/ Inside Weather L ig h t r a i n e n d in g to d a y . F o o tb a ll P r a c t ic e , p . 4: A d d ic t R o le , p . 7; F is h e l MICHIGAN H ig h 47 to 52. C o o le r to n ig h t. T a lk , p . 3. STATE UNIVERSITY V o l. 55 Number 288 E ast L a n s in g , M ich ig a n T h u rsd a y, A p ril 15, 1965 P r ic e 10c Students To Elect F irst Board Today L B J V ie w s D i s a s t e r ; No Senior Contest 4 Juniors Running P r o m is e s F e d e r a l A id S tu d e n t s w ill v o te to d a y f o r tw o r e p r e s e n t a ­ TOLEDO, Ohio I’:— President port audience at South Bend, the director of the .office of t i v e s to M S U ’s f i r s t S t u d e n t B o a r d . Johnson (lew a m ercy mission “ the federal government m ust not emergency/planning, Buford El­ ■M A lth o u g h t h e r e a r e f o u r e l i ’c t e d r e p r e s e n t a ­ along M idwestern flood and tor­ be something cold and far away, lington, four senators and 20 nado tra ils Wednesday shaking but a w arm friend and a warm house m em bers. He c o n s u l t e d t i v e s , t h e r e is no c o m p e t i t i o n in the s e n i o r his head in sympathetic disbe­ neighbor." along thè way with governors and division. lief and offering all the help The President brought with him local y....officials. .. the government can m uster. T u rn o u t should be so m e w h a t u n d e r the r e c o r d At the scene of the greatest 3 9 p e r c e n t who v o te d Determine concentration of d a m a g e and death, in Dunlap, Ind., Johnson told a volunteer d isaster work­ e r: Tornado/Victims in the r e f e r e n d u m p a s s i n g th e n e w s t u ­ “ I've never seen such com­ plete destruction.’' He had just picked his way Quick Tò Rebuild Reaction dent governm ent s t r u c t u r e , predict­ To Killings through an area of f l a t t e n e d Man is flexible. Man is tough dents’ desire to rebuild what ed P e te G r o m e te r . e l ­ hom es and a shopping center Even nature at her mightiest the storm had destroyed. ections c o m m is s io n ­ w here the death toll in Sunday’s cannot discourage him. Every house whose roof had tornado was 27. Such is the exafnple in Elk­ rem ained was dotted with men er. Johnson took a 2 ,1 0 0 -m ile a e r- hart County in Indiana, the area working to replace the shingles. Students from MSU recently Running for two junior seats ial swing ac ro ss Indiana, Illi­ hit w orst by th^ Palm Sunday T eam s of m ake-shift carp enters participated In a re s e a rc h in­ are Jim G rahnm , Dick Sanderson, nois, Minnesota, Michigan and tornados. w ere at all possible locations vestigation on c o m m u n i t y re ­ C h arles (Chuck) Stoddard, and Ohio and saw the ravages of 1 visited Elkhart County Tues­ a n d construction went on all action to the recent sex m u rd ers M arshall Zumberg. w ater and w.nd from the a ir and day night and Wednesday m orn­ through the night. A F T E R M A T H — S c a n « * I lk « t h is w a r« c o m m o n in th a a r e a s u r r o u n d in g E lk h a r t , in Benton Harbor, Unopposed for the senior posi­ on land. T here w ere stops at ing and saw the devastating ef­ T heir call for help was quick­ In d ., on W e d n e s d a y , as s e v e r a l t w is t e r s f o r c e d t h e i r w a y th r o u g h t h is n o r th e r n T hree of the victims bodies tions are Webb M artin and John the South Bend-Elkhart-Dunlap fects caused by two of the 12 ly answered. A ll N a t i o n a l In d ia n a to w n . T h is p i c t u r e w a s ta k e r n e a r D u n la p , In d ., th e h a r d e s t h it a re a . w ere found 10 days ago in woods McQuitty, a re a of northern Indiana, Minne- tornados/ that hit northern In­ G uardsmen w ere activated. In P h o to b y B i l l K ra s e a n near W atervliet. W rite-in v o t e s will not be apolis-St. Paul, Minn., and the diana. /Dunlap, Ind., the area many cases, they w ere students Each student-interview er was counted, under a ruling by the Toledo' region in northw estern that w as m ost severely rup­ a’ local high schools. Army given a map of the a rea , instruct­ interim board of review. Ohio. tu re^ by two blasts from the t r u c k s filled with emergency ions as to what houses he should The board felt students should All the way, the P residen t let skv', was gouged into two p a rts — w orkers could be seen through­ visit and questionnaires. have sufficient time to study the It be known that federal d isaster separated by a m ile-w ide path out the area. re lie f funds would be on the way. of destruction. “ At an hour and tim e lik e th is,’’ In spite of all the problem s $8 Football Fee Adopted; Some of the questions asked w ere: What w ere your f i r s t t h o u g h t s on hearing of the capabilities or incapabilities of all candidates. Students may vote in residence In the center of the path the caused by the d isaster the people hall lunch and dinner lines from he said at the start, to an a ir - land was torn and tre e s w ere quickly returned to their normal m u rd e rs? Did you call anyone? / stripped of their bark. Tower­ way of life. A young child, who ing elm s and huge oaks w ere perhaps didn’t have to go to Spouses Attend For $12 W here do you think the m u rd e re r came from ? If he la caught what do you think his p u n i s h m e n t 15 minutes before u n t i l 15 minutes after dining room hours. Off-campus students may vote bowed by the force of the wind. scnuoi since many of them w ere A MW football ticket plan, ■The season pass, determ ined • Different colored coupons will should be? in Bessey, Berkey, the Union or Homes w ere leveled and the closed, was playing in a large calling for an optional $8 stu­ on a basis of $2 p e r game, will be sold to designate class p ri­ Industries debris f r o m the splintered houses tre e that had fallen ac ro ss his dent fee for four home games be sold at fall registration tor ority. The coupons then will be covered the area as i f a giant house, as if it was part of his this fall, has been adopted by returning students and at sum ­ redeem ed for the actual stadium A nsw ers from different area s will be compared to determ ine the International C enter from 5 a.m . to 5 p.m. had crum pled them in his hands private playground. MSU athletic officials. m e r counseling clinics for in­ seat ticket according to cla ss how environment can influence Ballot boxes will also be taken to fraternities, sororities, reli­ Ordered and thrown the pieces every - w here. coming freshmen and transfer statu s as in the past. students. Special provisions for s t u ­ thought. Questions w ere also asked to predict how people will react gious living units and co-ops for 20 minutes between 5 and " p .m . In the town itself the violent T ickets for the Sept. 18 home dents choosing to pick up tickets Results will be announced in Shut pown attack was’ less severe, but row after row, buildings were naked U.S. Doubtful Of New opener with UCLA not included tor the entire season are p re ­ in the season package because sently under study by MSU Ticket in a sim ilar situation at a future tim e, said Richard Sturgis, pro­ ject director. the Student Services first floor lounge immediately after final of their window ST, PAUL ,/l(linn. f --M o re in­ from those buildings could be glass, and signs it falls before school s ta rts, will M anager Bill Beardsley. tabulation. The lounge will open be offered at the reg u la r r e ­ Addition of one or m ore d istri­ * C a r te r Beukema, one of the d u stries weye ordered shut down and residents evacuated in St. found blocks away. Red Viet Peace Plan serve seat sales for $2 with p re­ bution points to relieve conges­ sentation of a validated spring or tion at the Jenison Field House Interview ers, commented on the survey: at 8;30 p.m., but G rom eter said the, counting will take until about Paul Wednesday as the M issis­ to But the there was another side story: The Elkhart r e s i- WASHINGTON UP— North Viet Nam’s four-point peace plan got a sum m er term ID card. ticket booths is also being con­ "E veryone let me in but one 11 ‘p .m . sippi River began to iorce its cold reception in Washington Wednesday. A State Department spokes­ Single ticket purchases will sidered. woman who wouldn't answer any ID card s will be punched, and way through and under e m e r­ man said it would mean a Communist takeover of South Viet Nam. not be offered at the reduced Any full-tim e student will be students must sign a re g istra ­ Rule Voting questions,’’ Beukema said. He gency dikes. Although avoiding an outright rejection, he said of Hanoi’s price, but regular $5 reserv e eligible to purchase the four- interviewed the Negro section tion form as a check against Officials said plywood exten­ broadcast proposal for U.S. withdrawal and "peaceful reunification seats, if available, may be pur­ gam e coupons for $8. between the areas where the the number of votes. sions on some dikes were holding “ Spouse coupons will be avail­ G raham , a leader of opposition Set Tonight of Viet Nam’’: chased. women were picked up. well but that hydrostatic p re ssu re “ We are studying the report^ . . . as indeed we study all reports T o t a l receipts accumulated able to students carrying from "T h ey were very scared ,’’ he to the student board, says he is was forcing water to bubble up in­ of statem ents by the North Vietnamese . . .” through the sale of the season seven to 11 credits inclusive, said. "E v ery door was locked, running because the board can­ side t h e dikeworks in s o m e T he spokesman, p re s s officer Robert J. McCloskey, again ticket packages are to be used and to m a rried students’ wives. and they locked the doors after not succeed without support from places. p r o p o s a l to liberalize prodded the Reds for an answ er to the appeal by 17 neutralist p rim arily for the expansion of C ost of these coupons will be 1 was inside. Many doors had all students. A grain elevator complex, o r u The of printed nations for nonstipulatory peace talks on Viet Nam. He noted that athletic facilities. $12 for the 1965 season, d e ter­ two o r three locks." He supports continuing senior pow er plant and a printing plant m aterial indistribution le s on residence halls will President Johnson gave the U.S. response in his April 7 speech The plan, adopted by the Ath­ mined on the basis of a $3 All the people had some weapon c la ss government and revising w ere in the affected area near com e before Men’s Halls As­ offering unconditional discussions. letic Council, governing body of per game charge. to use— a gun, an ice pick, a the al 1-University student judici­ the main downtown section, which sociation (MHA) tonight. Spartan athletics, closely follows In this instance only, a special h a m m er— he said. ary. is on high ground and not affec'ed. T he new regulations would al­ The North Vietnamese broadcast quoted P re m ie r Pham Van Dong details worked out by the Student book will be issued which will be M ost people in the m iddle- He is a form er vice p re si­ In St . Paul and Minneapolis, low individual students or un­ as proposing. Athletic Advisory Board. good for admittance to all sp o rts. incom e section thought the killer dent of North Wonders Hall and the floodwatch was intensified at ch artered groups, as well as —Recognition of basic national rights of the Vietnamese people. to be from Benton H arbor. Most was chairm an of the Student Con­ Wilson Tells Reds the many bridges that span the ch artered clubs, to leave print­ —Withdrawal of foreign m ilitary personnel in accord with the people in this same section called g re ss academic affairs com m it­ M ississippi as ice chunks and de­ ed m aterial in hall lobbies. 1954 Geneva agreem ents on Viet Nam for the death sentence if the tee. b ris continued to ro a r down the Anyone opposed to the' rules —Settlement of South Viet Nam’s internal affairs " in accordance m u rd e re r is caught, even though Sanderson, president of West To Take LBJ Offer r iv e r. is asked to contact his hall p re ­ with the pro g ram ’’ oi the Communist Viet Cong guerrillas and. M ichigan laws prohibit capital McDonel Hall, said he thinks a Flood officials touched off dyn­ — Peaceful reunification “ without any foreign interference.’’ punishment.. good start is essential for the am ite to demolish the St, Paul sident meeting. p rio r to the 5:30 p.m. It is quite clear, U.S. officials told the newsmen and broad­ board to gain respect and con­ • Yacht Club building when it ap­ One professor involved in this p e ared the building would be we" |would f there is no opposition, c a ste rs , that this Hanoi proposition is unacceptable as a basis project was picked up by police fidence. like for this to go into for discussing an end to the Viet Nam war. He is a past Student C ongress swept downstream, endangering effect as soon as possible,’’ said Under the Hanoi formula the United States would simply pull UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. W!— ference at U.N. headquarters that it is' up to the parties concerned— and released after they learned other structures. B ritish P rim e M inister Harold of the study. ( c o n t i n u e d o n p a g e 6) Gov. Karl RolvaSg raised his JimWomen’s Sink, MHA vice president. out, leaving South Viet Nam to contend with continued North Wilson expressed belief Wednes­ and it was cle ar he was pointing damage estim ate to $23 million (WIC) Council Inter-residence Hall Vietnam ese aggression without Am erican support, it was stated. day that President Johnson’s of­ a finger at the C om m unists— in the state as the weather bureau posal Tuesdayapproved the pro­ T he result almost certainly would be to deliver the Saigon govern­ fer to enter into unconditional ne­ to take up the P residen t’s offer. ment to the Reds, the officials said. Wilson will meet today with w arned that high water will hang still go before the officeIt ofmust night. re ­ On the progress of the war itself, U.S. officials said the number gotiations could break “ a vicious President Johnson in Washington, Reaction To Senate on for at least four or five days sidence hall p rogram s and the of Viet Cong units and amount of infiltration from the Communist c irc le ” in the Viet Nam crisis where Viet Nam is expected to after riv ers crest. Committee on Student North has increased m easurably in the last six months. and lead to a lasting peace. rank high among m atters to be Winds and rains may be addi­ Faculty tional hazards. Affairs. T h e guerrillas now control more than half of South'Viet Nam. He told a crowded news con- discussed. The P rim e M inister was asked Inquiry Is Mixed if he believed North Viet Nam would enter peace talks while E d ito r ’s N’O te: Second of all midwestern co lleges,’ Hook­ er said. “ The chief executive undergoing U.S. bombardment. a t h r e e - p a r t s e rie s . runs universities, not the faculty " I t ’s a bit of a v lc io u scircle,’’ B y C O L L E E N O ’B R I E N or the legislature,” he added. he commented in reply. But he S t a t e N ew s S t a f f W r i t e r added that he believed President John X. Jam rich, associate Johnson’s , offer gn n e g o t i a n t s Mixed, react ion from MSU ad- dean of education, explained the made in his speech in Baltim ore 'm iniftrators and fhcitftjfgreeted* situation in term s of the his­ last Wednesday could begin