) &>*?%.;' ■■■ïf^m#-4f>.%•.V--Î-'S1 Ç*>,^1 1 ft Ä #ipi^fli ;«*v’^Säi”--vjfë. : 7 “.' «S Bs*"• -“>;C - •■: ■'• W- t A f ili® ' ■■ & k ÉÉÍÍb ^ b ÍÍ| m WëitMiM^c '/'?'• • t ^•v ¡11 1 : ■I H I ••-' ; Sonrías MSÜ For 51 Yen» ' ; i n Pam u Second Ch» M *!* 5 C clltS Established 1909 Vol. 53, No« 1 East lim riag, Michigan, Thursday Momiag, Marcii. 3 0 ,1961 r agCS paid at Ink I «nam aliali. R u sk B a ck s K A fO P ro p o sa l 7 Point Plan MMÉS Moderate Proposed ë S â iE Æ . j¿. Laos Plan s%*C Sh 3 .<■■■« By Hannah saiPEiapPWW iS B s a r ;W"WmmsmSßv^i '¿SS Approved S' .. . . Ijj *Êbm BANGKOK. Thailand tf'-D e- Less Classroom spite its compromise aspects, Time, More Self Studv \á j^ k K x ¿ A -. V H U n H f t A j í > ■ * HÊËfiËÈ] ? Secretary of State Dean Rusk said Wednesday the moderate resolution of the SEATÔ for­ eign ministers, on L am s is strong enough to provide “ all By SAM MARTINO mñ. that is needed.” State News Staff W rity The Southeast Asia' Treaty Organization compromised on President John A. llannai* w a r n i n g the '“Communists will present to the Board of 1 against trying to take over Trustees Friday m >rning a, Laos by force. The SEATO I “ revolutionary” seven point leaders decided to give Moscow plan to educate the university’s more time to think about neg­ growing student population otiations toward ending the Hannah Monday night told Laotian civil war. j more than 750 faculty members j The threat of military retali- ■at the Aud. that students! ¡ation by SEATO—an idea orig­ ! should assume more respons ] SÉ inally pressed by the United- ! ibility for their own learning. I B i States — was veiled behind a He suggested a greater de- j I gree of independent study on j the studapt’s ¿das' part and less time i n a classroom. [A ft&s su ■ warning that the aUiance_wquld take “ appropriate actions’ ll Moscow refuses to negotiate on Laos. The U. S. and other dele­ gations considered this strong H\h f ' M PK lSiP - HANNAH TOLD his audien­ WKmÊfèMM- ce that with aw expected enroll­ enough for their purposes. S&; . l ^ r , WësèÊ‘êÊÊm ment of 37.000 by I970r>hanges BEACH ANTICS— Vacationing students at Fort Lauder­ student attracts a crowd with his beàch antics. (Photo WHEN PRESSED {o elabor- LAST ONE OUT—PatUe McMahon of Tower Guard shows I and new approaches to fulfill- j dale find many ways to entertain themselves. Here a by Eric Filson ) ! ate on what moves SEATO PhiU# Owen, Grosse Pte. sophomore, the way out of the j ing the educational require-; | might take to counter Com­ Men’s Intramural building. It seems that Phil is the last merits of undergraduate stu- munist military moves. Secre- one to register for spring term. (Photo by Art Wieland) j dents must be made. The president’s new- plan During Student Invasion j tary Rusk told newsmen: ! “ if you read the resolution ¡calls for the utilization of res-| thoroughly you will find all that Voting April 3rd ideuce halls for academic pur-! post's and a greater use of | close+circuit television, films, teaching machines, program-; You Must Be Riot-Inciter to Get is needed.” ' — The prevailing hope hercrwas that Iron Curtain loaders would read between the lines .and be Third Round Of 1med studies and other aids convinced the alliance means Attention of Lauderdale Police : through 2 Resource Center. business. He reported that students j Nevertheless the eight-nation ! spend far more time in their residence balls than in class-! rooms or th%, library* He so#-1 SEATO veered away from the tough la« United StgtSs after France ' ' » t .;-: ~ a . ..... . v»v gested that tne situation oaf Students watched first a threatened a Veto, By HENRY R. BERNSTEIN- ,tion. Article 17, section 4 of the into an academic ad-' Editor's Note.—-Larry Walker Duties of police have usually about !opuiar, unlit n i o i i u c v ^ u j i u t i i i called to rewrite the state’s , thanr 1926. Thus the question and improve the scholarly constitution, or at least con-.will nqt appear on the ballot activity of the increasing num-, beach were off-limits at Interviews Here bar to_bar pilgrimages. have plenty of escorts’ as some | Coeds; At Waterloo cease-fire and warped 'SEATO against military a'e t i o n in sider revision of the document j automatically again until 1977. ber of graduate students. - a*£h*- “authorities” estimated they as a whole. They believe this | The amendment approved j In line with 'seeking other j g j j ADDITIONAL police Captain Reginald G. Sauls were outnumbered by fellows! WATERLOO. Iowa ^ T e e n - La“ fU|a||y af„ r Is the’best step to take towards j last November also states that j improvements Hannah said were callert in to halt the 6 to 1. agers, boys and girls alike, set some hard bargaining in_the solution of many state prob- a convention could be called i f ; that the quality of teaching ^ qqq noting students who were IV, Marine Corpn officer-select- Fort Lauderdale in the Spring out to cjo a man’s job in fight- j closed conference sessions, the lems. only a majority of those voting should improve as more pro- jJy g ¡n tbe mi(RjQe 0{ streets. ion officer, will interview stu­ is a strange city, of contrasts. ing this city’s worst flood in resolution said .nottqp# about n rR R F D “ CON - CON” bv question approved. fessors obtain their doctorate. Most beaches are traditkmal- dents interested in obtaining Students are nearly equaled history and earned unqualified any SEATO military action in f p a c r - conscious headline 3 ndervthe la^ as,KU exis-^d " ,f university decided to ly cVosed at night, evenings Marine Corps commissions in number by visiting Florid- praise for it Wednesday. Laos. writers, thcr constitutional con- i beKfor«. November, the people grow larger, it must 1 m be b e a g W v e J for motel par April ...........10 to 12 from 9 a.m. to j ians who want to see what’s Approximately 2,700 teen­ vention issue began finding its ^ ho d,d n. f vot« on the ques-1 led to become better, stated ties. - * ;% 4 p.m. in the Union concourse. 1going oi% * » agers were among the 4,000" T H E K E Y PARAGRAPH _______- as tion actually cast a “ no vote Hannah m offenng up the chal- . - bone-weary volunteers who con­ warned that if the British pro­ because a majority of those lenge for a moctomization of! ---------- ------------ tinued to battle receding flood-, posal is not accepted “ and ,v a n o u s m ^ r e s ^ n d pressure voting ¡n the ele^ jon7was nec-es^ educating new students. waters of the Cedar River. there continues to be an active ^Changing the constitution ^ forapproyal He said that physical and» Tbp youngsters filled sand- »Communist) military attempt *____________ „ civ, Ttie old method of vote count- human resources must be ar- bags.-rioaded them on trucks j to obtain controfoT Laos, mem­ l !’r°Ug„ , takPs at ing resulted in defeat of the ranged in such a way as to and took them to soggy levees bers of SEATO are prepared, 1 ast two and a half years to con con question in 1958 and facilitate the identification of which held baclr the wall of within the terms of the treaty, students with each other and water and unloaded them to take whatever action may be complete. The process could 119^ L - b e stopped by a negative vote constitutional amend- ; with the faculty even though THE YOUNG people were i appropriate to the circum­ during five of tiie six steps passed in November the university continues to singing as they rode along.: stances.” The April 3 election win b e R a n g e d the basis for represen- grow, The general pattern was 20_i Although SEATO members the third step in the six-step jt*ti®n at a constitutional con- HANNAH, regards the pre- hours of work and 4 hours of want to negotiate an end to the sleep. war in Laos, they appear to process. The groups favoring a ¡ven“ ®n- posed “revolution in education” differ on how to get the Com­ con-con have already gotten D * b e rules three to be a challengefor his tacul- “The kids have done these the issue past the first two ^leg ates were to be elected t things,”’ said Carl Fagerlind. munists to sit- down and start steps. from each senMormPdistnct. ‘ No other university in A m tr, 57. Street Commissioner, who negotiating. By the time the The first step in changing i “ * n®s Be®n c,,.aD* , ica has undertaken or comem- collapsed Wednesday apparent­ conference ended, there was a the constitution through a con- that one d e le g a tio n be elect- plates anything comparable, ’ 1 ly from the rigor of directing general belief that it would be the flood fight. best to fr»ve the“. Russians . - .. time \ention came last spring when ed for each senator a n d /o r he said. j _ the League of Women Voters «ach representative T h i s TRe new program will give “ If anybody did it. it- was the before SEATO takes action , . , «• ■ .. , Rmtoin Britain has has alpo«inv already Qclron asked fl the and the Junior Chamber of means that there will be a faculty members-, more ' time ¡ kids,” he s a id .