I n s id e W e a t h e r MICHIGAN TAT r Governor’ s Wife Held In Jail, Cloudy with p o ssib ility of p. 3; Aid Sought To Stop Locker Larcenies, p. 6; Sub­ STATE scattered thunderstorms. Turning warmer with high stitution Change HelpsState, p. 7. UNIVERSITY in the middle 50’ s. Satur­ day, cloudy and colder. Vol. 55, Number 116 Friday, April 3, 1964 East Lansing, Michigan Price 10* Bias Group Studies Open Housing Goulart Flies Into Exile 6 -3 V o te D e n ie s E .L . Afler Anti-Red Revolt RIO.DE JANEIRO i/P—-Ousted in the finale of B razil's anti­ Goulart has arrived in Montevi­ D is c r im in a tio n C o m m is s io n T a b le s M o tio n P ro ve d President JoaoGoulart, abandon­ communist revolution. deo, Uruguay, with his family and T o R e c o m m e n d J a ilT e rm s ing his vow to fight to the death, The Uruguayan charge d’ af­ some of his associates. More than a million Brazil­ By SUE JACOBY flew into exile Thursday night faires in Rio De Janeiro said ians poured through Rio De Ja­ State News Staff Writer neiro’ s main street in tumul­ tuous celebration of Goulart’ s A p r o p o s a l f o r a n o p e n h o u s in g o r d i n a n c e downfall and victory for politico- w h ic h c o u ld im p o s e c r im in a l s a n c tio n s o n m ilita ry leaders who acted to prevent a Cuban-style takeover. p e rs o n s p r a c tic in g r a c i a l d i s c r i m i n a t i o n in C o n g r e s s , early Thursday re a l e s ta te tr a n s a c t io n s w a s in tr o d u c e d a t a morning, had sworn in Paschoal Ranieri M azzilli, president of m e e t in g o f th e E a s t L a n s i n g H u m a n R e l a t i o n s the Chamber of Deputies, as his C o m m is s io n W e d n e s d a y . successor. E a r l i e r , a m o tio n b y D r . H . C . T ie n th a t Goulart's last redoubt in the southern state of Rio Grande Do the Human Relations Commission Sul, where he was born 47 years go on record as being convinced ago, apparently collapsed under that sufficient and conclusive evi­ relentless pressure fr o m the dence of racial discrimination generals who launched the up­ has been established in East CAMPAIGN UNDER WAY--Students pause between classes in front of Berkey Hall to examine Lansing was defeated by a 6 to rising Tuesday. In a v o ic e ch o ke d with of the many campaign pos ers on Campus Elections for cl ass officers w ill be held April 3 vote. emotion. Mayor Sereno Chaise Photo by George Junne The ordinance re c o m m e n ­ of Porto Alegre announced over dations would prohibit property BOLZANI MALFERRARI owners, realtors and financial the radio that Goulart and a party of 15 had left, that resistance o ffic e s fr o m discriminating was all over and told the people .o go home. N e w F o r m s U s e d Elections against potential customers on the basis of race, color, religion Brazilian Students Informants in Porto Alegre, Rio, Grande Do Sul's capital, said it was believed Goulart knew he faced a debacle and decided I n C o u r s e C h a n g e For AUSG or national origin. The Human Relations Com­ mission would be empowered to investigate formal complaints Approve Ousting to leave to prevent the blood­ shed of a futile resistance. With the firs t rebel columns A new form w ill be used this office to process drops and adds term for dropping and addirig n data processing equipment. 'Crucial1 T h is term’ s All-University and turn over its findings to the city attorney for prosecution if evidence o f racial discrim i­ nation is established. By FAYE UNGER Goulart had stayed in power be­ from rhe North marching In t r i­ umph through Rio De Janeiro, the courses, Registrar Horace C. 'Only those class changes made on Student Government presidential Persons convicted of racial State News Stoff Writer cause he had not defined himself King announced Thursday. the form will be accepted. election could be one of the most discrimination in the Municipal and his position, Carlos Bolzani, rebel, generals announced they .B razilian students on campus The new form, which is in trip ­ The drop and add period is crucial elections in the history Court of East Lansing would be Caxius Dosul, Brazil, graduate had arrested the 3rd army’ s com- favor the ousting of former Pres­ licate, w ill enable the registrar's Monday through Wednesday in of AUSG, a c c o r d in g to Gary guilty of a misdemeanor and student, said. Lately, however, (continued on page 5) ROBERT LEE GREEN ident Goulart, but they feel that he had been leaning toward the the firs t floor Union concourse. Falkenstein, Sturgis sophomore subject to a maximum $300 fine n e w ly inaugurated President If the change affects a student’s and AUSG electionscommission- or 30 days in jail. left in initiating the reform pro­ M azilli w ill need the support of grams Brazil so desperately fees, then he must go through er. Thomas B. Schepers, chair­ the Brazilian congress to initiate needs. the process in 106 Administra­ He said that AUSG is present­ the needed reforms. This tendency to the left wing, Bolzani said, was the immediate tion Building. A student dropping a course ly held in low regard by both stu­ dents and administrators, and man of the Human Relations Com­ mission, adjourned the meeting after a hot debate erupted over Aw ait FHA and adding another must get two that the person who is elected a motion by Tien that the com­ reason for ousting Goulart, but In te r n a tio n a l C lu b the shaky economic conditions in« Brazil are an underlying fac­ of the new forms. On the first he w ill mark an " X ” in the box president must be able to create respect and prestige for the or­ mission submit the ordinance recommendations to th e City Ruling In marked "D ro p " and fill out the ganization. Council for final approval. To G re e t S tu d e n ts tor. "The Brazilian people want re­ The International Club w ill hold form, but r e f o r m w ith o u t U.S. Must Support World Unity other information. On the second form he w ill BERKELEY, Calif, (fl—Americans must grasp with new strength mark an " X ’ in the space marked Elections for AUSG president and class officers w ill be held A p ril 16. The Rev. Wallace W, Robert­ son, p a s to r of East Lansing People’ s Church, proposed that Bias Case a welcome night at 8 in the Union Goulart or another Cuba,” Carlos Ballroom. the "audacious dream" of world unity, Adlai Stevenson, U.S. "A d d " and f ill out information No presidential c a n d id a te s Tien’ s motion be tabled until An MSU faculty member and an M alferrari, a graduate student Syed A. Hassan, club presi­ from Sao Paulo, Brazil, said. ambassador to the United Nations, said Thursday. about the course he is adding. At have officially filed petitionsyet, committee members had a chance East Lansing realtor involved in dent, said that all students are . "Another cause of the move­ " I f the United States does not press on” in support of world the Union, he w ill be given ama­ but there are two who have filed to examine thoroughly the ordi­ one of the firs t cases in Michi­ welcome, especially American ment against Goulart was the un­ policing and world law, said Stevenson, "the world, I believe chine scoring pencil to blank out for class offices.. Arthur Block, nance recommendations. Wed­ gan under a Presidential order i students. The evening is co­ dermining of the m ilitary author­ without rhetoric or exaggeration, is lost.” his student number and his sched­ Brooklyn, N.Y., junior, is run­ nesday was the firs t time the barring racial discrimination in sponsored by the International ities power by his constantly for­ Both Stevenson and U Thant, secretary general of the United ule seqiience n u m b e r of the ning for senior class vice-presi­ full committee had seen the open federal housing have both de­ Club and the International Co­ giving the m ilitary mutinies," Nations, were featured speakers at the 96th charier anniversary courses he is dropping and add­ dent, and Judy Keyser, Mansfield, housing report. Debate on the clined to comment after a hear­ operation Committee. M alferrari added. ceremonies at the University of California. ing on the two forms. Ohio, sophomore, has filed for ordinance w ill be re-opened at ing before the regional director Admission is free and refresh­ If a student is dhly dropping a junior class vice-president. the next meeting of the Human of the Federal Housing Adminis­ T h e Goulart administration ments w ill be served. course or adding one, he will Falkenstein said candidates Relations Commission May 6. tration. (FHA). (continued on page 3) Gemini Test F lig h t Postponed are allowed to place A-frame only use one of the forms. One ■The subcommittee’ s proposed Robert L. Green, a Negro in­ CAPE KENNEDY, Fla., I/P)—The long-awaited first test flight form w ill be required for each displays near the walks from ordinance w o u ld prohibit dis­ structor in education, and Rex J. in the two-man gemini program, an attempt to orbit an unmanned course dropped or added. Beaumont Tower to the Union crimination in financial terms of Frink, an East Lansing property spacecraft, Thursday was postponed one day until next Wednesday. Students wanting to change and between the Union and Ber­ real estate contracts as well owner, both said they would make So The S ig E p Bus Project officials put the blame for the delay on a short circuit sections in the same course will key Hall. as the selling or leasing of prop­ no statement before they were no­ in emergency electrical power equipment on the launching pad. complete this process within the A-frame displays may also erty. tified of the FHA decision on the They had announced Wednesday after months of delay that the shot departments and not through the be placed in front of BesseyHall, It would prevent realtors from case by regional director James D id n ’t Get To F lo rid a would be attempted Tuesday. regular drop and add process at at the northeast corner of the refusing to show houses or trans­ McLaughlin. the Union. Case-Wilson-Wonders complex mit offers to property owners on The hearing was held Wednes­ A big, bright yellow school went Relations Continue With Brazil “ The purpose of the new form and at the corner of the Brody the basis of race. day in Grand Rapids. bus didn’t make it to Florida is to achieve greater speed and Group across from Kellogg te n ­ Green said the official position Green charged in a f o r m a l during spring vacation, but it WASHINGTON /P—The State Department said 1’hursday U.S. accuracy in processing changes ter. (continued on page 4) (continued on page 4) found w ill haul students around the Barion relations with turbulent Brazil are continuing. While carefully in enrollment," said King. " It H o w e v e r, Falkenstein cau­ tioned, displays in these places ■campus this term. t have avoiding public comment, U.S. officials seemed pleased with the w ill also overcome problems of The bus belongs to Sigma Phi sing.’ ’. ouster of President Joao Goulart. illegible handwriting and trans­ may be removed by the grounds Epsilon fraternity. The Sig Eps purchased it for general use at activities like rush and social posed numbers because it uses machine readable coding." department if they are blown over or "become eyesores due to the elements of nature.” Falkenstein also said there is Students To File events. At the end of the term, they decided the bus would be a fine way to get to sunny Florida. Sig Ep P r e s id e n t Vincent W h e r e H a v e to be no use of mailboxes for dis­ tribution of campaign literature this year. He cited interference with United States mail and the Bias Complaint Two students told the East as if I would do something that Barion, B r u s s e ls , Belgium, A ll T h e number of candidates as reasons. Lansing Human Relations Com­ would contaminate or be un­ sophomore, said the bus was He also stressed that there is mission Wednesday night«.that healthy for a fam ily." all set to make the trip to Florida when the University stepped into L ila c s G o n e ? to be no door-to-door campaign­ they were unable to rent an apart­ Smith told the commission he ing. ment at 414 Abbott Road be­ had never experienced discrim i­ the picture. The lilac bushes which once cause they were Negroes. nation in housing before. surrounded the horticultural gar­ “ There were some g irls signed Gerald B ra y and William Smith and Bray told the com­ dens near the Student Services up to go along, too," he said. Smith, both Detroit juniors, said mission they would file a formal building w ill not be seen this "We had a faculty member who spring. G r a n d J u ry In d ic ts they were told by a represen­ written complaint with names of was going to chaperone us, and tative of the Claucherty Realty the owner and realtor. The violet bushes have been i all of the kids had written per- growing rapidly, obstructing an H o ffa A s s o c ia te Company that they could not rent 1 mission from their parents." CHATTANOOGA, Tenn.. (/PI—A the apartment to Negroes be­ outside view of the horticultural But the University cannot san­ gardens and strangling o th e r federal grand jury Thursday in­ cause "a family was living up­ M a c A r th u r ’s Docs ction overnight mixed social ev­ s ta irs ." flowering plants. dicted Charles L. (Chuckie) O’ ­ ents. Louis F. Hekhuis, director "The lilac bushes became quite Brien, an intimate associate of Bray said he had agreed with T ry N e w M e th o d of student activities, said theex- teamsters President James R. the realtor about a price over a maintenance problem," said WASHINGTON .f—Gen. Doug­ ' cursion would have been fine if John Zink, assistant foremen of Hoffa on charges of offering a the phone but that he and Smith las MacArthur’ s grave condition only men had been going. juror $25,000 to upset Hoffa’s were told the apartment was not grounds maintenance. "They be­ worsened Thursday and doctors "Because there were girls in­ gan to interfere with the growth recent jury-tampering conviction available to them when they went began an additional emergency to see it in person. volved, we couldn’t give the pro­ of the roses and other flowers.” here. treatment in a new attempt to ject University approval,” he In addition, it was decided that O’Brien, constant companion Smith said he was told by the stem the tide. said. " I t was a case of a stu­ the lilacs should be cut back in of Hoffa’ s at the latter’ s trials realtor that he "could only do But the newly applied technique d e n t organization wanting to* order to open the garden to be here and previously at Nash­ what the owner wants." can probably be used only for a sponsor a mixed overnight social vieweif /rom the outside, he said. ville, posted a $15,000 bond-with “ 1 can not tell yuu how 1 few days-. Its continued use event, and this just is not ap­ Zink emphasized th a t the U.S. commissioner H. Arnold felt when I was told that 1 could involves a danger that s till proved.” FRATERNITY BUS-Mike Anikeff, L a jo lla , C a lif., sophomore, is shown beside the Sigma grounds department did not wish Morgan and was released. His not rent the apartment because another complication, periton­ Barion said Hekhuis explained Phi Epsilon bus. As rush chairman, Anikeeff w ill help to decide the use to which the re­ to remove the bushes entirely arraignment date was not set there was a family living up­ itis, might arise to beset the hero the -University could not take cently-purchased vehicle w ill be put. Photo by Larry Fritzlan but merely to control them. immediately. s ta irs ," Smith said. " I t hurt me, of the Philippines. 2 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, April 3, 1964^ Rights Bill Hits Main Arena F o r e i g n M o n e y The c iv il r ig h t s b i l l is f in a lly ger o f th e b i l l , s e e m s to f e e l h e in th e m a in a r e n a o f th e U n it e d can n o t o n l y c a l l t h e tu n e b u t a l ­ B e y o n d C o u r t s S t a t e s S e n a te . s o d o a l l th e d a n c in g . F o r .m o re t h a n a f o r t n i g h t th e T h e o u t-s p o k e n R u s s e l l c h id e d S o u th e rn S e n a to rs have been Neither U.S. courts nor State Department negotiations can insure H u m p h re y and h is c o h o rts fo r the foreign investments of American businessmen. p la y in g e x h ib it io n g a m e s , d e la y ­ s a y in g t h e y h a d a g r e e d to l e t th e The Supreme Court's recent decision that it cannot pass on the in g t h e m a in c o n t e s t . B u t l i k e in D ix ie fo rc e s ta k e th e flo o r fo r seizure of American-owned property in Cuba w ill have far-reaching* b a s e b a ll’ s s p r in g g r a p e f r u it c i r ­ any q u e s t io n s in s t e a d o f p u s h in g implications in international law. , c u it. th e S e n a to rs know i t o n ly ahead w ith s p e e c h e s la y in g d o w n This is the view of Edward B. Bartoli, assistant professor of bus­ t a k e s s o lo n g to g e t i n t o s h a p e f o r t h e i r c a s e f o r th e b i l l . iness and a specialist in international business law. He is a member of the Michigan and Illinois Bar Associations and joined the faculty t h e m a in e v e n t . T h e S o u th e rn e rs ha d a s p e a k e r in September. The S e n a te r e a liz e d th is by re a d y to t o u c h o f f th e f i l i b u s t e r . He is also a member of the Michigan Bar Association’ s commit­ d e fe a tin g tw o a tte m p ts to d e la y T h e b i l l ’ s p ro p o n e n ts h a d s p re a d tee on International and Comparative Law, a group to promote world f o r m a l c o n s i d e r a t i o n o f th e b i l l . th e w o r d t h e y w o u ld ta k e th e o f ­ peace through law. In one of th e o p e n in g i n n in g s fe n s iv e t h is w e e k b u t a p p a r e n tly th is week in th e S e n a te b a ttle w e r e n 't r e a d y a f t e r a ll. Only Treaties A Safeguard over th e b ill, th e l e a d e r o f t h e The filib u s te r is o u tra g e o u s . He believes that only by treaty agreements with,each country in S o u th e rn S e n a t o r s s e r v e d n o t ic e I t w ill b r in g new m o m e n ts o f a n g ­ which U. S. capital is spent can this nation’ s investors gain assur­ ance that they won’ t suffer expropriation without compensation. h e h a s no i n t e n t i o n s o f l e t t i n g th e u is h a n d p e r h a p s m o n t h s o f a r g u ­ The Supreme Court ruling, an 8-to-l decision, s a id that U.S. o th e r s id e l , c a l l th e t u n e ” in th e in g . B u t a t l e a s t th e S e n a t o r s a r e courts w ill not question the legality of a foreign government’ s sei­ d e b a te . a r g u in g th e b i l l in th e b ig l e a g u e - - zure of property within its boundaries. Sen. R ic h a r d B. R u s s e l l , th e S e n a te f l o o r - - a n d a r e d e a l in g It stemmed fr o m the Castro government’ s expropriation of D - G a . . s a id t h a t S e n . H u b e r t H . w it h a m o s t im p o r t a n t d o m e s tic $175,000 worth of sugar that was to be sold to a New York firm . The H u m p h r e y . D - M in n ., flo o r m a n a ­ sugar was owned by a Cuban sugar company before it was national­ is s u e . ized by the island’ s government. Both the sugar company and Cuba’s government claimed right to proceeds from the sale. The U.S.SupremeCourt ruled that the Cu­ ban government’ s claim was valid since the dispute involved expro­ Liberal Arts Broadened priation by a foreign nation in its own territory. The money won’t go to Cuba yet, though, because the U. S. h a s frozen all Cuban assets in this country. ‘ ‘ U n d e rg ra d u a te p ro g ra m s in D e a n V a r g s a id th e r a d i a l m a ­ Even though the seizure itself was an affront to the American ideal of adequate compensation in case of expropriation, the Court’s de­ u n iv e r s itie s a c ro s s th e c o u n t r y j o r p la n w i l l ‘ ‘ b u i l d u p o n th e w o r k cision "couldn’t have gone any other way,” Bartoli said. h a v e b e e n c r i t i c i z e d o n th e g r o u n d th a t is done in U n i v e r s i t y C o l ­ “ We can’t examine and rule on the laws of other nations as they are applied within those nations.” th a t th e y a r e to o s p e c i a l i z e d o r le g e ” b y i n t r o d u c i n g s t u d e n t s to to o p r o fe s s io n a l. U s u a l l y th e a re a s o f im p o r ta n c e and r e le ­ T E L L H IM T O Q U I T T H R O W I N G S N O W B A L L S c r itic is m a m o u n ts to t h i s - - t h a t v a n c e to t h e i r m a j o r s . Bartoli Wants Negotiations Bartoli thinks this country should continue to negotiate for treaties* in s t e a d o f t r y i n g to t u r n o u t w e l l - He p o in t e d o u t th a t a s ig n if i­ with countries in which American businessmen have investments. e d u c a te d p e o p le , u n d e rg ra d u a te c o l l e g e s s e e k to g iv e p r o f e s s i o n a l tr a in in g . c a n t d i f f e r e n c e b e t w e e n th e r a d ­ ic a l m a jo r p la n a n d th e U n i v e r ­ Indiana Formula Proves Such treaties ought to require that U. S.