The BG News April 23, 1976 - ScholarWorks@BGSU

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Bowling Green State University Bowling Green State University ScholarWorks@BGSU ScholarWorks@BGSU BG News (Student Newspaper) University Publications 4-23-1976 The BG News April 23, 1976 The BG News April 23, 1976 Bowling Green State University Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.bgsu.edu/bg-news Recommended Citation Recommended Citation Bowling Green State University, "The BG News April 23, 1976" (1976). BG News (Student Newspaper). 3233. https://scholarworks.bgsu.edu/bg-news/3233 This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 International 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.

Transcript of The BG News April 23, 1976 - ScholarWorks@BGSU

Bowling Green State University Bowling Green State University

ScholarWorks@BGSU ScholarWorks@BGSU

BG News (Student Newspaper) University Publications

4-23-1976

The BG News April 23, 1976 The BG News April 23, 1976

Bowling Green State University

Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.bgsu.edu/bg-news

Recommended Citation Recommended Citation Bowling Green State University, "The BG News April 23, 1976" (1976). BG News (Student Newspaper). 3233. https://scholarworks.bgsu.edu/bg-news/3233

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 International 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.

An Independent Student Voice ■me BG news Bowling Green, Ohio

Fridiy. April 23.1976 Volume »/Number 102

Dorm restrictions lifted ByJoeWollet

Editor

Normal dormitory visitation options will resume at noon today, according to a memorandum issued yesterday by Dr. Richard R. Eakin, vice provost for students affairs.

Addressed to Fayetla Paulsen, coordinator of residence programs, Eakin's memo said a second phase of measures for the safety of residents will begin.

"In view of the measures which you and your residence hall staff have developed during the past several days to provide for a continued special emphasis on security of residence halls." Eakin's memo said. "I am asking that we begin a second phase of the program dedicated to the safety of residents by the adoption of a return to normal visitation hours in all residence units..."

THERE ARE also three provisions Eakin asked Paulsen to follow:

•-'The staff of each residence unit will schedule a meeting with residents to review visitation procedures to insure that all policies and procedures are understood and enforced, and to consider any additional procedures which the unit might choose to implement as special safety measures;"

••"Continue to secure all entrances and student room doors and maintain the use of only one entry/exit door in each residence unit after midnight" and

-"Continue the concentrated night guard coverage with special emphasis on keeping entry/exit doors secure and apprehending unescorted guests in the unit."

"There were some students who were appreciative of the restrictions," Eakin said yesterday. 'There were some students who were mildly unhappy and some who were quite unhappy,"he said.

HE EXPLAINED that anytime such a change is made, a mixed reaction is expected.

Early yesterday afternoon. Eakin indicated he did not know how long the restrictions would be imposed, but at S p.m. yesterday he said. "At no time did we plan to have the initial phase last beyond the week."

Eakin said the second phase of the security program depends on the cooperation of dormitory residents. If residents of a dotm decide to keep restricted visitation hours, they will be allowed to do so, he said.

Residence hall escort policies will be expected to be followed to the letter," Eakin said, and night guards will be active.

Eakin said direct contact with police is a critical element that should be considered in a review of the night guard operation.

Ford returns to campaign trail By The Associated Press

President Ford returned to the campaign trail yesterday, heading for Indiana and Georgia to start a grueling seven-week schedule aimed at nailing down the Republican presidential nomination befose the GOP convention in August.

Ford's schedule included appearances last night in Indianapolis and on Friday in Indianapolis, Evansville, Ind.. and Atlanta.

On the Democratic side, Rep. Morris K. I'Jail ID-AM/ l said in Washington that Ford's presidential campaign is helped by an impasse in Congress that has kept candidates from receiving federal funds.

UDALL SAID Republican leaders in Congress are in no hurry to restructure the Federal Election Commission so the money can begin flowing again.

He and Republican Ronald Reagan would gain the most from an infusion of federal funds. I Jail said.

Under a Supreme Court order the FEC cannot distribute money until the

legislation is completed. Attorneys for all major candidates except Ford urged the court yesterday to make the funds available.

IN ATLANTA, former Gov. Jimmy Carter picked up support in the state's May 4 primary from the United Auto Workers of Georgia. Gov. George Busbee said he would vote for Carter.

Ford will be in Louisiana briefly and in Texas for four days next week, campaigning right up to the eve of the critical May I Texas primary.

FORD CONSIDERS himself an underdog in Texas, and Reagan hopes a victory there will provide momentum for a string of May primaries in Southern and Western states, including Alabama and Georgia, which along with Indiana, have primaries on May 4.

Rogers C.B. Morton, the President's chief political adviser, said this week he expects Ford to lose in Alabama and Georgia, and win in Indiana.

He said Texas is still too close to call.

Ford aides said the economy is a major issue in Indiana and several months of good news in that sector should help the President.

FACED WITH the possibility of losing three or four primaries in a four-day span in early May, Ford will hit the campaign trail often, hoping to collect the 1,130 delegates needed for the nomination.

Grass class The roof of University Hall provides a higher view of education typical for spring quarter. Lawns replace desks and open air replaces walls as warm temperatures replace cold. (Newsphoto by Lance Wynn)

Agency reviews phone rates

Boston courthouse bomb shatters roof, injures J9

BOSTON (AP)--A bomb ripped through a probation office on the second floor of the Suffolk County Courthouse yesterday, injuring 1° persons, authorities said. One man lost a leg in the explosion, police said.

Officials said they were warned of the bomb by an anonymous woman caller who gave "ethnic connotations which I don't want to mention." said John Powers, clerk of the state Supreme Court.

He said the caller referred to the case of Anthony Jackson, who is accused of murdering several Boston area coeds about two years ago.

AUTHORITIES SAID the call came exactly 20 minutes before the explosion, and a voluntary evacuation was started. But some workers chose to stay inside the building, believing the warning to be a hoax. Powers said more than 50 bomb threats were received in the 19-story building within the last year.

Cathy Brock, an assistant clerk of Boston Juvenile Court, said she saw a man place a package in a paper bag under a counter.

"I was very, very scared, and I ran." she said. "I'm not used to this type of thing."

THE BLAST tore away a 20-foot section of wall separating the office from a corridor and blew a hole through the floor into the lobby below.

"It must have been one hell of a bomb." said one Boston police officer. "It ripped everything to shreds."

One witness to the blast. Walter Murphy, deputy probation commissioner. said:

"I saw smoke and glass, debris and blood all over the place. Doors were being blown off everywhere."

Powers said a call came to the main switchboard at 8:53 a.m. warning that a bomb would go off somewhere in the building in 20 minutes.

"IT WENT OFF in 20 minutes," said Powers. "It was right on time." Sheriff Thomas Eisenstadt quoted the caller as saying, "A bomb will go off,

Jackson."" Jackson's case was not due in court yesterday authorities said. No other case

with a defendant by that name was scheduled. "Suddenly the roof just shattered and came tumbling down and everybody

went running out," said Linda Barczyn, 24, of Boston, who works in the probation office. She was treated for a foot injury.

Editor's note: This is the second in a two-part serin of articles dealing with telephone companies, their problems and services.

By Dennis JSadowski Staff Reporter

Once a telephone company is granted a franchise, it is effective until the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio (PUCO) and the Ohio attorney general's office rule otherwise, said Robert Ryland, customer service manager of the Bowling Green district for the General Telephone Co. of Ohio (GTE).

Areas of Ohio were franchised early in the century. Boundaries for telephone service were based on city limits, railroad lines or streets. Often two companies ran telephone service in the same town and people couldn't call across town because of this, Ryland said.

Homes had two phones to accommodate the different systems of telephone operations in the same town or neighboring towns, he said. This

resulted in higher customer costs, he added.

THE LARGER companies, such as GTE and the Bell System, purchased the small companies and consolidated the phone services, he said.

Because of this consolidation, a community cannot switch to a different telephone service unless the original company doesn't offer the services its customers need, he said.

The only way a company can be forced to move is if the requests PUCO makes to the company are refused, Paul Richards, public information officer for PUCO, said. If the company refuses the commission's requests, the Ohio attorney general's office can take appropriate legal action, he said.

Rales established by GTE are under the "banded system," Ryland said. Rates are divided into bands based on the number of "main stations" or phone numbers in the community, he explained.

An independent company will charge higher rates than the Bell System or GTE because it costs them

more money as the investment per customer is greater, he said.

RYLAND SAID, in order to be granted a rate increase the utility company must go to PUCO and show what its investments are and what is needed to attract additional capital.

PUCO then holds hearings and audits the utility. It may take as long as two years before a request for a rate change is heard by the commission, Ryland said. In that time, costs may rise and the rate increase may not cover operating expenses, and the company may have to file lor another rate increase hearing.

According to Richards, it takes about 18 months for the commission to review a rate increase request. PUCO is working to cut the time to nine months by July I, 1977, he said.

"We were hit about two years ago with a large upsurge of rate cases because of inflation." Richards said. That caused the commission to get behind in its hearings, he added.

Richards said it takes several weeks to review cases because PUCO is "careful about the information

checked out." and that it reviews 1.000 cases a year, 100 of which are rale cases.

ON APRIL 7, GTE filed an emergency request with PUCO to allow the monthly rate for an extension phone to decrease. The petition asks for rate increases in other services to recover the lost revenue, he added.

