N o r th V ie t M I G s S h o o t D o w n 2 U .S . P l a n e s Reds Say 36 Downed In V iet SAIGON, Viet Nam if;--Com ­ m unist jet fighters, identified as Soviet-built MIG 15s and 17s of Korean war vintage, shot down two U.S. Air Force supersonic MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY STATE EWS F105 fighter-bom bers Sunday in a 60-plane attack on a strategic bridge 65 m iles south of the North V e i t n a m e s e c a p i t a l Voters Coundlmen Today of Hanoi. The Red jets escaped unscathed. A number of other aircraft were brought down by heavy' and accurate groundfire, U.S. offi­ cials in Saigon reported. They de­ Cotter Charge On Housing clined to give the number because rescu e operations were under way. A Red Chinese dispatch said Two Campaign Denied By City Officials the North Vietnamese claimed 37 enemy planes were downed in th ree separate U.S.-South Viet­ nam ese air attacks on the north. T he dispatch made no mention of the MIGs. While U.S. Air F o r c e jets pounded the bridge and a power By SUSA N J. F I L S O N State News Staff W r i t e r tered voters that a proposal for an open o c c u p a n c y ordinance David A. C otter asserted in his letter that "one draft of an open occupancy ordinance" would For City Judge station at Thanh Hoa, 36 South A candidate for the East Lan- would require homeowners to compel property owners to sell Vietnamese planes hit Ho Chi sin City Council has charged in sell their property at a price their homes to any qualified buyer E ast Lansing voters will elect two City Council membei s and a Minh bridge near the southern a letter to som e 3,000 regis­ fixed by the city. at a price determ ined by the municipal judge today. b o rd e r and 41 U.S., Navy planes city a sse sso r. M ore than 2,800 registered voters in Spartan Village, University riddled a N o r t h Vietnamese u; City officials flatly state that Village and C herry Lane Apartments are eligible to participate in i coastal railroad arid Route lr u n - ning south. .• ; THE LETTER no such proposal has ever been brought to the attention of any the election. City C lerk Mary Slavik points out that only 38 of these students voted in the City Council p rim ary ea rlie r this year. Maj. Gen. Joseph H. Moore, j T h e foil o w i n g is t h e p a r t i a l t e x t of a l e t t e r m a i l e d person involved in East Lansing "Any student registered in precincts 7, 8 and 10 is eligible to vote U.S. Air Force C om m ander in ■: to a p p r o x i m a t e l y 3 ,0 0 0 r e g i s t e r e d v o t e r s in E a s t city government. Said City At­ today, said M iss Slavik. __________________________ _ South Viet Nam, said the sub- : L a n s i n g by D a v i d A, C o t t e r , a c a n d i d a t e f o r t h e j; torney Rayrhond R. Campbell: Voting will take place at the Teach-In9 sonic MIGs, bearing North Viet- E a s t L a n s i n g C i t y C o u n c i l in t o d a y ' s e l e c t i o n : ij "A s a m atter of fact, I’ve regular precinct polling places nam ese markings, a.tacked in Because of the nation wide frenzy over civil rights, it : never heard of this type of o r­ used in the last presidential ele c- £ th ree flightsastheU .S. A ir Force has become unfashionable for anyone to speak out .or tr a - ■ dinance being proposed anywhere tion. The polls will be open until : Organized jets were about halfway through a j ditional values and individual rights. We a r e exhorted to : in the country. As city attorney, 8 p.m. 45-minute plastering of the 600- ¡j legislate away what is left of our diminishing freedom in . I’ve heard of a good many plans The City Council m em bers will foot suspension bridge andpower : exchange for an illusory panacea for racial problem s. : for ordinances, but never one be elected from a field of four plant. Despite the MIG challenge, : Shall we allow emotion to rule us? Shall we join the stam - ; which rem otely resem bled this.’ candidates. They are Donald S By Faculty the bridge w a s rendered unus- : pede toward an illusory panacea? T here is no racial con­ C otter says that he " is not at B arre tt, owner of an auto partsc uable and the power plant was : flict in East Lansing. T here never has been. liberty” to reveal the identity of shop; David A, Cotter, an insur­ about 75 per cent destroyed, Gen. But th e re a r e zealous and .vell-intentioned refo rm ers the persons whem he says have ance agent and real estate ap­ Moore said. He reported t h e among us who would attack and cu re all of the social evils drafted such an ordinance. p ra ise r; M rs. M ary P. Sharp, a bridge was only moderately dam­ of the world. m em ber of East Lansing’s Hu­ aged in the first attack that drew It follows, then, that if the attack is to go forward, the M rs. Mary P. Sharp, another man Relations Commission: in­ forThePeace MSU Faculty Committee only a feeble challenge from three evils must be created. But how does one create an im agi­ candidate for the City Council, cumbent councilman M a x R. ganized a in Viet Nam has o r­ MIGs Saturday. nary evil? The answ er is simple. One talks it into exis­ commented: ” 1 am shocked that a can­ Strother, an assistant to theMSU at 8 p.m. "te T a c h -in ” beginning hursday in Anthony Six MIGs this t i m e presented tence. purchasing agent. the first real air challenge to didate for City Council in feast All ol the candidates have de­ Hall. The key weapon in the re fo rm e rs ’ drive to co rrec t the Lansing would issue such a state­ Students, faculty and interested Am erican planes since the at­ alleged evils of discrimination and injustice in East Lan­ clared their opposition to an open off-campus tacks on the North began Feb. 7. sing is the "open occupancy" ordinance— sometim es known ment, especially since M r. C otter occupancy ordinance. Strother, to attend thepersons are invited ‘‘The war has clearly entered as the ‘'fair nousing" ordinance, what wouiu an open previously circulated a petition B a rre tt and C otter all say that in " marathon in which " activi­ all-night teac h - a newphase with the entry of these declaring that he beiieveo in the ra c ia l discrimination is not a ties a re scheduled until2:30a.m. occupancy ordinance do? Supposedly it would redistribute principle of open housing but not MIGs in com bat," a U.S. spokes­ " rig h ts " and alleviate "injustice." by compulsory m eans. problem in East Lansing. man said. One draft of an open occupancy ordinance contains sub­ "On the weekend before the M rs. Sharp maintains that r a ­ Friday. The MSU adm inistration has cial discrimination is a problem agreed Dane Dames stantially the following term s: election he now demands that all h ere. She says she favors achiev­ til that. time. to open its facilities un­ any owner of residential property who desires to sell candidates for City Council state ing o p e n occupancy t h r o u g h Rival Ringo the property shall list it with the city clerk; : their position on this issue, com­ "m ediation and conciliation." Women’s dorm itory curfew has —the’ city a s s e s so r shall appraise the property so listed pletely ignoring the fact that 1 TOM D O O L E Y ?— Nope, Biggie Munn. T h e day a fte r been extended until 2:30 a.m. M u n n a n n o u n c e d t h e f i r i n g of F o r d d y A n d e r s o n , Voters will also decide on a and set a sale price; — the property shall be sold to any qualified buyer who : have been the only candidate who ; from tl)e very beginning of this f o r m e r b a s k e t b a l l c o a c h , s o m e A n d e r s o n f a n s hun g proposal to raise the pay of City for those who want to attend the meeting. HOLLYWOOD F —George Roy M u n n in ef f ig y . T h e d u m m y w a s t i e d to ^ I r e e m Council m em bers from $5 to $25 Hill, director of ' ‘Hawaii,’ which offers to purchase it. • One could expect such an ordinance to contain com parable ■campaign has clearly and un- f r o n t of t h e Un ion a n d h a d , " F i r e B i g g i e , on it s p e r meeting. The proposal would e rsAmong the off-campus speak­ a re political scientist Stan­ is starting production in Denmark • equivocally said that 1 am op- —of all places—w rites that Cop­ provisions for the lease of houses and income property. f r o n t a n d " Y o u ’ r e N e x t , D u f f y , ’* o n i ts b a c k . ley Miliett, long-tim e resident Thus a presently innocent city official could, by law, be­ ( c o n t i n u e d on p a g e 6) P h o t o by R i c k i G i l b e r t ( c o n t i n u e d on p a g e 2) enhagen has its own answer to and teacher in Viet Nam, and the Beatles. come a petty tyrant with great economic and social power Alexander Ekstein, China spe­ " I t ’s an all-girl quintet which over our lives. cialist and economist at the Uni­ calls itself ‘G irls of the Barbed W ire,’" w rites Hill. " I t ’s a pop L et’s take a clo ser look at the ordinance itself. Obviously : it will have to be construed. What is meant by a qualified Douglas Against Influence versity of Michigan. P ro fesso r of anthropology John group that sends the young Danes : buyer? Will the owner be required to sell to a convicted D. Donoghpe, the chairman of the into wails of delight. rapist or m u rd e re r? Must the apartm ent owner lease to the Viet Nam com m ittee, said sever­ " I t ’s only a m atter of tim e be­ fore these shaggy-haired, leath­ e r-tro u s e re d young ladies meet i swindler, the burglar and the child-m olester? Such an ordinance, no m atter how carefully drafted, would ; take away traditional rights. It would be discrim inatory, j It would interfere with the right of contract. It would be Senator Raps Special Interest Groups al other reknowned lectu rers will participate. In addition, spot speakers rep­ the B e a tle s-o n t h e i r h o m e resenting various political p a r­ grounds. ■ cla ss legislation. It would put local government in the real B y JO B U M B A R G E R always enforced existing regula­ son with an income of $26 m il­ bill"Wwhich was defeated, he said. ties, religious e found the reason was not government groups organizations and : estate business with a vengeance. It would give local gov- S ta t e N e w s S t a f f W r i t e r tions. lion, he explained. will deliver >* ernment absolute control over real property. "A diffused general interest Douglas suggested a withhold­ that it would be too much trouble brief talks. 1 oppose the open occupancy ordinance, and if I am Sen. Paul H. Douglas, D-I11-, Is always the hardest to defend," ing tax on dividends and inter­ for them, but that the interest is Folksingers will be featured Meet Election ;i elected to the City Council, 1 will re sist such an ordinance. attacked the influence of spe­ he s t r e s s e d , illustrating his est savings as a way to equa­ usually added to the principal,” Intermittently. ;i An open occupancy ordinance will solve no problem s, but It cial interests on legislation in a points with bills whichhavecom e lize reported revenue. explained Douglas. Hopefuls: | will create them. speech h e re F rid a y , using income before him. He said 97 p e r cent of wages of "Trevenue h e bill would cut the amount in”T heis purpose to acquaint of the "teac h - the audience ;i: At the present time every property owner in East Lan- taxes and oil and gas regula- Investments and the Page 2 sing is guaranteed by law the freedom to sell or lease tins as examples. T he senator said tax loop­ and salaries are reported to the general rate of growth of the with views and information on !;■ his property to any person. But he is not compelled to sell "It is estim ated that If equal holes are making the present Internal Revenue Service under institutions would d e c re a s e ." Viet Nam and U.S. policies in In this special election is­ sue, the State News brings o r lease. No person is entitled to preferential treatm ent incomes w ere taxed equally, the revenue system a shambles, the withholding tax, while an The senator also objected to Southeast Asia, Donoghue said. under the law. If 1 am elected to the council, I will not tax rates could be cut In half," "W hen one hole is left open, estim ated 10 p e r cent of divi­ depletion allowances given togas "T h is information is not gen­ you the newest developments everybody else thinks he should dends and 33 per cent of inter­ and oil companies. erally available in the p ress or in East Lansing’s municipal trade any part of your freedom and mine for any m easu re Douglas said. est earned go unreported. election campaign. Full de­ : : of repression, no m atter how enlightened it seem s to be. He accused groups such as the have equal favors," he said Building and Loan A ssocia­ "O il is a fortuitous gift of tionofficial in re le a s government informa­ e s ," he said. David A. C otter Building and Loan Associations R esearch has discovered 20 nature which gives private in- tails on all of the candidates persons with annual incomes of tions w ere i n s t r u m e n t a l In " T h e com m ittee believes that and editorial comment are of trying to block public inter­ est bills, and suggested that gov­ over $5,000 who legally pay no spreading misleading, although ( c o n t i n u e d on p a g e 6) ( c o n t i n u e d on p a g e 7) found on Page 2. ernment com m issions have not federal taxes, including one per- true, Information about such a ' e x h ib