-owned property cannot be seized without adequate compensation to the investors. “ The present program of foreign investment guarantees carried out by the U. S. government is helpful but too one-sided.” th e re ‘ ‘ In r e s p o n s e to t h i s c r i t i c i s m , has d e v e lo p e d th e g e n e r a l s i t y C o l le g e p r o g r a m ‘ ‘ c o g n a te ” s p e c ia lis ts w i l l be is th a t e a ch ta u g h t in th e f i e l d . S tu d e n t s by No Big Boon To U-M Under this plan, the government pays for losses suffered by Amer­ ican investors through foreign expropriation. Bartoli urged that some responsibility, which could be stipulated e d u c a t io n m o v e m e n t, re p re s e n ­ Editor’ s Note: This is the Michigan, they had better see how in a bilateral treaty, must be assumed by the country which is re­ w ill th u s be in t r o d u c e d to th e dents. 1U gets $626 and Purdue ceiving the investment capital. te d b y U n i v e r s i t y C o l l e g e , a fe w last of a two-part series they would fare under such apro­ gets $688. best in c u r r e n t t h o u g h t n o t o n ly gram. The fact is they would fare If a foreign government chooses to nationalize U. S. property c o u rs e s w h ic h t r y to e n c o r h p a s s on the financial battle be­ The reason Purdue gets more " le t that nation pay, even if it must extend payments over a period in t h e i r m a j o r s b u t in e v e r y a r e a worse financially, not better. is because agricultural and tech­ tween MSU and the Uni­ A comparison between the two of years.” a r a th e r b ro a d s p h e re . nical programs cost more than in w h ic h t h e y a r e i n t e r e s t e d . top universities in Indiana and By establishing treaties with all nations where theU. S. has prop­ versity of Michigan. beginning professional training. ‘ •T h e r a d ia l m a jo r p r o g r a m is Michigan w ill help illuminate how erty, we can build "an accumulation of precedents" that may help By CHARLES C. WELLS If the formula were applied in create an orderly world in which conflicts are resolved by law rath­ a n o t h e r w a y o f m e e t in g t h i s c r i t ­ T h e r a d i a l m a j o r p la n a p p e a r s the Indiana formula for appropri­ Michigan, MSU would receive er than by force. ic is m ,” to be a sound a n d s e n s ib l e r e ­ State News Staff Writer ations w ill work in this state. more for this level than U-M. The situation in Indiana be­ When drafting these treaties, Bartoli advised, negotiations must sponse to th e n e e d f o r s tu d e n ts The Indiana formula for figur­ tween Purdue University and In­ If U-M heads think they would be kept from "escalating into the larger issues of the world." D ean P a u l A . V a r g o f th e C o l ­ get more for junior and senior ing legislative appropriations for. diana University (IU) and MSU le g e o f A r t s a n d L e t t e r s t h u s e x ­ w ith a b r o a d e d u c a t io n . level students they a re in for I Michigan state-supported col­ and the University of Michigan leges and universities is not the here are roughly comparable. another surprise. IU gets an av­ p la in s th e n e e d f o r th e C o l l e g e ’ s O ur o n ly c o m p l a i n t a t th is Discussion Must Specify Investments ‘‘golden goose” that the Univer- erage of $1,015 for junior and new p la n o f b r o a d e n i n g th e e d u ­ p o in t i s t h a t th e c o m p u l s o r y e n ­ “ The le v e l of discussion should concern o n lyth e investments c a tio n of m ost of its s tu d e n ts . fo rc e m e n t of s u c h a b r o a d e n in g themselves. HOW MSU AND U-M WOULD FARE UNDER THE INDIANA FORMULA " I t is difficult enough to successfully conclude a mutually accept­ U nder th e n e w p la n s t u d e n t s w i l l of s t u d e n t s ’ e d u c a t io n i s l i m i t e d --A Projection of 1959-60 Indi ana State Figures» able agreement on ownership and operation of a foreign-owned tin be lim ite d to 55 c r e d i t h o u r s in to s t u d e n t s in th e C o lle g e o f A r t s mine, for example, without demanding that an additional issue be U-M No. Students IU Average T otal settled, the issue of private versus public ownership. th e ir m a jo r and w i l l be r e q u ir e d and L e tte rs . F tosh-Soph. 7,309 § $ 626 equals $ 4,575,434 Jr.-Sr. 8,831 § $1,015 equa Is $ 8,963,465 to ta k e at l e a s t 9 - 1 2 c r e d i t s in Dean V a rg s a id , ‘‘I th in k i t "The day is long gone when the United States could live alone in Graduate 10,412 § $1,451 equal s $15,107,812 its wealth.” ‘ ‘ c o g n a te s ,” f i e l d s r e l a t e d to c o u ld b e a p p lie d to o t h e r a r e a s , ” Total $28,646,711 Foreign investment is vital in combating our balance of payments t h e ir m a jo r s . and we a g re e . problem and it can be fruitful only if this nation is willing to ack­ MSU nowledge that its dedication to free enterprise is not necessarily Frosh-Soph. 13,265 $ 688 equals $ 9,126,420 shared by other countries. Learning In Daytona Jr.-Sr. Graduate 8,937 5,874 § $1,101 $1,212 equals equal s $ 9,839,637 $ 7,119,288 "The division in the world between capital rich and capital poor countries must be taken as reality and these conflicting interests F o r m o s t s tu d e n ts s p r in g t e r m Som e h ig h s p o t s m e n t io n e d w e r e Total accommodated in international agreements. $26,085,345 began T h u rs d a y , b u t m any MSU th e n ig h tly beer p a r tie s , e d u ­ " I t is not enough for the foreign investor to look only to making f s tu d e n ts b e g a n t h e i r s t u d ie s tw o Last year MSU received $24,541,006 from the Michigan Legislature while U-M got the best bargain possible. He must realize that his investment may c a tio n a l to say th e le a s t , th a t w eeks a g o . A n u n id e n tifie d n u m ­ $35,647,157 or a difference of $11,196,151. The totals above are figured on appropria • well be a matter of public concern for the foreign country and ar­ f r e q u e n t l y la s t e d u n t i l 5 a . m . a n d range from the beginning to take this into account.” tions from the legislature on a cost-per-student basis. Both universities receive added b e r o f s tu d e n ts - - th e r e g is tr a tio n th e r e l a x i n g o f “ P u r i t a n m o r a l s ” sums for research and other programs like mental health and the agricultural experiment r o lls w e re lo s t in a b la n k e t w h ic h a l lo w e d th e s tu d e n ts to station. C O L L E G E GRADUATES - fig h t- - s p e n t th e ir E a s te r b re a k “ c o m p le te ly fo rg e t about s c h o o l t a k i n g a s h o r t c o u r s e in P h y s i c a l sity of Michigan has maintained Indiana University has many senior students and Purdue gets TR A I N I N G PROGRAMS L E A D I N G TO an d te n s io n s .” it is. of the same programs as U-M $1,157.50. E d u c a t io n and R e c r e a tio n 5 - 2 - 1 . Its position has been that the with the exception of engineering. Only at the graduate level does I N T E R E S T I N G C A R E E R POSITIONS O th e r c o u rs e s s h o u ld a r o u s e Indiana formula would give addi­ Purdue and MSU, both originally IU get more than Purdue. The The s tu d e n ts s e e m to h a v e O F F E R E D BY a s m u c h i n t e r e s t a n d e x c i t e m e n t tional revenue for U-M profes­ agricultural land-grant institu­ average p e r student at IU is c o v e re d q u it e a b it o f s u b je c t sional programs. tions, have m any sim ilar pro­ $1,451 compared to $1,212 for a s P E & R 5 - 2 - 1 , w h ic h i s a v a i l ­ f H E S T A T E O F MICHIGAN m a tte r in th e ir seven o r e ig h t But before th e U-M student grams. Purdue. a b le a n n u a lly o n l y to s t u d e n t s w i t h newspaper and th e university’s IU consistently gets less than There is only about a $305,000 * S T A R T I N G A N N U A L S A L A R I E S - S 5 , 804.64 and $6,117.84. days o f v i s i t i n g l e c t u r e s in D a y ­ administrators go top far in advo­ Purdue’s average appropriation difference between what IU gets l ib é r a l p a r e n ts an d a m in im u m S U B S T A N T I A L I N C R E A S E S A T E N D O F 6 MONTHS AND to n a B e a c h . cating the Indiana formula f o r for freshmen and sophomore stu- for medical technology and the o f fu n d s . university extension and the 1 YEAR. The c o u r s e - - d e s c r ib e d as O ne p r o b le m w h ic h a d m i n i s ­ amount received by Purdue for ‘‘t r e m e n d o u s , ” “ ju s t p la in extension, experiment station and ‘ E X P E C T E D 4% I N C R E A S E AS O F July 1, 1964 t r a t o r s w i l l h a v e to d e a l w i t h b e ­ agricultural extension. c o o l,” “ w o n d e r f u l , ” “ k in d a w ild ,” “ u n b e lie v a b le ,” “ g r e a t fo re th e c o u r s e i s o f f e r e d a g a in | From Olher Campuses I Using 1959-60 figures and the Indiana formula, U-M for 1964- 65 would receive about $28,646, AREAS: Administrative Analysis Mathematics t im e ,” e t c . - - s e e m s to h a v e b e e n is th e r a t i o o f g u y s to g i r l s ta k ­ Agriculture Parole and Probation 711 for student instruction. j u s t w h a t th e s t u d e n t s w a n t e d . in g i t . T h is y e a r , th e r e w a s a 5 - Innovation At Ohio State Budgetary Control Personnel Methods MSU would get legislative ap- Chemistry Personnel Technical Processing M any e x p re s s e d p le a s u r e at to -1 tre n d i n f a v o r o f m a le s t u ­ The Ohio State Lantern illustrated an innovation found on the p r o p r ia t io n s of $26,085,345. Physics Economic Research Columbus campus recently: "K nit one, purl two; Franco-Prussian Programs outside the teaching v a r io u s p a r t s o f th e c u r r i c u l u m . d e n ts . Employment Counseling Property Appraising War in 1870; knit one, purl two; x plus y equals z . . .” It seems area like MSU’ s agricultural ex­ Psychology Highway Planning coeds have taken to knitting in class in a new burst of enthusiasm periment station andU-M mental Purchasing Institutional Management for a traditional domestic skill. health programs are omitted in Right of Way Buying this comparison. Insurance Examining T A T E M EW S MICHIGAN Library Science Vocational Rehabilitation STATE Preminger Defends American Films MSU w o u ld be g e ttin g only UNIVERSITY $2,561,366 less than U-M if the Famed motion picture director Otto Preminger told the Tulane Indiana formula were used in this Michigan Civil Service is now recruiting applicants ¿or its Hullabaloo that American films and foreign films are not to be com­ state. Compare this to last year’s current examination program. Trainee positions involving pro­ Member Associated Press, United Press summer tern., special Welcome Issue in Sep­ pared as two separate classes. “ They are all part of one art,” he budget difference between the two gressive on-the-job development programs w ill be filled from International, Inland Daily Press Association, tember, said. "The art of film must be approached in the same manner. Per­ schools — U-M got $35,647,157 this examination. Associated Collegiate Press Association, Second class postage paid at East Lansing, haps it is not a complete art yet, but s till it is wrong to separate for instruction while MSU got American films from films of other countries.” $24,451,006, or a difference of Write to the M IC H IG A N CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION, Michigan Press Association. Michigan. LANSING, MICHIGAN, 48913, for examination applications. An Editorial and business offices at 341 Student $11,196,151. equal opportunity employer. Published by -ne students of Michigan Services Building, Michigan State Unive.'Sity, Several MSU administrators John Birch Society ‘ Enlightens’ have maintained they would be Benefits Available To State Of Michigan Employees: State University. Issued on class days Monday East Lansing, Michigan. Mail subscriptions Former Congressman John Rousselot, now a John Birch Society happy if the State Department of Pay rates well in line with those of other employers. through Friday during the fall, winter and payable in advance: term, $3; 2 terms, $4; leader, s a id at the University of Wisconsin that the society’ s "main Administration w o u ld recom -■ R e g u la r s a la r y i n c r e a s e s . spring quarters, twice weekly during the 3 terms, $5; full year, $6. Transfer and promotional opportunities. purpose is to enlighten." He blamed its unfavorable image on "d is ­ mend budgets to the legislature tortions of the press,” the Daily Cardinal reported. as close between MSU and U-M State contributory group health and life insurance programs— Editor......................... ....BruceFabricant Sports Editor.......................... Jerry Caplati as th e Indiana formula would State pays major share. Advertising Manager Fred Levine Wire Editor.................. John Van Gieson make them. Longevity pay. « Campus Editor Gerry Hinkley Night Editor.................. ■. Richard Schwartz Conant Book Attacked After figuring how they would Liberal annual and sick leave provisions. (Payment of 50% of Ass’ t campus editor................ Liz Hyman Asst. AdVi M grs............... Frank- Senger Jr., Several prominent educators speaking'at the University of Illinois fare under the Indiana formula, earned s ic k leave on retirement or death. No lim it on sick ................................................Arthur Langer attacked the controversial book, “ The Education of American Teach­ U-M administrators p r o b a b ly leave accrual.) Editorial Staff...Barb Bradley,Dave Stewart Circulation Manager............... t i l l Marshall ers by former Harvard President James B. Conant. The Daily would not be strong supporters Unemployment com pensatio n. ................... Mike Kindman News Adviser..........................Dave Jaehnlg lllin i reported they said the book ‘ left unsaid’ too many points to of it in this state. They may even E x c e lle n t r e t i r e m e n t plan including s o c ia l s e c u r it y benefits. make the work creditable.” become its strongest critics. Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, April 3, 1964 ^ G o v e rn o r's JACKSONBILLE, F la . (#) — mother o f Massachusetts Gov. M other J a ile d States,” the prim old lady de­ But M rs. Peabody planned to Jacksonville hearing was in pro­ M r s . Malcolm Peabody said Endicott P eabody made this clared, "than the ordinances of have her $300 bond posted and Thursday she deliberately ex­ statement from a federal court gress. St. Augustine.” ^leave this morning for Syracuse, Another witness, Dr. Robert posed herself to arrest and lm - witness stand as three attor­ She was brought here in a po­ N.Y., where she w ill attend an prionment in an overcrowded St. neys sought the court’ s inter­ Hayling, a St. Augustine den­ lice car with four other witnes­ Episcopal church ceremony. tist and integration leader, tes­ Augustine ja il because " a ll my vention in a city jarred by three ses after spending two nights in "Why did you go to St. Augus­ life, 1 have been concerned with years of racial strife. tified that during three years a ja il jammed far beyond its tine and why did you go to that of racial strife in that city r.o discrimination and injustice.” “ I would rather stand up for capacity with civil rights demon­ motor lodge to be arrested?” The white-haired, 72-year-old the Constitution of the United Negro ever sat on a jury and strators. asked Tobias Simon, one of three no Negro ever was acquitted of attorneys who have petitioned for any charge. Federal Judge Bryan Simpson to He was always convicted, he Favor Ousting | B a n d M e m b e rs ! the take jurisdiction over those in jails of the nation’ s oldest said, after several arrests on charges of interfering with, a (continued from page 1) P a u lo graduate s tu d e n t, said city. police o f f i c e r , unlawful as­ seemed to lack leadership and Goulart is not a Communist, but | E lig ib le For T rip | “ All my life,” Mrs. Peabody sembly, unauthorized taking of gave the appearance of not know- he tried to make basic reforms § Regular members of the:-: replied, " I have been concerned pictures, and assault and bat­ what it wanted, Oto Arantes, Rio in a "rough” way. He was aim­ ¿¡Marching Band last fall, in—K with discrimination and injustice, tery on a Ku Klux Klansman. de Janiero, freshman, said. With ing at the right goal, but he chose ¿¡terested in rejoining the bandi: and so have my husband and my All attempts to establish lines a new government the Brazilian the wrong way. for the trip to the World’s;.; children. T alking hasn’t done any of communication with white city people may now be given definite In the words of Arantes, the new ¡¡: Fair, should attend a m eet-* good. officials, he said, have failed. goals conducive to stronger dem­ President M azilli, f o r m e r ly ging at 7 p.m. Monday in the;:- "We decided that the Negroes Simon, trying to support his ocratic government. president of the Brazilian House ¡¿band room. needed help. When I asked if contention that "a fair tra il is "Goulart was influenced by of Deputies, is a "calm , good Those students who were in someone of my age could be use­ not available in St. Augustine,” his brother-in-law and his ad­ man.” M azilli has assumed lead­ •¡¡the band for the football sea- ful, they to ld me yes, so I told the court that he and two THE PLAYWRIGHT’ S LOVELY SCENE--Shown rehearsing a scene from the Performing Arts visers. The revolt has been build­ ership of Brazil previously for ¡¿son but are not members of £ came.” other lawyers were forcibly de­ Company production of “ Rhinoceros,” which opens April 14, are (le ft to right) William See­ ing since he firs t took office as short periods of time when the ¡¿the concert band should attend She joined a mixed group and tained in a St. Augustine jail ley, Grand Rapids junior, C. David Colson, St. C loir Shores graduate student, and Susan a c o m p ro m is e candidate,” country encountered difficulties. ¡¿the m e e tin g , according to£j went to the segregated Ponce Thursday morning and one was Pennington, Carbondale, III., graduate student. Photo by George Junne William Ting, Sao Paulo, soph­ M azilli, as described by the ¡¿Leonard Falcone, director ofS De Leon Motor Lodge to be pushed around. omore, said. s tu d e n ts , is a quiet, h a rd ­ ¡¡¡the marching band and pro- arrested on a trespassing charge, During an extraordinary c ir ­ L u iz Macedo, a n o th e r Sao working, respectable man with ¿jfessor of music. she said, because of the feeling cuit court hearing Wednesday- conservative views. ¡¡; No instruments should beS that “ our friends were taking night, Simon said Sheriff L. O. Bizarre 'Rhinoceros’ “ He w ill probably follow the ideas of those who ousted Goulart. He w ill be more of a caretaker ¿¡brought to the meeting. It ¡¡¡; the brunt of this. I didn’t sup­ ¿¡will be a briefing for the $ pose I could escape arrest.” ¡¡¿trip, Falcone said. :$ After almost a week of con­ Davis of St. Johns County agreed to accept surety bond for re­ lease of more than 200 prisoner^; with not much freedom to do what stant marching, Negroes in St. He had been accepting only cash Views Mass Psychosis selves 'outsiders’ if they are doned in favor of the conduct of he wants.” Balzani said. Macedo said M azilli can stay in power only if he can carry some Augustine marked time while the F R I D A Y S T O R E HOURS - 9:30 A.M. TO 5:30 P.M. bonds. “ Rhinoceros,” w ill “ horn in” of the reforms in the economy and at Fairchild Theatre, April 14 alone.” th ic k -s k in n e d beasts charg­ agriculture. He can stay in only to 19. The Performing Arts Com­ “ I chose to let my charac­ ing through the swamps. This kind with the support of the people and pany w i l l present t h is inter­ ters transform themselves into of a rg u m e n t is casually dis­ the Congress-support that w ill let nationally successful co m e d y rhinoceroses rather than into missed by his good friend, Jean, him pass the reforms. written by the celebrated "avant- some other kind of animals be­ portrayed by E a r l O. Boen, There may be a call for election g a r d e ” F re n c h playwright, cause these thick-hided beasts Pocatello, Idaho, grad student. ARANTES in six months. Eugene Ionesco. are the most ferocious in the Boen appeared in the title role " I personally think the people In "Rhinoceros,” Ionesco tells world and the ugliest.” of "Othello” and played Bosola have done the r ig h t th in g ,” "There won't be any actual in "The Duchess of M alfi.” O ffe r G r a n t s a fantastic story about a town full William Ting said, and the con­ of people who find it more com­ rhinos stamping around the F a ir­ Already on the way to rhino- sensus at present agrees with fortable to change from human child stage,” said Farley Rich­ dom, Jean begins to roar and The University of the State of him. The students see a more beings into a herd of