' r N « n ib c p P l e a s e ^ — W e a th e r R e p o rt V Stale News has aew teteplmm tees. Far news desks «se ntesdsn 2118, 2Uf er Variable eleodtaess aad cee! , _J 3*17. Fer all advertising crib, tadwHng Lew Ttarsday ................ 33 classified ads, ase « atsriiii S O er UN. High Teday _ 52 Serving MSU For 52 Y ean EeUbliahed 1909 Vol. 53, No. 30 t w i Laming, Michigan. Wednesday Morning, M ay 10, 1961 10 Pages 5 O nt* T r o v e s $ 7 ,1 5 0 ,0 0 0 iects f o r M S U StQI Has E a ts F a llo u t B is c u it To Pass JFK Prom ises Senate Civil Defense Plan The" house appropriated $7,150,000 Monday night for WASHINGTON (.T)—President Rockefeller, long an advo­ three self-financed building Kennedy nibbled a fallout bis­ cate of fallout shelters, is projects at MStJ. chairman of the committee. He cuit Tuesday and promised to passed out the biscuits to all The projects include resi­ have a new, strenghtened Civ­ those present. dence halls and food service il Defense program ready in “facilities for 1,200 students THE GOVERNOR said 35 a month. cents worth of the biscuits pins at $6,000,000 and 116 mar­ The biscuit was a gift from water would sustain someone OOPS Spaceman Alan B. Shepard Jr., takes medal from President Kennedy ried students apartments at Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of in a.fallout shelter for a day. after d r medal was dropped by the chief executive at. White House ceremonies $1,150,000. New York, who brought, along In tins, he said, the biscuits hsmipng the astronaut. Monday. Next to Shepard are his wife and his parents. The residence halls will.be a tin to a meeting between Ken­ could last ten years. lA Pmrepfcste) ... ■ . - - located on a terr-acre plot be­ nedy and members of the Gov­ There was no hint about the tween Birch Rd. and Maple ernor’s Conference Civil De­ details of the promised Ken­ Lane, facing Chestnut Rd. Married housing apartments will be located on the east side JERRY HOLMES WAYNE PARSONS fense committee. nedy program. But Gov. Steph­ en L.R. McNichols of Colorado, Laos Future Clouded chairman of the governors’ of Harrison Rd. between Chest­ Iranian conference and an ex-officio nut Rd. and the Grand Trunk Western railroad tracks. ~ Also included in the 835 mil­ lion building project bill passed J N a m e E d it o r Parliament member of the committee, pre­ dicted Kennedy would ‘come up with a reasonable program.” McNichols also predicted it T ru c e T a lk s S n a rle d , R e b e ls B a lk a l IC C were $2.700.000 for MSU-Oak- Jerry Holmes, Howell junior, national photo journalism hon- would win support from every land, which will be used for new residence halls, an addi­ tion to the student union build­ has been named‘editor of the. °rary. 1962 Wolverine yearbook by the His appointment takes affect Board of Student Publications. immediately. _ Dissolved governor, every legislature, and every citizen. In the meantime. Rockefeller ing, and for the construction of Parsons has been sales man­ TEHRAN, lit)—The Shah of told newsmen, the governors VIENTIANE. Laos. .¿N-Pro- gotiating site 55 miles north of ex-premier who'heads a rump an intramural building. New business manager for ager of the yearbook this year. want Congress to approve the Central Michigan University the ‘62 book is Wayne Parsons, He served as sports editor the Iran, a Reformer-Monarch op­ posed by big landlords of his civil defense budget request. Commumst rebel authorities Vientiane. “They said they had regime-in rebel territory, even refused to relay a letter from reeeived $1,604.200 for the con­ Lansing junior^ year snubbed members of the three- -no instructions.” 4 before. , , realm, dissolved parliment This asks a regular appropri­ nation latereiOMilControl INDIAN, Canadian and Pol­ the commisison group in Vien­ struction of residence halls to Holmes has been a Wolverine A member of Phi Delta TheiaiKennedy requested was ap- celebration and the opening of Iproved Tuesday by a House the National Assembly. There Last-ditch attempts by Sen­ vices and on cigarettes would been reconstructed. Tentative !Education Subcommittee. were once hopes that the as­ ate Democrats to increase the “$462 million budget approved by the Republican-controlled be continued. They bring in plans' call for the about $19 million annually, relocated on the Red Cedar which the Democrats proposed across from Shaw hall. sltelLJo be To Increase NATO’s Power [ By a strict party-line vote sembly session would be the ; of 4-3, with Democrats in the stage for forming a united gov­ majority, the controversial bill ernment, but students of La- legislature failed Tuesday by a to be divided this way: The program will open with OSLO in—President Ken- ON AFRICAN AFFAIRS—A man fact-funking nusteon as a cleared its first hurdle on what See SNARLING Page 5 17-12 vote. — $3.5 million for higher edu­ Mendelssohn’s picture of theuj-nady’s administration Tuesday long, wrangle took place cen­ first step toward la—chrag a is expected, to be a tough ob­ Except for Sen. Carlton H. cation; $9 million for school Hebrides, the “Fingal’s Cave pledged five Polaris-carrying tering on Portugal’s all-out program of manare economie stacle course in.the House. aid; $1.5 million for mental Overture.” The sea theme is submarines for defense of Eur­ campaign to crush a negro in­ aid for titear poverty-ridden The subcommittee added M o r r i s , R-Kalamazoo, who ined the Democrats, the vote health, and about $5.4 million carried on with “Sea Portrait,'’ ope as part of an American bid surrection in west African An­ lands. It was cheer Che specter $209 million to Kennedy’s three Swainson S Hewed strict party tines. The Democrats proposed to for pay increases and fringe a tone poem by Homer LeGas- to beef up the defense „of the gola. Franco Nogueriras of of a political hreiafcdewe and year grant program of $2.3 bil­ benefitiufor state employes. sey, followed by “Andalusian Atlantic Alliance. Portugal, without mentioning even of an '«tannate commu­ lion for public school construct­ Will Present extend some $19 million hi so- Swainson told newsmen that Fresco,” by Durand. Secretary of State Dean Rusk Angola, attacked the attitude nist take-over ■rprrad the un­ ion and teachers’ salaries. be belietes all of his budget A novelty composition, “Hie. at tile same time advised for­ of some of his colleagues who precedented ecu— It also rejected Kennedy’s re­ called nuisance taxes on com­ munications and cigarettes be­ recommendations are attain­ Foursome,” features four sax­ eign ministers of the North At­ refused to support the Portu­ ON ENTER-ALLIED trade quested cut of $78 million a able without any new taxes or ophonists, Leon Brooks, James lantic Treaty Organization that guese -position tar the United rivalries. In Daspi Doiimatfc year to the existing program Vet’s ‘Duck’ yond their automatic June 90 extension of taxes and that his Keranen, Carol Porter, and the United States: Nations. and Norway, backed by Rusk, ef federal aid to school dis­ Governor John B. Swainson expiration date. revenue estimates are valid. Patricia Loomis. 1. Intends to keep its fire Nogueiras aiserteti that the called an B t e e to take a lead tricts close to large federal in­ will present,an eight-foot plexi­ The tax-appropriation pack­ “However, there exists a dif­ A change of mood comes with divisions .plus supporting units, British Commonwealth State of in negrttetinc entry into the stallations. glass replica of the Vet's mas­ age was proposed after Gov. ference - of opinion on the the first movement of Brodin’s in mainland Europe mdefinate- Ghana had practically gone mantel« can— an market The resulting bill amounts to cot “the duck” at the Veteran's Swainson backed down from amount of anticipated income,” “Second Symphony,” and Bee­ iy. communist. This prompted-For- They praa—ed to jam in, too. a $3.3 billion .three-year pro­ two-point dinner to be held his long-standing opposition to he said. “I agree with thoee thoven’s “Adagiao Cantabile," 2. INTENDS TO retain effec­ eign Secretary Howard ‘Green provided the British da *o This gram to aid public elementary from 5 to 8 p.m. May 17 at continuing the nuisance taxes responsible legislators w ho from the Sonata Pathetique. tive nuclear striking power in of Canada to reject the sugges­ draw n qpatified piedge of act and high schools. Coral Gables. ’ in a move he said was designed feel that this numbers game Three Italian compositions the NATO area for American tion. Even quiet-spoken Lord tani frees Lard Haae The subcommittee did not A limited number of tickets to avoid the crippling of state, must not result in crippling are included in the program: and Allied use. Home of Britain felt moved to On Berte against m y Ras- deal with the issue of aid to may be purchased at the Un­ government he said would oc­ state programs and services. “Pines of the Appian Way.” 3. Wants its European allies say in effect that Portuguese rian dtellencr A l agreed such parochial schools. It is expect­ ion ticket office, from any Vet­ cur under the legislative’s bud- The Democrats' move came from “Pines of Rome,” by I t e to catch up on their convention­ policy in Africa was cut of a Soviet threat to tom West ed a move will be made toin- eran member or at the Veter­ get too late to convince many Re­ pighi; “Finieuli Finicula,” by al force target of 30 divisions— tune with 20th century realities. Berlin into tea " —creational, dude such aid when the mat- an’s office in 316 Student Serv­ Under the plan, the taxes on publican Senators that it was Danza; and the Adagio-Taran- now 3 years behind schedule On Greece And Turkey—the demilitarized" city is bkelyjter is taken up by the foil ices between 2 and 4 p.m. on telephone and telegraph ser­ a sincere one. telia,” by CavaUiaL at a level of about 20 divisions. council decided to send n three this year. House Education Committee, «Monday, Thursday or Friday. mm j | ' M id d y » ItilT O R IA L Wednesday Morning, May 1 0 ,1 0 6 t Tyranny o£ Miultiplc CllOlC© * r P “It’i aBoy— HaveaCigar!” F o re ig n P o lic y Exams: Sacrifice for Speed N eeds C hanges ByJtAYPRATT grade in each term of Re four required basics. Stata News Columnist A recent issue of H a n » * Magazine car- ried an article by Baneeh Hoffmann, a profes­ Winburne concluded that the entire univer­ The recent U.^.-financed jaunt by anti- sor of mathematics at Queens college, en­ sity should examine Re examing systems. Castro Cubans into Cuba and its subsequent titled "The Tyranny of Multiple-Choice Tests.” “What is the pgodact we want?” Winburne utter and complete collapse bring to mind Although the article was concerned with asked. “We should define what we want at some interesting thoughts. test given job applicants and perspective the qnd of the course,” he said. Nearly everyone in the United States "be­ students of many universities, the same Paul Dressel. a national Authority on test­ lieved the Cuban people Would rise up and objections to multiple-choice tests hold true ing, said that exams fulfill different pur­ throw off Fidel Castro’s radical socialist forTthe objective tests given by many in­ poses at different times. With an objective government if they had the chance. But in- - structors at MSU. ____ test “you don't know what kind of thought stead the Cuban peòple fought like demons HOFFMANN LISTED four main objec­ went on.” ■ — " "S > . for Fidel. tions to the multiple-choice tests: “The objective test does away with the personal attention the student gets with the SOMEHOW THE American people have 1. These tests did not allow a person with been so conditioned mentally that they can­ any creativity to express himself. essay te s t When the instructor marks an 2. They penalize thé person who is able to essay test he generally notes the mistakes not imagine existence in any sort of society find the subtle pointa which would go unno­ in writing. Hus gives the student a reference but their own as being even bearable. to use while attempting to correct his m ors. They cannot even conceive of the poverty ticed by the average person. the vast majority of the world’s people live 3. Questions are often made artificially IT WOULD SEEM that objective tests difficult for the purpose of making the though‘easily corrected force the student to under—no one makes much effort at point­ exams fit a 'format which does not calTfor memorize his material and require only that ing it out to them. Anyway, why be concern­ multiple-choice examination. he parrot back what be memorized on the ed? No-one starves in the United States, oc 4. These tests neglect the skill of dis­ exam. _ at least, almost nopne. ciplined expression. The problem is dearly that either the class EVEN OUR NATIONAL leadership labors THE PROS AND CONS of objective tests is too large or too much material is being- under some of these“ sarae delusions. Our were discussed with Dr. Chartes Cumberland, covered. Though classes of math and science enlightened President with his highly touted professor of-history, Paul Dressel, director usually require testing by problems, most “sense of history” has failed to grasp the pf international research, and Dr. John Win- other university level courses should re­ . immensity of the problem he faces. h urne, assistant dean of University College. quire that the student do more than mark For all the shouting over the last eight "Tests are no better that the man making A the correct slot on the answer sheet. years about the U.S. being always on the them and there are a lot of bad men making Unless the student is properly tested, defensive in foreign affairs, the first 100 them,” Dr. Cumberland said. “As a testing neither he nor the instructor can tell whether days of the New Frontier have demonstrated device, a properly made objective test can he is learning the material. Some students little to make one -think the situation has measure as well'as any other test.” don’t feel that objective exams gives them a ^changed. Indeed, young Jack seems to be Cumberland said that his philosophy was fair chance to express their knowledge. Some doing everything he can to keep old Ike's that every asjpect of college ought to be am say that they fed like they are participating blessing. educational process not merely a training in a guessing game rather than taking an process. An essay test forces the student in exam. _ \ ALL THE PROBLEMS seem to boil to his own words to define and select. WHAT INCENTIVE to learn is offered L e tte rs to th e É d ito r the basic conflict between totalitarian so­ “HOWEVER, a good objective test can when after studying boors for a test the cialism ana the parliamentary democracy of make a student think. My objection is to an objective -exam is not that it is a poor examing device but a poor educating device,” student ends up guessing which answer is more right than the others? The diletna of the large university is On Parking, Cuban Policy the West. This the West seems to see only in terms of a struggle for power; but it is qne the Communists see also as one obligat­ Cumberland said. whether or not'testing thoroughly and edu­ ment be forgotten, but wilUti-— To be nothing but ancient ing them to give evidence of their intentions Dr. Windburne said that hé would prefer cationally should be sacrificed to testing G iv e U s R o o m sue “challenges” to all the . history. . to createTiew societies. both types of exams. However in an essay quickly. Ta the Editor, other universities and colleges The views have been given What does the U.S. have to offer the again and again, This letter is directed to the in test there ig nothing more frustrating than MSU needs to decide whether an exam the nation. This is the start world besides some free seeds, technical aid, „ the very fluent student that takes off in should be an educational process or a train­ of a new era in blood donations By every man who has raised and pious pronouncements about free enter­ Board of Trustees,* President and we will still believe that a pen. _ flights on some thing he knows nothing ing process. We need to revise and clarify Hannah, and the Housing of­ twice as much blood can be prise and pulling one’s self up by one’s own about .Winburne said . '**■ our goals. What is the product we want to fice. We would like six rooms collected on the MSU campus The point I raise is just this. bootstraps ? Really, this stuff is pretty hard “Also the danger of essay exams is that graduate: a trained'person skilled in memo­ reserved for us next fall in the at some future date. It seems the rest of the news- to sell people who are nearly starving, are in in order to coordinate our university college rizing or a person experienced in selecting new Planetarium. _ _ Please give our best regards has been missed, extreme despair, and practically owe their Due to matters beyond our .and “congratulations” to Larry What about Mr. Shepart, Laos, souls to their employers, as did the sugar classes we have to have some sort of common material, self-expressive and thinking, equip­ control, we now have been Walker, general chairman for exam. We’ve got to have some kind of guide ped to live in complex society? ~ Fidel? evicted from our rooms on the fine job he did in getting Maybe even something about workers in Cuba before the revolution and post for our teachers.” Will individual quality again be sacrificed Terrace West Landon for next the students to come out and Castro’s reforms. year. __ Dean Reidel! THE UNIVERSITY college gives an objec­ for the empty boast of high literacy and give. NO MATTER WHAT people in the U.S. tive final exam counting 50% of thé course mass education? It seems we are fortunate to Al ’Flat Top' Daly 71592 Of left and right we can fight have our dorm chosen for ao Voice would like-to think, the Cuban revolution, experimental dassroom situa­ Jackses Prison of Opération Leaky Arm all night, though admittedly, with the Soviet aid it tion to the dormitory. But the world is in a serious was forced into' taking, is a success. University Autonomy Threatened French students will be liv­ ing in our rooms and having classes to the dormer at the V i r t u o u s L i f e it it it — “ plight, So let’s worry about the cur­ rent stresses, We must also remember that, above all, it is an indigenous American revolution, end of the hall and to the rec­ And stop making editorial arising from conditions here in our own By State Legislature’s Authority reation room next year. This leaves 15 of us home­ To the Editor: May I answer Mother Hub­ less. We already are hanging bards poem which you printed pages such messes! Bob Braun hemisphere^ It is the first of the nation­ alistic, Marxist, socialist revolutions, and must be looked at with these characteristics, •k k it Evefy year it comes closer. Last year, an at­ ally makes a profit Jrora tuition in the first few out of the windows by our toes in the State News May 5? with all their implications, fully in.mind. tempt by’ the legislature to limit out-of-state en­ years. ~ because three girls are crowd­ i_ Of course the young woman Most Cubans still strongly^support Fidel, rollment failed by only ten votes. This-year, an BUT FINANCIAL advantage or no, they all ed into two-girl rooms. had no children—she was sin­ P r i n c i p l e s ? tough perhaps with reservations, as report­ appropriations amendment which would cut the seem to fee! that limitation is both necessary and The article you reprinted a gle and lead a virtuous life. To the Editor: university’s out-of-state enrollment by more than in the best interest of the youth of Michigan. It couple weeks ago from the ed recently by the New York Times and (Mrs.) Louise A. Plachta Mr. Lady’s statement in the Knight papers. half barely failed passing the House. The pros­ is appalling to see bow completely they agree— Michigan Daily was true. _ it - it i t ■ pects for next year appear Incredibly grim. Democrat and Repubbcaa, liberal and conserva­ What is the point pf bringing Monday's State News that “Ju- At this point, the constitutionality of a legis­ tive—that limitation is in order. Conflicts seem classrooms' to the dormitory? deo-Christian principles should WITH THIS KNOWLEDGE, the U.S.. in latively enforced quota is very, much in ques­ to be centering only on matters of form of nance What is the point of having M i s s i n g M e s s taking a position in favor of toppling Cas­ guide our (younger conserva­ tro’s government, is acting in outright de- tion. The university’s constitutional status and legality. students live together with precludes legislative riders to any appropriation This is a short-sighted way to run an educa­ those who rere majoring in the To the Editor: tives! actions” demands some nial of its oft-mouthed doctrines of non­ bill which would "take from the Board of tional system. What none of the legislators seem same field' as they? In the past two weeks thé ques­ elaboration. intervention and self-determination for all Regents any substantial part of the Board's to realize—or at least none ofjtbem admit—is Are we so immature that we tion was raised, As those principles guide over people. discretionary power over the operation or edu­ that by imposing a limit on the number of out- need to be sheltered like this? -.And since that time the war 290 Christian denominations, It’s“no wonder many in the U.S.^particu- cational policy of the university." - - of-state students the university can. accept, they What will happen when we has raged. BUT A CONSTITUTIONAL convention is com­ are striking at the roots of everything that makes graduate and go out in the cold, Which side is best, the left or segregationists, intergration- larly the more conservative free enterprisers, ing this summer, and the threat of changing the this university an outstanding institution. cruel world? the right? ._. ists, pacifists, militarist. Greek are screaming for a crushing of Castro’B university's legal autonomy looms in the 'dis­ Ohio State. Ubnois. and Indiana have all at­ Then we’U be with people It has been a hell of a fight. letter societies and many other Cuba. They realize, though perhaps subcon- tance. If the university's policies can be directed . tempted to give quantity education, no doubt in who are from til walks of life. groups and organizations, it ap­ _ sciouslyr that our parliamentary democracy by the Legislature, an out-of-state student quota the sincerest effort to educate the youth of their What will there be to talk The conservatives have quoted pears that affirmation of Judeo- shelters them. B u t they don’t realize that is almost sure to be adopted sometime iit the respective states. But they have watered down about? t Goldie and Burke, Christisn influence (primarily next few years._ their education, narrowed their outlook, and. to We won’t know anything And a word from Ike didn't the Mediterranean basin, Rus­ parliamentary democracy has yet to make The legislators seem to have fixed onr the out- a certain extent closed oak the world in this about them and they won’t seem to hurt, . — sia, Europe,-and the Ameri­ it in a-m ajor underdeveloped area of the of-state student limit as the answer to a number effort. Perhaps everyone who wants one. gets a know anything about us. Karl Lady gave their argu­ cas). To say that is to say world. If it is forced to take a “free-enter­ pf educational woes. Faced with the prospect of four-year, moderately priced education. But it Why should wFhave to come ments, one, and all. only that the organization or prise” economy as a base it never will. huge numbers of Michigan high school students is also a mediocre education. all the way to East Lansing to His ideas were on the ball ! group is a product of its en­ The challenge to the United States is not beating at the doors of the universities.faced with IT MUST NOT HAPPEN HERE. The univer­ go to school? vironment. one of arms, though most will probably see administrators screaming about the obviously sity has spent many years building up quality With closed circuit television .The liberal side had J.F.K., If the younger conservatives inadequate appropriations, legislators h a v e education—quality education in part based on we could sit to our homes Marx and Engels had their say, have any definite ideas on how it that way. Rather, it is an obligation to latched onto limitation as a means of solving the principle that a cosmopolitan atmosphere and around the state and the nation The view of the NAACP was in, J u d e o-Christian principles produce ideas and economic aid, and certain­ problems which limitation cannot solve. wide-open approach to learning will produce the and receive a college educa­ It seems to me their side might should guide their and our ac­ ly not profits for American business. THE LEGISLATORS, aware of both the in­ best scholars far Michigan and for the country. tion. win. tions; I hope Mr. Lady will IT DOESN’T SEEM that the American creasing need and the increasing cost of quantity The university has great strength because its This idea might be consider­ take the opportunity, either in education, are looking to the quota as an easy roots are everywhere. To cut off its national ed by the Michigan Legisla­ I have a gripe, its