itio n . P h o to s b y C al C r a n e a n d A r l e n Becker a s i x - w h i t e h o r s e l i b e r t y a c t, w o r k i n g s h e e p d o g s , u r d a y and S u nd a y, T h e s h o w I n c l u d e d g o a t - t y i n g , ™ |N.pS""JJ?e t h e M i c h i g a n B e l l r a c e r s and a c u t t i n g h o r s e h o r s e s r i d d e n w ith t h e r i d e r s In n a t i v e c o s tu m e , GOAT GOTTEN, AMONG OTHER B lo c k and B r i d l e C lu b h e l d i t s a n n u a l s h o w b a t - 2 Michigan State N ew s, East Lansing, Michigan Monday, April 5, 1965 EDITORIALS For Progressive Leadership: i fH ' c«-’ Letters Criticizes Commencement Speech Mrs. Mary Sharp 15 T o the Editor: Can vicious s m e a r s win an in civil d is o r d e r s s im ila r to those It is extremely unfortunate that students of this University who election in- E-a-st Lansing? in Ann Arbor and Detroit. graduated at the Winter Commencement were subjected to the in­ cred ible oration which Rep. Gerald R. Ford delivered himself. After The State N ew s joins r e sp o n ­ M rs. Sharp has lo st so m e sup­ port from both s id e s for her stand AN IMPERIALISTIC hearing President Hannah's introduction of Rep. Ford, I was under the im pression that an im pressive discourse would follow. Instead, sible citizen s of this city in d e ­ Rep. Ford displayed a lack of insight into Am erican ways of life and ploring the cam paign tactics of on open occupancy. Som e m e m ­ A m erican problems that was frightening — considering, as Dr. David A. Cotter, one of four b ers of our com m unity would like WAR MPNGtS ! Hannah put it, his rapid r is e in thepolitical theater of this country. If, indeed, we do have "p ro ced u res in our units of government, candidates for the East Lansing to bury their heads in the sand in the courts of the land, by which controversies can be settled with City Council in today’s election. and deny the e x is te n c e of racial dignity and justice,” one wonders why conditions that should have discrim in ation in East Lansing. been eradicated a century ago produce the much-maligned demon­ In a letter circulated to so m e strations Rep. Ford so harshly criticized, today. In any case, I 3.000 r e gistered voters T h u rs­ Others feel that M rs. Sharp has thought any responsible government representative would see these not gone far enough in support wrongs, not as m atters of controversy, but, indeed, as wrongs that day, Cotter charged that ‘' o n e m ust be righted. draft of an open occupancy o r d i­ of open occupancy. It is to. be hoped that the selection of Commencement speakers, nance” would require property N e v e r t h e le s s , it takes so m e and awarding of Michigan State University honorary degrees, will in future produce m ore distinguished representation at our U niver­ ow ners to sell their h om es to any m easure of cou rage to stick to a sity ’s Commencements. buyer at a price determ ined by position when you are under fire Harm J. de Blij, Department of Geography the city a s s e s s o r . from both s i d e s . Mrs. Sharp is Cotter has not offered a shred the only candidate who r e c o g n iz e s Praises Courtesy Of Campus Police of evidence to prove t h e e x i s t ­ the fact that racial discrim in ation T o the Editor: ence of such a plan for an ordi- and injustice are p re ssin g prob­ T his afternoon my daughter was stopped on campus by a U niver­ n a n c e --o n paper or in the mind lem s in E ast Lansing. sity patrol c a r for an infraction ofthe law. Although there was some With a long record of c o m m u n ­ confusion in our minds, ignorance of the law is no excuse, and the of any resident of this co m m u n ­ officer was entirely within his rights in giving us a ticket. ity. He sa ys he is ‘‘not at liberty ity and public s e r v ic e , M rs. Sharp He very courteously explained our e r r o r , and pointed out the con­ i^ highly qualified to s e r v e on the sequences of everyone’s doing what we had done and the necessity to d is c lo s e the people who are b e ­ for the ruling. We certainly would have paid the ticket willingly, but hind this ord inance.” City Council. She will provide a he m erely issued the verbal warning. so r e ly -n e e d e d p r o g r e s s iv e voice Then to come home and read about the police brutality in Selma, R esponsible city o f f ic ia ls - - in - Ala.! The politeness andcourtesy of our campus patrolm an is som e­ cluding t h e Mayor, the City At­ on that Council. thing to be commended and cherished. The State N ew s finds it diffi­ Now John, This Sort Of Thing Has Got To Stop Mari aret P e te rs torney, the chairm an of the Hu­ Lansing man Relations C om m ission and cult to extend unqualified support se v e r a l r e a lto r s --h a v e flatly d e ­ to either of the two rem aining can d id ates. nied that any ordinance r e s e m b ­ ling the one in C otter’s letter has Max R. Strother was one ofth e m ost vocal opponents of open o c ­ Candidates Present Views Judge ever been suggested to anyone connected with East L ansing’s cupancy leg islatio n on the City city government. Council la st spring. He b e lie v e s that d iscrim in atio n is ‘‘not really The letter is couched in inflam ­ matory te r m s which would do credit to the old H earst scandal a 131'oblem” in E ast Lansing. Donald S. B a r r e tt, a n ew c o m e r To Be Elected to p o l i t i c s , s e e m s som ew h at sh eets or to the dem agoguery of w ish y-w a sh y on the subject. He a George Wallace. Cotter asks: has not made any public s t a t e ­ ‘‘What is meant by a qualified m ents on the problem of d i s c r i m ­ When East Lansing voters elect buyer? Will t h e owner be r e ­ ination in E a st Lansing. two city council m em bers for H ow ever. Strother has se r v e d four-year term s, they will also quired to se ll to a convicted rapist elect a municipai.judge. or m u rd erer? Must the apartment on the City Council for 16 y e a r s. Candidates a r e 'William K. It is p ossib le that B a r r e tt would H arm on, an attorney, and incurvr owner le a s e to the sw indler, the bent judge William H., Wise. burglar and the c h i l d - m o l e s t e r ?” be m ore recep tiv e to new ideas Harmon has written that the and new p olicies. Canons of Judicial Ethi''s should provide the best guide for a judgfu This type of crudity has never N either B arrett nor Strother “ A judge should be courteous appeared in an E ast Lansing e l e c ­ has used the low cam paign ta c ­ Don Barrett D. Cotter Mary Sharp M. Strother to counsel, especially to t h o s e who a re young and inexperienced, tion b efore. The State N ew s urges tic s exem plified in p o t t e r ’s l e t ­ Donald S. B arrett, 37, has been David A. C otter, 50, has been M rs. Mary P. Sharp, 48, has Max R. Strother, 56, has been and also to all others appearing the voters of this city --in c lu d in g ter. The State News b e lie v e s that a resident of East Lansing for 12 a resident of E ast Lansing for been a resident of E ast Lansing an E ast Lansing resident for 45 y e a rs. He is the assistant to the or concerned in theTiadministra- 2,800 m arried students and s e v ­ y e a rs. He is the owner of an auto 30 y e ars. He owns an insurance for 17 y ears. A graduate of the tion of justice in court?"'?"», . C o tte r ’s unsubstantiated c h a r g e s p a rts shop. A m em ber of the East agency in the city. He is also a U niversity of M i c h i g a n l a w MSU purchasing agent. Wise is running for a secbV.dv eral thousand faculty m e m b e r s - - have disqualified him from any Lansing Chamber of C om m erce, m em b er of the Lansing chapter school, M rs. Sharp is a m em ber S trother has been a m em ber of the East Lansing City Council te rm . He says that " fa ir and to vote against such sm e a r t a c ­ B a rre tt was one of the founders of real estate ap p ra ise rs. of the East Lansing Human Re­ p ro m p t” administration of jus­ further consideration by r e sp o n ­ of the Independent Garage Own­ C otter is the president of the lations Commission. for 16 years. He served as may­ tice in municipal court is a basic tics at the polls today. sib le voters. e r s of Michigan. Michigan Children’s Aid Society She has served on the Michi­ o r for six y ears. He has worked ingredient of orderly p ro g ress in and a m em ber of the M ayor’s gan F air Employment P ractices on the city traffic com m ission a community. Two City Council m e m b e r s will F or municipal judge, the State He advocates expansion of Recreational Development Com­ C om m ission, the United Com­ and the downtown planning com­ be elected from a field of four N ew s urges support for William parking facilities a n d safety serv ice s in East Lansing. m ittee and the East Lansing C it­ munity C h e s t Board, the Com­ m ittee. S trother is a strong advocate K. Harmon, a 3 7 - y e a r - o ld attor­ izen's advisory com m ittee on munity Services Council and the candidates. M rs. Mary P, Sharp population trends and school fa­ Michigan Welfare League Board. of m ore parking facilities. He is the m ost outstanding of these candidates. ney. William H. W is e , the in cu m ­ bent, has served as ju stice o fth e “ Not only do we have a popula­ tion increase by virtue of birth rate, but the University is ev er- cilities. -He says that "m o n ey —or the She says: "One issue which seem s to be of concern to our citizens has says, " I'v e been in favor of this and I’ve been working for it since 1947.” Election pea ce and municipal judge in E ast expanding, and the continuous lack of it’ is one of the biggest sev era l elem ents, but might best Strother has said many tim es building of new subdivisions, plus problem s facing the E ast Lans­ ( c o n t i n u e d f r o m p a g e 1) A m em b er of the East Lansing Lansing for a decade. W eb e liev e annexation, only multiply these be expressed as a feeling that that he is opposed to an open ing city administration. the Council needs todevelop more housing ordinance. He was the also raise the yearly special al­ Human Relations C o m m issio n , that city governm ent is b e s t existing problem s of traffic plan­ imaginative and p rogressive ap­ m ost vocal opponent of an ordi­ lowance for the mayor from $30 ning, public protection, street C otter, who is dubious about nance when it was proposed at a to $1,200. M rs. Sharp has made her position se r v e d when municipal o ffices improvement, sewage and water the $40,000 contribution which proaches to our problem s; that it needs to be m ore responsive to City Council meeting last spring. A municipal judge will also be on open occupancy c lea r from the change hands regularly. —the latter being a very serious p roblem at p resen t.” E ast Lansing made toward the construction of the Bogue Street various interest#«groups in the He said at the time: elected today. Candidates are beginning of the. cam paign. She We urge eve r y r e g is te r e d stu ­ community; that we could draw "In m atters pertaining to real William K. Harmon, 34, and in­ On U niversity-city relations, B ridge, says that "th e city coun­ m o re upon the many talents in our estate, there is a m atter of rights, cumbent judge William H. Wise, is in favor of achieving open o c ­ dent anti faculty m e m b e r to join B a rre tt says: cil needs some m em bers with the midst; that there needs to be the right of an individual to dis­ 65. cupancy through conciliation and thousands of other c itiz e n s of this “ The University a n d East courage to say ’’no’’ to some of m ore discussion before decisions pose of his property as he sees Harmon is a graduate of MSU Lansing are closely related, and the schem es proposed to it- - are made; and that it should pro­ fit. His reasoning should be his and the University of Detroit Law mediation. She does not support city in an overw helm ing vote for th e re must be close cooperation even when p re s s u re groups are vide m ore leadership in prom ot­ own." School. an ordinance at this t i m e , because p r o g r e s s iv e , resp o n sib le c o m ­ between the two. Parking and pushing certain propo sals." ing good relations between town Strother says he has no objec­ Wise has served as municipal housing are two m ajor problems and gown.” tion to students participating in judge since 1961. she b e lie v e s that it would result munity leadership. at the moment. Just because East On U niversity—city relations, On open occupancy: community affairs, but he says C o tter says: they should not "sin gle out one Lansing has close relations with " T h e y ’re both here. T h e col­ " R a c i a l discrim ination in the U niversity doesn’t mean that lege needs East Lansing, and East housing exists in East Lansing, group like tfle Human Relations Red Cedar Report MSU will 'run' the town.” facilities, Cotter says, should be and it is ridiculous to deny this. Com m ission for special atten­ Letter Policy On student participation in expanded. On opien occupancy: At one time, 1 sincerely believed that an ordinance was the best tion." He believes that: By JIM D e F O R E S T If you always kept your mouth community affairs: way to secure equal rights for New traffic patterns will have shut, how could you brush your " I think it’s fine for students "1 oppose any stature or ordi­ all of our citizens. However, the teeth? The State News welcomes all letters to the should include name and, if applicable, U niver­ to particpate in community af­ nance which would compel an to be established to better serve reaction against such ordinances the citizens and ofir neighbors editor from any m em bers of the MSU commun­ sity standing. This information may be withheld fairs, but only if they p la n to set- owner of property to sell or lease in California and D etroit and the from all directions from outside ity or non-L’niversity readers. upon request, but no unsigned letters will be tle down and own property in the his property under conditions un­ civil disturbances in Ann Arbor as well as within the city. City About this tim e of year I wonder L etters should be no longer than 300 words printed. town—only if they are sincerely acceptable to him. The force and have convinced me that an ordi­ planning will have to tie this why I didn’t go to the University and typed double-spaced if possible. Longer interested in East Lansing.’’ pow er of government, which de­ nance at this tim e will not be as of Honolulu. letters may be considered for publication as The State News re se rv e s the right to select riv e s its authority f r o m t h e and the development together. On open occupancy: people, should not be employed to effective as mediation and concil­ Recreational area s will have to “ Point of View” c o l u m n s . Correspondents and edit all letters to fit space requirem ents. iation. However, I believe the city be developed in sections of the “ I don't believe that any open cru sh the rights of the people. -occupancy ordinance is needed. I • "Right now any property owner m ust provide active leadership in city where they will be of most the fight to efTminarediscrimina­ value to the citizens. B efore!.took PS Y 151 1 thought really don't think that evidence I was crazy—now I know I am. has established that discrim ina­ in this community is guaranteed tion." A serious look at the ordi­ MICHIGAN STATI UNIVERSITY 1 STATS NEWS tion against m inorities is a great by law the right to sell or lease problem in East Lansing. There his property to any person he a r e n ’t too many minority group w ishes—reg ard less of race or m em b ers who live h e re .” religion. But he is not compelled to sell or lease. We need no fur­ On s t u d e n t participation in community affairs: "Students a re a vital part of this community, and 1believe they have every legitimate right to nances during the recodifica­ tion, which is in p ro g ress, to a s ­ sist in keeping the community the type we will be proud of. To meet the increased winter term use, the University Bus Service has added several new Member Associated P re ss, United P ress Editor ......................................John Van Gieson On housing: th e r laws in this field. voice their opinions in commun­ Many problem s have risen with International, Inland Daily P re s s Associa­ Advertising Manager A rthur Langer "1 am interested in the real es­ the multi-housing buildings con­ units to its line—dog sleds (don’t Managing Editor .......................... Hugh Leach tate zoning and other pertinent " I object to any effort to cla s­ ity affairs. 1 believe that E a s t laugh, they’re faster than the tion, Associated Collegiate P re s s , Michigan sify rights as human, civil, prop­ Lansing will be a better place be­ cerning litter and handling the busses!). P r e s s Association. Campus Editor .................C harles C. Wells issu e s of realaestate, but 1 do not cause of this.” trash and rubbish and the c a re ­ A ssistant Campus Editor L iz Hyman believe they would have the first erty , and so forth. T his is nothing On relations between "town lessn ess of those involved. This Published every class day throughout fall, Sports Editor .................. .Richard Schwartz p rio rity . So far this year, there but jargon. and gown." will have to be taken ca re of and W ire Editor ....................................Bill K rasean doesn’t appear to be any housing “ E very person is entitled to worked out with the owners, as w inter and spring, term s and twice weekly A ssistant Advertising Manager .Ken Hoffman shortage with the construction of full and equal protection of the "W e must realize that the Un­ sum m er term by the students of Michigan well as the parking facilities L et’s do something original, Night Editor .........................................B rad Smith new apartment buildings. I have law. E very resident of the com­ iversity and East Lansing do not around these housing units, andto like having a hootenanny. State University. Copydesk A d v iso r......................Henry T . P rice no extensive realestateholdings, munity is entitled to the public stand in opposition to each other, that they have mutual interests set up standards for the future Second class postage paid at East Lansing, News Advisor ..................Richard E. Hansen and not being in the real estate se rv ic e s that the community pro­ buildings. Editorial Editors .................Michael Klndman business, I will be objective re ­ vides. Every person is entitled to and mutual concerns. The tr e ­ -* * * Michigan. Susan Fllson garding any issues that may come courtesy, dignity and respect. But mendous growth of MSU ha s posed I hope to continue to giVe of my Editorial and business offices at 341 Stu­ Photography A d v iso r...................Dave Jaehnig new problem s which must be met knowledge and servic&ond of my­ I learned the Greek alphabet dent Services Building, Michigan State Uni­ up in the future. I am opposed to no person is entitled to have pref­ from the walls and stalls of Circulation Manager ................Bill M arshall the city government interfering eren tial statutes and ordinances by progressive action on the part self, for good government for the versity, East Lansing, Michigan. of die City Council.” citizens and our beautiful city. Michigan State University. in the business of real estate." enacted in his behalf." Michigan State N ew s, East Lansing, Michigan Monday, April 5, 1965 3 Who Really Has More Fun? Hatcher-Romney Tiff PI KAPPA PHI World News at a Glance F ro m O ur W ire Services Decision Due On Flint The bubblingpot of controversy The quarrel between Romney The board held public hear and Hatcher boils down to one ings in Flint March 4 — has met over the expansion of the Flint with the Board of Regents of the Latest Attacks Annoy Hanoi branch of the University of Mich­ basic point. Romney believes there should university twice — has sat with igan is expected to finally be be a statewide the Senate Appropriations Com­ TOKYO A broadcast from Hanoi says the North Vietnamese cab­ served up by the state Board of education first plan and for higher expansions m ittee in studying t h e problem inet has met in special session to decide what steps must be taken Education this week. later. and has had a chance to study after the latest U.S. attacks. The broadcast said the cabinet decided B o a r d President T h o m a s the recommendations of the Gov­ Hatcher says the need for new e rn o r’s Blue Ribbon Committee its most pressing duty is to defend North Viet Nam, but did not men­ Brennan told United P r e s s Inter­ facilities demands that some ac­ tion any specific steps that might be taken. national the eight-m em ber board tion be taken now without depen­ on Higher Education i s s u e d probably will come to a decision dence on additional studies. March 19. on the explosive issue at a closed The state Board of Education That report recom m ends " a p ­ Hungary “ F re e ” 20 Years meeting Tuesday night in Lans­ is the chief "planning and coor­ propriate ways" be found to p ro - ing. dinating body for all public edu­ vide Flint with a four-year col­ BUDAPEST Hungary celebrated the 20th anniversary of The controversy began in Feb­ cation” in the state. lege. its liberation from the Nazis Sunday with a m ilitary parade Many educators believe Flint including new Soviet rockets and supersonic pintles. ruary when Gov. George Romney It has no technical power — would be better served by com­ In close imitation of Soviet m ilitary parades in Red failed in his budget m essage to however — over the constitution­ bining the freshm an- and sopho­ Square, Hungarian ground, air and Danube River Flotilla recommend funds for the addi­ ally autonomous state univer­ m ore-level courses at the Flint troops marched past p rem ie r Janos Radar and a group o tion of the first two y e ars to the sities. Community Junior College with Communist delegates from several countries, including cu rren t junior- and senior-level the final two years offered by the instruction at Flint. T he board has been studying . . . looking forward to seeing you Tuesday Soviet President Anastas J. Mikoyan. the problem at the request of the U niversity of Michigan in Flint. The governor said any expan­ Brennan says he also has ap­ sion by the state universities Senate Appropriations Com m it­ pointed a committee to "gather and W ednesday night, 7-10 for open rush Bomb Attem pt Uncovered shoulcfwait for a m aster plan for tee from whom university offi­ information” on the question of higher education in Michigan to be cia ls and Flint citizens a re r e ­ whether to establish a medical at the Pi Kappa Phi house. formulated. questing funds for the expansion DA NANG, Viet Nam— Police seized a man Sunday in the Grand University of Michigan P re s i­ program . school at Michigan State. Hctel carrying a little m ore than a pound of plastic explosive in a dent Harlan Hatcher then defied sm all radio. Civilian a n d m ilit a r y police, Vietnamese and A m eri­ both the governor and the board ca ns, then emptied'the hotel and made a thorough search without r e - by admitting 126 of an expected suit*. freshm an class of 200 for next The hotel, in downtown Da Nang, is the largest in the city and national September had been accepted to many of its occupants are U.S. m ilitary personnel. These include the school. m em bers of a new m ilitary police detachment that arrived here two The Flint-based Mott Founda­ days ago to provide security around American billets and installa­ tion has chipped in $2.4 million tions in the Da Nang area . dollars already to help construct the facilities needed for the ex­ Indonesians Caught In Malaysia KUALA LUMPUR, M alaysia—Seven Indonesian g u e rrilla s were killed and one captured in an am bush set by g o vern­ pansion. interfraternity conference ment forces Saturday in the swampy jungles of M alaysia's mainland, a defense m in istry spokesm an rep o rte d Sunday. Critic Gives He said the ambush led to a 20-minute pitched battle m arked by heavy automatic weapons fire. No casualties were reported on the government side. First Talk Laser May Have Hidden Danger In Series f r a t e r n it y c r it e r ia OCTROI T—New Army-supported re se a rc h suggests that the mag- Alfred Kazin w i l l discuss .c ii’ht of laser beams may have hidden dangers for man in indus­ "T rad ition As Style: 'The Educa­ t r y 1 and medical use. scientist reported Sunday. tion Of Henry Adams’" this after­ Dr, Edmund Klein ol Buffalo, N.Y., did so in urging increased noon as the first in his s e rie s of aw areness by reseT rtU erc of the "poten tL I hazards" ot the power­ provost lectures. ful i tarns, both to t. erasclves and to met?¡cat pai«eii«.-* He will gpe.«>v at 4p.m . in F a ir­ ; CONSIDER THE FRATERNITY RESPONSIBLE I*OR A child T heatre. POSITIVE CONTRIBUTION TO THE PRIMARY FUNC­ The general title of the series TIONS OF THE COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES, AND China In Trouble is "T h e Imagination of Society: THEREFORE UNDER AN OBLIGATION TO ENCOURAGE Am erican Novelists and Story­ TAIPEI, F orm osa— President Chiang Kai-Shek said Sunday te lle rs ." THE MOST COMPLETE PERSONAL DEVELOPMENT OF ITS MEM­ people on the China mainland are in a serious plight and asked the The schedule for the week is as BERS. INTELLECTUAL, PHYSICAL, AND SOCIAL. THEREFORE. follows: Tuesday, "T h e Poet of F re e China Reliei Assn. (FCRA) to give them more aid. Cluang is­ sued the call in a m essage to the FCRA, which has been airdrop- the Big City: ‘Leaves of G ra s s ’ WE DECLARE: ping supplies to the Communist m3 1 nland. t" "Specimen Days,’” Thursday, The association, which is marking its 15^h anniversary, said it Howells and the Novel of Man­ has spent $9.8 million an relief for mafrtt#i«i.fhhabitar rs since J950, n e rs and Friday, -"© reiser and including. 166 airdrops. It also paid for supplies delivered to the the Coming of .Naturalism .’ I That the o b j e c t i v e s and activities of the fraternity should bc in entiri mainland"by balloons sent aloft from the offshore islands_of Quemoy His appfcar&nce I s ’ sponsored jointly by the Honors College and accord with the aims and purposes, of the institutions at which it has and ;vi the All University Student Gov­ chapters: . ,. , ernm ent (AUSG) departm ent of II That the primary loyalty and rosnor^bihty 01 a student in his rela­ B riton s P rotest u.5. Aulior. academic trfiaiis. Kazin, p r e s e n t l y is dis­ tions with his institution are to the institution, and that the associa­ I ONiK N - :'. ondon police Sunday dispersed a crowd of about 150 tinguished professor of English at tion of any group of students as a chapter of a fraternity mvoly.es.the.