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4-4-1990

The BG News April 4, 1990

Bowling Green State University

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Vol.72 Issue 106 April 4.1990 Bowling Green, Ohio High 50 The BG News Low 33" Permanent BRIEFLY non-tenure CAMPUS proposed Drug talk: Daryl Toler, a supervisory criminal investigator by James A. Tinker with the Naval Investigative Service, staff writer will speak on "Drugs and Enforcement'' today, noon to 2 p.m. in If the Board of Trustees approves, the Second Floor Lounge of the the University will have permanent, Student Services Building. but non-tenured teachers for the first time. A Faculty Senate resolution which Activists wanted: if you Kssed 44-12 in Tuesday's forum, calls want to transform emotions into ' creating a permanent lecture posi- action, you may want to join the tion in areas demonstrating a need for Progressive Student Organization. permanent teachers. Holli Kinstle, PSO president, said Such staffing flexibility is expected the group welcomes all students to be used in departments such as interested in affecting positive mathematics, English and foreign lan- change. PSO member Scottie guages where non-tenured faculty are Michaels said,"an organized group prevalent. can be heard easier than an "This is a major item, one of the individual." most important (resolutions) we've PSO meets Tuesdays at 9:30 in the passed in a long time," Faculty Senate United Christian Fellowship house on Chairman David Newman said. the corner of Thurstin and Ridge Bonnie Fink, a techincal writing in- streets. structor, called the action "a concrete form of support from our peers.'' Back To The Past BG News/Jay Murdock Dressed in outfits from the 1950s. Kreischer cafeteria employees (L-R)Carl Cash III, Rich Kling, and Liz Woodruff serve cus- Current University policy prevents STATE tomers Tuesday evening. The specialty dinner featured a soda shop which served root beer floats, malts, and ice cream full-time instructors from teaching sundaes. D See Resolution, page 7. Phones cut: A military budget pinch has put the squeeze on telephones at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Dayton, sharply Canada, Ohio Ohio may finance tuitions reducing the number of incoming and Subsidized college for educators, math majors recommended outgoing lines, officials said Tuesday. Between 30,000 and 35,000 calls a grant funds for reer in education. day come into Wright-Patterson on by John Chaltant "What we're looking at is that proposal, with some commercial telephone lines, while Associated Press Writer differential for people who pursue the teaching of about 50,000 calls a day are made studies center math and science," he said. from the base, according to Col. COLUMBUS — Some of the state's best high school Voinovich said he also was trying to determine if it Stephen Anno, manager of the Dayton students would be entitled to free college tuition if would be feasible to require students receiving state- Metropolitan Area Telephone System. by J.J. Thompson they pursue careers in education under a proposal paid tuition to work in inner cities and rural areas staff writer Republican George Voinovich is considering. short of teachers. The reduced service has resulted in ,fWe want the best and brightest people in teach- No estimates were immediately available about some callers getting busy signals The chance of establishing a Center for Canadian ing," Voinovich, the GOP candidate for governor, the cost of such a program or the number of students when they try to call to or from the Studies at the University was increased by last said Tuesday. "We need well-prepared ana dedicat- who might be eligible. base. Anno said as many as 50 percent week's donations from Canada and the state of Ohio. ed teachers. The issue is, how do you get more people The Ohio Board of Regents said between 2,500 and of first-attempt calls can be met with The Canadian government granted the University into teaching?" 3,000 bachelor's degrees in education have been a- a busy signal. $50,000 up front and will award the center an addi- Voinovich said he was reviewing a recom- warded annually over the last five years. Tuition tional $50,000 if the University raises $150,000 for the mendation from the Carnegie Foundation that schol- costs now average about $2,500 a year at a state- Canadian Studies Center, according to Michael arships be granted to high school students who grad- NATION Marsden, associate dean of the College of Arts and uate in the top 20 percent of their class and plan a ca- See Tuition, page 3. Sciences. State officials also awarded a grant to the Univer- sity, as of July 1, totaling $200,000, which will be giv- Ban defended: Assistant en out in $100,000 amounts for the next two years. Secretary for Health Dr. James "Everybody was very grateful," Marsden said. Air pollution bill passed Mason defended the Bush "It's a very positive sign." administration's ban on federal fetal The purpose of the center will be to enhance Ohio Senate approval shifted the clean air debate to the tissue research Monday, saying trade with Canada and a general focus on Canadian by H. Josef Hebert House where a similar bill is being written by the support for the research would result studies, Marsden said. Associated Press writer Energy and Commerce Committee. Rep. John Ding- in Increased abortions. The location of the center has not been determined, ell, D-Mich,, the panel's chairman, said he plans to Mason said the possibility an he added. WASHINGTON — The Senate overwhelmingly ap- have the committee vote by week's end and expects aborted fetus could have medical In addition to developing the Center for Canadian Eroved sweeping air pollution controls on automo- floor action next month. benefits for others would provide a Studies, Marsden said the University offers a minor iles, factories and power plants Tuesday after a de- Differences in the Senate and House measures will "powerful inducement" and an in Canadian studies, making it the first Ohio univer- cade of struggle over whether to strengthen federal then still have to be worked out. "additional rationalization" for a sity to offer this. clean air laws. Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell, woman agonizing over whether to This is the first year the minor has been offered, The new controls, which are estimated to cost the D-Maine, acknowledged the new requirements would abort her oregnancy. and Marsden said the response from students and economy $21 billion a year when they go fully into ef- be expensive to industry, but argued "the costs of faculty has been encouraging. There also has been a fect, were approved by a vote of 89-11. inaction will be higher than the cost of this bill." growing interest to offer a major in Canadian stud- President Bush, speaking in Indianapolis in ad- Health experts have estimated air pollution may ac- ies, depending on student and faculty interest. vance of Senate action, called it "a historic vote" count for 50,000 premature deaths every year, he WORLD that would "affect generations to come as we work to said. D See Canada, page 7. build a cleaner, safer America." D See Pollution, page 7.

Agreement reached: U.S. andJapanese negotiators reached Canfora tells of own agreement on a one-year pact to triple the number of observers on Japanese drift-net boats and equip all the vessels with monitoring transmitters, activist experience the State Department said Monday. Critics, however, said the pact would provide observers for only 10 by Jeremy S. Weber percent of Japan's drift-net vessels staff writer and allow the Japanese to continue to See related story on p. 3 fish the cold, salmon-rich waters Alan Canfora remembers very clearly the May 4,1970 shootings at Kent State south of the Aleutian Islands. University. "As the students gathered, they began to move toward the National Guards, but we kept our distance," he told a crowd of about 150 students gathered in West Hall HISTORY Tuesday night. "A few students were throwing stones — I don't deny that, but the Guard was throwing stones at us as well. "I was out in front waving a flag in protest," he said. "As I stared down the bar- rels of the rifles, I was scared, but I was willing to risk my life to make a state- On this date: In 1979, the ment. University administration approved a Student Government Association Eroposal to ban Thursday night "beer "And then they fired..." lasts" in the Northeast Commons. -Alan Canfora, Victim of Kent State Shootings According to an SGA senator, the alcoholic events created a "neighborhood problem" for "As the Guard reached the top of the hill and turned just before firing, they residents of Rodgers and Kohl halls, looked exactly like a firing squad, and that's exactly what they were," he said. and were inconsistent with the "And then tney fired... University's aim of promoting a good Canfora, one of the 13 students injured in the shooting that day, spoke to Univer- learning and living environment. sity students about student activism. The speech was part of a series of about 40 speeches he will be giving this year — the 20th anniversary of the shootings. The event was sponsored by the Progressive Student Orginizatibn, Social Jus- BG News/ Photo tice Committee and Graduate Student Senate. Canfora told students about what he called "a great renewal" in student activ- Kent State shooting victim Alan Canfora speaks about social and political issues Compiled from local and wire reports ism, along with recalling his experiences at Kent State. that students face today and in the past. D See Canfora, page 3. THE BG NEWS

Apf»4,19*0 Editorial The BG News -An independent Student Voice- EDITORIAL BOARD Beth Church Editor

Amy Burkett Amy Cole Managing Editor Editorial Editor

Christian Thompson Dennis Robaugh Asst. Managing Editor City Editor

Andy Woodard Sports Editor Ballot used to acquire rights

Voters in Ann Arbor, Mich, know the value of the ballot. Residents turned out Monday in a 2-to-l support of a city charter amendment declaring their city a "zone of reproductive freedom" Monday. "Propo- Hemingway's responsible sal C" limits the penalty for having or performing an abortion in Ann Arbor to a $5 fine. It was divulged that two He thrust a leather satchel in singing sword ... We got a blinding as the creamy surf Elected representatives should take note of such Ernest Hemingway stories are my hands and turned on his heel, thousand points of light ... for pounds at their feet. A pool side a pro-choice vote by the people — and such a bold being published this month. disappearing under the shadow the homeless man.. wet T-shirt contest is ending. statement to government officials. There is hoopla and celebration of a lamp post. The winner's virtue is framed in in various hterary circles. The Schizophrenic guitar solos fly the gentle outlines of her T-shirt. Anticipating future Supreme Court action will hype is mounting ... and I feel I returned from Key West over my head like doves from The loser has scars on her belly. reverse the Roe vs. Wade decision, pro-choice acti- compelled to divulge some in- determined to keep his writings hell. Down in a Jamaican reg- Up along the ribbon of high- vists are worried Michigan's anti-abortion statute formation of my own (at the cost a secret, but the announcement gae club Keith Richards is way that hugs the coast like a would be re-enacted immediately. of being a redundant columnist). that his works are being pub- wrapped around a stone groove lover, is an amusement park While my faithful yet exas- lished has caused me to reveal like a cuckholdine husband. Sa- and sandy boardwalk. Sitting in perated companion and I were his expatriate writings. tan sits in the back, his head hid its shadows are men with beards The legal supremacy of the amendment has been on our Hemingway pilgrimage in the shadows, his finger nails who while away their days debated, but legislators should ignore the question in Key West/ we were accosted tapered to points. A few N.Y. drinking cheap, fruity wine out of state or municipal jurisdiction and see the stand on a dark side street by an old Jets are snorting coca in the of glass bottles. At night, the people are taking: do not make abortion illegal. man with a bushy beard. booth next to him — one wears neon lights that dot the aging panty hose in emulation of roller coaster form a constella- He smelled like fish. His eyes Broadway Joe. tion of hope. The Citizens for Reproductive Freedom group were skewed at furious angles Word Up Up on the steam covered There is the hurdy-gurdy of a initiated the issue by collecting the 3.720 signatures and his breath reeked of tequila. streets a lOWear-old boy sells painted carousel, waltzing like a necessary to place the proposal on the ballot. They My companion cried out in ter- paper roses for a dime a piece, ballerina through the empty cot- are proud of the message they are sending to their ror, "It's the Blade Runner!!! while another boy sells horse for ton candy stalls. The men sleep He read what Dennis Robaugh by $500 an ounce. A celebration of lulled into the arms of Morpheus state government. wrote about you purnmeling him our free market economy. by the sea. for his wallet!!!'* Chuck A subway lurches uptown, a April is the crudest month ... They also should be proud to see the power their Travis steel snake, burrowing through Mixing memory with desire ... vote has with those who represent them. It is now "No," I said, "I think it's a tunnel of brick and mud. Ashes And so through the wasteland up to the legislators to work to support that senti- Ernest Hemingway!!!" to ashes... Dust to dust... we ride. Alone to the sound of columnist The crocuses are pushing up trumpets and drums. Bobby ment. "Hardy-Har-Har," cackled through the damp sou at Grace- Zimmerman squints through his the old man, "You're right... I land in Memphis Tenn. The dark sunglasses and bleats out need you to do something for faithful rise up from their slum- the moralblue print for a gener- me!" ber and take plastic glow in the ation ... "DREAMS OF AN OLD dark Jesuses to the grave of What you have just read has Cooperation of "I thought you were dead, Er- MAN" by Ernest Hemingway Elvis. been an excerpt of the manu- nie," 1 said. script Hemingway entrusted me Greenwich Village, set in the There is revolution in the with. The Blade Runner is "No, No, No, the rumors of my lower boroughs of Manhattan is streets and revolution in the air. claiming it's his, but madness Contras a must expiration have been greatly rotting in it's Bohemian skele- The blues are being played in a has a definite voice and tone. exagerated, I'm living down ton. Homeless mental patients 12 bar streetfight. On a rain- The rest of the story will be pub- here with Jim Morrison, we sleep in the subway, crack washed basketball court, a boy lished in the April issue of Play- have a cantina band together — dealers stand as silent sentinels lies dying over a pair of Reebok boy, along with the pictures of VY hat desperate motives lead the Nicaraguan anyway, I need you to get these under the white arch of Wash- pump-up shoes. Hemingway's granddaughter, contras to jeopardize the peaceful transition to a things published before that stu- ington Square Park. Neil Twilight of the gods is des- Margaux, in the buff. democratically elected government? ffy literary club in Ohio prints Young's high whining voice cending upon the Eastern Sea- those flatulent stories of mine ... sings ... We got people shuffling board. Daytona Beach's hotels Chuck Travis is a columnist There have been disturbing reports that the ones I wrote under the gui- on their feet ...We got people rise like Roman marble panth- for The News. He will not write thousands of rebel troops have been filtering back dance of a creative writing sleeping in their shoes. eons through the golden shafts of about Hemingway or the Blade into Nicaragua from neighboring Honduras, where class, "Hemingway said. RockVRoll guitar is the new setting sun. Their whiteness is Runner again, unless provoked. many of the U.S.-aided fighters have been based. International agreements call for the disman- tling of the camps in Honduras, but they also call for the relocation of the contra troops in protected zones in Nicaragua as a step toward disarmament and reintegration into the Nicaraguan mainstream. Letters

