical exam measure of the players' off-sea last year, especially quarter javelin throw, hurling the spear 148 feet, six inches. Debra Kaner Colleges :23.77. inations and short workouts, of Eastern was a distant second with a fling of 116 feet, 11 inches for four years before coming to son conditioning programs as back Gary Danielson. Gilliams, Williams, Prtichett and Cathy Miller teamed the players also took part in a up to followed by Spartan Kyle Wold with a 108-foot, 10-inch chuck. KSU. burial. As a football player at Michi¬ "One thing we want to make gan from 1948 through 1950, he sure of is that this camp marks frank shorter sports ^jiorlsmftstpr was elected to the Players All-America and tjie,. beginning of psychological All-Big 10 preparation, that we bury the squads in 1950 and was voted body of 1979 and do all the player of the game in the 1951 Rose Bowl. things it takes to make a MSU ASK THE EXPERTS successful 1980," said coach What's the latest and greatest in running this spring? ARTHUR TREACHER'S Sock-it-to-ya This *Are 420's a smarter buy than 620's? with term, Rodio Board, the governing body for the Jq THE ORIGINAL if $ a Michigan State Radio Network, is selecting a Chair¬ *Are the International shorts as good as Shorter Shorts? \V< FREE PAIR person for the 1980-1981 ocademic year. *Does the Arena SportBra out perform JogBra? Only on The Chairperson is responsible for chairing meetings of and performing various administrative tasks. *What's that new lacing sys¬ The tem on the Bermuda about? Chairperson must live on campus during the 1980- KODIAK SOCKS 1981 ocademic year. Ask us: We've got the goods, and lUesday we've got the experience! with the purchase of comfortable Applications are available at WBRS in Brody Hall, WMCD in McDonel Hall and WMSN in room 8 of the o ! OUR BUDGET BANQUET warm and durable Student Services Building. > Cfc COLE SLAW | BEVERAGE Danner Boots The deadline for returning completed is Tuesday April 22nd at 5:00 p.m. Interviews will applications ARTHUR'S FISH & CHI' be held on Thursday evening, April 24th, Michigan Ave. and Grand River frank shorter sports I Bring the Family stores only 217 Ann Street • 351-8550 1001 E GRAND RIVER andOURAND ACROSS FROM New York City's Labor ASMSU Hobie's CAMPUS Theater Presents ANNOUNCES JACK LONDON: ENGINEERING IN CAMBRIDGE, ENGLAND PETITIONING FOR: OPEN HAPPENINGS THE MAN FROM EDEN'S GROVE July 9 August 17,1980 Monday, April 21 Courses: ME 311, ME 351, ME 411, ME 455, ME 490, ond ME 499. • Assistant Executive Director OPEN STAGE 7:30 pm Erickson Kiva NIGHT Students are invited to attend an • Chief of Staff If you have the talent, London, Ameri we have the microphones! ca's master story¬ (Call ahead for 30 minute sets.) teller, comes to the • Director of Special Projects INFORMATION MEETING stage to tell his rugged tales of the TONIGHT, APRIL 21 at 7:30 P.M. • Director of Information GAME NIGHT sea. of haunting storit - the Gold Rush, Play your favorites and sign and tales of strug 3 Room 216, up for a tournament. Engineering Building • Director of Community Affairs Entertainment: Mark Tuller gles for social jus tice. A one-evening only performance. • Director of Campus Affairs DIME & DOLLAR Financial Aid and Special Scholarships Available to Qualified MSU Students • Director of Legislative Affairs NIGHT $1.5° Donation at the door For Further Beer and Party Subs by the inch Information, Contact; Bring your own glass or use one of ours Applications are available in After 8 pm. Office of Overseas Study Rm. 334 Student Services Entertainment: Gary Umlauf q«msored by the College of Arts and letters. Hotiois i olligi and are due by 5:00 p.m. mi's Madison College. University College. School of lain d Industrial Relations. American Studies Program. Hepartmei 108 International Center, 353-8920 Wednesday, April 30, 1980. 930 Trowbridfie American Thought and i'Office of the Provost. language. Knglish Department, an \ 10 Michigan State News. East Lansing, Michigan Monday, April 21, 1980 TROOPS PROTECT TERRIT U.N. forces sweep southern Lebanon By STEVE K. HINDY against future insurgent at¬ Shiite Moslem youth killed a trators who carried out the \ssocUtcd Press Writer Lebanon. weeks. tacks into northern Israel. week earlier in a clash with attack at Misgav Am came But U.N. observers have TIBNINE, Lebanon - U.N. Three months later, the Haddad's forces say the U.N. U.N. troops, not by his Chris¬ through the area where the been unable to confirm the oeacekeeping soldiers in south- Israeli troops withdrew from tian soldiers. U.N. force has been allowed to troops have not stopped the rn Lebanon olive fa¬ withdrawal because Haddad rebels operating in the area. wear the area. But before they left, exercise effective control." has not only refused to allow tigues. but their helmets and They point to the recent Kib¬ the markings on their white armored vehicles are baby blue. They make easy targets. they turned deep strip over on a the Lebanon border to rebel Leb¬ six-mile Israeli AFTER AN EMERGENCY 75-minute meeting Sunday, the,' Irish Cabinet issued a state¬ Israeli troops Lebanon again on swept into April 9, two days after rebels operating out them to move into his territory, but has refused to allow them to relieve the five U.N. truce butz attack. However, U.N. officials say their troops captured 116 Pales¬ PILOBOLDS? anese Army Maj. Saad Haddad. ment, saying: "The government of Lebanon staged an attack at observation posts on the Israel- On Friday two young Irish In the time since, Israeli tinian rebels attempting to understands that Israel is con¬ the Misgav Am kibbutz in Lebanon border. and soldiers — members of the leaders have staunchly stood by enter Israel last month. They why is it coming to the University cerned for its security and northern Israel and killed three nine-nation. 6.000-member U.N. the 42-year-old Haddad, supply¬ said U.N. Norwegian troops Auditorium for two performances ? sympathizes when death or Israelis. U.N. OFFICIALS ALSO peacekeepi g force in the area ing him with tanks and guns stopped five insurgents Thurs¬ injury is caused by attack from Lebanon's U.N. ambassador, charge that Haddad's forces — were abducted and shot to and paying his soldiers in an across the border." Ghassan Tueni, is now demand¬ day night and that Dutch death by Lebanese gunmen, have shelled their camps, kid¬ -a bunch of clowns, effort to protect Israel's nor¬ It added, however, "There troops blocked a group of rebels and a third was shot three ing the U.N. troops make napped their troops and stolen that had entered Haddad's ter¬ satyrs, jovial wolves thern border. evidence that the infil¬ was no certain all Israelis forces leave their equipment in times but survived. Israel claims it cannot control recent ritory the night before. six of the most extraordinary dancers Two U.N. observers with Haddad. However, Western now performing them en route to a U.N. military sources here said Had¬ a genus of saprophytic fungi observation post along the dad could not function without Lebanon-Israel border, and two Associated Press reporters Israeli help. And while Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Bleak future for % a.m. bar a tree of spasms muscles, elbows,buttocks, of energy traveling along, also were Begin has said repeatedly that a Broadway show seized but were released. he respects Lebanon's territor¬ By MICKI MAYNARD bills closing a loophole in the needed, leaving lawmakers ses and residents would have United Press International great vaudeville acrobats, Olympic