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University of Montana ScholarWorks at University of Montana Associated Students of the University of Montana Montana Kaimin, 1898-present (ASUM)

11-5-1965 Montana Kaimin, November 5, 1965 Associated Students of University of Montana

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Recommended Citation Associated Students of University of Montana, "Montana Kaimin, November 5, 1965" (1965). Montana Kaimin, 1898-present. 4204. https://scholarworks.umt.edu/studentnewspaper/4204

This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the Associated Students of the University of Montana (ASUM) at ScholarWorks at University of Montana. It has been accepted for inclusion in Montana Kaimin, 1898-present by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks at University of Montana. For more information, please contact [email protected]. I MONTANA K AIM IN University of Montana AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER Friday, Nov. 5, 1965 Missoula, Montana Yol. 68, No. 22 Slated May 19-21 Montana Prep MUN Expects 50 Schools Fifty high schools are expected will be discussed and resolutions to participate in the Montana passed using UN procedures. Each Model United Nations at UM May delegation will attempt to realisti­ 19-21. cally represent the views of their The program will be sponsored assigned country. by the University MUN delega­ The meetings will be conducted tion with the support of ASUM during Interscholastics, with each and the history and political sci­ school sending a delegation of five ence departments. Central Board students. Sessions of the General approved the project and subse­ Assembly, Security Council, Poli­ quently a budget of $1,300 last tical and Security Committee, Spe­ m onth. cial Political Committee, Social The MUN College program of­ Humanitarian and Cultural Com­ fers an opportunity for students mittee and Economic and Finan­ to acquire knowledge in interna­ cial Committee will be held. tional affairs and the workings of the United Nations. UM is one of more than 100 western colleges and universities sending delega­ U.S. Olympic tions to meetings each year. UM will represent New Zealand at the MUN in San Francisco next Exec Swells spring. The Montana MUN will be pat­ terned after the college organiza­ tion with the following objectives: Luge Hopes • To inform Montana high Montana may have its own school students of the basic Olympic team. workings of the United Na­ The executive director of the tions. U.S. Olympic Committee, Lyman • To recruit top caliber high school students to the Uni­ Bingam, told a Montana AAU of­ ficial, Dave- Rivenes, it is quite versity and present a view of the academic activities of probable that the entire U.S. Luge team for the 1968 Olympics will UM. • To a c tiv a te an interest come from Montana. A luge is a one or two-man —K aim in photo by R andy K night among Montanans in world affairs and the role of the racing sled. The first luge run in BOTTOMS UP—Starting from the bottom up, the ASUM President John Ross may or may not reveal the Western Hemisphere has been weekend of the Grizzly-Bobcat annual clash prom- ASUM Secretary Lynne Morrow’s art work to stu- UN. • To further an understanding completed at Lolo Hot Springs. ises to be an exciting one. Pending the outcome dents and others attending the game, As of Nov. 3, UM has the only of the game tomorrow afternoon in Bozeman, of the effectiveness of the UN in solving international prob­ known luge club in the United lem s. States. Winter Quarter Each high school will represent The club’s oficers are: presi­ a member nation of the UN. Dur­ dent, Bob Schoenwald; vice presi­ Otto’s Overstatement Preregistration ing the school year, they will dent, Art Villemure; secretary, study this country’s international Sylvia White, and treasurer, Bob Rescheduled policy. At mock meetings, topics K elly. Fails to R uin'B unny5 Preregistration packets will not be available until Nov. 12 be­ By GENE ENRICO cause of a delay in the printing of class schedules. Packets were 16 Pages Today Kaimin Movie Reviewer to have been available Nov. 10- • “Bunny Lake Is Missing,” review by Gene Enrico, page 1. Otto Preminger has overdone it again. But this time even 16. • Former Kaimin Editor Wilbur Wood on Viet Nam, page 2. his unfortunate habit of overstatement has not ruined Bunny The revised schedule is: • Editorial Brickbats by Behan, page 3. Lake is Missing. The film’s success is partly due to a surpris­ Nov. 12—8 a.m .-12:30 p.m ., G - • Conrad, page 3. H; 12:30 p.m.-5 pjn., J-L. • Sports, pages 4, 5, 6. ing and shocking plot in which a four-year-old girl is kid­ N ov. 15— 8 a.m .-12:30 p.m ., M - • “Sportlight” by Kaimin Sports Editor Bill Schwanke, page 4. naped from a young American couple who have recently N; 12:30 p.m.-5 pjn., O-R. • Society News by Columnist Mary Braida, page 7. moved to England. But is. Bunny really kidnaped or is she Nov. 16—8 a.m.-12:30 p.m., S-T; • Fribbish on the Protesters and their Parents, page 8. 12:30 p.m.-5 p.m., U-W . • “The Protesters,” introducing cartoonist Lorretta Lynde, page 9. merely her mother’s imaginary child playmate. Bunny Lake Nov. 17—8 a.m.-12:30 p.m., A- • Todd Brandoff Interviews Back Porchers, page 10. reaches its psychotic climax after several incredible shifts of C; 12:30 p.m.-5 p.m., D-F. • Rocky Mountaineers Feature by Mark Miller, page 13. suspicion. Completed packets will be ac­ • F eiffer, p ag e 14. cepted Nov. 17-Dec. 3. • Pfeiffer, on the Toronto Teach In, page 15. The film boasts some outstanding acting in spite of Carol • Hemlines Rising—yet, page 16. Lynley (the other Harlow). Keir Dullea is just as weird as he was in . He is also just as convincing. Sir Toole Says UM Laurence Oliver uses a subtle yet masterful sense of humor Manuscript File UM May Offer Professor Lester to save his potentially dull part as a Scotland Yard inspector. Is Not Complete Addresses Seattle Although director Preminger has tried to overload his Intern Course K . Ross Toole of the UM Luncheon Nov. 8 scare-gun (he explores such bizarre settings as the basement history faculty told Friends of the A program of summer jobs for UM graduate students and law John Lester, UM professor of of a doll hospital and the furnace room of a people hospital), Library that the UM must acquire music and district representative a more extensive manuscript col­ students is currently being or­ his weapon backfires when he adds too many startling char­ ganized by two UM seniors. for the Metropolitan Opera Na­ lection before excelling in ad­ tional Council Auditions, will acters. Even though relegated to minor roles, Clive Reville, John Ross, ASUM president, vanced work on the history of the speak at a luncheon in Seattle, and Lee Simmons, member of the Noel Coward, and Martita Hunt are show stealers as the in­ American West. N ov. 8. He said that too often the old President's Council on the State spector’s helper, the landlord who sings and reads poetry on The luncheon, given by the letters, ledgers, diaries, and dusty of the University, spoke recently Northwestern Auditions Board, BBC., and the crazy retired school mistress in the attic. old papers that come out of attics to the UM Council of Fifty. They will honor Mrs. Fredrick K. Wey­ and barns are overlooked and that presented ideas t/o organize- an ad ­ erhaeuser, Honorary President of these documents could contribute ministrative intern summer train­ the National Council, and Ron Student Injured much information about the past. ing program. The Council raised Bottcher, Northwest Regional Au­ Bear Paws Toole said, “Belatedly, we begin more than $500 to begin the pro­ ditions Winner in 1960. In Chemistry Lab now to collect for the University, gram . Mr. Bottcher is a member of Choose Head Henry Boyce Hilling, Jr., a jun­ having recognized that original Ross said about 20 jobs will be work requires original material available for next summer. The the Metropolitan Opera Company Bob Trerise, Helena, was elected ior from Billings is expected to and that advanced studies cannot next step he and Simmons will do and is a former UM student. He vice president of Bear Paws at recover from acid burns with only be satisfactorily based on second­ is to compile a complete list of performed for the Missoula Civic this week’s meeting. a slight loss of vision, the Health ary material.” eligible students and present this Symphony last year. The former vice president, Gene Service reported today. study to the Council of Fifty at Presser, was made president to re­ their next meeting. place Gary Curtis frho withdrew The accident occurred Tuesday from school last Monday. Presser when Hilling was participating in Forecast Cloudy Alaskan Slides has served as acting president for an organic chemistry lab experi­ Party cloudy weather will again the past week. “We had to get ment. He was carrying a flask prevail today with showers of Sen. Metcalf to Speak Set Tuesday Night Homecoming taken care of before containing sulfuric acid. The rub­ either snow or rain. Much of the Sen. Lee Metcalf, D-Mont., will A program of slides of Alaska’s we elected officers,” he said. ber stopper was released and back same can be expected over the discuss the accomplishments of Yukon Territory will be featured Bear Paws will coach the Spurs pressure caused the acid to erupt weekend. Weekend temperatures the 89th Congress today at 2:30 at the monthly meeting of Rocky in their powder-puff football game into his eyes. will range a little below the sea­ pjn. in the Music Recital Hall. Mountaineers Tuesday. in Bozeman tomorrow and will Hilling is the son of Henry sonal average. A high of 50 de­ The Senator's appearance is spon­ The local hiking and climbing also sell refreshments on the train Boyce Hilling Sr., Yellowstone grees this afternoon and a low in sored by the UM Young Demo­ club will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the to and from Bozeman. County legislator. the low 30’s is expected. crats. geology building. Why I May Soon Move to New Zealand By WILBUR H. WOOD young man.” And yes, Miss wised up to the fact that the kind a parade permit), probably fu- for the people of the United State Former Kalinin Editor Thompson, I have looked at our of victory he would have won in tilely, to protest past and prob­ That hatred will even be inherit Algeria would have been no vic­ ably future genocide—in Ausch­ So the Mfssoulian has gotten in­ country “with the eyes of an out­ by generations of American bo; tory at all). It comes to the same witz, in — yes — Stalin’s Ukraine, to the act, too, publishing letters sider”—as you recommend in your and girls fifty, seventy-five, on thing: keeping the poor man dowh in V ietnam . . . anytim e, any­ from servicemen in Viet Nam with letter. I have not seen what you hundred, yes, two-hundred yea —down in the mines, down in the where, futilely, futilely, “because lines in them like, “There are too have seen, however, for you write fro m now .” rice paddies, wherever. it makes them feel so good” to be many good guys getting killed ov­ that during a summer in Mexico Or, try D. H. Lawrence ( America a protector of freedom? pelted by rotten eggs and Hells er here for them to be shooting off you “saw the United States as a “Studies in Classic America country envied for our wealth anH When we continue to champion Angels. (You see, they’re actu­ Literature”), 1923: “The delibe their mouths like they are." (I all over the globe—in the hal­ quote this from a letter signed by prominence in world position, but ally red-masochist bastards!) ate consciousness of America also admired for our protection of lowed name of Anti-Communism Red Bastards fair and smooth-spoken, and ti Linda Thompson in the Oct. 22 —the most reactionary, totalitar­ world freedom.” Are they martyr-heros? Hell no. under-consciousness so devilis Kaimin.) I resist the impulse to ian, militaristic regimes extant in They are dirty red (-masochist- “Destroy! destroy! destroy!” hur call the widespread publication of I don’t know what part of Mexi­ the world? (Case in point: in the beatnik - atheist - communist - th e under-consciousness. “LO’ such letters a “conspiracy by the co you spent the summer in, baby, first few weeks of the Dominican perverted-promiscuous) bastards. and produce! Love and produce Establishment” (some of m y but somebody must have been put­ Republic “crisis” our support of friends over in—dare I say it? ting you on, bad. The Mexico I en­ Draft them, that’s the solution. cackles the upper consciousnei General Wessin y Wessin, the most Draft them one, and all. But —Berkeley no longer resist that countered, plus much of the South hated man in the country; case in And the world hears only ti first, one question, Mr. Clark: impulse). 1 resist that impulse, American, African, Asian and point: Haiti’s “papa doc;” case in Love-and-Produce cackle. Ref us why don’t you enlist? Why aren’t but I swear that every damn news­ even “Western” worlds, hates our point: South Vietnam’s General to hear the hum of destructk you over there? It’s your war, paper in the land has jumped into guts and fears our Marines and our Nguyen Cao Ky, who when he first underneath. Until such time as man. (By the way, appropos of the act, has dug up and dutifully missiles as forces of oppression, rose to his position was quoted as will have to hear.” published Letters from Our Boys not freedom. Granted, some of this saying that if he had any hero in nothing except your comment that Or, Norman Mailer, 1965 agai Over There Fighting for Freedom is envy, downright envy by the history it was Hitler!) “it’s too late for Tibet”: it was “We are a conservative, property against Communism. The San poor guy for the rich guy. (Your Hitler was Anti-Communist, but “too late for Tibet” about a cen­ loving nation obsessed with tl Francisco and Oakland papers soldier-in-Viet would say envy of that did not help Denmark, Po­ tury before the communists took passion to destroy other natior have been doing it for months, the poor-bad guy for the rich- land, Czechoslovakia, Norway, over China; and in the 1930s, p ro p erty .” coupling these plaintive letters good guy, maybe; one hesitates to France. Hirohito was Anti-Com­ when asked by Great Britain if The world hears America’s hu with snide remarks about “bearded equate goodness with riches, but it munist, but that did not help it wouldn’t be sporting to allow of destruction now. Vietnam hea and long-haired pacifists.” seems that most Americans sub­ Southeast Asia. Mussolini was free elections in Tibet, the U.S.— it. The mothers and children i On October 19 Senator Wayne consciously — and neo-Calvinisti- Anti-Communist, but that did not the U.S.!—said no, said that Tibet the village of Cam Ne—burnt Morse warned about all this: “I cally—make such an equation.) help Ethiopia. (My great-uncle had been under Chinese suzerain­ by the Marines in retaliation f< expect that in the weeks ahead the American Imperialism saw the Italians line up Ethiopian ty for years. Chinese soldiers, Mr. sn ip er fire—h e a r it no lo nger; th< nation will be treated to a vast But some of it is more than men and castrate them.) Clark, occupied Tibet’s high pla­ are dead. public-relations campaign that will envy. Some of it is justified re­ Oh well. None of this ranting teau before Mao Tse Tung’s fath­ One wishes he could hear it i seek to create the impression that sentment about imperialism. Neo­ will disabuse anyone of his or her er was a gleam in Mao Tse Tung’s longer. But one does not wishj anyone who questions what is be­ colonialism. Six per cent of the long-cherished myths about Amer­ grandfather’s eyes. Now, to com­ become dead in order not to hei ing done in Viet Nam is a draft world’s population (that’s us) ica’s Good Intentions, about Cold plete today’s history lesson: can it. Perhaps if one marches lor evader or is the tool or dupe of owns or controls sixty per cent of War Reality, about those “red bas­ you name any country in which enough the sound of his feet c Communists, or trying to further the world’s natural resources. tards” (I borrow the. last term there are Chinese Communist sol­ the pavement will drown out tl Communist objectives.” Morse said Much of the persistent Yanqui-go- from Edmund Clark, business diers today? Try it. Find one.) hum ... or, as e.e. cummings mig] he expects to hear more “about home hate that Americans refuse graduate, who used it in a letter Senator Wayne Morse, 1965: suggest, “listen: there’s a hell < dissent at home having a demoral­ to face boils down to this: Ameri­ in the Oct. 22 Kaimin). Besides, “We shall win one military vic­ a good universe next door; lei izing effect” on soldiers serving in ca—under the name of Standard America is making too much tory after another; we shall de­ go.” Viet Nam. “This argument,” Morse Oil, United Fruit, Anaconda Cop­ money fighting this war. You think stroy cities, industrial installations, The title of this missive is “W1 said, “has nothing to do with the per—has gouged out and milked I am kidding? Try reading some and nuclear installations; we shall I May Soon Move to New Zei rightness or wrongness or success dry the “underdeveloped nations,” of these “Inside Wall Street” col­ k ill b y th e m illions. . . . T h at land, Where the Radiation Wi or failure of a policy, but is only has paid coolie wages to the local umns that note how well the course of action will lay a foun­ Drift Sometime Probably, Bi supposed to shut off comment.” hired help, and has raked- off all stocks will do so long as we keep dation of intense hatred by Asians Later Not Sooner.” Thompson Insulting the profits. bombing—but not too much. In ' In the same way, using the same Damn right we’re affluent. So is other words, a limited war—not rationale and tactics, Hitler shut Europe. So is Russia. While the total war—is a spark for our Cold TASTEE FREEZE off comment in Germany in the rest of the world keeps having War economy. 1930s. To suggest, Miss Thompson, babies and keeps getting poorer Commies Creeping that I have no right to protest and poorer. And keeps trying to Lockheed is not being hurt by what I believe to be a dirty war, stage social-economic reform — this war. Meanwhile—this is for an immoral war, an obscene war revolution, if you will. And keeps you, Edmund Clark, business grad­ is a- suggestion that is undemocra­ getting Marine- bayonets thrust uate—the commies assuredly are tic, repugnant, insulting. into its (yellow- or brown-col­ creeping over the softball field at ored) face. Berkeley . . . they are scaling the Or, to quote e. e. cummings: walls of that other “citadel of com­ “There is some s. I will not eat.” Or, as in Hungary, Russian tanks m u n ism ” in M adison . . . th ey a re In fact, there is a lot of s. I will rammed down its throat. Or, as in oozing out of the plaster and wood­ not eat. Yes, Miss Thompson, that Algeria, French bombers cramp­ Deluxe Hamburger______-±M:______30c work in the hallways of the De­ must define me as “an angry ing the skies (until DeGaulle partment of State. How many did Highway 93 and South Avenue Phone 549-1394 you see yesterday? Was it 43? or 48? or perhaps 87? in the Berkeley Republic — I mean University of Pacifist’s Sacrifice Futile Dominican—er, oh anyway, every­ Death, connected with the distant Viet Nam war, was one knows that the way to defy SOUTHSIDE CHEVRON brought shockingly close to home Tuesday. Another casualty pseudo - intellectuals who protest the war (anyone who protests the can be credited to the Viet Nam endeavor, this one the death war is a pseudo-intellectual; Bert­ of a pacifist protester, Norman R. Morrison, who doused him­ rand Russell, Hans Morgenthau, ALL MINOR REPAIR WORK self with gasoline and’ ignited himself outside the Pentagon Jean Lecoutre protest the war; HIGH-GRADE GASOLINE ergo, they are pseudo-intellectu­ gates in Washington. als) is to draft them! (Draft Mario Morrison’s friends claim he was a gentle, sensible man, but Savio; he’s for free speech; ergo, “ W eT ake Better Care of Y our Car99 extremely religious. He had, for years, deducted $5 from his he’s a commie.) yearly income tax statement, insisting that the money be used Draft them dirty red bastards South Higgins and South Ave. Phone 549-9759 to fight them other dirty red by the United Nations High Commission for Refugees. bastards! What a unique solution What will this sensational suicide mean? Will it end the to the Cold War! Why hasn’t any­ war? Will it turn U.S. foreign policy about 180 degrees? Will one else thought of it? That way, the all-American boys will not it prevent the killing of one less American in Viet Nam? Will have to soil their index fingers Suit and Sport Coat Special his name be long rememberd as that of a martyr for peace? pushing those greasy buttons that The most logical answer to all these questions is no. His discharge napalm upon jungle vil­ lages. That way, we’ll have only death will do very little in the direction he intended. More red bastards (anyone who is red likely, his intent will backfire. is a bastard, Q.EJD.) fighting red Fearfully, we may see in the future a rash of fiery suicides bastards—and they’ll kill each other off! And all the fine, red- similar to the deaths of the monks in Saigon. However, there blooded—pardon me, blue-blooded will be no ocean and second continent between the American —American boys (and girls) will citizen and the suicide. It may happen in New York, Atlanta, b e left! Chicago, Los Angeles, Spokane. The closer to home, the more Surely this is the most ingen­ ious solution to the Problem of unbelievable. International Communism since— Hopefully, almost frantically, we pray that Americans will oh, since McCarthy. Just find see that a reoccurrence of this ultraistic event will do nothing enough red bastards to draft! (This should be relatively easy: merely but dismay the public to a regrettable display of futility. go to Berkeley and Madison, where For, as is well known, the first shock hurts the worst. There­ already at least 52—or is is it 67? after the economic principle of the law of diminishing returns —commies are shouting “Hail Mao!” in their attempt to drown takes action. The next flaming suicide may be shocking too, out the voices of the other 27— but the third, the fourth, the fifth and the sixth? who are hollering “Hail Sholo- We may soon become as blase about an American flaming kov!” [he just won the Nobel suicide as we are about the mass slaughter on the nation’s Prize for literature for having criticized the last Russian Nobel highways any weekend of the year. Prize winner Boris Pasternak].) Let us take the death of Norman Morrison for what it is, the “Dare I forget Stalin and the death of one, and only one, American who believed that a NKVD?—and on and on. . . clacks Edmund Clark, business suicide outside the Pentagon gates might change the world. graduate. No, nor do you “dare to It was his supreme sacrifice, but it wasn‘t good enough. To eat a peach,” Mr. Clark; nor drink reach the goals and ideas they seek, men must live and work fluoridated water; nor take Pope for what they believe. Only one man’s death has seriously Paul’s peace plea seriously. Meanwhile, the red bastards will affected the world, and he lived 1,965 years ago. behan probably march (if they can get