That is far different from the unmonitored Coughlin voices in the year explaining how jut grapes, his interest impressed YES there are "picking holi- movement of troops into strategic areas of then- should come to him for support me. days" where the workers don't own choosing, with the potential for provocative false promises of the different activities we Little did I know that during have to work because of the clashes with the army of the Sandinista-led work on throughout the year. We the USG vote to support the boy- abundance of grapes in storage government, which is supposed to turn over politi- took him up on the offer — ask- cott Kevin openly opposed the that aren't being sold. To the On behalf of the Grape Boy- ing him to support the National bill claiming he supported only workers "picking holidays" are cal and military power April 25. cott Committee, I would like to Grape Boycott. His initial re- the spirit of the boycott. The a call for celebration and the Those U.S. interests closest to the Nicaraguan congratulate Kevin Coughlin on sponse was "But you have to eat spirit of activism is not what boycott is working as it should. contras ought to send a message: The war is over. his reelection as USG president. 76,000 (?) grapes a day for them brings about success — it is in- The whole situation leaves me The Sandinistas lost the election and appear to be I'll be looking forward to an- to be harmful to humans." After corporating this 'spirit' into the with an already wavering lack cooperating in a genuine translation to the Cha- other year of exaggerated we explained that the boycott system that makes our work of faith in the political system. smiles and promises to do 'all he was for the human rights of the worthwhile. If Kevin is going to Kevin seems to be a "politician morro government. It's time to work for peace. can for groups like ours (Peace farm workers, he signed our pe- support student activism on this in training," that is practicing Printed courtesy of the Columbus Dispatch. Coalition and Progressive Stu- tition with a wide smile. All campus, this is a point he must as best he can the hypocrisy and dent Organization) in hopes to seemed well. Kevin would ask understand. political chicanery that is ram- support student activism on this me periodically how the boycott To end the story, Kevin then pant in the United States campus. Only I hope next year was going and even made the just outwardly opposed the government today. As far as The BG News Staff he adds a bit of sincerity to that suggestion of dumping 1 million - whole boycott using the excuse that training goes Kevin, keep Photo Edilor Greg Horvath Production Sup'r Patrick Michel support. grapes on the Union oval in a the boycott actually hurts the smiling you're doing a wonder- Asst Photo Editor MerkDeckard Production Sup'r Moms Near protest demonstration. Although farm workers. He knows this ful job. AMI Sports Editor Charles Tea Production Sup'r Becky Nuesbeum Kevin almost had us fooled the idea would defeat its initial statement is false — it's been Karen Nightingale on behalf Asst Sports Editor Matt Schroder Chief Copy Edilor Brands Young this year. He addressed both Eurpose, considering we would discussed before. The workers of The Grape Boycott Com- Wire Editor Knsten Kwiatkowski Chief Copy Editor Ivan Groger Peace Coalition and PSO early have called for the boycott and Asst Wire Editor Jamas A Tinker Copy Editors Irene Babssux ave to buy these million mittee Friday Magazine Editor Chrle Dawson Michelle Banks Asst Frldsy Edilor Debbie Hippie Jetl Betdof! ' John Kohlstrand Green Harvest ■ by Vlllamor M.Cruz Stall Artist Tom Kersey Anthony Burns Mary Remkoester

The BO News is published deny Tuesday through Friday during the academic year and weekly during the summer session by the Board oi Student Pubfccatione ot Bowling Green Stale University Opinions expressed by columnists do not necessarily reflect the opiniona ol The BQ News The BO Mews and Bowling Green State University are equal opportunity employers: and do rat diecHTWiela In hlrtng practioaa. The BO Mews wH. not accept advertising that la deemed discriminatory, degrading, or Insulting on the basis or race. sen. or national origin

mOctober. 1888. The BG Mews was honored by the Society ol Professional JourneHals as the Nation s Best College Deny Newspaper.

copyright 1888 si rights reserved Business Office Bowling Green state University 214 West Ha" Ph (418)372-2801 Bowing Green. Ohio 43403-0278 800 am to 8.00 p m Edrtonal Office Monday through Friday 210 West Hal Ph (418) 372-2803 THE BG NEWS

Campus Life April 4,1*90 Activism decreasing Career-oriented students and rising tuition cited for apathy

again. become more important. by Jeremy S. Weber "There has been a resurgence "There are a lot of urgent staff writer which is fairly recent," he said. problems going on, such as envi- "It is part of global trends ronmental issues," she said. "I Most students are too young to around the world, where major think students are realizing if we clearly remember the early changes are occurring. Students don't act now, we may not be 1970s, when protests were a are a part of global activism." around later." common sight on college cam- The reasons for the overall Frazer said increases in stu- puses. decline in involvement are dent involvement can be attri- Since then, however, student mainly financial, according to buted to the country's leaders. involvement in social issues has Bill Thompson, United Christian "Here in the U.S., the acts of steadily decreased and Univer- Fellowship assistant director. recent administrators and sity students are even less ac- Thompson cited economic presidents such as Ronald Rea- tive than most colleges. recessions in 1973 and the early gan have resulted in a res- Activism — defined as taking 1980s, and rising cost of educa- urgence of sexism, racism and action to achieve a political or tion causing students to concen- fascism," he said. "Activism in social end —peaked in colleges trate on their careers, rather the U.S. is an attempt to address across the country 20 years ago than causes. these problems." with anti-Vietnam War protests, At the University, Rigby said Student activism may not be but has declined sharply since, students are less active than as high as it once was, but said political science professor most because of their beliefs. Thompson said the Peace Coali- Gerald Rigby. "(The decline in activism) is ton's grape boycott and protests "Since I came to the Universi- probably due to the conservative over University divestment in ty in 1971, there has been a gen- nature of the people and the South Africa three years ago eral period of apathy," Rigby background the students come prove not all students are unwill- said. "This university is not in- from," he said. "I don't think ingto get involved. volved." you can get the bulk of the stu- Peace Coalition Coordinator Graduate Student Senate dents riled up about anything." Tim Strauss said most Universi- How Cold Is It? BG News/Jay Murdock President Ricardo Frazer Holli Kinstle, Progressive ty students are not active in Filling out a daily observation sheet, senior Dave Eichler checks a thermometer for his Meteorology 213 agreed student involvement was Student Organization president, social issues due to their home- class. The instruments, located on top of the walkway between Hanna and University halls, measure var- more frequent 20 years ago, but said student interest in current towns. ious items such as barometric pressure, relative humidity, and precipitation said activism has begun to grow issues will increase as causes O See Activism, page 7 Tuition Canfora who major in math and science. power and idea power," Mallory O Continued from page 1. said. D Continued from page 1. he said. "They still have an ef- said she expected Canfora to be assisted college or university. They would have to maintain a fect." an effective speaker. A bill similar to the proposal 2.5 grade-point average and Details of the Voinovich pro- Along with his speech, Can- "He was my personal catalyst being considered by Voinovich agree to work in Ohio for four posal are to be included in an "In a democracy, it is very fora snowed slides which in- to being an activist," she said. years following college gradua- education program he said is important for students to act as "He made me realize how many already has been introduced in tion. expected to be completed in two a conscience of the country," he cluded several pictures of the the Ohio House by Rep. William said. "When activism is focused Kent State shootings to empha- important and interrelated is- Mallory, D-Cincinnati, the "We have got to have uni- to three weeks. size his points. sues there were." majority floor leader. politically, this can only have a "I'm convinced they were Canfora said his life has been versal education in this country Voinovich previously has en- positive effect on the country." shooting at me," he said as he dominated by the shootings. if we are going to win the eco- dorsed education goals adopted Dressed in jeans, a sport coat displayed a slide of him crouch- Mallory's proposal would pro- nomic war weTe already in. In by the National Governors As- and tie, Canf ora said new issues vide a tuition-paid college edu- order to win that economic war sociation and endorsed by ing behind a tree, holding the "I didn't choose my place in we will ... have to use brain- such as the environment, wrist in which he was shot. "I history," he said. "I didn't ask cation for high school students President Bush. women's rights, racism and in- was visible and vocal. I was a to be shot that day. I can't help vestments in South Africa have MiSMWWWW become the basis for student in- marked man." thinking if only (the National volvement. Canfora praised the Universi- Guard members) had been told Give ty's PSO chapter and encour- not to fire, if only they had not * After a snooze, catch THE BG NEWS' "Clearly, the times have aged students to get involved been given live ammunition, another birthday changed and the issues have with the group. those students would still be changed, but students haven't," PSO President Holli Kinstle alive today."

USG USG USG USG USG } Preferred Properties ♦ Now is the time to get 8 Discover Kinko's ♦ Phone 352-9378 ♦ involved with USG ♦ USG is now accepting applications for SUMMER LEASING ♦ Cabinet and Organizational seats next year. Resume Package • ♦ FOX RUN ♦ Multi-Cultural Affairs and Human Relations HAVEN HOUSE MANOR Student Welfare ONLY $14.95 ♦ PIEDMONT National State Community Affairs ♦ BIRCHWOOD PLACE Public Relations ■ ♦ HOUSES University Committees I ♦ Treasurer On* Page Typeset Resume All residents receive a membership to Applications are in 405 Student Services and are due Friday, (ready far reproduction) CHERRYWOOD HEALTH SPA 3 April 6, 1990. ♦ Monday thru Friday 9:00 a.m.-4:30 p.m. ♦ Disk w/ Resume Stored V J USG USG USG USG USG Today's events are tomorrow's kinkoi memories. At The Key, we the copy center catch all your college ...... J experiences — good or bad, Open 7 Days angelic or mischievous. So go ahead, 354-3977 let your hair down and get a little 113 Railroad St. crazy, we'll be there. Besides, what's the use of having fun if you can't get caught?

• Only $18.95 for 384 pages. (Cheaper than any textbook) • Billed to your bursar account. "The Best in Live Rock-n-Roll" (So you don't have to pay now) Live Entertainment 7 Nights A Week • Pick-up or delivery. Wednesday Thursday Friday and (Like pizza) College 1.0. Ladies' Night Saturday Night no cover for the reduced free admission ladies cover • Check your mailbox soon! with valid I.D. before 9:00 BUSCH BY p.m. THE BUCKET H Where else can This Week: Hollywood Happy Hour Every Night from 8:00 - 9:00 p.m. 17,000 students Byrnegate Plaza 135 S. Byrne (near Hill), Toledo 531-1311 get caught in the Monday: KEY Hurricane Alice act? 9 • 0 THE BG NEWS Apt* 4,19*0

Residents' Satisfaction With The Bowling Green Police Division Ward 1 residents least Agree Neutral Disagree Ward 1 Agreeing 1. Overall. I am satisfied with 68 % 14 % 18% 38% satisfied with BG cops the Police Division. 2.1 receive prompt and efficient 72% 11 % 16% 60% the area north of Wooster Street Students living in Ward 1 "are by John Kohlslrand and East of Main Street. The more apt to be involved with the service from employees of the city writer number of satisfied responses police, Ash said, citing vandal- Police Division. increased as the survey moved ism and open container viola- 3. The City has Adequate police 62 % 24 % 14% 48% Confidence in the city's law through the second and third tions as two common student protection. enforcement officials is lower wards, and was highest in Ward crimes. among residents of the heavily 4. "The most calls for service 4.1 feel safe and secure within 74% 11 % 15% 52% student-populated Ward 1 than The survey, which queried re- come from the First Ward," Ash my neighborhood. in other city wards, according to sident satisfaction with the city said. 5.1 feel that my property is 62 % 19 % 19% 53% a report released by Bowling police, was included in the On the other hand, police con- Green police this week. Police Division's 1989 Annual tact with the more-established safe and protected within the Only 38 percent of Ward 1 re- Report. residents of Wards 3 and 4 is city. sidents responding to a recent 'It would seem clear that a more positive, Ash said, mostly 6.1 feel safe and secure within 67 % 18 % 15% 53% survey agreed with the state- special effort should be made to consisting of property checks the city. ment "Overall, I am satisfied identify ways in which the atti- and other services. with the Police Division," com- tudes and perceptions within 7. Members of the Police Division 66 % 15 % 19% 48% pared to a city-wide average of Ward 1 can be improved," the Overall, the results were con- perform their duties properly 68 percent. report concluded. sidered positive and police said and in a competent manner. In each of the seven questions Police Chief Galen Ash said they are satisfied with the corn- BG News Graphic/Derrick Ross asked, police satisfaction was the results of the survey were See Police, page 8. lowest in Ward 1. which includes not overly surprising. Migrant workers' plight told Italian summer past one-and-one-half to two years — and still no action has taken by Emily Schroeder place. staff writer "The democratic system just doesn't seem to work for migrant session offered workers and it never will unless a prerequisite takes place," Velas- As part of the week long activities planned for Hispanic Aware- quez said. Establishing agreements, not only with farmers, but with the cor- by Loti Miller ness week Baldemar Velasquez, president of Farm Labor Organiza- staff writer tion Committee, presented ''Food and Justice and the Plight of the porations paying the farmers is one of these prerequisites. Migrant Worker in the USA " Tuesday evening in MoseleyHall. Velasquez said among all the strikes and demonstrations he has Velasquez's presentation, sponsored by the committee to boycott organized and participated in with other workers, the most difficult University art and foreign language students now have an grapes, vividly described the poor working conditions of today's mi- has been communicating the message to the workers that the opportunity to study in Italy with the help of a summer pro- grant workers in order to alert students and to encourage them to CO orations are the cause of most of migrant workers' problems. gram. play a more active role. "The growers are not the enemy — it's the corporations the Hosted by Studio Art Centers International, the program al- He said he has organized migrant workers to fight for their rights growers are working for," Velasquez said. lows students a chance to have hands-on experience, according for 22 years. Being a migrant worker himself, Velasquez said he has In his plight for worker's rights Velasquez said he has seen several to David Cayton, professor in the school of art and one adviser had first hand experience with the poor working conditions and disrupting, violent acts including the severe beating of his lawyer by of the program. wages associated with working in fields for a living. Putnam County police officers. "They will see examples of works of art that they have only Velasquez and approximately 50 others had been injail after being seen in text books," he said. In an effort to remedy these problems, Velasquez tries ban arrested for a sit down demonstration in a field in Putnam County During the course of the program, participating students can together the migrant workers in order to overcome the problems in a when their lawyer came to bail them out and got jumped by four or enroll in classes ranging from graphic ana interior design to democratic manner. He said he believes these efforts are useless five officers. art history, Cayton said. without involvement from the younger, educated population. Acts of violence are just one of the things Velasquez wants to see Lectures are planned for many of the evenings and students stopped, while migrant workers forge on to achieve the goals they will be able to attend weekend field trips to places such as "A college campus is the center of intellectual acivity," Velasquez believe they deserve. Rome and Siena, he said. said. "Can you imagine students fighting for the right to have toilets "It will be a tremendous advantage to actually be there (and onran crnmnus'' IUS? TheseThpsp arearp fh*>the thinoethings migrantmir/rnnt umrlrareworkers within a three In concluding his presentation Velasquez left the audience with experience it)," Cayton said. milera ius of this campus are fighting for today." one request. "We will be able to see 500 years of art work as it matures "Brothers and sisters, don't throw away what you've got. Give it and evolves right before (our) very eyes, he said. "And be able Velasquez told Tuesday's audience the issue of field sanitation, to someone. If you have no money, which most of you don't, give to trace that evolution just by going from building to building." proposed by a federal judge, has been under consideration for the Foreign language students will also be able to attend the time. Time will win the fight." summer trip to Italy, according to Linda Francescon, instruc- tor of romance languages and one adviser of the trip. sstsssssssmtismmtss O See Italy, page 7. HAVEN HOUSE MANOR CINEMARK THEATRES SIBS AND KIDS WEEKEND registration: 1st group 8:45 a.m. CINEMA 5 "ND 1515 E. Wooster TOLEDO ZOO TRIP 2nd group 9:45 a.m. 11234 NORTH MAIL ST 354 0558 J LIMITED SPACE SATURDAY APRIL 7, 1990 The Hunt fix R«d October R NEXT TO CAMPUS 4:20. 7 00. 9 40 FIRST COME FIRST SERVE BASIS Accepting no passes or discounts 2 GROUPS $2 ADULTS, $1 2-11 YR. Joe Versus The Volcano Now Leasing both groups depart Union Oval 4 SO. 7 25 a 9 30 DINOSAUR EXHIBIT Add. $1.50 EA. 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News Capsules April 4,1*90