- “They’ve got the guts it’s taking, and they Soviet Union to agree to a Commerce succeeded in getting slightly more equitable repre­ for teaching, advising students, three-stage plan on Laos: a chance to „change the rules sentation according to popula­ writing, research and study. came through for us.” .1. A cease-fire. for calling such à convention. tion. . ,, a , He called upon the. members They successfully circulated The amendment requires that o{ the facutty to take “ bold 2. A neutraf commission to a petition to have, an amend- a election be held to imaginative action to accomp- merit to the constitution placed select the delegates. This elec- jjgb a realignment.” reaijy I'oleritlge Gets 1 oversee it 3. A 14-nation conference on before the voters. That wasrthe t»on must be held within four first step in the process. fmenths of the certification of See HANNAH, Page 2 Different Bed Laos’ political future. The United Stateg backs this plan. - 'the April election. LONDON, i£V—The remains Rusk came to the SEATO j THE FORCES favoring con- LANSING is set as the con- con pasted the second hurdle j vention site. If called, the con- S ’News W ants of poet Samuel Taylor Cole­ meeting, with a negotiat ridge Wednesday lay in a new fight plan. jn the November, election when j vention would convene the first »resting place—S t . Michael's He wanted SSA5TO the amendment was approved 1Tuesday in October after the by 352,688 votes. . 1delegates have been selected. Contributors. church in Highgate They were removed Tuesday and weapons to Laos uounce it would send The amendment approved probably Oct. }, 1961 Positions are still open on from a crypt beneath Highgate out the Communist re Peis if last November states: The approval of the League State News for reporters, copy Boys School where they had they refuse to stop fighting and That the question of calling of Women Votefs-Junior Cham- editors, secretaries and pho­ a convention b e 'placed before her of Cm ém kcc amendment ne. Applicants should N »; ■-..■ '■la gna - -né- tr.elMP:;ePPF^F(P'; V* poRce «wved in la restare erder. The •*«- _* g_ m lain for 127 years. The transfer stout talking. The french said was at the request of Coleridge that would have been an ulti­ the peojde in the April election, | in'November of last y e a r * » Sharon Coady* manag- » reaented etosing eff their inverile romaacing ; admirers who were distressed matum and Moscow could not and each 16th year thereafter the second step in the chang- editor, in the State News strip N naMghled heneh. PeBcc from six fsm m n itiB i w a n t i l e d in tn j by the uacaredior condition ef have accepted it without los­ Befera tha November eiec-i Sea CON (» N , P aga X X41 Student Services. quell the eM . A aybeJr yea kanw7 (AP wlrephoto). I the tomb. ing face. At ili im mm - / ■ sSIl BM^>yi’r ^ a â ir^ Z gSn^pP**^ •' . ^ï_*■ . • 1 PMBHP - V ■iö&.iSS&fr'“’' '--:äss«35d’.?--is8:.w & .W .i.':.'\tit Of8s?&ß;..L WÈÏ mm uiW'?W«>‘ä«V2?^WÏ !>.,N^-.-Äii'» ■'.:'vì 1 a’V:j* >’8:'¿“ .-•:■m -■•».•; I•■i' WF* .®M 'SS ■',v.l.-':•v ¡3®-••L « Umrsday Morning, March 30^ 1961 mm. B y P o la ris in g G asses Con-Con Battle Set ■ (Continued from page 1) .. 'com pleted in lea« than seven and one-hslf months.** Monster 'Sees* In Eleven Candidates Seek Va ing the constitution through a The convention could recoin* convention. i mend , a B e^af. constitution. By BILL SMALL The third step iii the procès» j amendments to the preseat State News Science Writer the magaette field on a » mol­ ce between molecules. molfecttie of gas. the effect of Also on the study of the distan­ ecule may be seen by changes Graduate students are still Trustee Positions At MSU ICharles Rogers of Dearborn may lake place et il» , p o i u ; ™ ^ « » - ”r “ ch,n5M * ' Working beyond visible light in the infrared spectrum.- working on the machine. Funds By MARCIA VAN NESS I CANDIDATES for the Wayne [are Democratic and Republi­ April 3 when the question must Recommendations w h i c h In the region of infrared, is One There are gasses in the at­ for the project are coming State News City Editor j State University Board of Gov­ receive a favorable majority came out of a convention would of the mechanical monsters of mosphere which are paramag­ from the University and the ernors are Dewitt T. Burton c a n candidates for the State vote, or the current agitation have to be approved by the for a convention will be halted voters, the sixth and final step thephyskrsdepartment. . ^ netic, that is they may be in National Science Foundation i with magn'etism'. Hauso (NSF). First of Two Parts of Detroit and Ralph E. Rieh- ! Board of Education. The fourth step in changing in the process of changing,the The hand - built machine, u # investigating behAvior of Elevten candidates for the j man of Holland, both Denio- OTHERS SEEKING election The machine, which is about the constitution through a con­ constitution through à conven­ known formally as a Vacuum (some gasses when they are f six' feet''wide, eight feet long MSU Board of Trustees will | crats. | to the board include Larry Do- vention will be the special elec­ tion* Infrared Itacording Spectrom- magnetized and placed in the and six feet high, is located in i fight for the two seats up to r ; On the Republican ticket are ilinski of Highland Park. So tion of „» delegates c, -- — -t -h —Thus we find the state of te r drives into the area of in- to the cqp c light beam, 1 a room in the basement of the ■grabs in' the 1961 spring elec- j Thomas B. Adams of Bloom­ 1eialist Workers; Oscar C. Gra- vention: if the voters approve Michigan in the middle of a visible rays just beyond the red | Edwards is concerned with Physics-Math Building. field Hills and Charles E. I wold of Spring Arbor, Prohibi of the visible light spectrum. , th# oi ^ structure ot ! tion on April 3. Brake-of Detroit. ih April. 7. ! process to change its constitu- Six political parties will oe Harriet Talan of Detroit is !' Charlotte, tion and Edna A. Conklin o< Neither the constitution as it! [ion through a convention. After This precirion inst n ^ e n t as - 1 the molecules themselves. He Independent Ameri­ stood before last November, pogghi* an amendment to the sembled o n t o the direct!«! of j jg working on the moment of nor the new anym.1rm-nt spec!- constjtution to make it easier T. Harvey Edwards and Clar-j mertia, a measure of-the effec- Detns Back ! represented In the contest, i the lone Socialist Workers can- j can. i Incumbent Derr.oferats € Al-. ! didate. - I len Harlan of Birmingham and, ■ The Prohibition party ticket 11 John C. Maclde of Mason, in- ' — ¡y fies whether the election of t0 cajj a convention, the voters ance D., House, professors of tiveness of a mass in rotation i Connor B. Smith or Pinconning will include Alfred T. Halsted;I!missioner cumbent state highway com- delegates will be on a partisan wiu ^ to the polls Monday to physics, aids In the study o il or non-partisan oasis THE LEGISLATURE, how mot. !decide whether to call one or molecular structure. * • A molecule is the smallest -■■■-«■ 7- ------- --------- _ — --------- * 1 -------- JFKYBiU are seeking reelection. of Kalamazoo and Alan LaRose R. Bedwell of Harper Woods. They will be opposed by John of Flint. Other parties repre- S. Plngel of Cross Pointe Woods i seated are Social)st tabec by Republican. is opporod by Charles ever, enacted a statute in 1960 Friday we will examine some exist in a free stote. which provides for nomination and election of convention dele­ of be the tackled problems at a which might constitutional particle of element The information of this struc­ that can I m J -l 1 1 1 4 A g -T 1 .0 I9 .D l / u lit House | j and Fred England, jr., of East !Jam es Sim of Detroit and mazoo Lansing, Republicans. William J . Persons of KaV !Frank Troha of Oak Park and candidate and Ralph W. Muncy I Robert Fink of Detroit rep- Independent American by Cam- is the Prohibition party gates on a partisan basis. But convention. partisanship-may be a prob­ ture is obtained by studying the details of the radiation ab- j sorbed and emitted by the mol­ Funds for Depressed Area« ! resents the Socialist Workers i eron A. MacKenzie and Roman of Ann Arbor