to the state Senate’s proposal for a tory of American universities. break the circle, and it was up legislative investigation of ad- "M ost of the adm inistration’s to the parties concerned to enter m inistrafion-faculty relations at powers have been delegated to into negotiations. state universities. it by the faculty,’’ Jam rich said. P r o v o s t Howard R. Neville " M atters such as admission Classes Meet feels that the proposed com m it­ tee would find littlfe trouble here. and expulsion of students can be “ 1 invite the senators to come handled m ore efficiently by ad­ On Good Friday to Michigan State, because here m inistrative officers than by the the faculty runs the University. entire faculty, especially at a C lasse s will be held as sched­ T he faculty is the U niversity,” large institution like MSU,’’ Jam - uled G o o d F r i d a y , Provost he said. rich explained. Howard R. Neville announced to­ Some faculty m em bers dis­ "F requently faculty members day. Students desiring to attend agree with this view. “ To the first extent that 1 run the United Na­ versityhear religious services are advised news of major Uni­ to make arrangem ents with indi­ decisions from the news­ tions, 1 run the University',’’ papers or students,’’ Hooker said. vidual professors. answ ered Jam es R. Hooker, as­ “ I feel that there should be more Although university offices will sociate professor of history and discussion of faculty affairs and y o u n g s te r s a r e now In th e p ro c e s s o f b e c o m in g o r ie n t e d to th e rem ain open, personnel may at­ A frican studies. University policy decisions be­ O H , B A B Y — S p r in g is u s u a lly th e t im e o f y e a r w h e n b a b y a n im a ls w a y s o f th e s tr a n g e w o r ld In w h ic K th e y n o w f ih d th e m s e lv e s . tend services with the consent of "M ost of the power lies in fore they are m ade," he said. m a k e t h e i r a p p e a ra n c e , a n d t h is y e a r is no e x c e p tio n . T h e s e P h o to b y B o b B a r i t their supervisors. the president’s office in nearly \ 2 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan % T hursday, April 15, 1965 Do You C a r e . . . Then Vote Play’s The Thing ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ » ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ • ■ ■ B y L a r r y Tate T o d a y ’s e l e c t i o n is of p a r t i c u ­ it c a n b e a s t u d e n t v o i c e . It’s up la r significance b ecau se students to you. It has been frustrating to follow the p ro g ress of our U niversity T he C o m m i t t e e fo r S tu d e n t theatre this season. One week, the actors look like professionals; w ill be v o t i n g f o r th e f i r s t e l e c t e d the next, we feel like applauding if they manage not to trip over each m e m b e r s of a S t u d e n t B o a r d R ig h ts c l a i m s t h a t y o u , th e s t u ­ other. One week, the group does a classic; the next, it does a script d e n t. do n o t h a v e an y s a y in s t u ­ of, to be kind, dubious m erit. b r o u g h t a b o u t by th e a g i t a t i o n of F urtherm ore, there is a disquieting tendency to do good jobs on students. d e n t g o v e r n m e n t . If you a g r e e bad plays and bad jobs on good plays, which has the effect of produc­ with C S R in w h o l e , o r in p a r t , ing a lot of interesting productions but hardly ev er a satisfying one. T h e i n e f f e c t i v e n e s s of AUSG What's wrong? vote to d a y a n d th e n fig h t f o r y o u r In production, the problem s are obvious. Some directors are m ore w a s a m a t t e r of d i s i n t e r e s t on r i g h t s t h r o u g h A SM SU , y o u r l e ­ talented than others; so with the actors, so with all involved in the th e p a r t of the s t u d e n t b o d y . It company. Unlike a reperto ry theatre, a university theatre is de­ gal c h a n n e l to t h e a d m i n i s t r a t i o n . pendent upon whoever is available for a partW ularproduction, upon i s h o p e d t h a t th e n e w o r g a n i z a ­ Not a ll th e f l a w s of th e old s t u ­ untried actors and (to some extent) d irec to rs, and no real stability tio n . A SM SU , w ill g a in m o r e s u p ­ dent g o v e rn m e n t have been r e ­ is possible. In selection of plays, the problem seem s to re s t in the individual port. m o v e d . B u t th e ASMSU c o n s t i t u ­ tastes of the direc to rs who do the selecting. U nless they believe a T h e f i r s t s t e p is to v o te . Y o u r tion l a y s a g r o u n d w o r k to b u ild play is well-written, they affirm, it will not be produced. C ertain influences, however, to some extent determ ine their tastes. v o te is not a v o te f o r th e o r g a n i ­ on. R e s p o n s i b l e l e a d e r s h i p and F irst, they intend, in a four-year period, to present a condensed z a ti o n . N o r is y o u r n ot v o tin g a an i n t e r e s t e d s t u d e n t bo d y c a n history of the theatre through their selections. v o te a g a i n s t it. You will be g o v ­ m a k e th e o r g a n i z a t i o n g r o w in to Second, plays must provide "th ea tric al experiences” ; that is, they m ust.be capable of having interesting things done with them e r n e d by th e i n d i v i d u a l s s e e k i n g th e f o r c e you w a n t it to b e . purely as stage productions. s p o t s in ASMSU a n d you h a v e an B u t i f n o b o d y v o t e s it w ill m e a n Third, the direc to rs try. to select, for the Fairchild productions and in a lesser degree for the Arena productions, plays with popu­ o b l i g a t i o n to c h o o s e . • nobody c a r e s . A d m i n i s t r a t o r s lar appeal. An empty house can be, as one*director puts it, “ tra u ­ T h e A s s o c i a t e d S t u d e n t s of a r e n o t g o i n g .to l i s t e n to a g r o u p m atic"; and a play that is agreed to have little chance of a ttrac t­ M i c h i g a n S ta te U n i v e r s i t y is now ing an audience is unlikely to be done. t h a t r e p r e s e n t s o n ly a few . T h e y Al! these are reasonable c riteria, of course, but all are conspic­ th e o n ly o f fic ia l s t u d e n t - a d m i n - ha ve th e p o w e r a n d it w ill t a k e a uously open to abuse. A play of historical interest may look a lot i s t r a t i o n link o p e n to you. You s t r o n g v o i c e to g e t t h r o u g h . b etter as the best of its kind than it does when presented to an au­ dience unaware of the worst of its kind. m a y com pf?tin t h a t it is i n e f f e c ­ G iv e ASMSU a s t r o n g v o ic e to Many plays provide, in the second place, theatricality and little tiv e b u t if th a t is t r u e it w ill be b e g in w ith . V o te to d a y . else. A director may be attracted to a play for what he can do with it rath e r than for its artistic m erits. y o u r fa u lt u n l e s s you v o te and then If y o u d o n ’t, you w ill be s a y i n g Finally, a play with some popular appeal may unconsciously be s u p p o r t the o r g a n i z a t i o n . not t h a t you d o n ’t s u p p o r t justified on highly tenuous artistic grounds. It c a n be a d e b a t i n g s o c i e t y o r Now, there are many talented people in the theatre group; this A SM SU b u t t h a t yo u d o n ’t c a r e . has been dem ons'rated. Assuming that this talent can be used m ore wisely, what steps might be useful to that end? One d irecto r sug­ Point of View gests two things; m ore money from the U niversity, to facilitate b etter training of the people involved and to provide better condi­ tions for them to work in; and the possible development of a m ore War In Viet Nam You Say T h e re ’ s A Bomb Planted In The A uditorium ? enlightened attittide among the students. From a bias toward the view that a play is basically literatu re written for the stage, I suggest a third. In the modern dram a course By Soo Sam Lee taught here, six inlsywrights are studied: Ibsen, Chekhov, Strind­ berg, Shaw, Pirstidello and O’Neil!. Robert Brustein in "T h e I am excluding those are in their own little T heatre of Revolt” adds Brecht and Genet. I believe this to be a LETTERS TO THE EDITOR good list, covering.the m ajor modern playwrights. w ho E d i t o r ' s n o t e : ¿00 S a m L e e is a cave like the isolationist', for they are like the j u n i o r f r o m S eo ul, K o r e a , m a jo rin g people who watched a girl being raped in fro n t. Yet, although in a th re e -y e a r period (last year through next year) in i n d u s t r i a l p s y c h o lo g y . of them in New York G uy and did nothing to stop alm ost 20 modern plays have been and will be done here, only two the aggressors. Thus I am going to exclude the y them are by any of these playwrights: and one of them , "T h e view, which demands immediate withdrawal from M aster Builder,” was wi addition a poor choice. Everyone, so far as I know, in the United The theatre group aspires to entertain and to educate. To do this, States desires peace as an ultimate goal. But this desire may not be the desire of some of the South Viet Nam. Still people everywhere h a v e heated argu­ m ents, which are due to the difference in their Teacher-ln Rebuts Rebuttal perhaps the present em phasis needs to be shifted a little. nation’s leaders, for they are aware that war is 0 0 T ifM U necessary to keep t h e i r people from r i s i n g ‘m ean’ to attain the ’end.’ T h e j e t t e r of oblique discontent involve bringing up certain m at- ifying certain points: raised by ggfc ' ■ S R A * c P A ■ against them. That is to say, a war becomes a Until recently, views were separated into three signed by six faculty m em bers te r s that would probably lead to a c A p E s c A R A r major p arts: the 'firs t group’ wanted to teach a “ The Six.” scape-goat for peoples’ aggressions which arise which appeared in the State News bitte r controversy that is best 1. The letter re fe rre d to “ that A L 1 V E A L A L 1 A from internal conflict or frustration of.a nation.. lesson t 1the leaders of North Viet Nam by bomh- Monday invites not one, but many left to be argued out at some s o - c a l l e d educational exper­ ACROSS 31. Word of N E M E ■ E L E 5 The reason for a frustration *> l a nation could '••ing t h e capital a n d industrial centers, which respqjises* •* * c a lm e r future day. 1 shall con- ience” and to “ its deliberately 1. Keep b a ck cho ice A è E R 1 19 D ■ m O L E ■be economical, political, Social, or agricultural. "would no-doubt bring a response; T h e 'se c o n d One called-for response would fine myself in this letter by c la r- one-sided orientation.” The m a­ 4. Marshy 32. Coulasb It could be any num ber of these things', '(f am group’ differs extremely*from the first by say­ jo r purpose of the teach-in wa6 place 34. Portent E L D Y A R P S ing- that we should negotiate in a peaceful mari­ 7. Employs 36. Redacts S H A N K 5 e C speaking here in an inclusive manner of all the n er; and the 'third group’ says to the first and to give students and others the 11. Long 38. And others: T E N T S A T A N 1 C individuals’ frustrations which makes up as an second, ’You both are partly right and partly chance to fam iliarize them selves winding, l.at. I aggressive nation.) Some leaders desire to im­ wrong in dealing with a nation as such, f o r w e Teach-ln Offers Cover-Up with another side of the Viet Nam. constellation 40. Inside O C A P A D M A 77 A v R O T M 0 T E T 1 pose their political system on others; conse­ Cannot purely exercise*the power o [ wisdom or sto ry and argument which has not 13. Volcanic 41. Insub­ * quently the inevitable outcome—a war. the power of sheer force,’ The teach-in Thursday wal But it is important to recognize been "getting through" in our matter stantial s T E E L E E N E M Y What is the reason for some men’s desire tor Since t h e President of the- United States successful in airing views which t h a t Washington’s fears a r e m a ss communication media. 14. Dormouse 43. Sala­ i E M B e *1 L 1 D * ■ war? The fact is there are men who seek war in rooted in Communist history as T he American people have in­ 15. Sport shot- mander formally announced the willingness for a peace­ are not commonly heard. Many 17. Attention 46. Enrages this world. Let us not ignore this fact as 1 try to ful settlement the ’second group's’ whole'argu- of the speeches were sensible well as in cu rren t reality. deed all along been basically get­ 18. Assuage 48. Sprite DOWN 6. Huge m ake my point c le ar in this essay. ment has collapsed with the formal refusal by calls (or negotiations, or instruc­ Most of us welcome President ting the “ one-sidedorientation,’’ 20. Halt an cm 50. Provoke 1. Erase lizard At least most of the people in theUnited States the North Vietnamese Government. tive in emphasizing considera­ Johnson’s offer to negotiate on an which the Six mention and de­ 21. Besides 51. Post Office 2. District 7. The gums agree on one p o in t-u ltim a te peace in this w.orld. tions which recommend policies unconditional basis. However, in plore. T his has been conveyed in 23. Sensational workers 3. Looking 8. More other than those favored by the rejecting unilateral escalation, the p re ss, over the radio an d tel- 26. Kipped 53. l urk, ilag glass secure But S eriously we do not advocate overlooking evision, and by certain lec tu rers. 28. Almost 54. Pouch 4. Cleanse 9. Twilight United Stales recently. 10. Sparoid Lost In The Labyrinth or m inim izingCom m unistbehav­ T his version is in general the 30. Jap. drama 55. Place 5. Forward I am sorry, therefore, to reg­ “ official version” that many of us fish ior which underm ines interna­ is te r a note of disappointment. The term inal phases of the tional stability. Such a course cannot in good conscience accept. y 2 3 4 5 i 7 e 9 io 12. Perform 16. Palmyra would be no grea ter guarantor of It is a version that alm ost every­ meeting became a rally rather peace than an unwillingness to one knows from A to Z. Since this it il% 1 li leaf 19. Irish lake li % By DON S O C K O L than a teach-in. It is regrettable that those who disagreed with the recognize that changes have tak­ en place within the world Com­ version has been so widely dis­ sem inated and is so well-known, ti 16 22. Waistcoat 24. ’The Bear" The MSU Psychology Department conducted a "Unfortunately,’’ he s a i d , "the other two speak ers chose to heckle and w ere not them selves recognized munist system . th e re would have been little " e d ­ 17 1» % a 25. Put on 19 2% §z i unique experiment in the Library last week. m en's responses were far from ideal. After four ucational” point in rehashing it 26. Digit The purpose of the experiment was to test days, one of the men cam e out scream ing hys­ to ex p ress dissenting views from Plainly, these have not been at the teach-in. ii kt 4 27. Kind of m an’s ability to cope with a difficult environ­ terically. He was fru strated in his search and the speak ers’ platform. enough. How many " te a c h -in s ” w ere held in the Soviet Union 2. The allegation was made by % 16 r% ke i79 30 number 29. Pitcher ment and maintain a clear concept of reality. took out his frustration by acting in an im m a­ the Six that the group sponsoring % t The absence of such a provision 33. Former Emil Cafeteria of the department selected three freshmen to p articipate.H egav ethem each ture manner. He pushed over six shelves of books on his way out and made quite a scene. He said becam e glaring after one speak­ e r ridiculed f e a r s of Chinese during the 1956 Hungarian m a s­ s a c re ? How many flowers bloom the teach-in advocates a “ Mun­ ich-type settlem ent.” T his, of 31 % 91 »% 9* 35 Kuss. leader 35. Holm oaks the call number of a book located in the third we'd lied to him. He said the book wasn’t in there Communist militancy. In t h e in China? co u rse, is a meaningless cliche. 