S — MONTANA KAIMIN * ★ Friday, Nov. 5. 1965 Policy on Letters to the Editor Editorial Brickbats Letters to the editor should generally be no longer than 400 words, pref­ erably typed and triple spaced, with the writer's full name, major, address Behan and phone number listed. They should be brought to the Kaimin office in Room 206 of the Journalism Building by 2 p.m. the day before publication or mailed to the editor in care of the Kaimin. • Springing up in the last week son “test” case bear close obser­ on in various campus nooks and r so is a court case that could vation. crannies. We might suggest the Letters must be within the limits of libel and obscenity and should Sve an enormous effect on scores • While we’re on the local lev­ Bear Paws take heed and, (when amount to more than a series of name calling. The editor reserves the right f University students living off el, all future homecoming float they return from selling mix on to edit or reject any letter. ampus. The Missoula City attor- chairman pay heed: “How To Win the Bozeman train) change the ey has recently filed a case The Sweepstakes Trophy”—pur­ sign on Highway 10, east of Mis­ gainst Mrs. Virginia Anderson, chase the TNT’s rock band, bor­ soula. It still reads, “Cross over 01 Hastings Ave., charging her row the Candle Bar funriture, get the bridge and visit Montana State rith running a boarding house in lots of whiskey and coke, put the University.” zone “A” residential area. whole works on a semi-trailer, • And speaking of the eastern Mrs. Anderson lives in an area smile and Presto, instant first Cow Palace, this is the year of MONTANA KAIMIN ear the campus, „ that, according place. the Big School Spirit. We ob­ a Dean Cogswell, contains about • We apologize to the Good viously have the team to do it, "Expressing 67 Years of Editorial Freedom” 00 University students housed in Guys. Not for anything we said, and as the train tickets sell, it rivate homes, all subject to the of course, but perhaps for some looks as if we have the support Dave Rorvik______E ditor one “A” regulation. This rule things we left unsaid. Namely, too, so wouldn't it be great to Jo e W ard______Mng. Editor tates that only one-family dwell- two of the other Missoula AM sta­ clobber Bozeman? They’ve had K aralee Stewart______B us. M gr. igs are allowed in the area. tions, both of which feature an it com ing. B ill Schwanke_____ S ports E d ito r1 Mrs. Anderson contends that atrocious programming of wall- Tom Behan------.News Editor Lnce the University cannot pro- to-wall commercials. Todd Brandoff____ Photographer ide housing for all its students As for the University station, Students DiscUss P rof. E. B. Dugan______A dvi» liey must live where they can, we plead for some listenable pro­ T he name Kaimin is derived from the original Sallsh Indian word amely in private homes near the gramming. Let’s get away from Zoning Dilemma and means "something written" or "a message am pus. the strictly long hair format. Stu­ To the Kaimin: by the Associate dents want programs and discus­ utilizes the Kaimm xor practice courses, butDut assumes no responsibilityresponan— and —_ <_—- Mrs. Anderson will appear in Did you know you don’t have clses no control over policyI 9 9 9 |_ orcontent. content. ASUM ASUM publications publications are are responslb.. responsible to •olice court on Nov. 18th. Mon- sions on contemporary music, pro­ to go to Viet Nam to have a Publications Board, a c committeeommittee of Central Board. Represented for national grams and ideas. advertising by National Advertising' Service, New York, Chicago, Boston, Los lay, Nov. 8, the Missoula City “cause”? It’s like this: Angeles, San Francisco. Entered second-class matter at Missoula, Montana. ’ouncil is scheduled to discuss In the meantime, everybody Few students do their best Subscription ter petition which asks for a turn to KNBR, San Francisco, studying from a park bench- much ariance decree for private homes channel 68. Comes in great after less say their best sleeping, what tear the University. A Central dark. with winter coming and snow and ENTERTAINING LINE H EA T W AVE Joard committee will also attend • The Grizzly Growlers are similar problems that^ make for The Marx brothers were the It has been found that opening he Council meeting. pushing the U of M title over the rusty typewriters and 'damp feet. grandsons of a man who was at the door of a refrigerator raises The proceedings of the Ander­ old MSU lable, which still lingers And apparently a lot of us are one time the leading magician of the temperature from one to three facing exactly this sad dilemma G erm any. degrees. if the City of Missoula fathers have their way. These gentlemen have decided the students must go from all homes in the residential area sur­ rounding the University. One homeowner has already been charged with sheltering these dreadful persons known as stu­ dents (US, mind you) in the same house with her family. This is called a zoning violation and puts us in the same classification as though we were grocery stores or filling stations. There’s not a great deal we can do to save our happy foster homes. But we can try — and we can attend the City Council meet­ ing Monday night, Nov. 8, and show the powers of Missoula that it matters where we live. If the zoning ordinance isn’t changed, perhaps we can ask for immedi­ ate distribution of park benches and the establishment of refugee centers. There will be close to a thou­ sand of us involved if a mass evic­ tion is forced. Can you imagine the impact if we all showed up Many Have Already Given at the Council meeting in the Fire H all? LEE SCHOEN Sr., Geology major L A R R Y FR ED R IC K TONIGHT Graduate Student, Art

CANADIANS TO STAY Dance to the Music of WASHINGTON (AP)—The La­ bor Department has extended the period in which 2,532 Canadian woodsmen may work in New Eng­ The House of Fine Diamonds land forests from Nov. 1 through FLORENCE HOTEL BUILDING next March 31. Most of the Ca­ nadians are employed in Maine woods.