INTERNATIONAL / NATIONAL PEOPLE Israel unveils advanced satellite Marcos embezzlement trial begins Estefan expected to be released JERUSALEM (AP) — Israel sent its second experimental satellite NEW YORK (AP) — Imelda Marcos treated the New York branch of NEW YORK (AP) — Singer Gloria Estefan, whose back was broken into Tuesday and showed off its advanced rocket technology at the Philippine National Bank as her "own personal piggy bank," a when her tour bus was hit by a truck, is expected to be released from a time of rising Middle East tensions. federal prosecutor said Tuesday at the start of the embezzlement the hospital today. Israel denied the Ofek-2 satellite was part of a program to spy on case against the former Philippine first lady. Estefan has been at the Orthopedic Institute Hospital for Joint its Arab neighbors, but Israeli leaders boasted the launch showed "Every time she descended on New York ... she cracked it open, Diseases, where doctors on March 22 implanted two steel rods in her the country's scientific and military superiority over Arab coun- (taking) bundles and bundles of cash," Assistant U.S. Attorney De- back. tries. bra Livingston told jurors. She will continue her rehabilitation from two fractured vertebrae Military analysts have long noted Israel's space program could "This case is about theft, fraud and deceit on an incredible scale," at home, hospital spokeswoman Mary Costello said Monday. give it immediate intelligence on Arab military moves and the she added. Marcos helped embezzle millions of dollars from her Doctors said it would take the Cuban-born performer up to six rocket technology involved also could carry more lethal payloads. homeland's treasury, the prosecutor said, to buy art, jewelry and months to fully recover. Witnesses said the rocket that hefted the 352-pound satellite into Manhattan real estate —"things Imelda Marcos desperately want- The operation came one day after she was injured when her bus space lifted off at 3:02p.m. (8:02 a.m. EDT). The Ofek-2 — "Ofek" is ed." was struck by a tractor-trailer in Pennsylvania. Hebrew for "horizon — was launched from an undisclosed site in She described Marcos and her late husband as "partners in Estefan, 32, was nominated for a Grammy Award this year for central Israel and entered orbit 90 minutes later. crime." "Don't Wanna Lose You," a song from her solo album. It was fired westward over the Mediterranean to avoid giving Arab countries a look at the rocket. Despite the secrecy of the Lawyers for Marcos and her co-defendant, Saudi financier Adnan launch, civilians including a busload of school children stopped to Khashoggi, were set to follow with previews of their defense strate- Famous folks for Farm Aid Four watch the rocket arch into partly cloudy skies. gies. Israeli officials refused to discuss the rocket involved in the The trial in Manhattan's federal court had been in recess since the launch. 12 jurors were sworn in last Tuesday. INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Willie Nelson hopes the fourth Farm Aid The satellite's orbit will range from 130 miles at its lowest point to concert can elicit greater support for the family farmer. 923 miles at its highest, according to Israel Aircraft Industries, Marcos, 60, said at the start of jury selection she should be tried in The singer and fellow organizers, musicians John Mellencamp which developed the satellite. her homeland, but hoped to be treated as an ordinary U.S. citizen. and Neil Young, had hoped they had performed their final Farm Aid concert when they left the stage in 1988 in Lincoln, Neb. "We thought the problem might have gone away by now," Nelson, the president of Farm Aid, said last week in a telephone interview from Montreal, where he was on tour. STATE / LOCAL Farm Aid IV will be held Saturday in the Hoosier Dome before 45,000 people. The tentative lineup of more than 60 acts includes Guns N' Roses, Bonnie Raitt, Don Henley, Bruce Hornsby, Richard Marx, John Census gauges county incomes Toledo's Jeep plants shut down Denver, Lou Reed, Iggy Pop, Jackson Browne, Dwight Yoakum, WASHINGTON (AP) — Want to open a fur salon, limousine dealer- TOLEDO (AP) — Terry Appleton looked at the silent smokestacks K.T. Oslin and Crosby, Stills and Nash. The cable Nashville Network ship or blue-chip investment house? Think about setting up shop in and empty parking lots at one of Chrysler Corp.'s two Jeep plants will carry the show from noon to midnight. Geauga County, Ohio, a money magnet just outside Cleveland. and shook his head. Per-capita income there tops Ohio's other 87 counties, the Census "It doesn't seem right, not seeing people and cars here," Appleton Slater convicted of drunk driving Bureau reported Tuesday. said Tuesday as he stood outside the Jeep Parkway plant. "We Ohio entrepreneurs looking for an up-and-coming community should be at work building Jeeps, not at home or at the unemploy- BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP) — Christian Slater, who appeared in might want to scout out Delaware County's cluster of bedroom su- ment office." "Heathers" and "The Wizard," pleaded no contest to his second burbs on the fringe of Columbus. Chrysler closed its Toledo Jeep plants this week, idling 5,300 drunken driving charge in a year and was sentenced to 10 days in Delaware County's per-person income grew faster during the workers, because of slumping sales. When the plants reopen next jail. 1980s than any other Ohio county, though at an estimated $12,732 per week, 440 workers will begin indefinite layoffs, a prospect that wor- The 20-year-old actor also was placed Monday on five years' pro- person it still lagged behind Geauga, where the average was pegged ries Appleton and others on the assembly line. bation, lost his driver's license for 18 months and was ordered to pay at$13,594. nearly $1,400 in fines and penalties. Delaware County had three localities where average per-person Ron Conrad, Jeep unit chairman of United Auto Workers union Prosecutors dropped charges of resisting arrest and battery on a wealth roughly doubled during the 1980s: Concord Township, Galena Local 12, said he's optimistic about the plants' future. This is the police officer in exchange for his no contest pleas to drunken driving and Ostrander. first time in more than two years layoff notices have been issued to and evading arrest. Delaware County's per-capita wealth increased 72.8 percent from Jeep employees without listing a date when they would return to Slater was arrested Dec. 29 after he led deputies on a chase that 1979 to 1987. In slowest-growing Jefferson County, wealth at the end won?. began when they spotted his car going 50 mph in a 35 mph zone and of the study period was 36.4 percent higher than in 1979. ended with the car crashing into two telephone poles. Overall, Onio charted a 55.5 percent increase in per-person wealth "But this local union and company get along so well that I'm con- Slater jumped out, ran and was climbing a fence when a deputy during the nine years tracked in the report. Average income jumped fident Chrysler will invest money and put a new product line in this dragged him down, getting kicked in the face by Slater's cowboy to $11,323 in 1987, the most recent year for which estimates are factory. A couple of years ago, that was unheard of," he said. boots, authorities said. available.

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UNDER THE GUN? WIN $100 Wednesday, April 4, 7:30 p.m. FROM THE UAO ROOMMATE OF THE YEAR CONTEST. Joe E. Brown Theater, University Hall APPLICATIONS IN UAO OFFICE, AND ARE DUE BY APRIL lOTH. Professor King, world-renowned social critic, historian, and philosopher from the University of Nottingham, shall discuss an emerging tradition of political thought and action that has become global. Beginning with Mahatma Gandhi and Martin Luther King, it has extended itself into South Africa, the Soviet Union, China, Central Europe, and continues to topple dictatorship.

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April 4,1*«> Elsewhere GOP criticized Soviets pledge dialogue " "YouYou mustmust understandunderstand thethe importanceimportance cord at that meeting To limit; theirtheir long-lot by Barry Schweld of that question for the Soviet Union and range nuclear missiles, bombers and after Bush visit Associated Press writer the Soviet people." Shevardnadze said as submarines. However, claims the overall he set the stage for talks with Baker be- cutback would amount to 50 percent were WASHINGTON — Soviet Foreign Minis- ginning this afternoon and with Bush on being challenged. by John Nolan A senior Bush administration official, Associated Press writer ter Eduard Shevardnadze arrived Tues- Friday. day for wide-ranging talks with President "Our main weapon in resolving any is- speaking on condition of anonymity, told Bush and Secretary of State James Baker sue ... is dialogue, honest dialogue, he The Associated Press the United States CINCINNATI — Republicans said they were pleased with Presi- [II and pledged to hold "honest dialogue" said. "And this is the dialogue we are look- would wind up with only slightly fewer de- dent Bush's visit Monday and Tuesday while Anthony Celebrezze with secessionist Lithuanians. ing forward to with the Lithuanian people ployed warheads than in the current ar- Jr.'s Democratic gubernatorial campaign criticized it as lacking Shevardnadze is expected to gjve Bush and the Lithuanian leadership. senals. substance...... u and Baker a message from Soviet Presi- Shevardnadze was met at Andrews, by When warheads kept in storage are tak- Bush spoke Monday night at a fund-raiser that produced as much dent Mikhail Gorbachev. Administration Deputy Secretary of State Lawrence en into account, he said, the U.S. total ac- as |700,000, GOP officials estimate. The money is to be split between officials hope it will spell out Moscow's Eagleburger. tually would exceed today's level. the campaigns of gubernatorial candidate George Voinovich and promise to deal peacefully with the inde- The foreign minister's agenda here rea- The official said the principal virtue of secretary ofstate candidate Robert Taft n. pendence movement in the Baltic republic. ches beyond Lithuania to the war in Ang- the treaty from the U.S. standpoint would But Voinovich missed a chance to call Bush's personal attention to ola between U.S. and Soviet-backed forces, be to force a reduction in long-range Soviet environmental problems at the radioactively contaminated site of While Shevardnadze's remarks on arriv- to ways of limiting cruise missiles in a SS-18 missiles. the federal government's Fernald uranium processing plant, said ing at Andrews Air Force Base had a con- U.S.-Soviet arms control treaty nearing Meanwhile, Margaret Tutwiler, the Timothy Burke, Hamilton County co-chairman for Celebrezze s ciliatory ring, the foreign minister empha- completion in Geneva and to trying to set a State Department spokeswoman, said the campaign. sized the significance the Kremlin atta- date for Gorbachev's summit meeting treaty would cut the SS-18 force in half and Burke said the president's Monday tour of General Electric Co. s ches to the Soviet Constitution and laws in here with Bush in June. reduce the total deployed Soviet missiles Evendale jet engine-building plant lacked significance. the face of the Lithuanian challenge. Bush and Gorbachev hope to sign an ac- by roughly 50 percent. "Voinovich had an enormous opportunity to do something positive with the president's visit," Burke said. ''What would have really helped the people of Southwest Ohio would have been for Voinovich to take the president to Fernald to show him the problems there." Voinovich campaign officials rejected Burke's criticism. Nude art "I think the Democrats can throw all the sour grapes that they Editors voice concerns want to, but the fact is that it's great for Cincinnati and for Ohio that George Voinovich was able to get President Bush to visit Cincinnati Group-owned papers criticized for profit orientation maybe — the result of which was shining the national spotlight on Ohio, Voinovich spokesman Curt Steiner said. "I think maybe what the Some argue group ownership advertisers and special interest Democrats should do is invite Mike Dukakis and Walter Mondale to by Mike Feinsilber brings greater resources to the groups, greater overall financial charged come to town and see what they can do for Cincinnati's problems." Associated Press writer local paper; some see homogen- resources and access to outside Celebrezze, Ohio's attorney general, filed contempt of court char- ization resulting from absentee experts to help solve problems by Joe McDonald ges Friday in U.S. District Court, accusing the Energy Department ownership. and train staff." Associated Press writer and Fernald's operator, Westinghouse Materials Co. of Ohio, of vio- WASHINGTON — A majority The committee's report was Independent papers, on the lating a court-approved consent decree regarding cleanup of the of the editors of locally and group-owned newspapers said prepared for the annual ASNE other hand, were likely to offer CINCINNATI — Lawyers and 1,050-acre Fernald plant. Celebrezze alleged Westinghouse and the meeting which opens today. Edi- "larger newsroom budgets, bet- department failed to properly handle hazardous materials at the firms owning multiple news- the judge in a lawsuit involving papers are more interested in tors of 234 newspapers, half ter understanding of (the) local an exhibit of photographs by the plant, about 18 miles northwest of Cincinnati. £Dup-owned and half indepen- market, more flexibility in mak- The Energy Department is preparing its response to Celebrezze s profits than in the communities late Robert Mapplethorpe dis- nt, all with circulations more ing decisions, greater in- agreed Tuesday over whether charges, department lawyer Marc Johnston said. they serve. than 10,000, returned question- volvement in the community, Bush spent Monday and Tuesday in Cincinnati promoting the In a survey, a majority of edi- the case prevents police from fil- naires. less turnover of key personnel, ing criminal obscenity charges. campaigns of Voinovich, Taft and J. Kenneth Blackwell, the party's tors also agreed freedom of the One historic characteristic of few levels of bureaucracy and a candidate for Congress in the Cincinnati area. Bress is in more jeopardy when Hamilton County Municipal le ownership of papers is con- the American press is its local tendency to be peculiar." Judge Edward Donnellon set the Bush met Tuesday morning at his hotel with Blackwell, a former nature, but local ownership is a In the survey, 62 percent of Cincinnati city councilman who resigned from a job as a top aide to centrated in fewer hands. first hearing in the case for Fri- disappearing phenomenon. Fi- editors of group papers and 91 day — the day the exhibit opens housing Secretary Jack Kemp in February to run for Congress. fty years ago, there were 1,559 percent of editors of indepen- Blackwell is trying to win the seat occupied since 1976 by Rep. A committee of the American — to consider the city's request Society of Newspaper Editors independent daily newspapers, dents agreed the owners of to dismiss the lawsuit by the Thomas Luken, 64, a Democrat who is retiring when his term ends locally owned, edited and man- group papers "are more con- Jan. 1. Blackwell's Democratic opponent is Luken's son, Cincinnati took a fresh look at a frequently Contemporary Arts Center. debated question among news- aged, and 319 were part of cerned about profits than what Marc Mezibov, a lawyer for Mayor Charles Luken. Republicans have targeted the race in their people: whether newspapers are groups. Now there are 1,233 happens to individual news- bid to gain a stronger foothold in Congress. the museum, said state law pre- likely to get better or worse group-owned papers and only papers or the communities they vents criminal charges or sei- when a local owner sells the 389 independents. serve." The same question was zure of the photographs until the paper to a company owning a The ASNE committee quoted not asked about locally owned suit is resolved. But Donnellon INTRODUCING THE 1990-91 number of them. one editor, David Offer of the papers. and the county prosecutor's of- family-ownedJVewport (R-I-) fice said nothing appears to pre- POMMERETTE SQUAD... Daily News, who has worked And 69 percent of groups' edi- vent police from acting. under both types of owners, as tors and 84 percent of indepen- The Arts Center filed the suit MOLLY NULL, CAPTAIN saying, "The type of ownership dents agreed freedom of the is not nearly as important as the press stands in greater jeopardy Last week, asking for a jury to GINA GUNDER, CO-CAPTAIN r decide whether as many as nine journalistic commitment of the 'if the press is owned by few of its 175 pictures in the six-week ANGELA DORSEY, LINE OFFICER ownership." people than if owned by many." show violate community stand- Nonetheless, the committee ards by depicting sex acts and KATHIE BERRY JULIE MESSERSCHMITT reported sharp distinctions But the editors parted com- featuring nude children. based on ownership. pany on whether "newspaper SHANNON FRY AMY MORGAN "The law states that any other Group-owned papers, it said, groups, if left unchecked, will proceedings would be stayed, TRICIA GEORGE SHARA MYSLEWSKI SGJ1NG were likely to offer "better ca- stifle competition and exert un- either criminal or civil. And I reer opportunities, more shar- due influence on the thinking of PAULA GIAAAAAARCO NICOL POZZUTO can't see any reason to bring Taste of China ing of ideas, less pressure from the whole country." obscenity charges prior to a jur- ANGIE GRAHAM NICOLE QUERCIOLI Gourmet Chinese y's deciding whether the mate- VICKI HILL KARI SAYLOR -J*» s- rials are obscene," Mezibov Restaurant said. MARELL JOHNSTON BRENDA SCHEIN ^ "1 want the best care ■ is Assistant County Prosecutor MARGARET KRIEG KATHY STALEY CattH m 1 can find. That's Steve Tolbert said the Law al- Mftl-MfMhi DA* lows county Prosecutor Arthur KRIS LOSZ MINDY WHALEN M why, for years, I've Ney Jr. to file charges at any DIANNE MALBONE TONI VELLEMAN time. Tolbert declined to say CnyCWf ^^v~*> whether prosecutors have de- •i.K trusted my eyes to CONGRA TULA TIONS! p Burlington Optical." cided to charge the museum. '6.9S "If we had, I wouldn't be at ALSO. A GREAT BIG THANK YOU TO THE All EnlfMt Com» w/Soup. Ric», 1 liberty to comment," Tolbert Fortun* CoofclM iV^^ Bob said. 1989-90 SQUAD FOR A JOB WELL DONE! 16161 WoosttrSl Ney is named as a defendant Giwnwood Center 352-915) in the Lawsuit, along with county • EYEGLASS SPECIAL • Sheriff Simon Leis Jr., Police Chief Larry Whalen and city so- 2 PAIR SINGLE VISION licitor Richard Castellini. The ■PLASTIC FRAME + ~~ST4%00 ING CORPS •PLASTIC LENSES ) f UOO L county hasn't responded to the • STANDARD SIZE LENSES M^M lawsuit but has until April 17 re- ■ ONE PAIR TINTED FREE m m spond. Donnellon said the Lawsuit doesn't ask the court to block Leis, Whalen or the county pros- ^Burlingi ton Optical —~■ ecutor from filing obscenity EYES EXAMINED BY D R. S. SHIf F OPTOMETRIST „toxv> charges. loillX) IOIIIX) BOWl INC. GREEN I'lV. s. KI'MIIIIIK 11-, 1 W. Svlv.inlj K.II. I. Un.i.ti'i "I do not see any direct orders indicating that they cannot take IH2-2020 472-1 1 1 t I52-23 S t action," the Judge said. JOHN NEWLOVE REAL ESTATE SUMMER & FALL RENTALS LARGE ASSORTMENT OF HOUSES, DUPLEXES, 8t APARTMENTS (TOO MANY TO LIST) STOP IN TO 319 E. WOOSTER FOR A BROCHURE OF COMPLETE START YOUR CLIMB DETAILS AND SPEAK WITH OUR FRIENDLY STAFF. TO CAREER SUCCESS THIS SUMMER. JOHN NEWLOVE REAL ESTATE 319 E. WOOSTER Apply now for six weeks of Army ROTC leadership training. With Pay, without obligation. 354-2260 You'll develop the discipline, confidence, and decisiveness It takes to succeed In a career. And you'll qualify to earn Army (ACROSS FROM TACO BELL) officer credentials while your completing your college studies.