- •who tried* to demonstrate-:if: from- of the U.S. Embassy to protest the State University of New York definite responsibility of the group tor the condu ct.th e individual, Am erican actions in Viet Nam. . ... at Storvbrcok, Long Iqjar.d, and III That the fraternity should promote conduct cdhsistent with good They m irched there from a rally in T rafalgar Square while a has received both the Guggenheim morals and good taste; leader. Canon John Collins of St. P au l's Cathedral, went to 10 and Rockefeller fellowships. IV That the fraternity should create an atmosphere which will stimulate Dow-ire St. to hand in a letter for P rim e Minister Harold Wilson He is the author of several ;; 'b.vrr-ssi.ug the sam e sentiments. books including "C o ntem p orar­ substantial intellectual progress and superior intellectual achieve­ ie s ,” "T h e Inmost L eaf," "O n ment ; . _____y r , ¡¡I j H Native Grounds" and "W alker V That the fraternity should maintain sanitary, safg, and wholesome March Tested in the City.”_________________ physical conditions in the chapter house; SELMA Neero leaders hoped to m user hundreds here BARNES FLORAL VI That the fraternity should inculcate principles of sound business prac­ today to reg ister to vote on the first registration day since ^W E TELEGRAPH tice both in ehaper finances and in the business relations of its mem­ the much publicized 50-m ile march from Selma to Mont­ gom ery led by Martin Luther King J r. flowers bers. Civil right’s leaders called off street demonstrations and WORLD WIDE m ass meetings here the last five days t o concentrate on 215 ANN ED 2-0871 voter registration for today. We Feel That The Objectives Set Forth By The National YOU Have A Stake In East Lansing City Government Interfratemity Conference Are Fulfilled By The Members Of The Interfratemity Council At Michigan State. We # PARKING # 9 HOUSING PUBLIC SAFETY Cordially Extend Our Invation To You To Attend Open # HUMAN RELATIONS Rush, April 5,6 & 7 At The Following Houses : ELECT A RESPONSIVE, Monday, April 5 Tuesday, April 6 RESPONSIBLE CITY Houses WEST of MAC. Houses EAST of MAC. COUNCIL THETA DELTA CHI SIGMA PHI r.PSIl ON ALPHA PHI ALPHA FARMHOUSE 501 MAC 526 Sunset 1604 E. Grand River 151 Bogue PHI KA PPA PSI PHI GAMMA DELTA DELTA .TAU DELTA DELTA CHI 522 Abbott Road 334 Michigan 139 Bailey 101 VVoodmere KAPP.A SIGMA TRIANGLE BETA THETA PI 242 N. H a rris :: VOTE FOR MARY SHARP KAPPA ALPHA PSI COLONY 146 Haslett ^ LAMBDA CHI ALPHA 128 Haslett 1148 E. Grand River DELTA SIGMA PHI 1218 E. Grand River 715 Grove ZETA BETA TAU 855 Grove Street PHI KAPPA SIGMA 236 N, H arrison PSI UPSILON PI KAPPA PHI If you voted in E a s t L an s in g last November, you are elig ible to vote today TODAY! SIGMA CHI 729 E. Grand River SIGMA NU SIGMA ALPHA MU 1344 E. Grand River PHI KAPPA TAU 121 White hills Drive THETA CHI 453 Abbott Road 810 W. Grand River PHI DELTA THE 1A 626 C owley (APRIL 5, ELECTION DAY) 125 N. Hagadorn TAU DELTA PHI COL Polling P l a c e s 731 Burcham ALPHA SIGMA PHI P re t. -1—C entral School. UNIVERSITY FRIENDS OF SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON DELTA UPSILON 420 Evergreen Rushing in the Union P re t. -2— GSencairn School. 131 Bogue 1504 E. Grand River ALPHA GAMMA RHO Mon. Sun P ;'rch P re t. -3—-E. L. Junior High School. MARY SHARP PHI SIGMA KAPPA ALPHA EPSILON PI 432 Evergreen Wed. Sun Porch P re t. -4 —Bailey School. Jack M Bain Dalton E. McFarland 207 Bogue 343 Albert St. ALPHA TAU OMEGA PHI SIGMA DEI TA + P re t. -5-—Edgewood United Church. T . C linton Cobb Jam es B. McKee 451 Evergreen 1234 E. Grand River ;• ;• :• P re t. -6—Marble School, p r e t. -7 — F ire Station No. 2. John W, Crawford John S. Duley Russel B. Nye Harold M. Riley Wed., April 7 ■• P re t. -8 —Red C edar School. Gordon L. Gray John H. Useem •• * • • : • • P re t. -9 —Pinecrest School. P r e t.-10—Red Cedar School. John G. Hocking V. E rie Leichty Ruth Hill Useem Claude A. Welch AH Houses : : • : • • P r e t .-11— St. Thomas Aquinas Schu J : P A ID P O L IT IC A L A D V E R T IS E M E N T I 4 1 Michigan State N ew s, East Lansing, Michigan Monday, April 5, 1965 Sports By Writers Play Name-Game For Cage Coach Firing: Too Late By J E R R Y M O R T O N Goodrich Hurls 5-Hitter State News S p o rts W rite r If Alfred Hitchcock were writ­ ing a story about the Michigan State basketball team he’d cali it Or Too Soon TALLAhASSEE, F la .- - B a s e b a ll c o a c h and allowing eight hits. The Blue Devils "T h e C ase of the M issing Man.’ Danny Lm vhiler may have found the sub­ got their only runs in the second inning T hat’s t h e situation facing RICHARD SC H W A R T Z stitution for the great hitting he enjoyed on a rwo-run home run. Spartan Cage fans who are wait­ State News Sports E ditor last spring. Howie M iller and F red Devereux, both ing for a su rp rise ending in the In baseball, it’s three strikes and you’re out. Boxing gives you Much of the sting is gone from Spartan righthanders, combined to defeat Florida search for a successor to Forddy an 8 or 10 count. bats with the graduation of All-Am erican State by the sam e sco re in the second game Anderson. And basketball . . . first baseman J e r ry Sutton and All-Con­ ference outfielder jo e P o r r e v e c c h i o but of the Friday doubleheader. State hitters, meanwhile, w ere not hitting the ball with the authority they demonstrated Season Rerun Sees The list of possible su cce sso rs is growing longer every day but Well, if you’re the head coach at Michigan State, the number ” 13” is more than unlucky— it’s unacceptable. State's pitchers have m ore than compensated fans don't know any m ore about At least that was the view taken by Athletic Director C larence for the lessening of hitting power. a year ago. The Spartans got only seven in The Spartans closed out their successful spring training tour with a 10-3 m ark Satur­ the Wake' F orest victory and four enemy e r ­ ro rs led to two of State’s 5 runs. Fencers Split Meets the situation than they d id T h u rs- day afternoon when Anderson was officially relieved of his duties (Biggie) Munn T hursday in leveling the axe on Coach Forddy Anderson whose Spartans could scrounge up but a single victory in The Spartans collected just three hits State's fencing team ended a 19-8 in the opening match. Against the face of 13 defeats this season. day after blanking Wake F orest 6-0 behind as head coach. " I t was a most difficult decision for me to m ake,’ Munn said, the five-hit pitching of righthander Jim Good­ against Bake and only one extra base blow, delayed season on a fam iliar note Detroit, Coach C harles Schmit- Names most frequently men­ " b u t our basketball fortunes of late have not been what we’d like rich. a double bv third basem an John Biedenbach, Saturday ... winning one meet and te r ’s forces staged a late rally, tioned by sports w rite rs through­ them to be, and in order to improve the picture, this decision was But Goodrich wasn’t the only Spa rtan h u rle r but four Duke e r r o r s led to the Spartan win. losing another. only to lose 14-13. out t h e state i n c l u d e J o h n The team ilew home to East Lansing im­ In its only home show of the m a d e.” throwing goose eggs. Rollie Walcott went the The split was the fifth such oc­ Bennington of the U niversity of Make no mistake. F o rre s t A. Anderson, a man of many moods distance the day before beating Duke 4-2 mediately after the Wake F orest contest. season, the Spartans had little currence of the season for State. St. Louis and Bob Stevens of indeed, has but one today. trouble in disposing of Indiana The fencers finished the season Oklahoma. Each has had a suc­ B itterness. with a 7-5 dual meet m ark and cessful tenure at his respective Sure, his public declarations were worded with a modicum of r e ­ iHalf For Me, For You ’ settled for a three-w ay tie for school and each served as an sentment, but the tersen e ss tellsyou it’s something m ore than m ere A S E L E C T IO N O F THE third place in the Big Ten. . assistant to Anderson and form er disappointment. Schm itter’s foil and sabre con­ coach Pete Newell. " It is with deep reg ret that I learn of being relieved of my dutes W O R LD 'S F I N E S T T R O P H IE S -P L A Q U E S tingents carried the scoring load Other possibilities i n c l u d e as basketball coach at Michigan S ta te . . . I am s o rry Mr. Munn does Although the " sp lits ” was not among the events scheduled in the Hoosier win, garnering 15 Vanderbilt coach Roy Skinner not consider me adequate to continue the duties involving the basket­ Over 1000 On Display Saturday night at the Lansing State Journal-Spartan High School of the 19 points. State won in foil a n d Tennessee m entor R a y ball fortunes of Michigan State a n d for this 1 am d e e p l y disap­ Relays at Jenison Field House, both Roseville and Ypsilanti of 7-2 and in sabre 8-1, but lost epee M ears. pointed.” £$ Special Prices For Quantity Purchases C lass A perform ed the feat. 5-4. T . S. Givens returning to the M ears helped conduct a basket­ Need one read between the lines? The two team s tied for first-p lac e honors at the second an­ lineup for the first time since ball clinic at MSU last fall be­ On paper, Anderson m ust live with the fact that not only was this Bring in your tropliii*s and plaques nual meet with 17 points apiece and then actually set about the Jan. 30, and won two bouts in foil. fore guiding the Volunteers to a seaso n ’s 10th place finish the most unsuccessful in the annals of for professional engr aving-24 Hour task of physically splitting the trophy in half, while a crowd of Bryan Kutchins also carved him­ successful season. Spartan basketball, but it cam e amid a bleak epoch, the 60’s, in The second part of the two- which only one team has placed in the first division. LM p - m -vÿV 0 ] LARRY CUSHION .... Service 3020 Vine St. SPORTING GOODS 2,274 cheered them on. Birmingham Seaholm placed third with 15 points. Defending Class B champions River Rouge took first again in the m eet Friday evening, am assing a total of 25 points. Romulus placed second with 17. "V self a 2-0 record there. Mark Haskell and Mel Laska each s p o r t e d 3-0 reco rd s in sabre, and Don Lund led the epeeists with a 2-1 m ark. p a rt m ystery concerns the fate of Anderson who indicated that he would like to rem ain with theU ni- v ersity in some capacity. An Associated P r e s s s t o r y P erhaps that is ample amunition to sound the gun, bur it is diffi­ cult to understand the timing of the firing. Simple logic would argue that if Anderson was to be bounced, the tim e was two years ago or a year from now. E ither it should have com e on the heels of four straight unsuccessful seasons or else 1 B ! k . Nort h of M i c h . A v e . - W e s f of S e a r s Records fell in alm ost every event, and two athletes from Mt. noted the possibility of Anderson Clemens along with one from both Battle Creek and Kalamazoo The Detroit battle went right after Anderson has showed what he can do when the “ best freshm an turned in perform ances that would have placed in this y e a r 's Big down to the wire as the Spartans being named to a coaching job team in the Big T e n ” becomes sophomore and plays beside the Ten indoor meet. fought back from a 13-9 deficit with the Detroit Pistons. That, likes of Stan Washington and Bill C urtis. The Class A struggle wasn’t decided until the final event of the to tie the score at 13-all. How­ too, is conjecture. As for the abrupt, yet dilatory m anner ii, which the announce­ m eet, the mile relay, which Roseville took, with a 3:28.6 p e rfo r­ ever, U-D’s D a v e W r o n s k i Despite a 1-13 reco rd in the ment was made, one has only to wonder the why’s and w herefore's mance. Ypsilanti placed second at 3:36.6, which tied it with downed Lund in the final bout in Big Ten, Spartan hopes appear of relieving a coach of his duties a month after a season is over Roseville for the championship. epee to give them the win. brighter for next y e a r . and at a moment when he is in the throes of recruiting. Generally a coach is notified of any decision immediately af­ te r the season is ended. T his allows him to feel out the m arket at the post-season coaches' meeting in Chicago. Likewise, it hastens the selection of a successor and smoothes the transition My S. B. S. p ro c e ss. If, as word has it, Anderson’s present recruiting effort could prove the match for last y e a r’s, you readily see the predicament this lends itself to. L e t’s say you’re Lee Lafayette, the most sought-after high- schooler in Michigan, and acknowledged as a top prospect for ac­ men cepting an MSU bid May 1. How would it sound to hear an assistant Still Has coach tell you how his old boss was a nice guy, but the new fellow, well, he’s also nice . . . maybe nicer. Yet nobody even knows who the new guy will be. wear No, you want to know whether th e re’s a coach who can deliver. shirts A Large Selection Of Used Books Does he have the ingredients you think are essential to develop the best that’s in you. F iring connotes insecurity, uncertainty, failure, desperation, lack of leadership. Contrast