Inside Weather F orei gn A i d Struggle Seen, MICHIGAN Mostly su nny and mild with S' TAT K N IW S p. 3; Boom In Bloom A t T h e diminishing winds. F a i r but P l a t e , p. 4; M S U Salutes William Shakespeare, p. 9. STATE turning cooler this eveni ng. Temperatures 60*65. UNIVERSITY V o l . 55, Number 124 Wednesday, Apri l 15, 1964 E a s t L a n s i n g , Michigan P r ice 10< Je sse , H a rris W in A U SG P rim a iy H annah O ffe rs S o lu tio n s To P a rk in g W oe 5 ^ a ra te ^ e a d e r s Announces Car Lots A m e n d m e n t W ins A p p r o v a l For DormResidents Jam es Je s se , Buchanan Junior, and Bob H arris, Bryan, Ohio, junior, will face each other in Thursday’ s All-University Student By J A N E K N A U E R Government race for president. State N e w s Staff Writer Out of a total vote of 4,612 in Tuesday’s presidential primary, Je sse took a slim lead of 1,249 votes over H arris’ 1,203. Herbert President John A. Hannah answered questions Monday regard-- Wingo, Buchanan sophomore, ran third with 1,051 votes. Tom* Par­ ing the problem of parking facilities expected to result from tridge, Swartz Creek junior, ran next with 607 and Je rry Wallace, the ban on campus driving between 6 a.m. and 6 p.m. on class Cedar Springs Junior, was last * * * days, effective next fall term. with 502. Hannah announced parking lots for dormitory residents in The AUSG sponsored amend­ an informal question and answer period ai South Case Hall. Residence hall lots were not announced earlier because final Heaviest ment to change part of the con­ stitution r e q u i r i n g proposed details had not been worked out. Residents of West C ircle dor­ mitories including Landon, Mayo, Turnout amendments to be published in the State News four times two weeks before an election carried Breslin Campbell, Williams, Yakeleyand Gilchrist will part their cars in the lot back of the University In Years 3,772 to 581 votes against. The change now calls for proposed The turnout for primary elec­ amendments tobepublished with­ Supports police quonsets, he said. Residents of the Case-W'ilson- Wonders complex will he allowed tions this year was heavier than out any specification of how often. usual, according to F l e c t i o n s Je sse said he thought it would Commissioner Gary Falkenstein, be a long row to hoe, but said to drive to the present parking Loan Bill lot provided for those units. Shaw Hall dwellers will have Sturgis sophomore. he definitely thought his plan He attributed the large vote to would work. He also commented more active campaigning and in­ that he did not endorse the Basic Secretary Jack Breslin came reserved space in the parking creased student interest. In Arm­ Action Party despite some rumor out Tuesday in support of a $1 mil­ ramp, and a similar plan is strong hall there were 116 votes to the contrary. lion scholarship and loan aid bill being considered for the re s i­ for one candidate alone. H arris said he was very happy now before the house of repre­ dents in Abbott-Mason, Phillips— mary election held T u e s d a y . T h e election reduced the n um­ The mobile units which ca r­ to be in the finals and urged Snyder dorms. V I E W F R O M T H E B A L L O T B O X - B e r y l Benschop", Roy al ried the ballot boxes to off-cam ­ everyone to take a close look at sentatives. Fee and Akers Halls will have O ak senior, costs a bal lot for her choice in the A U S G p ri - ber of final candidates for T h u r s d a y ’ s final pol li ng. pus d istricts proved successful the issues before deciding who The bill passed the Senate last week without much opposition. a parking lot near the entrance in Falkenstein’s estimation. In they will vote for in the finals. “ I think this will be a very good on Hagadorn Road. all they drew 162 votes. He added that the idea of a program ," Breslin said. " I t will Hannah defined the boundaries The counting of ballots seemed cooperative committee, wh i c h provide financial assistance to of the campus as Bogue St. and to he running especially smooth­ has been used by many candi­ the students who really need it ." Hagadorn Road on the east. Grand The scholarship aid program River Ave. on the north, H arri­ will be administered through the son Road on the west, and Mount G o l d w a t e r L e a d s In I llin o is ly. Counting didn’t start until dates, was his originally. nearly 7:30 Tuesday night, and early estim ates were that count­ Wingo announced that he would remain in the running as a write- From O u r Wire Services precincts In Illinois, Goldwater manding lead over State Trea­ ces f o r the GOP presidential Higher Education Assistance Au­ Hope Road on the south. surer William Scott. nomination. ing would be finished by 8:30 in candidate, His campaign man­ A 2,000 car parking lot on had 43,115 to 19,290 for Mrs. thority, h e a d e d by L y n n M. Sen. Barry Goldwater, with barring a recount. agers said that it was felt that the corner of Mount Hope and Smith. Ambassador Henry Cabot None of the Democratic races The Arizonan, in the early re­ Bartlett, superintendent of pub­ a better than two-to-one lead Voting in Butterfield Hall, how­ the difference between the can­ Farm Lane was authorized by Lodge had 295 w rite-in votes, for state office nomination was turns, was receiving about 65 lic instruction. The Authority al­ at 9:10 EST, is the apparent ever, was poor. Only 32 ballots didates was not enough that he Richard Nixon 127, Rockefeller. contested. per cent of the votes cast in the ready handles student loans. the Board of Trustees to handle were received from there. should be eliminated. winner of the Illinois GOP pres­ 4, Romney 2 and Scranton 10. Goldwater had been expected preference c o l u m n . In 1956, The scholarships will be to any the transit ca rs, Hannah said. idential primary. In the race for GOP nomination to win. The question was whether President Eisenhower; running Falkenstein said hedidn’tknow Bob Milne, Standish senior and Michigan college or univers'ty He said no cars, either faculty the reason why, but he did say president of WestShaw, announc­ Senator Margaret Chase Smith, for governor, Chicago industrial­ he would score an impressive against two opponents, polled 95 Or accredited junior college and or student, are to be driven on the only other name on the GOP ist Charles Percy had a com­ victory and thus boost his chan- per cent. that he thought voter turnout ed earlier Tuesday that he too will be awarded mainly on the campus between 6 a.m. and 6 and dorm spirit go hand-in-hand would run as a write-in candi­ basis of need. p.qi. during the week and the citing both Shaws, Bryan and date on a platform of abolish­ The maximum grant per stu­ most direct route to the stu­ Armstrong as examples. ing student congress and replac­ WAS HI NGT ON (f1 — Rep. dent will be set at $800 per year dent parking lots will be re ­ In t e r n a t io n a l E d u c a to r Louis F. Hekhuis, director of ing it with a group consisting of quired. Thomas J . O’Brien of Illinois, student activities, said he thought three members each from each and can be renewed. The exceptions, he said, would the oldest house member and a elections this year were being in of the six other major governing be faculty who want to pay a quiet, behind-the-scenes power an orderly fashion and agreed bodies on campus. 1 U.S. Will Revise fee of $18 per year to park their cars on campus. He said faculty members who pay the for many years, died today at Bethesda N a v a l Hospital. He would have been 68 on April A s h b y To O p e n Forum that the counting was running Milne said that he originally smoothly. He commented t h a t thought of running last term, everything seemed to be well- but he was then re-elected presi­ Viet Nam Brass fee will receive special tickets 30. Sir F ric Ashby, a leading inter­ and John K. Fairbank, an histor­ committee a c t s only in an ad­ organized. dent of West Shaw. He added national educator f r o m Cam­ ian from Harvard. visory capacity. Speakers do not SAIGON, Viet Nam ifj-T h e which will activate the timed- have to be cleared with it before Falkenstein said he expected that he also thought that another presidential ballot, made a strong bridge University, wi l l be t he Galbraith, Douglas and F a ir­ United States is going to stream ­ metered entrances to the park­ they can appear on campus. (continued on page 8) candidate was going to run on first speaker in a series of lec­ bank are scheduled to speak dur­ line the top-heavy administra­ ing lots. showing. the platform he proposed. For a fee of $48 per year, There was a flurry of write- tures sponsored by theUniversity ing the 1964-65 academic year. When this did not happen, he tion of its military forces in Viet ins for five other potential Re­ Forum Committee. Ashby, a specialist in experi­ Nam, American authorities an­ faculty members may reserve a decided to run himself. parking space on campus which mental botany, has long been in­ Listings for each dorm are nounced Tuesday night. The U.S. Military Advisory As­ will have their name printed on sistance Command that has oper­ it. This space will be reserved publican candidates. Most of the Ashby will deliver his lecture returns were from Cook County at 4 p.m. April 23 in theKiva.lle where M rs. Smith was making will compare American, Russian volved in international education. He has been the master of Clare Romney, Dems Wage arranged in the following order beginning with the men’s dorms: for them from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. a good showing. College at Cambridge since 1959. H arris— , Je s s e —, Partridge—. ated here since 1955 will be abol­ ished soon, (continued on page 6) In returns from 1,332 of 10,256 and British universities. Others who have accepted invi­ tations to speak on campus are He has also been associated with the Imperial College of Science at the University' of London, the Minor Districting War Wallace—, Wingo—. Armstrong, hall, for example is: Harris 14, John Kenneth Galbraith, econo­ Je sse 116, Partridge 16, Wallace University of Chicago, B ristol Gov. George Romney turned didates in 1962 indicated the new 9, and Wingo 14. mist from Harvard University; University, theUniversity of Syd­ the traditional cry of "one man, d istricts should be set up so they Armstrong, 14, 116, 16, 9, 14; Sen. Paul H. Douglas (D—Illinois); ney in Australia, the University one vote" back on the Democrats would have a chance of winning at Bailey, 13, 38, 11, 28 . 36; Bryan, of Manchester and Queens Uni­ Tuesday by chiding Lt. Gov. T . least nine seats. (continued on page 8) versity in Belfast. John Lesinski for raising a new Galbraith has been a professor issue in the congressional appor­ Goldwater Hits of economics at Harvard since 1949. He is a formerU.S. ambas­ tionment debate. In replying to a letter Lesinski World News sador to India and was one of the sent Tuesday the governor said, McNamara’s late President Kennedy’s close economic advisers. "Your letter brings into the cur­ rent situation an entirely new ele­ at a Glance Defense Plans Douglas h a s served as th e Democratic senator from Illinois since 1948. He is the junior sena­ ment—what you refer to as ‘the principle of proportionate repre­ sentation.’ You complain that my France Supports V i e t Ne u t ra l iz at i on WASHINGTON ifi- Republican tor from his state, outranked by proposal provides preferential Sen. Barry Goldwater hurled a Republican Everett M. Dirksen, treatment to th e Republican MANILA lit'l— France stood alone Tuesday in advocating neu­ ' charge of Irresponsibility back Senate minority leader. Party, while . your second pro­ tralization of South Viet Nam after its seven partners in the at Secretary of Defense Robert Fairbank has been a member posal is admittedly designed to Southeast Asia Treaty organization voiced strong objections. of the history faculty at Harvard increase Democratic member­ As the 10th anniversary ministerial meeting of the anti-Communist S. McNamara Tuesday, and said his faith is in seasoned mili­ since 1936. He is a specialist in ship in C ongress." alliance prepared to wind up, informants said France made no tary judgments on the state of F ar Eastern affairs. In his letter Lesinski said, " a l ­ effort to defend the plan when four other SEATO members leveled hr- ■■ . * U.S. strategic defenses. T h e forum committee w as though we have finally come to the their criticism Tuesday. P A R K I N G , L O T P R O B L E M S - V i e w e d from the top of Erick son H a l l , South Campus parking The Arizona Senator spoke out formed last year following a bit­ point of recognizing the standard lots s h o w ' the crowded conditions of everyday communtors. Dormitory car-owners, facing re­ in an interview a s newly re­ ter controversy o v e r MSU’s of equal representation, your plan Britain A d ds N e w T a x e s T o Budget stricted cam'pus driving pri vi leges this foi l, will enjoy an expanded parking lot system. leased Congressional testimony speaker-screening policies. The ignores the principle of propor­ Phot o by D av e Sykes by McNamara and Gen. Curtis tionate r e p r e s e n ta t io n ," LONDON l/l1)— Britain’ s conservative government, only six months Lesinski said the fact that Demo­ before facing the voters, slapped new taxes on liquor, tobacco and E. LeMay, Air Force chief of betting Tuesday in a budget designed to head off the threat of staff, heated anew the long dis­ Space Payload crats polled 51.2 per cent of the a runaway business boom. pute over the reliability of U.S. total vote for congressional can- White House Silent On Rail Talks m issiles. Lemay told congressmen at Fire Injures 11 Chancellor of the Exchequer Reginald Maudling, introducing his second budget in the packed House of Commons, warned that the balance of payments position—imports over exports—prob­ WASHINGTON (fl — Railroad way,” said a spokesman at the of optimism about the outcome of a closed hearing Feb. 25 he C A P E K E N N E D Y , Fla. (fl- E leven engineers and technicians ably would worsen before the year is out. and union negotiators continued White House which is controlling Johnson’s emergency efforts to thinks the Soviet Union has na. - 5 0 th bargaining u n d e r close White all official information on th e settle the complicated work rules rowed the margin of U.S. mili­ were burned, f o u r critically, dispute that has defied all govern­ tary superiority. Tuesday when a rocket engine ANNIVERSARY House wraps Tuesday and an ad­ talks. C o a li t i on Split O n D o ct o r s’ Strike ministration spokesman said the ment attempts to find a solution Goldwater, who seeks the Re­ being joined with a space payload Federal mediators met jointly ignited inexplicably in a checkout BRUSSELS, Belgium If)—T h e Social Christian-Socialist gov­ outlook c o u l d b e described and then separately with the two over the past five years. publican P r e s i d e n t i a l nomi­ building. ernment coalition appeared split Tuesday on what fo do about the neither as optimistic nor pessi­ sides Tuesday, the fifth day since The White House spokesman nation, said the testimony pro?