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Bowling Green State University ScholarWorks@BGSU

BG News (Student Newspaper) University Publications

12-3-1965

The B-G News December 3, 1965

Bowling Green State University

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Recommended Citation Bowling Green State University, "The B-G News December 3, 1965" (1965). BG News (Student Newspaper). 1908. https://scholarworks.bgsu.edu/bg-news/1908

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 License. This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the University Publications at ScholarWorks@BGSU. It has been accepted for inclusion in BG News (Student Newspaper) by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks@BGSU. ■ I Professor Predicts Winter Weather... Pg. 10 The B-G News Serving a Growing University Since 1920 Friday, Dec. 3, 1965 Bowling Green State University, Bowling Green, Ohio Vol. 50, No. 41 Alumni Honor Kenton Woman The second annual Alumni Com- center complete with picnic areas, munity Service Award was pre- fishing facilities, rest rooms, and sented last night to Helen Nash the restoration of the natural beau- Saulisberry, retiring mayor of ty of the park. Kenton, Ohio, at a dinner in Kenton. The first Community Service Mayor Saulisberry graduated Award went to Joseph 1'. Ryder y- from Kenton High School in 1914 of Film Mich., for his outstanding and earned a two-year diploma achievement in the Big brother from the University in 1939. program in Flint. After being elected to her first term as mayor of Kenton. she immediately started programs in cleaning streets, alleys and back lots. She launched a clean- campaign and interested civic or- ganizations in doing the same. Now. at the enil of her second term in office, these programs- THE FOUR PREPS, popular stars in campus ings of "26 Miles," "Down By the Station," are nearing completion. She has concerts, will appear with the and "Got a Girl." Besides these hits, the provided recreation parks and Orchestra Sunday night in the Grand Ballroom vocal group also has several record albums playgrounds, using many men on in the second event in the Celebrity Series. The high on the charts. relief on these projects. recording artists are known for their hit record- Through the efforts of Mayor Saulisberry, Kenton annexed a val- uable piece of property, in- cluding 200 acres and a large lake. •~\ Henry Mancini, Four Preps It was overgrown withunderbrush, weeds and dead vegetation. Mayor Saulisberry. with help from different civic groups, trans- formed this land into a recreation To Present Concert Sunday Helen Saulisberry