this with another Michigan university where Big Ten cham pionships and NCAA accomplishm ents create an atm osphere * Required Paperbacks of contentment, stability and confidence. C uriously enough, when jabs have beer, t akenat Anderson’s p e r ­ form ance, they have dwelled on his inability as a re c ru ite r— not as a coach. C ertainly when he has had the talent—and he did during m ost of his c a re e r at Bradley University and at least part of his Capitai * Engineering & Art Supplies 11-year stint h e re —the bright lights shone. Now, when it appears that Anderson has finally tapped at talent for upcoming campaigns, he is suddenly held to account as never be­ fore for past failures. It was Anderson himself who prom ised that “ this is the last s ea­ * All Your Needed School Supplies son we’ll have to suffer. " If you don’t think this school has a basketball tradition,” he said, “ just hang around the next four y e a rs ." No doubt he meant it; and was set on proving his word. Should he not at least have had this one, final chance? * Phil Frank Cartoon Books ^ke Gand featuring i . fjgjjj ¡ E s s g p l B g & ¡l â à âH H fiiP 1 ■ FRATERNITY .40 Years o f Q u a lity S e rv ice SORORITY • R E C O G N ITIO N PINS * BADGES • RINGS PADDLES I AM ON CAMPUS • P A R T Y FAV O RS • LA V A L IE R S A cros s From O ffic ia i Greek EVERY DAY.” Jew elry Home Econ. Bldg. ED 2-6753 cium ■«-<;«HNi KTMt *flnjkfjtflB ïI M l" 'j Dorm s Tim es Dorm s N. Wonders 4:30-5 S. C ase E. Wilson 5-5:30 E. Shaw iS iM ill W. Fee 5:30-6 W. McDonel E. Akers 6-6:30 W. Shaw or D i a l m e a t IV 2 - 0 7 6 8 Acrosfrtrntiftkey 1Daily M a rrie d Housing Service Capita] Laundry & Cleaners TUDENT TORE 2000 W. Saginaw Call IV 2-0768 • • S e r v i c e is our m id d le nc F rii Parking In Large Lot M Rear - 421-25 E. Grand River R e t i l i S ta rn a V i t i . ■-r i v ' : K S t t M R I ■■ - ••>'•V •<*-- 1218 E. Grand River ED 2 -5 03 5 OPEN RUSH: CALL M onday & W ednesday For A ED 2 -5 0 3 6 A p ril 5 - A p ril 7 Ride: ED 2-5037 The men of DELTA SIGMA PHI w e lc o m e you to Spring term rush. As you enter the D elt Sig house to­ night or Wednesday evening, you will be g reeted by one of our many beautiful rush h o s t e s s e s who will take your coat and e s c o r t you to our photographer. A bunny playm ate will then p ose with you for a free picture which w ill la ter be available to you. - »— — You will have am ple opportunity to talk with one of the b ro th ers about our fraternity. The ca su a l setting and atm o sp h ere will soon s e t you at e a s e . After you have se e n the handsom e in te r io r of our h o m e , any of the b ro th ers will be m o re than glad to answ er any questions you might have. Whether it is cam p u s participation, s o c ia l a ctiv ities, sch o la rsh ip , E ngineered L ead ersh ip , Irm a La D ouce p a r tie s, or just plain sp irit, the D elt Sigs have it. If you m e a s u r e up to our standards of sch o la rsh ip , lea d er sh ip , m aturity, participation, and spirit; we look forward to m eeting you! DeltSigs Patronize These Retailers Norm Kesel Florist Fred E yer’s Steak House L a rry Cushion Sporting Goods 109 E. Grand River Ave. E. Lansing 2 M iles North of Lansing on US 27 3020 Vine St. Lansing "Sporting Goods & Trophies' "Fine Food & Banquet Accomodations’ IV 5 - - 465 ED 7-1331 IV 9-1121 C am pus Tux Shop G ibson’s Bookstore Warren’s Poplars 547 E. Grand River Ave. E. Lansing 128 W, Grand RiVer Ave. E. Lansing 2758 E. Grand R iver Ave. E. Lansing "D istinctive Dining” ED 2-0972 ED 2-8681 ED 2-2113 B raun’s B arber Shop Lawrence Tornita Studio Shaheen’s Thriftway Market Brookfield Shopping Plaza E. Lansing 209 Abbott Road, E. Lansing 521 E. Grand River A ve. E. Lansing ED 2-4377 ED 2-8889 ED 7-1234 Spartan Texaco C am pus Bookstore Ace Hardware 1301 E. Grand River Ave. E. Lansing 131 E. Grand River Ave. E. Lansing 201 E. Grand River Ave. E. Lansing ED 2-6166 ED 2-0877 ED 2-3212 Bimbo’s Pizza R alph's Cafeteria Lansing Laundry 214 N. Washington Ave. Lansing 325 E. Grand River Ave. E. Lansing 112 W. Grand River Ave. E. Lansing IV 4-7817 ED 2-2913 ED 2-8407 K rauss Sunoco Station N elson’s Standard Service Uncle John's Pancake House Grand River & Bogue Sts. E. Lansing 1226 Michigan Ave. E. Lansing 2820 E. Grand R iver Ave. Lansing ED 7-9320 ED 7-9075 IV 7-3761 C lark Super 100 Gas Station Daniel’s Jew eler’s Spartan Service Station 1120 E. Grand River Ave. E. Lansing 207 S. Washington Ave. Lansing 1100 E. Grand River Ave. E. Lansing ED 7-9138 IV 2-1613 ED 7-0470 Louis Laundry & Dry C leaners P a rk e r Jew elry U niversity Standard Service 623 E. Grand River Ave. E. Lansing I I I S. Washington Ave. "L ansing’s Trophy C en ter’’ 1435 E. Grand River Ave. E. Lansing IV 4-2322 ED 2-6879 t EQ 2-3537 Jtt' B rin k’s A rm ored C ar Service C asa Nova #2 Dawn Donuts 231 N. Grace Ave. Lansing 211 MAC Ave. E. Lansing 1135 E. Grand River Ave. E. Lansing IV 4-1244 ED 7-1668 ED 2-2541 State Vitamin Discount Store Fox’s Jew eler’s Spartan Bookstore 619 E. Grand River Ave. E. Lansing 203 S. Washington Ave. Lansing "Leading Jew elersSince 1917’ 223 Ann St. E. Lansing ED 7-1521 IV 2-6239 ED 7-1180 Spartan C arpet Center C re s t Laundry Pick Quick Pantry F rand or Center 620 Michigan Ave. E. Lansing 1201 E. Grand R iver Ave. E. Lansing IV 7-5986 ED 7-0012 Fraternity of Engineered L eadership At MSU Since 1923 6 Michigan State N ew s, East Lansing, Michigan Monday, April 5, 1965 Acting Excellent OL IN H O S P IT A L 2-Year Probation Letter Charges Denied In 6Green Eves9 REPORT ( c o n t i n u e d f r o m pa g e 1) He said it is "inconceivable” Aquinas P arish in East Lan­ Visiting hours are2-4p .m .an d Set For Chieger posed to an ordinance and com­ mitted to a policy of education and v o l u n t a r y negotiation to that any agency of the city gov­ ernment would seriously con­ sider such a proposal. sing have issued a statement on C otter’s letter. They a r e Mr. and M rs. F ran c is J. Coomes, M r. and M rs. David Froh, M rs. 7-8 p.m. A form er MSU student has been placed on two years probation achieve civil and human rights. Roland J. Ledebuhr, a local Good directing added to skillful acting makes 'T h e Girl with for negligent homicide. " E a st Lansing has always been realto r, said that C otter " h a s Thomas A. McGuire, M rs. F red Green E yes," running through Thursday at the State, something C ircuit Judge Louis E. Coash Friday placed Robert D . Chieger, proud of the high ch aracter of not offered any evidence to prove E. Tripp and M r. and M rs. Dale A d m i s s i o n s include H arry 19, Bloomfield Hills on probation and ordered him to pay M etts. The statement reads in m ore than Just a tender love-story. Coiestock, South Lyon junior; s o p h o m o re , its election cam paigns. 1 think that such a plan for an ordi­ An Irish girl (with green eyes) falls in love with a rom antic P a t r i c k G a r v i n , Muskegon $300 court costs in the Oct. 18 traffic death of William M. Wetzel, it is tragic that anuone would nance ex ists." part: w riter-ex p lo rer twice her age. She becomes his m istress, but the Heights sohomore; Thomas De- 21, East Detroit sophomore. Chieger pleaded guilty. attempt to inject the racial is­ "W e deeply regret Mr. David Wetzel w a s killed as he was. crossing Chestnut Road f e a r East "B efo re I’ll b e l i e v e some­ C otter’s injecting the race is­ fixity of his ways conflicts with her youthful exuberance, and.he May, Roseville junior; Jam es F. sue into this campaign at this thing,” Ledebuhr commented, "I leaves her. She is broken-hearted, but her youth and bouyancy heal Hopper, North Muskegon fresh­ Wilson Hall at 1:20 a.m . Oct. 18. His leg was severed by the impact time, particularly in a manner sue into the East Lansing city and he died three hours later at Edward W, Sparrow Hospital. need to see proof that0 it is re a l.” election. Because we do not ex­ the wound, and she is made m ore m ature by the experience. man; Robert Aldrich, Bozeman, which can only be described as It is a simple story, and is treated tenderly, with touches of poig­ Mont., junior; Virginia Bruba­ Chieger, who had formally withdrawn from MSU after the fall term inflamm atory and demagogic. I Robert L. Green, the only Ne­ p re s s any preference for any nant hum or. Rita Tushinghnm plays the girl, Katie, an innocent ker, Glen Ellyn, 111., freshman; accident, was charged with "wanton, wilHful and reckless disregard have never seen or heard of such gro m em ber of the Human Re­ candidate in the Monday elec-^ child who finds her first l o v e . S h e b r i n g s the characterization off Dietrich Schlobohm, New York, of traffic law s." He was a l s o accused of "speeding, accelerating his an ordinance as he describes, and lations C om m ission, said that tion, we feel free to answ er Cot­ beautifully. N.Y., graduate student; Robert automobile while it was dark and limiting his ability to observe pe­ I would be unalterably opposed he has never heard a plan for te r ’s statem ent ’there is no ra­ The best perform ance, however, is tiiat of Peter Finch, as the A m sler, Spring Valley, 111., jun­ destrians in the area of two large dorm itories, where he should have to it. an ordinance resem bling the one cial conflict in East Lansing.’ w riter-exp lorer. The ch aracter has seen life, and in the process ior; Randall Rosen, Wilmington, realized other persons would be on the s tre e ts ." " I regret very much this vio­ in C otter’s letter. “ Mr. C otter’s statem ent m ail­ has lost his capacity for such single-minded love as Katie s. Del., freshm an; T hom as John­ Wetzel was one of three MSU students killed in automobile acci­ lation of the fair and honest " It’s no secret that 1 favor ed to the residents of East Lan­ The only trouble is that the director, Desmond Davis, is too son, Pittsburgh, Pa., sophomore. dents over one of thes most tragic weekends in recent history. He spirit which has always m arked an open occupancy ordinance,’’ sing three days before the elec­ good for the m aterial. The plot comes straight from the pages of was the first pedestrian killed on a cam pus street, University po­ our public discussion of com­ Green said. "But neither I, nor tion gives the appearance of a " L a d ie s ’ Home Jo u rn al," while Davis is equipped to handle deeper lice said. munity problem s in E ast Lan­ any other person who supports last-m inute appeal to racial bi­ Also a d m i t t e d w ere Linda an ordinance, have considered gotry. We consider this to be a and m ore significant m aterial. P ratt, W a t e r v l i e t sophomore; sing.’’ any law which would give the The result is a degrading effect on some of the directing for ex­ ample, just as Katie opens her door to meet her lover to go to his David P arsch, Lapeer freshm an; M arguerite Hizar, Birmingham Calendar of 'How To Hide Max R. Strother and Donald S. B arrett, the two remaining can­ city pow ers such as the one detailed in M r. C o tter’s let­ violation of the Michigan F air Election P ractic es Code. F u r­ ther, it is in direct opposition to country home, the ch urch-bel's of the town start ringing and off she goes leaving the door ajar. Despite the limitations of the m aterial, Davis presents some freshm an; Sergio Montalvo, Mex­ ico City, M e x i c o , freshm an; ( doming Events A Spaceship9 didates for council, did not com­ ment on C otter’s letter. te r .” Eight m em bers of St. Thomas Michigan public policy as con-_ tained in the 1963 constitution.” Jam es B. Quigley, Bay City Jun­ M onday Kun Mu Chen, MSU associate David K. B erio, chairm an of quite good sequences. When Kate’s happiness is at its fullest, she ior; Linda Jefferis, Stevensville the East Lansing Human Rela­ and her lover c a rry on the same conversation throughout scene Phi Gamma Nu—Rush, 7:15 p ro fesso r of electrical engineer­ tions C om m ission, said that "no SAGINAW $1.75 f r e s h m a n ; William A. Hasse, p.m ., Student Services Lounge. ing, will speak on "How to Make shifts, from street to cafe to sea.shore. Teaneck, N.J., senior; B a r r y T uesday Space Vehicles Invisible" at 4 such proposal has ev er b e e n * Won’t Buy . . . While this, too, is obviously unrealistic, it is a novel technique Berquist, East Lansing senior; brought to the attention of any that is wonderfully suited to its intended effect. Phi Gamma Nu—Rush, 7:15 p.m . today in the Engineering m em ber of our com m ission.” The movie is fair, but only because DaVis directing skill wins M argaret Stockton, D e a r b o r n p.m .. Student Services Lounge. Building Auditorium. A Sleek Sports C ar out over the mediocrity of the plot. Hopefully, Davis will com e up* freshman; and John Ridgeway, MSU Sailing Club— 7:30 p.m., He will discuss the methods Sht ►. A New Fur Coat Detroit sophomore. Union Ballroom. of making a space vehicle invis­ A cru ise or a Boat with something more suited to his abilities in the future. ________ A Diamond Ring ible to a rad a r system , includ­ G ra n d ing a new effective method called the Reactive Loading Technique. Douglas or an expensive anything All interested persons are in­ ( c o n t i n u e d f r o m p a g e 1) vited to attend the program , which com e,” he contended. "In a sense BUT is p a rt of a se rie s of Mechanical Engineering sem