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

5-13-1965 Montana Kaimin, May 13, 1965 Associated Students of Montana State University

Let us know how access to this document benefits ouy . Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.umt.edu/studentnewspaper

Recommended Citation Associated Students of Montana State University, "Montana Kaimin, May 13, 1965" (1965). Montana Kaimin, 1898-present. 4171. https://scholarworks.umt.edu/studentnewspaper/4171

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]. MONTANA KAIMIN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER

I Standing Room. Only Speakers, Crowd Debate At Viet Nam Teach-In

By JOHN LUMB ican foreign policy in Viet Nam. professor o f economics, delivered Kaimin Reporter He said the administration gives a history of Viet Nam. He traced many reasons for the United the history of the country through Conflict and controversy be­ States’ involvement in the war. tween faculty and a standing- its occupation by France in the No nation can tolerate aggression, 1800s through the establishment room only crowd characterized last particularly from a totalitarian of Indochina in the early 1900s. night’s teach-in conducted in the government that will impose hard­ Mr. Hoekendorf told of the oc- . Liberal Arts Building. ship upon the people after the ag­ cupation of northern Viet Nam by The most controversial talk of gression is complete, was the first communists led by Ho Chi Minh. the evening, evidenced by audi­ major reason offered. The second Ho’s Viet Minh controlled most of ence reaction, was by E. W. Pfeif­ was the United States would suf­ the rural areas, the French, the fer, associate professor of zoology. fer a loss of prestige if military urban areas, he added. He compared the United States Kaimin Photo by Todd Brandoff support was withdrawn. In 1946 the North Vietnamese foreign policy to that of Germany, began raids on the French in the ' TEACH-IN SPEAKER—William Hoekendorf, assistant professor U.S. Position Unrealistic Italy and Japan prior to World Mr. Kuhn said the United States south. By the 1950s, Viet Minh of economics, addresses students and faculty members at the Viet War H. position is unrealistic, in that self- were being trained in China and Nam teach-in held last night at Liberal Arts 11. The Rev. William Mr. Pfeiffer said the Johnson Kliber, seated left, introduced the speakers and directed ques- determination in Southeast Asia were using communist weapons. administration is using military The war expanded until the 1 tioning. is impossible. He said it has failed power to accomplish what diplom­ spectacularly in Latin America French lost their foothold in 1954, acy can’t. He added the treaties under similar circumstances. he said. the United States is entering into Two things keeping the United The Diem regime took over a are nearly the same in word as States going are the hysterical few months later and the history Women Marchers to Appear those signed by Hitler, Mussolini fear most Americans feel for com­ of the country is well known since and To jo to combat the spread of munism and the idea that America then, he concluded. communism before World War II. is omnipotent. The real reason Sartre Quoted Inonel Lilac Sally Neath, Festival will send 28 The at United Spokane States is going down the United States is in the war is Cynthia Schuster, associate pro­ the same road, he said. ' The K-Dettes, Angel Flight and members. The 19-man Air Force due to the administration’s wish fessor of philosophy, read an arti­ Air Force Drill Team, marching drill team has been practicing at We must “isolate the warhawks to maintain a “ moving balance of cle by Jean-Paul Sartre entitled units sponsored by the Air Force 5:30 a.m. this week to put the final and we’ll win this fight for sur­ power.” “Why I Will Not Go to the United and Army ROTC departments, will touches on their drill routine, ac­ vival,” he said, referring to the Mr. Kuhn said the United States States.” The article involves a pro­ fight to contain communism. travel to Spokane this weekend to cording to AFROTC Cadet Major should live up to the Geneva A c­ posed speaking tour through the march in the annual Lilac Festival Ronald Normandeau. The Angel Mr. Pfeiffer, emphasizing that cords. The administration should United States which Sartre can- Armed Forces Day Parade. Flight has also been practicing in he was speaking only as a layman, negotiate with the Viet Cong, called on the ground that he might The K-Dettes, led by Coed Col- the morning under the direction of ■ said that Americans have been in­ something Pres. Johnson has re­ seem to favor American policy in AFROTC Cadet Major Steven toxicated too long with, the idea fused to do, and stop bombing Viet Nam. New Award For Thompson, new Angel Flight drill we know what is right and wrong North Viet Nam in exchange for Sartre’s article states the United commander. for the world. W e have set our­ a show of good faith. Some Viet States is “the most vulnerable Coed J-Students Cadet Colonel Jerry Lebsack selves up as a police force for the Cong should be included in any power in the world, and the world The Helen Miller Malloch Schol­ and Coed Colonel Elizabeth Sale world, he said. government formed, he added. has not chosen it to be its center arship,- a newly established $200 will direct the Flight at Spokane. Foreign Policy Failed William Hoekendorf, assistant of gravity.” award, will be presented annually Lebsack, this year’s drill com­ Americans have professed that mander will officially turn over to a junior, senior or graduate they are out to lift up the de­ Five Story. $125 Million Bldg. woman journalism student to fur­ command of the Angels to Thomp­ prived people of the world, he said. ther her education in journalism. son after the Lilac Festival per­ We have had 20 years since World Applicants will be evaluated on formance. War II, and we have failed. We professional intent and promise, are now paying for our mistakes, Health Science Bldg. Dedication accumulative scholarship, con­ he added. People who are well off tinued interest in communication^ Renowned Poet don't need communism. The poor At Saturday Banquet in Lodge and financial need. people of underdeveloped coun­ Letters of application should To Teach Here tries have gotten nothing from the Formal dedication of the five- head, professor of zoology and for­ state the school the applicant plans William Stafford, winner of United States and are looking for story, $1.25 million Health Sci­ estry and leader of the Montana to attend, courses to be taken and national honors for his poetry, will something different, he continued. ences building will be Saturday at Cooperative Wildlife Research the way in which the $200 scholar­ join two MSU faculty members in Mr. Pfeiffer said we should a banquet in the Lodge. Unit. He will give an illustrated ship would help the applicant to staffing the Montana Writers’ combat communism with our tre­ James Colbert of the National lecture on “Radio-tracking of Griz­ obtain her objective. Workshop here July 8-21. mendous technological resources. Institutes of Health, the federal zly Bears” at 2 pjn. Letters, accompanied by a tran­ Faculty members participating He gave supplying a bicycle for agency that contributed about Tours of the building’s modern script of college credits, should are Warren Carrier, chairman of every two persons as an example one-fifth of the cost of construct­ laboratories for instruction and be sent by June 10 to the na­ the English Department, and John of how the United States could ing and equipping the building, research are scheduled from 1 to 2 tional scholarship chairman, Mrs. Herrmann, instructor in English, come out ahead. will address the banquet. p.m. and from 3 to 4 p.m. to give Miriam J. Sturgeon, Rural Route and director of the department's Barclay Kuhn, instructor in Mr. Colbert, associate director visitors a look at student and fac­ 3, Nashville, Ind. 47448. creative writing program. political science, discussed Am er- and chief of extramural research ulty research projects in the fields of the National Institute of Allergy of zoology, biochemistry, endro- and Infectious Diseases, will give crinology, microbiology, psychol­ Expected to Benefit Out-of-Staters a speech titled “ The Role of Sci­ ogy and wildlife management. ence in the National Future.” The committee planning the Speakers Saturday afternoon dedication is composed of Dr. Har­ will be Milton Willner, of the Clin­ old A. Braun, Missoula physician, CB Action Lessens Pressure ical Research Division of Hoffman- and MSU faculty members Carl Laroche, Inc., and John J. Craig- L. Larson, E. W. Pfeiffer, R. A. Diettert, James M. Whitehouse and M. J. Nakamura. Panel to Discuss All event? except the banquet On MSU Student Loan Funds are open to the public without Berkeley Protest charge. Reservations must be made Norton, assistant professor of jour­ ciation in Santa Barbara, Calif. By STEVE SMITH for the banquet, which begins at Kaimin Reporter nalism, concerning the installation A special documentary and panel Behan and ASMSU Pres. John 6:30 p.m. in the MSU Lodge. In an effort to relieve the strain of FM converters in the dormi­ Ross comprised MSU’s delegation. discussion on the Berkeley stu­ tories. Such installation would al­ dent demonstrations will be pre­ presently on the National Defense Behan said that seven major Education Act loan program, Cen­ low students to pick up FM broad­ sented by KUFM at 8 p.m. tral Board allocated $3,000 from casts on AM radios while increas­ topics were covered at the meet­ The documentary, sent to KUFM Chicago School the on-campus reserve fund last ing communications between the ing. Included were 1) What are the by the Pacific Foundation FM sta­ night. student body and student govern­ major contemporary issues on tion in Berkeley, gives a chrono­ With the money coming from ment, according to Mr.'Norton. your campus? How do they affect logical account of the events on Superintendent the ASMSU short-term loan fund, In discussing KUFM, Mr. "Nor­ student government? 2) How can the University of California cam­ the CB move is expected to benefit ton said he saw the FM setup as student government best relate to pus. To Visit MSU students in view of out-of-state a “very logical, helpful and effec­ the changing nature of your stu­ Following the documentary, the tuition increases. tive way to continue the dialogue dent body? 3) What should be the panel, consisting of Prof. Edwin A former member of John F. In proposing the allocation, between the community and stu­ nature of your government for R. Bingham, Jim Crane, Cathy Kennedy’s Panel of Consultants on George Cole, former senior dele­ dents.” He and junior delegate greatest achievement? 4) What Wolhowe and Ken Robinson, will Vocational 'Education will be a gate, urged the Board to adopt Paul Reagor plan to investigate the are your finances and how does be asked to give its assessment of member of the visiting staff at certain recommendations: costs involved in installing con­ student government administer the Berkeley “free-speech” dem­ MSU Summer Session. That $3,000 be used primarily verters in the dormitories. them? 5) How does stuent govern­ onstrations in terms of their mean­ Benjamin C. Willis will be here for ASMSU students and that the In further business, CB accepted ment relate to your faculty and ing in Montana. from July 7 to 9 in the education maximum amount of each stu­ a list of people who are expected administration? Where is coopera­ After panelists have expressed school working as a lecturer and dent’s short-term loans be in­ to serve as counselors at next fall’s tion most evident and why? 6) their opinions, Crane, panel mod­ consultant. creased to $300 per year. Presently, Freshman Camp. How can you best promote the erator, will invite questions from Mr. Willis, superintendent of the maximum is $125. A three per The Board also gave the green image of student government re­ KUFM listeners. Chicago schools since 1953, re­ cent interest rate is charged on light to the formation of the Com­ alizing that apathy is the promi­ KUFM will present a series of ceived his undergraduate degree all loans. mittee on Lecturers and Convo­ nent obstacle? 7) How can student four programs on forest manage­ from George Washington Univer­ Cole also recommended that the cations. The structure for the com­ government best promote cohesion ment to begin Friday at 7:45 p.m. sity, his master’s from the Univer­ present $1,000 allocation to the mittee was approved several weeks in the “ College Community?” This week radio-TV major Ron sity of Maryland and his Ed.D. ASMSU loan fund be continued. ago. Chairman Ray Cosman of Pub­ Bradshaw will interview Warren from Columbia University. CB granted Cole’s request that the Tom Behan* of Planning Board lications Board announced that Ensign, ranger for the Missoula During Mr. Willis’s career as an ad hoc committee on student loans outlined the major points dis­ the Garret, the campus literary District of Lolo National Forest, educator he has served on numer­ be allowed to continue its work. cussed at a recent meeting of the magazine, would be distributed on the habits of animals in our ous educational organizations and CB also was addressed by Lee Pacific Student Presidents’ Asso- either Friday or Monday. forests. professional education grou ps. Kaimin Columnist Stander Discusses Graduate Expansion To the Kaimin: will continue to lose professor President Johns has evidently who are in such high demand. L et’s Hear a Ripple spoken of Cynthia Schuster's state­ Our library is poor enough fo ment regarding an accelerated the undergraduate and is perfectl: graduate program as “ being used abominable for graduate work. to raise student sympathies.” He I cannot see how we can hopi From the GOP Mainstream claims that he does not wish to see to expand our graduate prograir the students used as “ patsies.” Ig­ with our limited funds in all area: Roy F. Malahowski noring the fairness and wisdom of and I ask the following question: such a remark, I would like to of President Johns: Spring is here, and with it a a conservative, according to the that is summed up succinctly and speak out as a graduate student Can we afford to have more o: revived if rather lean Republican same Arizonian. Anybody here very skillfully by Everett Dirksen and as a former graduate assistant a burden put upon our professor: party, in need of helpful sugges­ know what a chameleon is? who, in explaining his support of at this University in support of when they are already feeling thf tions for the future. The ultra­ But back to the moderate con­ the Civil Rights Act of 1964, .said, Mrs. Schuster. It is certainly about growing pains of the undergradu­ conservatives would like to con­ servatives. As usual, they consti­ “ Nothing is more powerful than time that the graduate voice is ate school? If not, do we have th< tinue with the 1964 system and tute the bulk of Republicans and an idea whose time has come.” heard at the University. are