36 39 SI 37. Fireplace floor stacks and told them to go in and find it. at all. It is regrettable t h a t the Six 39. Conform­ The participants were instructed not to commun­ “ He had developed paranoid tendencies and even sam e breath that free elections and self-determ ination for the T he need is for calculated dip­ should have reso rted to this tac­ 40 41 42 43 44 43 ing to type icate with each other. accused us of sending him in to find a non­ Vietnamese were urged, the fact lomatic and political appraisals and m aneuvers aimed at recip­ tic, which serves only to becloud % 46 % y/y 4t 49 % 42. Doctrines existent book. This, of course, was ridiculous. that the Communists have never the real debatable issues. 1 dare 47 44. Blaze Each of them was given a three-day supply of One of our trained personnel went in and Inund ro cal reduction of tensions, under 45. Cupel food, a two-and-one-half foot length of rope, a held genuine elections anywhere the auspices of the United Na­ say that none of the sponsoring SO il it 46.— Khan the book in only an hour. T his helped subject under their authority and that group favor or propose anything pen-knife ai d a piece,of flint. Each man was also num ber two regain his reality-perception som e­ Tibet and East Europe are still tions. A necessary condition for e v e n remotely resem bling a *3 i Ì4 Si 47. Shade tree given a whistle. If, at any time, any of them wanted to halt the experiment before com ple­ what. He is still under a doctor!s care. ’’ subjugated were swept under the stable settlem ents is that we do not abandon the principles of “ Munich-type settlem ent.” i % 49. Not: prefix 52. Rough tion, for any reason, they were to blow on tbe s “ And the third? ’’ I asked. -ug. self-determ ination and collective Actually there is a great deal lava: Haw. whistle. "Unfortunately we didn’t r e a c h '' him soon T h ere is no doubt that we can secu rity so wisely em phasized of disagreem ent among the spon­ enough. At the end of five days, when we hadn’t be c a rried away by irrational by the United Nations C harter. soring group as,to what the prop­ Students were kept" from the area during the h eard from him, we went in looking. When we fears of communism. In Viet e r and wise answer is to the prqb^, proceedings. found him, he was seated on a throne lie had Nam this' has placed us in an un­ Subbiah Kannappan lem of Viet Nam. T h ere is onTy The experim ent-lasted for five days and the fashioned out of two sets of encyclopedia. He enviable position of diplomatic Associate P rofesso r one thing that united the sponsor­ differing' responses of the three freshmen were held his pen-kmfe in his right hand and referred isolation and self-contradictions. of Economics ing group, and that was the com­ extrem ely interesting. to it as his scepter. He insisted he was the right­ mon feeling that the other side of _ "W e learned a great deal," said C afeteria. ful king oi the third floor stacks and ordered us the story should at least be made " T h e first man, better adjusted than the oth­ all to kneel. He did not recognize me at all." known. e r s , found his book in two days andj blew his "W hat did you learn from the experim ent?" Ad Hoc Clarification whistle, signalling completion. He was quite "W e made several recommendations to the Lawrence H. Battistini proud of himself.’’ lib ra ry ." said C afeteria. "T hey are. si ill mak­ To the Editor: * of the committee, individuals and P ro fesso r of Social Science When asked about the other two, Cafeteria ing things too easy over there. T he first subject other groups supporting Viet Nam M ember, Faculty Committee for shook his head and shrugged. was able to ..fond his book in only two days." The letter by Thomas G reer victory were present. These peo­ Peace in Viet Nam and t h e editorial in Monday’s ple w ere not affiliated with us and S tate’ News show the need for a often acted contrary to our ad- clarification of the activities of v;jo.'22Ji*me (<"- *k;*%fcecklingcan­ not be placed categorically upon M IC H IG A N STATI UNIVIISITY 1 STATE N EW the Ad Hoc Committee to Support President Johnson in Viet Nam at the "teach-in,” The stated and sole purpose of the com m ittee. We would appreciate a c la ri­ fication of G re e r’s position. He fetter Policy The State News welcomes all Happiness Is A M ember Associated P re s s , United P re s s International, Inland Daily P re s s Associa­ E ditor ................................ John Van Gieson Advertising M a n a g e r ................ Arthur Langer the Committee was to publicize its view t h a t Am erica should stand firm in Viet Nam. Its pur­ mentioned “ organized efforts by a m inority to h a ra ss the speakers and break up the assem bly.” T hen he re ferred to “ discour­ letters to the editor from any m em bers of the MSU community o r non-University read ers. Satisfied Customer tion, Associated Collegiate P re s s, Michigan Campus E d ito r.......................... C harles C. Wells pose was not to disrupt the gath­ L etters should be no longer P r e s s Association. Managing E d ito r .............................Hugh J. Leach ering. teous behavior” and to the bomb than 300 words and typed double­ Sports E d ito r ...........................Richard Schwartz While we disagreed wiih the th rea ts. spaced if possible. Lohger letters Published every cla ss day throughout fall, W ire Editor ................................. Bfll K rasean sponsors of the "teach-in,” we We join with G re e r in condem­ may be considered for publica­ w inter and spring term s and twice weekly A ssistant Ad M anagers ..............KenHoffman, had no desire to abrogate their ning both. But does he mean to im­ tion as “ Point of View’’ columns. sum m er term by the students Of Michigan M arcie Rosen freedom of speech and assembly. plicate the committee? C orrespondents should include State University. C irculation M a n a g e r........................... Jim Baker We did not demonstrate against nam e and, if applicable, Univer­ I M em b er o f Second class postage paid at East Lansing, E ditorial Editors ...................MichaelKindman, the "teac h -in ,” but in favor of Ad Hoc Committee to Support sity standing. This information N a t io n a l Susan Filson the present Viet Nam policy.The P residen t Johnson in Viet Nam E a s t L a n s in g L o c a tio n s Michigan. m ay be withheld upon request, but In stitu te o f Night Editor ........................... L eslie Goldstone assem bly Thursday was merely no unsigned l e t t e r s will be • N ext T o Dawn Donuts Editorial and business offices at 341 Stu­ Photography Advisor .............. David Jaehnig a convenient forum from which Michael Saxton, Chairman printed. D ry C leaning dent Services Building, Michigan State Uni­ News Advisor .................. Richard E. Hansen to ex press our views. The State News reserves the • N ext T o A lb ert P ic k versity, East Lansing, Michigan. Copydesk A d v iso r............................Henry P ric e Another point should be clari­ » John Owicki, right to select and edit all letters fied. In addition to the members Executive Committee M ember to fit space requirem ents. Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Thursday, April 15, 1965 3 Off-Campus Students Viet Policy Good’ : A m e r i c a ’ s "policy in Viet ism over Asiatic freedom as a Elect Board Members Nam, as far as it goes, is good and supportable," including the bombing, d e c l a r e d Wesley R . m eans to this end. N eutralism was bad: a coun­ try had to d eclare itself p ro - F r o m O u r W ir e S e r v ic e s Off-campus students will vote today for six of the 11 Fishel. A m erican by signing the SEATO m em bers of the new governing board which will take Fishel, professor of political agreem ent. M ighty Mac May Be Free over some powers of Students Off-Campus. science at MSU ,was guest speak­ He said that m istakes have ob­ Polling stations will be located with the polls for today’s e r at Tuesday night’s meeting viously been made. A m erica al­ LANSING— Rep. Joseph P. Swallow, R-Alpena, Wednesday intro­ ASMSU elections, at Berkey, Bessey, the Union and the of the International R e 1a t i o n s lowed B ritain and F ran ce to over­ duced a House bill that would provide complete refunding of the International C enter. Club. Opposed to the movement rule its stand to defend Laos, it Mackinac Bridge and elimination of bridge tolls by tacking one cent T he organization's constitution provides that three of the for " P eac e in Viet N am ," he adopted a “ b ird in the hand" to the gasoline tax. six representatives will come from Lansing and three from said he felt that the m arch this policy, and in Viet Nam it failed Swallow said his bill, which has bi-partisan support, provides for E ast Lansing. The remaining five m em bers will come from weekend in Washington w o u l d to pursue obvious anti-guerilla redemption of the nearly $100 million in bonds outstanding on the the Students Off-Campus organization. have little effect on American tactics. bridge by pledging the full faith and credit of the state. He said in­ Petitions were filed for the East Lansing positions by foreign policy. Fishel said that, in spite of terest» charges would be reduced by about $1 million a year. Jane Doyle, East Lansing freshman, and Nels Eriksen, Originally, he terated, the sit­ the opinions of W alter Lippman Grand Rapids sophomore. uation in Southeast Asia was one and Hans Morgenthal, Am erica Students from Lansing seeking to be elected are C h ar­ the United States was never ready m ust not disregard this sphere U.S. Peddles Pamphlets lotte Olds, freshman; Jann Ryan, sophomore; Mary Anne for and has not met with a of Chinese influence and effect SAIGON, Viet Nam— The U.S. Air F orce varied its attacks Davis, freshman; and G reg Hopkins, freshm an. viable solution. the necessary social reform s. on North Viet Nam Wednesday with a propaganda raid in ef­ The new board, representing 10,000 students, will become Clarifying the background, he fect calling on the North Vietnamese to overthrow their gov­ one of the six governing bodies on campus. Its purpose is to refered to the development of a ernm ent. provide a means of communication with the University for defined policy as slow, almost While 30 planes attacked two radar stations, six others students living off campus. spastic. Originally oriented to­ T rop h y R eco v e re d scattered three million leaflets blaming the w ar on the Red ward China and Japan, attention ru le rs of Hanoi and Peking. shifted with rising anti-colom al- The lost trophy for the tr i­ ism in the area. cycle race was discovered in the Dean Atcheson and John F os­ Pi Beta Phi house and returned Shipboard F ire K ills Sailor Local Traffic Survey t e r Dulles were the instigators of the "sto p com m unism " pol­ to the Sigma Alpha M u/fratern- ity. WASHINGTON—An engine-room fire aboard the c a r r ie r Ranger icy. the m ore directly the bet­ The traveling t r o p h y disap­ off South Viet Nam killed an enlisted man, the Defense Department said Wednesday.---— Includes MSU Drivers te r. Thus the government chose to support European colonial­ peared from the Chi Omega house last week. TfieTire resulted from a ruptured fuel line in one of the c a r r i e r ’s F our hundred MSU students are deals with land use, natural re ­ four engine rooms. being interviewed by the T ri- sources and transportation. The Pentagon said the blaze was brought under control within m in­ County Planning Commission in Financial sponsors of the com­ utes and the Ranger will put into Subic Bay in the Philippines for rep a irs. an effort to make local highways safer. m ission a re the three counties. Local, state and federal agen­ COMPLETE SCIENTIFIC INSPECTION This is part of a three-county cies also share the costs. tor Americon-Foreign-Compoctt survey which will lead to a tra n s­ During the 1962-1967 study featuring Klan To Be Investigated portation plan for the area. program , MSU’s obligation is / WASHINGTON— The House voted funds for an investiga­ The MSU students a r e among $18,000. • Wheal balancing tion of the Ku Klux Klan Wednesday, overriding a contention 5,000 residents of Clinton, Eaton In the hom e-interview survey. a Custom braka servie# that it would lead to “ a witch hunt into civil rights organi­ and Ingham counties who will be National Analysts, Inc.. of Phil­ a Stearing corraction zations.” interviewed in the next three adelphia, has been contracted ’;W>The $50,000 voted for an investigation by the Committee months to gain data on their to conduct interviews. Wo also do oxport tuneup 0Tl Un-American Activities ca rrie d out a suggestion by travel habits. MSU students and area r e s i­ P residen t Johnson that Congress look into Klan activities. The data will be used to con­ dents will be asked q u e stio n s work on Amorican and Compact cars s t r u c t m athem atical m o d e l s about the number and leng th of which will be used in planning trip s, types of vehicles u se d , Senate Approves Foreign A id B ill new highway and access routes in the area. purposes of trips and w here th e trip s start and end. LISKEY’S AUTO SAFETY CENTER ijJ o m d a . cU a n xu 203 East The T r i-County Planning C om ­ T h e in te rv ie w s w ill re q u ir e S n iflR T U tR H R Grand R iv e r# WASHINGTON— A tw o-year foreign aid authorization of $3.5 bil­ mission was formed in July, 1956, o nly a few m in u te s , a c o m m is ­ 124 So. Larch/off Mich. Avo. • Lansing lion each y ear was approved Wednesday by the Senate Foreign Re­ by resolution of the three coun­ sion m em ber said. lations Committee which tied o n ap ro v isio n aim e d at forcing a d ra s­ ties in o rd er to plan and co ­ tic overhaul of the pro g ram by mid-1967. It was a partial victory for Committee C hairm an J. W. Fulbright, ordinate growth in the a rea . The com m ission specifically C alendar o f S T O R E H O U R S : M O N D A Y T H R U S A T U R D A Y - 9 : 3 0 AM to 5 : 3 0 P M . - W E D N E S D A Y N O O N U N T I L 9 P M D -Ark., who wants the aid program revamped but has gotten nowhere with his plan to split the assistance into separate economic and m il­ O w ning Events «•A itary packages. Last Chance Pnre -m e d ic a l S o c ,ie ty — re g u la r F rid a y w ill b e th e la s t c h a n c e m e e tin g , e le c tio n s — 8 p .m ., 33 B ritis h Plane Crashes s tu d e n ts h av e to g et d isc o u n t Union. tic k e ts fo r W ater C a rn iv a l. B eta B eta B e ta — m e e tin g — 7 LONDON— A B ritis h a i r l i n e r w ith 26 p eo p le a b o a rd T ic k e t p r ic e s a r e c u t fro m p .m ., 401 Natural S c ie n c e . c r a s h e d W ednesday a s it c a m e in to Land at J e rs e y in th e $1.75 to $1.50 and can b e p u r - E n g in e e r’s W ives C lu b — m e e t- ch a n n el is