3 — 6 — 9 TURKEY BOWL PAYOFF—1 Turkey for Each 6 Entries ENTRY FEE-41.75 (Includes Bowling)

Men’s and HANDICAP % OF 220 Women’s Divisions Bowl Any Time Enter as Often as Lanes Are Available You Wish Mojo’s Mark IV No Limit to Number of 9-12 p.m.—Yellowstone Room NOV. 2 TO NOV. 22 Times You May Win 50c Per Person HELP FINANCE ACTIVITIES OF THE U OF M Treasure State Bowling Center CHEERLEADERS AND POMPON GIRLS Sponsored by ASUM Traditions Board HIGHWAY 93 SOUTH PHONE 549-4060

Friday, Nov. 5, 1965 i r k MONTANA KAIMIN — 3 Tips, Cats in Bozeman Sportlight Game Tomorrow by By GENE SPEELMAN Davidson is looking for the Bob­ Clemens at ends, Jerry Salois an Kaimin Sports Reporter cats to use the air again this year. Wayne Becker at tackles, Floy Bill Schwanke Toss out the record books. Don’t They have revamped their offense Joramo and Dennis Meyer i try to speculate. It’s Grizzly-Bob­ by moving end Gary Richards to guards, Ron Aukamp at cente cat time once again. quarterback and three-year letter- Steiner at quarterback, Connell As many as 10,000 fans are ex­ man quarterback Ray Foley to and Roger Seeley at tailback an Keep Your Pants On, John pected to crowd into 9,000 seat Richards’ end position. wingback, and either Petty < capacity Gatton Field stadium at Last week against North Dakota Molloy at fullback. Let’s hope ASUM President John Ross doesn’t have to drop Bozeman tomorrow afternoon at Richards tossed 37 times, complet­ For Montana State, probable ol his drawers tomorrow in Bozeman! 1:30 when the University of Mon­ ing 16. fensive s ta r te r s are Foley an Of course, this is not the main reason the Grizzlies hope to tana and Montana State University Two years ago at Bozeman, MSU Bob Stephen at ends, Tom Mar: resume their 68-year-old football dominated the game with 321 yards nan and Cliff Hysell at tackle hand a defeat to the arch rival Montana State Bobcats. Much riv alry . on the ground to 122 for the Griz­ Clark Smith and Kent Border i greater treasures are at stake than a pair of trousers belonging The UM Grizzlies will be seek­ zlies. Passing was not a determin­ guards, Richards at quarterbacl to the Cow College student body president. ing to even their season mark at ing factor for either team. Don Hass and Dan Hodge at hall In the first place, the Silvertips hope to end a two-game 4-4 and clinch at least a tie for Montana may have the punch to backs, and Hank Urza at fullbacl second place in the Big Sky Con­ end the Bobcats’ nine-year domi­ The Grizzly defensive 11 wi Bobcat winning streak which has seen the Bobcats walk away ference. nation of the classic. In the last include Greg Hanson and Joe Fis with 18-3 and 30-6 victories in 1963 and 1964. The Bobcats are looking for win nine years, the Grizzlies have la, ends; Walt Miller and Jim Sal managed to win only two—in 1960, Although Montana holds a decided 42-17-5 edge in the over­ 10-6, and in 1962, 36-19. all series dating back to 1897, it is difficult indeed to forget The Bobcat ground defense will the fact that the Cats have dominated the series in the past have to contain Montana’s two 10 years, winning seven of the last 10 meetings. The last Grizzly speedy tailbacks, senior Paul Con­ nelly and sophomore Willie Jones. victory was a 36-19 romp in 1962 led by the late Terry Dillon. Connelly has a 5.1-yard average The Bobcats very definitely have something to point for, per carry in 97 tries, and Jones- since the Moo U boys have lost their last five games, including has 6.6 yards per carry in 38 runs. Jones is the Grizzlies’ ace punt teams that the Grizzlies have defeated, namely Weber State and kickoff returner, with 18 and Idaho State. yards per runback in 18 returns Montana State is without a doubt headed toward its worst and 7.9 yards per punt runback. season since 1952, when they sported a 2-5 record under Coach He is also the Grizzly scoring lead­ er with five touchdowns for 30 Tony Storti. points. The Cats, if they lose to Montana tomorrow, will have to Quarterback Ed Steiner is sec­ face up to a possible 2-8 season, since their chances of beating ond with three touchdowns and 18 points. Idaho and San Jose State are very slim. Also to be respected are Mon­ The Grizzlies, on the other hand, may turn up their first WARREN HILL tana’s two fullbacks, senior Larry winning season since 1949, when they turned in a 5-4 record Petty and sophomore Don Molloy. number one in the Big Sky after Both have made key gains during vo, tackles; Jim Neilson, middi for Coach Ted Shipkey. Of course, the Tips will face at least two setbacks. They are also hop­ past contests. guard; Wayne Harrington an one more tough opponent one week from tomorrow when they ing to end a five-game losing Steiner ran effectively on option Mike Smith, linebackers; Warre tangle with the Western Michigan University Broncos in Kala­ streak . rollouts against Pacific last week­ Hill and Gary Smith, halfback; All Grizzly starters are in good end. The Tips came out on top of Larry Huggins and Doug McDor mazoo. condition and “up” for the big one. Pacific, 13-7. aid, safeties. If the Grizzlies win their final three games, they will con­ The Bobcats are also reported Despite their record, the Bob­ The Bobcat defensive lineup wi clude a 6-4 season, which, considering the opposition they have healthy and undiscouraged despite cats are to be respected. Statisti­ include ends George Schoonmakc faced this season (Idaho, Utah State, Utah) will be an excellent their 2-5 season record. cally, the Cats beat North Dakota and Earl Hanson, tackles Dav Head Bobcat Coach Jim Sween­ last weekend although they lost Simpson and Howie Hahn, guard record. ey, who has a 2-0 record against the game 21-12. Mickey Mathews and Wayne Pm Of course, no one is counting on the Tips to run up a score the Silvertips, considers the game The Sioux made their yardage dom, linebackers Bob Senden an anywhere close to the 79-0 margin they posted in 1904, but on very even. His counterpart, David­ count while the Bobcats fumbled Gary Carle, sidebacks Ben Vaugh son, considers Grizzly chances to at key moments. Sweeney praised and Marv Tiller, and safety Bo the other hand, no one is expecting a 40-6 licking like the Cats be better than the past two years. his defense after the game. G iven. handed Montana in 1959. Last year the Cats ran up 236 Montana holds an all-time lead F o r th e G rizzlies, B eck er is tl] Still greater stakes are involved than possession of the Mon­ y a rd s on th e g round to 161 fo r of 42-17 in the series over the Bob­ kickoff and extra point man, an UM. They passed for another 198 cats. There have been five ties. Allen is the punting specialist. tana Treasure Chest traveling trophy. With a win, Montana yards while the Grizzlies had none Offensively the Grizzlies will The two teams are nearly ba] could sew up undisputed claim on second place in the Big Sky through the air. start Terry Bergren and Roger anced in the weight department. Conference. This would be Montana’s highest finish in a con­ ference for many years. Montana’s best finish in nine seasons as a member of the Skyline Conference was sixth place, which was accomplished three times. GRAND OPENING The Bobcats, in. contrast, could finish in last place if they lost to the hungry Grizzlies tomorrow. Montana State won the Merle Norman Cosmetic Studio Big Sky last year with a 3-0 mark, but right now is dwelling in the cellar at 0-2. For those of you who are dissatisfied with a possible second Jackie Lustgraaf cordially invites you to the place standing, just remember that the Idaho Vandals began conference play this season. GRAND OPENING CELEBRATION Friday ’til 9 and All Day Saturday Aquatic Club Needs Members November 5 and 6 “Women swimmers are needed The club meets in the University to join Aquatics Club,*’ according pool Tuesday night from 7 to 8:30' to Cherie Beete, Aquatics Club to condition for competition in in­ VALUABLE DOOR PRIZES 125 W. MAIN— 543-3611 m anager. tercollegiate sw im m in g m eets The club, a division of Women’s scheduled for January and Febru­ Recreation Association, provides ary. Synchronized swimming is the opportunity for competitive practiced Tuesday from 8:30 to and synchronized swimming. Lat­ 9:30 p.m . er in the year, clinics for stroke The swimmers also may practice and diving instruction and water Monday, Wednesday and Thurs­ CARDINAL SERVICE, INC. sports will be added to the pro­ day evenings from 7 to 9 in re­ gram . served lanes of the pool. • OPEN 24 HOURS Alan Shirley • DOUBLE CARDINAL STAMPS ON TUESDAYS AND FRIDAYS save you 2c per gallon PROFESSIONAL PHOTOGRAPHY • LOW, LOW PRICES on gasoline, oil, Specializing in and car accessories Natural Color • A.P.T. (Added Personal Touch) — FOR APPOINTMENT CALL 9-3468 — Cardinal Gas — None Finer 825 South Higgins Avenue Corner Brooks and Burlington Mike Foote, Mgr.

* — MONTANA KAIMIN i r k Friday, N ov. 5. 1965 Cubs Chase Second Win Today The football season will end for terback, Karl Fiske at tailback, the Montana Freshmen today at Dave Vallance at wingback and Pocatello, Idaho as the Cubs play Claude Boiteau at fullback. the Idaho State University fresh- Defensively, Coach Whitie Campbell will have Jon Cates and The Cubs will be seeking their Ron Madeen at ends, Doug Shep­ second win in four starts. herd and Mike LaSalle at tackles, The Cubs defeated Northern Tom Connolly at middle guard, Montana College at Havre in their Jim Wysel and Mike Maxson at season opener 40-20, and then linebackers, and Rick Strauss, dropped two contests to freshman George Axlund, Gudith and Val­ teams from Montana State Uni­ lance in the backfield. versity and Idaho University by equally lopsided scores. In the only UM home game, the WRA Volleyball MSU Bobkittens were victorious 43-19. Last week the Idaho Van­ MONDAY dal Babes won 30-8 behind the 4:20 p.m. passing of Woody Deckard. Brantly West I vs. Knowles III Montana will use two units. Corbin 3rd vs. Sigma Kappa Offensively, probable starters YESTERDAY’S RESULTS are Jim Kenyon and Larry Gudith at ends, Don Blair and Ed Mialki Delta Gamma over Alpha Omi- at tackles, Herb White and Mike cron P i Grunow at guards, Rick Sparks Knowles III over Sigma Kappa WHITIE CAMPBELL at center, John Vaccarelli at quar­ Turner I over Brantly West II Cougars Called Cardiac Kids by Scribes PULLMAN, W ash. ( A P )— No one mentioned the possibility At times WSU seemed more in­ Washington State’s football record of victory over the three Big Ten tent on battling the clock than the against the Big Ten might not be teams on the Washington State other football team. Iowa met de­ so brilliant if the games had been schedule. feat with 35 seconds left, Minne­ a few seconds shorter and the But after all three—Iowa, Min­ sota with barely two minutes re­ sophomore - laden Cougars had nesota and Indiana—bit the dust maining and Indiana after time been told they were playing over of their home fields in frantic, ra n out. their heads. last-second finishes, they started “This team finds new ways to Coach Bert Clark’s WSU team calling the Cougars the Cardiac amaze me each week,” Clark said. had 16 sophomores among the first K ids. “They come up with mature per­ offensive and defensive units at WSU owns a 6-1 record head­ formances you would not believe the beginning of the season. West ing into Saturday’s game with from a club with so many sopho­ Coast sportswriters picked the Oregon and the Cougars will be mores and juniors.” And they’re Cougars to finish in the Pacific trying for their first five-game in key positions—in the offense Athletic Conference cellar. winning streak in 33 years. and defensive backfields. Clark won’t talk about hopes for HOT FOR AN INTERCEPTION—Gary Smith, 5-10, 163-pound a Rose Bowl bid as the PAC rep­ sophomore from Pittsburgh, Pa., is one of three underclassmen resentative, but it isn’t difficult to starting in the Montana defensive secondary this season. The Sid Class Plans Expanded see he is hoping. And Saturday’s hustling back is much tougher than his size would indicate, and Oregon game is crucial if the Cou­ will give the Montana State Bobcats nothing but trouble tomor- The capacity of this year’s ski go to the Women’s Center on the classes has been greatly expanded day of preregistration and pay gars are to be considered. by plans to offer instruction on their lab fee of $20. The fee cov­ WSU plays fewer PAC games two different days, Mavis Lorenz, ers instruction, transportation and than other teams — only three— physical education instructor said tow s. and must win all of them to hope Sandy Comparable to Three yesterday. Requirements for students who to be in contention with UCLA In former years, ski classes were wish to enroll are the lab fee, and Southern California. only one day, and those students equipment consisting of skis, boots, The Cougars figure their three who'registered late or who could bindings and poles, and a free af­ Big Ten conquests entitle them Of Baseball’s Greatest Lefties not work the class into their ternoon either on Thursday or Fri­ to a share of the Big Ten title, and NEW YORK (AP) — Is Sandy Koufax is in front of the other schedule were turned away. Trans­ day. they began PAC competition last Koufax the greatest left-handed three in career earned run aver­ portation facilities to Snow Bowl Students who do not wish to week with a 10-8 victory over Ore­ pitcher of all time? age — 2.93 to Hubbell’s 2.98, also limited the number' of stu­ buy equipment may rent it from gon State. The Los Angeles Dodger star, Grove’s 3.06 and Spahn’s 3.09. dents per class. several of the sporting goods stores T*he final conference game will selected as the Cy Young Award The Dodger fireballer already Miss Lorenz urges students who in Missoula and the ski shop at be against Washington at Seattle winner for an unprecedented sec­ has tied Grove in career shutouts wish to participate in the class to S now Bowl. Nov. 20. ond time this week, undoubtedly with 35. Hubbell had 36 but Spahn is in a class with Carl Hubbell, is well ahead with 63. Warren Spahn and Lefty Grove— Here’s the way the four great Got something to sell—a message to tell. Let the Mighty generally regarded as the finest southpaws compare in the impor­ Midget work for you with Kaimin Want-Ads. southpaws of the modern era. tant categories: Probably no other lefty has Koufax—11 seasons, 356 games, achieved more success than has 2,002 innings pitched, 138 w on, 78 Koufax during the past five base­ lost, .639 winning percentage; 732 ball seasons. No one has pitched runs, 651 earned runs, 2,079 strike­ more spectacularly, with his rec­ outs, 740 bases on balls, 2.93 ord-shattering four no-hitters, in­ earned run average; 35 shutouts. Mighty Midget's Ad-O-Gram cluding last season’s perfect game H ubbell— 16 seasons, 535 gam es, against the Chicago Cubs, his sin­ 3,591 innings pitched, 253 w on, 154 gle-season record of 382 strike­ lost, .622 w inning percentage; 1,- outs, and numerous other electrify­ 380 runs, 1,188 earn ed ru n s, 1,677 Just write your ad, only one word per space, below. Fill ing performances. strikeouts, 725 bases on balls, 2.98 The 29-year-old Koufax has earned run average; 36 shutouts. in coupon at bottom of Ad-O-Gram. Fold the Ad-O-Gram, JHE MIGHTY I MIDGET won 20 or more games only twice Grove — 17 seasons, 616 games, and bring it to the Kaimin business office or mail it to in 11 National League seasons. 3,940 innings pitched, 300 w on, 140 Spahn, the former Braves’ stal­ lost, .682 w inning percentage; 1,- the Mighty Midget in care of the Kaimin. wart recently released by San 594 runs, 1,399 earn ed runs, 2,266 Francisco at the age of 44, did it a strikeouts, 1,187 bases on balls, Write One Word in Each Square COST COLUMN AT RIGHT record 13 times, including seven 3.06 earned run average; 35 shut­ times in his first 11 big league sea- outs. Spahn — 21 seasons, 750 games, O N E LINE 1 d a y ______— 20# 'y Grove, who pitched for Phila­ 5,246 innings pitched, 363 won, 245 2 days ------30# delphia and Boston in the Ameri­ lost, .597 w inning percentage; 2,- 3 days ______40# can League, posted 20 or more 014 runs, 1,799 earn ed runs, 2,584 victories eight times, while Hub- strikeouts, 1,434 bases on balls, TW O LINES 1 d a y ------40# .bell, former Meal Ticket for the 3.09 earned run average; 63 shut­ 2 days ------00# New York Giants, did it five times. outs. 3 days ------80# 4 days ------$1.00 THREE LINES 1 d a y ------60# 2 days ------90# 3 days ____ $1.30 New and Used Cycles 4 days ------$1J0 FO U R LINES 1 d a y ------80# 2 days ------$1.20 3 days ____ $1.00 4 days ------$3.00