surprisingly seldom discussed. moqey to substantially increase try to find those other eight mil­ Perhaps one could formulate the Let me state, in the first place, our staff and pay the necessarj This is a group The Nation never lion voters. The 1964 Republican philosophy of at -least the older that I am totally in favor of a salaries? Do we have the monej endorses and often berates. This nominee, believing it unlikely that moderate conservatives as one graduate school. However, under for a substantial increase in oui is a group which may feel that he will be nominated in 1968, ap­ part principle, one part skepticism, present conditions, an accelerated library facilities? parently is attracted by Bill Miller Human Events is of dubious value. one part expediency and three graduate program at MSU would If the answers to all these ques­ This is the group that generally types as he speaks frequently of parts common sense. If the amount be a firm step toward academic tions are affirmative, then let u: hasn’t too many qualms about Dick Nixon. of principle seems disturbingly suicide. The graduate program in build up our graduate program passing a civil rights bill with small, one might consider that they Romney has been abroad, per­ the liberal arts school is approach­ However, if negative, then, in the haps to show the Europeans that an equal-employment opportunity use principle as a skeleton—yes, ing nullity. section in it, but which has been name of heaven, concentrate or the Republicans have potential that generally includes a backbone How many actual “graduate bettering what we already have resistant to Medicare financed nominees who are not too strongly — and do not seem too embar­ courses” are offered by each de­ Only when our undergraduate pro under social security. This is a devoted to big-stick diplomacy. rassed over the fact that they can partment? Most graduate students gram is sufficiently founded or group willing to co-exist with seldom display it. Bones serve a Scranton has been rather quiet— are obliged to take courses with adequate funds, on adequate facili Javits and Case, but which, what­ utilitarian purpose and are seldom one wonders whether he remem­ undergraduates which implies a ties and on adequate teaching car bers Silky Sullivan, that marve­ ever qualms some of its members worth exhibiting as ornaments. repetition of material with ^ no we proceed to a larger goal. Th lous horse of a few years back that may have felt, endorsed Gold- And what is the value of their added depth or perception and the students, both undergraduate anc water without any serious reser­ (sometimes) won races after being philosophy? Perhaps it can be situation can, therefore, be over­ graduate, will all be patsies if th vations after he was nominated. thirty lengths behind at the back- called a respect for the law of di­ whelmingly frustrating. administration overlooks the prac Moderate Conservatives stretch. minishing returns for conserva­ Advisers are so bogged down tical realities in an attempt to bite Rockefeller apparently will The philosophy of the older tives? Like the liberal Republi­ with undergraduate courses (where off more than it can chew. We are moderate conservatives, with cer­ for a third term in New York, but cans, they are willing, if neces­ there is already a shortage of pro­ headed toward sacrificing excel tain notable exceptions, is proba­ he evidently thinks that’s as far sary, to expand the welfare state, fessors) that it is impossible to vie lence at the undergraduate level bly the most ill-defined, the least as things will go. So does Javits— but they are more conscious of the adequate attention to the graduate for mediocrity at both undergrad­ incidentally, if anybody is inter­ coherent, the most mercurial (wit­ need for their philosophy of con­ (or undergraduate student). uate and graduate levels. The ad­ ness the cases of Everett Dirksen ested in finding a liberal vice- servatism. The liberal Republicans Present professors’ salaries are ministration must choose MSU’s presidential nominee, the senator and Thruston Morton), and the also warn of the dangers of un­ certainly not high enough to meet orientation and stick to it; but could, with a little persuasion. . . . least understood of any sizable bridled reform, but the more con­ the competitive market of the aca­ something will have to give. political force in America. One of Kuchel may be a dark horse servative Republicans see the folly demic world. We are losing and PAULA STANDER if the Californian lunatic right the better insights into the phi­ of succumbing to Disraeli’s “ Tory can’t find some way of getting rid losophy of this group is that which men and Whig measures”—lib­ of him. (Apparently the morals Clinton Rossiter attributes to the eralism through conservatism— Printing of 'Jesus' Editorial Defended charge has fallen through. Maybe late Robert Taft who, when ques­ philosophy. they can try to pin him on income tioned on this matter, replied, To the Kaimin: ergy and intelligibly attack Ror­ tax evasion. It’s worked before.) “There are some questions that I Pitfall of Cliche Apparently Dave Rorvik has vik’s editorial content, not his Nixon a Chameleon haven’t thought very much about.” But they will also avoid the pit- become an anathema. He is now right to print it. Certainly If they To the right of Scranton, but not There is strong emphasis on lib­ fall of reducing their philosophy accused of violating his responsi­ are allowed space in the Kaimin, to the right of Laird, who is under erty as a greater value than se­ to cliche. They will see where bility to the associated students, their opinions, (or group morality consideration? Well, there’s Nixon: curity, but this is softened by change should be made—tn strong transcending his “ broad limits of —“if any exists”), will be repre­ qualified, experienced—hasn’t held rather frequent use of the concept civil rights legislation, in some editorial freedom,” and willfully sented. office for four years, held some­ of “ equality of opportunity” in federal aid to education, even, as projecting a questionable image of DAVE MONTAGUE thing or other for eight years be­ difficult situations. There is defi­ with Dirksen and some of the more MSU, “ by which every student is Junior, English fore that. But since when has nite anti-communism, but consid­ “liberal” moderate conservatives, judged.” GREG ULMER Nixon been mentioned on the basis erably less of the crusading spirit in the selective endorsement of At first glance we were im­ Jr., History, English of ideology? (Yes, I know he’s for victory over communism than certain ambitious welfare meas­ pressed by the numerous signa­ more conservative than Scranton among the ultraconservatives, and ures as Appalachia, if they feel the tures of the letter of May 4, many and less conservative than Thur­ frequently a trace, sometimes liberals have grasped a really valid of which came from students who Johns Apologizes- mond, but that’s not exactly what more than a trace, of internation­ approach, or if they feel the need have, up to this time, appeared to I had in mind.) In May, according alism. There is uneasiness over the is worth risks that ultraconserva­ be among the University’s most to a well-known staunchly con­ growth of the welfare state but tives would feel were intolerable. If Guilty of Abuse accomplished. However, after To the Kaimin: servative Arizonian Republican, he little tendency to mistake the wel­ They will see the futility of at­ reading their letter, in which the was beginning to look suspiciously farism of the liberal Democrats for tempting to carry “ brinkmanship” points were obviously contradic­ I was disappointed to learn that like Harold Stassen. (Apparently socialism, as do many of the ultra­ and “ total victory over commu­ tory, (perhaps due to too many you and some of your readers are that was bad—no, I don’t know conservatives. There is skepticism nism” to their logical limits, limits chiefs), we wonder if they are not under the impression that I was much about Stassen either.) But abbut change, but there is also a that may be irrelevant or even advocating the “ insipid” imma­ guilty of abusing one of our dis­ by November, Nixon had become philosophy toward accepted change non-conservative. They will see turity which violates the academic tinguished teachers when I re­ the contradiction in terms of a principles of any university. Un­ fused to continue to debate with highly rational conservative phi­ less they think it is just to be Professor Schuster at Leadership losophy, realizing that conserva­ judged by narrow generalizations Camp last week. If such is the Up From Nationalism tism defines man as largely ir­ and group images, they display a case, I hope that you and your rational. quaint unawareness of the matrix readers will accept my sincere (And the Star Spangled Banner) And now the moderate conser­ in which prejudice, ignorance and apology both to you and to Pro­ vatives have a good crop of young, bigotry best thrive. fessor Schuster. At the- time, I “Th Star Spangled Banner is just so much trash.” maturing aspirants, many still was not aware that I had been By fearing the publication of an quite idealistic (so much the bet­ invited to a debate or that I was Joan Baez, nationally famous folk singer, said it in a recent editorial, which does not reflect ter for them)—among them Ford, expected to participate in one. issue of Fact magazine, and we agree. So do Fannie Hurst, the opinions of all 5,000 associated Dominick, Laird, Curtis (Thomas, I assure you of my respect for Richard Rodgers, Marya Mannes, Gus Hall, Norman Thomas, not Carl), Robert Taft Jr. .(though students, and that is inconsistent with the majority of opinions in the rights, privileges, and views he is temporarily unemployed), of every professor on this staff and Phyllis Diller, Meredith Wilson, Westbrook Pegler, LeRoi Jones Montana’s “ culture,” they are en­ Frelinghuysen, Smylie and a num­ if I have, in any way, been offen­ couraging censorship of academic­ and a lot of other poets, playwrights, journalists, entertainers, ber of others. With a little—but sive to one or any of them, my ally provocative material We real­ composers, critics and social reformers. , not too much— of the mellowness apology is indeed due. ize that it is the right of this group of Leverett Saltonstall, the lavish It shall continue to be my policy Some dislike the national anthem because the range is so to make known its desire for an histrionics of Everett Dirksen and to visit with or to discuss any unprovocative newsletter, just as steep, the key so high, others because the lyrics are so unpeace- the flexibility of Thruston Morton, plan, policy or procedure of the they might well form the nucleus it is Rorvik’s right to make his able and ridiculous, the tempo so slow. In short, because it’s a opinions knpwn. University with any person who lousy, inappropriate piece of music. It takes either a busty for a Republican party with a new seeks to do so and as promptly sense of purpose. While we do not necessarily as it is possible for me to do so. soprano or, as Fact suggests, a chesty “castrato” to negotiate agree with Rorvik’s editorial, “Je­ They would also do well to pre­ ROBERT JOHNS sus in the West,” we think that its awkward ups and downs. pare a few of their own members President How many times have you watched some buxom warbler on for the spring of 1968. After too the University is one of the few many years of Rockefeller, Gold- strongholds left for free expres­ television trill through .the Star Spangled Banner without water, Nixon and Eisenhower, it sion. Perhaps the group would STOP, I WANT TO GET OFF! musical accompaniment? Pretty grotesque. And you’re always would be refreshing to know that prefer reading editorials which Live births registered in the the mainstream of Republicanism concern innocuous problems, pos­ United States during the first half asking yourself, as author Hurst points out, “Is she going to could produce its own, home-culti­ sibly entitled: “Why Not Ride on of 1964 reached an estimated total make it?” You’ll recall that at LBJ’s inauguration she didn’t. vated candidates. With the young the Grass,” or “Monte Montana— of 1,978,000. This is about the same (Although, as it turns out, she was in tune with Johnson’s talent they have, there is little Profiles in Courage.” Perhaps the as the corresponding total for the reason they should not attempt to group can spend a little more en­ entire previous year. foreign policy.) do so. Even though the music isn’t bad, having been derived from an old drinking chantey, the words are ghastly. In an age of nuclear warheads, who wants “ the rockets red glare, the bombs MONTANA KAIMIN bursting in air?” Those words, inspired by the War of 1812, Policy on Letters “Expressing 67 Years of Editorial Freedom" of all things, probably choke up many a reactionary but they Letters to the editor should generally Dave Rorvik______Editor Pat Kennedy------Assoc. Editor only disgust the responsible individual who is more concerned be no longer than 400 words, prefer­ Keith Nichols_____ Mng. Editor Cheryl Hutchinson Assoc. Editor with his role as human being than as “American.” ably typed and spaced, with the Karalee Stewart______Bus. Mgr. Ed Mendel------Assoc. Editor Which brings us to a pertinent question: isn’t it about time writer’s full name, major, address and Bill Schwanke____ Sports Editor Kay Morton------Assoc. Editor phone nurdber listed. They should be Tom Behan______News Editor Paula Latham Asst. Bus. Mgr. to outgrow the need for childish tokens of national identity: brought to the Kaimin office in Room Todd Brandoff____ Photographer Prof. E. B. Dugan------Adviser flags, loyalty oaths, anthems, salutes and pledges? Isn’t it, in 206 of the Journalism Building by 2 The name Kaimin la derived from the original Sallsh Indian word fact, about time to start denationalizing in an effort to lead the p.m. the day before publication or and means “something written" or “ a message mailed to the editor in care of the Published every Tuesday, Wednesday. Thursday and Friday of the school year rest of the world up from the debilitating narrowness and by the Associated Students of Montana State University. The School of Journalism Kaimin. utilizes the Kaimin for practice courses, but assumes no responsibility and exer­ criminal waste of multiple polities, of revolting star-spangled Letters must be within the limits of cises no control over policy or content. ASMSU publications are responsible to Publications Board, a committee of Central Board. Represented for national bannerism, of the sort of egotistical divisiveness that has led, libel and obscenity and should• amount advertising by National Advertising Service, New York, Chicago. Boston, Los to more than a series of name calling, Angeles, San Francisco. Entered as second-class matter at Missoula. Montana. over the centuries, to the undescribable atrocities of war, to the reject any letter. Subscription rate. $8 per year. unforgettable shame of mankind? rorvik