represents the party. ¿y V. Ceglowski, both oLDetroit. Socialist Labor group. _ To Gel 394 Million Four men. including two in lem. Carolyn Stieber, MSU politi­ Area Churches ecules in the infrared spect­ rum. Sea Study ' In Gov’t Motley - On the Prohibition party ,tick- Dr. Lynn M. Bartlett, current cumbents, are non * partisan j et are Paul H. Kyburz of Lan- superintendent of public in- candidates for justices of the cal scientist, in her pamphlet, The machine Is in the groover] jsing and Merlin W. Voller of Tstrucfion, will be opposed by “ Focus on Con-Con.” says: • Con-con did not start out Hold Special That is, gratings used in the machine are grooved. One of WASHINGTON i/pv-Presidcnt WASHINGTON IT - T h e Mt. Morris. Charles Schwartz five other candidates. They are House Wednesday refused to of Detroit and John Zywicki of : Hugh H. Holloway of Sault Ste. Lansing and Hairy F. Kelly of~ State Supreme Court. John R. Dethmers of East as a partisan idea . . . Con-Con will have traveled down an un­ anticipated path if it succeeds Easter Service ¡STKÆ the gratings contains 15,000 , grooves per square inch and is nesday for more — • ; scale down, along Republican- Belleville are Socialist Labor Marie. Republican; Robert Birmingham are seeking re- money to baeked lines. President Kenne­ party „candidates. i Himrael of Detroit, Socialist election. . J six by eight inches on the sur- j study the secrets of the oceans. d y 's $394 million program for REPRESENTING the lnde-i Workers; EL Harold jUtiiui, Sr., Others on *he ticket will be in pitting the political parties Special Good Friday services ¡ace -- "Our trery survival may hinge : depressed areas. against each other. for all local Protestant wor , pendent American party will of Hillsdale, Prohibition: W. Ernest C. Boehm of Detroit **" “** r r t * v ’7 : T “ ’ : The gratings allow high re- upon it,” he said, The action was subject to I Clifford Bentley of Pleasant ‘The intense factionalism of shipers wUl be held tomorrow j selution or precision work to be „ His request for funds for possible reversal on a later i be Clair L. Bishop of Battle iI Ridge, Socialist Labor and and James H. McLaughlin of the past few years has already from 12:15 p.m. to 2.45 p.m. , carried . . „ u j outnut hv 'Creek and Ronald A. Hadley Grand Rapids. by the machine nesanneranhv oceanography — the t study of I roll call vote. |of Dearborn. Glenn H. Green of Grand cost Michigan money and pres­ at People’s a bi Church, * r , . i 200 West 1 oncino A magnetic field is developed joceans—came In two messages Friday: Proposals oa the bat- tige. A convention that is more rrand River, in t a s t i^ansing. wben the machine is running ; psking Congress for a net in- 1 HOWEVER, the 242-139 teller Twelve candidates represent-, Ledge, Independent AmericaiT Frank Hartman of Flint and lot of the same could accomplish Maundy Thursday services field polarizes gasses crease of 194,538.000 in appro- j vote seemed to assure defeat of I ing all six parties are seeking little. will also be held at People s are introduced into the ; priations ' for several projects the Republican substitute and j election to the University of "Governor John B. Swainson Church tonight at,8■P**; machine. |tri the fiscal year beginning i passage of the Kennedy Bill, al- !! Michigan Board of Regents^ Theodore Sachs of Oak Park voices concern that if only ‘pa­ ' ready passed by the Senate in rochial interests are _ voted, convention may in fact pose j services "tonight ,at 8 p.m.. and seen An infrared light chines ac- j uiy l. - — a will hold Maundy Thursday ccogs the mach,ne and can be! These projects included de- 1slightly different form. a filtered slit after j velopment of ' a supersonic I This would mean a substan­ 1and Allan R. Sorenson of Mid* | land are-Democratic candidates Time Out For Beauty . .. certain dangers to good govern-, the mass of the Last Supper a t j ^ jeaves the grating. transport plane forcivilian use tial victory for the Kennedy Ad- contested by Jam es Zeder of The tim e you spend aUP.H.F. is tim e used wisely. Bloomfield Hills and Paul G. n,£?t i” Michigan. 8:99 pmi. I When the light passerby Uie and federal aid for basic re- j ministration, which lost a test Goebel of Grand Rapids, Re­ Relax under an air conditioned dryer and have P a t The holding of a convention From 12 p.m. to 3 p,m. S a in t - -------------- ss ee aa rr cc hh and education in I of strength on mlnimum wages would be the fifth step towards | John]s will conduct Good Fri- II last week. The House at that publicans. 1science. .. On the Socialist Workers and M artin style your hair to compliment your c h a n g i n g the constitution ; day services, with, the liturgi- ! Kennedy put his request fori time adopted a more restricted ticket for the board are Sarah through" a convention. If con- cal service at 1:45 p.m. and the con is approved Monday, a spe- communion service at 2:30 Fish P a rty In ! oceanographic funds in his measure backed by Republi­ Lovell and Edith Gbur, both of •message asking for an increase cans and some Southern Demo­ good features. dal election would be held to p.m. of $23,492,000 for the commerce crats. Detroit. Roliin M. Severance .select the delegates and the j There will be no Catholic 5 *000 Fifths department. The department The Republican measure on of Saginaw and E. Harold Muim, jr., of Coldwater are P repare for the Spring v acatio n .. . convention would begin meet- services on Saturday until the directs studies of the oceiin. depressed areas would provide Prohibition candidates. ing in Lansing in October. __ special Easter midnight mass I at 11 p.m. O f W hiskey In a letter t6 Vice-President ui 11‘“ only $275 millions in loans and Representing Socialist I;u, but utu » i it ^ n , . Australia for improved metn- cussions. and other special : ior colleges of Mtebiftov, ships annually toe three years Center for the academic year. ] failed because of monev p r o b - j p o n --------- meetings. _ The AAUP says K does not after its passage. McFarlanc. president of Eastjod* 1961-62. Dr. Sherwood Haynes of the Hake issue w ith " V n need for “ If the bill passes commit­ lems in the state, he said. ,Shaw, because the movies are | thi* Willis^Mid. " It went to the Ways and shown in the lower lounge and' Australia has* the resources to , The . major objective '■f the j department of physics and as­ j i-emfteatton nor wtoto the veiue tee "and comes out on the floor, ” institute is to improve the sub- j tronomy will direct th e lour- ; of educational cwmw, but it we’ll pass it in a jiffy," said Means Committee and never j charging admission w o u l d double or triple the food supply ject-matter competence of the ]week summer program for ! does seek employment opportun- one of its sponsors, Rep. George j came out?” he said. block access to the grill and for its 10 million people, he participating teachers. It is de-1'physics teachers interested in ! ities for all those who have Montgomery* Wayne-D. - said. But to do this, Australian "THE REPRESENTATIVES television set. _ " farmers must apply engineering signed especially for teachers !the Physical Science Study i subject "matter qualifications re- The scholarships, could be who oppose federal aid to edu- The program will be on a who have been assigned to ICommittee materials and who gardttoss of their certification used for undergraduate o r |cation o{ C0Urse, will be trial basis this spring. A profit principles to the production of teach general science without Jwish to increase their pro- background. •— graduate study at any acredit- against this bill.’’ Rep. Moat-j will be realized from the ad- field crops and livestock. adequate preparation in' the ! ficiency in physics. •The faculties of the call«*** ed Michigan institution which ¿om6ry saidL^~ Imission fee thii tw in Dccmisfc When he returns to his tml* ! and universities fte M ichigan ere versity in the fall he will intro­ subject-matter areas that are offers a two-year community ‘‘However, this bill has back- {theexpenses have already been duce presented in the usual general EACH TEACHER may carry new selected on basis of their an expanded program of college or four-year college ing from most of both sides o f! P3^ f°r the year. This profit science course. ^ ijte graduate credit toward a mas- I exeellance in some su b ject m*' - course. the aisle and has bi-partisan i wilt be used to purchase a new training and extension educat­ ion in agricultural engineer­ Four subject-matter courses r’s program. In addition to ¡te r field and the AAUP wtobe* However, no university or j sponsorship,” he said. I projector. DR. A. H. WILLIS and a seminar have been spe­ the usdal MA and MS degrees, ' this precept to apply to all high­ college would be required to! The bill also provides for a n : MILA ALSO passed a resolu- ing. he said. ! the university oilers a Master er educational inrtVtutiohs.