weather delays spring michigan cloudy and warmer, … · cannon fire and rockets. they exploded a...

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Inside Weather delays spring sports, p. 4: Performing Arts Company returns, p. 5. MICHIGAN STATI UNIVERSITY Weather Cloudy and warmer, with rain. High near 50. East Lansing, Michigan Tuesday, April 6, 1965 Price 10? Mrs. Sharp, Strother Elected To City Council Positions Autobahn Blocked Reds Harrass Berlin Traffic OF MICE AND VETS—Operations are under way by veterinarian students and faculty for Vetavislt, an open house of the college of Veterinarian Medi- cine. Vetavislt will be held April 10, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. In Giltner Hall. The public Is Invited. Photo by Bob Barit U.S, Planes Strike Radar , Railroads SAIGON, Viet Nam (f'—U.S. warplanes blasted the Vinh Liith radar station and shot up some North Vietnamese rolling stock Monday against ground fire ab- sent to moderate. A. U.S. spokesman said a fight- er-bomber was downed, but the pilot was recovered. The New China News Agency, whose sta- tistics rarely agree with those released in Saigon, declared in a broadcast dispatch that four of the raiders were shot down and many others damaged. Communist Migfighters, which felled two American raidersSur.- day, failed to show up during this 18th day in the series of aerial attacks launched by the United States and South Viet Nam Feb. •7 The Vinh Linh radar station, Just north of the 17th parallel, was the target of 30 Navy fight- e r —bom ber s from the carrier Coral Sea. Escorted by a score of Cru- sader and Phantom fighters, they struck that link in Hanoi’s early warning network with fiery na- palm and 25 tons of general pur- pose bombs ranging from 250 to 1,000 pounds. No ground fire was noted. Sixteen U.S. Air Force jets made a 30-minute strike against North Viet Nam’s rail and high- way traffic farther north with cannon fire and rockets. They exploded a diesel train and set afire another locomotive and two trucks. The highway phase of the mission was staged over routes 7 and 8, runningeast and west about 120 miles south of Hanoi. Antiaircraft fire was described as only moderate, but felled one of the 16—an F105 Thunderchief fighter-bomber. The spokesman said the pilot was picked up. His condition was not known here. In London, the British govern- ment released a majority report of the three-nation international control commission asking Brit- ain and the Soviet Union to ar- mission, disassociated itself from the request. Within South Viet Nam, a U.S. crew chief was killed by the crash of an armedhelicopter intheceu- trai highlands). His companions escapecLirdury. BERLIN if)— Soviet jets roared across allied air conidors to Berlin Monday and the Commu- nist East Germans blocked the Berlin Autobahn for 3 1/2 hours in defiance of western access rights on the 110-mile highway through Red territory. Communist announcements said the measures were taken in connection with Soviet-East Ger - man military maneuvers. West- erners expressed belief, how- ever, that the Russians and East Germans were acting in retalia- tion for West Germany’s plans to assemble its parliament and cabinet in West Berlin Wednes- day to emphasize its contention that the Red-encircled city is part of West Germany. Communist MIG jets ma- neuvered-for more than seven hours high over Berlin and son- ic booms thundered down on the city. One Soviet Jet fighter screamed over tne French sector's Tegel Airport—used by commercial Peace Corps Wants More MSU Recruits The Peace Corps News, which was distributed with the State News today, is part of the Peace Corps recruiting drive on cam- pus this week. A team of ex-volunteers is manning an information center in the Union Concourse from 8:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. daily. Team members are Russell Schwartz, volunteer in Sierra Leone, West Africa, and Roger Banks, volunteer in India. The Peace Corps plans to dou- ble its size in the near future. Last year’s spring recruiting drive at MSU brought over 300 new volunteers. The team members are avail- able to answer questions and give Henry Adams Talk Given Alfred Kazin discussed his re- search for a forthcoming book on Henry Adams to an overflow crowd in Fairchild Theatre Mon- day. This is the first time that Ka- zin, author and critic of Amer- ican literature, has spoken on this particular study. Adams, grandson and great grandson of the two Adams pre- sidents, who wrote shortly after the Civil War, believed that so- ciety could be understood only through a knowledge of history. information. They are willing to speak to groups on campus which express an interest in their ex- periences and the Peace Corps program. Anyone over 18, who is a U.S, citizen, and if married, has no dependents under 18, is eligible to join. There is no education requirement and a professional skill is not necessary. There are over 100 Peace Corps volunteers over 65. Many volunteers àre liberal arts gra- duates, according to Banks. The Peace Corps Placement Test will be given by tester Mary Byrne Wednesday through next Tuesday at 9 a.m., noon, 4 and 7 p.m. except Saturday night and Sunday. It consisté of two parts: a gen- eral aptitude test and a modern language aptitude test for which knowledge of a foreign language is not necessary. The Peace Corps Question- naire which tells the applicant’s background, must be filled out and brought to the exam unless previously submitted. aircraft—at an altitude of about 300 feet. Western officials claimed the buzzing was a clear violation of air safety rules agreed upon by the Russians. Hundreds of Soviet and East German tanks, heavy artillery pieces and motorized rockets units rumbled over the country- side west of Berlin as Commu- nist police blocked Autobahn travel for the first time since the Berlin blockade of 1948. Travel on secondary roads from Frankfurt and southern Germany was permitted. Rail- roads ran normal schedules. However, the West Berlin Barge Association said a number of river and canal routes were blocked. In Washington, a State Depart- ment spokesman said the United States rejected a Soviet attempt to restrict flights in the three 20-mile-wide air corridors. "We made it clear that access rights of the three western pow- ers are unrestricted,” the spokesman said. He said the Soviet Union will be held responsible for the safety of allied aircraft flying in the corridors. In East Berlin, President Walter Ulbright met with Soviet Marshal A. A. Grechko, comman- der of the Warsaw Pact forces, in what the East"German News Agency (ADN) called a discus- sion of ’’current developments and other questions of mutual in- terest.’’ The East Germans claim the West Germans have no right to hold a parliament session in West Berlin because, in the Commu- nist view, it Is not part of the West; The Communists said the session could provoke interna- tional Incidents. Khrushchev In Moscow MOSCOW UP)—An attendant re- ported Monday that Nikita Khrushchev and hiw wife, Nina, showed up at an art exhibit ac- ross the street from the Krem- lin for an hour Monday after- noon. The former premier has by most accounts b e e n spending most of his time at a country home outside Moscow. But he has an apartment in Moscow and has been seen here, most recently on March 14 before casting a bal- lot in local elections. VOTING BOOTHS--were used frequently Monday in the Capital City spring elec - tion. Richard L. Sode, University Village sophomore, is shown casting his vote at the Red Cedar School voting booth. Photo by James Hil FBI Seizes Army Courier, Accomplice As Red Spies WASHINGTON UP)— The FBI seized two men Monday and charged them with an 11-year conspiracy to sell U.S. defense secrets to the Soviet Union. One. Army Sgt. Robert Lee Johnson, was assigned to Army Intelligence in West Berlin when he allegedly began his $300-a- month espionage career in 1953. The other, James A. Mintken- baugh, was recruited by Johnson while also serving in Berlin, the FBI said. It charged he later col- lected secret data from Johnson and transmitted it to the Soviets through contacts in Washington, all for between $25 and $350 monthly pay. Johnson, 43, was arrested by FBI agents at the Pentagon, where he was assigned as a courier in May, 1964. Mlntkenbaugh, 46, was picked up at his brother’s home inCastro Valley, Calif., not far from his San Martin home. The detailed FBI complaint didn't explain it, but Johnsonwas missing from his Pentagon job for two months last fall. He turned himself in, was court- . . . . . Books and ideas are social range for the commission s m - , , . __ _ . _ facts, not just laborious acqul- spection teams to resume opera- •> .. .. tions in North Viet Nam. The Hanoi government forced the withdrawal of five such teams from their observation posts in February on the ground it could not guarantee their safety. India and Canada joined in the appeal for the British and the Russians, co-chairmen of the 1954 Geneva conference on Indo- china, to get the inspectors back on the job. Communist Poland, the third member of the com- Council Canceled Because of President Hannah’s absence, no Academic Council meeting will be held today, -sitions of private scholars," said Kazin, explaining Adams’ views. Emphasizing the ever-present importance of style to Adams, Kazin said that he was not a man born out of his time, but an artist bemoaning society’s loss of proper style. Adams’ later writings concer- ning future history are some- times confusing, explained Kazin. "He felt that history is a pro- gression into the future and the future is necessary to complete the past,’’ he said. Kazin will continue his series of provost lectures today with a talk on “The Poet of the City: ’Leaves of Grass’ to 'Specimen Days’.” He will sp«ak at 4 p.m. in Fairchild Theatre. RESHAPED LANDSCAPE— Work is undsr way to revamp the landscape behind Kresge Art Center. Now that spring Is here(?) Michigan State will undergo nu- merous face liftings such as the one at Kresge. Photo by Larry Fritzlan martialed, reduced in rank,fined $600 and re-assigned to the Pent - agon, an FBI spokesman said. At his arraignment in Alexan- dria, Va., Johnson was held in lieu of $20,000 bail for prelimi- nary hearing April 15, He told U. S. Commissioner Thomas Moncure he didn’t have the money to make bond or hire an attorney now and asked the court to appoint counsel. The two men are charged with conspiring with each other and a number of persons to spy for the Soviet Union. The others include a Russian, Vitaly Ourjoumov, and several persons identified only by such names as Nervous Nick, Paula, Felix, Charles and Yuri. But only Johnson and Mintken- baugh are actually charged with the crime, for which conviction car. ies a possible death penalty. The 6 1/2-page complaint said FBI agents interviewed Johnson continuously between Jan. 4 and Women, Child Mutilated W A T E R V L 1 E T (UPI)—state and local police joined Monday in a massive effort »to find a •‘savage killer” who stabbed, strangled and, m ut i 1a t ed two women and a young child and left their nude bodies in a pine thicket. One of the victims was a 60- yeat-old woman, another was a housewife of 37 and the third was a seven-year-old child. The elderly woman was white, the oth- er two Negroes. All had dis- appeared from the nearby Benton Harbor area, two of them within three days of each other. It appeared all had been the vic- tims of the same killer, described by one lawman as “a savage.” The victims were Mrs. Esther Jones, 37; Mrs. Amelia Boyer, 60, and Diane Carter; ’7, all of Benton Harbor. Mrs. Jones’ head had been severed and was missing. Police said she and the little girl had been "mutilated in other ways.” Diane had been strangled with a red stocking that was still wrapped around her neck when found. Mrs. Boyer had been stab- bed and slashed. last Friday and questioned Mint- kenbaugh for five days last Jan- uary. Atom Smashing Topic Of Talk The MSU Men’s Club will meet for luncheon Tuesday at 12:15 p.m. in the Union Parlors. Henry Blosser, professor of physics and astronomy anddirec- tor of the cyclotron, will speak on “ Atom Smashing at MSU." Harmon Defeats Incumbent Mrs. Mary P. Sharp and Max R. Strother were elected to fill two four-year vacancies on the East Lansing City Council Mon- day. Mrs. Sharp led the field of four candidates with 2,378 votes. Strother received 2,268 votes. David A. Cotter and Donald S. Barrett, the two defeated can- didates, received 1,929 and 1,478 votes respectively. William K. Harmon defeated incumbent Judge William H. Wise for the post of Municipal Judge, 2,163 to 2,036. Voters also approved a pro- posal to raise the pay of City Council members from $5 to $25 per meeting. A total of 4,455 votes were cast in the election. The election ended one of the most heated municipal election campaigns in East Lansing’s his- tory. All of the candidates ran on a platform of opposition to an open occupancy ordinance. Bar- rett, Cotter and Strother took the position that racial discrimina- . tion is not a problem Jn.East. Lansing. But Mrs. Sharp maintained that members of minority groups do incur discrimination here. She espoused a policy of achieving open occupancy through "media- tion and conciliation" sponsored by the city government. A letter circulated by Cotter last week became the center of new controversy on the same issue. Cotter charged in his letter that "one draft of an open occu- pancy ordinance” would compel property owners to sell their homes at a price determined by the city assessor. But city officials said that no such proposal had ever been suggested to anyone connected with the city government. Cotter refused to identify the group which he claimed was plan- ning the proposed ordinance. Officers Halt Camden Registration March CAMDEN, Ala. (#)--Negroes tried five times to march down- town Monday as part of a voter registration drive but were halted by police who b o m b a r d e d one group with tear gas and smoke bombs when they refused to dis- perse. Two groups of marchers stood on the sidewalk and sang and chanted after they were halted. Twelve marchers were taken into custody by police. Mayor Reginald Albritton told the adult marchers they were free to walk to the registrar's office—with police escort if desired—but could not stage a mass march. While the demonstrators went on, about 35 Negroes lined up without incident at the regis- trar’s office. At their request, some of the Negroes were accom- panied by a policeman. At Selma, about 200 Negroes stood in line at the Dallas County courthouse to take voter tests or get on a list to take tests. There was no trouble. The Negroes went to the courthouse in small groups. Repeated marches were a t t e m p t e d in Camden. Negro leaders said they wanted to regis- ter at the courthouse and not the old jail building where the regis- trar’s office was moved recently. C h a i r m a n ' A1 Wall of the Ailcox County Registrar Board reported that 46 Negroes were registered. He said 42 of the last 56 who applied had qualified. Wilcox had no Negro voters until recent weeks although Negroes comprise 78 per cent of the population. "We’re not going to register in any old Jail,” said Major Johns, a field worker for the Southern Christian Leadership C o nf e r enc e(SCLC). He was taken into custody by police during a march. ; The mayor said all applicants, white or Negro, were processed at the building once used as a jail. Albritton said he regretted the use of smoke and tear gas, but felt it was necessary. About 80 demonstrators marched from a church and were halted by Albritton after two blocks. Johns was leading the m a r c h . When Albritton asked Johns if he was a Louisiana resident, the Negro man said be was. Teach-In Set In Auditorium High student interest has for- ced organizers of Thursday’s "teach-in” protesting U.S. Viet Nam policy to move the demon- stration from Anthony Hall to the Auditorium. The meeting will begin at 8 p.m. and will remain in the. Auditorium until midnight when students will be invited to smal- ler group sections inBesseyHal' classrooms.

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InsideW e a t h e r de la ys s p r in g s p o r t s , p. 4: P e r f o r m i n g A r t s C o m pany r e t u r n s ,p. 5.

MICHIGANSTATI

UNIVERSITY

WeatherC lo u d y and w a r m e r , w i th r a in . H igh n e a r 50.

East Lans ing , Michigan Tuesday, Apri l 6, 1965 Price 10?

Mrs. Sharp, Strother Elected To City Council Positions

Autobahn BlockedReds Harrass Berlin Traffic

O F M I C E AND V E T S — O p e r a t i o n s a r e u n d e r w a y b y v e t e r i n a r i a n s t u d e n t s a n d f a c u l t y f o r V e t a v i s l t , a n o p e n h o u s e o f t h e c o l l e g e of V e t e r i n a r i a n M e d i ­c i n e . V e t a v i s l t w i l l b e h e l d A p r i l 10, f r o m 9 a . m . t o 5 p . m . In G i l t n e r H a l l . T h e p u b l i c I s I n v i t e d .

P h o t o b y B o b B a r i t

U.S, Planes Strike Radar, Railroads

SAIGON, Viet Nam (f'—U.S. w a rp la n es b lasted the Vinh Liith r a d a r sta tion and shot up som e N o rth V ie tnam ese ro l l ing stock Monday ag a ins t ground f i re ab­sen t to m od era te .

A. U.S. spokesm an sa id a fight­e r - b o m b e r was downed, but the p i lo t was re co v e red . T he New C hina News Agency, whose s ta ­t i s t i c s r a r e ly a g re e with those r e l e a s e d in Saigon, d e c la re d in a b ro a d c a s t d ispatch that four of the r a i d e r s w ere shot down and m any o th e rs damaged.

C om m unis t M ig f ig h te rs , which fe l led two A m er ican ra id e r s S u r . - day , failed to show up dur ing this 18th day in the s e r i e s of a e r ia l a t ta ck s launched by the United S ta te s and South Viet Nam Feb .•7

T h e Vinh Linh r a d a r station, Just north of the 17th p a ra l le l , w a s the t a rg e t of 30 Navy fight­e r —b om ber s f ro m the c a r r i e r C o r a l Sea.

E sc o r te d by a s c o re of C ru ­s a d e r and Phantom f igh te rs , they s t ru c k tha t link in H anoi’s e a r ly w arn ing network with f ie ry na­p a lm and 25 tons of ge n e ra l p u r ­p o s e bom bs ranging f ro m 250 to 1,000 pounds. No ground f i re was noted.

Sixteen U.S. A ir F o rc e je ts m ade a 30-minute s t r ik e against N orth Viet Nam ’s r a i l and high­way traff ic f a r th e r north with cannon f i re and ro ck e ts .

T hey exploded a d ie se l t ra in and se t a f i re ano ther locomotive and two t r u c k s . T h e highway p h a se of the m iss io n was staged o v e r ro u te s 7 and 8, ru n n in g eas t and west about 120 m i le s south of Hanoi.

A n t ia i rc ra f t f i re was d e sc r ib e d a s only m o d era te , but felled one of the 16— an F105 T hunderch ie f f ig h te r -b o m b er . T he spokesm an sa id the pilot was p icked up. His condition was not known h e re .

In London, the B r i t i sh g ov ern ­m en t r e le a se d a m a jo r i ty r e p o r t of the th ree -n a t ion in te rna tiona l c o n tro l co m m iss ion asking B r i t ­a in and the Soviet Union to a r -

m is s io n , d is a s so c ia te d i t s e l f f ro m the req u es t .

Within South Viet Nam , a U.S. c r e w ch ief was killed by the c r a s h of an a rm e d h e l ic o p te r i n t h e c e u - t r a i highlands). H is com panions escapecLirdury.