the battle a future column or in a letter to people can meet the challenge the total­ way out. It is hard to agree that it is. and international roots is to forceably relegate it ture. They seem to be having spot, the editor, to present such itarian shortcut provides, or, indeed, even The financial problem is a strange one. No­ to the status of a provincial coOege. To limit the trouble appropriating us mon­ Just about Peanuts the war ideas, that the campus may comprehend the course it will necessitate. body seems quite able to determine just bow out-of-state enronment is the first step towards ey. raged hot, better understand the nature of For if they thought about it they would much money a cut in out-of-state students would debasing a great university into a merely ade­ P. S. If you can’t accommo­ The biloved pages of the State the organization he represents. see they would have to-reduce their-stand­ gain—or lose. Certain legislators say that the quate institution. date us in tiie new planetari­ News, Of especial interest would be ard of living to austerity, cut off the in­ educate-our-own policy will save the state money Michigan' must bang on to the cosmopolitan um, please reserve us six stalls Were the sounding board that the use whicb' conservatives in the long run. nature of its universities, or dae dose itself off in the cow barns on south was used. make of the Judeo-Christian come of the non-producers in our society Others point out that the out-of-state student’s from the world, and give up its claim to educa­ campus. principle of sin, particularly those capable of working, but not doing so 9T50 per year tuition more than pays for the cost tional excellence. Care! Miller, Lorraine Noir­ All of the arguments, it seems original sin. and still getting rich), and make the eco­ of his education, and that the University actu- The Michigan Daily et, Nancy Barkey, Tracy Da­ to me, - James Waltz nomic institution more responsible' to the vis, Gayle Rafgai, Connie needs and welfare of al) the people, and Gould, Aalto Wood. Sharon I»» VVI I S encourage humanistic, socialistic societies Robison. Barb Atkinson, Karen I DR cAM ED THAT VÜUG filEUP Michi FsOkaler. , • '♦ ♦ ♦— TH »C T«>ftANÓ .éN D TRADE SÛW0LTD (ÄffNHOD TÖ M AKE A UVÌN6 SO < (DENT’D in the underdeveloped nations of the world. This course seems more than our system by its very nature can work toward. It Published by the studwts of Michigan State University. Issued m f ME AFTER IJEÄJTMAAß® ! necessitates changes too great for most peo­ class days Monday through Friday, during the fall, winter and spring quartan. Issued weekly during the summer tana. Second das* pod- T o th e C h a m p s IS ple to make of their own free will. Besides, it would dsstroy. everything the United age paid at East Lansing, Michigan. To tha Editor: Editorial and business offices at SIS Student Services bteSdtag. Just read good news to the States has come, for many people, to stand Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan, Detroit Free Press about the for —- th at is the possibility our system Mall subscriptions payable in advance for one term, ft; for two hew record of L296 pints of creates for a few people in our society to terms, 94: three terms, 95. ->•- Mood the students of MSU do­ be able to get a little to a great deal more Member of the Associated Pros, Inland Daily Press Association nated last week. THEONLVUÄtf I üXJÜLDEWR I'LL HA/E TO ADMITTHAT material wealth than anybody else. and the Associated College press. Our hats we off to the new MA8W VOUUXWiDte ¡FVOU 60JND5 LOGICAL World’s Champion Blood Do­ u m u last exioH Bm ,ano WE WOULDN’T want to throw away the Editor-in-chief Suzann Price Sports Editer_____ Ben Bums MTHATCASEMLDimeSami Managing Editor..Sharon Coady Feature Edttor.Jees Maxwell nors—the Mighty Spartans— possibility of gaining more wealth than and'our heartiest “ copgrat mPjtiMAM BEéONtfòl City Editor Marcia Van Ness Woman’s Editor ....:— _______ our fellows without even working for it. Charlotte DeÜton ulatibos” to each and every Some set ss if they think it is an ideal too News Editor______ Dill Cote one of these that made tt pos­ Science Editor .-.,.. BiB Small sible for MSU to capture the beautiful to destroy. Perhaps we may have Adv. Manager Jèrry Lundy A u l. Adv. Mgr., Larry Peaüua Circulation Mgr... Paul Lesher title. to watch our nation go down the drain of A u t Adv. Mgr„. Larry Walker We bope tbat the State News history because of it. Indeed, we may even Editorial Editor . Jody Howard Photo Editor ...Al Royce will not 1st this accomplish­ destroy ail humanity in defense of ii.„ _ _ WW^TT lîlpii^Sî *î "’, ,■1-:î’t •.’■ ■PL- P ip i te mñ te te » m l^ lÄ lB S lIÄ ffS 8 Ü '■; "~te. te te ’ ^ ' ~te l l l t l /; T te f; 2ÜRK S IS ®BPl lilIlÉl Wednesday Mdfrning, May 10,1961 :tete Michigan State W—% g —tlu n rin g , Midrip a 3 m Missile n . n Crossw ord Puzzle | □□□□□□aa I lo m a 3 3 0 3 a a a ° a a a anona 3C 3Q S ssa Shepards Remain ftySg fffl -up t. SCUMS 8. Go/haad 2*.ffe«eF • 20. Candied 31. At present □ □ an □□□sa ci3nj □□sn □□asaaaa nuaanal A t Langley Base Bill OK’d S. The girl 12. Ba unde­ cided 32. Age 33. Unpolished 34. Festival □ □ a □ (!□ □ □ .SOB □ □ □ n sa a ri s a a a s c a n □□□□□ LANGLEY AFB, V*., and FrL Editions. Deadline for Mon. Edition: 1 p.m. FrL W AS H 1*05 T OJS hfi-The a Senate appropriations sub­ troversial. The House had Treasury asked Senators Tues­ voted for the 12,234 units of committee the estimated a- P h o n e E D 2 -1 5 1 1 „ E x te n s io n s 2 643 a n d 2 6 4 4 privately constructed housing day for enough money to hire mount of unreported taxable THAT’S RIGHT which the Senate rejected. The 2,300 more agents to run down income in l959, the latest year Senate-approved housing would tax cheaters. ~ for which figures were avail­ ONE for freshmen coeds AUTOMOTIVE EMPLOYMENT PERSONAL be built with direct appropria­ Secretary of the treasury able, as $24.4 billion. tions. teir Douglas Dillon said nearly .625 Either figure would be more ONE for upper class women 1958 AUSTIN-HEALEY. 100-6 mm. Excellent condition. 12.500 miles. Wire _ STUDENT WITH MILITARY ex ­ SUZY, DON'T FORGET Angel Rush. As_requested by President billion of income is slipping than enough to offset the fed­ perience in teletype m aintenance and Good luck. Bill. 30 past tax collectors each year, eral budget deficit for the cur­ wheels, overdrive. *1995. Phone ED repair. Contact Mr. K eith a t the Kennedy:" t h e Senate-passed 2-3913. 31 Computer Lab. Ext. 2597. 32 DELT SIG. GIRLS, m any for Serenade Monday night. Men of thanks version would authorize an ad­ unreported and untaxed. rent fiscal year ending June 1958 AUSTIN HEALY 100-8. 4 seat- Delta Sigma Phi. 30 ditional $10.5 million for nine The taxes on this undetected 30, which the Kennedy admin­ Just stop in and drop _*r, wl*e wheel*, radio, heater, white­ walls, overdrive. Call ED 2-2879—a f­ FORTSALE secret projects in support of a- income would be more than istration estimates at $2.2 bil­ ter 5 p jn . 32 speed-up in the Polaris and enough to balance the Federal lion. It also would more than Your Name and Address MUST SELL—Possibly 1954 BUICK CENTURY. Standard Aqua sequined formal, cocktail dress, moving. antisubmarine programs, and budget, he said. cover the estimated $2.8 bil­ transmission. ED 7-0012 after 5 p m . dancing slippers: worn once. Wed­ ding rings, very reasonable. W ard­ 6120 million more to help arm Getting specific, Dillon- told lion deficit for next year. in the box 1952 DODGE. 4-door.-m otor rebuilt robe accessories, portable radio, the nation with nine new Titan child's tricycle, good condition. ED missile squadrons -instead of 2'a years a*o. Good running con­ 7-2540. dition and tire*. 875. ED 7-0525. 31 TWO DRY SUITS. 1 perfect. 1 30 the six extra squadrons pro­ S o m e th in g W a r m D r a w in g o n S a t . J u n e 3 rd . CANDY posed by the House. 1957 MG A RED convertible. Wire needs repair. Original cost $40. Will "wheels and radio. Excellent condi­ sell for $20. ED 2-1361. 31 Kennedy did not ask for and H u m an tion. Call IV 2-1845. 32 FIRST REASONABLE offer. AKC ‘ " Mailed Anywhere these "extra funtts until after and Wonderful H appens,.«. 1950 MG-TD. Body expedient, top. Reg. St. B ernard fnale, 1 year old, Complete Assortment the House had acted. _ When You Send Flowers By - Wire fair, tonneau cover, heater, 8695 122 CaU ED 7-8379. 31 South 'Foster. _ 30 ROLLIEFLEX "T" BRAND new. Available At We Telegraph Flowers P a t r ic ia n H a i r F a s h io n s 1953 MG-TD.- New top and tonneau $200 Must sacrifice. Will sell for $140 Order Early and Save On All cover._heater, good condition. Reas­ Call ED 7-1178 after 6 p.m. onable. IV 5-5237. 32 GOLF SET. -5 SPAULDING irons. 32 The C a rd S h o p Myers Edits Out of town ‘Deliveries in the U.S. and Canada PAT _ _ _ MARTIN 1954 MG - TF Black, new Tonneau 4 Wilson woods, bag. Excellent con­ Across From and radio, good heater, excellent dition. ED 7-0007. condition. ED 2-2929 a tte r 6 p.m. FOR SALE - SIAMESE kittens. 6 weeks old. $15 CaU ED 7-1208 after 31 Home Economics Bldg. Magazine B a r n e s F l o r a l o f l ^ a s t L a n s in g 215 Ann Open Evenings&Sunday ED 2-0871 E D 7-1114 1957 MG MAGNETTE 4 door, radio, 5:30. .. 31 ED 2-6753 Chaff magazine has announc­ For Appointments heater, w/w, all leather interior. SIAMESE KITTENS — Males and ed the appointment of Bill $888.88 Call ED 7-2029. 34 females. Registered Sealpoint k it­ Myers, Hastings junior, as lo­ 195| METROPOLITAN convert. tens. Also Doberman Stud service. REAL ESTATE Condition like new. M u s t w l l 'h i s CaU IV 2-3545 after 5:30 weekdays, cal editor. # week. Best offer over 8600 NO. 9-6795. o r anytim e weekends. 30 Six Big Ten campuses publish TWIN BED FRAME & m attress. LEAVING MSU—Willing to lose their own editions of Chaff sev­ Spring and m attress fo r full bed, 82,500 for quick sale of equity in 8- 1960 SAAB. WHITE 10.000 miles. $25 en times a year.-Each univer­ Beginning Frid a y room home in Mason. Large, private Excellent condition.. IV 2-3998 eve­ afterBoy's ice skates, size 7. IV 2-4946 yard with redwood fencing. New car­ nings. . — ■ 5:30. 32 peting and m atching tile and d rap­ sity features local .personalities M.S.U. GRADUATION RINGS. See eries. Aluminum storms. Gas heat. Double garage. Less than $13.000. groups, and events written by them at th e Card Shop. Across from Gall OR 7-8642. ■— 32 a local staff of students. Spartan Motors, Inc. Home Ec. Building. ED 2-6753. 46 TWO-BEDROOM RANCH HOUSE TRAILERS Leaving city, paym ents less than rent. 15 m inutes from campus. Call Spring Sale Specials VERY LIGHT TWCL-wheeled trail­ TU 2-9104. er. Suitable fo r camping or storage. 32 B R A U E R ’S A t Noon ! ! MGS, 1960, red, wire wheels, radio, Call IV 5-6504. Address. 519 N. Logan. EAST LANSING!) N ear Campus!II 13.000 miles. Lansing. — 31 All stone, 3 bedroom ranch. Large TR 3. 1968: red, 2 covers, w hite tires. fam ily kitchen w ith loads of birch COLDSPOT REFRIGERATOR. 1961. cupboards. 20 ft. living room. Cover­ 11 cu. feet, separate tru e freezer. As ed patio for th a t sum m er living. 18 6 1 H O U S E good as new. Purchased for $239 Feb­ And carport overlooking it* 60'xlSO’ Chevrolet. 1960. Impala convertible ruary 1961. Little used. Must sell lot. Only 817.800. Call RJf. F rink. IV because of recent Im port restriction 2-4570, IV 4-7789 o r ED 2-8595. W alter A tradition in Lansing platinum mist, red tint. Stick shift. hack home. Please con tact,-ED 2-0341, Nellec_Co., Realtors. 30 For Fine Foods after 4 p.m. 34 Olds. 1961.~red convertible, red EAST LANSING - "Indian HU1” top. power. DYNAKIT 70 W amplifier. $45. 25 Ju st Uke new 11 Is this spacious Cape Open Chevrolet. 1959. Belaire tudor. red and white, radio, heater. Volkswagons. '60- th ru ‘58. colors w amplifier $20 Color TV Beautiful Cod. Approximately~~1500 sq. ft. of picture $150 ED 2-1606. 34 real living. 22' living room with fire­ place, Three, m aster MOTORCYCLE, NSU. 175 cc. 110 Screened-tn patio. Only $19.90011 CaU M.P.G., 68 M.P.G., 1959, tool kit, for more details. Oh, yeatl It is lo­ bedrooms. This Sunday - Only the 1961 ■to choose from. windshield, luggage "Tack, other cated on a lOO’xSOO' lot. Amist homes accessories. $395 CaU ED 7-1116. 30 of distinction. CaU R.J. Frink, IV 2-4570, IV 4-7759, o r ED 2-8595. W elter Especially for ENGINEERING EXPOSITION Ford, 1956. tudor, blue and-w hite. N eller Co. Realtor. 