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4-13-1978

The BG News April 13, 1978

Bowling Green State University

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Recommended Citation Bowling Green State University, "The BG News April 13, 1978" (1978). BG News (Student Newspaper). 3480. https://scholarworks.bgsu.edu/bg-news/3480

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 License. This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the University Publications at ScholarWorks@BGSU. It has been accepted for inclusion in BG News (Student Newspaper) by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks@BGSU. The BH Hews Vol. 61, No. 85 Bowling "Green Stale University Thursday, April 13, 1978

Going, going, gone!

AUCTIONEER GENE ADLER sold items yesterday that were a bit Everything sold yesterday was from the University Lost and Found different from the typical livestock and house sales that most auctioneers department. The Items had been unclaimed for a certain period of time. are hired for. He sold more than 77 bicycles for the University Charities The proceeds went to local and national charities. Board bike auction in the Forum of the Student Services building. Other Not all of the bikes sold were "junkers." Some were practically brand items sold included clothing and jewelry. new ten-speeds. The older bikes, with baskets, were perfect for beer runs, one auction participant said.

Newspholos by Larry Kayser Board of Trustees ponder University budget today

By Jane Musgrave community. These statements include below $15. The only place we could fee increase, which will cover costs to The board previously okayed the use Narbeth R. Emmanuel is the graduate Staff Reporter past accomplishments as well as possibly cut would be salaries," lipaj operate the Student Recreation Center, of funds to repair handball courts in the student representative. Dr. Richard projections for the future. Not all said. he indicated. stadium. Problems arose concerning R. Eakin said that his report con- To be or not to be. reports are about budget-related THIS ALTERNATIVE was rejected THE RECREATION facility and its which repair method was best, Postich cerning the revision of the Student That is the question the Board of issues. because Universtiy faculty and staff related budget ramifications probably said. He said he thinks the money could Government Association (SGA) Trustees this morning will answer in TODAY'S MEETING marks the need pay increases to keep up with the will be a major topic of discussion at be spent better repairing the tennis constitution will be made by SGA reference to the proposed 1978-79 culmination of months of agony about rising costs of living, Lipaj said. today's meeting, Ferrari predicted. courts adjacent to the Student Services president Bob Wolf. University budget. the most effective way to operate the The board's primary concern is Ferrari also said that University Building and will ask the board if the "The Board of Trustees is the University in a time of spiraling in- keeping the cost of attending the President Hollis A. Moore Jr. endorsed money can be transferred. Funds used UNIVERSITY ARCHITECT Roland vehicle that sets the budget," Michael flation and rising costs, John Lipaj, University down and still providing most of the Advisory Committee on for these improvements come from the Y. Engler will report progress on the R. Ferrari, vice president of resource chairman of the board, said Tuesday. quality educations, he explained. General Fee Allocation's recom- money generated from facility rec center and Musical Arts Building. planning, said Tuesday. Both Lipaj and Richard A. Edwards, Even with the $15 a quarter in- mendations and expects the board to do operations. University Provost Kenneth W. THAT VEHICLE will be put in vice president and assistant to the crease, the administration is still the same. Rothe will make a statement con- motion at 10 a.m. in the McFall Center president, described the University's $200,000 shy of the amount required to "All of the budgets have been AFTER THE BOARD considers the cerning standards used to determine Assembly Room as the nine-member financial situation as "very tight." effectively operate the University, reviewed and discussed repeatedly by budgets, it will hear reports from three faculty appointments and tenure, board meets to consider four separate "There's no fat in the budget, that's Lipaj said. various committees before the board University administrators and three Sheldon Halpern, vice provost of University budgets. for sure. But when you have to work ADMINISTRATORS WILL have to makes the final decision," he said. constituent representatives to the faculty affairs, said. The proposals consist of the with the kind of allocations we get, you "work this amount out of the budget," GEORGE POSTICH, director of board. "The report will just be an in- educational budget for main campus, have to be satisfied with what you can by "balancing the budget in mid- operations, said he will present David S. Newman, chemistry terpretation of existing policy, merely the educational budget for the do. It's a good budget. We're satisfied," stream," he said. proposals for auxiliary projects con- professor and president of Faculty illustrating to the board members how Firelands Branch Campus, and the he added. If the $15 a quarter increase is ap- cerning renovation of the sound system Senate, is the faculty representative. the Provost's Office implements general fee and miscellaneous WILL THE BOARD approve the proved, the money also may be used to at the ice arena and transfer of project Ronald H. Bell, senior, is the un- decisions the board makes." Halpern auxiliary budgets. proosed {15 a quarter tuition increase? cover the Library's operating costs and funding. dergraduate representative and said. The board also will determine next Probably, Lipaj admitted. equipment purchases, Lipaj said. year's student fees and hear reports "Hours and hours and hours of work In addition to the tuition hike, the from members of the University has been done and we still can't get it board also will consider a $30 general School of Technology proposed

By Paula Winslow In discussing the proposal's merit, Studies as a "slush fund", saying it is University drops Visa acceptance Staff Reporter Rothe stressed the need for the "an insurance for thefuture." University to develop new programs, Academic Council yesterday ap- especially those that emphasize "ob- "There's got to be something that we proved a proposal to redesignate the jective-based education." can sell a freshman that his parents can because of transaction expenses Department of Industrial Education understand or we're going to go to the and Technlogy as the School of "I WANT US (the University) to look average. I hate the attitude that you By Jane Musgrave name to Visa last year, advertising that from paying the service charge, Nusser Technology in the College of Education. different from Ohio University and can't do anything new." he concluded. Staff Reporter the card can be used more places, the said. The plan, submitted to council by Dr. Cleveland State and Kent State," he At its next meeting, council will University no longer will one of them. "SO IF I'M from Cleveland and I use Jerry Streichler, chairman of the said. discuss the Department of Quantitative If you've been planning to finance the The University will continue to ac- my Bank Americard to buy a dress in department, now must be reviewed by He also denounced labeling the four- Analysis and Control (QAC) resl of your University career by cept Master Charge, University Bowling Green, the merchant pays the the Board of Trustees. year-old University Division of General reorganization. saying, "charge it," it will not be with treasurer Paul R. Nusser said service charge. If I pay for my tuition to Streichler said that the plan will Bank Americard after Friday. yesterday. Bowling Green, the bank must pay the improve the department's public image Although the company changed its HUNTINGTON BANK of Wood service charge," Nusser explained. because students and prospective County, which handles all University Another law prohibits the University employers give more credibility to a Story clarified credit card transactions, told from including the service charge in the school than a department. Inside the News University officials that it no longer can price. Paul X Moody, a black student who absorb costs involved with Bank "We could include the addition cost THE REDESIGNATION would help spoke before Student Government Americard-Visa transactions, Nusser by increasing fees, but that wouldn't be graduates find jobs more easily, he Association (SGA) Monday night said. fair to students who don't use explained. Graduates often must EDITORIALS...The News is in favor of Congress' tax credit bill. asking for funds for black students who The bank currently is paying more BankAmericards," he said. Nusser convince employers that the depart- See Page 2. want to attend the May 12 through May than $15,000 a month to cover service noted that only 10 percent of the ment is competent in technology 14 African Liberation Day in charges stemming from the card's use, students use BankAmericard-Visa to education, he said. FEATURES...What University department used 800 dozen eggs a Washington D.C., said yesterday that Nusser said. pay University fees. Council chairman Kenneth W. Rothe week? Find out by reading and enjoying Karen Borchers' Focus some foreign students misunderstood Each credit card company is divided THE TWO STATE laws leave banks supported the proposal and agreed that Page on Page 3. the context of the news story written into districts, Nusser explained. Each "holding the bag," Nusser said. "schools are treated differently" than about the meeting. time a transaction is made outside the "Huntington couldn't continue to ab- departments. Moody said the transition in the story district in which the card was issued, sorb the costs without being reim- The management of a school is more ENTERTAINMENT...Read Frank Breithaupt's review of Stanley between SGA's escort system and his the bank accepting the transaction bursed, which state law says we can't highly structured and independent of its Clarke's concert on Page 4. request for funds was not strong must pay a service charge, Nusser do." college than a department, he added. enough, so it may have appeared that said. When the University began accepting SPORTS...The Falcon lacrosse team beat Michigan yesterday, 23- Moody may have had a connection with VISA'S DISTRICT incorporates only BenkAmericard five years ago, STREICHLER SAID that the 7. Also read the preview of Falcon tennis. Both on Page 10. the escort system. the Toledo-Bowling Green area, but transactions amounted to about proposed school also would increase "I want to make it clear that I did not Master Charge's district is much $100,000 a year, Nusser said. The enrollment and attract higher quality apply to be an escort," Moody said. larger, Nusser added. amount now is up to about $900,000, he students. Moody also wished to add to his While the same district rules apply to noted. Although the plan may redirect some Partly cloudy statement, "just because I hear the local merchants, two state laws "If the costs had remained the same, of the department's resources, highS5F(13C) PLO (Palestine Liberation stipulate procedures for banks dealing the bank would have probably con- Streichler said that the establishment Weather low 35 F (2 C) Organization), I won't come back a with state institutions, Nusser said. tinued absorbing the charge, but today of the school will not present any added 10 percent chance of rain terrorist." One law prohibits the University they can't afford it," Nusser said. costs. opinion 'judgment is founded on truth.. a shot in the arm guest columnist-Thomas D. Anderson for universities cost of living outruns salaries