BERLIN if)— Soviet je ts ro a re d a c r o s s a l l ied a i r c o n i d o r s to B e r l in Monday and the Com m u­nis t E as t G e rm a n s blocked the B er l in Autobahn for 3 1/2 hours in defiance of w e s te rn ac c e s s r igh ts on the 110-mile highway through Red t e r r i t o r y .

C o m m u n i s t announcements sa id the m e a s u r e s w e re taken in connection with S ov ie t-E as t G e r ­m an m i l i ta ry m a n e u v e rs . W est­e r n e r s e x p re s s e d b e l i e f , how­ev e r , tha t the R u ss ian s and E as t G e rm an s w e re act ing in r e t a l i a ­tion fo r West G e rm a n y ’s p lans to a s s e m b le its p a r l ia m en t and cabinet in West B er l in Wednes­day to em p has ize i t s contention that the R ed -en c i rc led city is p a r t of West G erm any .

C om m unist MIG j e t s m a ­n e u v e r e d - f o r m o r e than seven ho u rs high o v e r B er l in and son­ic booms thundered down on the city .

One Soviet Jet f igh ter sc re a m e d o ver tne F re n c h s e c t o r ' s Tegel A i rp o r t— used by co m m erc ia l

Peace Corps Wants More MSU Recruits

T he P e a c e C o rp s News, which w as d is t r ib u ted with the State News today, i s p a r t of the P eace C orp s rec ru i t in g d r ive on cam ­pus th is week.

A team of ex -v o lun tee rs is manning an inform ation c e n te r in the Union C onco urse f ro m 8:30 a .m . to 9 p .m . daily.

T e am m e m b e rs a r e R ussel l Schwartz , vo lun tee r in S ie r ra Leone, W est Africa , and Roger Banks, vo lun teer in India.

T he P eace C orps p lans to dou­b le i t s s iz e in the n e a r fu ture . L a s t y e a r ’s sp r in g recru i t in g d r iv e at MSU brought over 300 new vo lu n tee rs .

T he tea m m e m b e r s a r e av a il­ab le to an sw er questions and give

Henry Adams Talk Given

A lfred Kazin d is c u s se d his r e ­s e a r c h fo r a forthcom ing book on Henry Adam s to an overflow cro w d in F a i r c h i ld T h e a t re Mon­day.

T h is i s the f i r s t t im e that Ka­zin, au thor and c r i t i c of A m er­ican l i t e r a tu re , has spoken on th is p a r t i c u la r study.

A dam s, g rand son and g rea t g rand so n of the two Adams p r e ­s id en ts , who w ro te shor t ly a f te r the Civil W ar , be lieved that so­c ie ty could be understood only through a knowledge of his tory.

inform ation . They a r e will ing to speak to groups on cam pus which e x p re s s an in te re s t in th e i r ex­p e r ie n c e s and the P e a c e Corps p ro g ra m .

Anyone over 18, who is a U.S, c i t izen , and if m a r r i e d , has no dependents un d er 18, is e lig ible to join. T h e r e is no education re q u i re m e n t and a p ro fess iona l skill i s not n e c e s sa ry .

T h e r e a r e over 100 P ea ce C o rp s vo lu n tee rs o v e r 65. Many vo lu n tee rs à r e l ib e ra l a r t s g r a ­dua tes , acco rd in g to Banks.

T h e P e a c e C o rp s P lacem ent T e s t will be given by t e s t e r M ary B yrne Wednesday through next T uesday a t 9 a .m . , noon, 4 and 7 p .m . except Saturday night and Sunday.

It co n s is té of two p a r t s : a gen­e r a l ap titude te s t and a m odern language ap ti tude te s t fo r which knowledge of a foreign language is not n e c e s sa ry .

T h e P e a c e C o rp s Question­n a i re which te l ls the applican t’s background, m ust be fi l led out and brought to the exam unless p rev io us ly subm it ted .

a i r c r a f t — at an a l t i tude of about 300 f e e t . W este rn o f f i c i a l s c la im ed the buzzing was a c le a r violation of a i r safety r u l e s a g re e d upon by the R u ss ian s .

Hundreds of Soviet and E as t G e rm an tan ks , heavy a r t i l l e r y p ie ce s and m o to r iz ed ro ck e ts units rum bled over the co un try ­s ide w est of B er l in a s Com m u­nist police blocked Autobahn t r a v e l fo r the f i r s t t im e s ince the B e r l in blockade of 1948.

T ra v e l on secondary r o a d s f rom F ra nk fu r t a n d southern G erm any w as p e rm i t te d . R a i l ­ro ad s r a n n o rm a l schedules . However, the West B er l in B a rg e A ssoc ia t ion sa id a num ber of r i v e r a n d canal rou tes w e r e blocked.

In Washington, a State D e par t ­m ent spokesm an sa id the United S tates r e je c te d a Soviet a t tem pt to r e s t r i c t f l ights in the th r e e 2 0 -m ile -w id e a i r c o r r id o r s .

" W e m a de it c l e a r that a c c e s s r ig h ts of the th r e e w e s te rn pow­e r s a r e u n r e s t r i c t e d , ” t h e spokesm an sa id .

He sa id the Soviet Union will be held r e sp o n s ib le fo r the safety of a l l ied a i r c r a f t flying in the c o r r id o r s .

In E a s t B er l in , P r e s i d e n t W alter Ulbright m e t with Soviet M arsha l A. A. Grechko, co m m an­d e r of the W arsaw Pac t fo rce s , in what the E as t"G erm a n News Agency (ADN) ca l led a d is c u s ­sion of ’’c u r re n t developm ents and o th e r questions of mutual in­t e r e s t . ’’

T h e E ast G e rm a n s c la im the West G e rm an s have no right to hold a p a r l ia m en t se s s io n in West B er l in because , in the Com m u­nist view, it Is not p a r t of the West; The C o m m u n is ts sa id the sess io n cou ld p rovoke in te rn a ­t iona l Incidents .

Khrushchev In MoscowMOSCOW UP)—An attendant r e ­

por ted M o n d a y that N i k i t a Khrushchev and hiw wife, Nina, showed up at an a r t exhibit a c ­ro s s the s t r e e t f ro m the K re m ­lin for an hour Monday a f t e r ­noon.

T h e fo rm e r p r e m i e r h a s by m o s t accounts b e e n spending m o s t of h is t im e at a country hom e outside Moscow. But he has an ap a r tm en t in Moscow and has been seen h e re , m ost recen tly on M arch 14 be fo re ca s t in g a bal­lot in local e lec t ions .

V O T I N G B O O T H S - - w e r e u s e d f r e q u e n t l y M o n d a y in t h e C a p i t a l C i t y s p r i n g e l e c ­t i o n . R i c h a r d L . S o d e , U n i v e r s i t y V i l l a g e s o p h o m o r e , i s s h o w n c a s t i n g h i s v o t e a t t h e R e d C e d a r S c h o o l v o t i n g b o o t h . P h o t o b y J a m e s Hi l

FBI Seizes Army Courier, Accomplice As Red Spies

WASHINGTON UP)— T h e FBI s e ize d t w o m en Monday a n d ch a rg ed them with an 11-year co nsp iracy to sell U.S. defense s e c r e t s to the Soviet Union.

One. A rm y Sgt. R ober t L e e Johnson, w as a ss ig n ed to Arm y In tell igence in West B er l in when he a l legedly began h is $300-a- month espionage c a r e e r in 1953.

T h e o th e r , J a m e s A. M intken- baugh, w as r e c ru i t e d by Johnson while a lso se rv in g in B er l in , the FBI said. It ch arged he l a te r co l­lec ted s e c r e t data from Johnson and t ra n s m i t te d it to the Soviets through co n tac ts in Washington, a ll fo r between $25 and $350 monthly pay.

Johnson, 43, was a r r e s t e d by FBI agents at the Pentagon, w h ere he w as a ss ig n ed as a c o u r ie r in May, 1964.

Mlntkenbaugh, 46, was picked up at h is b r o th e r ’s hom e in C as t ro Valley, C alif . , not f a r from his San M ar t in hom e.

T h e de ta i led FBI complaint d idn 't explain it , but Johnsonw as m is s in g f ro m his Pentagon job for two m onths la s t fa ll . He tu rned h im se lf in, w as co u r t -

. . . . . Books and ideas a r e socia lran g e for the co m m iss ion s m - , , . ___. _ fa c ts , not ju s t lab orious acqu l-spection te a m s to r e s u m e o p e ra - •> .. . .t io n s in North Vie t Nam.

T h e Hanoi governm en t fo rced th e withdrawal of five such t ea m s f ro m th e i r observa tion p o s ts in F e b ru a r y on the ground it could not gu a ran tee th e i r safety.

India and Canada joined in the appeal fo r the B r i t i s h and the R u s s ia n s , co -c h a i rm e n of the 1954 Geneva co nfe ren ce on Indo­ch ina , to get the in sp e c to rs back on the job. C om m unis t Poland, th e th i rd m e m b e r of the co m -

Council CanceledB ecau se of P residen t Hannah’s

ab sen ce, no Academ ic Council m eeting w ill be held today,

-sitions of p r iv a te s c h o l a r s , " said Kazin , explaining A d am s’ views.

Em phasiz ing the e v e r -p re s e n t im p o rtan ce of s ty le to Adams, Kazin sa id tha t he was not a m an born out of his t im e , but an a r t i s t bem oaning socie ty ’s lo s s of p ro p e r s ty le .

A d am s’ l a te r w r i t in g s co ncer­ning fu ture h is to ry a r e som e­t im e s confusing, explained Kazin.

" H e felt that h is to ry i s a p ro ­g re s s io n into the fu ture and the fu tu re is n e c e s s a ry to com plete the p a s t , ’’ he said.

Kazin will continue his s e r i e s of p rovo st l e c tu r e s today with a ta lk on “ T he Poet of the City: ’L e av e s of G r a s s ’ to 'Specimen D ays’ .”• He w ill sp«ak at 4 p.m . in F airch ild T heatre.

R E S H A P E D L A N D S C A P E — W o r k i s u n d s r w ay to re v a m p th e la n dscape beh ind K re s g e A r t C e n te r . N ow th a t s p r i n g Is h e re (? ) M ic h ig a n S ta te w i l l u n d e rg o nu­m e r o u s fa ce l i f t i n g s such as the one at K re s g e . P h o to b y L a r r y F r i t z l a n

m a rt ia le d , reduced in ran k ,f in ed $600 and r e - a s s ig n e d to the P en t­agon, an FBI spokesm an sa id .

At h is a r ra ig n m en t in Alexan­d r ia , Va., Johnson w as held in l ieu of $20,000 bail fo r p r e l im i ­n a ry h ear ing April 15, He told U. S. C o m m iss io n e r T h o m a s M oncure he didn’t have the money to m ake bond o r h i r e an a t to rney now and asked the court to appoint counsel .

T he two m en a r e ch arged with co nsp ir ing with each o the r and a n um ber of p e rs o n s to spy fo r the Soviet Union. T h e o the rs include a R ussian , Vitaly Ourjoumov, and s e v e ra l p e rs o n s identified only by such nam es as N ervous Nick, P au la , F e l ix , C h a r le s and Y u ri . But only Johnson and M intken- baugh a r e ac tual ly ch arged with the c r im e , for which conviction c a r . ie s a p o s s ib le death penalty .

The 6 1 /2 -page complaint sa id FBI agents in te rv iew ed Johnson continuously between Jan. 4 and

Women, Child Mutilated

W A T E R V L 1 E T (UPI)— s ta te and local police joined Monday in a m a ss iv e effort »to find a •‘savage k i l l e r ” who stabbed, s t rang led a n d , m u t i 1 a t e d two women and a young child andleft th e i r nude bodies in a p ine thicket.

One of the v ic t im s was a 60- y e a t - o ld woman, ano ther w as a housewife of 37 and the th i rd w as a s e v e n -y e a r -o ld child . The e ld e r ly woman was white, the oth­e r two N eg ro es . All had d is ­ap peared f ro m the nearby Benton H arb o r a r e a , two of them within th re e days of each o th e r . It a p p ea red all had been the v ic ­t im s of the sam e k i l le r , de sc r ib e d by one lawman a s “ a s a v ag e .”

The v ic t im s w e re M rs . E s th e r Jones , 37; M rs . Am elia B oyer , 60, and Diane C a r te r ; ’7, a ll of Benton H arb or .

M r s . Jo n e s ’ head had been s ev e re d and was m iss in g . P o l ic e sa id she and the l i t t le g i r l had been " m u t i la te d in o th e r w a y s .”

Diane had been s t ra ng led with a r e d stocking that was s t i l l w rapped a round h e r neck when found. M rs. Boyer had been stab­bed and s lashed .

la s t F r id a y and questioned M int- kenbaugh for five days las t J a n ­u a ry .

Atom Smashing Topic Of Talk

T h e MSU Men’s Club will m eet fo r luncheon Tuesday a t 12:15 p .m . in the Union P a r l o r s .

H e n ry B lo s se r , p r o f e s s o r of p h y s ic s an d astronom y a n d d i r e c - to r of the cyclotron , will speak on “ Atom Smashing at MSU."

HarmonDefeatsIncumbent

M rs . M ary P. S harp and Max R. S tro th e r w e re e lec ted to fill two fo u r -y e a r v acanc ies on the E a s t Lansing City Council Mon­day . M rs . Sharp led the field of four candida tes with 2,378 v o te s . S tro the r r ece iv ed 2,268 vo tes .

David A. C o t te r and Donald S. B a r re t t , the two defeated can ­d ida tes , r ece ived 1,929 and 1,478 votes resp ec t iv e ly .

W illiam K. Harm on defeated incumbent Judge W illiam H. Wise for the post of Municipal Judge, 2,163 to 2,036.

V o te r s a lso approved a p r o ­p o sa l to r a i s e the pay of City Council m e m b e rs f ro m $5 to $25 p e r meeting.

A total of 4,455 vo tes w ere c a s t in the election.

T h e election ended one of the m o s t heated municipal e lec tion cam pa ig n s in E as t L ans in g ’s h i s ­to ry .

All of the cand ida tes r a n on a p la t fo rm of opposition to an open occupancy o rd inance . B a r ­r e t t , C o t te r and S t ro th e r took the pos i t io n tha t r a c i a l d i s c r im in a -

. t ion is not a p ro b le m J n .E a s t . L ansing.

But M rs . Sharp m ain ta ined that m e m b e rs of m inori ty g roups do incur d isc r im ina tion h e re . She espou sed a policy of achieving open occupancy through " m e d i a ­tion and conc il ia t ion" sponsored by the city governm ent.

A le t te r c i rcu la ted by C o t te r la s t week becam e the c e n te r of new co n tro versy on the sam e is su e . C o t te r charged in his le t te r tha t " o n e d raf t of an open occu­pancy ord inance” would compel p ro p e r ty owners to se l l th e i r h o m es at a p r ic e d e te rm ined by the c i ty a s s e s s o r .

But city off icials sa id that no such propo sa l had e v e r been suggested to anyone connected with the city governm ent.

C o t t e r re fused to identify the g roup which he c la im ed was plan­ning the proposed o rd inance .

Officers Halt Camden Registration March

C A M D E N , Ala. (#)--N eg ro es t r i e d five t im es to m a rc h down­town Monday a s p a r t of a vo te r reg i s t r a t io n dr ive but w e re halted by police who b o m b a r d e d one group with te a r gas and sm oke b om bs when they re fu sed to d i s ­p e r s e .

Two groups of m a r c h e r s stood on the sidewalk and sang and ch anted after they w e re halted. T w elv e m a rc h e r s w e re taken into cu stod y by police.

M ayor Reginald Albrit ton told the adult m a rc h e r s they w ere f r e e to walk to the r e g i s t r a r ' s o ff ice—with police e s c o r t if d e s i r e d —but could not s tage a m a s s march.

While the d e m o n s t ra to rs went on, about 35 N egroes lined up without i n c i d e n t a t the r e g i s ­t r a r ’s office. At th e ir reque s t , so m e of the N egroes w e re accom ­panied by a policeman.

At Selma, about 200 N egroes s tood in line at the D a l l a s County courthouse to tak e voter t e s t s o r get on a l is t to take t e s t s . T h e re was no t roub le . T he N e g ro e s went to the co urthouse in sm a l l groups.

R e p e a t e d m a r c h e s w ere a t t e m p t e d in C am den. Negro l e a d e r s s a i d they wanted to r e g i s ­t e r a t the courthouse and not the o ld ja i l building w here the r e g i s ­t r a r ’s office was m oved recen t ly .

C h a i r m a n ' A1 Wall of the A ilcox County R e g i s t r a r B oard r e p o r te d that 46 N eg ro es w e re r e g i s te r e d . He sa id 42 of the

la s t 56 who applied had qualified. Wilcox had no Negro v o te rs until r e c e n t weeks although N egroes c o m p r i s e 78 p e r cen t of the population.

" W e ’r e not going to r e g i s t e r in any old Ja i l ,” sa id M ajor Johns , a f ie ld w o rk e r fo r the Southern C h r is t ia n L ead ersh ip C o n f e r e n c e(SCLC). He was taken into c u s t o d y by police d ur ing a m arch .; T h e m ay o r said all applican ts , white o r Negro, w e re p ro c e s s e d at the building once used as a ja i l . Albrit ton sa id he re g re t te d the u s e of sm oke and t e a r gas, but felt it was n e c es sa ry .

About 80 d e m o n s t r a t o r s m a rc h e d f rom a church and were halted by Albrit ton a f te r two b lo ck s . Johns was leading the m a r c h . When Albrit ton asked Jo h n s if he was a Louisiana re s id e n t , the Negro man said be was.

Teach-In Set In Auditorium

High student in te re s t has fo r ­ced o rg a n iz e rs of T h u rs d a y ’s " t e a c h - i n ” p ro tes t ing U.S. Viet Nam policy to move the demon­s t ra t io n f ro m Anthony Hall to the Auditorium.