Henry Mancini, of positions of the television series motion pictures as "High Time," such popular songs as "Moon "" and "Mr. Lucky." "The Great Imposter," "Experi- River," "Peter Cunn," "Cha- Mr. Mancini started his profes- ment in Terror," "Hatari," "The Student 'Santas' Do rade," and "Days of Wine and sional career at age eight on the ," "Shot in the Dark," Roses," will appear with his 40- flute. He began to play the piano and "." piece orchestra in the Ballroom and then attended the Julliard The album "Mr. Lucky" was Shopping In B.G. . at 8:15 p.m. Sunday as part of School of Music, later joining the named by Billboard Magazine as this year's Celebrity Series. band as a pianist- the Album of the University students who plan picked - over items, according Tickets for the program are arranger. Year in 1960. In addition, Man- on playing Santa over the Christ- to Gary Gregg, retail advertising sold out, according to Richard A. In 1952 he joined the music cini was nominated twice by the mas vacation, should take advan- manager of the News. Lenhart, director of the Union department of Universal-Interna- Playboy Magazine poll in tage of the wide variety of pro- College students are handi- Activities Organization. tional studios and contributed the favorite band category and ducts and gifts offered by local capped in making purchases for Also appearing with Mancini music to over 100 films in six in 1964 was named the leader merchants--or they may be left two reasons, according to Gregg. as an extra added attraction will films. The most notable were of Playboy's all-star orchestra. looking through many small, often First, since the student is at- be the Four Preps, known for "," "The The Four ['reps, a vocal group tending classes, he does not have such popular songs as "26Miles," Story," and that got its start in high school, the opportunity to go home and "Down by the Station,' and "Got "." will appear with the Mancini Band. shop in the large metropolitan a Girl." He has won 17 Grammy Awards Harold Cohen, critic for the Pitts- shopping centers. Mancini has won several and has written scores for such burgh Post-Gazette, says "listen- Secondly, students do not Oscars from the Academy of Mo- ing to and viewing their smooth always have enough funds avail- tion Picture Arts and Sciences, vocal blend, outrageous quick wit able to pay cash for their gifts, including one for the best score and uncanny sense of timing, one as they intend to earn funds once from the film "Breakfast at Tif- must marvel at thefate that brought the vacation begins. tany's." He also won Oscars together four lads of such com- These two problems can be for the best songs, ',' patible talents." avoided by shopping in Bowling and "Days of Wine and Roses." They have appeared on the Ed Green before going home for the He is well known for his com- Sullivan Show, Hootenanny, Hob holidays. Newhardt Show, Show, "Local merchants have obtained and many other television variety large stocks of numerous items, shows. They also have several , books, records, sundries, record albums currently on the novelties, notions, and many other most popular list including, "Four items of interest," Gregg said. Preps on Campus," "Campus En- Students do not necessarily need core," and "Songs for a Campus cash to make their purchases. Party." ' In some stores, students may charge the items, receive them immediately, earn the money over • i vacation and then come back and Formal Tonight pay for them," Gregg said. "Students often have complained ' Frost Fantasia," the that Bowling Green's merchants UAO-AWS Winter Formal, THE DOOR to the B-G News only are interested in the student Henry Mancini will be held today at 9 p.m. opens to a world of news- body because of their purchasing ci^^ in