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1-18-1968 Montana Kaimin, January 18, 1968 Associated Students of University of Montana

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Recommended Citation Associated Students of University of Montana, "Montana Kaimin, January 18, 1968" (1968). Montana Kaimin, 1898-present. 4453. https://scholarworks.umt.edu/studentnewspaper/4453

This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the Associated Students of the University of Montana (ASUM) at ScholarWorks at University of Montana. It has been accepted for inclusion in Montana Kaimin, 1898-present by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks at University of Montana. For more information, please contact [email protected]. y . 7 ° , ■ MONTANA KAIMIN University of Montana Thurs., Jan. 18, 1968 Missoula, Montana /IN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER Vol. 70, No. 48 Parking Meter Idea Controversial at CB By MIKE WOOD budget was an additional $270 Montana Kaimin Reporter which will cover the extra cost of ten additional delegates from Cen­ The possibility of parking meters tral Board. on the UM campus, instead of the Van Heuvelen proposed a by-law present $9 registration fee was the change that the ASUM Program topic of some heated discussion Council Director receive $60 a last night at Central Board. month instead of $90 which he is Chuck Briggs, physical plant currently receiving. Wheeler said E f - commissioner, said the idea origi­ he feels the director’s job does not nated because cars were being left require $90 worth of time. for- long periods of time in the Andrea Grauman, Program campus parking lots. He said that Council Director, said she spends from 10 to 15 cars are left in the from three to four hours a day on lots after spring quarter and have her job and some days as many as to be removed by the University. six to eight. “I think the idea is absurd!” said Lee Tickell, former Program Scott Wheeler, Traditions Board Council Director, said “I feel that chairman. “Nickels and dimes plus if a program director does the job any tickets would probably add the way it should be done, he does up to be more than $9.”' as much as the Kaimin editor, Jim Eggensperger, Publications who receives $90 a month and ■ E E Board chairman reported that the should be paid the same.” The dis­ Kaimin requested the paper be cussion was tabled until next published only on Tuesday of the week. *LUV’—The Montana Drama Quartet is shown in a University Theater. From left to right are Patricia week before finals instead of the Briggs said he was checking on scene from Murray Schisgal’s contemporary satire Maxson, Firman H. Brown, Alan Cook and Roger whole week. a chemical treatment of the side­ “Luv” which will be presented Jan. 24-28 in the DeBourg. (Staff photo by Ron Lenn) “This would give journalism stu­ walks to melt snow after it was dents working on the Kaimin a packed down. chance to catch up with their studies and eliminate a pay raise for Kaimin associate editors,” Eg- Johnson Tells Nation to Expect Changes gensberger said. Human Leg Part He also said the Kaimin asked that a feature editor be added to Found on Campus the staff to take care of the Mon­ The lower part of a human leg In Taxes, Spending, Search for Peace tana Review. The feature editor’s was found on the Alumni bench salary would be $35 a month. on the UM campus by a University WASHINGTON (AP) — Presi­ fiscal year that will be up $10.4 said, serious differences remain be­ John Van Heuvelen, budget and student last night. dent Johnson told the nation yes­ billion in spending over the cur­ tween the two powers. finance commissioner, recom­ The student, who refused to be terday to expect higher taxes, rent year. CHINA ISOLATED mended that the ASUM budget for identified, said he was walking by continued progress, the most mas­ SURTAX PRESSED The President held out a not un­ 1968 be planned for 5,000 students. the bench when he saw the leg sive spending program .in all his­ friendly hand-to Communist China Band and Leadership Camp and at first thought it was