la n d s . An a ir p o r t sp o k e sm a n s a id : c h a s e d a t th e U nion tic k e t o f- in g — 8 p .m ., 110 E n g i n e e r i n g ’’T h e re is b eliev q d tq b p ,o p e s u rv iv o r.” fic e . B u ild in g . V je rs e y ' is th e la r g e s t of .the B ritis h -o w n e d ch an n el is la n d s w hich lie s c a tte re d 10 to 30 m ile s off th e n o rth w e st c o a s t of F r a n c e . T hey a r e fa v o rite to u ris t sp o ts fo r E a s te r h on ey - m o o n e rs . U.S. P o licy Gains Favor East Lansing / $p¡ • LONDON— F o re ig n S e c re ta ry M ich ael S te w a rt sa id W ednesday U nited S ta tes p o licy ev o lv in g in V iet N am h a s been w inning e v e r wider su p p o rt, even am o n g th e d o u b te rs. Speaking to 300 n ew sm en an d d ip lo m a ts a t a F o re ig n P r e s s A s­ s o c ia tio n lu n ch eo n, S te w a rt d e c la re d P re s id e n t Jo h n so n ’s sp e ech in State Bank Corner of Abbott and Grand Rivor B a ltim o re m ad e c le a r “ th e g o v ern m e n t of th e U nited S ta te s is p r e ­ p a re d to e n te r in to any d isc u ss io n in an y fo rm a t any p la c e an d w ith ­ B r a n c h O f f i c e s at l À o ut p re c o n d itio n s. OKEMOS HASLETT M ember F e d e r a l D e p o s it In su ra n ce C orp . Chinese Planes Leave T ibet M ADRAS— T h e C o m m u n ist C h in e se h av e sh ifte d a t le a s t T h e M a n Fro m /To d d’s . . . half th e ir a i r fo rc e p la n e s fro m T ib e t to unknow n d e s tin a ­ tio n s d u rin g th e p a s t fo rtn ig h t, th e M a d ra s E n g lish d aily r e ­ p o rte d W edn esday. s p r i n g ’s s o c ia l The p a p e r’s G angtok c o rre s p o n d e n t, q u o t i n g re lia b le s o u rc e s , sa id th e C h in e se a lso a r e b e lie v e d to h av e tr a n s ­ M I ferred p a r t of th e ir m o b ile r a d a r an d a n ti- a ir c r a f t co m ­ s e a s o n is u n d e r w a y plexes fro m th e Indian b o rd e r. a n d t he s e two f ormal s Peace Corps Leaves Indonesia W ASHINGTON— A Joint co m m u n iq u e is s u e d y e s te rd a y by the U .S . and In d o n esia sa y s th at th e P e a c e C o rp s is w ithd raw ing fro m In d o n esia. T h e co m m u n iq u e b eing announced in J a k a r ta w ound up two w eeks of ta lk s in In d o n esia b etw een a U .S . s p e c ia l U A #, \ by C o l u m b i a D a n c e a r e in the whirl... from a c ol l ec ti on of en v ov and In d o n esian P re s id e n t S u k arn o and h is aid e s. V l ong a n d short g o w n s . Left: W h i t e or m a i z e nylon s h e er with M. % e m b r o i d e r e d o li ve empire waistband. 5 to 13 si,zes. 2 9 . 9 5 GO CARTAN — WEEKLY DEPARTURES Right: W h i t e rayon O CA LIFO RN IA GO LD M IN E— 15 d a y s e sc o rte d by rail via C o lo ­ rad o R o c k ie s an d F e a th e r R iv e r C a n y o n ro u te to S a n F ra n c ia c o , o r g a n z a with o l i v e Y o s e m ite , L o s A n g eles, L a s V eg a s an d G ra n d C a n y o n . A pril th ro u g h O c to b e r. F ro m $41-5. □ CA LIFO RN IA —LAS V EG A S J E T H O LID A Y— 14 d ay s, e sc o rte d , u n d e r white loce. M a y th ro u g h O c to b e r , v ia T W A . L o s A n g eles, S a n ta B a r b a r a , . S u r, C a r m e l, Y o s e m ite , S a n F r a n c is c o an d L a s V egas. In clu d es In fo rm e d & D re s s e d to Im p " re ss. «K, 1 sp e cia l gro u p fa re s& vings— fro m '<■ 5*to 15 3 5 .00 □ GRAND W ESTER N C IR C L E — 15 d a y s e sc o rted b y P u llm a n to W hether it’s clothes or a rt, Paul Kostoff, The Man G ra n d C a n y o n , C a lifo rn ia , P a c ific N o rth w e st, C a n a d ia n R o c k ie s. F ro m $ 5 9 2 . F ro m Todd’s, always displays fine taste.T h is week, he’s casually co rrect in his sky blue flaxen sport D R ES S SALO N □ D ELU X E W ESTER N C IR C L E — 21 d a y s e sc o rte d by P u llm a n to G ra n d C a n y o n , H o lly w o o d , Y o s e m ite , S a n F r a n c is c o , P o r tla n d , coat (29.95) and Farah Slacks (6.99). Perfect for S e a t t l e , V ic to r ia , V a n co u v e r, L a k e L o u ise an d B a n ff. F ro m C h i­ ca g o fro m $ 8 5 0 . pensive browsing with pretty Karen Ritchie, Birm ing­ ham sophomore. □ Y ELLO W S TO N E—CO LO RAD O — 15 d a y s e sc o rted via rail to Y e l­ lo w sto n e, T e to n s , S a l t L a k e C ity , C o lo ra d o S p r in g s , G ran d L a k e , E s te s a n d D e n v e r. F ro m C h ica g o fro m $ 4 0 8 . □ COLORADO R O C K IE S — 8 d a y s v ia ra il. E a c o rte d in G ran d L a k e , Jacobsons E s te s , D e n v e r an d C o lo ra d o S p rin g s. A n e x c e p tio n a l C olorad o NORTHLAND T o d d ’s 3 ANN ARBOR Æ ijr A v a c a tio n fro m C h ica g o fro m $ 2 1 4 . □ A LS O — fo u r w eek ly to u rs to th e C a n a d ia n R o c k ie s an d th e w * *ar P a c ific N o rth w e st. FOR F O LD E R S AND R ESER V A TIO N S s f c H E C K AND MAIL AD, CO M E IN OR P H O N E: BIRMINGHAM DETROIT COLLEGE TRAVEL OFFICE 130 W. Grand River 332-8667 EAST LANSING - 211 E. GRAND RIVER - ED 7-9171 UÊÊ / 4 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan T hursday, April 15, 1965 "7 ntni , J p |l —111, Strong Pitch For Summer Ball ¡lift m il Him! II "W t e f e i it lif ts i ; 111 lily; 1 il i f c : filili would eliminate the expensive spring training trip. He said the By DUANE LANC ASTER cost to Michigan State last spring for a two-week tour of S ta te N e w s S p o rts W r i t e r Georgia', Florida and Virginia was $3,000. While this is a § .m m Baseball coach Danny Lirwhiler has struck upon a plan that would do away with the shivering crowds and general lack of warmth that accompanies a college baseball season. Litwhi er proposes to elim inate the frigid conditions by switch’"'’ frrom spring to sum m er baseball. modfest figure since the Spartans took 26 men and had to feed and board them, it is nontheless a seemingly unnecessary loss. T he team has gone down on a bus in the last few ye ars, but this season Litwhiler chartered a plane, which hiked the cost up to $7,000. 111»fl This would involve a difficult systemvof finding employment Litwhiler also revealed the tremendous cost of a ir travel during the season. " It costs us around $20,000 to travel by a ir ¡If F O R TH E S P Y IN TH E S K Y Tarp Duffy’s Secret Formula for the players, but both Litwhiler and assistant coach Frank for only one season.’ he said. P e lle n n feel this could be accomplished. Litwhiler feels this could be eliminated at least in the s u m - Pellerin also suggested that the profits, if any, made on the ball games be put into a general fund to buy scholarships for the ball players. Admitting the play borders on professional ,sm, Pellerin said it might be a strong attraction to the better play­ . Second In A Series________ e rs and would be a way of. getting them to play for Michigan m e r, since the team would only play local am ateur and pos­ "O ne of the purposes of practice is to show State. sibly sem i-pro team s around the state. B y JE R R Y M ORTON a boy what he is doing w rong," Daugherty said. While on economics, he pointed out that a sum m er program T his, however, doesn’t or wouldn’t elim inate the $7,000 S ta te N e w s S p o rts W r i t e r "W hen you c riticiz e a player in front of fans (average cos.t to fly MSU to two Big Ten schools) weekends they can get the wrong idea and the boy may be­ the team spends during the conference season. T he enemy isn’t the only w orry the Spartan com e e m b a rra ss e d ." T he estim ated cost to project the Big T en into the sum m er football team faces while preparing for a game. It’s difficult for fans to watch practice with­ would probably gobble up any money earned through the extra They have to watch out for friends as well. out cheering o r talking to players. This can S H IR T M A K E R S ticket sales. T h e re ’s nothing like a cheering c ro w d ,to also be a distracting influence. But Litwhiler and Pellerin both feel that a sum m er program in sp ire the Spartans on a Saturday afternoon Spring practice is basically a period of is a valuable one and said they would continue their] efforts but during the week they’d p re fe r to work in teaching and experimentation. To insure privacy toward this goal. " J u s t the fact that it allows the player to silence. ’ the Spartans will hold Saturday spring scrim­ participate in more ball games is a good enough reason to at T h at’s the reason for the tarp that hangs on m ages in the Stadium with re p o rte rs in the least give it a tr y ,” the. Spartan coach said. the fence surrounding the practice field. For p r e s s box and only players and staff allowed This would be a boon to the m ajor leagues, since the A m er­ the sam e reason, gate attendants a r e careful n ear the field. ’ ican and National League scouts would not be so much danger that only m em bers of the p re s s a re allowed to Daugherty said he thinks the im portance of of signing a player on the basis of lim ited perform ances. watch the G reen and White go through their spying on the enemy is overem phasized. “ S u re," said Litwhiler, ’’it gives them a chance to take a paces. ' "An opponent can learn a team ’s baSc of­ good look at the boys and also gives the players a better op­ fense by viewing film s of a previous game. portunity to give an account of them selves." "School loyalty pleases us a great deal," The only s ecrets worth knowing a r e the d ^ Although there was no single reason listed to make a special says Coach Duffy Daugherty, "but we have to fensive ones. If you could work against the point of, a recent survey by E arnest M yers, a graduate stu­ keep fans away so we can concentrate.” defense your opponent will use, you would solve dent here revealed that 72 per cent of the players in the W est­ " I t would be the sam e as having a professor a great p roblem ." ern Conference preferred an extension of su m e s o rto f the p r e ­ give a lecture while 2,000 extra people are Few team s now re s o rt to such methods, Dau­ sent season. standing around watching." gherty said. Intramural News S Par M or 1 The N E W S In I SO FTBALL 3 E m inen ce-E m percrs 4 CSO-IOLC G o lf F i e l d 5:20 p.nrt. 4 Farm house-D elta Chi VO LLEYBALL 1 E. Shaw 1-4 5 B randy-B rutus T im e G y m I C t. 1 2 E . Shaw 3-5 6 AGR-Sigma Nu 6 Spyders-Snark 3 Bethel M anor-Boehm fi. B ow er- 7 E m erald -E m b e rs The Batiste Oxford man 8 Sigma C hi-Phi. Sigma Delta 6:30 Akohol-Akrophobia 7 W. Shaw 7-8 4,Phi Kappa Tau-D TD 9 Wooster-W orthington A s u p e r-fin e c o tto n o x fo rd te x tu re ——ve ry lig h t in w e ig h t, y e t w e ll d is c ip lin e d . T h is s h ir tin g is all qua lity-e nrd o w e d w ith G a n t's ow n s o ftly fla re d O PEN 5 Z B T - P h i Delta Thêta 6 Abel-Abaddon 10 LCA-Alpha Kappa Psi F ie ld ■7 Sny. C ellar D w ellers-S uper- 1 Scorpions-Mugwumps 7 :4 0 p .m . 7:30 Felloe-Fecundity 8 C aravelle-C asopolis 8:30 A rsenal-A res It’s Goals, Not Grey Hairs, stition 2 W orship-W orcester T im e G y m 1 C t. 3 3 Theta Delta Chi-Kappa A lpha 66:30 Akbarama-Akvavit b u tto n -d o w n c o lla r and e lb o w le n g th sleeves L arge Dr. Range- 3 Beta Thêta Pi-Theta Chi McG.regor-McNab W hite and S olid C o lo rs . Other G ant S hirts 9 ATO - SAM Psi 7 C achet-C am bridge That Will Decide Cup—Reay in S trip es & S o lid Shades S leeve or * Regulation 9 h oles 10 Wolverton-Wormwood 4 D ueces-B rinkley 7:30 E, Shaw 9-10 DETROIT (UPI)—Chicago Black T hese veterans did, however, B arrel C u ffs 5Q -3 Par 9 h oles F i e l d 6 :3 0 p .m . F ie ld 8 :5 0 p .m . 8 McCoy-Me Fadden show signs of w ear and tear 1 Phi Gamma D elta-Pi Kappa 1 Rinky Dinks-Shieks Hawks coach Billy Reay refused (1000 yds.) Club 2 B lh zers-B a w d iers 8:30 C abana-Cavalier to believe that the youth of the Tuesday night as the Hawks fro­ Phi licked to a 4-0, triumph to tie 2 T riangle-P h i Kappa Sigma 3 Vets-Tony’s Boys T im e G y m 2 C t. 4 Hawks will be the deciding fac­ R en ta l-L a r g e putt 6 M cKinnon-McTavish to r in their pay-off Stanley Cup the se rie s -at three gam es each. green ,'\ 6:30 A ristocrats-A rgonaughts Playoff game with the Detroit T h is leaves the next 60 m in- S f f lc llls tw o e l e v e n s W ashington Einst 1^-78 a t Pork La k e Riti E. L a n s in g 2 M ile s N .E . o f Everybody Needs an occasional , 7 W. Shaw 9-10 7 : a » £ . Slew 7-8 8 Aktion-Akua Pahtrfa 8:30 Akeg-Akarpous " ' 7 Red Wings today. He Says age has no bearing oh the play of veterans such as G ordie Howe, Ted Lindsay and Bill Gadsby whom he says have ^ *utes of play to decide whicfi ' b f ' th* two m eets Montreal- in ’-the Cup finals. U nion B ld g .*E D 23432 T im e G y m 2 C t. 6 Reay says the s e rie s will go tic h ig a n theater b u ild in g Lift 6 Sultans-C ellar Dw ellers 6:30 W iquassett-W indjam m er been "bulw arks of the Wings" so far in the sem i-final series. to the *'team with the m ost left now ." 7 W ildcats-Wimbledon 7:30 Bawdiers-Shieks BONUS' NEW S 3 . 50 BASEBALL NOVEL! ' TODAY S GAME If everybody and his Golf , Tennis Call SPORT duck-billed platypus phones Golf and tennis will both hold Long Distance at 9 P.M. meetings today for freshm en and tra n sfe r students interested in M A G A Z I N E trying out for the frosh team s. Why don’t you phone T he tennis meeting will be «astsr held this afternoon at 5:15 in ★ IN THE BIG MAY ISSUE! ★ 208 Men’s IM, while the pro­ My Toughest Batters e a rlie r-o r laterP spective golfers will gather at by Sandy Koufax 7:15 p.m. in 209 Jenison Field Can The Notre Dame House. Surge Continue? Original The Ballplayers Pick the Pennant Winners at the TEE ROOM CAMPUS SUMMARIES Why The Fans Love Floyd Patterson Now * perfect weather golf every day This month — every month— a bigger, more action-packed SPORT! More in-depth profiles, exclusive interviews, thrilling color photograph!! * « music & dancing T h u rs. F ri. Sat. night "coun try club" atm osphere year ’round Keep G rades UP C D f l D T ’ 9 HYEARAS FIRST m a g a z i n e Ö l U l f I FOR SPORTS N 0 W 0 N S A I E 1 * walking distance from campus A T L .#N at. Sci SER V IN G 11 A .M . B asic C o ll. Courses T IL L 1 AM Golf-O-Tron MARSHALL MUSIC DANCING N IG H TLY JustEastofFranrforon^Uchigan^Avi 307 E . Grand River ED 2-6997 ’ 1 v Like, say, anytime between 8 P.M. and CO ELECTRIC! WITH SM ITH -C O M t RESTAURANT ■ I 4:30 A.M. week nights, or anytime (day or 6 MODELS TO CHOOSE FROM . . . night) on Sunday. 