T h e meeting will begin at 8 p .m . and will re m a in in the. Auditorium until midnight when s tuden ts will be invited to sm a l­l e r group sections in B esseyH al' c la s s ro o m s .

2 M ich igan State N e w s , E a s t L an s in g , M ich igan T u e s d a y , Apri l 6, 1966

EDITORIALSThat’s The Way The Ball Bounces

R ea dy . A im. F i r e .So i t s e e m s that f i r in g has b e ­

c o m e a new read y a im o f a th le t ic o f f i c i a l s when d i s c o n t e n t e d with team p e r f o r m a n c e . In l ight of T h u r s d a y ’s d i s c h a r g e of b a s k e t ­bal l c o a c h Forddy A n d er so n , M ichigan State h a s s e e n f it to e m ­ploy the h i r e - f i r e brand of a th l e t ­ic m a n a g e m e n t that h as c o n t a m i ­nated the high s c h o o l , c o l l e g e and p r o f e s s i o n a l s p o r t s s c e n e s .

While anybody who can count b ac k w a rd s knows the paths the 1965 Spartan t e a m e m b a r k e d upon, the p r o m i s e of b r ig h te r days ahead s e e m e d am ple c o m ­p ensat ion for th is y e a r ’s h a r d ­sh ip s .

But even if Spartan fans w e r e n ’t im pat ien t , A t h l e t i c D ir e c t o r C la r e n c e (B iggie) Munn w as .

Just as a r e f e r e e c a l l s the fifth foul on a p layer and send s him to the bench, so Munn u sed the fifth lo s in g s e a s o n in s ix as the r e a s o n for t o s s i n g a coach out of the g a m e . But unlike the p la ye r for whom t h e r e is a lways a next g a m e , t h e r e ’s no to m o r r o w for A n d e r s o n - - a t l e a s t not at M ic h i ­gan State.

Did A nd erson d e s e r v e getting the hatchet? Were the fa i lu r e s he e x p e r i e n c e d a lm o s t without i n ­terrupt ion s i n c e the c h a m p io n ­sh ip days of the la te f i f t i e s c o n ­v in c ing pro o f that he was s l i p ­ping . . . and would cont inue to s l ip?

To a n s w e r e i t h e r of th e s e q u e s ­t io n s , c o n s id e r a t io n of future p r o s p e c t s shbuld have p ro v ed the d e c i s i v e fa c to r that would have a l low ed A nd erson at l e a s t one m o r e y e a r . A t o p - f l i g h t i r e s h m a n t e a m , b ack ed by p r o s p e c t s for another f ine r e c r u i t i n g haul, p r o ­v id e s r e a s o n a b le g ro u n d s for o p ­t i m i s m .

Y et , with a l m o s t a “ th at ’s the way the ba l l b o u n c e s ’ ’ c r u d i ty , it was d ec id e d that A n d erso n was inadequate to d ev e lo p the ta l en ts he w as b r in g in g to the MSU h a r d ­wood. Indeed, it w as only d ays e a r l i e r w h e n A nd erson h a d spoken of the def in i te p o s s i b i l i ­t i e s for the fu ture .

S in ce the an n ou ncem en t , many

r u m o r s h av e f i l t e r e d out f r o m the J e n i s o n c h a m b e r s of Munn and A n d er s o n , s u g g e s t i n g in terna l rum bling m ig h t h ave brought on the f i r in g . N e i t h e r man i s what m ight be c o n s i d e r e d d ip lo m a t i c , and any s p a r k cou ld have ign ited the f i r e w o r k s .

A n d erso n w as not without h is f l a w s , the l e a s t o f which was the i m p u l s i v e , h igh ly v o la t i l e way he r e s p o n d e d to c r i t i c i s m . And Munn was not w ithout h is c r i t i c i s m - - e s p e c i a l l y when it d e a l s with a f a v o r i t e s u b j e c t o f h i s , B ig Ten C h a m p io n s h ip s (or the lack of t h e m ) .

H e n c e , f o r c e - m e e t - f o r c e .As with any h i e r a r c h a l s t r u c ­

tu re , he who r e i g n s , r u l e s . A s h e can h i r e , s o he can f i r e . And s i n c e Munn h ap p en s to o cc u p y the a r m c h a i r of a th le t i c d i r e c t o r , it w a s n ’t he w h o s e job hung in the b a lan ce .

Thus, e x i t A n d er s o n .That an i n j u s t i c e h as b ee n done

to A n d erso n i s , to our way of thinking, an und en iab le and i r r e ­m e d ia b le fact . W hether Munn had the f inal w ord o r P r e s i d e n t John A. Hannah ( w h o c o n v e n ie n t ly s c h e d u le d a tr ip to N i g e r i a the day of the f i r i n g ) , m a t t e r s l i t t l e . E i t h ­e r way, the net r e s u l t l e a v e s A n d erso n hold ing the bag .

While th e re i s l i t t l e c h a n c e of a d is e n c h a n te d p u b l i c r e s t o r i n g j u s t i c e , we would l ik e to s u g g e s t - - i n fa c t lend our e v e r y su pp or t - - t o s tudent p r o t e s t o f the f i r in g through l e t t e r s to th i s n e w s p a p e r which would be fo r w a r d e d to the a th le t i c o f f i c e .

F u r t h e r m o r e , we would l ik e to i s s u e an appeal to m e m b e r s of the t e a m , p erh ap s through th e ir n ew Captain , B i l l C u r t i s , or th is y e a r ’s l e a d e r , M a r c u s S a n d e r s , to e x p r e s s th e ir f e e l i n g s , e i t h e r ind iv idua l ly or as a group, c o n ­c e r n i n g the m a t te r . T h i s , i f n o th ­ing e l s e , would m o s t d r a m a t i c a l l y l en d r eco g n i t ion to the d e d i c a ­tion t h a t m a rk e d A n d e r s o n ’s e l e v e n y e a r s of s e r v i c e to M ic h ­iga n State.

CROSSWORD PUZZLEACROSS

1. Right-hand page6. Discuss

12. Elliptical

13. Keynoter14. Sincerity16. Weakness

of muscle17. Traveler

19. Kind of agate

20. Bobbin 22. Mackerel­

like fish24. Corn spike 25 Spotted

cavies 26. Correlative

of either2 3 4 5 i6 7 8 9 10 II

IZ %13>4 15 %16

% 17 IB 1920 21 %22 23 %%2* %75 %26 2728 23 %30

% 3/ %32

33 34 %”36 %%37 36 &33 A0 41

42 43 144

45 %4«

28. That thing29. Theme30. M an's

nickname31. Sacred

composition32. Largest

continent33. Servant

girl35. Left side ot

a ledger 37. Snake 39. Take out 42. More lanky44. Range in

Wyoming45. Sword­

shaped46. F.xpert

DOWN1. Fabulous bird

2. Topsy's friend

3. Bestow , upon

4*. Kind ol wave

5. Scent6. Answer the purpose

T A R S A P F A C EO B E S 1 t IY A L A RM E L 0 N R E T I R ES T A G A E L B E- ■

H E M K N 1 F E0 u Ie O M E S A U Sw e | L O O T 1 P L EE V A D E A c R E

A E M 5 A S H R A wc R 1 M E A A P 1 S Hp E C A R E S i 1 P u EA T E M E L M | E R N

7. Epoch8. Sceptres9. F.xpiate

10. Stylish:slang

1 1. Sand snak'.'genus

15. Akin 18. Said by

heart20. Portuguese

coin21. Devour 23. Dolt25. Vessel26. |ap. sash

27. Turmeric29. Deep pur­

ple30. Shrewd31. Mythical

king32. Helped33. Masculine34. Algerian

seaport36. Or. letter38. Steep40. quill lor

winding silk41. Explosive43. Concerning

MICHIGANSTATI

UNIVMSITY STATE MEWSM ember A ssociated P r e ss , United P ress

International, Inland Daily P ress A ssocia­tion, A ssociated C ollegiate P r e s s , Michigan P r e s s A ssociation .

Published every c la ss day throughout fa ll, w in ter and spring term s and tw ice weekly sum m er term by the students of Michigan State U niversity.

Second c la ss postage paid at East Lansing, M ichigan.

E ditorial and business o ffices at 341 Stu­dent S erv ices Building, M ichigan State Uni­v e rsity , East Lansing, Michigan*

Editor .......................................John Van G iesonA dvertising M anager Arthur LangerM anaging Editor ...........................Hugh LeachCampus Editor .................C h arles C. W ellsA ssistan t Campus Editor L iz HymanSports Editor ....................R ichard SchwartzW ire Editor ....................................B ill K raseanA ssistan t Advertising M anager .Ken HoffmanNight E d ito r .................................... Phil P iersonCopydesk A d v iso r ...................... Henry T . P r iceN ew s A dvisor .................. R ichard E. HansenE ditorial Editors ................. M ichael Kindman

Susan F llsonPhotography A d v iso r ...................Dave JaehnlgC irculation Manager .......................Jim Baker

No F lippers In The Pool

Letter To The Eiter«

Viet Nam Protests Seek Policy ChangeT o the Editor:

Sentim ent against the war in Viet Nam is growing among students and faculty m em bers.

T he MSU Com m ittee for P eace in V iet Nam (a student organiza­tion) and the Faculty C om m ittee for P eace in Viet Nam have co o r­dinated their efforts for the teach-in Thursday night and the fund­ra isin g drive to send chartered buses to the March on Washington A pril 17.

John D. Donoghue of the anthropology departm ent, chairm an of the faculty com m ittee and organizer of the MSU teach-in , has s e ­cured a distinguished group of speakers for the evening. T here w ill a lso be folk sin gers offering topical entertainm ent.

The teach-in w iir to m m en ce with lec tu res followed by a question period after which sm all d iscu ssion groups led by faculty member^ w ill provide for a personal exchange of v iew s.

The venture should prove invaluable to those students who are not c le a r on the issu e . It w ill present an alternative to the policy fo l­lowed by the national adm inistration and advocated by much of the p r e s s . Itsp u rp o se ised u ca tio n a la n d a tth esa m e tim e a form of pro­te s t ..

The two com m ittees have a lso worked on fund-raising projects for the trip to Washington. At present, two b u ses are filled and there is hope that two m ore can be chartered.

A jazz festival is scheduled for next Monday in the Union B a ll­room and a faculty fund-raising cocktail party has been planned. T h e com m ittees are a lso making arrangem ents for “ Hyde Park" sp eak ers on the steps of the Union Building daily until the m arch.

The Alfred Hitchcock film “ N otorious” starring Cary Grant and Ingrid Bergman w ill be shown Saturday.

T he com m ittees appeal for support to students who feel that the United States is fighting a u se le s s and im m oral war in Viet Nam. And to those who have not form ed an opinion we ask for the oppor­tunity to present a rational and humane alternative to current for­eign policy.

R einhard M ohr C h a i rm a n

MSU C o m m it tee fo r P ea ce in Viet Nam

On Forddy’s Dismissal:

And Then There Was MunnT o the E d ito r :

In T h u rsd a y m o rn in g ’s State News I re a d w h ere P r e s id e n t John A. Hannah I eft fo r two weeks in N iger ia .

T h e t im e , th e re fo re , w as r ip e fo r C la ren c e L. Munn to ac t . He did , and we rea d about it in T h u r s ­day af ternoon’s State Jo u rna l . F o r r e s t A, Anderson was f ired f ro m his post as v a rs i ty b a sk e t ­ba l l coach.

And the p re s id en t of MSU is now here in s ight to a n sw er q ues­tions.

You r e m e m b e r C la re n c e L. Munn. He was th e u n o f f ic ia lp re s ­ident of Michigan S tate U n iv e r ­s i ty for a num ber of y e a r s in the 1 9 5 0 ’s. T h e y c a l l e d h i m “ B igg ie .’’

Your m om and dad raved about h im and his g rea t football team s. MSU beat U -M and just about ev eryone e l s e in' those days.

Biggie was a v e ry r e a l MSU h e ro . T h is gave h im pow er— e v e r y re a l pow er. He had taken MSU out of the deep, da rk woods of in fe r io r i ty and o b scu ri ty . Pow­e r was Biggie’s rew ard .

But then som eth ing s trange happened at MSU.

B ig g ie 's a th le tes through the 1950’s had g i v e n MSU a name known to ju s t about everybody in the United S ta tes . T h is is what c e r t a in people at MSU desired . T h e t im e had a r r iv e d to make MSU a re a l institution of higher lea rn ing . T he U n iv e rs i ty had a “ n a m e .”

T h e p ow ers at MSU who wanted to m ak e MSU a truly g rea t school, not jus t a football fac to ry , could now act. T he “ egg h e ad s" could r e c r u i t s ch o la rs now that they had a " n a m e ” to use .

B iggie and h is w ell-paid am a­

t e u r s had done th e i r job well. T hey gave MSU the quick way to national f a m e . Now l ib r a r i e s cou’f d b e built ins tead of additions to football s tad ium s.

In a shor t t im e B iggie Munn had d isap p e a red . A nam e, C la re n c e L. Munn, w a s h e a rd once in a while.

Among t h e common folk of A m erica , a u n iversity 's academ ­ic ip tin g began to stand for som e­thing. Sputnik had, fortunately for A m erica , worked wonders.

It m us t have been a b i t te r pill ( o r Sputnik) for C la re n c e to sw al­low. T he C a e s a r of M SUhadbeen a s s a s s in a te d on a launching pad, and the 1960-style s tudent i r r e v ­e re n t ly approved the act.

Foo tball polls began to be cha l­lenged by som e new ones. High schoo l s e n io rs ta lked of the coun­t r y ’s “ top 20” and m ean t a c a ­d e m ic ra t ing .

In u n iv e rs i t ie s s t r iv in g to gain the new " to p 20" th e r e cannot be any national head lines ove r the f i r in g of co ache s in the m a jo r in­te r c o l le g ia te sp o r t s . Such doings a r e v e r y d e f i n i t e l y " o u t ” am ongs t the " e g g h e a d s ' w h o suddenly counted for som eth ing.

F i r in g s w e re g re a t fun and got everybody excited in the 1950's, but today they a r e g r im bus iness fo r u n iv e rs i t ie s " o n the way u p ."

So, t o d a y we get " r e s i g n a ­t io n s ” like c r a z y as schools t ry to d isg u ise the whole bus in e ss . Such p re te n se r a r e l y works. T h e r e f o r e , fo r a r e a l ly e a rn es t “ ac ad em ic c l i m b e r " like MSU t h e r e can be no f i r in g s whatso­e v e r , d isgu ised o r und isguised .

Yet, T h u rsd a y MSU had one. C la r e n c e a s s e r t e d h im se lf . He t r i e d to b r ing Biggie back to life. A f te r a l l , he probab ly reasoned ,

“ who m a d e th i s U n iv e r s i ty .m e or J o h n ? "

So, d e pa r t F o r r e s t A. A nderson f ro m the coaching scen e at MSU.

C la re n c e , n e v e r th e le ss , m us t r e a l i z e that he fa i led to rev ive Biggie , the man he was y e s te rd a y .

T h e r e could be no spoken word about a “ f i r in g ." Coach A nderson would be " r e a s s i g n e d " at MSU— fa r away t r o m the b aske tba ll co u r t . No one is e v e r f i red fo r not having a winning team th e se days.

T h e r e m ust have been a lot of quie t m aneuv er ing by C la re n c e b e fo re he announced the " r e a s ­s ig n m e n t .” A nderson , a s t i l l - young m an of 46, e x p re s s e d a de ­s i r e to stay with MSU in a non­coach ing posit ion a f te r he w as r e ­lieved of his p r e s e n t duties .

F o r those who have followed MSU baske tball with A nderson it is h a rd to be l ieve tha t th is sk i l led and dedica ted baske tball coach wants to give up his life­t im e occupation for the u n p re ­ten tious du tie s of a p r o f e s s o r of H P R .

No doubt, C la re n c e hoped to ap­p e a se h is fo rm e r subord ina te (i. e . John Hannah) by keeping the v ic t im on the MSU scen e for a y e a r .

Hopefully, it was p robab ly r e a ­soned, such co rd ia l " r e a s s i g n ­in g " might fool those who a r e r e ­spons ib le for the academ ic po lls ( i .e . intell igent A m e r ic a n s who

support and attend u n iv e rs i t ie s a c co rd in g to what they have to of­f e r a c a d e m i c a l l y ) . M a y b e A nderson even re ce iv e d a pay r a i s e to do le s s work for a y e a r — at the end of which he should d e p a r t quietly f ro m MSU.

It is doubtful if such an of t- r e p e a te d ru s e will work , but it goes a long way to show that

■Clarence cannot com e c lo se to the old days of un l im ited power.

MSU has lost a f ins baske tball c o ach . In the quiet g o ss ip c i r c l e s and bull s e s s io n s t h e r e w ere n e v e r g r ip e s about A n d erso n ’s coach ing ab i l i t ie s as th e re a r e about a c e r ta in o th e r w e ll-p a id co ach of a m a jo r s p o r t a t MSU.

No, ex actly the opposite is the c a s e . Dave S track , baske tball co ach at U -M , probab ly h a s f r e ­quent n ig h tm are s about that fav­o r i t e line, “ If F orddy Anderson w a s c o a c h i n g at U - M t h e y wouldn 't lose a g a m e ."

R eal baske tball fans knowwhat a fan tas t ic job F ordd y did in the 1963-64 seaso n . It was a r e a l t r i b ­u te to h is sk i l l s .

And th is y e a r? T h o se h a rd ­c o re 5,000 to 6,000 who c a m e to each hom e gam e know tha t with an ine lig ib le 6’ 7 " c e n te r , o r with an ine ligible guy nam ed Johnson, o r even with only a l i t t le , l i t t le luck A nderson w o u l d h a v e thw arted C la re n c e a n d m a in ­tained MSU's slow c l im b to aca ­d e m ic p rom in en ce . All he needed w e re a few m o re wins.

