MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY STATE STATE NEWS East Vol. 53. No. 216 Lansing, Michigan Jul^ 5> 1962 Frlce 1(^ Parking Fines Might Go Up Increasingly larger fines will Henry Dykema. secretary of be imposed on repeating student student-faculty motorvehlcle parking violators if a proposed committee, said it is seeking a Change in the jstudent motor vehi¬ rule that would have parking cle regulations is approved by violators charged $2 for the first Pres. offense. $4 for the second, $6 Hannatj and the Board of for the third. $8 for the fourth. trustees. j The proposal is an attempt $10 for the fifth and $25 for the slow down the sixth and every offense there¬ of parking after. ampus. Dean of Students John Fuzak was not overly optimistic about the acceptance of the proposal after University business office officials said they could not handle all the the book work in¬ volved. The business office sug¬ gested campus police keep record of the number of violations. The student-faculty committee prepared an alternative amend- LONG JOURNEY--Bob and Carol Manthy, an The Board o Trustees recently the regulations of the paddlingat the Grand Rivetond Waverly Rood ent to MSU couple, left Tuesday morning on their announced the ippointment of one ascending fines proposal Is not bridge of the Grand river. of America's foremost econo¬ acceptable. The alternative calls 600-mile trip canoe to the Great Lakes For¬ •-State News Photo mists, Alvln-H. Hansen, as a for an increase from $2 to (4 estry Exposition in Mio. The couple started visiting profes lor for the 1962-63 for each parking offense. school year. Dick Be rain, director of cam¬ Two Teams Rese The 75-yeai -old Hansen spent pus police, said, "We need some the past year as a distinguished deterrent to prevent the to pre¬ visiting profe sor at Yale. He vent the high number of viola¬ By JOHN WYNN Leaving today for the North¬ sites on Juet Island, a small, regularly teaches at Harvard tions." Of the State News Staff west Territories In the Canadian island two and a half miles long where he Is tl e Lucius N. Lit- There were 1,131 parking vi¬ Arctic, are lour MSU stall mem¬ and a half mile wide Inx the tiur Two MSU professors will lead Profess ir of Political Eco¬ olations in May of this year bers headed by Moreau S. Max¬ Northwest Territory island group respective research teams com¬ nomy (emeritu J). compared to 907 in May, 1961, well, professor in the department of the Canadian Arctic. prised of staff members and stu¬ According t > Fortune maga- Bernitt said. Nearly three thous¬ of sociology and anthropology, The sites where findings were dents in field work for study in zlne, Hansen is "likely to be and more tickets were written and curator of anthropology at discovered two years earlier, by one of the lea the Far North this summer. ling architects of by campus police from July 1, the university museum. a previous MSU expedition, re¬ postwar fiscal and economic pol- a similar 11-month period the The other members include vealed small ifunute stone tools icy. . . ." year before. William Kemp, doctoral candi¬ used for carving ivory into weap¬ "Today iS impossible to "The point of the proposal is date in geography who will do ons and utensils. The findings understand it is going on in not to collect more money, but investigations in land cover as relate to an earlier civilization the world 'iout i speaking to stop willful violations," well as archelogical excavation: that preceeded the Eskimos. acquaintance ith the ideas of Oykema said. "Student mem¬ G. William Hughes, film coor¬ The team, with 2,000 pounds Hansen Lc rii bers of the committee were gen¬ John Maynard dinator in the Audio Visual de¬ of equipment, will fly by trans¬ Keynes," :?aid the f ortune edi- erally in favor of the changes." partment. who will do still cover¬ port plane to Baffin Island In tor Another change before Hannah age and film the work completed Frobisher Bay, and ther. by Professor R abert I anzillotti, is drawing in the area needed during their stay; and Bruce Mor¬ chartered plane to Juet Island. chairman of !:e Department of to register a student's automo¬ rison. sociology and anthropology Floating the equipment ashore Economics, sai 1, "Hansen is one bile with the University. Offi¬ Junior, who will assist in the from the pontoon plane will in¬ cials students to register of. the most ren iwned living eco- want excavations. volve difficulty. nonusts. and t) 3epartmem is only cars to be driven within The expedition, a Joint project The team will live in light¬ MSU ' boundaries at East Lan¬ proud to have im as a member between the National Museum of weight cotton tents and use gas¬ of the faculty." sing. Canada and MSU, financed largely oline and kerosene for cooking "In having D Hansen on the The present boundary In which by a National Science Founda¬ fuel and warmth. faculty," Lanz llotti said, "we students must register their csrs tion grant, will excavate eight Frequent rain and near freez¬ are continuing the tradition of is Ingham county lines at Clinton ing temperatures prevail at this making avallab! to the students, and Eaton counties. Holt Road In time of year. the University and the comrnu- the south and Meridian Road in Schoolboard The mosquito bothersome and problem causes the men is nity, economist if international the south. stature." Anyone living in University Moreou S. Moywell Picks Woman to wear I'he head nets. group is supplied with , l.anzillotti brilliantly artlt d that Hansen has ulated the pro- housing or taking as few as one credit would have to register Ikenberry I'he b ast Lansing School Hoard elected its lone woman member, blems of the "r tature and that he Is economy" xognized in the their change. car under the proposed Currently only those Leaves MSU Mrs. Elizabeth Robertson, presi¬ dent in a 15 minute organizational academic worl ment centers a! and in govern- >ne of the major students carrying seven must register their car. credits Stanley O. lken!>erry. an in¬ meeting at the school. archietects of I iS. economic pol- structor in USi:'s Office of In¬ Mrs. Robertson is the first fe¬ icy. stitutional Research, today Join¬ ed (he staff at West Virginia male president in the history of the Hoard. Hansen has I ?en president of 2nd Comm. Arts the American E conomic Assoc- University. Maupmom, where Other officers elected for the he will serve as assistant to 1962-63 school year include: Roy iation. State ec Departmei ijst for the U.S. member of Session Underway the provost for institutional re¬ Caff, vice president; Robert W. Ihe second two-week session search and as assistant profes¬ Richards, secretary and Andrew U.S. Advisory Council on ocial Security,[Chairman of the of MSU's annual Communications sor in the C ollege of I ducation. Hay, treasurer. All of the of¬ :.S.-Canada Joint Economic Arts Institute, which began Mon¬ I he -year-oM native of West ficers ran unopposed. nd spec i a day, attracted 1 *^0 high school Virginia specializes. in the pro¬ C. I . MacDonald, Superintend¬ nuc adviser he Federal Re- students. blems oi higher education. A ent of East I ansing public Hoar.1. serve According to Assistant Pro¬ |057 graduate o! Michigan State schools, reported that 91." per¬ Some of his noted fessor William Hnlght of the i sore pub- University, he took part in a cent of the new Spartan Village lications inecon mic circles are: Communications Arts School, the Tiumbe'i "f internal investiga¬ school has been finished. Business I ycles and National In- students hail from Michigan, Ind¬ tes ol instructumalc ost s, fac- In other business, the two Fast come, Monetary Theory andFis- iana, Ohio, Illinois. Pennsylvan¬ Lansing banks were designated as cal Pohcy, Amci :a's Role in the ia, and California. organi/ation, lecision making, depositories of school funds and World Economy Economic 1s- Ihe Institute offers TV and md student withdrawls nd att i- ihe officers plus James Stephens radio., journalism, speech, % sues of the > and A Guide and ,,.s aIhU- Ihc stall at State. Maynard M. Miller ,,, to Keynes. dramatics courses. Comment On LIRC Civ Thm following oditoriol appeared in .The State Journal Sun¬ day ond presented their view on the Labor Industrie I Rela¬ tions Center controversy vi*w to rotoin the Confer or at which substantially is the some expressed by the State News — somvthing should be done loast its function. Feud Yie (This is the second of o gro delegates told of incident Hoover, who said in a letter: Michigan Stale University's labor and industrial relations center, nine-port series in whiih after incident where they had been "Our 1 a w enforcement ma¬ faced with a shut-up-shop-or-else ultimatum from the legisla¬ two veteran Associated Press subjected to Illegal searches aft¬ chinery has bc%n steadily un¬ ture, may yet have a chapter to write in its saga of controversy. er a crime wave in Detroit. dermined by legislative action newsman—Gene Schroder and And. while It s very likely to be the last one, it may well be Some said they were taken Into or judicial decisions until it is about the most A.F. Mohan—size up Michi¬ important. custody when hunting rifles were no longer a deterrent to crime. When the center was created six and a half years ago. it gan's proposed new Consti- found jn their cars. Crime is increasing steadily — intended to both labor and management. ution and compare it with the was serve Essenti¬ The Democratic contention that and faster than the population. ally. it was conceived as a parallel to the university's highly present document drawn up the constitutional provision was "Our system of law enforce¬ successful cooperative extension program which serves pri¬ in 1908) ^-Constitutional under Federal ment came from the English com¬ marily agriculture. As such, it was set up outside the aca¬ law was based on a 1961 decision mon law. The British still make demic structure of the university, and began—and for a time LANSING P—Should the civil in an Ohio