30 radio, heater. _ FOR RENT EAST LANSING • 821,900!!! Yes. Mother’s Day 2 blocks east of Frandor an Michigan It’s true!!! A seven room tri-level for 12 p.m. to 5 p.m. ED 2-8605 APARTMENTS only $21,900 - tw o fireplaces - spac­ ious carpeted living room with a Please call for reservations GIRL WANTED TO share ap art­ waU of windows overlooking a 100’ m ent near campus. ED 2-3941. - 32 x 163’ yard w ith patio. Paneled fam ­ LANSING’S ORIGINAL EMPLOYMENT ily room 20* x 24'.—A ttached 2-car GIRL TO SHARE large furnished garage. Call R J . Frink. IV 2-4570. RATHSKELLER te, - —. y ‘teste - -v SECRETARY WITH shorthand, typ- apartm ent. 133 Durand. East Lan­ IV 4-7759 or ED 2-8595. W alter Neller in g and bookkeeping experience.-25- sing. CaU Ext. 2467 before 5 p.m. 34 Co., Realtors. 40 vears of age. East Lansing office 28 • Candlelight Dining with Soft Dinner Music S p o n s o re d b y th e W rite qualifications and references FURNISHED APARTMENT w ith EAST LANSING!! Bailey School!!! 'in your own handwriUng to P.O. cooking facilities, across from Student Three blocks to campus!!! 3 bed­ Must ren t for sum m er and room, dining, full basem ent, gas • Private Rooms for E n g in e e r in g C o u n c il Box 403. E. Lansing. 31 Union. fall terms. $75 monthly. IV 2-8420. 31 heat, and attached garage. Nice fen­ Parties ced bock yard. F or-m ore details and MEN WITH NEAT appearance, in ­ telligence. and personal automobile nished YOUNG MAN TO -sharsTlarge fu r­ inspection, call R J . Frink. IV 2-4870, • German Food I _ 7' - - apartm ent needed- as Promotional R epresenta­ CaU IV 9-2389 or IV 2-1240. with 3 college men. IV 4-7759 o r ED 3-6895. W alter Nel- Specialities __ 30 ler Co.. Realtors. _______ 28 tives to introduce th e new Teaching Machine method of education. 860 1861 to INI Starting - Friday at Nootr the doors will open. See per week for approxim ately 2Q hours FURNISHED APARTMENTS, p ri­ SERVICE 100 Year* of Hospitality w ork which can be arranged to fit vate, class schedules. Call IV 2-5585 for m er close ing. for 2 and 4 men over 21. p a rk ­ to East cam pus, for sum ­ the exhibits constructed by MSU students, National En­ and fall. Call ED 7-1487 after TYPING DONE fn S partan Village -ah Interview. 30 4 p.m. 32 apartm ent. ED 7-0703. or ED 7-9008. tf S r a ttfr ’H gineers Technical Society, and interested industrial POSITIONS OPEN FOH night nurse, full or p a rt time. Also operat­ ROOMS ing room supervisor.' New, m odem TYPING ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER 1 6 6 1 Ifm ifle concerns on display iff Olds and all other engineer­ 50 bed hospital. Call o r writ* Direc­ APPROVED SUPERVISED rooms CaU Sonja. IV 9-1188 a fte r 5 JO Pick tor of Nurse* Mason Genet al Hos­ fo r 3 men. summer. 1145 Abbott Road, up and delivery if necessary. pital. Mason. Michigan _____ tf C all tn person. Friday. 1-5 p m. 39 30 ing buildings.. te EXPERT THESES and «ancrai typ­ ing, electric typew riter. 17 years LOST and FOUND experience, one block irom Brodv ED $-85«. • tf TEACHERS WANTED: *5.000 and LOST - MEN'S RAINCOAT In TYPIST ANN BROWN. New phone ^ Saturday — 9 A.M. — See the crowning of the pp. Vacancies in all western states. Short course -cafeteria, reward. ED Inquire Columbina Teachers Agency, 2-3410. num ber. ED 2-8384. Electric type­ 30 w riter. Term papers and theses, also Engineering Queen and the “ Micro-Midget”^ Auto general typing. tf RECOMMENDED BY - 1320 Pearl. Boulder. Colorado. PERSONAL WONCH DUPLICATING • moved DUNCAN HINES ft AAA Race in the Physics-Math “Parking lot. to 1730 E. Michigan, Lattsing. Thesis typing and duplicating, commercial Jeff Davis and Abe* Lincoln FEMALE: ADULT program direct­ RICHIE WARREN and SHELDON art. typesetting. CaU 483-4356. GALKNS please come to or. full or p art tim e Established p ri­ New* office. Room 347, Student Serv­ vate agency. Lansing, beginning sal­ ice* Bide, for ary. $5500 • 16.000. based on qual­ th e Creel D rive-In. . two free th e State passes to TYPING. In my home, by secretary tf tf Rooms for parties. + Saturday - 9 P*M. the 1961 MAY HOP - ifications. IV 5-7201. 32 w ith 10 yeers' experience. TU $-8736. Your host: “Holiday At Seà” in the Union Ballroom. Dance SAMMY SCRUB CHARITY Car _____________ tf Staa Braaer, Hotel Ad. 1M» MAN OR BOY WITH mow er to car* fo r lawn one* > week. Near Wash, May 12. 11-5:30. Speedway, TYPING, SECRETARIAL WORK, free parkiag to the Gary Wakenhut’s Orchestra. $2.75 Per Hagadorn and M 78. ED 2-6662. 32 across from Brody, Sigma Alpha Mu. electric elite, 18 re a rs experience in $1 thesis, BUY . . . SELL . . . RENT term paper*. Collage g rad­ uate. ED 1-5544 tf Downtown Lansing Couple — Semi-Forma]. LYDIA BELEVOD. naturally you . CAMPUS CLASSIFIEDS . cyou a n t participate in sorority’ Sing, WASHING - IRONING mending 213 S. Grand know y o u r* a baritone. Irving. and. Horn* Bekinfc dona in m y Rome . . . QUICK RESULTS . . . IV 7-6188. 88 Secret Formula Johnson Stresses Freedo HONOLULU. (D-Vtoe Frori- Tito Hawaii center, Johnson erIts purpose la to taring togeth­ two “proud and honorable Pigeons Get That O ■ ■“ W. ■ " the Untied States West' will commit the full aakL “to not for th* West to Baal Lyndon 1 . Johnson said teach East or East to study the cultures sad to fust a, new strength for freedom.” Bouncy Feeling T af tie great capacity” to the cauee at human freedom everywhere. O n M o th e r ’ s D a y LONDON, (*~A sort of pla*- still cluster on a couple 01 He brought this message . . . . remember Mother the tlc Jolly has bam enlisted in “control ledges” not smeared from Proridoat Kennedy on the traditional way the war on pigeons, sparrows with jelly. A few tough pigaons first leg of a 18400-mil* round- and starlinfz who Ilka to roost tolerate the stuff a few min­ the-world trip aimed chiefly at Chooe* Your Mother's Day on the National Gallery. It utes, but ultimately take off for reassuring America's closest works. _ other buildings. Flowers From Oar Sprlag • fresh Stock The way the ministry of pub­ Nelson’s monument presents antes to Southeast Aria. Phono Us or Com* la. lic works explained It Tuesday, special difficulties because it’s After anjBvemlght stop in pigeons and their comrades in desecration do not like to have 170 feet high. Since the ministry of works .Honolulu, the Vice President Is Barnes FloraJ of East Lansing heeding directly for Saigon and 216 Ana Open Evonlngsâ Sunday ED 2*0*71 a bouncy feeling under their has no helicopter,' for the time tatea with South Viet Nam's feet. being at least Nelson’s hat The ministry is taking advan­ must remain a pigeon roost. President Ngo Dinh Diem. tage of this anti-bounce phobia ■ ------- ,2a------- Meetings with heads of govern- in pigeon personality to dis­ ment to the Philippines, Na­ courage this birds from sitting oh the art gallery in such countless numbers. Tshombe tionalist China, Thailand, neu­ tralist India and Pakistan fol­ low In rapid succession. Archie Tarpoff A JELLY-LIKE substance developed by ministry and in­ Accused IN REMARKS prepared for a joint session of the Hawaii 124 East Kalamazoo dustrial chemists has been spread in I ribbon along fav­ orite pigeon lodges. It doesn’t Of Treason^ state legislature at Iolanl Pal­ ace, Johnson spelled out the Open Sunday . •. Mother’s Day purpose of his fact-finding mis­ evaporate for months and it LEOPOLDVILLE, (if),— The I sion for Kennedy: 12 - 8 p.m. doesn’t harden. Congolese government Tuesday “I go seeking to determine It is, in the opinion of fastidi­ issued an act of internment list­ what must be done now to safe­ ous p i g e o n s , uncomfortable ing 10 charges against Katanga guard the security of those who Special Mother’* Day Dinner stuff on which to sit. They go President Moise Tshombe and are free—and what must be somewhere else along with the permitting his detention for up done together in the future to children — half Pr,ce starlings and sparrows. to six months. fulfill the opportunities and re­ "Wo confidently believe we A special review commission sponsibilities of f r e e d o m are getting somewhere,” said w H 1 examine the evidence among the peoples of Asia.” for Reservations — Call IV 2*6233 Frank Jefkins, one of the min­ against the Katanga leader to istry's pigeon experts. recommend whether he should Johnson made no mention of ‘‘These friendly birds are stand trial. It will report to ITS POLLUTED—"As the sun sets ant the lingering shadows Mi the military situation in Laos also open Sunday, Graduation Day darlings, a n d we wouldn’t Premier Joseph Ileo who will MSU campus with the beautiful Ret Cedar river flawing through « ’» heart which has brought a sharp think of hurting them. But make the final decision. Ar­ (WJIM Radio) two co-eds enjoy the calm of the river hunk. The Ret Cedar seems step-up iff guerrilla fighting in building operators in infested ranging a trial will be difficult to be a major distraction for would-be scholars for n number of reasons during south Viet Nam, shaken Thai­ regions would like to bust up since the Congo has no judges Spring term. (State News phots by Dong Gilbert.) land and worried the Philip­ their gangs and scatter them and no courts. pines, Pakistan and Taiwan. more thinly among their hu-' The act, issued by Interior BUT, IN a busy round ' of man neighbors.” Minister Cyrille Adoula, accus­ speech-making prepared for THE MINISTRY is responsi­ ed Tshombe of treason, pro­ ble for cleaning the gallery’s voking civil war and endanger­ exterior and giving an occa­ ing the security of the state by Nixon:Press Self-censorship ground • breaking ceremonies for a new East-West center at the University of Hawaii and sional bath to Lord Nelson’s declaring mineral-rich Katanga pigeon-haunted statue nearby.' a separate nation and attempt­ Jack E. Flynn,'member of ing to split it off from the rest the team which compounded of the Congo. Promotes Fact Suppression in talks to legislators, Johnson stressed: _ Arms alone “can never make up invulnerable nor our ene­ the bird-confounding jelly, said It was issued 13 days after DETROIT (B—Richard M i Nixon had a word, “drastic,” estimation, found it wantng. mies invincible but thejupport the formula “is a top secret, the 42-year-old Katanga presi­ Nixon, stepping up his attacks Ito describe Kennedy’s propo- As he did in Chicago last we give to education can make and we can’t be too careful, dent was seized by Congolese on the Democratic administra- sals. And he contended the week, Nixon suggested a sum­ freedom irrestihle,” ho said. about spies.” He added: troops. He had walked out of tion, said Tuesday President President talked in such gen­ mit meeting between Russia's THE NEW Hawaii East-West “It can be said in a general a political conference at Co- Kennedy's cali for self-censor­ eralities It was impossible to Nikita S. Khrushchev and Ken­ center is a pet project of John­ way that people don’t find this quilhatville in Equator Pro­ ship by the press will eneour- determiSè if there was any ur­ nedy, mostly because he thinks son. Congress last month ap­ stuff offensive, and it is a new, vince. Tshombe has been held age government officials to gent Increase in the need for Khrushchev should see for him­ proved the appropriation of synthetic, organic substance under armed guard at Coquil- conceal facts the public has a secrecy— or If any government­ $10 million as the first step in with long-chain molecules. In hatvUle but it is expected he right to know. — self al action had been banned by pushed around. that Kennedy can’t be the laboratory it is a sort of a soon will be transferred to this The Jormer vice president, open reporting. the development of the center distant relative of plastics.” capital. who kept silent during ths first “He appeared to blame the Just about all the National 100 days Kennedy was In of­ press for recent Cuban events,” M others Day Id A Gallery has been treated. Birds fice, is on a weeklong tour in Nixon said of Kennedy. “But which, he has become increas- would the results have been Very Special Day tst- -------- Vandiver: No nigly critical of the man who much different had the -press barely beat him in November. failed to perform its traditional at PAIGECRAFT Rail Strike ‘Little Rock’ He chose the Detroit Press role? We started looking months ago Club—“an appropriate forum,” “IF A BAD REPORTING job tar those special gifts that Jolts France_ For Georgia as he called" it—to discuss a was done, was It entirely the would please the most special" speech Kennedy made to the fault of the press? Can it not of Mothers (and that includes PARIS, if)—The first trans­ nation's publishers in which he be said there was a deliberate yours). portation strike of the season "ATLANTA, i,?