snorting, mond, director of this bizarre grunt as he talks, and his skin Mexico at Toluca, Mexico, has stable government. horned beasts. comedy, "but t h e i r prim itive seems to g ro w thicker and made available several tuition As Bolzani said, "B ra zil wants “ I wrote ‘ Rhinoceros’ to en­ trumpeting w ill resound off-stage greener with every word. Jean scholarships f o r th e summer to be a little to the left of cen­ courage people to resist mass as one character after another sweeps aside morality in favor session, June 29 through Aug. ter, but not too far left.” psychosis,” said controversial hastens off the scene to join the of Nature and thinks life must Ionesco, "and not to feel them- herd with the exhilaration of be built on new foundations, on A ll c la s s e s at Toluca are small boys diving into a pool on the freedom of the jungle. taught in S p a n is h . Beginning y . > J a hot day.” Susan S. Pennington is cast courses m Spanish are offered. Brighton Lightens "B y means of this imaginative as Daisy, the sweetheart of the Students interested in applying I t o rr i v i - o Veterans' Wives Association M. tale, Ionesco has spun an alle­ last up-holder of the human race. for a scholarship are asked to w ill hold a welcome tea at the An Intersection gory about the way most people Miss Pennington w ill be remem­ write or call Donald Yates, assis- home of Mrs. Mark Doty, 421 rush into popular crazes to the bered for her performances in tant professor .of foreign lang- l inden St., at 2:30p.m.Saturday, ROCHESTER, N.Y., (0—T raf­ point where they become part of "Medea” and "The M iser” this uages, 324 M orritO jgH g before All wives of active servicemen fic engineers decided that four a thoughtless herd,” Richmond year. Wednesday. or veterans are invited. s to p -a n d -g o blinking traffic said. The Logician who makes a hash lights were inefficient at a three- C. David Colson, St. Clair of logic w ill be played by Fred- way intersection in suburban Shore grad student, is cast as rich D e S a n tis , Grosse Pointe Brighton. the mousy, somewhat unrugged Woods, graduate student. So, they installed eight red- individualist, Berenger, the only amber-green traffic lights, ten person in this nameless town walk-don’ t walk signs, two stop to hold out for staying human. S h o rt C irc u it Cuts signs, one yield sign, three do-' Colson has played leading roles not-enter signs, one stop-here- in “ Becket,” "The Stranger," S tre e t E le ctricity on-red sign, two speed lim it "The Duchess of M alfi,” and signs, one bus-turn sign, eight “ Jack, or the Submission.” A short circuit cut off street signs instructing pedestrians to For Berenger, it seems a pity electrical service on south cam­ push a button that w ill change if all the civilized values about pus and part of north campus traffic lights and clear cross justice and morality which ani­ for about five minutes Tuesday walks, and four sonic detectors mals don’t share, should be aban- night. If y o u th in k g iv in g u p Electric service in campus buildings was not interrupted. s m o k in g is to u g h , y o u H ra tœ n s i8 6 i h o u s e h a v e n ’t tr ie d g iv in g Offer Bicycles & R A T H S K E LLE R old world atmosphere At Salvage Sale u p GOODWIN’S FABRICS. # W o n d e r fu l fo o d The Salvage Department is offering bicycles for sale at * C a n d le lig h t the salvage yard located on Farm Lane. • D in n e r m u s ic The bicycles w ill be sold # F r e e p a r k in g at auction today starting at 1:30 p.m. 21« A bbott Rd. F ra te rn ity C o o k East Lansing, M ich. J A C O B S O N ’ S M E N ’ S SHOP - 210 A B B O T T ROAD Across from tho Stato Thaatar FU LL FA SH IO N ED D ies A t H o m e "W h e re y o u r c o l l e g e f a s h i o n s b eg in ” ' A fraternity cook for 10 years B A N LO N K N I T SHIRTS died Monday at her home in Holt. Funeral services for Jennie Mae Milbauer, ft!, of 2105 Cool- $5 ridge St., were held Wednesday B R A N D at Zion Lutheran Church. A n e xc itin g o p p o rtu n ity OPEN N E W to prepare fo r s p rin g w ith AND NOW OUR DAILY 11:30 AM-10 PM Rao At India Meet CLOSED A N D 1 0 0 % te x tra lize d n ylo n k n it SUNDAYS A. Naeeswara Rao, In d ia n NEW BIERSTUBE n'"-' , producer and director, will shirts a t a tru ly lo w p ric e . B R IL L IA N T address the India Student Associ­ A ll th e s tylin g and ation, Sunday at 7 p.m., in Union 213 S . G r a n d A v e . L a n sin g Parlor A. c o m fo rt yo u d em and: ra g la n s le e v e , rib b e d UNCLE JOHN’S c u ff a n d fa s h io n b o tto m , c o lla r. After-Theatre And In s p r i n g o f w h ite , shades b la c k , Late-Date Favorites red, French b lu e , PEACH P A N C A K E "CO BBLER” APPLE P A N C A K E D O W D Y s a g e , b e ig e or Warm, sun-ripened peaches fill Apples simmered in butter, sugar o a tm e a l. the heart of our delectable French and cinnamon, all wrapped up in S ,M ,L ,X L pancake roll, blanketed w ith the thinnest of French pancakes whipped cream. w ith whipped cream topping. T h e L i m e lit e r s s in g a n d p la y o n c e WESTERN CHILI P A N C A K E S STRAWBERRY P A N C A K E ROLL m o re . G r e a t f o lk s ta n d a r d s lik e “ N o M a n Is a n I s la n d , ” “ T h e B e s t Is Y e t Tasty Western chili rolled up in * Aunt-Sonya's richly browned Iowa corn pancakes, and topped w ith zesty Cheddar cheese. gQ Big, firm, crimson strawberries surrounded by a French pancake, dripping w ith juice, decked with a d rift of whipped cream. to C o m e ” a n d “ W illo w T r e e . ” m o re o f t h e b e s t w it h th e L im e lit e r s . I t ’s Jtirnbsims RCA VICTOR A M E N ’ S SHOP T h e m o s t t r u s t e d n a m e in s o u n d 282 0 E . G r a n d R i v e r IV - 7 3 7 6 1 4 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Fr iday, April 3, 1 9 6 4 , F a ith On C a m p u s M e t h o d is t Controversial N ew Religion Open Housing Only What You M e n H e r e Has Impact On Japanese (continued from page 1) position to an official policy. The ordinance would also ban Four campus ministers w ill' of the Lansing Board of Realtors, discrimination in advertising. Want To Hear? act as hosts for over 1,000 minis­ ters and laymen from Michigan TOKYO, Japan (J)—An organ­ ization called Sokagakkai is the tributed the testimony of those who report recoveries from te r­ leaders complain that it is carry­ ing out a campaign to discredit' which specifies that real estate agents must abide by instruc­ tions of home owners who wish Persons who rent rooms in their own homes, reside in a Methodist churches at a Kellogg fastest growing religious group rible illness, improvement in them. Some politicans charge building where they are renting L in d a M i l l e r Center conference to d a y and in Japan today, and the most con­ financial status or better job op­ to discriminate, points out the that it would establish a Fas­ need for an open housing ordi­ rooms or lease their homes for Saturday. troversial. portunities. cist dictatorship if it should only one year would be exempted A comprehensive study of Greek philosophy rarely fails to leave nance. The Rev. Wilson M. Tennant It is making strides in politics Meetings from the neighbor­ achieve national power. from provisions of the ordinance. one with the feeling that there is nothing new under the sun—the hood to the national level channel ” In effect, t h is makes the Greeks said it all. And so it is with the subject of this column today. and the Rev. Glenn Frye, pastors and is attractingU.S. servicemen Sokagakkai was started in 1930 The city attorney would also, t fo r University Methodist Church, in Japan, while critics denounce the organization’ s activities from realtor an active participant in For it was one of the foremost Sophists of ancient civilization, by Tsunesaburo Makiguchi, a discrimination,” Green said. “ It be empowered to seek injunctions and the Rev. George Jordan and it as intolerant and a possible 36-year-old president Daisaku geographer, and a fellow teacher from the Circuit Cour of Ingham Gorgias, who said, “ To tell an audience what it knows wins belief also hurts the realtor who does the Rev. Ernest Dunn, pastors threat to democracy. lkeda downward, give members a Josei Toda. County to prevent persons sus­ but gives no pleasure.“ After nearly 2,500years,Gorgias is essent­ wish to observe justice in his for the Wesley Foundation, w ill S o k a g a k k a i, or the value- feeling of participating in the They formulated the theory that pected of racial discrimination ially correct. Yet today the prevalent attitude concerning religion, dealings by placing him in op- attend the 12th annual Metho­ creating society, was founded 34 process of saving themselves and the only important value is human from taking steps to evade pun­ though not without exception, seems to favor hearing only what one knows and wants to hear. It is the members of religious movements dist Men’ s Conference. years ago. It is a laymen's organ­ humanity. gain, more vital than beauty or itive a c t io n by the Municipal iz a t i o n which promotes a 700- Since 1951, Sokagakkai’ s mem­ goodness. Judging that Nichiren Court of East Lansing. who clench their fists when this column does not reiterate what the “ catechism’’ they live by teaches. The Rev. M r. Frye w ill pre­ sent the closing moments of dedi­ year-old Buddist faith, theNich- bership has jumped from 5,000 families to a claimed four m il­ Shoshu best embodied this prin­ Concert Tonight Injunctive action might con­ If readers wish to hear only what they already have cognizance of, iren Shoshu. It teaches that Nich- ciple, they organized the Soka sist of a restraining order on the cation Saturday. A public "sing- iren, the monk who united Japan lion, or 10 million people. Kyoku Gakkai (society of creative sale of property. or solely that which is agreeable with their religious tastes, why Sacred concert music w ill be spiration” and reception w ill be spiritually to repel the 13th Running under the banner of education) to push its fortunes. Green Interpreted the Tien- should this column be written? The title "Faith on Campus" is a presented by the Detroit Bible held Friday night at University cnetury invasion by Mongols, is its political branch, the Kom- Both Makiguchi and Toda were motion as binding the commis­ rather nebulous one, as it must be, but this column is not designed College Chorale at the East Lans­ Methodist Church. the true Buddha. eikai, it has elected 15 members imprisoned in World War 11 by sion to recommend an open hous­ to serve as a summary of the basic tenets of major religious* ing T rin ity Church tonight at 8 The believer gets immediate to the upper house of Parliment the m ilitarists after they defied p.m. ing ordinance to the City Council faiths. It expresses the personal views of the writer, and nothing Such problems as juvenile de­ gain and happiness, says Sokga- and nearly 2,000 to local andper- the government’ s campaign to because of a motion at an ear­ more. If its stance happens to coincide with the expression of a linquency, integration, the traf­ Leon G. Anderson, director of kkai, by worship of Nichiren and fectural (state) legislatures. It make Shinto the national religion. lie r meeting which said the com­ sect, it is not to be surmised that the column is totally representa­ fic toll, rapid scientific change is a minority party but politicians the music department, Detroit tive of that particular group. his scripture, and by repeating Toda succeeded to the presi­ Bible College, w ill conduct the mission would take such action if and threats to peace w ill be con­ the chant: “ glory to the sutra note it has won overwhelmingly dency after Makiguchi died in The agnostic has something more than the average “ believer” in program. a need was indicated by com­ sidered during 28 sectional meet­ of the lotus of truth.” virtually every contest it has en­ prison. He gave impetus to post­ this respect, since his quest, though sometimes blind in its unre- ings. About 38 students, selected by munity research. These promises have had a tered. war development of the renamed M rs. Sharp, who served on the lentlessness, is a refusal to be satisfied with being told only what competitive audition, compose powerful impact on Japanese by­ Many Buddhist and Christian society. committee which developed the is commonly held or desirable. Review o f th e ecumenical th e Chorale._________________ To be a mere systematizer of a particular doctrine is a pitfall into movement, retirement opportun­ passed by the pstwar industrial open housing ordinance, said she < which some clergymen sometimes fall. Why go to church if you ities and fields of lay m inistry boom. These include unsuccess­ voted against Tien’ s motion be­ are only going to hear what you have been told all along or what and church service are also on ful small businessmen, clerks, cause it might stymie open dis­ sounds pleasant and conforming to contented ears? the agenda. maids and cooks, needy students L u t h e r a n S t u d e n t s O b s e r v e cussion of the ordinance itself. It is enlightening to see that a group of Anglicans have put to­ and the millions who have poured "T his might place a strain on Leon E. Hickman, Pittsburg, into cities only to find life cheer­ gether a highly controversial book called “ Objections to Christian our discussion of the ordinance Pa., executive vice president, less and lonely. itse lf,” M rs. Sharp said. "This Belief” (Lippincott). One of its contributors writes that pre-marital Aluminum Company of America, P o l i t i c s I n N a t i o n ’s C a p i t a l sex might in certain cases be less than the evil it is normally made Many religions in Japan have would be unfortunate, because I and th e R e v. D r. G. E r n e s t held aloft the lure of greater Five Michigan State students current issues and clarifying the ior; M a rk Johnson, O kem os believe we have developed pro­ out to be. He would like to see the Christian commandment be Thomas, First Methodist Church, “ Thou shalt not exploit another person.” happiness for these unhappy peo­ spent part of spring break in the responsibilities of Christian cit­ freshman; C a r o le Kopp, Mt. visions which have the meat and Birmingham, are the principal ple. Sokagakkai promises them izens. The best gift that this column can present to the University is to nation’ s capital observing the Clemens sophomore; Charles R. teeth t o improve human r e- speakers. results now. It has widely dis- federal government, discussing Sandra Hulkonen, Haslett sen- Morscheck, Jr., East Lansing lations in East Lansing.” give provocative, “ unorthodox"—if you like—ideas. Its authorship is still open to the literate public, although contributions to date, with sophomore; and Randall Schuler, Stephanie H. Barch, a re­ F lr s t C h ristia n O liv e t B a p tis t C h u r c h La n sin g C e n t ra l F r e e bus nursery Saginaw freshman, attended the search associate in zoology, said few exceptions, have not been of the high quality anticipated. As the subjects of this column move into socio-philosophical concerns R efo rm ed C h u r c h 2215 E. Michigan M e th o d is t C h u r c h 15th annual Washington Seminar she would vote against Tien’ s this term, it is advisable to keep in mind that criticism , though 240 Marshall St., Lansing Rev. William Hartman. Pastor 828 N. Washington, Lansing for Lutheran Students Mar. 22 motion because she felt the com­ SUNDAY Sunday through 25. mittee had not had enough time welcome, should not be of the sort demanding that one be told only Rev. John M. Hofman, Pastor Sunday School 9:45 a.m. what he wants to hear. This is not what you are going to get. Sunday School 10:00 a.m. Sessions were held throughout to examine the fa ir housing pro­ Morning Service 9:00 & Morning Worship 9:00 and Norman Clothier the city in government offices posals. 11:15 a.m. 11:00 a.m. guest talent NASHVILLE , Tenn. f —The Always a warm welcome at Sunday School 10:15 a.m. university and Lutheran churches. She also said she felt that very* Baptist Youth Fellowship Morning Worship 11:00 a.m. Tennessee Democratic Conven­ Evening Service 7 p.m. Dr. Robert E. Van Deusen, few persons had filed formal Seventh - D ay 5:30 p.m. Gideon Speaker lutheran church tion voted Thursday to support Those in need of transpor­ Washington Secretary of the Na­ complaints with the committee. Evening Worship 6:30 p.m. alc-lca President Lyndon B. Johnson for A d v e n t is t C h u r c h tation call: Youth Fellowship 6:00 p.m. tional Lutheran Council’ s Divi­ " E v e r y once in a w h ile , Temporarily m e e tin g at MID-WEEK SERVICE sion of Public Relations, told someone comes in and stands up the party’ s nomination to head Wednesday, 7:15 p.m. Evening Service 7:00 p.m. University Lutheran Church M r. B. Swagman at TU 2-2570 the students in a keynote address in a meeting and tells about the national ticket. ■ For church bus schedule For transportation call Division and Ann St. or Rev. Hofman at IV 5-3650 that for the Christian citizen, in­ a case,” she said,” but few file U n iv e rs ity call IV 2-8419 ED 7-1294 8:30 9:30 10:30 11:30 telligent participation in the pro­ formal complaints.” C h ristia n C hu rch SATURDAY SERVICES cesses of government is not an Green said there is a reluc­ 9:30 a.m. Sabbath School F i r s t P re sb y te ria n F i r s t B a p tist C h u rc h 11:00 Sunday 310 N. Hagadorn Rd. C e n t r a l M e t h o d is t optional matter. tance on the part of many per­ Don Stiffler, Minister 11:00 a.m. Worship Service Ottawa and Chestnut Capitol at Ionia Across From the Capitol At the Pentagon, the students sons to report cases of racial Ph 337-1077 Worship Services Lansing, Michigan WORSHIP SERVICES were given background informa­ discrimination because of the Bible School 9s4o a.m. For information or transpor­ 9:30 & 11:00 a.m. Rav. Scott Irvina, Minister 9:45 andll:15 a.m. tion on th e role of th e U.S. unpleasantness involved. Worship Service 10:45 a.m. tation call 485-9273 Criboery and nursery P ly m o u t h (WJIM 10:15 a.m.) armed forces in world affairs, He pointed out he has docu­ care provided, Church School 9:45 a.m. equal opportunity in m ilitary ser­ mented five cases of racial dis­ E a s t L a n sin g U N IV E R S IT Y Morning Worship 10:50 a.m. C o n g r e g a t io n a l "Compelled To Love” 'The Risen Christ vice and character guidancepro- crimination for the committee. B A P T IS T C H U R C H And His Disciples” David S. Yoh, grams for s e r v ic e m e n and U n it y C e n t e r “ His Presence is Real” Church preaching Green has another complaint (THE AMERICAN BAPTIST women. Sessions at the State De­ 11:00 a.m. Worship Service CONVENTION) pending before the Federal Hous­ Guest Pastor, Dr. Morrow, preaching Rev. Scott Irvine, Crib Nursery, So B ring The Baby partment centered on current ing Administration concerning a Chaplain Arthur M ills preaching Take home a copy of the "What foreign affairs. recent case in which he says he “ This Is Our Father World” A warm and friendly welcome American Legion Memorial 6:30 Youth Groups Then Are We To Do?” sheet C o n g re s s m a n C la r k Mac was discriminated against when* awaits you at First Presbyter­ 11:00 a.m. Sunday School Center, 1 Block North of ian. People of all races welcome for study and application. Gregor (R-Minn.) d is c u s s e d he attempted to buy a home in Across from Capitol on Allegan East Lansing Bus Station "progress and problems in civil East Lansing. Wednesday Evening rights” during a luncheon. Prayer Service 7:00 p.m. Worship Service 10:00 a.m. Church School 11:00 a.m. St. A n d rew s E a s t e r n F IR S T C H U R C H O F T H E N A Z A R E N E Richard W. Reuter, director Study Class 7:30 p.m. Nursery Provided 10:00- Genesee at Butler Streets of Food for Peace, spoke on the O rt h o d o x C h u r c h & Green .Affiliated with Unity School 12:00 a.m. SUNDAY SERVICES Supervised nursery provided cry of hunger and U.S. surpluses. of Christianity, Lee's Summit, Campus Bus Service U n i v e r s i t y Student C e n t e r Julius Cahn of the Senate Govern­ Missouri Church School........................................ 9:45 a.m. ment Operations Committee de­ (continued from page 1) 1216 Greencrest East Lansing Morning Worship................................. 