Weather Report Number Please Scattered showers and occasional snow State New» has new téléphoné Une*. For are . predieted for today by t h e U . S . news (tasks ■ extensions 2115, 2616 or Weather Barean. Expected high 16 de­ 3117. For all Mvertising calta, including grees. Tuesday's outlook, partly cloudy classified ads, use extensions 2642 or and caaL 2644. „ • - Serving MSU F or 5 2 Y e a n a»«—u Cl«*» Postan East Lansing, Michigan, Monday M orning, May 1 , 1 9 6 1 6 Pages paW at Saw jLanawa. Mlieh. Cents Kasavubu Is After I I k Tf • lva a-J -CTMJP . I i I P 1L m Li i r U B J y Laotian Rebels Offering W Ê B Ê ÈmÊmÊ m ¡¡§ I*St W Cease-Fire Proposals iÿ , Katanga Explain" A r r e s t O f Tshom be WASHINGTON (JV-The Lao­ S ecretary of S ta te D e a n Rusk United States is consulting with I ly silent Sunday , th ere was one tian re b e ls’ offer to discuss a spent m uch of Sunday a t his of­ its allies. P resu m ab ly it is m ak- c le a r sign of m ilitary p rep ara- cease-fire stirre d well-qualified ing c le a r its fe a r th a t com plete 1tions on this side'of the Pacific, COQUILHATVILLE. The fice conferring with his fa r e a st­ collapse of the Royal goverff-t This cam e in the sudden, 11th Congo W)—The Congolese Cen­ p riv ate hopes but no public op­ ern advisers. T here w as no of­ tim ism Sunday am ong often- m ent can not be long delayed if ¡Jiour cancellation of a 6,000 tra l G overnm ent is determ ined ficial com m ent on these dis­ rebel ^p re ssu re continués and ¡m an train in g m ission to E ur- disappointed ad m in istratio n of­ cussions but it was ap p aren t to d isarm K atanga P resident ficials. th ere is no outside help. ;ope: _ th ere w as deepening convic­ Moise T shom be’s arm y and get M eanw hile, plans w ent for­ The U nited States, however, tion th a t the presen t situation TROOPS standing ready to w ard for P resid en t K ennedy’s did not lay down any hard I board a fleet of about 300 trans- rid of all his white m ercen­ can not continue m uch longer. m eeting to day w ith th e N ational deadline on a cease-fire. I oceanic tran sp o rt planes were aries, F oreign M inister Justine While the Pentagon w as solid- ] retu rn ed to th eir b arrac k s at S ecurity Council—th e fourth IT WAS m ade known th a t the Bomboko declared Sunday. sessiop for th a t top stra te g y i F t. Cam pbell. Ky., at m id-after- F o r the first tim e, the Cen- group w ithin 10 days and p er­ noon Saturday. They w ere t r a 1 G overnm ent explained w hy it arrested the president of rich K atanga when he tried haps th e critica l one in the long-draw n c risis of Laos. In a sudden change of plans, State Dems Start Drive ¡scheduled to begin arriv in g in ¡G erm any Sunday, j The obvious im m ediate re a ­ K ennedy c u t sh o rt his w eekend To w alk out of a Congo unity conference, h ere la st W ednes­ a t his fa rm re tr e a t n e a r Mid- dleburg, Va., to- re tu rn to the To Raise College Aid son w as to keep these forces readily available for quick use elsew here if needed. The White d ay . - ca p ita l Sunday n ight in stead of M onday m orning. T here w as By SAM MARTINO com plete attendance of th eir House m ade it am ply plain th at TH E HARSH dem ands m ade no indication w h eth er th e Laos State News Staff Writer m em bers in th e House when the cancellation w as an im m ed­ on the. vigorous, independent Member* of Green Splash, Women’s swimming honorary, carry lighted candles in ­ situation fig u red in th is. the bill com es up fo r debate iate resu lt of S atu rd ay ’s urgent to pool at the beginning of the finale during the afternoon matinee presentation of D em ocrats in th e S tate House this week m eeting of the Security Coun- Tshom be m ade it c le a r th a t *‘My Favorite Things.’’ The show took place last Saturday in the Women’s In­ WHILE DIPLOMATS held to of R ep resen tativ es a re p lan ­ —T he R epublicans hold a two i cU Presided ov,e r Kennedy. Congo P resid en t Joseph K asa­ tram ural Building and featured a water ballet. The performance was repeated at a cautious, w ait-and-see posi­ ning an all out cam paign today m an edge over th e D em ocrats At th e D efense D epartm ent, vubu now is determ ined to 8:00 thatiright. (Photo by Fred Bruflodt) ______ tion—a t le a s t until M onday—th e to w re st enough votes from R e­ (56-54) in th e House buLaccord- ev e n the sm allest detail re g a rd ­ b rin g K atanga under—cen tral n a tio n ’s a rm e d forces a p p e ar­ publican ra n k s to am end th e ing to M rs. McCollough some j ing th e p resen t locations o r control. ed to be p re p a rin g for any role co n troversial education b i l l R epublicans m i g h t change j plans for deploym ent of troops, Tshom be angrily quit the they m ay be called on to play which would give state colleges ran k s to vote for an increase in j ships o r planes w as veiled be­ conference of Congolese lead ­ e r s because K asavubu a g re e d ,, 35 New Tower Guards in Southeast Asia o r elsew here. and universities m ore m oney. th e bill. hind tig h t secrecy. B ut -they w ere doing it in a “ We (the D em ocrats) a re go­ -H o w ev er, as fa r as could be to UN dem ands th a t all foreign R epublican legislators con­ M o rta r B o a rd Taps 19 Coeds tight-draw n secrecy equalled ing to try and bring th e bill up civilian and m ilitary advisers tend th a t the S tate’s budget ¡ learned ^an o th er planned exer­ only in w artim e. to th e G overnor’s re q u est,” c a n ’t tak e any increases while j cise in which U.S. forces w ere get out of the Congo. K atanga The S tate D ep artm en t studied said M rs, Lucille H. McCol- leans heavily on B elgiun civil­ a c e rtain n um ber of D em ocrats p articip atin g was underw ay— w ith in te re st news dispatches lough, rep resen tativ e f r o m ian an d m ilitary advisers and claim th ere is enough money in j jhis one off the tip of south­ h a s m any w hite m ercen aries in its arm y , considered I h e best in th e Congo. A t A n n u a l M a y M o rn in g Sing from Laos which told oi a re b ­ W ayne county. el cease-fire offer b u t said the Gov. John B. Swainson asked d ep a rtm en t h ad no official the leg islatu re for $117 millioff word. In th e absence of such for education. His req u est w as th e trea su ry to p erm it th e in- ea st Asia. crease. M ichigan S tate is seeking an B O M B O K O SAID THAT indefinitely by the C entral Con­ May Fifty-four M orning coeds Sing w ere a t honor­ B eau­ enaded P resid en by t a out-going n d % M rs. M John ortar A. Susan G illiland, a s A t lpena; Lansing. JennL word, -Tshom be will be held captive ed this m orning a t the annual B oards and Tow er G uards. fe r G reen, E a s t Lansing; P en e­ m ent, b u t one official said p ri­ priation C om m ittee to $109:1. lope G re e n „ E v ately th e th re a t w th as e no re p official o rted com m ove ­ sliced T he by th Senate e S p enate’s assed th Appro­ e bill in crease of $7 million over its 1960-61 budget of $29.4 for op­ eratin g expenses. U niversity Eichmann officials claim MSU will be se­ golese G overnm ent u n d e r m ont Tower. house a rre st. It w as indicated Tapped into M ortar Board, H annah held a b re ak fa st for M ortar B oard and S p artan th a t he soon m ay be tra n s ­ "senior w om en’s honorary, w ere m en’s L e a g u e entertain ed M arilyn H ruby, Cicero, III.; Wo­ Ju Jo an H a rris, B attle C reek; by P rin c e Souvanna Phoum a with th e cu t and th e House d ith How ard, E lm h erst, 111.; “ is encouraging—if tru e .” W ays an d M eans Com m News- dispatches said Sou­ gave its approval to th e m eas­ crease is not m ade o v er last ittee verely h u rt if an adequate in­ y e a r’s budget. Gets Help Tow er G uards, a t breakfast. B a rb a ra Je a n H um e, Alexan­ v an n a, recognized as P re m ie r u re F rid ay . fe rre d to the capital a t Leo­ 19 junior womem Tower G uard, poldville. An enem y of UN intervention sophom ore w om en’s honorary, tapped 35 new freshm an m em ­ New M ortar B oards a re : d ria , Var; J a n e K iesler, O tter by th e com m unist-dom inated Sharon Coady, C edar Springs; L ake; K a ren K rau s, L ansing; P a th e t L ao reb els, offered to p o “ We expect to get full sup­ rt from our side and to p e r­ E ig h t o th er colleges and n i - v ersities a r é m aking sim ilar! From Past in th e Congo, Tshom be h ad de­ b e rs. - — Linda Lee Converse, B elding; R osem ary K uhn, E a s t Lansing. m eet g o v ernm ent re p re se n ta ­ suade a few R epublicans to pleas claim ing th a t th eir o p er­ m an d ed the Coquilhatville con­ T h e honored coeds w ere ser­ Vicki Lou E stes, B attle C reekr M ary Jo Lindsey, D etroit; tives in a so rt of no-m an’s-land back a n am en d m en t,” stated ations will be crippled unless j JERUSALEM UFI — F o rm er feren ce re je c t the United N a­ K aren Luedtke, B erea, Ohio; 35 m iles n o rth of V ientiane, ad ­ M rs. McCollough, who is a m ore money is m ade available G estapo asso ciates of Adolf tions p ro g ram for stabilizing J a n e t R ockafellar, V erm ont- m in istrativ e cap ital of Laos. m em b er of the House E duca- to them . j J r - { E ichm ann now living in Ger- th e Congo. He gave th a t as his condition fo r retu rn in g to the Red China Facing New v i l le r Ju d y Sanders, H a z e 1 SOUVANNA offered to m eet C rest, III.; N ancy Sim m ons, before W ednesday and th e gov­ N orth Tonaw anda, N.Y ., an d ern m en t said it would send out h orse an d buggy days. We need tion C om m ittee. If the D em ocrats a re -sue- j “ We c a n ’t go back to the cessful in tacking on an am end- ¡ m any m ent to th e bill for an in crease testify a re '■willing and able to in h is'trial, assistan t De­ conference t a b l e . Bomboko said Tshom be’s te rm s a re un­ acceptable. Disasters This Spring L a u r a W ebster, St. C lair a flag-of-truce re p resen ta tiv e Shores. M onday m orning. A sim ilar T apped into Tow er G uard w hite-flag m ission S aturday to d en m eet ts,” th she e needs added. of our D em ocrats a re calling for proval. stu­ in funds, th e bill will be re tu rn ­ ed to the Senate for its ap­ Bruch said Sunday. — — fense Counsel D ieter Wechten- B ut the fact th at they served T H E CONFERENCE.. deci­ TOKYO Lfr—Red China faces since the beginning of the w ere: K aren A nderson, GrQSse failed to estab lish contact w ith in H itler’s storm troopers is sions apply also to rebel leader the th re a t of new calam ities y e a r,” the agency w ent on, but lie; Carol A rm strong, MilfOrd; the reb els. enough to rule out th eir ap ­ Antoine G izenga’s provinces of less than a y e a r afte r the w orst following recent rainfall “ sow­ M arjorie B eatty, G rosse P ointe It w as the first tim e th e re b ­ O riental and Kivu which Bom­ p earan ce before the court try ­ n atu ra l d isasters of the century ing has proceeded a t a faster Woods; Ju lie Bock, B altim ore, els h ad offered to m eet any­ boko claim ed w ere in a “ state M d.; L inda B rody^ D ow ner’s w here outside th eir own strong­ ing E ich m an n in Israel, caused severe shortages of p a c e .” of te rro r.” Gizenga boycotted 111.; J e a n B uchanan, P ro secu to r Gideon H ausner food for its 650 m illion people. “ Sowing of- m aize, m illet, j Grove, holds. It ra ise d a possibility th e m eeting. sorghum and o th er g rain crops B irm ingham . th a t the ce ase-fire issue m ay be h as said th a t Isra el car.nct Tfte official New China News The conference called on the Je a n Bullock, B ethesda, Md.;_ p retty Well resolved by the tim e prom ise im m unity for all for­ Agency disclosed Sunday th a t is being ru sh e d in the Yellow a rm y in the rebel provinces not m e r N azis the defense m ay China has been hit by a spring riv e r basin a fte r the recen t D elores Cabic, Clifford; M ary th e secu rity council m eets at to support G izenga’s leftist r e ­ wish to sum m on. drought in the n o rtheast and rainfall. Most provinces in the Cribbs, L aingsburg; B a rb a ra th e White R ouse a t 4 p.m . Mon­ gim e and to recognize the auth­ e a s t cen tral areas, a series of basin h ad rain fall ranging C urtis, R o ch ester; Anne De- day. It will then be early Tues­ Some, H ausner said, would ority of Mobutu and K asavubu. from ten to forty m illim eters Vroom e, G rand R apids; Ju d ith day in Laos. hailstorm s in the southeast and be a rre s te d the m inute they It asked K asavubu to "force (about *2 to 11% inches) a few E ngle, R om