*—Gov. Ernest urged self-restraint when nat­ attempt to mislead? And how And, now we have those jolted Prance Tuesday. Vandiver said Tuesday he ob­ ional security is affected. can the press be expccted to special gifts — everything from It was a 24-hour nationwide tained a pre-election pledge “THE PLEA OF security,” get at the truth when annoy- luncheon cloths and tableware to rail strike for higher wages but from President Kennedy that Nixon said, “could well become mous administration spokes­ unique ash trays and pictures. some jxains still ran, although he would never send troops to keep contradicting each Come in today aod see our wide not on schedule. Georgia to enforce-school de­ a cloak for errors, misjudge­ men other?” array qf gifts' specially selected Only the Communist-domi­ segregation. ments and other failings of gov­ nated General Confederation of He added that he supported ernment . . . the whole concept cluri And Nixon reached this con- forFor your Mother. those special gifts for Labor and the Catholic unions Kennedy onljr after he.got such of a return to secrecy in peace­ qa: ^ special people, shop first at walked out. T h e Socialists a promise. time demonstrates a profound PRÉSIDENT KENNEDY’S PAIGECRAFT — Your Gift stayed at work. The disclosure came at a misunderstanding of the role of remarks will inevitably encour­ Headquarters. But the confusion was worse news conference as the Gover­ a free press as opposed to that age government officials to fur­ than if all unions had struck. nor joined other state political of -a controlled press.” ther withhold information to | The finest gifts la the world come from In Paris some subway lines leaders in denunciation of the which the public is entitled'.” | wera open. But the transport proposed Clark-Celler c i v i l Tuesday night, at a combi-1 authority didn't get the lists of rights bill. open lines out in time for early These measures would have newspaper editions. every segregated school sys­ Brogan Gives nation fund entertainment and GOP raising rally, to which 12,- j P A IG E C R A F T Consequently, most commu­ tem submit a plan for desegre­ ters walked, drove ~or stayed gation within ~six months. Poli Sci Talk 500 again tickets were sold, Nixon | reviewed 222 Abbott Road, East Leasing ED 2-8*82 the administra- : WE DELIVER OPEN WEDNESDAY NIGHT 8:38 9:00 home while some trains- ran Vandiver denounced the en: “Three Political Systems in tioft's beginning, and, in his 1 virtually empty at the bright tire legislative package as fed­ an Age of Crisis: Britain, of the rush hour. eral intervention. Above the ground the usual “In Washington last year.” France and the U.S.” is the P p -'ImiF ip w y j r o p p S l i ' traffic Jams grew werse as the Governor said, “I secured sented by an subject of address to be pre­ many workers drove to thrir jobs. promise from Kennedy that distinguished troops would never be sent of history andvisiting D.W. Brogan, MSU professor - DONT b e fo o l e d against the people of Georgia litical science professorat of po­ Cambridge P&timH■ mmmmmP to enforce such silly statutes as this. It would take armed University. IN V E S T IG A T E S T O R A G E O F F E R S House Passes forces to enforce it.” The program, at He added that he told candi- Thursday in 21 Union, is the 4 p.m. The bravest move r _________ date Kennedy thatj |_______ he couldn't final event in this year’s series Military Bill support “a man who did-whatjof political science coffee hours, CLEAN AND S T O R E YOUR WASHINGTON. (P — T he Little Rock “President - - Eisenhower “ — | --- did in and is open to all interested students and faculty members. CLOTHES WITH US NOW. PICK of her life . . . House passed a rill Tuesday to THEM UP AND PAY AS NEEDED require an eight-man military obligation of ail reservists from 17 to 28 years old. A C a s u a l S ty le F o r IN THE FALL. THAT FIRST STEP The measure sent to the Sen­ GET AN ITEMIZED RECEIPT FOR ate would place all reservists S p r in g D a y s YOUR GARMENTS — THEY ARE From here on out there’ll be another 50,000 miles on the same footing by adding or so. but Knapp’s and Stride Rites are ready to two yoars to the obligation of VALUABLE TO YOU. .see that those miles are started in ths right direc­ men from MVfc to 28 who enlist tion. in the ready reserves. A casual hair style that The right-yoar obligation at leeks fashionable for a ready oppttte to those who mi­ Those tender, half-formed hones and muscles need ter the reserve forces uad Job Interview, la the exactly the right amount of support . . . too kind 18%, and fir draftees who classroom or oa toe ten­ - S E E U S F IR S T they get from Stride Rite Firsties with their snug- must remain in the reserve for fitting heels and flexible soles. six years after completing two nis courts can be de­ yean on active duty. signed for you at EMa- COLD STORAGE CASH AND CARRY Firsties, sizes 2 to 5, B to EE widths Ml The measure also extends to the National Guard the author­ Diane Beauty Salon. ity now posssiaad tar the other ALL WORK GUARANTEED AND INSURED INI organized reserves to order 41 days of additional active duty OASOIN LSVZL for men who fell to keep up Styling $2.50 EAIT LARSIXS thrir required trateteg. Shampoo f t Set $2.25 C o l l e g e C l e a n e r s •■OF TODAY r>OM Elda-Diane Beauty Salon It NOON TO S ML *10ft Abbot Road E. l aming 620 W . Michigan E a s t Lansing ED 24713 Phone ED 2-2416 Hoars 9-6 Snarling of Truce Talks Clouding Future in Laos (Omttaaad from Page 1) otton aflrin comfahr the po­ litical sttastion is for too com­ plicated bow tar any snch EAST n u u n RIVER AT N A H LTM R U B , OKEMOS quick aettiement Don't Mian It! MILLS BROS. CIRCUS The U J. State Department Sponsored by the Rotary Club reiterated that U.S. participa­ TUESDAY, MAY IS ^ tion la the Geneva cenlerence 'i t contingent upon” the estab­ lishment of an effective, veri­ (Corner of U A 16 and Okemos-Hanktt Rd.) \ v n M IDTc fied coose-fire la Lao*. J Delicatessen Department Special Wamthekes, prese officer Joseph Rem announced in Fresh Baked Dutch Apple Pies ... — ......... Washington that Secretary of Stole Dean Bosk is preparo* to go to Geneva from Ode, where he Is attending a NATO Fresh Homemade Macaroni S alad Hickory Smoked Sausage, Farmer Peeta, ................... —. ........... SUPER J C o rre c tio n o n Farmer Peet’s “R EA D Y TO E A T ” FOOD MARKETS M e e tin g P la c e I The meeting place tar the (4 to ¡6-lb. Average) philosophy graduate student colloquium, was given incor­ Famous rectly in Monday’s State News. for Quality The colloquium will meet Thursday at I p.m. at 530 MAC Since 1919 Are., the residence of Lawrence F. Holbrook. _ - Schmidt’s Super Market The program features Wil­ liam E. Tinsley, graduate as­ sistant la humanities, speaking on "Kantian Freedom: A Quest for Certainty." COFFEE H5P lb. only 4 9 c Rath’s Sweet Hickory Smoked M u s s e lm a n A p p le s a u c e S L IC E D BACON l b . 59c B r y a n M a id T o m a to e s a n / t e r v o o r t ’s Tissue Free — Sliced Thin J M 213 E. GRAND RIVER F R E S H B E E F L IV E R _ lb . 49 c L ib b y ’s S a u e rk ra u t EAST LANSING Ph. ED 2-2114 S C H M I D T S R O L L S A U S A G E g ra d e 1 lb . 29 c L i b b y ’ s S p in a c h ~ H E R R U D ’S R IN G B O L O G N A lb . 49 c P O L I S H S A U S A G E (B u lk P a c k ) g ra d e 1 IE 49 c No. 303 1 3 in 1 M IL D P IN C O N N IN G C H E E S E lb . 49 c Cans A O c Tennis Special ! r'Chicken Fryer Parts Sale” S w if t ’ n in g CHICKEN BREASTS lb . 49c CHICKEN L IV E R S lb , 49c LEGS AND TH IG H S lb . 39c NECKS AND BACKS ........ lb. 5c CHICKEN THIGHS ____ lb. 49c CHICKEN GIZZARDS — lb. 39c SHORTENING # Seco Tournam ent CHICKEN W IN G S ,..7 lb. 19c ; - 3 -lb . 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'■m 2, ~ i Gli Michigan State Nswi, East lam ing, Michigan Wednesday Morning, May 1 0 ,1 9 6 Ï M ogi G o H enne in 3 W eeks Cure Mental Patients Quickly When Treated Near Friends Dan River waVi’ wear CHICAGO Uh—Treatment of ment, Cotton cited World War covered sufficiently to go mental illness is being geared II figures showing that only 5 bock," Cotton sold. to the fast tempo of modern per cent of the American psy­ He said the recoveiy rate tinges, a report to the American chiatric casualties suffered in jumped sharply in die Korean Psychiatric Assm-showed Tues­ battle later could be returned war when patients were treated day. to full duty. at small centers near regiment­ A New York psychiatrist said Most psychiatric casualties al aid stations that kept them mental patients are being re­ were evacuated as rapidly as in direct contact with their un­ turned to their families and jobs possible after 1ms than throe, weeks of the battle front. for treatment far from its. - Similarly, Cotton said, when C O R D S U IT S intensive treatments in the psy­ a patient can her brought early chiatric units Of general bos ‘THE RESULTANT toss of to p recognized institution in pitato. J contact with his unit where all his own community with a min­ Dr. John M. Cotton, director his strongest loyalties and feel­ imum loss of contact with his ' of psychiatry at St. Luke’s hoi ings of personal obligation wefe family and job “the patient’s pital in New York, said 87 per rooted, so undermined the motivation to return to unpro­ cent of the mental patients in motivations for return to the ductive life makes our treat­ Travel stimulus for- a that institution are getting re­ threats of combat that few re­ ment more effective.” turned to their homes after 20 days of treatment. He added: PERHAP^long periods of $50 and Rare Book Prize going young co-ed hospitalization, which in the past have been felt so neces­ sary, have beeft"SO-sticcessful For Best Book Collection in removing the patient from Fifty dollars and a rare book chosen subject or subjects; his community, his job and his home that motivation for re­ will be given to the winner of uniqueness; and on quality the Undergraduate covery and return has been sub­ lection contest, according Book Col­ rather than quantify. 95 10 tly interfered with.” to Dr. Henry C. Koch, assistant (4) Each contestant to ask­ Psychiatric units of general director of libraries. ed to submit a bibliography hospitals primarily are geared of his collection with a short to treat acute, relatively short The prize was donated by essay of about 400 words de- # term psychiatric illnesses that S.R. Shapiro, a New York City scribing how and why the col­ respond to electro-shock treat­ book dealer who is interested in lection was assembled. ment and the numerous drug promoting b o o k - collecting (5) Entries should be sub­ therapies as well as psycho1 among college students. mitted to Dr. Henry Koch, therapy. Shapiro has sponsored the room 122, University Library, BUDGET PRICED . Treatment later is continued contest in universities through­ on or before May 15. on an out-pattero basis as the out the-country. If the contest After preliminary judging, the individual returns to his usual is successful, he has promised five best collections will be Casual Dan River cord suits that lead the carefree life you duties and occupation. to continue it on campus year­ chosen and these five will be like. They'll accompany you wherever you go without a ly on an endowed basis. HOWEVER, Cotton said some Koch said that the following visited by the judges to select wrinkle or a care. They love to travel because they wash and sufferers of severe deeply root­ the best collection. ed psychiatric illness can be rules will govern the selection Judges for the contest are dry with just a touch of an iron. Each a wise fashion invest­ kept functioning on a reduced of the best collection: Dr. John F.A. Taylor, profes­ ment . . . select more than one for an on-the-go wardrobe. but still usefuMevel when treat­ . (1) The content is open toT sor of philosophy; Dr. Virgil ed in their home communities. all undergraduates regularly Scott, associate professor of The other-severe cases require enrolled in the University. English; Dr. Donald Montgom­ iong term treatment in mental (2) Books must be owned ery, professor of physics and A. Cardigan neckline, patch pockets and % sleeves. Slim skirt hospitals. by the student. astronomy; Dr. Richard E. In pointing to the apparent (3) Each collection will be Chapin, director of libraries; in blue, pink or beige. Sizes 7-15. — benefits of keeping mental pa­ judged on unity of theme; Robert Williams, serials li­ tients with their usual environ­ comprehensiveness within the brarian; and Dr. Koch. B. Demi-box suit, with % sleeve jacket and slim, unlined skirt. In blue, aqua or pink. Sizes 10-18. # A in a series of polls conducted by L‘ M student KNAPf't S U IT 'S — STREET LEVEL, E A S T L A N S I N-G 4 representatives in over lOOcoUegte^ H o t " W e a th e r C o lo g n e by D o ro th y G ra y ANNUAL SALE 1 sips tax A wonderful selection of '■ ■ M l - . SZ! Hot Weather cologne for L ig h t u p an IiM , and answer these questions. - the warm months ahead. Then compare your answers with those of 1,383 other Select several fragrances college students (at bottom of page). at timely savings. 