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A|MH4,I**0 7

Resolution D Continued from page 1. begin working on tenure lecturers becoming too common tomorrow," said Alice Heim worried several senators. here for more than five years, Calderonello, an English profes- "I think it has the potential of because this might allow them sor and a staunch supporter of degrading teaching, said Gen- to sue for tenure. the proposal. ievive Stang, chairwoman of the However, permanent lec- Only department, program or welfare committee. turers will sign waivers agree- school officials can request Stang proposed not allowing ing not to sue for tenure. Typi- permanent lecture positions, Krmanent lecturers to consti- cally, applying for tenure re- which will prevent college offi- e more than one-fourth of a quires proven excellence in cials from mandating use of the department and/or 10 percent teaching, research and service non-tenure rank, according to of the total faculty — but other to the University community. Michael Locey, a member of the senators thought this too limit- ^n the computer you welfare committee. ing. Some senators wanted to go a The jobs are permanent, but Eloise Clark, vice president of step beyond the original propos- they are not guaranteed and if academic affairs, voted against al and try to grant tenure to lec- teaching quality is poor or if the the 10 percent cap, because she turers, but this idea was voted position is not needed, a perma- said "it was too restrictive" and down. nent lecturer may be released. might hinder areas needing "We can pass this today and The possibility of permanent permanent teachers. need to succeed in the Pollution D Continued from page 1. cimate my state of Illinois," de- successfully had sought finan- "We can no longer delay," said clared Sen. Alan Dixon, D-IU. cial help for coal miners affec- Mitchell, who has sought federal whose state has utility plants ted by the bill. controls on acid rain for nearly a that rely on high-sulfur coal as The final vote came after a decade and made the clean air well as coal miners whose jobs brief flurry of excitement over bill his top priority as Democra- will be jeopardized by new an attempt by Sen. Don Nickles, tic leader. real world and a chance measures to combat acid rain. R-Okla., at the last minute to "The American people want Dixon was among only the 11 change the permit requirements action. They demand action," he senators who voted against the of the bill and make it easier for continued. legislation. businesses to comply. Sen. Max But to many senators, particu- _ cannot vote for legislation Baucus, D-Mont., called the larly from the Midwest, the vote that will destroy the livelihood of 34-page amendment "an am- represented an agonizing choice thousands of hard working men bush that would hamper enfor- between cleaner air and concern and women ... that will bring e- cement of the new requirements about the impact of the new con- conomic ruin to communities and hinder civil suits against to use it there. trols on employment and elec- throughout Appalachian and polluters. tric bills back home. midwestern states," said Sen. The amendment was narrowly "This bill will absolutely de- Robert Byrd. D-W.Va., who un- defeated by a vote of 51-49. It's easy. Just try our Real World Demo on a Activism Canada Macintosh* computer to enter Apple's Real Q Continued from page 3. D Continued from page 1. World Sweepstakes. "We have a larger percentage '60s students were idealologists, According to Marsden, the If you're one of 14 Grand Prize winners, of students from smaller, rural- and it's not true. While maybe a program was in an 'awfully good type areas where there is less larger percentage were acti- position' to offer a Canadian you'll get to spend a week this summer at the activism," Strauss said. "It's vists, certainly not everybody studies major. confusing, though, because ac- was," he said. One of the most important organization of your choice listed below, where tivism is so low everywhere." reasons for the emphasis on the you'll see Macintosh computers hard at work. And "When students were drafted Canadian studies program is Although involvement was into the Vietnam War and they Canada's importance to the when you get home, you can use your own new greater 20 years ago, Thompson were threatened personally, United States, and the lack of said many people have the then they weren't sure they be- knowledge about its neighboring Macintosh SE/30 to write your resume and wrong idea about just how ex- lieved in the war," he said. country. follow-up letters. tensive activism was. "Students in the 18 to 22 age "Ohio's biggest trading part- range are primarily concerned ner is Canada, yet we know so There will also be 20 First Prize winners who "There is a mythology that with themselves." little about them," he said. will receive Macintosh SE computers and 1,000 Italy Second Prize winners who will get Apple*T-shirts. D Continued from page 4 • You really can't lose if you come in and get Any student can participate in only are taught one hour each people — will involve what they the trip including those with day four times each week and have learned,she said. your hands on a Macintosh today Because once little or no experience in the Ita- what they learn is usually not The total cost of the trip is you do, you'll see how easy it is to use and how lian language, Francescon said. used outside of the classroom, ! 1,850 which includes tuition she said. ees, housing, transportation, much one could do for you now. "All levels of the language will tours and weekend trips. Cavton be taught-including beginning "This is not only classroom said. It does not include lab tees, You'll appreciate the value of a Macintosh levels," she said. experience, but it also extends books or fees for out-of-state Language students will gain outside of the classroom to students. computer after you leave campus and head out much more experience in Italy everyday activities," she said. into the real world, too. than they would here in Bowling Students will receive six cred- Green, Francescon said. Everything students do — its for their participation in the But don't take our word for it. Come in and At most universities, students from shopping to meeting new program, Francescon said. try a Macintosh and see for yourself. And if you win the Grand Prize, you'll be seeing the real world sooner than vou think. Enter and you could win a week at one a Macintosh computer. 1

Enter April 2nd - April 27th Stop by the MacFest TODAY from 10 - 3 in the Student Lounge, 2nd Floor, Business Admin. Building or call 372-7724 for more Information

Set HKir Campus Ciimputer Reseller for Swepslakts Rules and Rq>ubilKins OWtYl* c«W«rT hit An* tf»M**W' J«»IMinnlr»Jijn-itTt*iTUlrj*iortM4*(T*'(jmf«rt kk

the College of Musical Arts & the BGSU Cultural Events Committee present a concert with jazz guitartist STANLEY JORDAN Saturday. April 7, 1990 8:00 p.m. in y M Kobacker Hall Tickets available at Kobacker Box Office Mori. - Fri. 12:00 pm to 6:00 pm, also at Finder's Records and Boogie Records. Tickets s15.50, s12.50, and s9.50 (s2.50 discount for students with valid BGSU I.D.) Call UAO for more details at 372-2343. THE BG NEWS

Apt* 4,19*0 Health Tobacco industry still flourishing by Judith Egerlon might quit because of rising Taiwan by accepting empty lately, tobacco industry adver- USA Today-CIN prices, Warner said. A pack of packages of Kent and Winston in saries have turned up the heat. cigarettes that sold for 90 cents exchange for tickets to a disco, Cigarette promotions changing in 1982 cost $1.50 last year. he said. R.J. Reynolds faced a fires- More American smokers are torm of criticism over its mar- The U.S. cigarette industry has draslically reduced its dependence snuffing the habit, yet cigarette But the best way to boost sales With the opening of the Asian keting plans for two new brands on print advertising during the past decade, while spending more on makers still rake in huge profits over a long period is to capture market to U.S. tobacco com- — Uptown, aimed at blacks, and promotional giveaways and payments to retailers for shelf space. and profess few concerns over new smokers and cigarette panies, exports have soared. Dakota, targeted at what a How cigarette promotions have changed: the tarnish on their golden prod- makers are finding them over- Since 1985, exports have more company memo called "virile uct. seas. than doubled from about 59 bil- females — young, working- Percentages of advertising and promotional expenditures: lion cigarettes to almost 142 bil- class women. Despite a shrinking U.S. mar- The number of foreign smok- lion. ket, tobacco companies are ers is rising 2 percent or more Congress recently banned 15.6% other squeezing higher profits from each year —almost exactly off- In the last quarter-century, smoking on domestic flights, 15 45.9% 39% other 16% 119% the $35 billion-a-y ear industry by setting the U.S. decline. In 1989, the number of U.S. smokers has states raised cigarette taxes last promotions' print ads promotions' print ads outdoor advertising creating new overseas markets, exports jumped 20 percent, ac- plummeted. In 1965, 40 percent year, and most now have laws 20.8% hiking prices on name brands, cording to the Agriculture De- of Americans smoked. Now, it is restricting smoking — even Vir- payments and adding generic brands and partment. only 25 percent. ginia, where tobacco has been to retailers, other new brands. the biggest cash crop since colo- Abroad, U.S. tobacco com- The number of cigarettes sold nial days. in-store For now. the strategy appears panies advertise on television — and smoked domestically has promotions to be working. But some ana- prohibited in the United States. dipped since 1982 from 625 bil- But the shrinking U.S. market lysts see serious trouble ahead They also give away samples, lion to less than 525 billion, ac- remains immensely lucrative. as anti-smoking forces gain sponsor rock concerts and sell cording to John Maxwell, a 17.7% momentum and seek more re- cigarettes without warning tobacco industry analyst with In 1988, tobacco company outdoor strictions. labels, said Dr. Greg Connolly, a Wheat First Securities. profits rose an average 15 per- advertising 33.1% public health official in Massa- cent, and similar figures are ex- payments "The strategy has been enor- chusetts. The declining number of pected for 1989. With each per- mously successful and profitabi- smokers provides stark evi- centage point of market share to retailers, lity goes up every year," said In 1987, Lorillard and Reyn- dence of the strength of the an- translating into $250 million in in-store Kenneth Warner, a public health olds promoted their cigarettes in ti-smoking movement. And sales, the six major companies promotions professor at the University of compete fiercely for smokers' Michigan. dollars. While he predicts cigarette Top cigarette 26.3%' To that end, they spend less on profits inevitably will decline, print advertising and more to companies "are doing their brands in 1989 pay retailers for shelf space. damnedest to halt the erosion." Promotional giveaways, such as 1989 market share T-shirts, also make up a larger To lure customers away from percentage of advertising bud- competitors, companies are sell- gets. Sponsorship of sporting 1. Sports sponsorships, give-aways, free samples, t-shirts, ing more value-priced generics, |;iC _ .ilff- 9.1% events is aimed at cushioning direct mail advertising, etc. Because of rounding errors, percentages do not add up to discounting popular brands with ,.,j 4,7% | il , 5.9% M 6.2% the federal ban on television ad- coupons and adding more ultra- IE vertising. 100 percent. lights and slim styles. 1 Newport/ Kool/ Salem/ Winston/ Marlboro/ Source: Federal Trade Commission Report 1969 Scott Davi9. Gannett News Service Lorillard Brown & RJR RJR Philip While tobacco companies Increased production of agree anti-smoking forces are cheaper generic cigarettes, not Williamson Nabisco Nabisco Morris making inroads, they see no Police available 10 vears ago, is an reason to change marketing u Continued from page 4. effort to hold smokers who Brand/company plaints received by city police strategy. pleted survey — the first of its increased 27.2 percent from the "It's business as usual," said kind. past year. Criminal complaints Source: Wheat First Securities, Philip Morris spokesman An- "Perhaps the greatest benefit alone remained about the same, Sf>»cW >M«rt • *Nrt» Fm to The Maxwell Report drew White. "There are still 55 now is the establishment of a however. Disorderly conduct, million smokers." base by which the results of any fighting, vehicle thefts, and EUROPE, SOUTH future survey can be com- breaking-and-entering reports AMERICA, ASIA Rod Litite, Gannett News Service pared," the report said. are up. Vandalism reports are IMB Nw »* «i MMM AMMI Here's a tip ... The survey was a part of a down. general citizen survey distrib- Criminal arrests increased DESTINATIONS OW RT a tax tip. uted to 2,000 residents by the 17 percent from 1988, but are LONDON $175 $350 Bowling Green administration. PARIS 225 430 about the same as they were in MADRID 235 450 If you've got tax The results were drawn from 800 1987. ROME 275 550 BICVCL€ responses. DTraffic accidents decreased STOCKHOLM/OSLO 250 500 questions, you can get Responses from citizens who almost 10 percent from 1988. COPENHAGEN 250 500 the answers by calling had not come into contact with Traffic tickets distributed by ZURICH 215 405 AUCTION Bowling Green police during the FRANKFURT 235 the IRS Tele-Tax service, city police again increased in 450 past two years were discarded. 1988 — by 28.7 percent. Last RIO 365 730 a recorded information TOKYO 495 850 Bowling Green State University will be The report also brought a few year, city police awarded more service on about 150 other statistics to light: NYC L.A./San Francisco 170 340 holding a Public Auction on Tuesday, April than twice the amount of tickets Add on rates Bouon. D Corner US erne* PfcjsSo topics. The phone DThe total number of com- they did in 1987. dep lai. S10 cuaVrmmig rw IS security lee mar appfy *> each o-eclion 10, 1990 beginning at 3:30 PM in the number is in your tax Eural and EurH YouW Pawes MeHte ■nmnajiffj Student Services Forum. Auctioneer: N. package and telephone 1-800-77*0112 ST/ J Keith Bradley. Bowling Green, Ohio. For directory. [FOR- ALL THE CAMPUS INFO, more information please contact: Kathy YOU NEED TO KNOW, 212-986-9470 Phillips, Inventory Management Dept., GRAB A COPY OF WHOLE WORLD TRAVEL 372-2121. BSMMS 17 E 45fli St.Sute 805. New York. NY 10017 vfctv of Htm MM Part of Bit wrttr/ide STA Travel Network ITHE BG NEWS!