eo; Linda Fiebing, floods in the south; stepped on Israeli soil and th e expulsion of all .foreign days ag o ,” the agency added. T rav erse City; G retchen Fio, brought to tria l for com plicity The Peiping regim e already diplom ats in- Stanleyville, Gi­ t h e agency zenga’s capital, not accredited has been forced to go on the on th e ac re a g e affected by Goldstein, L ansing. to th e Leopoldville governm ent. w orld m ark e t for food, placing gave drought, flood a n d hailstorm s. no figures G reenfield, M a D iane B roover, F lushing; s s . ; Stefany Rebels In in N a zi crim es ag ain st the Jew s du rin g th e w ar. This m eans Com m unist bloc huge o rd ers with C anada and W echtenbruch retu rn ed S at­ and some A frican diplom ats. A ustralia. C anadian A gricul­ “ A p a rt of farm lan d in G e rry Hinkley, M arshall; L in­ K w angtung province w as a f­ d a H um e, St. Jo sep h ; Shirley By a unanim ous vote itr ap­ tu re M inister Alvin H am ilton fected by flood o r w ater-log­ L indner, M ilw aukee, W ise.; Angola u rd a y night from a trip to G erm an y to confer with pos­ sible w itnesses. proved K asavubu’s re cen t a c ­ announced S aturday his coun­ ging as a re su lt of the rise of J a n e Lytle, R oyal O ak; M ary cord with the United Nations— try w as m aking a deal for a the w a te r level of the P e a rl M clnnis, C ed ar Springs; D on­ an agreem ent Tshom be had de­ m assive g ra in lift to C hina’s riv e r and its trib u ta rie s ,” " th e na M itchell, D allas, T e x .; Anne Defeated Ju stic e Moshe Landau, p re­ siding o v er th e th ree^u d g e pan-, m anded “th a t the conference hungry millions th at will r u n . . , . It said the P em b erto n , Lockport, N .Y .; nel try in g E ichm ann, had ad -' should condemn. I well over the $60 m illion grain | LISBON iff)—P ortuguese m ili­ vised Chief Defense Council Drr- biggest ra in fa ll- reg istered in P a tric ia P odlesak, Bloomfield The conference directives agreem ent^ signed with Peiping the province w as as “high as 12 Hills. ta ry forces Sunday drove -off R o b ert Servatius and H ausner u rg e K asavubu to use the U nit­ la st Ja n u a ry . inches. 1,000 arm e d rebels who attac k ­ M arlene. Tubenstein, S y ra­ ed th e village of M ucuba in to work out a possible m eth o d ' ed Nations, to help c a rry out The New China News Agency for in terrogating w itnesses in “ H undreds of thousands of cuse, N .Y .; R uth S chm itter, th e policy of unifying the Congo, rep o rt said a b itte r dry spell peasants, w orkers and other Masoir; M ary Schubert, De­ no rthern Angola, the L usitania a G erm an court, with cross ex­ go. persists in coastal Shantung sections of the urban popula- News Agency safd. am ination by an Israeli re p re­ tro it; L au ralee Sherwood, P o n ­ T i r e government -assisted sen tative there. P rovince . .. in n o rtheast China, tion have io in ed the- b a ttle to tia c ; C arole Sterling, Blue Is­ w here the Yellow riv e r em pties^ tect ^ dikes and re s e r news agency said the rebels H au sn er proceeds today with land, Hi.; M ary Sw enson, Is- killed -two negroes and four CEREMONY IN EMBATTLED LAOS — Palace guards pull into the sea, and neighboring voirs and d ra in excess w ater th e prosecution case against. linton. O n t.; D iane Upton, G a r­ whites among the village de­ gilded “dragon ship” with remains of Laos’ late King RedsCelebrate Hopei Province. from the fields to rescue the den C ity; Ju d ith W estle, Mt. fenders before airborne forces “ These a re a s have had no affected cro p s,” the rep o rt P le asan t, and D eborah Wil­ Staavang Vong to position in front of gilded" pyre for cre­ tailed N azi cruelty ag ain st the E ichm ann. So fa r it has de­ ra in or only a little ra in in the said. arrived. The villagers- had mation ceremony at Luang Prabang. The King, who died in Jew s in th e early days of the Cocky May I)a\ reeen t period,” it said. S everal h ailsto rm s have hit _ liam s, P o rt Huron. radioed M o rtar B oard and Tow er are dying . . . have no more for help saying: “We 1959, was center of attention in the capitol, Saturday, where efforts to attain a cease-fire failed, (if Wirephoto) H itler regim e. “ T here had been practically the Kwangsi Chuang region G u ard m em b ers serenaded the The p ro se cu to r' expects to MOSCOW UP)—The Soviet Un­ no rain over half of Honan P ro ­ since late M arch, affecting a livifig units of th e new m em ­ ammunition. They seem to wind up his case ag ain st E ich ­ grow from the grass.” îon today celebrated the first vince in ea st c e n tra l China co n siderable acreag e, it added. b ers T hursday night. May D ay of the, m an-in-space Meanwhile, it was announced that Gen. Julio Botelho Moniz, U. S. ’Jews, Ben-Gurion m ann around the m iddle of June. former defense minister, and Defense Attorney Servatius e ra in a buoyant, bum ptious mood—tem pered by the diffi­ Try to Outdo Fort Lauderdale Gen. Albuquerque Freitas, for­ Reach Understanding say s E ichm ann is anxious to tell his own story in court, but culty of getting food and drink mer chief of the Air Farce gen­ NEW YORK (if)—'The A m eri- 1would "underm ine the sense of th e 66-year-old G erm an law yer for the festivities. - The traditional order 6 f the day from M arshal Rodion Y. Collegians Riot in Galveston eral staff, havebeen placed on the reserve list. can Jew ish C om m ittee said | security and stability of Amer- h as not said definately w hether Moniz was relieved by Pre­ Sunday th e relationship be- iean-Jew ry^” mier Antonio Oliveira Salazar tw een Isra el and Jew s in o th er be will sum m on E ichm ann to The 74-year-old Isra eli leader \ the* stand M alinovsky, R ussian defense GALVESTON, Tex. Wh-Hun- MORE T H A N 600 youths fined. Last night 150 youths who took over the post himself dem ocracies has been clarified touched off a storm of protest | — dreds of p e a c e - officers were arrested for gathering in April 13. The Prem ier said at in an .understanding with Is­ among Jewish leaders in the m inister, hailed w hat he te rm ­ ed into rock chunking youths. ed the Soviet Union’s posses­ breathed sighs of relief Sunday Several shots were fired but no as an uneasy calm settled over streets and for unlawful as­ the time that the move was be­ raeli Prim e Minister David United States last sembly. cause of the situation in An­ Ben-Gurion. He said then that Israel must IStudent Bikes sion of "th e m ost up-to-date this resort city after two nights one was hurt from gnnfire. City officials and several stu­ gola, the West African-colony. Ben-Gurion was quoted by have more immigrants espe­ m eans of w a rfa re .” of r i o t i n g by college-age Scores were treated fbr cuts dents likened the trouble to an outbreak earlier this month at Apparently Salazar had de­ the committee as saying: cided that more and urgent "We, the people of Israel, cially educated Jews, and cited the Jewish law of the Talmud Need Licenses youths. and bruises. All students who own bicy­ Texas Rangers and officers Fort Lauderdale, Fla. military help should be sent to have no desire and no intention which says: One death resulted indirectly to interfere in any way in the “Whosoever dwells outside cles and live at an East Lan­ Board To Appoint from neighboring Houston rush­ ed here after the situation got from the riots. George L. Wind- “We,_ were just trying to make Fort Lauderdale look like Angola and did not gain sup­ port from Moniz, who instead internal affairs of Jewish com­ the land of Israel is considered sing address must get East sheimer, 63, of the Harris Coun­ to have no God.” Lansing bicycle licenses im­ out pf hand Friday night. a picnic,” one youth was quot­ demanded changes in the na­ munities abroad.” Publication Beads Police said the trouble start­ ty Sheriff’s office died Satur­ day night in a two-car crash. ed as saying. tional administration. The committee s a i d the He also called for closer ties mediately. The Board of Publications ed in fights along the beach ”1 THINK they came down Gen. Bernardo Thiago Mira Prim e Minister agreed that the between Isrqgl and Jews living The only requirements a r e . He was a reserve officer sent in other countries. serial number, make and color will meet Monday, May 8 at front-as 3,000 college students here from Houston to patrol here trying for trouble just Delgado has been named chief emigration of Jews to Israel is 4 p.m. in 150 Student Services from Texas, Oklahoma and like in Fort Lauderdale,” said of the Air General Staff. at their own “ free discretion.” Ben-Gurion ' later, however, j of the bicycle. streets. He also was quoted as saying said he had been misunder- S The 1961 licenses can be ob- to appoint next year’s editors Louisiana swarmed here for Police Commissioner Walter A complete reshuffle in the and business managers of the splash day, the opening of the THE MAJOR trouble occur­ Rouke Jr. “They weren’t or­ Portuguese cabinet is expected nothing should "be done by the stood and that he bad no inten- ¡tamed a t the East Lansing — — -j.— A. ...L ; nl. — - - -- • State News, Wolverine, and Galveston beach season, red Friday night. More than ganized but they were looking to be announced within 36 Israeli government which wou tion of saying 4tin4 A that American !f M IM A «|4 police a4|A(I tKAWI O station from 9 a.m.VM 4to A Spartan Engineer. were arrested as officers wad- 500 youths were arrested and for trouble.” hours. I s r a e l i government which Jewry is godless. 13 p.m. EDITORIAL. M onday M orning. May 1« 1961 ip- v E M S s g “It’« AD Right To Seat Them. T tey 5« Not Americans" Individualism Rules Changes at U of M Don’t Let Me See Reflect Student Responsibility My Pockets Filled Two recent news articles in the Michigan him” as meaning that he must be presented A young man lived with his parents in a public with his accusers. If such actions are put housing development. He attended public ^school, Daily reflect very definitely the growing roderne free «, and participated in toe free responsibility that university students are into practice on this campus it wiD bring lunch program. He entered the Array ami upon asking for and getting. They are finally re­ •about revolutionary changes in administra­ discharge kept his national service life insurance. ceiving some rights-that nil adults in the tive disciplinary actions and operation of He then enrolled in the state university working United States supposedly have. The April 18 student judiciary. part time for the state to supplement his GI edition ran this article: The second Dailey article whjch ran April check. “Universities may be sued for a re v e rs e 21 went as follows: UPON GRADUATION he married a public of disciplinary-action if due process of law is “Joint judiciary council said yesterday it health nurse and bought a farm with an FHA will interpret the forthcoming regulation loan, then obtained an RFC loan to go into busi­ not followed in the procedure, a lawyer said ness. A baby was born in the county hospital. yesterday at the first National Conference of permitting women to visit men’s apartments He a ranch with the aid of a GI loan University Attorneys in the Michigan Union. to mean that ‘apartment parties are per­ and obtained emergency feed from the govern- “ROBERT B. MAUTZ, Dean of academic missible as long as all other rules applying affairs at the University of Florida sees a to this sort of gathering are not violated.’ mLater he put part of his land in the soil bank national trend toward extending university A statement released for joint judic by and the payments helped pay off his debts. IBs chairman Charles Gessner, ‘62 said that parents lived very comfortably on the ranch with liability to unwritten guarantees. O ne of their social security and old-age assistance those guarantees is the constitutional r i g h t probably any violations occuring under the checks. to ‘due process of law' if t h e U n iv e rs ity is new ruling will stem from illegal an d /or THE COUNTY AGENT showed him how to ter­ acting as a ‘quasi-judicial body.’ excessive use of alcoholic beverages. race it, then the government paid part of the cost “This means that before a University m a y “THE STATEMENT explains that the of a pond and stocked it with fish. The govern­ take a major disciplinary action, the student state law applying to the consumption of ment guaranteed him a sale for his farm pro­ must know the charges against him and have alcohol very definitely applies to apartment ducts. v - fl. . parties. Minors are not permitted to consume Books from the public library were delivered time to prepare his defense, a c c o rd in g to to his door. He banked money which a govern­ Ralph S. Lesemann of I l l i n o is / T h e s tu d e n t alcohol in Michigan. _ ment agency insured. His children grew up, en­ also has a right to defense counsel, fair h e a r ­ Let us hope that the new ruling on the tered public schools, ate free lunches, swam in in g on the charges w ith th e r i g h t to sp e a k liquor rule will not set off a series of ir­ public pools. The man owned an automobile, so and supply witnesses on his ow n b e h a lf. responsible acts on the part of MSU students. he favored the federal-aid highway program. “If this is denied the s tu d e n t m a y s u e a n d It is obvious from the articles above and the He signed a petition seeking federal assistance has some chance of a c o u r t o rd e r in his fact that U of M has for years not had auto­ in developtng' an industrial project to help toe matic expulsion for drinking infractions that* economy of his area. He was a leader in obtain­ behalf.” ing the new federal building, and went to Wash­ WE INTERPRET th e sec tio n t h a t th e their administration feels their students are ington with a group to ask Congress to build a “student must k n o w t h e c h a rg e s a g a in s t somewhat responsible. Are we? great dam costing millions so that area could get “ cheap electricity." THEN ONE DAY, he wrote bis Congressman Where are College Students Headed? this letter of protest: “ I wish to protest excessive government spend­ ing and high taxes. I believe in rugged indivi­ An article appearing in the April issue of “The make an “all out” commitment to changing the dualism. I think people should stand on their own Atlantic” magazine goes a long way, we believe, status quo too radically. For example, college two feet without expecting handouts. I am oppos- in documenting the prevailing attitudes among students feel they have no control over their college ecTto all socialistic trends, and I demand a re­ college students. curriculum, that opportunities for intellectual life turn to the principles of our Constitution." 7- The article is titled “Where is the College Gen­ on campus are wanting, that they have no access —Dixon Evening Telegraph eration Headed?” It was written by David Ries- to faculty. Yet when Riesman asked such students man. professor of social sciences at Harvard. what they had done about these things, they were surprised at the thought they could do anything. Algeria Final Blow REISMAN’S THESIS is that while there is an increased interest on the part of students to com­ Riesman believes they can. At the extreme, he James Hays to Give_ French Army Morale Shaken mit themselves to issues, to be politically active, suggests picketing on the part of students to bring and to work for various social reforms, there still exists a reluctance to commit themselves wholly, about changes. ' Another example of this feeling of apathy, ac­ Udder Side of Story to be too radical or non-comformist, so to speak. cording to the article, is the student’s feeling that they must “ get the grade” in their course work — ian war, a convietion that th e . The famous «‘Cardboard Cow” talk will be pre­ There certainly has been, during the past year, ALGIERS ID — The French QUALIFIED OBSERVERS sented by the author, Associate Professor Emeri­ an increased awareness and less willingness on a reluctance to be m ore independent in their stu­ say that for some time to come country’s independence is in­ Army, heir to proud military evitable, and the traditional tus James G. Hays, Wednesday a t Y p.m. in 109, the part of students to accept the status quo here, _ dies. Yet, in a study made of which students got the French Army has ceased to but (me gets the feeling that much of the agitation the best recommendations from professors, the traditions, has suffereid a blow French hostility to military Anthony hall. it exist as a cohesive, efficient In an open meeting, the Kedzie Chapter of Al­ has been directionless and that much mere could rebellious, the student a bit off-beat scored con­ which may need years to heal, fighting force. rule, forced a number of offi­ sistently higher than those with an undiluted, un­ cers to disavow the Uprising. pha Zeta, of which Hays was chancellor 50 years have been accomplished with a more “ all-out at­ qualified sources said Sunday. What remained In the wake ago, will present the well-known lecturer in his titude.” • _ - complicated, straight-A record. The short-lived Algiers insur­ of the fourthly uprising was a CONSCRIPT demonstrations Riesman bases h is knowledge of what college RIESMAN emphasizes, and we agree, that in at the Maison Blanche, Blida humorously informative talk. rection revealed bitterness and mass of half a million men Hays has given his talk in nearly tvery state students think on several hundred interviews of college and later in the working world there is cleavages Which have been commanded by officers torn by and Boufarik airfields, and a students done for “Time” and “Mademoiselle” more leeway for commitment and non-comform- passive resistance by scores of and is very much in demand. piagntng the Army ever since second thoughts, conflicting Through the years, he has donated the entire magazines. One of the patterns that emerges from ity than college students think. its collapse before the on- loyalties, personality clashes, draftee units, were at the root these studies is an ambivalence toward work in He cites thé sit-in demonstrations and the avid of the collapse of the uprising. proceeds from lectures to a student loan fund siaught of Nazi tanks and dive and the ¿d m realization that which he created. large organizations and at the same-time a resig­ response to President Kennedy’s Peace Corp as bombers in 1940. another attempt to keep Al­ To those concerned with the nation. a passivity and fatalism, toward it. Col­ evidence that students are becoming more aware effectiveness of France’s arm ­ In fulfilling its function as an agricultural hon­ The arrest of 200 high-rank­ geria French has been lost, orary, Alpha Zeta Is recognizing this man’s 50 lege students want the suburbs right away and a of this situation. But until more speak out and they report. ed power, the problem Is how home and family. This too is part of the reaction commit themselves and surprisingly find that ing officers, the dissolution of to rebuild the unity and morale years of service to his profession. some of the Army’s proudest In striking contrast with the Students, faculty and campus organizations are against the largeness and impersonality of the many others hold the same idea and, most im­ agony of the officer corps was of an Army dramaticallly work that awaits the college graduate. portant, th at things can be changed, the new com­ regiments, and the threat of shaken in the past week. Offi­ invited to attend. _ massive sanctions have creat­ the mass of French conscripts RIESMAN SAYS that this attitude of accepting mitment will be diluted and the agitation will be serving in Algeria. Their weari­ cials grimly admit that the task work without making it more meaningful begins half-hearted. - ed a feeling of despondency will be difficult. among career officers. ness with the drawn-out Alger­ in college, and largely explains the reluctance to - — The Daily Iowaa Police Fear Murder Letters to the Editor Of Two Young Girls O n Controversial kS sa ,re p Psuedo-Conservatives and W orms HOLLAND, Mich. (D—Hundreds of police and volunteers searched Sunday for two young girls as fears for their, safety mounted in the In the eyes of the Afro-Asian face of a recent abduction-slaying. We for some unknown reason abroad and it’s for this reason for too long the American Margaret Chambers. 12, and her playmate. numbered approximately 50. bloc Americans cannot contin­ Conservative? One professor of political have a high regard for indi­ that tbe worms should be ex­ Negro has been concerned only with racial issues. The time ue to maintain the idea thatw e Carol Gee, 11, both of R(e. 1. Holland vanished science tried to educate the viduals who like to talk on terminated. are still living in Colonial yesterday near a wooded section of a Lake Mich­ Té the Editor: types of societies and govern­ Perhaps the Communist un­ has come for the Negro to igan resort park outside this southwest Michigan speaker on the history of broaden his interest in all of times. We have grown into a I am a Lansing resident who socialism and explain that ments that are so opposed to derground forces that one scientifically ..advanced coun­ community. ours that (to me) this is pos­ hears about so often are send­ his country’s problems. “The only thing I can think about is that graduated from the University many deeply-rettgious Chris­ try but we must also advance tians believe in and champion sibly the greatest crime of our ing the worms out in the open Having adopted this ap­ the political and social ideas thing down in South Haven,” said Gordon Cham­ of Wisconsin in June, 1960. I proach, we must seriously bers, father of Margaret. recently cortipleted a six month socialism around the world. tim e. Is there any reason to to humiliate us. Why it’s a of Americans such as indivi­ To my amazement, the audi­ undersell ourselves? loss of dignity for American question this basic principle of dual freedom. He was referring to the rape-slaying of Geral­ military obligation and soon "“effective strategy” . The So­ dine Williams, 15, last Jan. 11. The girl was will journey to Europe. In ence, led by the club’s faculty _ 1 realize that we grant the scholars on their way to class - If this University is to serve advisor, intimated that the right of freedom of speech to to have to leap over and slide viet Union has become more walking to a school bus stop from her South order to entertain myself while capitalistic than the United as a training ground for Amer­ -Haven home when she was abducted. Her I‘m bere in thlshotbed of cul­ good professor’s view was not all but I also feel that we on juicy worms sprawled ica’s future leaders how can welcome. The questioning per­ should have the right to be a across the sidewalks. States — income differentials bludgeoned body was found the next day in the tural activity, I attend nearly are much greater. Further, it the Conservative club continue basement of an abandoned farmhouse. every forum on world affairs iod terminated soon thereafter. little more selective in whom I think that the m atter should not to show the truth to i t r I wandered through tbe as­ we invite to speak. would appear that since the The killer of the Williams girl never was appre­ that comes to my attention. he looked Into a t once. pot cannot call the kettle black followers. hended. South Haven is about ¿9 miles south of Hence, on Tuesday, April 18, semblage a t the conclusion of There are many people in Ana Braiaard In the absence of an effective the meeting as these “ conser­ our nation who would like very this country will have greater the area of the present search. I set out for the meeting of the difficulty in finding open ears challenge from any other Ottawa County sheriff Bernard Grysen said Conservativé Club. Since the vatives” nibbled their dough­ much to overtake our govern- ir i t if* w source we would like to go on nuts. I listened to their con­ menUThey are of two distinct when it condemns the Soviet the possibility was growing that the two girls University of Wisconsin Con­ Union’s behavior. record as accepting the Con­ had been abducted. servative Club engages adroit versations and asked a few questions. I could not believe groups at the present time. One group would like to have a few On Conservatives More important, though, is. servative club's challenge in More than 700 persons were participating in and stimulating lecturers, such how can a country which owes the battle for the mind. If we the land, air and water search. Grysen said the . as Aynn Rand, Russel Kirk, that this university group rule and the rest be slaves, and Te the Editor: lose, we fear that our country actually accepted and agreed the other group would like to its existence to the observance search would resume in the morning. and Bu&ley of the National A well recognized