MICHIGAN 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. New Power Plant Under Construction McNamara said “there is no military requirement for the use To Postpone Strike A new MSU smokestack will Join the MAC Within five years the north campus plant should of nuclear weapons in the cur­ and MSC stacks next fall and will mark the be phased out and some time later the plant rent situation." PITTSBURGH [If)--The steel in­ board will meet the same day, site of Power Plant “65.” next to the stadium will close down. He added that no useful pur­ dustry offered Monday a pay McDonald said. ■The new power plant, now under construc­ Any additional expansion of facilities will pose can be served by "spec­ raise of .11- 1/? cents a»4>our for McDonald declined to confirm tion on South Campus between the Chesapeake take place at Power Plant “65" where there is ulation on remote continge.ncfes" a four-month postponement of reports that the 11-major steel and Ohio and Grand Trunk Western railroad room to make the plant two or three times as in which such weapons might be Saturday’s scheduled strike by firms had boosted their previous the United Steelworkers Union. 7-cent offer. tracks, will have a smokestack towering 25 large. brought into play. But presumably the 170 mem­ feet above the 250 foot MSC stack. The plant will contain two 250,000pound-per- This did not alter a disclo­ The offer was worked out in a "Because of a poor winter and spring for sure over the weekend that the private meeting between Union ber wage policy committee would hour boilers and two 12,500 kilowatt generators President David J. McDonald and be called back from union dis­ building, construction is slightly behind sched­ which will consume 25 tons of coal per hour U.S. government is retaining the tricts all over the U.S. and Can­ ule now,” said Joseph F. Kavanaugh, planning when operating at full capacity. option to use nuclear weapons in R. Conrad Cooper, chief negoti­ North Viet Nam In the proper ator for 11 major steel firms. ada only to consider a major con­ engineer overseeing the project for the Uni­ The power plant next to the stadium, built In tract offer. versity. 1947, could not be expanded because of problems circumstances—perhaps, forex- There was no public announce­ “We still hope the plant will be completed by am ple, If Communist China ment, but details of the offer were of coal shipping, storage and lack of space for learned from unimpeachable October," he added. additions. ' A id The need for the new power plant has be­ sources. come more critical with the additional building The new plant will oe used in addition to the McDonald immediately called Indian Army to be opened next fall, Kavanaugh said. present ones to supply heat and electricity to the union’s 170-man wage policy "Last winter we had to Initiate a steam cut­ all University buildings except Spartan Village. committee for a meeting Wednes­ back to keep steam demands within the capa­ It is necessary for the University to purchase Student Board day to accept or reject the offer. Alerted After city of the present two plants," he said. some electricity now, Kavanaugh said. Time gained in the four-month Ultimately the new power plant will replace "At a few peak periods we purchase roughly Plans Debate postponement would be used to the present ones on Circle Drive and next to one-third of the electricity, being used at that work out a final settlement. Border Fight the stadium, according to Kavanaugh. time,” he added. The 11-1/2 cents per man for On Viet Nam nearly a half million steelwork­ NEW DELHI UP)—India declared The student board will sponsor ers would be set aside until final Monday that tank-led Pakistani a public debate on U.S. action agreement is reached. infantrymen attacked south In Viet Nam, members decided The industry’s offer is a com­ across the west Indian frontier Sunday night. promise with the union’s demand in fresh, large scale thrusts. C arl Friberg, Inter-Co-op that the final settlement be retro­ India’s armed forces were Council president, is inves­ active to May 1 when current con­ alerted. tigating a time and place for the tracts expire. Defense Minister Y.B. Chavan program . “ 1 am very optimistic at this announced in Parliament at noon Two faculty members will point," said smiling Steelwork­ that a battle launched in the mor­ speak on each side of the question. ers President David ¿.McDonald ning was still going on in the In other action, the board set In announcing a Wednesday meet­ barren rann of Kutch. Six hours 8:30 p.m. Wednesdays as its ing of the union’s wage policy later, a spokesman said fighting meeting time. The open meetings committee. The union’s executive was continuing. He said Indian will be in 311 Student Services. casualties were "considerably The title for the cabinet head less than company strength (about provoked a 40-minute discussion 125 men) and Pakistan's were before "cabinet president" was higher." chosen. Clubs Unite It appeared that danger of es­ Members opposing this choice calation to a larger conflict ra­ felt that It Implies direct elec­ For Lunch pidly was increasing and that-the tion and sounds like the old office U.S. and Britain had failed in of All University Student Govern­ In a unique move, the ladies of their attempts to win a cease­ ment (AUSG) president. The the Faculty Women’s Club at fire. board appoints the cabinet pres­ MSU have been invited to Join the Chavan told Parliament Pak­ ident, Jim Tanck, while the MSU Men’s Club at a luncheon at istani tanks and an infantry bri­ AUSG president was directly- 12:15 p.m. today in the Union Par- gade of about 3,000 fighting men~ elected by the student body. lo rsr had attacked an Indian position The titles chief administrator Jack Breslin, secretary of the at Biar-Bet, six miles south of and chief executive were rejected University, will speak to the what India says is the interna­ on the grounds that they would group on the 19651egi.slativeUni- tional frontier. Biar-Bet is a lead to ridiculous names—such versity program. position taken by Indian troops PLANT PLAN TED — Workmen are busy on the new MSU power plant which will as vice administrators—for low­ A. R. Drury, president of the after falling back In a battle be completed by next fall. The stack, the third member of the MSU tower club, er cabinet personnel. Men’s Club, will preside. Saturday. will reach 275 feet Into the air. Photo by Cal Crane 2 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Tuesday, Apfil 27, 1965 The Present’s Tense EDITORIALS » Where Have All The Powers Gone? 30,000; 1984;