-' 14. day-old Belgian doctor’s strike against a new medical in­ m istic. .............. ■ s-afd the words "optimism ” and vides new ammunition for his The National Aeronautics and President Johnson arranged a 15- Space Administration reported surance law. "p essim ism ” have been "e ra d i­ campaign charge that intercom; Socialists repeated in political caucuses that the new medical "T h e re is absolutely no basis day postponement of a nationwide cated from our vocabulary" at nental m issiles a re riot depen­ the payload, an orbiting solar ob­ "e* lnsruance law should be applied with no changes, despite the doc­ for optimism or pessimism and strike scheduled last Friday. this stage of the talks between dable, and his insistence that servatory, had just been mated The White House was apparent­ with the rocket stage when the to r's protests. But among Social Christians, the attitude was it would be a disservice to the ne­ representatives of 5 unions and the nation needs a force of manned different. gotiators to characterize it in that ly disturbed by published reports nearly 200 railroads. bombers, too. engine suddenly ignited. i M ic h ig a n S t a te News, E a s t L a n s i n g , M i c h i g a n W e d n e sd a y , A p r il 15 , 1 9 64 Letter To The Editor The Cowardly Way News’ Bias Charged T w o - d a y - o l d w rite -in candidate reports “ running of a in when the others not w a it u n til the e n d , ru n n in g on do, and sho u ld ffr To the Editor: T h u r s d a y ’ s e le c tio n fo r A ll-U n i- the m ista ke s and p ro p o sa ls of 1 have before me a clipping from the Tuesday, April 7, issue of the Michigan Daily. The article begins, "University Executive v e r s i t y S t u d e n t Governm ent som eone e lse . Vice-President Marvin L . Nlehuss last night denied a report presiden t have been co n firm ed . Students sh o u ld re alize th is, that he has charged Michiga State University with practicing "academ ic pitchmanship’* in recruiting National Merit Scholars. A w id e m ove is under way to and in s p ite o f the e n t ic in g a r g u ­ " I haven’t made any statement on that subject at all, ” Niehuss sw in g s u p p o r t f r o m the p r e ­ m ents that m a y be p re s e n te d fo r asserted. a w rite -in v o t e , should se e It m atters very little to me who is telling the truth, in spite vio u sly a n n o u n c e d le g itim a te of the attempts to make a vital idealogical feud out of the issue. c a n d i d a t e s to th e n e w m an, a sort through p ro m ise s and th in k fir s t Unlike the State News, I do not feel that Niehuss was making a o f th ird s trin g s u b stitu te fo r those of the “ can d id ate’ s ” sh am e fu l statement of official U-M policy. ("T he charges made by the Uni­ versity of Michigan. . State News editorial, April 9.) As a who d o n ’ t like the tw o p rim a ry p e rfo rm a n ce in the c a m p a i g n . personal, casual, or petty remark, the statement has little sig­ w in n e rs. S tudents sh o u ld a sk th e m s e lv e s nificance. The factor that does cause me concern is the bias and one­ Th is “ c a m p a ig n ” is a sad fyow g r e a t th is c a n d i d a t e ’ s sided reporting of the State News. After headlining Niehuss* "c h a rg e s" and running daily follow-up stories, the News never c o m m e n t on the “ c a n d id a te ,” on no th in g m o r e . and interest has w aited in AU S G th is can b e , if he lo n g to jo in the vm mentioned the man’ s denial. Just as MSU is justified in presenting its side, (whether the A candidate for office sh ou ld ca m p a ig n in th is se n sa tio n a lis t issue is a medical school, state appropriations, or Merit Scholar­ ships), Niehuss' defense-or denial-has the .right to be heard on get out and ca m p a ig n a ctive ly fa sh io n . 3 our campus. Ellen Herscher And The Right Way Red Cedar Report Th is y e a r ' s A ll-U n ive rs ity T o c o r r e c t th is s itu a tio n , p la n s Student Governm ent e l e c t i o n have a lre a d y been m ade fo r re ­ Several buildings have been torn down to provide for parking ca m p a ig n has been re m a rk a b le v is in g the e le c tio n ru le s w e ll b e ­ lot extension. I wonder if the faculty and staff will be able to supply enough ca rs to fill these lots next year? fo r its re la tive “ c le a n n e s s ’ and fore next y e a r ’ s c a m p a ig n , p o s ­ d e v o t i o n to e l e c t i o n r u l e s , on the sib ly b e fo re the en d o f th is t e r m . * * * part o f both the E le c t i o n s C o m ­ This is good, since a precedent The University of Michigan complains that we recruit Merit m issio n and most o f the c a n d i ­ has b e e n s e t this y e a r for a clean Scholars as well as football players. We’re not only interested in the Rose Bowl, but the College Bowl as well. dates. e le ctio n that w il l s t i c k to a s e n ­ sib le , cle ar set of ru le s if they * * * are a va ila b le . Th is is especially true when If so many couples go down to the Red Cedar to feed the ducks, o ne lo o k s at the r u le s u n d e r w h ic h Hope The E le ctio n s B oard Finds Out About T h is ! why are the ducks starving? Actually, the ducks are better fed We m ay note at th is t i m e that than most of the students who live in the dorms. the co m m issio n has been o p e r­ ating, a vague and outdated set Jam es Jesse, to whom the S tate of a rb itra ry m easures, that can News Tuesday gave support for be log ica lly m isin te rp re te d in the presid en cy, has not been many ways. accused any vio la tio n s by the of c o m m is s io n e le c tio n ru le s . of P r o f V ie w s N i g e r i a ’s E c o n o m y Th e Ele c tio n s C o m m is s io n has Tw o of the five o rig in a l ca n d i­ re alized that som e candidates dates w e re accu se d o f o n ly m in o r have inte rp re te d h a r s h l y th a n o t h e r s . In th u s the r u le s m ore “ vio ­ vio la tio n s. O n ly tw o candidates West’s Influence Felt w ere fined and o th erw ise pun­ latin g ” the ru le s they have su f­ ished for m a jo r in fra ction s o f E d i t o r ’ s N o t e : T h i s is the second of a four-part series fe re d the co n se q u e n c e s of doing e le ctio n ru le s. on the U n i v e r s i t y ' s proj ect in N i g e r i a . It is written by an so, m a i n l y b e c a u s e o f d e fe c ts in a sso ci a t e p r o f e s s o r o f economics, Jo hn P. H en de r so n, who If th is is the case even w ith is now compl et ing the proj ect tour as an economics a d­ the r u l e s ’ w o r d in g . the m isle a d in g r u l e s now in v i s e r. T h e ar ticle was prepared to reflect the a c t i v i t i e s of F o r th is reason, few severe all M S U a dvi ser s to t he U n i v e r s i t y of N i g e r i a . e ffe ct, we feel that w ith better punishm ents have been called d e fin itio n o f the ru le s and w ith a for. And w h ile there have been honest g o v e r n m e n t elected For the eight Michigan State advisers living on the Enugu campus, life has become somewhat more interesting. There recently opened re m a rk a b ly fe w se rio u s vio la ­ Thursday, t h e r e w ill be a in Enugu one of the luxury hotels typically found in developing coun­ tion s th e re has been an in o r d in a te p r o m i s e o f a g o o d , e f f e c t i v e c a m ­ tries, complete with swimming pool, air-conditioned theater, dining a m o u n t o f c o n fu s io n in id e n tify in g p a i g n a n d a p r e c e d e n t f o r g o o d rooms and cocktail lounges—an atmosphere that permits an occa­ sional escape into another world, apart from the heat, dust and al­ the real infractions. governm ent. ternate dryness and humidity of tropical Africa. ' Michigan State is not the only institution of higher learning supply­ ing technical assistance to the University of Nigeria. A D V I S O R G R O U P - T h i s is M S U ’ s ad vi so r y group to the U n i v e r s i t y of N i g e r i a . Sitting are (l-r) The Netherlands Universities Foundation for International Co­ George F r i t z , G eo r g e Moore, L e w i s Z e r b y , C . F . D o a n e , J r . , B . L . P er ry , J a c k E l l i o t t and Vote . . . . Or Don't Complain operation has assumed a major role in the development of an engi­ neering curriculum and supplies faculty in this area, and the British Inter-University Council for Higher Education Overseas currently Robert L u m i a n s k i . In the second row are Warren H u f f , William L i n d q u i s t , E dw a r d L a w s o n , E l w o o d L a w r e n c e , R ober t Wynn, Hugh He n de r so n, J a m e s B o y d and William H a w l e y . In the third row are F r a n k Merriman, L . A . D o y l e , G l e n T a g g a r t , Geo r g e F e r n s , R o y N i eme y e r , Barry is supporting visiting professors in English, history, chemistry and F l o y d , E dw a r d Ha mma r skj öl d and K i r k L a w t o n . M i s s i ng from the picture are George Jo h ns o n, Just as everyone co m p la in s the next three term s to p a s s engineering. J o hn H e n d er so n , Gl e n J o h n s o n , Carl Ri cher , Phi l Pa ck a rd and D a v i d M a c F a r l a n e . While approximately one-half of all the faculty and senior admin­ a b o u t the w e a t h e r , e v e r y o n e com - * d e stru c tive c ritic ism s on o ffi­ istrative staff of the university are Nigerians, there are also na­ expand the industrial sector. f o u r regional governments em­ hears a good deal of talk about how plains about student g o v e rn m e n t. c i a l s h e i g n o r e d t h i s T u e s d a y a n d tionals from about 20 different countries in the various departments Today more than 80 per cent of rapidly these countries are de­ ploying about one-third of th e and colleges. veloping, but compared to the ad­ B u tu n lik e a m e te o ro lo g ist who Thursday. Nigeria’s occupied manpower is wage earners in the country. Dur­ Apart from the Michigan State contingent, about 15 Americans working in th e agricultural se c­ ing the last decade manufacturing vanced countries the gap is wid­ is s till h e lp le s s to c o n t r o l a b l i z ­ A t e v e ry e le c tio n --fr o m class employed directly by th e University and twenty-two Peace Corps ening, not narrowing. tor, and even if the country is has accounted for only about 1.5 Volunteers are teaching here. Great Britain has also supplied grad­ zard or a ra in s t o r m , a student to n a t i o n a l l e v e l - - y o u h e a r th a t able to invest in the industrial per cent of the output of the Ni­ Accordingly, N i g e r i a h a s uate volunteers. launched a tremendous campaign sector the 2 billion dollars which gerian economy. can do s o m e th in g about his g o v ­ p e o p le get the k in d o f g o v e r n m e n t Nigeria’s latest census shows a population of 55 million, well a six-year plan calls for, agri­ Against such a background is to improve the life of her people, over half the population of all tropical Africa, in a geographic area e rn m e n t. they d e s e rve . culture will still have to absorb th e tremendous urge to m o v e using education as one of the ma­ sm aller than Ethiopia. jor vehicles for bringing about a M a y b e you w ill help if yo u r e ­ She is the most densely settled country on the continent. Never­ 85 per cent of the increase in the ahead, to raise the level of output He can s ta y in fo r m e d on c a m ­ radical transformation in her so­ work force in the years ahead. and to advance into the twentieth m in d y o u r fe llo w v o te r s o f th is theless the country has plentiful, if not very nutritious, food sup­ p u s i s s u e s . H e c a n t