the Ballroom. gathering, deadline-making, power. Working with them this Tickets art on sale in and copy-editing. It is a world year, 1 am convinced their in- The weather for today is: cloudy the lobby of the Union and of late working hours and early terest is much more than this, and a little warmer with light also may be purchased at morning delivery of the News. for they realize a compatible re- rain, high 45-50. Mostly cloudly the door. Cost is $2 a For a more complete picture lationship between the two will and cooler tonight with showers couple. of the News see pages 4, 5, be for the benefit of both," Gregg ending during the evening. and 6. said. page 2 The B-G News, Friday, Dec. 3, 1965 From Russia With Love News Editorial Page Viet Nam War ] Nearing Climax? , from the Christian Science Monitor A sharp step-up in Vietnamese fighting lies ahead. This has become unmistakably clear from the words and deeds of bothAmer- *• icans and North Vietnamese. Although it is too early to say that war in Southeast Asia is heading toward a climax, it is plain that the groundwork for such a climax is being laid. On the one side, Communist leadership in Hanoi has not only refused to consider peace talks on terms even remotely acceptable to either Saigon or Washington, but is now upstepping its shipment of regular army units into South Vietnam. Obviously, Hanoi is set ^. to fight on. On the other side, Washington has spoken words which (were Hanoi listening wisely) must have an ominous ring to Communist ears. Defense Secretary McNamara has announced that America *- will create more of a highly mobile and extremely hard-hitting "air cavalry" divisions which inflicted such a crushing defeat on the Communists in the la Drang Valley. At the same time, both the Secretary and a State Department spokesman hinted broadly at the possibility of bombing the Communist supply paths through Laos and Cambodia. Meanwhile, America has taken action which (were Hanoi observ- « ing wisely) would tell them much about the limits to which Wash- ington will go to crush the Communist effort in South Vietnam. It has stepped up its attack on North Viet Nam missile bases and has cut one of the two vital railways into China. Thus the weight of the v war on North Viet Nam's limited resources and capabilities grows heavier and heavier. . Why, under such circumstances, it is possible to raise the ques- fc tion of a climax in the war in the not too distant future? Because the course of the fighting, plus America's decision to keep on pouring men , guns, planes, helicopters, ships, bulldozers, construction workers and so forth into Vietnam mean that Hanoi must early de- * cide just how much of its armed might it can seek to send southward. Some observers speak of the possibility of Hanoi sending several hundred thousand of its regular troops to the war. But can it act- ually do so? How are they to be supplied-over narrow jungle trails which now seem likely to come under continuous and heavy Amer- ican air attack? Even granted the more primitive military conditions under which the Communists fight, could Hanoi supply ► a quarter of a million additional men, plus the units already in South Viet Nam, plus the thousands upon thousands of Viet Cong guer- rillas? it could not, it would be suicidal to send them to face the pulverizing military machine which the is swiftly " creating in Southeast Asia. It is not America, but North Vietnam which faces the hardest decisions. In the end, its manpower, equipment and transportation . facilities are severely limited. For North Viet Nam the climax A BRITISH 'HOLLIDAY* must inevitably come-certainly not tomorrow and perhaps not for a matter of months-but already within the foreseeable future. Profs Laugh, Students Last From Our Readers