When the U.N. forces moved ial integrity, U.N. sources say recently passed auto loan inter¬ with only a few weeks left to veto power over the longer The so-called "4 a.m. bar bill" est hikes. gymnasts into southern Lebanon in the Israelis are often in Had- push non-monetary measures. hours. March 1978, their mission, as dad's camp inside Lebanon. may pass out on the Senate Legislative leaders tradition¬ The bar bill allows cities with outlined by the Security Coun¬ floor this week as lawmakers ally save the final two months convention bureaus to grand Ireland blamed Haddad's DETROIT BARS WOULD cil, tackle one of the last batches of of session before was to enforce the "terri¬ torial integrity, sovereignty militia for the murder of its legislation before settling down recess — summer usually around July 1 restaurants and taverns a two- hour extension of drinking automatically be allowed stay open later. to TONIGHT troops Friday and criticized to thorny budget issues. and political independence of Israel for supplying Haddad — for work on budget hours from 2 a.m. to 4 a.m. House In the House, action is proponents of the MONDAY & WEDNESDAY Lebanon." with economic and military aid. ex¬ measures. Because of this However, neighboring busines¬ (continued on page 14) APRIL 21 & 23 at 8:15 p.m. But the renegade Lebanese pected on measures reorganiz year's particularly tight UNIVERSITY AUDITORIUM THEY WERE TO confirm major said again Sunday the act ing Detroit's court system and finances, more time may be the withdrawal of Israeli was carried out by relatives of a troops, who had swept through southern Lebanon in an effort to rout Palestinian rebels oper¬ ating there, and to guard "A NEW STARR'IS BORN! CHAKA KHAN - RUFUS Monique Starr has the most exquisite face and body you see I'm surprised (and thrilled) she's baring all in a porno film. She's certain to become a vogue cover girl. You'll be seeing her a lot more, but never more of her! Monique Starr is a knockout. And 'Femmes deSade is a mind-blower!" "ORIENTAL, CAUCASIAN, BLACK... BLONDES, Monty Alexander with the 10% OFF BRUNETTES, REDHEADS...THE MOST EXCIT¬ on all dinners when seated by 5:30 and ordered ING FOXY LADIES AND THE MOST BIZARRE PORNO ACTION EVER FAN- BROTHERS JOHNSON by 6:00. TASIED!" - Mel Williams MON.-SAT. 116 E. 372-4300 jUj' £ SALLY FIELD "If you think you've seen all there is to see,then you must WEDNESDAY APRIL 30 Michigan PIUS..AT 7:10 ONLY Audiences WW Cherish "BREAKING AWAY"„ see deReiuy's 'Femmes deSade: There's a whole lot more 8 PM MSU AUDITORIUM going on than you think!" -Jeff Gates $8.50 & 7.50 ON SALE APRIL 10 MSU UNION TICKET OFFICE.SOUNDS & DIVERSIONS AlexdeRenzy's WHEREHOUSE RECORDS II & III ftzmmcs I TIFFANY PLACE 3wfc * SUMOtTING ACTOt 3£m BEING wWTHEREei peter sellers ^1 SHIRLEY MacLAINE kSOTC Showtimes: 7:30, 9:00, 10:30 Ebony Productions is a division of the ASMSU Programming Board, funded by student tax information about money. For 24-hour Programming Board events, call the PB Hotline 353-2010. The Auditorium is accessible. - And Greenhouse Cafe Showpiece: 102B Wells \ Michigon Stole News, Eost Lonsing, Michigon Monday, April 21, 1980 1 1 IT ONLY TAKES MINUTES TO PLACE YOUR STATE NEWS 347 STUDENT SERVICES BUILDING CALL 355-8255 Automotive Classified Advertising Employment HTT1 [ Employment [[jj] | Employment |[jjT| [ Employment \\jl\ | Apartments \\W\ 1 Apartments |[^j PINTO 1977 AM-FM stereo, PART-TIME and summer em¬ PHONE 355-8255 347 Student Services RN's-GN's-SNT's PART-TIME Bldg. sunroof, automatic, sharp ployment with Michigan's cashier/book PASTE-UP IF YOU would like a place to SOUTH LANSING- Large, store attendant, neat appear Applications being taken for little car. 25 MPG. 351-8617. largest, multi-manufacturer rent, but don't know where clean one and two bedrooms, LANSING GENERAL HOS¬ Summer-Fall Regular Rates 8-4-23 (4) distributor. Automobile re¬ PITAL has full and part-time ance a must, good pay and terms. Only to look, call GREAT LAKES 10 minutes to campus, heat, working conditions, excellent those interested in working today for there's hun- quired. 339-9500. positions available for regis¬ sure, appliances, air and carpet job for student, apply in both terms need apply. Must dreds in book. 394-2680. From. $235. 393-1746 1 PLYMOUTH FURY 3, 1970, C-18-4-30 (5) our day • 95' per line tered and graduate nurses person only. Cinema X Adult have some experience in C-22-4-30 (5) 8-4-23 (61 new front brakes, runs well. and student tech¬ 3 days - 85' per line nurse Entertainment Center 1000 paste-up. Apply in person $200 or best offer. 393-5599. HELP WANTED. Waitresses. nicians. A 4 day, 10 hour per W. 6 days - 80' per line Jolly, Lansing. after 3 p.m. Monday. State ONE FEMALE needed to 10-4-22 (3) Excellent pay. 487-6825. Call day work week option allow¬ OR 8-4-30 (9) 8 days - 70' per line between 12-3 p.m. 4-4-22 (3) ing 3 day week-end is avail¬ News Composing, Suite 105, P-K Building, 301 MAC 711 BURCHAM RD. sublet for summer. Very close PONTIAC PHOENIX 1977 able on the to campus. Air conditioned midnight shift. STUDENTS NEEDED (basement). Low mileage. Excellent ESCORTS WANTED $6/ We offer: Primary Et Team playground supervisors at St. as NOW LEASING and furnished. Call Sandy 332-1952. 3-4-23 (5) condition. Lots of extras. hour, no experience neces¬ nursing, complete orientation Thomas Aquinas School. In R.N.-B.S.N. Preferred. Appli¬ For Summer Only Master 484-8291 or 339-2301. sary, we will train. 489 2278. program, continuing educa¬ East Lansing on busline. Charge & Visa Welcome cations are being accepted 2 FEMALE ROOMMATES 8-4-29 14) Apply in person at VELVET tion support system, excel¬ Available now thru mid June. for full- and part-time Com¬ Large One Bedroom needed for fall term. Large 2 FINGERS 527 E. Special Rates C-9-4-30 (5) Michigan. lent wage ano benefit pack¬ 11:30-12:20 Monday-Friday. munity health nurses. Home Apt. Completely fur¬ bedroom furnished. Many PONTIAC FIREBIRD 1970. age. For more information $3.50/day. Call Mary 337- Care. Send resume to J. 345 Ads-3 lines-s4.00-5 days. 80' per line over nished. extras. $112/person. 351 Standard shift. 56,000 miles. contact Personnel Office De¬ 0031 after 4 p.m. 8-4-30 18) Mollema, R.N., Administra¬ 7564. 3-4-23 (4) 3 lines. No adjustment in rate when cancel¬ partment, LANSING GEN¬ M6000 led. Price of item(s) for sale must be stated Good running condition. $350 or best offer. 353-7898 or TEACHERS ERAL HOSPITAL, 2800 De¬ vonshire, Lansing, Ml 48909. ANALYST/RESEARCHER tor, In Home Health Care, 633 E. Jolly Rd. Suite 4-A. Lan¬ For Appointment Call ROOMMATES NEEDED for in ad. Maximum sale price of s200. Private 355-0776. Ask for Alimami. All K-8 part-time to assist consumer sing, Ml 48910. 5-4-25 (9) grades. Low in¬ Phone 377-8335. EOE. summer large 2 bedroom, 8-4-25 (5) group in electric utility hear¬ party ads only. come Catholic schools 25-4-30 (24) ings. Must have advanced NEED 337-7328 furnished, pool, low rent Peanuts Personol ads—3 lines SPRING cleaning 351-7564. 3-4-23 (3) - *2.25 - per in¬ TOYOTA COROLLA 1972, in Teaxas. Small accounting or economics done, call for more infor¬ sertion. 75' per line 3 lines, (pre-pay- BABYSITTER IN Okemos FURNISHED STUDIO units, over four door, 71,000 miles, monthly stipend, fur¬ background. Good oppor¬ mation 655-4472. 8-4-30 13) M„ncn i „ o , ment) . standard. Air conditioning, nished housing and home. June 16th to July tunity for grad students. Flex¬ $185/month all utilities in- IS? I *JS Rummage/Garage Sale ads 4 lines • *2.50. little rust. $895. Call 355- 1193. 