case (Mapp vs. Ohio). it work. We need to get tough." continued—its operations with litde fanfare or notoriety. rights of individuals take preced¬ But | the prevailing school of Some delegates argued that It's hard to bring logical order out of some of the elements ence over the arrest of pos¬ thought among the delegates was that c r i fn i n a 1 law needed mod¬ of controversy, but several things are reasonably clear. sible criminals? that tjie Ohio case dealt with ernization. First, the original concept was good. The error has not That question produced some matters different from those With fast automobiles, they been in the existence of the center but in the malfunctions which of the most soul-searching and covered by Michigan's provision. said, criminals have an advan¬ have .developed. In part, these may date right back to the begin¬ emotional debate witnessed at Seizurje of printed materials ra¬ tage over the police if officers ning -when it was determined that die center would be an entity the Constitutional Conven¬ ther than weapons was involved, are forced to get a warrant to apart from the academic structure. Perhaps with closer control tion during its seven months of and they were confiscated within search a car. and scrutiny, it would not have wandered into such pitfalls as deliberations. the area of a home not "outside By the time the warrent is the hlghly-critlzed motion picture produced for the A. F.. L, - It was only of several one the curtiage." sworn out, the suspect can be C. I. O. issues covered by the Declara¬ hundreds of miles from the scene There Is definitely a place for a program such as that origin¬ tion of Rights article of the pro¬ Opponents of the "weapons" and the evidence can be sold or ally espoused by the center. Its proponents, including Presi¬ part f the search and seizure posed new Constitution which buried or tossed into a lake, dent John A. Hannah, are on sound ground in contending that sectiop pointed out that Michi¬ touched off hours of verbal fire¬ gan Was the only State in the they said. M. S. U.'s land grant charter specifies that education facili¬ works. The debate hasn't ended Union I with such a provision in its The argument over "search ties be provided for everyone — agriculture, the professions, yet. and seizure" probably will con¬ business and "the working man." Delegates to the convention Constitution. tinue until it is settled once and There was, then, nothing wrong with the center's arranging considered the Declaration o f "B^d policement abuse it for all in the courts and des¬ good ones don't need . while the — educational programs and opportunities for labor leaders and Rights article so important that it," said one delegate, who con- pite whether Michigan citizens other union personnel. What was wrong was the approach, and they moved it into the No. 1 tendec the prvision violated tra¬ approve or reject the new Con¬ with it the fact that a definite Imbalance was allowed to develop spot in the Constitution. ditional civil liberties. stitution. between what was offered industry and its people and what was Included for the first time But | supporters quoted from In seeking to make 14) their made available to the labor side. is what some hailed as the strong- advice! sent to the convention minds on how to cast their bal- such programs should have ' It can scarcely be argued tnat • est civil rights clause to be found been worked out exactly on a "one for you, one for me" basis. in by farmer President Herbert (Continued on Poge 3) any state Constitution. The But center personnel should have charted a better course in provision bars discrimination lie matter of personal commitment and should have been criti- because of "religion, race, color MICHIGAN m)111 rally aware ol' the problems which bias—either real or .appar¬ or national orgin." ent—could Here cause. again, the matter of closer scrutiny and the benefit of the T^p cut claws in the clauses, convention also adopted a UNIVERSITY STATI |M1 H-U STATE NEWS ALL-AMERICAN ACPA ![voting impartial counsel from outside could have saved the day. provision creating a bi-partisan But these are things of the past, and the question is: "What civil rights commission to inves?- ! Member Associated Press, United Press International, now?" The legislature has made it painfully clear that if M.S.U. tigate cases of alleged discrim¬ Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press continues to operate the center beyond this fiscal year it can ination. Association, Michigan Press Association. ! Published by the students of Michigan State University. expect economic reprisal. The M.S.U. board of trustees, a The commission is established constitutional body, has made it equally clear that it considers Issued on class days Monday through Friday during the under the executive branch ar¬ the mstcer one for internal decision and that the legislators fall, winter and spring quarters; twice weekly during the ticle, which directs the legis¬ have no business-leg ally or any other way—telling the trus¬ lature to "provide an annual ap¬ summer term: special Welcome Issue in September. tees what they should, or must do. j Second class postage paid at East Lansing, Michigan. propriation for the effective op¬ It would seem fruitless and foolish however, for the trus¬ eration of the | Editorial and business offices at 341 Student Services commission." Building, Michigan State University. East Lansing, Michi¬ tees to decide now to fight the legislative edict. While they Although the civil rights pro¬ gan. Mail subscriptions payable in advance: 1 term. $3: probably have constitutional basis for their position, they are vision was praised by most dele¬ 2 tjerms, $4; 3 terms, $5; full year, $6. almost certain to end up the loser in the final analysis. There gates as a momentous forward is principle involved and principle, some may feel, is always step, when time came for a final Ecjitor Ben Burns worth fighting for. In this case the fight should be verbal, how¬ vote on the Declaration of Rights Managing Pljoto Editor Editor James Wallington ever. The legislature should be told, in clearly understood Dave Jaehnig article Itself most Democrats Advertising Manager precj Levine terms, that It is guilty of practicing economic blackmail and voted of attempting to set up an extremely dangerous precedent which against it. Circulation Manager .Henry Tmkham Instead, they plugged for their should not be considered as binding for the future. own version in a substitute Dem¬ At the same time the trustees should acknowledge their own vulnerable position created by their lax direction of the center ocratic constitution, which was Crossword Puzzle rejected by the Republican-dom¬ and perhaps the basic error of failing to integrate its program inated convention. The Dem¬ A IKOSS 29 Prompted Into the acsdemic structure. The center's obvious mismanage¬ ocrats called for stronger lan¬ l.pjrtlculai 33. Notched ment cannot be explained away as a mere matter of oversight guage on civil rights and stronger • Tajnal annl lilt.NS etlne 37. Valley or as a parallel With the long-established and successful ex¬ authority for the commission. 11 Stirlus 38 Cijllmu tool tension service program, for M.S.U, faculty advisors clearly Opposition of the Democrats 12 Bi|ling 39 Inditfu plant urged in the past the need for integration and detailed their was based not on the anti-dis¬ 14 Wi thdraw 41. Grimalkin reasons for such a move. crimination 15. Siniiple 42 Parry provision, but on Perhaps with such an integration, and with the careful estab¬ another section — search and It. Mi| 44 Settle 17 Oilrectum 4(i General lishment of a sound curriculum based on information and fact seizure which many — delegates 19 K, id of tight instead of bias, the university and the legislature could find acknowledged affects the Negro buoj V 47 Slackens common ground for a future compromise on the issue. population to a greater degree 20. S«< jeet 48 Course grass Solution of Yesterday's P IW'tJf*** stern Perhaps there is another and more acceptable direction — than white citizens. PA* kmc it MIN. 22 QujiCNivnt 49 Woodland integration of the M.S.U. program with that already being con- "Although in the main the De¬ 24. Ha :« Flower - ducted Jointly by the University of Michigan and Wayne State jit DOWN 7 Burst claration of Rights section re¬ 2ti. Co reposition cluster ll-humor university. The Michigan-Wayne State prograir is almost the affirms our basic constitutional for 1 Wanders 4 Chill 8 Edible 27. Played the 2 Surgical tuber opposite extreme from the one at M.S.U. The difference be¬ guarantees," the Democrats s. t; int card instrument i 'J Seaport tween the two—and the reason that the Michigan-Wayne pro¬ said, "the proposed document . Trample i Chile gram has not found itself in similar trouble—is that it is a has attached a proviso modify¬ / 1? 3 S 6 7 s 9 0 III Sofa part of the academic structure. As such, it operates and is ing the very important guaran¬ viewed as a teaching process, the same as any other academic II P \ie |p 13. Nick 18 Turf tee against unreasonable search 13 department or endeavor. or It does not have close association and seizure. Identification with any faction, except as these groups take /4 ■ if 21 Baiter 21 Oisposi- "Thi s provi so ha s already been (41111 part as students or research people. declared by several courts of 25 Cocrta lb 17 18 The merger suggestion is not a new one, and was first pro¬ this state to be posed as early as 1956. It was stymied then by a feeling that United States Constitution as an counts*^ to the H 2! 9, 19 28 Put «n .'lit Abiilli 20 22 23 M.S.U. should have its own program. Now there can well be unlawful invasion of every cit¬ H :ti Make. happy the fear diat neither Michigan nor Wayne State will want to izen's 24 23 26 right of privacy." W/, .12 A bom risk being embroiled in the present controversy. . At dispute is a part of the w WmMR u Ji From this point, the trustees must weigh their action and direction carefully. section which allows the prosecu¬ Clearly, more is at stake than the fate tion of individuals caught with • 27 ■ 3° -V 32 Keimi :n -SireId 3* Jf 3- ' 31 :i.'