principle of individual freedom hope to will have also lost. _ Review, 1 felt that I would with tbe many fallacies I had have no rules a t all or no of effective strategy m politi­ survive if it begins to suppress Ernest Green and hear aa engrossing and some­ heard. moral code. cal warfare Is the use of your what perceptive commentary The first gentleman with We are supposed to be aware enemy’s best weapon against such freedoms? We are not concerned with Samael E. Harris M.S.U. Chapter ef N.AA.C.P. Michigan State News on current events. whorn I conversed informed of these facts and oppose these him: The Russians have per­ me that the income tax was tyrants. We are supposed to the truth of the rumors that the ♦ it it Published by the students of Michigan State I quickly discovered -that fected Capitalism as a means Conservative club has largely University. Issued on class days Monday through legislated _ by communists. cry freedom and literally hang of challenging the West. Our conservatism at MSU U an in­ sidious distortion of the sophis­ This charge was based, he men who cry freedom for a . own president has recently been financed by e Michigan chemical company. This is Correction Friday, during tbe fall, winter and spring quar­ ters. Issued weekly during tbe summer term. said, upon a booklet published few and enslavement for served notice that this country ticated conservatism espoused by communists. He also told their own business. They Te toe Editor: Second class postage paid at East Timing, Mich­ by the Tafts, Kirks and Gold- many; or who cry everything must recognize the efficiency me that the tax was unconsti­ goes. We are supposed to be- should not have to account to Thanks for printing my let­ igan. waters. of the communists’ tactics of anyone onthis matter, and we ter. However 1 must make a Editorial and business offices at 341 Student tutional.- despite the 16th . come patriotic and literally subversion and guerilla war­ The speaker was a mission­ amendment. Another “ conser­ stand up and fight for what we defend their position on the correction concerning the dem­ Services building, Michigan State University, ary from Africa who based his fare and begin to use them issue. Our foreign aid program ocratic nature of the “Presi­ “ E ast Lansing, Michigan. vative” denied evolution. From know to be right and ju s t ourselves. advocation of “conservatism” another. I learned that there I said PATRIOTIC and I shcgld confirm the fact that dent's office which in the letter Mail subscriptions payable in advance for one wholly on the Bible and depre­ is no grid in F t Knox. A better example of the prin­ people are more influenced-by appears distorted. term, 13; for two terms, 94; for three terms, 15. mean it. What’s the matter, ciple can be witnessed by the cated socialism on the same — If I were a student at MSU, are we too ashamed to be content rather than the cost of President Kennedy said that Member of the Associated Press, Inland Daily grounds. This in itself is not so I would be chagrined by these proud of what we have and activities of the MSU Conser­ propaganda. “wo” will not tolerate com­ Press Association and the Associated College bad. I suppose it can bo done fundamentalists parading as vative club. This organization Our position Is that the Con­ munism in this hemisphere as mess. 9 where we live? acknowledges Barry Gridwater effectively and intelligently. conservatives. I’m certain that Teas Manley servative club is preaching a quoted in my tetter. You print­ Editor-in-chief ------------- ...SuzannePrice But I hoard this orator use thè tbb MSU campus can support as its prophet, but its behavior dangerous doctrine at a time ed that be had said that “he^- Managing Editor _— ............. — Sharon Coady terms “socialism.” “commun­ an organization that would dis­ ★ * ★ is much closer akin to the when the world expects tbe would not tolera'ie communism. Adv. Manager —.................. Jerry Lundy ism.” N d “welfare statism” cuss and present conservatism John Birch society. truth. Myron Knczm ak Circulation M anager Paul Lesher synonymously. I heard him decry socialism as immoral, In a manner that would make Worm Plot Both organizations have fa­ natically endorsed theJHUAC’s good old Edmund Bur)» proud. THAT5 BECAUSE YOU sianT and anti-Christ. There Jack C. Davis To the Editor: suppression of individual free­ ( o p u n o h jo ìo h T ^ j were numerous other intellec­ dom: DONT KNOWANV7HING if it it Spring is perhaps finally ABOUT OPWDNATION! tual absurdities, but these here. With Spring comes the Wlqr should tiw NAACP be were the most flagrant “ gentle” rains of April, and concerned with the activities Deisti completely astounded, Why Undersell fouowtng close behind them of the Conservative dub? ► t «•*' I expected during tbe quastton- To the Edtter: the worms squirm into the ~ Our Mwfst In this organ­ ing period at f i t and of the What do we think America picture. isation Is amdi deeper than the diatribe to beer poignant and stands for? Why do we try so Besides the discomforts that fact their objectives are dia­ perilspe even insulting com­ hard to venture from our Meals “ worm time” brings. It’s fairly metrically opposed to ours, e.g. ments voiced by some mem­ and beliefs that w t hold to be obvious that the worm is a their opposition to toe contro­ bers of the audience, which sacred. threat to American prestige versial “Rule 9”. We feel that Monday Morning, May 1, 1961 . Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan 3 Wmi MSU Profs Participate German Student Establishing Outstanding Academic Record R e p o rt Findings on Microbes Experiments with disease- afid public health department and Earl C. Renshaw reported By KEUN YOUN reading a te x f, a s i f you were HE IS STUDYING econom- I causing microbes were report­ scientists last week in Chicago. phylococcus organisms. San State News Staff Writer reading some amusing story.” ics and will receive his degree ed by University microbiology At the American Society for Clemente is also co-author of a “ It’s more like reading a in June. Clements is also co-author of a This w a s the suggestion Microbiologists meeting, grad­ paper presented by J. A. Row- magazine.. If you really con* made here Thursday by Mike Outside of his 40 hours of centrate on your textbook, you John K reke,' senior f r o m class attendance, he is partici­ Grad Named uate student Lawrence E. Day and Dr. Ralph N. Costilow dis­ enstine and R.-Y. Gottshall, of the Michigan Department of would feel like you were read­ Cologne, Germany, who is car­ pating in various activities and ing some interesting maga­ rying 34 credits this term, and clubs. Ticket Manager cussed research oh the organ­ ism responsible for the dead­ Health, w zine.'' _ is maintaining 3.5 all-college He is the German head-dele- Dr. Delbert E. Schoenhard “ So. why not take pleasure in average. gate to the campus UN; he is William W. Beardsley, Kala­ ly food poisoning, botulism. and graduate students Roy W., also a member of the market­ mazoo, a football letterman at In a series of three papers. Snyder and Richard B. Dardas ing club and Foreign Service Michigan State- in 1942, has Dr. Charles L. San Clemente, discussed experiments w i t h Fraternity, Delta Phi Epsilon. been named athletic ticket man­ graduate students Chester A. certain pleuropneumonia • like' CAMPUS CLASSIFIEDS D EA D LIN ES: 1 p.m. Day Before Publication for Tues^ He is now taking flying les­ sons a t Sheren Aviation Insti­ ager. His appointment was app 'ov- Hornbeck, William E. Inniss organism. tute, and will have a private —-v W ed„ Thurs., and F ri. Editions. Dead­ pilot’s license next fall. ed Thursday by the board of line fo r Mon. Edition: 1 p.m. F ri. KREKE CAME TO the Unit­ trustees. He takes over his new assignment May 1. - Complete Optical Phone ED 2-1511 Extensions 2643 and 2644 ed States in September 1959. Like many other foreign stu­ - Beardsley, 39, succeeds War­ Service ren Burtt, who re tire d this Cyee dents on campus, he had quite spring after 35 years of service examined AUTOMOTIVE PERSONAL a trouble in language and the in the athletic department. problem of adjustment in his Glaste* AUSTIN HEALEY. ItU . 100*8 river­ ivi. w ire wheels. 4 »eater. Radio. Vet * Association new environment. _ . He received his B.A. in busi­ Pitted ness administration from Mich­ & l»er. whitewall*: all extra*. 11.890 2-2878 «{ter S p.m. 24 Despite all difficulties he re­ ceived a straight 4 point aver­ igan State in 1948. Um Sean Easy Ne A p­ p o in tm e n t MUST SELL IMMEDIATELY. ISM M m convertible. P erfect condition. »400 Call IV »-7*47. 23 age in his first year. That time, he took only 20 credits. Mims The-Japanese have coined a Payment Plan flHKdLMVW nvxevasi Y JOHN KREKE new word to describe motor> MCA. ISM. GREEN, w ire wheel*, He recalled memories of his# O fhccfof: Dr». J. Christie gad H. ieckwirti, Opfomatrittt radio. w hite wall*. C ar In excellent cyclists. It is kaminariyoku, riW N. Call ED 7-1MI._________ , 27 first year and said, “It was just ‘thunder breed.” terrible. I could speak nothing ISSO MOA, RED convertible. A-l condition, w ire wheel*, radio, heater. ISAM mile*. SUSS. ED 2-3227. ISM OLDSMOBILE. 4-door sedan, tf but the broken English like ‘eat bread” or ‘drink water,’ which is essentially needed for sub­ Judge Blocks Witness In te a l food condition. Call TV 9-5264. ______ ______ ISOS PACKARD CLIPPER Power • I t i r ln i And brakes. New tires. Hr ik es 24 : I I sistence—food, clothing, shel­ ter. -r HUAC Rioters Trial % Motor in excellent condition, I DON’T have any trouble in Meed* transm ission work. Will ac­ English now. Not at all. Per­ SAN FRANCISCO, _(£>—The Burke, who took pictures cen t reasonable offer. Call ED 2-6880 Reminder: Elections - Tuesday.-May 2. during the tumult, testified a fte r * p m . 26 haps I ’ve been fortunate in that defense was blocked Wednes­ ^ 1868 PLYMOUTH. 4 door radio, GEORGE C A L P U R N IA TACKETT and I have been able to learn Eng­ day from recalling a witness briefly Tuesday that a police­ beater, good tires. Reasonable: ED to the- S tate STRAEHAN please come News office. Room 347, lish quickly. This has been of to tell about -police conversa­ man told him Patrolman Ralph 7-1815.______________________ -24 Student Services Bid*, for two free E. Schaumleffel hurt his head passes to the Crest Drive-In. great advantage to me.” tions regarding last May’s 1865 PLYMOUTH, red and white. Most of Nil, this German stu­ in a fall. He couldn’t recall Sped tire*, radio, heater, whitewalls. City Hall riots. the policeman’s name. Call IV 6-6646. 24 dent seems to have enjoyed his A delaar’g IS67 PLYMOUTH four-door Savov. life in the United States. Superior Judge Harry Neu- Robert J . Meisenbach, 23, Six cylinder, standard transmission. “ I really like this place, pro­ barth refused to permit John University of California stu­ budding beauty: ™ $490. In food condition. Call OX 4-6641. 24 fessors, friends and campus,” B u r k e , Sacramento College dent, is on trial on charges of Kreke said, “ and I am very student, to taxe the stand again hitting Schaumleffel with his 1048 CHEVROLET business coupe much enjoying my field of own club. the classic in -o r-o u t Good tires. Rood running condition- lS li W. M ain-S treet, c a ll XV 8-405.Y on the ground his testimony 23 GANDY study, too. would be hearsay. Burke said he identified the “Of course I have some trou­ officer Tuesday night after dacron/cotton shirt 1864 MG-TT black, new Tonneau and radio. Rood heater, excellent con- Mailed Anywhere ble like any other student,'but watching t h e controversial g B B B jr o 2-2828 after 6 p.m. »3 the big difference is that I am film Operation Abolition. with embroidered tree EMPLOYMENT Complete Assortment Available At really interested in-what I am doing. That’s why I can carry Coeds Among But he couldn’t tell about it in court. The story came out design...drips-dry 3LLEGB MEN WITH car. $25-850 p er eveninc: can w ork to fit vour schedule Call Mr. Ingram . ED 7-2158 e r IV 2-0746. 25 The Card Shop 34 credits this term , even though I feel it’s certainly too much burden to me.” _ Miss Lansing Only in arguments of Defense Attorney Jack Berman trying to,recall bis witness. wrinkle free. White POSITIONS OPEN TOR n icht nurse, full o r p a rt time. Also ooerat- liif room supervisor. New. m odem Across From Home Economics Bldg. MEANWHILE, he said he planned to finish his required Finalists The riots grew out of dem­ onstrations against hearings with pistachio or M bed hospital. Call o r w rite Direc­ ED 2-4>753 courses for the masters degree Seven MSU coeds are among here by the House Un-Ameri­ to r o f N urses. Mason G eneial Ho*- 1. Mason. Michigan.