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Falcons sweep UT mzz% amid cold, snow by Charles Toll Spring trip, their lives have been Hufford then proved she could assistant sports editor miserable. But we played well also hit, nailing a two-run double today. into left field. "We didn't make many mis- Both teams went scoreless the If cars would have been al- takes, we got the ball in play, we rest of the way, until the bottom lowed on Bowling Green's soft- executed our skills and we came of the seventh, when Toledo sec- ball field Tuesday afternoon, the out on top." ond baseman Jennifer Trimble traffic report would have read Joesph complemented her pit- misjudged a pop-up off Huf- "sluggish conditions with lim- cher on another superb outing. ford's bat. itied visibility." "(Hufford's) an old work- Bowling Green's Vickie Quinn But unfortunately for Toledo, horse," she said. "She knows pinch ran for Hufford and ad- the only motion on the playing what she has to do to win and she vanced to second base on a field was the speeding fastball of Sot the job done today. She single by Kim Still. Still led the BG'sLisal.Hut * idn't walk a lot and stayed Falcons with three hits in two ford. ahead of the batters." games. Hufford bat- Hufford said the wins may add An error by leftfielder Lydia tled through a well needed boost to a team Reresztesi loaded the bases be- the 30 degree starving for confidence. fore Karen Appelbaum ended tempeatures "It feels really great to win the game with a single to right. and light, today after having a rough cou- "The error was the key," blowing snow ple of weeks," said Hufford, who Toledo coach Sheryl Sprangel to help the has pitched in 78 innings (50 said. "It was a routine ball that Falcons win more than any other Falcon) should have been caught." both games of this season. The second game proved less a "Toledo was the team to beat, dramatic as both teams had to doubleheader and raise their re- which means we should be able battle the dropping tempera- BG News/Greg Horvath cord to 4-14 overall, but 2-0 in the to compete with the other MAC tures and increasing snow fall. Mid-American Conference. teams.'' With one out in the third in- Bowling Green's Michelle Clagett slides into home with the Falcon's second run of the second game as team- Bowling Green came from be- While the outcome was crystal ning, Still hit an 2-0 pitch into left mate Lisa Williams watches. The collision put Toledo's Lynn Szczypka out of the game. hind in the first game to beat the clear for the Falcons, the begin- for a double. The Falcons lea- defending MAC champions, 3-2, ning was as cloudly as the April doff hitter, Michelle Clagett, Sherri Magnuson's throw to On the throw to second. went up for good 2-0. and held the Rockets scoreless bunted for a hit, putting runners third trying to catch Clagett was Clagett raced home and collided "Mentally, I feel my team in the second, 2-0. Toledo's Leigit Ross led off the at first and second with one out. late. with Lynn Szczypka whose wasn't cola," Joseph said. "If The senior right-hander Huf- first inning with a single to right Appelbaum then grounded the The third baseman threw back effort to hold on to the ball was you let them think they're cold, ford gave up only two runs in 13 field. Hufford then walked Dena ball past the first baseman to to second to tag a sliding Apple- in vain as the called they'll play like they're cold. innings of work to improve her Fong to put runners at first and score Still. Toledo's rightfielder baurn out. Clagett safe and the Falcons Today, we weren't." record to 4-8. second with no outs. Wins have been at a premium After the next batter flew out, so far this season for Hufford Toledo's Ronda King-Randolph and the Falcons. During their cleared the bases with a double dismal 1-11 California Spring to right. trip, the Falcons were their own Deb Mantz kept the rally alive Greenbriar Inc. worst enemies committing 35 with a single to left, before Huf- errors. ford settled down and retired the Hufford pitched in all but one next two batters. UUe will be leasing the following of those games and came out Hufford would not give up any with a team-leading 1.59 earned more runs the entire day and locations for the Foil of 1990 run average, despite only get- only two more hits. ting one win. While Hufford dominated Last weekend in the Ohio State Toledo hitters, the Rockets Pa- • East Merry Avenue Apartments - 522 E. Merry Ave. Invitational, Hufford started tty Barrett held the Falcons to • Field Manor Apartments - 519 Leroy Ave., 542 & and went the distance in three one hit until the fourth inning games, giving up only two runs, when they surged back. 560 Frazee Ave. but the Falcons again managed With two outs, BG's Dena • Frazee Avenue Apartments - 818 Thurstin. 624, 670 just one victory. Romstadt hit a 1-2 pitch into left (will have new carpeting), 656 Frazee Ave. "We have been struggling," field for a single. A double by BG coach Jacquie Joespn said. Jeni Leis put runners at second • Buff Apartments-1470 & 1490 Clough St. "Since we came back from the and third with two out. VOLUNTEERS NEEDED • Campbell Hill Apartments- 3 Bedrooms >m FOR ^ "HerefeaNEW ff)C&gf'. 3rd ANNUAL BIATHLON TAX LAW tip" ENDS THURSDAY Coll or Stop in for a Complete FINAL 2 DAYS SATURDAY, APRIL 21 Listing of Available Generally, the new tax law re- plan to attend one of the quires you to pay at least 90 WINNER OF FOUP ACADEMY Apartments & Houses percent of your 1987 income AWAPDS following volunteer meetings tax through withholding or Best Picture and Best Actress estimated tax payments. IT April 3rd at 2:00 p.m. in the SRC Conference Room you don't, you may have to pay a penalty. Publication 505 con- or tains more information. Call April 5th at 4:00 p.m. in the SRC Conference Room 352-0717 I -800-424-FORM (8876) OT t he IRS Forms number in your phone book to get a copy. PC All volunteers will receive Hours: 7:15 4 9:15 a 3rd Annual Biathlon t-shirt freel 224 M-F 9am.-5p.rn. E. Wooster St Sat. 9a.m.-lp.m. *For more information, call 372-7482 Starts APRIL 6th " Eni.it Go.1 lo Jill

SSSSSSS«SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS=JSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS= Games Marathon Applications are being accepted Saturday, April 7 Noon to Midnight for At Off Campus Student Center "Basement of Moseley Hall" Summer 1990 BG News editor Proceeds For more Fall 1990 BG News editor go to the «B# info, call Link Food 372-8915 or 1990-91 Gavel editor Pantry 372-2573 1991 Key editor Cash and 1990-91 Miscellany editor Bring your non-perishable little sib! food donations 1990-91 Obsidian editor accepted at door. Sponsored by Application forms may be obtained at Commuter Off-Campus Organization The BG News office, 214 West Hall. Bowling Green Gaming Society Application deadline Thurs., April 12 5 p.m. Hidden Realms

352-757i / PASTA>, c-lmld.» Pickup Only - Iniidt i Pickup Only- — INSIDE ONLY — Wednesday 11 *HI 9 Thursday 11'til 9 Friday 11 'til Gone Saturday 11 'til 9 Sunday 11 'til 9 Spaghetti Lasagna Roast Beef Mini Reg. Sub Pizza Dinner Dinner Platter & Cup Ot Soup Smorgasbord PhM I Tic TO S«*J BM S*»J. Soup 4 ic Otm •3.75 •3.50 '4.50 THE BG NEWS