< White of the M.S.U. labor and industrial center. A basic tenet of items such es narcotics, bombs poplar academic freedom has its nerve exposed and an imprudent and brass knuckles in their ja 39 4C 4i operation at this time could be of long-lasting detriment to -- e«en though the evidence was car U at state-supported education in Michigan. seized during an illegal search *z 4J ♦4 4i The responsibility for. this prudent action must, of course, conducted without a warrant. Such 4b 47 be shared by die legislature. For either to act in haste or 43 Fema a provision is in the present anger would serve only to damage seriously the educational 18 44 -aiidpi reputation of our state. Constitution. During convention debate, Ne¬ H J5 B.illi" Dutch Hm Disease (Continued from Page 2-) Tree lots, voters may take into their calculations -- some They would: major changes made in the Declaration of Rights article. Make the appeal of criminal Woodsman spare that tree! Fungus Increases According to Theodore J. with DDT solutions. convictions'-a matter of leaving cording to Haskell, to discover This cry may be heard but not Haskell, Lansing city forester, "To minimize the appeal right to a court's approval. mortality wilting elms or desd elm wood heeded by a methodical team of seven elms were found to be rate of songbirds caused -- Guarantee the right of just by the where beetles could farced. Sam¬ specialists who In short order can infected in 1956 within the DDT," Haskell said, "spraying ples are taken from treatment city suspected at legislative and ex¬ transform a once stately elm tree and- the number increased each is done during the trees' dor¬ trees and sent for ecutive hearings. confirmation into a branchless trunk that is year with 989 trees infected in mant period after leaves -- Delete a section relating to drop to the Dutch elm disease labora¬ felled, cut and hauled away. The 1961. The score for 1962 W in the fall and before the buds subversion. tory at Michigan State University. branches and tree trunks are date is 390 elms. appear !n the spring prior to bird In dropping the section on sub¬ burned. Haskell said that the best "Actually, removing trees is migration." not only a version, the convention made it This sad episode, most likely method in controlling the disease costly process but it clear it had Scouting teams operate sys- means the loss of shade which no intention of ad¬ caused by Dutch elm Disease, thus far Is spraying the trees matlcallv through areas, ac¬ (Continued oo Page 4) vocating any lessening of the is repeated daily in the Lansing power of the State to "define and punish, within area and throughout the Michi¬ ELCOME SUMMER SCHOOL STUDENTS* FACULTY proper con¬ gan's lower peninsula up to East stitutional limits, the crime of Tawas. The disease, a fungus, subversion." is carried by bark beetles and The present section was adopt¬ enters healthy trees through ed in 1950 shortly after the Korean feeding punctres made by the war started. beetle, or it can pass through Delegates decided that the sec¬ natural root graftsfromdiseased tion — only constitutional pro¬ to healthy trees. vision of its kind in any State — Since it came from Europe was out of place in a Declaration in 1930, Dutch elm disease has of Rights, since it was limitation a spread through 20 northeastern upon the liberties of the people and central states. The trees rather than a guarantee against wilt and die, many in the same abuse of state power. season of Infection and few dur¬ Probably the noisiest fuss 7"o introduce you to the unusual CHRISTMAS CARDS on ing the second or third season. most crt the "most unusual" shop in Michigan-clip this Ad- It will be redeemable for any subject to come before the The first signs of the disease a 10% discount on Christmas Cards If presented by July 20, 1962. " Committee on Rights, Suffrage appeared In Michigan during 1950 and Elections was raised over in Detroit. Since then its rapid Phone ED 2-8438 Drive out and visit a provision that didn't get into spread has caused the State, and the new constitution — a ban its cities, villages, and communi¬ OPEN TEN TIL 9 P.M. "THE SHOP WITH THE CLASS ROOF" on the controversial so-called ties to fight the battle to save the EVERYDAY INCLUDING SUNDAY "Rule 9". elms. At a jam-packed meeting, the committee heard opponents of such a ban denounce it as an attempt to "constitutionahze big¬ otry and discrimination." "Rule 9" was issued by the Corporation and Securities Com¬ mission after disclosure of a JULY SALE ... "point system" in Crosse Pointe by which real estate agents grad¬ ed potential property owners ac¬ our entire stock of summer cording to color, race and na¬ tional orgln. Under the rule, the agents SUITS, SLACKS and SPORT COATS would be subject to loss of their licenses discrimination. if they practiced such drastically reduced! The proposal to kill Rule 9 was sponsored by Weldon O. . Yeager, R-Detroit, who said it Timely savings on men's sum¬ merely raflirmed a civil right "which has been the basis of our capitalistic enterprise system." mer clothing! SUITS: Mohairs, Yeager Tried several times to have his proposal adopted as an dacron-worsted blends, all- amendment, but failed each time. (Next Legislative Branch). wool tropicals, wash and wear Prepare for dacron-cotton cords and pop¬ Shaw Concert lins. The Summer Fine Arts Fes¬ tival Chorus Is preparing for the performance of three major SPORT COATS: Dacron- Choral-Orchestra compositions: Bach's "The Magnificat," Schu- cotton checks, plaids and berts's "Mass in C Major." and Stravinsky's "Symphony of Psalms." stripes. Gomer Jones of the Music Department, is preparing the chorus for Robert Shaw, who will SLACKS: Dacron- unduet final rehersals and the Festival performance on July 19. worsted blends and dacron- Jones urges experienced singers to join the chorus. He rayon blends. is seeking additional members In each section and particularly sopranos. Rehearsals are held dally in 125 Music Building from 3-4 p.m. IM Softball . were All Monday 1M soltball tames rained out and will be Jcieohsuiis played today at o p.m. along Thursday with the other two games sched¬ Store uled for tonight. Hour* Hie schedule for Monday, with MEN'S SHOP 9:30 A.M. all games at 6 p.m.. is: Colts To vs. Tony's Boys, Held2;S'IEP 5:30 P.M. 210 ABBOTT ROAD • EAST LANSING vs. Ag I con. ffi; tliway Research vs. stipends. #4: and Phillips Oilers vs. All-Stars, ,^6. 1 !>>■ out uld mill Itmbn fi-orn Tree F tbe ijr ufrh trees, getting rid of «»«? elm plies, and:: elm wood from wootf piles. All ;ot this must be (Continued from Page 3) According to Emerson, lOO burijed. diseased elms have been found cannot be replaced for years by "feeding and watering the this season. However, he be¬ a new tree." treefe helps keepj them healthy lieves that the total number this Haskell cited the case of Rock- and resistant to diseases. season will not equal the 324 ford, 111. In August 1961 a census •"The trees mtist be sprayed condemned trees for 1961. revealed that all of city's 11,666 thoroughly with DDT solution to elms on public property were "My department," Emerson offer| protection," Emerson con¬ said, "is fortunate in being able found to be infected with Dutch elm disease. tinue^. "The price of spraying to take full advantage in directly varies, but the co6t of spraying utilizing the extensive facilities The estimated removal cost a large elm tree will be close offered by Michigan State." for Rockford's elms based on a contract awrd was $665,000. •'Lansing has 17,161 elm Coral Gables' trees," Haskell said, "to help save them, the public is kept informed about Dutch elm disease and its control programs newspapers, sion." through radio, and televi¬ ILFORNO The Nante that Made Pizza Famous in Lansing Conducting a no less aggres¬ sive campaign against theene¬ NOW OPEN AT 11:00 A.M. mies of the elm is East Lansing's Serving Snocks - Sandwiches - Luncheons - Dinners superintendent of parks, John D. Emerson. Also Catering to "The most effective ways Private Parties Banquets property owners can save their • - Meetings elms," Emerson said, "are by sanitation, feeding, watering, and Visit Our Rathskeller spraying the trees." Open 5 p.m. Daily "Sanitation," he explained, Phone ED 7-1331 "means getting rid of the elm beetle's breeding sites by prun- Complete Take-Out Service Open 9 a. m. to 9 p. i. Monday thru Firday ... Saturday fill 6 p. m. OPENED LAST NIGHT--"Fiva Fingers," the s cond of the Summer Circle Theatre productions, featuring Tainie Kissee Okemes as the daughter, and Joel Gerughty, Lansing, as the tan, premiered Wednesdcy evening in Demons ration Hall. ••State I lews Photo. Enrolls In Conference Chilton E. Prouty, chairman of of the Alpine area, the educators of geology, wit! will become famili r with the fun- an international daxnental concepts and theevolu- for geologists in tion of geological t inking result- the Alpine areas of Switzerland, ing from continuinj research in- France, Italy and Austria this vestigations of the Alps. summer. The participants will visit im- The institute, scheduled for port ant academi: institutions, July and August, is. sponsored research organiza ions and mu- by the American Geological In¬ seums of geology here will also stitute under a grant frorr. the be opportunities t < iscussteach- National Science Foundation. ing methods and acquire new Through study of the literature, teaching and resea •ch literature field examination and discussions and collections ► ^ fojiinhAfMi EarTiEZorn Family Swimming Club For a Family of Four DAILY PLAN WEEKEND PU $6.50 $22.5 includes private room includes private room 10:00 A.M. to 4 P.M. 10:00 A.M. to 4 P M. $ur for reservations & information call ED 7-1621 SPECIAL rj Ultna in the "HISTORY OF Haspel tradition MICHIGAN STATE This sophisticated -uit is available in Natural. Burnt Olive and Black Olive shade-.. This i> UNIVERSITY" delightfully cool. smart wash and wearable suit. a In a blend of 651 Dacron* (polyester) 3.V. ONLY $1.75 Cotton. *;W at the i BOOKSTORE HOLDEN REID i CORNER ANN & MAC SHOPPING CENTER I | '|f tryHenry's Once VOVHR9 WILL RETU Make Henry's A .Habit 1153 Michigan — one Block Wast of Bi SUMMERTIME A Wk" ! 