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New lirary Check-Out ¡ J F K S u m m o n s L a t i n s e w S y s t e m [T...

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«lahlfohed 1909 Vol. 52 , No. 154 lirary Check-Out ew System considered By LANK WICK Slate New* Staff Writer i if" library checkout system one enabling the library user '»nder from division to division without annoying door- » may go into effect at the MSI' library Anione its many I'fitaies would be the virtual elimination of book-stealing .rding to Dr. Richard E. Chapin, director of the library, new system, a central circulation and door check, must t he O.K.'d by the administration He has asked Provost i! A Miller for a go-ahead (CORDING TO MILLER. no action will IxMaken on the e until President John A. Hannah returns to the country ; ve come to no conclusion yet.” said Miller. I want to talk er with the president " .Idler said that before the academic year is ov er a decision he made on the issue, but he did not say whether or not he »red it. cording to Chapin, the new system would have ntanv ad tastes for both library patrons and employees ’» re ’s how it would work ,;e present dpor-checks in each division would he discon ed Studenti could wander from division to division w ithout ig constantly checked, and all stacks would remain ojien SSKiVED READING would remain as is These books id continue to be checked out at division desks and would certain time limits r.e of the main change* would tie the central book check- ■;n the library lobby. All two-week books Irom any division >e library would be checked out at the long desk across the from the entrance to Humanities I Also, all hooks would iumed there, instead of to each division is system would save the student much time and effort instead of standing in several lines to check out books, he check them all out at this one large desk Also, lie can re- all his books here, and won't have to make the climb to m tiiem ts other divisions F MAJOR CHANGE. the one most likely to halt stolen *. would be that ail exits from the library will he check- s Here packages, briefcases, containers and books would becked, much the same as is now done in each division, main dUference with the new svstem w ould be ttvt wtl be at these exits at all time* the present divisional door-check system there are times when no one is at the door. Often the person «r nt worker at the door is called awav to other duties, cr i for a class, and leaves an opening which makes book- ea*y. ft the new central check-out system the onlv dutv of the Ls at dm exits would be tlie checking of libtarv patrons, v would not be called away for other duties CORDONATO CIIAI'IN al*Hit *10 000 worth of books are jntljr atalmi each vcar. He stressed that before the dtyistnn- signed reading was begun in Se|Hemher 3t* the figure was to M EW annually With the new system. Chapin ho|*-s 1 the loss to the lowest possible. But. he so»» s.inu- theft «tating, (See WOULD CUT T1IKFT l'age li 8tadentn Drive and H a e. Go Modern. Ye Olde Oxford tfk-Ox- », jed Mem p to dale aad stop Irtg W f If fggra to a char i t iato a «bop that k practices «re ape filSra to eld «to launched by Keith Thomas an undergraduate who ettitjra puG heat urn called the Oxford v! i ' Ulne - " T •‘University’ regulations he said in a hard hitting editori;»!. to re- to obey ( p i lor whales nie Otoie rules was iderson Give» Recital night aft Aim I CURANOS B A T P in J l Neue N ato Wrfter uaic dmurtmmt will • t Man— Sanderson d apartaba», to a «rad lai ef Flui* and Clan * * the Musk and. toa rtuámt ta ! Rus- Rita lac ■mm »Wh aW~ Mr parterm Op •»«tort- TAon can- wili “Sto Stadbes by | "should lie reasonable me a tires to meet. cooienn»»r«rs -circumstances not a pictur- esque hangover from the 17th centurv " Oxford fnneri.it' »»« found cd long before that in the 12th ' century and its regulation* are issued annual)' in a memoran . dum writt- n m I atm I Thomas ridiculed su< h rules as the one that prohibit* stu beats from entering tobaccon- ist's shop* unless for an ur gent reason' approved by the umversit* chancellor The statute oa yeh* les lit- erally translated from the la Un say* that all scholar» shall ahstalh Irom the o*e of vehicles in which they them salves are carried a* driver* i by whatsoever name they may I be railed ' unie** lnense is j granted to anyone bacauae^af : ill health or any raaaanabi* I cause '* la U3 D the university pro* 'tars dacraad no schoiar shall ' ascend into the am m a chariot ' during term time without leave of the pew tor* Another strange regulation ¡says a professional actor who ¡takas the stage within lie am verspy or *s pracinrts without permission urn be sent to ¿ad ' editor Thomas sanunad up the rasa for ahaidiaa this way • otwatete statutes land ta brag the practanai toMuea ta- ll» N tviiijj MSI) For 51 Year* bunt Lansinj!, .Michigan, Tnmday Morning, March 11,1961 Ilk Panna SecorKl Cl»»* M i l » l .rlltS It* rage* p „ d „ ta « Lansing. Mich. J ¡JF K Sum m ons Latins [To Join Ten Year Plan iT o W o rk fo r B e tte r Life PHOTOGRAPHERS' CONVENTION ’?“- What dees a phetwrrapher do when lii' s Hway from his wife- \l Denrau nl ih»- IW-lruit News likes to move ia -‘lose while his fellow photographer* are inorr conservative. Jaaire Riggs. Way or senior, models al Ihe Vlichigan Press Photographers' ( oafrrrnce held here kp.1 weekend. (Photo by Fred, Brill lodii Secretary ofWelfare Adding Parochial Aid to Bill WASHINGTON !’ vue larv ut Wcitare Abraham K i Im colf said Monday he i» ahso lutciy o|»|K>M'(i ' to mcltiding anv non-public school aul in tlu> Kennedy ailnuni'lration s *2 .1 tiilhon aid io ed’ .it al uni bill io iisiì M 'I ihii< and |>a- uh Miai s< h»H)l ani logether would he “must tragic." Ribt- cotf lobi a House Educaimn xuheamniittee and would jeo pardi/.»' thè wdmmistration pro- gram Al thè .>ame tune Bibuoll reliiM-d to commit thè adntin istration in advaiue on any separale legtslation to aid pri- vai** Sv hools ' \ s e r i o ti > « onstitutiunal an hhishop of the Human ( alh nlu XrchdHH esi* v*f New York reiterated his opposition to an federal aid program that rv etudes private and church-r» la ted school* In a statem ent iss.ie*! in N. a York the Cardinal sold II ttie Congress dec »des then* would be federal aid liii'ii certainly anv legislation should *onfnrm to the jeirr ¡- ples oi sih lal jlisu.it «Hi-a. treatment and mm-discrimma tron SEN WVVM . M i s, J) (ire ' .ni e,.tu .1 thè Senate Kdu< a turo subì ominiUce wlinli is al so i ondu» tmg tuarings on tp*. legislatioi) ut ged Catholic ieatlel s tu ni;,un from press- ing fui a pai'« Dia! si hool amendment Some Congre*- membets an*i CathulH s|«»kesmen have »a'd thè a.iministration luti should *«• anien.led to pi ovide (or In" interest long terrò loans lo • hiirch and «thei pi i v a I 'se fi»«fi - WASHINGTON V I’resi doi.t Kennedy summoned all of l.atin- America Monday night to ]<nn this nation in a vast 10- ¡year plan to spread hope, free- dom and a better life through the Western Hemisphere Th»* United Slates Kennedy (pledged, will do its part "to ¡complete the revolution oi the ¡(Americas—to. build a hemi- sphere where all men can h«iH' I lor the same high standard of ’• living -and all can live out ■their lives m dignityweand in j f r e e d o m | Bill. Ihe President <auttoned | great dang«*rs as well .i' gre.d challenges he ahead because Iol alien forces which once again seek to impose the des Sii/anii Price Keu|»|>ointe<l Hie Board <d Student I'ubli cations Monday reapimmted Su/.inu Price East latnsuig s»-nioi and Gerald l.tmdv Gai den -City -senior editor in < hi«-t and business manager. res|HT tivelv of the State News The ap|Hiintments are tor sjiring term In other a. lion fin hard I Harris .fifth-yeai veterinary medicine student from Blight on. Mass . was appointed edi tor of if» MSI Vetnrmarian ItotM-rt J Youiig f i f t h yt**M vel’erinary medu'ine stuih’iit from ¿¡«*1 I ansing w as ;»)> IMiinted business managei <»• ihe Veterinarian The last two ap|Hiiirtittenis ,ii <* (oi one veal potisms of the old world on the" people of the new- " AT THE same time th.* President--re|H*aled words ol special friendship for the |H*o- pie ol Uuba and the Honumcan Republic- \v ith which the Unit- ed States has broken diplomat- ic relations He added his hope that they will soon rejoin the society ol tree men. uniting' with us m our common effort Tins common effort, he said, must Ih* in the direction of eliminating "tyranny from a hemisphere, in w Inch it has no rightful place The new administration's ma ini pronouncement on policy toward I.atm America,was pre- pared for Kennedy s delivery al a reception in tin* East B ihhh of Ihe .W hite House Some''250 persons were invit- ed the Batin American diplo- matic corps and wives, repre- sentatives of the Organization ol American Stales i OAS i . members of the administration and of Congress particular!'- cnricorned with relations with the nations to the South. No representatives of Cuba or the Dominican Rcpublu were invited T1IE PRESIDENT'S talk came as a preview of a special message he is to send to Con- gress today In that he is c\ pec ted to cover somewhat the same ground but with moir specific recommendations tor legislation. Bey ond saying he'd stai i spending an already -proiected jvrno-million Batin American aid fund as soon as Congress vote it, Kennedy made no mention nl costs for the long-term un - dertaking To get Ihe program rolling Kennedy said he will ask an early nmeling of the Inter American Economic and Social Council to begin detailed plan- ning. Hus Council is an instru ment of the OAS. Campus Notes N ine* G raduate* 'I'ti C et M il ¡ lar a G o iiim i**ioii* < a * u 1 idtitor nogiu-rrt it tv■:. i nar •iVMnwn frfv irvh*p «w«rd> .Vpt>iu e(»r • e»*4 a B iA r Attnduift ov t» ff*r Jlppl MNItlOjA< (TpiiV. W f j t l t ’t * t >-m« HH St.u i«*; ts i n v o h ( ‘(J. u hu h Mould m juiri stud'* of 4U1V MK h legislation. BIBB lit f sjHikc Erancts Cardinal he said,j »telailed ì pro|HiM*d t out as Sjiellman. IP/fs Orar • ¡ V i! I-I *1 keiincdv a * * I Fund for \ aerine -W AMI IM »TON ** Presi-j deni Kennedy will ask t on- j gres* tintav for a II million to | huv oral polio » ;»cciii* when av ailabie to Ml up • reserve supply for fighting epidemic * i The money would he used by t the Public Health Service ts vtiH kptie about 3 mtllioa dusesj w huh Slates and c ommuruties J I »Mild ohi am Without CO»» Witeti ( thi aimed bv eiudemics The orai cavine taken bv mouth rather than injection. | still is being perfected in Uus ' country The White Home ! said it already is in use to Hu* via and other nations but ex- plained the I n.U-d Sitate* ha* higher slandards for the va» . ir» than wme btl«r c ounlne- Wvlk.s j l/Hmo ! K flotMH t IR d S. HERE I <<»Mh-hr (harten Roa*, m h ta it profe*w»r «I geegraph* » larrmndi i by a fen •< the trieb« beh me in b« ne» pr«(e»»b*n—clrens rlnnn mg He trave« the aaivenMv tbt* to ra la Jeto l*eaay Bra* t ire uv. roin ¡ h l H mmid H j o i , vu*. n ri' î>«ivi(i ( F udwT,! M.v itiud la Ì » Oh H) Ricrtwrd B I- a a - si Y Hftfi TNefldíjr*? I E.a-! rf <>( ’li** sa’M»«*! i.IflKWìb A y Brillaiwtattor <t’SAF), 1 ir of « h>tod o f j «tnd puljtte -uif«« j ii r»ie- I riUf iisvHbiifH j M i\rt <lmt Cmp\ j * t. Lcw.i.A HOTL j uiff t¡ f i«’f f Oo|>n. Re Goofed iH-an ol Mrule nts Toni Kin- . has held the rank of professor ; for 21 years- He was for seven years a teaching faculty mem- ber The sial»- New» erroneously said Eridav that King had never been a (acuity member ne*nr ( •d lege Aiito l'iva» CibfTi pM •kT i iMTT emvli»* e of » m'pfiUY ftokf of Wup KLiftiulNt fiU id OtorTTpHMfti I ! ' <*(} 4<u*liu! Ï> |N 'og ’Eye puii»“! IftHClAl rtijl,»»! ♦ fikl "f»*V* •«win** Elnvhiirwtu. » fouf y XklUb] ll!j r toi Arid ♦-¿rs *4 itUkl 1<lm ti e t vi fa»! ChU-Aàt' •* ‘Fiorello’ Ticket» On Sale Tickets are now on vale for Fiorello' Broadway musica comedy' hit recently engag.-d for the la« lure-Conrcrrt K’ftes a* a veasun »i«-< lal audum lie'll Be a Clohu-iimi Like* ll Big Top Thrills Lure Geography Prof to Circus By BILI, t UT» Male «e«r« Stall Writer Whe»i '*>u » e r e a Hid ^ld >f'U ever èrtali ol lunrnnt a»»* from thi* du i cd' »srlil sol joining that eve iting cok.i fu' wonder lui circus' Starb* you'd to the brave lion tra e r aad face the vaai ' mg. clawing beasts or ma; you d become cd» of Uwm ny clowns who made you laugh so _ tlf Charle» Boa* as^stanl profe.*w»r of geography had that dream but somebow if m ew toft bun The tares«the ay be run I have i n » *Uu(tg regr•■ t.» at ¡eaviiig the university K*< as said tml I ve had a life long »in us interest ñod I fin «il» i UfT}< C«*nc kl»MM that I prefer it But why Ihr - h»*n.r¡* j btot kids mi I bha mak tag tbeta enjoy the itoe to-Dor cog va expla¡a«d Eveaiuafty I hope m the Patorttoto Bros ta work up to maaagameat po ■ James Christy cirrenes hi <2 «- a «fc-> disk j*« k» v He eoi ned hi* Phi » drgr'e* at the Uttiveruty ef Mh higoo Ik ran», la Mate ia Itti and kept (lerformthg jja. Uh al group* and m the AparVan Cir cue atarh the university pre- vented uniti two years ago Has to (M as« it can t» M-*-n ui If«- turn April 17 Winner of thi re major -I. .1 main aw aid* Ihr iNilrtzer n I j l * r u e . Ihr Antoinette Pen v Al» M«aru S tudents, Nta M«ar«* B«Hlkl» Award and the New York Dr a ................................... ____ - j ma ■ CrttMi A^tird ¥\*>tr j lo* ’ i» I map (Ì on th«* hi# of ►to- rtilo il lei ¡ N# h York mayor oí th# lílüth. 'tin» iifg ajh* i#«i(i role IWih 1 reer c it ! u s the be ? (aim! tainment .»od rath new genera tion that come* afong a fr<-»h audi<-rt* r No tiliu-r form of art <« en trrtacouM ut ha» been **» en- grained m i hildrrn s Ulerature sdtaM. but in the meaatim«* FU be happy to jierforai av a <wan and A. anv aher ju'v. I'm given Shew business fia* been a strong urge ia Boas ever «in» e ton falber umh hünfCto * btgto» stoat aben he was a bey ia U*m a » . r J Pa After that be t / M . t a hi* p«rtornuag wings ta sntim» MUS {h d r ! E I decided M M tw yanrt ago that 1 4 have to try the cu» he u d t set tbe date about last March '* It aught not isern tike it. said Boas but fata geographer » snow ¡edge wG¡ to «atoaUs to the circus that rc onoriiH <onditit.i.v • air lwor there and vou cau l sell ta-ket* But -Wi t th* - ii< u -li-ad Nut at j !i »ay» l'«*a- Actuallv ti.r circuv mduvtfv ts in bettei »hape today than eft especially the clown many year* None will ever Children are really tbs bt as largr again as the Rmg- right, target for a clown aad last shew hut they still pretride my work will he dtrectod tg as good entertainment them a* long u I ctasra ” vea new on**» have started Boas csuiwov that sHbntMfh ‘*1 certain?. *wiids l irave the cieens is jcS n d x h u l teaching if I didn 1 ihmk there ne»i-d rtill n • business aad in a gaud future ahead has Si problem» Baaa. who*» chief interest* Tbe circus is not ad span has« have been ia industrial gtaa aad laughs.” be aad towaess geography re as a vocalist Witn the Jimmy Dorsev hand Carroll has appeared <ni lelevcvion •*ith Steve Alien Kale Smith Erma Kovacs and la* k Parr He has also played night chib engage- ments at Miami • Kdea Roc k San Sourt and Nautilus aad at New York * Latto t o n t o . The stage play to tato* b a n the boob by « w w i Wtafttoaa aad Georg* Abhatt add ta db retied by Abbott, alto ftiatlM of sudi tata as Pajama Game Dama Vaakaan” aad New Ok! ta Tawa.” circus kept galfcag tarn stone whan ■ h finally wee Boas ,lease. Harrtahurg <*» * the m*ut important ceatty completed the university at the and bt the Aller that be triad;«* h> thing» * the bus»*« 1 * rail MWfttat whwh tie term to joh Peaay lira Ct. ptatormtag wiags ta saitmi» mg he »aid and a know iwdg * that rtrcuae* ar, cus He U start off — a «dtar- Mack aad 1 « theatrical group*, oi ec onomic geography •* vital bv* are smaller and lend visor ouMk nil it“— ate* «tad la« Lafgyatu College. Pa. aad A show wdt go broke if you ar-jpftw to smaiier towns ; i fttaUlntar ii rli— r |gg tha Uaivessdy of Vkgtasa.nve m a town caUy to ducoveri Ma says hs vtUl ceasatars Uss, ___ _ Lactura-CtaMrt seria» aan- Whea .uu re stock ta the mud son Ucheto dh to t cawgr afttaft- sion ta ' Ptortdto“* aad Sehet» must be purchased sapartotly. Friends and coUcagues ha\(* They are available at tbe t *v- a research or blown down in a storm the says shows glamour to hard to see still thm iag to gefkrallv wished stack on starting a BUi W huii good i»i) Building ticket new carear campus or at the Pafta to Ih awshap to Utaftft ofitce «a
Transcript
Page 1: New lirary Check-Out ¡ J F K S u m m o n s L a t i n s e w S y s t e m [T …archive.lib.msu.edu/.../1961/state_news_19610314.pdf · 2014. 4. 25. · «lahlfohed 1909 Vol. 52, No.