By ROGER HOLLIIMY speedy compensation for the lee- jt WiU, we could always institute Columnist ture, he would cash his chips some of the practices of other Books And Coffee in the Administration building universities--shuffling of feet, I'o the editor: and H. Glendon Steele on Jan. I here was a time, , moving {rom offlce |0 office and c, and so forth, No doubt any publicity is good 18, all professors or students in when university professors were authority to authority emerging The point seems to be that we publicity. However, there was evaluated by their students. I he hopefully with his fair wage. e way show our the Department of English. should in som some unintentional garbling of the The one exception is the pro- sytem was a simple one and could This proposed chip method would favor or disfavor for the courses report on Books and Coffee pres- perhaps, with modifications, be ^tog the ultimate in we receive and that the professor, gram on January 11 in the Music bring imo entations by the Department of Recital Hall at 4:00 p.m. This adopted "ere. underhand methods of deceit as for his own good, should encour- English as announced in Thurs- program will feature Miss Nancy li would be a most satistac- the'bad'professors devised means age this instead of setting him- day's paper. tory way of eliminating num- of hidm& [neir accumulaled yel. £„ as the fina, authorj on Stepp, instructor in English, read- y Most students are aware, I am bers of ra her incompetent pro- low chi tne ^ hp teaches and the ing poems of the 18th century while fessors at present coming to . . . , . J „ , sure, of long established Books and Mr. Emanuel Rubin, musicologist The lgood red chip man now wa in w hicn e eachcs u Coffee hours which have been a classes under the protection of could makc tne walk from fa fesso , „ ,oud, and instructor of music will make cherished feature of the life on clear the relationships of music ^s-l^^o^r^^ classroom to Ad building carry at [he ramblings (or was ,t this campus. Though largely in- ,n a11 to poetry in that age. capable of stimulating thought or 8 ■* «"** before htm and -babblings'^ your students, but active last year, two series of Miss Stepp does not read her provoking the academic action nee- smiling affably at all and sundry, when an evaluation system weekly programs have been own poems, as announced inThurs- essary under tins system, especially sundry. ,s devised remember the old adage planned for the current year, one day's authorship of the poems of The method that these ancients , Should this method of evaluation about the last laugh being the long- for each semester. , . . fail, and I feel pretty sure that est. Alexander Pope. employed was to show appreciation Remaining programs for De- A varied program has been for the course by throwing money jjMflftBWTOSWv^^ cember and January will feature, planned for the second semester to the lecturer. Of course, if g: mi T> ^"1 ^.T '••• with one exception, readings featuring a number of visitors the students were dissatisfied they :•:• Y% c% lu^« [Vl CkXJJO by campus poets: Frederick Eck- from off campus. Again, all stu- witheld their coins. A ULC O VJ 11VW3 man on Dec. b, John J. Gross dents and faculty are welcomed. it can well be imagined that the :£ Serving A Growing University Since 1920 g on Dec. 15, Brian Richards and John J. Gross professor made sure that the lee- » 8 Sharon Lougheed on January 4, Professor of English tures he gave were both thought •:•: EDITORIAL STAFF £ provoking and well prepared, for & ?'•* f; Endres .....Editor :* \\ x, i.i. J J _J J .u '••'■ Judy Hirsch Manoging Editor M What Are Rights? his livelihood depended upon the ;.;. Ron"a|d Pej$a Editorial Editor 8 To tliL' editor: generosity of the students. g jock Hortmon Sports Editor g while we w^re out having a good Imagine what we could do with •:•: Mike Kuhlin Photo Editor Just what are your rights as time! Perhaps through our own a System like thisl % Morilyn Draper Feature Editor B a citizen? How do you interpret ignorance, we have been sur- Thoughts of impecunious, down- Jjj •:•: th.'m in our free country, or is rounded by an extreme and vul- at-heel professors and instructors :•:• K this a free country? There are nerable generation. (A little in- begging at the Union entrance, g BUSINESS STAFF •:•: certain groups or parties that fluence in the right place brings holding mortarboards in place of :¥ Robert Snyder Business Manager :•:• lead you to believe we live in in the votes. Isn't this the way collecting boxes, come to mind. $ Fred Kohut Assistant Business Manager g a land of milk and honey. (There it works?) ver si n onoa are those who imply we are headed Modifying this idea, we could. |;•:• John7°'* £'••Donnelly■•.■,• NotionalN«t*tSl Advertising^ |l . 9 ManagerJJ «" .;.;g Why so much trouble with civil institute a system of red and yel- | Dan Amon# Jim Taft...ClasSified Advertising Manager | for destruction because our rights, increase in crime, student low Chips (the colors arearbi- S Dove Sprunk Subscription Manager S freedom is being slowly taken demonstration, etc. Why? We hear trary) worth say $2 which is the :■:• Published Tuesdays thru Fridays during the regular school >•: away from us.) Then, there are about it and read about it, but veor approximate cost Of each course. $ « except holiday periods, and once a week during | those who do what they think is we don't care too much about it These Chips would be distrib- S summer sessions under authority of the Publications | best, regardless of influence from ...... , .;.; Committee ot Bowling Green State University. •.;. yet because it hasn't affected us Uted before each Class, red for g Opinions expressed in editorials, editorial cartoons or | either extreme. personally. What if youdiscovered a good informative lecture and yel- S other columns in the News do not necessarily reflect the | Perhaps mast Americans have it to be an influence of Com-nunist low for standard book repetition. }j opinions of the University Administration, faculty >J been so busy enjoying themselves tactics, then what? Couldn't be? The income of the professor & or staff or the State of Ohio. Opinions expressed by col- g that little thought has been given ...... j . .u •!•: umnists do not necessarily reflect the opinions ot the B-G B W hy don't you look into it for your- would then be based on the num- « N.ws. Edi,orialj in the Newt ,.fucf fh. opinion of fne to tomorrow or the children of self and see. bers of red or yellow chips that £: majority of members of the B-G News Editorial Board. •£ tomorrow. Perhaps the political John Beach he received. So as to ensure jwfiWfl^i^ffffllW^^ WftiMiB baby sitter lias been harci at work 335 Derby Avenue '