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S ta rtin g ____ Street Address Available at the NEW MISSOULA SPORT CENTER Highway 10 West Phone 543-8277 City and State J Friday, Nov. 5, 1965 ★ ★ MONTANA KAIMIN — 5 Lopez Tosses in Towel CHICAGO (AP) — A1 Lopez, decide to return as manager. that the White Sox were a cinch 57, quit as manager of the Chicago “We always have been ready to to take the flag. White Sox for family reasons and use Al’s great baseball knowhow Instead, the Pale Hose got spotty simultaneously was named a club because even before he signed his performances from key players vice president and consultant two-year contract A1 was doubt­ and again wound up second—this T hursday. ful about continuing as manager,” time seven games behind the Min­ The long-rumored move came said Allyn. nesota Twins. at a hastily-summoned news con­ Allyn said no new contract was The senior, a former National ference at which Lopez’ new job necessary for Lopez’ new job. Lo­ League iron-man catcher, pro­ was defined as assistant to Gener­ pez reportedly was earning more duced two pennant winners—the al Manager Ed Short. than $40,000 annually as manager. 1954 Indians and the Successor to Lopez, who was un­ Lopez, wearing a bandage on 1959 W hite Sox. der managerial contract through his right hand injured when he Lopez, who still holds the major 1966, probably will be named be­ tipped over a golf cart, said he league record for games caught,. fore baseball’s winter meetings made his decision to quit Wednes­ 1,918, n ev er finished o ut of th e within a few weeks in Florida, day afternoon and telephoned first division as a baseball man­ Short said. Short of his intention. ager. Lopez succeeded Marty Marion Sox owner Arthur C. Allyn, who “My wife was hoping I’d spend as W hite Sox m an ag er in 1957. presided at the news conference, more time at home,” said Lopez, said Lopez would be Short’s “right “and I was even reluctant to ac­ hand man,” in charge of selection, cept my present contract two years development and acquisition of ago feeling that I just was away Faculty Bowling players. from my family too much.” T eam W L T otal It was reported by AP baseball Lopez said his new job will de­ Bus. Office 2 13 5 18 expert Joe Reichler at the recent pend on assignment from Short. •Chem - Pharm 10 8 15 World Series that Lopez would “I’ll be headquartered at Tampa Phy. Ed. 11 7 14 step out after nine White Sox sea­ and might be gone a week here or Bus. Office 1 10 8 14 sons with Mayo Smith, former a week there, whenever I’m need­ •Journalism 10% 7% 13% manager of the Philadelphia Phils ed to assess talent or do any trou­ E ducation 10% 7% 13% and Cincinnati Reds, being a ble shooting,” he said. ‘Lib rary 9 9 13 prime candidate to succeed him. S h o rt said as m any as 18 o r 20 iBus. Ad. 9 9 11 Short and Lopez, to be based at candidates were under preliminary •Air Science 9 9 11 his Tampa, Fla., home in his new consideration for the managerial Botany-Forestry 8 10 11 front office job, discussed a new job. “We can’t name any names at •Physical Plant 8 10 10 manager even before Allyn an­ this time,” he said. High Individual Game — Bolle, nounced Lopez had quit as pilot. Lopez reportedly was disap­ Botany - Forestry, 213; Murphy, “We kicked a few names around, pointed over failure of the White Business Office 2, 210; Diettert, but we have a lot of screening to Sox to produce a pennant last sea­ Botany-Forestry > 206. do before we settle on Al’s succes­ son after the collapse of the New High Individual Series — Bolle, sor,” said Short. York Yankees. Botany - Forestry, 562; Diettert, Lopez had the stock reply “he’s Lopez, in his 15-year American Botany - Forestry, 557; Murphy, a good man” when such names as League managerial regime, had •Business Office 2, 549. Smith and White Sox coaches made a career out of finishing sec­ High Team Game — Business Charlie Metro and Tony Cuccinello ond to the Yankees. Office 2, 883; Chem-Pharm, 863; were mentioned as his successor. In 1964, the White Sox were Physical Education, 852. BMOD—That means big man on defense, and that’s exactly what Allyn scoffed at the suggestion edged by the Yankees for the pen­ High Team Series — Physical Jim Neilson, 6-0, 212-pound junior from Shelby, is for the Mon­ that Lopez was kicked upstairs and nant by only one game. Lopez Education, 2461; Physical Plant, tana Grizzlies at middle guard. Jim started every game on de­ handed an honorary title to keep felt certain the Yanks would wav­ 2412; Chem-Pharm and Business fense for Montana last year, and has done the same this season. him available in case he should er, as they indeed did in 1965, and O ffice 2, 2394. Soccer Bruins To Meet Zags In Home Match 6-TRANSISTOR The University of Montana Bruin soccer team will meet Gon- zaga tomorrow at 1 p.m. on the POCKET RADIO practice field north of Domblas- er Stadium. The Bruins defeated the soccer team from Montana State, 2-0 here Sunday. M ontana co n tro lle d p lay through most of the second half. The Bruins’ first goal was scored from five yards out by Emmanuel Ogbaje. Ten minutes later, Orest Szwabinsky scored on a penalty shot. • SHOP BOTH LOCATIONS • Bela Balogh also scored for Montana, but his point was nulli­ fied by an offside penalty. BIG SAYINGS DURING OUR A return match is scheduled for Nov. 21 in Bozem an. BIGGEST SALES EVENT OF THE YEAR! VOLLEYBALL ROSTERS DUE WOMEN’S Rosters for intramural volley­ ball are due no later than 4 p.m. TWO-TONE ZIP-FRONT to d ay in Room 112 of th e W om­ en’s Center, according to Intra­ mural Director Ed Chinske. WOMEN’S SWEAT SHIRTS Intramural swimming rosters will be due Wednesday at 4 p.m. STRETCH PAINTS • HEAVY COTTON FLEECE!! Pepperell stretch ASSORTED COLORS!! fabric!! Assorted colors! Nicely tailored! The College Plan for The College Man

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« — MONTANA KAIMIN irk Friday, N ot. 5, 1965 Society News Grads Can Get Program. Receives $69,300 SAE Initiates Little Sisters M.A. Credit, Math Men Get NSF Grant B y M ARY BRAIDA man majoring in liberal arts and Society Columnist Mr. Everett is also a freshman ma­ Job Training joring in education. A Thanksgiv­ For Secondary Ed Institute Ten women were initiated into Internship with a government Little Sisters of Minerva, an ing wedding is planned. agency in Alabama, Kentucky or The Department of Mathematics D r. R ein h ard t selected th e 10 auxiliary to Sigma Alpha Epsilon has received a National Science participants from 250 applicants. fraternity. The women who are Tennessee and graduate courses in Miss Linda Clark, a speech path­ public administration at universi­ Foundation grant of $69,300 an It is hoped that a sizable propor­ picked by the fraternity brothers, ology and audiology major from ties in those states are offered un­ Academic Institute in Mathematics tion of the 1966-67 students will act as hostesses to the fraternity. Big Timber, became engaged to der a Southern Regional Training for secondary school teachers, Dr. be Montana teachers. Chosen were Miss Charlene Howe, Mr. Bill Gannon, a graduate of Prograril. William M. Myers, department Delta Gamma; Miss Ann Murdo, When asked about the program, Montana State University. He is Students who will receive their chairman, has announced. Delta Gamma; Miss Katie Mack, Dr. Reinhardt said, “It has only from Helena and is employed by bachelor’s degree in June are eligi­ This is the second year the de­ been in effect two months now, Kappa Kappa Gamma; Miss Diane the State Vocational Rehabilitation ble. Each fellowship has a total partment has received the federal but we are reasonably pleased.” DuBois, Kappa Alpha Theta; Miss Center. She is a Sigma Kappa and grant. Dr. Howard E. Reinhardt, Betsy Brown, Kappa Alpha Theta; value of $3,300. The stipend is $2,- “It is a use of federal money he is a Delta Sigma Phi. Miss 500 and the remainder of the grant director of this year’s program, which is very advantageous.” Miss Effie Forsythe, Alpha Phi; Clark is UM Panhellenic president. consists of fees and tuition at the will also direct the 1966-67 insti­ “The program is to improve their Miss Patcee Bradford, Knowles tute. ability as high school teachers by Hall; Miss Linda Luoma, Alpha three universities. All fraternities and sororities The three-month internship, be­ The institute is designed to en­ increasing their knowledge of Omicron Pi; Miss Vicki Feiden, El­ are urged to report their social ginning this June, is served with roll 10 secondary mathematics mathematics.” rod Hall and Miss Jan Wellman, functions to M ary B raida, E x t.-544, agencies such as the TVA, Mar­ teachers for a year of graduate Dr. Reinhardt also pointed out Elrod Hall. by Tuesday of each week. shall Space Flight Center or a De­ courses in preparation for the that although the institute is gov­ master of arts degree. Persons ap­ ernment-supported, the only stip­ . . . But love me for love’s sake, partment of State agency. The plying must have had at least ulation is that the courses be pri­ that evermore thou mays’t love on g ra d u a te public administration courses will be taken during the three years of experience in teach­ marily concerned with subject through love’s eternity. This is the 1966-67 academic year. ing mathematics on a high school matter rather than the improve­ feeling experienced by couples level. ment of teaching methods. who have recently become engaged Fellows will be awarded a cer­ tificate in public administration at This year students are from on the University of Montana cam­ Florida, Washington, Colorado, pus. the end of 12 months training. Af­ Four organizations will send ter completing a thesis and ex­ Oregon, California, Nevada, representatives to the UM Place­ and South Dakota. During a recent visit by Mr. aminations, they are eligible for ment Center next week to con­ master’s degrees. Gary Wilcox, Miss Carol Boggio duct interviews for seniors. For the became engaged to him. Both are Applications and information Dullenty Speaks from Billings. Miss Boggio is a Monday, Security First Nation­ can be obtained from Coleman B. al Bank of Los A ngeles, w ill Forester’s Ball student at the University of Mon­ R ansone, e d u catio n director, At Forum Today tana majoring in chemistry. She is seek persons for jobs as manage­ Southern Regional Training Pro­ also a member of Angel Flight. ment trainees, industrial engi­ gram in Public Administration, Jim Dullenty, former regional mid Mr. Wilcox will be attending the neers, commercial loan trainees Drawer I, University of Alabama. chairman of Young Americans for University winter quarter and will and trust trainees. The represen­ Application deadline is March 1, Freedom, will speak at Montana Casual Wear major in political science. tative will be interviewing sen­ 1966. Forum at noon today in Territo­ iors majoring in accounting, gen­ ria l Room 5. Miss Michele Berry, a speech eral business, finance, manage­ A graduate student in history, pathology and hearing major from ment, marketing, economics, Bus Ad Council Selects Dullenty held the YAF position Pendleton* Chelam, Wash., became pinned to geography and mathematics. until April, 1965. His topic will be Mr. Ken Small, a business admin­ Also on Monday, the U.S. Im­ Sample As New Head “Conservative Ideas, 1965.” Dul­ istration major from Spokane, migration & Naturalization Serv­ Alex Sample, Jr. was elected lenty is the former editor of the Button-down] Wash. Miss Berry is a Sigma Kap­ ice, Helena, will interview sen­ chairman of the Business Advisory Hellgate Herald, weekly Missoula pa attending the University of iors in law, general business, man­ Council of the UM Business new spaper. Montana and Mr. Small is a Tau agement and forestry. The Service School. He is president of Conrad 1495 Kappa Epsilon attending the Uni­ has a position open for an immi­ National Bank of Kalispell. versity of Washington. Both are gration patrol inspector. The advisory council is made seniors. Tuesday and Wednesday the up of outstanding businessmen Skin the Cats! Portland office of the Central In­ who meet bi-annually with the Miss Judy Blaskovich became telligence Agency will interview business faculty. Sample replaces engaged to Mr. Bill Everett. Both persons to fill positions in admin­ Charles Anderson, Great Falls, as U of M are from Anaconda. She is a fresh- istration, management, research chairman of the council. and analysis. The representative Assorted Beverages will interview seniors "majoring in To Go CALLING V accounting, economics, secretarial MILT’S science, French,- German, Russian, TODAY “BEST PIE IN TOWN” WE ARE OPEN Montana Forum, 12 noon, Ter­ Spanish, geology, history, jour­ rito ria l Room 5. nalism, political science, geogra­ SUNDAY SPECIAL ON ALL HOLIDAYS SATURDAY phy, mathematics and physics, BAKED HAM OLSON’S HOURS: Miss UM meeting, cancelled. (m asters). Sunday-Thursday SUNDAY Also, Wednesday, the Seattle $1.25 accounting firm of Price, Water- • Soup • Salad 8:00 a.m. - 10:00 pm . Baha’i Fireside, 7:30 p.m., 405 house & Co. will interview senior • D inner Friday and Saturday East Pine, call 540-8507 for free accounting majors. • Dessert • Beverage 8:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. Students wanting additional in­ transportation. - i Ecumenical Night, C am pus formation, or wishing to make ap­ Milt’s Cafe Olson’s Grocery pointments should call the Place­ Christian Council, dinner and film, 833 South Higgins 2105 South Higgins ment Center, Ext. 425, LA 133. 5 pm., Lutheran Center. Skating Club, 7:30 p.m., election > C O L * * of officers, Committee Rooms. MONDAY AWS, 4:15 pm., Turner Hall SHOP SKAGGS FOR Recreation Room. Graduate Student Symposium, 7:30 p m ., L A 11. MONEY SAYING BUYS A slim, trim traditional shirt— 1 CONCERNING V CORDLESS with placket front, back pleat, • Jo Ann Kappel of Sidney BLOUSE TREE hanger loop. 100% virgin wool - and Hugh William Corn of Su­ TYPING TABLE in plaids, checks, authentic perior, UM School of Business TOOTHBRUSH tartans. S-M-L-XL. students, were recently awarded 87< $350 scholarships from Waldorf- $3.99 Hoeroer Paper Products Company. $9.99 All Metal— BY DR. WEST All Steel Holds 6 Blouses MODERN BEAUTY SCHOOL PRESTONE TV TABLE 100 ENVELOPES ALWAYS VIRGIN WOOL I In the $1.59 $2.99 221 AVAILABLE AT Wilma Theater Building 1 Gallon Permanent Type All Metal Study Standard Size— Antifreeze Adjustable Reg. 39^ Value P hone 593-7722 SPRAY STARCH Popcorn Popper POPCORN N ew F a ll H a ir Style 491 $2.99 29£ f j a l i ® r » All Work by Large 22-oz. Can 3-Quart Electric 2 lb. Yellow