2 — MONTANA KAIMIN irk Thurs., Jan. 18, 1968 Campus Newspapers Varied © Newseek, Inc. paigned editorially to shut down Colo., 500 students packed the stu­ sending their own men , abroad. ports twice a week from a student the university’s countersurveillance dent union ballroom to protest the The Queens College Phoenix is correspondent in Vietnam—who Reprinted from the project in Thailand. Then, training liberal policies of the Colorado raising $4,000 to send two cor­ speaks fluent Chinese and Viet­ December 25, 1967 Issue its guns on rival Michigan State Daily after blond editor Susan respondents to Vietnam. One will namese. Not many generalizations can be last month, the Daily implied that Schmidt endorsed Sen. Eugene Mc- be a critic of the Administration’s Whether reporting from Viet­ made about the estimated 1,000 some MSU officials were involved Cathy in the Democratic Presiden­ handling of the war, the other a nam or the local bookstore, most U.S. college newspapers. Some are in conflicts of interest in the sale tial primaries and condemned the supporter. They will travel togeth­ college papers are now sophisti­ ruled by faculty-dominated com­ of land near the campus. Next, the university for suspending ten stu­ er, interview the same sources, file cated enough not to accept the mittees; others may be entirely in­ Daily questioned the continued dents after an anti-CIA demonstra­ weekly stories. The Dartmouth, news unchallenged. “If you rewrite dependent and run by students. usefulness of Michigan’s vice presi­ tion. And one disgruntled Duke meanwhile, has been receiving re- releases,” says Princeton’s Sim- Some play only campus stories dent for student affairs because he student slashed 200 copies of the onds, “you get a pat on the back. about 'dorm visiting hours and stu­ “is unable any longer to command Duke Chronicle when it gave If you do a good job, you get a dent-government affairs; others the respect or receive the coopera­ greater play to the peace march HEAVY HARRASSMENT nervous handshake. We prefer the cover national and international tion that a high administrative in Washington than to the home­ TAIPEI, Formosa (AP( — A nervous handshake.” news as well and serve as the only post requires.” Not everyone, how­ coming football game. The Chroni­ report credited to Chinese Nation­ © Newsweek, Inc. paper in town. Some are wealthy ever, is impressed with the Daily’s cle headline read: Thousands Face alist intelligence sources says For­ and fat with ads; others can bare­ crusades. Leland Stowe, a Michi­ War-makers in Washington. “The eign Minister Chen Yi of Com­ ly afford to publish. But large or gan journalism professor and him­ days when this paper was little munist China lost 44 pounds as a small, most campus papers today self a Pulitzer Prize winner for the more than a campus calendar are result of strain brought on by Red All are where the action is—shaking old New York Herald Tribune, says over,” says Chronicle editor Steve Guard harassment. It said Chen administrations, infuriating alum­ the Daily staff often is guilty of Johnston, an English major from survived the ordeal only after Kinds ni, and turning off many of their one-sided reporting. “The Daily,” Wilmington, Del. “We do our own Chairman Mao Tse-tung inter­ student readers as well. he says, “teaches bad journalistic thing.” vened in his behalf. of Sometimes, the action gets too habits.” At some campuses, radicals pro­ hot. Last week, Hodding Carter, RESIST test that the paper isn’t active the liberal publisher of the Mis­ enough. Last month members of LETRASET SALE Music sissippi Delta Democrat-Times, The Ivy League papers usually the Black Student Union at San INSTANT LETTERING angrily resigned as adviser to the don’t go in for exposes, but a few Francisco State' walked into the Hullabaloo, the paper at Tulane actively sympathize with the New offices of the Gater and beat stu­ Reg. $1.50 - Now $1.25 MUSIC CENTER University, calling the staff “dis­ Left. The chairman of the Daily dent editor Jim Vaszko into semi­ MISSOULA BLUEPRINT honest little jerks.” At issue was a Princetonian, Todd Simon ds, a consciousness. They claimed the 1601 S. Ave. W. Holiday Village Hullabaloo story about campus po­ senior English major from Pitts­ Gater delayed unnecessarily ’in lice preventing members of Stu­ burgh, is a member of SDS, while publishing the picture of their can­ the Yale Daily News devotes large WVTWTVTWTTTVTVTTVTVYVWTTWTVTWVTVTTWWWWV: dents for a Democratic