12 os. Question # 1; In your opinion, who to the greatest living American? moisturizing body totioQ In Answer: 4 scents, 1.M plus fax. Question # 2 : Should the college curriculum, taking note of the growing TOILETRIES — STREET LEVEL importance of science, require more science couraea for mm* EAST LANSING — — science majors than at present? Answer; Yea-:------- N o ------- \r Queetion #3: Answer: When you kiss your date, do you close your eyes? Close my eyes— Don’t dose my eyes--------- New duek cloth Can’t remember- Question #4: -In your opinion, which of the following typefc of filters gives KNEE CAPPERS _ the best connotation of purity? (check one) Answer: A filter which to white inside and to wrapped in AT A LOW, LOW PRICE colored paper — A filter which to dyed a «dor and to wrapped in white paper - . ~ 98 A filter which to white inside and out. 5 95 3 Campus Opinion Answers: Youthcraft’s exclusive “Tidy Tab” with 2-snap in. The ever popular “Knee Cappers" for sum­ IÉ M I Anuer, QunlHm # li Six highest scoring individuals: 1. Kennedy—2. Eisenhower 3. Stevenson —4, Schweitser —8. Frost snap-out inner shields — gives you a girdle ward­ robe ail in one! Ideal for. travel . . . for every day.. mer fun. Washable duck cloth that gives you perfect fit. The new length just covers the 6. Sandburg' (This question was asked February 1961. Nylon power net slims hips, lastex panel trims knee. Colors in red, white or blue with white Note: Dr. Schweitser is not an American.) Answer, Qnestiaa i l l Yes 80%— No 70% tummy. S-M-L in white. v rope belt. Sizes 8-18. Answer, Question SSt Close my eyes 76% u sa i Don’t dose my eyes 11% Can’t remember 18% Answer, Queetion #4« A filter which is GIRDLES — GARDEN LEVEL. E A ■ T L A N S I N G STREET LEVEL - EAST LANSING H IM white inside and is. wrapped in colored paper 21% A filter which is dyed a color and hi wrapped in white paper 6% A filter which is warn insidsandeat 74% EAST LANSING STORE, LAMwas first in offer yena para while nsadten Alter —the famous Miracle Tip—pore white inside, pure white outside. And LAM’Smadam filter enables ynn OPEN TODAY FROM S ta rt F resh ■ ori S h to folly enjoythe rich fiaver of golden rtpo tohaeeaii. mx* i So reach for flavor... rsnsh for L*M. The ISMConst«. Opimss SM I nos takes at srw too sstMeas wfcsrr 12 NOON TO 9 P . M . I . S ta y F re sh w i f f t l i M ISMhe> ituSsnt rannuatitim, ant nay net bs a MMWfeMt» gfïïfÿ;. widowselection M*11 «ndtrjtoduAtoschools. mm M l PHONE ED 2-5006 . mt¡MUttítt 1 lgf§§ í» ..V.Viv.V» . ' ¡H L tmgmge H is to r y In te r Dept. Attend» For More Bombers g C P m i n r i i Asumhfr, » » Corel Quilas. How do the experts Interpret beth ITS titles Is Queen of Quebec is still 90 per cent States almost from the time Conference WAIHXNOTON, i M h i Ben- ballistic missile. ato Amad flmvtom OsmmRtee ANGEL FLIGHT, 7 p.m. Room II UW«, op* rush, all co- the history sf American rate* Canada) but had real power French apeeHag. _ UMTS irai Marni to of too dmartmsri Tuesday The Senators r e j e c t e d a da, Cuba, and Mexico? Opin­ prime minister. ion« of M6U faculty member* tain Cuban politicians a n d spasili*m y*. tions wttfa It« ¿tighten Cana­ tor its own parliament and FROM CASTRO down, cer­ * 0 ,” aa MSULtfea Aaurte* of foreign langoapM will attend toot m an moaned bombers motion by lea. ftrom Thur­ MSU PACKAGING Sectety, too I n aoooal m ssilii of top aody asked to defend toe na­ mond,' D-8.C., to authortm MM 7:30 pjn.. Log CUbln. “Tim first UJ. minister to Mhotrtgan Schoolmaster* Otto a n aoodsd to * Prsridsnt Ism mums*. toward future protec­ GREEN SPLAttL 7 putt, ac­ scholars have beau busily re­ and a check of some recently In the Canadian elections of writing their country’s history Mtxkco dty mads « «sm y ri t o te n ñ d in Aaa After, Fri­ to * wbfli too * m * i i d mi* tion of the army’s Mira Hue tive« (beds), sI ]pin. published literature tail a dif­ 1911, the liberal and Conserva­ in the 28 months since tidal every moo io mm aod too day. stis an w sl is growtog. missile kilter. pledges, 9 p.m. aU pledges, ferent story tgan most Ameri­ tive parties fought primarily came to power. second was m alcoholic.” AnsM J. Toynbas, foomd Thai wa* the effort of a vota Tte committee took no actioa W o d m u ’s u L cans are accustomed. on the issue of lower tariffs for American historians, as well, Maxicm atto tmsrinm ito Brinai I too, Is aotednisd Air FUrca proposals to a * RIFLE CLUB, 6:30 pm., base­ When America won its revo­ trade with the U.S.; the Con­ had given foe story of Cuban- toriaas agroa foot Amortom at «m of too fmmral toaddSMImffilnfortostctrs «tiauo dseelopmeat of the B70 ment of Dam Hau. lutionary war, Canada was a servatives winning by insisting American relations some spe­ aggression oms 0 major ingre­ mmEm ¡ r a m IÜS topic Win te “Tte bomban to a $tS,toijoo.ooo supersonic jot bomber as t DAIRY CLUB, 7:30 p.m., room collection of French-Canadians that the future lay with Britain cial stufy, since 1961. dient of too UA'M m wm wor Outlet for too Wsot Today.** authorisation MB far «tissues. determined to isolate them­ and the rest of the Empire. oi m m . potasa» i soomo of Pausili A. Yates, to«truster aircraft aad ships. Otherwise, complete rather weapons s y s t e m , than l i t Anthony. cutting it back to VARSITY CLUB, TJ0 D.m., selves from their English- It is now fairly well ¿ greed too «astro of to• Sonto«« ri foreign languages, win the commutes wont along with Speaking neighbors to the west FREE TRADE for Canada here that America became in­ states for maro room Im plato aid* over âoe of the laof _ too Presido* * «toot Is ased­ « experimental project * Stadium, ejection of officers. - ~ s . •ectima. Yams is too ynmdmS ad In thomfidds. Kennet» asked. The B70 is SPAÍTAN WOMEN’S League, and south; and Scottish, Irish, and America was a lost cause, can warininthe volved Spanish-Ameri­ tatto* slavery. 1866, basically from In «pïïsoffood relations be­ of too Michigan chapter of too Tha •snators’ vete followed designed to fly 2,000 mites « 7 p.m., Wednesday, A Union. and English colonists, most of but trade developed, between humanitarian whom were satisfied to keep the two nations in spite of the motives. tween UJ- prssilioti and two American Assodati* of Tieeb- •tettar feoti* tost wesk by ths hour st altitudes of over 70,000 their allegiance to the British tariff walls. U.S. investment For three years before the of Msxica’s mast important o n sf Spanish sod Portoguss«. House Armad larvine Com­ feet. v- I crown, regardless of the repub» in Canadian development grew Maine was Mown up in Havana 19th cantary preotoeats. Bototo Cerio* Tanm, assodato pro- muta*. Wh« tim Mum com lie growing to the south. r as w011, so that now Americans harbor, Americans were build­ Joans m á rafirto Días, UJ. fossor of foreign languages sod atto * appr ovai e fff,m joo, mittees approved w i t h o u t control SOper cent of Canadian ing up steam over the brtital pre-eminence to dovolopmint foreign studios, wilf speak Through the 19th century, industry. Both Senate a * House com' 006 authorisation m o a • u r e, rhang« the administration p i* P A IG E activities of the Spanish army investment, sod importent am- tha pemmlaT appeal of too Chairman Cari Vinson, D-Ga., to provide 94 billion to step up Canada gradually developed its own personality, still a split Between world wars, there in Cuba, burning whole villages ramno« granted to snoourags 100-yoer-otd Brauten bistorto said i te timo has not yot como production of ocaan-spapntng one because of the continuing was frequent friction over in­ camps that foreshadowed Eich- evttabty feuttt op deop resent­ si novel, “Os Serto«*,” written when principal rellano« c « bo IPolaris and b u i l d i n g concentration Amarteaas «vor too years to and Minuteman mis C R A FT Freneh-Engllsh hostility. fringement of Canadian and by Sacudes Do Cunha placed « the -intercontinental siles and lesser rockets. American fishing fleets in each* maan’s empire under Hitler. ment in Mexico. ONE CANADIAN professor other’s waters, and more publi­ ALTHOUGH American his­ claims that his country was the cised camplaints by U.S. prohi­ torians Inventor of anti-Americanism, bitionists against successful Ca­ of Newhave played up the role York newspaper ty­ which he says was a natural nadian rum runners. Hearst and Pulitxer in with the UJ . at frequent inter­ enough reaction of a small pop­ In 1986, Canadians and Amer­ coons ulation on one side to a large icans at the highest levels be­ for getting America, into the mood vals. war, current expert opinion Three episodes in rapid suc­ Mb one on the other. ' _ _ gan defense policy coordina­ is that their activities were cession early in the ctntury did * Throughout the 19th century,- tion on a basis of secrecy both certainly not the most impor­ no good for U J. prostigo. there was periodic talk of for security purposes and be­ tant factor. President Madera we* over­ á PerHea 2 7 c lb . American annexation, on both cause of a certain concern Cubans bad been struggling thrown in 1913 by rebels who sides of the border, and in 1932 about possible popular opposi­ with Spain for at least 20 years conspired with the American American troops invaded what tion in Canada. before America declared war, ambassador; the American oc­ became Ontario and burned the and evidence of real popular cupation of Veracruz in 1914 provincial capitol In retaliation WORLD WAR n brought the American concern' is much was justified to the eyes of for the British destruction of two nations even closer to­ Washington, D. C. gether. MSU’s President John greater than for any economic President Wilson aad Secre­ A. Hannah has teen involved or imperialist motive in the tary of fltate William JOmtogs Confederation of the British in joint Canadian defense plan­ final crisis. colonies of Quebec, Ontario, ning for nearly a decade, and Through t r e a t y cfouses, and New Brunswick in 1867, Canada is permanently com­ America reserved the right of ty; and the spectacle of Mexi­ Bryan, but was seen there as an insult to Mexican sovereign­ LOW PORTION 3 7, • CENTER CUT CHOPS 69, a was caused in part by fear that a ’strong U.S., fresiv-from the mitted and involved in U.S. intervention in Cuba to main­ cans being killed to Mexico by Sapor Right "^ STEWING battles of Civil War, might cal plans, despite some highly vo­ tain a republican form of gov­ 1917 seemed opposition by a Canadian ernment, once Cuba became General Pershtof’s troops to more Important 0M0RENS 4 I« i fes. 29(6 turn north for more combat. neutralist minority.- free in 1903. BY 1900, Canadians had _be- The drift of Canadians to the IN MSS SS, U.S. troops were than eliminating the bandit Pancho Villa. Semi-Boneless Hams 59cm. come increasingly interested in cities from the farms' and used IN 1917, Washington objected greater independence f r o m rapidly growing immigration liticaltosituation, clear up a chaotic po­ violently with what one constitution. to the new Mexican Soper Right BELTSVILLE 4 to9 tbs. Great Britain. from Europe have reduced the professor calls “great It refused to rec­ success After contributing thousands farm population to only 10 per by almost any standards.” ~ ognise the government of Pree* LA M E M L0 M A pe. 39c h TURKEYS of men to' the Allied cause in cent of the country’s total. In 1917, the U.S. intervened ideal Obregon for three years World War I, Canada argued Population-has grown from 10 with Britain for its own seat at to 18 million in the past 30 with somewhat less justifica­ in 19». after his assumption of power LA M E I0 L0 M A Siiesi 4*e Ik the Versailles treaty table, and years. tion, and in 1922 dictated po­ Mexican seizure of U.S. oil in 1926 finally obtained full in­ One effect of these changes litical reforms without sending properties in 1938 was only the dependence, with home control has been a breaking down of in soldiers. culmination of a long history of domestic affairs and foreign French-Canadianjirovincial at­ In 1932, American agents as­ of friction in the *»’■ and ’» ’s. .