11:00 a.m. scribed how national policies are Youth Groups.........................................6:00 p.m. complaint to FHA that Frink had L U T H E R A N W O R S H IP formed. Nathaniel Davis of the discriminated against him 1hen Alumni Memorial Chapel Missouri Synod Sunday Evangelistic Hour................................. 7:00 p.m. Peace C o rp s discussed h is he attempted to purchase a house 10:00 a.m. Holy Eucharist Divine Liturgy WEDNESDAY EVE Prayer Service 7:30 p.m. agency. Ray Scherer, NBC Con­ at 341 Southlawn Ave., East Lans­ 9:30 a.m. 11:15 a.m. Holy Baptism, Rite of Confirmation H.T. Stanley - M inister Tom Thompson Music D ir. gressional correspondent gave ing. Alumni Memorial Chapel Vespers and Confessions every Sat. a newsman’ s view of the nation’ s Frink and his wife Lorna are 7:30 p.m. Transportation Available Free bus service and nursery provided capital. both registered r e a l e s ta te Call Church Office IV 5-0613 The annual seminar was spon­ tor both Services If No Answer, Call IV 2-6994 agents. However, Frink said he sored by the public relations units was attempting to sell the prop­ "Our sincere and warmwel- of the national Lutheran Council come back and may y o u r erty as a private owner. A ll S a in ts E p is c o p a l U n i v e r s i t y M e th o d ist S t . J o h n s Student Edgewood U N IT E D and the Lutheran Church—Mis­ Frink is associated with the Spring quarter be blessed in­ souri Synod. deed. A particular invitation C hurch C hurch P a rish C hu rch Walter Neller agency in Lans- , is extended to new students 800 Abbott Koad Fr. R. Kavanaugh Interdenominational ing, but he said his firm was not to worship with us.” ED 2-1313 1120 S. Harrison Rd. Fr. T. McDevitt involved in the attempted sale 469 North Hagadorn Road Rev. Theodore K. Bundenthal, Pastor ED 2-0778 Wilson M. Tennant, Minister 327 M.A.C. East Lansing, Michigan . of the Southlawn property. Rev. Robert Gardner,Episcopal S o v ie ts A n n o u n c e Chaplain to the University Sunday Masses The executive order barring Dr. Glenn M. Frye, Minister (5 blocks north of Grand River) Rev. Edward Roth. Rector 7:15-8:30 - 9:45 (high) racial discrimination in federal IN T E R -C IT Y B IB L E CH URCH INTER DENOMINATIONAL Rev. George Tuma, Curate 11:15 8i 12:30 MINISTERS P ro b e L a u n c h in g housing was signed by the late 2827 E. Michigan Rev. Truman A. Morrison P r e s id e n t Kennedy. SUNDAY SERVICES WORSHIP Babysitting at 8:30 - 9:45 - 11:15 Two blocks west of Frandor 8:00 a.m. Holy Communion at Rev. R. Paige Birdwell, Jr. MOSCOW l/P)—The Soviet Union Sanctions suggested at the time R.S. BURGESS, PASTOR Youngsters Religion Class WORSHIP SERVICES announced Thursday night it has the order was signed by Kennedy 9:45 a.m. Sunday School All Saints Parish 9:45 a.m. & 11:00 a.m. 8:00 a.m. Holy Communion at 9:45 a.m. launched a cosmic probe from a included revocation of FHA mort­ Collegiate Bible Clas Mr. Peter Hine, Teacher 9:30 & 11:00 a.m. Chapel of Apostles, Wesley Sputnik while it circled the earth. gages and refusal of future FHA Morning Worship Service Bishop Marshall R. Reed, Sunday A pril 5 7:30 p.m. _ Sunday, A pril 5 The Sputnik was put up earlier dealings with persons found prac­ 11:00 a.m. An Uneven Exchange Foundation preaching Youth Sunday Thursday by a multi-stage boos­ ticing racial discrimination. 7:00 p.m. * Evening Service 9;30 a.m. & 11:30 a.m. Sunday Forum* ter rocket, Moscow radio re­ Green said in the complaint Book of Galatians Morning Prayer 8t Sermon Church School " Dating 8i Campus Morals” ported. that Frink told him the property 8:30 p.m. Collegiate Fellowship 11:00 a.m. Holy Communion Church School 9:45 a.m. all 9:30 & 11:00 a.m. The cosmic probe which then was not available but that awhite Buffet Luncheon served & Service ages & 11:00 a.m. children Wed 7:30 P.M. Prayer and Bible Study 5;30 p.m. Canterbury Meeting C rib room thru Senior High emanated from the Sputnik is friend of Green’ s was told the 2-5 years. Daily Masses called Zond-1 (Zond is Russian Junior High Fellowship 4:30 p.m. property was available by Frink. _______(For transportation call IV 9-6312 or Jim Jolly 337-9142 8:30 a.m. Monday thru Friday 8:00 a.m. - 12:10 p.m.- Senior High Fellowship for probe). Frink has denied the charge. < Daily Office 4:45 p.m. Tues. - 10:15 a.m. Membership Class 9:30 a.m. Sat. Masses 7:00 p.m. S O U T H B A PTIST C H U R C H Holy Communion Wed. - 7:00 a.m. 8:00 8i 9:00 a.m. Affiliated with United Church Of Christ, Congregational- Confession daily at 8:00 a.m. 1518 S. Washington Holy Communion Free bus transportation 15 to Christian, Evangelical and Thurs. - 5;15 p.m. 30 minutes before each serv­ 12:00 p.m. - 4:45 p.m. Reformed. Holy Communion ice around the campus. Phone ED 7-9778 WELCOME IN V IT E S YO U P e o p le s C h u rc h T R IN IT Y C H U R C H F i r s t C h u r c h of 9:45 a.m. B IB L E SCHOOL E a stm in ste r Interdenominational E a s t L a n sin g C h r is t , S c ie n tist "Pattern for Living” 120 Spartan Avenue lnterder.omination. P re sb y te ria n C h u rch 709 E. Grand River MINISTERS East Lansing College Class Taught by Dr. Ted Ward 200 W. Grand River 1315 Abbott Rd., E. Eugene Williams Church Service: at Michigan East Lansing Norman R. Piersma Minister Sunday 11A.M. 11:00 a.m. ‘ T h e C h a r i o t s of G o d !” Daniel E. Weiss Rev. Robert L. Moreland Morning Service - 11 a.m. Subject - 541 Walbridge Drive ED 7-0183 “ THE PHILOSOPHY of ALL “ Unreality” 7:00 p.m. _ js the world ripening for judgement? 9:00 8i 11:00 a.m. THINGS” SUNDAY SERVICES Church School -W ill God always be patient with man’ s perversity? Evening Service - 7:00 p.m. Sunday School: for Cribbery through Third Grade. "WHEN GOD SAT DOWN” University Students 9:30 a.m. 9:30, and 11:00 a.m. 10:00 a.m. Church School (HOLY COMMUNION SERVICE) Regular 11:00 a.m. 8:30 p m. A d u l t s , Y O U th S "Report from Africa” Fourth Grade - Adultfc 8:15 p.m. T rin ity Collegiate Wed. Evening Meeting-8 p.m. by 9:00 8t 11:00 a.m. Fellowship—Stimulating • * • * * * * * • • • • * * * * Program & Refreshments Program and Buffet Supper M r iiruce Smalley Church Services Reading Room located at 134 Sermon Other Services W. Grand River. Pastors: Dr. Howard FrSugden, Dr. Ted Ward and Rev. Alvin Jones CHURCH SCHOOL 9:30 8, 11:00 a.m. Crib room through Adult Classes •I .M l I I ; CAMPUS CHRISTIAN Rev. John S. Duley Presbyterian University Paster STUDENTS WELCOME 9:45 a.m. University Class 8t International class 7:00 p.m. Wed. Evening Prayer and Bible Study Qpen Mon. thru Sat. 9:00 a.m. -5:00 p.m. Mon., Tues., Thurs., & F ri­ days 7:00-9:00 p.m. McDonald's L a n s in g E a s t L a n s i n g ” "” l I ELLOWSIIIP” 4015 W. Sagniaw on Grand River Ave. I A ll are welcome to attenc Free bus service morning and evening h&p. AL EDWARDS Across From Home Economics Bldg S P O R T S C A R C E N T E R ED 2-6753 Ga/iA 616 N. H o w a rd - J u s t off 2900 B l o c k E . S a g in a w n R ig h t O n C a m p u s - A D e p a r tm e n t O f M ic h ig a n S ta te U n iv e rs ity 489-7596 Spartan Center U n i o n B o o k S tore U n io n B o o k S to r e U n io n B o o k S to re U n io n B o o k A id S o u g h t To Sto p H E LP YOUR BUDDY IM L o ck e r L a rc e n ie s LO C K U S (B A C K W A R D S ) LO CK By JEROME CAPLAN but these have been largely ig­ so there w ill be no chance of them pared with 25 in the preceding there were only seven in the same nored. being mistaken for the thieves.” year. month in 1963,” Bernitt added. State News Sports Editor D ir e c t o r of P u b lic Safety "Ninety-nine per cent of the Bernitt explained the majority "The new system may incon­ Men returning from the show­ venience a few students, but in Richard Bernitt reported that thefts have been from open lock­ of the thefts are committed by ers in the Intramural Building the long run we feel that they'll there have been 64 thefts from ers. There were 22 reported in n o n -U n iv e rs ity p e r s o n n e l. locker room may have to do some be glad to spend a few extra min­ lockers since July, 1963, com­ February of this year, while "Many high school students drift bending to open their lockers be­ utes opening their locks. It’ s bet­ into the locker rooms during after LOCKUP—New sign warns men to lock IM ginning Monday. ter to lose a little time than a lot school and vacation periods,” he lockers. Student (right) failed to head An upswing in lo c k e r room of m oney or a wrisrwatch, said. "In February we apprehended warning and now must bend to gain en­ thefts has caused the IM depart­ Beeman added. ment and the department of pub­ a group of three East Lansing trance to locker. There w ill also be IM depart­ lic safety to institute a new "lock ment aides assigned to make high school students, who subse­ the lock backwards” program. periodic checks of the locker quently admitted 17 locker room "Too many students are leav­ rooms. "We’ ll send two man larcenies,” he said. ing their lockers open when they shifts down at varied times Only 25 of the year’ s 64 thefts go to shower or get a towel. We throughout the day and night," have been solved and only $113.05 tried pasting reminder signs on inside of the locker doors, C A M P COUNSELOR- O P E N IN G S Beeman commented. "The men w ill wear identifying armbands. Last Tour’ Game of the more than $1200 stolen has been found. "Students also lose valuable identification cards and w a tc h e s , as w e ll as c a s h ,” Top Frosh, Prep Gymnasts UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS (Min.agi ’9Lco*p GRADUATE STUDENTS and FACULTY MEMBERS »«o' of coll« 1 MO R A o B 0 L P OT E T ■ U s N T Su b stitu tio n C h a n g e H e lp s S ta te ACROSS 1. Blue grass 4. Salt 7. Crustacean 25. Heavenly body 27. Annex 28. Serving B E G■ S L E * ti A V 0 A L E 5 P F E R E T B D E W 1 N S 1N A H D A K l V N 1 A G E GE G By RICHARD SCHWARTZ Daugherty feels that the rule, 11. Pique dishes the surprising performance of ers proving successful, unex­ the defensive backfield and quart­ K E N H A N G R 0 D which allows substitution of an gear unless some unknown in­ 13. Demigod 30. Witticism State News Sports Writer several upperclassmen. pected blossoming of so-so men erback position. The Spartan off­ E X 1 L E D E L t D E entire team during any stoppage dividual shoots into prominence. 14. Scolder 33. Electric "Our only major injury was in into fine players. ensive and defensive lines and R 1 T U A L R 1 5 E li of the clock, w ill encourage many 15. Copycat particle Shades of the early 1950’ s, sophomore q u a r te r b a c k Steve ’ ’Now w e'll have to do the same offense backfield have been gre­ On the plus side, State can look ■ E D D V S F rm s o p h o m o re s and returning 16. River to the 34. Result when platoon football was In its Juday. And more things worked thing all over again,” he added, atly weakened and face a general • forward to the return of a healthy varsity men bidding fo r spots to Elbe 35. Nucha hay day may return in modified out well than in any season 1 “ only this time it may be even overhaul. Juday, who was sidelined by a 36. Hauls master the specific skills of their 17. And not form to Spartan Stadium this fall. can remember another sopho­ more difficult.” Spartan speed , abounding in shoulder separation in the tail 38. Calmer DOW N 5. F a t h e r o f position. 19. Goddess of Coach Duffy Daugherty’ s Spar­ more quarterback making good, State’ s major problems appear most MSU teams of recent vin­ end of the season. Also in the 40. Ironwood E uropa While he feels that the old mischief 1. More tans, who start practice Monday, many positions switches of play- everywhere, with the exception of tage, figures to be in a slower, running for signal-calling spot 41. Livery 6. N octu rn al substitution system didn’ t nec­ 20 Sunbeam refined w ill be among the many teams are Dick Proebstle and Dave 2 1. Cliques 42. Ostrich animal trying to get the most out of essarily imply a ’’jack of all McCormick. 2. The end 7. R olle d tea trades—master of none” brand 23. Legal 43. Er. summer 3. Monastery college football’ s new substitu­ practice 44. Short- 8 . Refund ed of a football, Daugherty does Seasoned lettermen Don Jap- 4. Egypt, tion rule, which makes substitu­ 24. Supports napped 9 . Rugged see where it placed a hardship inga, Lou Bobich and Captain cotton tion virtually unlimited. cres ts For squads in the process of on the less experienced athlete Charlie Migyanka sprinkle the 1 0 . D ull rebuilding, such as State and trying to break into a line-up. defensive backfield for State. / 2 3 4 S 6 7 0 9 to persons Northwestern in the BlgTen.this "La st season when we faced Back in the fold after missing B ■ 1 2 . Play by a rebuilding job almost as acute a year because of illness is 6-4 il 12 13 Capek may prove a tempting invitation as this year's,” Daugherty ex­ Herman Johnson, who figures to ■ 1 8 . I nterp re ts for more player specialization. 14 plained, “ we were hardpressed be a definite asset in the MSU ( I ir 21 Fe nc ing to develop our sophomore talent backfield. 16 n 16 ti p o sitio n into all-around players. This, HP tü 2 2 . Fr ee of course, meant teaching both Bobich w ill abain be called upon 20 2/ 22 2 3 . Cudgel F e n c e r s to do the kicking for State. o ffe n s iv e and defensive tech­ m 2 5 . Poor 23 24 w im niques to the same individual. Ìli p o st u re ’ ’When you consider what little In all 22 letermen w ill be re­ //////. flf 2 6 . Snarl P i c k turning and 14 lost. However, 2S 26 27 time in which we have to do this, ■ m 2 7 . Fervid of those 14, 12 could be counted S IH you can understand why we regard 20 29 30 31 n 2 8 . H airv the new setup quite favorably. among the top 22 men last fall. 2 9 . Follow B In our present situation, at least, 33 34 sr 3 0 . F.state C a p t a i n Losses by position are: End— ¡ü mm it may prove to be somewhat lÊ 3 1 . M usic of a blessing.” Matt Snorton, Dan Underwood; 34 37 30 39 dram a Joel Serlin, junior from De­ Tackles—Dave Herman, Charley 1 tro it, has been elected captain of Daugherty feels the road ahead Brown; Guards--Earl Lattimer, 40 4i 3 2 . Se m e ste r s won’ t be an easy one for State. ü 35. Ship­ the 1965 Michigan State fencing M ik e Currie, Hubert Benson; y/////. 44 sh ap ed c l o c k team. He figures the Spartans at the Center—Ed Youngs; Halfbacks- 42 43 Also coming in for post-season bottom of the Big Ten in ex­ Ü Í Ék 3 7 . O c ean Sherm Lewis, Dewey Lincoln, 3 9 . M eadow honors was senior Nels Marin, perience, “ which only means we Ron Rubick; Fullbacks—Roger w ill have to work much harder b a r lev presented with the Munn Award Lopes, Joe Begeny. given each season to the Spartan between now and our opener with North Carolina.” fencer with the best won-l’ost record. Marin won 20 of 24 bouts “ We were in much the same this winter. situation in 1963,” he continued. Serlin has been a member of But we were lucky in a number HOPEFUL COACHES—University Coaches Burt Smith, left, Col Stoll and John McVay, look of ways, the most obvious being over tenders being sent to prospective athletes for the sports teams of the coming years. the Spartan fencing unit for the p a s t two y e a rs , performing ___________________________ Photo by Arlen Becker steadily with the epee contingent. Prep Track Meet One of the smallest athletes in * S H H H H gg p H ! with M a x S h u lm a n At Jenison Today (Author of Rally Round the Flay, Roys!" and “Barefoot Boy With Check.“ ) Some of the best high school staged today, with finals in the trackmen in the state w ill arrive pole vault, shot put and two- in East Lansing this morning to mile relay and preliminaries in WELL-KNOWN FAMOUS PEOPLE: No. 1 take part in Michigan's largest the other ten events set for a This is the first in u series nl 48 million columns examining the indoor high school track meet. 1 p.m. start. Finals in the ten careers of men who have significantly altered the world we live The firs t annual State Journal- remaining B events and in the in. We begin today with Max Planck. Spartan High School Invitational two C relays w ill start at 6 Max Planck (or The Pearl of the Pacific, as he is often Relays w ill be held at Jenison p.m. The same time schedule w ill called) gave to modern physics the law known as Planck’s Fieldhouse today and tomorrow, prevail for the A competition Constant. Many people when they first hear of this law, throw and tournament officials are ex­ tomorrow. up their hands and exclaim, “ (¡oily whiskers, this is too dt ‘<‘l> pecting a field of 1,700 athletes General admission tickets w ill for little old me!" representing Class A, B, and be priced at $1 for adults and (Incidentally, speaking of whiskers, I cannot help but men­ C schools. tion Personna Stainless Steel Razor Blades. Personna is the 50 cents for students for each blade for people who can’t shave after every meal. It shaves " I think this meet could be­ day. you closely, cleanly, arid more frequently than any other NELS MARIN come one of the biggest and A ticket w ill entitle the holder stainless steel blade on the market. The makers of Personna the Big Ten, he stands only 5-3 best indoor high school invitat­ to see both the afternoon and have publicly declared -and do here repeat that if Personna and weighs just 115 pounds. ional meets in the country,” evening sessions. Blades don’t give you more luxury shaves than any .other He is a 1961 graduate of De­ said meet director and assistant stainless steel blade, they will buy you whatever blade you Competing in the meet w ill be think is better. Could anything be more fair? I. for one, think tro it’ s Mackenzie High School MSU track coach Jim Gibbard, defending Class B state champ­ not.) and is majoring in history at "the response has been over­ Michigan State. whelming.” ion River Rougue and relay teams from 1963 C c h a m p io n Boys Marin earned his third fenc­ Thirteen championships w ill Training School. ing letter this year. He has scored be determined in Class A and points in three Big Ten meets, Claas B, along with a team The A field w ill include such finishing fifth on two occasions champion. There w ill be two re­ powers as Birmingham Seaholm, and fourth once. He prepped at lay events in Class C. Lansing Everett, and Lansing Lansing Eastern High School. T h e B competition w ill be Sexton. ; A R R O W - D won’t give you the E C T O N R enault D auphine Smart-Tough-Thrifty-Perky Up to 40 miles per gallon right time of day But I digress. We were speaking of Planck’s Constant, which is not, as many think, difficult to understand. It simply states of gas. M49 down that matter sometimes behaves like waves, and waves some­ $49.17 per month T h is re m a rk a b le s h ir t re ta in s times behave like matter. To give you a homely illustration, its c ris p , ju s t-iro n e d lo o k pick up your pencil and wave it. Your pencil, you will surely a ll d a y lo n g because i t ’s agree, is matter yet look at the little rascal wave! Or take flags. Or Ann-Margret. 6 5 % D a c r o n * a nd Planck's ( ’onstant, uncomplicated as it is, nevertheless pro­ 3 5 % c o t t o n . . . t h e id e a l w a sh a n d w e a r b le n d vided science with the key that unlocked the atom, made space travel possible, and conquered denture slippage. Honors were try the all new th a t m a d e “ L o o k , M a — heaped upon Mr. Planck (or The City of Brotherly Love, as he is familiarly known as). He was awarded the Nobel Prize?, n o w r in k le s ” a fa m o u s c a m p u s e xp re ssio n . the Little Brown Jug, and Disneyland. But the honor that pleased Mr. Planck most was that plankton were named after iiim. Renault automatic T a ilo r e d w ith th e p o p u la r Plankton, as we know, are the floating colonies of one-celled Sussex b u tto n d o w n animals on which fishes feed, Plankton, in their turn, feed c o lla r in tru e Iv y fa s h io n a n d ta p e re d to tr im y o u upon one-half celled animals called krill (named, incidentally, after Dr. Morris Krill who invented the house cat). Krill, in transmission___ their turn, feed upon peanut butter sandwiches mostly or, in e v e ry w a y e x ce p t p ric e . when they are in season, cheeseburgers. Du Pont R.T.M. But I digress. Back to Max Planck who, it must he said, showed no indication of his scientific genius as a youngster. convenient, and up to L o n g s le e v e s —on ly $ 6 .9 5 In fact, for the first six years of his life he did not speak at all except to pound his spoon on his bowl and shout “ More gruel!” S h ort s le e v e s —on ly $ 5 .9 5 Imagine, then', ,the surprise of his parents when on his seventh birthday little Max suddenly cried, "Papa! Mama! Something is wrong with the Second Law of Thermodynamics!" So aston­ 40 m.p.g ished were the elder Plancks that they rushed out and dug the Kiel Canal. Meanwhile Max, constructing a crude Petrie dish out of two See our complete collection of small pieces of petrie and his gruel bowl, began to experiment with thermodynamics. By dinner time he had discovered Planck's Constant. Hungry but happy, he rushed to Heidelberg Stop in for a demonstration ride famous ARROW wash and wear I niversity to announce his findings. He arrived, unfortunately, during the Erich von Stroheim Sesquieentennial, and everyone shirts in this season’s most popular was so busy dancing and duelling that young Planck could find nobody to listen to him. The festival, however, ended after AL EDWARDS collar styles. You’ll like the easy care of wash and wear. two years and Planck was finally able to report his discovery. Well sir, the rest is history,., Einstein gaily cried, “ K equals me squared!” Edison invented Marconi. Eli Whitney invented Georgia Tech, and Michelangelo invented the ceiling. This later became known as the Humboldt Current. RENAULT»! S P O R T S C A R i U)b4 Mux Shulinun SERVICE for most IMPORTED CARS H o ld en R eto * * * Mr. Shulman is, of course, joshing, but the makers of by factory trained mechanics Personna Blades are not: if. after trying our blades, you C E N T E R FRANDOR think there’s another stainless steel blade that gives you more luxury shaves, return the unused Personnas to Box 616 N. Howard - Corner E. Saginaw 500, Staunton, Va., and we’ll buy you a pack of any blade Phone 489-7596 you think is better. 