Society space to the draft-resistance move­ didate for homecoming queen. Ac­ from distributing a “dishonest and ment. The News’s lead story ear­ tually, San Francisco State stu­ obscene” pamphlet about alleged lier this month described how six dents support two papers, the mod­ police harassment during an anti­ students and faculty mehibers erate daily Gater and the radical • • • war demonstration. The fourth were reclassified 1-A after turning weekly Open Process. But Open ■ g O’GQ Cold Beverage paragraph of the Hullabaloo story in their draft cards: “The Selective Process was a little too open last reprinte^ — to Carter’s surprise Service,” the story began, “is strik­ month and college president John Snacks —the objectionable part of the SDS ing back at Yale’s draft protesters.” Summerskill suspended it for pub­ GO to pamphlet, which described the At Harvard, the Crimson ran a lishing a poem about anal mas­ • Meats imagined perversions of a campus half-page ad urging students to try turbation. Now, the radicals con­ police official in four-letter words. out as reporters and “add yourself trolling State’s board of publica­ ‘•What bothers me,” says Carter, to LBJ’s worries.” Professional in tions are trying to reshape the Ga­ Worden’s Super Market now Tulane’s writer-in-residence, style and appearance, the “Crim” ter to the New Left mold. “is that this is typical. Students to­ Nationally, student papers are * 434 N. Higgins Open Til Midnight day are, in a very cold and calcu­ has drifted away from the LBJ Administration’s policies. Editori­ big business. About 6 million ■aaaaaaaaaaaaaaa lated manner, testing just how far als have gone from support of the copies are printed each week—and they can push administrators.” The war in 1965 to the enclave theory about ten papers have budgets of WWTTTVTTTTTTVTTWWTWTVTWWTTWWTTTTTTWTWV^ administration, in turn, pushed edi­ in 1966 to calls for a bombing halt more than $225,000. The U.S. Stu­ tor Jeff Howie, a law senior from today. An editorial recently said dent Press Association was formed Texarkana, Texas, out of a job. He that a demonstration imprisoning five years ago to get the word JANUARY SALE resigned after receiving what he a Dow Chemical Co. recruiter for across to this growing audience. SAVE NOW ON THE ITEMS YOU NEED! called an “insulting reprimand” seven hours was “justified.” Today, almost 400 papers pay from Tulane’s publications board. IVY TO LEAD USSPA’s $25 annual fee and sub­ MENS C O R D S ...... 3.99 ■“Today’s college papers are more scribe to its code of ethics; 300 sub­ Famous Brand — Reg. $6.00 liberal,” protests Howie. “The same A few papers try to lead campus scribe to its Collegiate Press Serv­ things that used to be said behind opinion rather than simply report ice, receiving five releases and MENS COATS & JACKETS . 1/3 to V2 OFF hands are now said in the open in it. “I don’t think the Daily Cal 15,000 words a week in the mail Big Selection college papers.” represents the views of the stu­ (CPS just started Telex wire serv­ FEARLESS dents,” says Karlyn Barker, a 21- ice to ten papers). One recent MENS SWEATERS . . . . . 1/3 OFF year-old English senior from El story told of suspensions of 21 WINTER CAPS .... 1/3 to y2 OFF More papers indeed are more Sobrante who is editor of the girls at Connecticut’s Albertus open and fearless in challenging Berkeley student paper. “Although Magnus College for trying to ob­ RUBBER PACS .... 40 to 60% OFF their institutions. One of the most Berkeley is a generally liberal tain more liberal dormitory regu­ B. F. Goodrich U.S.A. active — and one of the best— school, we are more liberal than lations. CPS maintains nine staff campus papers, the Michigan Daily, most of the student body.” The members in Washington, a full­ Ladies Car & Suburban Coats . . 25% OFF publishes 10,000 copies six days a three front-page headlines of a re­ time correspondent in South Viet­ week; daily it averages 660 column cent Daily Cal reported: mass cam­ LADIES SWEATERS . . . . . 1/3 OFF inches of editorial copy. The Daily pus disruption planned for Mon­ nam and part-time bureau men is run by students and makes all day noon, UC dean criticizes draft in Paris, Chicago and San Francis­ STRETCH PANTS ...... 