1 FOR VACATION MINDED DRIVERS CLIFTON McCHESNEY AND HIS "SCAR- (iainting was a winner in the 27th annual LET CONQUEST" which it currently on Show, has recently exhibited his work in exhibit at the Butler Institute of American Birmingham, Mich. He is an associate pro¬ Art in Youngstown, Ohio. McChesney, whose fessor of Art. LOWEST DISCOUNTS IN TOWN • COMPLETE LINE OF AUTOMOBILE PARTS MSU Artist Exhibits • AUTOMOTIVE MACHINE SHOP • C0MPL6TE AUTO SPRING SHOP Work In Youngstown • • AUTOMOTIVE MAINLINE SHOP MUFFLERS AND TAILPIPES By ROBERT H. ROSS another won't, but Will find some¬ ished a two-man exhibit in the Of the State News Staff thing else instead, j Little Gallery in Birmingham "For example] the Cubists with scupltor Morris Brose of AUTO Clifton McChesney, an artist in residence and associate pro¬ fessor of Art, will exhibit Scar¬ let Conquest at the 27th Annual borrowed much but they didn't ture when they fj-om follpw Cezanne his struc¬ weqt to work, but rather used ideas t&at aided thejr Detroit. man in McChesney also has had one- shows in the past few years New York and on the West KRAMER PARTS Midyear Show in Youngstown, own plans." Coast through arrangement with 800 E. KALAMAZOO Ohio. Felngarten Gallaries. IV-4I335 The exhibition is being held in ^rtist^McCh££nevrecentK^uj-^ the Butler Institute of American Art July 1 through Labor Day. SEMI¬ Over 2,000 paintings, oil and water color, were submitted by artists throughout the country in the annual competition. Discussing his Scarlet Con¬ quest, McChesney said that he was "owrking through symbols creating matter and form, pri¬ marily in those forms which con- ANNUAL ta^/lcC?hesney said that shallow depths, not great distances, were the desired effect, creating the illusion of depth by the opening of regions into and out of the regions of the canvas." He added that "the painting is related to nature but derived more from the paint itself." self. ' The paint McChesney uses is a mixture of stand oil, dam¬ mar and turpentine that gives a flowing quality with which he obtains his form. Asked about the schools of painting today he said "there are no real schools of painting be¬ cause there is too broad a vari¬ ance among painters. It is very difficult to label someone and OUR ENTIRE STOCK of men's the more you attempt it the more you miss the content or message topresent." the painter is trying He added that most artists to¬ SUITS, Sport Coats and men's day try to avoid being labied in a school. Regarding the Masters, Mc¬ Chesney bad this to say: "What one painter i "ids in a Master. Raincoats, at reduced prices, Elected to Board representing savings of INDIANAPOLIS, I rid.- Law¬ rence J. Ciacoletto, professor in tlie MSI Department: of Electri¬ cal Engineering and Engineering MANY, MANY DOLLARS! Research, was elected to the Board of Directors of 1 honias & Skinner. Inc., i specialists firm KNAPP'S STREET LEVEL which manufactures magnetic materials, ofiicialssaid today. MICHIGAN'S FREEWAY SYSTEM Aim for Faster Communication 1 elephono hngineeririK l on- \ distinguished staff froi »rence atMkhiganStatel iuvei- dustr) and education will duct classes in such area v to July 20. More than 00 outstanding engi- engineering, finance* from tration, economics, design, »rs independent telephone firms in the United States,Cana- planning and communications. A series of special guest lec¬ ia and South America will partic¬ turers will discuss current re¬ ipate in the sixth annual seminar Kellogg Center. search and future developments. Joining to sponsor the confer¬ In line with the continuing ex- ence are the United States Inde¬ ansion of the nation's small, pendent Telephone Association i|ndependent telephone com¬ and the MSU College of Engi¬ mies, the conference will focus neering. sin "maximum utilization of every construction dollar." The mudskl|i|» r fish can re¬ Conference officials pomt out main out of water for long peri- ckIs of tini tne re are nearly 100 different mangrove telephone companies providing ^>ir billion. Mackie said the High¬ way Department has spent $1 billion since 1957 for construe - Club # 1 TAMMY TKl I . tlon and right of way. The re¬ maining (250 million will be paid to contractors asf xhey com¬ Chicken, bacon, tomato , $10.00 plete work now under contract. The U.S. Bureau of Publte Roads mayonnaise on toast. reports Michigan has a greater percentage of Its Inter¬ Served with an order state highway system completed to full standards than any other state in the nation. of french fries. As of April 1, Michigan had \ . 461 miles or 43 per cent of Its toll-free Interstate highway Serving complete meals system opened to traffic and designed to accommodate anti¬ and cipated traffic needs of 1975. featuring pizza in Nationally, about 17 per cent of the 41,000-mile Interstate Sys¬ a relaxing South Sea tem has been completed to full standards. Island atm atmosphere. Michigan was the first state THIE PIT in the nation to develop a five- year plan and announce a time¬ .ANSINC table in detail when each pro¬ ject would be put under contract. The five-year plan called for Air Conditioned three major freeway routes 203 MAC ED 2-0863 across Michigan to be . . . from our collection of sunny-hued solid colors and exciting new prints. Sizes 8 to 18. In hand: blue, olive, red, sand, black, charcoal, pecan or turquoise dacron- cotton belted basic. 7.98 On figure: an imported cotton batik print in a myriad of vibrant color combination*. 8.98 (Kdl)StlMS JUST ONE OF 1,200 is read by Bqrton K. Thorn, director of the Instructional Materials Center. The books ore port of a Sportswear display in the Education Building. —State News Photo. 1,200 Books for Thursday Store Hours 9:3t a.m. to 5:30 p.m All at Education j to dreamland in pea jacket TENNIS RACKET | slumber sets » Jaunty pea coats assume a RESTRINGING c fashion role as travel and I lounge companions for our 1 color-cued cotton pajamas. I Left: White cotton pea coat I with red or navy bermudo top grade* ot Gut J pajamas, 6.98 Right: Blue denim pea coat, 6.98 with gingham check long pajamas in pink or blue, 5.98 |H Sizes S-M-L WAiM»N&»ON 1693 Intimate Apparel Max Rogers Heads Itctliano Goes To~~Choose Miss Michigan Chemiistry Conference To Spain LAKE LAI Miss Michigan will be English and Spanish major, Max '.oners, professor aw chosen Friday night at the Muske- gun Seaway f estival from a field acting J. ' <-a i i>f the Chemistry Morilynn J. ltalia.no. ' f He*er'r , AMUSEMENT Oepanriiei . this vn-ek attendee .N.J. wii spenc her juni< :. year of 34 contestants. She wili fce studying st the University of physical heimstry symposium For Cool Night Life and a < crowned by Karen JeanSouthway, Madrid. in Boulder Colo. The meeting, Miss Michigan 1962. After traveling in Europe for which Dr. Rogers was gneral The beauty pageant's opening chairman cf. was sponsored the summer she will begin stud¬ ceremonies yesterday featured ies of Hispanic civilization and two Miss Americas -- sophomore Nancy Ante Fleming, MSU jointly by t le American Chemi¬ cal Society's Division of Physical culture will be September 2. Her work under the direction of FREE •Admission Chemistry and the U.S, Army 1961, and Maria Beale Fletcher. Research Office in Durham, New York University and she • Parking 1902. will live with a Spanish family. Hundreds ofcollege student s North Carolina. Miss Italiano is a member cf •Picnic Area have attended (fee Seaway Festival A Close-up view of the atoms die Honors college, Alpha this week. Events Kill scheduled in plastics.: methods of studying the speed of chemical action, Omicron Pi sorority. Alpha Lam¬ SPECIAL REDUCED PRICES include performances by Navy bda Delta,' national scholastic and analyses of the properties sky-divers and saatf fliers, tours of body protein will be among the honorary society for sophomore for All Picnic Groups o* Navy ships and foreign vessel s. women; and,Sigma Delta Pi, na¬ topics discussed by the rwo hun¬ call FE 9-8221 for reservations airplane rides, fireworks dis¬ dred chemists from all over tional Spanish honor society. plays. sailing regattas, and die world. CATS AND DOGS GET COMPANY Open Week Days Weekends & Holidays who always have liked i He grew up In the lo¬ rn an. Resolution, and at a time CASA NOVA crux of the book's whole situa¬ dustrial tion, for it describes one of ths In toe aftermath of this 00m- when a classical education still "customs of the country" that no motion, a young Negro Is mur- counted for something. In his late one wants to tinker with. dered E. Lansing's Oldest Pizzeria brutally a sadistic dep- years he has watched the scien- Air -Conditioned , The aoene ta the half white, uty sheriff, and the whole town nfic revolution bring civilization half Negro town of Palmyra, pop¬ ta stirred up. Part of the author's t the nuclenr ^5. 211 M.A.C. ED 7-1668 ulation 3,000. The central figure message la that the times are The other is that by now he Is a simple-minded radio re¬ changing, and that officers can't . . ., .