The purpose of this column is to unanimously by the Faculty Senate, are promoted this year, flat sums to be Students and new faculty members Needless to say, the tuition tax credit bill now being debated in the present to the University community with only two abstentions. commensurate with the rank achieved. may wonder why FWC is so concerned Senate and the House of Representatives would come as a great relief to information regarding faculty salaries. In effect, this FWC recommendation with the distribution of funds for merit. University students and their parents. The Faculty Welfare Committee THE SALARY REPORT included a simply repeats existing policy for The answer is that "merit money" is The House Ways and Means Committee passed their version of the bill iFWi'i, is responsible, as its name rationale for each individual request. promotions. The figure of 0.5 percent taken from a salary pool which already on Tuesday. It would allow parents of college students to reduce their indicates, for monitoring conditions For example, the need for a cost of was approximate, because the number is inadequate to maintain present federal income taxes by 25 percent of the tuition costs for each child up to relative to the general welfare of the living increment seems obvious. The and level of promotions has not yet been purchasing power of faculty salaries. a maximum of $250 a student. The overall cost of the plan will amount to BGSU faculty. Beyond question, this official inflation rate announced for determined for 1978-79. just over a billion dollars in 1980. responsibility includes concern for 1977 by the Bureau of Labor Statistics Merit awards, despite the pious, salaries. was 6.8 percent. Anything less than this KEEP IN MIND that the above FWC public protestation of various ad- But the long range effect of the bill, if passed by congress, will mean a At the March 7, 1970 Faculty Senate percentage would reflect a decrease in recommendations for next year's ministrators, translate as publication- healthier economy for the University in general. After all. the schools meeting, FWC presented its annual faculty salaries. No faculty member salaries were approved unanimously even publication in specific scholarly cannot operate without the students. If the tax bill does nothing else it report on faculty salaries. This report should be expected to suffer a decrease by the Faculy Senate. Thus, the FWC's journals. And, for the benefit of those encourages those who were economically unable to attend college. had been presented in summary form in real income without just cause. strong statement at the April 4 meeting who do not know, our various depart- That may not mean a lot to a "healthy" school like Bowling Green, but earlier to the University Budget of Faculty Senate was mandated by two ments themselves have grave difficulty Council. The report called for an in- Our recommendation that this 6.8 events: in determining what journals and it could be a breath of fresh air to a faltering Kent State Or Ohio crease 11.5 percent greater than the percent increase be granted across the University. salary total for 1977-78. The recom- board was based upon a number of The official inflation rate for 1977 by the Bureau The House bill is the most modest of three proposed to help the college mended increase was itemized as factors. One of the most significant was student. It is about a half a billion dollars cheaper than a Carter follows: that faculty with higher incomes pay a scholarship-aid plan and a wi.opping $3.5 billion cheaper than its Senate 6.8 percent for eost-of-living large proportion of any increase when of Labor Statistics was 6.8 percent. Any (increase) counterpart. 3.0 percent to compensate for salary they pay the next year's income taxes. Colleges make contributions-important ones-to our society. But the erosion since 1967 The 3.0 percent salary erosion in- less than this percentage would reflect a economic pressure on them is becoming too heavy to cope with. 1.2 percent for merit increases crement was actually labeled a decrease in faculty salaries. The News thinks this bill would give them well-deserved chance to stay 0.5 percent for promotion awards "changing faculty mix adjustment" alive. The report was endorsed (CFMA) and was recommended in order to compensate faculty for their First, the University Budget Council publications are meritorious and what relative loss of income since 1967. recommended that the entire faculty ones are not. Thus, the question of what Despite the fact that the BGSU faculty salary package consist of only 6.75 publications re-translate into "merit now consists of 60 percent professors percent-a figure less than the 1977 awards" becomes a divisive issue and associate professors, its average inflation rate. The Budget Council, at within departments and campus-wide. over all purchasing power is no higher least, acknowledged FWC's recom- relatively than it was in 1967-when mendations regarding salary ALL TOO OFTEN when there is little professors and associate professors distribution, however. They urged that money to go around, "merit awards" constituted only 43 percent of the total the 0.5 percent for promotion and 1.5 have been used on college campuses to faculty mix. percent for merit remain, but alloted reward persons who agreed with the only 5.0 percent across the board for administrators—and to punish persons AS A MATTER of fact, calculations cost of livng and none for salary ad- who disagreed with administrative of these changing ratios in our faculty justments. opinions. As the FWC letter to Faculty mix reflect an erosion of real income Next, the Council of Deans, on the Senate stated, merit awards are "pure totaling 15.2 percent between 1967 and other hand, accepted the 6.75 percent fiction" until cost of living increments 1977-78. The FWC report recommended total figure from the University Budget have been provided for the entire five year CFMA increases of three Council, but they ignored the Faculty faculty. percent each year, to compensate for Senate resolution (FWCsalary report) If possible, the FWC six-page report the faculty losses. almost totally. They recommended that will be distributed to the entire faculty, no more than 2.75 percent be allocated as an attachment to the next Faculty The merit increase was recom- across the board for cost of living, and Senate minutes. We hope that, when the mended at 1.2 percent, because that that at least 3.5 percent be distributed full report is read, its information will was the same percentage provided for for so-called "merit." cast a little light and justify the heat 1977-78 contracts. The FWC would which has been generatd by the prefer to see merit rewarded at a SUCH ACTION by the Council of question of 1978-79 faculty salaries. higher percentage, of course, but was Deans was taken in clear disregard of restrained by obvious limitations in the stated views in two reports from Thomas D. Anderson is chairman of y.amuwM'. ivmiwHAVE EKN university funding. elected faculty bodies and of faculty the Faculty Welfare Committee and a ;VAUJWf£mCFM(MY0NLY • last, the FWC recommended that a opinion solicited in an FWC survey professor of geography at the ftYlNGf&OUROlLWW SEIF-IXSIWING D011ARS." flat sum be reserved for persons who during early 1977. University. paulpourri letters operator? get me tobasco, ohio ception of one reserved space. I returned to my car at noon the same immorality Few things in life cause as much "One of you made that call and I'm I told each person how much he owed, day to find that it was blocked by grief, are as ill-timed and threaten After reading Allen V. Wiley's article another car. going to find out who. And when I do, and that the bill was due the next day. relationships more than the monthly concerning today's "new morality," I I requested the black Impala be he's going to wish he had remembered "Can you wait till Friday? No found myself reading it over and over phone bill. Its arrival marks the day of earlier. Why can't you guys remember bucks," Rich said. moved so I could leave. I was then reckoning and paying for past offenses. again in disbelief. I am astonished that informed that the car was there for a Paul what calls you make? You've got to be "I expect my income tax check this At our house, that is especially ap- such a clouded perception of today's purpose - to keep my car there so it more responsible," I shouted. week. Can you wait that long?" Brad parent, where five roommates and a young people exists. The revolutionary, could be ticketed by the campus police Lintern Still, no one admitted to the call. asked. host of others make regular use of the anti-establishment youth of a decade for illegal parking. My car was not in It left me but one alternative. In a fit "WILL YOU LOAN me $10? I'll pay facilities to the tune of more than $100 a ago has been replaced by a more the restricted space and, after a brief of authority I grabbed the phone and you back at the end of the month," month. conservative young person of the but abusive verbal exchange by two of called the phone company to find out Jerry said. And the bill comes to me. 'M who belonged to the number that was "I'll pay you when I get back from seventies. the Popular Culture staff and myself. I was allowed by their "benevolence" to called. my band tour," Roger said. Stereotypes and generalizations are leave. ON-CAMPUS students have a dif- since Roger and Rich each have I found out. It belonged to my sister. "I decided to wait awhile before too often used to describe young people. ferent problem to deal with, because of fiancees living there. I'd forgotten. paying. I have since checked with Parking their student billing numbers. Rather Why should we all suffer for the Services and have learned that, Then, I investigated each remaining "Uh, forget what I just said," I I'm writing this column from a cell in than sorting out which roommate made misbehavior of a few "teenage although the lot is not designated as call individually, to find the culprit. sheepishly told my roomies. the Wood County jail. The county is what call, each dorm resident must criminals, alcoholics and drug ad- such, it is for the exclusive use of That was not easy. I TOTALED each person's account, auctioning my car and typewriter for figure out how many calls actually dicts," that Mr. Wiley so Popular Culture staff and visitors. For "Who called Tobasco?" I yelled so all including their long distance calls, their compensation. made were the result of his being the pessimistically mentions? this oversight on my part I apologize. could hear. portion of the monthly service charge The phone company doesn't like to be lucky number chosen by someone "Not me." Mr. Wiley may be astounded to know However, I feel that I should also be and four percent excise tax. kept waiting. trying to con the phone company. "I didn't." that some young people don't smoke apologized to for having an action taken As usual, I was about a dollar off. As Paul Lintern, a News staff writer, Is On off-campus accounts, however, "Wasn't me." pot, get drunk every weekend, in good faith penalized by those who usual, I didn't bother to check back. It's publishing a collection of 56 columns, to "bedhop," or whatever else he might the call automatically is billed to the "I don't even know where it is." easier just to pay the buck. be available at the end of April. have no right to do so. The psuedo- phone being used, so the only worry is consider to be "evil." I've lived on this police action taken by the Pop Culture I GOT OUT my atlas and found keeping strangers from sneaking into Tobasco on the map. "It's near campus for two years and have found staff members was devious, illegal and the house and using our phone while we Dayton," I said. this to be the rule, not the exception. low. Furthermore, if the area in are asleep or away. "Oh, I guess that's me," Rich said. "I question is indeed restricted, the ap- The BIS CTews That way, the guilty callers live in the didn't know the name of the place. In concluding his article, Mr. Wiley propriate signs should be erected, as same house. Honest." A culprit apprehended. asked, "How do you rate the future they are everywhere else on campus. As soon as I received our March By the time I'd finished, I discovered Page 2 prospects of your country if we continue Don't worry Pop Culture - although Thursday, April 13.1978 phone bill last week, I sat down to try to that Men's Chorus members had called EDITORIAL STAFF to live by the treachings of the new my apology is public, I will accept a figure out who belongs to what, since by a dozen eastern cities to set up a tour, moral code?" personal apology by phone, mail or in ,di >r chance, I had the afternoon free. Jeanine had called her mother, Patti " limit I, pierman Mr. Wiley should be reminded that person. managing «lltor w. w,niam lammers this is our country, and only when we had called us collect, Joyce had called news tdltor cheryl a. geschke FIRST, I MADE a quick check for an old friend and Kevin just called. He editorial editor Stephen p. bean all, young and old alike, cooperate John G. Gary ean without sitting in judgement of each calls to each roommates hometown- didn't want to be left out. sports editor Steven w. sadltr 413 South College ■ copy editor |antt „. rop#rl other will the future of this country be Massillon, Alliance, Shelby, Wooster, Warren-and initialed each ac- ONLY ONE CALL escaped me. No photo editor lawrencem. kayser worth considering. entertainment editor marc holland cordingly. one would admit to making a call to Kay Lynn Lanning lost and found Then I looked for calls to Cincinnati, Wickliffe. BUSINESS STAFF 413 McDonald North business manager wllllam schabel The News "Letters to the Editor" sales manager .... rebec ca wllson smestad section has received quite a few letters start the day off, write pop culture in the past few days requesting the The BG News Is published dally Tuesday through Friday during the regular The News welcomes reader response to editorial comment as well as opinions school year and weekly during summer sessions by students of Bowling Green return of lost or stolen items. on topics of student interest, in the form of letters to the editor and guest State University under the authority ol the University Publications Committee. We would like to remind our readers columns. Opinions expressed by columnists do not necessarily reflect the opinions of force that the editorial page Is reserved for BG News Editorial Board. All correspondence should be typewritten and -spaced. Only those The BG News and Bowling Green State University are equal opportunity em- opinion and in some cases humorous letters and columns signed and listing the author's address and phone number I am a graduate student with faculty- ployers and do not discriminate In hiring practices. narrative. Publishing "lost and found" for verification will be accepted. The News will not accept advertising that is deemed discriminatory, degrading staff status at BGSU. On April 11,1978, letters is not our function. Letters to the editor may not exceed 300 words (30 typed lines). Columns are or Insulting on the basis or race, sex or national origin. I parked my car in the lot behind the Such requests should be submitted to not to be more than 60 typed lines. All rights to material published in The BG News are reserved house which currently is used by the I the appropriate section of the News The News reserves the right to reject letters or portions of letters that are Popular Culture Department. No Classifieds. Cost for advertising is 30 Editorial and Business Offices deemed in bad taste or malicious. lOe University Hall restrictive signs, warning notices or cents for each line (three line Correspondence may be sent to: Editorial Editor, The BG News, 106 Bowling Green State University other parking regulations are minimum). University Hall. Bowling Green, Ohio 4340] designated for the area, with the ex- Phone(411) 372 2003 The BG News Thursday, April 13,1978 Page 1