Even the " m i r a c l e tha t a lm o st

w a s ” a g a i n s t Michigan when A n d e rso n ’s t e a m gained a reg u la ­tion s ta lem a te with the num ber one tea m in the nation wasn t enough. U p se ts tha t don’t quite tak e p lace a r e quickly forgotten , C la r e n c e knows.

C la ren c e , sinking d e ep e r a n d d e e p e r each y e a r into oblivion at MSU, was finally given h is oppor­tunity at the end of th is b a sk e t ­ba l l season to show ev ery o n e that he was not ye t a p a p e r t ig e r . He knew that Anderson los t only two p la y e r s f rom th is y e a r ’s tea m and th e re was height and r e a l p ro m is e on t h e ' f r e s h m a n t e a m . With A n d e rs o n ’s wellr-known ta len ts , C la re n c e knew h e ’d nev er get an o th e r chance to low er the ax.

It is , hopefully, the la s t solid blow that the fo r m e r “ b o s s ” of. MSU will throw.

T h e new pow ers in t h e U n iv e r - s i ty m ust r e a l i z e that th is m ust not happen again. T h ey m ust r e a ­l ize that no one is the lo s e r in th is c a s e except,.the U n iv e rs i ty , i t s s tu den ts , alumni and faculty.

We unders tand why you did it, C la re n c e . You have p roved the w a r i s n ’t over, and that we can ­not ju s t ignore y ou r p re s e n c e .

But p e rh a p s the next t im e the p r e s id e n t goes to N igeria you r n am e will be in the headlines . And the U n ivers i ty , i t s s tuden ts , a lu m ni and faculty will be the v ic ­t o r s , f inally and com ple te ly .

G e o rge C olburn D etro i t g rad u a te s tudent

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M ichigan State N e w s , E as t L a n s in g , MichiganT u e s d a y , April 6. 1965 3

World New s at a Glance

Sit-In Protests Theater Prices

F r o m O u r W i r « S e rv ic e s

China, U.S. Disagree On ScoreTOKYO F o u r U.S. w arp lan es w e re shot down and many o the rs

w e r e damaged in r a id s Monday on North Viet Nam, the new China News Agency d e c la red in a b ro ad cas t d ispatch Monday night.

A U.S. spokesm an in Saigon sa id one plane was downed, but the pilo t was re scu ed .

Earthquake Hits Greece

MEGALOPOLIS, G reece— G r e e c e ’s w o rs t ea rthquake in y e a r s shook a dozen sleeping v i l lages into ru in Monday in the A rcad ian C en tra l Peloponnesus, kill ing at leas t 20 p e r ­sons and injuring 200.

T he roll ing quake s tru ck this a r e a 100 m ile s southwest of Athens a t 5:13 a .m . It was the fourth ea rth shock in a week in G re e c e and the th i rd in a month causing death.

B ritish Training South VietnameseLONDON— B ri t i sh fo rces in M alaysia have been t ra in ing South

V ie tnam ese t roops in jungle w a r fa re s ince 1961, Defense S ec re ta ry Denis Healey told P a r l iam e n t Monday. The specia l c o u rs e s in Ma­lay sia had been rep o r te d h e re for som e t im e , but thi: governm ent confirm ation .

was the f i r s t

Atom Jet Functions OKVANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE, Calif .—A s a te l l i te

which could hold the key to y e a r s - lo n g m iss io n s in s p a ce has c le a re d two c r i t ic a l hu rd les , the A ir F o rc e sa id Mon­day.

At 10:09 p .m . Sunday night a signal f ro m the A ir F o rc e Hawaiian track in g sta tion tu rned on a tiny ion engine, p r o ­totype of an e le c tro n ic beam device designed eventually for speeds up to 100,000 m i le s an hour.

Noble 10 To Decide While SittingWASHINGTON—Chief J u s t ic e E a r l W arre n announced Monday

that, in the fu ture , the Suprem e Court will no longer nand down de­c is io n s only on Monday but will announce ru lings on any day of the week it may be sit t ing.

Under p re s e n t p ro ce d u re , the co u rt announces its d e c is ions , and re a d s opinions, only at the opening of i ts Monday se ss io n s .

Dorm Heads Switch Jobs

K A L A M A Z O O (UPI) TheW estern M i c h i g a n U n iv e rs i ty Student Senate ha s ca l led for an " o r d e r l y ” s i t - in dem on s tra t io n th is weekend to p ro te s t a hike in tick e t p r i c e s at two local the­a t e r s .

T he s i t - in will take p lace F r i ­day night at the S ta te T h ea te r . In addition, the S ta te and Capitol th e a te r s will be picketed .

Air Recruiters Visit Campus

Men and women s e n io rs and g radu a tes in te re s te d in obtain­ing a co m m ission in the U.S. Air F o rc e will be in terviewed at the Union today.

F i r s t Lieutenant W illiam F. Kyle, Air F o r c e Officer T r a in ­ing S c h o o l (OTS) Selection Of­f i c e r for Michigan, will be avail­ab le f rom 9 a .m . to 3 p.m .

"S o m e of the c a r e e r f ields open to co l lege g r a d u a t e s , accord ing to Lt. Kyle, “ a r e in flying (both pilot and navigator) pe rsonn e l , s ta t is t ica l s e rv ice s , a d m i n i s t r a t i o n , t r a n s p o r t a ­tion, supply, co m m unications and en g in ee r in g ."

Applicants m ust be between the ages of 21 and 30. Applicat­ions for A ir F o rc e OTS can be subm itted seven months in advance of graduation.

Insurance HoursSpring t e r m h o u rs for the Stu­

den ts Insu rance O f 'ice , 337 Stu­dent S e rv ices Building, a r e 1 to 3 on Monday, Wednesday and F r i ­day; and f ro m 3 to 5 on T uesday and T hu rsd ay . T he new r e p r e ­sen ta t ive , Donna Norton, may be reac hed by ca ll ing 5-8284.

A spokesman for the s tuden ts sa id bu ses would take the s tu­den ts to the the a te r la te F r id ay afternoon. They will be p rovided f r e e popcorn and will be a sk ed to

O LINH O S P I T A LREPORT

Students may v is i t th e i r hosp it­a l ized f r iends between 2 -4 and 7 -8 p .m . daily.

A d m i s s i o n s include A tnsley Rigney, Livonia junior; Joanne Vivian, B irm ingham sophm ore; R i c h a r d S inc la ir , B irm ing h am sophom ore; T hom as C. Johnson, P i t tsb u rgh , P a . , sophom ore ;M o­ham ad K esh tkaron , Shiraz , Iran, sp ec ia l p ro g ra m ; Jam e s C arne , E a s t Lansing f r e s h m a n ; John M e r r i l l , Rocky R iver , Ohio, jun­ior ; Santo Pasqualucc i, E as t Lan­sing; C a r l O l e s o n III, Glen A rb o r f reshm en.

Vets’ Club Plans '‘Teas’

Fina l p lans f r S a tu rd ay ’s MSU V e te ra n s A s s o c i a t i o n " t e a p a r t y " at the Inn A m er ica will be m ade at the associa t ion rrteeting today at 8:30 p.m . at the C ora l G ables .

Also under d iscuss ion will be p lan s for the May 9 "D u ty Uni­fo rm T e a " at the " B o m b Shel­t e r " and the annual sp r in g p ic ­nic , to be held about May 23.

M em b ers in te re s te d in softball o r bowling may sign up with Bob S torch , c':ub coach, at the m e e t­ing.

Any m e m b e rs having co pies of w in te r t e r m ex am s m ay bring th em . They will he p laced in the exam file for fu ture use by m e m ­b e r s .

e n te r the th ea te r e a r ly and r e ­m ain inside until it c lo se s .

T he two th e a te r s a r e owned by the Butterfield c h a in .T h e s tu ­d e n ts afe p ro tes t ing a r ece n t 25 c e q ts boost in the p r i c e of movie t ic k e ts . A boycott of the th e a te r s th is past weekend was d e sc r ib e d a s " p a r t i a l ly su c c e ss fu l . "

E a r l i e r , the s tuden ts sa id they would bus m o v ie -g oe rs to Battle C re e k , about 20 m i le s away, to a t ­tend movies shown a j a r iva l the­a t e r .

Western's Queen

Home-Town GirlKALAMAZOO (UPI) A 19-

y e a r -o ld beauty f ro m Kalam azoo w as chosen f ro m a fie ld of 13 Satu rday night a s M iss W este rn Michigan U n ivers i ty .

E s th e r Smith , a f re sh m an at the U n ivers i ty , will now go on to the M iss Michigan contes t in J u ly .

M iss Smith is f ive-fee t , s ix and one-half inches t a l l and weighs 121 pounds. H e r m e a s u re ­m e n ts a r e 34 and one-half , 23 and one-half, and 36 and one- half.

First Off-Campus Meeting Slated

The Student Off-C am p u s O r ­ganization (SOC) will hold its f i r s t genera l meeting of the te rm , tonight at 8 in 34 Union.

B u siness includes the in s ta l la ­tion of new off icers and d is c u s ­sion the upcoming Athletic

ght.All in te re s ted s tudents a r e in- :ed to attend and vis i t the SOC jnee on the fourth f loor of the

Several changes in re s id en ce hall pe rsonnel hav e been announ­ced by Lyle T horburn , m anager of res idenc e ha lls .

P e e r Holtkamp, fo r m e r m ana­g e r of Shaw H alls , has beer, nam ed m a n a g e r of W onders , Halls, He w as rep la ced a t Shaw by Ray Hopper, f o rm e r food s e r ­v ice m anage r of Owen Hall.

The new food s e rv ic e m anager a t Owen is C h a r le s Tutt , f o r ­m e r ly at McDonel Hall.

Robert Underwood was p ro ­moted f ro m m a n ag e r of Won­d e r s to a s s i s ta n t m anage r of re s id en c e h a l l s in c h a r g e of building and m ain tenance . He is a l so a r e a m a n ag e r of the C a s e - W ilson-W onders complex.

T om Dutch, fo rm e r ly m anage r of C ase H a lls , is now m ana­g e r of the Brody group. He was rep la ced by Don Schmidt, fo r ­

m e r food se rv ice m an ag e r of C ase .

Ronald Smith, fo rm er ly at B ro­dy, is the new food su p e rv iso r of C ase Halls.

Debaters 3rdMichigan State fin ished third,

behind W e s t e r n Michigan and Wayne State, in the annual F r e s - m an-Sopliom ore debate tou rn a ­ment held at F l in t Junior Col­lege Saturday.

Pac ing the MSU d e ba te rs with, a r e c o rd of 4 wins and no los­s e s w e re Sue H a r r i s , Flushing f re sh m a n , and Pam Shaw, D ear­b orn f re sh m an .

Ken Newton, T ren ton , N.J . , sophom ore, finished 3S second- p lace sp eak er in the tournam ent.

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Shop Knappes East Lansing Wednesday Noon to 9:00

seersucker •••the crisp carefree look for Spring and SummerA. Chic b lo u so n o v e r b l o u s e with long s l e e v e s , snowy white c o l l a r caught with a s t r i n g - t i e bow. B lue or g r e e n , s i z e s 7 - 1 5 . 11.98B . S t i t ch ed white l inen c o l l a r and f lowing sa tin bow t i e d r a m a t i z e th is b lack and white pla id s e e r s u c k e r s h ea th . 5 - 1 3 , pet it e ju n io rs , 11,98C. S m a r t C h a n e l - t y p e jacket and s l i m s k i r t has l in en s h o r t s l e e v e d b lo u s e with w e s k i t po in t s . Gray o r G r e e n in s i z e s 1 2 - 2 0 . 12.98D. S a i l o r - c o l l a r e d jacket h as added w a i s t i n t e r e s t punctuated with l a r g e p e a r l - l i k e b ut ton s , s l e e v e l e s s l in en s h e l l . G ray , g r e e n , 1 2 - 2 0 , 12.98

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Wet Blanket May Snuff Out Early Spring Sports CalendarB y D U A N E L A N C A S T E R

S t a t e N e w s S p o r t s W r i t e rSpring spor ts coaches don't

v. ‘.‘w e a th e r ' ’ or not the ir sea so n s wii 1 get under way at the

st 1

Postpone Bat Debut Slated For ThursdayP e l ie r in sa id the s ituation is " Y o i ^ c a n ’t p r a c t i c e under

ice mmon as the Spartans g a m e conditions. The a i r is d if-vind and the

with Al- sday, has until May

n forced t > postpone f e r e n t , th e re is no >v ■pening gam es b ecause p i t c h e r s ca n ’t throw

have severof inclement w ea the r . ,

"W e schedule them this e a r ly secause we t ry to get in a s n any gam es as p issib ie bef re he B ia Ten se

hpi

M

jSt ab'

he sa id .Sy M eerm an , athle.tic grounds

a s s i s t a n t forem an, says the field is “ full of snow and th e re is a

r t s , ' he lot of f ro s t on the groun d .” " I t a ll depends on the sun-

T h e team took ’he day off sh ine , but I don 't think the b a s e - c c t s s f u l ba l l t e a m will be on the diamond

for at least a Week.”M eerm a n said he couldn’t tel!

when the ball diamond w uld be "W e lose everything we gained p lay ab le because m o re snow is

p r e d ic te d for the a r e a and it

team took "he day y a f te r its s t r ip but moves îht • Je: -

day for sem e in d o o r p r a c -

the t r ip n we. v . . f f .. J

at: t Keep prticine.'-l P e l ie r in said, but he would take a week even underadded that p rac t ic in g indoors is ideal w eather conditions.not without its l im ita t ions . E lm o Lowery, golf c o u r s e

PSI UPSILONPhone 351-4687 810 W. Grand River

forem an at F o r e s t A k e rs , is ever: les s optim ist ic about the playing conditions of the golf c o u rs e .

“ !t‘H be at lea s t two weeks yet b e fo re the c o u rs e is r e a d y ,” he sa id , " a n d we ll have to get i good ra in to get r id of the f ro s t . That would soften it up for the team but the public won’t be able to play on it fo r som e t im e y e t . ”

F o r t u n a t e l y , the golf team d o esn 't have a hom e m eet un­til May 8, while la s t season the opener fell on A pri l 11. An April 11 meet this y e a r is unthinkable.

T ilings a re no b e t t e r fo r foot- bal! coach Duffy D augherty and tennis coach Stan D robac. Both will join the ba seb a l l , golf and t r a c k team s in s h a r in g the d i r t a r e n a s at the M en’s INI and J e n - ison F ie ld House.

I t ’s a bit m o re c row ded when the la c ro s s e and rugby tea m s co m bine in the “ s h a r e the d i r t ” p r o g r a m c rea t in g an a lm o s t im ­p o ss ib le situation of s ix t e a m s c r a m m e d into the two d i r t a r e n a s .

Th i s April w e a th e r ju s t has . " s n o w " b u s i n e s s 3round the sp r in g s p o r ts scen e but until w a rm sunshine r e p la c e s the snow and blow of w in ter , the spr ing c o ach es -.re going to be both h a m ­p e re d and c ram ped as they try 'to read y the ir squads for the open­ing of the season.

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Gridmen Looking Up . . . At Foes, That Is

By J E R R Y M O R TO N S ta te News S p o r ts W r i t e r

It has beer, said that sp r ing b ree d s op tim ism , but that i s n ' t nec­e s s a r i l y the c a se when it conies to sp r in g football.

C oach Duffy D au g h e r ty 's e a r ly outlook for next fal l i s one of caution as the S p a r ta n s p r e p a r e to open s pr ing p ra c t i c e W ednesday.

" P la y in g that gang will be like try ing to swim up a w a te r fa l l , ” he said. “ You can go like the dickens and sti l l fall b eh ind ."

T h e r e m a rk was p rom pted by a glance at the S p a r ta n s ’ schedule which should ra te a s one of the toughest in the nation.

T he s la te includes Michigan, Ohio State, Illinois and P u rd u e on su c c e s s iv e Saturdays , in addition to N o tre Dame, Penn S ta te and UCLA,

MSU compiled a 4 -5 r e c o rd last

s t ro ng no: - leag ue opponents season to m ark the schoo l’s

f i r s t losing re c 3rd since 1958.i r s t step tow ard the 1965 season term er, lead them into the f i r s t of

D IG T H E D U G O U T ? F r o m t h e l o o k s of t h i n g s , yo u m i g h t s a y t h e o r i g i n a l s c h e d u l i n g o f t h e h o m e b a s e ­b a l l o p e n e r T h u r s d a y w a s s o m e t h i n g of a w h i t e l i e . P o s t p o n e m e n t of t h e g a m e w i t h A l b i o n w a s a n n o u n ­c e d T u e s d a y , w i t h a S a t u r d a y d o u b l f e h e a d e r w i t h C e n t r a l M i c h i g a n h i g h l y d o u b t f u l . P h o t o b y C a l C r a n e

• • • « • • • • • • • « « » » • • • • • a * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

THE PIZZA P H

for

HOI PIZZADELIVERY

call

ED 2-0863203 M.A.C.

T h e S p artans will take the ir W ednesday afternoon when 26 1 20 sp r in g p rac t ic e s e s s io n s .

P r a c t i c e s wil l be conducted Wednesday through Saturday fo r five w eeks finishing with the G reen -W h ite in t ra sq u ad s c r im m ag e May 8 at S pa r tan Stadium. ... .

D au g h e r ty 's main p r o b l e m s c o n ce rn graduation l o s s e s in the offensive line a n d d e fe n s iv e b a c k - field, and the need to find a r e ­p la cem e n t for halfback Dick G o r ­don who gained '41 y a rd s rush ing dur ing his sen ior season .► " I f we’re going to im prove, w e’d b e t te r have seven sopho­m o r e s who can fill gaps for u s , ”D augherty said.

One of the S p a r ta n s ’ s trong po in ts a p p ea rs to be the q u a r ­te rb a c k spot with Steve Juday r e ­tu rn in g for a th i rd season and v e t e r a r John Mullen read y to back h im up.