• . . , , PROGRAM ktUNegroes as oWnally as they haS reache^ 'hal ^"1, pairman wtth the odd name of eotLM&n %Ll<* rJ 0 ■* nl/4 \uKlnK nniK eo Htm fn old age which enables him inn to Native Hunnlcutt. once did. take an unemotional perspective. /■ INFORMATION Caldwell Is a veteran chront- IV 2-3905 Native has an octoroon mis¬ . . . growing out of his career as a ° tress named Josene. She works ^ acters of this milieu Z and k has "a mathematician andaph.losopher. ,, , , , . . sure touch wtth narrative and »e begins with Books That local color. This seems to be one Influenced Me in My Youth, Odd T of hta more telling productions, Miles A. Smith and It is interesting to see how his viewpoint has changed. He 3rd GAY and \ The Slickest way Of Wedding DEARLY BELOVED. By Anne 'mLTmn iiwnHn/ AAA iJ#J \ Wt tucrrorbmtu HILARIOUS to a Girl's Heart Morrow Lindbergh. Harcourt, WEEK! LANSING is through her Brace 6 World. $3.95. The effects of a wedding on the "supporting east" — practically everyone except the bnde and DRIVE IN THCATBE Feminine Curiosity!! groom - form the basis of this ujiUMnuiWttoi at em noveL It is written from the viewpoint Year's most Uproarious. Romantic Free-For-All! of each character, one to a chap¬ ter. There la a brief account of | THURS. FRL SAT. (3) HITS | hit no 2 at 10:30 the preliminary hours and a final hit no 1 at 8:40 description of the w.siding sup¬ WHERE SHOULD per. But most of the story con¬ A GIRLSTOP sists of the thoughts that run IN ROME? through the minds of the various individuals during the marriage service ttseif. There are. particularly, the mother of the bride, whose mar¬ riage has been reasonably nor¬ mal. and the mother of the groom, who has had some problems in her life. In addition there are such figures as the best man. a spinster aunt, an uncle and a bridesmaid. lr«y Imik Me ttdURsn Somewhere in this supposedly fiaw era#-si» Ptra psychological study there Is a lost personality — the father of the bride. And as a corollary, the males in this book are rather THREE _ /t\ "Hmu a strange lot. There is a grand¬ 2a STOOGES "itacoucN. CAROL HEISS father who has a few fuzzy rec¬ CINE MASCO. '1 CO. OR 0/ C» Lu»« ollections of the olden days, but - he seems rather ineffectual Perhaps women readers will get a stirring of emotions out of this novel. Male readers are likely to be filled w.th bafflement. Milc-S V University Theotre 'DORIS m UMMER RCLE .DAY FIVE FINGER EXERCISE Starts Sun-First Run Showing T hut Touch Thru Thursday at the arena theatre THE DAY ' The picture that gives you a front of Mink" S - DEMONSTRATION HALL seat to the most \m COLOR IN THE EARTH PANAVISIQN® . i jolting events of ^ July 7 tomorrow. TODAY! ADMISSION Wednesday & Thursday$I.50 Friday & Saturday $1.75 CAUGHT Bo* 2-6 P.M., Office Hours Phon. CURTAIN Monday-Saturday 355-0 U8 8:30 FIRE - STARTS FRIDAY JULY 13th 13 GREAT SI ARS IN Next Week: o i io PKi MiNoi K' ■ Advise snd Consent' •YOU NEVER CAM TELL" I UMVtRSAi Mimumki RlUttt merican Painters Go A\\ Directions lllvfrn. with "Mibh New Jersey ta« ol thr show, *fc.OOO. Bouche'a Thr abstract eKpresstonists !." a Kiirldh Hu^oslion of a fe¬ portrait la prlred at *5.000 and reached their prime after World male form tn retla. bluea and the lUvrrs rntry at *4,000. Some (A 1) V A N C L ) NEW *;*r II. particularly In Uie New There were entries ifrom 1.841 black, and Ben Katnlhlra.. with ol the entries by lesser-known YORK. June 16 (AP) — It York school. But in the last few artists, and the Initial weeding "Wedding Bress." a dreamy, artists are around $300. has been nearly two years years more and more pronounce¬ out by the museum staff had to mystical piece close to sur¬ In all the wide range of ex¬ ments have been heard that the be done from since the photographs and realism. pressiveness these 74 painters Museum of movement has burned out its slides. Finally 150 artists were have found, ustng highly individ¬ Among those who have been Modern Art invited greatest energies and Is sim¬ invited to send 335 works to New painting the figure right through ualistic styles and visual ap¬ painters to enter a show that mering down into imiutiveness. York, where Alfred H. Barr Jr.. the abstract furor are Joseph proaches. one characteristic Im¬ would explore "recent directions The rising number of figure the museum's director of col¬ Hlrsch. who Is represented by presses the viewer. in the painting of the figure by painters, particularly on the lections. made the final cholcea. "Coronation." a symphony of Many of them are express American artists." West Coast, began to make their Of the 63 men and 11 women colors satirizing the adulation tension, grlmness. fear, aban¬ Now the show is on. and the influences felt in the 1950s and represented In the show, about given a pri7.e fighter;' and Rene donment. despair and a haunting answer to the implied question the Museum of Modern Art put half were having their works Bouche. with a portrait of Elsa neurotlcism. seems to be "In all directions at on a.i exhibit called "New Images hung at the museum for the first Maxwell. Presumably that Is a sign of once." ol Man" in 1939. time. Hlrsch's painting. Inctden- the ttmcs. Or at least a fashion Yet despite the show's re¬ The present exhibit is called Among the more familiar of the times. tally. carries the highest price markable variety, there also "Recent Painting USA: The names are If on Oolub, who l*rovr«m tnfwdmiM IV S MS seems to be one generalization Figure." it will be in New York contributed "Seated Boxer I." a SPECIAL LANS INC ENGAGEMENT to be made about it: through Sept. 4. Then unUl the crude, heavy outline encrusted fall of 1963 It will travel to with dull splotches; Larry LAST 2 DAYS Few of the 74 examples could have been painted in any period Sh.u- A; j;3Q- 4;55- 5:JQ but the middle of the 20tb Century. The reason is that even the THURSDAY NIGHT painters of the human figure have SERVED FROM 4 to 9 P.M. -TIMt MACAZtNf been influenced by the abstract expressionists, some have adopted of their techniques and Soup or Juice 'Big ss BEN HUR, if not biggsr!" ~ios ancrk r««s have eyes seen the world through conditioned by the abstract Choice Standing Rib of Beef CHARLTON SOPHIA Potatoes ah Church Music $ 7/ HESTOH LOREN 1 Salad ■ . Roll Workshop Butter Date Set Coffee or Tea ate Austin Cole Lovelace, associ¬ professor of Church Music HOMADE at Garret Biblical Institute, On The Beautiful Mall (Frandor) Evanston, Illinois, will conduct a Church Music Workshop at Kellogg Center July 8-13. Don't you spoil Lovelace the music has served on faculty .of Queens Col¬ lege. Charlotte, North Carolina. A contributor to such magazines bhh sEvLPp, U»T tANHNO » fHONI to. Mt«4 V J W |C | •hilarious' with ono 41'?' as Music Ministry, New Chris¬ tian Advocate, and The Pulpit, 2nd Happy Week he is an organist and composer of sacred music. ALL NEW LAUGHS. . . Over 100 Michigan organists and choir directors arc expected to attend the interdenominational ONE OF THE FIRST workshop sponsored by the MSU Department of Music and Com¬ ENGAGEMENTS IN THE mittee on Church Related Pro¬ grams. UNITED STATES! AVs> H£££ N THAT THE FORCE Of (jKAv'iTATKJN I*? l?%LB^TOftVrTHAN IT u>A5 4!i BiLUON A,60.. > BINC CROSBY BOB HOPE A JOAN COLLINS PANAMA & FRANK'S Feature tPr "I'lease don't ask the theatre Shown manager why, if the picture is JLL aliout going to i all KONC.' it the Me 'ROAD the moon, they TO HONG THE 1:35 3:40 5:45 wijl say 'It Beats UJH05E FAULT Iti that? , UMJ56 FAULT 16 T? IT 6 N060i>& FAULT. J Me.' " ROAD TO 7:50 10,00 in HONG KONC ii uJt-tAT DOM MEAN NOBOO^S FAU T.'lT HAS TO 6f 5 linnnTlJV 1 AXIOM) MMdfVNOVELTY -Pleasure Highway BODV'i. FAW-T .'SQKEPOWS GOT 11 111 111 1 ill Ij/'liflU 111 I • SWIM RAM CARTOON "This is My Ducky Day TO TAkL THt BcAilVE! © : Look! Look! Our Next Big talWk JAcklSytMON W\sTAiR£ Attraction! ^u",b,a ^ FIND A SCAPEGOAT!! DID SHE. . .or DID* She? •She may h/ive mui ck-ietl hei u, husband. . .or maybe u's only \ \ ft a roomer*Don*I you miss the A V V uproarious golngs-onl! Room Rented ynaMylkciuQ l arge room for rent. available, ( all I D 2-0000. (' Automotive For Rent For Sale ^ Real Estate 19(50 BEL AIR - 6 cylinder, 4 Man's racing bicycle, good con- APARTMENTS Cape Cod, garage, full base¬ ft door, standard shift. Call IV 5- 0907 after 5:30 p.m. 5 2 rooms, everything furnished. dltion. $35. Call 355 80*1. 6 ment, built-ins, fireplace. Lot 66 x 165. 3 blocks from MSU, Good transportation. 1953 Ply¬ Parking and cooking. Close to Furnishing an apartment? Used Red Cedar area. $17,800. FHA. campus. 355-1610 or 332-3112'. furniture at good prices. We buy Call owner, LP 7-1422. 5 mouth — >60. Call ED 7-0724. 4 and sell. WILLIAM'S FURNll ▼" ■ —.—• MSU NEAR - 3-bedroom ranch, 1959 OLDS MOBILE! 881 Power Singles and doubles. Spartan Hall, TURE, IV 4-9244. 8 automotive 215 Louis, 1 block from campus. utility room, screened porch, • steering and' brakes. Beautiful Zenith patio, garage. Carpeted through¬ 6 tfansister radio and # employment blue ft white $1295. Parking and laundry facilities. out, drapes. Gas heat, lantern. -for sale ED 2-2574. 8 carrying case. Call Jim week¬ Colonial fench circles large zror remt 1960 CHEVROLET - 6cyi., stand¬ 5 blocks from campus, 3 rooms day evenings at 484-1766. beautifully landscapped lot. Many .lost & found ard transmission $1245. and bath, completely furnished East Lansing - Contemporary extras. $20,500, by owner. ED •personal 1958 OLDS MOBILE '98' Conver¬ for married couple, graduate or ranch, 3 bedroom, 1 1/2 baths, 7-0127. . 5 # peanuts personal tible. Absolutely full power. older student. standing fireplace, patio, FHA. Parking. Call ED Committment. Should see to EAST LANSING - near Wardcliff • real estate 2-4941. 6 ap- preciate. 1140 Rowena Road. 7 school. Owner leaving city offers •service LETT1CH ft STENBERG 4 GIRLS in a muddle need room¬ bedroom. 2 bath home plus •transportation 2628 E. KALAMAZOO BRICK 3-Br. Ranch $15,500 bal¬ garage. $18,300 FHA mortgage mate on the double. 4 rooms 5 1/4% mortgage. Pay¬ •wanted 484-3229 C ance, on available. Custom built for pres¬ here, campus is near. Call ED ments $116. Make offer on my ent owner in 1957. Call ED 7- AUTOMOTIVE REPAIR 2-2561 and be our third Muskete- equity. 5832 Bayonne. FE 9-8365. DEADLINE: 5 0969 for appointment. 5 9:JU a.m. one clost day COMPLETE Large custom built brick home, FOREIGN CAR Fresh vine-ripened tomatoes before publication wvsre 7 rooms plus balcony and util¬ SERVK3F 5 room modern house in bast daily. Farm fresh eggs. Also ity room. 4 bed-rooms, 2 1/2 PHONE: Lansing vicinity. $65 a month. will have red raspberries, sweet baths. 