____________if by the end of the fall term. the 10 finalists for the Miss can Activities committee. blue. 10-16 sizes. P iliL REAL ESTATE Kreke takes only /our to five Lansing Pageant. FOR SALE hours out of his busy day tiT The 10 finalists are Judy 7.9« _ EAST LANSINGII Look me overt! sleep. But his physical condi­ Roff, New Jersey freshman; DRAPES. 3 PAIRS w ith valances, 6 year old Cape Cod. ju s t tike new. apartm ent aise Ras stove. 2 small B ultt fo r th e large fam ily. 2 baths. tion is excellent. Jane Ann Brougham, Illinois drop leaf tables. 2 lounge chairs. 9 x 12 recreation room, ontv 815.- He grinned on the question of senior; Jolynne Cappo, Mason davenport. Call IV 6-6640. 800, and th e terras are right. Call R-J. P rin k fo r appointm ent, iv 4-7750. whether he occasionally takes freshman; Carol Wallen, Ash­ GRADUATING - MUST SELL: IV 2-4570, ED 2-6595. W alter Neller 1867 Z undapo Motorcycle: 22 -w att Co., Realtors. Brookfield Plaza. hi-fi. P A . system : d raw lng-studr 22 a nap. “Nap? I have classes all day ley freshman; Nancy Alice Martin, Illinois sophomore. iiriibsuns table w ith Ught. IV 4-860« after 7. EAST LANSING, 1113 Lilac. 3 bed­ o r R l Prospect S t Lanstn*. 22 room home, full basem ent, garage. from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.” Gretchen Ann Kuschwa, Bir­ Red Cedar School. 618.500. call own­ Most of his, hardships come I ROLLEPLRX *T“ CAMERA—H ard­ er. ED 2-6641. 28 mingham freshman; Patricia in used Sella new for 6116. Will ac­ during the final exams. Except Fife, Texas junior; Becky Size- c ep t «136. Also 38mm MAMIYA EAST LANSING!! M l.900 WITH five or six term papers during Executive. Y ear old. Excellent con- S2400 down. Will move you into this more, Lansing; Cynthia Ellen A lton. Cost 6110 new—675. Also 8mm larce 2 bedroom tri-level. Carpeted the term , there are “so many, Sandborn, Lansing and Carol MOVIE camera- Revere, with tu ire n t living room w ith fireplace. 24x20 lone. Magazine loading, c a ll TU 1-4022 paneled fam ily room. 17x12 fam ily 22 kitchen w ith all th e built-ins. A ttach­ ed 2-car garage. Call R J . Frink. IV TONNEAU COVER POR 4 place te r N eller Co.. Brookfield Plaza. 23 things to memorize within a short period of time. ” But this will be the last Jean Bellows, Eaton Rapids'. The finalists -Trill compete 3 ob May 27 for the crown now worn Gibbs-trained codes» woman a n is S Open All Day Monday — 9 :30 A. M. to 5 :30 P. M. Austin-Healy. 215 o r swap for MOA EAST LANSING!! NEW listing!!! term ,” be said,,“ so I guess I ’d accessory. Jack F ei reabend. ED See th is m aintenance free, all stone by Jqpet Lindke, MSU sopho­ lantand to assist executives in »ran 7-2820 after 6. 28 3 bedroom ranch, today II L arge fam ­ better take it easy.” more. te Id. Write Criiafa Daan about S p ecie WEDDING DRESS. SIZE 8-10. Worn Close to campus. ily kitchen w ith brick cupboards. Source lo r Coita«» Woman. A sk «a la st Ju n e by happy The ta. Call ED Covered patio for 20 ft. living room. EI88S GIRLS AT WORK. 2-6161 after S p m ■ 26 C arport. O n ly itfJOthOe CaU sum m er living. 18M JOHNSON OUTBOARD. Only TV 4-779». IV 2-4570. or ED 2-6595. R J . Frink. NAACP Drive Charles Mason and Jeremiah KATHARINE GIBBS one year'» use. In excellent shape. field Plaza. W alter N eller Co. Realtors, B rook­ 23 Dixon, worked from 1763 to Priced to *011. Call ED 7-1861. 27 Memberships in the NAACP 1767 to set up the Mason-Dixon s m a tK T JU U A L ■ EAST LANSING! RYSON 4 SPEED autom atic p o rt- Ju st like new il is th is spacious Cape INDIAN HILLS! can be obtained in the Union Line, which ended a boundary nU N 1M M > • • *M A l16 phonograph w ith VM changer, Cod. Approxim ately 1900 to . ft. of a t Christm as. Call a fte r 8. IV re concourse April 28, May 3, 4 dispute between the Calverts ■MMCUUS. » 1 S S l J . L t . . . 2 * rar» a l .living. 32 ft. living room w ith R. JL » • . 3 8 fireplace. 3 m aster bedroom s. Screen­ and 5. The campaign will be of Maryland and the Penns of 0UMMKCAR-4L . . .M il I _____ ^ membersh ip - 2 m ore ed in p atio . Only 819.00011 CaU for ow details. mruuis. Oh,o n , y es I Ii t Is is located climaxed by a dance May 20. Pennsylvania. contract. t D 2- 1111 . « x t 243a. on 100x9M f“ t *lo t am idst bornas of 100x300 6-6 pjnT R aaaonanle. 24 dlatinctii Unction. Call B jT y r tn k . IV4-7790 LEFT-HANDED GOLFERS a tten - IV S-4M 3-40707. or ■ ED 2-6806T ■ W alter M Nel- paSotng to p n ig h t I960 p ro- le r Co. Realtors, Brookfield P la n . 23 4 woods, 0 lion*. P erfect See Jo e B rim an t a t Jacob- ..f A F T LANSING!I Incom e. O nly p r E ast Lanaing. r- 26 818J00. » w ith term s. 8 bedroom spacious bosns. T op location. 8215 WEDDING DRESS • SIZE 7. E x­ rentals. Homg_ p e r m onth ihcom e from stu d en t cellent condition: Very reasonable ion. in exceUent condit­ CaU B P 2-8145 W ould consider tra d e fo r smaJl home. CaU R J . P rin k . IV 4-7758. IV 2-4870. o r ED 2-65M. W alter N eller FÒR SALE Cb* Realtor*. Brookfield Plaza. 22 EAST LAN8INO!! Cloee to campus! ■harp 3 bedroom fam ily homo, ex­ SÎ th e C ard Shop. Aerosa from tra largo dining room , l i t baths, full M Ec. Building. KD 2-6753. 46 b a se m e n t attach ed garage, large fenced-in y ard fo r children. Only europe TRAILERS »13608. Lew down paym ent. Call R J . P rink. IV 2-4878. J V 4-7759. o r ED Country girl charm , b y 'ALMA TRAHAR 36 x r good S-88M. W alter NoUnr Co.. Realtors. condition Air-condltionod. Priced Brookfield Plaza. 33 PARIS • Attend English • or French-taught to sell. ED 3-0044 o r ED 3-6178. Stall- classes. Lira with a Parisian family. Investigate A7» R, in gingham chock high- B* * SERVICE Western and Southern Europe on tarn next ISM AMERICAN 41 4S'x>’ excelle W o n . w ith Mr condition. Mu field-study trips. lighted with fact and ric-roc. IT ì i r a r a T K S B H ^ . T r yeare — jm in thasSs, term papers. E lectric eiltet Prereevlslte*: you atari b* enterin« your Collego graduate. S D 2-5546. 84 aapbemore ar Kmter y*tr, tm a *8*ainr i p end CoRon/omel triacetate in pink, FOR RENT TYPING. ELECTRIC ty p ew riter one year of colls«* Franeh. Fee: $2,350. year Can Sonia. IV a - lia t a f t « ’ Ï M . P ick­ .. ____ _______« in n er tacket up and delivery If necessa ry. 33 VIENNA • Attend English - or German-taught blue or gold. 5-15 junior sizes. aD aniearartaa. M Cnest site, l a i d size. JSTCatt W arren. ED TYPING DONE h t S partan Village liberal arts courses. Discover European culture at apartm ent. ED 7-6703. « BD 7-8*86 its roots by living with a Viennese family. Visit Mno MODERN HOUSE: S tf European countries on three field-study trips. H U .............. i baths, from EXPERT THESES and te n e rs i typ­ Hasiett. CaO ing. electric typew riter. 17 years Prereeulaitea: you must be entering your ZI ex perience, one. block tro m Brodv sophomore or junioryoarand havo a Cstee avenge ED 2-8545. - tf (no language prerequisite). Fat: 82,129. a ia r t m c n t s Ï rooma w ith th e except refrigerator LEARN TO PLY. Spring is b o m now 's a good tim e to sta rt enjoying th is exci ting y et relaxing sport Drive without Int FREIBURG » Attend German-taught liberal arts courses. Live with a German family. 8# introduced PU RN U IRBP.. 4 Close to campus, tf LARGE BOOM fi> 3-0034. out for a free dem onstration ride and 4 Place rentals Re ason able rates, i & w Aviation. N orth A bbot Road your eoHogo carver to Germany on a Held-study trip. ProreeuWt**: you muri be enteringyour tf funleryear hew e Cgtet evaraee and be prefteent apartm ^ ent, m _ odern. j Nm r . Private entrance, a s of b ttM M rt and w asher. P ark - Choose from three distinctly in Oarmen. Fee: 81,960. TYPIST ANN BROWN. New phone fif Mwrprgwrad- o T T n u m b « . ED 3-8M4. Electric type­ different European study programs- H T fg. o d i ow ner. NO 8-819». orms w riter. Tom papera and th ese». also (Ft* in mcXease Indudai elude* tuition, I6Wstudy, round-lr>p general typing. tf each an emphatic ocmiiptamant to and board.). ROOMS your American education ~T*S ä tN Ö lt. fiäLLEGE bu«7 near to 1720 E Ml WONCH D! flm wriith. ctean. good f i r sparking. C an a lte r ». IV a- 8484. typing and dupB eatinx commercia ari. typeeatung. CaU Ext. 482 - 4205 tf INSTITUTE OfEUROPEAN STUOfeS LOST ond FOUND TYPING, In m y ham s, b y secretary w ith 10 years* experience. TV 3-*728. for further Id non-prodl adVcoMsaaf orgonftraPooJ msxssaSB9BB& Dteartswet 0,39 East Wecker Driva, Cterag» 1, Mteab LBWr: M*fSfjÖE RULE. Mreteav ! iff information KAM A pril 17. V3 7-1027 23 i - M f r : WRL ATCH. Rm. IM WANTED mail coupon «ooera CITY SOM er*Tt family naed housing to r 1st session cocuec VfMMOOMOOL ■umintr school. CaU Adams. ED 7-18*7 Chock: □ PARIS Q VIENNA Q PMtSUM . TRANSPORTATION TO RENT 1 ta 3 badroom houaa in Baal Leasing or c u t aid* Lanaing WANTED - R ID t TO N Y. Cttv Full b animan t, central heat, g an g * , A v M u T j I a y A Call G ary, A JjJ raaaonablc r e n t Responsible couolo. ID Michigan Stale Newa, East Lansing, Michigan Monday Morning, May 1, 1961 *> . n , a a a D H B aa! Important National Aspect Crossw ord P u zzle | n 24. Originate g □□□ » Bn BD3 □□□ Hannah Likens MSU to Firm G ra d School D ean Lau d s U .S . l.Hoet . 5. Coratella, 34. Laborer I 37.no« 3 3 UÜ □ an DEIj Ü 333! □ □ □ a a so a To Chamber of Commerce I T " ' * • T ; J - tion je. Abeotute a u □□□□□□□ ao | ruler □aasnaiaQ ag o .etn Michigan can start *ven about the academic program of V Advanced Education Prog ram 8. Deep 40. Star in By MIKE SIMPSON incisión Serpent» o n d e □□□ n a u u 41 Loop and □ □ a □ □ □ a a u State Newt Staff Writer with Henry Ford’s chtldren. the university was Provost Paul 18 Newapaper employee knot □□ □□□ a a ts a a s ^nankins in business-1 i k e ' ssid, is for Michigan students A. Miller. He said that the three 14. Baccha­ 42. Shafts of □□□□□ □□□□□□□ biggest problems are: terms to the Greater Lansing-j 1—Bringing the different The nation’s graduate schools m ands of the tim es; but its fSc­ -The university ranks 22nd in nalian a y light _ a rra sa n n a a □□□ Chamber of Commerce Thurs-1t0 81® a re the m ost im portant endow -' ulty and adm inistration take the nation for the number of 15. Mother 45. Gibbon President John A. Ifrom other states **a coontrios. areas of study together. I 47. Corn spike day night, m ent the United States has at pride in exercising leadership doctor's degrees awarded and 18. Turk. Hannah said that MSU, in ad­ ‘We are living in an increas­ 2—Resisting the pressures to­ summer- SO Land smaller world,” Hannah ward imbalance and special­ the present tim e, D l M ilton E. to m ake learning, teaching and 15 for the number of master’s house measure dition to being a cultural and ingly M uelder, dean of th™school for j research a m ore m eaningful degreies. he added. 2. Authentic U Aid said. “ Black, brown, and yel­ ization. )7-Vend 91. Artlflees 12 A Canadian intellectual center, takes on the advanced g raduate studies, s a i d : and interesting endeavor,” Where do all these degree 10 Shrewd 93. Not any 2. Member of agitator low students from every coun­ 3—Not confusing the act of Parliament aspect of being a business or­ recently. M uelder said. holders go? , 20. Oetrlchliko 94. Part of 10 Srah of ganization. fry in the world are decent teaching with the process of Years back most of the peo­ bird the leg 4 Natural holly family ‘‘F o r the first tim e in the his- i t WILL rem ain a continuing wool grcaae I people and we must learn to learning. £ ple holding doctor's degrees 21. Thon* 99 Pleased ~ var “Our raw material is u x The job of a provost. Miller 22. Complete attention 9 A bomb 21 Heavenly ^ .» •> live with them." - t o r y o f th e nation, it is possible j eoncern of the various c o l t e r s j ^ ‘e n t i n t o e d u c a ti o n , b u t'’now 6 Renew coming student Hannah kai^ | Then are students said, is to stay home and make to identify our national w e lfa re ; t0 cont r ibute according to its i this 'Is not the case M uelder 24. Companion 97 Proglike body 28. Paper animal 7. Noah's boat 23 Rcstnoui “ Quality control is m aintained, at Eagt Hannah said the university as good as the and security in the quality of specialized capacity and fu n c-; said mulberry 98. New comb. 8 An by high admission standards, that he wante^ to see even president says it is. substance our grad uate schools, he said, j tj0n to a g re a te r m easure of Since 1958 approxim ately 40 beri: farm adventure 29 Of the he skid The university' will continue 9 Affirm more attend MSU. ‘‘NEVER HAS the quest for | understanding and knowledge, percent of these people have 28. Medicei 90. Responsi- first claas In spite of quality control,- Hannah admitted that after to resist offering consultation 10 Stage new knowledge in its own right ( a dded. gone into governm ent and in­ '28.fluidi Capture ' bUity direction 29 Scottish cap 27 Topaz hum Hannah said that there is a the first one hundred students service to business and indus­ and in behalf of society b e e n ! M uelder. who has had educa- dustry which a re directly d e ­ 22. Wading DOWN m eaning mingbird complete absence of uniformity irora New York state are ad try, Miller said, it make3 no attended with such a sense of j tion experience in G erm any pendent on them , he added. j bird X Weapon* “alone" 29 Arrest ^ in the raw materiah Educa- j mitfed tQ the university, the difference whether .it be in a u rg en cy ,” he added. ; and other p arts of Europe, said “ C ontrary to popular belief.’’] 