The B-G News, Fridoy, Dec. 3, 1965 poge 3 Spotlight On: 14 University Students To Present Chamber Music Program Sunday Brass, woodwind, and string en- Miller, baritone; and Robert sembles will be featured in a pro- ZierOlf, tuba. Mary Noonan, flute, Gemini Astronauts gram of student chamber music Herb Lashner . oboe; Patrick at 8; 15 p.m. Sunday in Recital and finally managed to evade the Burden, clarinet; Philip Binkley. By ASSOCIATED PRESS ond group of astronaut trainees. Hall. missile until it ran out of fuel. Stafford started at Harvard, but horn, and Robert Gable, bassoon, Stafford learned to fly after Fourteen University students are the woodwind performers. Tomorrow and for more than after three days, on Sept. 17, 1962, comprise the three groups. a week later if all goes well, graduation from the academy and he left the business school to be- Making up the sextet are Gerald The string quartet members are the national and world spot- flew interceptor aircraft intheU.S. com; an astronaut. Zimmerman, Thomas George, Yael Orbach, Patrick Rafferty, light will be on astronauts Frank and Germany. Later he became trumpets; Philip Binkley, horn: violins; Marilyn Rhoades. viola, Borman and James Lovell. They a test pilot and wrote two books Both men are married. Schirra Vincent Polce, trombone; Michael and Mary Durell. cello. will be zooming around the world about test flying. Student pilots lives near the Manned Space- on what is scheduled to be the at the Air Force Aerospace Re- craft Center in Houston with his longest manned space flight in search Pilot School at Edwards, wife and two children. The neigh- history. Calif. , now study the books bors recognize him by his sports On Dec. 13, Borman and Lovell as required reading. car, which often comes speeding BEAT will have to share the spotlight Stafford describes the explor- down the road. with Gemini 6 astronauts Walter ation of space as the extension of Schirra and Thomas Stafford. experimental flight. He says; Schirra's parents now live in Schirra and Stafford were two " It is just a logical step from the Point Loma, Calif. His father MICHIGAN disappointed astronauts a few experimental test pilot to the as- was a World War One pilot who SEZ week back when their Cemini 6 tronaut." The Major also denies later taught his son to fly. mission had to be scrubbed. But there is anything particularly Schirra first handled the con- on the 13th, if all according to heroic about being an astronaut. trols of a plane at the age of 13 schedule, they'll go aloft for a ' I consider it a job that takes and soloed at lo. rendezvous with Cemini 7. alot of time but it is just another Stafford and his f.muh also South Side 6 Schirra, known to just about job to me," he says. live near the spacecraft center. everybody as "Wally," is a hand- Schirra became an astronaut in Mrs. Stafford said one of the some, dashing, flamboyant type of 1959 and on Oct. 3, 1962, he flew advantages of her husband's being 737 S. Main St. man. Stafford's hair is be- the Mercury 7 space mission of an astronaut is that they could ginning to thin on , he is easy- six orbits. buy a house. Before, they just mannered, has a scientific exacting Stafford was chosen as an as- rented homes near the various Air Bowling Green, Ohio mind and once thought about en- tronaut only a few weeks before Force bases at which he was tering the business world. Schirra made his first flight. He stationed. Schirra is a Navy captain and had applied for an Air Force at 42 is the oldest of the assignment to Harvard University astronauts. He was born in Hack- Business School and finally had itf^^^^^^^^i;*^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^i< ensack, N.J. and graduated received the assignment. from the Naval Academy at An- At the same time, however, napolis in 1945. he had applied to the National Stafford a 35-year-old Air Aeronautics and Space Admin- Force major, graduated from the istration to become one of the sec - Naval Academy in 1952 and shifted to the Air Force after graduation. He's a native of WeatherfordOkla. 'Buddenb rooks' Both men were test pilots. Schirra, a Naval aviator, was To Be Shown active in the Korean War, re- ceiving the Distinguished Fly- ing Cross and two Air Medals. This Weekend One of the stand-out exper- iences in his career as a test The Movie Committee of the pilot occurred when he had fired Union Activities Organization will a missile at a target, and the mis- present "Huddenbrooks" this sile turned and started in for his weekend as the second feature in plane. Schirra circled and dodged this year's Film Internationale series. Originally a novel by Thomas CLASSIFIEDS Mann, the film depicts the transi- tion through four generations of a wealthy merchant family of Ger- FOUND many into the uncertainty of One pair of men's slacks. Out- modern society. side of Harshman li. Contact Jo, The film will be shown at 7 244-D. and 9 p.m. today and tomorrow, and at 3 and 7 p.m. Sunday in 105 Hanna Hall. FOR SALE