PUCO granted GTE a rate increase last August, based on a 7.14 per cent profit margin. The commission did not guarantee a 7.14 per cent profit, but said GTE should make that amount of profit based on the statistics it gave to PUCO. he explained. It was the first time the PUCO allowed a profit margin of more than seven per cent, he added.

"We (GTE) think they're (PUCO) wrong," Ryland said. The 7.14 per cent profit margin is not enough to encourage people to invest in GTE, he said.

Ryland explained a utility must ask PUCO even to lower rates. He said, however. GTE would not lower rates if their profit margin greatly increases, but would increase their services.

City Republican Women hold info meeting, discuss voter registration, ballot deadlines

By Willie Slaughter Staff Reporter

The Bowling Green Republican Women held a public information meeting Wednesday night in the Mid-American Bank on South Main Street. With about 20 persons attending, the topic was "Voter Registration: Just What You Want To Know." Jane Phillips lead the discussion and a "how to do it" presentation.

Phillips said each county in Ohio

Moody stays jailed; $5000 bond set A $5,000 cash bond was set for Paul

L. Moody, junior, at a hearing yesterday morning in Bowling Green Municipal Court. Moody is charged with gross sexual imposition in connection with an alleged attempted rape of a University student early Monday.

Representing Moody at the hearing, attended by more.than 100 persons, was James B. Simmons Jr., a Toledo attorney. Simmons requested the court release Moody without bond and on his own recognizance on the

grounds that Moody has no previous criminal record.

City Prosecuting Attorney Warren J. Lotz objected to Simmons' request. He said that Moody had been heard to make a threatening statement about the student who identified him.

Judge Richard H. Dunipace heard the sworn testimony of University Police Officer Michael Stein, who said Moody had made the threatening statement following 30-45 minutes of questioning in the police station.

Simmons then requested that a 10 per cent bond be set. The maximum full bond that could be set is $12,500.

Dunipace denied both requests and set bond at $5,000 with the stipulation that if the bond is paid, Moody be released to the custody of the Rev. Donald Lucas, Moody's pastor.

As of this morning, the bond had not been paid and Moody remained in the Wood County Jail.

The hearing was continued until 1 p.m. Monday.

has a board of elections office and there are 88 such offices in Ohio. She said the board of elections offices are under the Ohio secretary of state's office and each office has four board members, two from each major party.

Phillips said board members are appointed by the secretary of state after each party sends in its recommendations for individual board members. She added, "When they are appointed to the board, they then file their appointment with the clerk of courts' office."

"Every two years on March 1st the board meets and reorganizes. They then select a director and a deputy director. At this time one of the board members is elected chairman and the other, vice-chairman."

Phillips explained some of the duties of the ■ county board of elections.

"We have to see that all the ballots are printed for the elections and check the petitions that the candidates file for valid signatures On election day the workers remain at the polls all day until closing time. After the election they canvass the voting results which are then sent to Columbus."

Responding to a question regarding the problem of hospitalized voters,

Phillips outlined procedures hospitalized voters may follow to secure a ballot.

Hospitalized voters should follow these procedures in order to secure a ballot: Forms can be picked up at the Board of Elections office or the individual may sign a paper which states his name and home address. If this occurs during the primary election, they must state which party ballot they want. This must be returned to the board of elections by 3:00 election day. Ballots will be taken to the hospital for patients.

Phillips added that the League of Women Voters now provide that service for patients at the Wood County Hospital.

Phillips also had advice concerning absentee ballots. "Write to your home board of elections and request the absentee form or if you are near another board of elections in another county, your registration will be forwarded to your home county," she said.

"If you fail to vote within two calendar years, the board will notify you. There is an attached postcard to the notification which will reinstate you when it is mailed back to the board."

Phillips explained that April 24 is the first day voting can be completed on absentee ballots for the June 8 piimary. The deadline is noon Saturday. June 5.

Absentee ballots should be mailed to the boards of election, Phillips added.

"A person can bring their own absentee ballot, but they cannot carry anyone else's into the office." She said that absentee ballots are taken to the precinct and counted with the other ballots.

The deadline for voter registration for the June 8 Ohio presidential primary is May 10. The Wood County Board of Elections, 500 Lehman Ave. will remain open until 9 p.m. that day.

Weather Partly cloudy today and

tonight, high in the mid 60s. Low tonight 45 to 50. Warmer with i chance of showers tomorrow with a high in the upper 60s or low 70s. Chance of rain 20 per cent today and tonight.

F«e 2/The BC Newi, Friday, April 23,1976

eDneRiaLa find a better way

The Bowling Green City Council made a grave mistake this week when it agreed to use voter status as a determination for residency.

The council voted that all people who are registered to vote in the city and who own a motor vehicle will be required to pay a license tax to be used for road repair and maintenance.

Such grounds for determining who will or will not pay that tax are preposterous.

This action will discourage many University students and other residents from registering to vote in order to avoid the $5 license fee. It may, in essence, strip residents of voting privileges because of financial difficulties.

That means, too, that someone can own a car and not pay the tax simply by not voting.

Years ago, Congress outlawed poll taxes, a fee collected earlier in the century to restrict voting privileges, on the basis that they discriminated against those too poor to afford the fee. Now the city is saying that residents with vehicles cannot vote unless they pay this license fee.

Surely there must be a more effective and fair way to determine who is a resident.

City residents still have an opportunity, however, to appeal the tax. If voters obtain enough signatures on petitions to put a referendum on the November ballot, the city's decision can be overturned.

If a referendum is the only way to repeal this unfair license tax, it must be done.

Instituting a license fee to help repair and maintain roads in this city is a necessary step toward community improvement, but a better method of determining who is and who is not a resident of Bowling Green must be found to insure the voting rights of all residents.

free toilets for all The aspirations of proponents of pay toilets in Ohio were flushed

down the drain Wednesday night as the Ohio House of Representatives approved a measure that would make it necessary for there to be as many free toilets as pay toilets in any public rest room.

It is a necessary move to insure that every person who needs to use facilities has the opportunity to do so even if they don't happen to have any change handy.

The General Assembly had been pressured to pass the bill because pay toilets are a source of sex discrimination, since there are no pay urinals.

One of the main sponsors of the bill. Rep. David Hartley (D-Springfield), commented that if "God had meant for women to pay for these facilities, they would have been bom with exact change."

He was right.

runaway with it WASHINGTON-Can the national

Democratic party find happiness with a country boy from Georgia? Is it possible that the quadrennial soap opera on prime time from Madison Square Garden will be titled "Jimmy Carter, Jimmy Carter"*-

That prospect is beginning to sink home among the power brokers of the disparate constituencies within the Democratic party in the wake of Carter's strong showing in the presidential primaries.

The former Georgia governor by no means has locked up the nomination. More than a score of primaries remain to be decided and some of them seem likely to go to Scoop Jackson or even Mo Udall. We will have to stay tuned to these preliminaries a while longer.

BUT IT SEEMS to me. based on the assessments of various Democratic chieftains, that the once wide-open presidential race has virtually narrowed down now to Carter and Jackson.

Udall will have to score several surprisingly big victories if the liberal wing of the Democratic party is to have a preferred candidate in the running at convention time in July.

That this state of affairs would result so early in the campaign year is a surprise to most Democratic leaders and a shock to some.

The modem Democratic party, the coalition put together by Franklin D. Roosevelt, never has nominated a genuine son of the South for president.

TENNESSEE'S Estes Kefauver came the closest in I9S2 after an impressive string of primary victories, only to lose to Adlai Stevenson on the third ballot. But Kefauver did not regard himself as a Southern Democrat. Nor did President Johnson so view his own Texas roots when, as the incumbent, he was nominated in 1964.

So it's going to take some fresh thinking by the Democratic party to get accustomed to the notion that Carter might end up with enough votes to win the nomination instead of another Northerner. Indeed, some labor liberals and limousine liberals can hardly bear the thought that they may have to rally around a good old boy from Georgia.

Carter already has thought of that and, as a measure of his political insight, has begun to work on It for them. His objective is to solve his

the oily orb hypothesis WASHINGTON -It was either

Howard Hughes or the Albanians. Hughes used to be blamed for everything, which made him a suspect, and the Albanians are blamed for nothing, which is suspicious too.

The part that Hughes may have played in the matter has gone to the grave with him or is locked up in the CIA, which is much the same thing. What's on the public record is that in 1978 (sic) the Albanians wrecked the

international oil market when they sold a billion barrels of high-grade, sweet crude.

The price dropped from $12 a barrel to $6, and Albania became the first Communist country to join OPEC, so the Shah of Iran still had reason to hope that the cartel would keep prices up high enough to keep his secret police in electrodes to fasten on the nipples of the people brought in for interrogation.

BUT WHEN Switzerland. Bangladesh and Rhode Island brought in gushers, the Shah's minister of finance informed him that he would henceforth have to rely on the knout and the rack to bring polirical stability and order to ungrateful subjects.

Also being put on the rack were the executives of the major oil companies, whose stockholders were in rage and despair at this unlooked for abundance.

The geologists were none too happy either. Until it was discovered there is oil under everywhere, they were an important profession. Businessmen, political leaders and just folks who drive to work and heat their homes listened to everything the geologists had to say and gave them all the research money they wanted.

Overnight their profession was dropped and scorned. By 1980 full professors of geology were demoted to the pay scale of full professors of classical archaeology and Medieval Latin literature.