2 — MONTANA KAIMIN irk Thursday, May 13, 1965 Automation to Be Fulbright-Hays Scholarships Conference Topic CALLING U The Community Services Lab­ To Be Awarded in Competition oratory will discuss the social im­ Competition for scholarships en­ Candidates must be U.S. citi­ pact of automation at a conference abling more than 800 American zens, have a bachelor’s degree or TODAY CONCERNING U today and tomorrow in the Yel­ graduate students to study in 55 its equivalent by the beginning Christian Science Organization, lowstone Room of the Lodge. countries is now open. The scholar­ date of the grant and must be pro­ • Arnold Bolle, dean of the 5:30 p.m., Music 103, all are wel- The laboratory is a class in the ships are provided by the Ful- ficient in the language of the host School of Forestry, will partici­ Sociology - Anthropology depart­ bright-Hays Act as part of the edu­ country, Robert M. Burgess, Ful- pate in the White House Confer­ ment which provides students cational and cultural exchange bright adviser at MSU said. Indian Discussion Group, 7:30 ence of National Beauty May 24 3.m., Territorial Room 4, Mr. with an opportunity to do research program of the State Department. Three types of grants are avail­ and 25 in Washington. Mrs. Lyn­ and to become involved in practi­ able: U.S. government full grants, Tames A. Canan, area director of don Johnson will open the confer­ .he Bureau of Indian Affairs, guest cal learning projects as part of joint U.S. government-other gov­ ence. Panels are expected to dis­ social welfare education. New Men Picked ernment grants and U.S. govern­ speaker. cuss every phase of the national A panel of MSU faculty mem­ ment travel-only grants. Masquer meeting, 12 noon, Mas- beautification problem. Mr. Bolle’s bers and businessmen will lead B y Bus. Honorary juer Lounge, new initiates must principal interest will be in the Full grants provide tuition, the discussions. attend. programs relating to saving the Five new members have been maintenance, round-trip transpor­ YAF, 12 noon, Committee Room forests and soil. Registration will take place in selected for membership in Beta tation, health and accident insur­ the Lodge from 8:30 to 9:15 a.m. ance and an incidental allowance. • Parents’ Day chairman and Gamma Sigma, the scholastic busi­ each day. There will be a $15 In Japan, Nepal, India and the Re­ YAF, 7 p.m., “Communism, Hyp­ committee applications are avail­ ness administration honorary. registration fee. public of China, a maintenance al­ notism and the Beatles,” Confer­ able at the Lodge desk. The new members are Robert ence Rooms 2 and 3. lowance will be provided for one • A $400 journalism scholar­ Crippen, Butte; Boh Dickey, Hel­ Royaleers, 7:30 p.m., Women’s or more accompanying dependents. ship will be established at the ena; Sharon Kellogg, Glasgow; Center, free lessons. Joint U.S. - other government University of Montana beginning David Payne, Whitehall and MSU Young Republicans, 4 p.m., School Tour grants provide suition and full or in 1966. The scholarship, awarded George Mitchell, business admin­ Committee Room 2. istration instructor. partial maintenance from a for­ Standards Board, 4 p.m., AWS by the Minneapolis Star and Trib­ une, will be given to the outstand­ By Foresters Beta Gamma Sigma is the only eign government, plus travel costs Office. from the U.S. government. These ing journalism student at the end scholastic honorary in the busi­ Tentative Freshman Camp coun­ Students from the forestry school grants provide tuition and full or of his junior year. will visit 20 public and parochial ness administration field recog­ sellors meet in LA 139 at 6:30 nized by the American Association Brazil, Denmark, France, Ger­ p.m. If unable to attend call Jim schools in the Missoula area this many, Iceland, Israel, Italy, the week to discuss conservation with of Collegiate Schools of Business. Stegmiller. Netherlands and Sweden. grade school children. Membership in the University TOMORROW chapter requires one year resi­ Grants are available to a num­ New for MSU— The foresters will speak and Montana Forum, 12 noon, Terri­ dence at MSU, a minimum grade ber of Latin American republics show slides and movies to the torial Room 5, Ed Dussault, Mon­ average of 3.2 for undergraduates in the field of - history, social sci­ students. Saturday they will take tana legislator. Eicon Honorary and 3.5 for graduates, juniors in ences, political science, law and the children to the University's humanities. Something new for MSU—eco­ the upper four per cent of the Lubrecht Experimental Forest Details about the program and nomics honorary scholarship, Omi- class, seniors in the upper ten per northeast of Missoula to partici­ application forms may be obtained cron Delta Epsilon. cent of the class and graduate stu­ pate in a tree planting. In the past from Mr. Burgess. ROTC Men John Wicks, assistant professor years youngsters have planted dents in the upper 20 per cent of of economics, will be sponsor and nearly 50,000 seedlings at the for­ those receiving degrees. adviser for the group of about 20 est. Get Awards students and faculty to be chosen. James Christensen of Philips- PLACEMENT CENTER Having a Party? Mr. Wicks is a member of the burg and Fred Flint of San Bruno, £ Awards for achievement during honorary. Teaching positions open to grad­ We Have an Ashtray Which the 1964-65 school year were pre­ Calif., juniors in forestry, are in uating seniors are listed below. Junior, senior and graduate stu­ charge of the conservation events. Will Accommodate sented to advanced cadets of the dents must have an over-all 3.0 Representatives of the three Army and Air Force ROTC units GPA in all economics courses un­ schools will be at the Placement 39 at a Monday afternoon parade on dertaken and 3.0 over-all to be eli­ Tentative Counsellors Center today. the MSU Clover Bowl. gible for membership. A representative of the Lambert The award for the second year Members of the new chapter will Public School will interview teach­ The advanced Army ROTC cadet who Chosen for Frosh Camp er candidates majoring in English be announced at a luncheon later Tentative Freshman Camp coun­ had the highest scholastic average this month. and library or straight English, Bell Pipe Shoppe of his class in both military and sellors have been chosen. commerce and math. An opening 225 East Broadway academic subjects and demon­ The girls chosen are Jan Com­ for a fourth grade teacher is also Opposite Post Office strated leadership potential for eaux, Barbara Kundert, Leslie available. three years was presented to Cadet NAFSA to Send Griffin, Scotta Herrin, Janet A representative of the Fair- Colonel Dale Schwanke, comman­ Evans, Frances Smith, Billie Kay view School will interview appli­ der of the Army cadet brigade. Students Abroad Rainville, Mickey Murphy, and cants majoring in library science, The Reserve Officers’ Associa­ The National Association of For­ alternate Debbie Archibald. music, commerce, German and tion award for superior perform­ eign Student Affairs is working to Boys chosen are Lee Howard, guidance. Applicants interested in new! ance in academic and military sub­ send American students abroad, Alan Benson, Richard Bechtel, Ted teaching grades one and two or jects for three years was pre­ according to Vedder M. Gilbert, Flynn, Pat McGillis, Don Welti, grades three and four will also be sented to Air Force ROTC Cadet foreign student adviser. Ray Cosman, Jim Stegmiller, and interviewed. Major Steven L. Thompson. Students desiring summer jobs alternate Ron Coleman. A representative of the Bain- Three awards for leadership ac­ or academic training abroad should A meeting of the tentative coun­ ville School will interview appli­ 4 5 r p m complishment and potential were see Mr. Gilbert in LA222 for ad­ sellors will be held today at 6:30 cants interested in teaching grade awarded to AFROTC Cadet Lt. ditional information and guidance. p.m. in LA139. one or grade four. Colonel David A. Overcast and Cadet Major Walter S. Jensen Jr. record and Army ROTC Cadet Lieuten­ Got something to sell—a message to telL Let the Mighty ant Warren S. Schultz. All-around outstanding- first- Midget work for yon with Kaimln Want-Ads. Club! year advanced Air Force and Army ROTC medals were presented to AFROTC Cadet Major Donald E. New . . . just for you! Brown and Army ROTC Cadet USE Guaranteed top 40 al­ Lieutenant Peter L. Achuff. ways in stock! Great The Academic Excellence Award new lp albums, too! Mighty Midget's Ad-O-Gram Come in and see our given to the first year advanced new look! AFROTC cadet who has main­ tained the highest academic stand­ ing within his class was presented to Cadet Major Jon A. Krutar. Just write your ad, only one word per space, below. Fill K The all - around outstanding in coupon at bottom of Ad-O-Gram. Fold the Ad-O-Gram, ^Counter Guerilla Unit cadet medal was awarded to Cadet Major John and bring it to the Kaimin business office or mail it to GET YOUR A. Thompson Jr. IP The outstanding rifle marksman the Mighty Midget in care of the Kaimin. of the Army ROTC rifle team Free : medal was awarded to Cadet Cap­ Write one word in each square. Cost in Column at Right tain David L. Dillon. record