15" CARRIAGE— 15" PAPER CAPACITY— 14" WRITING LINE— Those a re t h e tim e s w h e n th e lo w e s t EITHER AUTOMATIC OR MANUAL CARRIAGE RETURN 12” CARRIAGE— 12” PAPER CAPACITY— 11” WRITING LINE — s ta tio n -to -s ta tio n Long D is ta n c e ra te s a re EITHER AUTOMATIC OR MANUAL CARRIAGE RETURN in e f f e c t . T h e y n e v e r g e t a n y lo w e r! ,10'"CARRIAGE—9 1 /2 " PAPER CAPACITY—8 1 /2 " WRITING LINE— ~iy *■ ’' i MANUAL C A R R IA G E RETURN B y t h e w a y , s ta tio n -to -s ta tio n c a lls b e ­ AI I Mo d e l s H a v e C h o i c e o f T y p e S t y l e s a n d S p e c i a l K e y b o a r d s t w e e n p o i n t s in M i c h i g a n a lw a y s c o s t s o m e ­ STA R T IN G A T w h a t m o r e w h e n y o u c a l f " C o l l e c t .” ' B u t , ypjgj d o n ’ t h a v e t o w a i t J t i l 8 P .M . to p h o n e TAMARACK ROOM b e c a u s e t h e l o w e s t r a te s f o r " C o l l e c t ” c a ll s 5 14 7 5 0 P a r t ie s up to 240 people can be s ta rt a t 6 P .M . w e e k n ig h ts . A n d th e y a re ■ M W Plus T axes e a s il y se r v e d in e le g a n c e. a ls o in e f f e c t e v e r y w e e k e n d - a l l d a y S a t u r ­ * P a y m e n ts A s L o w A s day and S u n d ay. $ 1 0 .0 0 A M o n th LU N CH EO N S S E R V E D D A IL Y * T r a d e - in s A c c e p te d S o a v o id t h e r u s h . T h e r e ’ s -p le n ty o f t im e NOW A V A ILA B LE * 1 - y e a r W a r r a n t y on t o c a ll L o n g D i s t a n c e a n d 's t i l l g e t t h e l o w ­ P a r t s a nd S e r v ic e For e s t ra te s . L o n g D i s t a n c e is t h e n e x t b e s t NEW & RECONDITIONED REGULAR PORTABLES FRATERNITY & SORORITY th in g to b e in g th e r e . Michigan Bell 117 E. KALAMAZOO ST. WOLVERINE TYPEWRITER CO. PHONE 482-1452 TER M PARTIES C a l l F o r In form atio n Part of the Nationwide Bell System On H our FREE PA RK IN G at R e a r of S to re —E n te r G ra n d A ve. P a rk in g L ot OPEN D A ILY 8 A .M . to 5:30—MONDAY T IL L 7:30 321 E . M ichigan CLO SED Sunday IV 5 - 7 1 7 9 Michigan State N ew s, E ast L ansing, Michigan Thursday, April 15, 1965 5 Hotel-Motel Placement Bureau ‘Man Of Year9 Of. I A L H O S P fT A L Ä EPO RT The Student Board Needs Enerience and Leadership ** * S tu d e n ts m u st r e g is te r in p e r ­ E d u ca tio n (B ,M ). M /F . C le v e ­ so n at th e P la c e m e n t B u re a u at la n d , O ho. le a s t tw o d ay s p r io r to d a te of b in atio n w ith o ne of th e above. F re m o n t, M ich. M /F . S chool D is tric t of th e C ity of R o s e v ille : H om e E c o n o m ic s (B ), R oy W atson J r . , R o c h e s te r, M in n ., h o te l-m o te l ch a in ex ecu ­ tiv e , w as n am ed " H o te l M an of A d m iss io n s i n c l u d e M ich ele B a r ro n , G ro s s e lie fre sh m a n : it it is to he Effective S p a rta n R ound T ab le P re s id e n t, W est M cD onel * in te rv ie w . A P R IL 2 2 , T H U R S D A Y C lio A re a S ch o o ls: E le m e n ­ ta r y E d u catio n , M ath , S cien ce , E n g lish , C h e m is try , E n g lish / A th erto n C o m m u n ity S ch o o ls: S p e ec h , B u sin e ss E d u ca tio n and G ra n t P u b lic S ch o o ls: L a te r E le m e n ta ry E d u ca tio n , V ocal and In stru m e n ta l M u sic, In d u s tria l E a rly E le m e n ta ry E d u ca tio n , In­ d u s tria l A rts , E n g lish , L a tin , S p e c i a 1 E d u c a tio n , V i s i t i n g th e Y e a r" T u esd ay a t th e open­ in g b ru ch of th e annual M id w est In te rn a tio n a l H o tel-M o tel Show S h a r o n G h e s q u ie r re , D e t r o i t fre s h m a n ; C h e rie R id d le , H olly fre s h m a n ; N ancy L ew an d o w sk i, H all M en ’s H alls A sso c ia tio n MHA R e -E v a lu a tio n ** E a rly and L a te r E le m e n ta ry E d­ S p eech C o rre c tio n (B .M ). M /F . u c a tio n , M a th e m a tic s, S cien ce, C lio , M ich. E n g lish -S p e e c h , P h y s ic s -C h e m - A rts w ith P h y sic a l E d u catio n , M entally R e ta rd e d T y p e " A ” (B, M ). G ra n t, M ich . M /F . T e a c h e r and T y p e " A ” m a jo r s , E n g lish , M ath, B u s in e s s E du­ c a tio n , and S p e cial E d u ca tio n fo r a t th e P a lm e r H ouse H otel in C h icag o . T h e a w a r d i s s p o n so re d D e tro it s e n io r; P a tric k C ro m le y , W illia m sto n so p h o m o re ; J a n e t S ö d e rs trö m , H a r p e r W o o d s C o m m itte e H all A c tiv itie s & W a te r- C a rn iv a l C h a irm a n *if C o rn in g G la ss W o rk s: A ll m a ­ is tr y w ith P h y s ic a l E du catio n jo r s of the C o lle g e s of E n g in e e r­ (B ,M ), B u s in e s s E d u ca tio n and ing and N a tu ra l S cie n c e (B.M , In s tru m e n ta l M u sic (B ,M ). M , D ), a ll m a jo rs of th e C o lle g e of H e s p e ria C o m m u n ity S ch oo ls: G ir ls P h y sic a l E d u ca tio n , E a rly and la te r E le m e n ta ry E du catio n , P h y sic s-M a th and In stru m e n ta l P sy c h o lo g ic a l D ia g n o stic ia n . (B, M ). R o se v ille , M ich. M /F . U tic a C o m m u n i t y S ch o o ls: G ir ls P h y sic a l E d u ca tio n : E le ­ an n u ally by th e MSU School of H otel, R e sta u ra n t and In stitu ­ tio n a l M anagem en t. T h e S chool, la r g e s t hotel sch oo l in th e na­ fre s h m a n ; Jo h n B e a ttie , S p rin g ­ fie ld , P a ., fre s h m a n ; Ju d ith Ann B a ll, L ela n d s o p h o m o re ; K aren S . K en t, S o u th field so p h o m o re . S te e rin g C o m m itte e , S p a rtan H elots MHA D istrib u tio n C h a ir - ** F , F lin t, M ich. B u s in e s s (M), all m a jo r s of the M u sic (B ). H e s p e ria , M ic h .M /F . m e n ta ry E d u catio n , E n g l i s h - tio n , initiated th e a w a rd in 1952. A lso D aun D ic k ie, E a s t L a n s­ B r i d g e - p o r t C o m m u n i t y C o lle g e s of A rts and L e tte r s , AUSG R e p re se n ta tiv e * H y s te r C o .: S oil M e ch an ic s, G e o g rsp h y , M a th -S c ie n c e , A rt, It c o o rd in a te s th e se le c tio n w hich ing fre s h m a n ; G re g o ry M o rg an , S c h o o ls: E le m e n ta ry E d u catio n , C o m m u n ica tio n A rts and S ocial B oy’s P h y s ic a l E d u ca tio n , S peech S cie n c e (B ). M a le. C o rn in g , N.Y. P ack ag in g T ech n o lo g y , M echan­ ic a l E n g in ee rin g (B .M ). P o rtla n d , M a th e m a tic s, S p an ish o r L a tin , E n g lish , M a th e m a tic s, P h y s ic s , is m ad e by ab o ut 150 h o te l- m o te l industry re p r e s e n ta tiv e s . New C an aa n , C o n n ., fre sh m a n ; J e r r y B oo n e, C h e sa n in g sopho­ MHA R e p re se n ta tiv e to IFC î elect DICK SANDERSON I C o rre c tio n , S o c ia l S cien ce o r and v a rio u s. M ich. A rt, I n d u s t r i a l A rts , (B .M ), W a t s o n h as h eld n u m e ro u s m o re ; K a re n G o rd o n , D ow agiac H is to ry , C iv ic s and L a tin (B, F a irla n e School D is tric t: E a r ­ Inland L ak es S chool: E a rly and C o u n se lin g and G u id a n c e , D iag ­ c iv ic and p ro fe s sio n a l o ffic e s. f r e s h m a n ; S a llie C u r tis s ,B u f ­ M ). B rid g e p o rt, M ich. M /F . ly E le m e n ta ry E d u ca tio n (B ,M ). L a te r E le m e n ta ry E d u c a t i o n , n o s tic ia n (M ), V isitin g T e a c h e r, H e is a p a s t p re s id e n t of th e fa lo , N .Y ., ju n io r; L a r r y B a u e r, B u ch an an P u b lic S ch o o ls: E l­ D e a rb o rn , M ich. M /F . e m e n ta ry E d u catio n (B ,M ), E le ­ M a th e m a tic s (B ). In d ian R iv e r, T y p e " A ” M entally H an d icap p ed (B .M ). U tic a , M ich. M /F . A m e ric a n H otel and M o tel A sso ­ H o llan d ju n io r: A ly ce J . S m ith , to ! ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★Student ★ ★ ★ ★ Board The F i d e le r Co.: E ng 1i s h, M ich. M /F . c ia tio n and a m e m b e r of th e U .S. B e r k l e y fre s h m a n ; D o n a l d m e n ta ry P rin c ip a l (M ), In d u s­ Lansing Public Schools: G irls W estw ood H eig h ts S ch o o ls: A ll D e p a rtm e n t of C o m m e rc e N a­ G an im , C le v e la n d , O hio, ju n io r; tr ia l A rts , V ocal M u sic, E ng­ Journalism , History, all m ajors lis h , B u s in e s s E d u catio n and In­ of the College of Communication s tru m e n ta l M u sic (B and) (B ,M ). A rts and Natural Science, all m ajors of the Colleges of Edu­ Physical Education, Early and L a t e r Elem entary Education, G eneral Science, English, Math­ E le m e n ta ry E d u ca tio n , M ath e­ m a tic s C h e m is try , E n g lish and S p a n ish , T y p e " A ” and T y p e tio n a l D efen se E x e cu tiv e R e - s e rv e . N eil S c h a ra g a , M t. V ern o n , N .Y ., fre s h m a n . ★★★★★★★★ B uch an an ,' M ich. M /F , cation, A rts and L e tte rs and em atics, French, Spanish, G er­ " B " m a jo rs (B ). M /F . F lin t, S.U. Book Store M.S.U. B ook Store M.S.U. B ook Store M.S.U. Book Store M.S.U. B oo k B u rro u g h s W elco m e and Co.: man, Biology, Vocal and Instru­ M ich . Ml A ll m a jo r s of th e C o lle g e s of Social Science (B,M). Grand Ra­ mental Music, Special Educa­ W hite C loud P u b lic S ch oo ls: B u s i n e s s , A rts and L e tte r s , pids, Mich, or any U .S . area. C o m m u n ica tio n A rts and S ocial Male.- / .. ■ tion, Industrial A rts, C h em istry / Physica, and Graphic A rts (B, E a rly and L a te r E le m e n ta ry E d ­ u ca tio n , M a th e m a tic s (B ). W hite fO R Y D V R Open Today u S c ie n c e (B ). M ale. M ich . & V a r­ Freem ont Public Schools: El­ M). Lansing, Mich. M /F . (ap­ C lo ud , M ic h .-M /F . io u s. em entary Education, P h y s i c a l plicants for Community College c o n v e n ie n c e 8:30 ü. 'tu9 A P R IL 22 AND 23 C e n te r L in e Public Schools: Education, M athematics and In­ must have m a sters degree.) G e n e ra l M o to rs C o rp . - C h ev ­ E a rly and L a te r E lem entary Ed­ strum ental Music, (B) and Ele­ Newago Public Schools: Men’s ro le t S a g in a w T ra n s m iss io n sM e - u c a tio n , G e n e ra l Science, Indus­ m entary Education (B.M). Senior P.M. MSU BOOK Physical Education, Mathema­ c h a n ic a l E n g in e e rin g and In d u s­ t r i a l A rts (B ,M ). M /F . High coaching openings: Swim­ C le v e la n d P u b lic School Sys­ ming, wrestling, cross-country, te m : E le m e n ta ry o r S eco n d ary and Junior High football in com­ tics, M e n t a l l y Retarded Type “ A " . Newago, Mich. M /F , tr ia l A d m in istra tio n (B ). M ale. S aginaw , M ich. u rn STORE Have you BE tried the INEW Loan ’Delinquency’ Low MSU s tu d e n ts w ho n eed to b o r­ y e a r s to re p a y th e loan a t 3 p e r ro w m o ney to fin a n c e th e ir stu d ­ ce n t in te re s t a y e a r. ie s a r e e x c e lle n t c r e d it r is k s , F o r NDEA b o rro w e rs w ho b e - e a c c o rd in g to MSU lo an o ffic ia ls . co m e te a c h e rs , up to 50 p e r cen t S STEAKS 0ÎEK Located in the Center W a rre n C . M cA lvey, in c h a rg e of th e lo a n s m ay b e c a n c e lle d at o f N atio n al D efen se L oan c o lle c ­ the rate of 10 p e r c e n t fo r each tio n s a t M SU , re p o r ts a d elin ­ for International Relations y e a r th ey re m a in te a c h in g . AT q uency r a te of only 2.19 p e r ce n t am o n g g ra d u a te s w ho b o rro w e d m o n e y p ro v id e d by th e N atio n al D e fe n se L o a n E d u catio n A c t O f n e a rly 1,000 MSU stu d e n ts w ho h av e g ra d u a te d an d a r e now on "collection statu s,” only 52 i THE PIZZA PIT F o r D e liv e ry C a ll ........... E D 2 -0 86 4 M.S.U. Book Store M.S.U. Book Store M.S.U. Book Store M.S.U, Book_Store_M^SJLL_Book (N D EA ). a r e b eh in d in re p a y m e n t, a c c o rd ­ •« 203 M .A .C . S in ce t h e p ro g ra m b eg an in ing to M cA lvey. CA$i{ ( a v pï |:. § ! •fMW KRW lMW Pi'ib 1959, MSU s tu d e n ts h av e b o r­ ro w ed n e a rly $3 m illio n .. Of th is , $226,222 h as b een re p a id o r ca n ­ CHOICE BEEF STEAK SALE * c e lle d , and only ab o u t $5,000 is d elin q u e n t, M cA lvey n o te s . T h e re m a in in g m oney e ith e r is being re p a id o r is h eld by s tu d e n ts s till | GET ONE SHIRT DONE FREE!: Round centercut 79< l b . in sc h o o l. A s t u d e n t ma y b o r r o w up to $1,000 in NDEA fu n ds d u rin g a With every six you bring in. Sirloin 95< l b . th r e e - te r m a c a d e m ic y e a r, o r $5,000 o v e r fo u r y e a r s . S ta rtin g a y e a r a f te r h e le a v e s M SU, th e T-Bone C* * stu d e n t b o rro w e r h as up to 10 LegO-Lamb Whole 690 ? Tickets On Sale SAVE 29« Gov’t. Insp. Grade A J fe For Green Splash 490 ir T ic k e ts a r e now on s a le at th e S IX SHIRTS F O R $1.45 TURKEYS Halibut Steak ,e ' > U nion T ic k e t O ffice fo r MSU’s • o an n u al G re e n S p lash , a p re s e n ­ ta tio n of w o m e n 's sy n ch ro n ize d sw im m in g , to b e h eld A p ril 22, REGULARLY 6 FOR $1.74 ; V A LID THIS C O U PO N M UST BE P R E S E N T E D 10 to 14 lbs. 390 lb. 8 I 23 an d 24 at 8 p .m . and A p ril 25 at 3 p .m . in th e W om en’s IM . T h e th em e of th is y e a r ’s p ro ­ g ra m is “ I t’s a G re a t C o u n try ," f W HEN C L O TH ES ARE BROUGHT IN FOR CLEA N IN G ^ C O U P O N VOID AFTER APR. 241 18 to 22 lb s. 350 lb. w hich fo c u se s on A m e ric a n folk m u s ic . C o stu m e s and s e ttin g have b een d esig n e d by th e p e r f o r m e r s th e m s e lv e s . SAVE 20% ft ft ft Rump or Rôtisserie Roasts lb. 1X F e a tu re d in th e show w ill b e a AT FLASH ft CIIDIUD Oil III III I PDeveined eeled& Î J Bag $■>§119 so lo by L o la M ille r and " G o ld - ft '•A N D O * SHOPPING C IN T I* • LANSING 17 MICHIGAN ft r u s h ," d ire c te d by N ancy R ae. T h e h o n o ra ry s y n c h ro n iz e d Jane Parker Bakery Featur• » sw im m in g clu b is co m p o sed of B ubka 30 m e m b e rs u n d e r th e d ire c tio n See Drum Oiimoiid Rinjs oily it 1 lb. 14 of th e ir sp o n s o r N ancy S taffo rd and th e ir p re s id e n t C a ro l B row n. these Authorized ArtCarved Jewelers Coffee Cake 8 Inch. A d m issio n is $1 and tic k e ts can b e o b tain ed at th e d o o r. F o r fu r­ Coconut Orange Pie 1 lb . 8 o z. th e r in fo rm a tio n c o n ta c t C aro n Michigan G lo re at 355-7354. 1 1 /4 lb . L v s . / « a 10 1/2 oz. pkg. A lb io n -S c o tt T u th ill, J e w e le r A lp e n a -R e n e ’s J e w e lry A nn A rb o r-B y c o r In c. Sandwich Bread 1 /jT Hot Cross Buns Ann Arbor-Daniel’s Jewelry Co. B ad A xe-S ag em an Jewelry Battle Creek-Roy S. Bailey Battle Creek Miller'a Jewelers Battle Creek-Young*a Jewelers Caro-Wm. Manasse 'Y'V Yams 2 - 390 Dananas Detroit-Rose Jewelry Freah W anjou vetroit-Sallan, Inc. F lin t-H a tfie ld Jewelers G ra n d Raplds-Heckner Jewelry C o. Greenvllle-Faber's Jewelry Hamtramck-Max's Jewelry Asparagus lb 290 Pears no size P ascal V la s ic Sw eet S lic e s Ironwood-John A lb e rt Jewelry K a la m a z o o -W a lte r E . R ing / " i r L a n sin g -D a n ie l’s J e w e lry C o. L a p e e r-A c h e so n J e w e le rs L u d in g to n -S ch o h l J e w e lry in k Celery 30 s iz e 290 Pickles 1 q t. 16 o z. M a rq u e tte -N y q u is t J e w e lry M ount P le a s a n t-T h o m p s o n 's Je w e lry S Ann Page Elbow Ann Page For 2 0 th Century Individualists! ^ j® M u sk eg o n -M arv in J e w e le rs M u s k e g o n -P a rm e le e ’s J e w e lry O w o sso -C a m p b e lP s J e w e lry O x fo rd -A ch eso n J e w e le rs ¡1 Macaroni 3 ;b*490 » . T Peanut ♦ Butter new a rv e a R oyal O a k -M y e r’s J e w e lry Shop A&P World Wide D F ^E A M D IA M O N D FLIN G S S t. J o h n s -L e s te r L a k e J e w e le r S t. J o s e p h -G re e n ’s J e w e lry S a g in a w -N u e c h te rle in J e w e lry S an d u sk y -S ag em an J e w e lry Applesauce 1 lb . C an s 7/$1 Green Deans 1 lb. C an s For lo ve's sake any girl w o u l d a c c e p t even an o r d in a r y S au lt S te. M a rle -J e a n ’s J e w e lry THE CHEAT ATLANTIC A PACIFIC TEA COMPANY, INC. e n g a g e m e n t rin g — s q u a t -lo o k in g , u n in s p ir in g . But, in he r he art, she hopes f o r an e xtraordinary r in g w h ic h w ill S o u th field -S a lla n ’s N o rth la n d Your A&P Super Market K e e & a k ê T r a v e r s e C lty -E a rl C obb J e w e le rs corner of Hagadorn & East r => A style for every taste. Each perfect c o m p e l the a d m ir a t io n o f all. ArtCarved D r e a m D i a m o n d Rings are e x tra o rd in a ry . S hu n­ W alled L a k e -Irla n d J e w e le rs W y an d o tte-S a lla n ’s Grand River, East Lansing J>uper M arkets w ith a guaranteed center diamond (or replace­ n in g the excessive metal an d g in g e r b r e a d o f o r d in a r y rings STORE HOURS: 9 AM-9 PM th e y d e lig h t the m o d e r n eye. Pure in f o r m , e le g a n tly s c u lp ­ ment assured). Rings enlarged to »how detail. Trade-M ark Reg. tu re d , th e y express th e taste o f o u r tim e. Monday thru Saturday A ll prices in this ad effective thru Sat. April 17, 1965 in a ll five Lansing A&P Sniper Markets. Keep this ad fo r com parison! See o u r n e w styles at y o u r A rtC a rve d je w e l e r b e fo r e y o u d e c id e . Each f r o m $150. For Jewelry free illu s tr a te d f o ld e r w r i t e t o A rtC arved, D e p t . C , 2 16 East 45tH Street, N e w York, N. Y. 10017. _2J3M sAjCi Ave1 i Ò Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Thursday. April 15, 1965 For Renting Flats, Spats And Party Hats*. . . CALL TODAY Shop In The World’s Greatest Market Place! 