JUST AS the editorialists were' telling us that the energy crisis was over forever, it was noted that earthquakes were occurring with somewhat greater frequency, and the geologists' pay was increased but only moderately because no city like New York or Moscow had been disturbed.

Then at the 1982 International Geological Conference held onder UN auspices at Calcutta. Nobel Prize-winning geophysicist Olio di Oliva read his now famous paper. His theory was so simple even heads of state could understand it.

Nicholas

vonHoffman

Di Oliva contended that the center of the earth is not made of hot rocks but crude oil. The Oily Orb Hypothesis, as it came to be called, states that our planet is a huge drop of oil with a relatively thin coat of dust, hardened mud and water, which of course appear to us as our mountains, oceans and plains.

Hence, according to Oliva's calculations, subsequently verified by scientists everywhere, we have enough oil. at our present rate of usage, to last for a million trillion years.

THAT'S THE good news. The bad news is that as we withdraw the oil and burn it off the planet's skin, the earth on which we walk shrinks, shifts, compacts and quakes.

The Oily Orb Hypothesis touched

off a furious controversy. The President made one of his toughest, most eloquent speeches on the subject, calling the whole idea a foreign "ism" and di Oliva an impractical ideologue. He pointed out that if the United States were ever to accept this kind of doctrine, it would be tantamount to surrendering our sovereignty since it would mean that all oil pumping would have to be determined by international agreement.

When he finished speaking there was great applause from the members of Congress, particularly from Texas and Rhode Island, the two major oil-producing states. The cheers went on for almost 10 minutes and would have continued longer except for the tremor which did virtually no damage except for knocking the point off .the Washington Monument.

The President in an act of courage that would have been fulsomely praised in the next day's newspapers, had the presses not been cracked by the quake, drove immediately to the scene, almost outdistancing the television cameramen following him.

PICKING UP one of the stones which had fallen from the Monument's crest, he was photographed saying that we would not be intimidated by this

barbarous act and that we owed it, not only to ourselves and our heritage ot 200 years of freedom, but also to our NATO allies to continue to pump oU.

NATO responded by giving us 24 hours to pack up our tanks, planes and troops and gel out. In Stockholm all the other members of NATO and the Warsaw pact gathered to sign the world's first mutual no-pump agreement.

The President said it was a dark day for Western Civ and appointed a high-level committee to study the situation and report back. The committee announced that oil could continue to be pumped with a high margin of safety. They pointed out that, besides Los Angeles and Boston, the chances were good the quakes wouldn't hit highly populated areas.

The committee explained that if a quake did hit a city it would provide the presently unemployed inhabitants with work. On the other hand, to stop pumping would cost jobs. The President agreed and told the people that life is full of dangers. "You can kill yourself if you eat too much celery."

The next day the English sent an atomic ultimatum. The President blamed it on Castro.

% YOU THINK 1 £NJCJY BE1N£ AN IWOTNT FAT (AT?1

LeTTera three-George problem-George Meany. George McGovern and George Wallace.

In order to make his candidacy acceptable to a majority of the Democratic party, Carter intends to make himself acceptable to organized labor, to the Democratic left wing that coalesced four years ago around McGovem, and to the disgruntled, antiestablishment Democrats who have been trying to send up a message through Wallace.

TO PLEASE these three important constituencies, Carter needs to find some ingenious way of tilting toward each without losing his balance. Now that he is clearly the front runner, he can expect no mercy from his opposition. The Jackson camp and I'd .ill's forces must cut down Carter and destroy his momentum while building momentum for themselves.

Jackson must do it in Pennsylvania on April 27.

It's unclear how Wallace can hurt Carter much anymore. Carter demonstrated in Illinois, Wisconsin, New Hampshire and Vermont that he is more than a regional Southern candidate. After having been excluded from the mainstream of the national party for years. Southern voters increasingly can be expected to rally around Carter, not Wallace. In Fact, Democratic party leaders of the North can envisage Carter running more strongly in Dixie next November than President Ford. That is not a displeasing prospect.

Hubert Humphrey still waits, of course, for a deadlocked convention to draft him. But as the primaries polarize around Carter and Jackson. Humphrey's prospects diminish.

It may be instructive to report that at a breakfast meeting the other day with Democratic Chairman Robert Strauss, Humphrey's name came up only briefly-and then only after a reporter called attention to the omision.

sga statement With respect to the recent article on

the University Administration's alleged over-reaction to the rape incidents which occurcd this past weekend, we, as Student Government Administrators believe the problem of overreaction rests not on the University, but on the student body as a whole.

We feel it is our duty to dispell any rumors that the rapist has been caught. Instead, a suspect has been detained and it is our obligation as student body representatives to remind us all that we do live under a judicial system where a person is innocent until proven guilty.

Racial tensions are building at a most serious pace. We urge the student body, again as a whole, to accept only the facts of these incidents which occured, and use their rational and good judgement to avoid any potentially dangerous conflicts.

Bill Bui i is

President Elect of SGA Dave Crowl

Vice President of SGA 405 Student Services

borges When Jorge Luis Borges came to

Bowling Green, just before the appearance of Christine Jorgenson, the television crews were already there-the cameras, the lights, trailing wires; microphones registered the answers of questions put to him-an American mission-endeavoring to inform the gathering of this writer's sustained international integrity.

It was all there in that room. I remember that they insisted that the podium be removed and a microphone system be brought in. His appearance was that unlike other guest lecturers, he didn't need notes, or set paragraphs. He wanted the audience to

see him in front of that gaunt microphone.

He was there and it was real-videotaped. He spoke to us for a moment, for a short while. Students and professors had come, undergraduates in blue jeans stood or sat on the floor. Others, in better fitting suits and serious expressions were seated where the cameras zoomed in. Someone said that the adjoining room would be open-it seemed like the same room-when several hundred showed up to listen.

Philip O'Connor of the Creative Writing program delivered a short, graceful introduction. Something was wrong however, the introduction was hard to hear because the amplification wasn't quite right, and some in the better fitting suits were fussing and exchanging comments to the effect that it was rude for others to talk and therefore make it difficult to listen.

The questions circled him. Voices asked his opinion regarding many topics. Some asked serious questions about the state of modern fiction. One interrogator smoked a cigarette while asking a question, and that didn't seem right.

There were distant opinions regarding poetry and the imagination--someone inquired if translations were faithful and clearly established. One faculty member announced that people seated in the adjoining room could not hear Senor Borges. Someone turned the microphone volume up.

It was all there for a moment-the man in the chair at the microphone, the face on the television, modulated and filtered through the electronic valves of the transmitter and set. This moment, this event, now stretches back and forth in our memories like a quiver of disembodied awareness, signal and reception. Only when the television crews turn down their lights and gather up their wires do we acknowledge the solitary creativity

this great blind Argentine poet offers to the world.

Mark Kosinski Teaching Fellow

English Department

rebuttal In my three quarters here at

Bowling Green I have had few teachers who were more honest, candid or human than my former Speech 102 prof Jon Currie. This comolimentary letter may appear a bit late in light of the fact that Jon may not be teaching on this campus anymore. It holds true that we "don't know what we got 'til it's gone" once more.

I feel that the BG News exercised poor editorial judgement in publishing the letter by Sylvia Sanchez last week. Such a potentially damaging letter, both socially and professionally, should not have been published prematurely, as this one was. A complaint involving such a delicate matter, teacher-student relations, should have been referred to an authority other than the "Megaphone News."

Statements published after the letter denied Jon's dismissal was prompted by the letter. If such is the case, I would hope that this letter and others like it are taken into

consideration when deciding Jon'q fate.

, Brian McKin 327 Kohl 1

THe BG news EDITORIAL STAFF .

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The BO News 11 published Tuetdeytl thru Fridays during the regular school I year, and once a week durin summer sessions, under authority of I Publications Committee of Bowl Green State Univereity.

Opinions expressed In editorial I cartoons or other columns in the I do not necessarily reflect Its* opirxons «| the Umvaisity Administration, 'acuity I naff or die State of Ohio. Opinio expressed by columnists do necessarily reflect the opinions of BG Newt. Editorials in the BO nifleet the opinion* of the majority i members of the BO Newt Edit. Board.

Editorial and Busmees Offices 108 University Hell

Fhone 372 2003

let's hear from you The BG News welcomes and encourages all letters to the editor. Lelte

may comment on other letters, columns, editorials or may address an subject a student, faculty member or other reader feels the need to comme on.

We ask, however, that all letters remain in good taste and in accord wi the laws of libel. No personal attacks on another person will be allowed.

The News maintains the right to edit or reject letters and columns. Letters should be a maximum of 300 words, typewritten and triple All letters and guest columns must indued the author's name, address an

telephone number and be signed. They can be dropped off or mailed to' BG News, 106 University Hall. Letters are subject to verification.

thj

Friday, April 23.1976. The BG News/Ptge 3

day in review From Associated

THE NATION'S FIRST law designed to force government bureaucracies out of business, unless they can prove they are needed, was signed yesterday by Colorado Gov. Richard Lamm.

The citizens' lobby, Colorado Common Cause, proposed the so-called Sunset Law six months ago to control the state, version of supergovemment: a system of regulatory agencies and programs that Common Cause feels has exceeded its statutory authority.

The law's concept is not complicated. It gives an agency or program a life of

six years. Within that period, the legislature must call in directors or supervisors to justify the agency's or program's continuance.