With new subst i tu t ion ru le s m a rk in g the r e tu rn of tw o-p la­toon football, the S p a r ta n s p lan to begin specia l iz ing at th e i r po ­s i t ion s righ t away.

Daugherty said he thinks the spec ia l iza t io n at e i th e r an offen­s iv e o r defensive posi t ion should m ake p la y e r s m o re p ro f ic ie n t and r a i s e the s tan da rd of play.

L as t s eason the Sp , r t a n s p laced s ixth in the Big Ten with a 3 -3 m a rk . D a u g h e r ty 's e a r ly p red ic t io n ca l l s fo r a s im i la r f inish in the fall.

" T h e top te a m s of Inst fall should be up th e re a g a in , " - he s.; id.

"M ich igan a p p ea rs to be the team j to beat with Ohio State,*Pittdvle and I l l ino is the chief r iv a l s . T h e r e s t of us figure to be in a big dog fight fo r the a lso - ra r . p o s i t io n s .”

Frater lea rn th e i r t cept a learnii puise, the im activi!

life is art experience in co op era t iv e living. T he members aspect opinions of others, to sh a re with them , and to a ssu m e to group obligations. A m e m b e r has the opportunity to ac- ischarge responsibility, and he a cq u ires se lf -conf idence by o stand on his own two feet am ong his p e e r s . He develops iative tact, and judgement. F r a te r n i t i e s have much to offer :: j 1 student in the way of sch o la rsh ip , lead e rsh ip , and socia l T hey are organized as r e sp o n s ib le o rgan izat ions having

real interest in promoting the best that th e re is in student life, ivite you lo become acquainted with our 34 f ra te rn i t i e s a t Michigan

îversm

Sincerely,GEORGE B , HIBBARD F r a te r n i ty A dviso r

The Inter-Fraternity Council cordally invites you to attend open rush tonightApril 6th from 7-10 F.M. at the following houses

THETA DELTA CHI SIGMA PHI EPSILON501 MAC 526 Sunset

PHI KAPPA fArt PHI GAMMA DELTA522 Abbott Road 334 Michigan

KAPPA SIGMA 715 Grove TRIANGLE

242 N. H a rr i so nZ ET A BETA TAU

855 G rov e S tree t PHI KAPPA SIGMA 236 N. H a rr i so n

PI KAPPA PHI 121 White h i l ls Drive PS1 LI PS I LON

810 VV. Gra nd R iverTHETA CHI

453 Abbott Road PHI DELTA THETA 626 Cowley

ALPHA SIGMA PHI 420 E v e rg ree n TAU DELTA PHI COLONY

Rushing in the LniorrALPHA GAMMA RHO Mon. Sun P orch

432 E v e rg re e n Wed. Sun P o rchALPHA TAU OMEGA PHI SIGMA DELTA

451 E v erg reen 1234 fe. Grand R iver

Call any House for a ride

IM Softball Weather Victim Also

J u s t as Danny L i t w h i l e r ’ s b a seb a l l nine has stolen the spo t­light on Spartan s p o r t s , so f tb a l1 has taken o ver f i r s t p lace on the in t ram u ra l c a len d a r .

R es idence hal l play, o r ig ina l ly scheduled to open la s t night, has bebn 'pushed up to Sunday, April 11, b ecause of bad w ea th e r . E n­t ry c a r d s for f r a te rn i ty softball a r e due April 9.

A m eeting of all independent and f ra te rn i ty m a n a g e rs is s che­duled tonight at 7:30 ,i n 2 0 8 Men’s IM. Also m eeting tonight a r e all softball officials in 203 Men’s IM at 8:30. T h o se men in t e r e s ­ted in officiating a r e asked to attend.

R es idence hall tenn is tou rneys a r e s la ted to begin Monday, Ap­r i l 19. E ”t i e s will be accep ted May 3 for the in t r a m u ra l tennis s ing les tou rnam en t .

T r a c k g e ts underway A p ri l 27 ..With, the f ra te rn i ty t r a c k - and

f ie ld m eet p re l im i n a r i e s . F in a ls ■ a r e scheduled for A p ri l 29. Re­s idence hall t r a c k and field p r e ­l im in a r ie s a r e s e t fo r T u esday , May 11, with the f in a l s May 13.

Minn. Duluth Joins WCHA

CHICAGO (UPI)—T h e W este rn C o l leg ia te Hockey A ssn . changed its playoff p ro c e d u re s and added an eighth team to the league dur i ng a two-day m eeting of fa­culty r e p re s e n ta t iv e s f ro m the schoo ls in Chicago.

T h e league will divide into e a s t e rn and w e s te rn se c t io n s for the playoifs. P rev io usly , the f i rs t four te a m s in the league had vied for the title.

T h e e a s te rn d ivision will in­clude Michigan T ech , the Uni­v e r s i ty of Michigan and Michi­gan State . Newly added U n iv e r ­si ty of M innesota at Duluth will join the Michigan schoo ls in the e a s t e r n division.

The w este rn divis ion will con­sist of the U n iv e rs i ty of Denver, C o lo rado College , the U n iv e rs i ty of M innesota , and the U n iv e rs i ty of North Dakota.

N O W ! There

are two c la s s ring com panies to serve you.

Roberts R ing Co. and

E l l io t t 's R ing Co.

Rings include d e g re e , seal , 3 engraved In i t ia ls and a choice of 10 s tones .VUeGanA

A c r o s s F r o m H om e E c o n o m ic s B ld g .

ED 2 -6753

G qaAA+tnexS partan C e n te r

Michigan State N e w s , E as t L a n s in g , MichiganTuesday, April 6. 1965 5

That’s Shot Indonesian Dancer To PerformDodging popcorn a n d jaw­

b r e a k e r s thrown on stage , load­ing scen e ry on t ru c k s at 6 a .m . and studying on the road will no longer plague 15 m e m b e r s of the P e r fo rm in g A r t s C o m p a n y (PAC).

T h o se 15 a c to r s F r id ay co m ­p le ted the sp r ing tou r of the PAC production of S h a k esp e a re ’s ‘‘T am in g of the S h rew ” to 23 co m m u n it ie s in Michigan a r. d C anad a , a tour which found the group on the road many week­en ds s ince Jan . 7 and during the s p r in g break.

T h ey co vered 10,300 m iles , ► f ro m D etro it to Benton H arb or ,

f ro m C oldwater to M arq u e t te and f ro m W aterloo, Ont., to I ro n -

wood. During sp r ing b rea k - th ey w ere on tour in the Upper Pen in ­su la .

Going on to u r h a s its h a z a rd s . At the Muskegon m a tinee p e r ­fo rm ance , the audience of 2,000 ju n io r and sen io r high school s tuden ts th rew popcorn and jaw­b r e a k e r s on the s tage , Frank Rutledge, in s t ru c to r in Speech and d i re c to r , said.

When t h e P e r fo rm in g A r t s Company goes on to u r , the a c to rs do all the backstage work . T hey load the t ru ck s at 6 a .m . at the A uditorium . A rr iv ing at the ir destina t ion at noon, they set up and r e h e a r s e .

In Detro it the s tuden ts lifted

all the scene ry and lights through a second s tory window, using the truck roof as a loading p la t fo rm . T h e the a te r was on the second floor of the high school.

After an evening p e r fo rm an ce the a c to rs re loa d the t ruck and move on the next stop, often a r ­r iv ing th e re at 4 o r 5 a .m .

The longest t r ip was the n ine-

hour d r iv e f rom W ater loo , Ont., to C o l d w a t e r , R u t l e d g e r e - m a rk e d . B lizza rd c o n d i t i o n slengthened the d riv ing t im e . The ac to r -s tu d e n ts , how ever, s p e n t som e of the tr ip in a specia l p la y - re ad in g sem in a r and c l a s s ­ro o m - ty p e d iscuss ions .

F ran k Hoholik, p re s id e n t of the M anistique Pulp and P a p e r

C o., Manistique, honored t h e p l a y e r s with a dinner and re c e p ­tion a f te r the ir p e r fo rm a n ce d u r ­ing the tour of the Upper Pen in­su la .

Bookings for next y e a r ' s p r o ­posed tour of " H a m le t” a re . a l ­rea d y being rece iv ed in la rg e n u m b e rs at the Cap and Gown of­f ice , Rutledge said. .

Dubbed the f i r s t lady of In­don es ian dance. Hazel Chung will a lso show h e r m a s t e r y of the W e s te rn sty le in h e r p e r f o r ­m an ce in F a i rc h i ld T h e a te r to­night.

T h e cu r ta in will r i s e at 8:15

p .m . on a co lorfu l p rologue that c o n t r a s t s the b a s ic p a t te rn s of E as te rn and W este rn dance, t r a ­ditional and m o d ern . She is ap­p e a r in g a s p a r t of the Asiari- Latin A m e r ica n -A fr ica n s e r ie s .

Like Mantle Hood, tonight 's

n a r r a to r , d i rec to r of the . s t i - tute of e t h n o - m u s i c o l o g y at UCLA, M iss Chung has taught at the U n ivers i ty of Ghana

T ick e ts for the pe rfo rm an ce , availab le at the door o r at the Union ticket office

Susskind Will ConductW alter Susskind, conductor of

the Toronto Symphony, will be in h is ninth and final season with the Canadian o r c h e s t r a when they a p p e a r 8:15 p .m . Wednesday in the Auditorium.

F o r his p ro g ra m he has cho­sen w o rk s by Beethoven, Ralph V aughn-W illiam s, Smetena, and P i e r r e M e rc u re .

Susskind leaves as one legacy to Canada, the National Youth O rc h e s t r a of Canada, which he founded soon a f te r a r r iv in g in T o - ron to .

He has a lrea d y accepted guest engagem ents to conduct during the coming season throughout the w o rld and he will continue as m u s ic d i r e c to r of the Aspen, Col., F e s t iv a l .

During the s u m m e r months in p a s t seasons he has conducted the P h ilh arm onic of London and the Royal P h i lharm onic of Ox­ford in England, the th ree lead­ing o r c h e s t r a s of Chzechoslovak- ia , arid the Philadelph ia O rch e s ­t r a at the Robin Hood Dell.

L as t season Susskind and the T oronto Symphony m ade th e ir

f i r s t extended tour in the United S ta te s , playing in 19 c i t ie s , in­cluding an ap p earan ce in New Y ork’s C arneg ie Ha]l.

Professors Give Recital C o n tra l to Ethel Arm eling,M SUass is ta n t p r o f e s s o r of m usic, will p re sen t a public r e c i t a l to­day at 8:15 p.m . in the Music Auditorium .

T he p r o g r a m w i l l f ea tu re Sam uel B a r b e r ’s voice and a s t r in g q u a r t e t com posit ion of M a t t h e w A r n o l d ’ s " D o v e r B e a c h .”

O th er works will include five s o n g s by B ra h m s , M o za r t ’s “ O m bra fe l ic e ,” and sev en S p an - ish folk songs by Manuel de Falla .

P ian is t Henry H a r r i s , p ro fe s ­s o r of m us ic , and faculty m e m ­b e r s Romeo T ata and T heod ore Johnson, violins, Lyman Bodman, viola , and Louis P o t te r J r . , ce l lo , will accompany M iss Arm eling .

Toiiijjbt •

West of M4C & Us

A i » t \ I l 2 3 f E. Grand « w rfh\ SigfriQ Delta 332-0575 & r RiJe

Believe It Or NotT h e r e i s a p la c e for you in the f r a ­

tern i ty s y s t e m . S o m e w h e r e ' on th is c a m p u s th ere i s a f r a te r n i ty w hose m e m b e r s have d e v e lo p e d a way of l i f e and a - s o c i a l - a c a d e m i c a t m o s p h e r e that you wi l l find to a g r e e with your n e e d s and d e s i r e s .

The m en of Alpha G a m m a Rho r e a l i z e that not e v e r y man i s m eant to be an A.G.R. In fa c t , our brand new h o u s e on E v e r g r e e n Ave . only h old s about 46 m en so we would be a l i t t l e c r o w d e d if they w e r e . H o w e v e r , you w i l l n e v e r know which of MSU’s f ine f r a t e r n i t i e s i s the r ight one for you u n l e s s you g e t out for rush .

The m e n o f Alpha G a m m a Rho c o r d i ­a l ly in v i t e you to open lmsh T ues . and Wed. A pr i l 6th and 7th fr o m 7:00 to 10:00 . And r e m e m b e r , you don’t have to s e t t l e for l e s s than the v e r y b e s t so s top in at the A.G .R . h o u s e or c a l l 3 3 2 - 0 8 3 4 for a r id e .

Alpha Gamma Rho432 Evergreen Ave.

C al l for a r ide 3 3 2 - 0 8 3 4

The F r ie n d ly H ouse | On E v e r g r e e n

The only “BEEF” youhave at McDonald’sis

100% pure beef hamburger

(Never frozen, ground daily)(government inspected)

EAST LANSING— EAST L A N SIN G - 234 W. Grand River 1024 E. Grand River

SOUTH LANSING— NORTH L A N SIN G - 4700 S. Cedar 2120 N. Larch

WEST LANSING 4015 W. Saginaw M cDonald's A R i d e C a l l :

STATE619 E. Grand River

DISCOUNTCosmetics & Vitamins

Across From Student Services Daily 9 a.m. - 6 p.m. - Wed 9 a.m. - 9 p.m.

COUPON COUPON

Cigarettes Aqua NetGood E v e r y Day

Coupons Good Thru April 12,1965 Good At East Lansing Store Only

6 Michigan State N e w s , E as t L an s in g , M ichigan T u e s d a y , A pr i l 6 , 1965

HAPPY CUSTOMER! SOLD FIRST DAY! 40 WATT s te re o am plif ie r ; G a r ­r a r d changer; sp eak e r p lus cab ­inet. Call

M&SSP, with a low cost

W AN T AD• AUTOMOTIVE• EMPLOYMENT• FOR RENT• FOR SALE• LOST & FOUND• PERSONAL• PEANUTS PERSONAL • R E A L ESTATE• SERVICE• TRANSPORTATION• WANTED

DEADLINE2 p.m. o n e c l o s s doy b e ­

fore p u b l i c a t i o n .C a n c e l l a t i o n s - 12 noon o ne c l a s s day before p u b l i c a t i o nPHONE

355-8255RATES

1 D A Y ...........$1.503 DAYS_____S3.505 DAYS_____S6.00

' 3 a s e d on 15 words per ad) T h e r e wil l be a 5 0 i s e r v i c e a n d b o o k k e e p i n g c h a r g e if t h i s a d i s not pa id wi t h in o n e w e ek .

The State News does not p e rm i t r a c ia l or re l ig ious discrim ina t ion in its ad­ve rt is ing co lum ns. The State News will not accept advertising from p e rso n s d isc r im ina ting ag&inst r e ­ligion, r a ce , co lo r , or na­tional origin.

AutomotiveCHEVROLET l§h3 tm pala con-

ve rt ib le . V-&, s t i c k . 19,000 m i le s . Also 1963 Karm annG hia . ED 2-5857; M rs . Bayle, 353- 2939. 4

CHEVROLET, 1^59 convertib le . Automatic t r a n s m is s io n , power s tee r in g , b ra k e s , rad io . F o u r new t i r e s . Good condition. 355- 3259. . ♦ - / f ?

CHEVY II, Nova. ¡9 6 2 ,^o nver t iL bie . New top.' Radio, heater . W hitewalls. Deluxe i n t e r i o r . S p o t le s s1 $1,250. .393-3206. 5

CHEVROLET 1960. White Impala hardtop. T w o-door. Radio, heat­e r . Sharp inside, o u t . Rush. $759. 351-5098. 6

CHEVROLET, 1963 Chevy II, Sup- e r Sport convert ib le . Pow er, au­tom a t ic . Excellent condition.3-’2-2567, IV 5-9111, Ext. 660. 7

C H E V R O L E T 1955, 2 - d o o r , s tan da rd shift. Runs exception­ally well. Snow t i r e s . Best offer over $100. 351-4493. 6

CHEVROLET, 1958 t w o - d o o r B e lray s ix -cy l ind e r . Standard shift. Excellent condition. $550 o r near . 332-8790. 6

CHEVROLET 1$58 Bel Air 2-door hardtop. V-8 automatic . Very good condition. TU 2-0702. 7

CORVAIR 1963 Monza convert^ ible. Maroon and white. P e r fec t condition. P r ic e : $1,595. Phone a f te r 5 pm ., ED 2-8883. 5

AutomotiveCORVAIR, 1964 L a g •on. Aqua. All

t inted g la ss . A c c es so r ie s . Own­e r going o v e rse a s . Call Aziz, 332-4601; 337-1731. 4

CORVAIR, 1^63 Mor.za. A u tom at- ic t r a n s m is s io n . Low mileage. One owner. T ake ove rp aym en ts . Call 655-2574; 655-2601. 4

CORVAIR" 1961. Monza coupe. 4- speed. New t i re s , ba t tery . Ex­ce l len t condition. New c a r o r ­d e red . 351-4730. 5

CORVETTE, 1961. Excellent co n- dition. 270 h.p. Two four b a r r e l c a rb u r e to r s . P o s i t rac t io n . Call F r i t z K irkp a tr ick , ED 2 -3568 .4

DODGE, 1964 V-* stick "shift. $1,500 o r take over paymen-s. Low mileage. TU 2 -9 - 68. 5

FA IR L A N t SPORT Coupe, 1^64. " H i g h P e r f o r m a n c e 289." 16,000 m iles . Bucket seats; 4- speed. $2,300. A -l . 355-6827. 4

FALCON FUTURA, 1964 two- door, hardtop. 260 h.p., V-8, fou r-sp eed . Like new. E x tras . 337-0638, Chuck.