Wiedmann divides a roll of dough into section! which later will become pie crust. Flour power Anyone passing Kohl Hall about 5 COOKIE PRODUCTION temporarily a.m. Monday through Friday has been was halted during the January 26 greeted by a flavorful aroma emerging blizzard when Wiedmann and baker from its basement windows. Willi Henoch spent five days in the The aroma from the University bake shop. shop begins to arouse the senses in the "We were the only two who made it in early hours and continues throughout during the blizzard. We baked a lot of the day. bread during those five days," Wied- Eight bakers combine their skills mann said. with more than two tons of ingredients He and Henoch were born in Ger- each week to satisfy about 8,000 hungry many and acquired their baking skills stomachs on campus. there. At age 14, both left home to begin three-year apprenticeships at baking BAKE SHOP MANAGER Richard trade schools. Wiedmann said he Wiedmann, says the shop used 2,000 worked 80 hours and earned about $2 a pounds of flour, 1,000 pounds of week. granulated sugar, 400 pounds of powdered sugar, 800 pounds of shor- BUT IN KOHL Hall, Wiedmann tening, 500 pounds of fruit fillings and works 40 hours a week and is busiest in 300 dozen eggs each week. fall quarter. "Our largest item, in terms of During the summer months, Wied- quantity, is the cookies and chocolate mann is the only baker and the shop is chip is the biggest seller of those," he moved to Harshman Quad. said. But, wherever the pies, cookies, A special machine allows the bakers cakes and rolls are made, Wiedmann to produce 150 dozen cookies in 10 and his staff have their own recipe for minutes. The bakery's oven, consisting the bake shop's success-a love and a of four rotating racks, can bake 18,000 skill for baking. cookies in less than two hours. The proof is in the taste.

Helen White places another tray of cakes on the rack to cool.

F O uC s

Ruth Fritz decorates cakes, which students can order through their dining halls.

Story and Photos

by Karen Borchers Willi Henoch has been working at the bakery since 1970. Before that time, he worked as a baker at the Commodore Perry in Toledo.

Ruth Fritz, one of eight bakers in the Kohl Hall bake shop, prepares dough for Richard Wiedmann sits beside the Union's 20th birthday cake, which he and Willi Henoch made in three hours. dinner rail. The cake itself weighed 94 lbs. and the icing weighed 60 lbs. Page 4 Thursday, April 13,1978 The BG News Considered top electric Clarke displays musical talent

Review by slightly distorted fanfare, talent as not only a bassist well-deserved break. and Gil Evens. Frank Breithaupt Clarke opened with the wild, but a leader and composer. "Picture yourself A honky-tonk strut in- chaotic title tune frttm his somewhere in a bar troduced the second half of From the hollows of a New "School Days" album. Clarke's next selection, hanging out with a beer," the show with a rhythm and Orleans jazz hall to the Clarke's duet with electric "The Magician," was a hint Clarke told the crowd as he blues tinged pieces, "The dance floor of a New York guitarist Ray Gomez of the sound he became noted led into the second part of the Dance." soul palace, Stanley Clarke highlighted the extended for while performing with show with a taste of how the took his audience on a jazz- piece. 's jazz-fusion band also could play The remainder of the musical adventure Tuesday group . •'traditional" jazz. concert, including the en- night in the Grand Ballroom, The atmosphere took a core, was devoted to duets Union. drastic change when Clarke Although it partially was Trumpeter Al Harrison's between guitarist Gomez continued the concert with a drowned out by impolite rendition of the Charlie and Clarke on electric bass Parker standard "Con- The concert sounds varied calm arrangement entitled members of the audience, backed by the rhythm and "Quiet Afternoon," also "The Magician" contained firmation" exhibited both wind sections. as much as the setting of the Harrison's and Clarke's Jazz hall and soul palace. from his "School Days" delicate movements again album. involving creative use the talents as swing musicians. Clarke's versatility is what During the set, Clarke did makes him, in most major not limit his enormous wind section, including a bassoon. Playing swing is nothing music polls including "down versatility on the The excellent use of new for Clarke, who has beat" and "Playboy," "top and string bass. Clarke's wind section- Halfway through the played with musicians like electic bassist," a position he woodwinds and two trum- concert Clarke gave the , , is sure to hold for a long After an arousing, but pets-was an example of his band-and the audience-a , Thad Jones, time. Japanese comedy premieres today

Preview By by Richard Lenhart and the plotting to off with show a light, comic tone. each time," he said. Jim Hick Student Activities Office, Nanki-Poo, who is the em- will be shown at 9 p.m. today peror's son traveling in- "It's biting satire," said RJ. WHITEHOUSE, a "Just when I think through Friday and at 2:30 cognito. Sibberson, a 1976 University junior and veteran of someone's not going to get it p.m. Saturday and Sunday in Nanki-Poo fled his graduate, said. "But it deals Cabaret Theater's "God- right, they walk in and do it the Joe E. Brown Theatre. father's court to get away with things about society spell," headlines as Ko-Ko. right the very next time," from Katisha. a matronly that don't change over Matched with him as the Paul Sibberson, director of GILBERT AND woman trying to snare a time." other comic lead is Janet "The Mikado," said. SULLIVAN'S comic operetta husband before it is too late. Paugh, senior, as Katisha. is set in fuedal Japan. Ko-Ko, The acting is highly Paugh played Jenny Diver in Mark Hetrick, a senior the High Executioner, tries THE COMEDY only stylized, Hetrick said, but fall quarter's "Three Penny and the show's musical to save a town faced with starts with the names. Sir demands that performers go Opera." director, laughed. "The ruin because of the em- Arthur Sullivan's ironic beyond what is written for The young lovers, Yum- hardest thing is trying to get peror's harsh laws. lyrics have delighted them. Yum and Nanki-Poo, are 21 music students together audiences for more than a "It's fun to see what played by Melissa Moorman, Newsphoto by Karen Borchers for practice." But, unknown to Ko-Ko, century, while Sir William different things the cast senior, and Mark Detamore, STANLEY CLARKE, RENOWNED jazz bassist, entertained a University "The Mikado," sponsored his fiancee Yum-Yum is Gilbert's music gives the members do with their roles junior. audience Tuesday night with several cuts from his latest "School Days" album. Clarke displayed his talents on both electric and string bass guitars throughout thetne two-hour concert.

Read it in the News Students organize first art show

A student-organizedifipnt-nroaniTpH art theIho TtninnUnion ActivitiesAntiiritioc ufhnlf^nlorwholesaler, millwill collsell jewelry.iau'alru r\onio*irmDagistino, «a fUniversity ^**************.*.*****.*.,*v show will be held 10:30 a.m. Organization, was arranged "This is our first attempt graduate, will display ABORTION to 5:30 p.m. today through by Mike Fix, Dale Francis at organizing a student show weavings and ceramic

Saturday in the Browsing and Ron Kostoff. Sue apart from the annual art sculptures. ■ TOLL FREE ¥ ¥ Room, Union. Spalding will play guitar for show in May," Francis said. 9 a.m.-lO p.m. the event and Scott Rhoden, In addition to the original Glassware and macrame * ¥ 1-800-438-8039 The show, sponsored by a Cleveland Heights student paintings, Lisa also will be exhibited. * BEER BLAST ¥ ¥ ¥ Something to ¥ AT Say? ¥ Local Briefs Something to ¥ ¥ Sell? Hydraulic Room ¥ ¥ Cancellation Use the ¥ ¥ Cyclethon BG NEWS ¥ The World Student Association election meeting The sixth annual Wood County Cyclethon, sponsored by Thursday scheduled for Friday has been canceled. Wood County Easter Seals and American Youth Hostels, Classifieds!! ¥ will be held from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. April 22. ¥ For more information, call 353-1735. Call 372-2003 April 13 8:00 to 11:30 ¥ Poetry, fiction reading or come in to ¥ ¥ Fifteen local women will read poetry and fiction as part ¥ ¥ of the creative writing program at 7 p.m. tomorrow in the Fellowship speaker 106 University ¥ Commuter Center. Moselev Hall. All Proceeds go the ¥ The Women Aglow Fellowship will feature guest Hall ¥ Career speech speaker Pat Abels, Ohio Northern University's board president. The public meeting will be held 11:30 a.m. ¥ Terry Koozer, a field examiner for the National Labor Project Hope Wednesday at the Holiday Inn, 1550 E. Wooster St, The ¥ ¥ Relations Board, Cleveland, will speak at the University buffet luncheon costs 14. about career opportunities at 1:30 p.m., Monday in the ¥ ¥ For more information, contact Kathy Friesner, 287-4451 Sponsored by Phi Mu Sorority Dogwood Suite, Union. or Naomi Healy, 352-7941. ¥ ¥ The meeting is sponsored by the Career Planning and ^**-***********..*.*.*.**. *.*.*.** Placement Services Office. SGA candidates r^^vvv^wvwvwvw-AVAVvvvvvv', Pianist performs Student Government Association candidates will be Pianist Jeffrey Swann will perform at 8 p.m. Tuesday in featured in a forum in the Commuter Center this week. the Recital Hall, College of Musical Arts. The concert is Union Activities Organization directors-at-large will free and public. debate at 10:45 a.m. today and on-campus senators will be UUJG (JUCD17BCD & Art show featured at 10:45 a.m. tomorrow. The University Women's Studies Program will host the Geology meeting invitational art show "Women in the Field," which runs Dr. Shinn will speak Friday about the "Environmental Monday through April 29 in the McFall Center Gallery. Approach to Limestone Diagenesis". The meeting, Gallery hours are noon-5 p.m. and the display is free sponsored by the Geology Club, begins at 12:30 p.m. in and public. Rm. 70, Overman Hall and is free and public.