If the legislators are satisfied, the program or agency will continue for another six years, during which the process will be repeated. If witnesses cannot justify then program's or agency's raison d'etre, they will be given a year to complete their business, with no reduction in their authority.

Among boards to be reviewed are those licensing and regulating barbers, cosmotologists and shorthand reporters. They come up for review on July 1, 1977.

"There is a whole history of agencies set up for the best purposes, but in fact they sometimes don't work for the best purposes," Lamm, a Democrat, said in signing the bill.

• • • A BOMB RIPPED through the Cuban

Embassy in Lisbon. Portugal, yesterday, killing a Cuban man and a Cuban woman and critically injuring four Portuguese, officials said.

The Cubans were identified as employes at the embassy but not diplomats. The Portuguese government apologized to the Cuban ambassador. Francisco Astray Rodriguez, for the bombing and promised a "rigorous investigation."

The explosion at the embassy's sixth-floor offices in a 10-story building in downtown Lisbon was strong enough to drive a yard-wide hole in the concrete floor, cave in two walls, and pilch metal window shutters across a busy six-lane thoroughfare.

Police pointed their investigations toward the large community of refugees from Angola, many of whom blame the Cubans for the civil war thai caused hundreds of thousands of Portuguese colonists to flee the African territory. There is a Cuban expeditionary force in Angola numbering more than 10.000 men.

• « • LEFTIST MOSLEMS in Lebanon

yesterday threatened to establish a revolutionary government if Christian President Suleiman Franjieh does not step down from office in 10 days.

Fighting tapered off in the year-old civil war that has left 16.500 dead and ruined the economy, but there still was sporadic shelling and shooting. Police said 27 persons were killed and 46 wounded throughout the country yesterday.

Nine of the wounded were hit in St. Joseph's Hospital, in Dora in eastern Beirut, which was blasted by 15 mortar shells.

Beirut radio also reported clashes in nearby Nabaa. a Moslem area in eastern Beirut completely encircled by the Christians.

Meanwhile, Syrian-equipped troops of the Palestine liberation Organization consolidated their hold along the so-called green line dividing Christian and Moslem forces in Beirut.

Three trucks carrying 35 tons of flour crossed from the Chiistian area in eastern Beirut to western Beirut, where bread shortages were beginning to develop.

Press Reports SEN. HENRY M. JACKSON fited off

another telegram to Vice President Nelson A. Rockefeller yesterday, still annoyed over a report that Rockefeller commented privately that Jackson's staff was infiltrated by Communists.

The two exchanged telegrams earlier-Jackson asking for an "absolute apology"; Rockefeller expressed his regret.

The Atlanta Journal reported Wednesday that Rockefeller made the comment in a closed-door meeting with 30 to 40 Georgia Republican leaders in Atlanta over a week ago.

"Your telegram amounts to a 34-word version of your earlier "no comment'." Jackson read from his second telegram at an airport news conference upon arriving in Cleveland for an evening of meetings, meetings.

"I should think that you would understand that the allegations attributed to you so sadly were reminiscent of McCarthyism and bring dishonor to your reputation and to that of the White House." the telegram said.

* • • PRICE CONTROLS and allocation

regulations for home heating oil, diesel fuel and other middle distillate oils may be ended by July I, the Federal Energy Administration (FEA) announced yesterday.

Administrator Frank G. Zarb said the proposal, if carried out, would have virtually no effect on consumer prices.

The FEA said it would hold public hearings and consider comments before deciding whether to send the proposal to Congress.

Under the law. the proposal would lake effect after il is submitted to Congress unless either the House or Senate disapproves within 15 days.

The agency has already proposed ending controls on residual oil. a heavy fuel oil. and Zarb said it would act. when appropriate, to end controls on other petroleum products including gasoline and jet fuel. He did not specify any date.

The proposal lodc-conlrol home healing oil and diesel tuel points out that these middle distillates have been in ample supply since the end of the Arab oil embargo of 1973-1974.

"On the basis of evidence available 10 FEA." it said, "the existence of the price and allocation regulations respecting niuidk diitill.no now tends more to create market distortions than to achieve the objectives" of the energy law.

• • • "ALL RIGHT, the baboons have had

it." vowed Kings Island amusement park General Manager Ed McHale. "Their show business career here is over."

As he spoke these words Wednesday night, park rangers were dousing fruit for the 48 runaway simians with a new. more powerful tranquilizer.

McHale said the Olive baboons, who escaped by mounting a 12-foot fence April 14, will be sent back to the animal dealers. McHale said the park will get new baboons or possibly some other animals in exchange. "We don't know yet."

The apes have out maneuvered keepers for eight days. The original plan was to keep them near their compound by laying out tranquilized fruit, which, however, apparently has had no affect on the small baboons who weigh about 15 pounds each. On Tuesday, 30 baboons came inside but when the gates were shut and the new electric shocking wires were activated, the apes climbed right out, undeterred. •■

Since thtn, the baboons have been coming and going while park rangers scratch their heads over what to do next, for the park is scheduled to open to the public Saturday.

US impact abroad discussed

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By Tom Schrock Staff Write.

A panel of five international students spoke yesterday on the political impact of the United States in selected areas.

Bemhard Walther of West Germany said that after World War II, the- newly-formed country of West Germany soon became the "junior business partner" of the United States, who organized the North Atlantic Tteaty Organization (NATO) to protect this partnership.

The new "European self-consciousness" created by former French President Oiarles DeCaulle and the opening of West Germany to eastern European countries led to a reassessment of the reliance on the US, Walther said.

The economic strength of West Germany and the feat of Europe becoming a battleground between two superpowers have also contributed to the Germans' self-sufficiency, he said.

India is also striving to remain somewhat aloof from the United States, according to Rajogopal S. Tatta, a native of India.

He said that although it may seem that India is leaning toward the Soviet Union and the government is becoming less democratic. India is "as far away from Communism as ever."

Narbeth R. Emmanuel of South Africa called for increased American influence in the affairs of

his country. He said that the South African policy of segregation, or apartheid, is "the most inhuman atrocity in the world," and the US, through its international corporations, can and should change this.

Emmanuel said he spoke to President Gerald R. Ford last May concerning the two countries' relations. According to Emmanuel. Ford said that the US "can't interfere in a family affair."

South Africa is controlled by the white population, ■epresenting only about 15

per cent of the people. Arnaldo Clavo of

Venezuela said the people of his country "should be thankful to the US." American intervention, which began with the discovery of oil in Venezuela . "has always been accepted," he said, and resulted in the present democratic government of the nation.

With the nationalization of the oil and iron industries, there is less American intetvention than before, he said, "but we will

never become totally independent from the US."

Ali SMIUI of Lebanon said American policy- -makers have succumbed to the demands of a small, vocal minority and have not acted in the best national interest in their relations with Arab countries.

He called for sympathy and understanding in American dealings with the Arab countries and asked for "even-handed" treatment of Israelis and Arabs. American leaders must formulate a long-range

Middle East policy, he said, and stop the traditional "hesitation and vacillation."

The American media have portrayed the Arabs in a false light and are largely responsible for the present American attitude, he said.

When asked why the media would want to do this, he said. "Everyone knows thai llic media is controlled by the Zionists. They arc the richesi people in the country and they own the media."

The panel Clavo and

of international students included Dr. L. Edward Shuck. Mr. Amaldo Mr. Narbeth Emmanuel. (Newsphoto by Mindy Milligan)

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hfe 4/The BG Newi, Friday, April 23,1976

Crowd expected for musical There ire high

expectations for the upcoming University Theater production of "Guy* end Dolls," being presented April 30, M»y 1 and 2. The cast ii anticipating such large audiences that they are giving an extra performance next Sunday night, and the box office opened two days earlier than usual, with longer how-.

According to director F. Lee Miesle, the anticipation it well justified. "Musical comedies are one of a kind: they're spectacular and very funny." Miesle said "Guys and Dolls" is recognized as one of the best musical comedies to come from America.

MIESLE SAID there are some special attractions to the show. They include four ''fantastic" dance sequences, well-known songs, a new approach in setting and design and more than 100 costumes.

He said that one of the best features of the production is that "It's a second look at an old friend...and the material is just as fresh.

His reference was to the show's first opening in New

York in 1950, where it ran for four years. Its more familiar version is the movie made in 1955.

The show "deals with a kind of a criminal subculture" involving two gamblers and their girlfriends. Each of the main characters has a problem that must be. and is, happily resolved by the end of the play. Nathan Detroit must find a place for a crap game; Sky Masterson, the other gambler, must woo the missionary, Sarah Brown, to Havana with him on a bet.

The ladies have their problems too. Miss Adelaide, Nathan's girlfriend, must find some way to get Nathan to marry her-after all. they've been engaged for the last fourteen years. Sarah Brown is torn betweeen her love for Masterson and a suspicion that he is using her mission house as a front for gambling.

RICHARD THOMPSON plays the resourceful Nathan Detroit; Diane J. Kumli.il is his faithful Miss Adelaide. Greg Working portrays Sky Masterson and Anne Binder is the soulful Sarah Brown. Other characters are Edward A.

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Magel, Jr. as Benny Southstreet, and Neal Alan Seabert as Nicely-Nicely Johnson, and a supporting cast of 40.

The show will run next Wednesday through Sunday and all performances are at

8 p.m. The box office will be open from 11-5 p.m., and tickets are $.50 in advance. No latecomers will be seated after the performance.