5-4-24 (4) basic needs provided. 25th. 30 hours per week Must have own transporta¬ ible hours, approximately 20 hours per week. $5 per hour. RED CEDAR LOG hiring eluded. Immediate occupan- cy, 337-1619. OR-22-4-30 (51 )' S1«,^nnpfu !BA, summer' $115/mon,h- 332 work study immediately. Call 63' per line over 4 lines-per insertion. Begin August 3. Write tion. Salary negotiable. Bene¬ Send or bring resume to 5-8263 or stop by 30 Student 'Round Town ads 4 lines s2.50-per insertion. Volunteers for Educa¬ fit of private swim club. VEGA '74, automatic, air, Utility Intervention Project, Services. 4-4-24 (4) SUMMER APARTMENT 63' per line over 4 lines. AM-FM, 28MPG. $650. 353- tional and Social Ser¬ 349-3608 after 5. 8-4-28 (8) 590 Hallister Building. sublet one block from cam¬ Lost & Found ads/Transportation ads —3 lines- 0147. 5-4-24 13) vices, Box N. 3001 So. 5-4-25 (13) EARN EXTRA money at pus on MAC, furnished, rent M inning 4-7-80 home. Good pay, easy work. ,50-per insertion. 50' per line over 3 lines. Congress, Austin, TX, SECRETARY EXPERIENCED negotiable. 351-6308 or 332- Win A Free No experience necessary. 0379 evenings. 5-4-25 (5) S/F Popcorn—(Sorority-Fraternity) 50' per line. 1 Auto Service | 78704. Poco Poster: downtown location, part time to start with potential to full Send for application report to Mr. Stephens 16118 Fen- Sorry, full Deadlines FALL SUBLET only- 2 grad ANNOUNCING: TO all guys BRAKES PARTS including and dolls. The answer to your — Check the Classi time, salary to commensurate more, Detroit, Ml 48235. for FALL females neet quiet female. 3 Want Ads-2 p.m.-l class day before public¬ with experience, send resume 10-4-29 (71 pads, shoes, and hydraulic own ultimate money making fieds for your student Now taking bedroom, $100, 349-9279. ation. to Box 10120 Lansing Michi¬ parts for your foreign car, in 3-4-23 13) business. If it has an engine - number. gan 48901. 5-4-25(8) DENTAL HYGIENIST posi¬ Cancellation Change-1 p.m.-l class day be¬ stock, at reasonable prices. CHEQUERED FLAG FOR¬ it needs MXO. Save your — If you find it bring tion open part-time. East applications NEEDED 3 people to share fore publication. customers and EIGN CAR PARTS, 2605 E. gas money. D. card to rm. 347 CONGRATULATIONS Lansing/Haslett area. 339- for SUMMER 4-man apartment for sum¬ Classified Display deodline-3 Everyone needs our time If student number is p.m.-2 class Kalamazoo Street. One mile tested and proven products. Student Services with- your 9656. 20-5-14 (4) mer. $85 per month. 332- days before publication. west of campus. 485-5055. 746012, you have won a free 8791.8-4-30 (3) SELL - you can make big week and get POCO poster. Bring I.D. to 332-5322 Once ad is ordered it cannot be cancelled or C-22-4-30 181 YOUR TIME IS YOUR OWN. money. Amway, Avon, Mary a free poster! 347 Student Services within 1 1128 Victor Stmt Sell Avon part-time. Earn ONE FEMALE roommate for changed until after 1st insertion. Kay, Shaklee, Stanley, and all Starting 4-7-80!! week. 1-4-21 (6) EMU ROC There is o M.00 charge for 1 ad JUNK CARS wanted. Also direct sales people welcome. good money and set your summer sublet in Americana change plus selling used parts. Phone For information - write Box own hours. Ask about low 332-8488 Apartments. Non-smoker 50' per additional THE U.S. Air Force is looking change for maximum 321-3651. C-22-4-30 (3) 26232 Lansing, 48909 Hurry! cost group insurance cover¬ 252 Rivor Street Rent negotiable. Call 351 - of 3 changes. LIKE TO DRIVE? for qualified young men and Act Now! 8-4-21 (61 age. For more details call 7023. 3-4-22 (4) DO IT FOR women with an interest in 482-6893. C-22-4-30 (7) The State News will MASON BODY SHOP, 812 E. only be responsible for DOMINO'S PIZZA flying as pilots or navigators, SUMMER SUBLET 1 bed¬ the 1st days incorrect insertion. Kalamazoo since 1940. Auto room. New carpet, across SUMMER SUBLET. Ef¬ Adjust¬ painting-collision service. GRADUATING ENGINEERS starting at about $14,000 HALL MONITOR East Lan¬ from campus. 351-0926. $250 ficiency, $155/month plus ment claims must be made within 10 Now hiring full and part-time annually and climbing to days American, Foreign cars. 485- We are specialists in Engi- sing High School 7:45 a.m. to 5- 4-22 (3) electricity and deposit. 1 of expiration date. 0256. C-22-4-30 (5) delivery people. Flexible $23,000 after 4 years. If block from campus. Call 351 leering Recruitment, Entry 1:45 p.m. Monday-Friday. Bills are due 7 hours with paid vacations you're between the ages of days from ad expiration date. evel to management. We and 21 and 27, have a Bachelors $3.30 per hour. Apply in LARGE 2 BEDROOM, air 4850 after 11p.m. 3-4-22 (51 If not paid by due date a M.00 late AUTOMATIC holiday benefits. Can TRANS¬ epresent firms located person Personnel office East conditioned, heat and pool make up to $5/hour with degree or will be getting one service MISSIONS for American throughout the U.S. Our Lansing Public Schools. 509 facilities included. Dishwash¬ charge will be due. commission and tips. Apply soon, you may be eligible! SUNTAN cars. Rebuilt, $125. Installa¬ vice is free Call or Burcham Dr. OR-8-4-24 (6) er. $325/month. Very clean. at the following locations: Find out more by calling Dick tion available. 323-4401. re to Shermtech Ilene 349-5117. 4-4-22 (5) 8-4-23 (4) ica, Suite D 16647 Mitlyng at 351-0640. 1139 E. Grand River, 10-5-2 (15) For Rent Automotive Automotive MUFFLER MAN Mufflers, shocks, coil spring Airport Rd., LANSING 48906 (517-323-1002) E. Lansing 966 Trowbridge, E. Lansing CLERK WANTED - Adult ONE BEDROOM apartment a nice place for a bachelor SOyBui, ■IRST VISIT TREE 10- 4-28 16) Bookstore. VELVET FIN¬ FALL HOUSING - DON'T 30% discounts to students. person, East Lansing, private B'dg 30' M»C E .in, COUNSELORS, MICHIGAN GERS, 527 E. Michigan, 489- GET CAUGHT IN THE entrance and driveway, back 351-1805 ATTENTION WE buy late 1975 FORD Pinto. 26,000 Lifetime guarantee. 5103 S. Boy's Camp. June 23 to COLD! GREAT LAKES 394- WSI LIFEGUARD Teach 2278. C-22-4-30 (4) door leads to patio and model imported and domes- miles very good mileage, Logan at Jolly. 394-5060. - August 16. Areas open: 2680. C-22-4-30 (4) beautiful lawn. Gas ROOMMATE NEEDED for tic compact cars. Contact Bill Very good condition. $1800. OR-18-4-30 (5) very young to 12 years, must large Judo, gymnastics, archery, be flexible. Call YMCA im¬ LIFEGUARD POSITION. En¬ and Burcham, WILLIAMS VW, Call 485-6347 or 372-1229. arts/crafts. stove refrigerator fur¬ summer to share two bed¬ Competitive mediately. 489-6501. closed private pool. Lansing- If you must sell your pet, call nished, $180/month plus utili¬ room apartment. Close to 484-1341. C-22-4-30 (5) 5-4-22 (4) GOOD USED tires, 13, 14, 15 salaries. Write: FLYING 8-4-21 14) Groesbeck subdivision. May us with a classified ad. We'll ties, lease, no pets 351-0946. EAGLE, 1401 N. Fairvrew, campus. $170/person. 337- inch. Snow tires too! Mount¬ 24-June 30. 28 hours/week: make the job easier for you. X-2-4-21 (10) 0566. 8-4-21 (41 ed free. Used wheel and hub Lansing, Mich. 48912. Give July 1-September 1, 36 caps. PENNELL SALES, 1825 background/experience. TELEPHONE SURVEYING. hours/week. Require W.S.I, Michigan, Lansing, Michigan 2-8-4-22 191 Evenings 5-9 from our office. certificate and 3 current re¬ 48912. 482-5818. $3.25/hour plus bonus. Call ferences. More information. Have a Housing Problem? C-22-4-30 (6) East Lawn Memory Gardens Call 372-3018 after 3:30 p.m. 349-9180. 