Delta Tau Delta Sponsored by UA0 mm DEPART JULY 14, 1978 RETURN JULY 28, 1978 $934.80 CONKLIN When signing up a with Dogs ^ □ deposit of $100 is needed D D &Suds D ATAH Full cost is dua by June 8, 1978 D □ make tracks to poaliai's for a terrific chef's salad MS *• "* .or chocs, from our oth.rgr.at m.als. pagliai's is open Sun.4 p.m.-Midnight: Mon.-Wcd. 11a.m. -la. mM 352-7571 Thurs.. Fri.. Sat. 11 a.m.-2 a.m. The BG NewtThunday, April 13,1978 Page 5

Day in review From Associated Press wire reports

A woman testified yesterday that she Poland, Ohio, as a passenger in the car. witnessed the Oct. 6, 1977 bombing She did so first outside the presence of death of Oeveland rackets figure the jury and then repeated her Four day Christian, Moslem war Daniel J. Green and identified two men testimony before the panel. Her who allegedly were in a car fleeing the husband, outside the presence of the r scene. jury, pointed out attorney Ralph Sperli leaves 35 dead in Lebanon However, her husband followed her to as looking like the passenger. Witnesses the stand and mistakenly picked out a Spoth is expected to testify before the Syrian troops pumped cannon and Hospitals issued appeals for blood, defense attorney as looking like the car jury today. rocket lire into a crowded Christian and ambulances and fire engines passenger. Carabbia is one of six men on trial for neighborhood in Beirut, Lebanon, world braved heavy fire in the embattled testify in Both Debbie and Greg Spoth of aggravated murder, aggravated arson yesterday, trying to quell fighting area. Cleveland Heights identified a picture and conspiracy to engage in organized between Christians and Moslems that of admitted killer Raymond Ferritto of crime in Greene's death. Mrs. Spoth has claimed 35 lives in four days. the third anniversary of the outbreak of CHRISTIAN LEADERS said they bombing case Erie, Pa., as being that of the driver of identified Carabbia as he sat with other The Syrians were trying to blast the 19-month civil war between ordered their militias not to fire "ex- a car that sped away from the bombing defendants in the courtroom. Christian militiamen out of sniper nests Moslems and Christians that claimed cept in extreme cases of self-defense." scene at a suburban I.yndhurst shop- FERRITTO HAS PLEADED guilty to and machine-gun positions in the neigh- 37,000 lives in 1975-76. The Calm returned to the area by nightfall, i ping center. the same charges. But, under an borhood of Ein Rummaneh in east predominantly Syrian Arab League although there was no official cease- agreement with prosecutors, he can Beirut. peacekeepers were sent to end the fire. MRS. SPOTH IDENTIFIED withdraw the plea if he cooperates in Residents of adjacent Moslem fighting and police the truce. Former President Camilla Chamoun, defendant Ronald D. Carabbia, 48, of the trial. district of Chiyah said the Syrians were Shooting from Chiyah eased up as the leader of the ultra-rightist National not firing their way, but said they were Syrians concentrated fire on Ein Liberal Party, accused Syria of "taking receiving some fire from the Christian Rummaneh. Thousands of Christian revenge," apparently referring to the sector. civilians there were trapped in their year's first major Christian-Syrian Desegregation suit dismissed apartments or hid in basement clash that claimed more than 150 lives THE FLARE-UP came on the eve of shelters. last February. A federal judge dismissed a by assigning students to the closest desegregation suit against the practical school. To sfudy Rhodes/on, weapons agreements Youngstown public schools yesterday, state There were exceptions to the policy, saying the school board was innocent of Contie said, but added that a careful intentionally segregating schools. study of the record demonstrated no Attorneys for the National in Youngstown "so as to further pattern of discriminatory intent of Vance leaves for Africa, Europe Association for the Advancement of maintain, foster or establish there in effect. Broad-based black rule in Rhodesia number of obstacles. Colored People (NAACP) said they racially identifiable teaching or ad- "While perhaps the school officials and a nuclear weapons limitation Among them are U.S. efforts to expected to file an appeal within two ministrative staffs." did not always choose the most in- treaty that can get through the Senate nation restrict the Soviet bomber known to the days. Contie ordered the board to submit a tegrative options, their actions and are the goals of Secretary of State West as the Backfire, parallel attempts While U.S. District Court Judge plan within 60 days for assignment and omissions regarding student assign- Cyrus R. Vance's trip to Africa and unable to complete terms for a new by Moscow to slow down development Leroy J. Contie Jr. in Akron turned reassignment of teachers and ad- ments were not intentionally Europe. treaty that would impose ceilings on of the low-flying U.S. cruise missile, down the four-year-old NAACP suit, he ministrators which will quickly segregative," the judge said. The mission that began last night is their long-range bombers and in- and differences over how to verify that said the school board had violated establish a racial balance. open-ended. Vance hopes it will lead to tercontinental ballistic missiles. the two sides are living up to the rights by disproportionately assigning Of the 19,841 students in Youngstown, HE SAID IT WAS probable that a Rhodesian conference in Malta or eventual treaty. black teachers and administrators to 48.9 percent are black. Youngstown's parochial school system Geneva, with the militant Patriotic A TENTATIVE agreement reached Vance said this week that the U.S. predominantly black schools. and possibly other private schools Front sitting beside moderate blacks by former President Gerald R. Ford in would sign a weapons agreement with IN HIS 240-PAGE decision Contie contributed to existing segregated and representatives of Prime Minister November, 1974, with Soviet President the Soviet Union only if it improved HE BARRED THE school board from said the school board proved it followed conditions in Youngstown public Ian D. Smith, leader of the white I.eonid I. Brezhnev has run into a Western security. assigning teachers and administrators a "neutral neighborhood school policy" schools. minority. If Vance can set up new negotiations More chicken, less beef for black rule in Rhodesia, the ad- State employees picket for pay raise ministration will have fulfilled President Carter's pledge to black part of anti-inflation plan Hundreds of state workers demon- HOWEVER, Rep. Harry J. Unman by the demonstrations one way or the Africa earlier this month in Nigeria. More poultry and less beef may soon price of meat is expected to rise 10 strated at the Statehouse for the second ID-Shaker Heights), chairman of a other. "I'm not bothered by picketing. show up in military mess halls and percent to 12 percent this year. day yesterday to underscore demands Senate-House conference committee It's a traditional right. I met with their IF VANCE'S EFFORT fails-and so school cafeterias as part of President The Pentagon buys large quantities for bigger pay raises than those con- considering the bill, said he is still leaders and heard what they had to far Rhodesia's interim government has Carter's new anti-inflation program, of beef for the military, and the tained in a pending bill. making his own study of state revenues say," he said. rejected British-American proposals for administration officials said yesterday. Agriculture Department makes pur- But one key senator indicated the to find out if the proposed raises can be The rally was staged by members of a new conference-U.S. standing in the Tom Joyce, a spokesman for the chases for the school lunch program. effort was futile. increased. the Ohio Civil Service Association and Third World could take a nosedive. Council on Wage and Price Stability BUT DON'T EXPECT any of that to "They fail to take into account the the Communications Workers of The stakes are equally high in the and Lester Fettig, who is in charge of bring down your grocery bill. fact that we already hacve ap- The Cuyahoga County lawmaker America who sounded basically the nuclear weapons field. federal buying policy, said meat is a "We're not so naive as to think that propriated all available money that can said he wants to call a meeting of the same theme as that of a Tuesday rally Despite intensive negotiations, the "hypothetical" example of where the this isn't going to be more symbolic be appropriated," said Senate Finance conference committee next week, by about 400 members of the American U.S. and the Soviet Union have been government might economize. The than effective," said Fettig. Chairman Harry Meshel (D- perhaps Tuesday, to settle the issue. Federation of State, County and Youngstown). LEHMAN SAID he wasn't swayed Municipal Employees. .KIDS RECORDS SCHOOLKIDS RECORDS SCHOOLKIDS RECORDS SCHQ

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— — Page ( Thursday, April 13,1978 The BG News UAO to feature RLA proposes new constitution folk harpsichordist By George Lundskow CONSTITUTION The vice president, now responsibilities to the procedures for upcoming tendance has dropped REVISIONS include titled vice chairman, will secretary. executive board elections. drastically this quarter and Dan Tinen, songwriter, acoustic harpsichordist and Residence Life changing quorum from two- become a voting member of members should attend pianist, will play his own brand of folk-pop May 11 and 12 Association (RLA) revised a thirds of the voting mem- the National Association of To qualify for an NOMINATIONS FOR meetings so RLA can vote on at the UAO Coffeehouse. proposed constitution bership to one-half. College and University executive board position, a executive board positions the new constitution and Tinen combines elements of Jackson Browne, Harry Monday night. If passed Residence Halls. member now must attend will be accepted at Monday's executive board. Chapin and Karla Bonoff, mixed in with his own musical next week, it will replace the The first draft of the new RLA meetings for one to two meeting and elections are Meetings are public and experiences and the innovative sound of the harpsichord. current three-year-old constitution cut the number THE NEW CON- quarters. scheduled for May 1. will be held at 6 p.m. Mon- The 24-year-old Tinen has been playing professionally charter. of voting members of STITUTION also eliminates Ted Shobe, RLA adviser days in the Student Cour- since he was 14, when be began as a rock band organist in Panhellenic Council from the membership secretary In other business, and hall director of Kreisher- troom, Student Services the mid-1960s. While in high school, he toured the South To pass the new con- position and transfers those members adopted election Darrow, said that at- Bldg. stitution, two-thirds of the 27 two to one, but RLA returned with a gospel-rock group. Then, under the leadership of the voting number to two. Chicago jazz trumpeter and arranger, Warren Kime, he voting members must ap- joined "Children of Time" and toured the Midwest college prove it and only nine circuit members were present WEIBL, A MEMBER of Progrom locks understanding In 1972, Tinen went solo, playing keyboards and singing Monday. the committee that wrote the new constitution, said the in clubs and coffeehouses in the Chicago area. He The main problem facing the international studies trying to have a program f acility reinstated. RLA Chairman Richard reason for the suggested preferred the intimacy, the one-on-one relationship an program is a lack of understanding by the rest of the There currently are 261 foreign students at the University, Weibl said that the reason change was that Panhel acoustic soloist has with an audience, although he University, according todirector L. Edward Shuck Jr. including 76 French business students this quarter. RLA is trying to adopt the represented nearly the same frequently travels with a variety of bands, ranging from "When people hear of any international programs, they new constitution is because number of students' progressive rock to soft pop. think that they only apply to foreign students. International SHUCK SAID he hopes that number will increase. While touring with his own band in Arkansas during the present constitution is residential units with one "restricted and vague." He means from all countries, and that includes this one. I wish "I would like to see more foreign students here, because 1976, he built the acoustic harpsichord that has become vote. we had more American students involved," Shuck said my goal is to increase the international aspect at BGSU," he the focal point of his act. said that the constitution must "grow with the group." Shuck, who has been at the University since 1964, said he said, adding, "I wish that we had 5,000 students." Tinen will play at the UAO Coffeehouse from 9 p.m. to A new clause in the believes that more exposure would make the program more The World Student Association supplements Shuck's midnight in the Carnation Room, Union. Admission is $1. constitution allows the successful. program with many activities for international students. president, now titled chairman, with the approval "WE NEED A separate facility. It would give us a higher INTERNATIONAL WEEK, planned for May, will include « VITAMINS* 8 MINERALS! of the executive board, to fill profile, which would help bring together more foreign and a soccer tournament, talent show, movies and music. 11 19 Nice things to do any vacancies occurring on American students. That's what this is all about," he said. There also are regularly scheduled coffee hours and "rap that board. "We had a separate international center in the Music sessions" which are "not as Mickey Mouse as they sound. foTyour body Today! Building from 1967 to 1970," he said, adding that he has been They're good ways to meet people," Shuck said.