a l k to h is A ll- century which Nigeria, like any ciety. plies, and famine is not a problem as it is in places like India and i n s o m e w h a t s t r o n g e r w o r d s : p u t China. developing nation, s e e s around In the four y e a r s since inde­ U n ive rs ity Student Governm ent Superimposed upon this agri­ her in today’s world. pendence, five universities have up o r shut up. In addition there are sizeable deposits of coal, iron ore, tin, tim­ cultural base is a commercial re p re se n ta tive a n d his class While the United States con­ been established, where before ber and oil in the country’s four diverse regions. system developed in colonial days templates sending a man to the there was only one with a few hun­ o ffice rs. H e can ru n fo r office o r Yet Nigeria is a depressed econorily and for millions and millions for the distribution of the agricul­ moon, and perfects planes which dred students. The number of h e lp c a m p a ig n fo r the c a n d id a te s of her citizens, the techniques, consumer goods and conveniences tural surplus to the rest of the fly many times faster than sound, children a t t e n d i n g p r i m a r y of modern life are completely unknown. world. The money economy today o f his c h o ic e . A n d he can vo te . Letter Like most developing economies she wants desperately to bridge the gap between her depressed condition and the technological de­ touches the lives of a small mi­ nority of Nigerians, with maybe the people of the developing coun­ tries see themselves falling far­ school has doubled in the last decade and is increasing at an ther and farther back, their state accelerated rate as is the number Tuesday, he can cast a ballo t Policy velopment of the advanced countries; but Nigeria still has a predom­ inantly agricultural economy with labor intensive. There have been no more than two million persons engaged in activity for which they of technology years behind. One attending secondary schools. fo r AUSG president and fo r h i s no appreciable advances in technology for decades. receive money wages, as against Moreover, she must depend upon agriculture for any development wages "in kind." class governm ent office rs, just influ e n cin g as m u c h as any h is Letters should not be longer than 300 words, and should be typed double spaced if possible. which will occur, since the continuous export ofgroundnuts and tree crops is the only means of paying for the importation of capital to The single largest employer is government, with the federal and N OW O P EN o th e r student on c a m p u s . Names and address should also be included. If he fa ils to meet th is c o n ­ No unsigned letters will be printed, but names ¡ 1 7 . D u tch 2 5 . T o w n with­ struc tive re sp o n sib ility Th u rs­ may be withheld if we feel there is reason. CROSSWORD PUZZLE V c u p b o a r d o u t a bell The State News reserves the right to edit 1 9 . R u ss, 2 8 . B a b y 's day, he w ill h a ve no rig h t d u rin g letters to fit space requirements. v illa g e w ACROSS 1 3 . P rep o sitio n n ap k in 2 0 . Fleur-de-lis 1. D d ty 1 4 . E q u alize 2 1 . C h a r iv a r i; 2 9 . S e p araU o n 4 . B elg ian 1 5 . V a ria b le s ta r co llo q . 3 1 . G er. c o m ­ FINE FABRI CS com m u ne 2 3 . S la m , c o in 1 6 . Irelan d p o se r STATE N EW S 7 . A g g re g a te 2 4 . S triped M IC H IG A N 3 4 . P ray er 11. R om an QUAKER YARNS STATE b ead U N IV E R S IT Y / 2 J « s 6 7 8 9 10 35. N ahoor 3 6 . Ice b e rg II 12 if 3 7 . M a le lipe | summer term; special Welcome Issue in Sep­ Member Associated P ress, United P ress tember. É d escen d an ts International, Inland Daily P ress Association, 14 if 3 9 . W a tc h - 3 . T ro p ic a l Associated Collegiate P ress Association, - Second class postage paid at East Lansing, m to w er: S p an . 2 2 . G ist A m er. trees 2 3 . B la c k bird Michigan P ress Association. Michigan. /« 17 18 m 19 4 1 . B a b y l. V 4. U n rig h t­ 2 5 . P ro v e rb s Editorial and business offices at 341 Student t ** m o th e r g o d ­ eou sn ess Services Building, Michigan State University, 20 21 22 dess 2 6 . R efresh P’ y the students of Michigan 5 . B u n d le ,. 2 7 . T h o ro u g h State university. Issued on class days Monday East Lansing, Michigan. Mail subscriptions 4 2 . P ert, to a 6 . C lo se by: V T v ; 23 24 fa re through Friday during the fall, winter and payable in advance: term, $3; 2 term s, $4; gro v e p o e t. 2 8 . S traw hat: spring quarters, twice weekly during the 3 term s, $5; full year, $6. IS 26 27 28 7 . S tro n g Eng- 4 3 . Stalk beer 3 0 . SlUv 19 30 i/ 32 33 4 4 . E p och' 8 . B e a st Editor...................................... •Bruce Fabricant Sports Editor................................. Je rry Caplan 3 1 . Siren 4 5 . M a rrie d 9 . L o n g step 3 2 . G ran d ee Advertising,Maqager. . . . , >(V .Fred Levine Wire Editqr ............. .John Van Gieson 34 r "1 It Campus Editor. . . . .Gerry Hinkley Night Editor. . . . . .\ . Richar^Scfiwartz" & ( ; 'i\ ; * " title 1 0 . Flew h ig h 3 3 : u u & ti'''* Ass’t Campus Editor....................... Liz Hyman Asst. Adv. Mgrs....................Frank Senger J r ., 37 30 JJ 44 1 2 . Sw edish 3 6 . S h o rt fo r a g irl's n a m e .........................................................Arthur Langer DOWN co u n ty 3 8 . E v e ry ­ manorial Staff. . .Barb Bradley, Dave Stewart Circulation Manager................... B ill Marshall 4i 42 1. C ru c ia n 1 8 . Fin ch 2160 H A M ILTO N RD ., OKEMOS b o d y 's uncle News Adviser. . .........................Dave Jaehnig ca rp 2 1 . F a c in g a ................................................ .. Mike Kindman À3 f. 44 41 2 . E a r e d seal 4 0 . C h a lice 1 BLOCK WEST OF THE LIG H T 1 f M i c h i g a n S t a t e News, E a s t L a n s i n g , M ic h ig a n Wednesday, A p r il 15 , 1 9 6 4 3 Union Book Store Union Book Store Union Book St Foreign Aid Struggle Seen UNION BOOKSTORE WASHINGTON (it- A s h o r t u n stormy Senate hearing Tuesday on a section of the administra­ tion's foreign a id p r o p o s a l Morse Blasts Program At Hearing America under the Alliance For Progress program. So far, Bell said, about 600 brought from Sen. J.W . Fulbrlght, The Committee took up this his aides. Other Senators began not meet when the Senate is in projects In 52 countries have been D-Ark., a concession that th e morning one part of the new $3.4 arriving later and peppered Bell session except by unanimous con­ approved under what he described program " i s in for another hard billion administration request— with questions, many critical and sent. as " a tight program.’ ’ year.’ * $225 million to continue grants covering the whole field of past, "T h ere is no hurry about this His discussion of a program to Fulbrlght, chairman oi the for­ for technical cooperation and help b ill," Morse said. "W e may be bring about 1,500 Africans to present and future foreign aid. eign relations committee, has the for underdeveloped nations. able to get around to it in Novem­ America for training and educa­ key role In the Senate in pushing Only Fulbrlght and Sen. Frank Sen. Wayne Morse, D-Ore., a ber or December.” tion during the next year brought the measure through. His forces J . Lausche, D-Ohlo, were present vigorous foe of the new program, Bell urged the Senators to ap­ a protest from M orse. He said had a tough time getting approval at 9 A.M. (EST) when the ques­ forced th e hearing to a h a l t prove the full $225 million for taxpayers are financing "aid to of a $3-blllion program in 1963 tioning began for David E. Bell, promptly at 10 A.M., the hour the grants to underdeveloped nations. education abroad” wh e n t h i s just before y ear's end. administrator for the Agency For Senate met to resume the Civil He said the money would be used country badly needs to expand International Development, and Rights debate. Committees may chiefly in Africa, the F ar East, facilities for higher education the Near East and South Asia. before 1980, when U.S. college Nikita Jolly; There is a separate and sim ilar $84-milllon program for Latin enrollments will be more than double the present total. Death Rumors Unmentioned African Study MOSCOW UP)—In high spirits, Prem ier Khrushchev turned up at a Polish reception Tuesday Requires 'Unlearning’ night, drank red wine, snapped at Red China and predicted world C u ltu re G ain s In Im p o r t a n c e communism wo ul d e m e r g e approaches possible to further Much “ unlearning” is neces­ stronger than ever from its dis­ the understanding of Africa. How­ sary before students can absorb putes. ever, he pointed out that the dis­ f a c t s about Africa, Benjamin Khrushchev never alluded to cipline of his approach is that of Dennis, assistant instructor in the rumors that flashed around a sociologist anthropologist. African culture, told the open­ the world Monday night saying he “ This approach is based on ing session of a Sociology and had died. But a foreign office scientific research and learn­ Anthropology 281 class. spokesman disclosed at the re ­ ing,” he said. “ This is not a class ception that a strong protest had been made to DPA, the West G er­ man news agency where the re­ Studies of African culture have gained in prominence since the independence movement, he said. of entertainment and storytell­ ing.’ ’ Dennis, a native Liberian, r e ­ Order By Aprils 18th port originated. “ Now with Africa asapossible ferred to the ancient cultural ex­ Khrushchev strolled into the Polish embassy bareheaded and wearing a gray overcoat. He was political pawn, understanding the African personality and heritage is of utmost importance to both change between Africans and the Greeks and Romans, and the an­ cient empire of Ghana. To Insure Delivery grinning, undoubtedly aware of Africa has a heritage of which U political cam ps," Dennis said. the reports of his death. He waved one can be proud, he said. to ambassadors waiting in front of the cloakroom and walked on into the forward section of the C U L T U R E O F A F R I C A —L e c tu r i n g to students on the A f r i ­ can culture, Benjami n D e n n i s , a ss i s t an t instructor o f Af r ica n He underscored the variety of By June 14th n i St udies, hosted an open c l as s . Ph o to by Gerr y Carr o handsome Polish embassy. Muscular Dystrophy Man’s Extra Large Ring (MLM) Medium W eight $ 3 4 .0 0 * Man's Large Ring (LM) Medium W eight $ 2 9 .0 0 * n (MLH) Heavy W eight $ 3 9 .0 0 * (LH) . Heavy W eight $ 3 4 .0 0 * Library Study Group Turks On Cyprus Group Praises ATO (MLXH) Extra Heavy Wt. (MLCB) Closed Back Wt. $ 4 4 .0 0 * $ 4 7 .0 0 * (LXH) Extra Heavy W eight (LCB) Closed Back W eight $ 3 9 .0 0 * $ 4 2 .0 0 * B o (XXS) Lady's Ring $ 2 4 .0 0 * To Report This Month Come Under Fire Alpha Tau Omega fraternity has been awarded a citation of Ann Arbor sophomore, received citations for their work in the W hite Gold $ 5 .0 0 Additional * plus tax Encrusted G reek Letters and. other symbols available. o k President John A. Hannah’ s tor of l i b r a r i e s . E d w a r d m erit from the Muscular Dys­ drive. Library Study Committee will Blackman, University College, NICOSIA, Cyprus (TVTurkey's trophy Association of America Sherman made the most indi­ will examine how residence hall regulars based on Cyprus came for outstanding work in a fund S report this month on possible vidual contacts, and Shaw collec­ innovations at the Library. libraries will fit into the total under fire for the first time Tues­ drive last November. ted the largest amount of money. t The committee is formulating a report on the Library’s future for the next 10 y ears. Hannah library plan. day while a Turkish battle fleet Fraternity members collected "T h e reports will be finished sailed from lskendrun in a ma­ more than $535 in East Lansing. within the next several weeks,” neuver like those that raised in­ William R. Sherman, East Jo r­ The money Is used for research and care of 34 muscular dys­ trophy patients In the Ingham SIG N UP NOW 0 r has voiced the need for such a Chapin s a i d . "W e a r e also vasion s c a r e s among G r e e k don junior, and John R. Shaw, County area. e study before any large expendi­ planning several meetings with Cypriots last winter. ATO plans to make the fund tures are made. Studying the problem of refer­ ence services are Henry Koch, consultants on information re­ trieval techniques.” Turkish Prem ier Ismet Inonu He did not rule out the pos­ warned last week that any attack Women’s League drive an annual project. FOR YOUR U assistant director of libraries, sibility that future students could on the 650-man Turkish contin­ LBJ To Speak n William Deal, biochemistry, and get information for term reports gent, here by treaty like a 950- Open House Richard Sullivan, history. Kenneth Hance, speech, and via computerized Information re­ man battalion from G reece, would trieval instead of having to find be Interpreted a s aggression against Turkey. Spartan Women’s League will At U-M Event Caps & Gowns 1 o Stanley J . Idzerda, director of it themselves. sponsor an open house for all ANN ARBOR (UPI)— President The l i b r a r y director com­ Johnson will be the commence­ n the Honors College, will report However, no official connection coeds at 7:30 tonight in the first on cooperation with the federal mented that about 10 