8-4-24 (5) 3-4-23 (11) Get a Solution by 1979 CAMARO- Berlinetta, MONTE CARLO, 1975. Pow¬ air plus many extras, like 332-7904. 5-4-25 (3) er steering/brakes, air, $1300 best offer. 882-0122. 1 Aviation ~| [\1 NOW LEASING tor placing an ad in Ctopdungbam new. or 8-4-21 (3) CAPRI-II Ghia- 1976- v-6, 4 OLDS CUTLASS Cruiser BEAT learn THE to 55MPH fly. blues- Experienced FALL and SUMMER THE HOUSING GUIDE speed, runs excellent, asking - instructor. Call 224-7915. $2000 or best offer. 485-8206 Wagon 1978. Loaded, built in Z-8-4-25 131 For information call 2 BEDROOM FURNISHED LUXURY APTS. on April 29, 1980 CB. $4375. 351-0350 or 349- CAPITOL VILLA APARTMENTS evenings. 8-4-29 (4) 'private bolconies *<6«h washer, disposal 3818. 10-4-23 (4) 332-5330 Keep cool this summer. 1654 E.Grand River 'swimming pool 'shag corpeting CHEVETTE 1978. 20,000 PACER X 1976. Bucket seats. Watch our Classified col¬ •control air 'heat included miles. 4-door. automatic. 4 new tires. $1650. Cruise umns for early sales on air NORWOOD APARTMENTS $3250. 627-3792. 8-4-29^3^ control. 332-5354. 8-4-22 (3) conditioners. 351-5647 *2 Blocks from 2 inches for s10. Deadline, Wednesday campus on busline 1330 E. Grand River *Ask about our special 12 month rates CHEVY 1974 Malibu Classic. CEDAR VIEW APARTMENTS April 23. Prepayment Required. V8, Air power. $1450. 351 Burcham Woods 731 351-5647 5467 or 337-9305. 8-4-21 (3) 1390 E. Grand River Now leasing for Summer & Fall State News Classifieds HURRY just a few RIVERSIDE APARTMENTS CHEVROLET 1975 3/4 pick-up with top. $1300 ton or left for FALL 351-5647 CALL 351-7166 Located at Hogadorn just south of Service Road best offer. 394-6304. 8-4-29 (3) APARTMENTS Now taking appli¬ 1310 E.Grond River cations for Summer 76 CUTLASS SALON Red and black, buckets, air, con¬ - dishwc Just in time for • pool sole, stereo, 40,000 miles. Excellent condition. 485-2022 8-4-21 (4) 'Shag Carpeting 'On-site Manogement • air • • conditioning ample parking MOTHERS DAY! 'Private Balconies furnished DODGE OMNI, 1979, 024, •SWIMMING POOL • bus service • tennis courts Let us send your message 2-door, lots of options, $4500, 'Close to Campus near by firm 627-3819. 8-4-29 (3) LEASING FOR of Love 745 BURCHAM FIAT BRAVA- 1979 stick, 14 SUMMER & FALL with our special month warranty. 8500 miles. 351-7212 for information call: $4400 646 8251 X-8-4-22 (3) 731 Burchom Drive 351-3118 9:30-4:30pm MOTHERS DAY Offer FIESTA, 1978 35 mpg, good condition, $3,200. Call 353- 8780 or 521-4340 after 5 p.m. Now Leasing For CAMPUS Wednesday, May 7, 1980 3-4-23 (3) and Fall HILL 4 lines *3.00, 70c per line over 4 lines. Look for a good job? Read our employment columns "2 Bedrooms - Price includes mailing copy of ad to every day. 'Furnished Apts. your Mother! *Free Roommate Service Deadline Wednesday, April 30, 1980 Amuss - CEDAR \'(to "Dishwashers "Central Air Conditioning Name: Student No: GREENS iJL ** _ _ "Swimming Pool Address: Phone: • ONE BEDROOM WHEN YOU SEE "Unlimited Parking Where to be mailed: FURNISHED APARTMENTS • AIR COLLINGWOOD "Pleasant Landscaping Name: CONDITIONING • SWIMMING POOI "Special 12-mcnth rates • PRIVATE BALCONIES APARTMENTS Address: .City _ - Z'P - • WITHIN WALKING "Heat Included AD: DISTANCE TO CAMPUS 'air conditioned FREE BUS 'dishwasher NOW LEASING FOR 'shag carpeting SERVICE 'unlimited parking SUMMER & FALL •2 bedroom OPEN EVERYDAY 'model open daily FOR LEASING 351-8631 Call 351-8282 Summer & Fall Return to State News Classified, rm 347 Next tn Brody CALL 349-3530 Student Services - Prepayment required. ] ^Michigon State News. Eost Lansing. Michigan Monday. April 21, 1980 Apartments 1 pp] [ Apartments |[^] |~ Houses Rooms For Sale ||<>| I Animals IPS] | Instructions I WailBl )[S It's What's FEMALE NEEDED immedi- BEST BARGAIN IN TOWN! HOUSE 1-bedroom. Sum¬ ROOMS, QUIET, close. Fur SEWING MACHINES atelv for remainder of spring term Er for summer sublease 1 and 2 bedroom Mobile homes. From $155/month. 'A mer. 1-2 people. 3 blocks to nished. Renting now, spring, Singer machines from $99.50. - new PUPPIES, LAB Setter, black, 6 weeks old. Weaned. $10 UP WITH THE SUN STABLES ONE FEMALE stripper for a bachelor party. Contact Happening MSU. Jane at 351 2840. Judy summer, fall. Men and wo Guaranteed used machines Rates are reasonable. Call each. Call 337 7606 John. 337 0396. mile from campus. 337-1056. at 351-7878. 3-4-23 (4) men spacious kitchen and Boarding/training, lessons. from $39.50 All makes re¬ E-5-4-22 (3) Announcements for It's What's 351-6756 evenings. 6-4-25 (5) C-18-4-30 14) Indoor/outdoor arenas. 15 X-Z-4-4-23 (3) community rooms. 332-3700. paired EDWARDS DISTRI Happening must be received in the minutes south of MSU. LARGE 2 BEDROOM fur Z 8-4-21 (6) BLJTING COMPANY, 1115 N. GERMAN SHEPHERD 1 589 5414 or 337-2028. State News office, 343 FEMALE TO Sublet, two EAST LANSING- Close to nished, very nice. $550 avail¬ WANTED STARTING fall Student Washington. 489 6448 Puppies. AKC. 314 months 5-4-21 (6) Services Bldg., by noon at least person apartment $87 per Available able June. 332-3900 own bedroom in apartment campus. now, un¬ MALE STUDENT rooms 332 C 22-4 30 (8) old. Wormed. $50.00 Call two days before month near MSU. Pets are OR 8-4-30 (4) near MSU. Female. Call 355 publication. No furnished, one bedroom, no 5791 after 5:30 weekend any 676 9468 after 5p.m. announcements will be o.k. full option available. 351 1554 after 7p.m. 5-4-24 (5) children or pets, grads pre¬ ferred. 12 month lease, $245 2 BEDROOM DUPLEX, appli time. 3-4-23 (3) YASHICAFRII, 35 millimeter, SLR, with 50 millimeter F1-9 E-5-4-24 (3) for "WkXl? professional modelini 6805. 3-4-22 (3) R.N.-B.S.N. Preferred. Appli by phone. accepted + electrical. 332-5988. ances, available immediately. 2 BEDROOM FOR students lens: Fully auto exposure; SUMMER SUBLEASE to train for Live Fashion cations are being accepted modern, furnished, 2 bed¬ OR-18-4-30 (5) $440 + utilities. 372-2213 for lease Summer term. excellent condition. $170, af¬ Lost & Found Show, for full- and part-time. Com¬ MSU l-go Club meets at 7 627-5776. 8-4-30 (4) $300/month. Magazine, Photo tonight, A 135 Wells Hall. Topic: room apartment. Air, close to Security de¬ ter 6 p.m. 351 1985. FEMALE TO share Spartan E-5-4-21 (6) graphy, T V. No experience munity Health nurses, home Go, an oriental board game. Open posit. Call collect evenings GOLD WEDDING band lost campus. 332-8327. 3-4-22 (3) Village Fall '80. Call Sue CREATIVE AMBITIOUS (313) 437-1317. 8-4-30 (6) necessary. care. Send resume to J. to the public. 355-1062. 5-4-22 13) on way from Giltner to Lib¬ Mollemat, R.N., Admini¬ people, to join me in finding a MARANTA HD-80 stereo i - house for next school year. rary. 355-5768. 2-4-29 (3) strator, In Home Health Care, SLEEPING ROOMS, down speakers, excellent condition. MSU Tai Chi Club ENJOY THIS FOUR MAN sublet Want to form an interesting 633-E. Jolly Rd. Suite 4-A. meets at 6 summer town Lansing, completely List $740 pair, sell $450, LOST HEWLITT Packard cal- Professional Modeling of p.m. Monday and Wednesday, Lansing, Ml 48910. 5-4-29 (9) SUMMER AT Twyckingham oool, $69/per- living environment. Business furnished 485-2747 or 485 485-8345. 5 4-21 (3) cular 33C. Reward. 337-1797. Lansing, Inc. 351-0031. Tower Room, Union. Open to the son, price negotiable. 337- potential. Non-smoking, 2774. 5-4-25 (3) public. 3 4-23 (31 RIVIR'S A WATER'S 7211. 8-4-24 (3) straight only. 487-0905. WANTED SILVER COINS PRIVATE GUITAR EDGE ARTS. S 5-4-25 (5) MASTER BEDROOM avail¬ SNOW & BONG SALE tion. Beginners through ad¬ instruc paying eleven times face International Folkdancing meets 1 or 2 FEMALES to share LOST-GOLD digital pocket value. 