YOU Cleveland Area Residence Wi Summer Jobt Sl.00-7.00 per Can Vote hour. Kramer Painting Inc. is <^L accepting applications for some 45 positions: Foreman, Thursday assistant Foreman, supply IGOOD LUCK IN YOUR%# driver, sec window and housewashers. carpenter. FREE BOTTLE April 27 Write David Kramer. j»54 N. MARATHON RUN Moreland No 21. Cleveland, of wexa// TO OHIO STATE r SGA Elections Ohio 44120. ALPHA DELTA PI SUPER Proudly Announces Their 1978-79 Officers PLENAMINSMulti-Vitamins with Minerals President Jennifer L. Cross FREE! Efficiency Vice-President Becky Simon 144 Tablets Pledge Director Laurie Jones Vice-President Rush Chairman '. Betsy Heath Ass't. Rush Chairman Sandy Sedlak Senior Panhel Cathy Gast Junior Panhel Sandy Sedlak Corresponding Secretary Cheryl Grindon Registrar 144 TABLETS FREE 72 TABLETS FREE 36 TABLETS FREE Recording Secretary Rosie Belfiore when you buy 288 when you buy 144 when you buy 72 Co-Treasurers Darlene Bilas SUMMER RENTALS Suzanne Hartman House Chairman Cathy Gast Guard Jennifer Caravella RIDGE MANOR "i Block from campus 2 bedroom, furnished Standards Chairman k Fran Ochyra APARTMENTS Social Chairman Clndi Burley All utilities paid DORSET'S DRUGS Scholarship Chairman Leigh Cooley Ass't. Pledge Director Karen Flowers 1 or 2 people $125.00-month 500 East Wooster Street "By the Tracks" Chaplain Gail Miller 3 or 4 people $150.00-month

EIGHTH STREET 803 & 815 Eighth Street Best wishes to past officers APARTMENTS 2 bedroom, furnished in future endeavors Air-conditioned 1 -4 people $140.00 plus electric FRAZEEAVENUE APARTMENTS 1'4 Blocks North of the "Towers" Across the street from Univ. Tennis Courts CELEBRATE! 2 bedroom, furnished, 2 full baths 1 - 4 people $140.00 plus electric $ ■ MB —■ •— HM ^» ^ ^" ^" ^ ^ ■■ ™ CELEBRATE!! Other locations starting from $110.00 Call 352-0717 or stop by CELEBRATES 224 E. Wooster Street YOU CELEBRATE!! CAN SEE YOURSELF Dixie Electric Co. 3 IN SYSTEMS CONSULTING

An Entertainment Utility SEE US. We are Interviewing COMPUTER SCIENCE Because you mode it...through the worst MAJORS on April 17th and 18th at Career winter in history Forget those bone chilling Planning and Placement Services. 360 Student days of winter and welcome those worm Services Building for: winds of spring. Friday night, jump into the COMPUTER CONSULTING PROFESSIONALS Dixie Electric Company's • System Design • Programming Consultants Spring Fever Fandango. • Systems Analysts Prepare for all the fun, dancing and excite- •Project Leaders ment you can handle. There will be every- •Data-Base Professionals thing from sailboats to tanning oil and some Consumer Systems mighty unbelievable low drink prices. sf "VICES GROUP INC Thf BG News Thursday, April 13,1978 Pige 7 Proxmire objects Trades hardhat for God to 'bug' funding Steel worker preaches NILES, Ohio (AP)-During the week, John "I was leaving a house near where Betty COLUMBUS (AP)-An Ohio State University research R. Stephens operates a crane at the was babysitting one night, met her and that project is bugging Sen William Proxmire (D-Wis.). McDonald Works of U.S. Steel Corp. On was the beginning. The Wisconsin senator, who specializes in exposing federal Sundays, he does something a bit different. frivolities, said recently there's a lot "farfetched" about the He trades his hardhat for vestments and "I GOT INTERESTED in her and she got me usefulness of spending $405,000 in federal funds to help Ohio preaches at the Gethesemane Baptist Church interested in going to Valley Baptist Church State scientists develop the 200-pound, six-legged, slow- in Youngstown. And, he admits, his sermons in Niles." walking robot named the "bionic bug." often are "active and sometimes longwin- When he was in training to become a deacon ded." at Valley Baptist, Stephens said a speaker Proxmire says the National Science Foundation (NSF) Even though he went to church regularly as came to the church who proved to be the claims the bionic bug would be useful in "hazardous and a child, it is ironic that he is a man-of-the- catalyst which propelled him into the fragile environments such as forests and frozen tundra " cloth now. ministry. "During the sermon the Lord called me," he said. "I THINK IT would be more useful in the Ohio State back- "MY MOTHER AND father didn't give me He was ordained in 1967 and a few months field," Proxmire said in a news release issued at his a choice when I was growing up. I went to later he was called to be the pastor at Washington office. church whether I wanted to or not." Stephens Gethesemane. Ohio State Professor Robert B. McGhee, the man said he stopped attending church as soon as responsible for developing the robot, said research already he left home. HIS STYLE OF PREACHING U not has produced at least one important contribution to Home was Silver Run, Ala., a rural com- passive. "I can't stand in one place. I move medicine. munity where he worked on farms and con- around and wave my hands, and if I get struction projects. In search of a better job, happy, I might even jump up and down a "Testing begins next month at the Veterans' he came to Niles and lived with a relative Administration Prosthetic Center in New York City of a new couple of times," he said. until he found his job as a crane operator. He said he knows that he's talked too long if artificial knee joint that was designed using our findings," he He credits his wife Betty with his interest in said. the congregation starts nodding off. the church. Stephens puts in long hours being a father to three children, a husband, preacher and RESEARCH ALSO HAS been beneficial in helping medical HIS LIFE WAS considerably different doctors study the human gait, he said. steelworker. He is on call 24 hours a day to before they met, he said. minister his congregation. McGhee said Proxmire doesn't understand the nature of "I liked to party on the weekends. We'd go AP photo grants from the NSF. But he feels it is all worthwhile OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY Professor Robert B. McGhee sits In the from bar to bar and when they closed, we'd "The joy I feel in relating to and helping background of the six-legged "bionic bug" that is drawing question from Sen. "An NSF grant is designed to further basic research. It's usually end up at somebody's house to play people is more than any amount of money I William Proxmire (D-Wis.). for producing knowledge, not new products." cards. could receive." Truck driver of 22 years Now Operating: FRIDAY AND SATURDAY plans to become lawyer 210 MATH SCIENCE BGSU ESCORT SERVICE EAST CANTON, Ohio I API-Meet David Darrah, husband, father, truck driver and college student with a 10-year plan for changing professions. 7:00 AND 9:30 PM 372-2346 He qualified for membership in the Teamsters' Union 22 /J This service will operate 7 days a week years ago. In eight more years he expects to be a lawyer. Right now, Darrah, 42, is more concerned about his $1.00 WITH I.D. from 8:00 p.m. - Midnight. evening classes at the Stark County branch of Kent State University. He does not care about being a sophomore or NEXT WEEK: WOODY ALLEN WEEKEND All escorts have been interviewed and senior. He just goes two or three evenings a week to get his Don't forget O.J. Anderson appearing first degree. have had a records check. AFTER THAT COMES law school and he is not sure where in the Carnation Room that will be, although he hopes close to home. Thursday and Friday at 9:00 PM Admission $1. All escorts will carry an identification card. "I don't think I want to be a truck driver all my life," he says. "I call this my 10-year plan. By the time I'm 50 I'll have We will escort on and off campus 30 years as a teamster and can retire. "I want to have the law degree by then." (with the exception of drinking establishments) He's already working with a lawyer, building a case as a 6th ANNUAL plaintiff about one little rule he sees as an injustice. He does Coordinated by SGA and University Police not like an Ohio Department of Highway Safety rule that requires over-the-road trucks to stop at every weigh station WOOD COUNTY CYCLETHON for checks. sponsored by: Wood County Easter Seal Society and American Youth Hostels JAM PROUDL Y PRESENTS 1 CONGRATULATIONS Date: Saturday, April 22 from 8 a.m. - 1 p.m. * TO THE * (Raindate): Sunday, April 23 from 1 p.m. • 6 p.m. NEWLY ELECTED OFFICERS* 1 Friday, April 14 * Courses in: BGSU, Bowling Green, Cygnet, Perrysburg, Rossford, North OF PI KAPPA PHI * Baltimore, Bradner, Pemberville, Weston, Bloomdale, Tontogany. * 8 PM * President- Kevin Lotosky ^P* ■ ■i-'v , ,J MarkKrach * Riders compete with self to generate enough money to win such prizes ■ifejt.jn * Vice-President Treasurer- Jim Miller * as: 10-speed bikes, cameras, sleeping bags, pocket calculators, T.V.'s. TOLEDO Rob Gessner cassette players, and so on. Secret ary- * CENTENNIAL HALL Warden- Bob Daniel All riders earning $3 and over get a cyclethon patch * * Historian- Brian Hendrickson * All riders generating $50 and over get a certificate with * Chaplain- Frank Armstrong For Information Call: * IFCRep.- Greg Thomas * 352-1735 KARLA BONOFF * Social Chairman- Mike Thomas * 3521252 House Manager- Quinn Clarke * 352-8861 * LU" Sis Advisors Rob Gessner and RIDE FOR FUN & HEALTH V Tickets $7.50-$6.50 Reserved * Mark Krach Tickets available at Centennial Hall I! >x Office, Finder? Records in * * THANKS TO THE OLD OFFICERS Sponsor sheets now available on campus and at merchants, in banks ... Bowling Green and Findlay Central ' rravel & Tickets La Salles- * FOR A JOB WELL DONE! Downtown & Woodville. Mail Boogie Records, The Other Boogie * Thank You! Peaches Records & Tapes. The Head She * 1 & The Depot *•••••••••••••••••••* CAMPUS MANOR ¥ (Behind Oino's. next to Sterling &. Dorsey's Drugs) ¥ ¥ Winthrop Terrace NOW RENTING FOR SUMMER ¥ ¥ * SPECIAL RATES • ¥ ¥ ¥ AIR CONDITIONED (by gas) North and South ALL UTILITIES PAID EXCEPT ELECTRIC ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ Phone 352-9302 or 352-7365 (evening*) ¥ SPECIAL SUMMER RATES ¥ ¥ ¥ MODEL OPEN 12-4:30 Daily ¥ ¥ Now Leasing for Fall y**A^*»*A*^****AA**»^AA^A**A^^^^^^^*>*A*^ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ and Summer Occupancy ¥ Pi Kappa Alpha ¥ 00 ¥ ¥ Fall Rotes Stort os Low as $75. Per Person ¥ ¥ ¥ Pikes hot dog n' suds ¥ ¥ ¥ For the Finest in Apartment Living, ¥ night ¥ ¥ ¥ FEATURE ATTRACTION: See Us Today. ¥ ¥ ¥ Hie Dancing Dimpletts ¥ ¥ ¥ Office at 400 Napoleon Rd. Open 9-12 and 1 -5 Mon.-Fri. ¥ Tonight CONKLIN ¥ ¥ DnKA □ Evenings by Appointment □ a I ¥ 352-9135 ¥ at 8:00 D □ ¥ ¥ D D *^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^J^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^J^.^^^L^* D D *********** MAAAAMAAAAAAAAAAA^A** Page 8 Thursday, April 13,1*78 The BG News