1965 Suzuki motorcycle, 250 cc. $500.00, Floyd Rausicr, Phi Tau All Pledge house, Ext. 479. Class FOR RENT

New 2-bedroom unfurnished apart- ment, 220 S. Summit; large rooms Jam and closets, extra storage space; erred, no pet; call 669-2156. Session Room - 2 men students. Inquire at Sponsored by the 353-3056 before 5:30, or at 352- Two man student rooms. Chi-O Pledges at the Chi-0 House Two man student rooms. W. Wooster St. $150.00 per se- From 3:00 to 4:30 p.m. mester. 354-2945. Today

FOR A RELAXING EVENING TO A GENTLEMAN'S TASTE

Ladies, no need to go around in circles trying to please your gentleman. Look VISIT THE no further than the Establishment. The Proprietor has used rare good judgment in selecting the finest merchandise for Christmas giving to those who will settle for nothing less than authentic traditional. Inspection is invited. Northgate Lounge S Clothes ftack BOWLING GRIEN.OHIO 1 mile North on U.S. 25 AIR CONDITIONED For Your Comfort V ( page 4 The B-G News, Friday, Dec. 3, 1965 Getting the 'News' -Daily

The production of a daily news- paper is a pulsating, challenging and sometimes frustrating pro- cess, regardless if it is a metro- politan paper with a circulation of 500,000 or a campus paper with a circulation of 8,500. Every facet must be combined to the proper extent; every depart- ment must be organized and co- ordinated. The B-G News this year made the transition to a daily news- paper. Every Monday through Thursday the offices are a mass of people, writing, editing, selling ads, taking pictures, mailing issues to parents and alumni. On pages 4,5 and 6 today, a pictoral story of the News is pre- sented, from the daily conferences of the editorial staff to the final morning distribution to the cam- pus community. Steps shown include the editing rim where copy is "cleaned up" and headlines written, the adver- tising staff working on page lay- outs; the sports and feature de- partments at work; the Associated Press wire service machine; the composition at Photo-Journal Press on E. Wooster Street; and the actual press at the home com- pany in Sandusky, 40 miles from Howling Green. The News has experienced grow- NEWS COVERAGE for the day and week are planned by the ing pains this year, but with the editor, managing editor and editorial page editor, who also pains comes the feeling of satis- plan the series of editorials to be used for the week. Editor faction of attempting to do the Fred Endres, left, discusses an editorial idea with managing best job we know how. editor, Judy Hirsch, and editorial page editor, Ron Pejsa. We hope to continue to live up to our motto; * Serving a Growing University since 1920."

STORIES BEGIN with the mak- ing out of the assignment sheet Sitting pretty . . . by the issue editor and the on its own sports editor. Above, Judy precious ISSUE EDITORS Randy Ketcham left, and George Braatz (above) discuss the day's layouts and Lake types out the list of throne story coverage before the copy is given to the editing desk. Each issue editor is in charge of reporter assignments for the one issue per week. The work consists of making out assignment sheets, assigning headlines to day and Jack Hartman, sports stories, assigning pictures and making the layout of the pages. The copy then goes to the rim editor, prepares his staff (below) where students edit it and write headlines under the supervision of Don WaMis, graduate assignments for the week. assistant in journalism.

KESSELS

"The piece to go ft #M «MMS you

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SKIRTS AMD SWEATERS by AltCarvecT Dt\EAM DIAMOND 1UNG6 Only an ArtCarved diamond ring: conies to you enthroned — only it deserves to! For its College Towne loftier, ultra-modern styling — its unique Permanent Value Bobbie Brooks guarantee. Come, compare. You'll find ArtCarved has no Century peers. oin4 .AI.,^ I. ,ho. d*u.i Ash /or our free illustrated folder Russ Togs Lofties Garland MILLS JEWELRY 112 South Main Street 188 South Main The B-G News, Friday, Dec. 3, 1965 page 5

GNdc 11. J T 6?%°! fe°tUre edit°r M°.rilyn Dr°Per« ri9ht< and her °»i**ant, Karen Wick. Mar.lyn it in charge of all feature staries, radio and television schedules and any pictures used on her pages for the entire week. Her scope of activity includes Professors in Profile, series nL^ VT or9an,I0,ions. international students, news from other campuses and special articles aDout students on campus. r

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NEGATIVES AND PHOTO- GRAPHS are the problem for Mike Kuhlin, News photography editor. Mike is in charge of assigning all necessary pic- tures for the entire week and iriiling sute thct they are all printed by the night before the issue in which they appear. BANTERING BRITISHER, Roger Holliday, columnist for the News, checks the spelling of an "American word" while typing one of his columns for the week's paper. A journalism major, Roger also works as an assistant issue editor of the paper.