‘policy. titudes and loyalties. Never­ sisted in the overthrow of a Fortunately for both sides, - ■ BANANAS GOLDEN RIPE 1 It lb ’4 As a member of the new Brit­ theless, the role of the French dictatorial Roosevelt regime, ami in 1934, the MSU professors say, the ish Commonwealth of Nations, in Canadian society remains President for good the U.S. renounced character of U.Sc-Msxicen re­ privilege of lations has shown a new ma­ the major question and prob­ 2 Ih(elle Beg 29c J [ABBAGE Urge Heads 1i 7 it chose to keep the King as -head of state (one of Eliza- lem of French politics, and intervention affairs^ to tidy up Cuban turity and dignity &lnce tha be- g of World War U- 1 ARROTS MSU SCHOLARS say that for International Relations better or worse, the U.S. did very little to influence Cuban leaders from 1934 until the last Night Staff IM Mpe Florida Clubs Hold Conference days of the Batista administra­ Assistant news editor, Jim tion. Dengate; copy editors: Joe "Because of our wealth, our t Harrts< Lane Wick, Gerry Hto- WATERMELON 1.29 ea ORANGES 5lbbag The hiatorical background of ordinator of inter-American af­ size. and our nearness, even 1kley, Betty Jean ~ Moore; Assis­ U.S. relations with its three fairs. ~ American Inactivity had major tant sports editor. Jo Cox; aa-| Gluek is chairman Of MSU’s effects in Cuba,” a professor sistant photo editor, Eric Fil* neighbors will be the subject Canadian • American Institute says. Not Ht«M New of the first of three panel dis­ and directs the annual Canada son. _ cussions here this weekend at seminars here. He received tive "Legitimately, some initia­ might have been taken the Midwest Conference of the his education at the University sooner with Batista, but there Association of International Re* of. Minnesota, and was Ful was no pressure on him to de­ IV X RENTAL TOMATOES WHITE ONIONS i a * lations Clubs. bright visiting professor of velop a more democratic type OelySi-OO Complete American history at Trinity of government.” The historical program, at 7 College, Dublin, Ireland.. - p.m. Friday in the Kellogg Lin­ Yates was trained at thé Uni­ f ’THERE HAS been perenni- i 228 Abbott Rd._E. L. VARSITY SHOP A ir A n Fag* coln Room, includes Charles versity of Michigan. In addi­ al ill-feeling toward the United 1 C. Cumberland, professor of tion to co-authoring a recent history; Alvin C. Gluek, assist­ text for college Spanish cours­ FR U IT COCKTAIL 29ozcan 3 lor 1 .0 0 KETCHUP 2 U 01 bottles 49« ant professor of history; and es, he has written extensively Donald A. Yates, assistant pro­ on both English and Spanish- fessor of foreign languages, language literature. why ie ina tmx c o tw a n r THAT MAY HAVK T * « lou loia with Phillips W. Foster, assist­ The Friday session of _the ©wwowTuwmr you am * ant professor of agricultural conference opens with an ad­ economics, a* moderator. dress by Stanley J. Idzerda, fort • a i INSURANCE toy NORTH AMERICA ,_ BANQUET DINNERS Ohlekea, Goof, Turkey aad Ham 2 . 12-o l pkg*. Mo Don’t Forget M o m ... Cbocotata Covered - Jose Porker Interviews scheduled for I4b.be* IGE OMAR M M pkg.*M 2 1a P0TATM Send her flowers by wire MONDAY, MAY 15, 1961 and AO priese to Ulto Ad effective thru Saturday NORM KESEL TUESDAY, MAY 166, 1961, [Your E. fnneSng A A P Super Market, May 20 to Witttamston Stora aad afl fhre Laaetag A A P Super Markets. Corner of Hfegsdorn A E* Grand River, with a general orientation meet tog to discuss florist INA, pariti«*, aad locations scheduled far S to re H o u rs - ’ TUESDAY EVENING, MAY 16, 8:36 PJB^T ' / • . : 109 E. Grand River Monday thru Saturday 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. MURAL ROOM, Uaioe Building. ED 7*1331 -if ' Satellite System Eichmann Shown as Brutal, Determined To Murder JERUSALEM, (* — Adolph THE. telegram announced) transports to Auschwitz, the WASHINGTON («»-An Inter­ lishment of such a system by Eichmann was portrayed Tues­ fha» Jewish children held in j Nazi extenninatta» factory m national Telephone and Tele­ private enterprise. However, day as a brutal man with life French concentration camps i Poland where millions perish- graph Co. official predicted the major cost factor would be and death powers over Jews in fhnuUt be included in future Ied. Tuesday that a working world­ the placing of satellites Into or­ Nazi-occupied Europe who be­ wide communications satellite bits, and the federal’ govern­ came bitterly frustrated if a ment is expected to handle this single one slipped through his system win be a reality by 1965. Henri Busignies, ITT Vice aspect. Hilliard W. Paige, General fingers. Assistant Israeli Prosecutor Galaxy of Stars President, said the company al­ manager of GE’s missile and Gavriel Bach, in a relentless ready has equipped one ground space vehicle department, said attack on Eichmann’s claim installation at its Nutley, N.J., his company "believes that, that he only obeyed orders, in­ Fro m Laboratories and is planning with affirmative cooperative troduced document after docu­ another in South America. Busignies gave his estimate from . . interested agencies of government, a communications ment showing that the former G e s t a p o lieutenant colonel H o lly w o o d to the House Science and As­ satellite system can and should wielded influence far beyond | tronautics qbmmittee. Most of be established by a joint ven­ his rank. La s Vegas his testimony was technical, ture of private enterprise.” Israel charges that Eich­ concerning such things as the possible orbits for communica­ mann, chief of the Gestapo’s N e w Y o r k !! Jewish Affairs section, was the tions satellites, and wa v e man who carried out Nazi Ger­ lengths. He said ITT is paying for its Planners many’s campaign to extermi­ nate European Jewry. " In ”P ers _ ; own ground stations but they will be used in the "project re­ lay" experiments,of the Nation­ Of Coup . THE EVIDENCE introduced j [ - & by Bach showed Eichmann | even attempted to interfere j th e H i- L o ’s - i ! r G o rd o n M a c R a e al Aeronautics -and Space Ad­ ' J a n e P o w e ll ministration. Both ITT and General Elec­ tric have Bled briefs with the Arrested with a hotel in the neutral en­ clave of Lichtenstein in Swit­ zerland where he heard that and many more _ federal Communications Com­ ISTANBUL, ‘ TURKEY W— “Jews were served food and j mission regarding a proposed Supporters of deposed Premier Adnan Menderes were arrested could get a cup of coffee.” L a n s in g C iv ic C e n te r worldwide network of commun­ SOMETHING’S WRONG—Garry Swttser, Northfield, Minn , senior, is somewhat Bach quoted from a secret) Tuesday on charges of plan­ mystified by the conflicting signs. Evidently workmen goofed or someone polled telegram to Eichmann from I ications satellites. Both companies favor estate ning an armed coup against the a prank but whatever the cause, the signs are a source ef consternation to those one of his'deputies, Rolf Guen-1 - r F r id a y M a y 12 regime of President Cemal ther, linking the defendant's Gursel. students who are rushing to Had parking space between classes. (State News office with the deportation of & 1 5 P JM L Police declined to give de­ photo by Vernon Rich.) „ , - - children, ranging in age from Reopening tails, but unofficial sources said about 35 persons were ar­ 2 to 12. tickets available at — DISC SHOP ANDRE’S RECORD SHOP Of Schools rested around midnight and 1 st D o c to ra te A w a rd e d in 1925 ICAMPUS BOOK STORE PARAMOUNT NEWS SHOP hidden weapons were found. A terse communique broadcast M IC H IG A N NOW PLAYING To Be Judged Istanbul Radio said the sup­ posed plotters had asked assist­ M S U G r a d P ro g ra m THEATRE PHONE IV 2-7 til SPECIAL SCHEDULED Regular Michigan Prices 65c till 5:30 - 90c - Eves. RICHMOND, VA., (»-The ance from an unnamed power After School Matinees & Snn. • Children 30c * This Just About Tops * Feature At . . . M ic h ig a n S ta te U n iv e r s it y question of the right of the Jus­ tice Department to try to force re-opening of Prince Edward "with foreign political ideo­ logy.” The communique said those D o u b le d in 6 Y e a rs Everything Disney Ever * Made! Don’t Miss It! * 1:20-3:20-5:20-7:30-9:35 County’s closed public schools arrested were sympathizers of By WES WIETSMA the graduate program wasex- F O R E IG N F IL M S E R IE S was left today for a federal dis­ Menderes’ disbanded democrat State News Staff Writer panded appreciably after 1947, trict judge to decide. party. Menderes and others said Muelder. _ T H E Y ’R F ^ presents Judge Oren R. Lewis pro­ party and Government leaders The University awarded 48 toppled from power by Gursel’s per cent of its total number of In 1959, when the University mised he would rule as early as masters degrees during the six- awarded 151 doctorates, it bloodless coup last year are possible on the government’s move to intervene oq. the ground the county was frustrat­ ing and circumventing the now on trial for crimes against the state. ' year span, 1955 to 1960. For the five-year span, 1955 to 1960, it awarded 49 per cent ranked 22 in the nation for the awarded and 15 for the num- number of doctor degrees “Deadly Decision” of4t~stotal number of doctor­ ber of masters degrees. court's desegregation order by ate degrees. (German) abandong its public schools. COUNSEL for the state and Bill Approved; Dr. Milton E. Muelder, vice- president and dean of the THE UNIVERSITY has es­ tablished eight colleges which The story of “Canaris" school for-advanced graduate are authorized to give the ad­ Prince Edward said the gov­ ernment had no right to Honor Dooley studies, reported this at a meet­ vanced degree. They are: ag­ riculture, business and public Arch conspirator and super spy who fooled Hitler! - enter the case and could offer ing of the Graduate Forum service, communication arts, no aid to the district court which has-original jurisdiction With Medal Monday. He'said MSU conferred its education, engineering, home Disney!} FAIRCHILD THEATRE first doctorate degree in Bot­ economics, science and arts, in the suit. WASHINGTON (»—A bill to and veterinary medicine. any in 1925. In an unprecedented, move award a medal posthumously last week, U.S. Atty. Gen. Ro­ to Dr. Thomas Anthony Dooley FROM 1925 to 1947, -the Uni­ About 275 areas or fields of -riw Abseht-m întfecI h s f e & r Thurs., Fri., May 11, 12 — concentration are offered by HD ma me bert F. Kennedy filed a motion III was approved Tuesday by versity sustained a modest pro­ 66 departments in these col­ ROW tm UJOn T & 9" p.m. ' in Lewis’ court seeking to join the House Banking Committee. Negro plaintiffs who are at­ The legislation, which now gram at toe doctorate level, with primary emphasis bn bio­ leges in which both the mas­ IkM URRAY • OLSON •WYNN •KIRK •AMES*RED‘ANDREWS ter’s and doctor’s degree may wWVN0W*MICMC^HMBTlHMS-JMßM$IE!VflO nlEDlMl 1 Admission : 50c tempting to re-open the Price goes to the House, would auth­ logical science and areas re­ be earned, said Muelder. ' Edward Schools. orize $2,500 for a gold medal lated to agriculture. . ADDED — "Saga of Wind Wagon Smith’1 The schools in that rural honoring the U.S. doctor who With toe recruitment of an Muelder emphasized toe sig­ southern Virginia county have remote part of Laos until he outstanding faculty in the fun­ nificant part graduate student damental disciplines and with enrollment has played in the SOON! Pat Boone in "ALL HANDS ON.DECK” been shut for two. years after died of cancer. rapid growth of total student the county’s board of supervi­ The bill also would provide a corresponding development sors declined to make school ¡for striking bronze duplicates of other professional colleges, enrollment at MSU. fund appropriations. Most of for sale. _ .. t Y% \ HURRY! THEATRE — PHONE IV 2-9881 the county’s 1,400 schoolage The committee also Approv­ white children have been at­ ed legislation to authorize pro­ tending a system of private se­ ducing a “galvano”—a large gregated school s.-The bulk of display medal—honoring the At LUCON 8A»T LANSING • fH O N I ED. i W l " " Last Day ......... ... H E L D O V E R ! 2nd H A P P Y W eek! the county's 1.700 Negro school 50th anniversary of naval avia­ children have been without for­ tion, and bronze duplicates of HAMBURGER HEAVEN 12:50 • 4:35 - 8:20 2:35 - 6:20 - 10:10 mal education. the gold medal presented last THE FEDERAL government year to the poet Robert Frost You expect variety. . . HK zabcth laurcnce eodiH T : ■M B Shu and the Negroes seek to halt the use of state and local tui­ TAYLOR HARVEY FISHER .’