7.99 pr. of its $250,000 budget on ads—from law for disrupting graduate study, co. Were $15.95 Ford cars to the local barber shop. and Mulford (a state assembly- DISSIDENTS It is also fiercely independent. This man) pressures regents for action But even CPS has New Left Montana’s year Michigan president Harlan against protestors. competition. Last summer student Largest Hatcher strongly opposed the ap­ On many campuses, however, radicals formed the Liberation Western pointment of Roger Rapoport as papers are printing more national News Service to tap what Marshall 0 m m Store the Daily’s editor — but Rapoport, and political stories than students Bloom, former editor of the Am­ who at 21 has written for The Wall want .to read. Some 40 Fordham herst Student and a Liberation 451 N. Higgins Ave. Phone 543-4718 Street Journal, New Republic, Na­ students recently burned copies of founder, calls “the exciting renais­ ^AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA tion and McCall’s, was appointed the Fordham Ram outside the gym, sance of newspapers.” Liberation by the student-publications board chanting “The Ram is Red.” says it has eleven staffers in Wash­ anyway. Shrugs Ram editor John Nolan, ington and mails copy to 170 regu­ Actually, Hatcher had reason to “The activists are liberal and the lar and 50 underground campus worry. The Daily opened the term activists join the Ram.” And Ram with a four-part series on classified reporter Pat Sarro adds that “if we papers. Pentagon research on campus represent the students’ views it’s Most college papers have large which ran 400 inches, and cam­ purely an accident-.” In Boulder, local staffs, and at least two are M«C«(C

Thurs., Jan. 18, 1968 ^ MONTANA KAIMIN __ 3 Slumping Cubs to Meet Kittens By CHUCK JOHNSON On the MSU freshman roster are vil led the Golden Bears to a sec­ Sights and Sounds Kaimin Sports Reporter some of the state’s high school ond place finish last season. He After poor showings in their last stars of last season. At center is hit a season’s high of 35 points and two games, the Montana Cubs will Tex Taylor, who at 6-8 is the tall­ grabbed 26 rebounds against Daw­ MUSIC AND DANCING play a highly-touted Montana est player on the team. Taylor son County Junior College. State freshmen basketball team in played for the 1966 Edgar team At the other forward is Lewis, FUSSBALL TOURNAMENT preliminary games to the Montana- that won the Montana Class C the former* Hellgate Knight star. Montana State games at Bozeman Tournament. Lewis, who as a junior played on SATURDAY, 2 P.M. on Friday and Saturday. At forwards are 6-6 Dean Krato- the Hellgate team that placed sec­ The Cubs shot 36 and 23 per vil and 6-4 Gene Lewis. Kratovil, ond in the state, is the brother of cent from the field in their last named to the Scholastic' Coach Duke University star Mike Lewis. two games with the Gonzaga and High School All-America team last Lewis has been a consistent dou­ Idaho frosh. season, chose Montana State over ble-figure scorer and a strong re­ th e RED The Bobkittens, coached by ex- such schools as Duke, Southern bounder for the Kittens this sea­ D A D fs. I FREE popcorn Bobcat Andy Matson, are 4-1 oh California, Wyoming and Wash­ son. D/ \ K U IN THURSDAY the year, losing only to the North­ ington State. A first team all­ A pair of ex-Billings high school west Community College Trappers stater for two seasons at Billings players are the starting guards for highway 95 south who also defeated the Cubs. West under Toby Kangas, Krato- the MSU frosh. Cal Winslow, "a star of the Big 32 champion Bill­ ings Broncs last year, is a good ball handler with quick moves. Jim Petek, a 6-3 sharpshooter who played at Billings Central, scored Evansville Commands Lead 33 points agaihst Miles City Com­ THE P C o n te s t munity College. The shorter Cubs also sport an In College Basketball Poll All-America on their roster. He SANDHURST is Don Wetzel, former sensation at By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS through Sat. Jan. 13 and total Cut Bank High School. Wetzel HAND CARVED CALABASH PIPE The Evansville Purple Aces con­ points on a 10-9-8-etc. basis: leads the Cubs in scoring with 18 tinued yesterday to hold a com­ 1. Evansville 10-1______141 points a game. At the other guard manding lead in The Associated 2. Kentucky Wesleyan 8-3__106 slot for coaches Del Carroll and The coolest Press’ small college basketball poll. 3. Long.Island U. 11-0_____ 100 Doc Holliday is Mike Heroux, a 5- smoke ever. There were no changes among These beautiful, 4. Indiana State 12-4______80 10‘speedster, from Menasha, Wis., tawny calabash the first five teams. Kentucky scoring 14 points a game. gourds individu­ Wesleyan held second place fol­ 5. SW Missouri St. 9-2______72 ally hand etched Probable starters in the front­ in rich, deep lowed by Long Island University, 6. SW Louisiana______57 line for the UM frosh will be 6-5 carvings to give Indiana State and Southwest Mis­ 7. Trinity, Tex.