Miesle said one aspect that he is especially proud

of is that "The manner in which the traditional elements of musical comedy-dance, music, and dialogue-are integrated, is extremely well done. They work for a total effect, and nothing appears thrown in."

Writing lab expanded By Cyndi Bloom Staff Reporter

The University writing laboratory, designed to help students with writing problems, has been reorganized under the office of academic services.

The writing laboratory was formerly run by the English department.

Dr. Charles Means, vice- provost for Academic Services, said he and others saw a "serious need to correct deficiencies" on both graduate and undergraduate levels.

The writing laboratory, opened under new management in March, is under the direction of Donald A. Heneghan, who directed a similar program at Northeast Missouri State University.

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"I DONT think there are any more poor writers than before, but I think i'ne problem is receiving more attention than before," Heneghan replied when asked . if he thought elementary and high schools are deficient in teaching grammar and writing skills.

"We get two kinds of students in here-those who have been referred by their instructors and those who independently want to improve their skills." he said.

Attendance at the laboratory is voluntary; students do not receive academic credit for taking the instruction. There is no charge for the services.

"The laboratory is here to help the student become independent, not to do their work for them." he said.

Students usually come in for two hours a week at their own convenience. The laboratory handles basic

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writing problems like sentence structure, punctuation anu spelling.

HENEGHAN SAID the advantage to receiving supplemental instruction in the laboratory is "there is no class structure; the student is given help on a one-to-one basis."

The laboratory is staffed by more than a dozen tutors, some enrolled in an English teaching methods course and other from Sigma Tau Delia, the English honorary society.

Heneghan said he thinks the student volunteers are advantageous also. "They can tell a student this is how I overcame that problem or this is how I worked that out ."

The laboratory teaches all levels of writing and among its 25 current students are two graduate students.

"We want to make the student realize his problems can be overcome so he can become independent."

E'LKCHI

_ BOO 323 -111(7 igl UmTravel Charters

The "guye" tune up for the oldest established floating crap game at"* MI mi* !«*»*"' New Yo* in this scene from "Guy« and Dolls to be UrarflOferSpmented April 28-Mty 2 in the Main Auditorium, University

Hall. Curtain time will be 8 p.m.

Bob Hope to appear Parents' Weekend

Bob Hope

Bob Hope, once called the "comedian of the century," will appear at the University Nov. 6 as a Parent's Day feature.

During his entertainment career. Hope starred in practically every medium. In the '30s Hope hit Broadway as a vaudeville star and when radio became the vogue, he performed for NBC and the Armed Forces Radio Network. Movie-makers and lelevision networks also used Hope to draw audiences.

Hope is best known, however, for his live performances. He entertained for the armed forces during World War II, the Korean and Vietnam wars.

His appearance is sponsored by the University Alumni Association and the Parent's Club. The 8 p.m. performance will follow the third annual "tailgate party" at the University lagoon and (he football game against Ohio University.

Because a sell-out crowd of 6,000 is expected, ticket orders are now being accepted. Further information on buying tickets can be obtained from the alumni office.

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Friday. April 23,1976. The BG Newa/Tift 5

local brief Time change

The diylight hours in the evening will be longer as daylight saving time returns again.

Area residents are advised to advance their clocks ahead one hour, officially beginning at 2 a.m. Sunday.

Twlrler tryouts Auditions for BGSU Twirlers will be held at I p.m.,

Sunday. All interested persons should contact Kathy

Siebenaler at 352-0103 or the University band office in the Music Bdg.

Geology talk Dr. Frank Simpson, professor of geology at the

University of Windsor, will speak on •'Sedimentary Structures on a Graded Cretaceous Shelf." at noon, today in 70 Overman Hall.

Clothing drive Beta Sigma Phi will conduct its second clothing drive

of the year for Goodwill Industries from •> a.m. to 4:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Big N parking lot, 1080 S. Main St.

Ed conference "Global Interdependence: Imperatives for Higher

Education in Northwest Ohio" will be the subject of a conference from 9:30 a.m. to 3 p.m., tomorrow on the I lth floor, Offenhauer West.

The conference is sponsored by the International Studies Committee of the Northwest Ohio Consortium.

Skill workshop "Communication in Conflict Situations" will be the

subject of a one-day workshop in the series for developing management skills for women.

The program will be from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. today in the Alumni Room. Union.

Music events Upcoming music events in the area include the

following: Sunday-Creative Arts Youth Orchestra. 3 p.m.,

Recital Hall, Music Bldg.: Bowling Green String Quartet, 8 p.m.. Recital Hall, Music Bldg. and Fourth Annual Ecumenical Concert as performed by the Toledo Symphony Orchestra, 3 p.m.. Rosary Cathedral. 2561 Collingwood Blvd.

Monday-British pianist Humphrey Searle will present a recital and lecture of the works of Franz Listz, 8 p.m. Recital Hall, Music Bldg.

Tuesday-Pianist Frances Burnett will present a recital of compositions by 20th century American artists 8 p.m., Recital Hall. Music Bldg.

Psych prof: set goals, be effective

L-

By Jane Musfrave As«. Copy Edit*

If you are talented, have a high 1Q. are highly motivated, creative, good looking and healthy, chances are that you will lead a highly effective life, according to Dr. David P. Campbell's theory of assets.

Campbell, who is vice-president for research and programs at the Center for Creative Leadership in Greensboro, NC and adjunct professor of psychology at Duke University, spoke at the University Wednesday. He addressed a group, composed primarily of psychology majors and professors, on "Some Things Psychologists Have

Learned About Leading an Effective, Maybe Even a Happy Life."

"The most important determinant of an effective life is goal setting," Campbell said. "The goals you set for yourself, however, must be the right type of goals."

CAMPBELL WARNED against setting static goals, such as making $100,000 a year or becoming president of a corporation.

"The problem with static goals is that once you achieve the goal, it will no longer seem important and this will lead to a sense of hopelessness."

It is better to set dynamic goals said Campbell because

dynamic goals allow more flexibility and a greater variety of choices so that a person won't get locked into a specific, unchanging lifestyle.

The number of assets a person possesses directly affects the number of life style choices that a person will have.

He said that communication skills are of utmost importance in Nfe effectiveness.

"COMMUNICATION skills, especially writing talents, will open more doors, afford more opportunities to meet exciting people and visit interesting places than any other talent."

Campbell cited intelligence, specifically IQ scores, as being very important in expanding choices. Though studies have shown IQ scores generally reach a plateau at age 17, if people stay in an intellectually stimulating environment, scores do show irk reases. he said.

"In our society today, appearance is of utmost importance in life effectiveness. The way you look greatly affects how people accept you and therefore affects the choices you will have in life."

Health is a critical ingredient in life effectiveness, he said. Surveys have shown that the

careers of 15 per cent of tlie population have been greatly affected by health problems. Drugs (including alcohol and tobacco), lack of exercise, excess weight and stress arc the four biggest health problems in

the country today, according to Campbell.

Campbell suggested that people should make checklists of their assets in order to determine how effective their lives should be.

Quinfef performs for composer Review by

Stephen Hedges

"I think it works-1'm very impressed with this piece."

The comment came from Barney Childs, renowned contemporary composer, as he stood before a campus audience Wednesday night.

The piece referred to was his brand-new "Fourth Brass Quintet," performed just moments before in the Recital Hall. Music Bldg. by the University Brass Quintet.

Childs had good reason to be impressed. His piece overshadowed the rest of the works on the quintet's program, including an earlier Childs work. This was due not only to the quality of the piece, but the high quality of the performance it received.

The fine performance was not suprising, however, since the brass quintet has a very personal interest in this piece. They commissioned it and gave the work its world premier in Atlantic City last month.

The work actually is constructed in such a way as to be five simultaneous solos instead of the more common (and overworked) homogenous br ass ensemble. As a result, virtuosic playing is expected of all five performers.

There are other characteristic! of this piece which deviate drastically from the "normal" brass quintet work.

Example: the end of the piece would "normally" be the beginning and the beginning would be the middle.

Example: the third movement is a set of variations in reverse order. In other words, the last "variation" is in reality the original theme and each preceding statement of the theme is progressively more varied.

EXAMPLE: the first trumpet player begins to play his third movement before the end of the second. As the other players finish the second movement and begin their third movement, he plays a solo which is influenced by Miles Davis' work in "Sketches of Spain" and "Kinda Blue." He finally rejoins the group just before the third movement ends.

These are indeed exciting concepts for structuring new music. On the other hand, Childs has assiduously

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avoided any avant-garde techniques in this piece. In a sense, he hai merely injected new methods into an old medium.

But Childs is right-the piece works. And what a treat it was to hear an important new composition with the composer present to explain the thought processes which went into creating it.

It was truly an impressive eVening- Dr. David P. Campbell

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~ora»c~ CLaSSIFIED »»w. CAMPUS CALENDAR

Friday, April 23, 1976

Active Christians Today Bible studies 603 Clough St. Noon & 1 p.m.

Jewish Stud. Gp. presents a joint BG-TU Shabbat Serv. commemorating Holocaust Remembrance Day, Prout Chapel, 6:30 p.m.

Saturday, April 24, 1976

Phi Kappa Tau B-Ball Marathon tor poor kids dental treatment o( Wood Co. today & tomorrow Men's Gym.