of the library was announced between the fleet floor lounge of Student Services. ment speaker at the University government and how it will affect plans and services here. Idzerda study questionnaires are already movement and developments of The organization is a women's in. The final date for returning this anxious, shot-punctuated day Service league. The open house them is Wednesday. of Michigan 120th commencement May 22, according to U-M P re s­ ident Harlan Hatcher. and B o will also report on possible uses on Cyprus. is an annual event. of microforms, which includes o microfilm and book-slides. Studying the advantages and disadvantages of a centralized Business Sorority SHOP AT JA CO BSO N 'S W E D N E S D A Y E V E R Y WEDNESDAY EVENI NG UNTI L NINE S T O R E H O U R S - N O O N U N T IL 9 P .M . Graduation k library is Richard Chapin, direc- Installs Officers S Three members were initiated and officers were installed re­ cently by Phi Gamma Nu,—pro­ Announcements t 0 Frofessor To fessional business sorority. r Initiated were JoAnn M iller, U Visit College Detroit s o p h o m o r e , pledge; e Karen M a n e c k e , Farmington Sherwood K. Haynes, chairman sophomore, and DianePijanow- of the physics and astronomy ski, F air Haven sophomore, ac­ U department, will be a visiting tives. ■ lecturer at Canisius College, n New officers are Susan Zorn, Buffalo, N.Y., today and Thurs­ Maplewood, N .J., junior, presi­ 1 1ig h t.r, brighter, . . day. dent: Connie Hobson, Mariette o Haynes will deliver a series Junior, secretary;, Anne M ills, this is the new look in of lectures and meet with faculty Ridgewood, N .J., junior, treasur­ n and students during his visit, e r; K larlce Kryszak, Allen Park sponsored by the American Asso­ sophomore, scribe. ciation of Physics Teachers and New adviser is M rs. Marilyn SPORT COATS the American Institute of Phy­ Burch, assistant instructor in B sics. • business law. o AND SLACKS COMING SOON! o k . . .b o th a d u r a b le THE 1964 blend o f da cro n p o lye s te r for Our Paperbacks and S t w r i n k l e - r e si s ta n c e , 0 GREEK and ric h w orsted fo r lu xu rio u s Sportswear are r e FEAST appearance. S p o rts coats: p laid s, Back On the Sales Floor U c h e c k s , glens and n ieaheutuj- ve rtica ls c o lorin g s. in n e w 39.50 See The Latest Styles 1 o S l a c k s ; so lid ton es In Jackets and Sweatshirts n n i DRIFTERS to c o n t r a s t . 14.98 B o SATURDAY, MAY % UNION. BOOK STORE o 4 -7 P .M . k BEHIND THE SIGMA-NU HOI /I CC g£ , S G u e i t tickets on sale in 307 A t Student Services B l d g . 3*5 p . m . , A pr i l 15 — A p r . 22 only M E N ’S SHOP 210 A B B O T T R O A D Right on Campus - A Dept. Of M.S.U. o r PRICE $1.50 Store Union Book-Store Union Book Store Union e li M ic h ig a n S t a te News, E a s t L a n si n g , M i c h i g a n W e d n e sd a y , April 15, 1 96 4 Spartans Slugging A t .549 Clip Boom In B lo o m A t T h e P l a t e By D U A N E L A N C A S T E R State N e w s Sports Writer If the old adage that 90 per cent of baseball is pitching holds true, then surely "nev er have so many” on Michgan State's ball club “ owed so much to so few ." The few, referring to the hitters on the Spartan squad, have been by far the most important ingredient of victory this season for Coach Danny Litwhiler. Currently, the hard-hitting State nine has 13 above the .300 Next Diamond Foe mark with left fielder Joe Porrevecchio leading the way with a fantastic .558 count. The lofty average came about as the result of one of the biggest hitting assaults in college baseball. In his last 22 times at bat, Chip Off Old Block Porrevecchio has banged out 17 hits and capped the streak last weekend with nine consecutive safeties before finally retiring. Litwhiler said that this was the longest hitting streak he has seen in his ten years of college coaching and former Coach Things may not be so plea­ Junior Cary Harrington is at John Kobs had to go back to 1926 and the days of an outfielder sant In Mt. Pleasant for Michigan third after a briilant .317 sea­ named Dan F leser to find anything to match it. State’ s baseball team Saturday son and a .333 performance in Porrevecchio is not the only one realizing amazing success when the Spartans take their IIAC competition. with his bat. All-American first baseman Je rry Sutton supports first road trip of the regular Keilitz moved from left field a hefty .458 average while catcher Bruce Look stands at .396. season to Central Michigan for a to first base and freshman Tom John Biedenbach (.366), Bob Maniere (.365), Dennis Ketcham double header with the Chippe- Krawczyk and sophomore Don (.341) and Dick Billings (.321) also have had much to do in giving was. Back will be at shortstop and M I G H T Y T R I O —T h r e e towers of strength form a pyramid of hold the bats t hey used to lead the team in hitting with re­ the Spartans a team batting average of .342. second base. power as J e r r y Sutton, J o e Por re ve cchi o and Bruce L o o k CMU Coach Waldo Sauter has Not only do the Green and White hit for the average but with specti ve marks o f . 458 .558 and .396. Photo by Jer r y .Carr 11 lettermen b a c k from last T w o - y e a r r e g u l a r Gary plenty of power as well. Five players, Porrevecchio, Sutton, Look, Biedenbach and B ill­ The runs batted in race is extremely close with Sutton’s 19 that his squad probably has more batting practice than any college year's squad which put together Strieter will be in center, flanked ings pace the home run hitters with three each while Tom K rze- the top figure. Porrevecchio is right behind with 18 and Billings in the nation. the best baseball record in the by Jim Fuller (.345) in left and mienski, Bob Speer, Jay Bach, Steve Juday and Ketcham have has driven in 17. Look and Ketcham have knocked 11 and 10 When the team was indoors, the batter practicing stood behind school's history. The Chippewas either captain John Strieker or added one apiece. The result is an amazing total of 20 round across the plate respectively. a wooden structure which had an opening through which the pitcher won 22 ball games and lost only sophomore Fletcher Miller in trippers in only 13 ball games. Collectively, the Spartans have totaled 112 RBI’s. threw the ball. The hitter tried to hit the ball back through the 13 to capture its first outright right. Porrevecchio and Ketcham top the team in doubles with six In rolling to their 10-3 record, the batsmen have rapped out opening. IIAC championship. Junior A1 Korytkowski looks each and Manier’s two triples head that department. l - 3 hits for 131 runs while holding their opponents to only 62 Litwhiler’ s reason for this was that it helped the batter place like the number one cathcer.The It all adds up to an im pressive sum of 255 total bases for runs and 101 hits. the ball where he wanted it, but the way the Spartans have been Topping the Chips’ regulars big backstop hit .291 last sea­ a team slugging percentage of .549 which means the Spartans It looks as though Litwhiler’ s emphasis on batting practice hitting home runs, it seems as though they would rather place are king-sizedhurler Dick Fogle, son and is a good handler of are averaging better than one base every two times at bat. is paying off. E arlier this season the Spartan skipper announced it over the fence. who has posted two straight 6-1 pitchers. seasons and 1961’s MVP Jim Boron, returning to school after Central will probably go with an absence of two years. right hander Fogel and lefty Bo- The infield is as tight defen­ sively as it was last year, though ran in the twinbill, while the Spartans are expected to coun­ ter with John Krasnan and John T e am s H it R o a d N e x t W eek not as powerful with the bat. Ellward. Michigan State’ s four spring Coach Danny Litwhiler’s base­ swings into Big Ten action with sports teams will compete in a ball squad gets the schedule un­ one game at Northwestern Friday total of seven events this coming derway Tuesday with a game at and two tilts at Wisconsin Satur­ the University of Detroit anrl then day. Qcui £>kof> week, all away from home. Spartan tennis players also go to the Motor City, competing at Wayne State on Wednesday for fe a tu rin g their lone dual meet of the week. in track, the huge Penn Relays FRATERNITY in Philadelphia will attract Spar­ tan athletes who’ll be competing SORORITY on Friday and again on Saturday in one of thenation’sprem ier re­ In the American League, the Minnesota Twins squeaked by the lays events. Spartan sprinter Bob • R E C O G N IT IO N PINS • CRESTS Cleveland Indians, 7 -6 . Baltimore defeated Chicago, 5-3, and the Moreland and MSU 440 and 880- • RINGS • PADDLES Tigers rolled to a 7-3 win over Kansas City. yard relay quartets return intact • PARTY FAVORS • LAVALIERS Boston at New York was postponed because of rain. Washington as defending champions in the and Los Angeles were idle. meet at Philadelphia. In the National League, the Chicago Cubs blasted the Pittsburgh O ffic ia l G reek A cr o s s From Pirates, 8-4. State’ s golfers get back into . . Home E c o n . Blag. D O W N W I T H T H E G R I P —Spartan baseball captain Mai C h i l j e a n , who mi ssed starting his first the swing of things after a week­ On the West Coast, it was Milwaukee at San Francisco and St. J e w e lry e d 2-6753 ball game in nearly two years because of a jammed index finger, tests injured hand by gripping end of inactivity with a dual meet Louis at Los Angeles. his bat* Pho t o by B ob B a r i t New York at Philadelphia was also postponed because of rain. against powerful Purdue on the Cincinnati and Houston were idle. Boilermaker course in Lafayette. D ro p 2 O f 3 M a tch es BOQKJSHOP G o lfe rs Find K in k s In Lin k s Michigan State’ s golf team r e - After splitting a triangular turned Tuesday after a somewhat meet with Ohio State and the Uni- less than gratifying trip to Notre versity of Ohio on Monday, the Dame. Spartans took on the Irish, West- ern Illinois and Western Michi­ gan. The result was that th e Green and White defeated only the Broncos. In the morning round, the Spar­ Field Intramural M EN 'S Softball Schedule 1 — Carleton-Cache 5:20 p.m. 2 — Caribbean-Cameron 3-4 — Vets-Evans Scholars 5-6 — Smitty*s Raiders-Dollar 65 7-8 — Sigma Phi Delta-Motts Deadli ne Hothingis quite as satis­ tans were thoroughly beaten by Notre Dame and Illinois, 2 1/2— 3 — Casopolis-Caravelle The entry deadline for open league softball is set for F r i- , fying or rewardingas agoodbook. “Bank On” 15 1/2, 3-15, respectively. The Spartans, however, turned the tables on Western, 14-40. 4 — Cachet-Casino 5 — Wivern-Wilding 6 — Carthage-Cabanas day in the Intramural Office. This league is open to students, 7 __ Cavalier-Cambridge faculty and staff. In the afternoon State fared much better, tying the Irish, 9-9, 8 — Agr. Econ.-Campus 4H (Ag. Your time is at a premium. MARNIE and topping the Leathernecks and Broncos by scores of 9 1/2-8 1/2 Council Club) 9 — Dairy Club-Packaging Club WOMEN’ S Family swim and open swim and 16 1/2-1 1/2. (Ag. Council Club) for women will not be held Thurs­ Stopinandsee our collectiontoread PETERS The final results were that State could beat only the Broncos, 30 1/2-5 1/2, while losing 11 1/2— L0 - - The Runs-Kiljoys 6:30 p.m. 1 — Thelma Thigs-Tony*s Boys day, Friday, or Saturday due to the annual Green Splash Water Show. at your leisure. We still pride ourselves • Math Major in Education 24 1/2 and 12 1/2-23 1/2 to Notre Dame and Western Illinois. Richard M arr turned in the 2 — Ag. M ech.-Forestry (Ag. Council Club) 3 — Agronomy-Block & Bridle Softball Resul t s inofferingyou the highest values at • Member Delta Gamma Sorority best round, with a 86-71-157. He was followed by Bob Meyer, 78- 80-158, Phil Marston, 82-76-160, (Ag. Council Club) 4 — McTavish-McFadden 7:40 p.m. East Mayo and South Wonders just squeaked past their oppon­ ents in the opening games of the the lowest prices. SENIORTREASURER and S h e p Richard, 82-81-163. Doug Hanky and Doug Swartz were tied with 85-81-166. 1 — Keystone Kids-Dollar 65 2 — Snyder 17-15 3 — Aristocrats-Argonaughts Women’s I n t r a m u r a l Softball program. E a s t Mayo defeated South Campbell 8-7 while South ' 4 — Ar House-Arsenal We play astudent's game! Playing conditions hampered all four teams as winds up to 55 miles an hour swept th e 8:50 p.m. 1 — Wormwood-Worcester Wonders edged West Wilson 7-6. In the only other games played West Mayo and West Yakeley course. t — Woodbridge-Woodward found the going a little easier. The Spartan’s next meet will 3 — vVooster-Wolverine West Mayo coasted to a 13-3 be at Purdue April 25. 