______44 Les Gordon of Dillon, scoring 10 th e m a rugged souri State. 8. Guilford______31 points a game, leading rebounder manly look. Southwestern Louisiana rushed 9. Pan American______20 and free throw shooter Jerry Hill up two places to sixth. Trinity, of Columbia Falls and scrappy Tex., slipped one notch to seventh 10. Lincoln, Mo.______19 Tony Bertuca, here on a football while Guilford moved up one posi­ scholarship from Chicago. tion to eighth. Pan American, No. 9, and Lin­ coln, Mo., No. 10, are the newly Ron Moore Tops JksL (BsriL ranked teams. They replaced San Faculty Bowling Diego State and Winston-Salem, Big Sky Scoring 225 EAST BROADWAY W L Tot. (Opposite Post Office) seventh and 10th, respectively, a Grimly guard Ron Moore is week ago. 1. Bus. Office 2 _-24% 14% 33% Evansville collected nine first- leading the Big Sky conference in 2. Physical Plant..23 16 31 place votes and 141 points in the scoring in league games through 3. Food Service _.22 17 30 latest vote by a national panel of Jan. 13. Moore’s 23.6 average, 4. Journalism -20 19 28 however, dropped to 20.2 points 5. Bus. Office 1 _.21 18 26 15 sports writers and broadcasters after Monday’s game with Idaho in 6. 19 20 26 based on games through last Sat­ which he was injured and scored urday. 7. Botany ------18% 20% 24% Tux Rentals For All The Top Ten, based on games only three points. 8. Education .18 21 24 Idaho State’s Ron Boone and 9. Dollars____ _18 21 24 Charlie Parks were tied for sec­ 10. Physical Ed. -.17% 21% 23% ond place with averages of 22.7 11. Library...... 17 22 23 College Functions points a game. 12. Chem-Pharm..-15% 23% 18% Intramural Schedule Greg Hanson, Grizzly forward, THURSDAY is the league’s leader in field High Team Series: 1. Journalism, 4 p.m. goal percentage, connecting on 2371; 2. Business Office 1, 2281; SX vs. ATO, MG 58.7 per cent of his shots. 3. Physical Ed, 2277. 5 p.m. Parks leads the loop in the free High Team Game: 1. Business TX vs. PSK, MG throw department with 84 per cent. Office 1, 823; 2. Journalism, 811; Ed Wilson, also of Idaho State, 3. Journalism, 792. 6 p.m. continues to lead the conference in Uptights vs. Nads No. 1, MG rebounding with 23 grabs a game. High Individual Series: 1. Hay­ 7 p.m. Named Big Sky Conference play­ den, 551; 2. Bowman, 540; 3. Brun­ FPFA vs. Piglets, MG er of the week was Idaho’s Jim son, 532. 8 p.m. Thacker, who scored 47 points High Individual Game: 1. Hut, Law School vs. Foresters No. 1, against Montana State in two 223; 2. Greaves, 204; 3. Fevold, MG games last weekend. 204.

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4 — MONTANA KAIMIN kk Thors., Jan. 18, 1968 UM Ski Team Scheduled To Begin Season at MSU The UM ski team, which has the reason for not having meets in where they will compete in a meet been working out since the middle Missoula. Marshall ski area is hosted by Brigham Young Univer­ of October, gets its first taste of building a jumping area which sity. The Big Sky championship competition this weekend at Boze­ will be used for meets, according meet and the NCAA qualifying man. to Nelson. meet will be held at McCall, Ida­ Coach Gary Nelson is taking a After the meet at Bridger Bowl ho on Feb. 23-25, hosted by the wait-and-see attitude towards the near Bozeman, the team is idle un­ University of Idaho. On March 1-3, team’s chances. Nelson said the til Feb. 2-4 when it travels to the Tips will compete at Snow team was doing well in timed Banff, Alberta, for a meet against Basin, Utah, at a meet hosted by runs. He added that the skiers by the University of Alberta. The Weber State College. The NCAA were staying on their feet during next weekend, on Feb. 8-10, the championships