* admit or once having admitted j U-man commission w h i c h tion setting up el6€^ He said that he picked this election” P £ lj University In the summer, Willis plans cifically, designed for this pro­ of Arts for teachers degree Irving Knobtoch of toe botany to be the base for to visit other colleges ana uni­ gram. These courses are ac­ departm ent and m em ber of the to keep a student it did not would Set the requirements and i cedures in men s his study of teaching and traig- versities in the United States ceptable for credit toward the especially des»gned for the sec­ AAUP. said. want. administer the scholarship pro- i AUSG and classnafficer candi- ing methods in this field. ondary school teacher. gram. They would be appoint- j dates, according to J a clk and Canada. He has received m aster of Arts for Teachers HIGH SCHOOL seniors vould ed by the govemoF for four- ! Schultz, administrative assist- Willis in concentrating oa a a Carnegie Travel Awatd for degree or, in some cases, the Master of Science degree. take - competitive exams, ad­ ministered by an 11-man com­ year terms. j ant. Members of the -commission The candidates must register characteristics research project in soil tillage, this purpose. soil compaction and traction A related summer program Complete Optical for secondary teachers of mission to be appointed by the would include three from pri- ! with Wayne Tinkler advisor, governor equipment. of wheeled chemistry, math, physics and Service “ Once* granted, the scholar-1 ™le colleges, one from Michi-! fheTr" ships wmiirt would hf. ronow ahlp for be renewable T h if wUl^f- — At this University, he, will fo r 8 a n State, one from the Uni-;their candidacy, inis w u i w conduct seminars for staff versity of Michigan, one from j low scheduling the candidate s members and graduate stu­ i Profs Chosen < biology will also be sponsored by the institute. four years, as long as the re­ — T he summer program for cipients show satisfactory aca­ Wayne State, one from the re- publicity'and appearances, maining state controlled col- For publicity, there cannot demic records as full-time stu­ leges and universities, o n e 'be any posters larger than II ing. dents in agricultural engineer­ - For Convo teachers of chemistry and math will be held for four weeks un­ dents,” Montgomery said. , In addition, he will review T w o 'University scientists der the direction of Dr. Wayne Uaa $aar* from public community col- i by 15 inches and these can only the Experiment Station re­ Taylor of the Science • Math Basy “ To be eligible, a student leges and thvee lay citizens. ! be displayed in the main lob- were picked as headline speak­ Payment must be a Michigan resident, a search projects in Not more than one person i bies. There can be no door-to- ment and counsel with the re­ ers for the annual Researchthat depart­ Plan High .school graduate of high d o o r campaigning without would come from the same in­ Conference of Chas. Pfizer Sc of: Dn. J. Chris tie end H. Beckwith, O p ltto ih to moral character, with a dedi­ cation to American- ideals,” stitution at one time. special permission from the search project leaders. resident advisor. Co., Inc., to be held in Chicago Menr to Take Montgomery added. May 7. Need would also be consider- CAMPAIGN HOURS are ffom 11 a.m. to 12730 p.m. and 5:15 Prof. R. W. Luecke, depart­ Draft Exam ed. ‘‘The scholarships would be FacingDeath p.m ^-to 6:30 p.m. in Brody. Candidates- must leave Shaw Information ment of agricultural chemis­ try, and Dr. C. K. Whitehair, A Selective Service Qualifi­ Jh tte e M fe f sw n m rf awarded without regard to by 6 45 p.m. and Brody by College of Veterinary Medicine cation Test will be given on t o Mswsdfy <—I whan m r yon wam Ato serhi - tog — 1 « * — race, religion creed or sex April 27, in the Counseling Of­ _ Join the swing to Spartan Book Store Exclusively On the Triangle N and M.A.G R H EU M m 1, THniniay Morning, Marcii 3 0 ,1 9 6 1 :v Michigan Stale New«, E u t Lansing, Michigan 5 i Kennedy Sends Housing Bill To Congress to Sa ve Our Cities WASHINGTON, ijn - Fresi- vigor the forward movement start hearings April 4. dent Kennedv sent Congressj toward a better ll/e for all / In the house the president’s W ill Congo Seek Other Aid? a 13.2 billion housing bill which Americans. ’ he sa.d. “ Essen- bill was sponsored by Rep »¡.i *_ — u better life is Albert Rains, D-Ala.,. chair* UNITED NATIONS^ N Y R. GEORGE STEINBAUER some kind of new formula for million. 1959 and 1960 UN assessments, i cial with the IN . made available in jimounts up i Officials said that if Congress. to $10,000 per family living I approves the program it could Get Vote raising money for its Congo1 unit. Utecome the most important At present, the Federal lious-1 method of-,attacking urban ! WASHINGTON W — Citizens Death Takes operation. " The Soviet bloc announced I lag Administration will insure j blight without federal subsidies, i oMf;e nation's capital were en-1 months ago that it would not' improvement loans for only A memorandum to Kennedy i dowed in 13 minutes Wednes* f pay -anything toward Congo five years and up to a limit of, from Housing Administrator | J ay “ wS a t T ev have been costs. $3.300. These loans are d i^ i Robert C. Weaver ja id : ; i S u J f o r a ^ centLy or m^re Spokesmen for the Latin counted so that the total char- We sorely lack todas the j — right to vote in national' American republics served no­ ges over a five year period can financing devices that are need-; elections tice Tuesday they are unable run to 9.4 per cent on a $3,500, ed to support and encourage Just 13 minutes eiapscd be- Dr. George P. Steinbauer, 57, to pay because of severe finan­ loan and as high as 9.7 per i the upgrading of good hom es; tween ratifications by the 37th I professor ofplant physiology cial strain at home. They have * * ? w" *n]*I,5r amounts j and neiglibpr!hoods to Preserve m h states of the 23rd I and outstanding authority on Come up with a plan that A broadening of ,home im- our cities and pio.e, t th e lm n 0 amendment to the Constitution seedsand seed cermination would put the major financial provement loans was suggested, standards of our people.allowing^ permanent residents i germination, burden for the Congo on the briefly in Kennedy’s special,. Weaver said the ent re hous-i of ^ District of Columbia tQl d i e d on campus Tuesday, five permanent powers on the housing mcsagc to^ Congress: *08 bill emphasizes the im"!vote fo r, president and vice' March 21. Security Council — the United on March 9. The proposed leg- provement of our existing hous-1 president islation he submitted today | ing supply instead of relying The botanist died following a States, Britain. Erance, Soviet is.w Hampshire House heart attack while leaving the Union, and Nationalist China.i SEND FLOWERS BY W'IRE yihg I The Th*» New spelled1 out the details of th is 1 primarily on new housing con- i approved a t _ 1 0 i p m with a Union °,n aafter f f f r bbowling o ' v'Im g with fel- and hiss other housing W recom- ij HtAstruction for better homes, as , j sprinkling of “no” votes. T h e' low facuIty membcrs L_■__ a Complicating the picture was statement from a Congo rep -, TO MOM AND YOUR mendations. " i we tlMK« have been knAH D doingBMnnea1 I . . . . _ ^ I Kansas House, which had Jtood [^ALTHOUGH artificial respir- resentative Wednesday that in These include 100,000 m ore! The 40-year loan proposal for ready for several days to etion was applied immediately view of the difficulty .the Unit-, low cost— public housing „ units. ] moderate - income . __— families T7“~7 achieve aciueve them e distinction aisuncuon of oi being! ueing; and the rescue squad was ed Nations was having in rais- j LOVED ONES AT HOME a $2 .5 billion authorization f o r would be an extension of the th eJast necessary state to act, quickly on the scene. Dr. ing money, the Congo should loans and grants for urban re- r program now limited to fam- was quickly summoned and at Stein bauer cdiild not be re- not be prevented from seeking i newal projects, and a two-year j dies displaced by urban re­ 1:14-p.m. completed the Sun­ vived. bilateral aid. * And don’t forget test program of 40 year, no- ¡-newal projects or other gov- flower State’s ratification. = - Dr. Steinbauer had been a Jean N’Sele, the Congolese | down payment FHA mortgages ‘ ernment action, T hat someone special THE SENATES of b o t h member of the faculty since delegate, told the assembly’s for low cost homes. : The president’s bill was of- states had approved earlier. 