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Friday, Nov. 5, 1965 MONTANA KAIMIN — 7 * * News in Brief * * String Quartet Dear America By The Associated Press hoorn, a Harvard botanist who • PARIS — Charles de Gaulle made the discovery. Plays Sunday By VIRGINIA FRIBBISH announced last night he is con­ The findings “indicate that The Montana String Quartet Kaimin Columnist vinced he must continue to serve there was water and erosion then, will perform Sunday at 8:15 p.m. Presumably the future leaders of this nation are its young, France and therefore will run for even though we don’t know what in the Music Recital Hall. its students, its demonstrators. We are the thinking, doing a new seven-year term as presi­ the atmosphere was like,” Dr. Members of the quartet are Eu­ dent Dec. 5. Few doubt the peo­ Barghoorn said. “All we know is gene Andrie, violin; Gerald Doty, elements of your society. We believe and we act. Let us carry ple of France will give him a that the biological processes then violin; Eugene Weigel, viola; and placards; let us demand change. vote of confidence. were comparable to today." Florence Reynolds, cello. Change has been the goad of progress, of a reaching toward The president said his re-elec­ • BILLINGS — Rep. James F. The group will play composi­ tion would assure the future of Battin, R-Mont., predicted yes­ tions by Joseph Haydn, Anton humanism. We, the young men and women of America, are the French Republic. He warned terday the Republicans will make Webern and Maurice Ravel. your own consciences. What we are you have allowed and that if he were defeated the na­ some gains in Congress next The String Quartet, resident created. What we believe must be changed you have left un­ tion could “fall into a confusion year. faculty group in the University done. We are impatient, but the next decades are ours. even more disastrous than she has He said the election of John V. School of Fine Arts, has been known before.*' Lindsay as mayor of New York performing chamber music for Perhaps Uncle Sam has not given us all the information we • DALLAS, Tex. — The dis­ City and other Republican vic­ school, college and community need to make sound judgments. Perhaps the news media are trict attorney proposed yesterday tories across the nation “indicate audiences since 1955. not doing their jobs. Perhaps you have ignored your young that Jack Ruby’s death sentence the start of a GOP comeback." too long. Perhaps you should listen to us. If only some of the for killing President John F. Ken­ Battin voiced pleasure at Lind­ nedy’s assassin be reduced to a say's victory saying: elder statesmen had the zeal to match their own experience. prison term. This could mean “Some elements of the Repub­ KUFM To the youth I say: Never will we be heard unless we speak freedom in seven years. lican party have termed Lindsay up in a loud, orderly and intelligent fashion. Never will we • HOUSTON — A stroll in as much too liberal," Battin said. Schedule be heard unless we show reverence for the society we are trying space has been ruled out of the “But they must remember his dual flight plan for the action- first job is to serve the views of —News at Seven to influence and change. Use diplomacy. That means off with packed 14-day space spectacular the people in his own district." the shaggy beards, out of the tight, dirty jeans and scuffed of Gemini 7 and 6, space agency 8:00—M onday C oncert • WASHINGTON — House in­ 10:00—KUFM Special R eport sandals. Cut those doggy mops of hair. If we have something officials said yesterday. vestigators told about a 1958 con­ 10:05—New s Final TUESDAY to say, we must not hide behind childish facades. Space agency officals earlier vention of the Ku Klux Klan 7 p.m .—New s a t Seven this week confirmed they had con­ 7:18—O ver th e B ack Fence If we have something to say, something to criticize, we must where a proposal to burn schools 7:30—U niversity R eporter sidered having Gemini 6 pilot drove some members out of the 7 :4S—Tuesday Opera be ready to pitch right in with constructive solutions. If we Thomas Stafford leave the space­ 10:00—KUFM Special R eport hooded order. ):05—N ew s F inal want LBJ to pull us out of Viet Nam, we must suggest what craft he will share with Walter Philip Manuel suggested that a WEDNESDAY Schirra during a rendezvous ma­ a.—New s a t Seven might be done to ease world tensions, to suppress Communist proposal “to burn schools in the 7 :i8—Scope neuver with the Gemini 7 craft. event integration came to the 7:30—C ontem porary Piano Sonata aggression in Southeast Asia. 8:00—U niversity Col______• SAN FRANCISCO ~ Bri­ South" backfired. 8:30—BBC Science Magazine Let us stop building arguments with the blocks of our own tain's Princess Margaret said in “Isn't it true," he asked Georgia 9:00—Sibelius C entenary 10:00—KUFM Special R eport little worlds. We must not become the patsies for sour minority her first public appearance in the Klansman Robert L. Bing, “that lO:05—New s Final THURSDAY groups looking for the fertile, thinking, acting minds of youth. United States yesterday that she as a result of the proposal to 7 p.m.—New s a t S e \ _ has been “longing to come to this bum schools, some persons at this 7 :15—Shakespeare Festival We must learn to question and recognize our own motives. 9 :30—M asterw orks from Fran country for ages." meeting dropped out of the Klan?” 10:00—KUFM Special R eport “I'm so glad it’s become a • KEY WEST — The Mexican 10:05—New s 1 reality.” She said she was espe­ Marine Ministry officially said i.—New s a t Seven cially happy to begin her 20-day f:i5—Songs of France yesterday that 39 Cuban refu­ 1:30—Matter of Morals Brooks Street tour in San Francisco. gees drowned when their fishing 1KX)—Music by Don Gillis 1:30—Special of the Week • KANSAS CITY — Three bil­ boat broke up on reefs off the Conoco lion years ago—when this planet Y ucatan. 10:05—News F inal was about one-fourth as old as It said six survivors were found —BRAKE SERVICE now—there lived organisms so —four women, one man and a —TUNE UP small that 50,000 laid end-to-end child. GET YOUR CAR would be one inch long. Their The boat sailed from Cuba Oct. —WHEEL BALANCING discovery “proved that life must 25, apparently trying to reach PREPARED FOR have existed much further back Isla Mujeres, and sank Tuesday WINTER AT —GENERATOR REPAIR than any previous evidence has about 30 miles short of its destina­ shown," said Dr. Elso S. Barg- tion, the Ministry said. Gordon’s Union 76 510 Brooks Phone 9-9880 1020 Brooks 542-2851 CLASSIFIED ADS 1. LO ST AND FOUND DEAR MR. AND MRS. FORESTER: If you ever want to see your baby LOST: SILVER DRIP-FORMED RING. again, don’t go to the police. Signed Rew ard. Call 9-3358. Perry Mason.______22-lc SAUNA OF MISSOULA 4. IRO N IN G ATTENTION FORESTERS (blechk!) Women of Knowles Hall, not law stu­ Sauna is a ritual of cleansing through • , t . m r n i m L IRONING. 429 S outh 4th St. W. 9^ dents, tried and gave up an attempt to disburden that verminous moose- — head from UM.______22-lc perspiration relaxation through heat — W ANTED: ATTRACTIVE FRESHMAN stimulation via cold water. Tension dis­ EXPERT^ TYPPICL _ ELECTRIC type- GIRL to join new folk-singing groui writer. Phone 543-6818. 1-tfc C all M ike a t 9-5615. TYPING FINEST QUALITY. MSU R------appears and the skin is cleansed in a way business graduate. Electric typewriter. 19. WANTED TO BUY no ordinary bathing can accomplish. Phone 543-4894. * S s EJ j TYPING. FAST, ACCURATE; 549- MAGNUM DOUBLE-ACTION re- 6-tfc volver. Les Loble, ' " 1 o r 9-3253. 22-3c 8. HELP WANTED PART-TIME GIRL for office help. 21. FOR SALE Complete Relaxation Typing. Saturday nights and Sundays. Come to Grant’s at Tremper’s. 22-3c COMPLETE SKY DIVING equipment Dlus extra reserve and main canopies • f a 17. CLOTHING -pin container. See at 511 Mental and Physical Well-being H astings a fte r 7 p ji EXCELLENT ALTERATIONS and cam pus. 549- FOR SALE: DX-40 transm itter,. S 38c pairs. Three blocks i 3_tfc receiver. 850. Phone 3-' yif Physical Fitness STUDENT RATE 1964 FORD GALAXIE 500XL, 4-speed 18. MISCELLANEOUS stick, 390 engine pow er. O ne ow ner, RUMMAGE SALE a t 210 A lder Nov. 8,500 m iles. 620 S. 6th East, 549-6655. •fa Cleanliness and 6, Friday and Saturday. Faculty Only $1.25 Women’s Club. WOLLENSAK -TRACK stereo tape RUSSIAN TRANSLATIONS. All Gua£mteeJ9°' -7048. P . O. B ox 805 courses. 543-7578. Try It Today-You Won’t Be Sorry ECPMT GrlT ANft p,ck...-jg ^ jgtaj^Paperback t 9 a.m.-lO p.m. Public and Private Rooms 22. FOR RENT STUDENTS INTERESTED 1525 South Ave. West 549-3971 line Pilot career shouldsho ’J contact - Tom LARGE CLEAN BUILDING Eaton. 211 Craig Hall. 4-39c for rummage sales. Call 9-5885. 19-4nc

LIBERTY ► BOWLING CENTER 5 NEW LANES IIEIDELHAUS PIZZAS OPENING iKeiddhausl ^ SOON CHEESE __ 1.15 1.65 2.15 PEPPERONI 1.25 1.80 2.35 HAM ______1.40 1.90 2.40 MUSHROOM __ .. 1.40 1.90 2.40 Monday - Friday SAUSAGE ____ _ 1.45 2.00 2.50 5 p.m. -1 a.m. ANCHOVIE __ 1.35 1.85 2.35 3% GREEN PEPPERS & PEPPERONI___ 1.40 1.90 2.40 All Day CHOPPED ONIONS & PEPPERONI____ 1.40 1.90 2.40 Saturday - Sunday CHOPPED OLIVES & PEPPERONI_____ 1.40 1.90 2.40 SALAMI ______. 1.40 2.00 2.50 BEEF______1.35 1.80 2.35 HAM & MUSHROOM 1.55 2.10 2.60 SAUSAGE & MUSHROOM------1.55 2.10 2.60 1 TUNA F IS H ______1.50 1.90 2.40 SHRIMP ______1.75 2.25 3.00 PECIAL______1.85 2.40 3.15 HAMBURGERS * 4 AND SHAKES TO GO . Across Mmdison St. Bridfo -