8 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Fr iday, April 3, 1964 Ski Report- L it w h ile r H a s C o m p a n y WSU Coach Invents Bat Tee C o u g a r s - S t a t e Snow G o in g MARQUETTE (UPI)—U p p e r with 14 Inches of new snow and Peninsula skiing conditions were excellent conditions. T o M e e t I n 9 Spartan Baseball Coach Danny a batting technique which w i l l same stride w ith only minor ball from all parts of the strike reported very good to excellent But some areas, like Brule \ Litw hiler has invented some new permit the hitter to contact the changes and other kinesthetic zone. Thursday as winter held on in Mountain near Iron River and Iro­ diamond aids, such as the large ball from the ‘four-inch wood’ movement of the body.” "H itting is such a complex and its last stronghold. quois Mountain Lake Shore near Michigan State and Washington State have signed to Brim ley, were already closed by fielders glove and the unbreak­ (or home run surface) of the Dr. Lande said that he knew of difficult task,” he said, “ that pi ay a football game at East Lansing in 1970, it was Cliffs Ridge near Marquette advancing warm temperatures. able pitching m irror. bat, over all parts of the plate, no other device in baseball that techniques should be made as announced Thursday by Biggie Munn, MSU athletic director, But Litwhiler isn't the only to all fields, swinging the bat at could show the exact position a simple as possible. This begins said skiing was excellent on a Pine Mountain said it would close , , and by Stan Bates, athletic director at Washington State. Michigan university coach who is a sim ilar velocity and using the batter should use in hitting the with the premise that all ba.lls 10-12-inch base and that an addi­ after Sunday. The contest is scheduled for Saturday, Sept. 26, 1970, in the inventing business. should contact the best wood of tional 4 inches of snow was ex­ at Spartan Stadium. Visitors to major league train­ pected. it*]] be the sixth meeting between the two schools and the the bat." J u d o C lu b ¡-¡r st sin ce 1954. The s e r i e s record stands at four victories for the Spartans and one victory for Washington State. ing camps this spring are likely to witness an innovation by a Wayne State L’niversity baseball Letter Winners Dr. Lande c a lle d this th e At Pine Mountain near I r o n "four-inch wood," designating Mountain, very good skiing was the surace between two points, reported on a 30-inch base and The Judo firs t term meeting of the Club w ill be held Tuesday Michigan State won in 1946, 1947, 1948 and in 1954. (continued from page 6) on the third floor of Jenison. A coach that may well find a per- four inches and eight inches, the sam e conditions w e re re­ Washington State was the victor in 1942. anent place in America’s favor­ Lewin, manager, Forest H ill. ton, Ind.: Kenneth Genova, Ann from the barrel end of the bat. ported at Porcupine Mountain judo demonstration by instruc­ Earlier this year Munn announced that the Spartan Arbor; Edgar Click, Huntington, "B y hitting the ball on the four- tors w ill be presented for old and ite sport. N .Y . near Ontonagon, where the base new members. gridders would meet the University of Washington-.in Ind.; Daniel Harner, Drexel H ill, It’s called a "m ultiple batting Freshman: Gerald B o rri, De­ inch wood it is conceivably pos­ was 14 Inches. 1969 and 1970. The State-Huskies match w ill be held at The coed club w ill meet from tee,” a device consisting of two troit; Robert Brawley, Sault Ste. Pa.; John Ladd, St. Louis Park, sible for a player to hit a ball Indianhead Mountain near Bes­ 7 to 8 p.m. every Tuesday and Spartan Stadium in 1969. telescopic tubes mounted over a Marie; Raymond Corrado, Chi­ Minn.; Jack Marsh, South Bend, with homerun power. semer reported a 30-inch base. Thursday. metal home plate. cago, 111.: PeterCorreia, Detroit; Ind.; Richard Mull, Lansing; Rudy “ Probably one of the great­ The telescopic tubes, accord­ T h o m a s Crowley, M e lro s e , Nichols, Flint; Richard Osgood, est values of the tee,” hepointed 3EST IN FOREIGN FILMS DEFT. OF SPEECH ing to Dr. Lande, can be raised Mass.; William Faunt, Sault Ste. Grand Rapids; Kenneth Walsh, out, " is to develop a "mental to any neight between 18 inches Marie; Stuart Forrest, Birming­ Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla.; Robert image’ of the strike zone with TO D A Y . BO X and 5’ 6” , and by means of slid­ ham; Carl Howell, Muskegon; W o lf, Birmingham; H a rv e y the relationship of the bat to the ing braces at the base of each Michael Jacobson, Copper C liff, Howitt, manager, East G ra n d ball at all levels and at all widths tube can be adjusted to any width Ont.; Dennis Keblaitis, Dearborn; Rapids; Donald McCaffree, man­ in the strike zone." T h ru T h u rs d a y ; From 7:00 P.M. OFFICE inside or as far as 24 inches out- A le x Mazaris, Detroit; B r ia n ager, East Lansing. Sat. From 1:00 P.M. side the strike zone. Inserted in McAndrew, Copper C liff, Ont.; W R E S T LIN G — V a r s it y : T h a n k Y o u the top section of each metal tube Thomas Mikkola, Copper C liff, E m e rs o n B o le s , L a n s in g ; is an 18 inch rubber tube which Ont.; R o n a ld Petaja, Detroit; William Bunn, Lansing; Monty Y O U ’ LL R O A R ! . the peRfoRrmnQ OPEN supports the baseball. Leonard P i 11 away, D e t r o it ; Byington, Lansing; RichardCook, F r o m ‘ ‘The general objective of the Thomas Purdo, Detroit; Ronald Farmington; Joseph Ganz, Tren­ tee,” said Dr. Lande, " is to show R o th , St. P a u l, Minn; John ton; I Robert Hansen, L a n s in g ; Dan Peterson commented Thurs­ Schuster, W y a n d o tte ; Douglas A la n Huckins, C a st r o Valley, Volmer, Cleveland Heights, Ohio; Calif.; T e rry Leonard, Perry, by head coach Forddy Anderson D a n n y Freshman basketball co a ch day on a post-season statement At The Legel Eagles9 Antics of The PETTIFOGGER ¿ R ts Olof Hogrelius, manager, Peek- Okla.; Homer McClure, Tulsa, that the Michigan State basketball And Her Friend In This com pany Larcenies skill, N.Y. SWIMMING — Varsity: Joe pa, Okla. Okla.; Gary Smith, Ponca City, fans played a vital role in the Okla.; Richard Turnbull, Sapul- Spartans’ success at home. Laugh loaded Merriment S t a r t in g (continued from page 6) "They were behind us all the of The Year! M ON DAY,APRII 6 Buys, E a s t Lansing; R o b e rt F re s h m a n : D o n a ld Behm, Beeman added. "So we decided Desmond, Los Altos, CAlif.; Lee Glenview, 111,; C h r is H a h in , way," Peterson said, adding that to expand on their idea and ask D r iv e r , Birmingham; Richard Cheektowaga, N.Y.; M ic h a e l he thought this was the reason the students to help us to help Gretzinger, Plymouth; Terrance Johnson, Emmaus, Pa.; Richard for the late season spurt In fo r themselves." Hagan, Drexel H ill, Pa.; Dennis Kentro, Berkley; Fran Larsen, which State won its last five Signs have been posted in the H ill, Lansing; Mark Hunt, Lathan, Gowen; Robert Pickens, Lans­ games to finish the season with a 14-10 mark. COUPON EXCHANGE & CASH SALE locker rooms notifying students N.Y.; Darryle Kifer, Warren; ing; Jeffery Richardson, Johns­ of th e new programs and an- Joseph Kolbe, Highland Park; Van town, Pa.; Pete Sferrazza, Mel­ Peterson also said he felt the fo r nouncements w ill be made to phy- Low e, B irm in g h a m ; James ville; John Wilson, Manhattan men on the team played a little "RHINOCEROS" harder knowing that the student sical education classes. MacMillan, D e t r o it ; Ja m e s Beach, Calif. body was behind them. "We want the students to pro- McCormick, H ig h la n d P a rk ; tect themselves by preventing Robert Sherwood, Grosse Pointe thefts. We don't want to become Park; Charles Strong, Lansing; ENTER SPRING LEAGUES NOW Fairchild Box O ffice Hours 12;30-5:00 P.M. a police department and we are Neil Watts, Monroe; William Rea, T H E A IR -C O N D IT IO N E D Individual Admission $2.00 not going to ," Beeman stated, manager, Jackson. Special Box Office Hours: April 14-17, Open 12:30-9:00 P.M. "W ith student cooperation I hope F re s h m a n : A la n B o k o r, we can put the thieves out of Ecorse; Charles Burnham, But- HOLIDAY LANES business." ler, Pa.; Gary Dilley, Hunting­ 40 B r u n s w ic k L a n e s »S nack B a r 7:35, 9:40 P.M.-Sat. 4 1:45, 3:45, 5:40, 7:40, B illia r d T a b le s » C o c k t a i l L o u n g e 9:45 P.M. Mixed or 3 man teams $1.00 prize fee — Finish in June O P E N E V E R Y D A Y A T 9A .M . "Frandor is Just South Of Us“ M IO H A E L C R A IG IV 7 - 3 7 3 1 M A R Y P E A C + 4 ■B R E N p A D E B A N Z l E J A M E S R O B E R T S O N J U S T IC E lansingkjS — D riv e - In T h e a t r e * ^ "CARRY O N PETTIFOGGER With M 7 r TTs a t . - s u n .-(371ï ït s 7 M A PAIR OF BRIEFS” ■ NEXT! SPENCER TRACY "IN H E R IT The WIND” HIT NO (1) SHOWN AT 7:20 a d iffe r e n t s t o r y / o f b a t t le - M IC H IG A N POLICY FOR THIS ENGAGEMENT MONDAY Thru THURSDAY rE 3 E - 4*1-7311 IE A 3 E l-::I Shows at 2:00-5:00- 8:05 PM * 4423905 •••« FRIDAY 8i SATURDAY m en canbegiven NOW Shows at 12:00-3:00-6:05-9:05 SUNDAY Shows at— 1:40-4:40-::05 PM 3RD WEEK PRICES: ADULTS EVE & SUN $1.25 Weekday Mats $1.00 Children 50t Re/e*sed th r u U N ITED ARTISTS IT S H E R E ! T H E M IG H T IE S T w a rh tm t sta rrin g A D V E N T U R E E V E R F IL M E D ! JOHN SAXON ROBERT REDFORD N O M IN A T E D FOR I HIT NO (2) SHOWN ONCE AT 8:50 | 8 ACADEMY AWARDSIN C L U D IN G il BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR! BOWTSE WEST WHS LOST. PRANK DEAN IB É W W lm 3 METRO’GOLDWT’N-MAYER ^ - .M / ïndCINERAMA pre se n t 8 IN 8T M M I R T I N * * A N IT A E M IR O ANDRESS URSU LA jS fc M HOW 9 J FO R T E S A S % TECHNICOLOR WARNER * THE HARLES BRONSON VICTOR B U O N O THE THREE STOOGES pfcTu« _ I HIT NO (3) LA TE SHOW «AT 11:16 | •WEST THE FIRSTJAMES BONO FILM ADVENTURE!' The master of rM undercover operations! who* \ Ik# Dr No IA N F L E M IN G S WON M E m o co Lo n « 24 GREAT STARS***Starring- SEAN CONNERY CARROLL BAKER-LEE J. COBB-HENRY FONDA CAROLYN JONES-KARL MALDEN - GREGORY PECK ursula ANDRESS -GEORGE PEPPARD-ROBÈRT PRESTON• DEBBIE J O S E P H WISEMAN REYNOLDS« JAMES STEWART- ELI WALLACE, *y¡¿ JOHN WAYNE-RICHARD WIDMARK. ja ck LOftD .... Narrated by SPENCER TRACY_______________ BERNARD LEE TECHNICOLOR :P C r lN IC O t.O R Slit Next! "SEVEN DAYS IN MAY” Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan F r id a y . April 3. 1964 V NixonSays War Must 4 2 W in S c ie n c e F e llo w sh ip s Some 4/to2 kMiS U students n 1 have 1 »_ I . . . . . . . Muelder. Graduate fellowships college from w.hich . . . they apply. M. Hafterson, James H. Hand, Faumgardner, tiruce C. Bt 'Key - Succeed been selected by the National Science Foundation to receive differ from cooperative fellow­ ships in that students apply di­ Of the 10 MSUscholars winning Joe A. Miller, Melvin D. Olman, Harold W. Davies, Jr., M riarr NSF graduate fellowships, five Aldred L. Stevens, and Harry J. Forbes, Joseph FC. Fr sc!'- SAIGON, Viet NamT—Richard fellowship; in each of three NSF rectly to NSF and the recipi­ will attend here. M. Nixon declared on a visit to programs. ents may attend any school they First year fellows will receive J. G Trodahl. raduate fellowship winners rtnevich, Jr., Donald G. Jar rnann, Richard G. Haire, the Communist-infested Mekong The three programs are co­ wish. $2,400 for 12 months with an are: Donald E. Anderson, Mar­ H delta Thursday that South Viet operative, graduate, and sum­ additional $500 yearly allotment jorie E. Anderson, Robert E. anO d Richard M. Kocan. thers include David Nam’s U.S.-backedwar on Com­ mer, explains Allan Tucker, as­ Cooperative fellowships are for each dependent. Intermediate Greene, Morris G. Muck, Peter Krom sistant to Vice President awarded to students to attend the fellows receive $2,600 and ter­ R. Killenn, Michael E. Mayszew- Joseph m, James B. Lemt munist guerrillas is a venture "designed to succeed—it must minal fellows, with only oneyear ski, Charles E. Newman, Michael Melnyk, RM . Levine, Andrew succeed.’’ to go, receive $2,800. These two Schulz, John W. Wingate, and becca A, Marvin R, Moore, ooreheadi Thoma "All this light talk about neu­ P h o t o g r a p h e r T o N a r r a t e F ilm categories each have dependent Franklyn \V. York. Perfitt, Lawi I tralization andpulling out of Viet allowances of $500per dependent. Summer fellowship winners Joh n D . S 11. Nam ignores the human factor— O n A la s k a B e f o r e Q u a k e Summer fellowships are are: Marvel J. Allard, Carl A. Zemach. all the people I met Thursday awarded those students working want tobefree,’’Nixontoldnews­ A travel film-lecture on Alaska before the earth quake is toward their doctorates. They men. the featured program on the World Travel Series Saturday. enable the student to continue U.S. helicopters and figher- Travel photographer Don Cooper will narrate his color motion his educationinthesummer with­ bombers and hundreds of Viet­ namese troops were assaulting guerrilla emplacements along a picture ‘‘Lumberjack in Alaska" at S p.m. in the Auditorium. The film is a pictorial diary of anAlaskan logger andhis com­ panion on their travels from the great virgin timber stands of the out him having to quit to earn enough to finish his education. This progarmpays $85per week C R E S T commercial canal less than 20 North American continent to the back country villages and cities for 10 to 12 weeks. V i t i i i « a t zwärrnm 3-Hits-3 miles away when the former U.S. of Anchorage, Fairbanks, Juneau, Sitka and Yakutat. MSU students receiving co­ KA4T LANS INA 0« U-S.I« vice president paid an unsche­ AN EARLY BIRD—Nancy Wendlandt, Grand Rapids, freshman, Highlight of the program is afilmed trip in which the travelers operative fellowships are duled call on Phu My, a delta is shown at the library checking out her assigned reading struggle to keep their 14-foot skiff from being crushed by the ice William K. Barnett, Trudie S. THE village of about 5,000. fromHubbard Glacier. Barreras, Hugh M. Culbertson, One helicopter was shot down, resolutions books. As the quarter begins, this may be one way to turn the Tickets for the film-lecture will be available at the Auditorium William F, Cutlip, Roger L, Dill— without injury to the crew, dur­ into actualities. Photo by Ken Roberts box office. ing, Dennis C, Gilliland, John ing the rain of bombs, napalm and rockets that cleared airlift landing zones. Of the elusive From Co-Op Service enemy, one guerrilla was known to have been killed. M SUFOREIGNFILMSEM ES Nixon talked first with self- defense corpsmen and their families near Tan An, 30 miles 'Insect Forecasts’ Aid Farms T h e E v i l T h a t M e n D o , L iv e s A f t e r T h e m A n Ironic Sa tiric C a v a lc a d e southwest of Saigon. The corps­ Checking the weather for plan­ w hich has just been in effect for personnel, amateur entomol­ over a year. ogists an d 4H club m em bers. men, a sort of home guard, bear ning farm activity has been in Cooperative extension service Dowdy gets the data from var­ o f 5 0 Y e a rs o f Terror the brunt of Red attacks at set­ vogue for centuries. ologist Alfred Dowdy has ious bug watchers around the tlements having no regular gar- Bug checking , however, is entom ri son. a new indicator of farm ing ne e ds be en sending weekly "insect state and compiles it inasimilar Hren’t life CAM PUS NOW! 650 to 5:30 forecasts’’ to farmers on the way the state-federal crop re­ basis of reports throughout the porting service researchers state. combine data on weather con­ The forecast was initiated last ditions. year to help reduce theeconomic Last year, the first of thesea­ il^derful - I . S I S KURT HOFFM AN ~T H E A T R Í - Evening & Sunday 900 losses resulting from insect sonal reports, Dowdy sent the 332-0044— Feature Today damage to crops. Dowdy said weekly forecasts to commercial the report enables farmers to " ' FAIRCHILD THEATRE 1:40 • 5:15 - 8:45 watch for potential insect infest­ farmers, chemical firms, ex­ Saturday at 3:20 - 6:20 - 9:20 ations and take precautions to media outlets.members ,andmass minimize damage. tension staff "TONIGHT” HENRY SILVA / ELIZABETH MONTGOMERY Material for the weekly sum­ In addition to the mailed re­ mary is provided by other MSU ports, a special teletype report 7& 9 p.m. WINNER OF 4 ACADEMY entortfblogists, county agri­ was sent to 30 mass media out­ cultural agents, stateagriculture lets over the U.S. Weather Bur­ Admission: 500 "Johnny Cool’ Shown Twice 7:32 & 1.45 A W A R D N O M IN A T I O N S department field men, U.S.D.A. eau's closed-circuit network. in cluding 2nd Shocker- . “ B e s t P i c t u r e of the Y e a r ” N o w ....m e e t t h e m o s t T O N IG H T H IT S II IliA KAZANS J u n io r Y e a r Unilnf’i Li D R IV E EXCLUSIVE 2 e x tra o rd in a ry g en tlem an s p y in a ll fic t io n . . . . . . . . . CU \ /V \ _ - . ™ — — I -- - I N THIATM Adm. S H O W IN G ! 1.00 Children Under 12 Fra* JAMES BOND j/j- \y M iles S outhw est ol Lansing o n M -7 8 A g en t 007... 11 i s m e t e s t A m e r i c a n H im o f th e y e a n —NEW SWEEK—HQlllSALPCHTSATURDAYRfvitW- JuQi*HCRlS1MERAlDTRIBUNE N ew Y o rk An unusual one-year N O W ! • ExclusiveFirstShow ing! college program. j SHOWN AT 7:20 ALSO -•11:13 PM J Writefor U N IV ER SA L Not Shown Saturday Matinee until 3:20 brochureJY- CITYSTUDIOS Ä _4t IA N F L E M I N G ’S Dr.No CARTOON SHOW Sot. Matinee 1:00 to 3:00 35 minutes of Bugs Bunny Cartoons Junior Year Program Plus exciting adventure feature WashingtonSquare T HEFIR S TJA M ESB O ND Jon Hall in "FORBIDDEN ISLAN D " College FILM A DV EN TU R E! NewYorkUniversity Kiddie show admission not good NewYork3, N.Y. ...J u s t a s k a n y G ir l! HARRY SALTZMAN and Ai B)RT P BROCCOLI p > n r IAN I t t M 1N G SD r . N o _ . S E A N CONNERY for showing of "AMERICA AMERICA" mURSULAANDRESSJOSEPHW ISEM ANJACKLORD, , ,BERNARDLEEv,,-, „■ ■ > ... - ■ He knows ALL the answers. . .SHE LETS HIM THINK! JOHANNAHARW OODAndSIMU' WITHER I '.* ,',;:.' -i*. ■ \, V . i r. - poind b. MOM* NORMAN I t: s. ■ AddHill! «moccoli [0* W OOUCIlOHSITO TECHNICOLOR* ‘- ime- . ' ' E'- Starts Thursday Wm. Holden and Audry Hepburn in "D r. N o'’ Shown 2nd at 9:52 "PA R IS WHEN IT SIZZLES’ ’ —3rd Feature — T O D A Y and S A T U R D A Y ------ Shown Today At 1:00-3:08-5:18-7:25-9:35 SHOCK CORRIDOR OPENS THE DOOR TO G LA D M ER DON K N O T T S a s SIGHTS YOU’VE NEVER SEEN BEFORE! T H 4 8 2 -9 8 3 1 E A T R E i N f ô S S " “oN ► 4 8 5 - 6 4 8 5 "INCREDIBLE MR. LIMPET” SHOWN SATURDAY AT 3:0 j - 7:05 - LATE At 1:15-5:08 and 9:05 P.M. SUPER BARGAIN DAY ALL-DAY SHOWING OF TWO FEATURES R ock, H udson. P a u la P r e n t i s s ntfd m,H o w a r d H a w ks production ’ M a r t s F a v o r it e S p o r t ? * T E C H N IC O L O R « -MARIA PERSCHY • CHARLENE HOLT IV «** HENRY MANQNIj S.K'pltyt| JO HNFENTO NM URRAYmSIEVEM cNEIl•iwmw.•>*«hHO WARDHAW KS >UMVtiwiHliUSi |j!IT J A O J 2 )J F jR S ^R U N ^ C O .F E A T U R E A T ^2 û J M ir r o r , m ir r o r , o n th e w a ll, Victim of a Wild Hallucination. ..That The Strip Teaser Who His Sweetheart Was His Sister1 Would Stop At Nothing n o w w h o ’s | — — in The Name ' > th e tw fa ir e s t in % J S U f lf M V 0,L0ve> Æ* o f a ll? (So PETER BRECK CONSTANCE TOWERS GENE EVANS BEnE DAVIS » B R f f M I U S ^ K M IM U D E N ^ P IIE R IM H IH R D ■MAD RfNGeR JAMES BEST HARI RHODES 'mw sK M SAMUEL f u lle r f \ ALEONFR0MKESS-SAMFIRKSNW OOuCTtON an alusoartist, rcleasc y "Shock C orridor" Shown 3rd at 11:52 C o'.tiffri screenplaybyJIMMY SANGSTER • o«,d b, FREDDIE FRANCIS • w -db, ANTHONY HINDS Only 4 Miles East Of Campus PHILIPCAREY JEANHAGEN-WithGEORGEMACREADY ESTELLEWINW00D' ScreenplaybyALBERTBEICHandOSCARMILLARD ---------------------------AHammer FilmProduction"A Universal Release-------------------- — MusicANDREPREVINProducedbyWILLIAMHW RIGHTDirectedbyPAULHENREIDPresentedbyWARNER BROS." 10 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, April 3. 