355-8255 Automotive Autom otive Em ploym ent F or Sale F o r Sale Real Estate with a ÔÔÛÔE LANCER 1961. .VL.tewith V O L K S W A G E N , I960. 44,Wx!) W A N T E D, NURSERY school CB RADIO. And Sport equipment. ATTENTION: red interior. Large 6. Good con­ m iles. One owner. Very clean. teacher. Two years college r e ­ C harlie's Radio and Sport Shop, golfers. $850. Telephone 332-3600 after­ quired. Must be able to work 620 Baker St. Call IV 2-7000. 11 Foods and irons. Also set of old. $22,000. 5780 Buena P ark ­ L E F T -H A N D E D EAST LANSING, near. Five bed- Matched set, Fla:g Ultra room s, three baths. Six years Election lowcost dition. Call any time, ED -9755.16- noons or e v e n i n g s . 12 with children. Howell C oopera­ AUTOMATIC ZIG-ZAG demon- Gcondition. eorge Nicol woods. Perfect way. 339-2497. 11 ( c o n t i n u e d f r o m p a g e 1) representative and has held sev­ FALCON FLTLRA l5r4 2-door VOLK5w7iGENT96irsedan. HTue. tive Nursery. Howell. 546-1009. stra to r sewing machine. Sews See after 6 pm. 696 EAST LANSING. Frank Lloyd W ANT AD on buttons, makes button holes, Beech St., E. L. 14 Wright C ontem porary. 216 Oak­ e ra l positions in the Men’s Hall hardtop. 200 h.p. V-8, 4-speed. Good condition. $700. Call 355- 12 Association. • AUTOMOTIVE Like new. Extras. 33’ -0638, 5920 after 5 pm. 13 MOBILE HOME salesm an. P a r t- m onograms, appliques, beauti­ FULLY GUARANTEED, Rebuilt land. Two bedroom, no base­ Stoddard suggests increased Chuck. h VOLKSWAGEN 1963 sunroof. Ra- u m e . Experienced p referred , ful designs, etc. $51.45, o r small and reconditioned appliances. ment. $22,500 cash. 332-5400. use of the student travel bureau, • EMPLOYMENT FALCON, l^r 1. F o ü r- ir sta- dio, heater, whitewall tire s. A-l but not essential. Phone IV 5- monthly paym ents. M a c h i n e T e r m s . H arley’s Appliance Re­ 18 a *‘d ia l-a -g rip e” telephone line • FOR RENT tion wagon. Rot if rack : >nom- condition throughout. $1,299. AL 2289; IV 2-0529. 12 c a rrie s original guarantee. Ac­ p a ir, 523 E. Grand R iver. 484- Service to maintain contact with students, ical family tra nsp’ rt :.n. E x- EDWARDS LINCOLN, M ercury, T F a C h EFS WANTED: JS",40Oup. cept trade-in s. Call OX 4-6031. 6011. 21 • FOR SALE • LOST & FOUND WATCH REPAIRING and clean­ and m ore popular entertainm ent. cellent conditi! wner, 3125 E. Saginaw (North of F ra n ­ West, Southwest and Alaska. 12 DOG HOUSES. Small, medium and A m em ber of Honors College, • PERSONAL 482-2121. 13 dor). Open Mon., T hurs, F r i­ FREE registration, Southwest HARMONY ELECTRIC guitar, large. Newly built. $12 and up. ing, using the new ultrasonic he was All U niversity Student • PEANUTS PERSONAL FALCON ¡902. Stai.darv tra n s- day til 9 pm. C12 T eachers Agency, 1303 Central $100. Medium am plifier, $25. Call. 487-0782. 14 cleaning equipment. Ring siz­ Government d irecto r of internal mission. Radio. Good condition, S P R l N G SELLING- S P R E £'!! Ave., N.E., Albuquerque, N.M. Capitol Record player, $45. All WEDDING GOWN. Organza. Full g u a r a n t e e d . T H O MAllP Swork ing and remourting. • REAL ESTATE ON affairs, and on Emmons Hall • SERVICE $850. Plymouth, 1958, ''-passen­ CHOOSE FROM a large selec­ excellent condition. 337-1233.14 length. Modified b e l l skirt. G eneral Council last year. • TRANSPORTATION 12 ger wagon, V-8, standard. \ e r y tion of late model used c a rs. COOK,' MALE or fe m a le A p p ly ’ WEDDING GOWN AND s i ip. E x- Chapel train with Swiss em ­ Lansing. Call ED 2-2293. 48 JEWELRY, 223 M.A.C., East Zum berg has had no experi­ • WANTED good condition, $350. Phone IV J u st freshly traded on new 1965 Green Door Lounge, 2005 E. cellent condition. $45. Small broidery. Size 10-12. 355-9959. DIAPER SERVICE, sam e dia- ence in student government, but DEADLINE 5-ll~0. 14 F ords. Michigan. 12 Size 32-34. Phone 482-0108. 12 11 says the Associated Students of 1962 FO Rp convertible 352 V-8. PART-TIM E. Having a tough time TYP.EWRITERS, USED ~ M o b ile Homes p e rs returned. Either yours or MSU (ASMSU) government must FORD FALCON, > 2. p stand-. ours. With our service, you may 2 p.m. on e c l o s s dqy be­ ard shift. Excellent c nditlon. Standard transm ission. Radio, fitting a p a rt-tim e job intoa vig­ m ake grea ter efforts to com­ include tw o pounds of b a b y 12 whitewalls. Many other extras. orous schedule? E arn $60 per PORTABLE and desk typewrit­ ACTIVE 1963. lO'xSO'. I 1wo bed- clothes that do not fade. Diaper . municate with student body. fore p u b l i c a t i o n . $850. Phone 62~-6169. C a n c e l l a t i o n s - 12 no on one One-owner cap. week working related evenings e rs , $18 and . Power 1962 FORD Galaxie 500. 4-door and Saturdays. Call M r. Blythe, $:4 up. Drafting table-and in­ condition. B est cash offer. 694- pail furnished. up. Tape re c o rd e rs, room , front kitchen. Very good He suggests liberalization of FORD, 19A2 Galax off-cam pus housing regulations c l a s s day before p u b l i c a t i o n steerii ig. White; terior. V-8 C ruise-O -M atic. P o w e r at 882-6629. 16 strum ents. T ra n s isto r radios, 7911. 11 AMERICAN DIAPER SERVICE and women’s hours. PHONE Excellent cmdi > trade. steering. Radio. Many other ex­ WANTED: BU'SEOY for lunch and portable phonographs. 25 sets AMEftlCAN, lbxS6. In good 914 E. G ier St. T he Student Board will be com­ 250. 33 11 tra s . Priced for quick sale. golf clubs, new ar.d used. 200 condition. See any tim e after 7 IV 2-0864 C posed of the four elected re p re ­ 355-8255 FORD ITvT Fairla e. Excellent 1962 FORD Fairlane 2-door V-8 2-5035. dinners. C a l l stew ard, ED LY YV - . T. condition. Recently ove-hauled. automatic. Radio. Extra clean. 14 C lassical L -P phonograph re c ­ pm., Lot 121, T ra ile r Haven. 11 L eah-M arise Shop. Over Jacob­ a e r a o n s d r e s s n i a k i v sentatives, two appointed rep re­ RATES ords. 200 guitars. D rum sets. sentatives, one of whom must be 1 DAY........... S I.50 New tires and battery,C all 355- 1962 FORD Falcon 2-door. Radio. EARNtNGS A&E unlimited as an B argains in diamond and wed­ LUXURY Quality l i 1 x 60' mobile home. carpet, duct a ir condi­ son's New owner. Lower prices. a woman, and heads of the major S3.50 7795 after 5 pm. 11 Standard transm ission. Locally Avon representative. T urn your ding r i n g sets, $19.95 up. ED 2-4417. living unit governing groups. 3 DAYS. 36.00 FORD, L>3 F a ir!a rt 500 four- owned. fre e time, into $$. F o r appoint­ G eneral household goods. Dish­ tioning, fully furnished. N ear C oral Gables. 351-4656. 15 TV (IE N't A LS for students. E co- Classicists 5 DAYS. door V-8. St.ck, radio, padded 1961 CHEVROLET C orvair 700. M ment in your home, w rite o r call es, rugs, beds, springs, m at­ ( 3 a s e d on 15 w o rd s per ad) rs. Alona Huckins, 5664 School nomical ra te s by the term a n d dash. Sharp finish. Very clean. 4-door. Standard transm ission^ St., Haslett, Michigan o r call tre s s e s , ch ests, davenports. Lost & Found month. UNIVERSITY TV R EN T- A steal at $1,250. A:, ideal grad­ Radio. Very good condition. WILCOX SECOND HAND STORE LOST: MAN’S Omega watch. Sil- ALS. Meet In Va. T h e r e w i l l be a 50c s e r v i c e evenings, FE 9-8483. Cll 509 E. Michigan 484-9263.______________ C a nd b o o k k e e p in g c h a r g e if ithi uation gift. 465-3596. 11 1960 FORD 4-door. V-8 stand­ ve r color. Lost in M en’s 1M S E W IN G AND alterations. Quick FORD ’.962 Galaxie 500. 2-door ard transm ission. Radio. A real IV 5-4391 C13 Building, Saturday. R e w a r d . and efficient service. Call Betty, t h i s ad is not p a id F o r Rent o ne w e ek. good buy. hardtop. Original maroon fin­ 1959 FORDS' 4 to choose from. TLX RENTALS. Why pay more? DRESSED B E lE P , A ngus a ncl 337-1001. 12 332-2949.________________ 11 William M. Seaman, profes­ ish. Excellent motor, body, $8.50 for whites. $9 for black, H erefords. D irect from farm . LO§T: BRoWN*Chesterfieidcoat. so r of rom ance languages, is one State News does not tires, Radio, heater, overdrive. 1964 Stop and look 'em over! 36tf p e r pound. Government in­ Picked up blue-black C h e s te r­ C om plete Gun- of 50 high school and college permit raci ¡1 or religious $1,344. AL EDWARDS LIN­ pick-up. FORD F a l c o n Ranchero, $9.50 other colors. Includes spected, cured. OR 6-5663. 15 field discrim inât in in its ad- COLN, M ercury, 3125 E. Sagi­ Oversized wheels and complete outfit. L atest styles. by mistake, Friday night. Sm ithing S erv ice Latin and Greek teachers who will participate :n a classics tire s. Radio. Deluxe trim . Many Evening appointments. WEND- BIG BEEF SALE. Four months Call 353-3152. 12 vertí sine c >lumns. The naw (North of Frandor). Open ROWS S. Lansing C lean e rs, 113- locker rent free with $70 p u r­ LGST: BLUE M ohair coat. Double GRAND LED GE GUN SHOP planning c o n f e r e n c e t o d a y State News Aill not accept Mon., Thurs., Friday til 9 pm. ex tras. New car warranty. 115 W. South St. IV 9-2435. 15 chase. T e rm s . BROWERS, Holt, breasted with Chelsea collar. through Saturday at A irlie House, sine from persons C12 1960 VOLVO 2 - d o o r . R a d i o , OX 4-3691. 12 F riday night at Shaw. 355-3120. 716 Maple W arrenton, Va. whitewalls. 3-speed. Standard . NA 7-2670 iinating against r e ­ FORD ¡963 Convertible. Auto- transm BICYCLE S T O R A G E : S a l e s , 13 INDEXING. EXPERIENCED book T he conference, firs; of .ts race, color i.r r.a- ission. $695. Apartm * n ts __________________ kind since 1924, is sponsored matic. White with dark blue top. Many transportation specials: TWO MALE room m ates needed service a n d rentals. E A S T LOST ON cam pus, Men’s black indexer and editor. ED2-2190. 9 riein. Radio, heater. Will sacrifice. from $95 to $495. LANSING CYCLE, 1215E .G rand horn rim m ed glasses. P lea se by the office of the U.S. Com­ for supervised apartm ent.C lose m issioner of Education. The pur­ Call IV 4-0805. 12 SIGNS FORD SALES, INC. to campus. Cooking, P riv ate en- P.iver. Call 332-8303. C call 355-2892 after 5. 11 NOTICE, NOTICE. U a:t no lon- ger. You can now place your pose of the conference is to Automotive FORD 19 57 convertible. One 162 W. Grand River trance. Clean. 351-5018; ED 2- GET YOURS - Phi! F ran k ’s C a r - evaluate classical s t u d i e s ir. owner. Thunderbird special en­ Williamston 0742. 12 toon Book. 50 of Phil’s best Personal child in my licensed h o m e . AUSTIN HEALEY Sprue MK 1. gine. A m erican education and recom ­ . 1959. Red. R a d i . C a l l ED 339-2640. Excellent condition. Phone 655-2191 C12 ARBOR FOREST A P A fttM E N f^, Cartoons in a beautifully bound WORLD’S GREATEST Rock 'n’ Abundant weekly. love for children. $20 Near Frandor. IV' 5- mend research and development 2-8369 after 10 pm. 13 . 16 -TRANSPORTATION.' SPECIALS E ast Lansing. New spacious book - $1,00 each. F o r ord ers Roll Band. The NIGHTSH1FT. of curriculum , teaching methods IN1PALA~,~i963 convertTble. Beau- - Make Your Own T e r m s • one-bedroom beautifully c a r ­ of five or m ore, call: 351-4322 Nobody can t o u c h us. ED 2494. 11 and teacher training. ' CADILLAC 56 sedan deVille. tiful red with white top. Stand­ 1959 VALXHALL, 4-door. $295 Full power. Excellent white­ ard s h i f t . 230 cubic inches. peted, Frigidaire kitchen, patio between 6 p.m. and midnight. 2-8369; 332-0327 ; 484-5686. 17 Kalamazoo Street Body Shop.l A C C I D E N T PROBLEM'’ C a l Seaman is d i r e c t o r of t h e walls. Asking S575. Phone IV $1,900. 393-3326. overlooking beautiful park. See CANOES - FIBERGLASS a n d NEW- EASTER Hairstyles! $15. A m erican C lassical League S er­ 9-5570. 916 1/2 W i s c o n s i n , LARK 1959, 6 cylinder, automat- 1958 11 PLYMOUTH 4-door, 9 -p a s - resident m anager, 1165 Arbor aluminum from $149 up. ALBIN P erm anent with hair cut: $9.95. Small dents to large wrecks. vice Bureau and associate edi­ Lansing. »,-j • U lc. 4-door. Body average. A-l senger wagon, $225. D rive, or phone 337-0634. 12 BOAT A N D MOTOR SALES. JUANITA'S SA LQ N tfJ*!* t a r • GAm erican a n d foreign c a r s . uaranteed work. 489-7507,1411 to r of C lassical Outlook , the M-78, Ptntejryille. 645-0951. 15 Hotel* 485-0724.^ ¡2 A C L’s official publication. 'C h e v ro le t White impaia E d e n R oc A p ts . East Kalamazoo. C hardtop. Tvvo-ddor. Red inter­ tire s. $300. Phone 482-5102. 14 1959 door, CHEVROLET Biscayne 2« $395. fcAPITOL "GAIN- Need an extra Joll Y'teQY's IMTkftAtTGNA L WEDDING A NNOl N("E ME NTS— ior. Sharp, inside-out. M u s t MERCURY 1959 station wagon. 252 River St., E.L. office in your home or shop? Now accepting m em bership's Save 10%. THE WELLS PRINT­ . rush. 351-5096. II V-8. Automatic. Radio, heater. 1957- BL'ICK 2-door hardtop. $257. N ow l e a s i n g f o r We have 20 used wood desks, Send $1 to World H eadquarters ING COMPANY. Phone 355-1942 Dean To Talk Good condition. $425. P h o n e from $25 to $30, used wood Wood’s Hotel, Grafton, Wiscon­ o r 332-2143forappointment.CIO CHEVROLET 195' C : vertible. 484-8705. 617 E. Michigan. 16 S u m m e r & F a l l John X. Jam rich , associate P :>wer steering, brakes. G o o d MUSTANG,- V-8 3-speed. Whitt ,19 5 6 VOLKSWAGEN 2 - d o o r , ch airs, ffom $4 up; used m im e­ sin. . 12 RENT your TV from NEJAC. .dean of education, will address condition, $4~5. Call 355-0762 sidewalls. R a d i o . B r o n z e . $495. Nat Hammond 332-8488 ograph machines, new portable RENT your TV from NEJAC. after 5 pm. 13 $2,095. Phone 489-9202. NOW RENTING - Sum m er term adders. We are spring house- New Zenith portable for only New Zenith portable for only N orthern Michigan U niversity's 12 SPARTAN MOTORS, INC. apartm ents for two and three. cleaning. Cash in on these mon­ $9 p e r month. F ree service $9 per month. F re e service honors convocation April 27. CHEVROLET isstr Bel Air. 4- 3000 E. Michigan ey m akers now! IV 5-4379. 11 and delivery. Call NEJAC TV Rental. 482-0624. and delivery. Call NEJAC TV The convocation will honor stu­ door, V-8 aut matic. R a d i o , OLDSNIOBILE 19 6 4 C u t l a s s IV 7-3715____________________ C15 $100, $110. Fabian Realty, ED VT-VM'feAR“ G enerator. T ra n s - Rental. 482-0624. C C dents who have excelled in schol­ heater. Electr c wipers. Top sports coupe. Bucket s e a t s . 2-0811; ED 7-2474. 11 arship, leadership and citizen­ condition. TL 2-3888. 