__MONTANA KAIMIN irk Friday. Nov. 5, 1965 .. r T"'Tf. r"^ ------“j t BIG SKY REVIEW 1 NMNMMMMMMNMHMMMMMMNMNHMMNMMMMMMNI 1111,1 l,***IIN,^**,*'*******S********®*®®**®®^^ Die Protesters . . . Land-grant Colleges Meeting Problems Through Use o f Dynamic Innovations ★ ★ ★ * ★ ★ B y JIM WELLS Perhaps the most perplexing despite the growing complexity of Kaimin Reporter problem the colleges have faced is most campuses. how to create academic and living The University of California at American land-grant colleges space out of little room. The most and state universities are meeting Berkeley has instituted an experi­ common way today is the high- mental two-year education pro­ the challenges of increasing en­ rise building. The Upstate Medical rollments and expanding knowl­ gram involving 150 freshmen and Center in Syracuse, N.Y., has com­ five faculty members. The unit at edge with a new dynamism in pleted two ten-story student resi­ which innovation plays an impor­ Los Angeles has a new counselling dences. Ohio University has a new program for students who have not ta n t p art. nine-story co-educational dormi­ The changes from the name of chosen a major field. The Univer­ tory with swimming pool, library sity of Maryland has announced the University of Montana to the and special study and recreation creation of small experimental col­ the dedication of its administra­ rooms. The University of Okla­ tion, faculty and staff to the main­ leges are characteristic of the homa now has four 12-story hous­ higher education scene of the taining quality instructional pro­ ing units for single students and 1960s. grams and preserving student 312 new apartment units for mar­ identity. Institutions of higher learning ried students. “The Tower of Perhaps the most heartening have been burdened in recent Beauty,” a 20-story 400-occupant years by the tide of post-war dorm for women is being opened thing about the campus revolution babies who have reached college this year at the University of South in the computer age is the spread­ age. This tide, along with a new ing use of class-programming by C arolina. world of technology and morals machines. The University of Mon­ have forced colleges to stand back Building Sample tana, the University of and take stock of themselves. Tremendous building programs and Arizona State University are are in actual construction on many Challenges Met among those using the new meth­ Colleges have had to find new campuses or are in the planning ods of registration which excludes ways of teaching, new ways to ex­ stages on others. long lines before the beginning of pand facilities and new ways to The University of Oklahoma has each term . raise finances, but the cortex of a $1.4 million Fine Arts Center The business of higher education the problem is how to cope with with a 600-seat theater; a $2.8 mil­ is moving at a new, fast tempo in quantity without losing quality. lion Engineering Center and a $2.3 America. Land-grant colleges and The 97 member institutions of million botany and microbiology state universities are the media the National Association of State building. Oklahoma also has the which have given the United Universities and Land-Grant Col­ world’s largest universty-operated States the lead in education in the leges have met these challenges in arport with a new $440,000 aero­ past. From a glance over the pres­ a variety of ways. In a report re­ space engineering building. The ent scene, it looks as if they, will leased by the Office of Institu­ University of New Mexico has em­ though much more streamlined, tional Research for the National barked on its largest building pro­ will continue to do so. Association, the new items have gram which will include a new been capsulized. Graduate Research Building, a new library addition, a new con­ Forester's Ball cert hall, an 18-hole golf course, a new biology building, a new ba­ Girl Problems sic medical science building, a Col­ Weekend Coming Up lege of Business Administration FOR NEW AND Plague Fjare building and a chemistry building addition. USED CARS, SEE HELENA (AP)—-The Montana It is to be noted that the cited Tournament of Roses Association programs are just a representative Ron Jerome and its executive manager, Orvin sampling of the many varied B. Fjare, face a queen-sized prob­ building programs. KRAABEL CHEVROLET *-fW aft 1 goaM +o krsoui v%* lem. How many queens should the Most institutions of higher learn­ Montana float carry in the Tour­ ing are striving to achieve a mean­ 9-6444 H ighw ay 10 how did jhftM ^ + V v « nament of Roses Parade in Pasa­ ingful faculty-student relationship dena, Calif? Fjare says his office has been % q v > « » o c a A ■ H v « . y « . 'yattyouJ, flooded with requests from Mon­ tana girls who want to be in the ; u > M W v n q O vx W e w R P parade Jan. 1. Fjare also has been charged with discrimination 'j'Zjt J

Friday, Nov. 5. 1965 * * MONTANA KAIMIN — » Backgrounds of BPM Members Vary B y T O D D B R A N D O F F that he wants to go to New York, Minstrel Dolan Ellis; he owned the down. Three days later I was on original singers in the Back Pore Kaimin Photographer at least for a full year, “Just to see night club where I was playing at the road with the BPM.” M ajority. What’s it like to be on the road what it’s like.” the time. He said, “I was singing Miss Carey explained that the Crowley, from Holdenville, Okla for a solid month, doing a show in Ellen Wahlen, from Brooklyn, ryhthm and blues then but it Pravana Singers had been a small and a graduate biology major froi a different city every night? N.Y., said she had been a theater wasn’t selling so I started singing college group that sang folk mu­ Phillip’s University in Enid, Okla Bob Schott from Wichita, Kan., major at UCLA. “I’ve been with folk music and then I met Randy.” sic. “For my extra money I sang said he was recruited by Rand who is road manager for the Back the BPM for about two years,” she Vassey said he had been a po­ with a pro dance band.” She said Sparks, “Not specifically as Porch Majority singing group, said. “I got the job by answering litical economics major at Auburn she had studied drama for three member of the BPM. I started ai answered this question during an an audition notice for a girl singer. University in Auburn, Ala., before years. “In the future I’d like to use ranging songs for the Christy Min interview Friday evening. I’m the only one in the group that he started singing with the Back my drama background. There’s so strels before the Back Porch Ma got started in that way.” She also Porch Majority. many things I’d like to try.” jority was bom.” “Traveling like this you don’t Started on Pizzas get much time to go out, like for said that she was the only one in Disneyland Singer “Then Randy got this idea t the group that didn’t have a back­ Mike Clough said he studied a date. When you’re done with the Miss Carey said that her father start the Back Porch Majority ground in folk music. “Before this, theater at the University of Miami performance you sleep. Every was a church interior decorator. The two of us went around re my experience was in musical before he started with the Back night next month we’ll be in a “The reason I mention this,” she cruiting. Mike Clough came nex comedy,” Miss Wahlen said. Porch Majority. T ’ve been with different city.” the group now for two years, since said, “is that he was here in Mis­ There was just the three of us ai Schott said he was in the Air Miss Wahlen agreed that there soula recently. “In fact I just first.” wasn’t much time left over after it was started,” Clough said. “I Force stationed in California be­ was working in California two missed seeing him. He recently “Before Randy picked me up fore he began singing with the traveling between cities and pre­ finished doing the interior of St. had my own folk trio in Kansa paring for and doing a perform­ years ago and I happened into group. “I started working for the Randy’s club. For two years before Anthony’s Church in Missoula.” City, Mo. I guess I really made t home club (Ledbetter’s in Los An­ ance. “Last night we were in Han­ Denny Brooks, from Long Beach, switch—from biology to folk musii over, Ind., tomorrow we’ll be in that I was with Les Baxter’s Bal- geles) ^ I was working on lights ladiers. The group fell apart so I Calif., and a former speech, radio and the Back Porch Majority.” and sound. I was an electrician Great Falls and the night after and TV production student from that we’ll be in Emporia, Kan.” went into Randy’s and did a cou­ and recording technician,’* Schott ple of Hootenannys. I started Long Beach State College, said he said. Kin Vassey from Atlanta, Ga., working for Randy making pizzas. had been singing as a single at Typewriter Repair Theater Major said he had been with the group I was playing everything in the Disneyland before he was recruited for two years. “I was doing a sin­ meantime, rock and roll, jazz, for the Back Porch Majority. “I Shaver Repair “Then about a year ago I started gle act in Phoenix, for ex-Christy working for Randy Sparks and I Afro-Cuban, you know, Martin was working at the Coke Corner Photocopying went on the road with the BPM.” Denny type of music—that’s Afro- in Disneyland, Randy had met me before he started the Christry During the interview, Schott RAIN FOR SPAIN Cub an. When Randy started the Wes Stranahan’s was up on top of the South bleach­ MADRID, Spain (AP)—An end BPM, I went on the road with Minstrels. At that time he wanted e rs to the Field House directing to water restrictions in effect in th em .” me for that group, but I said no the spotlights as the Back Porch the Spanish capital since last May Karen Brian from Frankfurt, because I wanted to finish school Missoula Majority was performing on the 15 has been announced. Officials 111., an English major from Joliet first. Last year he approached me stage below. said recent heavy rains led to Junior College, said she had been for the Back Porch Majority and Typewriter Co. I said yes.” Brooks said that he still Schott said he planned to stay the restoration of normal 24-hour with the group since the start. 531 S. Higgins Phone 2-2022 with the Back Porch Majority but service. “Two years in February.” has a year of college to finish. Ex-Folk Singer Mike Crowley was one of the Miss Brian said she had been singing most of her life, “I was a folk singer and started working as a professional entertainer when SECURITY FIRST I was 19. I worked for two years, then I met Randy in Los Angeles. NATIONAL BANK I went to the coast and arrived on a Sunday afternoon. That same night I went to Ledbetter’s and sang in a hoot. Randy heard me and the next day I started re­ serving hearsing with the Back Porch Ma­ jority. The group was just being Southern California organized then.” Linda Carey from Vancouver, will have a representative Wash., was a music and drama on campus to interview on major at Clark College in Van­ couver. She said she had been with I . Monday, November 8 the group for one year. BEAT “MOO” U SPECIALS “I was in Vancouver singing with a small college group called R eversible T -S h irts (2 colors) ______$2.25 each Candidates will be selected from the Pravana Singers. Randy heard Converse Basketball Shoes (Hi- and Lo-Cuts) ...... $8.95 per pair both the Bachelor’s and Advanced about the group and came up to B ask etb alls, N ylon, Volt, K B 2 0 ______$5.95 each degree levels of Accounting, Busi­ see us. The next day he called me ness Administration, Economics, from L.A. and asked me to come Finance and other Business Ma­ jors. Liberal Arts degree candi­ dates with at least one year of Garbage Can Yields G unsm ith W ilson Sc Volt Accounting, as well as alumni with Three Little Bears Trophy Engraving Lassie Award Jackets a minimum of 1 year’s full-time Rod Sc Reel Repair General Classic Trophies banking experience, are also in­ YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK, vited to apply. Calif. (AP)—Taxi drivers coming Free Parking HOLIDAY VILLAGE Knelssl Sklis off shift in Yosemite Village heard a loud growilng near their office. Please make necessary arrangements They found a mother bear at your Placement Office standing menacingly near a large, open garbage container. The men drove her back into nearby tim­ ber and looked into the container. Two eyes stared back. COMEBACK The men placed a chair inside the garbage holder and backed BOOTS aw ay. RANDGo all out for warmth. Up to your ankles in pile piled high inside A brown bear cub crawled out, The Young Man tiger tan waxhide leather or sagebrush pigskin all resting on a in the Know followed by another cub and then knows “Dacron1 a third. The cubs ran into the cushion of crepe. Rand Shoes $12.95 to $20.95. Feels great, looks great timber, rejoined their lurking in his classic shawl- mother and disappeared into the collar tuxedo of 55% forest Sunday night. Dacron* polyester, 45% worsted wool. Wrinkles haven’t a chance. At fine stores everywhere. A quarter o f a *Du Pont’s registered trademark. billion dollars

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10 — MONTANA KAIMIN k k Friday, Nov. 5, 1965 Conservatives Met in Secret, Vews Reports CHICAGO (AP)—The Chicago >aily N ew s said W ednesday a roup of Republican conservatives let‘secretly in-Illinois this sum- ier. in an attempt to choose a ew leader of their faction in na- ional politics. - Sixteen persons attended the leeting in a farmhouse in north- rn Illinois, the newspaper said a a copyrighted story. All partici- ants, were said to be veterans f the successful draft-Goldwater lovement that began in similar ecrecy four years ago. All were sked to keep mum. The News said F. Clifton White, lew York political consultant who aasterminded former Sen. Barry Joldwater’s capture of the Repub- ican p a rty m achinery in 1964, ailed the August meeting. Just Happened By White told The Associated Press n New York that it was not a ilanned meeting, just a get-to­ gether of “ 10 o r 12 of u s w ho lappened to be in the area.” He aid no political decisions took dace and declined to name those iresent. The News, however, said in- ormed soruces said participants ncluded: Russ Walton, Los Altos, Calif., >oard member of the American KNUCKLE SANDWICH?—A plaster cast of a grizzly’s left forepaw Montana Cooperative Research Unit. The process involves making Conservative Union. is compared to the palm of John Seidensticker, zoology senior at plaster casts from the feet and jaws of tranquilized grizzlies. (Photo William A. Rusher, New York, the U’s Wildlife Research Department. This particular casting prac­ by Jane Stahl). mblisher of the National Review, i conservative magazine. tice is a new one, recently invented by John Craighead of the J. Gordon Hall of Michigan, a General Motors Corp. executive India Signs Agreement With Russia for Transmitter vho had an active role in the Group Aids Cong WHEN YOU GO TO 964 Goldwater campaign. It will join another 1,000 kilowatt Charles R. Barr, executive of From Campus transmitter bought from Yugo­ BOZEMAN TO Standard Oil Co. Indiana, active ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) — slavia which will be beamed for n a political education program WATCH THE or Chicago businessmen. The chairman of the Committee Indian broadcasts to Africa. to Aid the Vietnamese said Wednesday his group is selling Grizzlies Beat Viet Cong postage stamps and 28 VARIETIES OF lapel pins to raise money to sup­ CHICKEN - TO - GO the Bobcats REPLACEMENTS port the Communist effort in Viet 5 MINUTE SERVICE i TAKE SOME OF OUR Nam . FINE FOOD FOR . Stanley Nadel, 21, senior at SNACKS! For Flats and the. University of Michigan, said Colonel Sanders Dee-lishus Heels the college group has raised about Kentucky Fried Chicken i s p BROADWAY Last summer, Nadel said, he 1640 W. BROADWAY 549-5311 LLOYD’S SHOE personally delivered medical sup­ MARKET plies worth $100 to the Viet Cong. O pen W eekdays 11 a .m .-l p.m . N. End of Madison St. Bridge REPAIR He said the money was raised 4 p.m. - 12 Midnight Open Evenings Until 10 * 521 S. Higgins through contributions taken on Sat. and Sun.— 11 a.m . - 12 M idnight Wednesday Until 8:00 the university campus.