«lahlfohed 1 9 0 9 Vol. 5 2 , No. 1 5 4

lirary Check-Out

e w S y s t e m c o n s i d e r e d

By LANK WICK Slate New* Staff Writer

i if" library checkout system one en ab lin g the lib ra ry u se r '»nder from division to division w ithout annoying door-

» may go into effect at the MSI' l ib ra ry Anione its m any I'fita ies would be the virtual elimination of book-stealing

.rding to Dr. Richard E. Chapin, d ire c to r of th e lib ra ry , new system , a central circulation and door check , m ust

t he O.K.'d by the administration He has ask ed P rovost i! A Miller for a go-ahead

(CORDING TO MILLER. no ac tio n will Ix M ak en on the e until President John A. Hannah re tu rn s to th e coun try ; ve come to no conclusion y e t .” sa id M iller. I w ant to talk er with the president "

.Idler said that before the academ ic y e a r is ov er a decision he made on the issue, but he did not say w h e th er or not he

»red it.cord ing to Chapin, th e new sy s tem w ould hav e ntanv ad

tastes for both library p a tro n s a n d em ployees ’» re ’s how it would w ork,;e present dpor-checks in each div ision w ould he discon ed Studenti could wander from d iv is ion to d iv ision w ithout ig constantly checked, and all stacks would re m a in ojien

SSKiVED READING would re m a in a s is T hese books id continue to be checked out at div is ion d esk s and would

certain time limits r.e of the main change* would tie th e c e n tra l book check- ■;n the library lobby. All two-week books Irom an y division >e library would be checked out at the long desk across the from the entrance to Humanities I Also, all hooks w ould iumed there, instead of to each div is ion is system would save the student much tim e an d effort instead of standing in several lines to check out books, he check them all out at this one large desk Also, lie can re- all his books here, and won't have to make th e c lim b to

m tiiem ts other divisions

F MAJOR CHANGE. the one m ost likely to halt sto len *. would be that ail exits from the l ib ra ry will he check- s Here packages, briefcases, containers and books would becked, much the same as is now done in each division,

main dUference with the new svstem w ould be t t v t w tl be at these exits at all time*

the present divisional door-check system there are times when no one is at the door. Often the person «r

nt worker at the door is called awav to other d u tie s , c r i for a class, and leaves an opening which makes book- ea*y.ft the new central check-ou t system the onlv dutv of th e Ls at dm exits would b e tlie checking of l ib ta rv p a tro n s ,

v would not be called away for other duties

CORDONATO CIIAI'IN al*Hit *10 000 worth of books a re jntljr atalmi each vcar. He stressed that before the dtyistnn- signed reading was begun in Se|Hemher 3t* the figure was to M EW annually With the new system . Chapin ho|*-s

1 the loss to the lowest possible. But. he so»» s.inu- theft « t a t i n g ,

(See WOULD CUT T1IKFT l'age l i

8tadentn Drive and H a

e. Go Modern. Ye Olde Oxford

tfk-Ox-» , jed Memp to dale aad stopI r t g W fI f fggra to a char i t iato a «bop that kpractices «re ape filS ra to eld « to

la u n c h ed by K eith Thom as an u n d e rg ra d u a te who e ttitjra puG heat urn c a lled th e O xford v! i ' U ln e - " T

•‘U n iv e rsity ’ reg u la tio n s he sa id in a hard h ittin g editori;»!.

to re­to obey

( p i lor whales nie Otoie rules was

iderson Give» Recital

night aft AimICURANOS B A T P inJl

Neue N a to Wrfter uaic dmurtmmt will• t Man— Sanderson d apartaba», to a «rad lai ef Flui* and C la n* * th e Mu s k an d .

t o a r t u á m t ta ! Rus-

Rita la c

■mm »Wha W ~ Mr

p a r te rm O p

• » « t o r t -TAon can -

wili“Sto Stadbes

by

| " sh o u ld lie re a so n a b le m e a tires to m ee t. coo ienn»»r« rs

-c irc u m s ta n c e s not a p ic tu r ­e sq u e h an g o v er from the 17th centurv "

Oxford f n n e r i . i t ' » » « found cd long befo re th a t in th e 12th

' c e n tu ry an d its reg u la tio n * a re issu e d a n n u a l) ' in a m em o ran

. d u m w ritt- n m I a tm I Thomas r id icu led su< h ru le s

a s the one th a t p roh ib it* stu b e a ts fro m e n te r in g tobaccon- i s t 's shop* u n less for a n u r g en t re a so n ' ap p ro v ed by the u m v ers it* c h an c e llo r

T h e s ta tu te oa y eh * les l it­e ra lly t r a n s la te d fro m th e l a Un say* th a t a ll scho lar» sha ll a h s ta lh Iro m th e o*e of v eh ic les in w hich they th em sa lves a re c a r r ie d a* d r iv e r*

i by w h a tso e v er n a m e they m ay I be r a i l e d ' unie** ln e n s e is j g ra n te d to an y o n e bac a u a e ^ a f : ill health or any raaaanabi*I cause '*

la U3D the university pro* 'tars dacraad no schoiar shall ' ascend into the am m a chariot ' during term time without leave of the pew tor*

Another strange regulation ¡says a professional actor who ¡takas the stage within l ie am verspy or *s pracinrts without permission urn be sent to ¿ad

' editor Thomas sanunad up the rasa for ahaidiaa this way

• otwatete statutes land tab rag the practanai toMuea ta­

ll»

N t v iiijj M SI) F o r 5 1 Y ear*

bunt L an sin j!, .M ich igan , T n m d a y M o rn in g , M a rc h 1 1 , 1 9 6 1 I lk P a n n a SecorKl Cl»»* M i l » . » l .r lltSI t * r a g e * p „ d „ t a « Lansing. Mich. J

¡ J F K S u m m o n s L a t i n s [ T o J o i n T e n Y e a r P l a n i T o W o r k f o r B e t t e r L i f e

PHOTOGRAPHERS' CONVENTION ’?“- What dees a phetwrrapher do when lii' s Hway from his w ife - \ l D en rau nl ih»- IW-lruit News likes to move ia -‘lose while his fellow photographer* a re in o r r conservative. Jaaire Riggs. Way or sen io r, models a l Ihe V lichigan P re s s Photographers' ( oafrrrnce held here kp.1 weekend. (Photo by F red , Brill lod ii

Secretary of WelfareAdding Parochial Aid to Bill

W ASHINGTON !’ v u e larv ut W cita re A b ra h am K iIm colf sa id M onday he i» ah so lu tc iy o|»|K>M'(i ' to m cltiding anv non-public school au l in tlu> K ennedy a iln u n i 'lr a t io n s *2 .1 tiilhon a id io e d ’.it al uni bill

io i i s i ì M 'I ihìhii< an d |>a- uh Miai s< h»H)l ani lo g e th e r would he “ m u s t t r a g ic ." Ribt- cotf lo b i a H ouse E d u ca im n x u h eam n iittee and w ould jeo pardi/.»' th è w d m m istra tio n p ro ­g ra m

Al th è . >am e tu n e B ib u o ll reliiM-d to co m m it th è a d n tin is tra tio n in a d v a iu e on any s e p a ra le leg ts la tio n to a id p r i ­vai** Sv hools

' \ s e r i o ti > « o n s titu tiu n a l

a n h h ishop of the H um an ( a lh nlu XrchdHH esi* v*f New York re ite ra te d his opposition to an fe d e ra l a id p ro g ra m th a t rv e tu d e s p r iv a te a n d church-r» la te d school*

In a s ta te m e n t iss.ie*! in N. a York th e C a rd in a l so ld

II ttie C o n g ress dec »des then* w ould be fe d e ra l aid liii'ii c e rta in ly anv leg is la tio n should *o n fn rm to th e je i r r ¡- p les oi sih la l jlisu .i t «Hi-a. t r e a tm e n t a n d m m -d isc rim m a tron

SEN W VV M . M i s, J) ( ire ' .n i e ,.tu .1 th è S en a te Kdu< a

turo sub ì o m in iU ce w lin li is al so i ondu» tm g tu a r in g s on tp*. leg isla tio i) u t g e d Catholic iea tle l s tu n i ; , u n fro m p r e s s ­ing fui a p a i '« Dia! si hool a m e n d m e n t

Some C ongre*- m e m b e ts an*i CathulH s|«»kesm en hav e »a 'd th è a .im in is tra t io n luti should *«• a n ie n .le d to pi ov ide (or In" in te re s t long te rrò lo an s lo • h iirch a n d « th ei p i i v a I'se fi»«fi -

W ASHINGTON V I’re si doi.t K ennedy su m m o n ed all of l .a tin - A m erica M onday night to ]<nn th is na tion in a vast 10-

¡year p lan to sp re a d hope, f re e ­dom an d a b e tte r life th ro u g h the W este rn H em isp h ere

Th»* U n ited S la te s K ennedy (p led g ed , w ill do its pa rt " to ¡c o m p le te th e rev o lu tio n oi th e ¡(A m ericas—to . b u ild a h e m i­

sp h e re w h e re all m en c an h«iH'I lo r th e sa m e high s ta n d a rd of ’• liv in g - a n d all c an live out ■ their lives m d ignityw eand in j f ree d o m| B ill. Ihe P re s id e n t < au tto n ed | g re a t dang«*rs a s well . i ' g re .d c h a lle n g e s he ah ea d b ecau se

Io l a lien fo rce s w hich once a g a in seek to im p o se the des

Sii/anii PriceKeu|»|>ointe<l

H ie B oard <d S tuden t I'ub li c a tio n s Monday reap im m ted S u /.in u P r ic e E a s t la tn su ig s»-nioi and G e ra ld l.tmdv G ai den -City -senior e d ito r in < hi«-t an d b u s in e ss m a n a g e r . res|H T tive lv of th e S ta te New s

T h e ap |H iin tm en ts a re tor sjiring te rm

In o th er a. lion fin h a rd I H a r r is .fifth-yeai v e te r in a ry m ed ic in e stu d en t fro m B lig h t on. M a ss . w as a p p o in te d edi to r of i f» MSI V e tn rm a ria n

ItotM-rt J Y ouiig f if th yt**M vel’e r in a ry m ed u 'in e stu ih’iit f ro m ¿¡«*1 I a n s in g w a s ;»)> IMiinted b u sin ess m an a g e i <»• ih e V e te r in a r ia n

T h e last tw o ap|H iiirtittenis ,i i <* (oi one veal

p o tism s of th e old w orld on the" peop le of th e new- "

AT THE sa m e tim e th.* P residen t--re |H *aled w ords ol sp ec ia l f r ie n d sh ip for th e |H*o- p ie ol U uba and th e H o n u m can R epublic- \v ith w hich th e Unit- ed S ta te s h a s b roken d ip lo m a t­ic re la tio n s He ad d ed his hope th a t they will soon re jo in th e society ol tre e m en . u n i t in g ' w ith us m o u r co m m o n e ffo rt T ins co m m o n e ffo rt, he sa id , m u st Ih* in th e d irec tio n of e lim in a tin g " ty ran n y from a h em isp h e re , in w Inch it h a s no r ig h tfu l p lace

T he n e w a d m in is tra t io n 's m a ini p ro n o u n cem en t on policy to w a rd I.a tm A m e ric a ,w a s p r e ­p a re d for K ennedy s d e liv e ry al a recep tio n in tin* E a s t B ihhh of Ihe .W h ite H ouse S o m e ''250 p e rso n s w e re in v it­ed th e B atin A m e ric an d ip lo ­m a tic c o rp s an d w ives, r e p re ­se n ta tiv e s of th e O rg an iza tio n ol A m erican S ta le s i O A S i . m e m b e rs of th e a d m in is tra tio n

and of C o n g ress p a rticu la r! '- cnrico rned w ith re la tio n s with th e n a tio n s to th e South.

No re p re se n ta t iv e s of C uba o r th e D o m in ican R cpub lu w ere inv ited

T1IE PRESIDENT'S t a l k c a m e a s a p rev iew of a spec ia l m e s sa g e he is to send to C on­g re s s today In th a t h e is c \ pec ted to co v er so m ew h at the sa m e g ro u n d but w ith m o ir spec ific re co m m e n d a tio n s tor leg is la tio n .

Bey ond say in g h e 'd s ta i i spend ing an a lread y -p ro iec ted jvrno-million B atin A m erican a id fund a s soon a s C o n g ress vote it, K ennedy m ad e no m en tion nl c o s ts fo r th e long-te rm u n ­d e r ta k in g

To get Ihe p ro g ra m rolling K ennedy sa id he will ask an e a r ly n m elin g of th e In te r A m erican E conom ic an d Social C ouncil to beg in d e ta ile d p la n ­n ing . H u s C ouncil is an in stru m en t of th e OAS.

Campus Notes

N i n e * G r a d u a t e *

' I ' t i C e t M i l ¡ l a r a

G o i i i m i * * i o i i *<a*u1 idtitor

nogiu-rrt it tv■:. i nar •iVMnwn frfvirvh*p «w«rd>

.Vpt>iu e(»r • e » * 4 a B i A r

Attnduift ov t» ff*r Jlppl MNItlOjA <

(TpiiV. W f j t l t ’t * t >-m« HH St.u i«*;

ts in v o h (‘(J. u hu h Mould m ju ir i stud'* of 4U1V MK hl e g i s la t io n .

BIBB lit f sjHikc E ra n c ts C a rd in a l

he s a id ,j • »telailed ì

pro|HiM*d t

o u t a s S jie llm an .

IP /fs

O ra r • ¡ Vi!I-I *1

keiincdv a * * IFund for \ aerine

-W AMI IM »TON ** P r e s i - j den i K ennedy will ask t on- j g res* t in ta v for a I I m illion to | huv o ra l polio » ;»cciii* w hen ■ av a ila b ie to M l up • re s e rv e supply for fig h tin g ep idem ic * i

T he m oney w ould he u se d by t th e P u b lic H e a lth S e rv ice t s vtiH kptie a b o u t 3 m tllio a d u s e s j w h u h Sla tes a n d c o m m u ru tie s J I »Mild ohi a m W ithout CO»» W iteti ( th i a im e d bv e iu d e m ic s

T he o ra i c a v i n e ta k e n bv m o u th ra th e r th a n in je c tio n . | still is be ing p e rfe c te d in U us ' c o u n try T he W hite H o m e ! sa id it a lre ad y is in use to Hu* via a n d o th e r n a tio n s bu t ex­p la in ed th e I n.U-d Sitate* ha* h igher s la n d a rd s fo r th e va». i r» th a n w m e b t l« r c o u n ln e -

Wvlk.s j l/H m o! K flotMH

t IR d S. HERE I < <»Mh-hr (harten Roa*, m h ta i t profe*w»r «I geegraph* » larrmndi i by a fen •< the trieb« beh me in b« ne» pr«(e»»b*n—clrens rlnnn m g He trave« the aaivenMv tbt* to ra la Jeto l*eaay Bra* t ire uv.

ro in

¡h l Hm mid H jo i , vu*. nr i ' î>«ivi(i ( F udwT,!