would probably be accepted by the ' Remember the procedure for 1,000,000-Hike! Board of Trustees. Again, the effecting rules changes in the Un­ trustees were making the deci­ By Jim Sterba iversity? It’s simple. s io n . In a democracy, change does not occur overnight. It usually in­ volves a number of time-consuming steps, the first of which is to You go through a committee, The next day, our editorial was eliminate obstacles to the change. o r m a y b e t h r o u g h a subcommit­ headlined “ Changing Tim es.” It In order to move a football from one point of the field to another, the offense must away the defense. If this happens, the ball­ t e e a n d t h e n a committee, with hailed the recom m endations, and carrier has little trouble moving the ball. a set of recommendations based s a i d : Members of the offensive team can yell, boycott, sit-in, or pro­ on research and opinion-polling. test in any fashion they chose, but if they do not successfully re­ “ Barring any unexpected prob­ move the defense, the ball-carrier cannot progress very far. In the case of housing rules, the It is the frequent claim of the lineman, that if he is only given lems, the recommendations will Gommittee you go through is the a chance to carry the ball, the team’s offensive problems will be be passed by the Board of Trus­ solved. faculty one on s t u d e n t a f f a i r s , Members of the backfield, however, having carried the ball all tees at its April m eeting, and will whose chairman is Charles W. their football lives, only muse at this whim. be University policy in time for The current library improvement ferment seems to involve many Titkemeyer. of these same role conflicts. next fall.” Perhaps, if those students and faculty (the linemen) who seek to When the committee is satis­ improve the library were to turn their attentions to eliminating ob­ fied, its recommendations go to We still believed it. stacles instead of cursing the administration (the backfield), the library might be changed. President John A. Hannah, who Last Thursday, the Board of Ofcourse, in football, the backfield also eliminates defensive ob­ Trustees met at Oakland Univer­ takes them to the Board of Trus­ stacles. This is also part of the job of the administration. But if students and faculty want toplay the game, they might be of tees. The trustees, so nearly ev­ sity. A number of issues were more value if they made it easy for the administration to carry the eryone seem s to think, have the discussed at the form al meeting. ball instead of retarding progress with placards. The housing recommendations It is important that students and faculty recognize the obstacles f i n a l s a y . to library improvement. The administration is frequently blamed. were not among them. But they are the ball-carriers of the operation, and must necessar­ Last term , through a series of ily be on the same side as the students and faculty. The housing rules cam e up for Perhaps once suggestions have been made to the backfield, it is traum atic confrontations of opin­ the next duty of the linemen to turn their attentions to clearing a path discussion, but informally at a ion, the University braced itself through which the ball-carrier can run. luncheon after the meeting. But this would call for defining and pinpointing the defense. This for a change in off-cam pus hous­ takes a little more time and work than heckling the backfield. ing rules, to be passed u p o n f i ­ The trustees “ informally ac­ However, if the faculty and students were to accept a role as ob­ lially by the Board of Trustees. stacle eliminators, where could they turn? cepted” the changes. They must When plans for the current library were being discussed by the have decided earlier not to veto legislature, two wings of the planned structure were neatly elimi­ A news story in the State News the rules, a procedure which nated by a legislator’s pencil. He thought they were unnecessary at March 11 said, “ Any recommen­ the time, and he was right. w o u l d have required formal dis­ Maybe the students and faculty could turn their attentions to in­ dations (of the housing subcom ­ c u s s i o n . forming the legislature. This task, however, would take more energy mittee) will go to President J o h n than some reformers want to use. It is much easier to sit on the Thus, the question: Who made library steps in defiance. A. Hannah, who will carry them It is apparent that some legislators are an obstacle to library im­ to the Board of Trustees.” the decision to change the hous­ provement. How can they be eliminated? , An editorial the sam e day, en­ ing rules? W as it the trustees, as A legislator has been known to listen to those who elect him. If the electors were to suggest to the lawmakers that MSU’s library titled “ Consensus,” said: w e w e r e t o l d right along it would was financially undernourished, they might be; more likely to appro­ be, or was it the subcommittee priate more money. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR With this in mind, students should convince their voting parents “ After the parent committee on off-cam pus housing and later that the library needs improvement, and get them to write or talk discusses them tonight, any rec­ the Faculty Com m ittee on Student to their representatives. The library might be improved. ommendations for change will 'Pay Right Through For MSU’ Of course, it is a little easier to sit in front'of Beaumont Tower Affairs, which must have tailored and denounce the library director than it is to get mommy and daddy start down the l o n g path through their recommendations to their Be loyal to MSU, back MSU, we have to pay to attend pep ral­ lege—and I am one of them. to write to their legislator or the Board of Trustees. Is 392,372 my student number, further investigation, passage by notions of what the trustees would support your teams at MSU, have lies at MSU? It is a lot easier for linemen to bawj out the backfield than to or is that amount of money they the committee, the president’s Spartan spirit at MSU, PAY to Why? Because the Athletic De­ throw good blocks. p a s s ? see your team play at MSU. Will partment wants a little more will get out of me before I grad­ But it is a lot easier to win football games with good blocks. Ask Office and finally to the Board of money in their own pockets? uate? Name withheld Duffy. On second thought, don’t ask Duffy. Ask Bump. Trustees. The board, Titkem eyer Was the decision made by the We pay $6 fees for bowling, hockey, golf, and canoeing, to em phasized,m akes all changes in decision-m akers, or by the rec- Point of View By Jane Salmon Kannappan Hits name only a few. We pay for lock­ rules. The committees only r e c * - ommenders ? ers, towels and everything else the athletic department has to of­ o m m e n d . ” N ew s 'Letterhead’ ■ ■ If the trustees only pass on m a­ fer. All of these fees are piled To the Editor: upon our $384.25 fees per term. We believed that then. jor changes regarding students’ Does the Athletic Department Who ’s Apathetic Now? April 8, a news story q u o t e d activities at informal luncheons, The headline stating that the back the rugby, squash or tennis team? Heck, no, they don’t make Editor’s Note: Jane Salmon, debate or discuss the importance solution than the opportunity of­ Titkem eyer as saying the recom ­ where does the real power lie in "teach-in offers cover-up” was surely not a correct interpreta­ that Jingling sound in the till. Chicago sophomore, is an of remaining in Viet Nam. When fered by mutual discourse. mendations that the Com m ittee on the University, and who does the tion of my views. On the con­ Does the student body realize advertising major andchair- the teach-in committee members Viet Nam is a political issue. man of the new MSU chapter were contacted, they immediately As such, it is proper to the realm Student Affairs had just approved University t h i n k it’s kidding? trary, let me repeat that in my that unless the male has pur­ opinion the teach-in consisted of chased tickets in advance, it will of Young Americans for refused to debate and ultimately of political organizations on this cost $10 for a date? If he had F reedorrv; turned down our offer of a panel campus. many sensible speeches and in­ discussion because they feared Though we appreciate the con­ But Seriously .... structive expositions. tickets it would still set him back My criticisms were directed at $7. If he doesn’t use his advanced Viet Nam has raised many the situation would be biased cern for impartiality, YAF feels the limited scope for discussion purchases, he loses $2, and the problems — in that country it­ against them. that sponsorship of a discussion or critical comments from the athletic department then sells his self, in Washington and right here by ASMSU detracts from its func­ seat for $5 more. Instead of choosing to go ahead tion as a governing body. Since it floor, and the procedures em­ on the MSU campus. The com­ and just present the other side of fosters student participation ‘Ugly In A ployed in “adopting” resolutions. Do your realize that a small plexity of the problem and the the question, YAF dropped the through the chartering of organi­ A substantive casualty was the fee of $.25 per student at the myriad implications of any solu­ whole idea of a discussion of this zations designed for specific pur­ neglect of the uncertainties of the Michigan game would have netted tion have brought about heated poses, it negates its aim by as­ | By DON SOCKOL situation, including the prospects over $7,500? At $2 per student, viewpoints. issue. for negotiating stable settle­ But the opinions have been suming responsibility for the Once a year, students all over campus cast undergo during the Judging. Do you have anything the total would have been $60,000 YAF felt a presentation of just functions it has delegated. to say about this?” ments, which arise in large part on student attendance alone! shouted at each other from a dis­ their votes for Ugliest Greek. They throw pen­ due to the aggressive posture of tance. No one has been able to the arguments for remaining in Perhaps some of the student nies into a box in the Union, and the Greek with "Well, Don,” one of them replied, "ofcourse If the sanitation department Viet Nam, though more in line apathy on this campus could be the tension is terrific. As you know, two men the Chinese Communists. ever decides that they need more bring them together for unemo­ the most pennies is crowned "Mr. Ugly” for the The difficult thing is to decide tional discussion, even though all with its own viewpoint, would be decreased by more willing co­ year. The money goes to a worthy charity, to a dropped out in the middle last year because it money, look out—pay toilets next far less beneficial in finding a operation from the faculty. group of orphans this year, and the contest is was too much for them.There are somany really on effective policies which take year! acknowledge the wisdom of such ugly men around that the competition is stagger­ cognizance of the Chinese Com­ action. followed with avidf*hierest. munist threat, without inflating If that is what the Athletic De­ Young Americans for Free­ ' 1 was lucky enough to get an interview with last ing. You can never let your hair up. You’ve al­ ways got to be at your ugliest." or deflating it. partment thinks of student sup­ dom, a new campus political year’s Mr. Ugly and members of his court. The weaknesses of a policy of port of teams, then let the Ath­ group, decided to sponsor such "Tell me,” I began, "how it feels to be "What advice would you give to any man who wants to become Mr. Ugly?" escalating the conflict in Viet letic Department cheer the team a meeting of the minds. YAF de­ ACROSS 29. Austral crowned Mr. Ugly.” "That’s hard to say,” answered one. “I think Nam do not derive from the ques­ to victory. Then see what their clined to state a position, but 1. Rubber bird "Well, Don, needless to say it’s a big thrill dirty living is essential. You’ve got to be dirty." tionable assumption that theChi- opinion is of this freeloading stu­ chose to present both sides of 5. Father 30. Longed for for any fellow. I look back on it now and 1 still “You also have to be able to take the disap­ nese communists are peace- dent body of ours. the argument at the same time; 8. Dude 33. Mother-of- can’t believe it. All the other contestants were pointment and heartache involved in not win­ loving. Rather, it isprecisely be­ Maybe they don’t realize it, but because we believe that this is 11. Poisonous pearl so ugly, 1 don’t know how I won. 1 guess it could cause such a policy may unite the some students here are actually the only way to insure the intelli­ tree 36. Exist ning,” said another. paying their own way through col- 12. Dusk only happen in America. Imagine apoor slob like “ For the most part though,” added a third, ”1 communist alliance on Chinese gent decisions which are neces­ 13. Metal as it 37. Electric me being ‘Mr. Ugly!’” think we all agree that Mr. Uglies are born and terms and strengthen erratic and sary to the preservation of our is mined particle not made. You Just have to be naturally ugly or purposeless anti-Americanism goal — freedom. 14. Lose breath 38. Drays "I'm sure you deserved it. Do you always of the kind represented by the In­ YAF attempted to arrange a 15. Of the 42. Arbiter wear that bag over your face?” nothing else will avail.” Aggression Is A 45. Appellation The others nodded their assent. donesians that one must seek a debate between the members of woods of Athena "Yes, Don. I’m required by law to do so. My “Is there any last word you have before we fin­ more discriminating policy.* the faculty committee which 17. Debates 46. Shoshone- face is registered in Washington with the FBI and There were also certain good 2-W ay Street sponsored the teach-in and those 19. F.xercise an . a federal statute provides that it must be kept ish here?” points about the teach-in which- members of the faculty which op­ 20. Three: pre­ DOWN 7. Hesitate "Yes,” said last year’s winner. "I'd like to 47. Ballad 1. Chrysalis 8. Superin­ . covered at all times.” encourage all students, Greek or otherwise, to deserve mention. It brought to­ To the Editor: posed it. One of our prime con- fix 48. Measure gether teachers and students on concerns was impartiality.YAF 21. Send pay­ of paper 2. Armadillo tendent ” 1 see,” I answered. vote. The money goes to a worthy charity. I think In the series on Viet Nam by ment 3. Tolled 9. Ital. day- I turned and addressed myself to Mr. Ugly's its important for students to know that even the a matter of public concern. made it clear that it was not en­ 24. Endow- 49. Pikelike 4. Keen breeze court. ugliest contestant needs student support. I don’t It demonstrated that such an Professors Greer and Fishel, dorsing either side. ments fish 5. Compact­ 10. Fencing “There’s been a great deal of talk recently care how ugly he is. He still likes to know people activity can take place only in a Thomas Greer answered the Two professors were willing to 50. Conducted ness dummy . about the tensions Mr. Ugly contestants have to are for him.” free society. It also emphasized question "What right do we have 28. Got 51. Hamlet 6. Hail 16. Simple the im portance of individuals with to bomb North Viet Nam?” by sugar the courage of conviction—right stating that “North Viet Nam ... J 2 3 4 T~ TT i » T~ 10 18. Bird of or wrong—who are willing to ex­ has not attacked American soil.” prey press unpopular views. Does he forget that Viet Cong Letter Policy II n 1 /i 22. Frost MICMIOAN It provided a standing refuta­ terrorists destroyed the United li 23. Spread hay STATI States Embassy in Saigon? By w I if % 24. Number UNIVI! SITT tion of oft-expressed views that The State News welcomes all 25. Wine vessel STATE NEWS our students lack Interest in pub­ international law, the embassy letters to the editor from any à %•i it 26. Early type lic affairs. Surely this is a better grounds of a foreign country are members of the MSU community of match Member Associated Press, United Press Editor ...... John Van Gieson considered to be that country’s h 2/ %tt %ti Advertising Manager ...... Arthur Langer method of indicating their lack of or non-University. readers. 27. Kelp International, Inland Daily Press Associa­ apathy than panty-raids *or sovereign territory. Letters should be no longer % $ 31. Intoxicat­ Campus Editor ...... Charles *C. Wells %24 %2« ir it tion, Associated Collegiate Press, Michigan picketing with placards bearing Thus, the Viet Cong attack may than 300 words and typed double­ 15 ing pepper Press Association. Managing Editor ...... Hugh J. Leach 30 %% four-letter words. be considered as an attack on spaced if possible. Longer letters if 31 32 plant Sports Editor ...... Richard Schwartz Also, one hears abroad that United States soil, justifying may be considered for publica­ 32. Esteem Published every class day throughout fall, Wire Editor ...... Bill Krasean %34 %35 34 34. Caviar winter and spring terms and twice weekly Assistant Ad Managers ...... Ken Hoffman, "affluent” Americans do not care United States involvement in the tion as "Point of View” columns. 33 about what happens to Asians or present war. To the possible ob­ Correspondents should include 40 % 35. Register summer term by the students of Michigan Marcy Rosen 37 %39 39m 41 39. Margarine State University. Africans. One would have had to jection that the Viet Cong are not name and, if applicable. Univer­ Circulation Manager ...... Jim Baker controlled by Hanoi, the United % 44% 40. Close to Bearch hard to find any trace of sity standing. This information 42 43è 45 41. Coarse Second class postage paid at East Lansing, Editorial Editors ...... Michael Kindman, States* State Department has pre­ may be withheld upon request, but Susan Fllson such Indifference among the as­ 47 41 hominy M ichigan. Night Editor ...... Phil Pierson sembled audience. sented documented evidence in no- unsigned letters will be 46 % 42. Lap robe Photography Advisor...... David Jaehnig the February 27th White Paper. printed. 50 1 51 43. Cr. long E Editorial and business offices at 341 Stu­ Subbiah Kannappan The State News reserves the 49 1 44. Dutch dent Services Building, Michigan State Uni­ News Advisor ...... Richard E. Hansen Bill Peters 1 % commune versity, East Lansing, Michigan. Copydesk Advisor...... Henry Price Associated Professor right to select and edit all letters of Economics Tyler, Tex., sophomore to fit space requirements. Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Tuesday, April 27, 1965 3

World News Shop East Lansing at a Glance Tuesday 9:30-5:30

W e d n e s d a y From Our Wire Service*

Noon to 9:00 1 Morse Jabs Rusk, McNamara WASHINGTON—Sen. Wayne Morse, D-Ore., denounced Secretary of Sta e Dean Rusk and Secretary of Defense Robert S, McNamara in the Sena e Monday and said both "should have been removed months ago." Morse, attacking U.S. policy in South Viet Nam as "immoral and Godless,” accused spokesmen forthejohnsonadministrationofem- ploying "smear tactics” against him and other critics of the policy. Taking the floor on a point of personal privilege, Morse took is­ sue with what he said was McNamara’s assertion he did not believe Russia and Red China would enter the war.