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Friday, Nov. 5, 1965 irk MONTANA KAIMIN — 11 FORESTERS’ BALL After 48 Years of Testing, the Foresters of the University of Montana Invite You to Their Most Famous Ball Friday NOVEMBER 12 & 13 Saturday Night Night 8-12 Midnight O LAWYER (Before Boondockers Day) ^ Ray Thrailkill’s Orchestra from Hamilton, Mont. (Live) Three Polkas Guaranteed Each Night * TUESDAY, NOY. 9 •fe Free Grub Tickets on Sale in Front of Lodge 7 p.m.—Beard Judging Contest •fa Free Refreshments (Open to the World!) PAUL WILL WALK AGAIN! Tjjy 400 Real Live Foresters Will Be Present * WEDNESDAY, NOY. 10 •fa Floor Show Delta Gamma Can-Can Girls BOONDOCKERS DAY Knowles Can-Can Girls Hanging of the Lawyer Lawyer Can-Can (Nice) Guys Smokejumpers Costume Contests (both nights) Helicopter Pickup Free Tickets to the Ball Air-dropped Photo Booth on the Oval Record This Night for Posterity Can-Can Girls Woodsmen-Woman Contests 400 Real Live Trees 1500 Dead Slabs * FRIDAY, NOV. 12 1000 Standing Poles Big Bawdy ■jif Tons of Sawdust Boisterous Booming Thousands of Pine Boughs Brawling Blissful Ball Real Live Log Chutes $3.50 Couple See-Neck Mountain * SATURDAY, NOV. 13 $3.50 Per Couple FORESTER’S DAY in Montana Plenty of Operating Room (by proclamation of the governor) ■jif No “Parking” Problems Open House—12 p.m.-4 p.m. Big •fa Extensive Exhibits and Bawdy Demonstrations Boisterous Booming ■jif Awards for Beard Contest Brawling at the Ball Blissful Ball $3.50 Couple

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IS — MONTANA KAIMIN irk Friday, Nov. 5, 1965 Mountaineers Stress Safety Storm in Southeast Asian War In Group Activity Jaunts Reported Blowing Both Ways By MARK MILLER sons who wish to join may do so Kaimin Reporter simply by attending meetings. KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia Similar aid is being supplied personnel for training in jungle Nature still exists; mountains The Mountaineers operate the (AP)—The storm over American by the Philippines whose foreign warfare. He recently welcomed Western Montana Search and Res­ secretary, Mauro Mendez, is remain unclimbed; deer still run military involvement in South Vietnamese Premier M arsh al cue Unit. This group was respon­ Viet Nam isn’t blowing just one known to feel that no action taken Nguyen Cao Ky. through the forest, and the Rocky by the United States in Viet Nam sible for recovering the body of way in Southeast Asia. The influential Straits Times, Mountaineers know it. The mem­ could be too strong. Neither Pres­ Christopher Jones, a University Along with gusts of criticism which does not hestitate to twit bers of the UM club like to be in ident Diosdado Macapagal nor his student who was killed in the against the United States, there the United States on other matters, the unspoiled wilderness and are Mission Range last spring in a chief opponent, Ferdinand Marcos, is a current of “Yankee, stay” sen­ has praised President Johnson’s willing to work to be there. climbing accident. has made Viet Nam an issue in tim ent. Viet Nam decisions. The idea is to get past the usual their campaigns for Nov. 9 presi­ The group places emphasis on Well springs of support for In neutralist Burma, which campgrounds and see nature as it the instruction necessary for the dential elections. American policy are Thailand, the shares a frontier with Communist really is. This is no place for sis­ prevention of accidents such as A reliable private poll recently Philippines, Malaysia and Laos, China, there has been criticism of sies. The feeling of being tired, showed that 76 per cent of the th a t one. whose governments and people U.S. policy — and also of North hungry and cold is not alien to Filipinos cheer for the Americans The club also publishes its own feel their future is closely linked Viet Nam’s refusal to negotiate a these people but the feeling of be­ in Viet Nam, with only a few of newsletter, The Mountain Ear. with the fate of South Viet Nam. peaceful settlement. ing self-reliant and close to crea­ This monthly publication covers the remaining 24 per cent actu­ One Malaysian observer cau­ B u rm ese condemnation of tion is a great compensation. Na­ activities of the club, trips, meet­ ally in opposition. tions: *If V iet N am goes Com ­ “power bloc” competition in Viet ture challenges and comforts the ings and news about individual munist, for us there may be no Malaysia’s Prime Minister Ab­ Rocky Mountaineers. Nam cuts two ways: members. Also there are tips on tom orrow .” dul Rahman is a vocal supporter of America’s policy. Laos has not let its official neu­ When winter comes, the Moun­ camping, hiking and cooking in The most strident opposition to taineers will put climbers on their the wilds. Safety and rescue pro­ Although elements in his gov­ tralist line get in the way of sup­ U.S. involvement has come from port for the United States. The skis and head for the snow filled cedures are given extensive cover­ Indonesia and Cambodia, which ernment would like to see Ma­ mountains. The snow may be as age. laysia take a more neutral stand government of Premier Prince have bonds with Communist China Souvanna Phouma has become in­ deep as 12 feet but people are few Many Majors and North Viet Nam. —in keeping with the country’s and nature is still beautiful. The club has about 40 members. efforts to win Afro-Asian friend­ creasingly aware of the role played Indonesian President Sukarno Although the majority of the ship—Rahman insists the United by North Viet Nam and Com­ Instructions Available has condemned what he ca\)s members are geology majors, stu­ States has no alternative but to munist China in stirring up La­ The only prerequisite for mem­ American “intervention and ag­ dents from other major fields, in­ otian civil strife. It’s acknowledged bership in the club is a sincere gression” in South Viet Nam. It fight. cluding philosophy and English, “It is clear that the Communists that American pressure on the interest in being in the mountans. remains to be seen whether the find a place in the Rocky Moun­ were the aggressors. It is wrong North Vietnamese has slackened Hikers, campers, spelunkers (cav­ recent crisis in Jakarta, with the to speak of American interven­ the Red war effort in Laos. ers) and rock climbers all find a taineers. solidifying of army power there, Reasons given for interest in the tion,” he says. The American-equipped Laotian place in this club. Persons who will mute Indonesa’s anti-U.S. out­ club are as divergent as the mem­ Rahman notes that Malaysia, air force raids the Ho Chi Minh wish to learn technical rock climb­ cry. ing can get instruction through the bers’ majors. Some members want while saddled with its own de­ trail, the jungle corridor in south­ organization. to climb an unconquered peak; Betting On China fense problems involving hostile ern Laos used by the North Viet­ Little change, if any, can be ex­ The advantages of all types of others are more interested in a Indonesia, is throwing open mili­ namese to funnel men and equip­ transcendental experience. Some pected in the attitude of Cambodia. tary centers to South Vietnamese ment to South Viet Nam. camping equipment—tents, sleep­ Its chief of state, Prince Norodom ing bags, cooking utensils and pre­ are interested in the physical makeup of the mountains; others Sihanouk, sees China as the event­ prepared foods—are frequent top­ ual victor. ics of discussion at Mountaineers are looking for mountain beauty. meetings on the second Tuesday The one thing that binds the Sihanouk is both scornful and of every month in Geology 207. members together is a deep inter­ angry toward the United States Slides of trips and safety proced­ est in nature. They may have dif­ and what he calls the “pretended N E W r u g g e d ures may also be discussed. Per. ferent reasons for this interest but government” in Saigon. He broke in the Rocky Mountaineers they relations with Washington last find their kind and an organiza­ May after accusing U.S.-Viet- ’ 6 6 e c o n o m y “Flattest Crew Cut tion which promotes the common namese forces of intruding into NEW PICKUP—redesigned from the ground up! Powerful interest. Cambodian territory—where the new 1300 ec engine, 4-speed stick, new alternator, In Town” Viet Cong are said to take refuge. torsion-bar stabilizer, big 6' bed, up to 2000 lb. payload. JUDGE DEMANDS SHIRTS Singapore, Southeast A s ia ’s More cab & load room. Cuts operating costs V&. Buy two! PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP)— newest independent state, has $1779 Black ■ Lumberjack shirts, sweaters and taken a somewhat less than warm open collars have their place, but line toward the American effort Bear not in Superior Court presided in Viet Nam. Its premier, Lee Ku­ over by Judge Joseph R. Weis- an Yew, is pessimistic about U.S. ability to sweep back the Com- berger. Barber Shop munst tide. He claims Americans 1411 S. H iggins He has warned lawyers that de­ fendants appearing before him know nothing about Southeast Dale Bagnell—Owner should wear jackets, shirts and Asia—“that’s why they are in a m ess.” ties. But in the Philippines, Thailand and Malaysia, official and popular opinion are running in favor of America’s presence in South Viet COLD STORAGE LOCKERS Nam and its air strikes against the Red North. BEEF— Cut and Wrapped Close to the Line Thailand’s Communist - hating PRODUCE— 3 Doz. Eggs______95c Foreign Minister Thanat Khoman GAME PROCESSING advocates “careful use of armed force” to prevent a Communist For the new DATSUN and Fine Used Cars and Trucks, takeover in Viet Nam and eventu­ see LARRY FLANAGAN—GREENFIELD MOTORS ally in all of Southeast Asia. Brooks Street Lockers A long border with Laos has put 230% Brooks Street Thailand close to the Indochina firing line. The feeling in Bangkok Campus Wear is that if Viet Nam falls, Laos will fall too, and Thailand also. Thanat Khoman believes that faced with American military 'M UNIVERSITY OF MONTANA |§ power, the Communists “are be­ ginning to feel that they cannot SWEATERS get what they want. There is no -= School of Fine Arts Department of Drama- s other way to stop aggression.” Although Thai military leaders say they need all their armed H Montana Masquers strength to meet threats develop­ ing along their own borders, Thai­ land has pitched in with some ac­ = present =s tive help for the American-Viet Nam effort, including use of air. THE MUSICAL COMEDY | j fields. 1 Little Mary Sunshine | Savon Drug JEANS Corner Higgins and Main Lee Leens i November 11-14 = Invites You Sta Press A Men’s and Women’s FOR A delightful musical satire on the ~ now all-but-forgotten operetta == Sunday Dinner In All Colors k TURKEY Slim Fits V UNIVERSITY THEATER ALL -k MASHED POTATOES Made 8:15 SEATS RESERVED k i Stretch R GRAVY Cords W Students $1.25 Box office open from k CRANBERRY SAUCE V 12 noon th e w eek of k VEGETABLES k. Blues General $1.75 production. k ROLL and COFFEE Californians = FOR INFORMATION, CALL 543-7241, EXT. 309 = Only 990

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Friday, Nov. 5, 1965 ★ ★ MONTANA KAIMIN — 13 Jules Feiffer

M I T . I NAPALM ( M T Q o n e LOVER? see. o h . H0IO . v e s !’ F in e ABSO- > McNAMARA, LUTELY THE NARUM PRICE­ LOVER" 1 LESS HAVeMT seenowe THAT BEFORE.

r r j flTOSETHFR nap THIS VERT ID A WAR i m l a ) T « e mohewt/ I S A M E S I 6 N ? LIKE THIS JUST HERE/ WHERE - make- . AMD TAKE THE oik \ McWAHAKA ELSE 6AM AlOOTief?: WITH HIS G l a s s e s THE 601/- ’ FIRE OWN? ROS/6 i/O l/l/E E0JMEMT SOT TO 6E T (IS RUSK w o m t o a r e AND „ mmws pouceSEE THE LAU6H5 ? BUNDY- 60/0(5 ID PBA36M6 ee furious! THEM OFF/