355-1101. 3-4-21 (3) from 7:30 to 10 tonight, Bailey "oir conditioned able immediately in luxury vanced. Call MARSHALL Collingwood Fall term. $98 75 SUMMER SUBLET-two duplex. Reasonable, near Bongs of half price watch with inscription. $RE- Elementary School. Bring tennis 15% off all WARD$. Call 351-2625. MUSIC CO. 337 9700. Open month. Elaine. 353-6548. rooms available in 5 bedroom campus. 332-6212. 3-2-3 (4) COINS-WILL buy U.S., and shoes. Open to the public. *on Red Cedor River house. Own room-$100. Sun SNOW SUPPLIES 10-5-2 (4) weeknights until 9:00 p.m. 6-4-21 (3) foreign. All metals. Also rings ♦free canoes Saturdays 10 a.m.-5 p.m. and watches. 625-3296. deck, porch. 351-1246. ROOM AVAILABLE in house Al Anon, a self-help group for T-Shirfs C-22-4-30 (6) ROOMMATE NEEDED. 1-4-21 14) June 8. Female $75 per $2.50 8-4-25 (3) friends and relatives of alcoholics, Beginning Fall term. Own month. Call 371-4182 Mobile Homes meets at 8 p.m. Tuesday, direc¬ room in 2 bedroom apart¬ CONGRATULATIONS GUITAR LESSONS- Home tor's apartment, Owen Graduate 8-4-29(3) 332-4432 ment. Near Abbott-rent If your student number is ROOM FOR rent, reasonable 2 BEDROOM. $5000 cash or $1000 down on land contract study program with personal instruction. No need for I Round Town~lfT1 Center. Open to the public. negotiable. Call Steve at 351 - 777522, you have won a free 8303. 8-4-25 (5) POCO poster. Bring I.D. to must occupy by June 1. Call with no interest. 543-5024. weekly appointment. Send THE BLACK MSU Single Parents meets from LOOKING FOR fall housing? after 5p.m. 337-0430. Orpheus Gospel 347 Student Services within 1 NEW YORK (LGA) American 5-4-23 (31 name, address, for sample Choir presents their 9th an¬ 6 to 8 tonight, MSU Day Care Call Mid-Michigan. Thev FEMALE TO share two bed¬ week. 1-4-21 (6) 8-4-29 (3) Airlines open ticket. Must use lesson. Sun Dew Publishing Center, Cresent Road, Spartan have over 400 properties to nual spring concert. May 4, by 4 24-80. $50. 349-5735 MONARCH 1974 14x70. 2 Box 333, Mason, Ml 48854 choose from, and they spe¬ room apartment on Bogue 1980, 6:00 p.m. Union Ball Village. Open to the public. Street. Own room, Beginning NEED 3 FEMALES to share 5 after 4 p.m. E-5-4-23 (4) bedroom, extras. Perry, 625- 8-4-25 (7) cialize in the MSU area. Call ROOMS ACROSS from Wil¬ room- Admission Free. fall. Call 355-6805. 3-4-22 (41 bedroom duplex. 2 baths, 4424. 10-4-30 (3) 5-4-25 (5) MSU Chess Club meets at 7 today and see if they have liams Hall on Michigan Ave. what you're looking for. 349- near campus. Will take 351-3038 or 351-9538. DISCOUNT, NEW- used TUTORING IN Spanish tonight, 304 Bessey Hall. Open to SUMMER SUBLEASE - singles. 332-1412. 10-5-2 (41 desks, chairs, files. BUSI¬ conversation, grammar and the public. 1065. C-22-4-30 (8) OR-22-4-30 (3) Two non-smoking females needed for cheap. 1 block EAST LANSING 1 bedroom NESS EQUIPMENT CO,, 215 E, Kalamazoo. 485-550. [ Personal 1 ["/] writing. Native speaker plus high school teaching exper¬ Yakeley-Gilchrist Black Caucus SINGLE ROOMS, $90. Ac¬ from campus apartment. Call duplex available now. Ste- OR 1-4-21 (4) ience. 484-0343. 8-4-22 (5) meets at 7 p.m. ross from campus, parking, Monday and River's & Water's 337-2489. S-5-4-23 (51 Mar Realty. 339-3512. Thursday, Yakeley-Gilchrist Black cooking. 332-2763, no an¬ ELECTROLYSIS TUTORING AND OR 8-4-30 (3) SHARP ELECTRIC printing English Culture Room. Topic: The Revital- Edge Apartments Now leasing for QUIET FURNISHED one bed¬ swer, 351-4495. 3-4-23 (4) calculator model EL 1166, ^ m grammar composition, essay and research paper. All ages, ization Program. Open to the # room, next to campus. 332- MINI-FARM for rent, seven OWN ROOM in large fur¬ never been used $75. 393- public. summer only 4458. 8-4-25 (3) acres and pond adjacent to nished house summer lease 0804. 10-5-2 (4) Michigan teaching certificate, ON THE RIVER Rose Lake Wildlife Research with fall option, laundry, $100 Virginia Ham hrti 8 years teaching experience, Opportunity for juniors and Area. 6 bedroom 3 bath and KENWOOD RECEIVER 2017 S. Cedar 484-0343. 8-4-22 (6) seniors to earn academic credit AIR CONDITIONED 2 TO 3 BEDROOMS in town- per month. Steve 337-1849. appliances. Call Dave, Tues¬ Model KR-3600, 1 year old, Phone 484-1632 house across from campus. 5-4-23 (5) interning with the Detroit Human Sorry. Full For Fall Fall and summer leasing. day to Saturday 351-3835. Available May 15. 5-4-25 (7) like new, $140. 351-0772. 5-4-25 (4) Call our classified department Typing Service Rights Department. Contact David Persell, College of Urban Develop¬ 261 River St. 351-8135 or 351-3038. ROOM FOR rent, country with your OR-12-4-30 (5) ad now! We want ment. (next to Cedar Village) AVAILABLE NOW East Lan¬ living, female, utilities in¬ NICE, GREAT big couch. to help you sell the items you ACCURATE TYPING. 6 years sing Lake Lansing Road, cluded, rent negotiable 641 - Must sell before end of term. no longer use. secretarial Women In experience. IBM Communication, 332-4432 NEEDED ONE female to live redecorated 2 bedroom, large 6305 after 5. 10-4-28 (4) Good condition. Make me an Correcting. Dissertations, Inc., holds a members-only meet¬ in 2 bedroom apartment, lot, garage discounted to offer. 337-2992. Mark H. thesis, term papers, editing. ing at 7 tonight, 342 Union, SUNTAN $100 per month, 12 month SUMMER one block APARTMENTS from campus. lease. 353-6170. 5-4-23 (41 $275. Call Equity Vest 351- 1500 or 393-4958 after 5. TWO ROOMS in 4 man house for summer. $115/ month. 485-6664. 6-4-24 (3) S-5-4-25 (5) Call 374-8627. 12 5-2 (4) LO followed by an open video work¬ shop at 8:30, Tower Room, Union. OR1-4-21 (6) Clean, quiet, air conditioned. Call evenings. 349-3413. 8-4-23 (4) FEMALE ROOMMATE to share 3 person apartment. SUMMER SUBLET- New OWN ROOM and half bath, LADIES FULL length rabbit fur coat, $90 or best offer, size 5-7, call Sandy after 5, „5tayfofr FIRST VISIT FREE TYPING - IBM reasonable rates, ten minutes from campus, 393-5123. 14 Selectric ITS Women's Caucus and the De¬ partment of Political Science pre¬ Spring with summer option. near MSU on Stoddard, yard 337-0260. 8-4-28 141 duplex, 4-5 person occu¬ 882-9810. 5-4-25 (5) >K 8109 301 M A c E Lai! years experience. 5-4-23 (4) sent a colloquim on Congressional pancy, 2 blocks from cam¬ parking, no lease, prefer girl, 351-1805 Elections with Susan Welch's GRAD FEMALE. non- Call 332-2000. 3-4-21 (4) THESIS EDITING by profes¬ smoker, room, campus room in two bed¬ close, June 10 UNIVERSITY VILLA pus. Call 337-1561. 5-4-25(4) MILK CASES, sturdy plastic, 12" by 12" by 10.5" inside, sionals with advanced de¬ OO research at 3:30 p.m. Tuesday, 324 South Kedzie Hall. Open to the through June 1981. 351-1712. 8-4-23 (4) 635 Abbott ROOMMATES House across NEEDED. from campus. FEMALE. NEAR Frandor and bus. Own room. $30/week. 75£each. Makes nice storage, book shelf. 676-5460, 676- | Peanuts Personal 1 fSfl grees. Free consultation. 8602. 3-4-21 (4) 339- i public. Showing: 3-7pm M-F Starting fall 1980 from $100. Call Pat 372-2011. 8-4-25 (3) to 2047. 9-4-25 (5) DEREK- WE made it! Two Mid-Michigan Genealogical SUMMER SUBLET-femaleto Manager: Apartment $311 332-7476. 5-4-23 (5) TYPING IBM correctable Society meets at 7:30 p.m. Call 337-2653 or 351 8135 years behind us and many share 2 bedroom apartment. 1 BLOCK FROM campus, SYLVANIA STEREO with more to come. Love always, selectric. 