1947. He was president of the financial committee hundreds In letters to Vice President fered in the senate by Sen. John Thirty-eight .state assents were Association. of Official Seed of thousands of Congolese w eir here in town. Lyndon B. Johnson and House j Sparkman. D-Ala., chairman needed to establish the new­ Analysts of North America. without work and starving. Speaker Sam Ravburn, D- of a banking subcommittee on est amendment as law. _ “ We will knock on other! Tex.. Kennedy said his pro- housing. In a statement. Spark- Arkansas alone had reject­ DR. STEINBAUER „was a doors if the UN can’t help,” he gram would enable private en- j man said Kennedy was propos- ed the" proposal. member of the Sigma Xi, said. We have all kinds o f potted plants — terprise to “ meet the housing Ing “ a program of action, not j The amendment, submitted science honorary, the Phi Kap­ This was the situation: needi“of millions ot Americans ; only in the field of_housing. by Congress last June, will pa Pi, and the Alpha Zeta hon­ The General Assembly de- who today live under condit- but also in_the equally challen- permit residents -of Washing­ orary fraternities. cided before its recess last De- corsages — bouquets ions this nation can no longer; ging field of community de- ton, who do not cast absentee He received his three de­ cember that assessments fori afford.” Ivclopment. ballots' in states where they grees at the Universiay of the 1960 Congo costs of $48H "We niüst resume with full He said his subcommittee will claim a legal home, to vote for Minnesota and was a member million should be levied on th e 1 president for the first time in of the botany faculty a t the same basis as the normal UN Candidates Rush Convocation j A convocation for spring term 1964. The District will Have 3 co" lü« electoral votes, the minimum University of Maine before assessment. i t e University Under such a plan the United He was a Fellow of the Am­ States would contribute 32.5 NORM KESEL allowed the six least populous erican Association for the Ad per cent as the richest UN T o Assemble 1sorority rushees is planned for states 'Thursday from 3 to 6 p.m. on of Alaska, Delaware, vancement of Science and member, while others would be more recently he had assumed proportionately less. Actually 109 E. Grand River ED 7-1331 Hawaii, Nevada, Vermont and A meeting for candidates run i the second floor of the Union. Wyoming. charge of the Beal Buried Seed ning for Student Congress, class Experiment here. THE CONSTITUTION origin­ offices or AUSG president will be held 8 pmi. today in room Niglit Staff ally provided for presidential DR. STEINBAUER had pub­ electors only in the states. lished 45 research papers on 328, Student Services building. Night Editor,' L i n d a Lot- Citizens in this area voted for the physiology of seeds. Candidates or their campaign ridge; .Assistant Night Editor, president in 1792, 1796, and Survivors include his widow, managers must attend. ! Mary Basing; Copy Editor, Vic 1800, but as residents of Mary- Mrs. Cecelia Steinbauer; two Elections Commissioner Har- Rauch: Copy Assistants. A nn'land and Virginia. The Dis­ daughters: Marion, 26, a med­ old Hodge, Haslett senior, will Brainard, Boh Chamberlain. . trict was officially chartered ic al student at the University explain campaign and election Sally Derrickson, Diana Zykof |' in 1802 on land first ceded by of Michigan, and Patricia^ 14, Ordinances. - "j sky. those two states. Since then it a student a t E ast Lansing high has been neither a state nor school; and one son. John, 22, part of a state. a junior in forest products a t CAMPUS CLASSIFIEDS The amendment does not MSO. grant statehoodi although some Funeral services were, held ot its opponents said it was a Thursday, March 23, at 10 a.m. DEA DLIN ES: 1 p.m. Day Before Publication fo r Tues., step in that direction. Neither at St. Thomas Aquinas Church, Wed., T hurs., and F ri. Editions. Dead­ [does4t change the local form line for Mon. E dition: i p.m. F ri. of Government, which is ad­ The U.S. center of population out of every ministered bv three commis- in 1790 was 23 miles west of ED 2-1511 EXT. 2615 sioners appointed by the presi- Baltimore. Today, it is located dent, with Congress enacting j in Clay County, 111., about nine its laws. - • miles northwest of Centralia. A U T O M O T IV E FO R R EN T IMS FORD CttatomUn*. 46.000 ROOMS 3 ■jllM. EO 2-3301. ask fot David Slater. 2 „ 2 SINGLE BOOMS w ith board. Horn* privilege«, parking. 8111 Main 1961 VOLKSWAGONS - 1900 through TV 5-0894. 3 n i l . Choose from fo u r a t Spartan Motor«. Michigan a t Cooper. East Lansing's largest Independent dealer. t-anatng*« A PROVED ROOMS for" ren t, n ear campus. 2 connecting room s for 3 Basic EUROPE Educator “ P h w itT S p 2-0604 EM P LO YM EN T BUS BOYS WANTED, call Bill. approved 3 m en students, p rivate entrance. One nice single room good fo r grad, student. 054 LUac. ED 7-3026. SPARTAN HALL - 215 LOUIS, Large ED '7-1714. Closest house to campus. each, large supervised room s for men. w arm rooms, washbowl in 3 À Special European Educational Tour Under The Leadership Of : on your textbooks 007 E. G rand River. 2 phone. parking, lobby w ith TV. Tele­ laundry facilities. One block from campus. ED 2-2574. 2 FOR SALE MR. ROBERT SHACKLETON, Sporte E ditor buy USED at ROOMS FOR 3 in new home. P ri­ vate entrance, ceram ic tiled showers W KAR-Radio and WMSB TV. A m ost"experienced HUMANITIES BOOKS 312. badm in­ ED 2-1183 - 2 ton racket and press, .»rclirrv equip­ trav eler, Mr Shackleton will be assisted in Europe m ent. Wanted. Statistics 451. Statics -BLNOLE ROOM."APPROVED, ouiet 204. Math 310. Call BUI. ED -79721. A -home, non-smoking man, odd jobs by a professional to u r conductor, and will also have 108. 3 for right party. 139 o r 206 Ceder Street. ._ tf th e services of expert local guides in each m ajor COMPLETE SET of golf clubs with MALE STUDENT to share 2 rooms city visited. bag and cart. ED 7-0284 . 3 and bath. Furnished, utilities paid, BICYCLE SALE - Tuesdav. April -parking ED 2-2452. 2 4, 1981, 1:30 p.m. at Salvnge Yard. i HALV A BLOCK to college bus 4 Farm Lane Michigan State Univer­ V isiting: sity Cam pus A pproxim ately 95 bi- rooms and bath, furnished, private Cycles, various m akes a n d conditions entran an d other miscellaneous items will be sold at auction. Item s may h r . W ce, utilities furnished. Call estrtn Real Estate. IV- 5-6163. 1 ENGLAND HOLLAND AUSTRIA, BELGIUM ITALY MONACO USED NATURAL SCIENCE 183 TEXTBOOKS GERMANY SWITZERLAND FRANCE seen a t Salvage Yard Monday. Ar.ril , 3 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p-m. and Tuesday. PERSONAL A pril 4. prior to auction. T erm s: Cash. .4 i JERRY BLANKE and Je rry T ia n ^ F please come to the- State News office for two free passes to the- Crest Oxford University F eatu rin g : Opera at the Baths of // WHILE THEY LAST PORTABLE TLPEWRIT2R - Smith .Drive» I tv. ~ ______._______ tf Corona. C urrent model w ith tab ­ ulators. Like new. $55. XV 7-09387" 3 The Shakespeare Country Caracalla S ER V IC E Cambridge t niveriity The F oil« Bergere BASENJ1S • BASKLESS. odorless, Air Travel, Pan American or The Rhine Voyage beautiful puppies tired e.v im ported Ship Travel, Canard Line English Champion. Free pam phlet on ECHO FARMS RIDING STABt-E. this rare breed. T erm Cotta Kennel corner US 27 and Round Lake Road, - TU 2 - 2 6 1 4 . ________________7 at East Dewitt. M itchell 1-6159. 4 EXPERT THESES and general tvp- ,j 50 Days, Inclusive Rate by T rain and Ship $1155.00 F O R R EN T j ing. electric typew riter, l j vears i experience, one block from Brodv [ 35 Days, Inclusive R ate by Economy A ir $1195.00 ^ 'N A P P R O V E D 3 ROOM CABIN a t I — _ ------- ’’ D etroit to D etroit L ake Laneing for tw o m ale student* BABYSITTING IN MY home ssn Complete housekeeping facilities, w ith , Stoddard: East Lansing 2 utilities paid. $1.4 w eekly. ED 2-6922.' jggggg * ~ tf Commencing July 6,1961 by Train with Return" ROOMS W AN TED August 24, 1961 4>r WANTED TO RENT-East Lahsing. EXCEPTIONALLY LARGE paneled ,3 or 4__________ bedroom ____ _____ __ ___ unfurnished _ home. Commencing July 1$, 1961 by Air with Return bed - sitting room. Private bath. 1 Ju ly 1 or earlier for 1 or 3 years block from campus. Some reduction Professional m an's fam ily G uarantee August 16, 1961 fo r occasional babysitting. ED 2-2976. excellent cere of property. Call S ED 2-6413 — 2 Tour O rganization: — SHARE-DOUBLE ROOM »73 per 7-3436. ______ L WORKING GIRL o r fem ale ered ­ term . 