Nothing to buy . .. you get a free 45 record, RE-ORDER just for joining! Abso­ lutely no obligation . . . SPECIAL ask any clerk for your membership card! on Yearbook Pictures

‘ And, when you join Twelve for our 45 Record Club, you get a free 45 with every 10 you buy! $2.50 Why wait! Shop our great new record col­ lection . . . join the 45 2” x 3” Application Size club today!

at RECORD SHOP . . . mezzanine alan shirley The Mercantile 825 South Higgins Phone 549-3468

Thursday, May 13, 1965 i r k MONTANA KAIMIN — 3 Vick Regains Batting Lead Clover Bowl Tips Prepare for Two Games Action With Second-Place Gonzaga

Centerfielder Bob Vick current­ times in 42 tries for a .310 average. Rex Bankhead has struck ou ly paces the winning Grizzly base­ Dewey Allen has scored 22 runs 32 men in 29 , and has ai SAE TAKES FIFTH STRAIGHT SNAKES STOMP TX ball team in the hitting depart­ for the Grizzlies, and is batting ERA of 1.24. Sigma Alpha Epsilon shut out Sigma Nu erupted yesterday for ment. Vick has been 71 .304. He has recorded 21* hits in 69 Delta Sigma Phi 11-0 yesterday an 18-4 softball victory over Theta Jack Mitchell has thrown 22 times, collected 26 hits, and is times at bat and has walked 13 innings, recorded 29 for their fifth straight intramural Chi. The victors got eight runs in swinging at a .366 clip. times. softball victory without a loss. the third , and closed out and has an ERA of 2.04. Frank Spear, who has come on Rex Bankhead, and util­ Smith, Walle and Johnson homered with five in the fifth. Theta Chi strong during the past few weeks, Jon King, after pitching 13 V, for SAE. Johnson was the winning got all of its runs in the third in­ ity , is 6 for 21 at the innings, has struck out batter: is now hitting .338. He is 23 for plate for a .286 average. 11 pitcher. Rossignol took the loss for ning. Dick Wilmot hurled for Sig­ 68 at the plate. with an ERA of 0.68. the Delta Sigs. ma Nu. Wayne Becker was charged Lee Levknecht has safely 13 In the pitching department The Grizzlies have no .mori with the loss. Larry Oddy has pitched 40 in­ home games this season. Thej AL & RAT’S EDGES BELLS nings and struck out 59 batters. travel to Spokane this weekenc IM Standings A1 & Ray’s put down a last ditch He has an average of for a conference doubleheadei effort by the Dumbells in the fifth Golfers Beat 2.70. with Gonzaga, meet Idaho Mon­ Fraternity League inning to win a close 8-7 decision. Hoyt DeMers has chucked 35% day, and finish the season nex Team W L Home runs were the order of the innings and has struck out 37 Thursday with a doubleheadei SAE ...... 5 0 day as Armstrong and O’Brien hit men. He has an ERA of 1.76. against MSC. PDT ...... „.4 1 round-trippers for A1 & Ray’s. MSC, Idaho SPE ...... 4 1 Marshall, Hill and Sullivan hit TX ...... 3 2 four-baggers for the Dumbells, all Montana University golfers won SN ...... 3 2in the fifth inning. two matches yesterday in compe­ New Assistant Coach Brings ATO ...... 2 4 GARGOYLES BEAT NADS tition at the University Golf PSK ...... 2 4 The Quest Gargoyles held on Course. Impressive Records to MSU DSP ...... 1 5 for an 8-6 win over the Nads in The Grizzlies clipped Idaho, 13- SX ...... __0 5 softball action yesterday. Bob Ful­ 5, and walloped a four-man Mon­ “ College football coaching is a ice Kingsford returned to MSU anc A League ton hit a homer for the losers. It tana State College team, 11%-%. lot more technical than coaching received a B.A. degree in Physi­ Team W L was the fourth loss of the season Idaho defeated the Bobcats, in high school,” says Tom Kings- cal Education in 1955. Kalispell ...... 5 0 for the Nads. The Gargoyles are 10%-1%. ford, recently acquired assistant He was assistant football coacl three and three. Dumbells...... 4 2 The Tips left almost immedi­ football coach at MSU. at Billings Senior High for on< Bitter Roots ...... 3 2 ately after completion o t yester­ Kingsford, an all-time Grizzly year before going to Poison. Vapors ...... 3 2 TODAY’S GAMES day’s triangular for Pocatello, great in football, and former Poi­ Kingsford’s football record ai A1 & Ray’s ...... 3 3 Idaho, where they will compete son High School football and track Poison was outstanding. He coach­ Quest Gargoyles...... 3 3 A League in the Big Sky Conference Meet coach, replaced Clint Whitfield ed Poison to four divisional gric Nads ...... 1 5' 3 p.m. Friday and Saturday. this spring. titles, and had a record of 54 Rejects ...... i____ 0 5 Field One — Rejects vs. Bitter Whitfield resigned to assume wins, 14 losses, and three ties. B League Roots Montana is the defending con­ ference champion. business interests in his home state Team W L Field Two— Kalispell vs. Vapors of California. Phi Alpha F a lfa ______5 0 B League Individual results in the Idaho- “There is a very noticeable at­ Uglers ...... 5 0 4 p.m. MSU match were as follows: Har- titude difference between high Mets ______3 2 Field One— Craig 1st West vs. land Peschel, MSU, def. Dick Trail, What's Blue Wave 3-0; Larry Kirkland, Idaho, def. school and college athletes,” 69ers ...... 3 2 Kingsford commented. happened Darby Rangers______2 3 Field Two—Darby Rangers vs. Gary Kopravica, 2-1; Don Waller, Blue Wave ...... 1 4 Mets MSU, def. Rick Jensen, 3-0; Jim The high school athlete seems to the Stompers...... 1 4 5 p.m. Wallinder, MSU, def. Ross Rogn- to have much more spirit, but the Craig 1st W est...... 0 5 Field One—Stompers vs. 69ers stad, 3-0; Jack Marcure, MSU, def. college player accepts the game cowboys C League Field Two —9 Uglers vs. Phi Chick Cutler, 3-0, and Bill Carter, much more maturely, and is in this Team W L Alpha Falfa Idaho, def. John Warren, 3-0. respect easier to coach. and Advocates ______4 1 Results of the MSU-MSC match Kingsford, a quarterback at MSU from 1948-50, is considered Indians? were: Peschel, MSU, def. Dick Dumas 45’s ------4 1 the greatest MSU passer. Haden, 3-0; Kopravica, MSU, def. Foresters ...... 3 2 He completed 155 of 323 passes Voo Doos ...... 3 2 MSU Netters George LaBlanche, 2 % -% ; Wal­ for 17 touchdowns and an unbrok­ They're still here in Montana, ler, MSU, def. Don Aaker, 3-0, The F ifths...... 2 3 en record of 2,296 yards. His best thank goodness. But so is a whole new modern world of opportunity. R.F.’s ...... 2 3 Travel South and Wallinder, MSU, def. Carl year was 1950, when he netted Ground Pounders------1 4 Peterson, 3-0. All of us at Montana Power join Montana State University’s ten­ 1,363 yards, nearly half of Mon­ with you in working to attract W esley...... 1 4 nis team left for Pocatello, Idaho, Idaho rolled over MSC with the tana’s total offensive yardage that new industry. Helping Montana D League yesterday to compete in the Big following results: Trail, Idaho, season. grow is everybody’s job. Team W L Sky Championships. def. Haden, 2-1; Kirkland, Idaho, After leaving MSU, Kingsford Candle GI ...... 5 0 The Tips lost to Whitworth Col­ def. LaBlanche, 3-0; Jensen, Idaho, was signed by the San Francisco D -1 3 ______4 1 lege and Eastern Washington Col­ def. Aaker, 3-0, and Rognstad, 49ers, for whom he played until B an d its______3 2 lege by identical 8-1 scores last Idaho, def. Peterson, 2 % -% . entering the Marine Corps in 1952. Rainiers------3 2 weekend. Waller of Montana was medalist He coached and played football, Apothecaries ------2 3 M o n t a n a P o w e r Mike Emerson was the only for the meet with a 70. Peschel basketball and track for three COMPANY Chodda Choppers :------1 4 Grizzly netter to win a match shot a 73 for the Grizzlies. and one-half years in the service, Tilly Winks ______1 4 against Whitworth. John Alexan­ and was elected to the All-Marine Knee P a d s ______1 4 der was in the same position football team in 1952. against Eastern Washington. Tiny Tee, IFC Upon discharge from the serv­ s e r v in g royts q u r b u s in e s s Making the trip to Pocatello are MOCCASINS Emerson, Alexander, Brett Assel- Slate Fraternity For the Whole Family stine, Tony Bonavist, Kit Walther and Rich Curry. INDIAN RETURNED Hand-Tooled Purses The Idaho State squad is de­ Golf Tournament and Wallets by fending conference champion. The MSU Interfraternity Coun­ Our stolen wooden Indian was recently returned by a University CLIFTON cil, in cooperation with Lee Pep- student who said he was not responsible for the theft; however, pard, owner of the Tiny Tee mini­ he could not tell us who did take it. He is now implicated by way At the Sign of possession. If anyone has any information regarding the Indian, of the Red Boot Phi Delta, Sig Eps ature golf course in Missoula, will please come forward and help straighten out the situation. All sponsor an interfraternity minia­ information will be kept confidential. A liberal reward will be NEAL'S Take Horseshoes; ture golf tournament Wednesday. given for accurate information: Play will begin at 7 p.m. at the SHOE REPAIR Pool Won by .007 Tiny Tee course. PAUL'S SECOND HAND STORE 13616 N. Higgins Phi Delta Theta and Sigma Phi Each fraternity will be allowed Epsilon won first place in singles to sponsor one four-man team. 128 Alder 549-8031 and doubles intramural horseshoes Each team will play 36 holes of competition during the past two golf at no charge. weeks. Each member of the winning Runner-up to PDT in singles team will receive a putter. was Sigma Alpha Epsilon. The LUCYS .007s finished second in doubles. Peppard has asked that fra­ Jack Plumage of .007 defeated ternities sign up their teams as Your Headquarters Carl Lawson of SAE for the indi­ soon as possible. vidual singles title. Rod Dahl and GIRLS for Larry Thome of SPE defeated Bob THREE 20-GAME WINNERS German-Style Spareribs Quality Gift Items Hoene and Monte Hamilton of The had three PDT for the doubles championship. who won 20 games or 1/2 PRICE for In pool competition, which ran more last season. They were Larry for several weeks during April Jackson of Chicago (24-11), Juan T onight GRADUATES and May, the .007s grabbed first Marichal of San Francisco (21-8) place with 17 total points. and Ray Sadecki of St. Louis (20- Live Music By Munich Accordion Players and Following the winners were 11). PDT and SPE with 13, Worms and WITH THE SINGING OF BILL POWELL JUNE BRIDES Hot Dogs with 8, Blue Wave with 7, Hustlers with 6, and SAE and ^ Dishes Alpha Tau Omega, each with 5 Schwinn Bicycles ’Ar Ceramics points. ^ Glassware Bill Terry of SPE beat Norm Sales and Service Quinzler of .007 for the individual at FREE GIFT WRAPPING title. LUCEY'S Heidelhaus ROSTERS DUE NEXT WEEK Rosters for intramural track and BICYCLE SHOP golf will be due next week, ac­ cording to Ed Chinske, intramural 2021 S. Higgins LUCYS director. Higgins and Pine The track rosters are due May Phone 3-3331 19. Golf lists must be in by May 20.