Sunday, April 25. 1976

Active Christians Today worship service Commons NE. 10:30 a.m.

BGSU Sailing Club 222 Math-Sci. Bldg.. 8:15 p.m. Open.

Karate Club: Goju-Kai practice 5-7 p.m. 201 Hayes Hall.

Duplicate Bridge Match Ohio Suite, Union, 1:30 p.m.

Kappa Delta Pi meeting Dogwood Suite, Union, S p.m. Members are requested to attend. Honor Fresh. & Soph.

Monday, April 26, 1976

Active Christians Today Bible study 603 Clough St. 6:30 p.m.

LOST AND FOUND

STOLEN: Mens Schwin Varsity 10 speed dk. br. Reward. 372-1112.

HELP WANTED

Now hiring full or part time waitress or waiters. Must be 21 yr. old. Dixie Electric Co. Perrysburg, 874-4793.

Addressers wanted IMMED! Work at home -no experience necessary-excel- lent pay. Write American Service. 1401 Wilson Blvd. Suite 101. Arlington. Va. 22209.

SERVICES OFFERED

EMPA Emotional ft Material Pregnancy Aid. We care. 352-6236 MJ.F 1-3 p.m. Tu.. W.. Th., 6:30-9:30 p.m. ■

Expert typing. Reasonable rates. Call 352-7305.

WANTED

76-77 1 f. to share apt. 251 E. Merry.

Modern, turn. 2 bdrm. apt. to subl. begin, fall. 352-1963.

76-77 1 f. to share apt. 521 E. Merry. Call 2-3317.

1 f. to subl. Fran* Apt. summer. $62.50/mo. Mary, 352-1178.

1 m. needed for summer. 1 Wk. from campus. Rick. 352-8505.

F. rmt. needed begin, of May or June $75/mo. Own rm. 352-4454.

2 f. rmmts. fall-spr. qtr. Mt. Vernon Apts. $70/mo.. $210/qtr. 372-5802.

2 m. rmts. for apt. needed next fall. Call 372-5136.

PERSONALS

Happy Birthday Chuck Wehrle, BGSU Dream Boy. Signed, Your Fan Club.

RECORDS--RECORDS- RECORDS. From Badfinger to Woodstock. .25-2.00. 352-5383.

PROUT ALUMNI: We need your talent for PROUTSTOCK -76. Please call: 372-4702 or 372-3839 by April 23.

The AX's would like to thank Bob, Stacy. Doug. Jeff, Ric, Paco. Tim, Greg & Doug for driving' for our formal desserts.

DG's sorry you couldn't make the B-Ball Marathon. Thanx for the support & have a good time at your formal. The Brothers of Phi Kappa Tau.

The 16th Annual Miss BGSU Pageant Sat. May 1 8 p.m. Ballroom. Dough-Boy says: Meet the New Miss BGSU.

CHI O'S—Get your "Baby Owls" ready for some "Hootin' & Hollenn'." See ya tonight! The Brothers of Sigma Chi.

SHINER. HAVE A HAPPY 22nd! LOVE, CHRIS & ELLYN.

OZ's, put your shoes & socks on and fire up for tonites tea! Tau Delt Bros, are ready to rock & roll! (Hairy Buffalo's are not an endangered species).

The Brothers of Delta Tau Delta would like to express their sincere thanks to a helluva brothers & rush chairman, Mr. Mike Laughlin. Shiney. you're great! Congrats on being chosen for the German Honorary & good luck!

TEKES SAY CONGRATS TO ALL NEW SORORITY PLEDGES.

FOR SALE

U.S. Skin Diver Tank & regulator. Little use. 2-4743.

Motorola AM-FM, 8-track stereo w/spkrs. excl. sound. $150. Also 29 gal. aquarium w/all ace. $50. 352-3346.

Component Stereo System Pioneer, AR. Pickering, 50 albums, new cond , $975 new; asking $495. Evenings, 703 S. Prospect St.

'68 Pontiac Catalina 4 dr. good cond. 372-4711.

'68 VW nice shape, dependable, 33 mpg. Asking $800. 352-7629.

Ludwig drum set. Exc. cond. Cheap. 352-0243.

FOR RENT

Apartments a> rooms fall & summer rentals. 352-7365.

Large 2 br. 2 full baths, turn. a/c. Reduced summer rates. Call Rock Ledge Manor 6th St. at College, 352-3841.

FOR SUMMER 521 E. MERRY, NEAR UNIV. 2 BDRM. 4 PERSON, FURN. A/C. FREE CABLE. WASH & DRY AVAIL. ENTIRE SUMMER $300 PLUS ELEC. JUNE 15-SEPT. 5. 352-6489.

FOR FALL 521 E. MERRY, NEAR UNIV. 2

BDRM, 4 PERSON, FURN. A/C. FREE CABLE, WASH & DRY AVAIL $65/MO/STUDENT. $260/MO. TOTAL Of. $780/QTR. PLUS ELECj EXC. COND. 352-6489.

Apartments & rooms fall &, summer rentals. 352-7365.

FOR SUMMER 256 S. COLLEGE. Apt. A. furn.. 3 bdrm. June 15 to Sept. 15. Total rent $375. Deposit $75. FOR SUMMER 256 S. College, Apt. B.. furn. 2 bdrm.,June 15-Sept. 15.' Total rent $350. Deposit $75. FOR FALL 256 SI College, Apt. C. Furn., efficf $100/mo. Deposit $50. near! college. FOR SUMMER 2561 S. College. Apt. C. furn! effic. June 15-Sept. 15f Total rent $210. Deposit* $50. 352-3611 or 352-6489]

SUMMER APARTMENT? 352-4671 or 352-1800.

Rooms foi girls. Summer fall. $45/mo. w/cookir privileges. 353-3975.

Subl. house summer bdrm. near campus 352-1270.

2 bdrm. apt. for summe qtr. Call now, 352-7319.

Preferred Properties rentln for summer & fall. Specie, summer rates. $300. Call fo info. 352-9378.

2 bdrm. furn. pd. util. exc, elec. Laundry facil.. lour avail., ample parking 288-1462 or 352-1778.

CAMPUS MANOR API 505 CLOUGH ST. (Bern Burger Chef) CART] APTS. 311 E. Merry St. (ll blks. from Towers) bdrm.-4 man pats, (wh] place 1-2-3 students into aJ apt. to fill 4 man aptj Summer rates for 1-2-3 students. 352-7365.

Summer 2 bdrm. fur; central air. 520 E. Ra. $350 for summer plus el< 824 6th St. $300 sumr plus elec. $525 Enterprise $350 fc summer. Newtove Realt 352-5163.

Room for rent. Boardin house. M. only, Extra mfp 352-3073.

1 bdrm. fura apt. 12 rmj lease near campus. Av 6/15/76 352-5239. 823 7555 after 5.

2 bdrm. furn. apts. on „ St. w/a.c. for summer &A tall. 352-5239 or 823-755 after 5.

FOCB Ashland fanMBBBar

Laxers trounce MSU

Friday, April 23.1976. The BG News/Page 7

By Greg Smith Aabtant Sports Editor

Jeff Woloshyn scored eight goals to lead the Bowling Green lacrosse team to a 23-8 Midwest Lacrosse Association (MLA) victory over winless Michigan State University Wednesday at East Lansing.

Woloshyn's scoring spree set a Bowling Green record for most goals in a game. Laddie Horyl and Bob Decker held the previous record with six tallies.

Woloshyn. the Falcons' leading scorer with 20 goals and five assists, tied his last season's scoring output. The

, senior attackman from DesPaines. 111., totalled 12 goals and 13' assists in 1975.

THE FALCONS' scoring output also broke a school record for the most goals scored in a game. The previous mark was 22 goals

against the Cleveland Lacrose Club in 1974 and Wooster College this year.

The Falcons jumped to a 9-0 first quarter advantage before the Spartans scored the initial first-half goal against the Falcons in the second period. Falcon goalies Pat Collura and Brand Closen were unscored upon in the first four games in the first half.

"We controlled the first period," said Falcon first-year coach Jim Plaunt." but after that we played with a lack of intensity. We didn't have the killer instinct that could have put them away."

The Falcon goalie duo surrendered eight goals in the league contest. Closen and Collura had > given up only three goals in the previous four games.

"1 WAS surprised they scored that many goals

against us," Plaunt said. They had been averaging only four goals a game. They didn't have the ball that much but they made the most of their opportunities. It just shows we can be scored against."

The Falcons, now 5-0 on the season and undefeated in MLA play with a 34) mark, start their second season tomorrow at Ashland.

"This is the part of the season which determines how good or how bad we'll be this season," Plaunt said.

"This can be the start of a great season or the slide to a bad one. These next few games can go either way."

The Ashland Eagles have never beaten the BG laxers but coach Gary Moose would like nothing better than knocking off the high-flying Falcons.

THE EAGLES are led by

freshmen attackmen Mike Cavanaugh and Bill Hansen. Cavanaugh leads the Eagles In scoring with 12-3-1S totals, while Hansen has netted 10 points.

Ashland features a young squad thai possesses only two seniors and three juniors. The Eagles lost .ill Ml A attackman Rich Ferrari, who totalled 29 goals iid 39 assists for 65 points.

The Eagles are winless in MLA play and have a 2-3 mark overall, not counting their MLA match with the Oberlin Yeomen, a team the Falcons defeated 21-0.