7a.m. to 7p.m. Wednesday, Social Hall of Near campus. $170/month or best offer. Diane 332-0287 FALL AND SUMMER LEASING SUBLEASE 4-MAN SUMMER SUBLET - Six bedroom house, two blocks from campus on Grove St. several rooms available. $75 to $90 per month. All utilities AM/FM and record changer. $75. 485-9061. E-5-4-21 (3) Karen. Z1-4-21 (4) Phone Ruth 641-6934. 8-4-25 (3) L© People's Church East Lansing. Topic: Records available at the Fort Wayne. Ind., Library, Open to CO weekdays after 9:30 p.m. or near included. Before 3:30, 489- Sundays. 8-4-23 16) campus for summer (2 bed¬ Price negotiable. Call 351 - 5314. 8-4-24 (51 SMALL FRIGIDAIRE 30" I Real Estate \[m\ EXPERT TYPING. Disserta¬ the public. room). $180/month. 351-9015 5574. 3-4-21 (4) high and 20x20 campus size tions - theses - business 8-4-28 (3) PROFESSIONAL WOMAN refrigerator, $100. 489-4523. PERRY AREA- New cedar legal. MSU grad. 337-0205. Spanish Club meets at 3 p.m. FARM HOUSE for rent $235 OR GRAD. STUDENT. Room E-5-4-21 (3: C-22-4-30 (3) sided chalet, 3-4 bedrooms, SUBLET 1 Bedroom, Birch- month plus deposit. For mar¬ in elegant older home with today, Language Lab, Wells Hall. 1 'A bath, appliances, water APARTMENTS Topic: video presentation of "Ayer ' 5 blocks to compus field Apartments, $200 plus electric. Call 372-1769. 8-4-22 (4) ried couple. Call between 5:00-6:00 p.m. Mason area. 676-9342. 3-4-21 (5) privileges. Close to campus and busline. $175/month. Call STEREO - YAMAHA re¬ ceiver CR 1020, Sony turn¬ table PSX-5, audio tech. car¬ softener, carpeted. 3 acres. $49,500. 625-4144 Aldrich EXPERIENCE TYPING of dis¬ sertations and theses, editing © Es Nunca Jamas." Open to the public. Social hour follows. 1 351-2766. 5-4-22 (6) Associates. S-4-30-6 and graphic service available large 2 bedroom tridge 15 SA, Yamaha speak¬ 372-2098 after 5 p.m. apartments EAST LANSING- A few 1 HOUSES 2-7 bedroom. 12 ers NS 69011. Excellent 1 furnished ROOMS IN beautiful Victori¬ con¬ MSU - ONE MILE 8-4-21 (5) Study mechanical engineering bedroom apartments avail¬ month lease starting fall. No Now Renting For able from $225. Heat in¬ cluded. Pool, laundry facili¬ pets. 2 blocks to 5 miles from campus. Nice houses. Call an rooming house. One block MSU. Furnished. Kitchen, dition, $1200, over $1700 new. 645-2125. 8-4-24 (8) Fireplace three accents bedroom located at sound TYPING FREE delivery. Fast, pick-up and © in Cambridge, England, this sum¬ mer. Overseas Study information meeting is at 7:30 tonight, 216 Summer & Fall ties Er easy access to I-69. parking, from $110, includes 2232 Forest Road. 9900 experience, 332-3700 9:00a.m. to noon or MARSHALL MUSIC CO. utilities, year lease. 332-1800. down, $350 per month. Dave low rates. 676-2009. Engineering Bldg. North Point Apartments, 2-5p.m. Monday-Friday or Your headquarters for pro¬ OR-15-4-23 (6) Fry Realty. 641-4512. OR-13-4-30 (4) Call 332-0052 1250 Haslett Rd,, Apartment see list on door of room 6 at fessional P A. gear, electric 8-4-25 (6) New Games Festival celebrating 7 332-6354. OR-14-4-30 (8) 201 Vi Grand River (Above keyboards, guitars and amps. between lpm-4pm UNIGRAPHICS OFFERS Earth Day '80 begins at 4 p.m. Hosier's). Z-9-4-30 (10) A gratis rom Call 337-9700 or stop in. NORTHEAST, MINUTES COMPLETE RESUME SER¬ Frandor Mall, 3 blocks from today, IM Sports-West. Sponsors: i pensjonat VICE: 3 PEOPLE FOR 2 bedroom EVERGREEN APTS 3 FEMALES Needed to share om du shakker west campus. Free parking. from MSU 3 bedroom, brick and aluminum ranch, built in typesetting; offset printing; and bindery services MSU Recreation, PIRGIM. Open to the public. furnished apartment, $90/ 341 Evergreen 4-person duplex for summer C-22-4-30 17) term. Fall option for 1 person. horsk china closet, enclosed patio, Approved dissertation print¬ month, Bill 337-2429. Showing: M-W-F 4-6pm 10 minute walk from campus. mature trees and bushes, ing and binding specialists. 8-4-24 (31 Manager: Apartment 2G John 351-4495 WANTED priced in the sixties. Call For estimate, stop in at 2843 Attention University Apartment Call 351 2426or 351 8135 $95/month. 355-9347. residents: informal co-rec basket¬ Louise Sabiano 485-3144 or E. Grand River or phone NEEDED QUIET female to FALL 8 SUMMER LEASING 8-4-28 (5) Guitars ball is from 7 to 9 tonight, Red - cameras - bicycles - 484-5474. 8-4-22 (7) 332-8414. C-22-4-30 (9) share large 2-bedroom fur¬ nished apartment. Own room ROOMMATE NEEDED start¬ 5 BEDROOM, 1 block from For Sale stereo gear-jewelry LOW RATES - COMPUTER © Cedar School. Sponsor: East Lan¬ sing Community Education. $115 a month. 394-1352 after ing May. 2 bedroom town- campus. 321-0081 after 3. 8-4-29 (3) NEW AND used guitars, ban¬ Recreation TYPING Resumes, Thesis, • ^ 3:00 p.m. 8-4-24 (5) house. 394-7076. 8-4-28 (3) Term Papers. Call "G" Typ¬ jos, mandolins, etc. Dulci¬ MSU Counseling Center offers 2 BEDROOM, Part utilities mers and kits. Recorders, DISC JOCKEY ing. 321-4771. C-22-4-30 (4) the workshop "Study Skills" from LARGE 2-PARTY furnished Instant cash-WILCOX HASLETTARMS garage, close to MSU avail¬ thousands of hard to find TRADING POST. 509 E. #1 SOUND Et DISCOUNT NEED A 4 to 5 p.m. today, 150 Student 135 Collingwood efficiency. Close to campus. Air conditioning. Summer able now for 1 year. $300. 332-8391 after 4. 8-4-29 (4) albums and books. Discount prices. Expert repairs free Michigan, Lansing. Phone RECORDS you your team up to favorite tunes for bring computer library search or a produced biblio¬ cn Services come. Bldg. All students wel¬ - 485-4391. C-14-4-30 112) Showing: 2-6pm M-F Coll 351-1957 or 351-8135 only - $150/month. After 5 p.m. 487-4451 DUPLEXES. 3 to 4 persons. estimates. ELDERLY STRUMENTS 541 E. Grand IN¬ your next party. Phone 332- 2212. Ask for Tom. graphy? Call GATEKEEPERS, at 349-6886 8-4-23 (4) w RECORDS! THOUSANDS to Women's Summer Leasing Only '190->200/MQNTH OR-10-4-30 (5) SUBLET MAY to August Semi-furnished, summer fall. Call 669-9939. 20-5-15 (3) or River 332-4331. C 22-4-30 (9) choose from 75£ and up, all quality guaranteed. WAZOO 22 4-30 (7) SPRINGTIME a noontime discussion is p.m. Resource at Tuesday, 334 Union. Topic: Center 12:15 DISCWASHER $10 new. ENTERTAIN¬ 2-bedroom with dishwasher. - RECORDS, 223 Abbott, 337- MENT. Horseback women's art: slide presentation SUMMER SUBLEASE, car¬ SUMMER SUBLET own FLAT BLACK Er CIRCULAR. riding, Last years rates. Call 339- 0947. C-22-4-30 (5) C-22-4-30 (3) and discussion of domestic peted furnished one bed¬ room 2 people needed $77 hayrides, sunset rides, moon¬ and Above Paramount News. folk art. 8956 after 6. 8-4-25 (41 light rides, and campouts. room, good for one or two per month plus utilities, close C-12-4-30 (3) people, two blocks from to campus. Call 351-5838. BOOKS! 3 floors of books, Boarding and lessons avail¬ COPYGRAPH SERVICE campus, reasonable rent. 124 CEDAR, E. Lansing, 2 3-4-22 (4) magazines and comics. able. CRAZY C RIDING COMPLETED, DISSERTA¬ Food and Nutrition Association DICKER AND DEAL 351-8579. X 1-4-21 15) man. 1 bedroom furnished. CURIOUS BOOK SHOP, 307 STABLE. 676-3710. TIONS AND RESUME SER¬ meets at 4:30 SECOND HAND STORE p.m. today, 9 $250 including heat Er hot East Grand River, East Lan¬ OR-2-4-21 (7) VICE, Corner MAC and Human Ecology Bldg. Christy ROOMMATE TO share house WITH 90 DAY SUBLET SUMMER. spaces, on river, price nego¬ Two water. 129 Burcham, 2 man furnished efficiency. $180 in¬ with four occupants for two GUARANTEES sing. 332-0112. C-22-4-30 (5) BLUEGRASS EXTENSION Grand River, 8:30 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday-Friday, 10 a.m.-5 tn Allen will speak pn Peace Corps, VISTA and ACTION. Open to the month- April 15. 