FORD, 1958. S ix-cy linder fou r- docr sedan. Runs good. Very good t i r e s . $150. 355-0822. 5

FORD, 1960 Falcon. Six cy lin - d e r automatic. T wo-door. Good condition. Take over paym ents. Phone ED 2-2752. 4

FORD, 1954 V-8 stick. S ta r t s , ru n s well. $99. Good town c a r . Call Dave, 355-8907. 6

FORD, Fa ir lan e . Excellent condition. Recently overhauled. New t i r e s and ba ttery . Call 355- 7795 after 5 pm. 6

KARMANN GHIA , $ 6 3 . Excellent condition. $1,695, f irm . P h o n e Harold, IV 2-1129; IV 2-9552. 5

METROPOLITAN, 1 $ 5 7. E co - nomical to opera te . 33 m.p.g. good t i r e s , radio, h e a te r . $90. Call 351-4392. 5

OLDSMOBILE, 1961 F-So " C u t - l a s s . " One owner. Automatic , low mileage, excellen t body and engine. $1,150. ED 2-3060. 7

OLDSMOBILE, 1$62 F -S 5 C u t la s s co nver t ib le . F o u r- s p e e d . Power windows and top. $1,295. Phone 482-6614. 7

OLDSMOBILE CONVERTIBLE. C are fu l g r an d m o th e r ’s 1963 dy-

hf, rtemii£’# /h i te . lea th e rC B lae ex­t e r io r . Pow er. Radio, he a te r . $1,995. ED 2-6680. 6

OLDSMOBILE, 1964 F -8 $ four- doo r. H y dram atic , V -6 . Many a c c e s s o r i e s . 4,900 m i le s . Sp t - l e s s . $1,950. IV 2-2804.

O P E L 1^59 2 -d oo r . G re e n . White- walls . Good body, good m echan­ical condition. C lean in te r io r . $200. K rau ss Sunoco. G r a n d R iv e r & Bogue, or evenings. Graduating s e n i o r , bought new c a r . 4

O P E L , 1959 Stationwagon. $300. Very g o o d condition. 42,000 m ile s . 32 m.p.g. C all 355-6440.

4PLYMOUTH 1963 convert ib le .

Exce llent shape. 16,000 m ile s . $1,700. Call OX 4-4781. 7

PONTIAC, 195$ tw o -d oor Sport Coupe. Excellent engine a n d t ran sm is s io n . Good b o d y and t i r e s . $700. 351-5178.

RAMBLER $61, C la s s ic . Custom 9 -p a s s e n g e r w a g o n . Six cy l­inder. O v erdr ive . F ib re g lass c a r top c a r r i e r . E x ce llen t con­dition. $950. 882-3388. 4

Automotive Employment For RentSPRING TIME SPECIAL

Save m oney on a New 1965 F o rd . We need nice late model used c a r s . See us today for an ex tra big allowance on your t r a d e - in .

SIGNS FORD SALES, INC.162 W. Grand R iver

W illiamston 655-2191

STUDEBAKER 1958. 289 V-6, 4 bbl. S tick with ov e rd r iv e . Radio, po w er s tee r in g . Runs perfec t ly . $100. 355-8951. 6

STUDEBAKER 1919 T o u r i n g . R es to ra t io n s well s t a r t e d . Ask­ing $900. Call 332-3300 ev e ­nings. 7

T h LNDERBIRD 1**5 9. White. 2- door hardtop. One owner. Good condition. Phone Dr. T ufts , 355- 6450. 5

T R 3-B R a re 1962. 2.2. engine. Red, rad io , whitewalls, b lue - s t r e a k s , s n o w t i r e s . $1,700. G rand Rapids, 245-9572 days; 534-4533, nights. 4

T R 4 , 1962. Good condition. All T r iu m ph options. Roll ba r , sway b a r . 482-4954.

VALIANT, 1960. Automatic . R a - dio, h ea te r , whitewalls. Good condition. Call a f te r 6, 882-9017.

6T T5T

SPECIAL WANT AD SALE During National Want Ad Week

April 4-10 $1 c■ l A / 0 > J g 1

(N O C A N C E L L A T I O N S )

Don’t Store It - Sell It

ORN. HORT. AND LAND. ARCH, s tuden ts . Saturday and Sunday. Retail c o m m iss io n s a l e s of p lan ts and ga rden supplies . O r ­ientations p r io r to la te M a r c h s t a r t . TIVTSS LANDSCAPE CENTER. IV 4-7753, 12-1. 5

DELIVERY BOYS WANTED. Av- e ra g e $2 p e r hour. Apply at V a rs i ty D rive -In . 6

BUS BOYS WANTED for lunch and d inner m e a l s . C a l l R i c h M cC leary . 332-3581. 4

WAN+feD WAITERS, w a i t re s s e s , kitchen help, cooks, ch efs . F o r work in C o ra l Gables Show B ar, R a th sk e l le r d i n i n g ro o m k it­chen. C all 337-1311. Ask fo rG ee .

_____________ 5EARNING^ ARE unlim ited as an

Avon r ep re se n ta t iv e . T u rn your f re e t ime into $$. F o r appoint­ment in your home, w r i te o r ca ll M rs . Alona Huckins, 5664School S t. , Hasle tt , Michigan o r ca l l evenings, FE 9-8483. C6

BUS BOYS wanted for lunch and d inn er . Cal l s tew ard , at 337- 9071. 8

RELIABLE BUS boys needed. F r in g e benefits . Apply in p e r ­son, Howard Johnsons R es tau ­ra n t , 3224 S. Saginaw. 6

VOLKSWAGEN, 195 7 Karm ann Ghia. 50,000 m ile s . Good condi­tion. Phone 485-0700. 4

VOLKSWAGEN 1 9 6 3 . Sunroof. Red. Whitewalls. Radio. Head­r e s t s . Many e x t r a s . Serv iced r e g u l a r l y . $1,395,355-6229; 372-4338. 5

VOLKSWAGEN, 1964. Sea blue. Radio, he a te r , whitewalls, sea t be l ts . 13,000 m ile s . Exce llent condition. 355-7837. 7

VOLKSWAGEN, 1961. Rebuilt e n - gine. Good condition. $975. Call 332-4465 a f te r 5. 5

VOLKSWAGEN 1964. Gray , red in te r io r . Exce llent condition, 13,000 m iles . Must se l l . White­w alls . 355-8307, 10 am -5 pm . 7

VOLKSWAGEN 19$7. T i r e s , body and m oto r good. R easonab le . 699-2537. 6

VOLKSWAGEN 19 6 i . ¿unroof. Blue. Low m ileage . E D 2 -6 1 9 8 .6

VOLKSWAGEN^ 105 7. R a d i o , whitewalls. F a i r body, ¡jcwd mo­tor;' $225. 353-1828,. • w;. .6

YOLKS’-.AGEN, lf>64. Exce llen t condition. AM-FM sh o r t wave rad io . Sunroof. O th er ex t ra s . $1,600. After 6, IV 5-7084. 6

VOLKSWAGEN, 1962 . R a d i o , h ea te r , whitewalls. Body, t i r e s and m o t o r in t o p condition. $1,000. Phone 332-5266. 7Auto Service & Ports

TIRES: SIZE 6.50, 6.40 x l3, whitewalls. Some ne ar ly new. $2-$8 each. Phone 355-9820, a f te r 5 pm . 4Scooters & Cycles

HONDA 1963. 150. Low m ileage . Phone 351-5493. 5

EmploymentN U R S E -R E G IS T E R E D . E x p e r -

ienced. R espons ib le posit ion . Top pay. D aytim e hours . Give com plete p a r t i c u l a r s in ap p l ica­tion. W rite Box No. B -2 , State News. 20

PA R T -t im e . HAVING a t o u g h t im e fitting a p a r t - t im e job into a v igorous schedule? E arn $60 p e r week working re la te d e v e ­nings and S atu rdays . Call M r. Blythe at 882-6629. 10

DENTAL ASSISTANT. Full time, M o n d a y - F r i d a y. Downtown L ansing. W rite in own handw rit­ing, sta ting age, qua lifica tions. E x p er ie nce not n e c e s s a r y . Michigan S tate News, Box C3. 6

For RentPARKING SPACES availab le now!

Two blocks from c am p u s . Also, g a ra g e for faculty. R easonab le r a t e s . 332-1907. 4

PARKING SPACES. One block to ca m p us . $15 p e r t e r m . ED 7-2345. 5

IN NEW ap ar tm en t house. T w o blocks f rom cam pus . Fu rn ished . One bedroom ap ar tm en t . Rent allowance for so m e ca re tak in g . M usselm an R ealty . ED 2-3583or 482-0179._______________ 6

ENJOY SPRING t e r m in four pe rson a ir -con d i t io n ed a p a r t ­ment. C e d a r Village. $58.75 each, monthly. 351-4316. 4

MALE. SINGLE room with bath. Available im m edia te ly . $50 p e r month. 351-5125. 7

N'Efeb 1 to 2 men for l a rg e Span- ish Villa . A c ro s s f ro m cam pus . C all 351-4353. 7

WANTED: TWO m en for a p a r t - menr. N ear ca m p u s . John o r Bob, 351-4860 a f te r 6. 6

ONE MAN to s h a re tw o-bedroom ap ar tm en t . P a r k i n g . T h r e e blocks to e a s t cam pus . R easo n ­able . ED 7-1487. 6Houses

THREE MEN needed for la rge unapproved house . 15 ro o m s , f i re p la c e s , p r iv a te bedro om s. C all , IV 9-6221. 4

NEED ONE o r two m a le ro o m ­m a tes . S h a re fu rn ished house. P r iv a te bedroom . N e ar cam pus . 324 Hayford. 6

EAST SIDE. 10 blocks f r o m c a m - pus . T h r e e bedroom , furn ished house. Six women o r men. NO 9-2725 days , ask for Helen. Evenings, ED 2-0298. 6Rooms

E STUDENTS. Two double

For SaleGET YOLkS - Phil P r a n k ’s C a r -

toon Book. 50 of P h i l ’s best C ar to o n s in a beautifully bound book - $1.00 each . F o r o r d e r s of five o r m o re , ca l l : 351-4322 between 6 p.m

For Sale Personal

MA room s . $10. 332-2563.

501 M.A.C. Call4

Apartments

" S E E ME F IR S T - 1 HAVE IT!" Standard and p o r tab le ty p ew ri t ­e r s , $29 up. R ecord p la y e r s , $14.95. H i-f i and s te re o p lay ­e r s , $36.50. P o r tab le b a t t e r y - ope ra ted tape r e c o r d e r s , $14.95. T ab le m od els at $49.50. P o r t ­able sewing m achines , $29.50. T ab le m odel rad io , $6 up. R a ­dio a l a rm s , $12.95. B a t te ry p o c­ket s iz e s , $4.95. M icroscop e se ts from ‘‘I ’ll buy anything of v a lu e .”W I L C O X S E C O N D H A N D STORE, 509 E. Michigan Ave. IV 5-4391. C5

BUNK BEDS with m a t t r e s s e s . Good condition. Also, a r m c h a i r s and sofa. C all 351-4230. __5

$20 puts you on a th re e -s p e e d English l i g h t - w e i g h t b i k e through S p r i n g T e r m . ACE HARDWHERE & GIFTS, Grand R iver Ave., a c ro s s f ro m theL’n- ion. ED 2-3312. C

BABY BATH1NETT, $8. H i g h c h a i r , $3 and playpen, $5. C a l i ED 2-5588. 4

EXQUISITE WEDDING RING set. Save a lm ost ha lf ap p ra ised v a l ­ue. Main s tone 3 /4 c a ra t . T h r e e months old. See and c o m p are . U n para l led design and beauty . ED 7-9540. 5

DESKS, BLOND and iim ed oak. F o rm ic a top. Heavy and s tu rdy . $30 each. Phone TU 2-5743. 4

H I-F I : DYNAKIT P A S -3 p r e - a m p and s te re o , 070 am p l if ie r . KLH model. Six sp ea k e rs . G a r r a r d type A ch anger. 2 1/2 months old. B est offer o ve r $450. ED

and midnight. - 2-8264. 6BICYCLE SALE.-Thursday, April

8, 1965, 1:30 p .m . a t Salvage Y ard , F a r m Lane, Michigan S ta te U nivers i ty C am pu s . V a r ­ious m akes and conditions . All i te m s may be seen at Salvage Y ard , Apri l 7 f ro m 8:30 a .m ., to 4:30 p .m . and A p ri l 8, 8:30 a .m . to 1 p.m . T e r m s : C ash. 6

R ocker,LEATHER S W I V E L c h i ld 's ro ck e r , p la s t ic hobby h o r s e , coffee tab le , g ray uphol­s te r e d c h a ir , two sm a l l lea the r davenp orts , l a r g e h a s s o c k . Phone ED 2-5498 o r 882-4428 .6

USED CUES. Your choice, $8. C ue c a s e s , $3.95. G o ld en 8 Ball. 224 Abbott Rd., E . L. 7

G^ TANK vacuum c le an e r . Exce llen t condition. C os t $69 new. S ac ri f ice fo r $18. 372-4213.

6WEDDING GOWN- chapel t ra in .

S ize 9. H a lf -p r ice , $95. 337- 1419. 6

C O L T .38 SPL rev o lv e r ) 4-inch b a r r e l . Official po lice . L i k e new. 50 rounds f re e . 353-2735.6Mobile Homes

A IR L IN ESTEWARDESSES

N e e d e d B y UNITED AIRLINES

" F l y w i th th e a i r l i n e

t h a t o r ig in a t e d

s te w a r d e s s s e r v ic e .

Q ualif ica t ions:S ing leAge: 19 1/2 - 26 Height: 5 '2 ” - 5 ’9 ” Weight: 105 - 140 lb.

G la s s e s , co n tac ts accepted. High School g ra d u a te s with at lea s t two y e a r s of co l lege p r e f e r r e d .

Contact

M.S.U. P lacement Bureau

Student S e rv ic e s Building, In te rv ie w s scheduled,

A p ri l 12 & 13

A n e q u a l o p p o r t u n i t y e m p lo y e r .

SWINGING SUMMER T e r m . Sub- let Eden Roc ap a r tm en t fo r four. $62.50 p e r p e rs o n monthly. Sun porch . 351-5288. 5

ONE MALE to s h a r e th r e e - bedroum ipa r tm en t . P r i v a t e room . $35. U t i l i t ie s paid. ED 2-4541; ED 2-6992. 5

NEED ONE or two g i r l s to sh a re a p a r tm en t . C lo se to cam pus . $50 monthly. 351-5362. 4

SPACIOUS APARTMENT w i t h f i r e p l a c e . A ccom m odate 4. P ark ing . If you need b e t t e r study conditions , ca l l 332-3980. ' 6

.ONE OR two congenia l fem ale ro o m m ates ' to s h a re ap a r tm en t with sam e. N ear cam pus . 337- 0379. 4

WANTED FOURTH ro om m ate for luxury ap a r tm en t . $57.50 p e r month. Pool, a i r conditioned, p a rk in g . C all 332-0262. 4

WANTED M A L E GRADUATE STUDENT T O SHARE 10’ x 58’ m obile hom e. 1/2 m ile from cam pus . 332-2664. 4

TWO MEN wanted fo r B urcham Woods rwo-bedroom apar tm ent. Call Bill, 351-5176 o r Buck, 353- 0037. 4

TWO BEDROOM ap ar tm en t f o r two, th ree men. L arge . V e r y c lean . C lo se . P ark in g . U til i t ies pa id. ED 2-6405.

SUPERVISED APARTMENT for two men. Two blocks from U n-ion. ED 2-0742._____________ 5

MALE TO s h a r e house. 1 1/2 blocks f rom B erkey . $40month­ly. C a l l 489-1541 a f te r 6. 5

TWO MEN, tw o -roo m apartm ent in approved house. $10 weekly p e r pe rso n . 505 Albert Ave. 337-0132. 5

WANTED: FOURTH room m ate for luxury ap ar tm en t . $51 pe r month. 324 Michigan Ave., 0\, E a s t Lansing. 351-4877. 7

OKEMOS. L O V E L Y basem ent ap a r tm en t . Furn ished . Util i t ies pa id. Park ing . P r iv a te . Single o r m a r r i e d couple. Immediate occupancy. Arrowwood Apart­m en ts . 337-9676. 7

FOUR PERSON apar tm ent for the s u m m e r . B u r c h a m W o o d s . C lo s e s t ap ar tm en t to pool, Air conditioning. Available June 15. C a l l a f te r 6, 351-4726. 9

ONE GIRL needed to sh a re th ree g i r l ap ar tm en t . N e w l y fu r ­n ished . U t i l i t ie s paid. $15 p e r week. 485-9411. 8

MEN, APPROVED, superv ised . Two doubles. Bath. Park ing . $9 weekly. Also approved a p a r t ­ment to s h a re . 351-4079. 5

MALE GRADUATE for room . $10 weekly. P ark in g availab le . Call ED 7-9567 a f te r 4. 5

MALE. SINGLE room in th ree man house. $9. P ark in g p r iv i ­leges. ED 2-2882. 5

MEN. LNSLPERVISED. S h a r e two ro o m s . Kitchen p r iv i leg es . N ear c a m p u s . $40 m o n t h l y . Phone 882-0625. 4

Q U I E T , UNAPPROVED. Must have c a r . Also, have two co m ­ple te beds for sa le . 655-1442 a f te r 5:210.. ;j i 4

SINGLE ROOM for m a le s tudent. L inens furn ished . C lose t o c a m - pus. $8.50 p e r week. 332-1682. 4

ROOMS: MALE, approved. V e r y clear, s ingle and double roo m s . R a t e s , reduced. P a rk in g . ED 2-6405. 7

SINGLE ROOM f o r men. Ap- proved a n d su p erv ised . $10 week. Spartan Hall. 215 Louis. ED 2-2574. 5

MALE. SINGLES- doubles'." Two blocks f r o m cam p u s . Bath. P a rk in g available . 437 M.A.C. o r ca l l 351-5304. 4

APPROVED. TWO sing les , one double. Park in g . Block f ro m U n - ion. C lean. 332 MAC. C lo se to every th ing . 4

r e c o r d e r . E xce llen t $30 worth of a c c e s -

n t ire se t , $100. 355-

WATERS EDGE Apts.Has v a c a n c i e s for

1 & 2 StudentsM ike S t it t ED 2-4432

MEN, SUPERVISED, approved, c lean , q u i e t . Cooking. T w o blocks B erkey . Doubles, ha lf ­doubles. 351-4017 a f te r 6 pm . 5

M pN: 130 F e rn . T h r e e p r iva te with cooking p r iv i le g e s , $10. One, s h a r e la rg e room , $8. 332- 0091. . 6

MALE STUDENT, s ingle. Share study, bath. Kitchen p r iv i leg es . P ark ing . Bed linen furnished. C a l l IV 9-0583. 6

WOMEN: GRAD students, a s s i s t - an ts , 27 o r o lde r . Kitchen p r iv ­i leg es . Two blocks from c a m ­pus. R e fe ren c es . 332-1907. 7

MEN: LARGE co m fo rtab le fu r - n ished p r iv a te ro o m . P r iv a te bath. ED 2-5374. 6

For SaleJUST IN - Phil F r a n k 's C a r -

toon Book. 50 of P h i l ’s best C ar to o n s in a beautifully bound book - $1.00 each. F o r o r d e r s of five o r m o re , ca l l : 351-4322 between 6 p .m . and midnight.