"They'll be a tough, scrappy team." said Plaunt, that we can't take too lightly."

Bill Gaydos will start in goal for the Eagles against the high-scoring Falcons. Gaydos has a .803 percentage this year.

Netters travel to Kent State By David Smercina

Sports Writer

Two key MidAmerican Conference (MAC) confrontations will be to the focal point for the Bowling Green tennis team at the Kent State University (KSU) quadrangular today and tomorrow.

The MAC foes will be Eastern Michigan University (EMU) and Kent. The other school at the match will be Penn State University (PSU).

"Thesi are must matches.

Kent and Eastern," said BG coach Bob Gill. "A loss to either one would be a severe blow to our hopes of a championship."

THE FALCONS, who were picked by the MAC coaches to finish fourth in the league, now have a 1-0 conference record and a 7-5 overall mark.

The Flashes and Hurons were picked eighth and ninth respectively in the same pre-season poll.

EMU's record is 9-9. The Hurons have four returning

lettermen and two of them, Cornell Ballard and Brian Lambert, played in the top three positions last year.

Even though BG prevailed last year, 6-3, over EMU. Gill said he looks for a close match.

The only team that both teams have met this season is Wayne State University. EMU triumphed 9-0. while BG had more of a battle, winning 7-2.

BG HAD AN easy time with KSU last year, shutting out the Flashes, 90. But

KSU came back to finish ahead of the Falcons at the MAC meet.

Kent has lost its only league match to date, and has a 3-7 overall record.

PSU, which rounds out the field, "is always one of the top ten or fifteen teams in the East." according to GiU.

"We showed some good signs last weekend." said Gill. "But the bad weather this week has kept us from having good practices."

Women spikers set for Relays By Sue Caser Sports Writer

Women's track coach Dave Williams has a lot of

'confidence in his girls.

In fact, he hopes to qualify four more events in addition to ihe six already qualified, for the Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women's (AIAW) nationals this weekend.

The women spikers travel to Eastern Kentucky University in Richmond. Ky. for the Becky Boon Relays. Some 25 teams will be participating in the two-day event.

"IF THE weather is nice, I am sure we will qualify a

few more events," Williams said. "Linda Helmink (javelin) and Lorna Miller (discus) are both very close to qualifying. Last week the wind killed them and I'm hoping for good weather and good results."

Among those competing will be the nation's number one and number three teams. Tennessee State University and Michigan State University (MSU).

"The Becky Boon Relays are considered the 'mini nationals' of the East." said the spiker mentor. "There will be some excellent competition, and it's always a good experience to run against such teams."

MSU finished ahead of BG's AIAW national

qualifying mile-relay team and Williams said his girls are out for revenge. The time difference between the two squads is less than two seconds BG (4:01.0) and MSU (3:59.0).

INJURY-WISE, the Falcons are in pretty fair condition. Jenny Gill will be returning to action after a week's absence with acute tendonitis of the ankle. But BG will be hurting as freshman Rindie James is out. James is the second leg of the 440-yard relay team

and the number two shot putter.

"I don't think we have the depth to win the meet," Williams said. "But we will bring home quite a few first and second place finishes."

Williams' other qualifying hopefuls include freshman Deb Romsek in the 400-meter hurdles and sophomore Jan Samuelson in the half-mile run. Both Romsek and Samuelson are on the mile-relay team along with junior Lynn Heckman and senior Stanene Strouss.

THE 16th ANNUAL

MISS B.G.S.U. * PAGEANT

SATURDAY, MAY 1st

8 pm

GRAND BALLROOM

SPONSORED BY •K PHI KAPPA PSI FRATERNITY *

SIGMA CHI WISHES TO

CONGRATULATE THEIR NEW ACTIVES

FRED FRIETAG

MIKE JOSEPH

BILL CROSSET

ROD LYNCH

CURT MILLER

JEFF RABBITT

JIM SCHALNO

DOUG SCHNUG

DAVE MANDELL MIKE SCIORTINO

DAVE McWILLIAMS JOHN ZIEGLER

SUMMER JOBS. JOBS, JOBS

College trained men and women will be considered to supplement our permanent staff in district offices throughout the United States.

These positions are full time summer jobs. We are searching for applicants who are ambitious, dependable and hard working. Excellent opportunity for advancement.

You may continue to work on a part- time or full time basis next fall if you desire.

For district office address or for appoint- ment with our local manager. Call Robbie, after April 18th. 9 a.m. to 5p.m.. Mon.. thru Fri.

1-242-9597

Leading scorer Jeff Woloshyn protects the ball in an earlier game this season. Tne senior from DesPlaines. III. set a new BG record scoring eight goals in Wednesday's MLA contest against Michigan State (Newsphoto by Lance Wynn)

Men's volleyball Bowling Green's men's volleyball team got its second

taste of championship caliber play Wednesday night, and like the first match, it was an experience it would just as soon forgei.

This time the opponent was the Ohio State Buckeyes with the result being another 3-0 setback. The Falcons lost the game by scores of 15-1, 154, and 15-3.

Bowling Green was in only one of the games, ihe second, when the Falcons jumped off to a 4-0 lead before the much bigger Buckeyes took over.

THE FALCONS' final match of the season will be tomorrow ai Columbus when they face Indiana University. Bowling Green is 1-1 against the lioosiers.

Bowling Green's record is 2-19.

Go Falcons

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Ptsje 8/The BG News, Frkliy. April 23,1976

BG golfers aim to end title drought ByDickRees

Associate Sports Editor

The drought keeps getting longer, but it's not as if there's no end in sight

The Falcon golf team is in a rut. And you'd think their own

tournament would be the ideal time to *end the scarcity of a first-place finish

on the linkster's tally sheet. The Bowling Green golfers will

attempt to do that this weekend as they host the Falcon All-Ohio Invitational on the University golf course.

BUT IF THE last two years are any indication of what to expect this weekend, the dry spell will continue.

In each of the last two seasons, the veteran BG squad entered the Falcon without a tournament victory. After winning the initial four invites, it only seemed natural that this tourney would again produce a win and propel the Falcons to greatei heights, like the Mid-American Conference (MAC) crown, which BG captured in 1972 and 1973.

Such was not the case. Ohio University dethroned the

Falcons in 1974 and Ohio State's "B" team took home the trophy last spring as the locals finished second and third respectively.

And as the Falcon contingent enters this year's tourney hoping to reverse the past two year's results, those name Bobcats and Buckeyes are the most formidable contenders to negate that chance.

It's a different team for BG this spring, though, and in the same regard, a victory this weekend is not a must, for the Falcons are young and coach John Piper is still experimenting with different lineup combinations.

BUT THE LINKSTERS are due for a better showing than the last two weeks.

After opening theii season with an impressive third-place finish in the Marshall Invitational, the Falcons placed an embarrassing seventh at the Ashland Invitational two weeks ago and followed with below-average

performances in Ohio State's Kepler and the Toledo Invitational this past week.

So Piper, through his system of challenge matches between players, has come up with two new faces in his lineup for the seventh annual tournament this weekend.

Freshman Jeff Parsons and senior Steve Mossing are the newcomers, while a third, junior Kay Ameen, made his first tournament appearance of the season at Toledo Monday.

Mossing, a veteran of three Falcon Invitationals, explained his feelings about the 36-hole tourney.

••IT'S GOOD TO host a tournament, and the team that does usually has a definite advantage." he said. "But people don't lealize how tough it is to win a tournament.

"The competition is getting tougher all the time, and you have to have superb talent to win." he added.

That just might be the case with Ohio State, as Mossing said the Buckeye "B" team is again loaded with good players.

But the Falcons have good players and what about the home course advantage?

"We don't play that much here, really." Mossing said. "This is really the only week we play this course a lot. And the weather is always a big factor.

"We're accustomed to playing in the wind, sure," the Napoleon native said. "But if the wind starts gusting and the weather gets inclement, it makes it that much harder for everyone, even us."

But the BG captain insists the team is planning to regain that first-place trophy, despite the recent mediocre play.

"EVERYONE IS aiming in that direction, but it won't ruin us if we don't win," he said. "Ohio State is the team to beat, but that can he done. We'd like to finish first, although a second or third won't demoralize us to where we can't rebound."

Getting off to a good start and thinking "team" are keys to success

this weekend for the Falcons, according to Mossing.

"We haven't been starting well, and we need to have a good first round so there won't be much pressure on us Saturday." he explained. "We also need to think of the team concept. Hopefully, we can get three or four to get good scores and have the other two not too far off the deep end so we can get a good team total."

Mossing, playing in his first tournament of the year, will man the sixth spot this weekend.

Parsons, a Toledo Rogers product who has won two straight qualifiers, will be making his initial appearance of the spring in the BG lineup. He'll play at number five.

Sophomore John Miller (76.K) remains at number one while sophomoie Gary Treater (78.31 and ireshman Steve Cruse (77.11 continue to hold down the number two and three positions.

HOWEVER. PIPER said yesterday

that the latter two may switch positons for this weekend's toumey.

Ameen, whose 74 paced BG at Toledo Monday, will play in the number four position.