4 blocks from campus. ED itate student to' share small furnished 5 house 2 blocks from BerkOy. Reason­ EAST LANSING'S PERSONALIZED BOOKSTORE able rent. ED 2-3601 a fte r ft v :n . SINGLE OR DOUBLE •room, men, 1 block from campus. Quiet neigh- ! - WANTED TO RENT for a t least borhood, 525 Albert. I t « Parking. one year by new staff m em ber, ms ED. 2-1304._______ 3 w ife., daughter.. IS, and son. 17. U nfurnished th ree bedroom . house I FOB TWO MALE grad, stu d e n t! i wlov recreation or fam ily room, l t d (OLLECE TRAVEL OFFICE Corner W. GRAND RIVER and EVERGREEN Clean, U rge room, linen furnished i Lansing or Okemos o rtfè fre d . Please 130 W. G rand River ED 2-866ÛL Cd-«n kitchen. Perking 56 each. IV ■write R Jf. Jorgenoen, >»1 Fairw ay 1-6307 after I P-m. or week-ends. I Road. State College, Pennsylvania. 1 tlirhigan Slate New*, East Michigan Thurwlay Morning« March 3 0 ,1 9 6 1 ft *___ Soviets, Americans Crossword Puzzle Jackie Appoints Curator to Catalogue Agree on Formula ACtO SS l Keen insight 5. Un-d in _ 32. Past tease 1 ending "33. Whiskers White House Furniture of Note brewing 34. Worthless: . UNITED NATIONS, N.Y., bly would take note of th* U.S. 9. B tm nder Bib that previous inquiries about no purchases 13 Im pression formula to head off full-scale sion starting Sept. 19. 14. H arem " 39. Send out tion of a new past — While, come through the White House usher. J B West, who “had recently looking over antique debate on disarmament in the This would enable the assenw room 40. Exceptional House curator—to keep records each year more than enough to do” in his | shops and galleries, but the 15. V ertical 46, So: Scot* Mrs. Kennedy’s secretary. own job. White House denied report ¡r ITS' General Assembly’s cur­ bly to get something ovyr in a ], 18. UlrhQSL 47. O ne of and data on historic items in that anythingjiad been bought rent resumed session few -short speeches th af might henihi trip lets the president’s m a n » « . „ Miss Pamela Turnure. in an­ THE FIRST LADY, since for the mansion. Diplomats said the formula have taken jnany long speech- j 19. T h ree 48 C ise lo r The first lady said die plans nouncing the new post, said -taking up residence in the ¿nnib iorrn sm all articles 4. Scarf of fur 11. Orienta! 1 to issue a catalogue for the MRS. PEARCE, the former was for the two to announce es—and help’it to finish a good 4ii. Thorii’J*- White House a little over two 20'Dromeidary 5. Saucy port dwelling ! public, listing *0 items of in­ Lorraine Waxman. a petite to the United Nations that they part of its work for the resumed 22 Sovereign’s ' rarer, aiiitr. •girl months ago. has embarked on session by the dosing d a te ,! IS. Moray terest in the White House. - would continue their fotir w* ek sons 50. Volcano 6. Total 17. Vasts with W /l / # 1 an ambitious project to refur-! brunette, mother of a 13-month- -old talks on the time, the April 26. Encourage 51. U nfathom ­ 7. Haw*« an feet SHE NAMED a young moth U rU mm/ nish it with authentic antiques; old son, is the wife of the as able — wrealh M-year-old Mrs. John N. ‘ _ _ f . place and the committee to re­ STEVENSON began the dis- 27 O uter fo rti. 8. Tangible 20. Encloaed j from the period around 1802, sistant curator of the Smith­ fications DOWN sume big-power disarmament armament-proeedure talks with 28. Jap. d ram a I i . Spigot 9. Stomach 21. Residence Pearce, a native of New Y o rk P f / f n f r I / I H N I when it first came into use as sonian. She has studied history -^negotiations. Citv. now a registrar-historian 1 the president’s home. abroad on a Fulbright Grant at Soviet delegate Valerian A. 29. S un — 2. Onet Scot. ache 22. Couples 7 10 , Threefold — .'i'C h w y 10. Ohio college She has appointed a fine arts the University oTStrasbourg THEY SAID Soviet I ’oreign Zorin at the start of this month 23. Hard outer t iithsOBian lnSti,Uti<>n EILAT, Israel. ^ T h e foun- 11. Owned candy town coating for the job. . . . . , / . „ ... committee to seek out furniture She will be on loan to the Minister Andrei A. Gromyko and GrorfVyko came into the 24 Decree —Mrs Pearce will go to work dation stone was laid at this and art. objects and help get White House and continue to-be and U.S. Chief Delegate Adali picture on March 6, shortly j / 1\ i J J « -, 7 8 m « >/_- 23. Soft drinks immediatelv in a ground floor southernmost point of the Ne- funds to buy them. paid by the Smithsonian, Miss E. Stevenson would inform the after his arrival for the resum- i v 0 27. Impudent office in the White House.! grev Desert Wednesday for an ed session starting the follow-. t4 So far. though. Miss Turnure Turnure said. No salary was Assembly’s 99-nation main po­ i | ’* J child which will become a reference Israel-American pilot plant for said, the committee Has made announced. ing day. • 30. Having left litical committee of this arran- J > Vi a will * , library on art and antique dec removing salt from sea water gement__ today in parallel The last disarmament negot­ 4 . orations The plant will use the meth­ m m . /* 31. Spear- speeches. _ iations took place in a 10-nation shaped She will compile the cata­ od of the Russian born Israeli East-West committee in Geneva 70 p / IT » if if 33. Support logue which will give the visit­ engineer. Alexander Zarachin. The informants also said the last year, March 16-June 27. 34. Showered two would introduce a joint m ing public a full rundown on It will be "built jointly by the The Communist side-accused n H 36. Hauls the furnishings of the famous' Israel Development Ministry resolution by which the assem- the Western side of stalling ?S1 37. Oblate of 29 I ?0 « Mary Immae presidential mansion at 1600 and the Fairbanks Whitney and broke off the negotiations ÜP ulate: abbr. Pennsylvania Ave Corp., New York. just as the United States was J2 ! •• JS 3* 39. Girila name Hint Sabotage about to put forward a new pro­ j5 : lJ6 .... - i 40. S-ah aped “ MRS. PEARCE will per­ Present at the ceremony were form function that has been President Itzhak BenyZvi, cab­ posal. ' curve 38 39 41. Indian necessary for some time in the inet ministers, and representa­ Caused Czech S S I 40 Ul ... r V ■'■ m yrfgfc 42 ,4 ||| — ÉË 45 memori*! post 42. Worthiest executive mansion.” said Mrs. tives of thè diplomatic corps. Kennedy. Thé price for 1.900 desalted Until now. there has been no gallons -of w ater will be less Plane Crash East Lansing « ! te l c so ---- I---- i SI scrap 43. Jap. weight 44. Bitter herb one in charge of cataloguing or than a dollar, said David Karr, keeping records of W h i t e president of Fairbanks Whit­ NURENBERG, Germany. ® —German police hinted today \ oters to FUI 6 APNe:w*ttuii/re» Wk 330 43. Yelp House possessions and provid­ ney ; This will be the lowest ing historical data about them. price ever for desalinated sea­ Pmr firn# 24 min. that sabotage may have caused the flaming crash of a Czech­ Three Offices water, he said. Mordechai Bentov, minister oslovakian airliner loaded with of development, said that an Communist Bloc technicians. Three non-partisan local of­ fices will be filled by East Lan­ PEANUTS IL BE ON \ M3URTEA«,ChA.?U:' 1 DONT LIKETO IÆAR A CAP BECAUSE ITCOVERSUPAfc' (loop Nursery ' agreement had been reached 22 of-them Russians. In all, ¿2 according to which 60 per cent persons perished. sing —voters in the biennial German and Czechoslovak in­ -spring election on Monday. 