M.v itiud la Ì» Oh H) Ricrtwrd BI-a a-si Y;« Hftfi TNefldíjr*? I

E.a-!rf <>( ’li** sa’M»«*! i.IflKWìbA y Brillaiwtattor < t ’S A F ) , 1

ir of « h>tod of j«tnd puljtte -uif«« j

ii r»ie- I riUf iisvHbiifH jM i\rt <lmt ■ Cmp\ j

* t. Lcw.i. A HOTL juiff • t ¡ f i «’f f

O o |> n . R e G o o f e d

iH-an ol M ru le nts Toni Kin- . h a s h e ld th e ra n k of professor ; for 21 y e a rs - He was for seven years a teaching faculty m em ­ber

The sial»- New» erroneously said Eridav that King had never been a (acuity member

ne*nr ( • d lege Aiito

l'iva» CibfTi pM •kTi iMTT emvli»* e o f »

m'pfiUY ftokf of Wup KLiftiulNt fiUid OtorTTpHMfti I ! ' <*(} 4<u*liu! Ï>|N 'og ’ Eye puii»“!

IftHClAl rtijl,»»! ♦ fikl "f»*V *•«win** Elnvhiirwt u. » fo u f y

XklUb] ll!j r toi Arid ♦-¿rs *4 itUkl 1<l m tie t vi fa»!

ChU-Aàt' •*

‘Fiorello’ Ticket» On Sale

Tickets are now on vale for Fiorello' Broadway musica

comedy' hit recently engag.-d for the la« lure-Conrcrrt K’ftes a* a veasun »i«-< lal

a u d u m

lie'll Be a C lohu-iim i Like* ll

Big Top Thrills Lure Geography Prof to CircusBy BILI, t UT»

Male «e«r« Stall WriterWhe»i '*>u » ere a Hid ^ld >f'U

ever èrtali ol lunrnnt a»»* from thi* du i cd' » sr lil s o l joining that eve iting cok.i fu' wonder lui c ircus'

Starb* you'd to the brave lion t ra e r aad face the vaai ' mg. clawing beasts or ma; you d become cd» of Uwm ny clowns who made you laughso _

t l f Charle» Boa* as^stanl profe.*w»r of geography had that dream but somebow if m e w to ft b u n The tares«the

ay be run

I have i n » *Uu(tg regr•■t.» at ¡eaviiig the university K*< as said tml I ve had a life long » in us interest ñod I fin«il» i UfT}< C«*nc kl»MMthat I prefer it

But why Ihr - h»*n.r¡* j btot kids m i I bha mak

tag tbeta enjoy the ito e to-D or cog va expla¡a«d Eveaiuafty I hope m the Patorttoto Bros ta work up to maaagameat po ■ James Christy cirrenes

hi <2 «- a «fc-> disk j*« k» v He eoi ned hi* Phi » drgr'e* at the Uttiveruty e f Mh h ig o o

Ik ran», la M ate ia I t t i and kept (lerformthg jja . Uh al

group* and m the AparVan Cir cue a t a r h th e u n iv e rs ity p re­vented uniti tw o y e a r s ago

H a s to (M a s «

i t c a n t» M-*-n ui If«- turn A pril 17

W inner of th i r e m a jo r -I. .1 main aw aid* Ihr iNilrtzer

n I j l* ru e . Ihr A ntoinette P e n v A l » M « a r u S t u d e n t s , N t a M « a r « * B « H l k l » A w ard and the New Y ork D r a

................................... —____ - j ma ■ C rttM i A ^ tird ¥\*>trj lo* ’ i» Im ap(Ì on th«* h i# of ►to­rtilo il lei

¡ N#h Y ork m ay o r oí th# lílüth. ►'tin» iifg ajh* i#«i(i ro le IWih

1 reerc it ! u s the be ? (aim ! tainment .»od r a t h new genera tion that com e* afong .» afr<-»h audi<-rt* r

No tiliu-r form of art <« en trrtacouM ut ha» been **» en­grained m i hildrrn s Ulerature

sdtaM. but in the meaatim«* FU be happy to jierforai av a < w an and A. anv aher ju'v. I'm given

Shew business fia* been a strong urge ia Boas ever «in» e ton falber umh hünfCto * btgto» stoat aben he was a bey iaU*m a » .r J Pa

After that be t / M . t a hi* p«rtornuag wings ta sntim»

MUS {hd r ! E

I decided M M t w yanrt ago that 1 4 have to try the cu» he u d m ê t set tbe date about last March '*

It aught not isern tike it. said Boas but fata geographer » snow ¡edge wG¡ to «atoaU s to the circus

that rc onoriiH < onditit.i.v • a ir lwor there and vou cau l sell ta-ket*

But -Wi t th* - ii< u -li-ad Nut at j !i »ay» l'«*a-

Actuallv ti.r circuv mduvtfv ts in bettei »hape today than eft especially the clown many year* None will ever Children are really t b s b t as largr again as the Rmg- right, target for a clown aad last shew hut they still pretride my work will he dtrectod tg

as good entertainment them a* long u I ctasra ” vea new on**» have started Boas csuiw ov that sHbntMfh‘*1 certain?. *wiids l irave the cieens is jcS n d x h u l

teaching if I didn 1 ihmk there ne»i-d rtill n • business aad in a gaud future ahead has S i problem»

Baaa. who*» chief interest* Tbe circus is not ad spanhas« have been ia industrial gtaa aad laughs.” be aad towaess geography re

as a vocalist Witn the Jimmy Dorsev hand Carroll has appeared <ni lelevcvion •* ith Steve Alien Kale Smith Erma Kovacs and la* k Parr He has also played night chib engage­ments at Miami • Kdea Roc k San Sourt and Nautilus aad at New York * Latto t o n t o .

The stage play to tato* b a n the boob by « w w i Wtafttoaa aad Georg* Abhatt add ta db retied by Abbott, alto ftiatlM of sudi tata as Pajama G a m e Dama Vaakaan” aad

New Ok! ta Tawa.”

circus kept galfcag tarn stone whan ■h finally wee Boas ,lease. Harrtahurg <*» * the m*ut important ceatty completed

the university at the and bt the Aller that be triad ;«* h> thing» * the bus»*« 1* ra il MWfttat whwh tie term to joh Peaay l i r a Ct. ptatormtag wiags ta saitmi» mg he »aid and a know iwdg * that rtrcuae* ar, cus He U start off — a «dtar- Mack aad 1« theatrical group*, oi ec onomic geography •* vital bv* are smaller and lend visor ouMk nil it“ — ate* «tad la« Lafgyatu College. Pa. aad A show wdt go broke if you ar-jpftw to smaiier towns

; i fttaUlntar ii rli— r |gg tha Uaivessdy of Vkgtasa.nve m a town caUy to ducoveri Ma says hs vtUl ceasatars Uss,

___ _ L a c tu ra -C ta M rt se ria» aan-Whea .uu re stock ta the mud son Ucheto dh to t cawgr afttaft-

sion ta ' Ptortdto“* aad Sehet» must be purchased sapartotly.

Friends and coUcagues ha\(* They are available at tbe t *v-

a research or blown down in a storm the says shows glamour to hard to see

still th m ia gto gefkrallv w ishe d

s ta ck on s ta r t in g a B U i W

huii good i»i) Building ticket new carear campus or at the

Pafta t o I h a w sh a p t o U ta f t f t

ofitce «a

Page 2: New lirary Check-Out ¡ J F K S u m m o n s L a t i n s e w S y s t e m [T …archive.lib.msu.edu/.../1961/state_news_19610314.pdf · 2014. 4. 25. · «lahlfohed 1909 Vol. 52, No.

in» f f r

s d . . ** ® •I« Gg »

IV

«J* M ich igan State New», E ast L an sin g , M ich iganT u e sd a y M o rn in g , March 14 , u

tetters to the Editor

S t u d e n t s A p p l a u d L a wFimi EuuMn Schedule Fee Winter, IN) ! SwüillSOIt A p p ro v e s Shorelili

Recreation Area LegislationFor ( iril Lairs

To th<* Ldltor:^ r T h o d i t is breaking for the unfortunate students who will now have to face the fact that

>stealin^ a id vandalism w i l l intoned II is a sad they realize that the will not merely give 11:iny or request lli.d itli a counselor. v\ifh

sneak while laugh-

not I n a

day whenumversitvt l io io .1 w ;«tins, talkwhom the ing up a sleeve

Now Hie students must learn that stealing and vandalism ate not tolerated here any more than they were at home01 h i the ptthlu s c h o o ls These concepts arc taught from in­f amy m most homes and in the puhlic schools: why docs the university student think iic can fort’et them upon entrance lo MSI Why is he allowed to lurcet them"

Yet on the other hand, the university exp ect, the student lo em brace a new moral con­cept upon his entrance to the university, u p h o ld it for four years then forget it. This mor­al concept is oltcn in direct op­position to the training he has received at home. It is ol course, the drinking regulation.

file logic of this situation es­capes me entirely.

Judy Turner ★ * ★

around, so why do it h e r e 1 Just about the tim e this was

allowed without retribution, two or three percent of the people involved would take ad­vantage of the issue and abuse the situation

The remark about having to g. alcohol and hous- j quit school or dropping out. be-

cause you are in favor of kis­sing in dormitories is childish nonsense. I do not think thi> university would allow- som e one to be dism issed because he voted ‘wrong’.

1 do not feePthat kissing in general public is wrong Done in the proper place, situation,

m em bers of a com m unity land tim e it is acceptable. How- have a responsibility to 'e v e r , under the wrong circum ­

stances. it should not be done.Conrad Hultguist Do V°u kiss a fM?rson Publlc

to prove that you arc a D o n I Juan, or because the kiss i m eans som ething to the both of I you"

Patricia Sponcnburg a a ¥

Riedel Immature?

be nidged bv a civil authority I under civ il laws, j It might be well for the uni­versity to exam ine som e of its other regulations dealing with

I subjects Which pertain to the individual's relation to society and not to iiis capacity as a

i student, < i in” Maybe the tim e has com e ! fpr us to realize that just be- • uusc we are students and have a responsibility to the uni- versily , the lact still rem ains that we are also m em bers of a community and have a respnn- sihilily to the university, t h e fact still rem ains that we are also andsociety .

¥ ¥ ■¥

FIN A L EXAM INATION SCHEDULE TOI» W INTTR. 1WI T he last d a v o f c l l n e t for W in ter T erm 1* Tuesday M arch IV All final exam ination 's w ill tot * tven In acco rdance w ith th e fo llow ing srnM U i«. ,

The lim e of th e ex am in a tio n s in B asic College courses Is given tjel°*’ ex a m in a tio n ro o m s w ill be announced bv Ihe in s tru c to r during

; w eek o f c lasses. 0

W ednesday. M arch 15. ?* 5T h u rsd a y . M arch 16 F riday . M arch 17. 10:15-1*S a tu rd a y . M arch 18. 10*13-12. lo

C om m unication Skills N a tu ra l Science Social Science H um an ities

T he tim e o f th e e x a m in a tio n , m B asle College c o o r a e t ^ ‘T J i ^ M u 'o n a « tU d ay s a n d th e tim e th e class is schedu led d u rin g th e te n n . ® term ,be g iven In th e sam e classroom s used fo r class m eetings du g

If a t least tw o of th e d ay s an d hou rs follow W** !*** Viif/,- ew * «. .•oursa*,in s tru c to rs , and room schedule ': will au to m a tica lly c lear. I .,t th e req u est of th e d e p ar tm e n t concerned , thebeen schedu led b \ th e ninete h o u r le c tu re section , a inil t ion schedu led ,tu d * n ta m ay e n c o u n te r conflic ts. In th a t e v e n t th e e x a m l n a t ^ n ^ e o u . hv th e ( lass m ee tin g tw o h o u rs each * m in jltjon willexam »nation sch ed u led bv th e single h o u r le c tu re T c - specialhe a rra n g e d b e tw een th e s tu d en t and th e d e p ar tm e n t requesting tn e sp e tta . schedu ling o f its e x am in atio n

Ail In s tru c to rs h av in g e x am in a tio n s from • J ® /o f o m p t l^ s o 'tH a 1? ro o m *dm » a re equeMeci to term» • *tP the ., f x r 'H i» f ti° m oromp-»Vit.h follow

and h tilldm gs m av be c lea red for th e e x a m in a tio n .peri \ _______

M ORNING CLASSES a f t e r n o o n c l a s s e s

¡So kissing

\o IA t g l C

Tii thr Kdlfor:I am very gratified to learn

that Ingham County's n e w priixeuifihg attorney, I<po A I'urhal iv breaking throiigli

H ie walls foimod by our uni­versity mUw A university. as a plan* Ini intcUetTunl growth, should accept its place as a I ».ill ol society/and adhpp- fa the regulations of- that societv

Inlrai lions ol civil laws, winch have very little to do " itli Ihe capacity of an indi­vidual as a student, should have Hu effect on his status 111

the university No matter what the motivations or clreum slan- i *•», a student who rifles a ran­dy m achine.. steals a bicycle, oi breaks any m i l law shouttt

To the Editor:In regards to the fetter that

Mr. Drueker and Mr. Jones wrote in W ednesday’s paper on kissing in the dormitory living

i roomsFirst of all the dormitory

house councils are com piled ol the elected dorm officers, rep resentatives, and any coeds ol Ihe residence hail who wish lo

¡attendWhy can a coed be seriously -

reprimanded for kissing in the I living room s' The dorm living | room is to be used as you , would use a living room in a private home Would you like ■your parents walking into the living rooms just at the tim e | you decided to k is s your g ir l ’ Mosi people would be em bar­rassed.

Being college students, we are supposed to h e fairly m.i ture young adults. Therefore, we do not need to retreat to 'lovers lanes either, and there i are plenty ol places and op­portunities to display a u c ­tions

It is not proper etiquette for couples to overly display af- lection in public Other eon p ie s , adutts.. parents, guests, or younger children would not ap-i pft'ciatr seeing tins in Ihe liv-f ing rooms You would not do it | in your own home with o th c is 1

To the Editor:I would like to suggest that

Mr R tedel’s view s, ¡is reflect- I ed by his latest article, on the

M SI: student's position in the com m unity arc immature. Mr Riedel objects to the lact that "students are subject to active civil law This may well mean a confusion of interests to the student tinder a system which is tar less sym pathetic and in­formed as to his unique situ* turn

One only has to look at the MSI? student’s "unique situa­tion" to see the w eakness ol this argum ent. For one thing all MSI' students, at least dur­ing the term , are living within the legal boundaries ol Ihu state ol Michigan and are therefore the legal subject to its law Secondly the student at MSt is being subsidized by the taxpaying citizens nt this state

Supposedly these taxpayers are subsidizing our • education so that wo will becom e better informed and more usetul m em bers of society llow can vvc become, prepared to pai ticipate in social I unctions if we- arc educated under law

See LETTERS page X

If v o r ule«s me<*ts

R e f in n m r at one of

then«* hour»

Y our exam tim e aad

d e t r is

If vo r ria«* m eet*

B eeum inir a t one of

these h o u rs

Y our exam tim e and

d a te is

M V FVITThFM TW ThF

8 fio 8 30

W ednesday M arch 15 8 -On - 10 00

MWFM TThFM TW ThF

1 DO 1 30

F ridav VI a rch 17 3 4.» - 5:45

TTh R .00 8:30

T hurudev M arch 16 A IX» • 10:00

TTh I 00 1 30

S a tu rd a y Mu rch t8 3 45 • 5:45

MW F M TTfiF - M TW ThF

h oo o no

F rid a v Mu: i*li 17 8 % • to Of)

MWFM TThFM TW ThF

2 00 2 .30

M onda' M arcii ¿o IO 15-12 15

TTh p on 0 30

8 a lu rd a \’ M arcii r . 8-On • 10 fx>

TTh * .GO 2 30

31 onda v M arch 20 3 .43 - 5 15

M W VM TThFM TW ThF

io no 10 30

M onda’ M arch 20 8 On • 10 00

MWFM TThFM TW ThF

3 On .1 30

Thuradiiv M arch 16 ! .00-!) Ot» qm

T I .. io no 10:30

W edncsdav M arch 15 1 :3d - 3:*W

TTh ;t nn 3 30

W ednesday M arch J3

i :00-9.00 pin

MW FM TThFM TWThF

I ! (HIII 30

Th u red *iv M arch 16 1 .10 - 3 30

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By SHARON ROBISON Sta |e N ews Staff Writer

Governor John Swainson has given his approval of a Sen­ate bill which provides for the acquisition and preservation

io r shoreline areas for public I recreational purposes.