will be at Seamboat the runs. Falling, he said, was a Grizzlies journey to Provo, Utah, Springs, Colo., in late March. major problem last year. Nelson, a Grizzly skier for four years, said that the alpine team should be “pretty good.” But the nordic team was weakened be­ THE PIZZA MOBILE cause of the loss of four members LIVES i because of inelgibilities, he said. Montana State is Nelson’s choice as the team to beat in the Big Sky conference. He attributed the Bob­ cats’ strength to their abundance of skiers, and football kicking spe­ cialists, imported from Norway. Nelson tabbed Rick Gibbon, a junior from Coeur d’Alene, Idaho, as the team’s best skier. When he t * was a freshman, Gibbon placed ^ '• ■ - • •• third in the Big Sky meet, and has been consistently among the top five in meets for the Tips. Three members of the team— to bring steaming, 200-degree Gibbon, Rusty Lyons, and Tim Fredrickson — attended a training pizzas to your door. . FAST! Vaughn Sophomore Guard camp at Sun Valley, Idaho over the Christmas holidays. Those skiers competing in Boze­ man are Gibbon; Fredrickson, a May See Substitute Action sophomore from Spokane, Wash. Lyons, a junior from Walla Walla, HOWARD’S PIZZA The transition from playing in Montana’s Dave Gustafson, how­ Wash., Pierre Loiselle, a junior the front court in Class C high ever, seems to have made the dif­ from Missoula; David Lloyd, a jun­ 1947 South Avenue — Phone 542-2011 school basketball to playing guard ficult adjustment. ior from Claresholm, Alberta; in college ball is not an easy one. Gustafson, whose hometown is John Dobbins, a sophomore from Vaughn, was a star forward-cen­ Kennewick, Wash.; Mick Hagestad, ter for Simms High School. He a freshman from Kalispell, and earned all-district honors his sen­ Tim Potter, a freshman from Extra ior year. Washington, Conn. For the Cubs last season, Gustaf­ The team has no home meets, son was a part-time starter at but Nelson plans one for next year. Put a Little guard. He was the fifth leading Lack of an adequate jump has been Brass Rail = scorer, with an 8.6 average per - game. He netted 51 out of 59 free ZING throws for an outstanding 86 per UNION BUS cent. in Your Life This season, he has seen limited TERMINAL action for the Tips. With Ron 3 SCHEDULES TO with Moore injured, Gustafson is slated SPOKANE $7.65 to play considerably more. In five S ale games, the six foot-two inch guard 5 TO BUTTE $4.45 Royal Crown has scored 10 points. Higgins still in progress = He is a good driver and is par­ DAILY ticularly effective with hook shots Fully-equipped buses & Main with either hand near the basket. In the spring, Gustafson throws for your convenience the javelin for coach Harley Lewis’ track team. CALL 549-2339 ^▼▼▼▼VTVTTTVTTTTVTVTVWTTVTTWWWWTTTVTTTVTTTTT' Week-End Specials SWEATER DRESSES were to $17.95 NOW 697

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Thors., Jan. 18, 1968 irk MONTANA KAIMIN — 8 Housing Rules PLACEMENT CALLING U CONCERNING V CENTER TODAY • Discussed by • Theta Sigma Phi, national by the UM art methods class. Judo Club, 7 p.m., Field House women’s journalism honorary, in­ Classes are from 9-11 a.m. each Today wrestling room. itiated four new members last Saturday through March 16 in the • The Educational Research and Young Democrats, 8 p.m., LA139. Corps Women night. They are Mary Pat Murphy, UM Fine Arts Building. Development Council, Willmar, Barbara Richey, Theresa MacMil­ Minn, will interview interested and Draft Counseling, 5 p.m., UCCF The Women’s Action Corps, for­ lan, and Janet Doty. Richard B. Reinholtz, UM art de­ qualified persons for positions as House. merly Women’s Rights, will begin • The K-Dette bus for the MSU partment chairman, said the en­ counselors, psychologists, speech Christian Science Organization, a campaign to make off-campus game at Bozeman will leave from rollment fee covering all supplies therapists, curriculum supervisors, 6:30 p.m., Music 103. living possible for women under the Lodge tomorrow at 11 a.m. used by the students is $5. Draw­ and social workers. Program Council, 4:15 pjn., Ac­ 21, it was decided at a meeting ing, painting, sculpture and print­ • Leadership Camp Committee making will be taught. tivities Room, Lodge. last night. applications aye available at the January 22 Bear Paws, 