4 __ Worthington-Wollstone victory over Landon while West 9 One of the fin e s t se le ctio n Independent Bowli ng Yakeley romped to an easy 24- R E A D IN G 3 win over " R " Attic. of books fo r c h ild re n . Alleys 8 p.m. The sorority league will begin I S T H E 1-2 - Bower-Montle Thursday evening. K E Y # One of the b etter balanced book se le ctio ns. • One of the good used Sue Smith book sources. Senior Secretary ‘YOUR SU PERM ARKET FOR EDUCATION” AUSG CONGRESS, S E C R E T AR Y WOMEN’ S I NTER- RESI DENCE COUNCIL SPARTAK BOOKSTORE ... DGftM W SE '-P R 'ESiD E N T - FOR C I R C L E HONORARY CORNER MAC & ANN EAST LANSING 2820 E. Grand R ive r IV 7-3761 SOPH. TREAS SUE SMITH for Sr. Secretary M i c h i g a n S t a t e News, E a s t L a n s i n g , M ic h ig a n Wednesday, April 1 5 , 1 96 4 5 T ig e rs B u m p A ’s I n O p e n e r T rackm en O p e n (UPI)—Two o f f - s e a s o n ac­ five hits In picking up his initial Colavlto reached base on an Meanwhile, Colavlto, the sub­ quisitions from the Kansas City athletics, Je rry Lumpe and Dave Wickersham Tuesday, paced the win. However, Regan needed re­ lief help from Mickey Lollch and Wickersham in the ninth. erro r, then Wickersham walked Doc Edwards to load the pases. He then got GlnoClmoll to ground ject of much jeering from the 35 thousand fans was hitless In four trips to the plate. With O h io R e la y s Detroit T igers to 2 7-3 opening Wickersham came on with two- out to end the game. Orlando Pena, picked up the day victory over their former out and two on in the ninth to Detroit pounded three Kansas Trackmen resume competition and one-mile relay units entered loss and now has not beaten De­ teammates. face home run slugger Rocky City pitchers for 12 hits, includ­ outdoors this weekend by taking at Ohio. troit In his last four tries. Phil Regan, making the first Colavlto, acquired by the Athle­ ing home runs by Norm Cash and part In the Ohio Relays at Co­ Jim Gentile clouted a seventh- opening day start of his four- tics In the trade that brought Billy B r u t o n and triples by .V lumbus Saturday. Likely combinations for the inning homer and Manny Jimenez year career, struck out six and Lumpe, Wickersham and pitcher Lumpe, B ill Freehan and Don Practically the full squad will distance medley have Joe Barnett smashed a plnch-hit homer In walked only one while giving up Ed Rakow to Detroit. Wert. go to Ohio State for the out­ in the 440, Ron Horning in the the ninth to account for two Kan­ door inaugural with Coach Fran 880, Mike Martens in the three- sas City runs. Dittrich putting his main strength quarter and Mike Kaines in the Detroit scored Its final run in the sprint relay races. mile. Running the the two-mile in the eight when Me Aullffe race will be half-m ilers Dean doubled, went to third on a sing­ Top hopes rest with the440 and 880-yard relay quartet of Hunt, George Thomas, Bob Ful­ le, then scored on a passed ball. cher and Dick Mather. Dittrich Walker Beverly, John Parker, will pick his mile unit from Sherman Lewis and Bob More­ S n id e r A g a in ytjfe* land, intact from 1963 when the among Horning, Martens,, B ar­ M gr L nett, Parker, Beverly, Mather combination won championships ai d Chester Harris. 6H a p p y M a n 9 at the Penn Relays. (UPI)-Veteran Outfielder Duke Moreland anchors In each in­ Entered, in individual races stance and looks to have a fine are Jan Bowne, E ric Zemper Snider says he’s "very happy” outdoor season. He won the Big and Kaines in the mile; Dick over being sold to the San Fran­ Ten’s indoor 60-yard dash title in Sharkey and Ron Berby in the cisco Giants by the New York V ■**** March for the second straight three mile; Fred McKoy in the Mets. "I'v e played with a contender year and could well be ranked high hurdles and high jump; Dave * 4L Y 1 m m among the nation’s best sprin­ Mutchler and Tom Herbert in all my life except last year. J ters. the shot put and discus; Ayo It means a lot more when you go up to the plate for something C I N D E R E L L A S T O R Y - S p a r t a n trackmen aren’ t the only Coach Dittrich also plans to Azikiwe in the intermediate hur­ more than individual achieve­ ones getting a workout at the cinder oval behind the M e n’ s have distance medley, two-mile dles and B ill B erry in high jump. ment,” Snider said. IM. Members of the grounds department make regular vi si t s T O K Y O B O U N D - C h r i s Klu- Sale of Snider was announced to the site to see that it stays in too condi tion. ter and Marcia J o n e s , both this morning for an undisclosed iMgNfR Li fi» members of the women' s amount of cash. DRIVE swimming team, prepare for The 37-year-old Snider has - IfHCATRS N O ly m p i c canoeing trials to 403 career home runs and ranks B E S T IN F O R E IG N F I L M S S .2 M i l e s S o u t h w e s t o f L a n s i n g o n M - 7 8 be held in N e w Y o r k ne x t 10th on the all-tim e home run September. list. I WOW! Limiteli Engagement! MSU Coeds Eye Tokyo W edThurFri-Sat EXCLUSIVE D R IV E -IN SHOWING! 3-Features-3 WINNER - “ B E S T P I CT UR E OF THE Y E A R " I T O D A Y .. . ■ and T H U R S D A Y : AND T HRE E OTHER ACADEMY AWARDS. Darnedest j F r o m '7:0 0 P . M . 90c In S a d d l e , R e a d y T o P a d d l e hillbilly weddirf ever ' © W IT BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR! »I two hours of paddling on Lake w m M -Gm»rams . u-M B E S T A C T O R !” 'B E S T D IR E C T O R ! By M A R G I E B A U M A N Championships, she qualified for Since s h e b e g a n swimming A lb e r t F in n e y T o n y R ic h a r d s o n State N e w s Sports Writer Co-captains of the 1963 Michi­ gan S t a t e women's swimming the North American Champion­ ships in Nova Scotia that sum­ m er. competitively for the Cleveland Swim Club, at the age of 8, Chris has been in 13 national Lansing, as long as weather con­ ditions permit. Besides paddling, the girls are M O R3IL DER -------------------------------------------- vv YORK FILM CRITICS AWARD team, Marcia Jones and Chris Kluter have teamed up again. This time, though, they're hop­ After taking first and second places in the Nova Scotia re­ gatta against Canadian and U.S. Amateur Athletic Union (AAU) championships representing that club. also conditionng themselves by w e i g h t l i f t i n g , running and swimming. BRIDE The w hole They alternate between days IKNCII FMH1C MRf BUDDY ■H U R ..LOIS ing to paddle their way to Tokyo competition, Marcia went on to In the last week of April, Chris T ra c y M a rc h K e lly iro rld lo res th e President's Cup Regatta, will again present the Cleveland of working out on the outdoor for the Olympic Games and to where she placed second. Swim Club in an AAU mmet track, where they are presently I 1T h e Wime F i r s t A t 7:.42 represent the United States In n m k s v i t Last year she won the singles in Pittsburgh. running about a mile and a half RCLEASC0THRU the women’ s canoeing compe­ UNIT!0ARTISTS and the four-man national champ­ "T h is will probably be my each time and doing 12 to 14 tition. Marcia, a March graduate from Oklahoma City, Okla., andChris, ionships, th e North American championship s i n g l e s and the last one and then the old lady will re tire,” Chris said. varieties of weightlifting exer­ cises in the women’ s IM build­ Feature 7:00-9:15 P.M. ■ FR ID AY: JIRRYLEW1S a senior from Solon, Ohio, have President’ s Cup Regatta. There won’t be much time ing. AC ADEM Y AWARD FAB-U-LEWIS Although she’ s a -novice at for retirement for the pretty ‘\Ve hope to work up to running N O M IN E E ’ ’ B E S T fun festival been training since fall term for kayak paddling, Chris feels her brunette if she holds to the train­ from three to five miles on the F O R E IG N F I L M " 1963 the Olympic trials to be held for the whole 12 years of experience in com­ ing schedule she and Marcia track',’ Chris said. In New York City, Sept. 6. familyl petitive swimming have left her plan to follow. All these exercises are aimed Only one of the 15 to 20 teams in good condition for her present Their p r e s e n t schedule in­ at increasing their wind, strength competing at the trials will be goal. cludes from one and a half to and endurance by the time they selected to go to the Olympics set out to train with a coach in in October. Asked what they thought the competition would be like at the New York eliminations, both girls CAMPUS) LAST DAY! Wm. H O LD EN • Audrey HEPBU R N Newport Beach, Calif. The same coach Is also aiding the men’ s singles team in the canoeing ALBERT FINNEY/SUSANNAHYORK/HUGHGRIFFITH/EDITH EVANS/jOANGREENWOOD/'.TOMJONES" atSOHMMK / ImoMGufJ!M*MUMCJV/ SCMl«Mi|i I WOOOCIOIMOimilOl» I DIANE CIIENTO/GEORGI DEVINE / DAVID TOMLINSON/JOHN OSBORNE/TONY RICHARDSON/u^ir E A S T M A H C 0 L0R * UNITED ARTISTS LOPERT RELEASE « « « / mZa, “ PARIS WHEN competition. mentioned a team from Washing­ ton, D.C., as their biggest worry. INFORMATION IT S I Z Z L E S ” i»»» I H I T N O (2) ( F I R S T R U N F E A T U R E ) A T 1 0 :1 5 | "Actually, it's a little diffi­ in T e ch n ico lo r cult to say just what the com­ 1 :0 0 - 3 :0 5 - 5 :1 0 • 7 :1 5 • 9 :2 0 petition will be like during an Olympic y e a r , ” Chris said. "T h e re 's a l w a y s the chance j -T |L - t I t '."/ !' ww 1 «¿Mat»» « q o w I SHOWS At 2:00-5:00-8:05’’ 1 I I 2nd A t 7 : 4 8 PATRICKALLEN 7 OSCAR NOMINATIONS! » - I JACQUELINE ELLIS someone might come up out of including | AMERICA'S MIOHTIESTAMENfOREI ! JA M E S MAXWELL nowhere.” Since the same girls seem to • B est Actor* B e s t A ctress — METRO-QOLDWYN-MAYER— . ' and CINERAMApreaant A UNIVERSAL RELEASE compete in these events year • B est Supporting Actor after year, ybu get to know the competition,” M a r cl a added. Shown at 1:00-3:05-5:10-7:15-9:25 mm I STARTING WEDNESDAY, A P R IL 15 » "When you beat them over and •over again, it wears down their THE WEST I LANSING egos.” Marcia was first attracted to the sport after seeing how poorly PAUL NEWMAN ! WASWON | CAN SEETHE NO. 1 the United States did In the 1960 Olympic canoeing competition. She placed in national compe­ IS HUD! METROCOLOR* STARTIN G ATTRACTION OF ALLTIME . SALEMDOVER» w . J Ä =-i Ä * j P M orrie R ichm an tition in 1961, just five weeks after she bought her own kayak. _v— M-. DOUGLAS-NEAL-deWILDE m MON FRIDAY presents AT SPECIAL POPULAR PRICES! As one of the top threepaddle- noua,* micio» miw» ho NOMINATED FOR 9 ACADEMY AWARDS ists in each of the events of the PANAVISION lURiiNRin. ihg raveich makiinmu iwingrmiich harrifi frank, i m i «Mi » uh» m u m n • hiojc scinto» tLMLR BERNSTEIN- * PtRUKHJK! RtltASE N a t i o n a l C a n o e and Kayak MCLU0ING "BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR” BURT StVINARTSPRODUCTIONSJOELPRODUCTIONS.«» GRADUATES LANCASTER TWO SHOWS DAILY- MATINEES 2 P.M. EVENINGS 8 P. M. KIRK B o x O f f i c e O pe ns A t 1 2: 45 P . M . NOSEATS RESERVED IF YOUR MAJOR IS IN THE FIELD OF: I DOUBLAS zo. HMMUC CLINICALPSYCHOLOGY MARCH A M CLINICALSOCIALW ORK I GARDNER «» E L E A N O R H O L B R O O K • SUNDAY,APRIL26, » SPEECHANDHEARING ■IT HITS THE SCREEN WITH; SPECIALEDUCATION THE SPEED OF LIGHTNING !j 7:30P.M . .■»»•»%> m. *»< • i f 11 •• • i i .* K- >•"' • ■* i "I M U A * • li - if.. > i. i r*\Aif sippi committed to critical think­ "I would say about 20 girls voted here today,” she said, "and He said the candidates had F o r L on gest L a p summer in a concentrated effort : ive days a week, offering a cur­ ing and social action.” to raise the educational level oi riculum designed to bolster polit­ Moses has also been recruit­ that is out of a total of 32 girls the experience and the grades, HONOLULU (UPl)-Mrs. Jerrie young Negroes and to prepare ical awareness and improve living ir. the house.” but did not have the ideas to ing students at the University of Mock was scheduled to take off them for political action to fight reading and writing skills. Robert Fenchuk, Temperance make a useful student govern­ Michigan and the University of from Honolulu Tuesday night on discrimination. SNCC hopes the schools will be junior and Pi Kappa Phi, said ment. California at Berkeley. More than the longest over-water lap of her able to offer programs in jour­ the mobile unit had not been to 200 students have already volun­ "I am impressed with, the cam­ round-the-world solo flight. Her SNCC is also planning to inten­ nalism, humanities, political sci­ his house yet‘ DUt the idea was teered. paigns put or. by the candidates, takeoff fo r San Francisco de­ sify its Negro voter registration ence and creative writing. great because the ballots were Students will also be able to and I think they are all capable pended o n weather conditions drive and adult community cen­ more accessible. aid in the freedom voter regis­ of doi ng a good job,” Jan over the Pacific. ter programs through volunteer Moses said the Negro schools "The idea is great if it only tration drive. They will work in Houghton, Hunt i ngt on Woods The Columbus, Ohio, housewife aid this summer from students, i: i Mississippi may be as much •vorks,” Harry Colestock, South a campaign, launched in Febru­ freshman, said. faced a 2,400 mile air journey in teachers, lawyers and medical as six grades behind educational Lyon sophomore and a member ary, to register over 400,000 Ne­ her attempt to become the first personnel. standards for the rest of the na­ groes on freedom registration of Farm House, said. The mobile Miss Johnson said she believed woman to circle the earth alone. "Students who come to M iss- tion. books which resemble the official M I N O R I T Y P E O P L E S S P E A K E R - R o b e r t M os e s , director of units had not been to the house books of the state. the M i ss i ssi ppi V o te r Reg i st ra t i on Pr o j ect for the Student yet. Student opinion or. the elec­ These will serve as a basis for N o n - V i o l e n t Coor di nat i ng Co mmi tt e e , addresses audience at $250,000 Beta House Parking Problems challenging official state regis­ tration records and the validity of official federal elections this Union Monday eve n i ng . Pho t