Swainson filed his statem ent ‘ with the U. S. Senate Commit i tee on Interior and Insular at- I fairs last w eek .

The bill would appropriate j 10 m illion dollars to establish I a program of shoreline land acquisition. T he federal gov ernm cnt would m atch slate funds on a SO-SO participating basis.

I “ MICHIGAN has the longed Great Lakes shoreline of any state in the a rea .” Swainson said, and a never increasing number of people of the nation are looking to M ichigan for out- d o o r recreational opportunt ties."

Swainson said that M ichigan i appreciates every opportunity to share the enjoym ent ol its

! w ealth of natural resources with visitors from other states

"Tourism places am ong the top three revenue-producing in­dustries in M ichigan along w ith m anufacturing and agricult-

I ure." h e saidSw ainsoa credited expanding

populations, better highway s.! more le isure tim e, increasing ! interests in outdoor recreation, and higher incom e for contri­buting to the spectacular grow ­th of tourism in recent veai-v

“ MICHIGAN can expect a state park attendance of 40

j m illion by 1970." he said "With . parks now at cap acity , expan­

sion will be necessary to m eet this dem and."

A 10 m illion dollar land a c ­quisition and park im prove­ment program w as authorized by the legislature in 1980. Swainson said that a survev indicates th e need for an ex ­penditure of 188.5 million.

The Governor shid that this bill is esp ecia lly significant to M ichigan’s parks, tourist in­dustry . general econom y, and the vacationing public's enjoy - mcnt.

Huron Mountains. Pictured Hocks, Grand Sable Dunes, an« Sleeping Bear D unes ore ll-c

i shoreline areas m entioned in the Senate bill.

Sw ainson said the study call- ' ed for in the bill could deter- ; m ine realistic policies for hunt | ing. trapping, and tim ber cut- ! ting in the areas.

"Tax losses and/or gam s to both local and state govern

1 ment could be evaluated in such a study." he said.

'Michigan appn acquisition and developm* each of the 37 shoreline designated in the wr, Swainson said

Three of the area» mend in the bill Fa- Point, and T av, already been a< ing to Swainsun

HE ALSO » should acquire » Sleeping Bear Seul Choix Point and Ottawa M

"P assage «: ti not only in k. fast-grow me 1 . of our c iti/i li­lt will also a:d - visitors on its -

The Gov el no; would be an im the stimuli!- needs to rev jtaU

te Sti Point,

¡¡red i

ort eres, Haber

Troop» Go to CongoNEW DELHI. .T—Four hun­

dred Indian com bat troops lea v e for the Congo today. They are the vanguard of the 5.000-man brigade India has volunteered to serve as a UN task force

For the Gurkha riflem en it m arks a return to a potentially active fighting front

T hey served in both world w ars with distinction but w ere barred from the Korean con­flict because N epal w as not then a UN m em ber.

N o FIN A L EXAM INATION MAV BE GIV EN AT ANY TIM E OTHEK THAN TH E REGULARLY SCHEDULED TIM E E X C E P T BY FACULTY ACTION

Booklet Parallels Growth Of MSU and Lansing Area

By M Mil I \ \ V \ M SS Male News Mull Writer

H hut h a p p e n s 1« The c i l v ol I ..ist 1 ..tiiMiic liejH’iiii» ini w hut bapiH its tu M u t u g a n S t a l e I ui-V Cl si! V

\t least impalatimi ligure» ilow tli.it Hie imputation n| Ihe

' i t' ha» increased Horn .Y.it.'Ll In I'.WU lo 30,198 ut lutiti

\iui tin* school s growth hu» follow cd Hu- suini.', pillici n

ih m.iv be It's the fit y timi billowed.Hie school

U H M FINDINGS um, u |MMte«l In (tie I.eagiie ol - H i- men Voici » of the Lull sti g \ i e.i Who have published a ."1 page siudv entitled, today and T« it oí i ovv in the Lansing M e rc i" 11»in \ i ca

1 h e h o o g i d d e s e n l i e , le. e* govFinnu'nt tu i.aiistii Fast Lansing Meridian l e v mn , p I n g h a m county and ih" whole m etíopohtati area »

History is p,tia oi the sioi . irvealm g t h a t t h e i i t s i t ; *i on vv tun j - now v ant,ni» t e i n

*stpjy uà» a man named I* ilo I* it Run hum

He i» i«'i*iiicd to li.ivi i omo - hj-thc .area in 1849 and settled

en a lai m which included m o s t ol the present business »* t-»>n w o t ut VblHitt ltd o» well as

in acres ol the e .impiL.

"Ill Itl II.T a tog house near where the present Music Itmld mg now stands, and lived there until lHi.i when the laud wu» hough, hv the state a» patt ol the m!c I oi the new Michigan Vgriv ultm ¡tl College the book­let states

By 1900, the city of Last Lan­sing counted ikx) persons ¿s p» populatu.in By IVEJi• there were t !!8‘L tty 194U more titan a.OtXI and hv 19.HI the figure hud jum,*ed to '¿llgilia

"1 It t s extremely r a p t d growth is accredited to the ex pension ol MM the writers .»a\ wliieli jumped from an enrollment ol .YIXIH in 1943 to m oie than 31.000 in the tall of P.AHI■ AISl is also credited as the

greatest single taefot in the i tty s economy

But what about the place of the college m the metropolitan i om m unity"

THE MF TROPOLITAN arc.* inclUvtes. both Fast Lansuig and Lansing, the township, county and environs And MSl' s part ni the total econom y is stg- nil icant

Writers oi Hie Irook say that in 1959. som e 9.4(Xl MSU e m ­

ployes earned an annual p ar- roll m excess ol $23 million. The building and equipment in­ventory was m excess of $127 million $70 million of which had been expended since 1951).

The pto|Htsed expansion dur­ing the next five years ts e s ­tim ated at $12r million, chiefly m sclt-liquidating expenditure», largely in construction projects by local firms

Ionising » metro,Nililan area j is rated 17th in tire nation in i rate ol growth, and the book

concerns itself largely with i problem s *d the com m unity if that rate continues

THESE include Conserva­tion of natural resources, co­ordination ol governm ent oper­ations and control of the

:' sp ra w l' ol the m etropolis I M embers of the league also ¡suggest possible solutions-

"Citizens and officia ls might ¡wel l consider whether broader I concepts ol financing public fa- 1 cilitles oi an en tile com m unity i might assure greater econom ic ¡health tor that com m unity." I the studv concludes { limn med control of publr.

sjiemimg is an essentia l ingre­dient of gvKKl governm ent and goiHt comm unity developm ent

Education Dept. Tests PlanI he i ollcge ol t-.duv'atutn w

indiate a new .program di-Mgh t-d to test the effectiveness of special training with audio vi s u i l i in changing aspirations of

men * an bioavtcn occupational kucw ledge and increase aspir­ation levels

It will also aim to assist theinte''ectuallv sunerior students tupertor girl to m ake career ai thè mnth grade level.

The program , to be d im 'ted :>v Dr. Elizabeth Drews, « ss<k •- i’e : I 'S»,r of e.luvation, w itiV \ .in n i n part by a $»0 iXX)

;»<>t . thè Naiional De ti -c Edm atjon A d

deiisions in acvorvlaiK-e with her ability and to assist the

, sujiei ior boy to consider aj greater mm.ho* ol career pos­sibilities

j The program i» lurthcr de­signed to help the superior boy to be more accepting of a high

TIIL PROGRAM is designed , level car**er good for the lu ­te determine If a special ninth , perior gud g r a d e vocational guidance .Tl'c »igmucanc* of the pro- i )ii-»<• dcvlo j^d abo.d au>1in- j gram is to put mto effect a v .1 m att: ,als to present hi- com sc which presents ihe iu-

apiut ul-c&oar backgrounds, turc to youth especially inof ouwtauding men and xp- i terms of fti,ovpfPi»ji

CHANGES within oictipa- lions in the emergenv e ol new professions and areas of know ledge, and the demand (or high level talent will be brought out in the program

The p r o po » e d guidance course, to be produced by Mary Louise fturditt. education spe­cialist. will be developed usjng a series of audio-visual’ lilVli tages ot outstanding men and women Each montage will be presented as a biography or story showing interests, prob­lems. and occupational deci­sion-making

Occupational and home ac­tivities will be included m an effort to create a presentation 9t A styia of Ufa.

Election»I iiiitm Board

Now officers for Union Board arc John Forsyth, president. Lansing. Jim Wilson, vice president. A llendale N J .; Marcia Lam eoreaux, secretary . Grand Rapid»

The new committee heads, all juniors, appointed by the forsyth include Douglas Chad­wick. special events. Gahar.nt, Ohio, Lee Wyman, public relat­ions, Toronto. Canada Sally Spilier. forum, Riverside. Illl-

I inois: Judy Lapelie. publicity. Midland: joe Drollct. member at largo. Lansing. Bonnie Me­ade. student services. Jackson,

i Bruce Bancroft, sorial events, Fly mouth. Indiana and Nancy French, personnel. Ann Arbor

W W W

A l p h a X i D e l t a

Alpha Xi Dells sorority has elected its new officers ior the coming year. They are Karen Anderson. Pontiac sophomore, president: Laura Plage. Ed; m ore junior, recording secre­tary Pam Smith. Prescott jun­ior. corresponding secretary.

, and Louis Lake, North Mus­kegon sophomore, treasurer.

* * *

B u t t e r f i e l d

Newly elected officers at But-i terfirld Hall include Walter | Zaremba. president. Cleveland!

, Ohio sophomore: Bob Johnson.I vice-president. Detroit sopho­more Mike Schwarts, secre­tary . New York City freshman Lee Williams, treasurer. Can- onsburg. Pennsylvania fresh­man

* * *

B«*lu T b v t a P i

Recently elected officers ot Beta Theta Pi are Bob CanHeti Southfield Junior, president Dave Earl. St lgnas junior, vice-president. Bob Edward». St Clair Shores junter . treas­urer; Ray Champ. Grand Hap- ids sophomore, corresponding secretary; Al Barnes. Brewm City senior. Alumni secretary. Dave Mowers. Birmingham junior, recording secretary, and John Mehtrom. Rochester sophomore, assistant treasurer

Senior PelilionoS en io r of the- W eek ’.K-lit. ' 'Hs ;

*;•" now av-aiiable m tl*v U m on

. con co u rse Pciitiunm s: e*Kl- A pn! | ! 7. AH srw ina sn d fa ll Sem or» of j th e W eek wiH 6c r tw s m from !

these peUUurn Ì

PIZZA o 1 SALE • ¿ i for 1

T O N I G H T — 5 p . m . i o 8 p a i

VARSITY DRIVE INED 9-6517

DELIVERY SERVICE 8:30

Kraus»

SuiKH‘0

Service

SPECIAL!S 1 A 1Black»a ll * | | | i |

Tube-Type plu,

T ir r *

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Ki*|iair'

24 HOURS DAI«91» E. (>rand Rnir |

(corner Bocur’.

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Night StaffHowwrd HaaUt-s. new » ecutor

Chartotw Daiton. «»xoteni. staff: A nn B r»*njr,t. Ju d y Y eilender. Weiid Kewtcksn. Sara Bacon,!

i Larry 'Cox, Brandon Brown.I

Dr. Frood prtspntBd the automobile industry with this magnificent

pre-compact. Hurt end disillusioned because the auto industry preferred to develop their own com pact. FROOO NOW OFFERS HISCAR TO SOME LUCKY COLLEGE STUDENT! Th is is a brand-new, gas-driven, REAL CAR It f e a t - c i four (4 ) wheels, genuine foot-power brakes, fresh air conditioning,” and actual left rig": •tearing m echanism ! The economical 7 .9 horsepower engine saves you hundreds of don«r5 r t W *Dd oats! Goes 32 m iles per hour, gets u p to 6 5 m iles per gallon. The Froodmobile caT u

licensed in every state except New Jersey. (New Jersey hates Frood ) WIN this beautiful car (with "FROOOMOBILE" mounted in b rass on the cowl!). Actual value over > 1 ,000

T O B N T M T H C L U C K Y S T R I K E F R O O O M O S I L E

C O N T E S T t s im p ly f in is h t h i s s e n t e n c e In 2 5 w o r d s o r l e s s :

**/ mmd thm Frmmimobile bec u r e . . .**

CntnM ml» ba iuda*rt «" tiw b«M ot humor, originality and rtyta (praterably Froodian) If m tha opuuon o( our JudgM. your anaawr .» ba»t Uw mahare Ot Lucfcy Stnka mil o«*,««, to you. on tho Froodmobria. A carton ot IucIum mil ba pvan to tha firat J00 runnor»np Along with your ontry •and your ngma. i t te n addroaa. collage or uniworaity. and ctaaa. Entnaa must ba poatmarliad nolater thwApN IS. 1SS1. All entnee become the property el The AmencanTebeeceComoanv tandyour anpy Car atertea) to UiCKV STRIKE. P. 0. SOX 17A, NEW YORK 10. NEW YORK.

CHANGE TO LUCKIES and get some taste for o c/ioflj*je r , j ~

Page 3: New lirary Check-Out ¡ J F K S u m m o n s L a t i n s e w S y s t e m [T …archive.lib.msu.edu/.../1961/state_news_19610314.pdf · 2014. 4. 25. · «lahlfohed 1909 Vol. 52, No.

To n Ii v M orning, M arrh 1 4 , 1 9 6 1. M ichigan State Newa, East L an ain g, M ichigan

Satellites, Televisions, Radio Will Predict Weather Reports

r i n mC r o s s w o r d P u z z l e l a o m

WASHINGTON. -.6 - IN e w its <douds front alxni» and The I’ittsbureh s t a d i u m ■ather eves ana ears Will helping scientists, understand ,

a constant alert on our better the mechanics nt wea- . amP sen<FII is betng built with a root.<*ep

N e w its do helpi' bette ther.

shouldover it

Stilt another hopetu! area tor the

?5 in the future.Well know sooner and more m rT I.D lv

a c c u ra te ly when bad-tempered j . , “ fT lR k S„eather-wiH strike u s, ®v!n« im ; the future is iromcalh

satellites w ill orbit with tel- c l°ud information, and, ion cam eras to w a t c h ?na^ f experts to figure the P * —

»term clouds form over the Pa- "eights ot clouds. sjmt which weather historians a ir tr>,i!ii and m ove toward the Cali- aI* c*rrying storm poten- ins to find in past records a;,,rnia coast, or to watch battles ' • "iav ,,vrn show pattern between the sun’s ac-i air m asses over the U.S. S?I,1F n_'er-all. not vet known. tivity and the earth's weather,

heartland. similarity between all storm Our weather is made by theRadar ears w ill m easure the interplay of air. water vapor

r.uii |x»uring out of m idw estem ^ n* the satellite pi«, lures and the sun And the stm ap- |»i understornis. giving advance a l°ne are not the answer to the parently has seasons over the

¡erts of flood. weatherman'' prayer.- years, burning hotter at someinhcr radar will scan the "Weather i> an awfully b ig'* 'mes t h a n others. During

... i?on for the om in ou s’torna- machine and it doesn’t always these times the earth gets more lo funnels that reach down tell u sa h ea d "i time the siie- r’om thunderheads cities of how much, property

. .dam age it will ln iint. or how Man’s own fires on earth a!. . . . . equipped(m any lives it will endanger." so seem to atiect the weather

•ais.-bobbing in the tropical j gays Of. A. K Show alter of the pouring great amounts ot car

ACBOBO 1 On

,*f Cltdctl I .H f c l

12. Stupor IS . Commotion 14 W rite IS . E x tra port 14 F#roc:ou*

w ild an irra l I I T a fs 20 Conste'.la-

tion 2t B ib lica l

pr.ott 23 Age 14. Flow er 25. V oca l art 27. Exp ort 24. Prectpitoua

placoa 31. Planted 33 Require«37 T a x

31 N arrowV:OW

41 Steep43 Perce ive44 Spoken 43 A ncien t

Rom an official

47 Cave*4» - ...........

Doono"VI Devoured S3 P o u e tfive

pronoun 34 Adored33 P layed the

f.rrt cord34 T u r k l lh

tit le3* V elocity

•O W N 1 S', jp .d per- r»n

Undercut Truck Rate»