Midnight Messengers Active in Mississippi JACKSON, MISS. (AP) — The measure of desegregation. Political signed, “a local civic group.” It STARTS SUNDAY! midnight messengers of Mississippi leaders come in for special atten­ is similar in content to other noc­ have been unusually active lately. tion. turnal messages delivered in other “We are watching you, poli­ They’re the unknown persons areas at various intervals. ticians,” the letter says. “When this Most pamphlets and letters are The names and who slip through the night and era of the second reconstruction equally anonymous. leave mimeographed or printed has ended in victory for us, we Their effect is debatable. Often places didn’t matter, matter in mailboxes or on door­ will long remember your sorry, the tone is so vitriolic the reaction treacherous actions.” steps. tends to evoke sympathy for the only when! The Holmes County letter is The letters or crude newspapers targ et. deal almost entirely with racial in­ tegration and communism —- sub­ jects which stir passions in Missis­ sippi. FOX THEATRE- A furious letter appearing in Holmes .County advises Negros that “we are not going to be (Some b y anyone.” Severe action is threatened against whites who accept any

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J4 — MONTANA KAIMIN Friday. Nov. 5, 1965 Pfeiffer Discusses Toronto Teach-In By KAY MORTON said it is social change which calls America to a man being given a Saigon government, said Hanoi ever, NLF issued a message that Kaimin Associate Editor for social rather than private own­ blood transfusion in one arm (Al­ was committing aggression against they did not wish to participate in ership of the means of production. liance for Progress) and being South Viet Nam, just like the overt any program with the Saigon re­ EDITOR’S NOTE: E. W. Pfeif­ The Russians only support those bled from the other arm. He said aggressions of the North Koreans. gime. An American reporter who fer, associate professor on leave revolutions which call for this. for every one dollar invested by He claimed that 54,000 North Viet­ had recently talked with NLF rep­ from UM, attended the recent In­ U.S.S.R. foreign policy is based foreigners, $3.70 is being taken namese soldiers had crossed into resentatives in eastern Europe said ternational Teach-in from the upon the right of all countries to out. Mr. Lockward said Americans South Viet Nam. When Commu­ he felt they did not understand the University of Toronto, Canada. a free and independent life, he have been intervening in Latin nist aggression ceases the Saigon importance of the teach-in and as The teach-in was received at UM asserted. He said the U.S.S.R. has America since 1903, not to save the government will request all for­ long as the United States continues through a tele-lecture process. Mr. introduced a resolution in the people, but to preserve American eign troops to leave. its military operations against the Pfeiffer's impressions follow. United Nations calling upon all economic interests. Phuong Margain, secretary gen­ NLF and North Viet Nam, neither countries to refrain from inter­ Mr. Berle defended U.S. action eral of the Cambodian Cabinet, NLF or Hanoi will negotiate. Revolution and great power con­ fering in internal affairs of other and policy. He said the Alliance asserted that American interven­ The American position was de­ flict was the general topic for dis­ countries. for Progress is under attack by tion in Viet Nam has stopped any fended by Prof. Robert Scalapino cussion at a history-making, three- Second Session Communists just like the Marshall hope of social progress there and of the Department of Political Sci­ day international teach-in on the “Latin America, Revolution and Plan was attacked in Europe. He pointed to the instability of the ence, University of California, University of Toronto campus. Intervention” was chaired by the said the U.S. is paying above successive Saigon regimes. He said B erkeley. Meetings were conducted in a vast former Canadian ambassador to world copper prices to Chile to Cambodia is making progress be­ Judging from the speeches at arena which was filled with more Mexico and Brazil, W. Arthur Ir­ help the country build up and that cause it gets no foreign aid. the Toronto teach-in, the Johnson than 6,000 people who had come win and was enlivened by tense U.S. troops were needed to protect At this point, a representative of administration still has much to from all over the world. exchanges between Adolph Berle, the Dominican right of self-deter­ the National Liberation Front was do to convince the world of the The aim, according to sponsors, former State Department consult­ m ination. to have been the speaker. How­ rightness of its foreign policy. was “to establish a confrontation ant on Latin American affairs and Third Session on equal terms between the poli­ Dr. Cheddi Jagan, former premier Sir Patrick Gordon Walker, for­ cies and views which are shaping of British Guiana and Andres mer British foreign secretary, was our world today.” Lock ward, of the Social Christian chairman of the third session, The meeting was not a protest Party of the Dominican Republic. “Viet Nam, Revolution and Inter­ Your Music Headquarters meeting but a series of debates Mr. Jagan compared Latin vention.” and discussions. Ngu yen Doc, an official of the This Week Features Representatives of the govern­ ments of Cambodia, South Viet League In London NEW SUB JOINS FLEET Nam, U.S.S.R. and Britain partici­ NEW LONDON, Conn. (AP)— MANTOVANI OLE’ pated. It was disappointing that Seeks Dogsitters The Polaris-firing submarine Ben­ the United States and Red Chi­ LONDON (AP) — The Nation­ jamin Franklin has joined the nese governments and the National al Canine Defense League has Navy’s nuclear-powered fleet. Liberation Front of South Viet opened a drive to round-up dog- The 425-foot missile-launching JER EYE’S Nam refused to send representa­ sitters. submarine is the 30th of 41 pro­ We Give Gold Bond Stamps tives, although non-official Amer­ grammed by the Navy. icans did participate. Said a league spokesman: The first session was “Revolu­ “The demand for dog-sitters is tion and Ideological Conflict.” tremendous. We’ve decided to set Prof. Z. K. Brzezinski, director of up a national register. the Research for The Institute on “We’d like to see suitable dog- Now Through Saturday! WILMA Communist Affairs, Columbia Uni­ sitters in every city in the coun­ versity, called upon advanced in­ try- In the suburbs too, for that dustrial nations to unite to serve m atter. the “third” world, that is, the “Charges will be a matter be­ underdeveloped nations. He urged tween the sitter and the dog own- the United States to establish an Guaranteed international order to keep revo­ “Dogs get lonesome just like lutions from falling into extreme human beings,” the spokesman ex­ hands, like those of Red China. He plained. “When owners are away S te p s O n saw the United Nations as the best they often want to be let out and way of doing this and warned let back in.” H o w T o against letting Western policy take Dog-sitters must be over 18. The the form of an anti-Communist league spokesman said that some C a p tu r e crusade. early recruits have indicated that V. N. Bekrasov, chief foreign they will send their fees to the A Bachelor^ editor of Pravda, defined what the league to help needy or homeless U.S.SJR. means by revolution. He dogs. ------FOX THEATRE —Telephone— WEDNESDAY TUESDAY 549-7085 . . . COMING TO MISSOULA . . . AN ENTERTAINMENT EVENT OF FIRST IMPORTANCE!! PLAN TO SEE IT!! ( MARGOT I RUDOLPH FONTEYN INUREYEV TOGETHER FOR THE FIRST TIME ON THE MOTION PICTURE SCREEN I ,/Vnd The Artists Of STEAL HIS APARTMENT! The Royal Ballet (He’ll love being locked outl) BORROW HIS NAME! (He'll adore explaining It to his friendsl) % Enchanting | J y TECHNICOLOR '0 / j ^ s n f " y M|f SaNDR/a D ee B o B B Y D a R J N DO NaiP O'CONNOR, as Harvey Granson TrtaT

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Friday, Nov. 5, 1965 MONTANA KAIMIN — 15 Help of Whole Nation Sought Hemlines Go Up, Up, Up In Resettlement of Refugees NEW YORK (AP)—Men may models, in short yellow shifts, boy cap set coquetishly on a Vidal MIAMI, Fla. (AP)—The feder­ gressmen, mayors and a repre­ seldom make passes at girls who black gloves and in black coal Sassoon haircut. al government has pledged that sentative of Gov. Haydon Bums. wear glasses as Dorothy Parker miner’s hoods exploded into the Those sharp, straight-haired the nation—and not Florida alone Gardner said the refugees has said, but they certainly will showroom and raced back and coiffures were cut into three tri­ —will help resettle refugees from would be quickly resettled in look twice at the kind of bespec­ forth before open-mouthed buy­ angular points at the nape of the C uba. other parts of the United States. tacled misses w ho m odeled ers in town for the spring mar­ neck. The front sweep of hair More than 300 arrived at Key He said the new influx would Jacques Tiffeau’s spring collection ket. brushed down over one eye and West Monday and 11 more boats not be comparable “to the first Tuesday. The breathless pace continued under the spectacles. Those glasses were on their way. flood” in 1959. as lanky lasses switched from worn primly at the end of the Some especially fashion-conser­ high-waisted or no w aisted “The President and federal de­ He reported th at refugees noses, were lensless, to stay out vative males may believe such smocks to shifts with armholes partments are particularly con­ brought to Miami after clearing girls are spectacles themselves in of the way of long false lash on cut away generously back and the one seeing eye. cerned that the whole country customs would “be on their way chocolate drop caps which tie un­ take up this problem,*’ said John in 48 hours” if they can be re­ front. Short cropped shirt jackets To demonstrate at home and der the lip; scarves wrapped and blousons topped kicky pleated Gardner, secretary of the Depart­ settled. around upper arms like tourni­ evening wear, manikins undulated short skirts. effectively in tubes of bright col­ ment of Health, Education and “The Miami rate of unemploy­ quets; thigh-high hem lines; and W elfare. Some of the wide V-necked car­ ored wool. Skirt sides slit to the ment is below the average but vision-blurring haircuts that not’ digan jackets and coats in the col­ He told a news conference: “The hip line provide a show of shapely Negro unemployment is far too even those huge tortoise-shell lection bared collar bones, while citizens of Florida have made tre­ shanks. Or the ladies, unhampered high and we must cope with it,” glasses could remedy. others were filled in with organza mendous contributions and Flori­ by underpinnings, floated and said Gardner. But any man hep to the little- sashes, bowed at the side of the da must not be asked to carry the bounced in wispy printed chiffon Some refugees arriving at Key girl look adored by rich young neck. Those slashes also wrapped burden alone.” dresses gathered at the yoke, baby West said they had heard they swingers will hail Tiffeau’s new­ around hairdos or held on pillbox doll style. Draped around their In Washington, an informed were resented in this country. est designs as a marvelous opti­ hats, winding around chin and bare shoulders were huge match­ source said a U.S.-Cuban agree­ “I am told that Americans re­ cal exercise. neck like bandages. The most pop­ ing stoles. ment on a plan to fly refugees sent our presence here,” said Possibly with no tongue in ular hat was an oversized news- Skirts hiked high, high and to Florida probably would be an­ Senora Mercedes Muniz de Ca­ cheek intended, a disc jockey higher on two and three inches nounced today. pote. “If they knew what we go blasted an old A1 Jolson record, above the knees until the real eye- Gardner said plans are to fly through they might understand.” “Ain’t I the Fool?” Then twin History Honorary opener climaxed the show. Out out between 3,000 and 4,000 refu­ from under the hooded coats gees monthly. Malapportionment Blamed Headed by Grad stepped two bony beauties in Gardner and Buford Ellington, G ary Cummins, a graduate stu­ jeweled bikini dresses, a wide ex­ representing President Johnson, dent in history, was elected vice panse of bare midriffs between met Monday with Florida political president of the UM chapter of short patches of skirts and brief and civic leaders, including con- City Pupils Said Slighted Phi Alpha Theta, national history bits of bras. honor society. Other officers were CHICAGO (AP) — America’s schools, said he knew of no states elected last spring. city children are being short­ “where the central city child has GORDON’S UNION 76 Professor James I. Robertson changed in the classroom, a noted per capita expenditures to match GORDON'S WINTERIZING sociologist says. Throughout the the suburban child.” gave a talk entitled “Southern The “Planters,” about the morticians Is Best — Get Snow Tires, country, he says, youngsters in He said this situation reflected Batteries, Anti-Freeze and large cities are getting poorer ed­ apportioned state legislatures in the United States. The meeting All Yonr Car's Needs NOW! was at the home of Oscar J. Ham- o r ip in a ! ucation than their contemporaries “which have been controlled by •20 Brooks 542-2851 in the suburbs. rural minorities and have shown Dr. Philip M. Hauser, director a callous disregard of urban needs, of-the Population Research Train­ including school needs.” The no-iron slacks! ing Center at the University of Hauser committee, which looked Chicago, said in an interview that into charges of de facto segrega­ the inequity applies both to whites tion resulting from residential fa­ and Negroes. He said the recent cial concentrations, recommended spotlight on Negro schools dis­ commitment by the Board of Edu­ closed the inferior quality of cation and Supt. Benjamin C. Wil­ schools for city white as well. lis to a policy of integration. “In our cities, compared with “Managed integration should be suburban children, white children accompanied with steps to im­ tend to have a second-rate educa­ prove quality of urban schools for tion and Negro children a third- all children, the committee said. rate education,” he said. In cases of de facto segregation, Hauser said, there is a tendency “Typically, the child in the cen­ to resist integration by hiding “be­ tral city with the most disadvant­ hind rationalization,” such as ages has considerably less money + $hoiu o s claiming it is not practicable be­ per capita spent on him in public cause of residential patterns. education than does the child with However, he said, one reason great advantages in the suburbs.” Hauser, who headed a 1963-64 for the exodus of whites when research committee on Chicago schools are integrated is that school boards have no clear poli­ cies for achieving and maintaining Attention Students— integration. FOR YOUR NEXT CAR SEE He called for establishment of quotas to insure that no more than JOHN GALLEGUS say, 30 per cent of a school can be 93 CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH Negro. He said such quotas would 1807 B rooks 549-6433 end the white flight to the sub­ urbs. Black, Brown and Wet Sand 8.95

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16 — MONTANA KAIMIN i r k Friday, Nov. 5, 1665