11 Console. 3-speed. Dual exhaust. Auto Service & Parts STO P. LUXURY apartm ent tor isto r battery elim inator. Sencor A fefeTTER PRICE for your c a r GETTING MARRIED? Wedding ship. CHEVROLET, I9$5 4-door Bei $1,975, 489-4042; 372-1369. 12 GENERATORS AND STARTERS. sum m er term . Dishwasher. Sun substitor. Signal tr a c e r. Also at PH1LP DODGE, 1431 E a s t pictures, form al, candid. Taken lawnmower. C h e a p . 332-2178 Michigan. See Russ Lay. Phone in color - black and white. Air. V-8, automatic, p o w e r OLDS.MOfelLE, 1^63 ' ’98” steering and brakes. $525. 484- door hardtop. Fully powered. teed! Exchange price $7.90. Me­ four- Rebuilt 6 o r 12 volt. G uaran­ porch, campus. air conditioner. 351-4248. Close to 11 after 5 pm. 11 IV 4-4517. C M acLachlan Photo, TL 2-5976.11 WMV Protests ‘ 4042 after 5 pm. 12 Ready for delivery! $2,400 or chanic on the job! Installation ANN ARBOR apartm ent for two. GARRARD 4Gs[Teed r e c o r d changer. $25. Call Paul, 355- PORTRAITS, HAND painted on KALAMAZOO (U P I) — Two •CHEVROLET ¡9^4 Impala con­ trade. IN’ 5-5248. 12 service available. ABC AUTO Furnished. Close to main cam ­ 6362 8-11 am. or late evenings. silk or canvas. F rom any clear DIAPER SERVICE, three types downtwon Kalamazoo t'h e a t e r s vertible. 15,000 miles. Red with O L D S M’OB 1 L E 1961 S t a t i o n PARTS. 613 E. South St. IV 5 - pus. Summer school, or longer. photograph. Sizes 8” x 10” or wash f o r tocleaner, of diapers choose from . Bulk are likely to get m ore protests • black interior. Excellent condi­ Wagon, 4-door. Pow er steering, 1921. C ED 2-6379. 11 11 24” x 28’ . 882-6724. 11 p e rs. Fluff dried and whiter folded. Use dia­ from students at W estern Michi­ tion. Phone 62”-6652. 12 brakes. 332-8868. 11 NEW BAT1ERIES. E x c h a n g e H ouses WEDDING GO WN , c o c V t a i l gan U niversity. The students plan d re s s e s , 10-14. Best reasonable HIGHWAYS R I D E f t S RANCH- your own or rent ours. Contain­ a meeting tonight to draw new CHEVROLET 1959 Impala con- OLDSMOB1LE, 1963 convertible. price from $7.95. New sealed AVAILABLE JULY 1st. T hree- offer. Call 337-1522. 11 W estern pleasure riding; Mule e r s furnished. No deposit. 25 vertible. Silver. L arge 6-cyl- Perfect condition. Low mileage. beams, 99^. Salvage c a rs, large bedroom home. 5 minutes to SHORT-WAVE All-Band receiv- dearn hayrides, overnight trail y e ars experience. BY-LO DIA­ strategy in their battle with the lr.der automatic. Good condition. Priced for quick sale. Call 484- stock used p arts. ABC AUTO MSU. Completely f u r n i s h e d , e r with selectivity booster, ac­ rid es, riding instructions. IV PER SERVICE, 1010 E. Michi­ owners of the State and Capitol Must sei!. Call 351-5314. ,1 2 4441, 9-5. 13 PARTS. 613 E. South St. IV $175. Partially furnished, $150. c e sso rie s, $65. Ham tran sm it­ 9-5153. P 12 gan. IV 2-0421. C T h e a te rs. They have been pro­ 5-1921. C THE LOU HILFMAN trio, quintet testing a 25-cent adm ission price CHEVROLET l9S8 Imp ai: 2 OLDSMOB1LE i964 - 1964 " 9 8 ” . Best Phone 339-2209 after 6 pm. 14 te r, $15. Paul 353-0282. 11 f e a t u r i n g v o c a l i s t , M i s s THESES PRINTED. Rapid serv - increase to $1.25 at the theaters door hardt-,p. $200. Call 351- offer over wholesale. Red with Scooters & C ycles DISHMOBILE DISHWASHER. Ex- Sch errie Payne. M usic for all ice. Drafting supplier. Xerox owned by the Butterfield chain. 4f'91 after 6 pm. 14 black top. 337-2053 after 6 pm. Rooms cellent condition. Automatic de­ occasions. 353-1571. copies., CAPITAL CITY BLUE­ 14 1964 HONDA. 50 cc. 980 m iles. 12 PRINT, 221 South Grand. 482- CHEVROLET 1902 Impala seaan. Excellent condition. Electric EAST SIdE. Furnished t h r e e fro st r e f r i g e r a t o r . Roomy Service_______ Outstanding condition, 26,000 OLDSMOBILE 1963, Starfire con- s ta rte r luggage rack . 332-0344. room s, bath. P rivate entrance, fre e z e r com partm ent a c r o s s IX) YOU SHOP in Hudson, Fields 5431. C17 m iles. $1,500. IV 2-21 67, 6-7 vertible. All pow er, including parking. $75 monthly plus utili­ top. 332-6217. 12 o r Macy’s? You get a choice i>t \ \ i i s T y p in g S ervice 14' tilt wheel. Excellent condition. HONDA 1963 Super Hawk. 305 cc., ties. 482-4953, 11 11 GENUINfe MEXICAN and Guata- don’t you? F rom us you get a f ANDALSOOWEN PAULA ANN HAUGHEY, typist. CHFVROLI 1 1958,2-door. 0 cyl­ Sell or trade. OX 9-2913. 16 3,300 m iles. Windshield, sad­ choice of 20 insurance compan­ IBM Selectric D issertations, F or Sale malian artifacts, crafts, blan­ ies. BUBOLZ of E ast Lansing. inder. Radio, heater. Excellent OPEL KADET, 1964 SportCLupc. dlebags. $650. Call 339-8831. 16 kets, reco rd s, books. 372-0330. ______________________ Cll theses, term papers. 337-1527. condition. Call any time. 332— Radio, heater. Safety gr> up. VESPA 125, 1964. Windshield. P O R ' f A 6 L E TYPEWRITERS, 11 J. C. ADVISES: Vote today for C 8790. 14 Whitewalls. Call 351-5394 ur Excellent condition , $300. IV new a n d reconditioned. A l l L IG H T -W E IG H T 3- EDIE STARR, t yp i s t. Theses, ENGLISH Jim G raham . Qualified candi­ COR VAIR MON/.À '.'964.4-speed. ED 2-0841. 13 5-8275. 14 p rice s. Wolverine Typew riter s p e e d bicycles, $39.77, full date for Student Board. Vote for dissertations, t e r m papers, A real good machine! 351-4315. PONTIAC, 1960 Catalina c-n- RSA 1956. 650 cc., $100 dow n. 482-1452. Co., Inc., 117 E. Kalamazoo. ric e . R ental-purchase term s Graham. general t y p i n g . Experienced. IS pavailable. U, ( IBty £ N * p frif| OR 6-2645. C 14 vertible. Sharp condition. Auto­ Take over paym ents of $270. We also have tennis E n G L is h and ^ ¿ ¿ t t R N riding matic transm ission. R a d i 1. See at 2516 Alpha, 12-4 pm . 14 WEDDING klNC set- Solitaire racquets, golf balls, badminton c o u rse s. Enroll now and receive JOB RÉàL'ME^, 10Ô copies, Whitewalls. $1,050. ED 7-7448 diamond setting. See at 1232 birdies, gifts and housewares.' fre e bus transportation. 882- ALDINGER DIRECT MAIL Ad­ after 5 pm. SKAT-KITTY. 36” x ¿5” . 30 P arkdale after 4:30 pm. Call IV ACE HARDWHERE, vertising, 533 N. Clippert. IV W a t e r s ^ d g e PORSCHE’ , LATE 6* c. Si” ; 1 m.p.h. 150 mpg. F o r around 2-7815. 11 from Union. ED 2-3212.a c r o s Cs 4863; 355-2015, 21 I Pino t h a t i O n T seem to 5-2213. C campus, red. Blaupunkt AM -FM radio. new. Sacjrifice. 351-4107. boat or plane. Brand CHOICE BEEF for your freezer. ■O U YM Pty PRECISION typew rit- F o r appointment, call 484-4519. (i)HEN FREE! A thrirtingho ur oflieautyI hold a PERSON'« A T T EN T IO N ... 14 ANN BkOWN typist and m ulti- ond Seat belts. Driven only 7,000 BL’LTACO, 1964. 20t> cc., lo w Cut, wrapped, blast frozen and e r s - portable, standard, elec­ M ERLE NORMAN C osm etics MINDSI SORT TALK TO PEOPLE. THEIR lith offset printing (black and miles. Never raced. $3,850. ED mileage. Good condition. $450. delivered. Call 485-5394. 12 tric . L. ”E. Lighthard & Co., Studio, 1600 E. Michigan. C17 THEY STARE OP HJANOEROPP AND INTO SPACE, AND ... white and color). IBM. General 2-4067 after 6. 12 Call owner, 627-5677days; 627- RCA ' VISTA ’ Yelevi sion, 1963 310 N. Grand Ave. IV'2-1219. 16 typing, term p a p e r s ,. t h e s e s , Ri vers E d g e RAMBLER STUl5EKtS: WHY leave y o u r n rrz 1961 sedan. Hlue. Ex- 6833 evenings. 12 model. Excellent condition. $150 SK1ERSI BARGAIN sale. M en's dorm s, when BIMBO-'S will de­ dissertations. 332-8384. C cellent tires. Rebuilt engine. or best offer. Phone TU 2-7291. equipment bought this season. BARB1 MÊL, Profess'ionaltypist. Apartments Standard 6. Very good condition. Employment 12 Head competition slalom s (200 liv e r your pizzas to you! Call 484-7817. C17 No job too large or too sm all. $545. 882-2276. ' 13 NURSE-REG ISTERED . E xper- STUDENT VI OLI N' S, VIOLA, SL, m a rk e r and lift bindings). Block off campus. 332-3255. C # ■J RENAULT 196 3 deluxe. Black lenced. Responsible position. Cello. O rchestra models. Ex­ ' Reikkqr sealed-sole boots (10), SAILING EXPEDITION'. C e n t . REASONABLE F A S T accurate N o w Leasing with leather upholstery. Roomy Top pay. Daytime hours. Give pertly r e p a i r e d . Reasonable Kennedy poles, B a rra c ra fte rs A m e r./ C arib. Shareadventure, typing in my home. T heses, dis­ back, seat for luggage or long comp/ere p a rtic u lars in applica­ cases, strin g s,p a rts ,a c c e ss o r­ doviaVe-lock rack. Aspen stretch expense. A irm ail. Yaxe F a ir - sertations. Cali 355-9913. 14 for ' trips. 355-9368. 13 tion. W rite Box No. B-2, State ies. BARTOW VIOLIN SHOP, pants (32). Total value $267. winds, Club Pesca, Cartagena, SAAB 1960 750 GT. Good condi- News. 20 306 1/2 N. Washington. IV 7- Now $100, or any item s 1/2 Colombia. 14 Wanted tion. Radio. $490. Call 332-3746. BUS BOYS wanted. Sigma Alpha 5697. 14 p ric e . Call ED 7-1570. 14 BLOOD DONORS reeded. $5 for Summer and PHI MU ALPHA jazz festival. 14 Mu Fraternity. M eals plus s a l­ April 19 and 20. 7:30 pm. Music RH Positive; $7 for RH Nega­ THUNDERBIRD 19 59, 2 - d o o r ary. Call steward, ED 7-1714.12 STOP - - LOOK auditorium. F re e adm ission. 14 tive. Detroit Blood Service, Inc. Fal l T e r m s hardtop. Full power. A ir con­ FULL OR p a rt-tim e male help. 1427 E. Michigan Ave., Hours ditioning. New white sidewall T r a n s p o r t a t i o n required. D elta - E v e rg re e n H aslett Peanuts Personal 9-4, Monday, Tuesday, Wednes­ tires. $945. HAROLD PLETZ Vaughan’s Landscaping. ED 2- day, F r i d a y . 12-7 Thursday. # 2 B edroom s MOTOR SALES. 150 E . Grand 6311. 11 U n i v e r s i t y T e r r a c e JOLLY GREEN Boobie: W h a t 489-7587. 48 River, Williamston. 655-1870. STUDENTS FOR Saturday and shall it be, race c a rs o r rubies? WANTED TO BUY: ' t w o wheel # 2 B athroom s C12 Sunday Retail com m ission sales NOW LEASING j 11 light-weight tra ile r. E D 2-4660. W ELL, STANHOPE, what hap- 12 VOLKSWAGEN 1 9 6 3 . Sunroof. of plants and garden supplies. GARAGE IN East Lansing. P re f­ % B u i l t - I n FM Red. Whitewalls, radio, head­ Orientations p rio r to starting. SUMMER TERM F A L L 19^5 pened this time? 11 Also, Saturday Field W o r k erably near campus. Till June rests. Many ex tra s. Serviced Real Estate 15. Call Bob, 351-4427. 12 # A m ple P a rk in g r e g u l a r l y . $1,250. 355-6229; available. T w i s s Landscape 372-4338. 16 C enter. IV 4-7753. 13 HOUSE FOR SALE. Mt. Hope WANTED TO SUBLET; June ¿1- VOLKSWAGEN, 19 6 1 're d with BEAUTICIAN, FULL tim e with a O EHM » PROPERTY MANAGEMENT CO. School area. T h ree minutes to Aug. 13, 3-bedroom house con­ venient to c a m p u s . George End of River Street black interior,. R a d i o , white­ year experience. M artin’s Hair 444 Mich. Ave. 332-0838 MSU. T hree bedroom Cape Cod. walls. Good condition. One own­ Fashions, East Lansing. Phone O W ES M A N 1 1/2 b a t h s . C arpeted living R am seur, Sewanee, Tennessee. Mike Stitt, mgr. ED 2-4432 e r . Call 351-5007 hefore 3pm. 11 ED 2-4522. 14 D room . Call 487-5783. 11 14 M ichigan State N ew s, E ast L ansing, M ichigan T hursday, April 15. 1965 / O’Neill PlayNext Week Fraternity Sponsors T r a v e l S e r v ic e O p e n s S o o n A student trav el b ureau to p ro - G overnm ent p resid en t. Its serv ices will include trip s A d d i c t R o le Is C h a lle n g in g B y F A Y E E. UNGER Hardw ick said. "U nd er the influ­ ridden woman who wants desp er­ International Talks vide inform ation a n d arrang e T he bureau will also m ake a r - for students from other nations trip s , w ill be open in about two rangem ents for c h a rte r and groiq) and A m ericans to travel to dif- weeks as p a rt of the student gov­ ra te s for trip s over term breaks, ferent a re a s of the country. ernm ent stru ctu re. Entertainment Editor ence of m orphine M ary T yrone ately to free h erself from a be­ Five inform al discussions of m eetings of April 15 and 22, for The bureau will have a file of LIEBERMANN’S can relive different periods of lief that she is responsible for current international issues have all men interested in the intern a­ inform ation from tra v e l agencies M ary Hardwick, E ast Lansing h e r life. the death of her baby y e ars be­ been announced for Spring T erm tional ca re e r fields. in other co untries, lists of ex­ graduate student, is tackling her fore. by John G. Schultem an, presiden t On May 6 , during the new MSU penses and req u irem en ts such as ro le in the U niversity T heater M iss Hardwick is presently of Delta Phi E psilon, national International p a s s p o r t s and innoculations, p resentation of " L o n g D ay's working for her doctorate in the­ professional fra tern ity for in te r­ Epsilon will Week, present Delta Phi Abba P. law s, accom m odations and se rv ­ Journey Into Night” with a study ate r interpretation. A fter receiv­ national relations and business. L ern er, professor of econom ices available at the destinations. of drug addiction. ing her m a ster of fine a rts de­ A lfred G. M eyer, p ro fesso r of in a discussion of econom ic ics, di­ "W e hope to talk to internation­ When the cu rtain ris e s on her g ree in 1955 from Ohio U niver­ political science, leads off the lem m as of the developing nations, al students and students living all opening night T uesday, M is s sity, she becam e a m em ber of the se rie s with a consideration of the and on May 8 , the group w ill have over the U nited S tate s,” saidB ob Hardw ick, a 15-year veteran of Pittsburgh Playhouse staff. resu lts of the change in Soviet an exhibit on work and study H a rris , A ll U n iversity Student ‘Silent Witness’ the professional stage, will p e r­ While acting and directing with leadership, at 7:30 tonight in 32 abroad at the annual International form the role she says is the the Pittsburgh play ers, she p o r­ Union. m ost c o m p l e x she has ever trayed the only other personality Alvin C. Gluek, asso ciate p ro ­ F estival. played, the ro le of drug addict that she said com pares in com ­ fesso r of history and chairm an of On May 13, the internal politics M ary T yrone. plexity with her p resen t one. That MSU’s C anadian-A m erican sem ­ of the E ast European Com m unist T he " S i l e n t W i t n e s s for T he role of M ary T yrone in r o l e w a s h e r p o r t r a y a l of in a rs, will analyze C anadian- bloc w i l l be discussed by Den­ P ea ce,” sponsored by the R elig­ Eugetie O’N eill’s tragedy, “ Long M argaret Hyland in "T h e Rope A m erican relations in long-range nison 1. Rusinow, Balkan expert ious Society of F rien d s (Quak­ Day’s Journey Into Night,” is the D an cers.” persp ectiv e on April 22 at 7:30 visiting here la te r this term ers) w ill begin at 1 p.m . F riday re -c re a tio n of the playw right’s M iss Hardwick helped estab­ p.m . in the Union A rt Room. under sponsorship of the A m er­ instead of 2 p.m . as reported in m other. lish a th ree -y ear dram a pro­ Inform ation concerning m em ­ ican U niversities F ield Staff. W ednesday’s State News. W ritten as an autobiography of gram at the F irs t P resb y erian bership and the fra te rn ity ’s pro­ O’N eill’s ea rly y ears, the play C hurch, Stam ford, Conn., p rio r fessional program s w ill be avail­ * able at open rush hours at the deals with the psychological de­ stru ction the drunken father, the to com ing to MSU. VOTE TO DAY FOR » » addict m other and the two sons JIM * in th e T yrone fam ily inflict on M A R Y H A R D W IC K » each other. "D uring certain scenes of the P olanski’s 'K n ife In W a te r’ G RAHAM » » Although she has had little » chance to observe p erso n s under play she is a 6 0 -year-o ld woman. th e influence of drugs, M is s T hen she retu rn s to the tim e she Studies M a tu rity ’s M e a n in g STU D EN T BOARD » » Hardw ick said she has studied w as a convent student, to the day QUALIFIED By DOUGLAS L A C K E Y bolic struggle for the possession » a rtic le s ojj, drug addiction in she firs t m et her husband-to-be State News R eview er of the sw itchblade. But the cool * AUSG C ongressm an » " L ife ” and read an O 'N eill biog­ and to her honeymoon.” Polanski’s "K nife in the Wat­ dom inance of the woman over both * C hairm an, Academ ic A ffairs Com m . » raphy to discover what kind of Throughout the six c h aracte rs e r ," which played Monday and men m akes th eir stru ggle for * Vice P resid en t, N. W onders. » trap M ary O 'Neill was caught in. of M ary T yrone runs one common T uesday in the International Film pow er pointless. 