4 — MONTANA KAIMIN i r f r Thursday. M u; 13. 1965 Bowlers Finished With Season Rod

and After Successful Title Defense Montana’s bowlers have no more doubles competition. They rolled Individual six game totals for Reel scheduled matches this spring, ac­ scores of 624 and 647 respectively. the first team were: Gene Kraft, cording to Vince Wilson, bowling Donaldson also captured first in 1,172; Senn, 1,171; James, 1,146; By GARY LA FONTAINE coach. the handicap singles eveht with a Mike LaSorte, 1,101, and Gordon The MSU keglers wrapped up 588 series. Simard, 1,035. A number of questions about although the pork rind has come spring competition last weekend >ork rind lures have been asked to Montana, the art of fishing it by winning the Montana Intercol­ ince the last column and although hasn’t. legiate Championships in Billings. his series of articles isn’t meant The best way I can relate the This is the second year the Grizzly Brown Paces Two-Milers 0 be a pulpit for my homilies, I method of fishing it is to tell bowlers have captured the title. hink I should answer them'. about my first experience with it. MSU won the team event with Montana’s Doug Brown has put (55 feet, 3% inches) and The history of the pork rind is I was seven and fishing a small a score of 5,625, averaging 187 per posted the best mark in the two- Dwayne Turpin in the pole vault is old as American bass fishing. bass pond in Connecticut with a man per game. Ron Senn took mile event with a time of 8:50.4 as (13 feet 10 inches). Colonists in South Carolina were friend and his father. I started high individual game honors with Big Sky track teams start their Idaho State’s John Figueroa he first reported to use it and with a store-bought, lure, and al­ a 235 and a 231. final week of competition before has the best time in the 220-yard 'rom there it spread to wherever though my friend’s father quickly The Grizzlies had the high team the conference meet May 21-22. dash with a clocking of 21.7 sec­ >ass were fished for. caught three bass, I didn’t get a game of 1,002. The University of Idaho contin­ onds. Bengal Art Scott leads the Its popularity reached an apex strike. Montana State College took sec­ ues to dominate conference track mile with a time of 4:13.5. Ben Miller paces the high hurdles with n the late thirties when the old I asked him what he was using ond, with Eastern Montana College statistics with leaders in four run­ jait-casting equipment was still finishing third. ning and three field events. 14.4 seconds and the intermediate and he handed me a pork rind lure hurdles with 38.2 seconds. dng o f the hill. After the war the with a weedless hook. I fished this In doubles competition, Eastern Vandal runners with best times took first with the MSU team of Idaho State also claims best smaller lures of spin fishing dis­ fruitlessly for the next hour. I are Bill Bryson in the 100-yard marks in the mile and 440-yard placed it and it became known as must have looked like I had Don James and Senn finishing dash (9.4 seconds), Virgil Kear­ second with 1,163 pins. relays. the Forgotten Lure. reached the end of my patience ney in the 440 (49.7 seconds), Nils Montana’s second team, which Actually, it has never really because the helpful adult came Jebsen in the 880 (1:52.3) and Montana State’s Dick Scott has been forgotten. The hard core of was entered in the handicap divi­ John Mynott in the three-mile ah effort of 22 feet 11 inches to over to me. “ You’re fishing it sion, took second with a score of serious bass fishermen have kept wrong,” he said. (15:15.3). lead Big Sky broad jumpers. ’ 2,508. Bob Peterson was high for Idahoans leading field events Weber's Ace King leads in the the art of fishing with pork rind He continued, “ It isn’t a manu­ alive. They are the fellows that the second team with 1,063. aTe Ray McDonald in the discus triple jump with a mark of 45 feet, factured lure. Fished wrong it’s Bob Peterson and Jeff Donald­ (166 feet, six inches) and shot- 10% inches. the weekend tyros, watch come much worse than one. Fished right into the docks with full strings of son of MSU combined for a 1,271 it is much better. Here, this is the fish. Then the weekend fisherman total pins to take first iii handicap way to do it.” remarks that some people have all the luck. Taking his pole, he flipped the NEED A RIDE? 1 And now my lifelong companion lure into the water. Then, to my Bobcats Whip of the bass ponds pops up here in surprise, he didn’t start a hurried Montana. The first time I saw it retrieve. He let it sink to the bot­ This week the Kaimin will being used here was at Ninepipes tom and after a few seconds he Western Twice run FREE classified ads turned the reel handle twice and and the experience has been re­ BOZEMAN (AP) — Montana stopped. He lifted the rod tip. He once for those who need peated many times since. State College won a nonconference snapped it to the side, then reeled I was sitting on the shore, fin­ baseball doubleheader from West­ rides or passengers for ished fishing for the day. Using a little more. ern Montana College Wednesday, pork rind, I had caught seven He continued this procedure un­ 8-3 and 12-1. Spring break. Deadline for hard-fighting bass and I was sat­ til the lure was at his feet. He said, Ron Scott and ads: Noon the day pre­ isfied. “ Fish it slow. Make it twitch, rise, centerfielder Ernie Hanson each Another fisherman came along scoot to the side, and in general hit home runs for the Bobcats in ceding publication. with a pork rind hanging from the make it look alive. You supply the the opener. Scott also had a triple end of his spinning rod. He stopped action.” and two singles. hear me and, casting out into the I did and became a devout con­ Montana State broke a 2-2 dead­ PHONE EXT. 219 or 549-7200 cove, reeled straight and quickly vert. There are a lot of little ways lock in the third inning by push­ in. I cringed. He looked at me then you can make a pork rind move ing across four runs on Hanson’s THE and said, “They can keep these and I’ve tried most of them. If it homer, a triple and two singles. damn pork lures in the east. They isn’t in a straight line and it is The Bobcats rocked three West­ MONTANA KAIMIN sure as hell don’t work on Mon­ slow it will attract bass. ern hurlers for 12 hits in the sec­ tana bass." The pork rind is found at most ond game, including eight for ex­ I just sort of smiled sickly and tackle shops. The bass are at tra bases. nodded. After seeing this happen Ninepipes. They are a great com­ First Game over and over I am convinced that, bination. Western ...... __200 001—3 6 3 MSC ...... 114 2Ox— 8 12 0 ENJOY CHECKBOOK Gehring, Rollings (4), Lots (5) Mets Purchase Chuck Hiller and Christensen; Richards, Win­ MONEY CONVENIENCE ters (3), Madden (5) and A l­ brecht. As Major Leagues Cut Rosters Second Game By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Cincinnati released Boros out­ Western ______100 000— 1 5 3 A total of 24 players were either M SC ______372 OOx— 12 12 1 right to San Diego and optioned Lots, Nelson (2), Rawlings (4) released, sold, optioned or placed infidder Tommy Helms to the and Fisher; Ulstad, Olsen (3), Tuss on the disabled list in eleventh- same dub. hour manipulations as the major (5) and Albrecht, Winners (5). leagues baseball teams got down Cleveland optioned Williams and infidder Tony Martinez to to the required 25-man limit Tues­ Portland and outfielder Richie day at midnight. Scheinblum to Salinas, Calif. MERLE NORMAN The busiest dub—and the un- luckiest— was the . Boston optioned Nixon to To­ COSMETICS It purchased one player, released ronto and St. Louis sold pitcher Dave Dowling to the Chicago another, sold one outright to a MAIL ORDERS minor league club and placed A ll- Cubs for the $8,000 waiver price. Star second baseman Ron Hunt on The Houston Astros optioned PROMPTLY FILLED the disabled list. outfielder Mike White to their Oklahoma City farm dub and put S The newest member of the Mets Write: is Chuck Hiller, second baseman Nellie Fox on the active list. Fox ;|purchased for an estimated $50,000 had been strictly a coach since the 6 Seventh Street South season started. from the . Great Falls, Montana 59401 This deal was necessitated by the All other clubs were already injury to Hunt, who suffered a down to the limit. left shoulder separation in a col­ lision with Phil Gagliano of the St. Louis Cardinals Tuesday night .and may be lost for the rest of the WITH AN EASY-TO-USE season. Do You Know About The other Met cut was Carl Wil­ ley, 34-year-old right-hander who Kraabel's Special was the club’s best pitcher in 1963. Willey, never fully recovered from a jaw fracture sustained in spring Finance for Students and Faculty? PERSONALrCHECKING ACCOUNT - training last year, was sold to Buffalo of the International League. If i f A few dollars and a few Others who felt the axe induded minutes opens your account you don’t, Gary Rivers, age 23, a Corvair driver, knows several veterans— tAt Checks personalized FREE Roy Sievers, outfielder Bobby D d good wheels and will understand your problems. Phone Greco, catcher Russ Nixon, pitcher 549-2578. ^ Economical — costs less Frank Baumann, Steve than money orders Boros and pitcher Stan Williams. Sievers was given his uncondi­ If i f NO minimum balance tional release by the Washington Senators, who also sold pitcher Gary is not at home, try Merlin Fisher, just a little older i f NO charge for deposits Nick Willhite to Spokane and re­ with a little more experience. Phone 549-0416. i f NO monthly service charge turned pitcher Green to the . The Phillies released Del Greco If A Friend Of The Family outright to Arkansas and the Chi­ cago Cubs optioned Baumann to Salt Lake City. Philadelphia also Merlin is not at home, try Earl Slack, an Impala Super MONTANA optioned pitcher Morrie Stevens Sport driver, a little bit older and a little more experi­ NATIONAL and catcher Pat Corrales to Ar­ enced. Phone 542-2889. WESTERN BANK kansas.