U.S. Sinks Communist Boat SAIGON—A 60-foot Communist patrol boat was reported sunk and North Viet Nam’s road and rail lines were hit again today by U.S. and South Vietnamese warplanes. A half dozen V raids rounded out two weeks of daily attacks. Spokesmen said all the planes returned, though ground fire in some areas was heavy. Radio Hanoi declared two were shot down. GREEK FREAK--Each year as part of Greek Week an Ugliest Greek contest Is held with contestants coming from each of the fraternities. Ron Rubinoff, Holly­ wood, Calif., junior, is shown puttingthefinishlng touches on Pete Smith, Birming­ Thant Confident On Indian War ham sophomore, as one of the contestants in this year’s contest. Photo by L arry Carlson NEW YORK—U Thant, United Nations Secretary General, said Monday he did not believe the outbreak of hostilities between India and Pakistan would escalate into an extended war. He made the statement at Kennedy Airport before boarding a plane 7 Awarded for an eight-day European trip. 2 Coed Cooperatives Concerning reports of fighting between India and Pakistan, Thant said: GM Funds “ 1 don’t think the fighting will escalate, because the governments Considered For Fall of India and Pakistan are well aware of the implications of an ex­ Seven outstanding high school tended war.” Michigan State may have two mand for low cost cooperative seniors have been awarded Gen­ Thant will attend a four-day meeting of the U.N. Administrative new cooperatives next fall, an­ housing. eral Motors Corp. scholarships Committee on Coordination in Vienna starting today and then go to nounced Carl Friberg, Inter- Geraldine Sell, Bethesda, Md., for the 1965-66 academic year Geneva to deliver an address at the World’s Veterans Federation Cooperative Council (ICC) pres­ sophomore; Ronald Robotham, at MSI'. May 3. ident, today. Bellaire junior, and Friberg have Of the seven, five are from One of these new cooperatives looked at several homes in East Michigan, and one each from will be the first off-campus co­ Lansing with the idea of either New York and Ohio. All ranked L B J Signs Education Bill operative owned and operated by purchasing or leasing houses in­ in the top one per cent of al­ coeds in the history of the Uni­ stead of building. most 1600 scholarship contes­ WASHINGTON—President Johnson signed legislation versity. Previously all coed co­ Both groups intend to start tants who participated in a spe­ Monday extending and liberalizing the Manpower Retrain­ operatives have been operated by their co-op with around 20 m em ­ cial testing session earlier this ing Program and called it "a wise and necessary compan­ the University. bers. Robotham’s group have year at MSU. ion to our efforts in the education field.” The extension Because of lack of student in­ asked the aid and advice of Myron The General Motors Scholar­ runs until 1969. terest MSU phased out its last P. Kelsey, professor of econom­ ship is renewable for four years Johnson signed the bill in a White House cabinet room cer­ coed cooperative in 1956.TheUn- ies, in organizing their co-op. of undergraduate study. Stipends colorful carefree emony attended by a delegation from Congress, cabinet mem­ iversity then built Van Hoosen Both groups face two major range from $200 to $2,000 an­ bers and labor leaders. Hall to mee' the limited coedde- problems. First they must raise nually, depending upon financial enough money to make either a need. down payment or secure a lease little shells on a suitable house and furnish The program, is nationwide and Civilians Help Dominican Rebels 'Quad Cities’ it. The second problem is getting is not restricted to a particular •>: SANTTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic—Army rebels put weapons the approval of the University. field of study. 4 .0 0 Estimated capital needed to Scholarship winners and their in the hands of thousands of civilians Monday to support their revol' Battle Flood planned majors are: aimed at bringing exiled ex-President Juan D. Bosch back to power. start each co-op varies between Collect them to top almost everything Army troops passed out rifles and machine guns to an estimated ROCK ISLAND, 111. i1!—Vol­ $6,000 and $10,000, depending on Lawrence K. Benninger, Orch­ unteer flood workers in Illinois whether their houses are leased ard Lake, chemistry; Karl R. you wear . . .skirts, slacks, Bermudas. 3,000 civilians and another 10,000 to 15,000 persons were reported Blasius, Pleasant Ridge, physics: in possession of bottled gasoline bombs fueled free by service sta­ and Iowa, battling the Missis­ or purchased from the present In Antron® n y l o n a n d colors to put a tions. sippi River's worst spring on­ owners. Robert P. Hiwkins, Toledo, ma­ slaught in history, waged an ap­ Considering the. proposed off- jor not declared, and William rainbow to shame . . . plus white.Sleeve­ D. McConnell, Jackson, matlis- parently losing fight Monday to campus housing regulations less and machine washable. S-M t L. L f . Koreans Riot contain the rising water. changes sent to President John m attcs. The mighty river already was A. Hannah and theBoardofTrus- Also Earl D. Sacerdoti, Wood­ SEOUL, Korea—About 300 college students held a rally six feet above flood stage in the tees by the Faculty Committee bury, L.I., N.Y., mathematics; os\ their campus Monday and about 30 of them began a hunger “quad cities’’ area and still ris­ on Student Affairs, Miss Sell Donald F. Harmbier, Wayne., fin­ strike to protes' what 'hey regard as South Korea’s exces­ ing, threatening breaks in make­ said, she thinks there is a good ancial administration; and Roger sive concessions at diplomatic talks with Japan. A Japanese shift levees protecting, commu- chance the University will give E. Williams, East Lansing, pre­ 13 » H k * m m «------s && mm t s s » 11 flag was burned. * nities in both states. its approval for off-campus coed medical. ¿The students adopted a resolution demanding the release A predicted crest of 22.5 feet cooperative houses. of students arrested in connection with student demonstra­ —seven feet above flood level—■ i l H P i r ! j I r r i l S f ■ tions last week to protest the talks for the normalization of is expected Tuesday or Wednes­ diplomatic relations with Japan. day. The embattled area—termed Most of South Korea’s 65 universities and colleges were by Army engineers the current Take a break reopened after being closed 10 days ago becaiïse of spread­ prime danger spot - -includes ing students demonstrations. Rock Island, Moline and East Moline, 111., and Davenport and Bettendorf, Iowa, The metropol­ from your studies. itan area’s population in the i960 England, Yes; Cambodia, No U.S. Census was 270,058. • m or w LONDON Britain has endorsed a Soviet proposal for an interna­ In Rock Island, leaks appeared load the gang m mwm mw tional conference in Cambodia which would become a forum for in­ in a three-mile earthen dike and formal peace talks on Viet Nam. ( city officials feared it would l i r i c i : But Britain’s move looked foredoomed to failure by Cambodia s burst, pouring six feet' of water into a car chief of state, Prince Norodom Sihanouk. The Cambodian govern­ into a housing project with 1,200 ment advised the British of a new condition for the parley it had it­ residents. and head for 1 : 1 il i n I self requested: Sihanouk wants neither the Americans nor the South Most of the residents already I I • IIÜ IM IIM Vietnamese in he talks. have been evacuated. the tastiest A break in another levee in h i « M i d Rock Island sent water cascad­ ing through a 54-block indus­ bargains in tow n Japanese Protest U.S. Viet Policy trial area Sunday. Six feet of TOKYO—About 25,000 Japanese, including 2,000 leftist water stood in the area Monday a t . . . Zengakuren students, staged riotous demonstrations Mon­ and plants employing an esti­ the mad, mad look of day here in two waves—one by day and the oiher five hours mated 1,500 workers were later at night—to condemn U.S. policy in Viet Nam. A closed. thousand steel-helmeted policemen sealed off street ap­ Hundreds of high school and Madras in accessories 2.00* proaches to the U.S. Embassy.' college students in Rock Island, The metropolitan police board mobilized 3,000 other po­ Moline and East Moline remain­ McDonalds ed away from classes Monday Take the big craze for the look of these fading licemen along Tokyo’s busiest where the partici­ to help the thousands of volun­ pants—14,000 by day and 11,000 at night—m arched, ca rry ­ Lansing* fabrics .in stride and tuck these handsome plaid ing placards reading: ”U»>. Get Out of Viet Nam,’ and teers already piling additional East Lansing- sandbags on dikes in the three 4015 W, Saginow accessories in your purse. clutch; cig­ “U.S. Get Out of Asia." communities. 4700 S, Cedar Blk. East of Campus Moline’s water plant was 2120 N. Larch ■2 B4ks. West of Union arette case or leather-trim m ed billfold. *pius f.e .t. Mumps For Humphrey? threatened by the flooding. RALEIGH, N.C.—North Carolina Gov. Dan Moore, host to Vice President Huber: Humphrey during the weekend, was confined to the executive mansion Monday with what his doctor said was a case of -~y- T sport a the mumps. t h The governor’s press secretary, Tom Walker, said the office of MAY the Vice President was being notified since Humphrey and his wife spent Saturday night at the mansion in Raleigh and were exposed. fr L0S6RS- «/-GBCIKDGÎIR California Michigan State University 43rd ANNUAL WATER CARNIVAL *£ 1 L + J ...... Il J ______i crush . . .fw Mam b th" • • • A « h u m * * ATTENTION CAR OWNERS 2 .0 0 «£• complete front end repair and alignment Everyone in the know is 1 wearing this colorful head­ I • brakes «suspension gear. A must to control «wheel balancing • steering correctioni tresses in convertibles or at sea. Madras plaids, so­ * motor tune-ups lids , stripes and hound- stooth checks. One size LISKEY’S Auto Safety Center f i t s a l l .

TICKETS SOLD AT UNION ACCESSORIES-STREET l e v e l e a s t l a n s in g 124 SOUTH LARCH IV 4-7346 TICKET OFFICE 8 AM - 5 PM A Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Tuesday, April 27, 1965 TO HECK WITH FIVE-YEAR PLANS gm Sports By Schwartz 'Lei's Win Now, Plan Later': Benington Coach . . ,