8R0U)N,IF MOU WONTMAKE Me KAvE NATURALLY CURLYHA« 7ÜUÜW V Elects Officers of the shares of the joint com­ pany will be held by Israel and Of the four candidates for WEARA CAP.. j vestigators, searching for the Mrs. Myron Kelsey was elect­ the o th er 40 by the American cause, had only the wreckage councilman, two will he select­ ed president of the Quonsef partner. and the reports of eye witnesses ed . Cooperative Nursery School for to go on. There were no sur­ - They include: GeorgeJWhite, the year starting spring term. vivors when—the four-engine vice president and engineer of , 9 Uusfttn 18 crashed to earth the Whitehills Development last night 30 miles north of Co. and member of- the East Newly elected officers are: Mrs. Jam es Butcher, vice 30% DISCOUNT On Nationally Advertised A man w ith Alopecia U niversalis* Lansing Building Code study president in charge of mem­ doesn’t need th is deodorant here. —. committee. He is an Air Force bership; Mrs. _Norman Rich. Car Rental Rates in - The turbo-prop plane was on I D O T $UpP05t VtU/'Vfc &ÆRHAD A NO, BUT I'VE HAD MV SHARE ¡ vice- president in charge of a regular flight from Prague | veteran and elder of Edgewood Pi AVER ON VOURTEAM LUMOHAS OF OTHRPBSJUAfc KINDS' He could use a woman's roll-on with impunity. MennenSpray was to Bamako, capital of Mili in Peoples Church: George \V. HAD^ATJimV GJPLVHA«. HAVE v j parent education; Mrs. Hyman Berman, secretary and Mr. EUROPE made for the man who wants a deodorant he knows will get through West Africa,. Aboard were a Cawood. ood head of George Caw- Associates: Kennedy B. YOU, CHARUfc 8R0idN? J A. M Dhanak. treasurer. For 'Free Information to the skin . . .where perspiration starts; ~ _ crew of 8 and 44 passengers, There are a few openings for _ Write To: Mennen Spray Deodorant does just that. It gets through to the all identified as East Bloc tech- of directors of theofEast Dillinger, member the board • registration spring term for skin. And it works. All day. More men use Mennen Spray than any —nicians and their families fly­ sing Savings and Loan Co. Lan­ and i children from the ages of 2 h Share- A-Car other deodorant. Have you tried it yet? 646 and $1.00 plus tag ing to jobs in africa. _ j to 5. Anyone interested in reg- 59 Dr. Tvaergade - The passengers apparently Max R. Strother. »Coropieie lack of body hair, includm* that of th« scalp, legs, armpits, fact, ate. There are on incumbents, _as i istering their children may call Copenhagen K., Denmark -realized their plane was crash­ the present mayor, Harold F. Mrs. Butcher « t ED 24.949 ing. Firemen reported a num­ i PletZ, and Councilman Arthur ber of bodies were found still fPowers are not seeking re- caught in tight embrace. The plane came down in an j election. William H. Wise, attorney, open field-near the village of I is the unopposed candidate for Ruesselbach. A sharp series •municipal judge. Joseph Fk DeLisIe .Attends Conferences todav — _ to of explosions scattered the j O’Keefe, employe of the safety wreckage over a wide area. and security department of Frances II. DeLisIe, director Deans and Counselors and the of the- Women's-Division of "American Personnel—and Guid- introducing at ^ rn trh H o u s r A young mechanic, who Fisher Body Division is thè watchedjthe falling plane from | unopposed candidate for con­ Student Affairs, took part in, ance Assn. She parUcioated in panel dis- the market square of Graefen- (stable. two c onferences between March -cussions on “Ways of Working berg, a neighboring village, I ‘ Voters will also decide on the 20 and March 31 in Denver, More Effectively with Pan- ~ reported the plane came down !*,annexation of three areas to Color ~ - _ Hellenic Groups” and “ Human in flames with engines sputter East Lansing^ * SA L E They were meetings of J h e Relations in Student Personnel v l e a n t h e b a s e m e n t* ’ ing. National Association of Women Work.” ~ Although eyewitness reports Ag . message to' bolster varied. Bavarian police report- Sundav aUenUance stands in ed that the vast majority agre- j f n’t of t h e Presbyterian ed jh ere had been an explosion j (.hurch at Watkins Glen, N.Y. in the air before the crash. A] It read s: “The snow is gone. trail of wreckage strewn for What's your excuse' now?” rthe “ washing the rags” several miles up to the crash Associated Press reports. site indicated the plane w a s. falling apart while in the air. | Sweater values to $18 — now 2 for $10 Although West Germany a n d , Czechoslovakia have no diplo-j THOMPSON’S “ cleaning the tubs’” - - | matic relations. Red tape was_ •waived to permit a team o f ' Czech investigators, headed by JEWELRY 100% Wool Skirts values ta $20 now $5 Deputy Transport M inister. Karel Stekl, to inspect the - “ emptying the coals’” crash scene. Keepsake Stekl said the plan was o n ; course and reported no trouble; Diamond Rings Blouse values to $8 — now 2 for $5 in its last message at 7:05 p .m .! The crash occurred just 10 to. “ sweeping the stairs” 15 minutes later. The 44 passengers included Watch & Clock 10 women, four children and 100% Wool Knee Hose — All $1 one baby, according to a list Repairing brought by - the eight-man Czech delegation. Besides the • Corduroy Slacks — $6 - Russians, other passengers in­ 22 3 M .A .C . A V E , cluded 12 Czechoslovakians, 9 Bulgarians and one East Ger­ _ E a s t L a n s in g “ vacuuming the cobwebs” man. GJoves — Tams -Scarfs — All Off ‘Svhitewashing the walls” 20% Off On All New Imports Of Wool Skirts, Slacks, and Suits From England i “ mopping the floor” BATHING SUITS - MEN'S JACKETS - LADIES’ & MEN'S SWEATERS V2 OFF Mat IWct« M m I wfc* 1M* IharpI NSOar kaapt yaa awaka a*4 aiart—tafalyt X eC hw - ALL CASH No Layaway I f you sometimes find studying soporific (and who doesn’t?), the word March SO to remember is NoDox.® NoDot perks yon up in mutates, with the same safe awakener found in coffee or tea. Yet NoDoz is faster, handier, more reliable. Absolutely BETWEEN BITES... 4 DAY LIMIT TO CLEAN - to non-habit-forming, NoDoz is sold everywhere without prescription. So, Sf g et that refreshing new feeling April S to keep perspicacious during study and exams—and while driving, too— with Coke! ahmys keep NoDoz in prorimity. •- ,¡¡¡4 toa Cacatola Oaapnar Ip Uwa n star aaabaMSMt—wa—M».n wpMm». fUaWar a—swMaW1 taw USaWMrtm L A -S A IA * COCA-COLA BOTTLING ( OMPANT L an sh ig , N k k i t u (on, your campus) ïfcW ¡wtowSkSO» ■ K P m « VM| m f i l iBl iw S to H M S t--. . WE SMI’ wmmWs-b V £ ¥ f ^ ! p l ï IHM Y •'! i ^ f ü WÊmmsm ä y ñ t ■ ■ !ifSSI tr .iiiijiiin in .M ii m U i i Hotel. Restaurant, and interviewing Economics, Ffrys- Outstanding Foreign Student Placement Bureau Management far I les, Chemistry, Biology, Motet- Summer employment To Reeeire lion s Chib Grant • lurgkal and Electrical Engine­ Intorvtewtag to toe P ta c e (Mich.) interviewing Early Ele­ t S. S. K r e s g e C o. in- ers. Journalism, Language, ment Bureau Wedttesdey. Ad* mentary Education. terviewtag all majors'from the I Business Administration and Aa outsteadtog f e n b M - i è A a M to wort world n h n t a d * | collages of Business A Public j Psychology. Gutman of Stearns The headline news sounded ra ­ ■ — ministration’s program for a ) & Co. “ It will be a shift toward ther critical, which leads us to V thet h sort of defense' expenditures believe that any m arket cori Michigan State University T H E A T R E Righi; ON OUR STAGE [which will be required if we as- rectlon if it is forthcoming here tsum e that 1. The major power will be relatively minor h r na­ LECTURE - CONCERT SERIES ‘SPECIAL’ MICHIGAN * I >ausing ture.” UNIVERSITY AUDITORIUM—Monday, Apr. 17, 8:15 p.m. LOAD U P YOUR CAR! ONLY ONE DOLLAR j groups have neutralized each In Person! TONIGHT *8:30 EJM. j other in H-bomb, capability, 2. IThey are reasonably satisfied The average age at which with their share of world geo- John F. Kennedy’s predeces­ Reserved Seats: $5.00, $4.00, $3.00 "Students: $4.00, $3.00, $2.00 SEE (2) COLOR HITS FOR ONE BUCK Ob Sale at Union Ticket Office JOSÉ J graphy, 3. The United States sors became President was 55 ] wlil build up its capability for years. j meeting local attacks so as to i be able at some convenient * m - —, F o r P r v m m Inform ation D ial IV 2-3905 lo o yo u n g to m a n y..: lo o la te to tu rn b a ck.. RESUMES GRECO time to draw the line against any further Communist pene­ inf his Ceapaey if SPANISHDANCERS Shu« ani Mimjms — tration areas.” of the underdeveloped HE SAID the buildup of tact­ ical power would not be great FRHIAY 3 d » P.M. 2ND WEEK! MICHIGAN THEATRE - PHONE IV. 2-7311 to JOVE Main Hoof: $3.00, $2.50. Loges: $3.00; Balcony: $2.00, $1.55 enough to start a new arm a­ ment race but big enough “to j complete the job we ded in Eu­ ☆ NOTE: D UE TO T H E JO SE GRECO B A LLET ON TH E STAGE TODAY, “ 101 DALMATIONS” W ILL NOT BE SHOWN. - THE STORY OF TWO KIDS WHO WENT TOO FARI iASTYFILMCOW.fKStMATXHI -AipffiftSMiNTCMiMIMM.KUASC N - Thetrue life story of tre actual amazing masquerader... Æ)VÉ|\rrURES*L/lUGW2*EXCfTÊh/IENrSi Too Soon to Love Shown twice at 7:22 and-19:31 2nd Feature — tonr I HIS ROMANTICESCAPADES...HISADVENTURESRSSIXDIFFERENTMEN!!! % f? -22s _ WKIAST . f r j bating No wonder millions who j' D ‘ e /ig k tfil/\ * * music by read the sensational / w om an !MANCINI best seller about 1 L composer of J America's r incredible Fred Dtmar» #\ say it makes fiction D e fh J te A f «EARTH best-selfin( j zeenHame... No winder D e k t/o u s /j «cords! [ Shown Once At 10:38 — bis story ms teetered 3 P lease different times in UFE FRIDAY and SATURDAY 3 FEATURES ' N ote! Tomorrow IflT A L IE W O O D / R O B E R T W A G N E R . GOOD •****, '.uinu: I i m : I FRIDAY " s a r f & s . v o r x t i ( L W M IÎALS ’ Doors Open pÆtfÿ&lMLT ■Walt DB UI5N NEW ALL-CARTOON Ff neys FEATURE 3:00 P.M. [One Hunèêdand _ I l i Sue Ane Langdon Dalmatians " T f c C H M lC O U J a * GREGORY PECK >) JCAN wuiwWyilRS X I M iB E ll'G m u ito cottane* F ia ta re shown at 1, 3:IS. 5:3«, 7:55. 