20 Moisten tional1 costs nAnfp for ft each ptii/1 /knV student, _ - second, third, fourth, and fifth field of large demand, such as The growth of our .graduate i ^J1® United States fa r surpasses he said, “ holders of P hD 's with fat accordingly, are almost impos­ hundred students don’t add nuclear physics, or in a field of 30 Hindu meal sible to account for, he said. | small demand, such as epistem- schools has been tre m e n d o u s,:“ 1® world in th e-q u ality of its a re n ’t all concentrated a t H a r­ 31 Hebrew much to the university. never have so m an y students j PSjiSf program s, v a rd .” proselyte - i n a question-a n d-answer Speaking to the Chamber ' ology, he said. been so highly m otivated as ^ ® schools of other nations In fact, M uelder said, the big­ S3, Additions period following dinner , for 60 at present he said - m ay surpass us in quantity, but gest concentration is in an in to house* Chamber members a n d 60 39 Gr long S MSU leaders. Hannah said it is “ B one 'takes the tall enroll.' ment of 1945 as rpnrcscntinf? are tops in - ^ ** lhe DuP™l hC“n, S , I The government, he added, 38 Salty 40. Correct estimated that for every' dollar MAGAZINE OPPORTUNITY 100 then bv 1960 graduate en Society ,s dem andin^ th,s j has as m any em ployees with 41 Genealogy spent to teach a freshman, $2- S tudent w ith background in editorial and advertis­ ro h m e n f & " f t “ £ J f W y aod they are getung , t . ! doctor’s d e g r e e s a s V *I top ten 42 Wood fiber $3 are spent for each student 48 Reflected at the junior-senior level and ing to head s ta ff of new college magazine. W rite cent a t the university,” he ad- he added universities in the nation do sound $110 at the graduate level. m onthly column, edit topy, sell and layout advertis­ ded. HOW DOES ‘he u n iv e rsity ; M^ ^ che,or -s degree, exV 44. Operatic With the growing number of ing, handle circulation. C ar necessary. ExceDent This is com pared to an in­ stand up to this quality . cept w here it is the highest de­ melody students coming In MSU each compensation for about 10 hours p ef week. Send full crease of 229 per cent in under­ 40 Singing voice year and the growing percent­ resum e to g ra d u ate enrollm ent over the ta il advanced here ^®ree m a P artic u la r field- “ 41 Variety age of these being graduate sam e period, he said. reflects o ^ ^ M y . S d Muel * ! to¿ • ¡higher S S S f degrees, X SS?* of apricot students, Hannah said that he C haff Magazine j . n / as a step 40. Decays had hoped the legislators at „ T H E TOTAL graduate enroll-j Applicants for g raduate s tu d y ! said Mu®ld e r- 91. Triumph this year’s session would have P.O. Box 495 5’ ° r 1next fall total 2.329. an in c re a s e ! ____ __________ ______________ 92 Theater E ast Lansing, Michigan 23 per cent of the total cam pus ; of 47 8 cent over 1960 ---------------------------------------------- sign taken a closer look at the prob­ enrollm ent, according to M uel-1 This continuing increase is a 1 9«. Type lems of the university. der. good sign th a t the u n iv ersity j The university has establish­ has attraction, he added. Information measure “ However, t h e legislators I show no interest,” Hannah ed eight colleges authorized to said. “ They don’t question the j Enjoy Savory Toastmasters International — facts, the programs, the costs j give advanced degrees: Agri­ IN QUANTITY M u cld ersaid . culture, Business and Public the university has aw ard ed : AWS Activities Board Execu­ Service; Com m unication A rts; 1,667 doctorate degrees since 7 p.m ., 37 Union Placement Bureau or the need. “ Instead, they amuse them­ Pizza, G iant tive Council—4:30 p.m .. Un­ Intreviewing at the Place­ music, English, biolôgy, busi­ selves by circulating rumors j Hams, o r Sub­ E ducation; Engineering; Home the first degree in botany in ion’s wom en’s lounge. ness and guidance and counsel­ about how much the fence ■ Econom ics; Science and Arts, 1925 ment Bureau Thursday. Ad­ m arines in Young Socialists—3 to 6 p.m ., ditional information in the ing. around the golf course costs, and V eterinary Medicine Forty-nine percent of these open a i r concert on south Moore Business Forms, Inc. how many out-of-state scholar-] M ore than 275 a reas and | degrees w ere granted in the five Placement Bureau bulletin for the com fort of steps of Union to com m em o­ the week of May 1-5: (Midwest) interviewing all ma­ ships we give, how many lib­ fjglds of study a re offered by j -year span from 1956 to 1966, ra te L abor Day. Lawton Community Schools jors. * erals are on campus, and how your living unit. 66 departm ents in these col- he added, Circle Honorary— 7 p.m ., 338 leges in which both the m a ste r’s j A total of 8,609 m a ste r’s de- interviewing. elem entary. ed­ large we are,” he said. Student Services. “These are foolish- state- j and doctor’s degree m ay be -grees haye been aw arded since 1Evergreen W iv e s -8 p.m ., For- ucation, junior high math and earn ed . the first one in 1861, 48 p er estry cabin. M iller Moss and science, senior high English, math and French. CSC, Parish ments, but no one answers ' them. MSU was roundly criti-1 • NO 25c DELIVERY CHARGE GUARANTEED “HOT” DELIVERY The University is not only cent of them between 1955 and r " p r Rudolph speaking, cized on the floor of the senate responsive to the spirit and d e-1 1960. 1 -r Imlay City Community To Present last week. Not one senator de- i The capital of the republic Schools (Imlay.City, Michigan) fended higher education.” PROGRAM INFORMATION CALL ED 2-5817 I of U pper Volta in West Africa interviéwing elementary edu­ I is Ouagadougou. cation. Romulus Township School HUAC Films Hannah said that the uni-j versity contributed approxi­ mately 9100 million a year to PIZZA PIT District (Detroit area) inter­ The film strip “ Communism the local economy, making it 203 M.A.C. (downstairs) ED 2-0863 Program Info. IV 2-3905 viewing elementary special ed­ on the Map” and the film “ Op* second only to Oldsmobile- ~ ucation, junior high social stu­ oration Abolition” will he E A S T L A N 5 I N C ■ PHONE ED.2-2814 MICHIGAN t h e A t he p h o n e iv h i i»- dies, language arts, guidance and counseling, speech, art, The payroll alone amounts to shown Monday at 8 p.m. in the $36 million a year, Hannah recreation hall of the Catholic said. In addition students spend HOME OF TH E BEST IN FOREIGN FILMS men’s physical education, in­ Student Center, 327 M.A.C. NOW SHOWING between $16.5 and $17 million EXCLUSIVE LANSING AREA SHOWNING dustrial arts, senior high math, The films are being spon­ each year for incidentals while Shows 1-3-5-7-9:10 speech, guidance and counsel­ sored by the Activities Council on campus, he said. Most of F IR ST SHOW 7 PJVL — ADULTS 90c Feature 1:20-2:36-5:20-7:30- ing, vocal music, business edu­ of St. John Student Parish. ~ the payroll and the student ex­ 9:35 REGULAR PRICES cation and girl’s physical edu­ “ The showing is open to all penditures is -spent in the Lan­ Have a ball FE A T U R E AT 7:35 - 9:45 cation. MSU students, faculty and stu­ sing area, he sard, and it is ^ytOSCS FUI‘Pco 0v Eau Claire Board of Educa­ dent wives who are interested then spent over again two, tion (Western Michigan) inter­ in viewing, these films object­ three, four, and five times. “One of th e Year’s B est ! 99 * FLUBBER - * viewing instrumental and vocal ively. ana without discussion,” The university has spent $108 —f4*w York Tint Msftold Tribuno-H . 1. Yeti •‘ Coo —SelvrJar Ìlertew Michael Belyan, Activities million for building construc­ "ChukraThas truly composed ¿ 3 a 'ballad'. Lovely im agery,., fyy picture poem that has tem po , ./// G LA D M E R T Hf AT P r *PHDNf I V NOW ! LAST. 2 DAYS! Council president,-stated. tion since 1946, Hannah said, “ Our purpose in showing making it the largest purchaser these films is to encourage stu­ in central Michigan in this dents to decide for themselves category. “ Even if you businessmen in Europe and feeling. It is humorous, " ‘ '■» on the Communist Mayday exciting, tender and strong." ■CwOx, N. V, ’★ ★ ★ ★ ( s a r HoV M r.M lN M Performances At 1:00 - 3:35 - 6:20 :10 That Fabulous _what stand they will take” as don’t have a cultural or intel­ intelligent citizens against the lectual interest in the affairs Communist threat to our nation of the university,"- Hannah and world," Belyan concluded. said, “ you certainly have an this Summer 'One of the gm t ones...fine entertainment" Fun Show! economic interest in it." Defending his stand against (1 andget college credits, rW M K K M WASH-II-WEAR curtailed enrollment, Hannah said: Imagine the fun you can have on a summer vacation III B a lla d «fa DACRON BLEN D “ Never has a qualified stu­ dent been refused admission Europe that includes everything from touring the Conti­ nent and studying courses for credit at the famous 8or* _ Soldier SUITS to Michigan State University. “ We want to make it pos­ bonne in Paris to living it up on a three week co-aduca* tional romp at a fabulous Mediterranean island beech-dull: EXTRA ADDED COMING SOON sible for every child born poor resort! Interested? Check foe tour descriptions below. A BOWL OF CHERRIES MAKE MINE MINK !RA Y -O t^ N -W B !-lÆ PEPE Reg. $ 3 9 .9 5 Value to get the highest education O nly possible. “Then every bright child FRENCH STUDY TOUR, $1233 pnr day phm a ir fa re . Two wed» touring France end Switzerland, born poor on a farm in north- sig h tse e in g m Rouen. Tours, Bordeaux. Avignon, Lyon, ÎT Îl LAST 3 DAYS! D A N D A H E f- $ 2 7 .9 » Geneva, with visits to Mont-Saint-Michel and Lourdes. LUCON IV itU f\ A* H its T h rill ADDED Saga of Wind Wagon Smith S H IH E Y JO N B COLOR BUY AND SAVE AT Night Staff Night news editor, Bill Doer- Then in Paris, stay six weeks studying a t La Sorbonne. Courses indude French Language, History, Drama, Art, Literature, for 2 to 6 credits. Spend your last week touring IA9TIAN5INO « PHONE tp .2 4 + 4 4 NEXT ATTRACTION! Len Kositchek’s ner ; assistant news editor, Joe Luxembourg and Belgium. All-expenae, 70-day tour in­ H it No. 1 Shown 2:10 *4:50 - 7 : 4 0 >10: 20 STARTS WED. Harris; copy editor, Bob Cham­ PAT BOONE - ALL HANDS ON DECK GLENN FORD — IN Varsity Shop berlain; assistant copy editors, cludes sightseeing, holds, meek, tuition for $12.33 p** day, plus Air France Jet Economy round-trip fare. “CRY FOR H A PPY ” 228 A bbott Rd. Diana Zykofsky and Lois in Color E a st Lansing, Mich. Goode; assistant photo editor, STUDENT HOUDAYS TOUR OF EUROPE, Eric FÎlson; night sports editor, $ 1 5 .7 2 p e r d a y p lu a a ir fa r e . Escorted 42-day tour Ben Burns. includes visits to cultural centers, sightseeing in France, ;fiEORGE SANDERS BAR8MU SHELLEY, MAIL ORDER NOW!! Switzerland, Italy, Austria, Germany, Luxembourg, Den­ fo r mark, Sweden. Norway, Scotland, England, Holland and V r t ï A f Î E OF STEP OUTSIDE TO Belgium. Plenty of free time, entertainment Hotel, meala, everything induded for $15.72 per day, plus Air France Jet Economy round-trip fare. ’2nd Science Fiction T hriller Shown 1:00 • 3:40--'~6:25 - 9:10 TELL THAT DIRTY CLUB MEDITERRANEE, $13.26 per day phis a ir f a r e . Here’s a 21-day tour that features $ days on your own in Paris, a week’s sightseeing in Rome, Capri, “T H E INCREDIBLE P E T R IF IE D WORLD” K j s m c S JOKE! EVERY Naples and Pompeii, plus 9 fun-filled, sun-filled, fabulous days and cool, exciting nights at foe Pdynreian-etyls STARTING THURSDAY ! A .Musical Arabian N ig h t Club Méditerranée on the romantic island of Sicily. Spend ACADEMY AWARD W IN N E R Send mail orders tot ILS.U . THING IS CLEAN your days basking on the beech, swimming, sailing—your nights partying, singing, dancing. Accommodation, meals, . Elizabeth Tnylor in University Theatre Auditorium everything only $13.26 per day complete, phis Air France 2 o f h e r G reatest Trium phs! Don’t m iss th is O utstanding Show !' Dept- of Michigan State Uriv. ^-bB «eat* reserved — AT LOUIS. Je t Economy round-trip fare. Some w om en never give * nam e.