By DUANE LANCASTER A n d C o m ic State News Sports Writer RICHARD SCHWARTZ Jft*: John Benington, State's new basketball coach, held his first State News Sports Editor press conference Monday and appeared to be a serious, confi- dent man, eager to get started on a difficult job. It was a noon luncheon but it seemed more like the “Tonight The day before, at a banquet with next season’s ball club, he Show." said he wished the season "would get started tomorrow” and at What was billed as a Kellog Center press conference Monday Monday’s conference said he was "officially at work no\*fc” with State’s new head basketball coach, had more the appear­ Benington is Just as anxious to get the Spartans back on a winning ance of a studio laughfest with a Johnny named Benington in the note. place of a Johnny named Carson. # “I'm not thinking about two or five years from now and I'm not "I'm probably the only coach in the history of the game,” said starting a rebuilding program. I am thinking about next year," he Benington, the father of nine, "to have his own kids hang him in said Sunday, and told the players present he thought they were effigy. In fact, three of my children don’t even speak to me, now better than they themselves thought. that I've told them we’re moving again. Benington is already caught up in the time-consuming Job of "My kindergarten boy claims I’m breaking up a romance with recruiting and is still responsible for much of the work left un­ someone named Jilly. . . that’s right, my kindergarten boy. Then finished at his former school, St. Louis. there’s my eighth-grade son whose infatuation lies with Marylou. "I still have to carry .out some duties at St. Louis, so 1 am Boy, let me tell you, when you run into these kinds of problems, really holding two jobs now," he said. you’re dealing with pretty serious matters. His comments were laced with a kind of subtle humor, but he "My wife tells me there's even a movement underway amongst seemed to weigh every question carefully. the nine where they’ve gone about the neighborhood collecting The questions were quite gen­ signatures for a petition to stay in St. Louis. eral and perhaps the most con­ "But, really, my wife and the kids are real excited about the crete announcement was that Son­ idea of coming to Michigan. Yes, people have said of my family ny Means, Benington’s assistant that it has enough for a basketball team all its own, with cheer­ at St. Louis, would replace Bruce leaders to boot. Fossum as assistant coach here. "Too bad It doesn’t have a cqach.” He said Means would join the Turning to player personnel on a team called Michigan State, TREAT THE PRESS— John Benington, new hparran DasKetbaii coach, offers re­ Spartan staff shortly, but said he Benington reported on the first meeting Sunday porters a blending of the serious and the humorous at a press conference Monday, didn’t know if Dan Peterson would "After some brief remarks by myself and "Biggie" Munn, we He is flanked by athletic director Biggie Munn, left, and John Fuzak, dean of stu­ stay on as freshman coach. opened the way for any questions, feeling it was as good a chance as dents. Photo by David Sykes any to discuss matters. The Job of recruiting is per­ "Up stood Captain Bill Curtis, who asked: ‘Do we have to wear haps the least enjoyable part of those long stockings next year?’ I then told Bill that I hoped that coaching for Benington. would be the biggest problem we faced, whereupon Stan Washington " 1 don’t know of a coach who rose to say, ‘Coach, 1 don’t think Bill is speaking for all of us.’ Intramural News wouldn't rather Just coach the “There you go. We’d been together for two hours Sunday and material that comes to him in­ SOFTBALL 3 Abdication-Abundantia Caribbean-Carleton stead of doing all that recruit­ already there was dissention on the team. Field 5:20 p.m. 4 Casino-Cambridge Fyjimos-Screaming Eagles ing,” he said. "I later asked Bill if he had Lee Lafayette (who's graduating 2 Logical EmpiriciS'S-APS 5 TabTop-Petes Popouts W .Shaw 2-3 He said he agreed with other from the same high school in Grand. Rapids he did) coming to State. 9 W. Shaw 9-10 coaches that recruiting now is "Oh, yes, I got him," Bill answered. 10 W. Shaw 7-8 a major problem and “a mess.” "Well you better have," I told him, "since your scholarship S o r e a t t o w e a r Field 6:30 p.m. depends on it, too." 9 1 Fenrir-Fern The only hope he saw to "Actually, 1 arrived in East Lansing Saturday,’’ Benington 2 McBeth-McLean straighten it out would be if the continued. “Having seen my picture in a Saturday edition and ano­ O i l 'w t a t n t ó e u e t ■ a tp a i r NCAA were to enact penalties 3 Windsor-Wivern against players who might have ther in a Sunday paper, all I can say is that it’s the first time 4 Winchester-Wildcats taken part in any illegal recruit­ anyone aged from 21 to 50 in just 24 hours. 5 Howland-Elsworth ing drives. “Had they asked me first, I would have gladly worn my glasses. 6 McDuff-McLaine On Michigan State recruiting, At least that way 1 could have covered up the wrinkles under my 7 Agr. Econ-Paperbacks he said: "We have a home visit eyes.” 8 Bio Chemistry-No Counts left with all our key prospects.” Asked which nickname, "Old Dad,” “Big Ben,” "Bennie” or W a t h S L d * 9 Bower-Motts Under NCAA rules, a coach is “Long John,” he would prefer, Benington replied: “There’s noth­ FARAH Field 7:40 p.m. ing you can think of that they haven’t called me before. But if you allowed to make just one home 'Old D ad’ M akes State Debut 1 NDEA-Grossout AC visit to a potential tender signee. must use something, how’s about ‘Young John'?” 2 Fenwick-Fegefeuer Benington said he was not going 3 McNab-McGregor to play any particular style of 4 Tonys Boys-Muffers basketball such as could char­ Field 8:50 p.m. acterize former coach Forddy 1 Brandy-Deuces Anderson’s “pressure offense” 2 McCoy-McInnes or Tennessee coach Ray Mears’ State Looking For Repeat Win 3 McFadden-McTavish "disciplined offense.” But, ra­ 4 Schular Mets-Magaffers ther, he would play "any style Alleys BOWLING 6:00 p.m. to w in." 1-2 Dodge Boys-Delta Sigma Pi "The style of basketball is 3-4 Red Trojans-Alley Cats not as important as winning,” . As Sluggers Fuen' Detroit Nine 5-6 Vets-Jive 5 he said, “and I’ll play 26 dif­ Alleys 8:30 p.m. ferent. ball games if 1 have to, , 1-2 Lushwell-Evans Scholars depending on who we’re play­ By DUANE LANCASTER 3-4..Bower-Sammies ing.” Slate News Sports W riter 5-6 Montie-Sigma Chi He did say he would seek ad­ The University of Detroit’s VOLLEYBALL vice from Anderson but said he baseball team, 8-2 for the sea­ would also seek advic# from any­ son, moves to Old College Field Time Gym 1 Court 1 body else. this afternoon to face the team 6 Trojans-Bawdiers "That doesn’t mean I have to responsible for half its losses. 6:30 Abode-Abednego take it,” he added, "but I’m al­ Michigan State, which defeat­ E, Shaw 7-10 ways seeking it.” ed the Titans 8-2 earlier in the :30 Abelard-Abel Benington showed that he does­ season at Detroit, will be using 8 Akeg-Akrojox n't duck questions but answers ference games over the week­ 8:30 Akvavit-Akhilles three pitchers in an attempt to season and an earned-run-aver- them in a way that avoids his stop the Titans from avenging age of 4.35 in 18 innings. Do­ end. Time Gym 1 Court 3 being put on the spot. the defeat. Game time is 3:30. brei is 2-0 and has a 1.43 ERA Steve Juday, who drove in four 6 Brannigan-Brinkley Asked to compare the Big Ten Coach Danny Litwhiler, whose for 31 innings work while Dev­ runs against Northwestern Fri­ 6:30 Vikings-Shieks with his former conference, the Spartans are 2-1 in the Big Ten ereux is 4-3 with a 1.98 ERA. day, is the probable starting W.Shaw 1-4 Missouri Valley, he said simply and possess a 16-5 overall mark, Titan coach Bob Miller will shortstop, but senior Bruce Pet- :30 Nebishes-Rinky Dinks that the only major difference is said he would be going with Dick start either George Mach or Lou tibone could also be in the line­ Akohol-Aku Aku that one had 10 teams and the Kenney, Doug Dobrei and Fred Rodomski depending on who will up. Juday is hitting .406 while 8:30 Akua Pahula-Akcelsior other had only eight. Devereux. All three saw ac­ be the best rested. Pettibone is at .356. Time Gym 2 Court 4 tion this weekend with Dobrei The Spartans, who seem a bit Bob Maniere, a .293 swinger, 6 Deuces-Brougham Lacrosse Lam ent picking up a win against North­ short on power this season, bang­ will hit second, with third base­ 6:30 Brutus-Brandy ed out 28 hits and scored 19 man John Biedenbach (.392) hit­ 7 Casopolis-Cache The Michigan State lacrosse western Friday. DICK KENNEY Kenney has a 3-0 mark this times in winning two of three con- ting third. Left fielder Bob Speer 7:30 E. Shaw 2-5 club dropped a contest to Ken­ will bat cleanup, followed by 8 Aktion-Akarpous yon College, Gambler, Ohio, Sat­ rightfielder Dick Billings. Speer Time Gym 2 Court 6 urday by a score of 14-8. is at .313 while Billings has a 6 Akrophobia-Akbarama Bill Haeger of the Spartans OUTDOOR TANK OPENS M AY 1 .329 average. 6:30 E. Shaw 1-3 scored the club’s highest total Howie Miller, hitting .237, is 7 E. Shaw 6-8 In game scoring so far this sea­ the probable first baseman and 7:30 McFadden-McRae son with five goals and one as­ will bat sixth. Either Dick Kil— 8 Wollstone-Wooster sist. ______bourn (.357) or Bill Steckly (.216) Fee-A kers Pool In Future? will handle the catching chores with Jerry Walker. Walker has a Summer Study in By PHIL LOOMIS mount up over the winter, are thoughts, although not on paper, State News Sports Writer currently in motion. to have some facilities for swim­ .328 mark and will hit eighth. Workmen are repairing tile ming in 'he Fee-Akers complex The Spartans have a 35-9 lead New York Hold on, MSU aquanauts and along the pool’s ledge that was sometime in the near future,” in the all-time series, which be­ sunbathers. There is still hope. damaged by the effects of chlor­ Beeman said. gan in 1915. Select your program from the 1,000 courses The outdoor pool at the Men’s ine water last year. Cracks are conducted for 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 , 7. 