Thursday, May 13, 1965 ★ ★ MONTANA KAIMIN — 5 Prof. Schuster Views Graduate School Talk given by Cynthia Schuster, type which can be graded by ma­ let us undertake only what we can about the effect of research and administrators, faculty and si associate professor of philosophy, chine. do well. The results of the at­ publication on the quality of a dents, do all we can to nnma at Leadership Camp, Thursday The larger th e,classes, the less tempted combination at California man’s teaching. It sometimes im ­ that trend as fast as we can. evening, May 6, 1965. there can be of the priceless op­ have so disheartened some profes­ proves it and sometimes makes If, when you have heard 1 portunity a small university can sors that, aghast at the inability of him terrible. The only generaliza­ point of view opposed to mi This year the people of Montana offer its students; the opportunity their mass-educated undergradu­ tion we safely make is that the from Dean Honkala, Profess have been asked to support rapid for lengthy discussions between ates to think and to write, they teachers who care can do more for Silverman, and perhaps Preside expansion of graduate research professors and students, and for have seriously proposed cutting students in relatively small classes Johns, you decide that you care programs at MSU. Statewide pub­ lengthy comments written by pro­ out undergraduate education al­ than in large classes. much about teacher time availat licity has associated “progress” in fessors on the student’s efforts to together. They now see that only Ambiguous Stand for undergraduate students as y higher education with increases in express his thoughts clearly in institutions with teaching staffs President Johns’ stand on the do about justice in parking ticke numbers of graduate degrees of­ written papers. primarily devoted to undergrad­ question whether we have freely voice your desires as conspicuous fered and increases in numbers of Learn to Know Students uate education can do a good job chosen our present policy of rapid as you did last week. What ha students and faculty involved in of it. graduate work. With twenty or thirty students expansion of graduate research, pens at MSU depends partly Let me comment briefly on the or have been forced into it, seems you, and you can make it depe; This evening I ask you to think in a class, the professor can get in reasons given by those who advo­ to me to be ambiguous. He has a more on you than it has. about an aspect of the present and touch with the abilities, interests cate rapid expansion of our Grad­ copy of this talk, and I hope he planned rapid expansion of the and needs of individuals. He can I close with one more que show each student in what ways uate School. The three I have will want to clarify his position from Dean Honkala’s talk to t Graduate School which, though heard most frequently are: 1) It frequently admitted in private he is dogmatic, illogical, vague, tomorrow morning. Council of Fifty. In asking lor i will attract industry to Montana. In the conference with the phil­ conversations, has not, so far as confused or misinformed. He can creased support for graduate r 2) Every university should con­ osophy department I mentioned I know, been publicized. It is this: spot the brilliant but bored or search, he said: “ Graduate stu< tribute to the store of knowledge. earlier, he admitted that expan­ In our university, indeed in any lazy student who might respond costs money; it is the most d to greater challenge, and he can 3) It will enable us to attract and sion of the graduate program at manding level of instruction, . . state university with limited funds, keep good faculty. rapid expansion of graduate pro­ sometimes make suggestions to MSU is resulting and will result in it is personal and individual.” grams results in deterioration of the student who is having diffi­ Pocketbook Objective larger undergraduate sections. He I would plead with you and wi undergraduate education. culty with the work. 1) is the defense which has hit went so far as to say that econom­ the people of Montana to give ii ically the whole thing is ridicu­ I think that during the past two But what happens when classes the headlines in the Montana press. creased support to undergradua years MSU has gone a long way run from sixty to two hundred? This is an objective dear to the lous: “ We could send every grad­ education, for it is the most di toward selling the undergraduate A professor lecturing to two or hearts and pocketbooks of many. uate student to Harvard, pay his manding level of instruction, ar student down the river, as he has three classes of that size cannot Others of us love Montana just as way, and throw in a Chevrolet it must be personal and individu for decades been sold down the make himself available to every she is. Surely one of our precious car, cheaper than we can prepare if it is to be effective in develoj river in big research-oriented state student who wants to go over freedoms is the freedom to choose him here for a Ph.D.” ing minds, as contrasted to men universities. It looks to me as if some point on which he is con­ whether to live in a place like “ But,” President Johns added, ory-storehouses of piece-meal it we are jumping on a bandwagon fused, nor even to those students Chicago or in a place like Missoula “ that’s the trend. The Board wants formation. (politely called a “ trend” ) without who, intrigued by some new idea, —to choose whether to go to col­ it, the people want it, and it’s what Quality of Education we are going to have.” reflecting on the human costs. want to discuss it and to ask for lege in New York and be one of suggestions for further reading. 30,000 or in a small university in “Not long after this conversa­ The quality of undergraduai Individual Opinions In research oriented universities, a sparsely populated state where tion, Dr. Johns asked Dean Hon­ education will never make heac Before I proceed, let me make undergraduate students are usu­ an individual is still more than a kala to speak to the Council of lines, and it cannot make an in it clear that I speak only as an in­ ally not allowed to make appoint­ statistic. Fifty, and through them to the pressive splash in reports, as ca dividual faculty member. Some ments to see the lecturers at all. But to the extent to which we people of Montana, explaining to figures about numbers of advance other faculty members agree with They are permitted to see only attract industry to Montana, to them why they should support re­ degrees awarded, but if our visio my point of view, but I present the student assistants who grade just that extent we transform our search at the university. Dean is not clouded by phony statistic: it here simply as my own. It is my the papers. There are professors communities and our educational Honkala complied with the much definitions of “ progress” and “e> own conscience which speaks at the University of California institutions in imitation of the publicized talk from which I have cellence,” we can still make MS1 when I say that I regard the uni­ who have lectured daily to large industrialized population centers, quoted. The “trend,” it would an academic haven for scholai versity’s obligation to its under­ numbers of undergraduates but thereby narrowing the range of seem, is at least in part of our whose hearts are in their teachin graduate students as its first and have not spoken with one choices open to Americans. making. I suggest that we all, and for serious undergraduate stu greatest" obligation. undergraduate student for a Last year Dean Honkala, in his dents. Let me also attempt to avoid decade. talk to the Council of Fifty, misunderstanding by declaring Free to Change stressed the fact that many new MSU Foundation that I do not oppose all graduate This is the direction in which industries operate without noise, research at MSU. I am not pro­ we are moving, but we are still smoke or smell. However, in a Receives Stock Johanson posing anything so extreme as free to change direction. telephone conversation with me, The MSU Foundation has been turning MSU into an exclusively Body Shop Every administrator at MSU I he mentioned that evidence shows given certificates of International undergraduate university. have heard speak on this topic that even pulp mills prefer to lo­ Business Machine stock valued at I oppose only the present heavy features has admitted, when pressed, that cate where research brain-power $21,500 to found an Albyn F. emphasis on graduate work and the present pace of expansion of is available. McCulloh Scholarship in the MSU the rapid pace at which we are • Complete Auto Body the Graduate School entails larger Enough said? The stink aside, Law School. adding graduate degrees—a pace Repair undergraduate classes and in­ I cannot see that carrying on re­ Mrs. Grace McCulloh, Sand which has shifted budget priorities creased use of student paper- search beneficial to industry is a • Painting for new staff and new equipment Point, N.Y., established the schol­ graders. Last year, in a conference major obligation of MSU or of the arship fund in memory of her hus­ • Glass Installation in a manner prejudicial to under­ with the philosophy department, taxpayers supporting it. Since graduate education. band, a 1930 MSU law alumnus, President Johns was disarmingly rendering this service to industry who died in 1963 while vacation­ Located at 214 E. Main Decreased Time frank about the situation. will divert teacher-time from un­ ing in Rome, Italy. The present pace of expansion First he explained to us that dergraduates who need it, I regard of the Graduate School maintains we cannot hope to regain soon the it as immoral. the total student-teacher ratio but number of full-time philosophy Pleads for Slowness greatly decreases the teacher time teachers we had six years ago 2) The second reason, that every available for attention to under­ (when university enrollment was university has an obligation to graduate students. much smaller than it is now), be­ contribute to the accumulation of Who Did It? The most obvious price paid for cause priorities are given to the knowledge, I grant. I plead only over-rapid expansion of the grad­ new graduate programs. for slowing the pace so that we do Who Borrowed M y uate programs, with its inevitable When he was asked whether the not default in our primary obliga­ shunting of teacher time into sup­ university is buying its expansion tion, the best possible education of Skate Board? ervision of graduate research, is in graduate programs at the price undergraduate students. increasing the size of undergrad­ of increasing the size of under­ 3) The third reason cited is that Don’t Borrow a uate classes. I suppose that each graduate classes, he answered: research facilities attract good fac­ of you has been enrolled in both “Do you know of any place where ulty. This occasionally benefits Skate Board— large and small classes. that price has not been paid for undergraduates. More frequently, I leave you to reflect on what it?” however, it works against them, has been done for and to your I suggest that Montana refuse for faculty members attracted by Get Your Own enquiring minds when you have to pay that price! Let us heed the research facilities and by graduate been enrolled in sections of more experience of institutions which students are rarely able or willing ONLY $6.75 AT than sixty students, with no out­ have attempted to combine large- to devote much time to under­ side written work required, and class undergraduate education graduates. all examinations of the “ objective” with big research programs, and No generalizations can be made DON’S DRUG 1407 South Higgins Sherlock Holmes Lives On in Residence Hall By JOHN EDWARDS the only organization of its kind. The organization is not large but Sherlock Holmes, the James The Baker Street Irregulars, the the members are devoted, accord­ Bond of the 19th century, lives on Sherlock Holmes Society of Lon­ ing to Phil Redant, councilor of at this University through the vi­ don, and the Cion Society are sim­ the Resident Patients. For in­ A Go-Go carious sleuthing of the Resident ilar but larger groups with the stance, in San Francisco, a woman Patients of MSU, a group of same interest in Holmes. who refers to herself as the Soli­ Holmes fans. Names of the organizations and tary Cyclist, the title of a mystery, Members of the organization— of officers are pulled from Sher­ holds regular meetings by herself SHARPE’S A& W nine in number—share a common lock Holmes mysteries. Some to read Holmes’ mysteries. interest in intrepid master sleuth groups also publish journals con­ On Holmes’ birthday the Resi­ Sherlock Holmes, and his absent- taining information about other dent Patients celebrate with a i t CHILI CHEESEBURGER minded crony, Doctor Watson. The Sherlock Holmes societies and re­ dinner cloaked in the atmosphere organization meets, according to search conducted by Holmes en­ of a Holmes mystery. The Heidel- i t MUSHROOM BURGER Phil Redant, councilor of the thusiasts. haus, which resembles a chalet de­ group, to create closer ties be­ Most Holmes societies are pre­ picted in one mystery, is a savory i t MEXICAN TACOS tween Holmes enthusiasts, to dis­ dominantly professors, but the location for such a celebration. cuss Sherlock Holmes and to pre­ MSU organization has a few stu­ The Resident Patients, like i t ' PORK CHOP SANDWICH serve interest in the Holmes mys­ dent members. MSU enthusiasts many other Holmes societies, want teries. are Phil Redant, John S. Harrison, to spread the appreciation of i t CHEESE DOGS Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, author Julie Phillips, Lloyd Nielson, Ira Holmes and his adventures to of Sherlock Holmes mysteries, is Robinson, Bruce Tomko and Don­ others. With this in mind, they not the main character of discus­ ald Mackey. hope to procure taped radio plays i t HOAGIES sion, but rather, Sherlock Holmes At the meetings every second of Sherlock Holmes mysteries and himself. The Resident Patients be­ and fourth Tuesday of the month, sponsor them over KUFM, the lieve Holmes really existed and a story is assigned for group dis­ University FM station. Conan Doyle was only a literary cussion at the next meeting. Dis­ People interested in Sherlock SHARPE’S A& W agent who recorded the adven­ cussions are devoted to character Holmes are invited to attend the Open 11 ajn. to 11 pan. tures of Holmes and Doctor Wat- analyses, the intricacies of Holmes’ meetings, Redant said. However, ideas and comparisons of his stor­ membership in the Resident Pa­ 2413 So. H iggins------Across From Ballpark The Resident Patients of MSU, ies with those written by other tients is limited to facilitate dis­ formed in August of 1964, is not authors. cussions.