1 acre lot over-looking MG's - Volkswagens - Jaguars 1 child no drinking. Call Bell cherries. Other fruits and vege- 355-8255 or 8256 Oak — 468-3354 after 5. Refer- tables at reasonable prices* Red Cedar River. Under $30,000 - ED 2-3304. 6 ences. " Roadside Farm Market. 2 miles RATES: Custom installed ROLL BARS. $35 for most any sports car. House furnished for 4 students. Close to campus off East Kal¬ east of E. Lansing on US 16 at 3^ Service 1 rat. si .00 Okemos Road. tf WHILE YOU WAIT Chromed - $15 more. or one day amazoo. Call IV 4-2821 or stop 3 dats s2.00 On the river near M.S.U. spacious service on passport and applica¬ at 610 Allen. 5 5 dats s3.00 5TRATTON brick tri-level. Has everything. tion pictures. Limousine leaving SMALL HOUSE, Furnished. Ideal Good for student center. $10,000. dally at noon for Hicks Studio, Based on 15 word* par od) SPORTS CAR for couple or single person. $100 IV 5-6128. JoAnna Sargeant, Okemos. Return transportation TK«r« will bo a 25* sorvico CENTER monthly. Call ED 2-2048. t.f. Broker. 5 guaranteed. Refreshments. Call and bookkMping ehorg* if 1915 E. MICHIGAN ED 2-6169 for reservations. Por- CANADA, large cottage North ot HOUSE. Okemos (secluded this ad it not paid within DIAL IV 4-4411 Sault 45te. Marie. Call ED 2- traits, applications, passports. C C2 4051. 5 estate). Contemporary home of redwood, glass and brick. 3 bed¬ FAST, THOROUGH SERVICE for Attractive, furnished house near DIAPER SERVICE rooms, 2 baths, 2 fireplaces, your car. Drive in' get acquaint¬ Frandor. 2-3 bedrooms. Accom¬ solarium, screened patio, re¬ Automotive ed with dependable TEXACO pro¬ odates 4 at $35 each. Call 355- SERVICE to your desire. creation room, $30,000 bracket. ducts. Expert lubrication and 1245. 5 You receive your own di¬ 1955 Oldsmobile Sedan very good Call ED 2-5096. 6 service. We c 1 e a n your wind¬ 7 room furnished house. Men or apers back each time. With condition; $350 or best offer. shield, check your oil, tires and 3 Jungle Hammocks: Full size, ED 2-4185 after 4:30. 5 women students for summer and our service, you may In¬ battery. Drive in soon! fall. Call ED 2-3792. mosquito and rain proof. New clude your baby's under¬ tf 1961 FIAT 1200 Roadster. Char¬ cords. $8 each, fit) 2-0612. shirts and clothing which coal with red and black interior. ROOMS will not fade. White, Blue 5 Pirelli tires, radio, heater, For Sale 1957 3-bedroom ranch. or Pink diaper pails fur¬ SINGLE & DOUBLE rooms, also Near MSU. Large living room safety belts, Abarth exhaust sys- nished. i rack. Call 355-5910. with dining L, built-in kitchen, apartments for summer & fall. AMKRICAN LAUNDRY 4 piece bath, basement, large Curry's Campus Court, Okemos. 111 E. WASHTENAW FIAT - 1959 - Blue Spider con¬ SPARTAN TEXACO SERVICE Call lot. Call ED 2-4158. 7 332-2517. 8 vertible. Completely rebuilt. 34 CORNER GRAND RIVER IV 2-0864 C M.P.Gal. Make an offer. 355- and SPARTAN PEANUTS Single room for Child care 4105. 6 Phone 337-9034 C men. Approved. in my home. Full or Call ED 2-4562 or 355-4601„ 544 1959 MG - White convertible, PERSONALS part time. 1230 Burcham Drive University Dr.. Parking. £6. black top, 29,000 miles. Call it Employment 5 G. Thanks for telling me! Now off Abbott. F.D 2-6859. (j Jim Blackburn 489-5670 after 5. Attractive guest room. No smok¬ Female Program Director fpr I'll know not to find it. I.V. 5 ALTERATIONS. Hemming & re¬ ing. Lady or gentleman. $8 a styling: formals, trousers adult work — Clubs and Classes. Dear B.D.Y., thanks for all week with breakfast Saturday and you skirts, etc. NEEDLE'N THREAD 1957 FORD Convertible. V-8 College graduate in Education or have done for me. How about automatic, black and white, white Social Work, over 25 years of Sunday mornings. Garage. Call Shop. 108 Division, behind Cam- Mrs. E. A. Gee at ED 7-9357. 5 letting me help you now.! pus Drug Store. ED top. Better than average. Guar¬ age. Call the YWCA. IV 5-7201 2-5584. C anteed 90 days. We trade! LAY & from 9-5. 5 Double room, cooking facilities FOR SALE: One used Year Book MATTHEWS, 1322 E. Michigan MEN & available. Parking. ED 2-2301 with three torn pages. Call E. THESIS TYPING & PRINTING WOMEN: Sell party Avenue. IV 5-2243. C 5 Main St. Week Day Fill-in Club plan quality toys, full or part evenings at Wonch Grafic Service for information.. 1959 FORD Convertible - V-8, time. No investment, no Junk. 3 singles, large, closet space, puts Best financial arrangement of¬ Standard shift, light blue with parking, telephone. ED 7-2094. 6 Personal you at the top in your orals! white fered. H. & B. Toy Sales IV top. Guaranteed 90 days. - LAY & MATTHEWS,"*1322 E. 7-0851. 8 Single and one double room. Sum¬ YOU get ideas at a 'Tops-in- Michigan Avenue. IV 5-2243. C mer quarter. $50. and $80. re¬ Toys' party. Call IV -7824. C5 Toy Party Demonstrators. No spectively. 2 blocks from Union. 1961 VESPA MOTOR SCOOTER experience necessary. We deliv¬ Shaded. NeWly painted.' Parking. Kittens: To give away. Inquire at at Stratton Sports Car Center, and collect. Top earnings. 404 W. Michigan, Apt. lw. 5 er ED 2-3634 or 428 Evergreen. 5 1915 E. Michigan, Dial IV 4-4411 TOPS IN TOYS, IV 5-7824. 8 333 BEETY ST11 HLI R and MARTIN C Albert Street. Rooms for LADIES! If you want work but 8URNSTEIN come to the Michi¬ boys, kitchen and TV facilities 1959 Plymouth, 4 door. Auto¬ cannot give full time, AVON Cos¬ available, $6.00 weekly for 5- gan State News Office, room 341, matic, radio, heater. TU 2-5809. metics offers the week terms, $5.00 weekly for 10- for your free passes to the Crest opportunity you 6 need. Write week terms, summer school. Drive-in Theatre. or phone: Mrs. Alana C5 CORVAIRS - 1961 - 1962 MONZAS, Huckins, 5664 School St., Has- Phone IV 4-7406. Evenings and TELL DAD'S AGENT to skip the 70Q*s. Sticks, automatics. Seven lett, Michigan, telephone IV Sundays, 372-0330. 7 fav-.r. Bubolz will insure your to choose from. 2-6893. C5 ^ For Rent car without PHONE ED 2-8671 a free lecture. VOLKSWAGEN 1957 - 2-door - ^ ROr Rent T. V. RENT ALS — For your room stairs next to or come Spudnut shop, 220 up¬ Green, radio, whi tew alls. A 195" or apartment. From $5 - $7 a Mbert St. C5 in 1961 condition! A 4th of July APARTMENTS month. ALL SETS GUARAN¬ Special. TEED. Phone NEJAC T. V. Coeds - 3 room furnished apart¬ RENTALS ED 28978 or 489- ALL BABY MiLK FORDS 1957. 2-door hardtops. Cooking, private bath, 1684. C - ments. 10% discount by the case. Red and white, gray and white. parking, all utilities paid, private Marek Rexall Both automatic. This week only- entrance. Campus - Kalamazoo For Sale bus on corner. Call 355-8255 Prescription Center SPECLAL at $495. Both college before 4 and IV 2-5769 after 5 1962 Sear's De Luxe Moped Motor 301 N. Clipperi (by l randor) C owned cars! p.m. t{* Bike. Excellent condition. 110 Student insurance office closed MPG. Convenient and inexpen¬ for the Home of Lansing's Personally oKEMOS. Well furnished, un- summer. For claim forms Selected Used Cars. sive transportation. $160. 355- and information write: H.N.W. supervised apartment for 3-4 male students. Private entrance, ^ ft li„ 175 W. Jackson Blvd.. parking. Phone ED 7-1561. 5 Slide rules. Save $10 on excel¬ Chicago 4, 111. Phone 484-7786 or SPARTAN MOTORS lent K-E log log duplex vector. N wonder stop at Reduced Rent. Couple to occupy o Mary's husband INC. 1720 Eos' furnished 3 room apartment with Belt loop free. Also, 5 inch doesn't approve of toy parties. Michigan Avenue, 3000 E. MICHIGAN K-E vest-pocket slide rule. He doesn't have to do their shop¬ IV 7-3715 bath and act as supervisor. Utili¬ ties furnished. Close in. Phone Phone ED 7-9230 after noon or Lansing. ping. TOPS IN TOYS, IV => ED 2-2495. evenings. 5 7824. 8 Stonehouse Attends ADDITIONAL Arctic Conference TOP TEN HITS WANT ADS ! (Continued from dehydrated and page freeze 1) dried HOUGHTON—H. B. Stone- house, associate professor of geology atMichiganStateUniver- 3^ Service foods. sity, was enrolled in theSummer 1.. JOHNNY GET ANGRY Joonnie Somm.rs The only visitors to the island Conference on the Geology of 2. THE STRIPPER EXCELLENT T. V. REPAIR on David Ro.o for the expedition's two month Lake Superior being sponsored all makes and models. All work 3. SEALED WITH A KISS Brian Hytand stay, will be Eskimos. Other oc¬ by the National Science Foun¬ guaranteed. DISCOUNTS TO ALL dation at Michigan 4. SURFING SAFARI Baaclt Bays COLLEGE HOUSING. Open 8 cupants on the island are seal, College of artic fox, rabbits and weasels. Mining and Technology, Hough¬ 5. BREAKING UP IS HARD TO DO Nail A.M. to 8:30 P.M. T. V. Tech¬ ton. nicians, 3022 E. Michigan. Call White whales are numerous off¬ IV 7-5558 shore. Conference enrol lees were C 6. LITTLE DIANE Dion Domestic and The group expects to return studying in a "rolling class¬ Imported yarns 7. PALISADES PARK and patterns. 40% DISCOUNT on to MSU September 10th. room" as they toured die peri¬ Freddy Cannon domestic yarns to M.S.U. stu¬ Maynard M. Miller, an as¬ meter of the lake by chartered .. 8. ROSES ARE RED Bobby Vinton bus on a 12-day, 1,300-mile trip. dents. Alteration work on knit sociate professor of geology at Enroute they got a first-hand | 9. WAH-WATUSI Orlons garments: regauging of patterns. 10. THE LOCO-MOTION MSU since 1959, wil! direct a look at the geology pf the area Littla Eva 16 man research team at the and received extensive field MARION'S YARN SHOP study 3223 Mall Court glaciological institute, in the in the mining areas of Michigan, WE CARRY A COMPLETE SELECTION Alaska-British Columbia coast Ontario, Minnesota and Wiscon- (Frandor) 5 range, 30 miles from Juneau, OF THE CURRENT HITS House painting by 2 students. Ex¬ Alaska. perienced. Reasonable rates. Seven MSU members make up OVER ONE HUNDRED TITLES! Call ED 2-6336 or ED 7-7837. 