321-0881. tiable. Call 332-3799. cluding heat Er hot water. 8-4-23 (3) Top quality pre-owned mer¬ WHITE WEDDING dress, size SERVICE plays weddings, p.m. Saturday. 337-1666 public. 8-4-30 I3I June 15 Er July 1. One year 7, floor length veil, new $380. parties, 655-1366 or 353-9695. C-22-4-30 (7) chandise. Large selection of leases only. Call 882 2316. SUMMER SUBLET 4 bed sell for $150. 393-1138. C-22-4-30 13) ■ stereo equipment by Pioneer, Students FOUR SPACES. Fall lease, 9 OR-22-4-30 (91 EXPERIENCED IBM typing, for Carter/Mondale room duplex, Gunson St., Marantz, Mcintosh, Sanyo, E-5-4-22 (3) dissertations (Pica Elite). meet at 7 tonight, 332 Union. or 12 months. Close to cam¬ furnished, nice, backyard SAE, and Kenwood pus. Call 332-3799. 8-4-30 (3) 124 CEDAR, East Lansing 2 grill, $112/month. 332-1252 - plus 14K GOLD keepsake men's Service FAYANN 489-0358. Open to the public. many more! We have a wide man, 1 bedroom furnished between 5-10 p.m. C-22-4-30 13) variety of cameras: Yashica, wedding band-never worn, SUMMER SUBLEASE. Mod¬ apartment. Year lease only. 5-5-4-23 (5) appraised at $325, sell for GUITAR REPAIRS. Prompt Cannon and Vivitar, Kodak ern furnished 2-bedroom Heat & hot water included, $100. 663 1257. E-5-4-22 (41 guaranteed service. Free esti¬ TYPING TERM papers. Ex¬ and Pentex. Sporting goods. apartment, air. $250'month $250/month. Leases starting ATTENTION GRADUATE mates and reasonable rates. perienced, fast service - IBM Large assortment of tools: or best offer. Treehouse June 15 or September 1, students Newer, spacious, 3 - LADIES SAMSONITE suit¬ Member American Guijd 0f Call 351-8923. OR-22-4-30 (3) mechanic's to household. We West Apartments. 332 3804 882-2316 after 5 p.m. bedroom, 3 baths, finished Luthiers. MARSHALL MU¬ have diamond rings - Lowest case, 26" Used only twice. 8-4-30 (5) OR-22-4-30 (8) room, $525 per month SIC CO. 337-9700. © rec TYPING IN my home. Close prices in town! $40. 487 2306. E-5-4-22 (3) Attention Pre-meds: Discussion plus utilities, Available Sept. C 22-4-30 (6) to campus. Quality work' board with first-year medical stu¬ 1 FEMALE NEEDED for 2 1, Call 669 5513. bedroom, 3 person apart Houses m OR-8-4-21 (6) WE BUY, SELL AND TRADE BASEBALL FANS, official EXPERT GUITAR repairs. Cindy 9 a.m.-7 p.m. 394 4448 C 22-4-30 (3) dents and information summer medical jobs concerning 3 major league baseball jackets, is at 8 ment, 80-81 school year. Call HIGHEST QUALITY, call JeH Acoustic and electric. Most tonight, Bessey Hall. IF YOU would like a place to FOUR BEDROOM duplex, 1 DICKER AND DEAL Kathy 332-2157 or Debbie SECOND HAND STORE, 332 5232 or 882 6633. extensive shop in the state. TYPING SERVICE. Resumes, 349-6888 8-4-30 (5) rent, but don't know where block from campus, summer ELDERLY INSTRUMENTS. 1701 S. Cedar St., Lanisng, 8 4-25 (4) term papers, etc. Delivery to look, call GREAT LAKES only, furnished. 332-7096. 332-4331. C 22-4-30 15) Students can promote better 5-4-21 (3) 487 3886 C 12 4-30 (29) arrangements. 655-3803, M-F FEMALE TO share 2 bed today for sure, there's hun¬ BASSMAN 10 amp, 4 speak¬ care by volunteering as resident room apartment immediately $138. Okemos, on bus run. dreds in our book, 394 2680 C 22 4-30 (5) LOOKING FOR fall housing? Call AIR CONDITIONER 5000 ers 200 watts $300 or best offer. 337 0082. 5-4-21 (3) TUTOR FOR preschool child¬ ren experienced, qualified after 6. Weekends 2-6. 1-4-21 (4) (JO advocates For more at area nursing homes. information, stop by 26 349-3127 after 4. 8-4-30 (4) Mid-Michigan. They BTU Philco. Good condition. teacher with child develop¬ Student Services Bldg. have over 400 properties to 355 6211. $75 or best offer. EXPERIENCED IBM typist SUMMER SUBLET, close, ment major preschool em¬ choose from, and they spe E5-4-25 (3) Dissertations, and term own room, 1-6women, Fall SONY POTABLE AM FM phasis. 882 8958 after 5. CAMPUS VIEW option, negotiable. 355-1951 cialize in the MSU area. Call today and see if they have stereo radio with cassette. 3 5-4-25 (6) papers. Call 349 6692. OR 6-4 30 (3) Environmental Information Ser¬ or 353-1574. 8-4-25 (41 FOR SALE 1 pair Kenwood vice and Resource Development 324 Michigan Ave. what months old. $99. 355-1534. you're looking for. 349 Club 8" two way speakers $125. 1 E-5-4-21 (3) are sponsoring the Earth Day howing 4 6 pm 8 7? pm V 1065. C 22 4 30 (81 PROFESSIONAL LAWN TYPING 14 years experience. 2 BEDROOM with pair Utah 12" 3 way speakers recycling drive. Collections are Manager Apartment S2 efficiency care. No job to big or small, Call 332-3292 after 5:30. from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday in Call 351 3038 351 9538 apartment. Close to campus $140. Realistic 25 watt amp or HASLETT 1 Person to share call Jeff Wells at 351 1249. O 2-4-21 (3) the Livestock Pavilion FALL 4 SUMMER LEASING 332 0616 after 6:30 p.m 3 bedroom home country $90. Sharp tape deck $90, Animals 7-4-21 (3) and 5 4 22 (3) must sell, 355 9477. 3 4-23161 McDonel Hall. setting. References. Phone PROFESSIONAL EDITING. 339 8086 5 4 22 14) GERMAN SHEPHERD pups- Corrections to rewrites. EXCELLENT FOR Pets. Mod¬ SUBLET FOR summer Own BOAT; 14 ft. wooden' bow excellent show quality, large Instructions Typing arranges. 332 5991 Mobilization for Survival meets ern 1 bedroom apartment for mounted steering, 35 H.P. bones. Champion EKO-LAN, OR 1-4 21 (3) at 7 summer with air condition¬ room, 1, 2, or 3 females SUMMER SUBLEASE. tonight, Oak Room, Union. Evinrude, trailer, extras. $850 Shiloh and champion Casey's LESSONS IN Guitar, banjo needed to share new Spartan Beautiful New Topics: Earth Day, coordinating ing, close to campus and Duplex, close or best offer 625 3283. It no bloodline $300 $500. Call and more, at the ELDERLY FAST ACCURATE final plans for Meridian Mall. $190/month. St duplex. Call 332 4612 or to campus. Call 337-0907 answer 625 3520. typing. April 26 anti nuke Doctor Sam 337 2504 INSTRUMENT SCHOOL. Reasonable Call Mon rally 349 6462 8 4 24 (6) 332-8765 8 4 21 (5) after 5:30 8 4-21 (3) S-6-4-30 (3) rates. in Washington, D.C. Open to 1 4 21 (7) C 18 4 30 (3) Fnday.489 6903 OR1 4 21(3) the public. Michigan Stote News, East lapsing, Michigan Monday, April 21, HAGAR the Horrible by Dik Browne Daily Tv Highlights (6)WJIM-TV(CBS) (lO)WllX-TV(NBC) (1) /26)WELM-TV(Coble) (12)WJRT-TV(ABC) (23)WKAR-TV(PBS) MONDAY 3:00 (10) Little House On The Prairie 11:00 9:00 (6) Guiding light (11) Pattern Of The Universe (6-10-12) News (6-12) Phil Donahue (12) General Hospital (12) That's Incredible! 