DRESSED B E E F , Angus a n d H e re fo rd s . Choice Governm ent inspec ted and cu red . 36$ p e r pound. Phone OR 6-5663. 5

CHEVROLET, 19 5 6 . W ringer w a sh e r , boy’s bike, s t r o l l e r s , baby s c a le s , ch es t , sewing m a ­ch ine. TU 2-1771. 5

VM TA PE condition, s o r i e s . Er 9072. 4

CLARINET, 1956 L e b lan c . E x c e l - lent condition. Make offer . 355- 3022. 4

GENUINE MEXICAN ;:nd G u ata- m a lian a r t i f a c ts , c r a f t s , b lan ­ke ts , r e c o rd s , books. 372-0330.

11

ACCORDION 120 B a s s . L ike new. L e s s than 1/2 p r ic e . Phone IV 4-0692. 5

CHAIRS (2). Newly uph o ls te red nylon f r ie ze . R easonable . We will de l iver . Phone IV 4-4268. 5

CHOICE B E E F for your f r e e z e r . Cut, wrapped, b la s t fro zen and d e l ivered . Call 485-5394. 12

ALUMINUM HARDTOP fo r MCA. Good condition. $150. 339-2472.5

BIG B EE F SALE. F o u r months locker ren t f re e with $70 p u r ­ch ase . T e r m s . BROWERS, Holt, OX 4-3691. 12

TWO FORMALS, cockta il length, one p i n k satin; o the r a g u a / white. S ize 5-7. Worn once. FE 9-8455. 7

RANGE 30" F r ig id a i re . C hrom e d ine tte se t , 4 c h a i r s . R e f r ig e r ­a to r , m isce l lan eo u s . Phone IV 2-5189. 5

$200 MARTEN " F o lk ' gu i ta r . Six months old. $145 o r best offer. Exce llen t condition. C all 353-1315. 5

M EN’S SKI BOOTS, used . S ize 10. $12 o r best offer. 355-3022. 4

ENCYCLOPEDIA BRITTANICA, 1965. Full se t , $300. Save $100. C all 351-4194. 5

BICYCLE S T O R A G E : S a l e s , s e rv ic e a n d re n ta ls . E A S T LANSING CYCLE, 1215E .G ra n d R iver . Call 332-8303. C

GUITAR. DOUBLE neck Gibson Hawaiian. National am p lif ie r . 8 y e a r s old. B es t offer o ve r $90. 372-4971. 6

FIVE MEN’S su i ts . Size 40-42, r e g u la r . New. Outstanding buy for co n se rv a t iv e d r e s s e r . Call Chuck, 351-5484. 6

GREAT LAKES, 10’ x 57' E x - pando tw o-bedroom . F urn ished . C a l l 484-1222. • 4

GENERAL, 1964. F o u r months old. 10' x 50’. Two bedroom s. Can s leep seven. Phone 332- 0934. E a s t L ansing . 5

CHEVROLET C A M P E R bus. S leeps four. Fully equipped, bo t­tle gas heat and r e f r ig e r a to r . Sharp . Phone IV 5-8843. 4

DETROITER !s>60 C ustom deluxe model. 36’ x 8’. One bedroom . C all O p era to r , SLnfield 3-3500.

% 6BARON 1963 TO’ x 3$r mobile

hom e. Will t r a d e for o lder th r e e - f o u r bedroom hom e. 676- 2464 anytim e. 7

COMMEMORATING T H E 12th su m m e r of L'.S. A d v iso rs in V ietnam , STGOOV (The Society to Get Out of V ie tnam ) has a num ber of ‘‘Vie tnam S um m er C a m p " badges for d is s id en t c i t ­ize ns . Send 30$ to: STGOOV, P.O. Box 189, E as t L ansing. 4

Real EstateATTRACTIVE MODERN house.

Designed by Dow. T h r e e bed­ro o m s , two baths. All e le c t r ic kitchen. In te res t in g living a r e a with two s to ry landscape win­dows facing la rg e back y a rd s u r ­rounded by beautiful t r e e s . C om ple te studio a p a r tm en t in b asem en t, s e p a ra te en tran ce . F u rn ish in g s included. 332-1894.

6EAST LANDING, nea r . Leaving

s ta te . F o u r b ed ro o m s , t w o b a ths . Exce llent plan. Conven­ient, s c h o o l s , shopping. ED 2-6046. 6

GROSSBECK - THREE bedroom ranch , 1 1/2 ba ths , living room , dining ro o m , two f i re p lac e s , a t ­tached ga ra ge . IV 5-6296. 5

ServiceDIAPER SERV’tCii, th r e e ty p es

of d ia p e r s to choose f ro m . Bulk wash f o r c le a n e r , w h i te r d ia ­p e r s . Fluff d r ie d and folded. U se you r own o r ren t o u r s .C o n ta in ­e r s fu rn ished . No deposit . 25 y e a r s e x p e r ien c e . BY-LO DIA­PER SERVICE, 1010 E. M ich i­gan. IV 2-0421. C

TV RENTALS for s tuden ts . E c o - nom ical r a t e s by the t e rm a n d month. UNIVERSITY TV R E N T ­ALS. 484-9263. C

C H ILD C A R E for todd le rs i n L n - ive rs iry Village ap a r tm en t . Full or p a r t - t im e . Weekdays. 355- 6015.

RENT your TV f ro m NEJAC. New Zenith p o r tab le for only $9 p e r month. F r e e s e rv ic e and de livery . C all NEJAC TV R enta l. 482-0624. CP I A M I S

PersonalWORLD’S GREATEST Rock ’n ’

Roll Band. T he N1GHTSHIFT.„ Nobody ? can t o u A ■ Ujj, EÒ

2.-8369;^ 532-0527; 4 & -S & & - & .. 1- H M ’E Y O U HEARD? - P h i l

F r a n k 's C a r too n Book. 50 of P h i l ’s be s t C ar to o n s in a b eau­tifully bound book - $1.00 each . F o r o r d e r s of five o r m o re , c a l l : 351.-4322 between 6 p .m . and midnight. 5

A B ETTER PRICE for your c a r at PH1LP DODGE, 1431 E a s t Michigan. See R uss Lay. Phone IV 4-4517. C

JOLLY BOY’S INTERNATIONAL Now accepting m e m b e r s h ip ’s Send $1 to World H e a d q u a r te r s Wood’s Hotel, G rafton , W iscon­sin. 12

C ALL THE PRESIDENTIALS if you want the be st m usic fo r your p a r ty . IV 4-3018. 5

THE STEVE BERGMAN Combos a r e back th is sp r ing to swing! T e r m p a r t i e s and R&R. 351— 4235. 5

THE KNIGHTS OF HARMONY ... A unique sound to the la te s t in dance m us ic . 332-2575. 10

RENT y ou r TV from NEJAC. New Zenith p o r tab le for only $9 p e r month. F r e e s e rv ic e and de livery . C all NEJAC TV Rental. 482-0624. C

ENGLISH AND- W estern rid ing c o u r s e s . E nro l l now and r e ­ce ive f re e bus t ran sp o r ta t io n .882-4863; 355-2015._________ 10

WHO WRITES c ra z y in su ran ce ad you l i k e to rea d ? Pronounce BOO-BOLTS! C4

HOLD ARCHIN] UP, CHARLIE BROulN.

T

a ma 'a Y o lS ’ O S ’

i'm 60IN6 TO Tickle you u)ithTHI5 DANDELION ..if YOÜR CHIN TURNS YêLLOU) IT MEANS YOU LIKE BUTTER..

/ ' \ yes L . 7 ( f Æ n \ /

vOt/\HEV, LOOK! CMARLie BROWN

LIKES BUTTER!

I DON 0€R IF MY FONDNESS ft* DAIRY PRODUCTS WIU. UKPUSUMBN1 6 AMES

DELUXE STUDENT LIVINGNOW LEASING

FALL 1965

D el ta - E v e r g r e e n - H a s l e t t U n iv e r s i ty T e r r a c e

O E H M• PROPERTY

MANAGEMENT CO. O W E D M A N 444 M ich. Ave. 332-0838

Who Really Has More Fun?

PI KAPPA PHI

. . . looking forward to seeing you Tuesday and Wednesday night, 7-10 for open rush at the Pi Kappa Phi house. C all ED 7-9734 For R ides

M ic h ig a n State N e w s , E a s t L a n s in g , M i c h i g a nT u e s d a y , A pr i l 6, 1965

ServiceA C C I D E N T P R O B t E M i C a l l

Kalam azoo S tre e t Body Shop. Sm all dents to la rge w reck s . A m er ican a n d foreign c a r s . G u aran teed work. 489-7507.1411 E as t Kalam azoo. C

DIAPER SERVICE, sa m e d ia - p e r s re tu rn e d . E i th e r y o u rs o r o u rs . With our s e rv ice , you may include t w o pounds of b a b y c lo thes that do not fade. Diaper pail fu rn ished .

AMERICAN DIAPER SERVICE 914 E. G ie r St.

IV 2-0864 Cw E d d In g ANNOUNCEMENTS—

Save 10%. T H E WELLS PRINT­ING COMPANY. Phone 355-1942 o r 332-2143 for appointment. CIO

EXPERIENCED MOTHER w i l l c a r e for p re - s c h o o l child in E as t Lansing home, n e a r F r a n - d o r . Good re fe re n c e s . 332-3485.

______________ 4Typ ing Service

BARBI MEL, P ro fess io n a l typist . No job too la rg e o r too sm al l . Block off cam p u s . 332-3255. C

BEV TALLMAN. Your theses , t e r m p a p e r s , e tc . Typed in my hom e. E le c t r ic ty p e w r i te r . 372- 3849. ~ C6

PAL'LA ANN HAL’GHEY, typist. IBM S e le c tr ic D is se r ta t io n s , th e se s , t e r m p a p e r s . 337-1527.

CTYPING DONE in my home. Pick

up and de liver . Phone IV 5-4604.

N ever has so l i t t le done so muchl F o r jus t a few c e n ts aday, you can sell you r “ Don’t W ants" and r e c e iv e cash!

Placement Bureau Chinese Dinner SetService

EDIÊ STÀRR, t y p i s t . T h ese s , d is s e r ta t io n s , t e r m p a p e rs , g enera l t y p i n g . Experienced . IBM E le c t r i c . OR 6-2645. C

JOÉ RÉSUMES, ¡00 copies , $4. ALDINGER DIRECT MAIL Ad­v e r t is ing , 533 N. C l ip p e r t . IV 5-2213. C

ANN BROWN typis t and m u lt i - lith offset p r in t ing (black and white and color) . IBM. G enera l typing, t e rm p a p e r s , t h e s e s , d is s e r ta t io n s . 332-8384. C

TransportationRIDE WANTED for two to P i t t s ­

burgh o r Willow Run a i rp o r t . T h u rsd ay , April 8, 2 pm . 353- 0331. 4

Wanted

CAMPUS: "T H I A M T -— 3 S 7 -O S 7 1 ► u m « —

Starts THURSDAY! /

2 O u ts tand ing A ttra c tio n s

BLOOD DONORSTieeded. ~$'5 for RH Posit ive ; $7 for RH Nega­tive. D etro i t Blood S e rv ice , Inc. 1427 E. Michigan Ave., Hours 9-4, Monday, T uesday , W ednes­day, F r i d a y . 12-7 T hursday . 489-7587. 48WANTED':' LADIES' left-handed golf clubs. In good condition. Phone 355-1387. 5

WANTED: A used English bike with f o u r - g e a r t r a n s m is s io n . Phone 355-4191. 5

LA S T 2 DAYS 1 ¡00-3:05-5 :10-7:20-9:30

A p r i l 12, M o n d a y G i r l s ’ Vacation Fund: G enera l

C ounse lo rs , P r o g r a m D ire c to r , W aterfront C o u n se lo rs , C ra f t s , C ra m a t ic s , M u s i c and C a m p N u rse . E ast Windham, N.Y. (Fe­male)

Goff 's R es tau ran t and C a te r ­ing: HRI m a jo rs ( j u n i o r s and above) for food s e rv ic e m an ag e r for yacht and country club. Wau­kesha , Wise. M /F

Michigan Capitol G ir l Scout Council: Camp D eer T r a i l s : Unit L e a d e r s , Unit A s s i s ta n t s , W ate r ­front A ss is tan ts and N u rse . H a r­r iso n , Mich. (F)

P ine Point R eso r t : Head Chil­d re n s ' C o u n s e l o r , C h i ld ren s ’ C ounse lo rs , W ai te rs , Bus Boys, B a r te n d e rs , Social D i r e c t o r , Desk C le rk . M /F . E lkhar t Lake, Wise.

P r o c te r and G am ble C o.¡Sum ­m e r em ployment fo r men one y e a r from d e g re e s in: C hem i­ca l , M echanical and E lec tr ica l Engineering , MBA’s with tech­n ical u n derg radua te deg ree . Male Cincinnati , Ohio

A p r i I 12 a n d 13 Sky Chefs, Inc.: H R Im ajo rs(B)

fo r p e rm anen t em ployment and HRI jun io rs fo r s u m m e r em ploy­m ent. M /F . V arious locations

A p r i l 12, M o n d a y Belding Area Schools: English,

A r t , English, H is to ry and Gov­e rn m en t , Vocal M usic , B us iness Education, M ath-Sc ience C om ­bination m a jo rs (B). M / F . Bel­ding, Mich.

Durand A rea Schools: E lem en­t a r y Education, Specia l E duca­

tion T ype " A ” , English, A r t - Homemaking, Math and Physica l Education m a jo rs (B). M / F . Du­rand , Mich.

Goodyear T i r e and Rubber Co.: Indus tr ia l A d m in is tra t ion and a l l m a jo rs of the C olleges of A r t s and L e t te r s , Com m unication A r ts and Social Science, M echanical E n g in ee rs and E le c t r ic a l Engi­n eer ing m a jo r s (B). M ale. J a c k ­son, Mich.

H a rp e r C re ek C o m m u n i t y Schools: E a r ly and L a t e r E le ­m e n ta ry Education, C om m unica­tion Skills and Science and So­cia l Studies, Math and Science, B us iness Education, Speech C o r ­rec t io n m a jo r s (B,M). M /F . Bat­t le C re ek , Mich.

l .B.M. C orp .: E le c t r ic a l , Me­chanica l and C hem ical Eng in ee rs (Male), P h y s i c s , M athem atic s and C h em is t ry m a jo rs (M /F) (D). Various

Lakeview School D is t r ic t : E l­e m en ta ry Education, English and H is tory , G en era l Science, Eng­lish (som e J o u rn a l i sm b a c k ­ground d es ired ) , D ire c to r of C u r ­r icu lum , G ra d e s 1 th ru 12, and Visiting T e a c h e r (B,M). M / F . B att le C reek , Mich.

Maple G rov e School B o a rd of Education: E lem e n ta ry Educa­tion m a jo rs (B,M). M / F . F la t Rock, Mich.

M erck & Company, Inc.: C hem ­i s t ry , Biology, a l l m a jo rs of the C olleges of B us iness , A r t s and L e t te r s , Com m unication A r t s and Social Science with Science C ou r­ses (B). M ale. Michigan

T he National C ash R e g i s t e r

MSU Asian-Latin American-

waiter matthauTlB o th n o m in a te d fo r th e A c a d e m y A w a rd

African SeriesF ontastic A d v e n tu re s a n T ru e !

¡UNDERWATER c o c o n NOMINATED FOR

T H EFINEST HOURS: P'Mution q! le vien films

C O L O R

7 Academy Awards!1. Best Motion P ic tu re2. B est Actor3. Best Supporting A c tress4. Best D ire c tio n5. Best Screenplay6. Best A rt D ire c tio n (B la c k and W hite)7. B est C inem atography (B la c k and White)

"Zortia The Greek”

presents

HAZEL CHUNGF i r s t L a d y o f I n d o n e s ia n D a n c e '

M iss Chung, who has s t a r r e d in s e v e ra l b roadw ay productions , is profic ien t in b a l ­le t , j a z 7 and m od ern dance, as well as S ia m e se , Indian, Javanese , . B alinese, and Sudanese .

Tonight: Tuesday A p ril 6 — 8:15 p.m.Fairchild Theatre

Admission: MSU Students, $1.50 Public, $2.00

Tickets on Sale at Union T icket Office, Paramount Newshop

ANTHONY QUINN . ALAN BATES . IRENE PAPAS. LILA KEDROVA . GEORGE FOUNDAS

starts FRIDAY APRIL 23rd!

YOU ARE

INVITED

TO ATTEND A

WEEK OF

PARTYFASHIONS

Tuesday, A p r i l 6th Through Saturday, A p r i l 10th

Informol Modeling 1 To 5 P.M.