'D onated by friends of Jim Graham) » "A ctually I am p l a y i n g six thread, how ever, M iss Hardwick S eries, poses difficult problem s I judge the film then, to be a » c h a ra c te rs instead of one,” M iss rem ark ed. The addict is a guilt- in interpretation. study in the meaning of m aturity. Art Faculty9s Own Work For the Best On one side the film appears T he apparent m aturity of the old­ directed by a careful and delib­ e r man falls apart upon challenge B.Y.O. by the younger: his evident m e­ in Italian Food e ra te hand, but on the other, Fills Kresge9s Galleries one wonders what all the c a re chanical skills are no help in a and deliberation is about. m oral c ris is. Polanski h i m s e l f c l a i m s But the younger man provides “ K n ife" is a political allegory. no m aturity 6 f his own, and the Indeed, the older man is a re ­ w om an's irony with each indi­ The faculty of the D epartm ent of A rt takes a turn at cam pas W inekler, p ro fesso r of a rt, pro­ duced painting effects by a copper generate Com m unist, but th e younger man is too weak in ch ar­ cates h er d espair with both. All this is au sterely narrated , BUY YOUROWN exhibition with the annual faculty enem eling p ro ce ss. With that ac ter to fulfill the ro le of hard­ with fine im agery and skilled un­ . . . au th en tic g la ss m ugs fro m exhibition opening.*today in the p ro c e ss the a rtis t can build up line M arxist, rounding out the d erstatem ent of sound. But un­ E n g lan d as used in the pubs K resge g alleries. subtle effects by heating v a r­ political m essage. like his Polish p eer W ajda. Po­ Some of the 20 p ro fe sso rs who entered th eir work in the exhi­ ious pigm ents on a copper sheet. The exhibition includes paint­ The film could be a sexual allegory, centering on the sy m - lanski fails to provide 'content equal to his m astery of sty le. HOME-MADE LASAGNA ONLY A DOLLAR bition have used recently devel­ ings, p rin ts, pen-and-ink draw ­ oped m ethods and tools now avail­ able to the a rtis t. ings, sculpture, ceram ics and copper enam elings. T he form al E V E R Y T H IN G SPAGHETTI The néw paints that have grown opening w ill be from 2 to 5 p.m . FO R YOUR CA R AT . . . out of industrial d isco v eries,a c­ ry lic and polym er, appear in the Sunday. The exhibition w ill run through May 2. T-BONE STEAK w orks of two p ro fesso rs, Owen The collection of bold colors K R A M E R ’S ! B rainard, asso ciate p ro fesso r of a r t, and Thom as W allace, in­ and shapes shows an individua­ lism in the presen t faculty that E S P E C IA L L Y ! PIZZA stru c to r in a rt. T hese paints w as not alw ays apparent in the EA ST LA N SIN G -2 0 9 E . G rand R iv ar resem b le the t r a d i t i o n a l Oil faculty In past y e ars, Paul Love, And many other Ital ian-Anier ican Dishes DOWNTOWN - \0 7 S. W ash ington A v a. paints on canvas. d irec to r of the K resge A rt Cen­ M UFFLERS! Air Conditioned-Open for Lunch at 11 Daily, 4 Sun. Irw in W hitaker, asso ciate pro­ te r, said. S ta rts T O D A Y ! fe sso r of a r t , and K atherine G allery hours a re 10 a.m . to CAMPUS: Okinawan 5 p.m . weekdays and 2 to 5 p.m . R e p la c e y o u r w in te r» w o rn u f f le r w ith a ru s t - p r o t e c t - An ideal place for your noontime meal. 75« to 5 : 3 0 Eve. $ 1 .0 0 Saturday and Sunday. The gal­ $ 5 M d m u ff le r ! A s lo w a s • . . -T H E A T R I - F eatu re Today 1:00-3:05 le rie s a re also open 7 to 9 p.m . Official Here T uesday. '-os?! „.RSHBML, ► ase-i 5:15-7:20-9:30 2 * -C O M PLE T E - A U T O M O T IV E DELIVERY ELECTRICAL P resid en t Shunichi Shim abu- kuro of the U niversity of the SPRING MACHINE SHOP lA IR -C O N D IT IO N IN G ! 2 1 T M.A.C. ACROSS FROM K N A P P ’ S ED 7-1668 S H iR ie y M a d a m e Ryukyus and th ree other univer­ AUTO GLASS SA LES & sity ad m in istrato rs a re here to­ day to begin conferences with S E R V IC E DRIVE AT H e ß FUNN¡esT...TuBN¡NG MSU officials on the future de­ velopm ent of the Okinawan insti­ S E R V IC E ^w S o u i l l e MH— > a u i N i — ( a n a rm in g rm lY lT n -IN a H aR em îm to B e o iâ M - tution. As a highlight of his trip , Shim abukuro is to p resen t a letter C O M P L E T E L I N E NEW AND R E B U I L T A U T O P A R T S a N D THe s c ß e e N ín t d a "SERVING G REATER LANSING FOR 48 YEARS” N O W T H R U S U N . (2 ) H IT S to L t. Gov. W illiam M illiken from the chief executive of Ryukyus, ■“ Whol es al e & R e ta i l — W ilP WHÎRL o f w a c k y fu n ! AUTO thanking the 'S tate of M ichigan for allowing MSU ad v isers to help the U niversity of Ryukyus. MSU has had ad v ise rs at the SEHOHBRE KRAMER 800 E . K a l a ma z o o PARTS P h o n e IV 4 - 1 3 3 5 [ F I R S T L A N S IN G S H O W IN G ! A d m i s s io n $ 1 . 2 5 C h ild ren Under 12 F r e e U n iversity of Ryukyus since 1951. E E I1 ::E :B E 1 E 1 : M IC H IG A N —— 4U-HSI CONTINUOUS FROM 1 P.M . ►4f 4 W -- A n a g e o f ra m p a n t lu s ts , a b a n d o n , ru n a w a y ANY NUMBER p a s s io n s . A n a g e b r o u g h t b r i s t l i n g t o lif e b y 4 M -7 9 I1 - S t t - ► « « .« O » ........ T O D A Y and F R I D A Y FEATURE At 1:05-3:15 tw o o f th e m o s t e x c itin g s ta r s o f o u r tim e ! CAN PLAY... . . F ea tu re at 1:00- 5:20-7:30-9:40 P.M . b u t it's b e tte r LA STD A >^3^40-6¿25-9£20_ idi 'k .¡rRNAAm m SMIYKMMU w ith ju s t tw o! “ “ITS A Ov^P HIS HEAP LOVE. AmoGlHLS. SO LAUGHS! M AD, M AD, MAD, starú Sa t u r d a y Ac t i on & R o ma nc e ¡%namr M an ÎS 5 *®** nanoiimn w WORLDad ì n” T 'heScreenStretchesTo Vast NewHorizons, To * STARTS FRI! * ToilTheEpicStoryOfThe Groat Southwest! namsHsuene COLUMBIA BIOODCURDUNG prestili» PICTURES comeoiesssR A JERRY BRESLER Production AM ERICAN IN TERN A TIO N A L STARS A M M E « R M M I E I n in ^ K B O R K H WMiEY HMVEYIEMBECK m « s u r - n r » a » donni m i m m i « * m m SHMI - SONMHCRinOES MOT PMIl a. WUUÍT5N K BUSTER KEATON EM t WILSON M U M (S K I I U l tlM S in VIUIM «SD» IM IS «. IIC IIU M I MME! I. UIIFF l l l l l l l O N U m W ntSTON HARRIS J0HN9EICUD DONAlDWOflT HARTITAHUNT WMElABROWl ©1965 A m erican Internation»! P ictu res______________________ ■1=. I JIM Iutton•Coburn A JAMES GLENVIL1 E ANHALT"r, ANOUILH -PETER — EDWARD J EA N CHAEl , —p i SENTA P A N A V IS IO N * I P u u A u .,4 1 JACK LEMMON f ti e m I B m T E C H N IC O L O R * 1r ” _________ 9 9 VMM US HOWTO FILMED IN PANAVISION COLOR - os Becket F R ID A Y : F ro m 7:00 P.M . ITATE os His King F rid ay 7:00, 9:35 P.M . S c m e JP p b ö S S aAMERICANINTERNATIONAL*ctu>«INC O L O co-stamnglMBACKUSSCOTTBRADY•FREDCUUK-MflDHYDE-W v l— l i — k . W f* * * HITEHARRYMORGAN r MURDER R AStwe Parto-I. Lae Thompson Production roMwirr ™D* I : ‘ *’Inherit The W*d” 1964 -A m e ric a n In te rn a tio n a l picture I “ B I N G O ” At 7 : 3 0 - 1 1 : 0 7 ‘ ‘ P E O P L E ” A t ^ 3 5 _ J Extr a A d de d ! ” Nov el t y Cartoon “ We G i v e Pi nk Stamps ‘ K E E P A M E R I C A S I N G I N G ” ______ TECHNICOLOR’" »¡UNITEDARTISTS i T hursday, A pril 15, .965 i 8 M ichigan State N ew s, East L ansing, M ichigan - Canadians On Canada Get A Coke Quebec Solution Needed Something m ust be done about Morton, p ro fesso r of history at have to accept its sh a re of the the status of Quebec in relation I -^¡vsrs ity of M a n i t o b a , d is­ financial debt if independence to the re st of C anada, tw oC anad- cussed Q uebec's status in th e w ere declared. ian p ro fesso rs said Monday night. second of two sem in ars on politi­ A ssociation, u n d e r present F ran cis R. Scott, d e an -em e ri­ cal problem s in C anada. circu m stan ces, would only con­ tus and p ro fesso r of law at M c- At present, Quebec, which is tinue to furth er the p resen t drift, w ith e v e r y p iz z a G ill U niversity, and W illiam L. “ At four-fifths F rench, does not the two men said. T he cultural want independence as much as it differences prevent the English W e w ill give you a coke F R E E wants g reater rig hts and less and French from acting for the interference from English Cana­ w ith e v e ry d elicio u s p izza you P hilosophy dians,” M orton said. “ Quebec wants to becom e equal to the re st good of the country. "Q uebec is determ ined to be o rd e r. C a ll us today. of combined Canada in political m a ste r of its own d estin y ," Scott Talk Slated "T h e Logic of E xplanation" will be the topic of T h u rsd ay ’s P h i l o s o p h y Colloquium spon­ power, but of co u rse the re s t of Canada won’t accept th is ." Independence c o u l d c a u s .e grave econom ic troubles since said. "P rofound internal changes are taking place within the prov­ ince, especially in education and relig io n ,” he added. T he two p ro fesso rs said that RICARDO'S I FOR so red by the MSU D epartm ent of much jf Canada is a hinterland Philosophy. M ichael Scriven, a p ro fesso r at Indiana U niversity, for Quebec. Quebec would also the decision is in the hands of the F rench. 482-1554 DEL;i,T 482-1555 will address the group at 8 p.m . In 113 A kers Hall. O ther philosophy colloquia will Crew Club Meets GIVE FLOWERS a n d PLANTS FOR EASTER be held this term on A pril 26, when Sir K arl Popper of the Un­ 1 he MSU Crew Club w ill hold iv e rsity of London speaks on its firs t form al m eeting of the " T ru th and T ru th Content",; May term tonight in 204 M en’s LM. A S T R O C U C * * * A s t r o n a u t A l a n L . B e a n , who v i s i t s * M i c h i g a n S t a t s on T u e s d a y , 6 , at which tim e Quentin L auer, M ovies of last y e a r’s reg attas paid a v isit i o his cousin, Sarah Ja n e Thorkilson, J a c k s o n junior. The visit S. J . of Fordham U niversity, will will be shown. T his y e a r’s re ­ t u r n e d out to b e a f a m i l y r e u n i o n a s M i s s T h o r k i l s o n ’ s p a r e n t s a l s o s h o w e d up f o r the s p e e c h . Phot o by Bob B a n t give an ad dress on "P hilosophy and H istory” ; and May 26, when gattas and plans for tryouts will be discussed. All in terested stu­ Send A B e a u tifu l Police Club Tung Mei Fang of the National dents a re invited to attend. Taiw an U niversity w ill lecture T he club w ill have its firs t • Easter Lily P lant Meeting Set on a subject to be announced. race of the season Saturday when Clinton Board Plans One other colloquium will be scheduled for the last weekend it m eets Wayne State U niversity at B elle Isle. S tarting tim e is • O rchid Corsage in May. 1:30 p.m . New Area State Park Alpha Phi Sigma, rational po­ Moke “ Ma c ’ s Your Headquarters For A ll • Roses A new project for 3 2,700- boat launchings, large parking lice science honorary, will hold a c re state park, 15 m iles north­ lots and modern campir.,; facil­ its first m eeting of the term at east of Lar.sing, was disclosed Tuesday at a m eeting of the itie s . R oger W'ickland, habitat man­ 7:30 p.m . tonight in 34-35 Union. P ip es & S m o ke rs Ite m s • S pring Flow ers Clinton County Board of Super­ agem ent e\p e rt for the State Speaker w ill be A l b e r t S, v iso rs. C onservation D epartm ent, said Cohan, deputy state attorney gen­ F r e e D e liv e r y O n O r d e r s O f $ 4 .0 0 o r M o r e that if the p ark ’s plans ’- eceive e ra l. 2 ‘ S p e c ia l W ith T h is A d * I The park, to be named Sleepy • With Any P urch ase S5.00 or O ver, • Hollow P ark, will cost about a go-ahead, land acquisition and H is topic will be "T h e Con­ • You Can Buy A Regular florist financial plans will take about ofEast Lansing $2.5 m illion. flict Between D em ocratic L iber­ • The park will include a 550- a y ear, and dredging of the lake and dam construction will take ties and Internal S ecurity." ! $3.50 Zippo L ighter F or Only < BARNES FLORAL NORM KESEL a c re fishing lake with two is­ Anyone interested in Joining lands for picnic sites and scenic another year. The p a rk 's lake C e n tr a l M i c h i g a n s ’ Most C o m p le te il tra ils totaling about 2 1 acres. should be ready for the fisherm en Alpha Phi Sigma should com e at by 1968. 6:15 p.m . for a special m eeting. A s s o r t m e n t Of T o b a c c o s & C i g a r e t t e s Open 215 Ph. 109 E ast Ph. It will also contain two 800- foot sand beaches, 2 10 cam psites, 120 North Mon. - F ri. nights Ann St. ED 2-0871 G rand R iver ED 7-1331 6World9Week M A C ’S W ashington T ill 9:00 Quick Dependable Service. . . Holds OpenRush Open rush for International at Week will be held for all inter­ ested students today at ":30 p.m . Y A N .K E E in 22 Student S ervices. C L E A N E R AND ‘ International Week will begin May 3 and will baicom prised of S H IR T I Ai iN n P Y 'eEm in a rs , m ovies, cam pus UN ctiv ities, international c o f f e e hours and a festival inw hichd is- blays and international dances Will be exhibited. H e r e ’s a t a s t e y o u ’l l w a n t to a c q u ir e ... S T A D IU M (A Jin k ilw & n ÿ OPENNIGHTSTIL P.M. 10 f r a n d o r s h o p p in g c e n te r SUN. TIL P.M. 7 S -t-r -e -t-c -h S tr ip e s IN NEW G e rte x* LIGHT CONTROL PANTIES G ertex olefin fiber and nylon for light, inch -erasin g g a rte r panties and b riefs. Won’t pull, snag, run o r lose shape. And the strip e s stay snappy bright . . . because G ertex fiber just refused to fade! Choose in gala red, aqua, pink o r navy s trip e s , with w hite, o r all-w hite. Sizes sm all, m edium , larg e. BRIEFSAND LONGLEGGARTERPANTIE PETTI PANTS $ 1 .5 9 *G ertex is G erfil C orpora­ cowrw tion’s reg istered tra d e ­ m ark for its texturized olefin fiber. e£> little flat that EASTLANSING "flits” in style YANKEESTADIUM Y ou'll find it e a sy to ta k e to th e new ta s te of RIPE OLIVE, th e lively-though $1 0 Just a distancefrom Short d a rk s h a d e in s u m m e r s u its by M a d iso n a ire. I t's th e n a tu ra l s h a d e for Y o u ’ll fly c a su a l-c lo c k ‘ round-the- in style when theCampus 'th e n a tu ra l s h o u ld e r s e t yo u ’re w earin g these pan ­ th e b u s in e s s o r p le a s u re cake h eeled sm a rtie s. c o lo r ta ilo re d p e rfec tly C h oose them in red o r bone by V arsity-T ow n. C Ç 5 0 calf. Y o u ’ll lo v e’em ! H. Kositchek E. GRANDRIVER &Bros. ★USEYANKEE’S Lansihg 113*115 No« W ashington A ve shop to Ç p.m. monday, thursday, friday CHARGEPLAN h MILEEASTOFHAGADORN /