«, East Lansing, Mich. $1.75 MR. JOHN 9CHNKIDKR 1 r/oAIR FRANCE ~ 35 Gleaser ui 683 Fifth Avenue. New York 22. N. Y. just a phone num ber! Gentlemen: - Fie— rueh me full information on the following: □ French Study Tour □ Student Holiday* To pnsR H unoR i S Ss an S« ‘e g < ■fc* U U R B E tH « m Shirt Laundry Name________ □ Chib Mediterranée its s a s - milage BHKHSB E. Grand River Aero»« from Student Service* Building ......... ...............Wftafte- GREAT ATTRACTONS n ty T£NNfeS8ifcE. WII:UAV$f'. PLftV: -ON- TML/ SCftfcE - it’s quick and easy C A T O N A H O T T IN R O O F .ELIZABETH TAYLOR PAUL M W M A N BURL IVES Dial ED 2-3537 far Pick-up A Delivery A ÌR tF R A N C E J E T SPO R T S. Monday ; — ■- ■ ~ s r - v ■ . • > ¡p O f t f e i A ’f f t ' >;J . ■ :% . ‘ Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Morning, May 1, 1961 chigairState in Tripleheader MSU Extends Losing Tuco Hom e Meets This W eek String to Five Barnes Seven Michigan State ath­ tennis team entertains Western letic events win be played on Michigan on Wednesday. swing while the golfers will bq appearing in two guadrangular foreign soil this week while two The netters also play at meets. By PAUL SCHNITT The complete schedule is: State New* Sports Writer engagements are booked at Wayne State on Monday and East Lansing. travel to Evanston, 111., tor Today For the Spartan btsebsU team Saturday was a “ long, long" Coach F ran Dittrich’s tiita- weekend action with four Big Tennis, Wayne State i t Detroit day — literally and figurattvuly. clads will be home for a tri­ Ten opponents. Golf, Northwestern, N o t r e angular meet against Ohio The Spartan baseball team Replaying Friday's ratoad out affair along with the regularly Dame and Wisconsin at Mad­ State and Penn State on Sat- j faces Notre Dame. Indiana and scheduled doubleheader, State clashed with the University of urday and Coach Stan Drobac’s 1Ohio State on a three day road ison, Wis. Michigan in a unique tripleheader. Wednesday Tun, WOLVERINES made a complete sweep of the three Tennis, Western Michigan at home (2:30 p.m.) seven-inning contests, 5-1, 6-4, 4-3, to all but mathematically eli­ minate the Spartans from any Big Ten title aspirations^ Michigan State has lost five conference games in a row after Intramural Dept. Now Thursday Baseball, Notre Dame at Notre beating Iowa and now stand 1-5. Michigan extended its undefeat­ ed record to 44). Head Coach Jim Kobe sent his three top starters — Mickey Accepting Green Fees Dame, Ind. Friday Baseball, Indiana at Blooming­ - Sinks, Bob Ross and Gary Ronberg — against the Wolverines in hopes of returning State upon the path of victory from which Green fees are now being ac­ up either at the IM office or at ton, IndT they strayed while playing Minnesota last weekend. But it was cepted J^>r the Michigan State the golf course. Tennis. Iowa, Michigan, Minn­ to no avail. ^ Individual Golf tournament. The IM office is accepting j esota and Northwestern at MICHIGAN Jumped on Sinks for three singles, a sacrifice fly TTiis tournament "fill be a 36 entries for the Intramural ten- j Evanston. HI. and two runs in the very first inning of play. That was at 11 a.m. hole tournament and 18 will do His singles tournament. The j Saturday As it turned out, those runs would have sufficed. Mike Joyce played on Saturday. May 20 tourney begins May 8. A $2 ball Baseball, Ohio State at Colum­ kept the Spartans bats quiet throughout the game except for a and Sunday, May 21. fee must accompany each en-j bus, Ohio (2) bomerun by Tom Riley. Each contestant signing u p ; try. This is not any entry fee. Track, Ohio State and Penn After the shaky opening frame, Sinks settled down and yielded for the tourney must pay the j but simply a means of insuring j State at home (1:30 p.m.) only two hits the rest of the way. But one was a three run homer $2 green fee at the IM office at that each participant meets ^ Indiana , Ohio State and by Dennis Spalls in the sixth that put Michigan beyond the the time he epters. He will re-.¡their obligation ij of furnishing ®j*~ Purdue at West Lafayette, range of State’s feeble offense which collected four safeties. ceive a receipt from the office, jean of new balls. . ^ ^ j jn(j WADE CARTWRIGHT, Sported first baseman wins the race to the bag in one which when presented at the A new can of top-quality ten- Tenn¿Si i owa) Michigan,-Min- In the second contest, Ross hooked up with Fritz Fisher in a of three games State leet ta Michigan Saturday, lid s extends tee Spartan less battle of southpaws. golf course at. the time of the nis balls may be picked up be- nesota npsota and Northwestern at string to five straight games aad virtually knocks them out of championship tournament, will entitle him to fore each match. Loser of the Evanston, 111. WOLVERINE first sacker, B arry Marshall, hit a four competition. the regular golf course green match will keep the used balls bagger over the left field fence In the opening frame. fees receipt. and another can will be avail­ COMPLETE The second inning proved to be Ross downfall. Jim Newman able to the winners at the next j FORMAL 19c W EAR SHOO opened the rally with a walk and went around to third on Ed Since starting times must be match. No entries will be ae-t Hood's single into leftcenter. The relay from the outfield eluded Bill SchudUch enabling Newman to score and Hood to take second. Tigers To Keep Practice Site reserved for this tourney by Thursday, May 18. no entries cepted without this fee. will be accepted after 5 p m. Independent and Dormitory tennis rosters are due by 12 R E N T A L VARSITY SHOP 228 Abbott Rd. E. L. < eid w a poms sauor oor jn q saaijeq om j jxau atfl p a jrp j ssoy Wednesday, May 17. _ ED 2-8967 The Detroit Tigers will con­ A new clubhouse and press- have held their spring, training noon Monday and play will to right to bring in Hood. Trying to get Jones at third. Ron Hen­ Anyone interested in enter­ start Tuesday. — derson threw'wild. Nobody backed up the play so Jones trotted tinue to conduct spring train­ box are recent improvements every year since 1953- Its fa­ ing the tournament may sign home with the third run of the inning to make the score 4-0 in ing at Lakeland, Fla., at least at Henley Field, which has one cilities include dormitories^ a five more years, it was an­ favor of the Wolverines. nounced Wednesday. of the best playing fields in clubhouse, five diamonds, A NEW Spring HAIR-DO SOPHOMORE, Jack Nutter replaced Ross and pitched excel­ They hâve trained there Florida. Attendance lent ball for three innings, striking out six and allowing one sin­ every spring since 1934, with set a record of 23,941 for 16 and a converted airport hangar this spring pitching mounds, hitting cages At No which gives the Tigers and gle by BiU Freehan, Michigan’s catcher. the exception of the 1943-45 war­ exhibitions. _ r Extra The* following inning Carl Charon doubled and Sartorius time seasons when they were The new contract also covers their house farmhands the only field in professional baseball. brought him home with a hard grounder into left field, cutting restricted to Evansyille. Ind., Tigertown. the minor league _ R A the margin to 4-2. for their pre-season condition­ I base where a mile some from 200 Hcn’ey farm prospects Field W A SH 'N W EAR Charge... Dazzle in your the life, man and LOVELIER Y O U ... BUT MICHIGAN came storming back in their half of the ing. y o u r friends, Your expert coiffure artists: seventh to regain the four run edge as Nutter allowed a walk, a single and a double. SIGNING OF a contract ex­ PoHsM Cottons Reliability with an exeking Barb Box,Edith Hotis,Connie Whcelock tending the Tigers’ visits to AND new hair-do. In a last effort to catch Michigan, Tom Riley was safe on an Lakeland through 1966 was an­ error. Fisher retired Sartorius and George Azar. Henderson nounced by Tiger President Tigers Win Baby Cords Styled H air Cut $ 2 .0 0 — kept the frame alive, bouncing a single passed the outstretched John E. Fetzer, who said: body of third basemen Joe Merullo.' “ This new agreement is the Sam Calderone cleared the bases with a~4ouble into rightfield. most favorable the Tigers have j First Game v M y 53.95 Body VJ ave P e n n $ 1 0 .0 0 State had closed the score to 6-4 with the tying run at the plate in - Call Now . . . the person of pinch hitter Wade Cartright- b a d at Lakeland^ indicating confidence of that community I th e j I I f I W IT ! i l l I Lett Kositchek's . CARTRIGHT swung at Fisher’s first offering and grounded in our organization. We are | Varsity Shop Frandor Shopping Center College M anor Beauty Salon out to second ending the game. - happy to return to the city DETROIT Lfv—The Detroit MON. THRU FRI. TILL I 224 A bbott Road — ED 2-3113 Member of Ronberg faced diminutive Bob Marceve.au in a game that where our teams have trained! Tigers, held to a pair of singles 228 ABBOTT RD. SAT. TILL 7 NHCA Inc. eventually went an extra inning before Michigan completed the so many years .’*' by southpaw SteyO^ Barber, E. LANSING Across from the State Theater sweep in the eighth. Complete term s of the con-i through the first six" innings, AS HE has done all season, Ronberg pitched admirably. After tract, negotiated by Tiger Vice- exploded for eight runs against the visitors picked up a run in the first, Ronberg scattered four President Jam es A. Campbell Barber and Jack Fisher and singles through the sixth. with the city commission of defeated the Baltimore Orioles1 And he aided his own cause in the fourth by initiating a rally Lakeland, were not disclosed. 8-2 Sunday in the first game with a single which knotted the score 1-1. of a double-header. Ronberg threw'two quick'strikes to Hood in the seventh and IT WAS announced, however, Phil Reagan pitched two hit- then walked him. Dick Honig sacrificed Hood to second. Mar- that the Tigers will take over less innings of relief and gained cereau was safe when Wayne Fontes pulled Cartwright off the complete operation of their ex­ his first major league victory Bag with a toss. When Jones hit a slow grounder toward first, hibition games a t Henley Field, Bubba Morton tied the score Cartwright chose to make his play to home. It was late and Hood including ticket sales and con- for Detroit with a seventh-inn­ slid safely across the plate. Freehan’s single to left brought •cessions. The exhibitions for- ing pinch single, his first ma­ Marcereau home. | merly were handled by Lake- jor league hit. | land civic organizations. OUT CAME Ronberg and Ken Avery, who pitched a couple of The Tigers securing their hold games in the bull pen, got the final out. j- _ on first place, scored three Mike,Joyce, victor in th e iirst game many hours ago, replaced S e l l e l l 1110 times off Barber in the seventh Marcereau and ran into trouble. and added five runs in the Pinch hitter Bert Olah walked and pulled up at third on the Volleyball eighth when the Orioles com­ strengtllteLFontes' second double. After Henderson w asretired, Monday, 5:30 p.m. —PM Al­ mitted two errors to go with Schudlich batted for Cartwright and singled home Olah and, pha vs 69ers, court 1; L Streaks the five Detroit hits in the Inn­ Fontes with the tying runs. vs Evans Scholars, court 2; ing. J a c k McCook.hurled the eighth and suffered the loss as Honig Monday, 6:15 p.m. — Alpha Walt Dropo hit his first home knocked in the deciding run. Kappa Psi II vs Vets I, court run for Baltimore. It came in 1; Armstrong 3, vs Alpha Kap­ the second inning off starter pa Psi I, court 2; Don Mossi, who gave up both Monday, 7 p.m. — Hedrick the Oriole runs in the five in 2 FOR 1 PIZZA SALE 2 PIZZAS FOR THE PRICE OF 1 vs Hawaiian*, court 1; Els- nings he worked. _ worth vs lotaspheres, »P1 Softball Monday, 5:20 p.m. — Rather court 2. 