(Wednesday from 1 to 8 P.M.)

A full w eek 's showing of exciting, newly a r r iv e d ca m p u s p a r ty fash ions . Enjoy a re lax ing v is i t with o u r student h o s te s s e s while you d is c u s s the gala ac t iv i t ie s ahead. R e f re sh m en ts .

DRESS SALON

Co.: All m a jo rs of the College of B us iness with em ph as is on Ac­counting m a jo rs (B). M ale. L an­sing , Mich.

N orthern I llinois U n ivers i ty : Hotel, R es tau ran t , and Insti tu­tional Management m a jo rs (B,M). M / F . DeKalb, 111.

P ea t , Marwick, Mltchel a n d Co.: Accounting m a jo r s (B.M). M ale . Various

Radio C orpora t ion of A m er ­ic a : Packaging Technology m a­j o r s (B). M ale. Indianapolis . Ind.

Remington Office S ystem s - Division of S p e rry Rand C orp .; Accounting m a jo rs (B). New York M ale

School D is t r ic t of the City of F e rn d a le : E lem en ta ry Education, Phy sica l E d u c a t i o n , Spanish, E nglish , R em edia l Reading and Social Studies, M usic , English (B,M). M /F . F e rn d a le . Mich.

School D is t r ic t of the City of Wyandotte: E lem e n ta ry Educa­t ion, Vocal M usic , I n d u s t r i a l A r t s , Jo u rn a l i sm , English, Math an d B u s in ess Education, Special Education, Psychologis t (B). M / F . Wyandotte, Mich.

Smith, Hinchman & G ry lls , As­so c ia te s , Inc.: C iv i l ,M echan ica l , and E lec tr ica l E ng in ee rs (B,M). M ale . Detro t, Mich.

United A ir l in e s : Hotel, R e s ­tau ra n t and Insti tutional Man­agem en t m a jo rs (B). M ale. Chi­cago , 111.; all m a jo rs , a ll col­leg es fo r S tew a rd es se s (B). F e ­m a leW aterford Township P u b l i c Schools , Oakland County Chil­d r e n ’s Village School: Special Education Type ’’A” M entally R eta rded , Emotionally D is tu rbed (B.M), Counseling and Guidance (M,D). M /F . Pontiac, Mich.

An e ig h t -c o u r s e Chinese din­n e r which is open to the public, w ill be held at the M a r t in L uther Chapel Student C e n te r Saturday a t 6:30 p .m .

T h is is the sp r ing d inn er spon­s o re d by t h e C h in ese Student Club.

T h e m enu , p r e p a r e d by th re e n e w ly -a r r iv e d c o o k s , Includes d ish e s r e p r e s e n ta t iv e of North , C e n t r a l and South China: Can­tonese b a rb e cu e po rk , Chungking beef with brown sauce , Shanghai co ld ch icken , Taiw an cold dish, Peking sweet and so u r r ib s , cab­bage and ham , egg-foo-yung and Yanchow f r ie d r i c e .

T ick e ts can be p u rc h a s e d from M r s . Wold at the U.N. Lounge in the Union Building fo r $1.75.

On WK10:05 a . m . - —Music R oom —

DOHNANY1: V a ria t ion s ona N ur­s e r y Tune. ,

2 p .m .— Spring S e r e n a d e ™ HANDEL: “ B e n e r ic e ,” O v e r ­tu re ; C H A U S S O N : P o e m e ;PAGANINI: Violin C o n ce r to No. 1; BRAHMS: Academ ic F es t iv a l O . v e r t u r e ; R. STRAUSS: Ein Heldenleben.

R e s e rv a t io n s should be m ade by T h u rsd ay by ca l l ing the follow­ing n u m b ers a f t e r 5 p .m . — 351— 5126, 332-6118, 351-5098 o r 337- 2628.

Course Offered In African Dance

" A fr ic a n D a n ce ," t h e f i r s t A m er ican c o u r s e on the indige­nous dances of T ro p ica l Africa , i s being jointly offered th is q ua r­t e r by the A fr ican Studies Cen­t e r and the D epartm en t of HPR.

F ea tu r in g th e o re t ic a l , p a r t ic i ­pation and f i lm se s s io n s , the c o u rs e focuses on the functions, s t ru c tu r e s and s ty les of African dance.

Students m ay take it for 1 c red ­it (HPR 111) o r 3 c red i t s (HPR 424). T h e c l a s s m e e ts T ues­days and T h u r s d a y s , 1:10-2:15, in the Women’s In t ram u ra l Build­ing.

Calt'iuiar ofEvents

MSU Flying Club—7 p .m . . Old C ollege Hall , Union. ‘

learn Israeli Falk Dances

E v e r y w e e k ,T u e s d a y 7:30 p .m . Union , Room 21F r e e Admission

E v e r y o n e W e lco m e !F i r s t M eet ing ,

April 6Is rae li Student C lub

H i l le l Foundation

10 a .m . — O n C a m p u s—N irm al K u m ar-B o se

1 p .m .— M u s l c T h e a t e r — M usical , “ C a r n iv a l . “

11:15 p .m .— R ecita l S tage— J e a n - P i e r r e Ram pai, f lute.

MostCompleteStudy Aid

orig inal . . .Campus Summaries

Atl. Nat. Sci. Hum. B asic College C o u rse s

MARSHALL MUSIC307 E. G r . R iv e r 332-6997

M IC H IG A N 01-7111 twroOM* TkOM ► 011*0« ...... r ’ MOWSHOWING •

$. $ 8 % 8 » S- yf •* >:: * * *' • • * & *

* CONTINUOUS I POPULAR* PERFORM ANCISI I PRICES I $

: STANLEY KRAMER “ITS A !mi si «in ■ ^ .AMAD,

I iiuiu MAD, MAD,i PANAVSmr u i n« flCDMICOLOR* J ™ , , , *

UMTEO artists WORLD gFeature Times „

1:00-3:40-6:25.9:20

Next! ’Hush...Hush Sweet Charlotte

JacobsonsMEN’ S SHOP

210 ABBO TT ROAD

p erm an en t c re a se s

w ash ing after w a sh in g ,

th at ’s the b e a u ty of

MEN’S STA-PRESS

LEISURE SLACKS

F irs t-day freshness

w i th o u t i r o n in g , re a d y fo r

w r in k le - f r e e ac t ion . . .

p le a t ie s s , b e l t lo o p , cu ffed

s lacks t r im ly t a i lo r e d

o f d a c ro n p o ly e s te r a n d co tto n ,

K o ra t ro n -p ro c e s s e d so th a t

they go th ro u g h l im i t le s s w a s h in g s

a n d d ry in g s w i th o u t lo s in g th e ir

c rease. N a tu r a l , n a v y , ta u p e ,

o l ive . 28 to 40 s izes. 7 . 9 8

Jacobsons

B ES T IN FO R E IG N FILMS

3 3 2 -Z S l*/• TODAY . . . 7:00 p .mPETER FINCH and RITA TUSHINGHAM „GIRL WITH GREEN EYES

7:30, 9:35 p .m .# FRIDAY:

I P re s e n te d in coopera t ion with MSU’s A m er ica n Thought and

anguage D e par tm en t.

JOSH WH »

SPINOCI FMMNC

Tracy March Kelly* lm i« H TT b«W in d '

GE6TDRIVE'SIASI tANStN*

ENDS TONIGHT Exclusive Showing

S h o w n T w i c e a t 7 : 3 7 - 1 1 : 0 32 n d F I R S T R U N HIT

1 f f UNDERn

2 n d a t 9 : 2 2T O M O R R O W

C A r y G R aN TL e s u e C a t o n

tec h nico lo r*

TrevoR HowarDK Grsnoi Company Production • A Universal fctosc

Why So Many Phi Kaps?1 out of every 27 Americans are presently members of a

G reek-le tte r society. Many of these, especially at MSU, be­long to Phi Kappa Sigma.

Why?

Mainly because the objects which are the capstone of Skull House are considered by many men to be very s im ila r to the ir own.

'Skull House”

" T H E objects o f this Fraternityshall be the promotion o f good fellowshipand the cultivation o f the social virtuesamong its members;the protection o f the just rightsand the advancement o f the best interests,present and future, individual and collective,o f all those who shall be brought togetheras members o f this Fraternity;the encouragement o f good scholarshipand hreadth o f training fo r its members;and cooperationin the educational and cultural programs o f institutions o f higher education in which chapters are located.”

Founded in 1850 *46 Chapters internationally1964 Greek Sin# Champs •1964 Greek Week Winners

• Once a Phi Kap , always a Phi Kap

The SKULLS j g of PHI KAPPA SIGMA

236 N. H arrison

ED 7-1611

¡8 M ichigan State N e w s , E a s t Lansing^_M^chi_gan T u e s d a y , A pr i l 6, 1965

Double S & H G re e n Stam ps f VERY W ednesday

W t rasorva tha righ t to lim it q u a n tititt. P r ic tl affoctlva thru Sat., A p ril 1«.

y o u (Ju s t G a n t (B e a t c JJ ia t K ia tio n a lA t N ational, Buy O nly Yo u r

Favorite Fryer PartsW M i A Q c f^ t C Q

T f V lb Brutti %ß\ßFryer LapA t National, a ll Pryor Port* a r t Hand-cut fa t your c a t i r | pleasure!

€lb

U.S.D.A. Cheica leaf, Volue Way Trimmed

Swiss SteaksFaecy

Blade Cet Chuck Steak 49C Select

Reead Beee i l Shoulder

Cet 69Clb

Frath Florida Marsh Seedless

Grapefruitic5 4y

F rttk , Crispy Salad Fixin's, lo m s iiw

Escarofe or Endive.U.S. No. 1, F iiio tt Q uality

Winesap ApplesRayai Hawaiian Brand

Pineapple. . . .Hat Heuso Grown

Mushrooms . . .

3-lb.Btj

No. 7 't Site

Lb.

1 9 :3 9 *

3 9 ‘

4 9 ‘Packaged F r tih Daily, Slaw a t ^ mm rn

Tossed Salad . . . . . . » . ' 1 5In P lo itlc Cup a a n .

Diced or Pitted Dates '°-v 3 9Diamond n a n ' «

Large Walnuts & 4 9ta r Your Lawn mm j n b j a m

Michigan Peal . 5 0 - 5 9

National's Hickory Smokad, Fully

GenerousSkankPortion

Cooked H am s..

National Mas the

Easter Hams4 5 ,1

U.S.D.A. Choice Beef, Value Way Trimmed

ChuckR oast..

13-16Lb>.

Hickory Smokad, W hola or Shank H a lf

Cooked Hams -Give a Ham fo r Eastor, Fancy, Fully Cooked a A A #

Fruited Hams 6 9 nBonatesi, Th in Sliced

Breakfast Ham . . . .Extra-fancy, Flavor-curad, Fully Cooked

Easter Wrapped Ham

National's Fully Cooked, Completely

U.S.D.A. Choice Beef, Value Way Trimmed

BonelessU.S.D.A. Choice Beef Steak £ d O Q

(Boneless Top Sifloill . . . . IU.S.D.A. Choice Beef, Rolled and Tied

(Bone/essChuck Roast .

M ickleberry 's Famou» Old Fashion J 6 #

Sliced Honey L oaf . . . . - 3 9

lb.

cib.

10-13Lbs.

8 9

59 ,:

Boston B utt Style, Completely

iBoneless Pork RoastPro-diced, Loon, Tender ond F lavorfu l

iBoneless Beef Slew.

■ i l l

79 :4 9

7 9 :

$ib.

clb.

Booth's Famous Pon-roedy

Frozen Breaded Shrimp.Pooled and Do-vainad, Fancy C ockta il Sise ̂ ^ O

Booth's Frozen Shrimp . v.-;So Frosh Brand, Fast-

Frozen Cod Fillets s s s s

1-lb.Pkg.

1 - l b .Pkg.

99:2 39

39 :

BonelessHams

Whole,or

ShankHalf 69C

lb

Orchard Frosh, Fancy California

FruitCocktail

1-Lb.Can

Kraft's Famous Salad Dressing

Miracle Whip194 9

300 Extrat AH Oreen-Stamps

W ith T h e se C o u po n s!

QuartJar

UhKTtO EDITION—COLLECTOR'S A L B U M -H IT TUBES THAT S O U OVER A MILLION C O M E S - A V A IU H E AT TOIM NATIONAL FOOD STORE

Campbell s Tender Hearted

Pork & Beans 2 “ 2 5 '2 9

Swansdown, for Perfect Cakes1-Lb.,3-0z.Box

Puts New White Strength in Yenr Laundry, Dent Pack

• •

A jax DetergentClown tike A White Temnde, Dent Pick,

A jax Liquid .Cnte The Big ink Dawn ta She, Dent Pock

A jax Floor & W allHoi I nitwit Chlorine Bleach,

A jax Cleanser . .Windows Sptrhie with A |u

Window Cleaner

• •

• •

2• a

3-Lb.,1-0x.Box

1-Pt.,12-Or.Bottle

3-Lb.,M ix.Sixe

14-Ox.Cant

B-Ox.Sixe

Flavors Preserved in Glass, Top Treat. No Deposit Bottles,Lemon-Llme, Cola, Orange,Root Beer or Strawberry

Far Luxurious Complexion Cara

Palmolive Soap. .Far Lexuriou t Complexion Cora

Palmolive S o ap. .Latham in ta Ocaons o f Fragrant Suds q < 6

Vel Beauty Bar 2 ,:- 3 9Saaks ths Kids Clean, No Bathtub Ring m o k .

Soaky Liquid Fun Bath . . 6 9C a m .. Gravy T ra in < ) j F . lb . $ ^ 8 9

D09 Food . . . . . a ) Baa JL

Cake MixesA Delicious Dessert, Hawthorne Mellody m

, , Sherbet “ 4 9 *72*56*95*3 3 *29* Large Eggs

0

2 0 % O k f Cow Suds, fo r Autom atics, Deal. Pack 3 -lb ., M M m

2 3 Ad ADvanced Detergent. - 6 43 M Oool Pock, fo tt-D ltto lr in g P ockets 1-lb ., M W S A ,

4 9 Action Bleach Packets. , — 7 3M ild , Mode fo r Doing Dishos by Hand 1 -p in t, M B i »

Vel UquM Detergent. . . 6 5Gets Clothes Cleoner, Deal Pack 3 - lb ., . M A ,

FABulous Fab Detergent. '•*O TAll-Purpose Liqu id Detergent, Deal Pack 1-p t., ■ V 6 #

Palmolive Liquid _______ 5 3

Pop .Gaines Gravy Train

Dog FoodServe the Finest, Grade A Fresh

6 “ 3 9

5 69. -43

Gaines Gravy Tra in

Dog Food...........................2 - 3 9Gold I M m s s I g A g M m ,

Palmolive Soap............... 2 — 3 1Plastic Food W rap , Deal Peck M M e

Baggies Food Wrap . . . 6 1Gaines Gravy T ra in M a n

Dog Food 1 0 - $1 39Gold Daodorant u m m m m _

Palmolive Soap. . . . . 2 — 4 3

r ()ai j d / h r da t j i jou save /ow, low p n c e s p l u s • o /a t j a j t c r d a y t jou v / w

N A T I O N A L C O U P O N

FREE W IT H THIS COUPON

; 5 0 E X T R A gsr*xBhn S T A M P S Ii W ith purchase of 1 Lbs. o r Mors |

A LL BEEF HAMBURGER• Redeem th is Coupon i t Nstlonel Food j > Stores. Coupon expires Saturday, A pril 10 •

N A T I O N A L C O U P O N

FREE W IT H THIS COUPON :

j 50 E X T R A GREeHN S T A M P S !1 W ith purchase of one Dosen or more •

FRESH ORANGES! Redeem th is Coupon i t Notional Food 1 ; Stores. Coupon expires ts tu rdsy , A p ril I t . ;

N A T I O N A L C O U P O N

FREE W IT H THIS COUPON :

150 E X T R A 0sr£ehn S T A M P S jW ith Purchase of 4 Lbs. or More

CABANA BANANAS; Redeem th is Coupon at National Food j j Storas. Coupon Expires Saturday, A pril 10. :

N A T I O N A L C O U P O N

FREE W IT H THIS COUPON :

j 2 5 E X T R A 6* r« hn S T A M P S jW ith purchase of a 10*oz. Pkg.

i National Maid Bread Crumbs! Rodtom this Coupon ot National Food | S Storas. Coupon Expiros Saturday, A pril to.!N s s s s s e t s s n e s s a s s s s s s s . s t s s s s s s s s s ts s s t s s s s s s s s s s s s s f

N A T I O N A L O O U P O N

• FREE W IT H THIS COUPON

! 5 0 E X T R A greemn S T A M P S !W ith Purchase o f a 1-Lb. Jar

TOP TASTE GRAPE JAM• Radoom th is Coupon at National Food * | Storas. Coupon Expiros Saturday, A p ril ID. |

N A T I O N A L C O U P O N

FREE W IT H THIS COUPON

125 E X T R A green S T A M P S !W ith Purchasa o f a 4-oz.

NATCO BLACK PEPPERj Radoom th is Coupon at National Food | S Storas. Coupon Expiros Saturday, A p ril 10. *

N A T I O N A L C O U P O N

i FREE W IT H TH IS COUPON

!2 5 E X T R A g*r1 e hn S T A M P S !W ith Purchasa o f a 14-oz.

j EASY LIFE SPRAY STARCH j• Radoom th is Coupon at National Pood S | Storas. Coupon Expiros Saturday, A p ril I t . |

N A T I O N A L C O U P O N

FREE W IT H THIS COUPON

¡2 5 E X T R A green S T A M P S !j W ith Furebate o f a Can o f Bilicono ;

AQUA VELVA LATHER! Redeem this Coupon at National Food { | Etorat. Coupon Expirot Saturday, A p ril IE .!