K> Aprll4,1990 Ruggers shut out Buckeyes Nicklaus pursues by Scott Geringer Roger Mazzarella, who saw the surge was Mark Colclesser (two stemmed from the Falcons Buckeyes defeat BG last fall to tries), Kyle Fulmer (three con- Spring Break trip to Gulfport, 7th Masters win sports writer keep his team out of the national version kicks), and Todd Myer Miss, in which the Falcons The Bowling Green rugby club tournament. and Andy Wasiniak with a try a swept the University of Southern by Bob Green continued its early spring "We had a very successful fall piece. Mississippi and defeated and AP golf wrilor season success with three vic- season, but that one loss was all Mazzarella said, "The Slip- tied the Gulfport Landsharks in tories during the weekend to im- it took to knock us out," he said. pery Rock game was 'typical four tight games. prove its record to 6-1-2. BG also handed Notre Dame a BG showcasing the most so- The seasons only loss for the AUGUSTA, Ga. — The Olden Bear turned Golden again, and The Falcons defeated Ohio loss in the round-robin competi- phisticated offense in the nation rugby team was against the now he's on the prowl for still another Masters title. State in Columbus 8-0 on tries by tion in a 4-0 struggle. Doug which includes scoring by the national military champions, Sam Snead was 52 when he won his eighth Greensboro Open S" le Long and Tom Yessler. Slagel provided the lone try for backs." Pensacola Naval Air Station in 1965. He was the oldest man to win on the PGA Tour. e victory atoned for an earlier the margin of victory. However, the coach was wor- 14-6. Although Mazzarella was Julius Boros was 48 when he won the 1968 PGA champion- 12-12 tie with the Buckeyes in According to Mazzarella the ried in the first half with the dissapointed with the loss, he ship. He was the oldest man to win one of golf's Big Four which tries by Eric Hepner, most important victory of the score tied 6-6. "The Slippery was pleased with the team's events: the Masters, U.S. and British Opens ana the PGA. Tom Clark, and Kevin O'Reilly weekend was posted against Rock game was important, he effort. Jack Nicklaus was 46 when he won the 1986 Masters, the were not enough to decide the Slippery Rock in which the rug- said. '"We've had trouble getting "This game let us know where oldest man to win that title. Now he's 50. contest. gers came out strong in the sec- mentally prepared for the sec- we are and where we need to And, confident and enthusiastic in the wake of a triumph in The victory was especially ond half scoring 16 points. ond half in games." go," he said. "By next fall I his first start on the Senior PGA Tour, Nicklaus says he's ready satisfying for Falcon coach Contributing to the scoring Mazzarella said his concern "c we will be gangbusters." to take on the younger players in the 54th Masters that begins Thursday. ■-I think my chances are pretty good," he said. "I really think they are." The statement came in the cheerful, confident, rosy review Reds clipped 8-6, of his victory in the Tradition at Desert Mountain. But that was against a field restricted to golf's over-50 set, Lacrosse team Gary Player, a three-time Masters winner and Nicklaus' trade for Hatcher playing companion over the last two rounds last week, thinks it is more than possible Nicklaus can win here. "Extremely likely," Player said. "He's playing very, very downs Albion KISSIMMEE, Fla. (AP) - Class AAA Nashville roster to well. I thought his putting was excellent. He's doing the things Harry Spilman's two-run double the Pirates farm system. you have to do to win. I don't care what they say about all those in the eighth inning Tuesday Hatcher is at home in Houston younger players. There's not a one of them can play anything by Greg Watson gave the an 8-6 awaiting the birth of a second like the way this man plays." sports writer exhibition victory over the Cin- At the core is his new-old swing. In the years since his sixth child and will join the club after Masters victory, he said, his swing changed to accommodate cinnati Reds. the baby is born, the Reds said. back problems that, at one time, threatened his playing career. The club lacrosse team lost two of three games last weekend The Astros rallied from a 6-5 but is hoping to take home the upcoming Dayton Flyer Cup. deficit with three runs in the Hatcher, 29, was hitting .417 in Ten Ohio college lacrosse teams, including Ohio State, Ohio, eighth off loser Doug Danning, seven exhibition games. He was Those physical problems are cured, he said, and he has and Dayton will compete for the cup. The Falcons opponent has 0-1, at Osceola County Stadium. drafted by the Chicago Cubs in slowly worked his way back to the swing of an earlier era, a not been announced. Craig Biggio started the rally 1981 and played briefly with the swing that produced 70 American PGA Tour titles and a record The Falcons bowed to John Carroll and OU Saturday, then with an RBI single to score Ra- Cubs in 1984 and 1985 and then 18 major championships. beat Albion Sunday. fael Ramirez to tie the game. was traded to the Houston As- "I'm very confident with what I'm doing," he said after Blake Kneedler and Nate Anderson led the scoring with two Spilman then hit a double to tros. He was with the Astros reaching the halfway mark on a goal he'd set Tor 1990: a victory goals in the 11-7 loss to John Carroll. right center that scored Biggio from 1986 until last August, on both the Senior and regular tours."If I'm going to win on the "We went into the game thinking we could beat them easily," and Gerald Young. when he want to Pittsburgh in a regular tour, the Masters is the tournament for me to win. said captain Geoff Knapp. Reliever Al Osuna, 1-0, got the trade for outfielder Glenn Wil- "I've won there six times. I know the course and the tourna- Kneedler and Sean Murphy accounted for the teams' goals in victory and Randy St. Claire got son. ment and what it takes to win there. I'm comfortable there. I the 6-2 loss to OU. his first save. don't have the strength I once had, but strength isn't a factor at The club was fired up for the game, said defenseman Tom The Reds are 7-3 in exhibition Hatcher's combined totals for Augusta. You don't have the rough there you do at the Open McDonnell. play. last year included a .231 batting and the PGA. "We lost our last two overtime games against them and The two teams will face each average with four home runs, 51 There are other fellows who are better than I am around the wanted to get even. We just got worn out late in the game," he other again Monday in the open- RBI and 24 stolen bases. His best greens. But that doesn't give them the advantage al Augusta said. ing game of the regular season season was in 1987 when he hit they might have some place else." Bin Robertson and Murphy led the Falcons to a 7-4 win at the in Houston. .296 for Houston with 28 doubles, against Albion. Robertson said team unity helped the club. ODD 11 homers, 63 RBI and 53 stolen "We worked very well with each other," he said. "There was bases. better passing and the offense worked with the defense better PLANT CITY, Fla. (AP) — than the last two games." According to Knapp, the Falcons will The Cincinnati Reds acquired In his last outing, Roesler pit- Indians, Pirates probably be seeded third before the Flyer Cup but the players outfielder Billy Hatcher in a ched two shutout innings against nave high hopes of taking the trophy. trade with the Pittsburgh Pi- the Red Sox in a split-squad "We lost to OU in overtime in last year's Flyer Cup." rates on Tuesday, giving up pit- game in Winter Haven. McDonnell said. "They and Dayton are the teams to beat." cher Mike Roesler and non- post spring wins The lacrosse team took third place when Miami forfeited last roster infielder Jeff Richardson. Roesler, 26, was the Reds' year. No.17 draft in June 1985. He was TEMPE, Ariz. (AP) — Candy ched the last two innings for the "If we just get some good practices in before the tourna- Roesler goes to the Pirates' called up for the first time last Maldonado doubled home Chris Indians to pick up the save. ment, we could turn this into a runaway," added Robertson. major league roster, and Rich- Aug. 7, and was 0-1 with a 3.96 James in the seventh inning ODD ardson moves from the Reds' earned run average in 17 games. Monday afternoon to give the BRADENTON, Fla. (AP) — Cleveland Indians a 2-1 exhibi- Jeff King and Jay Bell homered tion victory over the Seattle and had three hits apiece and Mariners. the Pittsburgh Pirates worked The BG News James scored the game- over Texas starter Bobby Witt winning run after getting the In- for 10 runs and 12 hits in five in- is recyclable! dians even with a run-scoring nings in an 11-5 victory Tuesday triple off loser Vance Lovelace. over the Rangers. For over 80 years, James' sinking line drive to Bob Patterson, a veteran center field skipped past a minor league left-hander who ■ -rue PDIHINII uiCTirc nDrnM7«TinN T- charging Henry Cotto, allowing will make the Pirates' opening THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE ORGANIZATION Cory Snyder to score from first day staff, checked the Rangers we've kept our welcomes base. Snyder opened the inning on two hits over 3 1-3 scoreless with an infield nit. innings after starter Bob Walk DARRYL TOLER The Mariners took a 1-0 lead in left in the second with a strained from the fifth inning when Dave right calf muscle. Cochrane hit a leadoff homer off Walk allowed Rafael Pal- creamy GLYNCO Bud Black, who allowed five hits meiro's two-run triple in the FEDERAL LAW ENFORCEMENT TRAINING CENTER over five innings. second as the Rangers took a 4-2 lead. Bell hit a solo homer in the April 4 Moseley Hall 7:30 p.m. Seattle starter Scott Bank- third and the Pirates took a 6-4 complexion. Refreshments Provided * • All Majors Welcome head pitched four scoreless in- lead In the fourth on King's nings, allowing one hit and Gene run-scoring double and R.J. ^••••••••*******dr**rV**», Harris followed with two score- Reynolds' two-run single. less innings before Lovelace, expected to start the season in King hit a two-out solo homer Triple A, came on in relief. in the fifth ahead of singles by Mike LaValliere and Jose Lind Jeff Shaw replaced Black and and Andy Van Slyke's pinch-hit Eitched one inning to get the vic- three-run homer just inside the WANTED! iry while Ceciho Guante pit- right-field foul pole. BGSU's most qualified students as ADVERTISING SALES REPRESENTATIVES Fresh. Wholesome. Pure. Our standards of excellence for since 1909. Standards we're keeping every day, so you can count on the creamy complexion of Smiths. The BG News 10* OFF 35'OFF If you are a self-motivated, On Any Gallon or 24 02. size On Any Half-Gallon results-oriented person, of Smith Dairy Product of Smiths Ice Cream YOU Only I Je*e Dealr. Wr *iH tTMiJanw *ou 0 r*JC da** in ix* pniiutrd upon mjurw. il truWmrd Jirt m nor wodwrJ upon »h« than rrtaitm or (kannfhotiwv 4 raird, students on campus. rrqur*. 4 rrdtrtwd h. <"hri htrfurtJ, reunited or pra- thjn tnidm o* .Irarmfhow. hiKirJ CumiiMr *WM SUMMER 4 tawd. kmied, rrwrmrd « pa* tain lai. Cash pmrutwriJ CiMomrr IIHIW par marmpcMft valur I'iOd At Cleveland State University. We offer over tali* in Cjtf» rtdrmpt** v*tur , K. VaUonh on product ] KM l« V«M onhr on ptod- «:r inuV jrrd CoqM -w**\ All majors encouraged to apply. 750 different summer classes — days, evenings, wl war indu arJ Covporw an arr nonaMifniNr. nun WMllHllrt. nnwramfa-'raNt. rf jn«lrrt»r*f, and IM* Must have own car. or Saturdays — and most run for just 5'A weeks and may «* hr rrpfudmrd not Sr rrprodwrd. Rrdnm h* matkni pn-ipir. i« Redeem h* miifant instead of 11. (We also offer some 8 and 11 SDK ,2»N.VWSt. prompt)* i<> S D PC., 5»N V«r St, Orrvdlr. week sessions.) So call 216-687-3770 or write Orrvfle. OH 44667 OH44»7 Applications and job descriptions the Registrar, CSU, available at 214 West Hall. Cleveland, Ohio 44115. Summer may be long AA SMITHS DEADLINE: April 6, 5 p.m. and hot, but the classes at CSU tti£. THE DAIRY IN THE COUNTRY CSU are short and sweet. No Limits. THE BG NEWS April 4,1990 11 Kosar says his arm is healed Tribe's Nichols CLEVELAND (AP) — After game at Denver in the belief he games." Kosar's close friend Marc three months of recuperation in could help his team win despite Kosar was plagued by a staph Trestman, Cleveland's offensive , Cleveland Browns his injuries. infection that caused swelling in coordinator last season, was starting slowly quarterback Bernie Kosar said "The last couple of games I his right shoulder. He also had a fired after the season and has he has healed injuries that ham- was limited in the way I could bruised right elbow and a signed on as an offensive assist- pered his throwing arm at the throw," Kosar told The Plain strained index finger in his ant with the Minnesota Vikings. end of last season. Dealer. "When I was hurting the throwing hand. Kosar said his Florida stay al- CLEVELAND (AP) — Rod Nichols likes regular season In the latter part of the 1969 most was Minnesota, Houston, Kosar didn't miss a game last lowed him to review problems baseball. Spring games just don't seem to get his competitive NFL season, Kosar would con- Buffalo and Denver games. season, which included late- the team had on offense last fire going. sistently downplay the affect of Those were the most important season wins over Minnesota and season and the resulting Trest- The 25-year-old right-hander is a candidate to become the shoulder, elbow and hand injur- games. I wanted to play. Houston and a playoff win over man firing. Cleveland Indians' fifth starting pitcher, but be hasn't been ies by saying he adjusted to the impressive so far in . "You can say maybe the Den- Buffalo before the loss at Den- He gave up two runs on three hits in one inning against the physical problems the injuries ver game was one I shouldn't ver in the semi-final to the Super "I'm going to still work as presented. have played in, but I maybe Bowl. hard as I have in the past," he Seattle Mariners his first outing, and Dante Bichette of the Cal- In an interview published shouldn't have played in the Kosar said he feels fine now said. "I don't hold any animosi- ifornia Angels hit a 3-run homer off him in four innings his sec- Tuesday in The (Cleveland) Minnesota, Houston and Buffalo but has been advised to gradual- ties towards anyone. My main ond time on the hill. Plain Dealer, Kosar said he games, too. And those were all ly work his arm and shoulder concern still is for this team to "Before my second start, I wanted to work at getting into a played in the AFC championship very successful offensive into playing condition. baseball frame of mind," Nichols said "So I watched films of win." me pitching in 1988 and '89, then I watched as much baseball as I could on TV. "That's how I get the feeling back of what it's like to be on the mound. It's easy during the season, but not in spring training. I don't know why exactly, except that all winter I'm only trying Netters Gretzky doubtful for Kings to stay in shape." Nichols is not assured of opening the season in the majors. In The other injured Kings are forwards John Tone- parts of the last two seasons with the Indians, Nichols has a 5-13 split by Dick Brinster lli, Dave Taylor and Steve Kasper and defensemen record and a 4.72 earned run average. AP sports writer Larry Robinson and Tom Laidlaw. All missed But his competition for the fifth starting spot includes rookie Sunday's game. Kevin Bearse, who has never pitched a big-league game, and matches With the injured Wayne Gretzky a doubtful par- "We do expect to have Robinson back, hopefully veteran Al Nipper, who didn't pitch at all last year after sur- ticipant, the battered Los Angeles Kings open the Tonelli and Kasper, too," Webster, himself re- gery on his knee arid elbow. While the women's tennis NHL Smythe Division playoffs Wednesday night covering from an inner ear operation, said. "But The 6-foot-2. 190-pound Nichols was Cleveland's No. 5 selec- team was busy defeating Ken- against the defending Stanley Cup champion Cal- both Tom Laidlaw and Wayne Gretzky are big tion in the June 198$ draft. yon 7-2, Michigan State was gary Flames. question marks." Before rejoining the Indians last season, he pitched at Class shutting out the men 9-0. Gretzky, sidelined after absorbing a hard check Gretzky, who likened the Kerr check to being AAA Colorado Springs of the Pacific Coast 1-eague. where he Carla Marshack, Nannette from Alan Kerr of the New York Islanders on rear-ended in an auto accident, had 40 goals and was 8-1 with a 3.58 ERA. Zimmerman, Brenda Conley, March 22, is one of six injured Kings. That's hardly 142 points this season. Those were the worst num- "I'm just going with the flow," Nichols said. "I know it's Tisa Pacella, and Sara Emdin encouraging considering an 8-4 loss to the Flames bers he has posted since getting 137 points as a wrong to take the attitude I have the team made. I'm not an es- all posted singles victories for in the season finale Sunday night anda healthy Los rookie in 1979-80. tablished veteran." the Falcons. Angeles team's playoff loss to Calgary last season His absence would be a severe blow to the fourth- Even if he makes the Cleveland pitching staff, he will pitch The only BG singles player to in four straight games. place Kings, whose 75 points this season surpassed behind veteran starters Greg Swindell, Tom Candiotti, Bud lose was Robin Monn, who "At this point, we do not expect to have Gretzky only the Islanders' 73 among the NHL's 16 playoff Black and John Farrell. dropped a close match, 5-7, 6-2, back in the lineup on Wednesday," Coach Tom teams. "I need a full year i in the majors) under my belt before I can 64). Webster said Monday before the Kings — without The first-place Flames, whose 99 points are sec- relax in spring training," he said. The Falcons took two of the Gretzky — left for Banff, Alberta, to prepare for ond-best in the league, will host the first two games three doubles matches. The the first-round series. of the best-of-7 series. After Friday night's second Marshack/Pacella and the "I've no idea when Wayne will return," Webster game at the Olympic Saddledome, the series shifts Zimmerman/Conley duos each said. "We just have to take it day by day." to Ingle wood, Calif., where Games 3 and 4 will be Gymnast Friel honored were victorious. Team officials say Gretzky, who won his eighth played Sunday and next Tuesday. The teams BG improved its record to 10-3 NHL scoring title this season, has spasms and a would alternate sites for games 5 through 7, as Mary Beth Friel has earned a was second-best among the sev- with Tuesday's wins. hyperextension of the back. But they haven't ruled needed. spot in the NCAA Northeast re- en at-large selections for the re- D D □ out the possibility, however remote, that he may gional gymnastics meet this gional. Against the Spartans, the play Wednesday night. That rotation also would hold for the other weekend at Ohio State in Friel set the school record in men's team did not manage to "Wayne continues to be treated in Los Angeles, Campbell Conference series. Columbus. the all-around earlier this force a third game in any match. and remains on a day-to-day basis," Dr. Steve A sophomore, Friel was se- season with a score of 37.2. Rob Suski lost to MSU's Wade Lombardo said. "A decision on his availability to In the other Smythe Division series. Winnipeg lected on an at-large basis to Freshman Robin Wall missed Martin 6-3, 7-6 in the closest play on Wednesday will be made tomorrow (Tues- opens at Edmonton, where Gretzky lea the Oilers compete in the all-around. earning an at-large berth in the match of the day. day)." to four Stanley Cups in 1980s. Friers season average of 37.04 regional meet by .15.