8 , 10, 12, and IM will open for business Sat­ also being filled in and lights Beeman believes that approxi­ 14 week terms, beginning June 1 and ending urday. around t h e pool are being mately 10,000 studen s will be September 10. checked. living in resident housing, east of M ao A Real Sport 1M will open for business Sat­ But the biggest task Is the ac­ Farm Lane, next fall. Morning, Afternoon, a n d Evening Classes urday. Now, if only the weather­ tual cleaning of the pool. Then “A pool somewhere in that (UPI)— Thp official Chinese man will cooperate. when it’s cleaned, three more area would be feasible," he Communist newspaper has In the Arts In Business The opening date has been days must be set aside to fill added. “It would alleviate trans­ printed an analysis of why Red In the Sciences In Retailing pushed up from May 15 in order the pool with 800,000 gallons of portation problems and would China’s ping-pong team was so In Education In Public Administration to provide present students more w ater. save students time in that area.” successful at the recent world In Engineering In Law swimming time before the end of While immediate plans are be­ The increasing number of stu­ table tennis championships. In Communication Arts spring term. ing made for Saturday, Beeman dents using the outdoor pool is The Peking newspaper said: Frank Beeman, intramural di­ also has an eye to the possibility supported by figures. More than "For several years - Chinese with PROFESSIONAL - UNDERGRADUATE - GRADUATE rector, explained that the usual of another outdoor pool site. 100,000 students, faculty mem­ table tennis players have cease­ College students in good standing at their own odds-and-ends, repair jobs that “It is safe to say that it is our bers, and guests used the pool lessly increased their initiative F a r a P r e s s schools may enroll. Application should be made in advance. All courses have the same content facilities last year. On one after­ in studying Mao Tze-Tung’s as in the academic year. Students may take full noon alone some 2,500 people thought and gained noteworthy re­ N e v e r year courses or a combination of single term GOLFERS! used the pool. sults." courses. Credits are ordinarily transferable to Revitalized N e e d other institutions. I r o n i n g . Write to the Director of Summer Sessions, SHAG BALLS *1.19 doz. for for either Graduate or Undergraduate Plastic They’re ironing while they’re drying >» liutletin and Application Form. PRACTICE BALLS HOT PIZZA Trim, comfortable Farah NEW YORK UNIVERSITY 2 Qc ea. or 6 for 1 Walk Shorts are sharply New York, New York 10003 DELIVERY styled of ideal warm Telephone: SPring 7-2000, Ext. 8097 or 8098 TENNIS RACQUETS,. „ leather fabrics. from call Wear ’em, wash ’em and they’re ready for fun FREEluSGA 1965 Golf again without ironing. Rule Book-with pur- •T chase of $1.0 0 or m ore. POPULAR SOLID COLORS $50 0 ED 2-0863 LARRY CUSHION THE PIZZI! PIT 203 M.A.C. YARN-DYED WEAVES IN STM KS AND PLAIDS $ 6 ° ° 3020 Vine St. - 1 blk. N. of Mich. Ave. - West of Sears FARAH MANUFACTURING CO. INC • E L PASO. TEXAS Open Mon . & F ri. Nights Till 9______IV-57465 Tuesday, April 27, 1965 ò Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan ‘Zorba ’ Film Depicts Placement 'H ay Fever* A rrives Today , Bureau By FAYE E. UNGER The comedy will run Tuesday "Coward gives no great jnes- Life’s DespairHilarity E ntertainment "Editor through Saturday in the Auditor­ sage in his comedy, but the fast- May 4, T uesday ium Arena Theater and then go on moving farce is an entertain­ By MICHAEL ' HERRELL part of life. The audience ap­ Students must sign up at the The script of Noel Coward’s tour to Wonders and McDonel ing, intricate character study,” plauds, because it feels their Placement Bureau two days prior "Hay Fever” calls for a flapper, complexes. Miss Nye said. State News Reviewer triumph. to interview. a prim English diplomat, a so­ In "Hay Fever’’ the Bohemian "Zorba the Greek," playing In its leaps from hilarity to Advanced Science Institute: cialite intent on attracting men Bliss family, composed of a nov­ A child actor, Coward prob­ until Thursday at the State gives tragedy and its final reconcilia­ Electrical, Mechanical Engi­ and a slow-witted athle e to be elist father, an actress mother ably lived with the type of people the battle between the hilarity tion of the two, "Zorba the neers, Mathematics, Physics (B). placed in the midst of an ultra- and two eccentric children, in­ he portrays in the story, she re­ and tragedy of life in the char­ Greek” is a remarkable docu­ Minneapolis, Minn. Male. Bohemian family. vite guests to their country home marked. Coward based "Hay acter of Zorba, a man with a ment in the eternal battle be­ Airport Community Schools: The Performing ArtsCompany for the weekend. F ever” on a visit he paid to the meaty, tempestuous Involvement tween optimism and aespair of Girls’ Physical Education, Home cast presenting the Coward farce The family members then pro­ well-known theatrical family of in the vulgarity of living. life. Economics, all Elementary Edu­ Tuesday in the Arena Theater ceed to wittily expose the person­ Luntzs in New York. Basil, a sheltered young Brit- cation, Business, education, Eng­ have elements of these charac­ ality flaws their guests try to A fast-moving farce like ”H*y ish-educated academician of lish, Science, Special Education ters they portray in their own hide. They alternately ignore and Fever” presents fewer problem» Greek origin, falls in with Alexis Civil Service Type "A” (B,M).Carleton, Mich. personalities, Janet Nye, a grad­ pretend to love their guests. for theater-in-the-round. Miss Zorba, the lively, worldly Greek M/F. uate student and director, said. Comments that ordinarily com­ Nye said. Constantly moving, the who makes it his Job to educate Blissfield Community Schools: "To be funny, the characters pliment are the tools of insult for actor has less trouble keeping h it Basil to hi» point of view. Offers Jobs ’ Early Elementary Education, in a comedy must seem real to the Blisses. face turned to the audience. Director Michael Cacoyannis English (B,M). Blissfield, Mich. the audience,” Miss Nye re­ Badly shaken, the guests sneak has taken the novel by Nikos Applications by architects, M/F. marked. “Having elements of a out of the house after one wild Kazantzakis to expound Zorba’s gradés 5 through 15, are being Concord Community Schools: character in his own personal­ night. In the middle of an argu­ philosophy visually in the film. accepted by the Board of United English, Social Studies, Chem­ ity gives an actor a good basis ment over a trivial fact, the French Film Zorba lives his philosophy, and States Civil Service Examiners istry/Physics, Biology, Agricul­ for giving more than a stereo­ B lisses barely notice their so Cacoyannis can expose for professional positions in sev­ ture, Earth Science, Industrial typed comic portrayal.” guests’ departure. Zorba’s character by action, en states. Arts, Mathematics, Type "A” At Fairchild ra’her than spend tedious min­ The positions to be filled will mentally retarded (B,M). Con­ A baffling kidnap and murder utes in harangue and dialogue. be in planning, designing and re­ cord, Mich. M/F. mystery, the French film "Two The action expostulates the idea search in the architectural field. Grand Rapids Metal C raft: Are Guilty” will be run at 7 in an uncommonly unifi- d pic­ Many of these positions will in­ Chemistry (B). Grand Rapids, Fairchild Jazz Concert and 9 p.m. Thursday and Fri­ ture. clude theprepartion of specifica­ Mich. Mile. day in Fairchild as part of the Anthony Quinn plays Zorba.He tions and cost estimates. The sal­ Great West Life InsuranceCo.: International Film Series. THE FRUITS OF BLISS— Jam»s Alexander, Eugene, is a natural for the part—vital, ary ranges from $5,990 to All majors , all colleges (B). In the film two men commit Ore., graduate student, who portrays the father of emotional, rugged, animalistic. $16,460 per year. Blend Of East-West ~ the "Bohem ian” Bliss family, irks Chilton Cun­ Full Information and applica­ Lansing and vicinity. Male. a kidnap-murder. Three are ar­ Zorba is no superman, a product • Kent Co. Special Education: rested, however, and neither ningham, Ann Arbor junior, his weekend guest in a of some lopsided philosophy like tions may be obtained by writing The folk music of Africa and pearance here as part of the scene from “ Hay Fever.” The Performing Arts Camus' Meursault; he is in many to the executive secretary, Board Deaf, Orthopedic, Homebound, Asian-Latin American-African Jury, judge nor the public can Company will present the Noel Coward farce Tues­ Physically Handicapped, Coun­ the Middle East meets the jazz of decide which two are guilty. ways like you, and the people of U.S, Civil Examiners, Build­ the West in the music of Ahmed series. day through Saturday in the Arena Theater. you know. ing 3400, Great Lpkes, 111., or any seling (B,M). Kent County, Mich. Admission to the performance Anthony Perkins, Jean-Claude M/F. Abdul-Malik, who will appear at Brialy and Rena to Salvatori por­ But the film does not degen­ post office where this announce­ Michigan Hosptial Service: All 8:15 p.m. Wednesday in Fairchild. at Fairchild is $2 for students tray the three suspects. Directed erate into a blind optimism, ig­ ment is found. Abdul-Malik, who has played and $2.50 for adults. Tickets are noring man’s tragedy. Man fi­ majors of the Colleges of Busi­ available at the Union ticket of­ by Andre Cayatte, "Two Are ness, Arts and Letters, Com­ jazz as bassist with Art Blakey, Guilty” was filmed in Cannes. nally ends as no more than "food Archaeology Talk Coleman Hawkins andThelonious fice or at the door. Many Lack Exposure for worms,” Zorba says. munication Arts and Social Sci­ Abdul-Malik is regarded as an Admission to the film is 50 David Gordon Mitten of Har­ ence (B). Mich. Male. Monk, began a study of Eastern cents. In one of the most hideous folk music on State Department authority on the music of Sudan sequences ever filmed, the citi­ vard University and the Fogg Art National Twist Drill and Tool and Egypt, Wilson Paul, direc­ Museum in Cambridge, Mass. Co.: Mechanical Engineers (B) tours to Africa and the Middle zens of the Cretan village con­ E ast. tor of the Lecture-Concert ser­ To Modern Composer duct a pogrom against the only will discuss "New Excavations Rochester, Mich. Male. at Sardis" today at the Central The Singer Company Wood Ignoring popular Jazz trends, ies, said. Past Voices to a concert to be soothed but to woman Basil ever loved. She is Abdul-Malik created his own mu­ Careful study marks Abdul- By LINDA BOYLE be stimulated," said White. murdered horribly despite Michigan Society of the Archae­ Products Division: Mechanical State News Staff Writer ological Institute of America Engineering (B). Truman, Ark. sical idiom that blends Western Malik’s experiments in music. "The problem is the audience Zorba’s efforts. harmony, African rhythm and Rebroadcast Four MSU com posers con­ “Why do people die? Do your meeting. * Male. In his study of the tempered doesn’t get enough chance to hear He will speak at 7:30 p.m. in Sky Chefs, Inc.: Hotel, Res­ Eastern tone intervals. scale on which Western music The voices of Sir Winston cluded that people fail to under­ the music," he said. "It takes books tell you why?" Zorba asks In his performance Wednesday Churchill and Harry Truman an­ stand music of the 20th Century Basil. Basil says no; the books the Honors College Lounge of taurant and Institutional Manage­ is based he explored the math­ repeated hearings to under­ the Library. ment (B). Various. M/F. he will alternate between the bass ematical basis on which the scale nouncing V-E Day in 1945 are because they do not hear it often stand it.” describe man’s agony. and Eastern instruments like the featured in an MSU Radio En­ enough. Mitten, a former Fulbright Vineland Board of Education: rests. “ A lot of us aren’t particularly “1 spit on your agony!” Zorba Fellow, has done archaeological Girls’ Physical Education, all 12-stringed oud, an instrument Born of Sudanese parents in core Series program at 8 p.m . “Premieres of New Music" interested in what people think of cries. the player strums with the quill today in Parlor C, Union. will give them achancetohe.ar it. What does he mean? Cocoyan- ■vortc. at Corinth, Sardis and in Elementary Education, Science, Brooklyn, Abdul-Malik graduated our work," Richmond said. New Mexico. Music, Spanish, Physics/Chem­ of an eagle feather. from New York's High School of The program, sixth in the En­ A concert of their compositions nis answers by immediately istry, Industrial Arts, Educable Backed up by a combo that in­ Performing Arts. core series, is a taped rebroad- and those of eight other MSU com­ shifting to a scene of muscular Mentally Retarded (B,M). Vine­ cludes a saxophonist and a drum­ cast of Norman Corwin’s "On a posers will be presented at 8:15 laborers manhandling logs up the His performance substitutes Note of Triumph” program pro­ 0 