6 — MONTANA KAIMIN ★ ★ Thursday. May IS, 1965 Faculty Prepares for Antiquity With Savings

By BILL WALTER sors (AAUP) and the Association The age at which participation The level rate means that a set and is based on creditable service percentage of the salary is ear­ All teachers at Montana State of American Colleges (AAC). in a retirement program begins and average salary. Under this marked for the retirement pro­ niversity can be assured of hav- The statement of policy released is one of the three major elements part of the benefit, the teacher re­ gram, while under the step-rate, g an income from the state when by these organizations reads in that influence the level of benefits 10 per cent of the salary below the ceives 1/70 of the average salary ley retire. part, . . to establish a retire­ that the person will receive upon Social Security base is deducted, multiplied by the number of years Members of the administrative, ment income, including Social Se­ retirement. According to the and usually about 15 per cent of of service before 1939, plus 1/140 structional or scientific staff at curity, ‘equivalent in purchasing TIAA-CREF recommendations, the the salary above the Social Secur­ of the average salary multiplied by Montana State University, whose power to approximately 50 per other two factors listed in the com­ ity base. These figures were the number of years of service nployment lasts for more than 30 cent of the average salary over the mittee report were the level of reached, in most cases, through the since 1939. The average salary is lys, are required by law to hold last 10 years of service’ for a per­ contributions to the plan and the son who participates from age 30 to age at which the person retires. belief that an employee must have the average of the highest five embership in the Teachers’ Re- years on whic hthe full 5 per retirement . . .” Automatic Deductions The compulsory retirement age rement System of Montana. The cent has been paid. Salaries are w states that this membership is The committee reasoned that Montana law states that the in Montana is 70, but members may start receiving benefits by limited to $5,000 for retirement >nsidered a condition of their em- since retirement benefits are not teacher shall contribute 5 per cent purposes. loyment, unless the person was subject to Social Security or re­ of his salary, up to $5,000 per the earliest age, 60, if they have Annuities nployed by the University prior tirement deductions, and the per­ year, which will be deducted from 10 years of creditable service with­ > the passage of this legislation sons will probably be in a lower the monthly salary checks by the in the system. Nationally, three- The annuity is the actuarial i 1939. at which time staff mem- tax bracket after the time of re­ institution and deposited in the fourths of the institutions have a equivalent of the member’s ac­ srs were given a choice as to tirement, and if one or both of the teacher’s individual savings ac­ retirement age of 65, but 90 per cumulated contributions at the hether they wanted to join the persons are over the age of 65 count. A membership fee of $1 is cent of these allow extensions, time of retirement. Men receive rstem or not. and therefore eligible for also deducted each fall, but this most of them to age 70. $77.80 annually for each $1,000 Required Contribution exemptions when computing in­ is not refundable and law permits Rates Vary in the fund, while women get $67.90 for each $1,000 on deposit. The Montana Teachers’ Retire- come tax, that the average person its deduction from the teacher’s As is the case in Montana, 90 per upon retirement would receive The difference compensates for tent System is a joint contribu- savings account if it is not paid. cent of the retirement plans now nearly two-thirds of his former the difference in life expectancy >ry system, which provides that In addition, the University pays require payments frob both the take-home pay, sufficient for between men and women, so they teacher is required to contribute 3% per cent of each teacher mem­ individual and the institution, normal living. ber’s salary to the pension fund but the rates may vary greatly. At will actually average the same iward an annuity purchased with amount. le deposits which were deducted Montana Plan and % per cent to the expense the State Universiy of New Yotk, •om salary earned. The University In part, the Montana plan fol­ fund. This is subject to the same members pay 12 per cent on the The same general plan is fol­ Iso contributes toward the pen- lows fairly closely the systems maximum of $5,000 annual sal­ first $4,800 and 15 per cent on lowed by other colleges that par­ on, which is based on salary and found at many other colleges and ary. This money does not belong everything else above that. This ticipate in the combined T IA A - jrvice. The Retirement Board is universities. Most of the institu­ to any one person, but goes into includes a 3 per cent employee CREF plan. The TIAA benefits ie legal body that is responsible tions across the nation, however, the general fund from which all contribution currently being paid are the same as the annuity part >r the administration of the law make the retirement program op­ pension and expense payments are by the state. in Montana and the CREF pay­ sgarding the plan and is composed tional while the instructor is under made. The number of schools adopting ments are like those given in Mon­ tana under the pension section. f four appointed members—two age 30 or during a waiting period Once the teacher reaches age 60 the TIAA-CREF plan has greatly jachers and two representatives imposed by the institution. o r«has completed 35 years in the increased in the past few years. Lower Than Most system, he need not pay the 5 per f the public—and the State Sup- A study of colleges and univer­ During the past 25 years, the num­ Despite the fact that the amount cent of his salary, but the Univer­ rintendent of Public Instruction. sities participating in , either the ber of institutions has risen from collected from a teacher's salary sity must continue to pay its share. The Montana Retirement Sys- TIAA or the CREF plan, or both, 189 to 668, including 71 public- under the Montana Teacher’s Re­ ;m, unlike that of many other shows that 82 per cent of them Interest Paid supported colleges and universities tirement System is generally lower tates, administers the entire pro­ require the instructor to become Interest is paid on the money that have joined since 1960. than that in most other states, the ram within the state and does not a member of the retirement system on deposit in each teacher’s ac­ Francis P. King, research direc­ facTthat almost all Montana teach­ articipate in any of the national upon reaching age 30, while Only count on June 30 of each year, tor for the TIAA, wrote in the ers also participate in the Social roups that have been established 18 per cent are similar to the Mon­ and is computed on the previous Winter, 1964, issue of the AAUP Security program should guaran­ or the same purpose. tana system and require member­ balance and the monthly pay­ Bulletin that most of these schools tee them almost the same bene­ Two Major Organizations ship immediately. ments made during the year. The joined the program to obtain more fits as those who see a greater Nationally, there are two main Most of those requiring a person rate of interest is not set by law, adequate retirement income for portion of their salary taken out rganizations for teachers’ retire- to join at age 30 will allow an but is determined each year ac­ their faculty, full vesting of bene­ for a single retirement program. lent — the Teachers’ Insurance instructor to participate in the cording to the earnings of the fits, the CREF variable annuity In addition, teachers at the Uni­ nd Annuity Association (TIAA) program prior to that time, how­ deposits of the system. and greater access to the nation’s versity are not putting all their nd the College Retirement Equi- ever, and some also permit pay­ On the national level, the per­ academic talent. eggs in one basket. It is doubtful ies Fund (CREF). Both of these ment for the years before 30 once centage of deduction is usually The way the Montana program that either program would fail, but •Ians work toward the over-all the instructor has joined the pro­ about 10 per cent, almost double is set up today, the retirement the present system gives Montana oal established in 1962 by a com­ gram, allowing him a chance to the Montana rate, which is on the benefit is composed of two parts— State University teachers a wider ined resolution of the American receive maximum benefits upon level system of figuring, in oppo­ the pension and the annuity. variety of choices for the distribu­ association of University Profes­ retirement. sition to the step-rate system. The pension is paid by the state tion of their retirement income.