inars. any profits made after the o ri­ $1.75 W ILL BUY A Delicious ginal expenses a re recovered Large T-Bone Steak is a windfall.” He suggested that the deple­ STEP Volunteers tion allowance has been leading at the SPORTSMAN’S BAR to over-investm ent and m o r e 801 E. Saginaw St. Here Rust’s Dean rapid exhausting of resources. Acting dean of Rust College, "T h ese s p e c i f i c allowances ALSO Join us fo r o u r " D a ily D o u b le " 4-6 p.m . McMillan will speak to the Student have touched off atsyash of sim ­ Education Project volunteers at ila r bills for other industries," 7 tonight as part of their orien­ Douglas said. " Ihere a re al­ tation. lowances for sulphur, coal, sand The meeting, in the Student gravel and even clam and oys­ CL rutAJ Cmcyo Services lounge, is open to all te rHeshells.” said there is now a pro­ interested students. STEP volunteers will help with dirt holesextend posal to the allowance to JiJkat 94 / I fyteiensuUf, ? educational program s this sum­ used m e r at Rust, a Negro college in their value as holes. destroys sense that for filling dumps in the them Holly Springs, Miss. Douglas, a senator since 1948, ‘Whcut 9 4 P U l K appa ? is a m em ber of the Finance and Banking C o m m i t t e e . He has MOW! Interested? Then 7. . the rq^n of Phi Kappa Tau There tnught at the University of Chi­ cago and has served on several are two c la s s ring of the city boards. . com panies to serv® cordially ipvite you to open fornght. ; t you. -, Call ED 2 -3 57 7 Astronomer Here 125 North Hagadorn Road For a ride R oberts R ing Co. ForTw o-D ay Visit and Students interested in c a re e rs E llio tt ’ s R ing Co. in astronom y will have an oppor­ tunity to talk individually with a lA Ü 'A T A distinguished A m erican astrono­ m e r T uesday between 3:30 and 5 p.m . at Abram s Planetarium . P ete r van de Kamp, profes­ so r of astronom y and director of Sproul O bservatory at Swarth- m ore College, Swarthmore, Pa., is paying a two-day visit to TAU DELTA PHI Rings include degree, seal, MSU under the ailSpices of the 3 engraved initials and a A m erican A stronom ical Society. The b ro th er s of Tau D elta Phi invite choice of 10 stones. you to accep t the challenge of developing 'JAe Original . . . c h a r a c te r and d yn am ism with the n ew est m e m b e r of the fraternity s y s te m . C au l CAMPUS A cross From SUMMARIES Open Rush will be held tonight and W ed­ H o m e E c o n o m i c s B ldg. Most Complete .. nesd ay, April 5 and 7, from 7:00 to 10:00 ED 2-6753 Stujiy Aids in the Union sunporch. -Atl. • Nat. Sci, * Hum. C au l • Basic College Courses For rid es call 353 -1 84 0 A iutejc Spartan C enter_______ MARSHALL MUSIC 3 0 7 E . G r . R iv e r 3 3 2 -6 9 9 7 The men of Sigma Chi cordially invite you to Open Rush tonight at 7 p.m. We are located at 729 East Grand River. the men of Epsilon Rho chapter of Sigma Nu fraternity cordially invite every eligible rushee to attend Open Rush at the chapter house, across from Mason Hall. 731 Burcham Thank You Mon. A p ril 5 SIGMA for a ride c a ll Phone ED 7-9020 for rides or information Wed. A p ril 7 ED 2-2501 ED 2-2502 Monday, April 5, 1965 / Curzi: NCAA Champ On WKAR Canadian Sound Set ny between 8 a.m . and 5 p.m . Wanted: A 6DCast London as seen J>y Londoner at the Union ticket office. In Parallel, High Bars M o n d a y -A M 10:05 a.m .— Music Room— Vaughn W illiams and the beauty of the Czech River Moldau as felt by native com poser Sme­ Conductor Walter Susskindwlll Tryouts for Rolf Hochhuth’s World War II. Its implied accu­ University students, wilt be filled HAYDN: Piano Sonata No. 49. conclude his association with the controversial play “ TheDeputy ’ sation that the Roman Catholic at tryouts. "T h e Deputy” will CARBONDALE, Ili--M ichigan in an evening session starting at tana take form in m usic as the Toronto Symphony at the end of w ill be held from 7 to 9 p.m . to­ Church stood silent while Nazi run May 25 through May 29 in 2 p .m .-—Spring Serenade— Toronto Symphony perform s at the 1964-65 season, his ninth persecution continued has cre­ the Auditorium arena theater as State’s Jim C urzi left the 23rd eight. The prelim inary rounds V A U G H A N WILLIAMS: "The day and from 6 to 8 p.m . Tuesday annual NGAA Gym nastics Cham ­ dwindled the ranks of entrants 8:15 p.m . Wednesday in the Aud­ with the orchestra. in 49 Auditorium. ated contention throughout the p a rt of the Perform ing A rts Com­ W asps,” Overture: B A R B E R : itorium. world. pany’s arena theater program . pionships held here Friday and from 112 to 40 for the finals. K n o x v ille : S u m m e r of 1915; “ The Deputy" exam ines Nazi Saturday as the best parallel and In final competition both team LLYWELYN GOMER: The Tem ­ In the first Lecture-Concert Phi G a m m a N u persecution of the Jew s during More than 20 ro les, open to high ba r p e rfo rm er in the nation. a n d individual titles w e r e at pest S u ite : SHOSTAKOVICH: serie s presentation of s p r in g C urzi, who forsook all-around stake. Penn State, fresh from an Symphony No. 1; SCHUMANN: term , the Toronto Symphony w ill To RushTonight competition to concentrate on overwhelming deieat of Southern Piano Concerto in A; TCHAI- perform “ Overture, 'Leonore' Phi Gamma Nu, professional the two specialties, took a blue Illinois (defending Champions) in KOWSKY: Overture ” 1812.’ No. 3,” by Beethoven, “ Trip­ business sorority, will hold open ribbon in the parallel b a rs and the E astern Regionals, dazzled tych’' by the Canadian compo­ rush tonight and tomorrow night shared the high b a rs crown with spectators with stellar pe rfo rm ­ M onday- “ F M ser P ierre M arcure and “ The Penn State’s M i k e Jacobsen. ances by Jacobsen and others, Moldau“ by Smetena. at 7:15 in the Student Services 10 a.m .—-On Campus— M rs. lounge. Jacobsen led his team to the na­ as they took undisputed po sses­ tional title. sion of the national title, besting L ast year as a sophomore, the University of Washington, J e n e l l e Moorehead, National President, PTA. 1 p .m .-—M u s ic T heater— The T o r o n t o Symphony has chosen to devote the second half of the program to Ralph Vaughn All women in fields related to b usin ess, advertising and ac­ Should -freshmen C urzi captured third place in the W estern division finalist, 68 1/2 W illiam s’s “ A London Sympho­ counting are invited to attend. all-around event won this year to 51 1/2. by Jacobsen. In many respects this was M usical, "Anyone Can W histle,” with original Broadway cast. 8 p.m .— CHERUBINI: Opera, ny," a composition as true to type as Gershwin’s “ An Am er­ D ress will be casual. Interested women may c a l l 355-4892 for rides.___________ use it, 1oo? ican in P a ris.’’ In both perform ances C'urzi Jacobsen’s weekend. Along with exhibited t h e smoothness a n d his individual all-around victory, skill that earned him the praise he edged out Washington’s Bob Hall, 54.9 to 54.8 in that team "Pigm alione.’’ 10:30 p.m .— Music of Luigi Nono. _____________ Students may exchange coupon books for tickets to the sympho- MICHIGAN (TheycJ probably let if qo fa their heads) of all at the meet. “ 1 wish we had C u rzi.” said event, as well as winning a half IZ i. U I7 1 H „ s a t i l . 9 4a « -»90® ....... But then, wouldn’t any man? If he suddenly of the individual high b a r crown • NOW ShTowiNG • him? Gene Wettstone, coach of the with a 9.4 m ark. champion Nittany Lions. He did a magnificent job. 1 had no idea In team scoring he took two Teach-In Marathon £$***$*&#*&* * * * # # ft & % | CONTINUOUS I POPULAR found all those starry-eyed gals looking at So, if you think you can handle it, go ahead, use SHORT CUT! It’ll tame the how he improved over la s ty e a r ’s first in the bar events, a second ( c o n t in u e d fr o m p a g e 1) the first "teach-in." They also i PERFORMANCES I I PRICES I wildest crew cut, brush cut, any cut; perform an ce.” in the floor exercise, tied for a m ore effective and m ore mor­ called a teaching strike which give it more body, more life. Keep it Last year Curzi as a sopho­ third second in the side horse, took a ally acceptable policy can be aroused national attention. ! STANLEY KRAMER “IT S A m o re captured third place in all- fifth ininthelong horse and finished found," he said, "and that the Donoghue was one of the speak­ under control. And make you look a NIUall ■■ w rings. government is willing to seek ers at the U-M "teach-in." M AD, m great! Try it (if you dare!) . . . Old 1 ,round. earnestly for such an alterna­ "When we started, we received S pice SHORT CUT H a ir » Spartan coach George Szypula i #» seven telegram s from other uni­ jj M AD, M AD, a l s o had p raise for C u r z i.“ Once physicS ClUO S©tS tive." * PAMAVISION* m n Groom by Shulton . . . tube again, he was brilliant,” Szypula » T hese issu es are to be dis­ v ersities supporting our action,” * TECHNICOLOR’ "¡¡g * „ or jar, only .50 plus tax. cussed in sm aller group ses­ he said. "By the end of the eve­ £ iiMTEOABT1STS said, " H e just seem s to thrive on sions headed by MSU faculty ning, we had 30." W ORLD .competition First Spring Meet m em bers from midnight until Money to pay for speakers F e o t u r e T jm e s The finals wound up two days of The MSU Physics Club will hold and other costs is coming from 1:00.3:40-6:25-9:20 2 a.m . v touch competition in a slam - its first spring term meeting to­ The protest Ts a part of a donations from faculty m em bers, bang finale Saturday night with a day at 8 p.m. in the P h y sic s- national movement for new in­ Donoghue said. N e x t! 'H u s h ...H u s h S w eet C h a r lo t te 1 capacity crowd of 10,000 packing Math Conference Room. formation and for m ore discus­ Southern Illinois new arena to P eter van de Kamp, d irecto r of sion on Viet Nam policies. see the top gym nasts in the na­ t h e S p r o u l O bservatory of “ Fifty other universities are tion crowned. Swarthmore College, will speak. • Competition opened Friday aft­ His visit is sponsored by the ernoon at 1:30 and was continued A m erican Astronomical Society-. engaged in ‘t e a c h - i n s ’’ Dono- ghue said. "T hese w ill culm i­ nate in p ress conferences In Washington and a student bus- BETA THETA PI BEST IN FOREIGN FILMS CAM PUS: ride on the Capitol." Donoghue heads the MSU com ­ m ittee of 20 m em bers. They are: 1148 E. Grand R iver "T H I A T I P Edmond Alehin, Lawrence Bat- — 3 3 7 0271 . ► 332-e e 44 • tictinl, George Borgstrorti, Tho­ T heatre 'PkQ*Æ 332-¿a ED LA S T 3 DAYS 75£ to 5:30 Eve. $1.00 m as G reer, Harold Hart, Abba Learner, Vernon Lidke, Stewart • TODAY . • • 7:00 p.m. 1:00-3:Ü5-5:)0-7:20-9:30 M arquis, Jam es McKee, R ussell Nye, S e y m o u r Parker, Frank PETER FINCH and Pinner, John Relnoeho, Joseph R oberts, Milton Rokeach, Ri­ RITA TUSHINGHAM « chard Schlegel, Daniel Walden, GIRL WITH Charles W rigley, David Zlvlatt and Donoghue. GREEN EYES 7:30, 9:35 p.m. As the result of an advertise­ ment placed in the Lansing State Journal by 200 MSU faculty mem­ • FRIDAY: bers protesting U.S. policies In P resented in cooperation with waiter matthau. Viet Nam, faculty m em bers at MSU’s A m erican Thought and STARTS THURS. the University of Michigan staged Language Department. 2 Outstanding Attractions Both nominated for the ACADEMY AWARD UNDERWATER COLOR -W v, HELD OVER Tracy March Kelly 'I n h e r it ssff* Plus FIRST EXCLUSIVE SHOWING IN Ik n " T H E FIN EST HOURS” |"T H e W in s to n C h u r c h i l l S to r y COLO*\ to WITH A CROOKED SHERIFF UNIVERSITY "JEW* 'OLE THEATER Al ft? ... Coupons and Cash TU' [ HfcVtNftOftt for Don't »TAMO K Eugene O’ Neil \ CHAHtE *R oonP RWaA "Long Day’s Journey Into Night” Accepted by M ail Starting Monday, A p ril 5 fS S S u W fñ0ft .. Shin« tltctc * rio O ever «<«* Shown T w ic a at 7 :3 7 -1 1 :0 0 presents 2 N D F E A T U R E H IT HAZEL CHUNG “ F i r s t L o d y o f In d o n e s io n D o n e e UNDER M iss Chung, who has starre d in several broadway productions, is proficient in bal­ S h o w n O n e * a t 9 :2 2 let, jazz and modern dance, as well as Siam ese, Indian, Javanese, Balinese, and Sudanese. STARTS WED. Tuesday, A p ril 6 - 8:15 p.m. Fairchild Theatre C A ry G RaN T L esL ie C a to n Adm ission: MSU Students, $1.50 tech w c o lo n * P ublic, $2.00 T ickets on Sale at Union T icke t Office, TrevoR HowarD Paramount Newshop I*».»i t m % Monday, April 5. 1965 Michigan State N ew s, East Lansing, Mic'higan NATIONAL WANT-AD WEEK The Story Of Your STATE NEWS WANT-AD A 15 Wd. Ad F or A M inim um O t SAVE $$$ 3 Days For Oniy $1 Per Day. The State News does not perm it racial or religious CORVAIR P563 M- • - n convert­ RAMBLER 1961, C lassic.C ustom GUITARIST WANTED for estab- let Eden Roc apartment for four. ible. Maroon and white. Perfect 9-passenger w a g o n . Six cyl­ lished pop music group. Rhythm $62.50 per person monthly. Sun SWINGING SUMMER T erm . Sub- Presented To Mark discrimination in its ad­ vertising columns. The State News will not accept condition. Price: $1,595. Phone inder. Overdrive. Fibre glass in lead. Call 332-8264. after 5 pm., ED 2-S8S3. 5 c a r top c a rrie r. Excellent con­ DENTAL ASSISTANT. Full time, ROOMMATE NEEDED fo rth re e - dition. $950. 882-3388. 4 M o n d a y - F r i d a y . Downtown 3 porch. 351-5288. 