o by Geral d Bray There are To Be Completed By Fall (continued from page 1) week days and the forenoon Sat­ expect 18,000 student cars reg­ istered on this campus in 1967, fall. A massive number of students to aid in the voter registration ROTC Cadets Talk V op.struction > r.ew Beta mother and a study and trophy plus more faculty cars. This two c la s s ring urdays. drive will be concentrated in at hetn Pi fratei fuse if due room. bridge is going to relieve much companies to serve you. ) be completed Members wi: end of July. )!e to move E.G rarid River, The dining area connects the wings. Floor-to-ceiling windows will cover the wall facing the All students and faculty cars will still have to be registered, Hannah said. of the congestion.” Hannah also said a new dor- miiory to be built east of M c- least three Mississippi cities. Students must be 18 to partici­ pate in the project. Parental con­ To Air Installations He also said the bus service sent is required fo r students Air Force ROTC cadets will affecting U.S. air defense. The Robert’s Ring Co. about ( le east of Red Cedar River. Donel will open to bids this to be instituted will be run by under 21. Information may be ob­ have the unique opportunity of cadets will also be able to com­ Campus, at ting of fall The house has three living week. T h i s is a six story struc­ and the University. A flat charge, tained at the NAACP office on the taking part in a direct two-way municate with the briefing offi­ term. rooms, one of which is sunken, ture and will be included in the telephone conversation with one which has not yet been deter­ third floor of Student Services. cer in Colorado. E llio tt's Ring Co. Desig •d b rt James R. and has a fireplace covering McDonel-Fee-Akers complex. of the world’ s most important mined, will allow a student to The telephone report is part Living st wi < st Mver one entire wall. "Th is dormitory will not be defense installations today. The exterior will be field- buy a bus ticket, valid for one of a briefing which will be pre­ S250,001 It two wings, named until it is built,” he said, An amplified telephone tie-in stone and redwood. All inter­ term. These tickets will be sold sented by John B. Lazell of the one for 22 twe- bedrooms, "and there are no plans now to from the AFROTC campus class­ the other a suite tl c house- ior beams will be exposed, even at the dormitory desks, he said. "The student is not required name it after the late President Committee Rush room directly to th e North Michigan Bell Telephone C o m -' in bedrooms. John F. Kennedy." pany. Lazell will discuss the role to purchase these tickets,’ Han­ American A ir Defense Command He also told the students that Starts For IFC of c o m m u n i c a t i o n s in this ON EDAYSERVICE nah said, "but we hope that the new modern buses and the con­ venience to the student will make the "front door” of the Uni­ versity has moved from the Ab­ H e a d q u a r t e r s in Colorado Springs, Col. will provide the Committee rush for In ter-F ra ­ cadets with an on-the-spot re­ nation’s/defense systems. Lazell, district plant engineer Rings include degree, seal, • Bock by 4 Deprived Children this plan popular." bott Road entrance to Harrison ternity Council wi l l be h e l d port of the North American air for Michigan Bell in Lansing, 3 .engraved initials and a choice of 10 stones. SPECIALTHISW EEK To Tour Campus A shuttle system between the transit car parking lot and the Road because of the new con­ nector' with state freeways. Thursday in 307A Student Ser­ defense situation. vices from 7 to 9 p.m. A briefing officer in Colorado is a 1923 civil engineering grad­ uate of Michigan State. He visited c74? W ashPants A group of underprivileged children from Detroit will be center of campus is planned, he said. Plans are under consideration to build a new student union on the sight of the present Har­ Open will be social, public re ­ Springs will report on actions lations, publicity, publications, taken to identify unknown air­ internal relations, constitutional craft over the North American the Colorado Springs headquar­ ters in 1962. All three of Lazell’ s children accompanied by Student Educa­ Hannah said the rumors about GoaJL G>nofi 390 tion Corps members on a tour of the campus today. Bogue Street bridge not being necessary are not true. "Have you ever tried to go rison Road quonsets, he said. board of review, scholarship, continent within the past 24 hours, "We must realize that in the goals, and expansion committees. describe U.S. and Russian satel­ future the greater majority of There will be 10 to 15 members on lites now in orbit, report po­ are MSU graduates. His son, Robert, received a commission through AFROTC in 1948 and Ac r os s From Home E conomi cs Bldg. Lansing Laundry The 38 youngsters have been sent here from the Detroit Spe­ across Farm Lane bridge at noon time?" Hannah asked. "We teaching will be on South Cam­ each committee. Newpledges are sitions of ships in nearby waters pus," he said. eligible. and describe weather conditions s e r v e ^ ^ an Air Force naviga- F D 2-6753 cial Education Project Vocation­ tor* ^ K & Dry Cleaners al Rehabilitation Center. This is the second group this year which GqaA §>llfrp, 1 12 W e s t G r a n d R i v e r SEC has invited to the campus. A iw ie A , E a s t L a n s in g S e r v in g E a s t L a n s in g an d The children will tour the hor­ ticulture greenhouses and cow P la c e m e n t B u r e a u Spartan Center C a m p u s s in c e 1926 barns. They will eat lunch in Brody cafeteria. Students must register two jr. high basketball, swimming, tion, elementary e d u c a t i o n , tary, English for high school Elementary education, j u n i o r days before date of i nt e r ­ wrestling, (B,M). M/F. speech correctionists, physical high English, and social studies (B). M/F. v i ew. BIGGER DISCOUNT Grant Public Schools: Elemen­ tary education, Spanish agricul­ therapist, (B,M). M/F. Newaygo High School: Elemen-' (B), senior high math (B). M/F. East Hills Junior High School: BYRNES Apri l 20, Monday Zeeland Public Schools: E le ­ Counselor (M), vocal and general tural education (B). M/F. tary education, high school math BARGAINS DRUG Bangor Public Schools: E le ­ G r a s s Lake Community (B). M/F. mentary education, high school— home economics, industrial arts, music (B) and art. M/F. Farwell Area Schools: E le­ mentary education, instrumental Schools: Elementary, science(B, Retail Credit Co.: All majors head football coach, wrestling mentary education, elementary AT STORE music, (B), guidance (M). M/F. Believue Community Schools: M). M/F. Hesperia Community Schools: of the Colleges of Business, Arts and L e t t e r s , Communication coach. (B). M/F. vocal music, secondary Spanish or French, physics-chemistry, GRAND RIVER AT MAC Elementary education, English, Elementary e d u c a t i o n , hi gh Arts, Social Science (B). M/F. Apri l 2 1 , T u e s d a y industrial arts, math, English, an math (B). M /F. school commerce, home ec, spe­ Sarkes Tarzian, Inc.: Chem­ Albion Public Schools: E le­ P .E . (B,M). M/F. NEWSPAPERS BOOKS M AGAZINES Creamery Package Manufac­ cial education, coach,basketball, istry, electrical engineer, met­ mentary education, journalism F e d e r a l Deposit Insurance turing Co.: Mechanic an, chemical track (B,M). M/F. allurgical engineer, mechanical and English, general science, GILLETTE STRAWBERRY engineer, dairy and food technol­ ogy (B,M). Fremont Public Schools: Ele­ Imlay City Public Schools: ele­ mentary education (B). M/F. Lowell Area Schools: J r . high, engineer, all majors of the Col­ lege of Engineering (B,M,D) ra­ dio and TV, speech, drama and math, guidance and counseling (M), special education Type A Corp.: All majors of the College of :sines s with emphasis on Banking (B). STAINLESS STEEL SUNDAE mentary art, junior high, math, Latin, Spanish, industrial arts, science, vocal music, and Eng­ lish, senior high, English, lan- others. M /F. Saugatuck Public Schools': High (B,M). M/F. Camp Easton for Boys: SUM­ MER EMPLOYMENT: Water­ Good Humor Corp.: SUMMER EMPLOYMENT: All majors for Good Humor ice cream salesmen BLADES high school English (B,M), spe­ cial education, men’s P.E., Ath­ letic director, assistant football, guage-Latin. (B,M) M/F. Montcalm Area Intermediate School District: Special educa- school English, business educa­ tion, (shorthand not required), front director, (with WSI, age 21 or over), camp craft, nature, ar­ to work primarily in Detroit. home ec, baseball and basketball Hale Area Schools: Early ele­ 19 chery, sailing, canoe, waterski- 69 (B). M/F. ing and rifle (NRA Instructors mentary, high school English, and V e t e r a n ’ s Administration: Certificate), counselors, age 19 journalism, physics, chemistry, SUMMER EMPLOYMENT (B)for or over. biology, home economics, social re g. 30C J r . or Sr. in grad, school in Lewis Cass Intermediate Dis­ science, music high school in­ reg . 890 psychology, social work andHRl, trict: Special education—social strumental and elementary vocal. sophomores or above in account­ work (B,M), speech, psychology M/F. LETUS FILLYOUR ing or industrial arts for student assistant. M/F. Waukegan Township High: High (B,M,D). Cutler-Hammer, Inc.: Market­ ing (M). Hull School: Elementary edu­ cation, special education (B). M/F. school English, mathematics, so­ School District #7 - City of P R E S C R IP T IO N S cial studies, business education, journalism (photography), spe­ cial education (B,M). M/F. Dearborn Heights: Elementary Education, vocal music. (B,M) M/F. Board of Education Huron In­ termediate School District: Spe­ cial education (B), visiting teach­ C O M P LE TE STOCK - LOWEST PRICES White Cloud Public Schools: Durand Area Schools: Elemen- er (B), speech correction (B). M/F. Jenison Public Schools: Ele-< B-H mentary education, junior high English, social studies (B).M /F. W ETTING SOLUTION FOR C O N TA C T LENSES SIMIIAC LIQUID WE’RE MAD More listings for April 2 1 , will appear tomorrow. BENSON C|19 reg. $ 1 .5 0 & ENGLISH O V A L 190 CAN m »” AT MADRAS •COPPERTONE QT. ■ ■■COUPON ■■■! t p ir e s A p r ii 18, 1964 a ■ is a a COUPONBBBB E x p ir e s pHisoHex A p r il 5 oz. plastic bottle 18, 1964 S p r in g fresh Wallace fashion eyewear an d d e lig h tfu l. . . M il à Add vivid beauty to your spring costuma with 12 limit one 8 9 * m ! reg. $ 1 .2 9 ■ limit I l mi t one 9 6 * J i reg. $ 1. 50 B Wallace's exciting eyewear. Our vast collec­ tion of fashion fram er allows you to choose DRESSES SKIRTS 5 ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ C O U P O N !■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ C ü U P O N B B M M « » ■ E x p ir e s A p r il 18, 1964 m E x p ir e s A p r il 18. 1964 2 eyewear to complement costume, coloring or BLOUSES FRESH AERO SO L PRO personality. Look over the many new styles BERMUDAS DEODORANT a ■ TOOTHBRUSH S for sprina! PURSES B ILLFO LD S tone T S * & eg. $1. 25 « l .. . 4 7 * J l i mi t ons £ 4P reg 6yç a WALLACE OPTICIANS *. « k«4» • 34 n Ijt • tv s » »• ■ • «V■I UM M2Gr »..•*'■ - J. -#J itftMt A LB E R T - 3040 Vine (opposite F rondor) P h . I V 9 - 2 7 7 4 ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ E B B B is> a fia a iic a iB ii> *ü 4 i& 4 sa K a ia a a ik iD ii AT a ls o offices downtown at 1 07 N . Washington. P h . I V 2 - 1 1 7 5 OUR 35thYEAR INEAST LANSING m tr r - D r . R . C . Jones and D r . B . C . Bussar d, registered optometrists MAC 4 M i c h i g a n S t a t e News, E a s t L a n s i n g , M ic hi g a n Wednesday, Aprii i o , Í 9 b 4 y F i l l Y o u r S h o p p in g C u r t W it h N A T IO N A L ^ ^ B F O O D STORE! N a t io n a l M o n e y S a v e r B u y s ! We reserve the right to limit quantities. Prices effective thru Sat., Apr. 19th. YOU JUST CAN’T BEAT THAT NATIONAL M6AT”! F a rm -F re sh W h o le T e n d e r Fancy G o v t. In sp ected , Young FA N CY Tur keys ANY SIZE 6 LBS. & UP HENS AND TOMS . . . COME AND GET 'EM. GET ONE TODAY! roan me 59 O U R Q U A L IT Y -R IT E Whole p l u s a t or S e m i- B o n e le s s H A M S Half N A T IO M A L S & H O R E E N F O O D S S T A M P S Practically Boneless S WISE PRICES 3 SIZE SLICES Boston Butt P o rk R oast Lb. 39 NATIONAL SLICED BACON H IL L S ID E TO P TA STE T H IC K S L IC E D TO P TASTE N A T IO N A L FREE 50 EXTRA &H W IT H T H IS C O U P O N CO UPO N . STAMPS 69 With The Purchase of 3 Lbs. or More Solid, Lean C O R N -FED Lb. M E D IU M S L IC E D 49 lb . 2 £98* S L IC E D 591 W A F E R ________ ^ 7 lb . HAM BURGER Reda.m This Coupon At National Food Store». Coupon Expires Saturday, April IS. Boneless Chuck R o ast . . . 69 D ic e d G r is tle F ree N A T IO N A L C O U P O N N A T IO N A L 'S C O R N -F E D FREE W IT H T H IS CO UPO N Lb. Boneless B eef S t e w ............ 50 EXTRA G^en STAMPS With The Purchase of Any Package TEN D e lic io u s H O T D O G S T O A PACKAGE So Prosh, Boneless Haddock Fillets . . S w is s S t e a k PORK STEAKS Redeem This Coupon At National Food Storoe. Coupon Expire» Saturday, April IS. H illsid e F r a n k s • Lb. 49 Mrs. Pawl's • ■ • ,PLk gb. - 5 9 ROUND BONE BLADE CUT Fish Fillets............ X" 69* 3ss1 TO P TASTE, M IC H . GRADE 1 Bologne, Famous Per Flavor SHOULDER CUT CHUCK STEAK N A T IO N A L C O U P O N L u nch M e a ts Pickle t Pimente, Olive, Dutch Booth Breaded Shrimp 10 - O x . £ Ç c FREE W IT H T H IS CO UPO N 5$ 49 50 EXTRA STAMPS Pkg. S tH N a t i o n a l's T O P T A S T E , F in e f o r S n a c k s B r a u n s c h w e ig e r • 2 ¿L 89* So Froth, Quick Plxln' Ocean Perch Fillets. . . . 