s u p e r s a v e

Thursday, May 13, 1965 ★ ★ MONTANA KAIMIN — Crowds Picket Pentagon Forces Now Number 45,000 Urging Viet Nam Parley U.S. Adds 2,400 Battle Troops WASHINGTON (AP) — Hun­ religious leaders and Mr. McNa­ dreds marched through Washing­ mara.” ton, picketed the Pentagon and The demonstration began at To Beef Up War Against VC conferred with Secretary of De­ Mount Vernon Methodist church fense Robert S. McNamara on in Washington. About 600 assem­ SAIGON (A P) — Transports In the aerial drive against North overran Song Be Tuesday, killin Wednesday in an interreligious bled and marched 3% miles across landed about 2,400 more U.S. serv­ Viet Nam, 12 U.S. Air Force F105 five U.S. Army advisers and 4 plea for negotiations, not bombs, the Potomac River by bridge to icemen Wednesday for the war fighter-bombers were reported to of the Vietnamese garrison—i: to settle the war in Viet Nam. the Pentagon, picking up more against the Viet 'Cong while Com­ have sunk two 70-foot junks and one of the heaviest onslaughts c The estimated 800 to 1,000 join­ participants en route. munist survivors of the battle of hit a number of oil tankers at the war. ing in the “interfaith vigil on Viet Bearing placards saying “ Nego­ Song Be, the latest big engage­ Vinh, 140 miles north of the bor­ A senior U.S. military advise] Nam" also sent telegrams to Pres­ tiate, Don’t Escalate,” and “Bombs ment, hid out in the hills. der. Barges and boxcars were Lt. Col. John G. Hill Jr., of Alex ident Johnson, North Viet Nam Are No Way to Parley” they took The U.S. military force in Viet among other targets. A spokesman andria, Va., said he believed a Premier Ho Chi Minh and South up positions some distance from Nam rose to about 46,500 men. said all the F105s and their 12- least 2,000 Red guerrillas took pax Vietnamese Premier Phan Huy three entrances on as many sides A third battalion of 1,400 U.S. plane escort returned safely. in the attack on that provicial cap Quat urging talks to halt the vio­ of the building. Some walked slow­ Marines moved ashore at Chu Lai, Dominating talk on ground op­ ital 74 miles north of Saigon an< lence. ly. Some stood in silent vigil. where the 1st and 2nd Battalions erations was the retreat of the that they had intended to stay After nine leaders of the Prot­ The counterpicket, who identi­ of the 4th Marine Regiment estab­ Viet Cong force that temporarily while. estant, Roman Catholic and Jew­ fied himself only as a Falls Church, lished a beachhead last Friday. ish faiths left a 75-minute session Va., businesman, marched in front Navy Seabees are to build an air­ with McNamara, Bishop Daniel of the group with signs saying strip at Chu Lai, 52 miles south­ Low Bids for 11-Story Dorm Corrigan, director of the Home among other things: “ Running Up east of the strategic Da Nang air­ Department of the Episcopal the White Flag is Running from base, that should help in cam­ Church, New York said: “He lev­ Communism,” “Down With All paigning in the central highlands. On Campus Total $1,745,000 eled with us and we leveled with Reds and Appeasers,” and “ Con­ The troop transport Mann bore him.” tinue Bombing.” in 976 men of the 173rd Airborne HELENA (A P )—Contractors of­ dormitories planned for MSU, Me Brigade from Okinawa to join fered Wednesday to handle state Laughlin, Inc., Billings, bid $1,362, The Pentagon called it “ a friend­ Pentagon cafeterias, restaurants ly exchange of views between the 2,000 other paratroopers of that building projects in four cities for 000 for the general contract. Rain and rest rooms were opened to the brigade previously transferred by low bids close to the estimated $2.1 bow Electric, Great Falls, bi demonstrators and an Army medi­ air. The newcomers, including an million, with most of the cost for $113,000 for the electrical contrac cal detachment with a doctor and artillery battalion, were assigned a skyscraper dormitory in Mis­ and C. W. Schmid, Missoula, waj Russian Lunik nurse stood by in case they were to help guard the Bien Hoa air­ soula. low for the mechanical work aj needed. port, 12 miles northeast of Saigon. The total of low bids for an 11- $270,000. Lands on Moon Dr. Edwin T. Dahlberg, former Further foreign manpower may story dormitory on the Montana For the MSC housing project president of the National Council help to reinforce the South Viet­ State University campus was Edsall Construction Co. was apl MOSCOW (AP) — The Soviet of Churches, now at the Crozier namese war effort. In Manilla, the $1,745,000. parent low for the general contrac Union announced its spacecraft Theological Seminary, Chester, Philippine House of Representa­ Low bids for a 40-unit housing with a base bid of $206,365. Wal­ Lunik 5 hit the moon Wednesday Pa., did most of the talking for the tive^ voted 56-18 to send 2,000 project for married students at lace Diteman, Inc., Bozeman, wa: night but indicated it had failed group which raw the secretary of troops— an engineering battalion Montana State College in Bozeman so close at $208,000 that selection to make a “ soft landing'' on the defense. with security support. The meas­ totaled $273,184. of various alternates could swinj lunar surface. ure now goes to the Senate. For the first of several highrise the job to either bidder. Such a landing would have put the Russians at least half a year Klan Activities ahead of the United States in the race to put a man on the moon. The first announcement distrib­ Eyed by HUAC uted by The Tass news agency af­ WASHINGTON (AP) — The ter the landing said Lunik 5 “ hit House Committee on Un-Ameri­ the moon in the area of the Sea of can Activities is stepping up the Clouds” at 10:10 p.m. Moscow tempo of its investigation into the time— 2:10 p.m., EST. Ku Klux Klan. It may question The purpose of a soft landing is Klan leaders at preparatory, closed to continue to receive radioed in­ hearings in two weeks, sources formation after the craft lands on said Wednesday. the moon. By saying information They also said committee inves­ was obtained only in the approach, tigators have reported the Klan is the announcement indicated the active in at least six Southern moon shot was at least a partial states and that while the FBI has failure. infiltrated the Klan, there is evi­ The announcement implied—but dence the Klan has infiltrated did not say— that the spacecraft some Southern law enforcement had failed to lower itself gently agencies. onto the moon as the first such Chairman Edwin E. Willis, D- venture by man in his effort to La., appointed a subcommittee this put himself on the lunar surface. week to conduct the inquiry into In the past, Soviet space scien­ what President Johnson called tists have not said ahead of time “the hooded society of bigots.” what their ventures were intended The sources stressed that the to do. Then, whatever they did closed hearings would be part of could be claimed as at least a par­ the committee’s investigative rou­ tial success and the world did not tine and should not be confused know the extent to which accomp­ with the normal hearings that they lishment might have fallen short said would get under way within of intentions. two months. Air Force ROTC CLASSIFIED ADS has now been updated to fit into today’s Each line (5 words average) first insertion______20c busy undergraduate schedule. Each consecutive insertion______10c (No change in copy in consecutive insertions) Deadlines: Noon the day preceding publication. Here are the facts about the new two-yeaf AFROTC Program. If errors are made in advertisement immediate notice must be given the publishers since we are responsible for only one Incorrect insertion. Phone 543-7241, Ext 219, or 9-7200 Who is eligible for two-year AFROTC? Any which will amount to approximately $120. Dur* male undergraduate who still has two years re­ ing the school year, you will be paid $40 a month, maining in college. It’s an especially good break and you will also get free uniforms. for junior college students who plan to complete their baccalaureate requirements at a four-year Will I have a chance to fly while I am in Institution. AFROTC? Senior graduates are eligible for the Flying Instruction Program. This involves 36V4 What’s the curriculum like? It’s been thoroughly hours o f flight training and 35 hours o f ground revamped. You won’t find pat answers and tra­ school. Successful completion earns you a civilian ditional ritualized solutions to problems. New private pilot’s license. instructional methods teach the student to arrive at his own conclusions, and to test them against those o f his classmates and instructors. Symbolic United States Air Force o f the change is the new title — Department of Aerospace Studies. How will students for the new program be chosen? First, you must pass the Air Force Offi­ cer Qualifying Test and have a medical examina­ tion. Then you meet with the interview board o f senior Air Force officers, who will decide whether you are to be selected to attend the Field Training Course. This will be held during the summer before your junior year. Its purpose is two-fold; to let the Air Force judge you and to let you judge the Air Force. Only after you are both satisfied will you be enrolled in the program. So you see, ou have everything to gain and nothing to lose y applying now. But you must act fast—applica­ tions will be closing for next year’s juniors. Forms are available from the Professor o f Aerospace Studies, or from Headquarters Air Force ROTC, Maxwell AFB, Alabama. A s an AFROTC cadet, will I receive pay? Yes, you will be paid for the Field Training Course

8 — MONTANA KAIMIN irk Thursday, May 13, 1965