D00NES8URY by Garry Trudeau Classifieds two YEAR, HE PRESENTS AWtaST01HE£HmOHS Campus Calendar Is a dally listing of campus events UHO SHOW THE HOSIIM- Ski Club 7 30 p.m., President Lounge, Ice Arena. Open to PKOtMENT IN RKT>£HN6 (meetings, lectures and entertainment), provided as a ser members and guests. MKSONAL ueemes, AS vice to readers. Unless otherwise noted, the events are free cumfmo BYAMMCSTY and open to the public. To submit a listing, Campus Calendar Lectures and Classes IHTEKNATKNAL! N forms are available at the News office, 106 University Hall, PDLPC Workshop 2:30 p.m., 320 Student Services. "Study 372 2003. There is no charge for submitting listings to the Power: Getting a Grip on Good Grades." section. UAO Mini Course G 5 p.m., Faculty Lounge, Union. Guitar. For those who signup. THURSDAY Tulsa Energy Advocates 8 p.m., 110 Business Administrations. Panel discussions. Meetings Board of Trustees- 10 a.m., Assembly Room. McFalI Center. Entertainment Red Cross Bloodmoblte 10a.m. 3:45 p.m..Grand Ballroom, "Roots: Freedom" 12:30, 2:30, 7:30, 9:30, Carnation Room, Union. Union for afternoon showings, 210 Math-Sciences for evening SGA Candidates Forum 10:45 a.m., Commuter Center. showings. Featuring UAO directors at large. Sponsored by the Com Stargazing 8 p.m., roof. Life Sciences. Weather permitting. muter Center. Beer Blast 6 11:30 p.m.. Hydraulic Room, Lehman Avenue. om.rmui ABE 10V KMXN6' unuafAH.Pinsi- Geography Club A. 30 p.m., 304 Hanna Openfo'all. im,seeiou mnrBAur- Tiecom- sunns m us. Aio KNTMAKDSOFTm NOoeuoaiAcy School Interview Sign Ups 67 p.m.. Forum, Student Ser- "The Mikado" 9 p.m., Joe E. Brown Theater. Admission $2, Arnmiatn TiEim. ive KimoN'5 CAN HAN60N1HE PHUPPtMS&mmEDk . NO TUWCDOUTHS vices. students$l. mmim- eonoDosam THATK- OUTCOME! WUCAKT ttSZSMS CEMXMCY AWD> PIOPU UBtBTT Full Gospel Business Mens Fellowship of B.G. Dinner UAO Coffeehouse 9 p.m. midnight, Carnation Room, Union. \am.icnt! lAsr/rnvnt mee. mueievmiBGm AUEEKBETOKE me , HEAVY KXrr. Meeting 6:30 p.m.. Dogwood Suite, Unikon. Deke Sllverman Admission 50 cents. Featuring mime artist Owen J. Anderson. HUT sane commits 60 DEADLINE! oecaxsE,/ from New York City wilt speak. Student Swim 9 10 p.m., Natatorium. Admission 25 cents, 10 nDtMriuxK.-^ -J FlyingClub 7:30 p.m., 115 Life Science. cents suit rental. DAILY CROSSWORD PUZZLE