Attention CRIMINAL JUSTICE ORGANIZATION The next Student Council lor Exceptional Chil- LOST WHO: Darren Toler dren s meeting wll be Sunday April 8 at 8 PM in I lost my black, leather-bound folder before CAMPUS 4 CITY EVENTS Young Men of Black Alienee RESUMES Meeting TONIGHT 7:30 PM 2nd Floor WHEN: Apr* 4 1980 7:30PM 406 Ed Bunding See you there! This «a be the spring break and I'm in trouble if I do not find It Student Services. Refreshments/speaker WHERE 400 Moeewy Hal aat meeting of the yeer. The contents include mrsc papers, a book ol Quality typeset or ••FMAMMHng" WHAT: Q»ynco-Federal Law Enforcement Train- stamps, a smsl yellow scratch ped etc U.S./Japanese naartlone laser imegeset Attention ing Center. Al majors welcome-refreshments It you find it PLEASE either cat Matt al Election of Off icars Former President ol Nissan Motors Goto from your typewritten copy or Young Men of Stack AJkance provided Donlforget PARTY!'Apr!6 372-4341 or leave it In the BG News office in Wad. April 4, (:00 Friday. Apr! 6 1:15-3 OOPM compatible Macintosh program Details at meeting! Applied Human Ecology Meeting TONIGHT 7:30 PM 2nd Floor McFall Center West Hal Thank You $16 for one page Student Services Refreshments/speaker 'ADCLUB' WOMEN FOR WOMEN Don't put It off any longer' Trunk! to ill ot our 89-90 oWcars Attention presents President -Laura Fegley Discover Europe A Earn 6 Credit hrs. LOST Diamond Cluster nng lost m Union 3rd Young Men of Block Alienee KATE CLINTON, "lumerist" VP of Programs -Joanne McDonald Summer Study Program in France. Hoor ladies room Please cal 353-8788 Sen- UntOraphlce Meeting TONIGHT 7 30 PM 2nd Floor (feminist humorist!) VP ol Membership -Dave Myers Classes ere English timental Value! 211 Weal Hal Student Services Refreshments/speaker. April 6. 1990. 8pm . Jos E Brown Theatre Treasurer -Pam Fogel Dr. Charles Chittle wil talk about program Tickets S8-12. at the door LOST Gold watch-narrow, octagon-shaped 372-7418 D< of Ad Agency -Came Oehnbostel Open to al Attention Co-sponsors Women's Studies Progrsm, Stu- face, narrow band If lound please cal Cynthia Fundratsmg Dir. -Peggy Kain Wed .April 4. 9pm dent Activities Organization. Lesbian and Gay 372-8425 Young Men of Back Alliance Room lOOOBABMg For more info VP NSAC -Warren Marten Meeting TONIGHT 7 30 PM 2nd Floor AJkance. Kohl Hal. Founders. MscDonaM Publicity Dir -Debra Jordan Dr. CMSe 372-8180 or 362-6012. Student Services Refreshments/speaker Complex. Offenhauer Towers a Lavender Trie- ACT Uaaon -Sue Wefcer note. SERVICES OFFERED CENTER FOR CHOICE II Secretary -Cathy Hissong MUM "How to get Into Law School" • Abortkjnethru I 7 weeks Social r>r Amanda Biggs ATTENTION OSEA MEMBERS THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE PROGRAM. COL- Wed. April 4 et 7:30pm • Morning sfter treatment Publications tailor -Laura Gross The last meeting wi be Wednesday April 4th st LEGE OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES. Ohio Suite Al persons! snd private Resume Books Dir -Thanh Nguyen 9pm Hope to see al of you there! AND THE PREVENTION CENTER IS PLEASED Ohio Law School Admission Counselors Leader in EDITING SERVICES lor Proud to be ProChr>ce OAC rep -Troy Chaney Be a part of the world TO PRESENT DAMYL TOLERFROM THE Aast. Agency Dir -Sheri Troeber Sponsored by Pre-Law Society * Phi Alpha Theses. Books. Articles. Reports 16N Huron St . Toledo OH Apply to be a board or committee member of FEDERAL LAW ENFORCEMENT TRAINING Public Serv Dir -Roberta Weinman Delta. • RESUMES. Composed a Laser Printed ■ 1-255-7769 World Student Association CENTER. HE WILL SPEAK ON "DRUGS AND Thanks for all ol your hard wortt' Stste-ot-tneart WORD PROCESSING Pick up application at 403 South Hal ENFORCEMENT ON WEDNESDAY. APRIL 4 'Good Luck Graduating Seniors' Versatile. Al-Ph 0 Staff Deedlne Aprils FROM NOON-2PM IN THE STUDENT SER- LOST & FOUND KORREKT SERVICE Cal 352-8744 Typing 1 35 per page 354-0371 'AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL- Election day: April 15 VICES BLDG 2ND FLR LOUNGE BRING A PRESENTS: TIMOTHY POGGOCAR. STU More info, please contact: Peggy Pak at SACK LUNCH! EVERYONE WELCOME! TYPING SERVICES Need a caring response D€NT ADVISOR FOR INTERNATIONAL STU- 353-1952 Reasonable rstss with sccurscy FREE FILM! Cry Freedom" fern about South Lost s teal Eddie Bower jecket m the freezer at to your pregnency concerns' DENTS AND PROFESSOR OF SOVIET STUD- Join the real world, km WSA African Plight (Free Munchles Tool) Mark's Friday Night Any info eel 372-5813 Cal 352-3987 Iron. 8AM to 9PM IES. GERMAN AND RUSSIAN LANGUAGES. Cell BG PREGNANCY CENTER 7:30 Wedneeday 4 Apr! et 354-HOPE BG CLUB VOLLEYBALL 305 Moaeley sponsored by International Re- For Wo on FREE PREGNANCY TESTS OR POGGOCAR STUDIED FOR SEVERAL Lost: black and white female cat very specie) in action at home lations Or ganuaton and supporting services continued on p. 12 YEARS IN THS SOVIET UNION. AND WAS A pet. 354-7727 or 362-7339 MEMBER OF AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL IN April 4 Mich State Tonight LADIES LADIES LADSES TEH LATE SEVENTIES COME HEAR HIM Apr! 6 Ohio Wealeyan Friday SPEAK ON THE RECENT EVENTS AND 1 Annual Lades Nile Out Apr! 11 TOLEDO Wednesday CHANGES IN THE SOVIET UNION AND N Y Strip Dinner a Beverage All start al 8PM MAKE YOUR SUMMER '90 EASTERN EUROPE AS WELL AS THE EF- Games-Movies???? At Anderson Arena FECTS OF THE SEVENTIES ON THESE APRIL 7,1990 8:00-12:00 WORKSHOPS CULTURALLY DIVERSE! CHANGES AT 7:00 WED APRIL 4 IN RM 303 at Tontogeny Legion Hal UNDERGRADUATES HAYES EVERYONE WELCOME' MM SKI CLUB For more Information A tickets Ethnic Studies: The Discipline Attention to al members of Ski Club! Nomtna- Contact Mick at 823-3264 AD CLUB llona tor office wst be accepted at this Wednes- or Jeff al 823-3146 Sec. 4602 3 credits GRADUATES •Cong/aUNew taso-St VK»V day's meeting for officer elections on Apr! 11. ETHN W395 Sec. 4603 3 credits President -Jennifer Gambia tggo. Come and nominate the person's) you VP of Programs Jennifer Matrass PHI ETA SIGMA SOCW580 PUBLIC SCHOOL would eke to see hold office tor the loaowmg Al Members 4-Weekends Only: 5-9:30 pm F VP of Membership -Matt Dickman year Remember nominations are this TEACHERS Dir of Ad Agency -Laura Fegley Happy Hours 8 am-4:30 pm S Wedneeday April 4 and officer elections win Friday. April 6 FundreJeing Dir -Rebbecca Worth be held on April till May 11 -June 2 (Staff) COUNSELORS Publicity 0* Matt Park Ceaetdy'e Please try to ettendl 5 00-8.00 PM Andrade Champion Perry PuMcatlona Ed -Paul Lavocki 8:00 PM Wedneeday 200 Hayes ETHN W395 Pubtc Service Dir -Debra Jordan ADMINISTRATORS SOC 580 Royster Scott Ethnicity: Crosscultural Counseling UNIVERSITY Sec. 4612 3 credits FACULTY 135 South Byrne Rd. Sec. 4613 3 credits SOCIAL SERVICES Toledo, Ohio 4-Weekends Only: 5-9:30 pm F PERSONNEL sPgayti 531-0329 8 am-430 pm S COMMUNITY Hour*: June 15-July 7 (Perry) 12 Noon - 3 am. Mon-Thurs COURSES LEADERS Where The Party Never Ends 12 Noon - 4 am, Friday Opens 4 pm Sat. & Sun. 3227 Introduction to Ethnic Studies (3 cr.) 101 8-9:30 MTWRF 5/14-6/15 WET T-SHIRT NIGHT (R. Andrade Assoc. Prof.) qS&r* FIRST PRIZE $100 3229 Issues: Ethnicity & The Contemporary Athlete 5:30-7:30 am MTWR 5/14-6/15 APRIL 4, 9:00 pm (J. Scott, Professor) (3 cr.) 300 Monday College ID Nite Reduced Cover 5190 Introduction to Black Studies (3 cr.) 120 10-11 30 vlTWRF 6/18-7/20 Mon & Tues 12:00-6:00; Wear a Tie and Get In Free (P. Royster. Professor) Tues & Thur 12:00-6:00; Bring a Friend and Get In Free 5189 Introduction to Ethnic Studies (3 cr.) 101 12:30-2:15 MTWR 6/18-8/10 Non-Alcoholic-Establishment 18 yrs. & Older to Enter (Staff) Deja Vu is always looking for new talent! 5191 Ethnicity In America (3 cr.) 304 8-9:30 MTWRF 7/9-8/10 (Staff) Waitresses Needed - Professional Atmosphere Apply Within or Call 531-0329 REGISTER EARLY - CLASSES FILL DANCERS NEEDED • Excellent opportunity to make great money. For Information Call Department of Ethnic Studies 372-2796 or 372-6949 THE BG NEWS