5 the group, the others represent¬ PAR-MORE T.V. SERVICE. Special rate for ing colleges from acrosstheU.S. From MSU are: Henry Imshaug, GOLF COURSE college housing. Service calls, $4. Absolute honesty. ACME TV., I f 10 Herbert. IV 9-5009. I assistant professor, of Botany and Plant Pathology, who will do Regulation 9 Holes Par 3-9 holes DISC SHOP a field study on lichen, a com¬ 1000 yd. driving range WE TRAVEL anywhere - any First With The Hits time. Quality catering for all oc¬ plex plant whose algae and fun¬ Corner Park Lake Road casions - to fit your budget. gus grow on various solid rock and East M-78 Michigan Catering Service? IV formations: Douglas Swanston. Phone ED 2-3432 323 E. Grand River Ave. 9-3343. C graduate assistant in geology, TYPING SERV1CF Christopher Egan, Walter Dobar and Owen Horpeister, gpology ED1E STARR: Typist, thesis, dissertations, term papers, gen¬ graduate students, Frederick eral typing . Experienced, IBM Fisher, geography graduate stu¬ electric typewriter. OR 7-8232.C dent, and Peter Kakela, geo¬ Ann Brown, typist and multilith graphy major and MSU football offset printing (black & white", & star. The institute, developed by color). IBM. General typing, term papers, thesis, dissertations. ED Miller, has progressed over the -11m. l past 20 years, and offers under¬ For Fast Accurate typing on elite graduate and graduate research IBM typewriter call 339-*2139. credit in' field work- and study. SIDEWALK T Since 1946, Dr. Miller has TYPING: Ceneral and Thesis. led scientific expeditions to the Experienced. Reasonable Rates. Juneau Icefield, and the pro¬ Cal! ED 7-0138. 6 gram is scheduled to continue the next 40 to 50 years so ^ Transportation for Want expenses a rider to Florida to share and driving, Tuesday, July 10. Call ED 2-1020. 5 as to study the change of glaciers and climate. This summer's expedition will include kan coastal a regional study of Alas¬ SUPERINTENDENTS glaciers. ★Wanted The summer field camp com¬ WISH TO -DO babysitting in my prises six permanent campsites In case you haven't noticed and research iacilities on the home daily, experienced. Can Taku Glacier. Eight well insula¬ furnish 5M7. references. Call ED 2- ted, aluminum-sheathed struc¬ We're Remodeling & Expanding. ^ tures, including a 40-foot class room building, exist at the main If you've ever had the urge to Charles Woods site. A 500-volume library contain¬ Now at Bradley ing research materials is main¬ supervise a construction project Peoria, 111.—Charles P. tained at the two main stations. Woods, who received his bach¬ Communications between camp¬ elor's and master's degrees at sites and with Juneau is main¬ now's your chance during the Michigan State and was a former tained by two-way radio. instructor there, has been appointed associate professor of Support for the summer activ¬ next week. business education at Bradley ities are sponsored by a grant from the National Geographic . University, school officials said today. Society, the American Philosoph¬ Since 1957 he has been teach¬ ical Society', and the Air Force ing at the University of Nevada and Abrams Aerial Survey Corp., in accounting. Lansing. - MIAMI BEACH Although it doesn't look like it SUN AND FUN HOLIDAYS We Are Open for Business. 7 days and 6 nights at top ocean-front hotels and motels, including jet tourist airfare and transfers. No matter what your needs, Total package from Detroit, including tax $155.50 let us help you. So, if you can Fort Lauderdale For The Fun Of It! find the front door, Stop in at . . . 7 days, 6 nights from Detroit, including tax $153.50 Nassau 4-Doy Extension $ 74.50 East Lansing's Department Store for Students San Juan 4-Day Extension $121.40 For folder with details, CALL COLLEGE TRAVEL ED 2-S667 ;*lSTi; OFFICE >30 W. Grand Rn CAMPUS BOOK STORE (ACROSS FROM THE UNION BUILDING) East Lansing larks io nea< 7th Asian Conservative Club Skiti Is Interesting Fare The Conservative Club elected Diving A top foreign policy expert, Beyond Three Seas,"a Russian officers year for the Elected were: 1962-63 school In the Union Spring term. Jim Sparks, Is For Top a cial noted films authority on oriental languages and civilizations, spe¬ and exhibits, and a and Hindustani production. This historical drama about the first Cassopolis jr.. president; Bryce llanna. Union Lake sr., vice- Russia n to visit India, will be president; Marjorie Albee, (This is the second of three stories on water safety). demonstration of Japanese print- shown at 7:30 p.m. Friday and Detroit sr., secretary: and By EDWARD S. KITCH making highlight the special Saturday in Fairchild Theatre. Fletcher Monnigh, Ionia soph., events for the seventh annual All special events of the Asia treasurer. Summer Institute on Asia. In other business, Institute, with the exception of plans were The Institute, which continues the foreign film, are free to the made for the club's fall term to July 25, offers special courses public. program. and events to provide an op¬ portunity for acquiring a general knowledge of Asia, explains Dr. Walter R. Fee, chairman of the Institute committee. SPECIAL "The Grand Design of U.S. Foreign Policy" will be discus¬ sed by one of the men helping BOOK SALE to shape this policy. He is Dr. W. Howard Wrigglns, a mem¬ ber of the cil State. of the policy planning coun¬ U.S. Department of 2 For The Price Of 1 His lecture, open to thepublic, will be at 8 p.m. Monday in Kellogg Center Auditorium. NELSON CLASSICS best and most appropriate equip¬ Another public lecture, this CHICAGO (AP) -- Skin and scuba diving have grown tre¬ mendously as American sports ment as well as know the loca¬ tions of decompression cham¬ one concerned with the nature of Chinese thought, will be pre¬ OXFORD WORLD CLASSICS bers. It also provides swimming sented at 6 p.m. July 11 in the since the U. S. Navy sent frog¬ Kiva. men into Tokyo harbor to cut Here are some safety rales: An exhibition on the Japanese COME IN AND BROWSE anti-submarine nets in World Don't dive when conditions are sense of style will be presented war a. unfriendly, suck aa when the surf in Kresge Art Center Sunday is heavy, the weather stormy or through August 6, co-sponsored glamorised -t so that it diving, fly the divers' flag which requests that by the Department of Art and- the Asia Institute. The exhibit will include Japan, SPARTAN BOOKSTORE But all experienced akin divers boats keep 100 feet away. ww that ooe Boat be a skilled When using air tanks limit Design Today: Vernacular CORNER ANN & MAC operationa to a maximum of 130 Graphic Art of Japan; Uchima, tolly enjoy the sport. feet depth. Far less would be prints and rubbings; Frazier, Skin diving ia preferable. FLASH CLEANERS Frandor FLASH Dry Landscape; and Tsutakawa, CLEAt^ swimming and diving while uaing Know and observe the rates of Fountain Design. P sucn aids aa flippers, face maak ascent given by U. S. Navy decom¬ A reception introducing the and a snorkel breathing tube. pression tables to prevent air Scuba (Self-Contained Under¬ embolism and the bends. exhibition, with comments by water Breathing Apparatus) adds If you skin dive without air William Gamble of the Depart- air tanks to the diver's back so tanks don't stay under too long, ment of Art, will be held in the he can stay Xinder water longer A lack of fresh air for too long Kresge Art Center gallery from and dive deeper. Special rubber can coat a swimmer his judgment. 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday. suits may also be used. You should be in good physical jn keeping with the Asia Insti- The National Safety Council shape when diving. tute. the Summer Series of fore- auggests that anyone Interested NEXT: Wotar Skiing. ign films will present "Journey in this sport join a akin divers club. "Here the novice can receive id learn about the Kositchek's Kuhll, director of public safety for the council. Kuhll emphasizes that equip¬ ment la most important. A diving club will km Congregation Bids JULY Farewell U n will hold i ve r s a i ty to Herb Lutheran Church farewell reception for SALE the Rev. Donald Herb, pastor of "Hey sis, it's second fiddle, but he's moved into f7! the church for the past five years, from 7:30-9:30 p.m. Sunday. • CLOTHING first place. .he's wearing a suit dry cleaned by . FLASH CLEANERS." 50 Pastor Herb will leave July No doubt about it. 15, for Chapel Hill. N.C. to be¬ come regional secretary for the •SPORTSWEAR grade. We II keep . your .the well-groomed wardrobe sparkling! man makes the 3 Q, O southeast region of the Division of College and University Work of the National Lutheran Council. Herb has been an instructor •FURNISHINGS in the Religion Department in One-hour dry cleaning and shirt addition to his other duties. •HATS laundering at no extra charge A graduate of Gettysberg Col¬ -everyday including Saturday! lege, Herb attended Mt. Seminary in Philadelphia in 1945. Herb served as a Naval Re¬ •SHOES serve chaplin during World War f£a*k OPEN We Suggest A Look Then LOOK - /. Mon Thru Fri Fresh and Cool Compare - All Known Brands with an easy to do £ Till 9pm Summer Hairstyle 2 Saturday popular prices o Till 7pm and coin-op Dry Cl< ling Florence Andersen Beauty Salon osifcheyros. x Cfl 201 Abbott Apt. gD 2-4314 113 N. Washington £ Frandor Shopping Center 2nd floor-State Bank Bidg. FLASH CLEANERS Frandor FLASH I'LK gJH oj s^jed; ■*:**' — i Church This Weekend First Presbyterian First Christian SOUTH BAPTIST CHURCH Seventh - Day * SOUTH WASHINGTON AT MOORES RIVER DRIVE, LANSING Ottawa and Chestnut Reformed Church Adventist Church HOWARD F. SUGDEN, D. D., Pastor 9:30 Worship Service 240 Marshall St. Lansing DESMOND J. BELL, Assoc. Temporarily meeting at University Luthern Church I Pastor Cribbery and Nursery Pro¬ vided Division and Ann St. Rev. John M. Hofman, Pastor Morning,' Worship 11:00 a.m. SATURDAY SERVICES •'LIVING ABOVE" 9:30 a.m. Sabbath School Morning Service 10:00 a.m. Second in a series of travel adventures in the Bible. SERMON Evening Service 7 p.m. 10:50 a.m. Worship Service Bible School 10:00 a.m. Evening Worship 7:00 p.m. "A Deeper Meaning KOGER W. COON - minister Those in need of transporta¬ "THE ROAD WE DON'T LIKE" of Happiness" For information or transpor¬ tion call Mr. Henry Bosch at Call IV 2-9382 for free bus service morning and evening. Rev. Shoaf Preaching ED 2-2223. Adult Youth tation call 355-0991. Fellowship 8:30 P.M. First Church Lansing Central Always a^warnT^eTcome^aT East Lansing Free Methodist Seventh - Day Peoples Church Of the Nazarene East Lansing Trinity Church Church Adventist Church Interdenominational Genesee at Butler 828 N. Washington, Lansing Temporarily meeting at Interdenominational Morning Service 11 a.m. University Luthern Church 120 Spartan Avenue Church School - 9:45 a.m. EM vision and Ann St. 200 W. Grand River Morning Worship- 11:00 a.m. 10:00 a.m. Camp Meeting at Rev. E. Eugene Williams Sunday School Grand Ledge, July 6-14. Michigan Pastor Youth Groups- 6:00 p.m. Youth Fellowship 6:00p.m. at 11:00 A.M. Evangelistic Hour- 7:00 p.m. Evening Service 7:00p.m. National and International Speakers. SUNDAY SERVICE "God's Remedy for Fear" ROGER W. COON - minister Rev. F. W. Van Valln (Holy Communion Service) Nursery Provided For transportation call For Information or transpor¬ 10:00 a.m. IV-2- Harry T. Stanley. Minister 9857. tation call 355-0991. 