11:30 (10) Mike Douglas 3:30 (6) Harry 0 8:30 (23) Sesame Street (23) Villa Alegref (10) Tonight 10:00 4:00 (6) Stockard Channing 9:00 (12) Phil Donahue (6) Jeffersons (6) Flintstones 12:30 (10) Card Sharks (10) Bugs Bunny (6) MASH (12) Star Trek (12) Mary Tyler Moore (12) Match Game (10) Gossip Columnist 12:40 (23) Mister Rogers (23) Sesame Street (11) Blacks Britannica (6) McCloud 10:30 4:30 (12) Movie 1:00 (6) Whew! (6) Brady BunchS . (23) Auction Continues (10) Tomorrow PEANUTS (10) Hollywood Squores (10) Gilligan's Island 9:30 (12) Odd Couple (12) Gunsmoke (6) Flo 1:30 by Schulz (12) News (23) Villa Alegre 5:00 10:00 2:00 10:55 (6) Six Million Dollar Man (6) Lou Grant (10) News (6) CBS News (10) Sanford And Son 11:00 (11) TNT True Adventure Trails (6) Price Is Right (23) Mister Rogers MSU SHADOWS (10) High Rollers 5:30 by Gordon Carleton pinball PETE'S (12) Laverne & Shirley (10) Mary Tyler Moore (23) Electric Company (11) WELM News SPONSORED BY: 11:30 (12) News (10) Wheel Of Fortune (23) Electric Company (12) Family Feud 6:00 DID Yolk. tlwt our local pbs stt\-vw (23) Once Upon A Classic (6-10) News IS HocQ/AJfe A "TV auotiotl" 12:00 (11) Univision ? y (6-10-12) News (23) Channel 23 Grent Auction "THAT'S &rfat - X coulo US<£ (23) Novo 6:30 (6) Almanac 12:20 (6) CBS News (10) NBC News FRANK & ERNEST SPONSORED BY: Order your yearbook now. 355-8263 12:30 (11) Show My People by Bob Thaves Red Cedar (6) Search For Tomorrow (12) ABC News Leg (10) Password Plus 7:00 (12) Ryan's Hope (6) Tic Tac Dough X'vE been SIVEN credit AND THEY Alu 1:00 .. COME Dot (10) Sanford And Son FoR A L.OT OF THlN David Plawecki, D-Dearborn, IN THE HOUSE, Detroit courts' caseloads would create measure originally intended it said he does not believe there lawmakers are pushing for even more confusion and back as a way to spark extra are enough, votes to pass the quick approval of bills reorgan¬ logs. business during this summer's bill. Floor debate on the izing the city's court system. Republican National Con¬ measure last week was weight¬ Detroit's lack of a central ANOTHER BILL EX vention in Detroit. But ed heavily against it. court system has led to a giant PECTED to see action this opponents got around that by Even if the measure makes it backlog of cases and cost over¬ week is a measure closing refusing to give the bill back to the House, the Senate's runs, said supporters of the loopholes in recently approved immediate effect. If approved, move striking money for sub¬ reorganization move. The bills laws hiking the interest ceilings it would not become law until stance abuse programs has would abolish the Court of on auto loans. next April. angered members of the lower Common Pleas and the traffic The measures, which were However, if recent Senate chamber. Rep. David Hollister, division of Recorder's Court rushed through both houses winds blow correctly, the bill D Lansing, who relunctantly and create one state-funded during the final week of session apparently has little chance of voted for the bill the first time, district court. before Easter break, do not iillf It's tie Deal of the Decade" survival. said the deletion "gives me a The legislature would over¬ make it clear that the maximum Democratic Floor Leader good reason to vote against it." see the reorganization with new car rate of 16.5 percent completion targeted for Jan. 1. applies only to autos. However, opponents said the Loan officials at some of the state should not fund the new state's largest financial institu¬ ASMSU blimp flops court in light of present econ¬ tions have held up approval of '1.25 omic conditons. They main¬ new car loans until the meas¬ tained combining the two ures can be approved. 'continued from page D would send the Student Board "VOL NEVER KNOW, we bill for that amount. a EACH might pull a blimp out of the Studer said he did not think hanger next fall," Studer said. "The idea is not dead. We the blimp's failure would hurt the credibility of ASMSU. Iran oil price hike were just unhappy with the "I think it should enhance it," 'continued from page 1) last year to lay the groundwork product." Studer said. "We had an idea States should cease its tyran¬ for a military coup to keep The six-hour trip by car to and we made the right decision nical interventionist policy and Khomeini from coming to Champaign cost the board $50 to research the project before immediately respond to the in gas and Studer power. said they we bought it." correct demands of the Iranian The plan never materialized government and people." because of the rapid disintegra¬ In Tehran, Bani-Sadr tion of Iran's military forces, appealed for law and order at the newspaper said, quoting Mothering image continued from page 3i universities on Sunday, the day after the ruling Revolutionary Council ordered most campuses unidentified senior federal offi¬ cials. The paper said President closed in an attempt to end two Carter sent Gen. Robert E. ambivalence about mothering," Chodorow said. "Mothering has days of clashes between mili¬ Huyser, a former Iranian mili¬ tants Moslem and leftist stu¬ become a very salient issue, tary adviser, on a mission in "IN THE WRITING on dents. especially for feminists." motherhood fantasy is being early 1979 to try to keep the One student was reported Chodorow said although fem¬ military forces in Iran intact put forth on the whole of killed Saturdav. and inists have made very impor¬ loyal to the government of reality," she said. Prime Minister tant contributions to the under¬ "The fantasy of the perfect Shahpur THE NEW VORK TIMES Bakhtiar. The Bakhtiar standing of mothering, feminist mother has led to the cultural reported Sunday that an Air government was established by thought has often said a oppression of women and a Force general was sent to Iran women's life should not revolve the shah as he left the country. child who is itself a product of around mothering. it's own fantasy," she said. Chodorow also said woman¬ hood is linked to motherhood, "All of us, women and men alike, have to work and free GOVINDA'S and motherhood is linked to ourselves from the myths and r childhood. Many women want misconceptions feminists con¬ to have children and view tinue to hold," Chodorow said. IP Baffled by Insurance ■ ALL YOU CAN EAT Policies? | ($4.75) FREE WITH THIS COUPON All Vegetarian Meal Introducing the Sentry J 7 courses Delicious and Nutritious I \W MARCIA BJERKE j Plain Talk Auto Policy Call me for details | ! every International 319 Grove St. Mon-Thur Society for Kristina Consciousness Noon-2pm Also E.l. 351-6603 specializing in next to 7-11 donations accepted apartment, home and life insurance ! &-SENTRY 500 N. Homer St. • I Tl INSURANCE MADE TO 0R0IR FOR VOU Omni Bldg.. Suite 205 1 block west of Frandor RAMON'S STRIKE AGAIN E.Grand River r 1 1 46 A S. Washington 482-6690 ^372-3010 I" $1.95 Meat Cheese enchilada dinner Don't or Includes three enchiladas, retried beans and Spanish rice Forget... One ticket gives you all day, all night access to Jenison. June 16-August 8 For those who are restless, you can come and earn s90.00 go as you Humphrey Institute please. But for those who don't want to miss a second of the a month of Public Affairs action, there will be picnic tables, frisbees, concessions, for 2 or 3 hours a week of your spare time. University of Minnesota food, and refreshments. Tickets on sale NOW! Summer Program in Policy Skills donate plasma for Minority and Disadvantaged students You may save a life! $1,000 Stipend Manufactured In Jenison Fieldhouse At Michigan State University It's easy and relaxing. Be a twice-a-week - Non-credit coursework to introduce students to Noon To Close All Seats Reserved, 1000 In Advance, 1250 Day Of Show | regular. MO cash each donation, plus Economics, Current Public Issues and Statistics Small classes, resulting in individual attention 5: bonuses. -College junior preferred, all majors accepted Tickets Available At: this ad worth $5 extra MSUNION TICKET OFFICE WHEREHOUSE II & III New donors Students must apply by May 7th only. Phone for appointment. SOUNDS & DIVERSIONS | 332-8914 For more information contact: 6l SCHOOL KIDZ RECORDS (ANN ARBOR) LANSING PLASMA CORP Thomas Chopel BELIEVE IN MUSIC (GRAND RAPIDS) 3026 E. Humphrey Institute: University of Minnesota Michigan Ave. Lansing, Mich. 48912 909 Social Sciences Tower; Minneapolis, Minnesota TD ) Pop \-J) studen Entertainment E student tax money. is a division of the ASMSU Programming Board, funded by 55455 (612) 373-4621 For 24-hour infor about Programming Board Events, call the J ~ " P H. Hotline H( 353-2010.