A SECRETARY is a must for WANTED-COEDS every office and the News has Alyce Tosko, a business administration major. Her job Would You Like includes taking classified ads, answering business letters and to be the best sending bills to advertisers. dressed women Local retail advertising mana- ger, Gary Gregg, left, discuss on campus ? the weeks layouts with national ad manager, John Donnelly, right, and salesman, Barry Suckman.

ELECT

VISIT THE

THE ENTRANCE to the News Bonnie Shop ASSOCIATED PRESS is the wire service used by the News shows students editing stories JOHN POMEROY for state, national and international news as well as for sports and writing headlines at the for the Latest in stories. Above, Larry Donald, left, issue editor, and Jim rim. Students from journalism FRESHMAN Treeger, assistant issue editor, check the wire for the impor- Representative classes work on the rim as Women's tant stories of the day. The copy is then edited by the rim and part of the laboratory require- to student headlines are written, the same as for local news copy. ' ill ment. council 101 N. Main I ! I page 6 1965

PASTING DOWN the finished columns of copy, Dave Willmorth, manager of the Bowling Green branch of the Photo Journal Press, checks layouts to make sure the pasted copy is level and even before going to the Sandusky plant to be photographed PRESSES ROLL and the paper is ready for distribution to the campus. The press used in and then printed. Sandusky is a Cottrell Vanguard web-feeding offset press. Below, Robert Snyder, left, business manager, discusses the News budget with adviser Wallace Eberhard.

HOME FOR THE HOLIDAYS

Special Fare Charter Express Bus Service From Campus To and New York City. Leave Dec. 17 - Return Jan. 2

CLEVELAND ROUNDTRIP ..$7.35 NEW YORK ROUNDTRIP...... S33.75 SUBSCRIPTIONS ARE a large part of the News revenue and Ann Warfel, mail subscription Reservations Now Being Taken manager, prepares to send PICKING UP his copy of the B-G News, Kent Harbison reads copies of the paper to persons about sports scores the morning after the game. With a daily on the mailing list. She stuffs operation and a night press run, the News is able to bring stu- envelopes and sends copies of dents, faculty and administration important stories the day of BOWLING GREEN TRAVEL CENTER the paper each day after it the event and scores of games and election results the day comes out. after. 139 E. WOOSTER PHONE: 354-8171

Photos by The Alpenhorn Room Tim Culek, Mike Kuhlin, ]f rtti'a Nrro Snnrn Charles Fair Why not a Petti's MON. - SAT. 5-1 - SUN. closed and Fred Endres Christmas Gift Certificate? FINE FOOD AT STUDENT PRICES

NOW IS THE TIME lO OZ. DELMONICO STEAK ALPINE SPECIALTY to make your appointment SALAD - RCLLS - BEVERAGE - POTATOES One-Half Barbecued Chfclicu *» 1.35 j for your all for $1.90 [Barbecued Spatcribs .... 8j.30' Christmas Portrait Spaghetti nr Ravioli . . . . ".LI"! 'Cole Slaw-French Files-Rolls and \i\ Liri at "PIZZA" ALL YOUR FAVORITE BEVERAGES Weissbrod Studio 12 Ounce Fish bowl •> .2'.; (MADE WITH FRESH DOUGH) Pitcher 1.00 123 W. Wooster Ph. 354-9041 The B-G News, Friday, Dec. 3, 1965 poge 7 New Woodwind Group To Play Tuesday New Approach A newlew musicalmilStml orniingroup at