1964» Coed Dorm Rules Aren't So Bad By NECIA BROWN not more so, than most schools mends AWS for th e ir decision. MSUhoursarepar for thecourse, and in some cases liberal. Of and must adhere to all the same rules and regulations. "There is nothing magical about the chronological age of surveyed, concerning hours, He feels that freshmen are often 21,” Don Adams, director of State News Staff Writer freshman restrictions, off-cam­ a s mature and cap ab le a s upper­ 3 schools, 12 reported earlier Of the 20 schools which re­ In respect to coed regulations, pus housing age and supervised classmen. HecitedWondersHall, curfew s, seven had the same plied to queries concerning min­ residence halls, said. Michigan State University is one housing alternatives. an all-freshmenandtransfer stu­ hours, and four had 1:30 or imum age for off-campus living, UCLA, Cornell, and Oregon of the most liberal universities MSU universal hours for all dent dorm, which hadthe highest 2a.m. curfewsforweekends. Ten only UCLA, New Mexico State, Statewere the onlyschoolswhich women living in Universityhous­ grade point average of all dorms schools had freshmen restrict­ and Brigham Young Universities reported no on-campus room in the country. last term. In addition they are ions. had no set age. The Universit­ check. MSU in general does not Women maycomplainabout re­ ing are Monday-Thursday 11:30 Eight universities having ies of Missouri, IndianaandKan­ have roomcheck in the women's strictive hours, about compul­ p.m., Friday and Saturday 1a.m, handling their responsibilities as dormitory, although this mayde­ sory living in supervisedhousing and Sunday midnight. Until this leaders with capability and ma­ special privileges for upper- sas permit any student above until 21, about the sign-in, sign- year freshmanhad10:30Monday- turity, he said. class w om en in the form of akey sophomore level to liveoff-cam­ pend upon the individual dorm. Thursday hours. Last springAWS “Maturity is not determined or buzzer system. Cornell has pus. The University of North At MSU women students liv­ out system, or about thenovisit­ by age,” Laurine Fitzgerald, as­ no hours. A lthough MSU has no Dakota permits seniors to live ing either in dormitories or su­ ing rules in residence roomsbe­ abandoned this restriction. upperclassm en privileges, there off-campus and the University of pervised off-campus housing tween men andwomen. Many faculty advisers feel that sistant dean of students, said. freshmen are mature enough to “Their 21st birthday does not seem s to be nodemand for them. Maryland permits anyone under must sign-in andout after 8p.m. Vet, a survey of 26 colleges give students an automatic en­ M iss Fitzgerald, Adams, Louis 21 to live off-campus if theyhave "in case of emergency,” as the and universities revealed that handle the responsibility of the F. H ekhuls, director of student special permission. Baylor Uni­ AWS handbook explains.” They ¡É p MSU has as broadminded and extended hours. Don Adams, dowment of maturity.” director of residencehalls.com- In comparisontoother schools, activities, a nd Miss Kreis said versity has a 22-year old off- must designate their destination student-centered ar. attitude^f they have heard no complaints campus age minimum, as does and the hour they plan to re­ about the hours and have seen Cornell. Penn State says 23, turn. Upon arrival back at the no petitions concerning upper­ and South Dakota State and the dorm, they must write in the classmen privileges. University of Arkansas require exact time and place their ini­ Four universities reported 25years of age. tials afterwards. women were allowed in men’s A few years ago at MSU the Miss Fitzgerald says that the rooms. Visiting hours at Iowa minimum agefor off-campusliv­ signing systemmay be regarded State are Saturday andSundayfor ing in unsupervised housing was as a "gesture of courtesy.” three hours with the doors left 25. Now it is 21. The minimum "When they are at home, most open. At UCLA women may visit might have been reduced further of the women students tell some­ men Sunday nights if the doors but there would have been ser­ one in the house where they are open. At ColumbiaUniversity ious legal implications. Although are goingandabout what timethey women may visit in men’srooms even a 21 year old must adhere will return.” every Saturday night 7 p.m.- to University policies concerning It usually isn’t compulsory but midnight. Cornell also permits drinking, society and the Uni­ may be regarded as an informal ADVISING OFF-CAMPUS STUDENTS - Donald V. Adams, visiting in men’s rooms. versity recognize that at 21 a sign-out system, she said. director of the di vision oF residence halls program, is shown Only during an open house in person is no longer legally con­ individual dormitories may MSU sidered a minor. Women students argue that if in his office. Adams helps to solve problems encountered men or women visit one another But many faculty members they must sign out just for by coeds living in off-campus housing. in their rooms and doors must agree that just because a stu­ "emergency” purposes, as the Photo By George Junne be left open. dent turns 21 does not mean AWShandbookexplains, whydon’t Women students must live in a that suddenly he is moremature, men students have to sign out? dormitory for one year if they more responsible or more capa­ Men’s dorms provide a volun­ are under 21. After that time, ble. tary sign out sheet. they have other choices. They may either remain in a dormi­ tory, move to a supervisedhouse CDC-3600.. New off-campus, live in Van Hoosen DORM LIV IN G -These girls, shown in the Mason Hall cafeteria, are subject to the Univer­ Hall supervised apartments, or join a sorority and live in the sorority house. P la c e m e n t Monday, April 6 B u re a u in languages, Arts, Business, Non-C red itCo urse sity's rules regarding coeds living on campus. Sign-in and sign-out, hours and some regula­ "There is good reason for the Science, Math (B,M) in East Di­ A series of sessions in the use of statistical programs fo tions must guide a part of their living routine. Photo by George Junne dormitory system,” Adamssaid. Consumer’s Power Company: vision, West Division, and North CDC 3600will be offered again by the Agriculture Experiment "Students learn to work together SUMMER EMPLOYMENT: All Division High School. M/F tion and the Computer Institute for Social Science Research i and live together. They learn majors, all colleges, sophomores Portage Public Schools: Ele­ operation with the Computer Laboratory. A i d F o r m s leadership and responsibility. or juniors for temporary market mentary Education, Art andVocal Interested persons are invited to attend. Noprior experier, surevey position. Must be resi­ Music (B), Junior High: English féta/7/DÍ! Many dormitory groups hold dents of Michigan areas under assumed. Emphasis will be onpreparingproblems for existing classes and professors often andSocial Studies, Math,Science tines, rather than on programming. A v a ila b le speak at special nightime lec­ survey. & Math, (B): Senior High: Eng­ The sessions have been divided into two series, onTuesday American scholars interested tures. If the student government Tuesday, April 7 lish, General Math andScience, Thursdays, the purpose being to allow more time between re in university lecturing or ad­ is mature and the student is French, Industrial Arts (B), sessions for participants to run test problems. vanced research in Australiaand an active participant, collegewill Bay Village City Boardof Edu­ Special Education: Mentally All sessions will be held in room402 of the Ccmputer Center at New Zeeland may apply for Ful- havemore of an impaceonhim.” cation: Elementary Education, Handicapped for Jr. High (B), 4:10 - 5p.m. Dates and topics are as follows: bright-Hays Act grants for the Lana Dart, assistant director English - French, General Sci­ Visiting Teachers. M/F academic year March-November of student activities, explains ence, Chemistry (B,M). M/F Pier School District #42: Ele­ Date Tuesday 1965. that a room off-campus must City National Bank of Detroit: mentary Education (B). Female Application forms may be ob­ be approved bytheUniversityand All majors, all colleges, Ac­ only. March 30 (no session) tained from Committee on Inter­ be supervised by an adult. The counting or economics courses Sandiego City School: All Ele­ April 6 Simple Correlation Analysis national Exchange of Persons, rooms may run from $8— $12 per helpful but not required, (B,M) mentary with emphasis on pri­ 13 Analysis of Variance Conference Board of Associated week depending whether kitchen for Management Tr ain ing for mary level, English, Math, Sci­ 20 Analysis of Variance, cont’d Research Councils, 2101 Consti­ privileges are offered. The girls General Banking andTrust Ser­ ence (B,M). M/F 27 Regression Analysis I tution Avenue, Washington, D.C., living in these rooms have the vices. School District of the City of May 4 Regression Analysis, cont’d 20418. same hours ason-campuswomen L.H. Field Company: All ma­ Ferndale: Elementary Education 11 Transformation of Data and related topics jors of the College of Business (B,M): Physics (PSSC) Program, .pertaining to previous sessions (B)-for Retail Executive Train­ Jr. High Counselof (M), Phys. QanÀ ing program. M/F Flushing Community Schools: Elementary Education, English, General Science, Mathematics, Commercial, French., Vocal Music (B,M). M/F Ed., Industrial Arts, General Sci­ ence, (B,M); Senior High: Coun­ selor, Special Education(M) M/F School District of the City of Highland Park and Highland Thursday PunchedCards Factor Analysis' Frequency Distribution Analysis f e a t u r in g Park Junior College: Elemen­ Frequency Distribution Analysis Franklin City Schools: Ele­ tary Education (B,M); Secondary, Pattern Analytic Techniques mentary Education/Elementary English, Social Studies, MathSci- Pattern Analytic Techniques Vocal Music, Secondary (B,M). ence, Industrial Arts, Art, (no session) F R A T E R N I T Y M/F Instrumental Music, P.E., Farwell Area Schools: Ele­ French, Spanish (B,M); Special mentary Education, Elementary S O R O R I T Y *cL*‘ Vocal Music, Secondary. M/F Education: Corrective reading, mentally retarded (B,M);Col- THE BEST OF NINA SIMONE RECOGNITION PINS CRESTS Fraser Public Schools: Ele­ lege: Math, Physics, Chemistry, RINGS PADDLES LAVALIERS mentary Education M/F Lake Orion Community Psychology & Sociology (M,D). M/F ISON C 0LP1X RECORDS PARTY FAVORS Schools: Elementary, Junior High Tuscola Intermediate Board of t: Industrial Arts (B), Senior High Education: Special Education (B, O ffic ia l G r e e k Across From Government and Economics (B). M) M/F Home Econ. Bldg. M/E United Air Lines: All majors Je w e lry ED 2-6753 Niles Township Community (Must be single between 19 1/2 High Schools: Various openings and 26 yr.) Degree not neces­ sary. Women only. (Stewardess positions) GOODYEAR TIRE Young Women’sChristian As­ AT sociation: Sociology, Religion, Education, Psychology, (B,M,D); Recreation and Physical Edu­ NINA SIMONE AT NEWPORT NINA SIMONE AT TOWN HALL Exactly Like You cation (B, M,D), Social Work, Blues For Porgy Little" Liza Jane The Other Woman (M,D). Women You’d Be So Nice To Come Home To You Can Have Him Summertime Wayne National Life Insur­ Flo Me La Wild Is The Wind ance Company: All maiors of In The Evening By The Moonlight Fine and Mellow college of Arts and Letters, and o th a rt. . . a n d o t h a rt ■■• Business Communieation Aets, Social Science(B) for salestrain­ ing and assignments. Eight Smash LP’s inStock Ypsilanti PublicSchools: Early J a n t z e n COUPON 00 OFF and Later ElementaryEducation, M/F Junior High andSeniorHigh School teaching positions. M/F Fullerton Junior College: Bus­ i.'"“' $277 I g a mono p ro p o rtio n e d Stride \ iness, Education, Fine Arts, jx* * * \ regular price Home Ec., Humanities, Life sci­ > t »* t shown below ence, Nursing, Physical Ed., rules th e u n d e r w o r ld >**•• * » » * \ #»M \ Physical Sci. Social Science, Ad­ Í\>M ministration Vice President for 323 E. Grand River Open Evenings Student Personnel. M/F 95 Blackwall 6.70 - 15 EVANS SCHOLARS' GOLF TOURNEY A new panty g i r d l e in t h re e ♦ tax 7:50 - 14 s e p a r a t e and d i s t i n c t body A p r i l 11 t h r u 19 s i z e s , c a r e f u l l y c r a f t e d to (whitewall as shown $2.00 extra) fit p e r f e c 1 1 y. . . . e v e r y ­ w h e r e . F a m o u s . L y c r a (r) GOODYEAR NYLON TUBELESS E n t r y fee $ 1 .5 0 Spandex p r o v i d e s s t r e t c h ‘ ‘A ll Weather 42” p er p la y e r and c o n t r o l. T h i s w o n d er blend o f n y lo n , a c e t a t e , No lim it road hazard & quality guarantee A 9 - h o le p r e - s e a s o n in d o o r m a tch s p o n s o r e d by L y c r a sp a n d e x and r a y o n E v a n s S c h o l a r s of M S U w i l l be p la y e d at G o l f - i s m a c h i n e - w a s h a b l e , too. O - T r o n with in d iv id u a l and te a m h a n d i c a p s , W hite, s h o r t , a v e r a g e o r l ^ t s jn o s t ^ F o r d s ^ C h e v y ^ a n ^ T ÿ ^ ^ ^ ^ p r iz e s , and t r o p h i e s . C a l l G o l f - O - T r o n o r E v a n s long in s i z e s S - M - L - X L . S c h o l a r s at 3 3 7 -9 7 0 3 f o r in f o r m a t io n . FOUNDATIONS - EAST LANSING GARDEN LEV EL LISKEY’ S A U T O SAFETY CENTER 332-6565 GOLF-O-TRON 3411 E. MICH. 124 So. Larch IV 4-7346 I Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, April 3, 1964 11 Salaries Up For H ttV e B e e n I n c u r a b le Sees Oswald As Psychopath Job Demand Raises Wages Starting salaries for 1964 MSU reach $600 as opposed to last Journalismgraduateswill earn ment, chemistry, physics, math­ Even if Lee Harvey Oswald would have been treated for possible psychopathic tendencies as a youngster, it is not cer­ tain that hecould have been helped, aconvention of the Council for Exceptional Children was told here Thursday. as an instructor at the Boys Vocational School in Lansing. Such schools, he said, are likely, to have more experience with potentially psychopathic adolescents because they must accept those who are legally committed and because of their graduates have climbed nearly year’s average of $570. Mechan­ approximately $20 more each ematics andeducation. "It is imperative,” said James M. Crowner, assistant role as a last resort in dealing with the socially maladjusted. $50 higher per month over 1963 ical engineering salaries have month. Salaries have risen from John D. Shingleton, director of professor of education, “ that society identify and seek ways He offered two steps in dealing with the young psychopath in areas of acute demand, the risen to $618 from $600. Electri­ $430to $450. the Placement Bureau, said the to help thousands of potential Lee Harvey Oswalds still free or adolescent who has psychopathic characteristics: Placement Bureau reports. cal engineering salaries are $629 Marketing graduates will earn divergence of salary increases to possibly hurt, contaminate or kill senselessly.” —"Avoid the formal labeling of any adolescent as apsy­ in comparison to last year's fig­ $524, a $21 increase over last in various fields can be attrib­ "This is a need generally minimized in the wake of Presi­ chopath.” This term, he said, is not easily defined, and it is Packaging graduates will earn ure of $613. year. dent John F. Kennedy’s assassination,” Crowner told the $624 per month. The 1963 aver­ uted to supply and demand. council during Thursday’s session of its 42nd annual meeting. likely "to carry a connotation of hopelessness which should age was $575. Liberal artsgraduates are also Accounting salaries haverisen "In some fields such as pack­ not be applied to a mature adult, much less to ateen-ager.” included in the general increase. from $524 to $543. aging, there just aren’t nearly Crowner, coordinator of special education at MSU, is presi­ —A teacher working with a potential young psychopath The salary picture is almost Average monthly starting .sal­ In some fields, salaries have enough graduates to fill all the dent of the Council for Children with Behavioral Disorders, should be careful "not to allow his kindness to be interpreted as bright for engineers. Starting aries are $493. Last year's fig­ only risen afew dollars per jobs which are available,” he a division of the C.E.C. as gullibility.” wages for civil engineers will ure was $482. month. These include manage- said. "Naturally, the salaries He described the adolescent psychopath as usually of high increase at asharp rate." or superior intelligence, "neither challenged nor stimulated "When working with adolescents who exhibit psychopathic This is true in all fields, by formal education,” extremely skillful in "maneuvering his traits, Crowner advised, "a teacher should maintain a struc­ N a t l B oards Shingleton said. He pointed out classmates and teachers" and "devilishly” capable ofworking tured, yet cordial, relationship, rarely if ever compromising that engineers used to be lower into the favor of others. on the rules.” ‘ "Oswald, the accused killer of President Kennedy, mayhave C h oose Fou r paid until the post-Sputnik sci­ entific boom increased the de­ been such ayoungster,” Crowner said. Also participating in the conference are John E. Jordan, associate professor of education, and two graduate students, mand. An MSUfaculty member since 1958, Crowner spent 11 years John Johnson and Paul Spata. Z o o lo g y Profs More than 1,400 interview Four members of the depart­ schedules have already been ment of zoology have been ap­ completed at the Placement Bur­ pointed to national boards and eau this year. review committees. Department Chairman Charles S, Thornton, is a new member of the Cell Biology Study Section of the National Institutes of Last term 536 employers in­ terviewed at the Bureau, a6per cent increase over the 505 who interviewed during winter term 1963. G ra d u a te Allan Tucker will address the 20th annual Midwest Conference S tu d y He T a lk will discussquestionsabout the critics of graduate education TOP VALUE Tours to Europe Health, on Graduate Study andResearch and their criticisms. T. Wayne Porter, professor A 15 per cent increase in job at a luncheon session Monday in The findings suggest, according and assistant director of Kellogg interviews was notedfromwinter Chicago. to Tucker, that criticismof grad­ Scenic Europe, 7 countries, 15 days Gull Lake Biological Station, is a term 1963. More than 6,880 stu­ Tucker, assistant dean of ad­ uate education more often re­ S189 member of the National Science dents interviewed last term. vanced graduate studies and flects the personalities, temper­ The Glorious European, 9 countries, 28 days $372 Seven Countries, 10 days S120 Foundation Advisory Panel assistant to the vice-president aments, backgrounds and aca­ Romantic Ireland, 10 days $126 John R. Shaver, professor, isa for research development, will demic disciplines of the critics Swi s s Highlights, 12 days $141 member of a National Academy report findings on a study of rather than their dissatisfaction Mountains, Lakes, and C ities, 14 days with the system of graduate ad­ $165 of Science panel which reviews applications for predoctoral Luci Baines graduate students and faculty at MSU and other universities. ministration. Sunny Spain, 15 days $174 National Science Foundation Highlights of Italy, 15 days $216 fellowships. THE SEASON’ S THE REASON--Richard M iller, East Lansing Sends Scores The Yugoslavian, 15 days Scandinavia, 15 days $231 $237 Armon F. Yanders, associate graduate student, is shown taking advantage of the warmer professor and assistant dean of natural science, is amember of weather with his son, Ricky. The April breezes seem headed To M a rq u e tte Highlights of Britain, 15 days The Austrian Tyrol, 10 days $198 $120 NoDoz in the direction of more kite flying and less snow. a National Science Foundation Photo by Tony Ferrante MILWAUKEEJPl-MarquetteUn­ iversity’s admissions office said All tours are from London to London, are fully escorted, in­ Wednesday it had received the clude complete sightseeing program, selected hotels and 3' college entrance examination meals daily. Transatlantic transportation not included. (New scores for Luci Baines Johnson, 3 week fare Detroit-London, round trip jet is $347.40). Q u a k e D i s r u p t s L a n d M a s s 1 16, daughter of President and WASHINGTON¡/PI—TheCentral of Commercial Fisheries at Jun­ dead clams. Damage was des­ Mrs. Johnson. Norbert J. Tlachac, director of J m Thesetours sell out fast Call NOW Alaska land massappearstohave eau. cribed as"catastrophic” tothose admissions, said receipt of the S A F E A S C O F F & e i been thrust upward from 6to 10 His report coincidedwithothers beaches. score did not constitute an ap­ feet by last Friday’s earthquake, from Alaska indicating a major plication for admission or an in­ T H E S Á F E W A Y t o s t a y a l e r t the Interior Department was in­ King and Dungeness crab and formed Thursday. permanent land shift. Based on shrimp fleets and plants appear quiry about informationabout ad­ The report did not specify the scope of the central land mass to which it referred, but said that the result was probable ex­ tide measurements , land at Valdez apparently was 14 feet higher than before, while Kodiak island appears to have sunkeight feet. badly damaged, andwill beforced to operate at reduced levels, he reported. Total repair and replacement mission. Miss Johnson is ajunior at Na­ w it h o u t h a r m f u l s tim u la n ts tional Cathedral School for Girls N o D o z keeps you m entally N ext tim e m onotony makes in Washington. The White House alert with the sam e safe re­ you feel drowsy while driving, said Wednesday that it had noin­ fresher found in coffee and working or studying, do as Lv m Wm h p tensive damage to salmon, clams and waterfowl in Alaska. The Rietze reported that razor for the fishing industry’s docks, boats, gear and plants is esti­ formation on whether Miss te a . Y e t N o D o z is fa s te r , millions do . . . perk up with Johnson wanted to attend Mar­ handier, more reliable. A bso­ safe, effective N o D o z tablets. TRAVEL CENTER IN I report wasmadebyHarryRietze, clambeaches near Cordovawere mated by Rietze to cost $24 quette. 