12 April 4,1990 Classifieds

Senior Sand Off HELP: •CARaI»£AN CRUISE- continued from p. 11 Dtecovar Europe a Earn 6 Credit hra Senior Sand OH l need 1 tneo to sublsass apartment for summer KELLEYS ISLAND Register today Summer Study Program In Franca. Senior Sand Otl with 3 other Imles vary doee 4 nice ajeo cheap Porthole Cats needs RE Management Cleeeea are in Engtsh Senior Send OM (SI03 75 plus dap pkia etecl 354-7825 eves. cooks, bertonders a wait people 606 Ctough St. B15 Or Chartee Chime wn talk about program Thura 7-6 PM Sand resume with Apts for summer a fal Mlletl Alumni Canter referencea a phone numbers to: PERSONALS Open to al Need 3 lemalea to sublet our house' Ctoee to sin available P 0 Box 7B2 Wad. April 4.8pm campus, lurmsheo. at condition. ALL unities 362-9302 Keesys Island. OH 43438 Room 1000 BA Btdg. For more Info Santor Sand Off peM except electric I Cal 354-8316 • • •COUNRTY PIG ROAST H • • • 12 month lessee available May 15. 1890 Or ChltHe372-8180or352-6012. 1 Mora Day 25KEGS Mead to ns-aaass 2 bedroom apt for summer. 6096thSI -2Br house S4S000autl All Seniors Welcome FEATURING 8LITZEN Ctoee to campus $305 plus uttWee Cal 424 112 S Summterlic apt S195. a utl. GAMMA PHI BETA WENDY MIDDLETON April 5 7-SPM LIFEGUARDS ""Saturday April 7"" 353 3575 alter 7 00 PM Gel your eummer |ob load up now' 426 S Summit 2 Br apt $345 00 6 uhl Congratulations 10 you and Kurt for your Mllall Alumni Canter Wood County Fairgrounds Ufaguarda al stuns • SS.SOVhr. Slave Smith 362-8917 pearling I wish you both all the happiness! Needed one lerrvate roommate to rant 2 bdrm II interested, contact. Love ye-Your Big apt '80-91 school year. Ctoee to campus. 2 nd Annual FUI Ultimata Fnsbae Ctasaic Serious people to lose weight or earn money. JELLYSTONE CAMP RESORT Sal Aprl7 11 OOAM Rhonda inexpensive For Information please cal 2 bdrm apt available for eummer only Central Nueltlorval weight loss Cat 637-6041 3392 SR 82 BQSU Intramural Fata 372-1868 or 372-1681 ak Located uptown very nice $400'mo plus Mantua. OWo 44265 utBtlea 354-7032 Featuring LOVESTREET Sigma Ctas NEEDED: 2 people to lease apartment on 4lh Gsy Lesbian Information Line Tha Alpha Gams lax) an awaaoma Bma Friday (near Saa World of Oho) lor mlo 372 8331 end Elm Totafy furnished, two car garage and 2 BEDROOM APARTMENTS ONE HALF Can 352-LAGA (362-6242) from 7-10 PM night! Mondays. Wednesdays and Fridays for the an- reasonable rent Cal today for more Info. Ji BLOCK TO CAMPUUS. SUMMER OR FALL Thanks! Need Part Time Income? Need a Scholarship? 2nd Annual FUI Ultimata FnaDaa Classic swers to your questions about homoeexuaHty or 372-6788 CALL TOM 352-4473 DAYS OR 3S2-1SOO EVE Sat April7 11 OOAM Need a Grant? Wa Can Help1 Free Info: to sat up penal csscueetona tor deeees. real- a WKENDS. BGSU Intramural Fields Ona mala roommate needed lor 80-81 school I 800 USA 1221 exl 1080 dance hale, or campus organizations year 2nd St Apt Cal Bob or Mark at 4 bdrm. house Large String room. Ctose to Featuring LOVESTREET Summer Job? Not Yet? GET READY FOR SUMMfEH 354 5834 campus Available Summer and Fall. torlnto 3728331 "HOW TO FIND YOUR OWN 1 5 % off aj non-prescription sunglasses SUMMER EMPLOYMENT Waiters. Wait 352 54 75 CO-OP OR INTERNSHIP" Roommates) needed for summer a fal '80. ressss Bartenders. Buasara. Tanglewood Dm. Deaths a Archer. Inc Business Majors Own room aval. Low rant a free memoerehip to Country Ctub, 8746 Tanglewood Trail. Chagrin 5 bdrm 6 parson house 12 month lease May Adoption Happlty married coup* ol 14 years. I022N Prospect April 10th-8 00PM-101 BABWg Cherrywood Spa For more Info contact Dan at Fata. 0. 44022 (Bambndga Twp ) Apply m 90- May 911 Cal 352-1584. 9 5 or 353-8611 We promise your chad a loving homa and flnan- Serengeti ' Neons Arts S Sciences Majors 354-4540 or MK at 353-8464 person, sand lor appkeation. or call 543-7010. cial security Oavolad. stay homa mom Caring Ray Ban ' Vuamel dad and ona Dig staler All medical an d legal April 16th • 8:00PM • 101 BABktg SUMMER SUBLEASES WANTED 521 E Merry Carrara ■ Flourescanta Cal Co-op Office: 372-2451 lor dele* Summer Kitchen Help' e>pen»aspaKl CalcoHoct I 622 9268 2 females needed to rant house for summer Cooks: no axp naadad, but helpful - wet train. near Ottenhauer OWN ROOM S85 plus uW /mo. Cal Mara 2 bdrm turn apt. Alpha XI Dana Kappa Sigma GRANT KHUCH Must be 18 a over Send resume to: Casino Fantastic job on the tricycle race' THE BROTHERS OF SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON 372-1883 PO Box 13. Keseys Island OH 43436 excellent cond WISH TO CONGRATULATE JOE MELtLLO ON Prices lor 2 3. or 4 people Gamma PI Gamma SUMMER SUBLEASES NEEDED Legal action will bo continued against you un- HIS LAVALIEMNG TO PI BETA PHI CHRIS Summer Salaa a Marketing Intern CALL 3 Females needed to sublease apartment for less you gal in touch with ma IMMEDIATELY STECURA. tor wholesale beverage distributor In Loraln, JOHN NEWLOVE REAL ESTATE Attention Cal Malt al 372-6867 or 372-6066. eummer Only $66'month a utBtles Own Ottawa, Erie. Huron counties. Must have own 3542260 THE BROTHERS OF SIGMA ALPHA EPSHON room, furnished, across the street from cam- oar, rats, req'd Sand letier or resume to: Young Men ol Black Alence Help WFAL raise II tor the Ronald McDonald Meeting TONIGHT 7 30PM 2nd Floor WISH TO CONGRATULATE JIM SCULTZ ON pus Cal now! Ask lor Martssa 353-8827 Pept- B. PO Box 122. Loraln, OH 44062. Children'! Charity with the 2nd Annual HIS LAVALIERINO TO DELTA GAMMA LISA Apt. with central air- $90 month 1 block from Student Services Refreshments/speaker WANTED-WANTED-1 or 2 Female roommates WFAL Volleyball Toum. wllh ell proceeds go- FOIKENS Toledo companies seeking marketing stu- campus Summer Nice duplex Cal Bob or ing to R.M. Children's Charity, Teams may lor summer HOUSE on 3rd and S College, futy dents for part-time co-op starting Fall 1880. Dave al 363-7136. Attention consist of up to 7 people (coed or not), but fMehed CH anytime 353 8043, ask lor Lb EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITIES" Call the Co- Young Man ol Black Aaiance The Greek CARE. Fair CHEAP HOUSING only f may play at ona g i van time. Sea WFAL WANTED op office 372 2451 or atop by 2IS Admin Mealing TONIGHT 7 30PM 2nd Floor April 1,1880 In City Park SPACE NOW AVAILABLE FOR 1 MALE for rules Entry Faa SIS. CapL sign up at 31 Btdg. Student Services Refreshments/speaker. 1:00-5:00 pm Students interested in spending their summer in ROOMMATE DURING SUMMER BRAND NEW West Hall- Faa needed at time of signup Any Europe Earn 6 credit hours Informational 7 Calf Paula or Soils 2-2115. Saa them for Don't Miss It! UPWARD BOUND SUMMER PROGRAM APARTMENT. CLOSE TO CMAPUS FOR Attention meeting Wed Apm 4, 8pm at BAA 1000 For Sign-up. Tournament data Is April 21-Sat. at ONLY S130/MO PLUS UDUTES. fT YOU Young Men ol Black Alkence more kilo cal Dr Charles Chrtta) 372-8180 or RaeCavmVar.SlgnupbyAprillO. June 24 - Aug. 3 (8 was.) WANT IT, GRAB fT THIS ONE WONT LAST Mealing TONIGHT 7 30PM 2nd floor The Sisters ol Gamma Phi Beta would Ike to 352-6012 LONGi CALL 372-4341 or 363-7688 IF YOU congratulate Debt Fransen and Mark Hanee on Student Servicee Ratreshmants/apeakar Intramural officials anyone that has worked this Wanted 1 lo 4 mdMduels to sub lease house A pre-coeege preparatory program tor high HAVE ANY QUESTIONS C ALL ANYTIME year that la mtereated In wonting summer, coma their Gamma Phi-Fiji la valeting school students Employment available as: lor summer Great location, lour houses frrm Deluxe 2 bdrm. turn. apt. on Fifth St. 9 mo. Attention lo the IM ottkie by April 13 UNIFIED 1190 Marks on Manvtea Price nego., contact Paul or lease 2 bdrm unfurn on Seventh St 12 mo. Young Man ot Black Akance TutorfCounaetor Kappa Sigs • Alpha x,s Sweatshirts all lor sale' Scott at 372-1606 or Dave al 372 6893 lease FREE AC 1 heat Cal 352 3445 Meeting TONIGHT 7 30PM 2nd Floor Congratutatlona on a successful "Trike Race" Cal Jason at 372-4841 Residential Minimum sophomore classification WANTED: 1 female roommate lor 90-81 Student Senves Refreshments, speaker philanthropy! Four Positions DO YOU HAVE MORE school year Fox Run Apartments Cal NOW! FEET THAN FfT IN YOUR Love-The Alpha Gams Wanted: a ride 10 tha airport April 15 In tha Mary Bath 2-4470 or Olna 2-5786 Instructors SQUARE FOOTAGE? ATTENTION KIM KAPPEL morning. WH help pay for gas Anytime would WANTED: 2-3 F roommates to share large 3 High school math. English, social studies, sci- YES? Well, you did tt-you're me newest addition to KKG • KKG • KKG be great' Please cal 2-6867 during the day or bod house from Sum a Fal 90 S Spr 91 Call ence Non-residential Bachelor's degree re- FoSow 3 Eaay Stops To A the Medical Collage ol OhkxMCO). Do you G-A-M-M-A 353-3608 in the evening Ask lor Dab Kay or Jessica 353 7957 quired Salary negotiable PLACE with more SPACE: have any Ida* how proud I am of all your ac- Greeks Advocating Mature complishments! You've come a long way I.CalToday-352-9302 Management ol Alcohol Wanted One non-smoking female roommate Applications available at 2. Find out how to gat BIG baby! Congrate-you deserve HI KAPPA SUPPORTS GAMMA' WANTED for 1880-81 school year, r 2 block from cam Love, C squared 301 Hayes Hal Deadline Aprtl 2 space forms best $$$ pua Cal Mtcheas 2-3654 3. Choose your 2 bdrm 2 bath apt. Make a "FRESH START" a move your FEET to our STREET! ATTENTION OMICRON DELTA KAPPA MEM- Watt staff, hostess, bartenders Smoking Cassation classes begin tha HELP WANTED Now hiring lor 1990 Summer Season ROCKLEDGE MANOR APARTMENTS ■ERS: weak!!! FREEH! Call "Tha WELL" at 1 F rmte needed for 90-91 school year E 840'850 Sixth Street Spring Initiation is this Friday. April 6th The Merry Apt Cal 354-4273. ask tor Tern or Help needed lor an shifts 352-9302 SIMM Island House Hotel Port Canton. OH breaklast is at 7am m the Union (2nd floor) and Sponsored by the Student Health Service Thonda. the ceremony a) at 4pm at Prout Chapel Pins $ 1000s weakly stuffing envelopes. Send self 1-800-233-7307 1 GRAD or STAFF non-smoker needed to share addressed stamped envelope to Matche Asso- and Certificates wi» also be distributed Friday II apt. with studious 30 yr old grad student ciates 4431 Lehigh Rd Sulla 236 College DON'T MISS THESEI you can help at el with initiation, please call Mi- Order your 1990 Key TODAY WANTED! Sl87'mo .. own room, aval fas asm. vary Park. Maryland 20740 •01 4 SO] Frith SI. chela. 3520781 Hope to saa you Blare! Onty$!8 95 BGSU'S moat qualified student, ae close lo campus Cal Christopher 353-2656 2 bedroom fum a unfum Check your iratfbox! 250 COUNSELORS and Instructors needed! ADVERTISING SALES REPS. BEDROCK BABE OF THE WEEK or leave message FREE gas, water, • sewer Private, coed, summer camp In Pocono tor THE BG POLICE DEPT Laundry facilities, private parking Order your 1890 Kay TODAY 1 M. or F rmte. for summer '90 and/or Fel. Mountains Northeastern Pennsylvania. Loht- THE BG NEWS For breaking up our altar hours in record time! NEWLOVE RENTALS Only S18 95 Chartee Apia - Scott Hamtton a Troup Vary ksn. PO Box 234BG. Kenlrworih, NJ 07033 If you are sell-motivated, 32S S. Main 352-5120 Check your majboxl flexible Can Char 372-5928 or Jenny (201)271-0881 results oriented, you have tha potential BEDROCK BONE OF THE WEEK 372 3435 to be ona of tha highest paid students THE UGLY GUY FORM DOWNTOWN SATUR- Order your 1990 Key TOOAY A $23,000 a year tob plus benefits U S MM 1 non-smoking female to sublease 4th St. apt. on csmpus. Open to all maiora. Muat have Only$18 95 lobs, your area Anyone can qualify (218) DAY NIGHT THAT'S REAL COOL FIRST lor summer $117 a month a uttWee Cal own car. Applications a job descriptions Check your maabox! 836-3434 ext 1408 Cal 7 days. 8.00 am - YOU TRY AND PICK US UP. THEN YOU POUR 353 9338. ask lot Kelly available): 214 Wast Hall. Deadline 416180. Georgetown Manor Apis A PITCHER ON US MAKE UP YOUR k 8 00 pm. 800 - Third Street MIN0l(P S YOU DON'T EVEN FIGHT WELL PHI ETA SIGMA 2 non smoking lemalea for 4th SI apt. for next 1 bdrm • 2 bdrm units: WrrHGIFtLSil school year $120'montn a utisties Cal A 1 OPPORTUNITIES' Assemble products in Work1Shourato30houraparwaokoutofa7 tully furnished. A.C. AH members Invited 10 day atotaweee. (day. evening and weekend 363-9338. ask to Kelly. your homa. No experience needed. Excellent Now lasting tor 1990-1981. Happy Hours at Caaakty's shifts). Our company la seeking employees pay Cal 1-318-826-4989 Exl • M 1436 24 and summer 1880. Chi-O • Shannon Wise ■ Chi-O this Friday Door prize raffia and tree pizza! COOK lo perform unskilled light production work Hours Including Sunday Convenient • a reasonable The sisters of Chi Omega are happy tor you and (or sorority chapter at BGSU Parson responsi- Plant location Is only 2 blocks from B.O.8.U. ALASKA CANNERY and ftahing employment Ca 11 3 5 2-49*6 5pm-10pm your "friendship" with your OKLAHOMA mani PHI ETA SIGMA ble lor lunch/dinner Prepare for appro* 46 campus. Tha rate of wage Is $3.10 par hour. If opportunities Secure your summer lob Focus Attetnion al members women For info cal Deb 372-3685 Interested pick up an application al tha off Ice yoursearch [206)771-3811 ol Advanced Spaclslty Products, Inc., 428 HELPI Chi-0 • Wendy Blank ■ CI»-0 Bring a Mend lo CassKty's this Friday. En(oy F. rmt to share apt. expenses lor Fal '90 own 1 need to subtee my apartment for the summer. Congratulations on your Delta Chi lavallenng to free pizza, drinks, and door prizes' bedroom a bath, air. dishwasher. Cal Kety Applications era being iccaplavj Ctough Street. Bowling Green. Ohio. Tele- It's cute. cozy, close to csmpus a the cheapest 352-3487 Mar phone 354-2544. Mfcel efficiency around' Cal 353 9940evsa SUMMER 1880 BG NEWS EDITOR Love your Chi-O sisters PiPhiPhlTau PS. How about some direction in your He? Hay Tlm(l moan Dirk) FREE TICKET FALL 1880 BG NEWS EDITOR House for rent on N Prospect. 3 bdrm.. AC. a- 1980-91 GAVEL EDITOR FOR SALE vaf. lor summer 4 fal Can 362-0503 or Thanks lor coming with me Saturday. I had a Food server needed lor an International Dinner. 199IKEYEDIT0R 354 5866 eHer 5 30 FIJI'S GET UVEI great time Your teenage Mutant Nin(a gunman Sat. April 7 Be a server and gal free ticket In- 1880-11 MISCELLANY EDITOR FIJI'S GET LtVE! partner terested? Apply by Wad Aprtl 4 Contact: Pe- 1 986 Bulck Sommerset 1880-81 OBSIDIAN EDITOR JAY-MAR APARTMENTS FIJI'S GET LIVEI Jackie ggy 353-1952 or Ting Ting 353-7250 or Exceeenl Condition Loaded $5,500 2 bdrm. turn /unfurn. AC. as low aa Applications may be obtelnsd at Stave 353-5338 354-1207 $440/mo Heat included rales avaaeDle Ph. Tha BG NEWS office, 214 Wast Hall. 354-6036 Deadline: Thura., April 12.5pm. Two female subleaeers needed AC. wa- 1987 Jaap Wrangler with removeabks hard lop Large house for rant for aummer/fal. 140 34.000 mass, vary good condition. Must sal MenvBe. 3 houses behind Mark's 354-6743 sher/dryer dishwasher Easy living' 1300.00 ATTENTION EARN MONEY READING $6,000 354 4466 entire summer I Cal 364-8513 ask lor Rhonda BOOKS' $32.000/yeer Income potent* Da- NEED 1 OR 2 PEOPLE TO SUBLEASE APT AT otHeKS. ta* [1)602 836-6665 Exl Bk 4244 •1 Kawaaakl 560 LTD THURSTIN MANOR FOR SUMMER. CLOSE TO Good Condition $500 FREE RENT FOR SUMMER ATTENTION EARN MONEY TYPING AT CAMPUS. AC. LOW UTILITIES, FURNISHED. 4 Cal 353-9660 MONTHS RENT FOR THE PRICE OF 2. CALL 1 BORM ON SECOND ST HAS AC HOME' 32.000.yr income potential Detsas. 354-8009. LEAVE MESSAGE IF I AM NOT TAKE IT AND I'LL PAY PART OF (1) 602-836-6885 Exl T-4244 THE RENT. CALL BILL 353-7894 Answering Machine-only mo's oat! HOME. Typeset Resumes ATTENTION EASY WORK EXCELLENT PAY! Used vacuum • only $26 Preferred Properties m now leasing lor summer Assemble products al home Details (1) MUST SELL! Cal 353-6198 and fal. Piedmont apartments and many of our Looking tor a Summer Job? 602-638 8865 Ext W 4244 livings N Y Del ol Put-In-Bay. OH other saHnga are available! Al residents receive ATTENTION EASY WORK EXCELLENT PAYI a membership to Cherrywood Health Spa. Cat la hiring! ATTENTION - GOVERNMENT SEIZED VEHI- Assemble products St home Detaile (1) 352-9378 If you enjoy having a good time yet stM need a CLES from SI00 Fords. Mercedes. Corvettes. 602 838 8685 Exl W-4244 place to work, kvtng's Is tha place for you' Pay Chevys Surplus Buyers Quids. Sublsass May thru Aug 15. 1980 2 bdrm la S3 75


1 bedroom apt. tolutUasi HE MANAGEMENT Summit Terrace Apts Fatman bv John Boissy 362-9302 Cal 354-1441

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And vuu'iv Mill smoking?