RR’s Take Over Auto Hauling¡the west coast for $1TS On a I fo u r -per-truck bans, the freisi would be $445

b i t t e

M otion e» Veote'day'o Potilo

2 H a n ( do» n3 T ran .‘ ijce - .i

flax»4 Ibten char­

acter5 S w u rm ir f

bird4. S o n i7 Sum me i drink«

energy- and with it m on a ' churning of go ocean ot ¡nr

s \ | VI.L RADIO >ai s. bobbing in t

'liters south of the I nited Weather Ilureau "But it I*0*1 dioxide into the atmos- |M.atcs. even now feel out Itloes give us the fingerprints of phere This a, t< as a sort of

i oming winds of hurricaneas a

heat blanket, allowing theoiin ’s . rays to -.trike the earth, creat-

What we tieed trom >«letice ,n2 heat but preventing t h e 1ap ing h ack into

leat weather " he explains spa<p

. the kind oi weather weTtPlanes, ships and radar are jor

p obilizod to reach out fromMir owni backyards and find is a fJTater ,.ontnbution , 0 dc. heat tromrouble before it happens

what will all th is m ean”one thing seem s certain it 1IYRR1D CORN, for exam

■ ill save lives and limit the pie. helped eliminate the need damage to your property Ik - for early ,tn><i warnings to ause you'll be able to prepare farmers because it was resist-

: oncoming storm s ant to frostAlready trial satellites are in And the « lothes drver is t ok-

Information

r È 1 V Wli* .-:À ; * i'|«j a•* T"' ■7

■è *4 1 uit M mr

if H If1 Ah to V B II W

if H if» IV iò li m «t14 rI «14f 'ûtiV li i*fj lé n

I A ira » S ep .no*

*0 M |* W itch o f

17. Pal» color lï Expuni»Il E n i l .s h l*t*

ter22 Parcel f»<

ir.-umi 24 Monk**24 Mild 21 A n c :* r l

1 vo.» h»»*d c r-.ariot

30 V e ie tab la 32. M cr.t 43 N ifb t b» .

fe r»34 S ttm 31. S ty l i ih 31. O f th» voie» 34 tnc»na»d 40. R n cu e d42 Cu ltivâ t»*43 r * * d tb»

k itty44 D ow ntow *

C h .ca |o41 P a rt ot an

-.m brelia30 Born31 Incteaao

PlacementBureau

v sky. providing us with .in g the Monday washerwoman ■ange view s of the earth and off our neck'." he said.

t A T I IO I .K S T I ’ I I E X T O R t iA V -rZATJO.V S’u-iC’-,* i

4-»

CAMPUS CLASSIFIEDSD E A D L IN E S : 1 p.m . Hav B efore Publication for lu e s . . W ed.. I bur*..

and F ri. E dition*. D eadline for Mon. F d ition : 1 p .m . F ri.

E D 2-1511 E X T . 2613

Vietnam Reitels Silent As April Election Near;

AUTOMOTIVE\ LO R D V-B w ifh »*-

• v o r . ED 2-«iB:

VOLKS WJNGON

FOR RENT FOR SALE.1 A lATrHMTY ; Ai r- »

SAIGO N.’South Viet Nam f lesx- and som e observer The government has begun the government s attitude on t ar* t «immunity Schools m

..to clear up the m vstery of keeping quiet w as « hanging. , terviewm g later Elementaryw hat happened to President Key new spapers in Saigon j Education. Secondary English

1 N go Dinh Diem 's once-noisy quote ‘ authoritative sources" I and Business Education ! political opposition. ' i as saying that Dr. Dan is in- Interviewing at the I'l.e •

Some think the pro-Western deed alive and « il l go on trial ment Bureau Kndav Add.-. I,,., «reason after more invest.- tional Information in the 1 la* « ■iv e rn m en t s n u ie t voi*e m " lr «• » . . . «., , ,, ...g a tin g T hey sa y th a t P h a n m en t B u re au B u lle tin fot tin

NEW YOHK, T— Have you mothballed, their d r i v i noticed? There aren't so many thrown out <d_ jobs' of those big truck-trailer rig.« ! T1IE ABRUPT switch stem s • - k , .._ Mi loaded with new cars hi-halling from introduction nt ingenious As th tru uudown the roads any more. ' new. railroad etjuipment and a toward in. reas

The railroads took aw ay a lot | drastic cut in call freight ratesof the new car-hauling business on new automobiles, in 19fiO. and are grabbing more The Association of Amei >■ an all the tim e Thousands of Railroads rails it part ot .«

haulaway" trm ks huv- In-« n ' revolution in transportationOrganized truckers titain-* wnat thev say are discriniinatorv anti-truck rates approved by pinr e g u l a t o r y a u t h o r i t i e s b i a s e d illthe railroads’ favor

\t any odds, a now tri It vcl railroad flatcars with sjk* i allv dcNimu’d tacks a llous au

Uentrat Alutual Insurance t ««. to^lobllrs t„ i„. loaded on like interviewing all majors from sar(jines pj standard size ao- all Colleges t((S nr j-, eonipaits, twice b

Warren Woods Public Schools (br(.,. I|n„,s tn „.|t haulawa-- < ■« iDelruit Areat interviewing El-ementary Education jjy t r |. |,E V E 1.. ■« «'.»dilia*

Veterans .Administration lie*- ( .tn , oted lr,,n'r |>«>ti««it t< pital interviewing Chemistry. . .Biochemistry, Biology. a n d Medical Technology.

Carl Sandburg liigh School interviewing Secondary Math.English. Business Education.Sp an ish . G e n e ra l S c ien ce. In s tru m e n ta l an«l V-m.iI Music.Art. and Guidance and Coun-

j seling.Firestone Tire & Rubber I <•

interviewing all majors from ¡the colleges of S. icnce A \ i t

Business & Public Service, jnd Communication Atts

Equitable Idle Assurance So­ciety of the United States in­terviewing Math. Accounting Finance, and all majors trom all colleges

, Forest l l i l l s ( onsolidatrd 1 I School |f«rand Rapids. Alich.i

• interviewing Spanish. Berman telt Sm'ial Science & English

1*1 \ M ISY j . ^I hAì

WvCd CnAC/c Ì- PÄCW4

ro u n d s b e fo re t o n srftssfed era l r r gui a t o rs , t-aro po^'*h te r.ir nifu a tio n s hold in te re s tl - r big 9r<*tnf9 o f th e public

Km one th e r e ’s a c h a n c enew < : r pri« es m ig h t b e r tduced rf r«> entlv low ere»i -h.rp ing < >sts hold t i r m —espe> .aly m t ie w e st ar.-l o th e r p ^ e! i,i î* r * ■u oved tro m » u tn ta>r >•i«*< ah 1 a sse m b ly p la n t- NfKKl> 's m ak in g an» p r o s u ^

Su* i»ndlv if . la m e s !: H«ffaunion b o ss of t h e id led t r g »

k. t» i' s h i w r .Fl'-. e»«*IS Dl'» « a » . a -S w ill rise fo r gor-f

u h irh a f te r U-.r.g puh.-o".

[di 'U'vba« k \ .4 Tig/'\vr-A xi s o r a i r .

A x’*-C £KsRCgri5 AS J ~ i i -£ : c i - 9£A w *DOBS T much £AT.

V

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»AS <iC< Mé, Vvv’ JAN s e U . A T .«£ .v a ' CAN C»*6i <«s V3UCAN N fv .T ME

*12»- / 4 t

( 3JT J-Jn " iNTSW eRE 1I x ' iTk MV FOOIK r£-y

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EUROPE-NEAR EAST—*395Special C onducted Stu d en» T auet

f KI LC r *. f lln ! AHS-C OW I

EMPLOYMENT>HT AND LA

. nniA-eiìd i tirttii) mats

I'jrunf * '• ¡.erster IV 4-

iTTMXXtr«4« * î «0« m M3 W'i

v r s» wi

*: »:n : T*A lt»S

«¡.MA

g o v e rn m e n t’s q u ie t voicidiscussing the m issing oppon .- - t . . „ . l . . . .cats reBe« t ' bu t an isolated et Kha. Sun a national assem bly- werk m March U -l.tort to hush critics before the m an also m issing sin. e th-Anni «> presidential election coup attempt, will t»e.tried on |CelH.1 interviewing t«»r a nuhere Other* hope the new Mm.Iar « harges ber of I(a. ulty^ vacam .es |..r

Some opposition maimr-. ..rr U k H i. s< hi»«»i .«<i, in

S a c ra m e n to S t a l e ( o liege

« tv*|wtaTkätiveness mean* more I

nergm g v a government noted lirm no-opf>osition rui

era! attitudes are emerging in now free from jail- but onlv "l^nmgs are - K n M, alter the deadline p.*'-ed t"i catalog a' toe ru< euieiit h

« an ilid a te to «qijiose reau

Med j« m Ven e» ord -Ow Iho r o ^ r o e *0 it-e J *0 G r e e k I v lo r d : g h o d « «

C ypruv oed Iva» »de« q»'d«d *©«»•t o i daer.o«). ««"-'-o-« 1 ^» on a i - b K n . dc , 17 days O-'r A3«j oe<l »p.

i v on «h i »»•»•* o n e - (all Wnfa at »■«>* U« '

10Til STUDENT TOUtS In d M IÄ he) M S M . N I C • T d e iO M ' - t u t

RO*>M Fi*R* I*’, PA.' * V g •

g. ♦•« ft- e r I D

PERSONAL• 4 AND BOARD $I . R 43 fiai ?!># sn HAD «

% Ldurwl

GT-rMtbdtwii4**fr»p«rt

od Cf«*? and gvr

“ ” lie*« :s >»a r t a *

a-fa Mir

i:d tr» t .

a I hem < rr -4*W*< t ion bid Hifrf*»¡♦- 'n e tug n a m e , is no sign that his government

w «tb a two-day -oup attempt , irkrt f#rf >ns nrpo, iU(m=— 'ha* *•«*«* N u m b e r I* t a m p a ii , n

Dr t han Wuang [»an The And there is no «rnrd thât Dr. _ A .etnam ese phvsi« , ? n . e-l.n at Dan M)j , ^ , n M M m f l , h f

~ *“d at Harvard h a s been m i" 4 Ml«> « cp ge«tur<¡.i*, ' n r lo tti# th in k 14 «uld

t e-i*: mf OR'

DR DAN 4.1. w a . the most strategy «t.» veux vr" «»*»* : outspoken among a n o n t’om-+ g*:T * 06 MU V'a’# ¡q ' » *s** •*>» h ,’ - . , t s rnunist group that p u b li-" . a<t u .- * î .aim, «» ru -»«i Diem s government la-tr.« A H iiA L t' eTi'DKM-c Ma' of t»ein2 undemo«rai.

Big Top> A »a«?» I-'

<«r tram »v » ’ - iswt Ai thr J‘in - W‘h.

V TA Y row • r <3 tot s r r - t

- rx'diir- *Phi Kat n ' &

FOR RENT SERVICE

i ««rrupt a n d «liitatorial (h a tgrs »hat t lie in * »u|«t*‘T d e n ..

D r D a n i< not «on<od« ri planner ««I the truitl»-■*

. Pia» lollow et] > n rnontti Rut he did mm the I*-1 ri-brls a- advisor andurged the nation bv tad«

alltcrs alici alrea«tv lie.ng «•

,n tea« hing ,,j „ Av foe his Wile and

lied

tie« n -a" - born

Idelighted, he

« we re rust ail W •• !u\ c to kecj.

W. VSTt R' nos» ¿*ir>l«» .»• i o a

W h en trie î «»op w a 1 * i D r D a n an d o th e r op t le a d e rs d is a j- j ie a re i l 1 : .» gr rn m e n t r e i i i ' e d to r m on th« t< sav w h a t b e c a m e ot th e r :

rn 2-1

ARAiTMENTS

ATTHACVn*V A K'»*'-?*a I'afumlitAi *»:or anti «tnv«

; A4LP ttoft« Ali. ’ f D ■ -rAJST «IDE HA \ 1 r *> Kydent» m * pw* *'mKÎ mptgfT'i+r'i toApprised TV ?,-*■$

v : -mis

VHABE jrrvmo apart’ Or-f l'tlllt'#' tfi-'’■np'gg MJk» A.«-’. laffe *'

W •«' Aop-‘«nI r o r*}7i«

R A m m tD Lfi'is'i4# J* A L ;*’,-<«# " ~' S *R à- >*> iv H : ■:»: ■ g -mü avec f'gì

APPRI

»NOMSf fJ 2 • X4 f tm oap*r* ê ii t trpinf

• ari an f m iu r w is i j a m ISO l - ‘ •-.n t l f * f "*ica !A fn roc«-» «n #M6aâl IB

« * ter F ¡u«»n »x «•»bî •-,«•*.«» K'rm

; • au* *

, f0 %«i<1 hp ìs n<H * f r t J i nb o h p \ j t tl*. w h e r^ lV n n v B ros

Kr<j \a j|f ì*r p lav tn g bo i it w ill b r• ìr in Ih e < hi« a r r a in th * *um Qf FTTtpr a n d fi «'»fI>• * »»aftx of tb<*

m id H p tM « vo m rth m ^ I •' ani tn

an<i I i l n * '\p r f»#* happ> wnJp*.« RI MOHS C .R I H m Ih iA . i I t r y it I ha*«* rw> «li e t i s i a '

i j ri in Ntfr,#* '«àid I».r I>an b a ri t io ti u i t h tra « h in g *»f t h r u m

d it i ) in ja^I Th«* In trm a tm iie T ' \ p r « .f » an*l ‘ f [he • rv us «J«m* n *C o u n c il a l ' S a«f »-»rk o u t , I «I probabtN h kp rv iso n Crmif» in (»«’n p \a a v .» « ! r r i u m t»» f p a ih in c

fcavf*6f lm p n f h n « iti la m i- Bui ini novi. I f! f»#* « onte’ ars to intuir«1 io he a cjoun.^p^ fnrget

T h * g o v e ro m p iit i f f i h H i ta» *Ja> * m h * d u l* v ¿ r a d r « aP«i?*ar» for f»an « r r # g ioD ttti r e ^ i f f a t w a

■ f > KIT ARIA . •e gè f,‘#e ,

et-**'

PAC io? a a pa r t y 'U/Tiìii-mt* fur

• r **» t a t t i ffi) ï-

3 R oo .i rv a \i6 H » Dv iS t |.^r«4 Ut».■'-•e»? gmjrmg* ai A ;

«r !w Î #1 «dr *e uv»v e‘ r>i> rhPt tor «r .All a >&■ Viti

Al A V< Y ATTfR T ? 11.■■ -tASued * r-.v»'-- g

- ‘Ving., laui-ar- IV y-**»!

ALA IH D Dr «a.- kJ Ibe* - 'J t * guAtù ,*■»'

î f,ÿ • H a: *>D Ì-V3«r

V ■ fJi T T lfL V D g v * t. m «D t*

FOR SALE TRANSPORTATION

a m u u

Ì^oom s

tA<

•ppnoAXD o o r a i /m front tJtmipan pn «** #s '

^7 ft Orarsi R ìrtr Ai

A P P io v so ftoo^L ' r t } * * '<1* AtuS dour-it Vir private

r *n r.. cal y pAThtrg a.nl* * «n«N« iè«*-?>d l* --6 • » ■ * • ~

ED 7-K30 t itc f I +

« *aift AND « V O ll

a '» n *i-

PER DAYe d « é * |

m o l i

IU.M «co * ' « I PO r *> ' * 9* iam p o *i|l> StlMU- t» e 'i 1 1 2 • o*f g«erv ft tj ih* ronii(et of t^ t i«c«t v " r ! 'couct. «uommodat-on «a t»«*ia-' *:**' .» -•»**ætod v.gUH*0 1 . t-«kca r* * t *4 *•*“ ’’ « «

m mm. m a i u sa . u u i *»«*4 m a o m u i m ( j f .r g tu r frê ê I# P I I M M .‘e t ««"C ,

(OUEGE TRAVEL OFFICEan i l

‘« ••H i

IV . w g k a m i k i i e k . e I t e i ,. K i i : * » * :

I S A ,

r - .

î

i TT¡ • M i I 044-

fi«4M M«d um fKMS Bmkiét

F r o m t h e

ServicesBuviim Bat'k \our lexlliook»

• n

Kr«*c Parkin» (larti>u>

h 'cr \\ rapping fur Mailin'!