209 E. MICHIGAN AVE. PHONE 482-5591 regional director of the Bureau high and dry, and littered with million. lu t e ly n o t h a b it- fo r m in g . Another tine product of Grove la b o ra to rie s Fraternity Open Rush 7 - 1 0 p.m. Sunday, Apr. 5 Monday, Apr. 6 Tuesday, Apr. 7 A lp h a G a m m a R ho S ig m a C hi A lp h a Phi A lp h a 308 Abbott Rd. 332- 6310 729 E. Grand River 337-9020 1604 E. Grand River 337-9472 A lp h a S ig m a Phi S ig m a A lp h a M u A lp h a Tau O m e g a 420 Evergreen 337-0373 1344 E. Grand River 337-1714 k 451 Evergreen 332-0846 T h e ta D e lta Chi S ig m a A lp h a E p silo n K a p p a A lp h a Psi 501 M.A.C. 332-2563 131 Bogue 337-9091 146 Haslett 332-1874 K a p p a S ig m a F a rm H o u s e O m e g a Phi Psi 7l5Grove 332-5092 151 Bogue 332-8635 Union 332-5243 P hi K a p p a Psi D e lta U p s ilo n P hi S ig m a K a p p a 522 Abbott Rd. 332-5039 i 1504 E.Grand River 332-8676 207 Bogue 332-8696 T ria n g le D e lta Chi T h e ta Chi 242-N-Harrison 332-3563 10i Woodmere 332-0866 453Abbott Rd. 332-3581 Pi K a p p a Phi B e ta T h e ta Pi A lp h a E p silo n Pi 121 Whitehills 337-9734 255 Bogue 337-1498 Rm. 33 Union Bldg. 332-5253 Phi K a p p a T au Psi U p s ilo n S ig m a N u 125N. Hagadorn 332-3577 810 W. Grand River 332-2519 731 BÙrcham332-2501 Phi S ig m a D e lta Phi K a p p a S ig m a D e lta T au D e lta 1234 E. Grand River 332-0875 236 N. Harrison 337-1611 139 Bailey 337-1721 S ig m a Phi E psilon P hi G a m m a D e lta L a m b d a Chi A lp h a 526 Sunset Lane 332-6649 334 Michigan 332-5053 128 HaSlett 332-0841 Phi D e lta T h e ta Z e ta B e ta T au 626 Cowlev 332-3568 855 Grove 332-3565 W e d n e s d a y A p r il 8 th - A ll H o u se s Call Any House For Information O r Rides Save This Ad For Address Reference 12 Michigan State New s, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, April 3, 1964 HOME FOR TORTEES FOOND " I had r e s u l t s f r o m the ad t h r e e h o u r s a ft e r , It c a m e o u t .1* AQUARIUM SUITABLE for turtles. Preferably used, call 482-6712. i t A u to m o tiv e i t E m p lo y m e n t ★ F o r Rent i t F o r Rent ★ F o r Rent ★ Personal witha J. B.’SUSEDCARS BUSBOYS WANTED; 2 B.T. Call APARTMENTS HOUSES ROOMS Coming SUNDAY, APRIL26-7:30 100 Faculty lowcost Exclusively Chevrolets Lyle, 332-1309. 2 LARGE 3 man apartment above 2 BEDROOMhouse n e a r F r a n d o r . WANT GIRL to share nicely fur­ pm at the Lansing Civic Center, W ANT AD Ccondition. ‘55-’60 Chevrolet Hardtops and R onvertibles. All in excellent teed w OUTE SALES, dry cleaning Justice Court on Michigan Ave. Com pletely furnished. For stu­ nished room. Cooking. Call 332- JOAN BAEZ.—Tickets— Main ork. Married student. Guaran­ Parking, lots of closet space. dents. A vailable now. Neat, c le an , 6736. 3 Floor $4.00, $3.50, $2.75 and Present wage, commission, full­ $35 deposit each, as low as$7.50 re a s o n a b le. 489-2334, ED2-8191. APPROVED VACANCY for 3 $2.25 - Mezzanine- $4.00, $3.50, • AUTOMOTIVE •EMPLOYMENT 2801S. Cedar TU 2-1478 or TU 2-6721 time, 8-5:30. Savant Cleaners, per week, plus partial electric. _______________ IV 4-7441._____________ 5 IV 9-2389 after 5 pm. 4 E A S T LA N S IN G , tw o blocks from 4 men. Private bath and entrance. $2.75 and $2.25- Balcony - $2.25 Parking, extension phone, kit­ and $1.75 Papers • FOR RENT C COLLEGE GIRLtohelpwithchil­ 1 or 2 GIRLS over 21to share cam pus. Need 3 or 4 girls to chen. Drive a little, save alot. share completely furnished $5 per man. IV 2-5189. xxxx • FOR SALE dren in exch a n g e for m eals a nd luxurious apartm ent. N ear cam ­ STUDEBAKER 1960 Lark Con- private room. 6 blocks from pus. Call 332-2034, or 332-6246. house. 337-9842. 316 Elizabeth. NICELY FURNISHED“ rooms; or money order 3 M ail orders only- Make checks More than 100 faculty mem­ payable to and • LOST & FOUND vertible. Jet black finish. New Berkey. ED 7-9298. 3 3 33 men 21 or over; closein; reason­ mail to Morris Richman Con­ bers a t presented academic papers the 68th annual meeting of •PERSONAL white vinyl top, leather interior, CHILD CARE in my home days. WANTEDONE maleroommateto FURNISHED, NEW 2 bedroom. able; Also share apartment. ED certs, Lansing Civic Center, the Michigan AcademyofScience, • PEANUTS PERSONAL radio, heater, w hite wall tires. C lose to R ed C edar S chool. W ill share furnished luxury apart­ Fireplace, basement, park ing, 7-2345. 3 Lansing, M ichigan. E nclose self- Arts an d Letters March 25-28 • REAL ESTATE Stick shift. A sporty model and a give school children lunch also. ment. Pool, air conditioned. 332- (629 Misslin). Up to 4 adults. E. LANSING. NICEstudent rooms addressed stamped envelope. 39 on campus. real gas miser, $685. A1Edwards ED 7-2573. 6 8 7 6 . ____________ 5 $180 month. IV 5-4917. 5 for men over 21. Single and FOR TOP-NOTCH protection at The papers dealt with subjects •SERVICE Co. Lincoln Mercury Comet BABYSITTER, 5 day week! 3 W A N T: TH IR D room m ate for U N S U PE R V IS E D , 2 Coeds, 1 /2 doubles. Recreation room, kit­ rock-bottom rates, it’s State in 19 general categories, and •TRANSPORTATION 3 Dealer. 3125 E. Saginaw (North evenings until nine. 2schoolchil­ Brentwood Apartment. Call Tom double and single available. 3 chen, of Frandor). C2 dren, 482-8997. parking. IV 5-7673. 3 Farm Mutual, theworld’slargest ranged from “ Babylon’s Ring­ •WANTED C H E V RO LE T 1 957 BEL-AIR. 4 4 or Jack at 485-3916. blocks to campus. Call 332-1242. auto insurer. Call or see your tailed Roarer,” a study on the D E A D L IN E : W A ITR E S S : P R E FE R student TWO GRADUATE students need _______ 5 ★ F o r S a l e State Farm agent today. Ask for humor of H. L. Mencken, to door ‘‘V-8” . Excellent condition, 1 p.m. one class day be­ n o rust. B ogue’s S tandard Ser- wife. Can arrange hours. Call furnished apartment or house WANTED: 3 or more bedroom starting fall term. Call 353-0034 house in Okemos or East Lans­ BABY BEDSNEW, full size with dor. Ed Karmann IV 5-7267, In Fran­ "An interpretation of the dif­ fore publication. vice. Holt. . ', C A S SA N O V A . A sk for Jo hn or C2 ference spectrum arising from C a n c e l l a t i o n s *12 noon one M ike. E D 7 -1 6 6 8.______ 3 or 353-0043. ing, beginning Juneor July. Write wet-proof innerspring mattres­ the interaction of cations with 1963 V.W. Black sedan, radio, FURNISHED APARTMENT fori Doug Gilmore, 5721 Perryton, ses, $25.95. Canopy Crib com­ ★ R e a l E s t a t e __________ pyruvate kinase,” an aspect of c l a s s d a y b e fo re p u b l i c a t i o n seat belts and white walls. Like BABYSlTTER/care of 1 yr. old boys. Newkitchen, close tocam- ichita 20, Kansas. 3 plete. Special at $59.95. LOOK PHONE: new, $1495. IV 5-8287. 3 in my home. 3 days/wk. Refer­ pus, reasonable rent. ED2-5514 W M E N W A N T E D to share large B-4-U Buy Storage Furniture NEAR MSU, clean attractive 2 biochem m edical istry relating to the sciences. OWNER MUST sell remarkably ences. E D 7-2462, after 5 P .M . 3 farm house. Unapproved, unsup­ Sales. 4601N. U.S. 27. IV7-0173. bedroomhome, carpeting, fenced In addition, eight MSUfaculty * 355-8255 2 after 6:30. clean 19 5 8 O ldsm obile. Pow er C2 yard, washer/dryer. $9,500. ED members served as chairman of RATES: equipped. Must sacrifice. 489- FO or LK SINGERSplay bass, banjo guitar. C ontact W illiam H ester ervised. $30per month and util­ ROLLEIFLEX, EXCELLENT ities. Car necessary. IV 9-5161. condition, F.3.5, 500th. of a sec­ 2-6748. 5 the various section meetings. 1 D A Y ............S I.25 6411. 3 for audition. 3370936. 518Sun­ r i v e r s i d e e a s t ___________________ 5 They were Moreau S. Maxwell, 3 DAYS. . . .52.50 MERCERY 195$ 4-door. Big en- rise Court. 4 Luxury Apts, on the Red Cedar ond, best offer, ED2-3100. Other ★ S e r v i c e anthropology; John E. Cantlon, 5 DAYS $3.75 gir.e, straight stick. Good condi­ NEED MONEY? Work selected R O O M S photo equipment also. 3 tion. W ill trade. B ogu e’s Stan d­ From $55 per month EAST LANSING, 1 double and 1 ENGAGEMENT RING, Call TU WHY PAY MORE? For profes­ botany; lore; A . Clyde E. Henson, folk­ T. Cross, geology-min- (Based on 15 words per ad) ard Service. Holt. evenings of your 4 urdays during Spring term on choice an d S at­ single o n 1 st. floor of H ouse. U n ­ 2-6597 after 5 PM. sional dry cleaning, W EN D- 3 ROW’S. Pants, skirts, sweaters, erology; Hazard Adams, lang- SHORT TERM LEASES There w ill be a 25tf service TR - 4 1963. Private owner. Ex- pre-advertising program. Con­ »Spring »Summer »Fall supervised, kitchen. $10/week. WOMEN’S STANDARD size Golf 60£. Plain dresses, suits, coats, uage-literature; W.D. Collings, and bookkeeping charge if cellent condition. Wire wheels, tact Mr. Hoisington 882-6626. 3 337-7885.__________ 4 Clubs-Patty Berg Cup Defender- this ad is not paid within radio, ABARTH exhaust system. IS THERE a creative genius at ED 2-0255 AFTER 5:00 P.M. TWO LARGE double rooms. Pri­ Used 6 times. 355-3871. .. 3 w $1.19. 3006 Vine St., 1/2 block medical sciences; Harold T. one week. White with black interior. Call MSUwho spends histime inclass U n f u r n i s h e d A l s o A v a i l a b l e vate entrance. G oodcloset space. TEFLON frying pans, hotfse- est of Frandor. C2 Walsh, philosophy, andT. Wayne IV 5-7819. 6 thinking up real wild greeting WANTED-2 girls to share 4 gir' Parking. IV 4-6791. 3 wares and gifts. ACE HARD- T.V. RENTALS for students. Porter, zoology. President-elect of the 1,700 The State News does not 19C0 CHEVROLET) Bel Air, 4- card ideas? We pay TOP prices apartment. 551Albert, Apt. 9, or 2 ROOMS newly decorated and WHERE 8cGIFTS, 201 E. Grand E conom ical rates by the term and m em ber organization is Bennett permit racial or religious door six. Standardshift, excellent for ideas or art aimed at college call 332-0692. 2 furnished with kitchenandrecre­ River, across from Union. ED month. UNIVERSITY T.V. REN­ T. Sandefur of the departm ent discrimination in its ad­ condition. Low mileage, TU market. Write: College Hall SUMMER-FALL, womenover ation room. Neat, clean, reason- 2-3212. C TALS- 484-9263. C of G eology. Current president vertising columns. The 2-22910. 4 Cards, Hickory Dr. Larchmont, 21,100 yards to Berkey or Bogue able. 489-2334, ED 2-8191. 4 ENGLISH, 3-speed bicycles, ACCIDENT PROBLEM? Call is Sheridan W. Baker, Jr., de­ State News will not accept E N G LISH F O R D 1 938 ) G ood re- N .Y. 5 S t. entrance. Furnished, clean, SINGLE AND double rooms for $10.00 down, time payments Kalamazoo Street Body Shop. partment of English, University advertising from persons liable transportation, easy hand­ EXPERIENCED BAB YSIT- utilities, yard. $50 monthly. rent. Cooking and parking. Phone through Springterm. ACEHARD- Small dents to large wrecks. of Michigan. discriminating against re­ ling. 35 m i per gallon. 332-8796 TER desires full tim e babysitting 2-4-6 girl apartments. Loners East Lansing. 332-3792 or 337-9168, 425 Ann, WHERE & GIFTS, 201 E. Grand American and foreign cars. More than 1,000 faculty mem-' ligion, race, color or after 5:30. 3 in my University Village Home. who would share if right girls 3 River, across from Union. ED Guaranteed work. 489-7507. 1411 bers from Michigan colleges and national origin. '56 O LDS , 2-door hard-top. Full For further informationcall 355- could be located. Call anyway, chen and parking facilities. 2 R O O M S -S IN G LE S , doubles. Kit- -3212._______________ C East Kalamazoo. C universities and other interested power, goodtransportation. $225. 5 BIC YC LE SA LE : Friday, April S TU DE N T TV 6 Across from Berkey. 507 E. 3, 1964, 1:30 P.M. at Salvage 19" portable, $9 per month. 21” persons attended for the three-R EN TA LS. New 3 M 835 after 5:30. 5 ED 2-2276. A TU R E W O M AN to stay with 2 2 M E N to share 4m an apartm ent. day event. ★ A u to m o tive i960 RAMBLER reclining seats, school age children in Spartan One block fromCampus. Utilities Grand River. Information after Yard, Farm Lane, MichiganState table models, $8per month, 17" OLDSMOBILE 1962 cutlass con­ b aby blue, standard transmis­ nights of April 7, '8, 9 & paid. Parking. $35 mo. 337-0767. 5:00 p .m . _ University. Campus. Various table models, $7 per month. All vertible. Radio, heater, hydro- In sion! 4 door, 6 cylinder, radio. Village 10. Call 355-1107.________ 3 6 LA R G E R O O M w ith show er, pri­ makes and conditions. All items sets guaranteed, no service or excellent condition. Must sell matic with Consul. Low mileage, to best offer. Doug Sanders OR MARRIED COUPLE to manage NEED 4th. roommate for luxury tleman, IV 9-4355. vate entrance; parking. On e gen­ may be seen at Salvage Yard, delivery charges. Call Nejac TV one owner. 485-9340. 4 6-1485. new apartment buildings close to apartm ent, $45 . Walking dis­ 3 April 2, from 8:30 A.M. to 4:40 Rentals, IV 2-0624. C WANTED:. ‘60, *61V.W.Goodcon- CORVETTE STINGRAY1963con- campus. Clean, responsible. Ap­ tance. 106Avondale Apartments. blocks to campus. Maid service. 1 P.M.ndTerm 4 A P PR O VE D W ITH C O OK IN G , 3 P .M . a April 3, 8:30 A.M. to THE KNIGHTS OF HARMONY s: Cash. 2 For the finest in dance music Hostels, Inc. dition. 332-2778. 2 vertible, black with red interior. ply Mr. Tom Rand, MSU Place­ 1130 Beech St. 3 $10/week. Call 332-3534 or 332- NC-98, 9 tube COMMUNICA- Phone 332-2575 SIMCA MONTEREY 1962. Blue 300 hp. Call TU 2-4839. 4 ment Bureau. 3 FEMALE 21, to share four girl 5231. 3 Corporation car. 13,000 miles, CASSA NOVA: DELIVERY Boys; apartment. Close campus. Nicely ROOM and BOARD. $155 term. T IONS RECEIVER, heath kit PROMPT DELIVERIES, three VTVM, signal generator walkie types of diapers to choose from. Plans Trip excellent condition. For sale by ‘56 OLDS, 2-door hard-top. Full Car necessary. Call ED 7-1668, furnished. $45 month. Call 332- Ulrey owner. 332-8767. 5 power, goodtransportation. $225. ask for John or Mike. Wage plus 3124. 3 Co-op. Approved, unsuper­ talkie, Hallicrafters 10". Speak­ Bulk wash for cleaner, whiter *57 Olds, 2dr. ht, runs well. No 332-8850._____________ 4 mileage.______________ 3 OKEMOS, FORtwomen. Utilities vised. Call 337-9901. 3 er. Reasonable. 137 Bogue. 332- diapers, fluff dried and folded. The American Youth Hostels rust. Power, radio. $250. Phone N IC E S IN G LE room . Across from 4511. 6 Use yours or rent ours. Contain­ will sponsor agroup trip toSouth 355-4862 after 6. 3 i t E m p lo y m e n t ★ F o r Rent paid. $ 75.00 m onth. A sk at O ke- campus at 908 S. Harrison. Un­ S C O O TE R -C H E A P . Looks ba d; ers furnished. No deposit. 25 America this summer. The fly­ 1955 BUICK, One owner, rebuilt, ' BUSLOTSNEEDED. Short hours, GARAGE, ROOM for one small ___________ m os Hardw are. Ph on e E D 2-1315. supervised. Call 35 5-8014. 3 runs like a w atch. E quipped. $1 50 years experience. By-Lo Diaper ing 40-day trip will tour eight 3 EAST SIDEclean, pleasant rooms or best offer. 355-5812 evenings. Service, 1010 E. Michigan. IV countries and will leave Miami | automatic transmission. $150., 5days a week. Call ED2-5065, and one large car. Ten minutes NEAR CAMPUS, luxury apart­ Good transportation, starts well. D from cam pus. IV 9-2593. 5 ment for 2, 3, or 4 men. All new for male. Cooking, parking, rea­ ____________________5 2 - 0 4 2 1 . _________ C Airport C onJuly 2. ountries visited will include Call Laird, 332-6992. elta S ig m a Phi. 3 EARNINGS ARE unlimited as an 3 sonable rent. Call IV 5-8557. 3 B E D ; B O X spring w ith mattress, T.V., RADIO, PHONO REPAIR A P A R TM E N T S Danish modern furniture, air M E N , AP P R O V E D , supervised fram e. Very g o od condition, $3 0. Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Bo­ OLDSMOBILE 1963, F-85 Cut- Avon representative. Turn your conditioning, wall-to-wall car­ Don’t Search—Call Church livia, Chile, Argentina, Uruguay lass, hydromatic, power brakes free time into$$. Call Mrs. Alona UNSUPERVISEDFURNISHED. peting, parking provided. ED room close to campus. New, N___________________ ewmodern desk, $10. 337-9541. IV 2-5608 and Brazil. All trips are limited and steering, radio, 2-tone, ex­ Huckins, FE 9-8483, evenings. Cooking, parking. Near Union. 2-0255. 3 clean, private entrance and bath. 8- transistor radios- Special buy3 to groups of nine under the guid­ cellent condition. $2,195. 627- Call 355-3021 or 332-0716. 5 Parking. ED 7-2573. 3 on areal good1963model permits Prompt Service-New &UsedSets ance of atrained leader. 5038.________________ 4 C2 APA R TM EN T N EA R E ast Lans- GRADUATE STUDENTS. Fur- ing, Sleeps 5'. Everything fur­ SUPERVISED, APPROVED, sale at $12.88. Limited quantity. CHURCHT.V. SERVICE D etailed information is avail­ SPARTANMOTORS nished Just completed. The Mar- nished, all female or male grad­ double room. Cooking andpark­ ACE HARDWHERE 8c GIFTS, 8080 W. Willow, Lansing able from the American Youth FORD 1956 T Bird, white body, PART TIME max. 225 Division. Close in. uate students. 882-3967 after 5. ing. 1/2 block from Berkey. $9 across from Union Building. ED Quiet. Apply now. 482-5589. 3 __________________ 3 per man. 332-2495. 5 2-3212. C Hostels Inc., 14West 8Ave., New black hard top, 3 speed. Very T W O B LO C K S from cam pu-s, fur­ S P RIN G “TER M single a nd l/2 C2 DIAPER SERVICE, samediapers York. sharp. Aclassic $1,395. and 3 RO O M A PT. Utilities all fur- M EN ’S E N G LIS H racer 3-speed returned either yours or ours. nished, rent single or double, nished, m arried couple or m e n double roomfor men. Near cam­ control light. Never used, $35. With our service, youmayinclude xxxxxxx 549 Grove. ED7-0830after 6p.m. Students. 332-8082. Parking. 5 pus. Parking if desired. 332- 355-7013.______________ 6 two pounds of baby clothes that ★ S e r v i c e V.W. 1963. Radio, heater, 10,000 3 .WANTED FOR beautiful new 2- 0149. 3 BELLA SCOOTER, excellent do not fade. Diaper pail furnished. TYPING SERVICE actual miles. Just like nevj. Two FU LL TIME M ALE ST U D E N T share double to choose from $1,595. Brand N e w . . . . bedroom apartment, 2, 3, or 4 room plus study room. Phone, running condition. First $135 AMERICAN DIAPER SERVICE ANN BROWN typist and multi- xxxx.x girls to share. $55. Each, large private bath, kitchen privileges. takes it. 485-3916 after 5 pm. 914E. Gier Street lith offset printing (black 8t white FORD 1961. 6 cylinder, stick. A OA PBELNEI NIN GS A R E A V A IL­ THE STATE C A M P U S V I E W m odern kitchen, air conditioning, 3 3 2-8913. 6 _______________ 4 IV 2-0864. & color). IBM. General typing, good runner at a lowprice, $795. Luxury apartments close to campus. 332-0255. 3 APPROVEDROOMin newhome; 8 T.V.’S, $40 for all. Springer C term papers, thesis, disserta­ XXXXX NEWS C L A S S I F I E D A D ­ 3 FU R N ISH E D RO O M S and b ath. ceram ic show er; patio, close in. Spaniel pups, liver and white. THESIS PRINTED tions. ED 2-8834. C ALFA ROMEO 1958 Roadster. V ER TI S IN G D E P A R T ­ will be ready for Private entrance. Marriedcouple ED 2-1183. $ 25 each. 485-7775. 3 JO B R E S U M E S 1 00 copies, $4.00. 1• Clean inside and out. Runs like M E N T F O R C O ED S WHO SPRING T E R M preferred. Utilities paid. Park­ WOMEN - DOUBLE room, un-3 MOTORCYCLE: HARLEY Drafting SR apid Service Aldinger Direct upplies, XEROXCopies 533 North Clippert. IV 5-2213. M ail advertising. atop, $995. L O V E TO T A L K . A ing 1541 New York. 3 supervised, bath, parking. New DAVIDSON motorcycle. 74 cubic 3000 E. Michigan • 5 min. walk from library LARGE 2 bedroom, upper near furniture, abundant storage. inches. Excellent condition. $ 450. CAPITAL CITY BLUEPRINT ___________ C IV 7-3715 P E R F E C T CHANCE campus. Unfurnished with stove Phone 337-0813._________ 3 Call ED 7-2114. 3 221South Grand TYPING In my home. Shirley Call or stop in CORVAlR 1962 Coupe; 25.0T30 F O R Y O U T O M A K E E X ­ and refrigerator. $85 plus eco­ MALE STUDENT to shar eap- LOVABLE DOG, Labrador Cock- Lansing, 482-5431 or 482-5038 Decker, Forest Ave. Lansing. Miles. Original owner, excellent T R A S P E N D IN G MON­ 324 Mich. Ave nomical utilities. No students. proved double room, $75 term, er, 7 months, gentle with chil­ 2 Phone IV 2-7208. C shape, Floor shift. Must sell. EY. HOURSARRANGED 332-6246 ED 2-8247. 