1 -Lb . Pkg. 49* 1C G re e n With the Purchase of • 11-ox. Size Welch's W A LN U T OR PECAN M EATS lb Redeem This Coupon At National Food NATIONAL’S PRODUCE IS ALWAYS FRESH! Stores. Coupon Expires Saturday, April 18. O ranges [ U.S. NO. 1 NEW CROP N A T IO N A L C O U P O N CALIF. VALENCIA SHOP NATIONAL FOR YOUR FREE W IT H T H IS CO UPO N C A R D E N N E E D S 25 EXTRA £L STAMPS With The Purchase of Orchard Fresh or Top Taste 19*Ox. or 12*Oi. 2 Bags$C18 First of S .N .S . 1 0-6 -4 F o r m u la J A M , J E L L Y or P R E S E R V E S Covers Redeem This Coupon At National Food the Season WEED N’ FEED 5,000 Sq. Ft. Stores. Coupon Expires Saturday, April IS. and They Doz. S p a rta n $£96 Are Delicious! F lo r id a - V i n t R ig o — F in o f o r S a la d s M i ld T a s t in g 7 9 LAWN FOOD ,w s w 4 Sq. Ft. N A T IO N A L FREE W IT H T H IS C O U P O N CO UPO N TOMATOES u 19* YELLOW ONIONS 3 & 2 2 ‘ PLANT FOOD G re e n Up 1 0-6 -4 F o r m u la Covers £98 50 EXTRA STAMPS 2 5 0 -Lb . $ 5,000 Bogs With The Purchase of Any Pkg. Fresh Pack Sq. Ft. C A N D Y FRO M M A N Y LANDS Redeem This Coupon At National Food DON’T M ISS T H E S E NATIONAL M O N EY S A V E R S Assorted Hybrid P l y m o u t h o r C o lo ni al E v e r b l oo mi n g First Q u a l i t y Stores. Coupon Expiros Saturday, April 18. C ream y Sm ooth — D elicious in Salads Rose Bushes . . ‘«s- 9 9 * N A T IO N A L C O U P O N Top Taste Salad Dressing BMut"*1 Everblooming Roses___________ $1.29 FREE 25WithEXThe W IT H TRA T H IS 2Z. STAMPS COUPON A m erican or Pim ento Purchase of Any Size CHECK N A TIO N A L’S BAN CREAM DEODORANT Natco Cheese Slices . . . . L O W , L O W P R I C E S ON Redeem This C o u p o n At National Food Stores. Coupon Expire» Saturday, April Yi. T op T a ste — M akes D elicious San d w ich es HEALTH & BEAUTY Luncheon Meat • • • • • • • • A ID S N A T IO N A L FREE W IT H T H IS C O U P O N CO UPO N T op T a ste — D elicious fo r Lunch Reg. 13-Ox. 78 S Flus 50 EX TRA STAMPS Vienna Sausage ■ I ■ I 99c Can Tax With The Purchase of 4—24-Ox. Bottles Assorted Orchard Fresh — A T re a t with Ham H E A D AN D S H O U L D E R S Reg. Lge. $1.00 Tube IT TO P T R E A T BEVERAGES Redeem This Coupon At National Food Stores. Coupon Expires Saturday» April 18. Apple Sauce _ _ . .. _ • • • • • • • • • _ Shur Good, Fudge C re m e 59 3 2-O x. N A T IO N A L C O U P O N Fruit Cocktail ^ -b ^ b b b u b b b . . .2 S 3 9 * SANDWICHC00KIES • • ^ Duei Cr(m( SoBdwi(h Pkg. FREE W IT H T H IS CO UPO N 16-Oz. 50WithEX TRA ££ STAMPS N atco'flour . 5 6 3 9 * K H * a" D- • ■ Bog 49 The Purchase of a 4-Ox. Jar TOP TASTE IN S TA N T COFFEE Redeem This Coupon At National Food | Stores. Coupon Expires Saturday, April 18. m C ream y Evaporated V m J| ■ B a s i l Q _ 141/2 -0 1 . S U HI-HO CRACKERS 111 l l v L R M in illJ . 1 -Lb . B ox» 39 Top Taste Canned Milk . O Can* I bi, iw N A T IO N A L C O U P O N W EST0N C 0 0 K IE S 2 Lb. S iz e 59 FREE W IT H T H IS CO UPO N N A T IO N A L C O U P O N 25 EX TRA H STAMPS THISC OUPONWORTH$2.00 Toward The Purchatt o* T o p T a s t e — M a d e w i t h B u t t e r m i l k — Sliced With The Purchase of a 16-Ox. Can Easy Life SPRAY STARCH 1-QT. CASSEROLE Reg. $5.99 With Coupon $3.99 One Coupon For Family |M Redeem This Coupon At National Food FRSSH Oo. I Q c Redeem This Coupon At National Food Stores. Coupon Expires Saturday, April IS. < ■ Stores. Coupon Expires Saturday. April 11. BREAD . Lo*‘ I M N A T IO N A L C O U P O N FREE W IT H T H IS CO UPO N 25 EXTRA H STAMPS D o u b le câ êl S t a m p s ivm W e d n e s d a y nrirtr Vtire r*DN?hese ur m -9; Way above average condition and summer and winter. Sportswear this ad. 10 sional dry cleaning, WENDROWS. the following: Union, 51, 51, 16, 702 W. Barnes 372-1279. 12 WOMEN OVER 21, SUMMER- Pants, sk irts, sweaters, 60£. 22, 68; trucks, 94, 38, 7, 7, Call IV 4-0362 BUlQK SKYLARK. 1962. This priced to goll A1 Edwards Co. FALL. 100 yards to Berkey or to cocktail. A ccessories and ★ Real E state Plain d resses, suits, coats, $1.19. 16; Berkey, 92, 59, 16, 29, 71; Open Evenings Mon & F ri sporty special going to some Lincoln, Mercury, Comet Deal­ Bogue St. entrance. Furnished, shoes. Also some men’s clothes. 3006 Vine St., 1/2 block west of South Campus G rill, 22, 19, 3, er. 3125 E. Saginaw (North of c l e a n , utilities. 1 -2 -4 -6 - girl Phone IV 5-4101. 12 160 ACRES bi-sected by 2 trout Frandor. 1963 CORVAIR SPIDER convert­ lucky party with older Chevy or Frandor.) C12 apartments. ED 2-2276. CIO 7, 16. ible $2,100 4-speed positraction $150 down. TU 2-4583. 11 11 DUPLICATING MACHINES. 3 to stream s. Wild, good hunting. John T.V ., RADIO, PHONO REPAIR choose from. A11 in excellent con­ Sundstrom. 137 Bogue St. 332- and metal brakes. Phone IV ’58 STUDEBAKER. Good tran s- ’58 OPEL. Red, 2-door. E x cel- 9-9610. 10 portation. 1959 BUICK CONVERTIBLE.Ex- sonable price. Phone 337-2749. Real good tire s. Rea­ lent tires. 11 after 3 p.m. o v 30 e r - a l m.p.g. l condition. Call 355-8028 New 12 WALK! DON’ T DRIVE ^50 f t. to Bogue St, Bridge dition. Stencil, ditto. $25 up. 451L 332-8488. 12 IN THE village. Charming ôlder RAFT 8’ x 10’ . 1 year old. 332- large home with extra lot. View Prompt Service-New &UsedSets 14 Don’t Search—Call Church IV 2-5608 Turnout (continued from page 1) cellent condition. FE 9-2156. 13 CHEVROLET 1958 Convertible. 1957 CHEVROLET, 4-door. Body i960 FORD, 2-door FairlaneSOO. 4208. 10 of lake. Right in Haslett. Ex­ about 7,000 ballots to be cast < CHURCH T.V . SERVICE 348 engine positraction, power and tires good. New engine. Must 8 cylinder, s t i c k , exceptional ENGLISH 3 speed bicycle. $39.77. cellent for home or business. A in Thursday’ s final election, at 8080 W. Willow, Lansing steering, brakes, windows. A real see and drive to appreciate. $575. condition. 372-1603. 14 ACE HARDWHERE & GIFTS, 201 ra re buy. Owner is leaving coun­ which time voting for class of­ C beauty-offered by original owner. TU 2-6466. 11 H A R L E Y-DAVIDSON MOTOR- E. Grand River, across from t r y . Clarence Oberst, Walter ficers will also be held. C ompl et el y furnished $895 . 332-5692. 11 MOTOR SCOOTER. Good condi­ CYCLE. Over 1200cc. Excellent Union. ED 2-3212. C Neller Co. ED 7-9437._______12 TYPING SERVICE He said candidates will be • Wall to wal l carpeting FORD- 1959 4-door. 6 cylinder. tion. $135. Call 485-3916. 11 condition. Includes many extras. SPECIAL DISCOUNT price on 1238 REGENT, four room house TYPING. Term papers, theses. allowed to have one representa­ • 4 car parking with new interior, 6 minutes to IBM E le ctric. 337-1527. Work Low mileage. R/H, white walls. 1963 CHEVROLET Impala Con- Now only $450. Call ED 7-2114. electric s t e a m i r o n s . ACE tive present when the votes are 12 • A i r conditioned HARDWHERE & GIFTS, 201 E. campus. Ideal for young married guaranteed. 13 Excellent mechanical condition. vertible, 327-V -8, Radio, power- counted. Candidates themselves • Snack bar couple, $5800. Call 484-2052 or $550 or best offer. Call 8-5 glide, power steering, brakes. i960 FALCON, 4-door stick. R a- Grand River, across fromUnion. TYPING IN my home. Pick-up and will be allowed to wait in 13 355-4678. 6-10 355-6064. 13 White wall tire s. Phone 355- dio, heater. Good gas mileage. • Private Balcony E D 2-3212._________________ C21 355-2184. 13 delivery. Phone 669-9484. 10 Student Services. _____________ 13 Call 355-1079 after 5 pm. 12 • F o u r large closets TEFLON f r y i n g pans, house­ FIVE BEDROOM home. Excellent 1958 CHEVROLET. 2-door, six, 4170. All University Student Govern­ stick shift. New t i r e s ; 67,000 *57 FORD 4 door sedan. V-8 PONTIAC. Good condition. Di shwasher s wares and g i f t s . ACE HARD­ income for couple renting to stu­ TYPING in myhome . 15 years ment President Bob Kerr said miles. IV 5-2432. 11 stick,, over-drive. Deluxe, radio. 4-door, automatic transmission. WHERE & GIFTS, 201 E . Grand dents or fine tor large family. secretarial experience. Electric Tuesday that student interest in CORVETTE. White ’60 with ’61 $250.* Call 337-2343. 11 Reasonable p r i c e . C a l l ED R iver, across from Union. ED Approved student apartment at­ typewriter. IV 7-0619. CIO th e presidential elections is Call or Stop at the Model 2-3212. C tached. Call owner, A.T. Staser, ED1E STARR, TYPIST, Theses, greater this year for two rea­ 283 engine and transmission. 4 KARMANN-GHIA 1963. Original 7-0881. 12 speed 411 Positraction. Perfect owner. Top shape. Blue body, OLDSMOBILE- 1962 Starfire. 2 5 2 Cedar REYNOLD’S C b R N E T . t w o 337-1755. 11 dissertations, term papers, gen­ sons: condition. Call Mark 332-264’. white top, with matching interior. Rose mist. Fully equipped. Call 332-5051 332-5051 years old. Excellent condition. THREE BEDROOM Fram e house eral typing. Experienced, IBM —the way the campaigns were 12 30 day guarantee. IV 9-5570. U IV 9-2245. 17 Cost $235 new. Sell for $160. with finished paneled basement, E le ctric. OR 7-8232. C run, and 1960 RAMBLER. 4-door sedan. ’59 CHEVROLET 4-door, 6 cyl- FURNISHED APARTMENT. 1 or ED 2-4986. 12 furnished dark-room, screened —the strength of this year’s Custom. Reclining seats. Radio. inder, automatic. Excellent con­ ★ E m ploym ent 2 men to share with third man. M ARQ UE DIAMOND r i n g . 48 patio. Gas heat, garage, fenced TYPING in my home. Shirley student government. , ED 2-5514 after 6:30 p.m. 10 points. $375 value; asking $175. yard. Close to campus and Marble Decker, Forest Ave. Lansing. 6 cylinder, standard transm is­ dition. $735. Phone 332-6656. 12 Phone IV 2-7208. C Kerr said that the accusations sion. $795. 487-5880. 12 1 9 6 3 FAIRLANE 500. S~pori EARNINGS ARE unlimited as an GIRL NEEDED for brand new Call IV 4-5025._____________ 14 school. FHA, low down payment. 12 JOB RESUMES 100 copies, $4.W. against the elections commis­ WELL Ke p t ’ 53 Olds 2-door. Coupe. Bucket s e a t s . B l a c k . Avon representative. Turn your luxury apartment. C o n g e n i a l P O R T A B L E TYPEWRITER - 337-0531 after 5 sioner, and the fact that more 1 0 Aldinger Direct Mail advertising. — Has everything and looks nice. 15,000 m iles. Still guaranteed. free time into $$. For appoint­ roommates. Only $45 month. Qall Olympia P r e c i s i o n . Buy the MODÉRN 3 bedroom home dorm candidates are running has 533 North Clippert. IV 5-2213. Power. Only 52,000. Bargain at Must sell. 482-0209. 14 ment in your home write or call: Judy 355-7746. 10 finest. Term s available. Hassel- minutes to MSU. $16,900. 1809 C stimulated student interest in $275 for student or family. Phone AUSTIN-HEALEY. 100-6. Good Mrs. Alona Huckins, 5664 School Lyndhurst Way. FE 9-8228. 12 bring Co. 310 N. Grand IV 2 - TERM PAPERS, theses, exper- AUSG. WANTED: 1 girl to share apart­ 337-1449 Saturday, Sunday 8-5. condition. Must sell. 484-6870 St., Haslett, Michigan or call eve- 1219._______________________CIO ienced. IBM electric. Marianne He predicts that the number ment with another. Call 332- ★ S e r v ic e 12 before 10:00 p.m.___________ 12 n in g ^ ^ H I^ 9 -8 4 8 3 ^ ^ ii in X tn AVON B AR D -Afte r years, Shakespeare remains 403 From the A s s o c i a t e d Pr ess Why is it that the plays of a writer born four centuries ago of stories, and Shakespeare of­ fers good ones. He must be discovered slowly spect for man. He was compas­ sionate and hopeful, and his hon­ Full Cut Round 6 9 $ LB > sX are acted all over the world, and est but tender vision stands as a among the greatest classical and by oneself. The simplest and o writers of all time. play in its whole complexity. are more often edited, reprinted, translated and even read than those of any other writer, living best of his m erits, the one which finally breaks all language bar­ riers at home and abroad, is his beacon for humanity. We may be thankful that Shake­ speare is the writer who has been Sirloin Steak 85$ LB Weisinger s a i d Shakespeare or dead? "B o jan g les" Robinson, quite wonderful decency. internationalized rather t h a n had an enormous vocabulary and he used his language to give genius of the tap dance, was once asked to what he attributed his success. After a moment of stern some dark darling of the modern There is a natural human good­ coteries. The most forceful writ­ A&P Frozen Straw berries T-Bone Steak 95$. c specific and concrete details on ness radiating f r o m Shake­ ers of today take a dim view of 3*1 the ideas he was conveying. concentration, he said " i t must speare’ s works—goodness ot a the human race, and of course S oz. pkg, Shakespeare understood human character almost a s well as F reud, he said. be m’ dancin’ . " It was a good reply. It must be Shakespeare’ s writ­ precious kind, because it com­ they may be right. bines firm ness of moral texture Perhaps we do not deserve the with a spirit of love andkindness. respect and love expressed in I > : 10 4'.85' super SICHT SEMI-BONELESS HAMS 57t lb .!,,£ 2 k ^F rozen Sunnyfield Waffles C HOICE BEEF CHUCK ROAST "Shakesepare generalizes on ing that accounts for his success Qualities we too often associate Shakespeare’ s art. Then all the BEST B LA D E Q his topics, only alluding to con­ temporary political issues with­ as a writer, not the stale "m y s­ te rie s " about his life nor their only with amiable softheadedness kinder his gift. Whether or not are dignified in Shakespeare by we deserve it, we want it and need CUT 39* l b . in out stating forthright the con­ sem i-fresh "solutions.” A repu­ intellectual vigor and great art­ It. Biographers may as well stop 5 oz. pkg. 10c > ditions as they w ere,” Weisinger said. " it is wrong to assume that tation can be so awesome that it paralyzes our minds. We forget that it rests upon the conspic­ istry. speculating about Shakespeare’s This great artist was also a theoretical amours. We already wise and just and merciful man. know whom he loved. He loved us. ; A&P Frozen Potato M orsels ARMCUTROAST ENGLISHCUTROAST 2 <* b 49$ • 59* Shakesepare wrote with any spec­ uous presence of merits of a sim­ He faced reality, yet remained And because he loved us, we love ific events in mind.” Weisinger s a i d Shakespeare ple kind. People have always been fond an idealist. He saw all of man’s him. The whole world still loves infirm ities, yet retained his re - this lover. 