10:28 P.M. EXTRA SPECIAL! SAo.D at 7:25,4:40. 7:10. 0:30 P.M. SIMMON CARROLL T H E ■BIG- - RAYM ONDMâSSEY-joanbiaokmanbobertmiodleidn BAKER 1l i C C harlton O U N T R Y v te j, j aneephr te UHI ffWBLaewM Ir ROBERT IIUUJtjM-ftWmOtr ROBERT ARTHUR es“Father Devin" HESTON * I BWVERSAL-MTEÌOUT10MI PICTURE «SS t •URL HORSE IVES HELD OVER! m c m im , ----- 2ND W G W EEK F eatu re T oday.1:15, - 3:20 - 5:25 - 7:35 t 9:45 ONLY 4 M ILES E. of CAMPUS on US 16 M i« Swimmers B aseb all Golf and Tennis Teams Place Siti Squad Wiifr Wrapup Southern Tour In NCAA 5 Games Die Spartan tennis squad has Davisu Cup Committee of the won two and lost two on their Western Lawn Tennis Associa­ 1 southern swing during spring tion. G ra p p le rs Arc 8th On Vacation .. vacation. The first two Spar­ The Western LTA operates In And Fencers 17th Tour o f South tan matches w e r e against five states and Drobac’e ap* George W a s h i n g t o n and pointment was announced by Georgetown, whom the Spar­ t By Bfeft BURNS By BEN BURNS tans easily outdistanced S-l and j Wallace Holzman'of Cincinnati, State Newt Sports Writer Stale News Sports Editor , 7-2. Ohio, chairman of the Davis Norm Young was Michigan The third and fourth Spartan j Cup Committee. Michigan State’s baseball ixyrtches were against Virginia j MSU’s yarsity golf team, has State’s outstanding performer squad journeyed south during and North Carolina. The Spar- ! lost two straight on their south­ a t the NCAA meets held during spring vacation to warm up for tans were edged by 6-3 and 5-3 ern four to. the University of spring vacation. He won MSU’s the Big Ten season. Memos. - Georgia, th e y were edged in first wrestling championship The Spartan squad coached MSU TENNIS coach, Stan the first match by a 14-13 score since 1958 when Ken Maidlow Drobac, has been appointed and they dropped the second by John Kobs has a 5-2-1 record vice chairman of the Junior by a 25Vk-lVk margin. won the 191 lb. class. for the trip so far and will re­ The Spartan wrestler was turn to campus on Monday.^- cohsidered the underdog thro IN THEIR opening g a m e hghout the meet, but defeated against Wilmington the Spar­ Lansing Skat i ng Club tans lost to Wilmington 8-6. four straight opponents to win-, They proceeded to split with thè 137 lb. title. Camp Le Jeune by winning two: 8-3 and 5-4 and losing one, MSU IC E A re n o ÌN YOUNG’S first bout he 7-0. •cored a takedown and a one Later they beat Wilmington point predicament with 20 sec­ onds left to win it 8-6. He beat 5*2 and thén beat Farleigb Dickinson 83 and tied them 4-4. SH O W Dirrell Kelvington of the Uni­ In the last game the Spartans TROPHf OF1HCTÒRY—The Cinctoati Bearcats coach ' FRI. SAT. 8pm versity of Pittsburgh in his won over Apprentice 18-2. second bout by a 9-8 score. and players hold aloft their trophy after defeating Ohio R e s e r v e d %1 Kelvington had beaten Ybung i p a c c o r d in g to information releases the Sjpïrtan squad fig­ State, ship 70-65, In the National Collegiate (NCAA) champion­ game. In the foreground, from left ore: Coach Ed S e a ts B a lc o n y 1 J A p r il 7 - 8 twice previously by big scores. m ures to be long on pitching and Jnnker, Tom Thacker and Bob Wtesenhaha (21) captain Young won his third bout by short on just about everything à 3-2-score and the fourth with •( the team. (AP wirephoto). * _ . else. • 5-3 score on a takedown in Coach Kobs’ 36th Spartan Y our K ey to B etter V alues . . . th i last twenty seconds. th e Spartans finished in a tie for eighth with 19 points. Young scored 14 of those. NORM YOUNG MSU wrestler won the only Spartan NCAA championship during spring vacation by winning four straight boats at the Corvallis, Ore. meet. The wrest­ squad will have four letter winning pitchers, who had a 14- 6 record tast year and just three other regulars returning this spring. C am p u s C lassifieds TONIGHT Q&Ga!up& (Author of “/ Was a Tt*n-ao* Dwarf". " Ths M mtf A c c o r d in g to assistant Loses of Dobit GiUis”, etc.) coach Grady Pennirtger, “ We ling team placed in a tie for eighth and Young accounted Veteran pitchers for the Spar­ lost four matches by one point éach and we felt we should for 14 of the squads 19 points. — tans are Mickey Sinks 8-3, Wes Klewicki 2-0, Bob ROSS 2-1 and At The Gallery Ken A very 2-2. T H E EN G IN EERS HAVE H A IR Y EARS have come in third instead of OTHER 1968 regulars who 547^2 E. Grand River - the tie for eighth.” George Hobbs and Jerry Hdke scored two points each for the Spartans and Duane Grad Kickers Meet are back include Bill Schud- lich, first base, who hit .239 last year, Ron Holmes, second base, .217 and P at Sartoriusrinfield- ESPINA Flamenco GuUati»t and, Today, in this age of technology when engineering graduates are wooed and courted by all of America’s great industries, how do you account for the-fact that Rimbaud Sigafoos, who fin­ Wqlfert scored one. _ I The Grad Kickers, a newlyi mar Fratzke, Horst Gierke, outfield; .264. ished at the very top of his class at M.I.T., turned down him- th e swimming team placed ! formed soccer team which is j Cecil Heron, Walt Iwanow, Other returning letter win­ International Folktinger dreds of attractive job offers to accept employment aa a machin­ fifth in their meet at Seattle, ! composed of Michigan State i Johnson Aremu, Dave Mfcky, ners are Wade Cartwright .182 W ash." _ , 9 P.M. — Cover Charge 75c ery wiper at the Acme Ice Company at a salary of 320 a week j graduate students and former] Janos Nevai, Rolf Schulze,-An­ and Tom Riley .212 outfielders. m with a twelve-hour day, a seven-day week, and only fifteen 1 fH E 400 YARD freestyle varsity players, will m eet! gelo Pilitsis, Paul Winther, Sam DUE- TO B ob- Monczka’s team consisting of Jeff Matt* I Thursday for practice and oth- Ramthu, Alan McKnight, Mo­ dropping out of jchoc&beqkuse f.-: •*«-.{ ’ minutes for lunch* Ion, Bill Wood, Larry -Jones hammed Hanifl, Cliven Victor of Ulness the eatchlng spot is I know what you are thinking: “Cherckts la foment!" You aie and Mike Wood finished sec­ ond. MSU’s 400 yard medley relay ! L' er business at 5 p.m. soccer field on campus. a t the and John Southin. up for grabs among Cartwright, Additional persons interested football guard" George Azar The club was formed in Feb- in playing soccer are encour­ and Gordon Hiortaaa. the GALLERY thinking that Mr. Acme, head of the Acme lee Company, has g beautiful daughter with whom Rimbaud is madly in love end squad finished third and was i ruary and has been admitted to aged to contact the club sec­ In the infield thé best bets be took the job only to be near her. made up of: Mattson, Bill Jin- j the Western Michigan Soccer [retary, Rolf Schulze at ED are Ron Henderson a t second. IS NOW UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT Friends, you are wrong. It is true that Mr: Acme does have gleton, Carl Shaar, and M. \ League. The-WMSL has sched- 7-1213 any evening. The chief- Said Calderone at third and a daughter, a large, torpid lass named Claodia who spends all Wood. >uled a 16-g a m e schedule problem facing the soccer club ! Wayne Fontes and Carl Charon . her waking hours scooping marzipan out of a bucket and staring Bill Steuart finished fifth in 1against teams representing all is the lack of a sponsor and a • and Don Livensparger .at first the 100 yd. butterfly event and j ot the major cities in western playing field. If a field can be or shortstop. The Policies and programs have been at a television set which has not worked in some years. Rimbaud Mattson finished 3rd in the 100 j and central Michigan. located in the Greater Lansing I In the outfield the contention has not the slightest interest in Qavdia; nor, indeed, does any y f 4( ■.'fijjf* -x. w v • * ' * * '* *• r ••'•>- g f •<,.y*tr- II ^ '],*. • S V % •• •'" ’v ■' *;* «■-> -' ' '• •'* 4 * Gome in and see us this week. You all know a - , ■' •_ - '. ' • . : ■_ •■ -■ where we are, same location for over 20 years. fetfvSj BFf'WW! •.Î !*■* m mm m m