5 527 Elizabeth St. ED2-4461. 3 dren, cheap to right party. ED SMALL TRUCK available for Call 355-5952. 5 TO F I T Y O U R S C H ED ­ GIRL WANTEDto shareapt. with MALE GRADUATE Student to 2-2210 noon or after 5 pm. 4 light moving jobs. Rates cheap ★ Wanted Convertible '55 Chevrolet. EYD EAL VILLA 3 others. $40 month. Furnished. share double room at 143Bogue. VICTOR 30x8 mobilehome. Inex­ as borscht. Call me anytime. BUNK BEDS, davenport, chest/ '56 engine, equipped with power- U L E . A P P L Y IN ROOM 1 or 2 bedroom apartm ents com ­ Call ED 2-0255. 2 Across from Abbot Dormitory. pensive living; ideal for couple IV 9-5161.___________ 3 drawers, desk, chair, tables, pack, floor shift, customized 345 S T U D E N T S E R ­ pletely and excellentlyfurnished. AVONDALE APARTMENTS at 332-4558._____________3 or two students. 337-0747. 3 TYPINGSERVICE lamps, stove, refrigerator, kit­ body, red, white top and trim, VICES B U IL DI NG A N Y Choice of interior colors, central Gunson and Beech, about 4blocks GIRLS; 2 double rooms. Private TAPE RECORDER, miniature TERM PAPERS, theses, exper­ chen appliances/ accessories. power brakes, wonderbar radio; AFTERNOON. rec-room, laundry facilities, from campus. For students. Two entrance, phone, parking; walk­ transitorized, two speeds; bat­ ienced. IBM electric. Marianne ED 2-1027. 3 tinted windows, new tires and barbecue areas and swimming bedroom luxury apartments at ing distance from Union. ED teries, AC Adaptor. Cost $100, Harrington, 372-3280. C2 TWO USEDunicycles. 337-9620. mufflers. $300. 337-9620. 4 pool. GEappliances. Call FIDEL­ $180 per month, or $45per stu­ 2-1317._______________ 3 sell for $60. 485-4133. 3 EDIE STARR, TYPIST, Theses, 3 1963 MG 1100white sports Sedan. TOP $$. Looking for several men ITY REALTY ED2-5041, George dent, per month, w ith 4 to an N IC E S IN G LE room . A cross from AQUARIUM SU ITABLE for Excellent gas mileage. Top who want tomakeexcellent money Eyde ED 2-0565._______ C2 apartment. GE stove, refrigera­ campus at 908 S. Harrison. Un­ KAY ELECTRIC Guitar- dual dissertations, term papers, gen­ turtles. Preferably used, call condition. Best offer takes. 332- on a part-time basis during TWO STUDENTS to share 4 man tor, air conditioner, Danishmod­ supervised. Call 355-8014or 337- pickrups. Call Mac anytimeafter eral typing. Experienced, IBM 482-6712. 5• 1770. 5 spring term. Call Mr. Kennedy apartment. Cooking, parking, ern furniture. No leaserequired. 0650. 3 7 pm. 337-2056. 6 Electric. OR 7-8232. C CHEVROLET CONVERTIBLE 337-0606. 882-6629 b etwe en 1 0-12 am or entrance. $8 per week. Offstreet pavedparking, storage $5 PLUS 2hours work per week. BICYCLE SALES, service and 1957. Must sell. $650. Phone 3 private ED 2-5776.____________ 3 facilities. Stop inat apartment 116 Girl to share bedroom, kitchen, rentals. East Lansing Cycle, 1215 332-1207 afternoons. 3 WANTED: P^RT-TIME girlcap- ACROSS FROM campus, com­ and look it over, or call 337- living rqpm. Utilities paid. ED East Grand River, call 332-8303. / ■ A f HM ( 5 able of typing; some bookkeep­ pletely furnished and air condi­ 2080 for an appointment. 5 2-5977." 3 _________________ ^C TRIUMPH 1961 Herald. 2-door. ing; payroll and running small tioned. Studio apartment for 1or 333 ALBERT ST. STUDENTS WER M A N Excellent runningcondition. Rea­ East Lansing office. Call 332- 2 persons. ED 2-0811 or ED HOUSES sonably priced. Call ED2-0879. 3 8873. 4 7-2474. 3 O ne male roommate to shareun­ OVER 21. Spring term $87.50; ★ L o s t & Fo u n d approved, unsupervisedhousefor summer term $50. 2-manrooms, Long-haired, female, tabby cat. P R OP ER TY MANAGEMENT CO. 3 in Lansing. Eight minutesfrom T.V. and cooking available. Pri­ 484-6589 between 8 and 5. campus. Call 482-2577 after 5 vate entrance. 337-2448, 372- Call 7 Ask for Nancy. Reward. 3 NOW LEASING APRIL SPECIALS p.m. 5 0330._______ Unsupe rvised, FURBISHED CABINS Yf L ake two doubles, two half-doubles, 1 ★ P e r s o n a l U napproved T H E FINEST IN STUDENT APARTMENTS FROM STORY OLDSMOBILE Lansl^bfpr 1 or 2 malestudents. single. Cooking, recreation IF YOUR mind wanders as you $7 weekly. Phone 332-8932. 3 room, parking, TV. 447 Grove. view the stars intheplanetarium, NEED MALE over 21 to share APPROVED 337-9842. 3 think about the kooks at Bubolz DELTA-HASLETT-EVERGREEN ARMS SINGLES and furnished house at 207 Milford. doubles. Clean, reasonable. One Insurance for auto, fire, and life DELTA APARTMENTS uj EVERGREEN ARMS ’58 C h e v y I m p a l a C o u p , 3 37-10 41 evenings. 2 3 32-867 1. C 2 235 DELTA (BEHIND PEOPLES ’ 58 M e r c u r y 2 d o o r, WORKING WIDOWwill share block from everything. 332MAC. CHURCH) r a d io , h e a t e r , a u to m a tic pow er s t e e r i n g , p o w e r home with responsible couple. E D 2-1017 after 5. 5 MSU College » tra n sm issio n , w h i t e ­ b r a k e s , ra d io , h e a te r, Graduate student or faculty. 1 SINGLEROOMfor malestudent. Linens furnished and laundered. R E P U B L I C A N C L U B C-* O K a u to m atic V - 8 , w h it e ­ Every convenience. 48 7-0846 aft­ \i > - w a l l s . S to r y s e l l s M e r - er 3 p.m. C lose to cam 3 __________________ 3 pus. C A11 33 2-1 6 8 2. 7 s jp *. L -JU c u r y s fo r L e s s ! $495 w a lls . Story s e lls I m ­ STUDENTS, HOUSE for 4. Fur- HALF D O U B LE S , double, clean, | SPECIAL M EETING j UJ < p a le s fo r L e s s ! $695 nished except utilities. Call 332- quiet. 2 blocks to Berkey. 532 o CD D U "ij/) 1154._________________3 Ann, after 6 pm. . < i FACULTY LADY to share home CLOSE TO shopping and college.3 Tuesday Night *\G' r with employed lady in Haslett. Half of attractive room for girl April 7 Automobile necessary. FE9- 21 and over. ED 7-1598. HASLETT APARTMENTS STORY OLDSMOBILE 8400 after 5. THIRD ROOMMATE for house. S 3 INGLE ROOMfor men. S miles from campus. Phone 332-4261 3 .... 7:30 135-145 HASLETT ST Over 21. Call 337-9620. 2 evenings and Sunday. 4 Subject S E E RESIDENT MANAGERS OR W h e r e T h e A p r il A c t io n I s THREE BEDROOM, males, com­ 2 BLOCKS from campus on Appliances STOP IN A T T H E D E L T A pletely redecorated. Walkingdis­ M.A.C. Nicelyfurnishedroomfor “ MIDWEST C O N V E N T I O N ” Furnished tance to campus. Call ED2-1027 male students. Cooking. Call 332- SHOPPER’S FAIR PARKING LOT after 5 pm, or weekends. 6 6736,________________ 2 IInion Building 235 D E L T A O P EN EVENINGS PHONE: 332-0838 > Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, April 3, 1964 13 D r iv e r E d u c a t io n A w a r d State Lauded For Safety Work Driver education was pin­ traffic accident problem be­ critical nation-wide traffic excellence State Superinten­ pointed Thursday as amajor cause there is no single an­ accident problem where it or­ dent of Public InstructionLynn route for reducing Michigan’s swer. But the fact remains iginates, with the driver him­ M. Bartlett said his depart­ climbing traffic death toll. whatever else we do to pro­ self, and at the same time it ment would askthelegislature James R. Berry, traffic con­ mote safety we’ll still have a- originates when he starts to for increased funds tooperate sultant for the Insurance In­ high accident rate until we drive. driver education next year. stitute for Highway Safety in have moredrivers whocanand "As to the accident pro­ Washington, D.C., said, in will operate vehicles lawfully blem the unvarnished truth is This is no time to rest present; g the state an award and safely. that most of them are not on our laurels. We must of ev filence for its driver “ That’s the kind of oper­ accidents at all—they are improve our efforts. JThe job education program, “ Michi- ators that driver education is caused occurrences. They so far indicates apotential for c.in has established itself sol­ designed to provide,” Berry cutting down accidents," Bar­ idly as one of the foremost said at acourt conference on happen because somebody tlett said. states in driver education. traffic safety called by Gov. does something wrong — "There is no intention here George Romney. through ignorance, imcompe- Gov. Romney agreed with to pretend that driver educa­ tance, recklessness or stu­ Bartlett, citing the fact that Berry' lauded Michigan be­ pidity, or maybe all four." Michigan’s traffic death toll tion is ‘the’ answer to the cause “you are attacking a is up 49.4 per cent at the In accepting Michigan's present time over last year. CAMPUS VISITORS—Thot s a lot of bull you see heading up the campus Thursday while walking to and from their annual fourth consecutive award for the auditorium steps. The two 1600 pound Brahma bulls, on veterinary check-up. campus as a part of the Block and Bridle Horse Show, toured DL , L n l * . G e r m a n F ilm T o O p e n S e r ie s rnoto by Bob Barit. Prize-winning German motion picture, "Aren't We Wonder­ Block—Bridle Show ful,’’ opens the spring term Foreign Film Series Friday. The satirical film, based on a novel by Hugo Hartung, will be shown at 7p.m. and 9p.m. in Fairchild Theatre. 12” Rehearsal Full Of Mishaps Director Kurt Hoffmann subjects German soceity of the last 50 years to a coldly ironical scrutiny as he holds up his cinematic mirror to the German people from the days of the Kaiser through PIZZA A girl was thrown, twoBrahma bulls visited the vet, two ducks dle slipped, throwing her off balance. The horsebuckedsend­ where veterinarians checked slipped on Ice and ranintoaditch the"Aren’t rise of Hitler and the post-World War II recovery period. We Wonderful” won the Berlin Film Festival Award were kicked by a horse, and the ing Judy to the livestock pavi­ themfor a skin disease. stopping at a 45 degree angle. In 1959 as the best German film of theyear. w ith p ep p eroni pony van went into a ditch, but lion floor. She was taken to The bulls belongtoLeonAdams, The ponies were unloaded but the weekend Block and Bridle Olin Memorial Health Center aprofessional Oklahomacowboy, were not hurt, accordingtodriver 96i showwill go on. where she is reported in good who rides them Roman style, of the hitch, CaptainJimWallace standing on their backs, one foot The six ponies are hitched to F o x s Q u a lity J e w e le rs S in c e 1917 condition with only bruises. on each bull. a five-eighths scale model fire Judy Mason, of Amherest.New The Adams also have a dog engine andcirclethepavilionwith Hampshire, was thrown fromher The two Brahma bulls, Geron- and duck actwherethedogrounds a fire bell and steam pouring horse Thursday afternoon when imo and Apache, were walked up four ducks and gets theminto from the equipment. the stirrups of her English sad­ down Farm Lane to Giltner Hall a burlap sack in less than 20 Other features of the showwill seconds. include Chuck Grant whowill give plus tax a dressage exhibition. GLOWING and delivery "Today we were putting them Approximately 60 students have perpetual beauty— through their paces when the entered into English andWestern V e ta v is it Open H o iis e ducks headed out of one of the style competition for the show. U N I Q U E “ contour gates enclosing thearena, thedog Tickets for Friday’s showare brilliance” design chasing them," Mrs. Adamssaid. $1. To B e H e ld S a tu rd a y The showbeginningat 7:30p.m.. One of the horses kicked the will also feature a horse pulling Live and close-circuit televi­ ample, in many cases the stu­ ducks. contest where the horse pull up sion surgery, exhibits on latest work done on tuberculosis, can­ cer and the study of life without germs will be features of Veta- dents preview surgery on televi­ sion before performing their own surgery on the animals. Some of the surgery performed Saturday Two of the ducks were re­ covered with no injuries. One had a broken bill, andanother a broken leg. to 3600poundweights. The Saturday matinee will be­ gin at 1 pjn. and will include a greased pig contest between EXTENDED TERMS AVAILABLE ^ÄiV“ up to visit open house Saturday. will besurgerypioneeredat MSU. sorority girls, andhorsejumping Vetavisit open house will be from 9 a.m. to 5p.m. at Giltner The program is intended to give prospective vet students Two new ducks were brought in for the act. The Victor ComptometerMach­ competition in the English class. Tickets are 50 cents. The Saturday night showIssold FOX’S 50* Hall. some idea of the actual veterin­ ine Six Pony Hitch company had The veterinary open house, out, according to Jan Harwood, Direct Diamond sponsored by vet students with ary curriculum. Dr. Willis W. no less trouble in coming to the Ann Arbor senior, and John cooperation of the faculty, is de­ Armistead and Dr. Charles F. show. In the Tennessee mount­ Battel, Cass Citysophomore, co- I MPORTERS signed to give thepublic abroad­ Reed, dean and assistant dean, ains the van carrying theponies chairmen of the show. er idea of veterinary medicine respectively, will be present to An exclusive ’ fountain* FRAND0R SHOPPING CENTER p izza by and the methods of educating answer questions about require­ s ty lin g . S ophisticated, veterinarians today. ments for entrance into the col­ AND 203 S. WASH. The students will attempt to approximate classroom condi­ lege. All interested persons are in­ G ra d S tu d e n t Show s charm ingly d iffe re n t. A c o m p l e m e n t t o t he RICARDO Phone tions for the visitors. For ex- vited to attend. R is in g T r a n s is to r Use loveliest hand. $ 2 7 5 » IV 2-1554 See K R A M E R ’S fo r David I. VanBlois, East Lan­ radio, purchased by some 70 L A R G E S T D IS C O U N T S sing graduate student, recently per cent of car buyers. In 1963 presented figures showing the all manufacturers offered com­ * IN T O W N ! expanding markets in Michigan pletely - transistorized radios, COMPLETE LINE for transistors, diodes, andother spending $8.2 million for the N EW & R E B U IL T A U T O P A R T S semiionductor devices to the In­ transistors. E x c itin g th in g s a re h a p p e n in g a t F o rd M o to r C o m p a n y ! MAX KRAMER Be good to your car, stitute of Electrical and Elec­ 7 ,u d L T « u X n' IT ’ S TIME TO ARRANGE FOR A tronics Engineers. In 1963the auto industry spent SPRINGCHECK-UP t h e b e s t v a lu e s fo r v o u r m o n e y !” more than $15million for semi­ P E G G E R S A fte r F ord's s p e c ta c u la r d e b u t in last ye a r’s Ford e n g in e e rs m et m any c h a lle n g e s In d e v e lo p ­ conductor devices. It will spend- slacks In d ia ria p o lis 500-m ile race, m any people w o n ­ ing th is engine. B u t th is is ju s t ty p ic a l of the about $20 million in 1965 and ch a lle n g e s being a cce p te d every day by o u r probably $65 million in 1970. dered w h a t we w o u ld com e up w ith next. W ell By our skilled stoff of A.M.D's Coauthors of the report are it's here! Ford M o to r C om pany e n g in e e rs have e m ployes . . . th a t's w h a t m akes Ford M o to r (A utoMo b iIeD octors ) Lawrence J. Giacoletto, pro­ developed a b ra n d -n e w V-8 e s p e cia lly fo r th is C om pany such an e x c itin g place to w ork. A n d fessor of electrical engineering, ye ar's co m p e titio n at Indy. A lth o u g h it's th e n o t only in e n g in e e rin g . E xciting o p p o rtu n itie s SEE THE HEAD SURGEON, MAX KRAMER andThomasA. Faulkner, Berrien TODAY Springs graduate student. sam e size as the 1963 version, th is ra c in g e n g in e e xist in m a n u fa c tu rin g , fin a n c e , sales, m a rke tin g , ~*Ur, A**’ The first significant use of is a m u c h “ liv e lie r " p e r fo r m e r in d u s tria l re lations, p u rc h a s in g , tra ffic , p ro d u c t semiconductors in automobiles, b e c a u s e o f fo u r o v e rh e a d g e a r- p la n n in g , sty lin g and re se a rch . A ll types VanBlois said, was the the car driven ca m sh a fts and o th e r re fin e ­ of ca re e r o p p o rtu n itie s fo r all types of GR A D S T U D E N T S m ents. O verall re su lts o f these re vo ­ g raduate s. If yo u 're looking fo r an AU C T *IC , Just Completed lu tio n a ry c h a n g e s: an increase o f at in te re s tin g c a re e r— look to Ford Furnished Apts. least 44 horses, d e liv e rin g 420 hp or M o to r C o m p a n y . A g r o w in g ‘ SERi ING GREATER LANSING FOR 4S YEARS" "The Marmax” m ore at 8,000 rpm . co m p a n y in a g ro w in g in d u stry. — Wholesale & Retail — 225 Division KRAM ER 800 E. Kalamazoo Phone IV 4-1335 PARTS Close-in Quiet Apply Now 482-5589 W ELC O M E BACK FROM N EJA C TV RENTALS ...b u ll rugged slims with the new A-l pockets (single patch on hip) and loops for belt or sans belt use! Tai­ lored to "peg” you as a sharp-smart dresser! In N E W 19” p o r t a b l e s 21” t a b le m o d e ls 17” t a b l e m o d e ls rugged wheat, faded blue o n ly $ 9 .0 0 p e r m onth o n ly $ 8 .0 0 p e r month o n ly $ 7 .0 0 p e r month and black denim $4.50, the new wheat s-tr-e-t-c-h den­ im $6.98. At your fa vo rite campus store: Free Delivery And Service CAU Œ) THERE’S A FUTURE FOR YOU WITH FORD MOTOR COMPANY TheAmerican Road, Dearborn, Michigan AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER Nejac TV Rentals IV 2-0624 P E G G E R 5 O-f) KOTZIN CO, LOSANGELES. CALIFORNIA 14 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Fr iday, April 3, 196*1. SALE p o p u la r chain 4 wr* mmm A *S je w e lry styles t a k e t i m e t o t id y u p ! take stock, then stock u p on these items " to put order in yo u r life . . . inexp ensively v**. C-ft 1.88 v 2.88 M a t in e e , p r i n c e s s and bib s t y l e s , m e s h and multi-strand fine sc* +: c h a i n s , in p o lis h e d o r textured combina­ t io n s . G o l d o r s i l v e r w. c o l o r e d , a d ju s t a b le o r cla sp sty le s. *pius f .e .t . w0 0 J EWELRY — EAST LANSING STREET LEV EL *4?» «4S|hr W W * 1 Viw * * VHMNMNW ■**+ «.•» > , "v. *k .» . ^,4 . 4„ «v * Ì . . p ro p o rtiio n e d skirts handy helpful Speco w ire b y C en tury closet organizers book table F u n to w e a r and fun to c a r e Order made easy. B l a c k w rought i r o n . Tw o f o r , D a c r o n (r)- p o l y e s t e r E v e r y t h i n g ha s a p lace r a c k s fo r b o o k s, fla t top and cotton s k i r t s fo r e v e r y and k e e p s it, with th e se . h o lds la m p , o r b o o ks. a c t i v i t y . P e t it e s i z e s 6 - 1 6 , S o lv e s t o r a g e p r o b l e m s m e d iu m 8 -1 8 and t a ll 1 2 - T r o u s e r h a n g e r s , se t. . 88c fo r a p e n n y -w id e p rice .- 2 0 , in h e a t h e r b r o w n , h e a ­ M u ltip le s k i r t h a n g e r. .88c 2^88 3 - T i e r T a b l e . 3- t h e r n a v y , b la c k o r b l a c k - M u ltip le b lo u se t r e e . . . 88c handy s h e l v e s . 26 1 / 2 ” o l i v e . L o o k f o r y o u r height Set of 4 s k i r t h a n g e r s . . 88c high, 2 0 ” l o n g , 1 1 ” on the t ic k e t . B e l t h o ld e r r i n g s . . .2 for 88c w ide. 2.88 A c tio n A - L i n e with t w o deep p le a t s in f ro n t, one in back. E x p e rtly t a i l o r e d with sid e z i p p e r , le a t h e r t r i m m e d s e l f b e lt. 8.98 S titc h e d P le a t e d S k i r t , an a ll - r o u n d s w i r l of w id e ly boxed p l e a t s , s titc h e d b e ­ low the hip to s t a y in p la c e . 8.98 S le n d e r S k i r t , s e a t lin e d with k ic k p le a t in b a c k fo r e a s y w a lk in g . Easy-care fa b ric s t a y s f r e s h , even goose neck lam p storage chest drying rack a f t e r m any w a s h in g s . 7.98 F l e x i b l e a rm ad­ Stu rd y wood and Fo ld s flat for ju s t s to j u s t - r i g h t K raftb o ard c o n ­ storage.Kiln- light. F o r o ffic e , s t r u c t io n , m a s o n ­ dryed lumber, SPORTSWEAR - EAST LANSING STREET LEVEL h o m e , students. ite tops. 35 x 15 x with s n a g l e s s B r a s s accents. 12” siz e . White wood dowels. 1.88 with gold p a tte rn . Id e a l fo r d o r m o r 6.99 tra ile r. 88c Knapp1s O w n W o n d e r V a lu e H o s ie ry $100 3 fo r 2 .8 5 Y o u get the s a v i n g s when you laundry bag pillow cover underbed chest ch o o se o u r W ond er V a lu e n y ­ H ea vy d r i l l m a ­ F i n e c o r d u r o y to 35 x 1 8 x 6 ” . lo n s , and you s a v e even m o r e t e r i a l with d r a w ­ c o v e r b e d p illo w s . Room y d u st-p ro o f by buying in t h r e e s . C h o o s e s t r in g c l o s i n g , D e co rato r c o lo rs. p r o t e c t io n . D u r a ­ f u ll- f a s h io n e d o r se a m le ss and m eta l g r o m - W a s h a b le . 1 . 4 9 3 / 5 4 b le , a ll-s te e l con­ p la in o r m i c r o m e s h , in p r o ­ m ets fo r lo n g e r s t r u c t i o n . L o c k . 499 p o rtio n e d s i z e s 8 1 / 2 to 1 1 . w ear. $1 S h a d e s to c o m p lim e n t y o u r new s p r in g f a s h io n s : r o s e t o n e , NOTIONS-SECOND L E V E L EAST LANSING rh u m b a o r taupetone. S e l e c t . . and s a v e , today. Shop by Phone - Dial 3 32 ^ 86 2 2 HOSIERY - EAST LANSING STREET LEVEL and Ask for the Telephone Shopper I