1 ' " ’ 0 , 1 ° i land, N.J, M/F. mer who beats out the rhythm on tonight in the Music Building’s On WKAR hillside. Congo drums, Abdul-Malik will for the previously scheduled ap­ duced and broadcast soon after choral room. This is Cacoyannis’s answer concentrate on the African folk pearance of African folklorist the original V-E Day. Better understanding of the T uesday--AM to the modern school of despair. OLIN ! element in his music for his ap­ Olatunji. Arthur Weld, Jr., associate "new music” was one topic dis­ 10:05 a.m. Music Room— Life is good, life is bad— professor of television and radio, cussed in an informal gathering VIVALDI: Cello Concerto in D; possibly. But life is to be ac­ HOSPITAL will introduce the program. of graduate students Gary White, VIVALDI-BACH: Cello Concerto cepted, lived as it comes, while REPORT The series, sponsored by the Thomas Richmond, Jere Hutche­ in G. one extracts the most one can Department of Television and Ra­ son and Millard Thomson in 2 p.m . Spring Serenade— and loves all of it. Students may visit between 2-4 Berserk Boy’s Mother dio, includes outstanding mys­ White’s office recently. SCARLATTI: Sonata; BEET­ Rather than a pale exercise p.m. and 7-9 p.m. daily. tery -comedy and documentary People should try to accept HOVEN: Symphony No. 3; DE­ in Intellectualism, the message Admissions include Stephen F. programs. The program is open ■ each piece of music with an open BUSSY: Estampes; PROKOFIEV: is a living appeal borne with Grether, Birmingham freshman; to the public. mind, White suggested. They Classical Symphony. exceptional force. Zorba’s phil­ James T.Mulvehill, Newport jun­ Says He Was 'Good’ 3:25 p.m . B aseball—MSU vs. should not try to judge it by osophy triumphs over man’s in­ W ile a w a y ior; David Krout, Marysville, LONG BEACH, Calif. Of)— Cottage Hospital, Santa Barbara. standards of the 19th Century. Detroit. evitable defeat. Ohio, freshman; Laura M. Surgeons removed a bullet from the time looking “When he wrecked the car, turn­ Trip M oney Goes "People are used to hearing 7 u e s d a y - FM In the fina) scene, when t h e Grauel, East Jordan freshman; ing off the road, perhaps he hit his head Monday. more traditional music, fruit of Zorba’s and Basil's labor Janice K. Schweigert, Bellville Authorities as well as his par­ 10 a.m. On Campus—A lfred through our his head...” To U .N . Hostess Hutcheson said. “That is why they comes crashing down about them, freshman; Laura J. Robinson, A stunned mother thus groped ents are puzzled by young Clark’s are having so much trouble now." Meyer, Department of Political they dance the dance of life, which large selections of Cheverly, Md., freshman; Alice rampage. "I just don’t under­ Monday for some explanation of Mrs. Naome Wold, hostess in "There Js quite a large jump Science, "Recent Russian Lead­ is also the dance of« death—a popular magazines A. Sloan, Almont sophomore; why her 16-year-old son sudden­ stand,” said Capt. Robert D. the U.N. Lounge, was presented from the I9th-Cen'ury music to ership Transition and Its Ef­ Suzanne K. McCombs, Adrian ly changed from "an extra good Sudlow, commander of the Santa with a check of $300 for a round now," White said. "But really fects". and pocketbooks sophomore; Meryl Elizabeth Maria substation of the Santa boy” to a sniper who killed two trip ticket to Europe recently. modern music is quite a logical 1 p.m. Music Theater—Musi­ a t Smith, Petoskey senior and motorists and wounded 11 others. Barbara County sheriff’s office. The money, collected by for­ development from music of the cal, "Do I Hear a Waltz?” Hooshang Karmeli, E. Lansing After more than an hour’s gun At the family's two-story co­ eign students, American stu­ first 30 years of the 20th Cen- 11:15 p.m. Composer and pian­ junior. battle with law enforcers early lonial home in the Belm ore dents, faculty and staff mem­ tu rf._ •» ist SERGE PROKOFIEV is fea­ *7Ae Gcvul c Other admissions include Sunday, authorities say, Michael Shores area of Long Beach, tall, bers, International Club, Alpha "Style changes gradually, tured. Raymond W. Schlobohm, Hunting­ Andrew Clark shot and killed dark-haired Mrs. Joyce E. Clark Pi Omega and Delta Pi Epsilon, said Thomson, who put three A + m e K ton, N.Y., senior; Thomas J. him self. tried to describe her boy: was presented at a "Take Your Gothic poems to music for the Spartan Center Jew ett, Grand Blanc Junior; Saturday night he took his fath­ "He always loved people, he Turn” social sponsored by the concert. “Generally it is a proc­ Engineering Talk M-F 9:30-8:30 Daniel A. Friderici, Port Clin­ er’s 30-06 Swedish Mauser deer was always full of love. I think that International Club and the Inter­ ess of growth.” Sat. 9:30-5:30 ton, Ohio, sophomore; Melissa L. rifle and about 80 rounds of am­ expressed him as much as any­ national Students Affairs. Some composers are further W alter Noll, professor of Wickert, East Lansing freshman; munition from a locked cabinet in thing—the word love. He was Mrs. Wold will be retiring along in developmem than others. mathematics at Carnegie Insti­ Sandra L. Swift, Minneapolis, the garage and drove off in the very outgoing and considerate." from her present position next Composers themselves find it tute of Technology will lecture Minn., Junior; Claire Wilcoxon, family’s I960 Cadillac. Her grieving voice sounded as month after six years of ser­ difficult to understand those fur­ on "Space, Time and the Prin­ Grosse Pointe freshman; if she had been drained of tears. ciple of Objectivity” at 4 p.m. At daybreak Sunday he began vice. ther along than they are.The aud­ today in the Engineering Build­ Patricia E. Bieskie, Albion firing from a grassy hillside Michael attended Sunday school ience has it even worse. freshman; Kay Marilyn Richard­ near Santa Maria, 175 miles weekly at the Fifth Church of "It’s not easy on the audience, ing Auditorium. son, Bloomfield Hills freshman; north, at cars and trucks passing Christ, Scientist, his mother T D C E le c ts but an audience should not come The lecture is the twenty-third Barbara Cybulski, Detroit fresh­ on U.S. 101, the heavily traveled said. He was a sea scout—had in a series of mechanical engi­ man; and Barbara M. Walker coast route from Los Angeles to taken part in the organization’s Theta Delta Chi recently elec­ neering seminars. All interested from Southgate. San Francisco. review in white uniforms at Ma­ ted officers for 1965-66. T a m p e r , T a m p e r persons are invited to attend. He had crashed the car against rine Stadium, near the Forrest They are: President, Andy Ma- a freeway off-ramp railing be­ Clark family's home, Saturday turen, Qivison junior; first vice Two freshmen pleaded guilty Original... morning. president, Charles Prester, Ne­ in court Monday to the charge LBJ Called low. waygo junior; second vice pres­ of tampering with a traffic con­ CAMPUS SUMMARIES Slain in cars were Charles ident, Alan Rose, Rochester, ORIENTAL IMPORTS Christopher Hogan, 21, San Luis trol device. G e t U P To Testify Obispo, Calif., and Joel W. Kocab, Young GOP Head N.Y., freshman; recording sec­ Stephen R. Dugas, 304 South 28, Los Angeles. retary, James Ashley, Dearborn Case, a Big Rapids freshman G r a d e s • Straw Handbags HAYNEVILLE, Ala. UP)--A Ku Of the injured—some hit by Margie Cook, Lansing sopho­ Heights freshman; treasurer. and Richard T. Yeomans, 315 .Atl, - Nat. Sci. • Hum. Klux Klan attorney defending bullets, others by bullet frag­ more, is one of the 13 newly Matt Wray, Park Forest, 111., South Case, Grosse Point Woods . Basic College Courses! • Snack Trays three white men in a civil rights appointed committee chairmen freshman; corresponding secre­ freshman both paid fines and slaying has obtained a subpoena ments or flying glass—5-year- old Kevin Dean Reida of Norwalk, for the Michigan Federation of tary, Harvey Hoadley, Traverse costs totaling $54.30. MARSHALL • Bamboo Skewers for President Johnson as a wit­ Calif., is in critical condition at College Republicans. City sophomore, and herald, In addition to the fine, both ness in the trial of the first man. Miss Cook will head the Com­ Chris Pruszynski, Pittsburgh, were placed on three-month pro­ 519 W. Grand River tltUiUlJmunity ActionavwvM Committee...... Pa., freshman. t u > , bation. MUSIC The subpoena was issued by 307 E. Grand River 332-6997 From Berkeley to Brooklyn, Circuit Clerk M, E. Marlette Yugoslavia Topic g flnnuuunnnnnnriui . swarms of students are joining and commands any sheriff in Ala­ in the noise and fire of new bama to summon the witness, Dr. S. Lukac, editor of the Bill Consolidation And Household Expense ProMem? Have Some Fun! Make Friends!! radical groups. The current is Lyndon Baines Johnson. weekly newspaper NEN (Bel­ NEW! Use in your car, on the beach, sue of The Saturday Evening grade), will speak on “Yugosla­ in class, on the campus . . .You Name It! Post has the inside story of the Attorney Matt H. Murphy Jr. greatest rise of the Far Left of Birmingham, represent­ via—An Exercise in Antistereo­ 40 SIGNS IN EACH SET type’* at 7:30 tonight in 133 Solve Them With since the 1930’s. ing three Klansmen charged with Read how some groups are murder in the night-rider slay­ Akers. The Russian and East almost peaceful; others are so ing of Mrs. Viola Liuzzo, hadthe European Studies Program 1» INSTANT, CASH from your ¿fa* O* militant that even the Ameri­ subpoena issued for the trial of sponsoring the talk. yvt' ^(»unatur can Communist Party disowns Collie Leroy Wilkins Jr.The trial CREDIT U N IO N v0£ov* DC/zvk? them. How young leaders of is set for Monday. s i e m K j x the‘’e»v?4ential radicalism” see C akiular of 'fa'rtCute, the Cuban Revolution as a t^lue- The President announced the print for A m erica. Find o u t arrest of the men March 26, the C on i big Evente about new plans for protest and day after the highway killing, and "MONEYTREE” it .s h a k e - unrest on college campuses. called for an investigation of the A HOOT How one far-out groUp, training College Life—7 p.m., Alpha Convenient up to $2,000 line-of-credit service now IV Klan. Delta Pi, 225 N. Harrison—Jim available to help you consolidate your household bills, its members in karate, is se­ Green, speaker. . tftay off high interest charge accounts, take advantage cretly preparing to launch a j F'i a w - t reign of terror. Campus 4-H—7:15 p.m., 312 of spring sales, or any worthwhile purpose. Get the facts in the penetrat Berlin Film s Set Ag Hall. INSTANT CASH is now available at CU’s low inter­ «• c0' ,ng report of “The Explosive Ag Engineering--7:30 p.m., est rates, and fully insured at NO EXTRA CHARGE1 Revival of the Far Left," in the Two films showing life and 119 AgEngineering—Speaker May 8 issue of The Saturday from Massey-Ferguson Co. Use YOUR Credit Union FIRST ..Call now 355-0293 Size 4” by 5 1/2 ” ...... Only $1.50 travel in Berlin will be shown Size 7” by 10 1/2 ” . . . .Only 2 .0 0 Evening Post. and officers will be elected at Pre-M ed Society— 8 p.m ., the meeting of the MSU German Giltner Hall. Michigan Si ote Each set Is packaged In a sturdy envelope. Send Club at 7:30 p.m. today in Union SNCC— 8 pun., Old College U nivars iiy check or money order to Sign Talk P.O. Box 68, Field. Employees’ CREDIT UNION Brooklandville, Md. 21022 (We will send C.OJD. POST P arlor C. if prefered) Satisfaction guaranteed or money re­ Students and faculty are invited Baptist Student Center— ON SALE NOW to attend. Refreshments will be 7:30 p jn . , Speaker—Rev. Kat- funded. ’______served. terjohn, 332 Oakhlll. / ó Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Tuesday, April 27, 1965