5 Our Observance Of NATIONAL WANT-AD WEEK advertising from persons CORVA1R, 1964 Lag v r . Aqua. All Lansing. Write in own handwrit­ man apartm ent. Eydeal Villa. discriminating against re ­ tinted glass. Accessories. Own­ SPRING TIME SPECIAL ligion, race, color, or na­ e r going overseas. Call Aziz, Save money on a New 1965 Ford. Experience ing, stating age, qualifications. Swimming pool, a ir conditioned. 332-4601; 337-1731.___________4 We need nice late model used Michigan StatenotNews, n e c e s s a r y . Call Paul, 353-2059. 3 April 5 to 10 tional origin. Box C3. 6 CEDAR VILLAGE Apartments. CORVAIR, 19n3 M.-r./a. Autotnat- c a rs. See us today for an extra One to four persons. Male or ic transmission. Low mileage. big allowance on your trade-in. ORN. HORT. AND LAND. ARCH, female. Students or otherwise. Automotive One owner. Take overpayments. SIGNS FORD SALES, INC. students. Saturday and Sunday. Call 655— 2574; 655-2601. 4 162 W. Grand River Retail com m ission s a l e s of 241 Cedar St., E ast Lansing, ALP.4 ROMEO, Super Spy- Williamston plants and garden supplies. O r­ Phone 351-5318. 3 der. Beautiful condition. See, CORVAIR 19-1. Mcr.za coupe. 4- 655-2191 ientations prior to late M a r c h ONE MALE to s h a r e th ree - 421 S. Chestnut, Lansing. 5-6, speed. New tires, battery. Ex­ STLDEBAKER. 1964 Lark. Stick s t a r t . T W I S S LANDSCAPE bedroom apartm ent. P r i v a t e Monday-Friday evenings. cellent condition. New c a r o r­ room. $35. Utilities paid. ED CHEVROLET ¡961 Bel Air. 4- dered. 351-4730. 5 shift, six cylinder, two-door. CENTER. IV 4-7753, 12-1. 5 2-4541; ED 2-6992. 5 door. 8 cylinder. Powerglide. CORVETTE, 1961. Excellentcon- Also, 1961 Studebaker Lark con­ FULL TIME w o m a n grocery cashier. Möst be neat and plea­ EAST LANSING. New deluxe fu r-/ Low mileage. No rust. $1,095. ditior.. 270 h.p. Two four barrel vertible. 372-2680. sant. Apply in person, Prince nished one-bedroom apartment. IV 4-1581.__________ 3 carburetors. PosKraction. Call TEMPEST 1963 convertible. A Brothers Market, 555 E. Grand Air conditioned. N ear campus. rV V issi CHEVROLET 1962 Bel Air 4-door Fritz Kirkpatrick, ED 2-3568.4 sporty model with LeMans in­ River, East Lansing. 3 IV 7-0659. 3 y sedan. 6 cylinder, s t a n d a r d CORVETTE, 1959. Excellent con­ terior. Economical, 4-cylinder BUSBOYS WANTED for lunch and TWO OR three man apartment at transm ission. One owner. Ex­ ditio:.. New 32" engine. (GM fac­ engine. Radio, heater. White­ cellent condition (never driven tory warranty). Two 4-barrel walls. Automatic transm ission. dinner. C a l l Steward at 332- B u r c h a m W o o d s . A ir-con­ in Northern winter). Must sell carburetors, pi sitraction. Two AL EDWARDS LINCOLN Shows the best of care! I $1,799. OS75. 3 ditioned. Pool. Available April immediately. $1,245. ST 2-4.30 tops. R o b e r t G r e e n e , 404 MER­ SUMMER JOB. Wanted: Student 18th. 355-1803; 351-4374. 3 CURY, 3125 E. Saginaw (North (male, female). Experience or WANTED: FOURTH girl for lux- (toll). 3 Charles. ED 2-8139. 3 of Frandor). Open Mon., T hurs., course w o r k in food service ury apartm ent. One block from CHEVROLET, 195V tw—door se- DODGE, 1964. Automatic, t h e C3 management or related area for Berkey. 351-5192. 3 dan. Power elide, V-S. Good con­ most economical transportation F ri., til 9 pm. ^ food service supervisor atCam p ONE OR two room m ates to share dition. Phone TL 2-2S29. 2120 for $1,150. IV 9-167S. . THUNDERBIRD 1959 hardtop. W. Miller Road. 3 DODGE, 1964 V-8 stick "shift. Solid white finish. Nearly new Martin Johnson, Irons, Michi­ 4-room apartm ent. C l o s e to CHEVROLET. Chevy II 1963Sup- $1,500 or take over payments. whitewall tires. Air conditioned. gan. Overseeing and supervis­ campus. 372-3683 after 10pm. 3 e r Sport Convertible. P o w e r Low mileage. TL 2-9708. 5 All power features. A-l condi­ mately ing food service for approxi­ NEED ONE or two g irls to share brakes, s t e e r i n g . Automatic FAIR LANE SPORT Coupe, 1964. tion bumper to bumper. $1,099. 275 people each meal. apartm ent. Close to campus. transm ission. Radio. Excellent " H i g h P e r f o r m a n c e 289." AL EDWARDS LINCOLN MER­ June 14-September 6. C a m p $50 monthly. 351-5362. 4 condition. 372-2567; IV 5-9111, 16,000 miles. Bucket seats; 4- CURY, 3125 E. Saginaw (North Martin Johnson is large, well- SPACIOUS APARTMENT w i t h O n e : T h e s t o r y B e g i n s W ith Yo u. Y o u r ad is t a k e n o v e r Ext. 660. speed. $2,300. A-l. 355-682/. 4 of Frandor). Open Mon., T hurs., equipped co-ed camp operated f i r e p l a c e . Accommodate 4, t h e p h o n e by N o r a S i m o n o r D i a n e F r o s t , o u r c o m p e t e n t CHEVROLET 1 ^ 3 Impala con- FORD, 1958. Six-cylinder four- Fri. til 9 pm. C3 by Hyde Park YMCA, Chicago. Parking. If you need better study copy w rite rs . vertible. V-S, s t i c k . 19,000 door sedan. Runs good. Very THUNDERBIRD l 9$9 . White. 2- Inter-racial, i n t e r - c u l t u r a l . conditions, call 332-3980. 6 door hardtop. One owner. Good Recreational facilities excep­ miles. Also 1963 KarmannGhia. good tires. $150. 355-0822. 5 tional. Salary go o d ; e x a c t ONE OR two congenial female ED 2-5S57; M rs. Bayle, 353- FORD, 1960 Falcon, i i x cylin- condition. Phone D r.T ufts, 355- amount depends on experience of room m ates to share apartment 2939.____________ 4 der automatic. Two-door. Good 6450. 5 applicant. Camp Director Paul with same. Near campus. 337- CHEVROLET, 1959 convertible. condition. Take over payments. THUNDERBIRD 1960. Dark blue. Krouse will be on campus Mon­ 0379. Automatic transm ission, power Phone ED 2-2752. 4 Good condition. Take over fi­ day, April 5 to interview appli­ W A N rtD FOURTH room m ate fur steering, brakes, radio. F o u r FORD 1961 Falcon 2-door. 6 cyl- nancing of $1,100. P h o n e IV cants. For an exciting sum m er, luxury apartm ent. $57.50 per new tires. Good condition. 355- inder, standard shift. R a d i o , 9-4471. 3 register now for interview Mon­ month. Pool, a ir conditioned, 3259.______ ' - 5 heater. Good condition. $795. ED TR 3-B R are 1962. 2.2. engine. day. Call or see Tom Rand, parking. Call 332-0262. 4 CHEVY II, Nova 1962, converti- Red, radio, whitewalls, blue- Placement Bureau (355-9520). 2 WANTED M A L E GRADUATE bie. New top. Radio, heater. 2-0298. 3 streaks, s n o w tire s. $1,700. T w o: F r o m t h e c o p y w r i t e r s , y o u r a d g o e s Whitewalls. Deluxe i n t e r i o r . KAR.MANN GHIA, 1963. Excellent Grand Rapids, 245-9572 days; PART-TIME, MATURE sec re - STUDENT mobile TO SHARE 10’ x 58’ home. 1/2 mile from to B a r b a r a J u d y , C l a s s i f i e d M a n a g e r , who Spotless! $1,250. 393-3206. 5 condition. $1,695, firm. P h o n e 534-4533, nights. 4 tary for church. 15 hours weekly. e d i t s , t y p e s an d p r o o f r e a d s it. Harold, IV 2-1129; IV 2-9552. 5 VALIANT, 1960. Automatic. Ra- 1-4 daily. Must have experience campus. 332-2664. 4 METROPOLITAN,’ 195 7. Eco- dio, heater, Whitewalls. Good and church interest. C o n t a c t ENJOY SPRING, sum m er term s DELTA nomical to operate. 33 m.p.g. condition. Call after 6, 882-9017. Tom Rand- Placement Bureau. in four person air-conditioned good tires, radio, heater. $90. 6 355-9520. 3 a p a r t m e n t . C edar Village. Call 351-4392. 5 VOLKSWAGEN $5 6 . Excellent HELP WANTED, MALE p a rt- $58.75 each, monthly. 351-4316. EVERGREEN OLDSMOB1LE, 1958 four-door condition. $450. Also, Pickett standing student employment time. Janitor. Evenings. Out­ 4 haMt<^5. All power. Good run­ $18 slide rule, now $10. Call opportunity. Must plan at least Woods two-bedroom apartment. TWO MEN wanted for Burcham ning U§ndition, 2610Heights Ave. 332-4511. 3 UNIVERSITY IV 2-5017. 3 VOLKSWAGEN 1964. Steel sun- one y e a r continuous Lansing Call Bill, 351-5176 or Buck, 353- area residents. Excellent salary 0037. OLDSMOBILE, 1961 F-85 "C ut- roof. Top shape. Must sell. Call and benefits. Contact Personnel 4 TERRACE la s s ." One owner. Automatic, 882-7611.______________________3 Department, St. Lawrence Hos­ TWO BEDROOM apartm ent. Men. low mileage, excellent body and VOLKSWAGEN, 19 5 7 Karmann $10 per week. Ample parking. engine. $1,150. ED 2-3060. 7 Ghia. 50,000 miles. Good condi­ pital. 3 ED 2-1027. Near e a s t end of DELIVERY BOYS WANTED. Av- HASLETT OPEL 19592-door.G reen. White- tion. Phone 485-0700. 4 erage $2 per hour. Apply at campus. 3 ill TWO BEDROOM apartm ent f o r T h r e e : All C l a s s i f i e d D i s p l a y a d s a r e c o m ­ walls. Good body, good mechan­ VOLKSWAGEN 196 3. Sunroof. V arsity Drive-In. 6 two, three men. Large. V e r y ical condition. Clean interior. Red. Whitewalls. Radio. Head­ BUSBOYS WANTED for lunch and clean. p o s e d by J i m B a n n a n , s a l e s m a n , s h o w n b e ng T h e F i n e s t In $200. Krauss Sunoco. G r a n d re sts. Many e x t r a s . Serviced dinner m e a l s . C a l l R i c h paid. ED Close. Parking. Utilities a s s i s t e d by B a r b a r a J u d y . S tu d e n t River & Bogue, or 355-9773 r e g u l a r l y . $1,395. 355-6229; McCleary. 332-3581. 2-6405. Apartm en ts 4 SUPERVISED APARTMENT for evenings. Graduating s e n i o r , 372-4338. 5 bought new ca r. 4 VOLKSWAGEN. 1964. Sea blue. WANTED kitchen WAITERS, w aitresses, two men. Two blocks from Un- help, cooks, chefs. For ion. ED 2-0742 . 5 Now L e a s i n g OPEL, 1959 Stationwagon. $-¡00. Radio, heater, whitewalls, seat work in Coral Gables ShowBar, MALE TO share house. 1 1/2 For Very g o o d condition. 42,000 belts. 13,000 m iles. Excellent Rathskeller d i n i n g room kit­ blocks from Berkey. $40 month­ FA L L 1965 miles. 32 m.p.g. Call 355,-6440. condition. 355-7837. 7 chen. Call 337-1311.AskforG ee. ly. Call 489-1541 after 6. 5 4 VOLKSWAGEN, 1961. Rebuilt en- 5 PONTIAC, 19^9 two-door Sport- "gine. Good condition. $975. Call Coupe. Excellent engine an d 332-4465 after 5. 5 F or Rent REGISTERED O EHM ( transm ission. Good b o d y and VOLKSWAGEN ¡964. Gray, red PARKING SPACES available now! E. Lansing Voters O WE R M A N tires. $700. 351-5178. interior. Excellent condition. Two blocks from campus. Also, Today is Election RAMBLER 1964Classic660. V-S. 13,000 miles. Must sell. White­ garage for faculty. Reasonable Day and the op­ 4-door sedan. Automatic trans­ walls. 355-8307, 10 am -5 pm. 7 rates. 332-1907. 4 PROPERTY mission. Power steering. Radio. VOLKSWAGEN 1959. Red. Mighty PARKING SPACES. One block to portunity to e l i m ­ MANAGEMENT CO. Low mileage. $1,795. HAROLD motor. Go like crazy! 60 m.p.g. campus. $15 p e r term . ED 444 Michigan Avenue PLETZ MOTOR SALES. 655- if you push. 489-6411. 3 7-2345. 5 inate the e x c e s ­ F o u r : A f t e r t h e a d is t y p e d it is s e n t to 332-0838 1870. C3 GARAGE FOR rent, ¿ lo se to siv e p enalties of W i l l s t a f f , an e s t a b l i s h m e n t in E a s t L a n s i n g , campus. 139 Kedzie Dr. Call w h e r e t h e ad is s e t on t h e J u s t o w r i t e r a n d Scooters & Cycles Judge W illiam H. m a d e up in a n e w s p a p e r p a g e p r e p a r a t o r y to 1963 Vespa Motor scooter. Fuily ED 2-5102 after 4 pm. 3 b e i n g s e n t to G r e e n v i l l e f o r p r i n t i n g . S h o w n ' H a p p i n e s s Is A O n e - E y e d equipped. 355-5813. 3 Apartments W ise. h e r e a r e S t e v e H e l d e r m a n a n d J e r r y Dunn. HONDA 1963. 150. Low mileage. MALE TO share two-man a p a rt- Phone 351-5493. 5 ment. One block to campus. 300 STOP this injustice M o n s t e r For Y o u r O w n Employment M.A.C., Apt. 2. 3 by voting for To Watch The Academy Awards E A S T L A N S I N G . Downstairs 111 N U R S E-REGISTERED. E xper­ apartment. N e e d 3rd m a l e . William K. Harmon Tonight ienced. Responsible position. Parking. Quiet. $40 per month. P a i d P o l i t i c a l A d v e r t is e m e n t Top pay. Daytime hours. Give No deposit. ED 7-1897. 3 complete particulars in applica­ tion. Write Box No. B-2, State News. 20 WAITRESS AND cook w a n t e d . Full time, part-tim e. Insurance benefits, paid vacations. Apply in person, Howard Johnson’s F i v e : At a p p r o x i m a t e l y 7 p . m . t h e a d s , c l o n g Restaurant, 3224 E. Saginaw. 3 w ith t h e e n t i r e p a p e r , is s e n t by t r u c k to GREAT LAKES EMPLOYMENT G r e e n v i l l e , M i c h i g a n f o r p r i n t i n g . S ho w n for permanent position in office, I h e r e is C h a r l e s W e b b , h e a d p r e s s m a n , left, O. c h e c k i n g p r i n t i n g q u a l i t y on o n e of t h e Sales, technical. Call IV 2-1543. f i r s t c o p i e s f r o m t h e p r e s s with p r e s s m a n C2 R ichard R ittersdorf. PART-time. HAVING a t o u g h time fitting a part-tim e job into a vigorous schedule? Earn $60 per week working related eve­ nings and Saturdays. Call Mr. Blythe at 882-6629. 