1-1 b. bag 19c r> MARVEL ICE MILK 490 ft STATE 1 2 GAL. X 619 E. Grand River ANGEL SOFT FACIAL TISSUES 400 C T . B C X E S 2-390 (A z Across FromStudent Services CLAPP’S STRAINED BABY FODD JARS 10-790 o in HICDRINKS MEL 0 - 8 IT CHEESE SUCES "S. m DISCOUNT Daily9 a.m. 6#> ¿¿ à g G R A P E A D E , ORANGEADE, FRUI 1I I ITTFPUNCH. P I N E A P P L E ORANGE 6 oz, PKG, 4 $1.00 C in Cosmetics &Vitamins Wed. 9a.m. 9p 1 qt. 14 o z . C A N S 3 89$ * l e s s e r q u a n t i t i e s a t r e g u l a r le ■o g D L i m i t • O n e Pu r chase F o r E ach Coupon JA N E PARKER BAKERY FEATURES- tn -4 J> PUMPKIN PIE 390 EA. s u in Sandwich Bread 1 1/4 L B . LOAVES 2- 390 n > dazed Donuts DOZ. 350 in X couponl I coupon! Cinnamon Bread EA. 290 in > COLGATE 1Q/l ALKA SELTZER Figure 8 Coffee Cake EA. 290 < Z a Toothpaste luÇ tn reg. BJç reg. 59c 1» I CALIF. FRESH ASPARAGUS 25$ ¡S coupon Icouponl C OldSpice Cigarettes Head Lettuce Winesap Apples in ShaveBom b 30 S I Z E 2-29* 59$ 5 3 4/990 10 A P P L E S 5 reg. $1. 00 BANANAS Pascal Celery I couponl i couponl 2 lbs 29$ EA. 25$ m ^net TABU COLOGNE THE GNEAT ATLANTIC A PACIFIC TEA COMPANY, INC, $1.69 n Y o u r A & P Super Market > E £ u p er M arkets I/» 0 J J I j reg. 2. 50 corner of Hagadorn & E a s t X Grand R i v e r , E a s t L a n s i n g V* STOREHOTS: 9AM -9PM AM ERICA’S D I H H O M U TO M M IRC H A H T S JN C I M S * » , <: M onday Air prices in t ^is ad effect i ve thru Sat. Apri l I i / 1 9 6 4 in all fi ve L a n s i n g A & P Super Markets. B: Specials Available at East Lansing Store Only mmm m m n m m m H SAVINGS . PLUS P L A » - - n É É | ìt F re e P a rkin g A t R ear Of Store Coupons Good T h ru . A p r il 20 Wedne av 10 M ic h ig a n S t a te News, E a s t L a n s i n g , M ic h ig a n Ca)t*nc!arof S a fe ty D irec to r S p e a k s T o R e tir e e s C lin ic T u rn o u t S a tisfie s ( iu m in g E v e n t« Spartan Guard Drill Team - C lo se Livin g C re a te s P o lice P rob lem s Fe u rig ; 6 ,7 8 8 Im m unized 4 p.m., Demonstration Hall. Accounting and FinanceClub- 7 p.m., 32 Union. "Michigan State is a place for learning, service and re cre a - but only one case of attack, at- tempted rape and conviction was The members of the depart­ ment of public safety also serve P r o m e n a d e r s — 7 p.m 34 Richard O. Bernitt, d irec- recalled by Bernitt. as safety engineers, p r e v e n -, J.imes F eurlg, direc- Feurlg said he thought the day was the best day to hold an 01 in M ¡rnorial Health Cen- turnout at Olin was "a good immunization clinic. Women s IM. tor of public safety, said Thurs- He also said that narcotics fires, handle food and water sup­ express« d satisfaction with Students who missed the first Phi Gamma N u -7:15p.m .,Stu - Hay_ ..but it is also a place for "pushers” have been arrested. plies. representative figure" because turnout a last Sunday’ s po­ persons who have already had t h e clinic at which vaccine for Type dent Service Lounge. thief to get fat and a sex deviate Student traffic violations this Bernitt said that the depart­ Mi Humanist Society—8 p.m.. Un o fulfill his desires. year number 3,772. ment has 28 uniformed policeof- mmunizaition clinic. immunization and those who I polio was given may still ob­ e said 6.77SS persons received would not take it for religious tain Types III and II at future ion Ballroom. Bernitt t o l d members of the sa bin olio vaccine at Olin reasons must also be taken into clinics. Feurig said. They could alone. ese S20 were chil- under 16, 149 under one account. But he questioned whether Sun- then pick up Type I at a private source or at a clinic in another UJS C o rrectio n MSU R etirees Club that because people live close together on campus, problems are created Socialist To Speak Here old. county. The article on the UN Confer- for University policement. The president of the Progres­ | lie PI.M wa' organize! The vaccine, obtained from ence appearing inTuesday’sState "D orm s are like hotels, and sive Labor Student Club of New two years ago 1iy socialis a private source, would prob- News incorrectly reported that felt that the e the doors are usually left open.” York City will address the Young 1FROTC Sets Goal ably cost a minimum of $5 for a resolution was adopted which each type, Feurlg said. would allow Israel to complete The cost of the entire county construction of pipeline divert- Bernitt said that lastyear 1,800 reports of criminality were r e ­ ceived by the department of pub­ Socialist Club at 8:45 toni it in the second floor Union Sun Porch. Jerry Gelles will discuss the and communist groups U.S. had failed in I and had violated basic soc purpos OJ 3.000 Blood Donors polio prevention program for the ing the Jordan R iver.This motion lic safety. The majority of these r e c e n t l y - f o r me d Progressive principles. first Sunday ran about $40,000, was not passed. The resolution were thefts. Labor Movement, ( P L M) its The new group is based he said. which passed the general assem - Numerous "peeping toms” are aim s, methods, objectives and CIf ’ ■ce ROTC spring held in Demonstration Hall, The next clinic will behel d bly specified that Israel shall de- idea ■lolds militant aci apprehended by campus police, principles. e will begin Mon- Monday has been reserved pri­ May 10. _____________ sist from diverting the river. 3,000 pints marily f o r faculty and staff, -ox. jar In s ta n t C offee according to Joe Montana, Buf- 2 of veek-lor >e wii be falo, N.Y., senior and chair- — man of the drive. of Kroger "However if students want to Poll Indicates donate on Monday, they won’t be turned away," he said. Awards will be given to the Spotlight with 3 rd week coupon and $2 purchase Coeds Seek residence hall with the highest percentage of donations. We reserve the right Copyright the Kroger Co 1964 fMrs.’ Degree "We a l s o plan on making appropriate awards to houses or precincts with the highest to limit quantities See K ro g er’s B ig najority of coeds art average in each dorm,” Mon- J G if t M a i l e r f o r a F R E E G ift coll ice to man* it i by a Uni- a tana said. TENDERAY B EEF S A L E ! / E v e r y W e e k p lu s O th e r California B ig V a lu e s ! prof Tax Consultant IA ßrag«; R ed eem y o u r f il le d T o p V a lu e sociate profes- at USC. He be- Boosts RFK Here an d K rog er S t ic k e r C ard s . ie\ e 4 • culture women From Our Wire Services X th is w eek fo r 3 , 0 0 0 get n os of their status Tenderay Swiss, Rib or f rom i.inds, and that .\ Chinese tax consultant who Ik E x t r a T o p V a lu e society a women who is calls himself a Republican an- S ta m p s! i 30 is an oddity, me questioned ? toliowir colleges nounced Tuesday the formation 0f a committee t o boost the Democratic v i c e presidential ROUND ties: MSI Welles- Oregon, Stanford W is c o n - Cornell, Califor ni and Illi- chances of Atiy. Gen. Robert Kennedy in Michigan. Paul P. Ch.ien, an East Lansing S T E A K >» » V A L U A B L E M 25 Extra Top Value Stamps M C O U P O N . I hose »rviewed were accountant, said the committee w ith the purchase o f M b or m ore Tenderay Boneless Top Round or •equi red ve their names of which he is chairman intends O sca r M a y e r M realisti he was beint opinion, for n to circulate petitions and dis­ tribute information to promote S IR L O IN i PORK SAUSAGE LINKS For faster se rvice , please g iv e .ashier ht a wom.i rolled at a coed t|le vice presidential prospects I coo upo u p o n bDerore e fo re yyou o u rr oord rdeerr is rung college, in "the best 0f the brother of the late Presi- PORK I Redeem at K ro g e r thru Sat., Apri* 18, 11964 possible preserve." dent. S T E A K ib. CHOPS Campus Briefs Tenderay ^"G 50 Extra Top Value Stamps G Chuck Steaks 4 9 / H w ith the pu rchase of a n y 2 cans of K ro g e r First Humanist Talk 59/ I 4 oz. Chili Powder,4-oz. Ground Cinnamon, * 3¥«-oz. Ground Paprika or I4-oz. Ground Black Pepper For faster se rvice , please g iv e cashier To Define Movement j Tenderay Boston Rolled Center Cut SA V E 5 0 / ■ I co u p o n before you r o rd e r is rung. Redeem af K ro g e r fhru S al., A p ril 18, 1964. I -e m the Humanist Society's series on humanism at 8 tonight in theUnion Ballroom, Boneless HAM S L I C E S with mailer coupon on a Patrick Cudahay I g — — Q :-e Hui V, al si ¡st er lectur associate pruiessor of philosophy and adviser to :iety, will speak on "Humanism: What It Is ." in the series will include "The Psychology of Pot Roast Canned Picnic ■ I 50 Extra Top Value Stamps w ith the pu rchase of a I Belie "God: oes He Exist ’" and "The Communication of L’n- I HUNGARIAN RING COFFEE CAKE I popul ar Ideas." ■ For faster se rvice , please g iv e cashier | ■ co upo n before you r o rd e r is rung akers will be David Gottlieb, associate professor p Redeem at K ro g e r thru Sat., A p ril 18, 1964. | ropolosrv and education: andTom Steinfatt,Human- C o n se rva tive s To H ear D urant re100r Extra 1 a sTopaValues Stamps n n K 1Chare!: v ( . Durant, chairman of the 14th Congressional District, w ith the pu rchase of five 2 0 -o z. o aves I will discus: !5S "Conservatism: A Path Towards Liberty" at 8 p.m. Thursday it 32 Union. K R O G E R W H IT E B R E A D Durant w irked his way up from precinct runner to his present For faster se rvice , please g iv e cashier position of district chairman. It was over this position that Durant 100 Extra TV Stamps co upo n before yo u r o rder is rung coup* and Govern ar Rom: ey clashed in 19h2, when Romrey tried unsuc- I Redeem a at K io g e r thru Sat., A p ril 18, 1964. hnve Duran ousted. with coupon on Kroger •am is sconsored by the Conservative Club. V A L U A B L E C O U P O N N at’ l O ffic e r V is its Business Group rles L. Ferrar, rational executive secretary of Delta Sigma W hite Bread r, 100 Extra Top Value Stamps | w ith the pu rchase ot a bit. ot 3 0 0 Pi. *oic-ssi' : ?.\ business fraternity, will meet with the MSU chap- ter Town Square I BAYER ASPIRIN activities and discuss plans. He will also ■ For faster se rvice , please g iv e cashier 5 are initiated. co u p o n before you r o rder is rung T ro janow icz Gets G rant LAST BIG WEEK! KROGER BRANDS Frozen Pies I Redeem at K ro g e r thru Sat., A p ril 18, 1964 John M. TrbjanovC'icz, instructor in foreign languages, has been awarded a S1,000 grant by the Germanistic Society of A'merica for f G100 H9BSSEB9 n a post-doc! orate l: s' itute at the University of Tubingen in Germany. Only eight such grants were given. Winners were selected on the C A R LO A D S A L E KROGER V A L U A B L E C O U P O N I Extra Top Value Stamps SALT basis of national competition. w ith the pu rchase ot a b o x of 100 I The institute will be held Aug. 2 to 28. Kroger Whole Kernel 25 Extra VAC-PACCORN 1 ,2 c .° , Top V a lu e ■ KROGER TEA BAGS i I For faster se rvice , please g iv e cashier | Avondale Stamps • co upo n before your o rder is rung. CUTBEETS Minn us I Redeem at can Big :rG V A L U A B L E C O U P O N Avondale CUTGREENBEANS3 .0 „3 26-oz. coupon and S5 RAISIN Free Running or Iodized n 1 !l m box purchase BREAD KROGER SALT 26-oz 5 / m Headquarters Avondale GREENPEASS | a I For taster se rvice , please g iv e cashier co u p o n before yo u r o rd e r is rung. - — . _J I Redeem at K ro q e r thru Sat., A p ril 18, 1964. II * * * * * * * * * * * Avondale Complete TOMATOES 1 Canteloupes r. miTirnniMii ni * * 3c°a3n Tune Up * Kroger . All Flavors * CATSUP'Ä Hawaiian I COUNTRY CLUB ICE CREAM I Vt g al. 3 9 1 I * * Rebuilt » Kroger Yellow Cling I For taste,r se rv ice , please g iv e cashier | SLICEBPEACHES Pineapples 1 LawnFood5-» *6.95 CrabGrassKiller *1." P sSrtn^S^Sfstwps * co u p o n before your o rde i is rung. * * » Motors and * * MUFFLER * Kroger ( Redeem at K ro g e r thru Sat., A p ril 18, 1 9 6 4 . I * Transmissions CMC K - N P A W I NSTALLATI ON BARUENSWEETPEAS 10 6 4 Magic Turi up DISCOUNTS TO S T J D t N T S AND F A C U L T Y Kroger Pineapple-Grapelruit or covers 2500 sq n Deo #1 49 | with the purchase ot 2 pkgs. or mot TOMATOJUICE 1 â llT A ^ H U I V ■ IMPORTED HOLLAND BDLiS~ KAMIN’S PARTS Kroger Devil’ s Food, White or Yellow I For taster service, please give cashier 1526 N orth L a rc h IV 4-4596 Sun. 9-1 CAKEMIXES X W ATERMELONS T9k I coupon before your order s rung. Redeem at Kroger thru Sat.. April 18, 1964. __ II H ou rs Mon. • F i 8-6 Sot. 8-5