6:30 p.m., LA102*. “There is not much (administra­ Lodge desk. The first meeting is • Dr. William Myers, mathe­ Touche, Ross, Bailey & Smart, Planning Board, 4 p.m., Activi­ tion) creativity as far as changing today at 6:30 p.m. in the Lodge matics department chairman, at­ Seattle, Wash, will interview pros­ ties Room, Lodge. things now because there is a ru­ Activities Room. tended a meeting of National Sci­ pective staff accountants. Little Sisters of Minerva, 6:30 mor of another high rise dorm,” • A Friday afternoon ski class ence Foundation Summer Institute p.m., SAE House. Alice Windsor, committee chair­ is now open. Students may register directors in Washington, D.C., re­ January 23 Women’s varsity basketball, 4-6 man* said. She proposed building this week in WC109. cently. The Bay of Edmonton, Alta., will p.m., WC gym. new housing for women students • IFC formal rush will be the Dr. Myers received a grant from interview Canadian business stu­ similar to the married students weekend of Jan. 27. Men register the National Science Foundation dents for management trainee po­ TOMORROW housing instead of a new dorm. with Dean Cogswell and pay a $1 to conduct an institute in mathe­ sitions. Intervarsity Christian Fellow­ She also suggested a method for fee. matics at UM this summer. Dr. Northwest Bancorporation of ship Bible Study, 7:30 pjn., Lu­ granting girls permission to get • Openings are still available in William R. Ballard, professor of Minneapolis, Minn., will interview theran Center. out of the present dormitory ar­ the children’s Saturday art classes mathematics, is associate director business seniors for management Co-recreational volleyball, 4-6 rangement. A board could be cre­ for students in grades 1-8, taught of the summer institute. trainee positions. p.m., WC gym. ated which would-permit a certain number of girls to live off campus on a first come, first served basis. Miss Windsor said Pres. Pantzer told her that it was not possible for Visiting UM Lecturer Contrasts Pre-Inventory Sale girls under 21 to live off campus because of financial problems for American and English Colleges the university. She said if this were really the case, the proposed board “There is a tremendous differ­ their way through school,” he said. SKIRTS SWEATERS could limit the number of girls ence in the aims and achievements The British government gives aid moving out of the dorms and ex­ of the British and American uni­ to university students who in re­ % From tend the privilege on a yearly or versity systems,” Simon Evans, turn are expected to spend vaca­ quarterly basis at first. UM visiting lecturer, said in an tions and spare time doing re­ Other situations which the com­ interview recently. search. Price $5.33 mittee thought should be changed The 30-year-old Englishman re­ Mr. Evans plans to return to were mandatory payment for food ceived a master’s degree in ge­ England at the end of this year. service meals for all dorm resi­ ography at Cambridge University, dents, women’s dorm meetings and England. He taught four years in sign-out cards in the no-hours college in England before coming DRESSES dorm. to the University last year to teach Drama Quartet geography. Vs . The American system is very in­ To Present ‘Luv’ clusive and is vocationally ori­ Montana Drama Quartet is re­ Cloudy and Wet ented, he said. The purpose is to hearsing for production of “Luv,” OFF Variable cloudiness with occa­ give almost everyone the oppor­ Jan. 24-28 at the Masquer The­ sional rain or snow showers were tunity to attend college in prepara­ ater. tion for a life’s work. The four faculty and staff mem­ forecast for today by the Weather bers of the UM drama department Bureau. The British system is very se­ present one production each year. CAR COATS PANT SUITS The high today will be from 35 lective, Mr. Evans said. Only one Patricia Maxon, actress-in-resi­ to 40 degrees with a 50 per cent of every 10 students who apply to dence with the Montana Repertory chance of snow. universities is accepted. The sys­ Theater Co., will play Ellen Man- % Mr tem is aimed at the classical con­ ville. cept of teaching the student how Firman H. Brown, chairman of OFF OFF CLASSIFIED ADS to think and learning facts is sec­ the drama department, will play ondary, he said. Milt Manville and Alan Cook, as­ Deadlines: Noon the day preceding “The difference is reflected in sistant professor of drama, will publication grading and administration,” he portray Harry Berlin. The play is PHONE 243-4932 said. The English student has an directed by Roger DeBourg, visit­ adviser who assigns reading ma­ ing lecturer. 