Allen, Osterink Are Top Greeks N. Viet Aggression Cited

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Allen, Osterink Are Top Greeks N. Viet Aggression Cited M ICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY N FWS East Lansing, Michigan Tuesday, April 27, 1965 Price 10$ G rads Find Library'Inadequate' of courses and a distinguished brary budget of $1.5 million a undergraduates and 6,000 gradu­ to the Big Ten. It is to be ex­ to him. The ' ‘divisional areas Editor’s Note: Second of ates in the same facility. pected that State would be be­ were planned for undergraduate a five-part editorial an­ faculty in this graduate area. year. There are other areas in the Despite the lack of adequate The MSU library is ninth in hind in library resources. But use. Periodicals and books are alysis of the MSU Libra­ University which are feeling the resources in some areas of stu­ the Big Ten in number of vol­ the Sullivan committee points dispersed, and reference ser­ ry. pinch of inadequate library re­ dy, MSU Is attracting an increas­ umes. The University of Illinois, out that our present rate of growth vices are fragmented. By COLLEEN O’BRIEN sources. This is reflected In ing number of graduate students. fourth in the Big Ten in number is inadequate, not only for catch­ The Sullivan committee pro­ State News Staff Writer demands for increases In hold­ The percentage has risen from of students, has the biggest li­ ing up, but also for keeping up poses that a large central ref­ If a graduate student wants to ings of various departments. 12 in 1955 when the library was brary, with over three and a with comparable Big Ten librar­ erence service be established, write a Ph.D. thesis on the So­ built to 22 in 1964. In addition, half million volumes. The Uni­ ies. with a large "stack’’ system for viet Union, he should not come to Faculty questionnaires indica­ the number of departments of­ versity of Michigan, seventh in In 1962 -63 Michigan State spent all general reading. The present MSU. The library is inadequate ted a need for holdings in depth fering Ph.D.'s has trebled In the enrollment, has over three mil­ over $424,000 to purchase66,700 system prevents researchers for the research necessary in by African studies, $70,000 to same period: In 1955 there were lion volumes. Michigan State has volumes. U-M spent $736,000 for from having ready access to ma­ this field. $100,000; chemistry, $250,000; 16; In 1964, 52. about one million volumes in its twice as many volumes that year. terials in depth or materials of This is the advice that at least foreign languages, $60,000 and so library and is fifth in enroll­ Even if the resources a grad­ an Interdisciplinary nature. one professor gives potential on down the list. The library was designed for ment. uate student needs are in the Tomorrow the State News will graduate students. It will take a long time to ful­ 14,000 undergraduates. It is now It is true that MSU was the library, the organization of the present faculty viewpoints of the Yet MSU has a good program fill these needs with a total li- trying to meet the needs of 24,000 last university to be admitted central library is a hindrance library’s needs. Allen, Osterink 125 S tage Library P rotest; Are Top Greeks S it-in Is P lanned Today By DON SOCKOL fairs Committee of Committee member of the Canterbury Club. M argaret Allen, Cleveland, Council. She was Trophies and State News Staff Writer for Student Rights (CSR). One speaker quipped that pri­ Ohio, senior and Kappa Alpha Programs chairman for Water The most scalding Indictment ority Is given to self-liquidating Theta, and Bruce Osterink, East Carnival, and is the campus re­ About 125 persons pitted them­ of the library was delivered by projects, and on this basis, we Lansing senior and Delta Tau cruiter for Pan American Air­ selves against a chilly drizzle Josepli Roberts, associate pro­ could build a roller rink or a Delta, were presented the Out­ ways. and UTiiverslty policy Monday af­ fessor of political science. He world's fair here. What we are standing Senior Greek Awards She Is a member of Kappa ternoon to battle for library re­ told the crowd that he know of doing, he said, is degrading the BY. B A B Y —-Art students across the campus Monday night at the kick-off Delta Pi, education honorary and form. A sit-in is planned at the several faculty applicants who, idea behind education. grieve the loss of ‘‘.white work,” a creative ex­ speech for Greek Week. has a 3.1 grade-point average. library today between noon and on Inquiring about the library, The students in general seemed pression by Bob Weil, an instructor of art, stand­ Miss Allen has been presi­ Miss Allen has worked on Ca­ 5 p.m. were told it was not very good, to support the demonstration as ing behind Kresge Art Center, The "white work,’ dent of her sorority and presi­ reer Carnival, J-Council, Union Invitations were extended to "but 1 !