This years Falcon features a new format, as only Ohio schools are entered and trophies will be awarded to the top teams in both the university and college divisions

The I 2 teams entered include BG,' Toledo. Ohio University. Ohio State,. "B", Cleveland State University.. Wright State University. Wooster, Ohio Wesleyan. Heidelberg", Baldwin-Wallace. Akron and Ashlandj (

Tee-off lime today on tho) b.515-yard University course is 10:30. a.m. Tomorrow's starting time is 8:3C ; a.m.. with teams with the low totaj' after the first round going off last. ■

Monday, the Falcons will compete J in the important MAC Invitational hotted by Miami University in Oxford' The 36-hole affair is played in one daj and is a determinant for next week'* prestigious Noithern Iniercollegiat tournament.

Dlamondmen play four

Big' games scheduled By Terry Goodman

Assistant Sports Editor

It's only the second weekend of the Mid-American Conference (MAC) baseball season. No team has played more than four games.

But Bowling Green sees today's doublcheader at Western Michigan and tomorrow's doublcdip at Northern Illinois as "big" games already.

I.E.: The Falcons realize how lough league-leading Eastern Michigan is and intend to keep pace with the defending champs.

THIS WEEKEND is real important for us," ace righthander Kip Young, who starts today's first game. said. "We've got to at least win three of four this weekend and possibly all of them.

"If we split, it won't do us any good." Young continued. "We can't be

.500 and win the MAC. You should always win more than half of your games at home and try to splii on the road. Since we didn't do well at home last weekend, we'll have to make up for it on the road."

Following Young to the hill will be either lefthander Gary Kite (4-2) or righthander Jim Joyce (4-1) in the nightcap against the Broncos, unbeaten in two loop contests.

Tomorrow. Mike Hale (0-0). still suffering arm problems, will possibly return in the opener with Romie Scliwieterman (1-2) pitching the second game.

HALE WILL hurl only if he receives two OKs-one from coach Don Purvis and the other from his doctor.

"Hale is making very good progress." Purvis said of the Falcons' number two starter last year. "He threw batting practice Wednesday and if he doesn't throw lhl<

weekend. I'm almost sure that he'll throw some next week. He will go to the doctor for his final word today (yesterday)."

Young expressed concern for the ailing southpaw, who could hold Ihe key to the Falcons' success this season.

"We've really missed him," he said. "He's at least a number two starter and if he was healthy, he'd be at least 4-1.

"WE NEED Mike bad and we need him fast," Young added. "Pitching is one of our weaknesses as we showed lasl weekend by scoring six runs and still losing. Mike can help us."

Young will be gunning for his eighth straight win without a loss today. He sports a 1.64 earned run average, has won 2S of his lasl '(> decisions and owns a career mark of 33-4.

Safe Randy Law slides safely into third base in an earlier two important MAC doubleheaders this weekend, contest this season. Law and the rest of the Falcons (Newsphoto by Jim Osbom) travel to Western Michigan and Northern Illinois for

Thinclods finish relay circuit at two sites MAC standings

Conference Overall TEAM Eastern Michigan Western Michigan Ohio University Toledo BOWLING GREEN Miami Hull State Central Michigan Kent State Northern Illinois

BG W :i II 13 l» 19 :i

18

L S 'I

12 ti 8 II Ii 7 15 II

PCT. .724 .550 .520 .7<v0 .703 ,6S6 .780 .720 250 353

Today's games

BOWLING GREEN ai Western Michigan.(2) Toledo al Noithern Illinois. (2) Ball Stale al Kenl State,(2) Miami at Ohio University,(2)

Tomorrow's games

BOWUNG GREEN at Northern Illinois,(2) Miami al Koni State, i.'i Ball State ai Ohio University,(2) Toledo al Western Michigan.(2) Central Michigan al Eastern Michigan, (2)

By Bill Estep Sports Editor

Three years ago a Dave Wottlc-amliored Falcon four-mile relay squad sel an American record at the Drake Relays.

Well, the local thmclads return to Des Moines. Iowa this weekend lot the (>7ih tunning of the Dtake event. Bui don't expect any new US records from this Falcon contingent.

Drained by two weeks of relay competition and some untimely injuries, this lasl leg of the Midlands Relay Circuit provides BG with its final tuiieup before a month of Mid-American Conference (MAC) action.

THE FALCONS, who have toured the relay map al Ihe IXigwood (University of Tennessee). Kansas and Ohio State Relays ihe past two weeks, will split its lime at two sites ibis weekend.

Head coach Mel Brodt left with a six-man group for Dtake yesterday morning, while assistant coach lorn Wright and 23 Iracksters will challenge the Ball Stale Relay field al Muncic. hid. tonimorrow.

Junior speedster Brian Storm, who qualified for this year's NCAA championships in the 100-meter dash at IXigwood. will go after his third straight 100 placing In a relay meet today at Drake.

The Falcons' remaining entries today at Dtake include: Ihe two-mile relay foursome of Dan Dunton. Kevin Ryan. Gary Dcsjaidins and Ron Taylor or Ivor Emmanuel and ihe mile relay squad of Taylor, Emmanuel, Storm and Dunton.

THE DISTANCE medley relay quartet of Dunton. Taylor. Ryan and Dcsjaidins will also represent the Falcons tomorrow,

Tim Zumbaiigh. who met the 10.000-metei NCAA qualifying Standard al Ihe Dogwood event, will sit out this weekend's action. "We're jusl giving him a week off 10 try and gel things together for the rest of the season." Wright said.

And Ihe rest of the season is of the inmost importance to Brodt and his squad-thc Mid-American Conference -cason. that is.

"WE'LL USE this weekend primarily to gel mentally and physically set for the MAC meets," Wright said

"Ball Stale is a chance foi the team to come logethei and gam some self-confidence." lie said. "And with us being home the next three weeks, that self-confidence will Carry over."

The Falcons begin then May home stand with a triangular meet next Saturday wild Ball State and Central Michigan. They follow with two Straight home dual meets with Ohio University and Miami respectively, The MAC championships are Ihe following week at Miami.

*••••••••••••••* * KAPPA SIGMA*

•«* Rick lluichinson. who broke Wottle's freshman 880-yard

run record lasi season, i~ oui indefinitely with a pulled. I hamstring, Randy Zimmerman (hamstring) and Waltei ] Hawkins (leg) will also miss ibis weekend's relays Lew Maclm. slowed the lasl two week- with a heel injury, wilt | compete al Ball Stale.

You have no further lo look iltan this week's MAC.J statistics lo see where the Falcons' strengths ain'J weaknesses he. BG is ranked among the top sis. compcliloi.J In eight tunning events ami onlj one field event, the tripl^ jump Falcons with best MAC performances include! Desjardins m the mile run,4:05 6:Zumbaugh in ihe litres] mile run. 13:51.5 and Tayloi in the 440-yard dash. 47.8.

CONGRATULATES ITS NEW OFFICERS

mrxnoN SIASON OPENS*

DIAGRAM HERE

DESCRIBE YOUR HAY IN WRITING ON SEPARATE PAPER SPONSORED BY

lil»lriMI>.'iii..WiM.'l NAME

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jusi fill out the "Greet Pt; Play" contest foim and submit a diagram of your play to tht special Blue Ribbon Panel of coaching eaiierts."

Tht aight most original, imaginative and lagal plays will be selected by Ihe lodge* and will be placed into Ihe offensive game on Saturday, May 8, at 1:30 p.m. All eight price winning ptavs will be run during the game and the order of prices will be determined by the yards gained on eech play. All sight plays will be used during the spring geme.

The two best plays based on the yerda gained, will be incorporated into ihe Bowling Green oflense for the 1976 seeson end wM be used in a game-type situation during one of BG's six home games in 1976. And they may be used more if they prove to be successful

Atl entrants will be admitted free to the spring game May 8. 1976.

If you've ever wanted lo be a coach, here's your chance to be part of the Falcon coaching brain trust for 1976.

CONDITIONS OF CONTEST 1 Contest it open to ell readers of the BG News. 2. Contestants may enter more than once but an entry

form must accompany each entry. 3 Deadline fo- entr.es is Friday, Apr. 30.1976. 4. Entries should be sent to "GREAT PET PLAY

CONTEST" "BG NEWS". University Hall, no later than April 30 et 5:00 p.m.

Jim Parenica

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RUSH

PLEDGE TRAINER

SOCIAL IFC REPRESENTA TIVE Bob Kane

ALUMNI RELATIONS Dave Pumpa

HOUSE MANAGER Steve Leonhardt

SCHOLARSHIP

PUBLIC RELATIONS

LITTLE SIS ADVISOR

GUARD

GUARD

ATHLETIC

B.A.

THANKS OLD OFFICERS FOR A JOB WELL DONE

Dave Cowles

Dan Ponton

Joe Dargin

Mike Brand

Scott Kellogg

Phil Wollenberg

Gio Graff

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MARATHON V, * FOR CHARITY *; J OPENING CEREMONIES J SAT 2:00 pm MEN'S GYM Jl «X . ^ — J.

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SAT. 2:30 P.M.

SAT. 4:50 P.M.

SAT. 7:10 P.M.

SAT. 8:30 P.M.

SAT. 10:50 P.M.

SUN. 1:10 A.M.

SUN. 2:30 A.M.

SUN. 4:50 A.M.

SON. 7:10 AM.

!UN. 8:30 A.M.

SUN. 10:50 A.M.

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J AWARDS PRESENTATION J SUNDAY 12 NOON 2 LETS OO OUT AND HAVE A I, ji. GOOD TIME FOR THE POOR 4 yt CHILDREN OF WOOD COUNT?I| *••••••••••••*•?

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