Spring-time featuresSHealahirtP nith .MSI * S2.B9 ¿t ii|iF rie iu l^h ii» K in ^s \ «irU| * S.T.00

Lilli«* br«»lh«*r • lilll«* **i»il**r M SI S b r a l* l i iH *

S I ..V H u i h I i i }>

( hililrrii «

N « * h K i « ‘l i « s i i u i k I N « # n» - I * ¡ 4 ‘ I m »i i l k a » k «

l ' ; i | M * r l M » t i i i < l » C « i r \ a r i i l i u n K « * ; » « l i i » ”

S p a r t a n B o o k S t o r e* In t h e T r ia n g l e . S i m a n i l M M

t a * l l a m i n g . M i c h i g j n

Page 4: New lirary Check-Out ¡ J F K S u m m o n s L a t i n s e w S y s t e m [T …archive.lib.msu.edu/.../1961/state_news_19610314.pdf · 2014. 4. 25. · «lahlfohed 1909 Vol. 52, No.

M ichigan S late » * * , Ea*t L an sin g . M ich iganT u ew la y M o rn in g . March 1 1 . 1

Sporh for All

Munti Enthusiastic of MSU Si torts Facilities and Program

r.x f l .A V I t l K IM B \ l I M j t r \ f H ' i * ta f f U r i r r

>frnnd of Two |*art«»

I | *i| M I V

Pifasso Marries liOn^imr KHpimI

VALLAURtfi. France. * Artist Pablo P icasso. 79. has m arried his longtime compan ion and model .in a private cerem ony at th is Riviera vi!-’ lagc The bride is Jacqueline Rncque. 33.

The civil ceremony was per- iorm ed at the town hall March 2 and cam e to light Monday Mayor .Paul Rerigon. who of­ficiated. is a‘ Communist like

‘P icasso and an old friend P er­iston also officiated at the n n : • riage of the late Prince Vv Khan and Rita Hayworth in 1*M9

Yallauris w as put on the m a p by P icasso when lie set up a studio here for potter^ and ceram ics The Spanish Imrn m odem m aster carved out a new career in this field after success in a wide variety oi - painting sty les, ra n g in g Ironi cubism to hi<\. delicate lo se |ieriod portraits.

Would Cut Thefts,-Better Advisory Pl„

I T S B U N

Nixon Joins Los. Angeles Law Linn

I .OS ANOF.t.KS *'■, Kormei \ a p President Ru-liard M Nix on Mondai loined a leading I.os Angeles law firm Adatti»I Mique «V l la ro l tm c

'I lip com p an y an n o u n ced ' T hp firm is p le a se d t ■ > an

rinunce lli.it R ic h a rd M Nixon, fo rm er Vice P re s id e n t l ia . i l a . d a ’- b eco m e co u n se l to th e In 111

The announcement cam e ai ter speculation Hu c.\ ' ji i President, beaten loi the pres idenev last November by .lulin P Kennedv. might take a uni \ i-rsi* pod oi engage 111 at l ive I s 1111 111 -

I ivpi the weekend NlNoil • al m'daled In . polii a al ambi

l ion.» in Sai tatúenlo In tolda pu1 ss conference

i am noi a candidate loi governor I have no intention to 11* a i andatile oi hi dilute a ni aft

•vvt. ttKRt:

W l, l . l . l NO

VII N \

Government Gives Contract

WASHINCTON. h— The gov em inent, in a major m ove to holster the m ilitary's ability to , ll\ troops to faraway trouble spot>. Monday awarded a hi I - '

i lion-dollar contractThe contract with laickheed ■

■Aircraft t'nrji ca lls ‘ for «!*•— ; vdopm ent and production oi at* Herd of more than Its* long range, high-speed let cargo ■ and troop transport plane

However, the lu st of them is 1 not exp n ted to be ready he t o r e the latter part ol calendar ptfi-l

In «in u n u su a l m o v e th e W hite H ouse announced the a w a rd ol the contract 'I Ins presumahlv rellectcd the new , high, priority and jiersunal at tent ion w h ich President Ken . nedy has given !■> the problem of miproving tin* arm ed fore ••. , .ip.duiiH toi lighting limii

• ml oi In u hi I it e w at

H MSB, WILX TYIV» Olebrat«* TIm'Ìi* A uni vernai*)

W MSB. ah ng w ith its co­l ise o;i f t u n n e l IO. W i L X TV ( i -> ì> ra i ing il* «econd ¡»nni-

W .-p e - lU . v i s i s t a t i o n aiu l W I I .X -

■.i-r.it- > o " le .-.line f r rq tlfn u’.ipnng m.d-Mioi.igan vicw - a un que p r o g ’.ini se rv ire

gs th p o n ly p isc« in thè ;. ; v"hP-c —-, ; . . do n o•MHI; u r i i i - e g - p r o g ra m « in i r .fo r i i . i . a n d c u ltu ra l tia-

a - M r h n g t<» n ts tio n m a n - 1 . J * . .1 C a iiiiian . T: ■

:. . ... ,. p i e b e s t e q u u i - | ita? • .:. m e co u n trv . T oc

• st.i.tent r . TV w hen , , , < i . ,. ta.il s 'a ' ri oy era t-

B r M o c v .n * 1 8 'J hour« a re . WMSii ; un tlic .1 1 fnr.ni .l'I a : 1 > 2 lì, li il itti. 1 roOi

' . 7 30 ’ P ’, » rakq.iv>

<1 ¡II a : unsi; ; in an d»•e Ut* " • o : r.oon M 4 p ni

A M P l'S C L A S S IF IE D S . .

IV K SJTR K A D EPSH ÌP . • ■

J i )W C O ST

(C ontinued f otn pas'* ’ *

The greatest loss resulting from stolen books is to the stu- i’icnt and faculty m em ber, say* Chapin, “ mostly through loss of research tim e and through class- changes

Chapin said som e instruc­tors have been forced to change c la ss and reading a ss ig n m en t because ot stolen hooks. He said the best solution to “ e

real book thief", or the ; v - son who" m akes a habit of stealing books, w as lo *nsiill in’ the student a pride in the

lib ra ry . He feels the new sys- tem would, hr «—«H-;* *n Ike right direction

Besides flic cutting of ‘Xiok 'theft and the freedom of m ove­m ent inside the building. fT.a pin said the new system " o' free professional librarians in

l'ail divisions from many tim e- consum ing tasks concerning the handling of books.

“ We haven’t been giving the students the reference inform a­tion and the advisory service they d eserve," said Chapin. ■ because often th e divisional

1 librarians arc busy w ith the ■ problem s created by the pre­s e n t checkout system in the d i­visions As soon as w e can get a central checkout system in. w e can do a better job ol ad­vising the students

Chapin explained that all d i­vision librarians are experts in the field of their division, and can advise ■»indents on how and w here to gather in

I form ation.

CHAPIN IS ai.su hoping to im prove reference serv ices bv setting up plenty of scheduled hours in w hich those serv ices will be available. The schedu­ling ot certain hours w ill pro vide the student with the a s ­surance that he can get all the hclji lie needs at th ese t in e

A n o 1 h e r im provem ent brought about by the new sy s­tem would be increased shell - reading done by the students treed from present door-check

M o r e shelf-reading would m ake the books easier to find, and would cut-down tlie prob­lem ot losl ot hus-shclved

books remaining lost Also, it would help elim inate the pml>- Icms created by students who purposely m is-shelve books in order to deny their use to others.

\ | J , |N AI/I-. the new sy » tern would have many advan­tages to offer both the library em ployees and patrons

Chapin has asked tor and would Pke student reaction to the central checkout system

s i ­

ll

lie has Ooverm strength Tor the : •

• We i , host it v want, s.-i

Studeni ' a resolution administrai to empower, library lo t; steps to e

sse.d that Student t hacking v. o u 1 d !ii> hand in the bid »y stem-crve tlie students

know; what they Tiapin•igress has passed

• esolving that th e n lie encouraged lie direr tor ot thp e the appropriate ih lish a central

bonk checkout system tor the convenience ol the student

THF. RK.MH.l TION isV a tcr ed down however, by an a m endment which -ays 'ad­m inistrative |>lans for change in librarv policy should be sub­mitted to Student Congress for its opinion a» to the usefulness ol the plan

Chapin feels the new svs tom is not only ■ more useful hut is osent lai

Chapin feels that there is no better system for á library

set up such as ours, and he is confident that adm inistration officia ls w ill give him the go- ahead II the system is not O K ' d , however. Chapin said lie lords many students and la cully m em bers w ill want lo I now w h>

Chapin stressed that since lie tuts lieon library head lie has had excellent co-operation from adm inistration heads on all library m atters He said Provost Miller and the other officials concerned with the li- brary are fully aw are of prob­lem s.

THF l FNTRXI. i HKC'KOl T system ; then, seem s to la* a »lop in the direction ot hotter library se iv ice lor the univer­sity Should i1 lie rejeet«*d. the present library svstem xvill re­main much the sam e

According to Chapin, the hew svstem would not be a library cure-all Many problem s would continue He leels thal the unf~ versitv has grriwti. hut that the library has not kept pace with it

lie pointed out that MSI and Purdue are at the bottom

■ol the Big Ten libraries in num ­ber ot volum es.

This doc» not m ean, how­ever. " Chapin said that wo don't have ail the answ ers available

Chapin said that through in creased contact lietween the di-

I v isional librarians and the stu-

dent a more i¡ standing ol tin tages, and pi ..m,,.-.MSI' library ....... i,in. the stu d en t i ■

EASIER

Study atV

the GALLERY. 1 1 7 ' i t K . ( ¡ R A M ) K I V K K

OPEN AU NIGHT DURING FINAIS

J2 NOON TO 7 A.M.

PRILLI) FROM

I " .«'121l.AIH.K SKI I t ll"\

Lamode SI:FR WHO!! luiUNTtiHf

Cash For BooksD o n ’ t B e a L o s e r . . .

ANY WAY YOU FIGURE IT .

Il Pays to Brin« Your Books lo I s Right From Your Finals \ *

I*«lutasti«* Prices and u Convenient LocationV (Kight Across From Berkey Hall)

S t u d e n t B o o k S t o r eFree Parking iu Lot Behind the Store

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I 111*».lax M orn ins. M arch 1 1 . 19 ft I

8 a Bann .* hPlayground for Caroline

LOW P R I C E S

Alirhigan Stai»* \ p * « . Ka*l 1 anting. Michigan

\ > H i \ < » T O N ' ‘— T h e h t: ; \> b o » a » « H i. d a d d y '

«■ ! ’r■■' idont of t h e U n i t e d i!‘ f i n e a b - g b a n e o u t

; in th e W hite H o u s e

\ th ree -y ea r-o ld s c e n e s t e a l t a r o l in e K e n n e d y h a s ob-

,)i;sly m a d e t h e p r e s i d e n t i a l -ion h '-r play g r o u n d

- ( s full of s u r p r i s e s — p a c k - a toy p is to l, b l i t h e l y help- he r fa th e r p lay h o s t to

i id le a d e rs\ t h o u g h M r- K e n n e d y say s

« o u ld l i k e C a r o l i n e k e p t of th e p u b l i c s p o t l i g h t , t h e ¡den t se e m s w i l l i n g e n o u g h

u s e h i s b londe little* d a u g h - • -h a re p u b l n a p p e a r a n c e st fo) f T1.

M I M E O F t i n m o s t a p p e a l - p h o to g ra p h s of C a ro lin e

e ta k e n p e rc h e d o n h e r fa - - o ffice d esk . w hile o>-

-ib ly w o r k i n g <m a f f a i r s o f f

. n o l i n e i - a - l u l l o f s p i r i t i cjuestions as any three- . "id Right now. she seem s ihservers ti» 1st unspoiled by- u n u su a l lit»- in to w h i f h she

■ Seen th ru s t .it o b n o u s l v h a l t a k e n t o it

with delightAlthough she .- m * ,t ■ u,

of a British nurse. Canm anages to g< t "ff ........ rfor unexpected apiw-.e an-1

< LATTERINl. - n e r s hieh heeled -hoe«, broke up an important r

1 conference her father # s - ducting in Pain Reach. VI; a flash, s h e t r . ) - » 1 t h e to smn cam era- pom the president t ie-11-> make her T \ debut in pmk paiam a-

Carolinc i-n't adverse to ing out secrets, either wandered into t; c White H communications room on* day and When askrd va hat daddy was doing, candidh p l i e d

- H e ' s not doing a n y t h H e 's iust sitting up tlu-re his shoe- and sc* k- <>:* o n o t h i n g

Caroline, us nVueUjjg - the -world - most famous pie

MRS. ELEANOR I! -r reports the {‘resident s da ter is the typc that ; k< -

tag alongCaroline g >e- on tours of

R ». C M

ASH. T ill V

P L U S K I NG

OKEMOS STORE

O P E N D A I L Y9.«9

Exc«pt

Smdays

CORN S T A M P SPRICES GOOD AT

OKEMOS STORE ONLY

r-\ Pri n K*

■ 'Pti tr

)lïV 5

EAST GRAND RIVER AT HAMILTON ROAD, OKEMOS

‘HI Next ^ rar

Philosopher Russell Writes Own O b itu ary—2.5 Years Ago

> \r > o \ • I w e n t ' -four exp losive* he ;* t ie u-a >■--ag o B e r tr a n d R u sse ll- high p ro p h e t and te so iu tc a;». s tep ■ • : • t* i.»r.

of th e w o rld s g re a t phi! t ie of n u c le a r d is a rm a m e n t by > a n .p a tg : ’ ■ ; r th e e -*a ' : ::< r — -w rut' h is own obitu- B rita in <•! a > . - f , - : . b a -e ft

When m ost m en of hi» y e a rs t S P o ’u r.s < a r" - r.g * ; ui- ■ sa id . are content to l i t by the f.re :r.» • a n d n u c l e a r w eap o n s ge:By th e ilea l!. the Third < omforting them selves ¡n re- er.«"'-

id Rus-sell tu p .e r tra n d R us- f lec tio n on a long a n d rew ard - R l's sM .I . -a d '• t '■as h e p re fe r r e d to c a l l 'h im - m g life. Bertrand R ussel! is p a re d to g > to » ' 'a * h e - tn a

a link w ith th e v e rv dis- p lay in g th e re v o lu tio n ä re a n d le a s e his fwst But r .e p h c r ‘p a s t g a d v o c a tin g c iv il d w o b e d ie n te n o r a m uf ht< • - - we:

. '■ th e a m a z e m e n t of m a n s - in th e c a u s e of n u c le a r d isa rm - a:-*“----! X «? ' P" °• -not t T i h c lo se f r ie n d s — a m e n t ter d e sc rib e d <t iu 'e r tf

t se n p re d i 'i tu f th e d a te of F a r fro m s ittin g by th e fire q u te te " rr-»»t o rd e r

m ovil»0nC ic D Wl i

Mtr S A L EFrc*h Idean

Ground Beefl . l i . t h i l s » k 9 c

Farmer Peet*

Skinless Frankslirad a No. 1 K andom

^ f i g h t *

I . h . 1 i n I \ 39.Heady To Vat A lb avt

Parm er PeetySmoksd PietiesFresh Pork Butt Sleek

3 9 cIk. 39c

death r i P*»J B' he recently sat on a to io pa . i ... uijj >„ '«• ment outside the defense nI I I W K M a.uged a sy! istry building at the head

uf ¡1 Ik ..>,d m an n some 3.000 ' sit-down" d»

table a g i ' - d.e '!t M i d i e n W i l lwith a m e rry twinkle M e e t M a r c h 2 8

." ¡¿i» w h I the tid e

t »**■<* n

Farmer PeeU

Ring Bologna39.I .tf id e No. t

I I I . O n l >

Frt**h B u lt

Pork Roastl.ean Meals O í h

I II. O n l y i J 7 f

• b rig h t b lue e'- es. he add ■ . h e su rp r is in g ly high g v o i c e

;m I m ilsi say I m !»■- - a l ittle n»d -.1. . a - ’ ’ .:..-

h e >m ay foe ner w*u t\

o n t.)W.ir«l hi.N &:**ula*« oft \ f

nounnng cmminilsor rrv. »cars \ i» <* in World H it I Ht

h a s be*n a* v i r io u sVt^te News »taff m em bers tim es for adsceat.r.g fMhifism

will meet March 38 at 7 p rn rights for w.,men.^ tree love

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„ , . u . , . ___ Tuewdav Mornina,HiHiiguri Stale N w . Kiiwl I .anting. Micliijiaii

C Y N I C You can tell him by his favorite food—sour grapes. According-to the cynic,

there's an opportunist in every public office, an Elm er G an try in every pulpit, a racketeer in

every union local. N o worthy cause can possibly succeed, he believes, because the w orld is

ffill o f schemers. A master o f the negative, a veteran w et blanket, he dampens d ^ fleatioiy

chills initiative. A n d while the cynic sits and gram bies, doctors answer midnight c a ll« , . .

artists create works with more concern fo r art than applause. . . school teachers help their

students, not their bank accounts, grow. W here would Am erica be today i f the cynic’s view

had always prevailed? Human advancement proves that people can, and usually d o, w ork

together for the common good. In this nuclear age, is there any other choice?. . 4 —-

C a r e e r h u n t i n g ? The amazing growth o f nationwide Is d ear testim ony io the power o f new ideas. Founded in 1 9 2 6 , nationwide today is the w orld s second largest mutual auto insurer in cars insured— and one o f Americas leading underwriters o f fire, life and general insur- once. Our representatives also have the opportunity to sell mutual funds.I f you d like to work fo r this dynamic company, nationwide is hiring sales representatives now. ham while you learn-with advancement oppor­tunities. Write Dean W. Jeffers, M .-Sales,Nationwide,Columbus 1 6 tOJuo.