MAN. Full or part-time for gen- “ We got so many calls from this ad--we are eral landscaping work. Exper­ certainly going to keep advertising in your ienced preferred. Call ED 2-3310. Sandhill Acres Land­ RIGHT MAN FOUND QUICKLY! paper” said this satisfied advertiser. scaping.

Automotive Automotive For Rent For Sale Personal FALCON 1960 2-door stick shift. VOLKSWAGEN 1960 sunroof, Ra- MARRIED COUPLE. O n e- CAMPER, 1955 1-1/2 ton THE LEGENDS. A unique sound with à 29,400 miles. One owner. $450. dio. Extra heater. Whitewalls. bedroom apartment. University Chevrolet truck. Completely for parties and get-togethers. ED 2-1162. 20 Call 337-2708. 20 Village, sublet for summer. Re­ furnished. Like new. Excellent Dave 353-1817 or John, 353-1974. low cost ; FORD 1^55 V-S Standard trans- VOLVO. LATE 1960. Beige, fe-16 decorated. Rent adjustable. Call shape! 655-2883; 655-1733. 23 21 Who’s Whose W A N T A D I mission. 4-door. Blue. Radio. engine. 4-speed. Michelln X 355-6145. 19 PIANOS- ALL kinds, including PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED at Pinnings Jean Harden, Inkster sopho­ Very clean interior, exterior. tireB. Excellent condition Eden Roc Apts. old uprights. ROBERT WEAR low-low prices. 30-day charges Bonnie Reiter, Shell Rock, Iowa more to Richard Hautau, East • AUTOMOTIVE $200. 351-5483. 20 throughout. 337-2056. 19 Refinishing Shop. Phone TU available. MAREK REXALL freshman to Dennis Snyder, Lansing senior and Alpha Phi • EMPLOYMENT 252 River St., E.L. PRESCRIPTION CENTER, 301 Omega. FORD, 19ÎO 4-door Wagon. Stick. Auto Service & Parts 2-3320. 25 Western Springs, 111. Junior and • F O R R E N T Make good second car. Reason­ Now leasing for N. Clippert, by Frandor. Free Triangle. Leah Cirrito, Boston, Mass. k FULLY GUARANTEED, Rebuilt • F O R S A L E able. 13510 Wacousta Rd. Phone NE\V BAÍ'YE IES. Exchange fever thermometer with this ad Susan Horner, Massapequa, N. senior and Zeta Tau Alpha to S u m m e r F a l l and reconditioned appliances. • LOST & FOUND 627-2243.. 19 price from $7.95. New sealed Si and any new prescription. C19 Y., freshman and Sigma Delta Tom Hantke, Edgerton, Wis. beams, 99«. Salvage cars, large Terms. Harley's Appliance Re­ graduate student and Theta Delta • P E R S O N A L FÔR5 19« Sunliner Convertible. Nat Hammond 332-8488 pair, 523 E. Grand River. 484- ROcR, FOLK, Blues. Great ver- Tau to Marc Benezra, Wantagh, • PEANUTS PERSONAL stock used parts. ABC AUTO satile entertainment for parties N.Y. sophomore and Sigma Al­ Chi. Straight shift. Runs good, but PARTS. 613 E. South St. IV PERSON APARTMENT to sub- 6011. 21 Caron Feldman, Oak Park sen­ • REAL ESTATE needs body work. 882-4400 after lease for summer. $50 monthly. MAHOGANY FURNITURE. 4- and get-togethers. Call up THE pha Mu. 5-1921. . ' C Close to campus. Call 351-5455. GUYBEARS. 355-6344. 21 Juliet Brand, Arlington ior to Michael Goldfine, Ocean­ • S E R V I C E 7 pm. 20 GENERATORS AND STARTERS'. poster bed; dressing table; din­ side, N.Y. senior. • TRANSPORTATION FORD 1957 Fairlane ’00. Excel- 23 ing room side table; dining table MUSIC! IF you need it, we've got Heights, 111. freshman and Delta Rebuilt 6 or 12 volt. Guaran­ HASLETT APARTMENT No. 13. Zeta to Joseph Lebrun, Hampden, Patricia Roney, Battle Creek • W A N T ED lent transportation. $135. Call top. ED 2-5526. 19 it! THE ESQUIRES, the wildest sophomore to Jay Wiles, Bangor 337-0409. 20 teed! Exchange price $7.90. Me­ Luxury, 4-man. Across from sound around. 351-4725. ' 21 Maine senior and Phi Kappa Sig­ chanic on the job! Installation campus. Call Ken, 337-2746.21 T A PI RECORDER. Flawless m a. junior. DEADLINE FORD 1957 4-door Fairlane. Au- service available. ABC AUTO portable. A real steal for $50. ENGLISH AND WESTERN riding Maureen Lee Kellogg, Mar- courses. Enroll now and receive Mary Kay Wells, Lansing 2 p.m. one class day be­ tomatic. No rus:. $200. 131 PARTS. 613 E. South St. IV 5- H o u se s Call IV 9-3857 for information. freshman to Wayne H. Clifford, cellus junior to Edward John fore publication. Whitehills Dr., Apt. 7, after 5 19 free bus transportation. 882- McGraw, Oxford senior. 1921.______C MODERN HOME on Lake Lan- Flint senior and FarmHouse. Cancellations - 12 noon one pm. 21 WESTERN WEAR, boots, sadd- 4863; 355-2015.______21 Gail Panetz, Detroit sopho­ Scooters & Cycles sing. Four students wanted for class day before publication FORD 195J 2-dorr Ford-O- summer, while owner vacations. lery. COLTSFOOT WESTERN Real Estate E ngagements more to David Ehrlich, Chicago, Matic. Green and white. RaMio. TRtuMPH 200 cc. Tiger Sport. Call 339-2597. 20 MERCANTILE, 11380 Peacock 111. junior and Alpha Epsilon PI. PHONE Runs good. Clean. $195. 355- Very good condition. 1958. Spare Road, Laingsburg. Phone 651- LOVELY 3-bedroom home, at- Rita Wasmer, Detroit senior to Merry Michel, Dearborn 0636. 21 parts, factory manual. $250. Rooms 5637. 28 tached garage. Efficient one- Charles C. Wells, Coloma senior Heights, senior to Robert Austin, 355-8255 LOTI'S ELITE 1963 Stage II, Ser- 337-2054 after 6 pm. 21 CANOES: TS* fiberglass "Pere level. No stairs. Smartly and Sigma Delta Chi. Dearborn senior and Delta Sig­ MALE STUDENTS. Supervised planned Interior. Carpeted. Bonnie Wolpin, Great Neck, ma Pi. RATES ies 11. ZF Box, wel maintained. Employment housing. Cooking, parking. Two Marquette". $165. 17’ molded Neatly shaded lawn and neigh­ 1 D A Y ...... $1.50 Call collect, Mat , 655-4990, mahogany “Wolverine", $180. N.Y. junior and Sigma Delta Tau Linda K. Hall, Livonia sopho­ blocks from Berkey. Phdne IV borhood. Can walk to MSU, to Evan Katz, Eastchester, N.Y. more to Richard E. LaBarre, 3 D A Y S ______S3.50 Ann Arbor. 20 N'Vr SE-REGISTERED. Exper- 5-8836. 23 Beautiful 15’—16* deluxe Runa­ ieftced. Responsible position. bouts, $675-$850. Used canoes, schools, and stores. By owner, junior and Sigma Alpha Mu. Farmington junior. 5 D A Y S ______56.00 MG A MARK II, 1963 Roadster. ROOM FOR woman. Large. Pri- Just $14,500. 1175 Snyder St., Jean R. Lukens, Toledo, Ohio (3ased on 15 words per ad) Abarth Pirelles, belts, radio. Top. pay. Daytime hours. Give vate phone. Block from campus. $100 up. R epair work reason­ complete particulars in applica­ able. CUSTOM BOAT DESIGN 337-2171. 19 senior to Richard R. Gehringer, Secretary Vote There will be a 50« s ervice Extra heater. Tonneau. Excel­ Graduate preferred. ED 2-8498. EAST LANSlNG. Spacious 4-bed- Howell graduate and Delta Sigma lent condition. $l(2-l5. 351-5021. tion. Write Eox No. B-2, State 19 and REPAIR, 1020 Dakin St.. and bookkeeping charge if 19 News. 20 IV 9-1845. 27 room family home. 1- 1/2 baths. Pi. Young Republicans will hold this ad is not paid within Living room, 14x29, fireplace. a special election for corres­ MG MIDGET 1%2. Excellentcon- Sa t u r d a y l a n d s c a p e " an d For Sale RINCON SKATEBOARDS- Brand o ne week. Gardening ¿ieldwork. Apply in Modern kitchen. 2-car garage. ponding secretaries at 7:30 p.m. dition. New tires. Low mileage. CHOICE BEEF, 7or your freez- new. Made of oak. Wheels by Shade trees. Central school person. Twi-ss Landscape Cen­ Chicago Roller Skate. $6. Phone Business Group Thursday, Old College Hall in 332-8721. 19 ter, 1112 Lake Lansing Road. 19 er. Cut, wrapped, blast frozen area. Under $24,000. By owner, the Union. All members are re­ The State News does not MUSTANG 1965 Convertible de- and delivered. Call 485-5394.25 353-1571. 20 2-1424. 21 quested to attend. permit racial or religious luxe. 289 engine. Floor shift. PART-TlME. Attention teachers PORTABLE TYPEWRITERS, COMPLeTE DRUM set. Slinger- Elects Officers discrimination in its ad­ Whitewalls. Take over pay­ and students. Readers Digest new and reconditioned. Trades land professional. $350, or best Service P L A N T I S V-27 vertising columns. The ments. 332-3644, after 6 pm. 19 Sales and Service, Inc. is now offer. Call FE 9-2038. 20 The Omicron chapter of Phi accepting applications for excit­ accepted. All prices. WOLVER­ RENT your TV from NEJAC. Gamma Nu professional busi­ State News will not accept MUSTANG 1965 Convertible. V-8. INE TYPEWRITER CO., 117 E. HOLTON CORONET and acces- New Zenith portable for only advertising from persons Burgandy. 3-speed. Seatbelts. ing new stereo and music pro­ Kalamazoo. 482-1452 . 25 sories. Used only few months. ness sorority recently Installed discriminating against re­ gram. For information call Mr. $9 per month. Free service Kathy Lorencz, Owendale junior, Radio. Whitewalls. Tbp condi­ Blythe, at 882-6629. 26 FRATERNITIES, SORORITIES- Excellent condition. Best offer and delivery. Call NEJAC TV as president and Judy Foss, ligion, race, color or na­ tion. $2,295. Call 694-6351. 20 Are you satisfied with your over $50. Call Dori, ED2-2569. Rental. 482-0624. C tional oriein. WASHINGTON STATE. New dam. 20 Dearborn junior, as first vice MUSTANG 1965 hardtop. Blue. Rock men. Top pay. Long job. present meat source? If NOT, DIAPER SERVICE, same dia­ president. Automatic transmission. Radio “Job News", 40« and stamped call BROWER’S, OX 4-3691. 25 TENNIS RACQUETS. Factory pers returned. Either yours or Others installed were Karen Automotive and heater. Call ED 2-8972 after envelope. YWCO, Box 463, Kirk» ENGLISH'LIGHT-VVEIGHT 3- prices on new Davis frames end ours. With our service, you may Manecke, Farmington junior, se­ 5 pm. 20 land, Washington. 19 speed bicycles, $39.77, full strings. Professional quality. include two pounds of baby cond vice president; Kris Krys- BUICK, 1963 Electra 225. C-m- OLDSMOBILE 1964 4-speed. Like price. Rental-purchase terms Call Paul, 353-0282. 20 clothes that do not fade. Diaper zak, Allen Park junior, secre­ vertible. Air-conditioning. AM- EARNINGS ARE unlimited as an Te Im u I »•< O*—« • *m, new. Many extras. $3,700 new. ' available. We also have tennis TWO FORMALS, cocktail length. pail furnished. tary; Margo Caulkin, Redford t HILP DODGE, 1431 East No job too Large or too small. Summer and F irst $150 takes It. 414 W. Michigan. See Russ Lay. Phone Block off campus. 332-3255. C Barnes Ave. Phone IV 5-5876 For Rent IV 4-4Sl^. C TYPING IN my home. Term pa­ W a n t M o re after 6 pm. 19 We still have a few pers and theses. Call 627-5160. Fall Terms ROWE RANCH has fine horses one & two-bedroom INTERESTED IN FLYJNG? New Will pick up and deliver. 20 VOLKSWAGEN, 1963. Red. Radio, for rent. 10 minutes from cam­ equipment open to students and B u sin e ss ? heater. Excellent condition pus. Reservations. 372-2325. 19 apartments available staff. MSU FLYING CLUB. 355- TAPING. TERM papers and # 2 B e d r o o m s throughout. Serviced regularly. for Summer and Fall. 9133. \ 21 theses. Electric typewriter. Apartm ents Fast service. 332-4597. 20 # 2 B a t h r o o m s $1,150. Leaving town. C all 337- *DO YOb have to buy'a member- 7258. EUKNISflE'b APARTMENT for BURCHAM WOODS ship for road map travel serv­ BEV TALLMAN. Your theses, J u s t C a ll # Built-In FM VOLKSWAGEN 1500,1964Varient couple with one child. Cheap rent and ice? Amazing offer! With auto . term papers, etc. Typed in my wagon. Big engine, low mileage. plus little AM dom estic work. EYDEAL VILLA insurance from BUBOLZ. (he home. Electric typewriter. 372- # Ample Parking New car condition. Best offer, ED 2-5977. 22 maps are free. BUBOLZ, 332» 3849. C20 4 * 487-0828. 21 RETIRED COUPLE wants to rent Hurrv, Call Today 8671. C18x\ TYPING WANTED. Accurate and 0 Air-Conditioning VOLKSWAGEN 1958 with sunroof. one-bedroom furnished apart» IF YOU’RE brand new in town, neat. Will pick up and deliver. Best offer over $550. Call 337-* ment for August and September. ED 2-5041 or ED 2-0565 good. New faces are welcome. CSL1 IV 5-0107. 22 2459. 2.i Call 337-2295. 19 See our old faces for new in­ End of River Street VOLKSWAGEN, 1961. Fine. GIRL ROOMMATE wanted for surance ideas on your new home GENERAL TYPING. Theses and Clean. Rust-proofed. In good two-girl apartment. A cross for better iving or car. BUBOLZ INSURANCE. themes done in my home. Call 355-8255 Mike Stitt, mgr. ED 2-4432 running order. Call 332-3108.19 from Union. Call 337-2048. 20 C19 OX 4-0378. 23 • fc Tuesday, April 27, 1965 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan 7 Success Radiation Danger Studied P ro te s ts Why is radiation harmful? Research at the Argonne James L. Dye of the chemistry After all. It's Invisible and non- National Laboratories and else­ Department is 1 studying a tame (continued from page 1) Not Just polsonous. It doesn’t even feel where Indicates that radiation version of the electron-and- the university,’* one said. hot. splits an electron off the water water reaction under a $37,000 "When one side Is presented, Before scientists can find a molecule. This electron is very Atomic Energy Commission as in the teach-in, the demonstra­ 8 to 5 Job prevention for radiation burns, reactive, and attacks tissue vio­ grant. He uses no radiatiftn. tion is bad, but when both sides they must find out why the high lently. Since the body is 90 per Instead, he obtains his free elec­ are given an opportunity it is a The dedicated businessman cent water, that reaction causes trons by dissolving an active must be more than an 8 to 5 em ­ energy rays are harmful, and good thing,’’ said a coed. how they do their damage. severe damage. metal, such as sodium In a nit­ "I always like to listen to peo­ ploye if he is to succeed, accord­ rogen solvent, called an amine. ple if they have something to ing to John Drabell, Airline Sales Water is dissolved in another say," a third student said. Manager for Collins Radio. batch of the solvent. The two As a practical course of ac­ Addressing the MarketingClub solutions are mixed in a compli­ tion, students were encouraged to Thursday evening, Drabell said Computer Laboratory cated flow device. To study the write to their parents with their that extra effort Is a mutt for rate of the reaction, he measures complaints about the library. In advancement In today’s bualneas how much light, and of what wave addition to this, and more imme­ world. length, the solution absorbs ,r: diately, a sit-in will be staged “Business needs people who Offers New Services a given time. The more elec­ are willing to take their Jobs trons that have reacted, the less ,at the library today between home with them at night and put Two new services have been Four packages are presently of­ noon and 5 p jn . announced by the MSU Computer fered with a corresponding red light is absorbed. out that little bit of extra effort," Laboratory to assist students charge for each. In future studies, other sub­ Drabell said. and researchers in taking ad­ Also, jobs which call primarily stances may be substitued for According to D rabell, a 1959 vantage of Computer Center fa­ on computer library programs water in the amine solution. In Wildlife Fund graduate of MSU, marketing is the cilities. but which are outside of thepack- this way, Dye will be able to hub of the corporate wheel, and The first, User Research Co­ age programs will be handled by study the effect of radiation on firms that are not marketing or­ ordination, is free of charge and the laboratory at the established a variety of materials. iented will not survive. Dye h a s been experimenting Hires Lindy Collins Radio, located inCedar will provide information on com­ rates for each phase of the proj­ puter facilities, assistance in or­ ect. Small programmingprojects with solutions of metals in amine WASHINGTON UP)— A famous Rapids, Iowa, sells communica­ solution for ten years. These but publicity-shy figure of avia­ tion equipment for such varied ganizing research for the com­ will be accepted in addition to puter and project coordination- the above. solutions are of Interest in the tion history has been working corporate needs as airline oper­ field of electrochemistry. They quietly In a small downtown of­ ations, microwave systems and linking keypunching, tabulating Further information on the and/or computing. URC can be obtained In 201A Com­ conduct electricity somewhat like fice here for several months for com puters. a metal, and somewhat like a the protection of wild creatures. Communication equipment in The second is a “package” puter Center or at 355-4688, and program which will handle all for the package program in 203 chemical battery, depending upon “Whenever civilization comes, the recently orbited Gemini space how much metal is in solution. > wildlife tends to disappear," he capsule was made by Collins computer details for the user. Computer Center or at 355-4688. wrote in a recent magazine arti­ Radio. LAST 2 DAYS! cle. “On every continent, and in CAMPUS) 1:00-3:05-5:15-7:20-9:30 almost every country, the crisis M- 2o- for wildlife is acute." Dial ‘A T For T H t A T R f- He became a world figure over­ U.S. Offers night 38 years ago. After a trag­ AH SPRING With the warmer weather comes open windows and balloons flying 0 332-6044—-« out' of them, as seen last weekend at the Phi Kappa Psi fraternity house. This Motivation edy in his family he sought pri­ C o m p i è vacy in Europe and has taken un­ impromptu water fiaht resulted in a water hose-water balloon free-fo r-all. Academic motivation will be Starts Grad Grants Photo by Patti Pcout discussed at the College of Edu­ CINEMASCOPE usual steps to avoid publicity Competition for government Thursday! COLOR it Dt LUXE ever since. His effort has been graduate grants for academic cation Colloquium in 128 Erick­ so successful that he is seldom study or research abroad will son Hall, at 4:10 p.m . Wednes­ recognized. open Saturday. day. THE N0.1 ATTRACTION OF ALLTIME Old friends who discovered that William Farquhar, professor Sponsored by the Institute of of guidance and personnel serv­ he was spending more and more International Education, the Battery May Sub For Gas ices, will present seven to eight time in Washington on his hobby 1966-67 grants for pro­ - of nature conservation helped fessional training in creativeand Solar and nuclear power will key concepts that he has dis­ By JEAN PRITCHARD shore reserves and deep wells—- covered in an analysis of data L-ÉOFATRA keep It more or less a secret performing arts will offer more both costly to pump. No one knows undoubtedly become more popu­ until Monday. State News Science Writer gathered through use of the M- CO LO R B Y DE LUXE than 800 American graduate stu­ how long these reserveswill last. lar in the distant future, but are Scale. Ira N. Gabrielson, president of dents the opportunity to study in The American motorist doesn’t At the same time petroleum is not immediately practical, ACADEMY AWARDS! know It yet, but gasoline short­ The M-Scale, an objective Now at our Regular Prices the Wildlife Management Insti­ 55 countries. becoming scarcer, more and Giacoletto continued. measuring device of educational tute, announced that Charles ' Selections will be made on the age is a "now" and not a "future" more non-power uses are being 75« to 5:30 PM Eve. & Sun. $ 1,0 0 A. Lindbergh, 63, of Darien, problem, said L. J, Giacoletto of One Swiss bus firm has solved drive, was designed by Farquhar. basis of academic and profes­ found for it. The Russians have the fuel problem by using the It measures information about Conn.—first person to fly solo sional record, the feasibility of the Electrical Engineering De­ already announced that they don’t across the Atlantic Ocean—has the applicant’s proposed study partm ent. principle that objects in motion student personality characteris­ Already surface reserves of Intend to waste crude oil as fuel, tend to remain in motion. The bus tics, occupation aspirations, per­ been appointed a director of the plan and personal qualifications. but to concentrate on its potential sonal preferences and academic World Wildlife Fund. The purpose of the awards is oil are depleted, and industry for synthesizing new materials. is run by a ton and a half fly­ must turn more and more to off- wheel set spinning in a giant va- self-image. to increase mutual understand­ As a practical, immediate sub­ uum chamber. The spinning wheel The M-Scale was used in tests ing betweeif the people of the stitute for gasoline, Giacoletto can power thè bus for about five given to 5,200 high school stu­ Area Blood U.S. and other countries through suggests chemical energy. miles. Then the driver has to plug dents as a part of the Michigan the exchange of persons, know­ Scholar Sets One practical chemical battery into a power line to set the wheel Study which is sponsored by the Serves More ledge and skills. would consist of a block of lithium spinning for another five miles. United States Office of Education. Further Information can be hydride—a compound of the light­ “We ought to try that here," Farquhar’s lecture will present Lansing’s Red Cross Blood obtained by writing Institute of Poland Talk est metal and the lightest gas smiled Giacoletto. the results of these tests Program faces a new challenge. International Education, 809 Uni­ known. About 57 pounds of the The Lansing Region, whlc&.ttfcs ted Nations Plaza, New York, Virginia Rock, Michigan Sta^e compound would be needed to been providing the necessary Y. 10017. assistant professor of American provide the same energy poten­ ™ '5 *> il ll I a i thought and language, will-pre­ me: Pa., freshman. AHMED ABDUL MALIK