,,m ~*~^M^» / ACROSS 63 Ocarina 33 3rd cent, date: 52 daisy 1 Washes down 65 A military base: Rom. 53 Marry again m 6 Fade Abbr. 34 Rocky hilltop 54 Vigor: Colloq. 9 Queen 66 Time periods 35 Apres wear 55 Choose 12 nous 67 Yearner 37 Intent 56 Govt. worker 13 Lady of classic 68 Late hours: 38 African antelope 57 Float lyrics Abbr. 44 Dresser sections 58 City: Lat. 16 Greek letter 69 Parts of ships. 45 Dandy 59 14 Down. In 16 Musical Abbr. 47 Type of France FOREST Substitute Teachers instrument 70 Bear of a kind missile: Abbr. 61 Sanguinary 18 Inter 50 Ribbed, as a 64 Game score 19 Finial DOWN column FORESTEST APARTMENTS 20 Musical 1 Goddess Needed instruments of youth 9 10 II 22 Herb 2 Equal: Phrase Large, Clean, Comfortable 24 West German 3 Vegetable 15 COLLEGE SENIORS OR RECENT state 4 Make a fluff 18 GRADUATES WISHING TO DO SUB- 25 Footballers: 5 Pursues Apartments STITUTE TEACHING IN TOLEDO Abbr. 6 Clayey 26 Johnny 7 Trimmings of a PUBLIC SCHOOLS ARE URGED TO 27 Isolated rock sort And As A Bonus You Get CONTACT THE PERSONNEL OFFICE 31 Railings out- 8 Hills of the IMMEDIATELY. side windows Highlands 36 shoestring 9 Bill of fare Pendleton Realty Service 37 Mature 10 Minute 39 Old French coin quantity 40 Astronaut's 11 Fish $225 per person per quarter Caroline Potton, Elementary '■all's well" 13 Real estate 41 Horse parcel (4 person occupancy) Bruce Scott, Jr. and Sr. High 42 nutshell 14 Connective 43 Breeze direction words 46 Noted actor 17 Light-Horse 48 M.D.'s Harry Still accepting applications 729-5111 Ext. 232 or 318 49 A fish, the 21 judicata yellow ide 23 Book of the for fall quarter 51 Anatomical sac 6il.lt- Abbr. Teachers' rate. 54 Pontifical lenu item 56 Shrubby plant 28 Loot of a type 60 Hidden mike: 29 Santa Pendleton Res/dent Slang 30 Duster 62 Spring mo. 32 Author Wallace Realty Manager Cinema UZ THE TOLEDO 352-1619 35)-2276 AREA AN EROTIC needs YOU MERRY- to sell GO-ROUND! Advertising Campus Calendar for the THURSDAY IS STUDENT NIGHT! LOST AND FOUND 29THMINI MARATHON. tea that was really great. Now furniture stays, good cond., MIDNIGHT SHOW Ladies gold watch lost Thurs. Pizza, hotdogs, refreshments, we Alpha Chi's are looking shed stays, pull out in BG NEWS Sentimental value. Reward. & entertainment! Join an forward to the Beta date! livingroom, $5,800 or best FRIDAY-SATURDAY! 352 5488. established fraternity with Aqua Hut 20 percent off super offer. Lawndale Plaza, Lot 4, Weston, Ohio. Ph. 669 8541. Gray plastic tool box with art many benefits! Phi Kappa Tau sale on masks, fins & snorkels Rush dates remaining: April runs until April 15, so hurry on ALL SEATS $1.50 Apply at supplies, lost on Thurstin Ave. Mazda RX4 wagon, 1975, AM Reward 385 I486, Toledo. 10th, 12th & 17th 7:30-9:30. over. 1011 S. Main. FM, 4 speed, air, un Friendship & Brotherhood is dercoating, excell. cond., BOX OfFICI OPINS II 45 P M Lost gold wire rim glasses & GREEKS: Get psyched for the 106 the only wayl $2,950. Ph. 866 1789 or 352 8880. SHOWTIMI: 12:01 A.M. white case with green but- Phi Kappa Tau Basketball Locker Room Sporting Goods Marathon for charity, April 21 • University terflys. Reward. Ph. 352 1300. '68 Cadillac Fleerwood. AM the one step for all your 22. FM stereo radio, all power, Lost gold plated Kangaroo sporting goods. For your WANTED AC, runs good, minor dent on broach. Sentimental value. Hall jewelry 8, gifts see Vatan's. right rear render. $700 or best Reward offered. Call Brian, 1 F. rmmte. wanted Summer Aqua Hut 20 percent off super offer. 257 2188 or 257 3681. STUDENTS WITH I.D. $1.50 372 3780. Quarter. $85 a mo. Campus sale on masks, fins & snorkels 1971 Doge Tradesman. 6 cyl. SERVICESOFFERED Manor. 372 4310. Do it NOW! I runs until April 15, so hurry on F. rmmte. for 78-79 school automatic, 4 new tires, new STADIUM T& W Sound will furnish music over 1011 S Main year. Furn. apt. very close to alternator. Partially insulated, omci for any size & type party at Europe less than Va economy custom windows & captain OPINSAT campus. Call 372 1514 or 372 reasonable rates. Call now, fare guaranteed reservations. chairs. Good MPG. Best offer 7:00 P.M. 4688. 372 32B4 or 372 3270. Call toll free 800 325 4867 or see over $1800 Call 352 5357 ask for Pregnancy Aid & Under 1 F. rmmte. needed for 5 SGA your travel agent Uni Travel person apt. next yr. Own room, Michael. standing. EMPA. Emotional Charters. • $80 a mo. plus. util. Call 352 1965 Rambler. Ex. body, good Material & Pregnancy Aid. Sigma Nu FRATERNITY 7593. engine 8. battery. $350. Call Elections 372 5776 or 352 9393. 352 4842 after 6 p.m. FANTASCX RUSH TONITE AT 7:30-WITH HELPWANTED Professional Sound Systems. THE CHI OMEGA A SUPFRSEXUAL ESCAPE How would you like a SUM FOR RENT STARTS TOMORROW! Aprii 27 The Music Machine offers SORORITY. MER INTERNSHIP selling CAMPUS MANOR RENTING " will keep your sound for all sorts of parties. Beer Blast at Hydraulic Room blood boiling " Call Dave Brown at 352 2900. RESORT PROPERTY!? For FOR SUMMER. SPECIAL "THE OTHER SIDE OF THE MOUNTAIN, PART 2" Mo"v(irov I HI I Thursday April 13 at 8:00-11:30. Soon further information call RATES! AIR. COND 352 9302. PERSONALS sored by Phi Mu for Project SHOWN AT 7:30 AND 9:30 P.M. Placement Office, 372 2356. Congratulations to Robbie Hope. Upstairs of house on Clough St. EXPERT TYPIST needed Available for summer. 1 TMrS MOVII IS BAUD » AO Holmes 8> Karen Motuza on 2BT Rush Party! Tonight immediately to type disser bedrm., will hold 2 or 3 com- MISSION TO flRSONS II AND (Please Vote) being selected as RAs. Love, 7:30. Refreshments served. OVIB ONLY . POSITIVC 10 tation in Spanish from typed fortably. $165 a mo. all utilities A TRUE LOVE STORY... nioumo Your Alpha Delt Sisters. If you attended Delta Tau text. Knowledge of Spanish paid. 352 0229. The Alpha Delts congratulate For everyone who believes in happy endings Delta's Rush Party last desirable. Call collect I 447 2 bedrm. furn. apt. to sublet their new rush counselors: Thursday, you would have 4297. June 15 Aug. 31 Grad. student Cindi Burley, Karen Flowers & seen the "sophisticated The BG News needs sales pref. Call 352 5553 after 4 p.m. Franny Malcolm. Good job, Ladies" of Chi Omega live up ladies! people to sell advertising in the 2" F. rmmtes. needed to 'THE to their name. Thanks, sisters, Toledo Area. Come to 106 FREE for the asking >/a gallon for the help. P.S. We enjoyed sublease furn. apt. Fall qutr. University Hall for an ap Cheap rent, close to campus. OTHER SIDE of Pepsi in a resealable bottle the show, too! pointment. when you purchase any 16 inch Call 352 8781 or 372 2003. OF THE Our Regional Conference We need waitresses, waiters, pizza from Pisanello's Pizza, wouldn't have been the same SUMMER RENTALS. 525 E. 352 5166. Please ask for your pizza makers & delivery Merry St. 2 bedrm apts. $450 MOUNTAIN'UNT without the Sisters of Phi Mu people. Apply between 4 9 p.m. free pop when ordering. 1 or the Sisters of Chi Omega. per qtr, plus elec. Furnished. PARTi coupon or value per pizza. M. Fri. at 440 E. Court. 824 Sixth St. 2 bedrm apts., Thanks for making It a Pagliai's East. Phi Psi Lir Sis's, thank you for weekend to remember. The $350 quarter plus elec. Fur- 2 STARTS TOMORROW! the beautiful opel & a year of Brothers of Delta Tau Delta. Summer help needed at nished. Call Newlove Realty fun & memories. Love. Mystery Hill & Prehistoric 352 5163. Congratulations Dan Snyder Forest, Marblehead, Oh. Call Tammy. on your lavaliering to Sue Mid Am Manor now leasing MARILYN HASSKTT TIMOTHY BOTTOMS "CAHDIESH0E" AT 7:30 AND 9:15 P.M. 732-3439 & arrange for In- unfurn. apts. for summer & Congratulations to Mark Lunka of Lake Catholic High terview. SAT. SUN. MATINEE AT 2:00 P.M. Bennett on being named School. Your Sig Ep Brothers. fall. All util. paid, except elec. MURRY HOTEL MACINAC Call 352 4380 between 1 8. 5. Crescent King The Phi Psi's. RUSH SAEIII Tonite at 7:00 ISLAND, MICHIGAN needs House to sublet for summer. Phi Kappa Tau Little Sis Rush the SAE's swing into the big '78 summer cooks, bartenders, INDS TONIGHT: HIGH ANIIITT" AT 7■ 30 H 10 P.M. A lost fortune... 3 dark clues, Thursday 8:30-10:00. All in Wrap-up! Our last rush party AC 8. laundry facilities excell maintenance men, piano terested women welcome. Is always the best so don't location. 121 N. Prospect 352 all hidden at players, & personnel for 6464. Come meet the Brothers. miss it. Refreshments, hotdogs rotation between food service, 8. chips will be served at 7:00 THURSTIN MANOR APTS. Thursday, is college night at waitressing & housekeeping. EVEN IF YOU'RE HEALTHY ... at the House. One last shot AIR COND., FULLY CAR Eunle's. 809 S Main. Happy Send complete resume, work Hours 9-12, Sat. 4-7. at. a degree in Friendship! experience, recent photo, PETEO, CABLE TV, ... IT COULD HAPPEN TO YOU! LAUNDRY FACILITIES. THINGS HAPPEN Sigma Chi marathoners are The Alpha Phi's congratulate social security number, first & EFFICIENCIES. NOW running to Ohio State to raise Meg Davis on being tapped last day available to work to: From WALT DISNEY Production. LEASING FOR SUMMER 8. -COMA' AT 7:30 AND 9:25 P.M. money for the American Into Mortar Board! Another 3969 Penberton, Ann Arbor, honor I Mich. 48105. FALL. 451 THURSTIN ST. 352 DAVID NIVEN, HELEN HAYES. Cancer Society this weekend. 5435. Sigma Chi Superstars, Mitch, Thanks to the Theta Oil's for a COUNSELORS WANTED JODIE FOSTER. LEO McKERN HOUSES, 2 bedrm. apts. ft Imagine your life hangs by a thread. Dave, Scott, & Bill tea that really "topped" Physical Education, athletes, congratulations on winning the everyone's weekend! "Hats WSI, drama, general, coed single rooms for summer rental. Ph. 352-7365. State title &• good luck In the off" to another one! Love The overnight camp. N.Y. State. Midwest Regional. Alpha Phi's. Apply David Etfenberg, 15 Enjoy Summer living at RockledgeManor. 8506th St. S. Jeff Rabbitt the Canal Fulton Goldenhearts The fifties party Eldorado Place, Weehawken, College. Lg. 1100 Sq. Ft. luxury > Shuffle is just too cool for was right in style. You made it New Jersey 07087. school. all worth while. Love, The FOR SALE 2 bedrm., 2 full baths, AC, Brothers. furn. apts., cable vision, dish- _ TKHNICOIOA.' ^ ^ M Swimming goggles are now In Advent 201 Cassette deck 8. Ron, congrats on your first washer, & lots of closets. GENEVIEVE BUJOLD - MICHAEL iPGl ■«M«0»eij(»iAv'St»DrS'ilE»jTiOllC0 « CW'*•« 0o