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Page 8: New lirary Check-Out ¡ J F K S u m m o n s L a t i n s e w S y s t e m [T …archive.lib.msu.edu/.../1961/state_news_19610314.pdf · 2014. 4. 25. · «lahlfohed 1909 Vol. 52, No.

» M irh ipan S ta ir New*. Ka«l l.aii<«in". H irh ip anT iirw la y M o rn in g , Marcii 1 ) , |» (|

Eleanor Pr JFKWASHINGTON. n Mr.- El

r.'innr itmiM-i i’ll a champion <•1 many causey, appealcst !<i I 'resident Kennedy Monday t• >r appointment of more women In top posts in government

And. after a requested morn- husband, ing conference with the"iTt||iy.' Franklin dent at the While House-, she' left Kennedy a three-page list of women qualified for high level jobs Mrs Itoosevett e x ­plained " s o m e people fell" the President's appointments so far left something to hi' desiredt *as lar as women are eoneem -

own

the former first I all that is need prod and remind-

pros tiled Iwith and

Sometime lady declare ed is a lilth

.ex . So she the list

Mrs Hnosev elt optim istic though don't know whether

Neither tile Wlot M rs Hooscvelt ill names on the list

So far h> White the President lia MU apiminlmenl-

are women Ex President Dwight F isco

how er named a woman (b e ta • '»lip Hobln to a cabinet post, hut Kennedv has made no feni

was not say mg

it o f n

I* House sc lo se d

nadeH|||

m ine c a b in e t 01 high poin poin t m en t -

Mrs Hoosiwelt said she the list compiled for her intends to add to it soon

Slie explained that herthe* late president

’ Chfcf' franklin D , Roosevelt. had been given a list of women qualified for public office by a representative o( the National habitation Association. adding the reminder list helped KlfR so sh e saw that President Ken-

• nedy received a sim ilar re- fiiindet After all. the former first lady conrluded. it's unfair to Is- i rilieal "unless you help "

Kenneth lias won praise tor naming the first woman White House physician h r Janet Tra- vell. and has broken new ground by apjiointing form er Congress woman Heva llosone ol I tali as iudii i.il officer of the Post Oft ire departm ent. Otherwise, he has named w om ­en m ainly to posts which have gone to women in recent year .

In the diplomatic field he switched Ambassador Prances Willis, a career diplomat, from ambassador to Norway to C ey­lon, a country which has Hie lust woman ever to serve as a prime minister

If HII

noram

tally.it Hit it

mnr.

L o c a l P i c t u r e

A t t e n t i o n . S a v

l i s e A t t r a c t ! * P u b l i s h e r

T o H u n ‘ P r o b l e m S t a l e

Senator Challenges Writers

Hi-

PREPARATIONS FOR SHOW—Tlirhard Forhnsh, Inkster sophomore, is shown M-tiwWnc his Onarter Horse m are for the Rloek and Bridle show to he held in the I f ir s in r i PasH ira March 31 and April I. I Photo hv Roy V oss).

For lloffa

Jurv Was Improperly SelectedHe

A g r i c u l t u r a l M e e t i n g A t k c l l o ^ « ;

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in the objects

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exen partiall Pl.it tised h

I snggest caught nfling mi cam pus is pniquc front slum dweller sanie act Mr

thè (ai t that su f ' ' is Mibjett t « ourt costi. and niay go to taii Menni*Iole he is stili held lesponsihl« t>' thè university

I mainimi! that sin h u n ol lendet Ita« noi mily violateli society s law hut alvo t h è trust Michigan ta x p a te is have piace»! ip hitti. a> mdicated tu t*.eir partirti puvmeiit of bis educaiion and must necessari- e face thè nsk et w ithdiawal ol bis trust .e I s m a l t i r '

I regr.c! ttie p i. unsy mpathotic he ’untfornted ot umqurncss Hut musi alt re meni Ivi i- a cruci, cruci old w

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OKI.AM «» H a i Allot tiey.s for Jam es I; Hof I a con ­tended Mondav that- a grand tury which tiwlu t«*«l tlx laUir leader fot m ad It and w as uti- projierly selet ted The'- * alle«t on C S Ihstri» t Judge Joseph P. laeb to d ism iss j|x cast*

A Grand Jurx in d o ied Hof ta, 4Ji. international President ot the T eam sters I iikni, and tw o Other Detroit men in l*e centlier on 11! «-«Hints «u m .« i | fraud and m isuse qy more than jaon.ooo in unHiii tund

A hearing on m otions !»» quash the imii< intent w as , ,(i led for Mondas .

F i l l « l u i D r i l l i « I f S i t u i m i ! * ' l i u r t l *

legal

antiMr

[tbot

I sv stemtends t.) Hiedel s

I* ail, we that this orld Iteanrt

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• ». jM-r-R na: jw..heir Siw* «. are rr*

•o br «-.»re f*>■ »'«'-niif'.’tire Mnc; s>e -.vkie »*f • e lirm* «a?S*x ì«*ìy'mN i'**-' sîràtuM' «.irt Ahe"..te- I i • *> sprm * te nr*: •

* X»S t ^ « r v « "«jRseLiiilybajK*-rT,4n* ■tv.' "t . SAl*t I> ..fr;r‘T M,* « Uj%5s. Stu-KÌV A'f.'- ÌRN’AdM' !

Nh>Ck a » 1

House of Lord.*I Curii* Pn*s*

LONDON. T - V lull a'SJlicit a s a « urh on Ihe - press via- adojded hv the House ol lairds : Mondai 74 21.

It would permit lega! action against am one rrsjouisihle for un tustiftable jhiIiIh atior. «il nta terial relating to a « duett s private a iia ir - I »ini Man- « r«*ft the sponsor rtepiored thr British press coverage m news

, ami photographs when Princess M argate! vi.sded Ireland and when Arteurut Bex an was on his deathbed..

Ijord Arran, who has a bark ,poun«l in the newspaprr busi- Iwess. pictured the measure as j ntuzzlmg free speech and pro voting ' a lawyers* banquet'* of endless litigation Viscount Ktl- mutr, laird chancellor and tor- mer attorney ^generai, said such legislation would n <> t work.

*ltie indictment charges the three used union tunds in con- ne« tion with Sun V alley. Inc.. a real estate lirm set tin to develop 2.475 acres in Brevard count* near I S highway 1 and Cape Canaveral, Fla.

Julian Parker ot Tallahas- 1 si-r. one ot s«*veu defense at-1 lornev s ._ slated two grounds tor d ism issal.

"We find no cau se for action in this ca se ." he totd th«> judge, i The other ground, he said , con- cern«*d the method ol selecting grand juriors.

Hot fa sat in (tie trout row ot s|H*ctators and a|i|M*ared to fol­low th«- proceedings intently, j His co-defendants, Henry Low- c i . a lornter officer in a team ­sters local at Ih'trnit. and Ilo- bert M«-Carthy, .lr , a banker, were not presimt

Jacob Kossm an of Iietroit told the judge that the detens«*»«intends "This w as a state jurv rathei than a ferk*ral jury State law r«»quires that ■« grand juror must tie a quail fi«»«l e lector. To In* a federal juror, you don t have to tic a «tualdied elector.

Fuller F . W arren, form er

Florida governm from Miami, sum m ed up the ea se during lunch recess by saying, "It hasn't exactly m o v e-d with lightning «peed

l ie predicted in«* hearing would run through today and possibly W ed n esd ay .

The d efen se ca lled tw o w it­n esses by nud-alteriKMin. Both testified eoneerning the m cth. ml of selecting n am es from

' which the grand jury was drawn.

Mrs. Mildred D urrence d e­puty clerk of federal court, testified she Used Hie nam es lor grand jury selection that

1 w ere provided by clerks of c ir ­cuit < statc> courts in four coun­ties.

| Jam es Iknvd ol W ashington, ' D C . a Justice Departm ent a t­torney . objected tim e and a gain to contentions by the de

I fense. W hen the w itn esses were being questioned, he asked the judge several tim es to m ake d e f e n s e nttom«*ys rephrase questions

ma.li Imwl.ty a y ’s Su I

ii.*•.''* »!

M«aesAB u s

** .4iHNiri

Clt*«T.rO> y M i-v’

U u ' h u ‘ UM*i !•

K n t m H e r

I dilor > Note him llutrh. director ol housing, i e**eiv ed this lelirr I eh from a Hun g a tu n refugee who Nttemieit MM two years ago but now lives in I'ngland \nv inl»»nw.» *i«»ii on t sill.« I fixed should b«- direeled to liutrh . ex l 7741 I tear Proprietor

I am terribly sotirv t- tu m ­ble voti again t>et it u o u I d. !>«• a very great kuvdness u von Would try to help m e tu » r ,i Very old friend ot mine

Her name is t ’siUa Fgved .« Hungarian and («ossibly ol M ichigan State I nivefsity

That slie used to liv«* her«» is «|uite certain as I in f ix e d a letter from her with your ad dress two years jg o j believe she is staying with a fam ily called I'ottyondy also Hun­garian

I would tx* most grateful it you could find tunc to reply to thi* letter.

Excitement must be mount­ing at your end.' but here there is notiung but the sam e old grey , wet winter

Gabar I.—p e l iw — « ¿ Q r t i M d j

GLADM ERSTARTS

s f p f :r

BARfiAM BAY!ALL IIAY PRKV1KM «H TIIF.SI-. TWO FFATI RKN

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Taay Carlin ia "THE GREAT IMPOSTER" April C4k

(•aoa Faad ia "CIMARRON“

re* -if they imvc »»nhe \ Y7

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Sullivan. Parr Talk (lanceled

NEW YORK. 1* The highlv puhhei/ed television del),'lie lw- tween E«l Sullivan and Ji*rh Parr vvas called off Monday, well in advance ol its late e v e ­ning air tim e E ach -sid«* blam ed the other

NBC, in iM'hall ot Parr even invoked th«* mem ory of last lu ll's presidential i am|>aign de­bates lH*tvve«»n Presulenl K en­nedy and form er- \'>n-e P resi­dent R ichard M Nixon

"Jack P arr, through his rep­resen ta tives, has just ca lle il off the debate." was the initial declaration from Suflivail a star of th«* CHSTrtrvism n net

! work. " P aar sim ply has welsh- ! «*dI Hcplied NBC ill a statem ent Ion hchall ol Paar. its jie|iular i lat«» nighl entertainer;

"Ed Sullivan Monday backed • out of h is announced intention ol debating Ins d ifferences with Jack P aar "

In the absence o f Sullivan. P aar recalled f o r Monday night's show his previous sch e ­duled ta len t—a couple of co-

| m edians, a singer and som e in- J defin itely-catalogued gu ests.

The* debate w as to have lieon presented on Monday night's P aar show, beginning at 11.30 p m. The idea fur the oratori­cal «lash grew out of last w eek's publicized exch an ge be­tw een P aar and Sullivan over pay sca les on their- respective show v

lhtrill President Makes ( itrreelion

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Thi? s t h e m e f- ‘ .»V i e ­ accuv i’f! itdur*i< », no? i’i fi» e c.' lle told o w n W j.iUle SiikTto. * H u p e H> • U%ve a! 1 '«tha.v intir e a d , v o tw l a f »ur-e «•fit t i l e . S h i ö Ip ln»

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l ake M llio in t'lil \i»tl o lir »lore

(Hi The Triangle * Ann lit MAC

East Lansing. Michigan

Ave.

M IC H IG A NTHTRS.. M A R , • 4:34 P.M.

In IPerson!ON (H R ST At « I

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PRIM,It «VI INFORMATION CALI 111

E A S T L A N S I N G PHONE ED. 1-7814

HOME OF THE BEST IN FOREIGN FIL'D EXCLUSIVE I.ANMING AREA SliOWIN».

FIRST SHOW 7 I*. M. r - AIM l.TS

” FfiÄTI R EÄ T 7:S® - » ü » ~ HI RR'

LAST TIME TONiiHT

Nmninaled Far H*e Ar.nl* in* '» ,r*

4 DAYS ONLY STARTING WEDNESDAY

O N E O F T H F f - R F 'f FOREIGN IHT> ^

COMING—“ROgHO-MON"— "HELL TO FTFRMT'

"MIDNIGHT LACE”

Page 9: New lirary Check-Out ¡ J F K S u m m o n s L a t i n s e w S y s t e m [T …archive.lib.msu.edu/.../1961/state_news_19610314.pdf · 2014. 4. 25. · «lahlfohed 1909 Vol. 52, No.

W ifh i|fn State New*, F,a«l la n « in " . M ichigan SPORTS T u csday Morning« M arch 14 « 1 9 6 1 . 0

U n c l e T o m ’ s W i n s I M B a s k e t b a l l T i t l e A k p a t a , Y o u n g* IAll-University Champs

Trounce Lambda Chi'sR i c h e y L e a d s S c o r e r « W it h I B ;

H a l e S c o r e s 1 1 F o r Lo«» r*

Ry KD KOTI.MI State New* Sport« Writer

Hie winner and still champions Uncle Torn s Bovs In (he final* for the all U niversity basketball title U nde Tom v Bovs sooted an im pressive 74-62 victory over Liitnbdt. Chi Alpha Uncht Tom ’l led throughout the entire game. olten by as much as 25 points.

I lie first quarter was marked by the outstanding defense of I ncle Tom’* Boys Lambda ( hi had trouble getting the ball inside and only scored 6 point*, all on long outside «hots

I ncle Tom ’* Increosed their lead in the second quarter

.mainly on the tremendous-Tnit side shooting of Paul Striker man" Hughes. Paul collected 8 (aunts in the quarter on «et stmts from 30 feet out

I.ainhda Chi trailed at half time 41-22. At the start of the seeniM half Lambda Chi »wit- i lied to man to man defense and were able to «lav closer to I ncle Tom s but they could n I overcom e the big lead With the switch in defense hv Lamb­da Chi, D ave Richy took over the scoring job for Uncle Tom's. D ave collect.-1 7 points in the third quarter and was high man for the gam e with Hi.

The fourth quarter was a lit tie wild with both team « clear- was her first mg ther benches. Lamlrda Chi Pan-American started the quarter down 23 |iomls, 59-36 They managed dav ||r-r d lo outacore U ncle Tom ’* in the questions to final quarter 26-15 hut it w asn’t enough.

It waa a fine team victory for Uncle Tom s Lour of their starting five were in double ligures and nine men contri-

IM Winter SportsALL-SPOFTS TROPHY STANDINGS Til III H IS T t.lt TLKM

1961• M W T M f .»■-I«».»» *f k*w»int i MSSOOVli » IM .II*

■aM

buted points to tin- eausr (tthcr men in doiilde figures for the Winners were Paul Hughes, 1 12. Jerri Karc/.rrut and Phil Nov lei, 10 cat h

latmixla also had nine men 1 figure in their .scoring. T oft were Steve Ifale It Jeti Buck.11 and flean Kelley 10

W i I i l i a R i u h d p h

l l o s p i l a l i / e d

NASHVILI.L lenn f- Olympic champion Wlma Hu dolph has entered a Im a! hos ' jutal for treatment ol w hat h en ; coai h ( ailed a stoinai h ojiset

Miss Rudolph collaps.-d #on ! the track last »aturda- iltei losing the 220 yard da*t. in *h< Senior W om ens track and' and field m e e t at ( olumbus Ohio The loss to Tennessee U l team m ate Vivian Riown

Since the 1'rVi gam es

She entered th< hospital sun toi referred a<l

oach Ed Temple who said fhe triple fold medal 1st in the I'#i0 Olvmpu s »houid he released in two or *hree day s

The hospital listed hei i on dition as fair

Schwarm Named MVP at Cage Fete

F a l l » ( » e l » L e u d e r » l i i p T r o p h y :

l l a l K L a m e r » A I » o H o n o r « * « !