A lpha K appa Psi Folk Singer from Sudan

Initiates M em bers Company of Four Mail reservations accepted only when accompanied Alpha Kappa Psl, profession­ by coupons, check or money order Please enclose al business fraternity, has ac­ (Replacing Olatunjl) MAIL ORDER a stamped, self-addressed envelope for return of tivated 10 new members. . BLANK tickets Make checks payah(e to Michigan State They are: Bart Knowles, Ce­ FIGARO University Mail to: Performing Arts Company. dar Springs freshman; F red Bi- Department of Speech, Michigan State University, alczyk, Dearborn sophomore; Wed., Apr. 28-8:15 p.m. ANTHONY QUINN Larry Fisher, Grand Rapids A U \ N B A T E S ALL SEATS RESERVED—NUMBER Main Floor. -Balcony. East Lansing, Michigan sophomore; Earl Hoenes, Bur­ IRENE PAPAS PERFORMANCE DESIRED Number of -@ $ 2.00 (main floor) Nan lington Junior; Jim Norwood, Sar­ Single Tickets _@ $ 1.00 (balcony) MÎCHAELCACOYANNIS 1st and 2nd choice ( ) Friday nia, Ontario, Canada, sophomore; Fairchild Theatre Address- Ken Kenny, Royal Oak fresh­ PRODUCTION ( ) Saturday Total Number of Ttckets. Admission: Students: $2.00 man; Barry Metheny, Waterford " Z O R B A Phone_ sophomore; Fred Piper, Ionia Public: $2.50 Number of Season Coupons. Amount Enclosed $_____ T H E G R E E K " sophomore; Len Malda, Dear­ Tickets on Sale at Union Ticket Office, • in* O, NKO& *A/ANT/**iS born sophomore; and Walt Fal- Paramount Newshop -rlAAKEDRCNA GEORGE FOUN0AS l Ion, Grayling sophomore. 8 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Tuesday, April 27, 1965

Ws retarvi H*e right le limit quontitiox. F rita S & H eHective fhrooqh D o u b l e G re e n S t a m p s [VERY W e d n e s d a y Sat., May 1. ! cJk eres T lon e (B etter cfk a n T lation a Is for S teaks.

U.SJ).A. Choice Be«f, Value Way Trimmed, 5-inch Cut Rib Staak, or

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Hyyruda'i Peint Cet, Brisket * V alue Way TrifiM**1 Corned Beef U .S.D .A. Choice, end Velue-W ay Trimmed Cook c W ith Cobbogo! 6 9 ib. — B o n e l e s s U.S.D.A. Choice Boot,lot, Valuo Volvo Woy Trimmod Trimmed QQ Select, Center Sliced " W b * » U J .0 .A. C b ^ c , M So Frock, Bonolott Freien (Boneless Strip Steak . . Cod nilBts JjJ; 3 9 * U.S.D.A. Choice Boot,lot, Volvo Woy Trimmod d k d k J Ham Steak So Frock, Foil Frozen Portions tra m Our porterhouse Fully Cooked, C Haddock ’}£; 4 9 * Hickory Smoked (Boneless Rump or Round 7 7 i Home I Ib. 7 9 U.S.D.A. Choics Boot,lot, Volvo Woy Trimmod Cooked, Freien, Brooded Ocean Piumose, Canned Sirloin Tip Roast .9 9 « , Perch Fillets ’¿ J ; 4 9 * (Boneless NATIONAL COUPON U.S.D.A. Ckolco Boat, Volvo Woy Trimmod S t e a k Sliced Bacon |:| j FREE WITH THIS COUPON | No Refrigiietion Bof this sprclsi.cu, o _ (Boneless Chuck Roast . . / 9«,. §?;; house tteaki J 1 100 EXTRA eV.iN STAMPS 1 Hooded, Idoal Loon, Tender 'n Flavorful, Pre-Dicod M i trimmed "ft T ï^ î" *» i f i With purchase of any 1-Lb. or Larger I for Comping Out! 6 9 *Ib. M only •'•«» you mootlor o«-,? 1£,ho,e•*, ¡f | BEEF ROAST j ff «nost bw ”*• ! Redeem this Coupon at National Food j Skinlatt, Mkh. Grodo 1 iBoneless Beef lor Stow . . / 7 b èsî msrtiloora,.. '••'I- i| : stores. Coupon Biglrss lot.. May 1.1 Betty Cracker's AII-pwpoM Flew Mix m 0 .r .no "ueT »“» Armour’s Star Loon, Grictlo-froo Cvbo, or m *«e««t it<, ‘ « “ no |?ii sovor.i of rh.!l Í?' ••» NATIONAL COUPON Bisquick . . . * I -'L°"TB«Hoo*e rreiSÄ Franks (Boneless Sirloin Tip Steak .99«., m now m M .tlon.liSAK$ f Ì FREI WITH THIS COUPON j Hein — Rich and Delicious, Com Country Pork, Boston Butt Cut M J W ( I ¡50 EXTRA ¿¿A STAMPS Mb. I I with purchase of 1 Lbs. or Moro I Tomato Soup . Pkg. iBoneless Pork Roast . . . 4 7 i I ] ALL-BEEF HAMBURGER ! 5 9 e : Radoom this Coupon at Notional Pood j Sofa and Gentle for Fine*! Fabrics, 10-21 Loon, Uniform Slicot Per 1-lb. Pkg. Oil n g I t stores. Coupon liplros lot.. May t.f Roman Bleach . Hillside, Mick, Grodo 1 Hillside Sliced Bacon . & 5 5 NATIONAL COUPON Skinless For Sandwiches, or for Snack Tray m W 0% r i FREE WITH THIS COUPON f Loon, Tender end Meaty M # % £ 1 -lb. Pkg. / V 150 EXTRA oV««mn STAMPS! Franks Pork Steaks ...... 4 “ », Eckrlch Smorgas Pac * » S with pure hafa of tl.se or mora, Fresh ! i FRUITS AND VEGETABLES j Tog Toste, Dolkiovo Liver Flovor J A g Hygrado's Michigan Grade 1 M 1-lb . j Redeem this Coupon of National Pood j ; Stores. Coupon expires Sot., May 1.1 » Crira. w * * K **** ^ 4 9 c Pkg. US. No- T» Fre#h Liver Sausage . 4 9 i b Polish Sausage . . 5 9 NATIONAL COU PON Serve the Finest, Natco, Grade A Fresh FREE WITH THIS COUFON | Dozen ¡50 EXTRA o * r iin STAMPS} A p p l e s In Ctn. With purchase of ony j BAG OF FERTILIZER j Large Eggs . . 3 9 * j Redaom this Coupon at Natlenol Pood I Perfect Cakes — White,Whits, Chocolate, Yellow, Double Dutch or Swiss Choc. j ^ 4 ^ | Stores. Coupon ■xplres lot.. May 1.I c national coupon FREE WITH THIS COUPON . § 3 - 3 9 P illsbury C ake M ix - 2 9 ¡25 EXTRA or*in STAMPS; Deal Pack, Fresh-frozen, Concentrated Breakfast Drink i With purchase of pkp. of Id BRILLO SOAP FADS Howoiio, »oye» Howolie« • Radoom this Coupon at National Pood : 9-0z. : Stores. Coupon liplros lot.. May 1.1 ■ i Can fresh PineappVe . • national coupon Grown B i r d s e y e A w a k e 2 9 , SHOW With H ot H o w . I FREE WITH THIS COUPON j Garnish You Orchard Fresh, Fancy Quality Preserves 1-Lb., fresh Mushrooms. . _ ¡25 EXTRA o * r i* n STAMPS} 4-0z. • With purchase of a 4-ox. Natco ; Jar BLACK FEFPER [ CM.»» Crt“ ‘ I » ' k * | 7 S traw berry Jam . . 4 9 S Redaom this Coupon at National Pood f ! Stores. Coupon Ixplres Sot., May 1. j Green Onions • ■ • ■ t one Jumbo Size, Strong and Absorbent, White or Colors ^jjjm Jumbo H i NATIONAL COUPON Gordon Fro.h, In Ç.»» r,ekH" 7pkg*. 1 # Red Radishes . - lftt FREE WITH THIS COUPON i K leenex Tow els . 2 « . 5 9 125 EXTRA oRiiN STAMPS} ti. l u 5 With purchase of a Bfl. of Nasal f ! IMITATION VANILLA a! fresh Artichokes ■ • • ^ • Redaom this Coupon at National Pood ! ^ B i g Gaaaed Q oods S a l e . , , Stock U p n ow! • Stores. Coupon Ixplreo Sot., May 1.1 ■ : ■$. UsaUse

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