-M is right down the a valid means of protesting. made of white plaster, will soon give way to an dent of Sorority President’s Board, Water Carnival, Greek students, faculty, the director of road’." “This is a healthy sign for addition to the Center. The 12-foot high structure Week and AUSG. libraries, and administration of­ ion’t know what can be is so constructed that any movement from its posi­ BRUCE OSTERINK, " 1 tion causes its destruction. Photo by L arry Fritzlan In 1962 she was a member ficials to discuss charged library done," said Richard Gale, East (continued on page 7) of the queen's court for Home­ inadequacies. The latter two were Lansu g graduate student. "I U.S. Doubts coming, and was active in the conspicuous by their absence. don’t ’.ink Chapin cares enough Contemporary Dance Club and A note from Director of Li­ about 1 iI r a r y improvement. I Junior Pan-Hellenic Council. braries Richard Chapin saying gave him a list of things that A rm y Units Seen In South Sincerity Osterink has held offices as "I do not believe much can be could be corrected quickly and sophomore class president and accomplished by open-air dis­ cheaply when 1 was chairman of Of Soviets corresponding secretary of his cussions," was read to the crowd, the AUSG L ibrary Committee, fraternity. His grade-point is assembled near Beaumont Tow­ and none of them have been acted N. Viet Aggression Cited UNITED NATIONS, N.Y 3.9. er. Chapin extended an open in­ upon. I speak of such things as The United States charged Mon­ Honoraries he has belonged to vitation to any person with a betier lighting and better cata­ strikes will continue as neces­ day that Soviet attacks on U.S. include Blue Key, Excalibur, Phi complaint about the library to loguing." WASHINGTON t* - - HeavYJ should enter the war on a mass Eta Sigma, Green Helmet, Omi- Communist casualties In Sout" scale. sary to Impede the Infiltration policy in Viet Nam and else­ meet with him individually. A (■ w of the speakers sug­ McNamara discussed the sit­ and to persuade the North Viet­ where raised serious doubts cron Delta Kappa, Phi Kappa Any interested person was giv­ gested t.iat the library was more Viet Nam have forced North Viet namese leadership that their ag­ about Moscow’s sincerity in mak­ Phi and Tau Beta Phi. en the opportunity to voice his important to the University than Nam to start sending regular uation against a background of He was Mr. MSU In 1964, be­ army units into battle there, Sec­ nearly three months of almost gression against the South must ing any real progress on disar­ views during the forum, which the football team, and the fee stop,” McNamara said. mament. longs to Honors College .and has lasted an hour, but no dissent­ hike for football tickets would be retary of Defense Robert S. Mc­ dally U.S. and South Vietnamese been a resident assistant inCase air bombing of highways, rail­ The defense secretary said the Ambassador Adlai E. Steven­ ing opinions were offered. better spent on the library. Namara said Monday. air attacks have wrecked 24 brid­ son made the charge in reply to Hall. “ It was suggested that the ral­ McNamara reported In a news roads, bridges and other tar­ Osterink also played freshman "Thefi is a preoccupation with gets on the North Vietnamese ges, have slowed the inf/tcraifon a blistering denunciation of U.S. increasing the size of this Uni­ ly was not the best way to han­ conference this new turn in what and "significantly and adversely foreign policy delivered in the basketball, was on the AUSG Cab­ dle the problem and we never he called "progressively more routes used to infiltrate men and U.N. Disarmament Commission inet, and won the General Motors versity at the expense of the flagrant and unconstrained" ag­ arms into South Viet Nam. affected the morale of the Viet library,” said Reinhard Mohr, did get official permission for "The carefully controlled air Cong troops in the South." by Nikolai T. Fedorenko, the chief Scholarship Award and Outstand­ chairman of the Academic Af­ it," said Howard Harrison, a gression hy North Viet Nam. Soviet delegate. ing Junior Award. MAGGIE ALLEN Evidence gathered in the last month, McNamara said, has con­ firmed the presence in a central highlands province of a battalion of the regular North Vietnamese Union Offered Raise arm y.
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