10 The Waters Edge And EVENING EMPLOYMENT R ivers Edge Apartments SUMMER WORK If you are 18-35 and free 6-9:30 pm, 4 evenings per N O W LEASING for Off t h e p r e s s a n d into 3 3 ,0 0 0 h o m e s in t h e week and occasionally on Saturdays, you can main­ E ast L ansing a r e a . H e re Ed Logan, G ra n d tain your studies and still enjoy a part-tim e job doing SUMMER and FALL la t * R apids senior, o v e r the m any a p r o s p e c t i v e b u y e r is l o o k in g item s for sale. SPECIAL Rates For T erm Rentals SPECIAL INTERVIEW WORK Some Openings Available $20 P er Term that w ill bring an average income of $55 per week. If you are neat appearing For 1 & 2 Students This Spring David TV Rental and a hard worker, call M r. Brown, 351-4012 be­ 1025 N. Pennsylvania IV 7-5 04 9 tween 10 am & 1 pm. Mike S titt, m gr. ED 2-4432 ( Monday, April 5, 1965 9 Michigan State N ew s, East Lansing, Michigan Service Service Wanted F or Sale Personal F or Rent F o r Rent F or Sale T H E 12th TV RENTALS for students. Eco- TYPING DONE in my home. Pick BLOOD DONORS needed. $5 for TWO MEN, two-room apartment MALE STUDENT.Graduate, sen­ GÊT YOURS - Phi F rank’sC a r' VAN DYKE, 1959 . 46' x 10’. Two COMMEMORATING sum m er of U.S. Advisors in nomical ra te s by the term a n d up and deliver. Phone IV 5-4604. RH Positive: $7 for RH Nega­ in approved house. $10 weekly ior. Share double room adjacent toon Book. 50 of Phil’s best bedroom. Excellent condition. Vietnam, STGOOV (The Society month. UNIVERSITY TV RENT­ tive. Detroit Blood S e r v ic e ,! ''. p e r person. 505 Albert Ave. to c a m p u s . Quiet, clean. 143 Cartoons in a beautifully bound Privately owned. P h o n e 669- ALS. 484-9263. C 14£7 E. Michigan Ave., Hours 337-0132. 5 Bogue. 332-4558. 3 book - $1.00 each. For orders 9729. 3 to Get Out of Vietnam) has a Wanted 9-4, Monday, Tuesday, Wednes­ MEN, SUPERVISED, approved, of five or more, call: 351-4322 GENERAL, 1964. Four months (¿amp" num ber of "Vietnam Summer SEWING A N D ALTERATION^. day, F r i d a y . 12-7 Thursday. WATERS EDGE Apts. clean, q u i e t . Cooking. T w o between 6 p.m. and midnight. old. 10' 50’. Two bedrooms. badges for dissident cit­ Quick and efficient service. Call WANTED A used English bike 469-7587. 46 B etter 332-2949. - ~ 3 with f o u r - g e a r transm ission. W.a K’TED: LADIES’ left-handed it blocks Berkey. Doubles, half­ ''SEE ME FIRST- I HAVE i n " Can sleep seven. Phone 332- izens. Send 50£ to: STGOOV, Has v a c a n c ies for doubles. 351-4017 after 6 pm. 5 Standard and portable typewrit­ 0934. E ast Lansing. 5 P.O. Box, 189, East Lansing. 4 CHILD CARE in my East L ans- Phone after 7, 355-4191. 5 golf clubs. In good condition. 1 & 2 Students MEN, UNSUPERVISED. 1/2 dou- e rs, $29 up. Record players, MARLETTE 1963, 10’ x 50'. Fully Peanuts Personal ing Home. pendable. One Experienced. or two children. De­ Phone 355-1387. ble r o o m . Available S p r i n g $14.95. Hi-fi and stereo play­ carpeted. M iller Gun Furnace. BOO-HOO. We weep tor our lost Phone 332-4509. Mike Stitt ED 2-4432 term . Kitchen. Private. Close. ers, $36.50. Portable battery- Like new condition. Phone 484- composite and water carn ivah RENT your TV from NEJAC.3 $135 term . 485-6550. 3 operated tape reco rd ers, $14.95. 4766. 3 trophy. Please return. The AE New Zenith portable for only H ouses APPR6VED SINGLE or double Table models at $49.50. P o rt­ 8' x 45’ PALACE RANCH Home. P h i's. 3 $9 per month. F re e service FOUR BEDROOM modern home. for men. P riv ate entrance. Bath able sewing machines, $29.5t). Good condition. Must sell. Call and delivery. Call NEJAC TV Newly redecorated. Black top and phone. L arge. Reasonable. Table model radio, $6 up. Ra­ 882-7611. 3 Rea E state road. Six m iles from campus. Close. ED 2-1746. dio alarm s, $12.95. Battery poc­ Rental. 482-0624. C 3 ket sizes, $4.95. M icroscope NEW MOON T95T 1963. 3-bedrooms. ATTRACTIVE MODERN house. WEDDING ANNOUNCEMENTS— $135. OR 6-5013. 3 WOMEN: GRAD students, a s s ist- IT x 17’ living room. Furnished. Designed by Dow. T hree bed­ THREE MEN needed for large ants, 27 or older. Kitchen priv­ sets from " T il buy anything of Excellent condition. Must sell. room s, two baths. All electric Save ING 10%. THE WELLS PRINT­ COMPANY. Phone 355-1942 unapproved house. 15 rooms, ileges. Two blocks from cam ­ value." Call 699-9609. * 3 kitchen. Interesting living area fireplaces, private bedrooms. pus. R eferences. 332-1907. 3 W I L C O X S E C O N D H A N D CHEVROLET C A M P E R b u s . ' with two story landscape win­ or 332-2143for appointment.CIO Call, IV 9-6221. 4 APPROVED ROOMS f o r male STORE, 509 E. Michigan Ave. Sleeps four. Fully equipped, bot­ dows facing large back yard s u r ­ EXPERIENCED MOTHER wi l l ONE GIRL with c a r to share house s t u d e n t s . University YMCA. IV 5-4391. C5 ca re for pre-school child in tle gas heat and refrig erato r. rounded by beautiful t r e e s . East Lansing home, near F ra n - with . three. $45. 405 Edmore, Cooking, Parking. $7.50weekly. BUNK BEDS with m a ttre sses. Sharp. Phone IV 5-8843. 4 Complete studio apartm ent in Lansing, mornings. 3 314 E vergreen. ED 2-3839. 3 Good condition. Also, arm chairs basem ent, separate entrance. dor. Good references. 332-3485.4 Happiness Is CAMPUS, N E A R . Furnished. ROOMS FOR rent to females over and sofa. Call 351-4230. 5 Lost & Found Furnishings included. 332-1894. College s t u d e n t s . Male p r e ­ 21. Kitchen privileges. Side en­ GOLF CLUBS. Wilson K2S irons, FOUND: WATCH. In F irst Na- 6 I yping Se rvi ce ferred. Call 485-5135. 3 trance. Phone 332-6090. 3 3 - 5 -~ - 9- Sand Wedge. Used one tional Bank, East Lansing. Own­ EAST LANSING, near. Leaving BARB1 MEL, Professional typist. MALE. SINGLES- doubles?" Two season. 60% off. $36. ED2-3396.3 er may claim by identifying. 3 baths. state. Four bedrooms, tw o No job too large or too sm all. Rooms blocks room. Graduate students p r e ­ or call 351-5304. ferred. Sem i-private entrance. f r o m ca m p u s.-B ST.AL Ei APPROVED, s i n g l e Parking available. 437 M.A.C. ENCYCLOPEDIA BR1TTANICA, ath . 4 1965. Full set, $300. Save $100. WORLD’S Personal GREATEST Rock ’n‘ * ient, 2-6046. s Excellent plan. Conven- Block off campus. 332-3255. C c h o o l s , shopping. ED 6 ED1E STARR, ty p i s t. Theses, dissertations, t e r m papers, Spring Term Walking distance. Parking. ED APPROVED. TWO singles, one WEDDING DRESS, size 14. Full Roll Call 351-4194. 5 Band. The N1GHTSHIFT. GROSSfttlCk - THREE bedroom general t y p i n g . Experienced. 2-1363. 3 double. Parking. Block from U n- length, 2-piece. Could be used 2-8369; Nobody can t o u c h us. ED ranch, 1 1/2 baths, living room, IBM E lectric. OR 6-2645. C 332-0327; 464-5686. 5 dining room, two fireplaces, at­ JOE RESUMES, 100 copies, $T. MALE STUDENTS. Two double ion. Clean. 332 MAC. Close to as form al. Phone 882-1575. 3 HAVE YOU HEARD? - P h i l tached garage. IV 5-6296. 5 ALDINGER DIRECT MAIL Ad­ room s. $10. 501 M.A.C. Call everything. 4 BICYCLE S T O R A G E : S a l e s , 332-2563. MEN APPROVED supervised. service a n d re n ta ls.’ E A S T F rank’s Cartoon Book. 50 of Service vertising, 533 N. Clippert. IV Cooking, parking, laundry. Two Phil’s best Cartoons in a beau­ M em ber o f TWO CO-EDS for half double blocks to campus. Singles, dou­ LANSING CYCLE, 1215E,G rand tifully bound book - $1.00 each. DIAPER SERVICE, three types 5-2213. C and single or full double. Near bles. 327 Hillcrest. 332-6118. 3 River. Call 332-8303. C For ord ers of five or more, of diapers,,¡y^chpose from. Bulk ANN BROWN typist and m ulti- N a tion a l East Lansing Locations campus. Call 332-1242. 3 wash f o r cleaner, whiter dia- lith offset printing (black and ROOMS: MALE, approved. Ve r y MAGNA VOX CONSOLE, Hi-Fi call: 351-4322 between 6 p.m.5 perfc. Fluff dried and folded. Use white and color). IBM. General In stitu te o f • Next To Dawn Donuts MEN. UNSUPERVISED. S h a r e clean single and double rooms. player for sale. $50. Call 351- and midnight. typing, term papers, t h e s e s , Dry C le a n in g two rooms. Kitchen privileges. R a t e s , reduced. Parking. ED 5254 after 6 pm. A BETTER PRICE tor your car • your own or rent ours.C ontain­ • Next To Albert Pick N ear c a m p u s . $40 m o n t h l y . 2-6405. $200 MARTEN " F o lk 1 guitar. at PHILP DODGE, 1431 E a s t e r s furnished. No deposit. 25 dissertations. 332-8384. C 7 Phone 882-0625. 4 SINGLE ROOM f o r men. Ap­ Six months old. $145 or best Michigan. See Russ Lay. Phone years experience. BY-LO DIA­ Q U I E T , UNAPPROVED. Must proved a n d supervised. $10 offer. Excellent condition. Call IV 4-4517. C gan. PER SERVICE, 1010 E. Michi­ h&ve car. Also, have two com ­ week. Spartan Hall. 215 Louis. 353-1315. 5 IV 2-0421. C JOLLY BOY’S INTERNATIONAL A C C I D E NT PROBLEM?C a 11 plete beds for sale. 655-1442 ED 2-2574. 5 MEN’S SKI BOOTS, used. Size l6. Now accepting m em bership’s after 5:30. 4 $12 or best otfer. 355-3022. 4 Send $1 to World Headquarters Kalamazoo Street Body Shop. SINGLE ROOM for male student. For Sale PIANO CABLE spinet W5 Ex- Wood's Hotel, Grafton, Wiscon­ Small der.ts io large wrecks. Linens furnished. Close to cam - JUST IN - Phil Frank s C a r ­ celient c o n d i t i o n . Call IV sin. 12 Guaranteed aw< Am erican n d foreign c a r s . ipus. $8.50 per week. 332-1682. 4 toon Book. 50 of Phil's best 9-9653. 230 S. Magnolia. 5 CALL THE PRESIDENT1ALS if East Kalama; 489 -7 5 0 7 APPROVED DOUBLE or single Cartoons in a beautifully bound BIG BEEF SALE. Four months you want the best music for your C h i l d c a r l ■ir toddlers inU n- room in new home. Tiled show­ book - $1.00 each. For orders locke- rent free with $70 pur­ party. IV 4-3018. 5 Villa; e apartment. Full er. Patio. C lose-in. Parking. of five or m ore, call: 351-4322 chase. T erm s. BROWERS, Holt, DISCOVER THE challenge and fun iversity or part-tim e Weekdays. 355- ED 2-1183. 3 between 6 p.m. and midnight. OX 4-3691. 12 of Rallying! G reater Lansing 6015. ROOM AND Board.- $165 Spring $20 puts you on a three-speed TWO FORMALS, cocktail length, C orvair Club presents a funda­ DIAPER SERVICI , same dia- term . We break dorm contracts. English l i g h t - w e i g h t b i k e one p i n k satin; other a g u a / mental rally, school for all in­ pe rs returned. E ither yours or ULREY Student Co-op. 332— through S p r i n g T erm . ACE white. Size 5-7. Worn once. FE terested or enthusiastic about ours. With our service, you m ay' 6349.__________________________3 HARDWHERE & GIFTS, Grand 9-8455. 7 this type of competitive r e c r e a ­ include tw o pounds of b a b y MEN, APPROVED, supervised. River Ave., acro ss from theU n- RÀNGE 30 '' Frigidaire. Chrome tion. April 6. S pm. Bud Kouts clothes that do not fade. Diaper Two doubles. Bath. Parking. $9 ion. ED 2-3312. C dinette set, 4 ch airs. R efrig er­ Chevrolet, 2801 E. Michigan, pail furnished. weekly. Also approved ap art­ A D M I R A L REFRIGERATOR. ator, miscellaneous. Phone IV Lansing. Steve Sander, ED 2- AMERICAN DIAPER SERVICE ment to share. 351-4079. 5 Dual-temp. Full width, 50 lb. 2-5189. 5 8316; Ron Davis, IV 9-6533. 3 914 E. Gier St. MALE GRADUATE for room. $l6 freezer. Very good condition. DRAFTING BOARD and Dietzgen BACK AGAIN this term! T h e IV 2-0664 C weekly. Parking available. Call $40. Phone 339-8619. 3 instruments. Excellent condi­ Wildest Sound around. CalhTHE ED 7-9567 after 4. 5 DRESSED B E E F , Angus a n d tion. Call 355-5921. 2 ESQUIRES, 351-4725. MALE. SINGLE room in three Herefords. Choice Government ACCORDION 120 B ass. Like new. STUDENTS: WHY l e a v e your ’ rhan house $9. Parking p riv i- inspected and cured. 36 a? ? VOTE ? No S ittin g C h a r g e - N o A p p o i n t m e n t s © 107 5 8253 TODAY E. M ic h ., L a n s in g IV COMPUTE -ft Wffliam K. Harmon News Notes To Europe Tourists BUY fo r M u n ic ip a l J u d g e USED BOOKS STOCK ( p o lls open *ti I 8:00) On Union Board Flight! SAVE OF ALL * April 8th . M e e t i n g w i t h C raven Tours Personnel from 1:00 to 5:00 p . m . in U nion B o a rd A ctivities Office. TEXTBOOKS The Men Of DELTA TAU DELTA Oi * All m o n e y co l l e c t e d on c h a r ­ t e r s in e x c e s s of a c t u a l p r o ­ r a t e d c o s t of a i r c r a f t will b e Cordially Invite You To Attend r e f u n d e d p r i o r to d e p a r t u r e . Paperbacks Open Rush Tonight At 7 0 ‘clock. We’re At 139 Bailey St Also and Reference Books R e c o m m e n d e d and R e q u ir e d fo r GIBSONS BOOKSTORE Call ED 7-1721 For Rides . Every Course CORNER W. G R A N D R IV E R A N D E VE R G R E E N ONE B L O C K WEST OF T H E UNION Monday, April 5, 1965 l O Michigan Stale N ew s, Easi Lansing, Michigan MSU B oo k sto re MSU B ook store MSU B o o k sto re MSU B oo k sto re MSU B oo k sto re MSU B ookstore MSU B o o k sto re MSU B o o k sto re MSU B oo k sto re MSU B oo k sto re MSU B o o k sto re MSU M M u B Are You Looking For Spring Term B Books And Supplies? M U "Phil Frank Strikes Again A collection of great Campus Cartoons ~«a¿OgA È\ 4 M ifv! i)j vi( ^ U U Faithful Pens 11 For Those I Long Lectures Pack of three Pens Sjoo u If You Need Cash Well Still Buy Your Old Textbooks We have all of the books and supplies that you’ll NEED And the most complete line of reference books in East Lansing Agents For The Following Publishers Academic Press Addison-W esley W.A. Benjam in Co. B laisdell Am erican E lsevier BOOKSTORE Holt, R inehart & Winston International Textbook M cM illan - McGraw H ill u M IT Press Prentice Hall John W iley H arper Torchbooks In The Center For International Programs OPEN WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY 8:30 A.M. UNTIL 9 P.M. Mon., Tues., F r i. 8:30 AM to 5:30 PM u MSU B oo k sto re MSU B oo k sto re MSU B ookstore MSU B o o k sto re MSU B ook store MSU B o o k sto re MSU B o o k sto re MSU B o o k sto r e MSU B o o k sto re MSU B oo k sto re MSU MSU B oo k sto re i