1 vs Rather 2, field 1; Rather 3 vs Rather 4, field 2; East Shaw TROPHIES _ VARSITY DRIVE-IN 9 vs East Shaw 16, field 3; Ra­ and ther 6 vs Rather S, field 4; Bai­ Plaques ley 1 vs Bailey 7, field 1; Bai ley 3 vs Bailey I, field f ; Bailey over 1060 OFFER GOOD S • 8 P.M. 4 vs Bailey I, field 7; Butter­ 0« display ED ¿4517 field 1 vs Butterfield 8, field S; Butterfield C vs Butterfield 7, in stock _ field 9. immediate delivery Monday, 6:39 p.m. — Butter­ field 2 vs Butterfield 5, field 1; Professional Engraving The Michigan State East Shaw 4 vs East Shaw 5, field 2; Rather 5 vs Rather 7, field 3; E ast Shaw 2 vs East Larry C M m m Conservative Club Shaw 3, field 4; E ast Shaw 7 vs East Shaw t , field 5: West Shaw 4 vs West Shsw 5, field . Spoiling Goods MM VINE - Mack north of K klriti« Avo. presents West Shaw 2 vs West field 7; West Shaw 7 vs West 01 Soon Shaw I, field 9. Rev. Edmund A. Opitz S taff M em ber o f F oundation fo r Econom ie Education SLACK SALE! r “Conservatism and Reg. $14.95 & 512.95 B»W $ 1 0 .0 0 2 f o r $ 1 9 .0 0 His what's up front that counts Ethical Values” Reg. $10.95 A 5 9.95 now $ 8 .9 5 2 f o r $ 1 6 .0 0 Tuesday, May 2 , 8:00 p.m . Reg. $ 8.95 & 5 7.95 now $ 6 9 5 2 fo r $ 1 2 .0 0 ............... | is you rs in W inston and only W inston. R oom 3 3 , U nion B uilding U p fro n t ypu get rich golden tobaccos specially selected Ivy o r Pleated Models ■ Sixes 3 0 to 4 2 Michigan State U niversity, a n d specially processed fo r filter sm o king. S m o k e W inston. Nationally Advertised H i f g t r Slacks a J. l o i i l * M w . C t , « M » l AH MSU 8taéeats «ad the General Public Are Cordially Invited as Guests FREE ADMISSION Len Kositchek’s Vanity Shop E. I W INSTON TASTES GOOD like a cigarette should ! o Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Monday Morning, May 1, 1961 STOCK-UP YOUR 12” HI FIDELITY! MAJOR LABELS! TOP ARTISTS! SALE IS LIMTED TO HI-FI LIBRARY AT STOCK ON HAND. AIL AT TREMENDOUS SAYINGS! AT THESE PRICES A MINIMUM COST, ALL SALES ARE PRICES WERE ~FINAL NEVER LOWER ORIGINAL $3.98 TO $25.00 NO EXCHANGES 3 3 1 3 RPM LP RECORDS CLASSICAL. . . POEULAR .... JAZZ . . . FOLK SONGS . . . SPECIAL INTEREST RECORDS M-845. P O P U L A R C L A S S IC S IN H I-FI. Su Adrian 8oult and Hermann Scherehen conduct.si« of the mosT brilliant and best-loved'w orts in the orchestral repertoire— worts, . r. ALL ARE SUPERB, HIGEST QUAUTY PRESSINGS N O W » I 98 to « 6 98 M-479. M A T C H IN G S O N G S O F T H E B R IT ISH IS L E S A N D A M E R IC A . Sung by Peggy Sceger find Ewan ■full of melody a n d dynam ic' rythm. Tchaikovsky's 1812 M a cC oll. Unique presentation by two of the wo*!d > Overrture, Liszt's Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2. Suppe's most noted folksing ers ot both O L D W O R L D and C avalry Ovcratur*. G lierc's Russian Sailor's Dance, C h a - M-302. S P IR IT U A L S . Born of an urge to voice emotions, American versions of folk songs and bdjlads originally M -658. Franck: S Y M P H O N I C V A R IA T IO N S , Rimsky-Kor- here are 17 N e gro Spirituals sung by one of the great M - 4 I I . Tchaikovsky: V IO L IN CONCERTO IN D sung m England. Scotland and Ireland, and later briers España, Sam t-Sacnr Danse M acabre. Pub. at $4.98, sakoff: P IA N O C O N C E R T O . Scriabin: P IA N O C O N C E R ­ Mezzo-sopranos of our day, Lucretia W e st who has per­ M A J O R and P I A N O C O N C E R T O N O . I IN B FLAT brouqht to the New W orld by many centuries of im­ O n ly $1.98 TO. Features piariftt Paul Badura-Skoda supported by formed as a soloist with most of the world's great M A J O R . A rare opportunity to acquire two of Tchai­ migrants, included arc traditional ballads, courting Artur Rodzinski-and the Philharmonic Syniphony o f London, orchestras. Pub. at $3.98 O n ly $1.98 kovsky's most popular mqsterworks on one superb songs, broadside ballads, nursery songs, sea songs, M-491. Collector's Item: H IS T O R Y O F C L A S S I C JAZZ. and H enry Sw oboda and the Vienna Symphony. record! superlative performances by Violinist Erica which have withstood the rigors of t-me. A panoramic, view of traditional jazz, featuring all the Pub. at $4.98 - O n ly $1.98 M - I S I . Vivaldi: T H E F O U R S E A S O N S . The Winter snow, Morini, and pianist Edith Farad! Philharmonic Sym ­ Pub. at $4.98 great names including Armstrong, Morton, "Oliver, the rustic dance of Autumn, the song of the-birds in the phony O rc h e stra 'o f London and Vienna State Opera Beiderbecke, Walter, hundreds more. Over 60 com ­ M-249. F O L K M U S IC J A M S E S S IO N . Here is an a c c u -. Spring, the heat and thunder storm of the Summer comes Orchestras conducted- by Artur Rodzinski and Herman plete selections on S 12" LP records plus illustrated rate» picture-in-sound of the spirit and tone that prevails to life in these-magnificient concertos for violin and string Scherehen. Pub, at $4.98. O n ly $1.98 KT484. Schubert: Q U IN T E T IN A M A J O R . O P . 114 8 1 / 2 1 10" Book, by Charles E. Smith. Discographical, whenever a group of kids get together to. enjoy themselves orchestra featuring the famous violinist Renato Biffoli. •'TROUT.” Schubert wrote this piece in 1819 while sum­ Notes and Index of Musicians and. Selections. H a n d ­ .with folk music. 16 slangs, many not recorded elsewhere, , Pub. at $4.9« O n ly $1.98 mering at^Speyr, and in it displays all the fun and cn» somely gift boned. Rub. at $25.00. - O n ly $9,95 featuring Larry Ehrlich, Pete Stein, Pete Stone, and a host M -48 2 S T A N L E Y H O L L O W A Y ’S C O N C E R T PARTY. 14 joymcnt of a holiday. The interp+oy between piano and of other great young folk singers. cheerful songs of a bygone a g e .delightfully sung by the strings makes this work spontaneous, lyric and free-flcw- Pub. at $4.98 O n ly $1.98 internationally acclaimed star, of M y Fair Lady—Including ing. Delightful performance by the Endres Quartet with M-157. W A L T Z E S O F . . J O H A N N ST R A U S S. Eduard A lb e rt's Reunion, The Kinq who W anted Jam for Tea, Rolf Reinhardt at the piano. Pub. pi $4.98 O n ly $1.98 Strauss, the great nephew of the famous "W a ltz _ K in g " Sam 's~Chrntm as Pudding, I I more! brings up back to colorful O ld Vienna as he brilliantly Pub. at $4,98. - O n ly $1.98 M -150. Brahms: H U N G A R I A N D A N C E S * and D vo­ - M-441. Beethoven: S Y M P H O N Y N O . 6 IN^ F ^ M A J O R conducts h s ancestors' beloved Blue Danube, T ile s From rak: S L A V O N I C D A N C E S . Sheer delight filled with (P A S T O R A L E ). The tranquility of the country and the Vienna W oo d s, Emperor Waltz, Voices of Spring, etc. A the whimsical merriment, the charm, the touch of co­ M-487. T R IB A L M U S I C O F T H E B E L G IA N C O N G O ; peaceful life of the shepherds, the- ripple o l the brook, unique gem! Pub. at $4,98. '' ^ ' O n ly $1.98 M -489 S O N G S M Y M O T H E R T A U G H T M E. 14 beloved songs that have stood the test of time— -Sweet Genevieve, quetry, the ardent tenderness of the Slavic people, are these 12 dances of Brahms and 6 of Dvorak, Zestful performanc by Bamberg Sym phony conducted by Jon el Perla. Pub.jst $4.98. O n ly $1.98 Book BOOKS Ekonda. 22 songs of tribal ritual, dance, etc. recorded in the field. A fascinating recording of the music of the Ekonda— probably the most complex in Africa. Extensive, informative album notes by A lan P. Merriam. the joyous reunion of country folk, the fury of the thunderstom, the serene cafm afterwards. Small wonder this great symphony is so revered! O tto Kjemper conducts the Vienna Symphony. Pub. at $4.98 O n ly $1.98 Silver Threads A m ong thé G old, The Rose of Tralee, etc,**“ Pub at ”$4.98. O n ly $1.98 A stirring, performance by the Emil Cote G lee Club. M-614. C A T C H E S R O U N D S A N D G L E E S O F T H E 18th M-154. Beethoven: 4 P I A N O S O N A T A S . Here they are on Pub. at $3.98 O n ly $1.98 one superb record— the Paihetique, Moonlight, W aldstein, and Apassionafa performed by virtuoso Orazio Frugoni. A k 5 a i0 M -615. A C O N C E R T O F F O L K S O N G S : The Shanty Boys. Varied, lively, always interesting, here are 14 fo'k songs sung by the famous Shanty Boys. Shucking of the C E N T U R Y : The C atch Club. Irreverent, witty and w.sc songs from merrie clde England sung by the great Ran­ M-237. T H E R E G IN A M U S IC BO X. Charming, delightfully dolph Singers. W h ic h u the Propperest Day T o Drink, If listening delight— a [oy to own! Pub at $4.98. O n ly $tv98 rotaiqic, here are 25 icicctions played on the remnrjable Regm a— known as the " K r g of the m usic'boxes." A start- Img combination of the melodies of an antique mus.c bn«, M - l 19. W H A L I N G B A L L A D S A N D S Q N G S : Thar She Books Corn, O u t After Beer, A w ay Rio, 11 more. Pub. at $4.98. .. O n ly $1.98 Eve in H er Innocence, 16 more. Pub. at $4.98 O n ly $1.98 M-439. Tchaikovsky: S Y M P H O N Y N O . 5 IN E. M IN O R . reproduced with the brilliant modem sound techniques. Blows! N o seaman were in such constant hazards as the M -442. Brahms: S Y M P H O N Y N O . I IN C M IN O R . The The warmth and abundance of its melodies, the rich Pub. at $4.93 O n ly $1.98 whalermen in their old black-painted whaling vesselsc-They were greatTiands at workinq, fighting and singing. Hoarse 59c to $2.98 Brahms f la ir for simple melody is never more evident than in his lovely first sym phony,' maqnificently conducted coloring of 'its harmonies and—the fire of its spirit have made this one of the most universally beloved of M - 240 Cynthia G ood ing: L A N G U A G E S O F LO V E: Inter­ and tender, ribald or heartbroken, their songs still 'ive on here by H sinrich Hotlreser. Pub. at $4.98. O n ly $1.98 - Tchaikovsky's Symphonies. Heinrich H o ’heiser conducts the nationally acclaimed as a folk sinqer of great talents end versahtity, Cynthia G o o d in g sings 17 traditional songs of in-this exciting recording of 15 sung by the famous A . Lloyd and-Ewan M acC oll, accom panied by Pegqy S e e g e \ Assorted Titles Bamberg Symphony. Pub. at $4.98. O n ly $1.98 love— love cf man for woman, parent- for child, ct,c. 7 songs Pub. at $4.98 ' ' „ O n ly $1.98 W O N D E R L A N D . Read and sung by the inimitabc! M-483* S C O T S STREET S O N G S . 14 broadside bajlads in English including I G ave M y Love a Cherry, and be a u -- Cyril Ritchard— original music score by A lec Wilder, sung by one of the world's greatest folksmgers. Scots* tiful W elsh lullaby, A ll .Through the Night, and 10 lovely, M-627. Cim arosa: IL M A E S T R O Dl C A P E L L A and IL played by the New York W ood w ind Quartet— the bom Ewan M acC oll, with occasional accompaniment on universally appealing songs in French, Spanish, Turkish, Pub. at $T 98 M -842. A Treasury of Classic Marches: IN M A R C H O n ly $1.98 M A T R I M O N I O S E G R E T O . Two qreat comic operas by the famed contemporary "of Rossini. Both performed by -the Orchestra da C am era di M ilano with Ennio Gerelli con­ ducting fam ed soloists. Pub, at $4.98. O n ly $1.98 Brush Lewis Carroll classic complete on four 12" LP records in deluxe full-colortllustratcd gift -box, plus a facsimile volume of the rare 1865 first edition of the book! Illu­ strated by John Tenniel. Pub. at $25.00. O nly $6-95 the concertina by A lf Edwards. Includes The Brewer s Daughter, To The Begging I W ill Go, 13 more, plus full album notes on the background of each song. Pub. at $4.98. O n ly $1.98 T E M P O . Nine~sp.fi;ed marches skilfully performed by the M-659. Tchaikovsky: S Y M P H O N Y N O . 4. Strong, affirma­ Pi•ints M-616. M U S I C O F T H E A F R lC A N _ G O L D C O A S T : G o ld London Symphony, Philharmonic Promenade, and Philhar­ tive, cheerful in feeling, this is a particularly inspired read­ M-438. Dvorak: N E W W O R L D S Y M P H O N Y N O . 5 IN E "Coast Saturday Night. A real ranty! Here ~ts the new monic Sym phony of London conducted by Hermann ing by Herman Scherehen end the Vienna State O p rra _ M IN O R . A powerful work beautifully blending Dvorak ; dance hall and concert music cf A frica today performed Scherehen, Sir Adrian Boult and Artur Rodzinski. — Orchestral Pub. at $4.98. O n ly $1.98 concepts of two worlds— the O ld and the New. C o m ­ by Safe a A cquaye and h