Sports in review From Associated Press wire reports

Gossage took over and served up a two-run homer to Larry Norton to fight Holmes Hisle, his third of the season, tying the score 3-3. It was the Gridders leave Cincy The new rule, 8.02 d, says that after the first beanball, the Brewers' 11th homer in five games. umpire may warn both managers. The next beanball by either team's pitcher can result in immediate expulsion of Ken Norton signed Wednesday to fight unbeaten Larry Bando's first homer of the year gave the Brewers a 1-0 The University of Cincinnati football team bears the scars the offending pitcher and his manager. Holmes and said he intended to rip apart charges that he was first- lead. The Yankees went in front 2-1 against Haas, of a difficult transition year in which new coach Ralph Staub "The purpose of the new rule was to cut down on the a "paper champion." 2-0, in the third on a leadof f homer by Jim Spencer, singles by set up his own system of discipline. beanball activity," Johnny Johnson, chairman of the Playing Norton's reference was to critics, including Leon Spinks, Willie Randolph and Michey Rivers and a sacrifice fly by A total of 35 players have left the school since Staub Rules Committee, said Wednesday. replaced Tony Mason. The Bearcats finished up last season who term him a "paper champion" since he gained heavy- Thurman Munson. Nettles' first homer of the year made it 3-1 "There was just too much of it and we wanted it stopped." with a 5-4-2 record. weight title recognition from the World Boxing Council after in the fourth. The controversy over the new rule surfaced Tuesday Many of the players who left were unable to adjust from that group withdrew recognition from Spinks on the grounds Haas set a Brewers' record with his total . The during the -Chicago Cubs game. What the more freewheeling approach employed by Mason, who is Spinks violated an agreement to fight Norton. right-hander struck out the side after Randolph walked to became apparent from the actions and statements of the "You're always a champion on paper," said Norton. "It's start the Ynakees' eighth. He struck out Reggie Jackson four now coaching at the University of Arizona, to the more pitchers involved was that the rule, although idealistic in its what you do after you get it that counts." times. disciplined style of Staub. intent to stop beanball wars, does no such thing. Norton will try to make it start counting in a scheduled 15- "Some of the players were able to adjust. Some weren't. Instead, the rule serves to punish the retaliating pitcher rounder against Holmes, 270, the night of June 9 at Caesars And some didn't want to," explained sophomore fullback Gus while allowing the first beanball thrower to get off scot-free. Palace in Las Vegas. It will be nationally televised by ABC. Cub's rally to win Tucker. Tucker is one of those who doesn't want to. A starter and Ray Burris' five-hitter and two-base errors by New York the team's second leading rusher last fall. Tucker requested Brewers win again Steve Henderson and Bruce Boisclair helped the and received an opportunity to forego spring practice to play Golf's strongest field Chicago Cubs rally for a 4-2 victory over the Mets Wed- with the school's baseball team. nesday. Don Money's tie-breaking two-run in the seventh He has since quit the baseball team, is not participating in Golf's strongest field, an elite 29-member cadre of winners The Mets got their runs off Burris, 1-0, in the first inning headed by Masters champion Gary Player and defending inning and Moose Haas' 14- pitching swept the spring football drills and plans to transfer, as does starting on Tim Foli's single, Henderson's triple and Willie Montanez' defensive back Marcellus Greene. titleholder Jack Nicklaus, has gathered for the prestigious unbeaten Milwaukee Brewers to their fifth straight victory, a sacrifice fly. 5-3 triumph Wednesday over the New York Yankees. Tucker and Greene have asked Staub for letters of release $225,000 Tournament of Champions that gets started Thur- But the Cubs got a run in the second on consecutive singles which would facilitate their transfers to other schools. sday. Tim Johnson reached base on Craig Nettles' error with by Bobby Murcer, Dave Kingman and Manny Trillo, then one out in the seventh and Lenn Sakata singled before Money tied it in the fifth when Henderson dropped Hector Cruz' fly to All 29 men-who have combined for more than 50 in- ripped a line drive down the left field line off reliever Rich left, Burris sacrificed Cruz to third and Greg Gross scored Gossage, 0-2. New beanball rule ternational titles in the last 12 months-competed in last him with a grounder. week's Masters and most arc attempting to pull themselves Ken Holtzman, making his first start since last Aug. 13 In the sixth, Murcer reached second when Boisclair Only the American League has the designated hitter, but and his first appearance since Sept. 10, checked the Brewers out of the letdown that naturally follows one of the game's dropped his fly ball to right and he came in on Kingman's both baseball leagues have a new beanball rule that many great events. on three hits until Sal Bando singled leading off the sixth. hard single off Mets started Nino Espinosa, 0-1. people are designating as just plain dumb. Prepare Yourself for FINALS in only ONE WEEK END Come to a FREE SPEED READING LESSON Increase Your Reading Speed 50-100% ATTEND A FREE LESSON Thursday April 13 12:00 2:00 4:00 COMPARE and DECIDE Dynamic Reading Systems Inc. 20-50 percent discount on books. Tuition Assistance Payment Plan D.R.S. guarantees in writing to at least triple your NO FINANCE CHARGE!! DYNAMIC READING SPEED or you will receive Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics Inc. a FULL refund. Partial refund of the price of the ALL MEETINGS Advanced Course course if you fail. HELD AT THE Lifetime membership enables our No known advanced course known at this time. graduates to retake the course to extend Their graduates are required to pay their skills at no additional charge. a registration fee to retake the course. BEST WESTERN Our professional instructors are required to do NO exams given. extended research after the initial training FALCON PLAZA period for further insight, and take written exams. NO reading proficiency evaluations given. Our instructors are required to take reading NO discount on books. 1450 E. Wooster St. proficiency evaluations. Contractual obligation with finance Charge. Dynamic Reading Systems Inc. A company established by a group of former Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics' Instructors, utilizing totally new concepts. 1721 CROOKS RD., TROY, Ml 48084 (313) 649-5210 Copyright 1977 Dynamic Reading Systems, Inc. Faft M Thunday, April 13,1178 The BG Newi BG track invitational to bring out best By Dan Firestone Ohio State's Laurie Oldhain (57.8) is favored to win, but THE LONG JUMP should be a tight contest between Last year's 400-meter hurdle champ was Bowling Green's Assistant Sports Editor will be closely foiUowed b e Michigan State's Pam Swanigan Michigan State's Annette Lee (19-9V«.) and Ohio State's DebRomsek. (58.0) and Diane Loraway (58.2) and BG's Deb Wemert "She'll (Romsek) be doing great if she runs her best, Sherry Humphrey (19-3), as well as the high Jump with considering the wind we usually have. She's runa 61.1 and the Meet records should fall like dominoes at the BGSU (58.2). Western Michigan's Kay Barstow (5-8) and BG's Mary Zarn Invitational this weekend. record is 65.2," Williams said. If weather conditions are good, the fifth annual meet may "ALL THE RACES should be great," BG coach Dave (5-7). In the 100-meter hurdles, Stephanie Hightower, of Ohio RELAY TEAMS from Michigan State, Ohio State and have its record book completely rewritten, when the Falcons Williams said. "I foresee every meet record being broken." State, an AIAW Nationals finalist, and Michigan State's Kim Bowling Green should battle for the top spots, and Williams and 21 other women's track teams compete at Whittaker Michigan State's strength in the sprints and relays may be said Michigan State is favored to take three of the four Track starting tomorrow at 3 p.m. and Saturday at 10:15 a.m. enough for the Spartans to take the team championship, but Hatchett have both recorded 14.2 times and the winner should easily break the 15.5 meet mark. relays. not without a strong challenge from Bowling Green, Ohio BG is favored to win the 4 x 800-meter relay with Billet, Excitement should be at a peak during the 800-meter race State, Central Michigan and Slippery Rock. The 100-meters will test the eyes of the judges at the finish Romsek, Jan Samuelson and Becky Dodson back from last when the American record (2:00.9) will be challenged by Sue BG finished second in last year's meet behind Central line with a host of speedsters, led by Slippery Rock's Sue year's school record team. Latter, of Michigan State, and Judy McLaughin, of Otterbem Krogstad, who has ran 12.0. Michigan, champions the past three years. Sue Klembarsky, who Williams said could have probably College. Falcon junior Pam Koeth finished third last year in the BG's freshman Jane Guiford ran a 12.5 in hr first meet won the pentathlon for the Falcons, suffered a foot injury and this year and four other entrees have ran as fast. will be out for three to four weeks. LOOK FOR BG's Gail Billet, whose best time is 2:14, to be shot put, but Williams said, "Pam's improving quite a bit and could get the meet record." TRACK NOTE: There will be a high school division at the among the leaders. I

By Tom Baumann TOM MCNICHOLAS set a appear to, as they scored reference to the game. Assistant Sports Editor new individual point record eight goals in the second "They all went out there and with seven goals and four period for a 10-2 halftime did a good job, while having It was a day to break the assists for 11 points. That lead. fun doing it." records yesterday for the breaks the old record of 10, "The wind hurt us a lot in ^ ■/ Bowling Green lacrosse set in 1973. the first period," Coach Jim WE NEEDED A big team. Even with all the new Plaunt said. "Coupled with scoring game like this," The Falcons downed records, the Falcons looked that, we didn't have the ball Plaunt continued. "We Michigan, 23-7, in a game sluggish in the opening out of zone, which was a always knew we could score, that saw three new records period, until Dick Irwin problem early in the game." but today we went out and set and another tied. broke the ice with a goal at The Falcons pounded did it. I think that the fact we The 23 points scored by 6:53. Only :45 later, the Michigan goalie Mike Bucci did will give us some added Bowling Green ties the Falcons scored again with with eight more goals in the motivation for the rest of the record set in 1976 against McNicholas getting his first third period, with season." Midwest Lacrosse goal of the afternoon from McNicholas getting four of McNicholas also led the Association opponent Guy Collison. those. Falcon with four assists, Michigan State. The 2-0 advantage stood Fellow attackmen Mike while Dick Irwin, Lee The Falcons also set two until :01 left in the period Squires and Jim Macko also Murphy and Mike Squires team records with 20 assists when Fred Hartman fired a found the nets often, Squires each had three. and 53 points (23 goals and 20 shot which entered in the getting five goals and Macko "I think that the fact we assists) during the non- lower left corner of the net. four. had so many assists shows league contest. That goal didn't scare the "Everybody played very that we're playing together Falcons any, at least it didn't well today," Plaunt said in as a team," Plaunt said. "No one is carrying the team by himself, it's all a joint ef- fort." The Falcons dominated SKI CLUB the farrafts in the game, something that is generally a SPRING PARTY rarity for Bowling Green. HELP US CELEBRATE OUR BEST YEAR EVER! The possession obtained on the faceoffs proved valuable for the local laxers, who Thursday Nite 7:30 raise their record to !H). ICE ARENA LOUNGE The midfielders played well on the faceoffs, and on OPEN TO MEMBERS & GUESTS offense, but the defensive play still is questionable. — ELECTIONS FOR NEW OFFICERS - 9:00 "I'm still concerned about the defensive play of — OVER $300 of DOOR PRIZES the middies," Plaunt said. Top Prize: Rossingnol Skis, Other Prizes: Kerma Poles, "Particularly on the fourth and fifth midfields. We Sunglasses, Goggels, Ski Bags, and lots more. should be doing better than Ncwspholo by Dave Ryan we are now. — BEER, MUNCHIES The laxers are idle this UP FOR GRABS-Falron Dick Irwin and Michigan's Falcons pounded the Wolerines, 23-7, while breaking weekend, before entering Bert McLandless go for a ball in mid air In yesterday's three records and tielng a fourth. Prizes to be given away at 9:30 sharp- league action again next game In the stadium as Jim Macko (31) looks on. The Only registered members eligible Wednesday at Michigan State. Bosox down tribe

Mike Torrez gave up 13 hits before being pulled with one out and two on in the ninth. Tom Burgmeier got the second ATTENTION STUDENTS! out on a strikeout, but was pulled after Dade-who had opened with a double and gone to third on a single by Duane Kuiper- All students with National Defense/Direct came home on Hobson's throwing error. Dick Drago came on and picked up his first save by striking out Willie Horton to A plxxa n»v»r had It 10 good, m end the game, giving the Boston Red Sox a 6-3 victory over Student Loans, Nursing Student Loans, Fast Free Delivery 352-5166 Cleveland yesterday. The Red Sox defense kept the Indians off the scoreboard in ,i,~ re as* « Dtp-, ">/•- the early going as Cleveland stranded four runners in the or Student Development Guarantee Loans, match IZmcri 14 nth lbinch Out Rlrnded Ik,,., PI,.. 12.05 12.60 S3 40 14 20 first two . Genuine Pepperonl . 45 .55 65 80 Spicy Sausef* 45 55 80 who are graduating or leaving BGSU after Tender Muihioomi 45 55 80 Imported Ham 45 55 80 Freeh Ground B..I 45 55 80 EatraCheeee 30 35 60 Eft-tra Thick Doufh 30 35 60 Spring Quarter 78, should contact the C hop pad Onion, in 35 60 Green Olives 30 .35 60 Green Peppers. 30 35 60 Supreme Plj.a 43.45 1450 IS.7S tt'.n Student Loan Collection Office to make Supreme includes Pepperum Sausage Mushnnrm Onions and Gteen Peppers t WHEN: THURSDAY, Hot Submarine Sandwiches an appointment for an exit interview. ll.ll> S APRIL 13 - 7:30 Roaal Beef Sub am 145 lo | 95 Ham Sub am 1.45 1, 1.9$ STUDENT LOAN COLLECTION OFFICE Meatball Sub am 1.40 |g 1 85 SalamlSub am 1.40 Ig 185 8 WHERE: OX HOUSE - All above tubs come on French Breed wilh your choice of Catsup. Mustard. Mayonnaise, or Plua Sauce. 5 710 7Hi STREET 407 Administration Building AmertcaeVMoiareua Cheese on any Sub - small .10 extra ■ large .lStntra. Garlic Bread (5 ellceeI 45 * m. maim MEN wacom Telephone: 372-0112 Soft Drinks (In 16 ai. bottles) tssilaiMsa 40 Pepet. Doctor Pepper seal 7 UP.

mmu^—ummmmmm TUIOUICEDALEn TE OURRosa QUARTERLY % COME SEE THE * KAPPA SIGMA " ™L 1 fffflSHHJ ■MM ■ ■■ *■«■?■■■ |CS C0LD KE(JS. nnMI, 7.go