•*JOHNoMARAS ». Tin Roof S if t! what tion grants by white children attending'the private schools. ' They also want to prohibit tax P A IG E and you get U! Clippert St. Across From Frandor BUTTERFIELD« DINA MERRILL - W. PH BwnrltaaL-jWQLJlENMMl Brate ummcmgÊ 1 happas wm C.m#*nScoee un■ ■ ^ ! H*lilM| t Stute Newt, W m lm dkg* MM »**1"* • Wedameday Morning, May 10»_1961____ /- 0 Sports Rambles U n it S c o re s 4 0 R u n s é By PAUL SCHNITT < State News Spirti Witter Ì. The highest scoring game ihouse with two wins each. In as of April 38, the leaden of I with a 223 score. The team of It w a a hectic weekend for the Spertaa beeebell team and pined this season in the soft- (block four. Lambda Chi Alpha tba Mocks run as follows: One, ¡which Reisch Is a member, the head coach John Kobe. To South Bead for Thursday's game with ball tot was recorded Monday j and Sigma Alpha Mu are dead- Elsworth and Phi alpha are tied Untouc^les, night with West Shaw three de- locked in a tie for the number game for the. week with 892. Notre Dame, a single coldest against Indiana Friday at Bloom- f*aW«f «««t Shaw two tor toe one position with two wins with 1.5 points each; Two, Vets vets H won the series for the • ington that was rained out, then off to Columbus to face the Buckeyes twice on Saturday—oeariy 1,000 miles by bus. score of 40 to 5. Pitching for each.. These results ere the 1touchables lead -with 9; Three, the Un­ week with a score of 2502. lead with 11 and In Monday Kobe was ready to do battle again as he sat in his the victors was Dave. Klinger, j finals through the week of April Four, another tie between Vets IN VOLLEYBALL last week Jettison office prior to the afternoon practice session. Three Rivers freshman, who!34th. Illin d Delta Sigma Phi I with Ellsworth leads Mock one with ¡¡J“ t w DORMITORY contest nine ,TTr— points each. The. ......high ,a three win record and the “WE’VE PLAYED BETTER away against Big Ten competi­ S S L «** ***“ • are: Block 1, Arm- game for the week was bowledtBOer’s lead Mock two with the tion than home,” he admitted, ttgbung up a cigar. precinct three m the first i and 2 with one win by A1 Reisch, Clifton N. J. soph same record. “We had 33 hits in three games last weekend." added assis­ mg each: block two, Armstrong 8 tant coach Frank Pellerin. "It was our most consistent hitting Last week, one of the most with two wins; block three, Bat since playing this kind of competition." promisingg pitchers hi the three ley 3 and 6, with two wins; Plan Your Next Outing At — So n went. Mulling over pest games, looking ahead to the gues, John Van lwarrden. block four, Bryan 3, the winner leagues, upcoming series this weaken!. East Lansing graduate student.student, of the Mock, block five, Bryan ' “HEY, DID YOU see this?" Kobe cautiously held up what appeared to be an old newspaper. The front page was a faded pitched a no-hitler and Ded- 6 with two wins; block six, But- nesday burled a two-hitter to terfield 8 and 8. with two wins VROUND LAKE STABLES pink. It was The Lansing Capital News. “An old fan sent this win the Mock championship of each: Mock seven, Emmons 4 • HORSEBACK RIDING to me.” The Spartan mentor carefully turned to the sports the Independent League for the {«Htfa two wins;'Block eight, Em- Integrals. Out of 29 hitters toimons 7 Mock winner; and in • HAYRIDES page, a pale yellow hue. face him, 22 were struck out.¡block nine and ten. Rather 2 “How about that?" His finger rested on a story on the left • PICNICS side of the page. —........................... '~ •nnr , r . n r n s „/ «w. — Jand 8 are the winners respect- . • SPECIAL PARTIES West Shaw 2 leads block “Spartan Baseball Team to Windup Season Saturday with U with two wins; Mock 12, East Irish at South Bend: Kobsmen to End Successful Campaign." t^ent !Shaw 9 is in first position with INSTRUCTIONS AVAILABLE—MODERATE RATES The headline was the most conspicuous on the page. The date three wfc*; Vets 1 and AJL Psi. two wins; and Mick 13, East could not be discerned. Kobs carefully turned to the front page with two wins eachi. Q*” »i Shaw 9 leads also by two wins, of the frail paper. Located Directly Across From STAN pROBAC winsf each; y f Tinkers Terrors, IkFinally in block 14, toe leader West Shaw 8 with two wins. ‘TUESDAY, JUNE 3, 1920!" . . . tenais coach. . . Iotaspberes and Vets 1H all The Beach At ROUND LAKE Thirty-five years ago, it was Kob’s first year as bead baseball tied at three-wins each; Sugar- IN INDEPENDENT bowling coach. daddys with three wins; and 3 miles west of Laingsburg TBer’s winners of the clock. Nlsitten twenty-six: “The Jazz Age,” “Return to Normalcy,” “The Roaring Twenties,” woman suffrage, prohibition. Con­ servative Calvin Coolidge was sitting in the White House rais­ Tennis Coach Hopeful IN THE Fraternity League, V a rs ity C lu b undefeated Sigma Nu leads ing the tariff. block one and Alpha Gamma M eets T o n ig h t IN ONE CORNER of the page were the Major League Stand­ ings. The New York Yankees (35-14) were in first. You see, Of Successful Season Rbo and Alpha Tan Omega, tied with one win and one tie The Varsity club will hold a S H E P A R D ’S . . . Open tonight, Umes haven’t changed that much. Connie Mack’s Philadelphia Stan Drobac, State tennis Minnesota, Iowa and North­ each, bold down the number j meeting to elect officers Wed- ’till 9 Across from Home Ec Bldg. *Athletics were in second with a 30-22 record. And the Tigers? coach, is looking forward to western. one position in Mock two. j nesday at 7:30 p.m. All fnern- Sixth place only ten games out* r- *• a good season this year with The big match, however, is Also tied in Mock three are j here are urged to attend this Over in the National League, Cincinnatti was on top with their present record of 14-2. with Michigan, the defending Delta Sigma Phi and Farm- meeting'by Burt Smith, adviser: champions. The championship Pittsburgh close behind. • The two games lost were on matches will be held here and A fellow by the name of Babe Ruth was leading the American the spring trip- In Big Ten com­ Drobac predicts Michigan to League in home runs with 19 after 49 games; and he was batting .383. petition theyYe defeated Ohio, retain their title, M.S.U. in sec­ ond place and Indiana and GOLFERS! Ever sin c e sh o e s w e re In v e n te d ... ANOTHER HEADLINE read. “Tigers defeat Senators, 1-0.” Northwestern third and fourth tee off with the best Ed Wells bettered the "Big Train”, Walter Johnson—a future respectively. member of the Hall of Fame. IM S c h e d u le Drobac appears to be very Golf equipment from . . • - June, 1926. Starting Wednesday at the Colonial Theater was The softball games that were proud of the team. "All the “The Golden Cocoon.” At the Gladmer Dr W. Griffith’s “Sally of the Sawdust” was showing starring “lovable” Carol Demp­ rained out Monday evening at men are doing great," be com­ 6:30 p.m. will be rescheduled mented. The team is young Larry Cushion Sporting Goods ster and W. C. Fields. Price of admission: 10c and 25c for for Friday at 5:20 p.m._ with only two seniors, Plagen- 3020 Vine St. — 1 Block North of Michigan Ave. matinee;40c and 40c for evening. boef and Henry leaving. The big story of the day was the opening of the Lansing All second round fraternity Hall and Dampeen, mention­ West of Sears ' Municipal golf links. and dormitory tennis matches ed as having amazing records, OPEN MON. THUR. & FRI. TILL 9:00 P.M. which are not played Tueeday are Sophomores and will be . .ONTHE NATIONAL scene Senator James Wadsworth of New should be played Wednesday. back next year so the future York declared the eighteenth amendment a mistake. “He came The contestants should check also looks good. Drogac is a forth as a frank and avowed wet and claimed that the experi­ with the IM office. _ man living his job. ment in constitutional prohibition had been a failqfe,” the Lansing paper said. - Softball “Those boya really play D O N ’T L U G T H A T June, 1926. Fresh eggs,were 35c a dozen and men’s ties were Monday, 5:20 p.m. — Arm­ ball!" he says. — six inches wide with multicolor polka dots as big as half dollars strong vs Armstrong 3, field 1: Contrary to many beliefs, S T U FF H O M E! H A V E decorating the front. - ~ ~ As the year progressed the Cardinals dumped the Yankees, “ Armstrong 2 vs Armstrong 4, physical education majors are field 2; Bailey t vsBailey no8,slouches. Stan Drogac is a IT S T O R E D F R E E man has sought footwear field 3; Bailey 6 vsBailey 7, classic example to prove this four games to three in the World Series. Ruth clobbered 47 round trippers to win bis first of six consecutive borne run field 4; Bailey 3 vsBailey 5, Drobac, married with point, field 5; Elsworth vs Motts, field two children, graduated from A T L O U IS . IT W IL L like comfortable crowns. Hack Wilson ofthe Chicago Cubs took the honors in toe 6; AOCS II vs Tinkles Terrors, MSU in 1963 with a BA in phy­ National League with 21. field 7; Hasbeens vs Tbata sical education. He now has B E IN G R E A T S H A P E What happened to the Kobs team tbat went to South Bend Tau, field 8; Untouchables vs his masters and is working I that weekend? The Fighting Irish white-washed'Michigan State College, 6-0. _ Sigma Phi Delta, field 9. on a PhD in guidance counsel­ W H EN YO U G ET Monday, 6:30 p.m. — AOCS I ing. . _ But the Spartans finished with a respectable 13-7 record to mark the beginning of a long, successful and gratifying career vs Asher, field 1; CSC vs Phi He became assistant coach B A C K . S T O R A G E IS Alpha, field 2; Gunslingers vs in 1955 and head coach in 1957. for John Kobs, State's mentor. ~ Animals, field 9; Cardinals vs Last year was the team’s best F R E E A T L O U IS . Uncle Tom’s Boys, field 4; under his guidance with a 17-3 Comfort comes f i rst . . . Downers vs Mac’s AC., field overall record. Golfers Lose One; 5; Evans Scholars vs Geldings, Things have been improving field 6; KDA’s vs Owen Grads, consistently over toe last three field 7; Triangle vs Delta Tau years and look quite good tor Ciaaaar aid and rightly s o . . . but looks are mighty important, too. Delta, field 8 Psi Upsilon vs toe tennis team now. - ■ Skirt Landry Win Over 4 Teams Sigma Chi, fiald 9. Bowling C. Grand diver Across from Student Services BnUdins - An Apache Moc gives you both . . . style and MSU’s golf team defeated Cochran • 84, Bud Badger • 77, 'Wednesday, 8 p.m.—Evans Ohio State and Indiana and Marty Kleva - 81, Larry Mc­ Scholars vs Ray’s Boys, alleys IM H ig h lig h ts it'» quick end easy - - leathers you’ll wear with lost to Purdiie in a quadrangu­ Millan • 77 and McDaniels • 81. 1 and 2; Asher vs D.S. Phi H, Friday at 5 p.m. is the dead­ . pride. . . and wonderful lar meet at Lafayette, Indi­ alleys 7 and 8. line for entering the IM tennis Dial ED 2-3537 to r Pick-up & Delivery ana. over the weekend. Low man for Northern Illinois tingles individual tournament. * feeling comfort! Monday, they defeated North­ was Tom Kerr with a 154 total. ern Illinois 925 to 994. Over all, coach Jack Brotz- Michigan State's 1930-31 bas­ In the quadrangular meet mann waa pleaaed with toe ketball team, which potted a the 36 hole totals were Purdue team’s performance, Brotz- 18-1 won-lost record for MSU’s mann felt with a little better all-time best single-season per­ - 912, MSU * 920, Ohio State - 946, and Indiana 960. The top man for the Spartans was Bud­ luck the Spartans could have beaten Purdue on the weekend. formance, also was the first Spartan athletic team to travel University Styled > . . . comfort dy Badger firing 73-73 and plac­ Their record stood at 11-3-1 for by airplane. ing second in the 24 man tour­ the year and 5-1-1 in toe Big ney. C.A. Smith, team Captain, Ten after the weekend meets. Pete Kakela, Michigan State MANSHELDS OF GENUINE shot 149 to take fourth place. However, Monday’s outcome football tackle, is vice pres­ Gene Hunt, with 71 for best improved our standing. ident of Ms senior class. round of match, claimed sixth IMPORTED SHELL CORDOVAN place; Tad Schmidt had 150 for fifth place. In Monday's match, those Tour history book tells you that cordovan playing 36 holes were Tad Sch­ wee used in tbs shields of Spanish sol­ midt, medalist for the day with 144; C.A. Smith and Gerry Bar­ rett both with 152 totals. The other 3 rounds were divided among Gene Hunt ♦ 77; Don In te rn a tio n a l diers—because of its great strength and high polish. Try these long-wear shoee.. .see how they take a high Michigan State will play its ■hine with a flick of the doth. $15 Classics!—for all “grads”— : Fe stiva l . season-ending football gamer against Notre Dame in 1965 old and under! and 1966. style • OTHER HAND - SEWN Saturday, May 13 SLIP - ONS — $12 - 919. ( MSU AUDITORIUM Ratty lad Ska STAGE SHOWS ~ 36.95 3 P.M. and 8 P.M. 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