4. IRONING terial, suggests lectures and checks “Luv” by Murray Schisgal, is a I’LL IRON men’s shirts, 15 cents; pants, essays. The student spends his time 20 cents. Phone 949-0539 or come to 119 comedy, the humor of which lies 5. 5th E„ Apt. B.______47-tfC preparing for eight four-hour in misery. The characters present 6. TYPING comprehensive exams at the end troubles and memories of suffer­ TYPING. 243-4122. 46-4c of the year and no grades are ings. Tribulations of loves past, Fairway Shopping Center TYPING. Former corporate secretary. given during the year. present and future are revealed as 9-6704.______42-tfc Whether a British student is ac­ one man tries to palm his wife off RUSH TYPING. 549-8074.______42-tfc cepted at a university depends on on another so that he may marry TYPING. Mrs. Don Berg. 240 Dearborn. 543-4109.______3-tfe his mark on a national exam taken another woman. TYPING. 543-8733.______41-tfc after high school, which in turn “Luv” will be the third play TYPING. FAST, ACCURATE, EXPERI- depends on the quality of his back­ produced by the Montana Drama Now Through Saturday! ENCED. 549-5236.______41-tfc ground schooling and reading. For Quartet. They have also presented TYPING. Mrs. Homer Williamson, 235 this reason, a background of “After the Fall” by Arthur Miller Dearborn Ave. Phone 549-7818. 48-lc wealth or poverty could be a sig­ and “Who’s Afraid of Virginia FROM SWEDEN IT WAS “/, A WOMAN" 10. TRANSPORTATION nificant factor in college accept­ Woolf?” by Edward Albee. NEED RIDE from University to Ban­ ance, although social class itself is The set was designed by Rich­ N O W SCANCHNAVIA croft, Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and 5T’SJ% A MAN”! Friday at 4 p.m. Call 549-5366. 48-2c unimportant, Mr. Evans said. ard James, associate professor of NEED A RIDE to Bozeman? Call Dick “I have tremendous admiration drama. Costumes are by Mrs. Alan at 549-2614.______48-lc for American students who work Cook. 17. CLOTHING WILL DO ALTERATIONS, years of experience. Specialize Unlv. women’s and men’s clothing. Call 543-8184. 11-tfc EXCELLENT alterations, 3 blocks from campus. Call 549-0810.______7-tfc Curiosity 18. MISCELLANEOUS Kills WANTED FREE: Postage stamps, scenic Cats... pictures (calendars, etc.), P. O. Box 334, Butte.______42-tfc 2122 21. FOR SALE BY OWNER, 3-bedroom, full basement, attached garage, wall to wall carpet. GIRLS University district. Call 542-2517 after 5 p j n . ______47-5c TWO GUITARS—one electric for $85, lady’s folk for $15. Call 549-2193 after 5 pjn. 47-2c GIRLS MUST SELL: '62 Valiant, 2-door, 6- cylinder, standard, 32,000 miles. 543- 3002. 47-tfc LANGE SKI BOOTS, 11 narrow, $100. GIRLS New, used once, sacrifice for $80. 9-0174 or 243-2653.______46-4c AUTOMATIC WASHER, Frigidaire, ex­ cellent condition, $50. 9-3262 after 3 p.m. or weekend.______42-8c “THE SVELTS” T.V.’s, new and used. Stereos, tape re­ corders, radios, guitars. Sales and guar­ anteed service, Koskl T.V., 541 So. Hig- ROCK ’N ROLL glns Ave.______41-tfc ABOUT 200 classical and operatic LJ?. 9 9 “ I, A MAN"! records. Very Cheap. Call 549-7546. 45-4c HAND MADE Austrian Rogg ski boots, From Sunset Strip The Motion Picture size 11-11%, new last spring, $30. Down­ for people over 18! hill racing skis, 220 Kastle woods, new this season. $45. 542-2747.______48-2c Cover Charge 75c / ~ FOMOCO TACHOMETER, 0-6,000 R.P.M., 9-6793 after 5 p.m.______48-2c Plus Jean Renoir’s Amorous Masterpiece: 22. FOR RENT “A DAY IN THE COUNTRY” WARM, COMFORTABLE, DISTINC­ TIVE 3-bedroom duplex, 8165. One block from campus, no pre-high school children or pets. Phone 549-3885. 40-tfc OPEN 6:30 P.M. FURNISHED two bedroom basement “Country” at 7 and 9 “17” at apartment. 542-0070.______46-4c 7:30 and 9:30 ROXY TWO BEDROOM furnished duplex near CORNER RYMAN& Holiday Village. 543-7008,______46-4c WEST BROADWAY Adults Only (18 Min.) All Seats $1.25 ROOM FOR TWO University men, 430 So. 6th E. - 48-2c

6 — MONTANA KAIMIN irk Thurs., Jan. 18, 1968