7:30 p.m. Topic "Venture for Venture" Greek Archdiocese FIRST WESLEYAN Rev. David P. Mc Clean Other Services Orthodox Church METHODIST CHURCH Westminster Presbyterian Church "HOLY TRINITY" 9:45 A. M. Sunday School North Magnolia Ave. at Michigan Church School Classes for University Stu¬ dents. 1000 S. Washington at Elm 10:00 a.m. Morning Service - 11:00 AM 7:00 p.m. Wednesday evening D. Liturgy of St. John the Prayer and Bible Study. Chrysostom 10:30 am. SERMON BY THE PASTOR Crib room through 9th grade. the Church office, ' ' ' ^ 7:00 PM " Phone ' Evening Service ■ - ,/ 377-7699 for information con¬ 11:00 a.m. Fellowship period- Breakfast to all - 11:30 am. cerning the campus bus sche¬ to 1:30 pm. dule. Refreshments First Church of Edgewood Peoples All Saints Episcopal Martin Luther University Lutheran Christ, Scientist Church Church Chapel And Church Student Center and Student Center 709 East Grand- River 469 North. Hagadorn Road 800 Abbott Road - ED 2-1313 (5 blocks north of Grand National Lutheran Council East Lansing River) Rev. Robert Gardner 444 Abbott Road, East Lansing Division and Ann Street, E.L. 332-0778 (2 blocks north of Berkey Hall) Theodore K. Bundenthal, \ 332-2559 Church Service 11 A. M. Rev. Truman A. Morrison, Episcopal Chaplain to M.S.U. Sunday School 11 A. M. Minister. A church in the Campus Pastor Protestant tradition common Rev. Edward A. Roth Pastors: to the major demoninations. Donald W. Herb SUNDAY SERVICES & Subject SUMMER SERVICE SUNDAY SERVICES j 10:00 a.m. 11:15 a.m. Holy Eucharist Bible Class C.T. Klinksick Campus Worker: Tecla Sund Topic "SACRAMENT" 8:00 a.m. Holy Communion Sunday Worship "THE ACT OF CREATION" Sunday, July 8 9:00-10:15 Holy Communion Wed. Evening Meeting 8 P.M. Sermon by 6:00 p.m. Fellowship Picnic . Sermon by Reading Room 10:00 a.m. (cost plus dinner) Pastor Herb, preaching. Rev. Truman A. Morrison ALL INVITED 134 W. Grand River 9:30 A. M. J 7:00 p.m. Film and Discussion Sunday School 9 a.m. only Mon. thru Sat. 9 a.m.-5p.m. Morning Prayer or Holy "BUDDHISM and Mon. Tues. Thurs. & Friday Communion. Sermon & CHRISTIANITY" Nursery care IsJ provided at 7:00 - 9 p.m. Church School, Cribroom all services. through 4 years olds. Transportation provided L. S. A. Church Schoot. ED 2-0778 All are welcome to attend Sunday Supper Session At Herb Church Services, and visit Rev. Bundenthal is available for counseling at all times. Parsonage, 510 Linden. (2 and use the Reading Room. CANTERBURY CLUB blocks N. of Church) What Then Are We To Do? Eastminster St. Johns Student This question is asked Kimberly Downs University Methodist parish every Sunday in the worship Church of Christ Church Presbyterian Church service of Central Methodist 1118 S. Harrison Rd. Fr. R. Kavanaugh Church, Lansing. U' fact, Ministers: Wilson M. Tennant "What Then Are We ro so?" 1007 Kimberly Drive, Lansing 1315 Abbott Rd., East Lansing Glenn M. Fr. T. McDevitt Frye Rev. Robert L. Moreland, Sheets are prepared for every SERMON: Minister 327 M.A.C. sermon. The minister offers (2 blocks W. of Frandor Shopping Center on E. "Three Steps In A Trans¬ five or six suggestions for study and application during Grand River) forming Friendship" 541 Waibridge Drive, E. L. Sunday Masses the week." Dr. Glenn M. Frye. preaching Approximately half the congregation takes a sheet IV 9-7130 Nursery, crib room for all Study Phone: ED 7-0183 7:15-8:30-9:45-11:15 home. / services. (Babysitting at 8:30 & 9:45) Church School 9:45 a.m. all Daily Masses 6:45 a.m. If you wish to worship ages. 7:20 a.m. & 8:00 a.m. Gerald O. Fruzia, Sr. SUMMER PROGRAM where persons desire tq(" Ap¬ Saturday Masses 8:00 & 9:00 WESLEY FOUNDATION ply Christianity." we invite a.m. Confessions dally and you to worship with us next SUNDAY SERVICES 10:00 a.m. Church School for during 8:00 a.m. Mass and Geroge 1. Jordan, Minister Sunday. Director 6th grade & under. Saturday 4-5:30& 7:30-9 P.M. Services at 10:00 A.M. Morning Worship 10:55 a.m. 10:00 a.m. Worship Supper 6 p.m. Novena Services Bible Study 9;55 a.m. Holy Communion Tues. 7:30 p.m. Evening Worship 6:00 p.m. Forum 7 p.m. "The Recovery Ofl'rgency" THURSDAY ":00 P.M. Matt. 25 31-46 Wednesday evening Bible MEETING & OPEN HCXJSE David S. Yoh, preaching Study 7; 30 p.m. Anand Michael will talk on " Thursday evening ladles his home country of India. Three Rules l or Life" Sunday Forum 9 A.M. prayer service Bible Class 7:30 p.m. 7:30 P.M. Bus operates around Central Methodist For transportation call Saturday Dance FE 9-8190 campus for til I For Transportation Call 9-12 P.M. Church ED --0290 Across from the Capitol ED 2-1960 or ED 2-2434 WELCOME Phone ED 7-9778 * - ■5- % j*ft By BILL BURLESON englneerlng doctorate from N. C. Carolina graduate. Flnlahcd high Roonofce World-New* Staff V¥rlt»r State and works for Bell Tele¬ school In 1950. phone Co., Newark. J. In 1957. Ralph finished high GREENVILLE, N. C. In 1946. Robert was graduated school. He Is attending Emory (AP) - "I've alway felt from high school, lie also at¬ University in Atlanta on a schol¬ this way — If you get it in tended N. C. State College and is arship, studying chemistry. now a physicist with NASA at George finished Greenville's their heads they can't lose Langley Field. Rose High School in I960 and will it," says W. L. Mayo, a Edward Bniahed high school in study chemical engineering at N. red red Pltl County farmer who 1*50. was graduated from N. C. C. State College this fall. wfi! read his 14th child off to the State College and is a NASA phys¬ And the last of the Mayos, Sam¬ college this fall. icist. He was recently trans¬ my, will move on to East Caro¬ "You can give them a little ferred to Houston, Tex. lina College come September. If The second daughter, Luis, he attends college four years. piece of land and they can loee that." the spry. 71-year-old Mayo also earned a master's degree In Mr. and Mrs. Mayo will have had •aya. mathematics. She is now married s child in school for a 44-year Most of the Mayo children — to Charley Ladson. who works at span - and that should "fcet It In 12 hoys and two girls - have be- Langley Field. Lula. an East their heads" for good. Four sons are employed by the National Aeronautics Space KNAPP'S EAST LANSING - OPEN TODAY AND FRIDAY TIL 5:30 Agency (NASA) and the two daugh¬ ters, both married, formerly worked for NASA. Two sona earned doctor's degrees tn en¬ gineering fields. 'Some of them went through college on the GI bill," Mayo said. "Some of them worked and some had college scholarships." He said he helped hie children where he could financially. number we aver had hi college at doctor's degree from North •r aakt. sd night idle station WRAL tn Maleighto *y Ms way through college. What caused 14 children to want To tell yoa the truth," Mayo aaid. "I always felt like keeping hands off and just kinds left that up to them." Re said he and his vife, both from the Greenville area, didn't have much more than a there now J. H. Rose, superintendent of Greenville schools, said a Mayo child had been in the city schools since 1923. The youngest. 18- year-old Sammy, graduated this year from high school and will enroll at East Carolina College in Greenville In September. The oldest of the generation Is Wilbur, now 46. who was gradu¬ ated from high school In 1936 and later from N. C. State Col¬ lege. He Is an engineer with NASA In Newport News. Va. Charles, graduated tn 1937 from high school, was an agri¬ cultural engineer and graduate of N. C. State. A captain In the Army Air Corps, he died in the plane crash. lit 1936. Louis from was graduated high school. He attended Special Purchase! Fashionable, New Duke University and Is now an engineer with Weetem Electric In Win a ton -Saiem. SWIM SUITS at Thrifty Prices Bruce was graduated from high school in 1940, later received a degree from N. C. State and a doctorate from Syracuse. He now works for General Electric in Syracuse. N. Y. Next came James, who finished high school in 1941. He attended N. C. State College three years and now operates a radio station In Mount Olive. N. C. Mattle, one of two daughters, has a master's degree in mathe¬ A fabulous collection o,f brand new fashion bathing suits! Wide selection1 More than 30 matics from East Carolina Col¬ styles! There ore two-piece, sarong, knit, sheath, boyleg, skirt and other styles to choose lege. She formerly worked with NASA and Is now married to from. Vyrene, lastex, cotton ond nylon fabrics make them cool, comfortable and easy to Walter Home, an engineer at care for. Wide selection' of colors and pretty garden prints. Sizes 32 to 38, one group to Langley Field. Va. size 46. Sec them now! Alton, who finished high school in 1945. was graduated from N. C. State College. He's also em¬ KNAPP'S SPORTSWK \K -STKl.l I I .I V I I ployed with NASA at Langley Field. Next came John, a 1947 high school graduate. He received an