The annual basketball banquet for the 1961 Vii< higan Stele cage squad was held Monday evening in the fam ou s (»nil in Lansing

Loach Lorddy Anderson looking at the seas»)n n retro«|»ect admitted that this was a miserable season He added *hat he was not attempting to make excuses, hot that, the fu tu re holJs a great deal in store for these hovs

P l a c e i n I C 4 ABv IVAN HOL. DOVAI.DSON

Slate New« Sports Writer

Michigan State's two-mtler (.»•ri V Young and team mate Sol \» ¡.am both brought home honors last Saturday from the K‘4A trsi'k in York n tv

ham r I

tX 01 fl

he main am suffer*

Andwv>i> prai*F<f Kahn for his

ART WHWARM rw fh fA Mini Valuable P la v ff award

I l i a d i S c h o o l I t a * k f t h a 11

Faro riles Lpsel In ~ Tou rim men t Pia v

Art s< hwiar m reveived the most valuable the management of the fam ous \rt a junior guani second leading «corer on the team and was one of ' s ta v s during t hi! early part of the season wh ed from inexperience

D a v e fa h s the only graduating senior ■*..* awarded toe I* aderslup trophv lor his job a team eaptain I ahs along with Schwarm. was responsible lor holding the team together as it gained experience during the season hah* ■««» the third leading scorer ol the team and was named to the I PI honor able mention All Amern an squad

during his ai eer at MSI •-/-

* Dave Is a line ball plaver It ha* heen a wonderful -»per- lenr e coaching him ile ha* been a tremendous asset to the name of MSI ’ stated Anderson

Im k Hall received the f ree Throw trophy trom the Ind.ana polls Alumni Club fiati scored on 104 <J IV) free shots for a 80 percent average

Ja'k learners who injured several time* during the sea- son received the S[iortrTF,jnship award for his play while suf­fering from hiv injuries La me r * ' a sophomore sparked the d am on m an. occasions with his h ustle and aggressive p la v

' it her members of the team received g"’s from the’manage ! ment and the roar hing staff f aptain Dave kahs alvi present­

ed the owners of Uic Lamou* and the varsity coaches with gifts I from the team.

i oungSpartao junior who rr-reoüv ■won the Big 1 en two mii»< r»>•••ri piared -e» ond n th< two mile run i>e-,.¡1 :■ »»Yalr in tJie 1 ( 4 \ \ .r a t . i *emor from Nigeria a< e t <•< ond in h; <»a»l jnm» h a le.»,, of 23 fr-et lu inches I ai’) ( i f t i i en of Manhattan jumj>ed 21 ler-t to * ; n the event

SOPHOMORKS B.ll Mannand IJr>n Voorheis aiso 1 o.n-peted tri th*- La tern me» t Mann a jaissibte -s;nner in th e hif?h huM'e event v* * imu rmed in th«* m«*lr ftfU'hitfir,;’ a hurdle ln th ■ h»! sa. dash Spar ’ m -i»t -nt» i V».o-he, wo» ehm irated in the <.uar*< final* af’er runnuig a fa (|H t m i. » oea*

V/é dut fiiirS• *. i o-an

trie h »bout h felt that, ho* pata shoo'drespectiva amerited Dittr

Mu h ig an t ra c k a re p futuie fot

as the-/ make >*boterai.» a*- saults on Mat* lro«b indoor records.

John Parker, rangy middle distarne star frorri Richmond. \ a ha* had a hand in two of the marks He ran the 440 ip

to erase Wiilie Atterber- r y , 48 A set m 1957 And Par* ,e r anchored a mile relay group to a (¡rr.ing of 1 23 1. to ta»tter' »he Ì 23 5 mark set in I « : Running with Parker were Hnn Homing of Sturgis. Ro- !*ert k uif her of Ha/el Park arid Walker Beverly o( White plains. N Y

Sj.aHar, first - ear runners riso have se» a two mile relav r«*r or»t The foursome of Bill

s Stewart of Detroit Bedford,Warren Ochs of i)earhoen. Homing and FuPher -an 7 WS The o;d mark was 7 V3 2 set ;n 1957

r Sprinter Sherman l / » n of \ f/,u;sv:..e K> tied th e 80-y*rd « dasn mark of 'A 3 held jmnt-

h; 7 c h Lord l'Oh > andr F"rc<j Jor.nson 1947

T a i r,ther Spartan* though '<■(ord h'Cdver* have been

■ singled out by 'he co*< htngI .»,,(< for their f.ne indoor per-

UtT Tèéin« « %<r 'py,* *»», a-e iferman John­

son ra< v hurdler and afl-around fieid event man from p a .'f e ’d n J and Wilmer

*,t John-on .'-T-.dcit high jump­er from Bristol. Pa

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point* M inner — Itri> b an n er IM M RBtM»#f-(ipi — Itm %f*rr*«71 "• F \ HIM THU f l»«M Bl I *«7! 66 Winner - Herb bt»N*«M md IW *> Ait «re*e44* 3« R u n n er-u p — Ron I'»bum i M IreBli 1*» Rn Futfin\ *• I ‘ _> H IR m i>«,:J4 '5 ',41 s ar 1 H'ea«tn*lie

Winner 4im Mtmilt'th - )1 I F'*»I»»n Runner up Ril| Pi«.hni*?*:*? * ' ,f<Winner —. %»t«t> -4 iller ’4 7

Hunitrf t iF »»m Muff"• >• v«rd butDffly

'*•* <M W iDDef i a • k A ai*Mifir -166 «6 Runner tip Irene. « AIR.-iluoo

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I 4fe\ n hi pie ’I t* n e* sj#, Mumphre> »•> i

Ron Moepine* «1 V ^ I VRMnJ Winner ■— (*tf4l« l|OK«er.II Rtnnee-up — |>tn AatHN

Bs I .A W R L N f k ( n \ »«(.it»- S i « s s p n r t t H r i l r r

p t* o i.l *oe M. ’ S' high k Jvivi to u rn am en t Tuesday nifh1 a» f i t d.»*- winners-m eet in the r e g io n

1-ast wcs-n % (J.*'.'i< * P.a •< t jred an .n i- -a., ar

of upseU a- r- a n f • ranked team s lost

to C la- - A ’ .so ' ‘r • •' •» g: . i n the Sevt »t’a - »■

suffered only og t!ic 11-guiar

t:on Hermans- -ate > leading

Irv S. hot ere tiea 'c i

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fav o rii^ - h o w ever ro ll to e a sy d , s t r u t vs»to rie s , r.aw 17 Oi f l a n A tav •a y Lav City f c n tra ; ar i '»!' P le a s a n t 0». »4.

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Page 10: New lirary Check-Out ¡ J F K S u m m o n s L a t i n s e w S y s t e m [T …archive.lib.msu.edu/.../1961/state_news_19610314.pdf · 2014. 4. 25. · «lahlfohed 1909 Vol. 52, No.

10 M ich igan S la te New«, E u t Lan ding, M ich igan .SPORTS. T u e sd a y M o rn in g , M arch 1 4 , 1 9 6 1

P a t t e r s o n K O ’ s I n g o I n E x c i t i n g 6 t h R o u n d

MIAMI BEACH. Kla '.f Floyd Patterson fought back fnim two firxt-ruund knock downs ami knocked out Swe­den's Ingcnuir Johansson in 2 45 nl the sixth round and re t.uned Ins heavyweight title in a lousing fight of explosive punehes

The handsome Swede, who also was felled onee in the first round, went down from a chop­ping right hand punch to the jav\ late in the sixth lie start eil to get up but fell back as referee Billy Began counted ten Me almost made the grade.

Patterson, fighting to retain : tile crown lie won back in tin precedented tasluon last June

Johnson, Schmitter In NCAA Fencing

At least two MSP fencers will journey In Princeton New Jersey during spring vacation to com pete in the NCAA fencing meet

The MSP fencers who are sure contestants are Don John

i son.-’ mbre and Chuck Schnitt- ter Jr.. epee

IN ORDER TO com pete in : the meet the fencers hnvc to place in Ihe top three spots of the conference m eet.

Johnson won fhe Rig Ten

strength td the possibility of a higher team standing

The choice would he between la w le s s , captain of the squad and a senior and Dick Schlnc- mer. an outstanding sopho­more. who placed sixth in the lllg Ten meet

had his legs Imeklcd in tiw , . . , . .third round and was shaken ! *»br<* championships two weeksup again early in (lie sixth be­fore he pat over the crusher.

Knockdown tim ekeeper HyPang said Johansson cam e up on one knee at nine hilt then I. II hack at the count of ten

" lie slartiHl twisting as lie got up." said Ijing. " lie trip­ped over him self and fell hoc* at the final count."

This third m eeting of the two heavy slugging heavy Iweights was an eve-popper I while it lasted. Patterson, a •I In I favorite who w as expcc- j ted hi flatten the Swede quick- j i i Hum he did last sum m er,! w.is hi real trouble in that lust > round

Patterson run into Johans- \ son's fam ed ' loondrr" right imidway in the first round and I went iluw ii Ml hough he was Iup ai three, lie had to take an .antiimutic eight count under j the rules <>l the Miami Beach B oxing v n m m is x in i i

H a i ip r n II i n s

*nd I ( i o l i l M o i l a l i n

R i f i o M a i r l i

I ago at Madison, Wis j Schmitter was runner up In I epee to Bruce Krivisky of Itli-1 ' nois.

The two Spartan fencers will j ^ir K,,r<r note m arksm en i be -accompanied by their coach j too|( ,in«| p lace in 24-team Charles Schm itter. father oi Com petition last w eekend at Chuck. ■the U niversity of Illinois Invi­

tational Kifle m eet with a score of 1,406. only eight points aw ay from the first place Illinois Army HOTC team

Kon llaugen . MSI’ junior.Turtle" la w le s s 'fo r "the ! w °n * flr* | P1«™ « ° ,d m edal

for his 290-point score in theindividual com petition and afirst-place slot on the I op-tenteam . John Pilley. also a tun 'ior here, filled tlie sixth p laceslot on the team with a score

BOTH FENCERS are seniors and during the regular season Chuck Schmitter placed high in percentages with over 70 and Johnson was tied with ('apt Dickrunner up spot with 68 per cent victories

Coach Schmitter has m en­tioned a possibility of being a l­lowed to take a foil fenrer to nationals also to round out the

| Tennis Team ! Heads South For Training

1 Hie Michigan State tennis I team, with four lettermen re­turning from last year's fine team , will take off next Tues­day on ' its annual Southern trip

leading Coach Stan Drohac’s ! squad south will be Brian Eis­ner. Manitiwoc. Wis. junior. Eisner, who also played num­ber. one last season, was run- nerup In last spring's Big Ten

* meet ■Other players who will make

the trip are: Dick Hall, Mani­tiwoc. Wis. sophomore, who just recently made the switch from the basketball team; Ro­ger Plagenhoef, Holland sen­ior. Kon Henry, East Lansing

I senior; Rill Lau. Flint junior; Jack Damson. Holland sopho­more ; and Mel Saperstein, De­troit junior.

EISNER, Plagenhoef, llenry | and Saperstein are all letter ; winners, while Hall and Dnm | son are up from last year’s frosh team, and Lau is a trans­fer student.

The netters. who compiled a 7-0 mark on the trip last year, will face a seven-match card again this year. The schedule includes matches with George Washington, Georgetown, Uni­versity of Virginia, North Car­olina, twice. North Carolina State and Davidson.

The team plans to return the day before classes', and will then begin an intense practice schedule to get ready for its tough, regular-season matches.

Stale High School Tournaments ReviewedBy LAWRENCE COX

State News Sparts Writer-The Michigan state h i g h

school basketball finals held in Jenison Field House every year have been the scene of tremen­dous basketball In the past.

Great teams and exceptional players who now star in col lege and professional basket ball have performed in tournament finals.

In the early IBM's Highland ) Chris Ferguson, sophomore again this year Park with George Lee and ¡guard, was a member of the George Duncan won the Class j j ingjng Sexton team which

won the 1MB Class A title.Pete Gent, freshman basket­

ball player, led his Bangor

j team featuring the Burton broj thers won several Class A titles

Perhaps the most exciting! j" U* IMO’s.game was I<ansing Sexton's I three years for U of M and ledfantastic BO-79 comc-from-be- hlnd victory over Hamtramck

A championship. Lee, former University _oL Michigan ace,-now plays professional basket hall witir the Detroit Pistons Duncan went on to star for j team to the Class C champion- Wayne State when that school ^ ¡p jagt year had fine basketball teaata Basketball fans can expect

The great Muskegon Heights j (0 m a thrilling spectacle

Fr*tioj

March 24 »m a with fine team s ax Sagm», River Rouge, and competing.' Tournament officials

to break all records in this i „ 37th annual state tournait»« finals. The three session! „ Saturday Bight. Mu already sold out

i n 23, are

in the 1959 Class A final Sexton was behind by 15

points with only three minutes remaining in tlie fourth quar­ter. Sexton pressed and re ­peatedly stole the ball as Ham

the Big Ten in scoring and re bounding In the 1956-59 season Ed plays with the Hartetn Globetrotters.

In Gass B two names stand out. One is basketball and football star Blanche Martin whose River Rouge team won

tramrk tried to freeze. The Mg the state championship in 1954 Big Reds tied it up as time ran and 1955. Martin, a formerout

In the overtime the lead changed hands several times. Hamtramek led by one point as Sexton brought the hall up the court with seconds left in tlie game.

As the buzzer sounded. Sex­ton’s Bob Davis threw a des­peration shot at the basket. The crowd went wild as the shot somehow bounced In.

Another outstanding g a m e was the 1958 Gass A final in

MSU football great, played professional football in the AFL last season

The other is the two-time s m a l l collage All-American from Wheaton. Mel "Peterson, who led his team, Stephenson, to the G ass B title in 1956. Pet­erson set the state scoring rec­ord with B49 points that season, an average of 3B.B points a game.

And who can forget the amazing Chassel team from

which Detroit Austin defeated j the Upper Peninsula which

squad a n d give

Exhibition Ball

Ja c k B rcs lin ik-xx Ix u|>|»nn! cil -.cri c t .m til Mit lui; in S la te i n ix i'i s i t . x B o a rd oi 1 rú s te o s , c a p ta in e d th e S p a r tu n loot ha il Mpi.ol d u rin g his lu n ln gl a d tlu tr d a i s

Exhibition baseball at LAKE- LAND, Kla . i.W- Mmncsola 2tXI (100 000—4 10 1 Detroit 401 100 20X—8 14 0

Lamenti. Stubbs (3t, Stonge tfii and llenrv; Running, Gr- /enda <4i, Seyfried 17» and R. Brown W Banning L-Lumenti

If o rn e runs — Minnesota. Green. Mincher.

increased of 284 P°'ntsiiu .rca .seo j M e |n b m of |h r |w | |n a m ,

their scores were Ron Haugen. 200, John Id! lev. 264 liill tlresco , 278; Cari Rehne, 278. Bruce Behrm ann. 276, and J er ­ry Nve. 272

The AFROTC team wim the Invitational m eet in 1060. a c ­cording to Sgt. Glenn T r a c i. the coach.

Sport Shortslandy M cDaniel. St. Louis

relief pitcher, took part in three shutouts in gam es start­ed last year by other Cariiiual pitchers.

Benton Harbor. It pitted two of today’s college All-Ameri­cans, Dave DeBusschere of the University of Detroit and Chet Walker of Bradley.

DeBusschere led his Austin team to a narrow three point victory as hb scored 30 points, a Gass A final scoring record.

swept to three Class D cham­pionships in a row from 1956- 1958.

A number of present day MSU athletes have also appear­ed in the state finals.

Football star Gary Ballman's East Detroit team reached the Class A semifinals in 1957.

Jockey John Sellers vxon three Chicago stakes race., ir. 1980. all with T V. Lark

E ric Guerin is the last jock­ey to win the D elew are Handi­cap tw ice. He won with Bus- anda in 1951 and with I'arto in 1955

UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTSW4— ------ -* j -

GRADUATE STUDENTS an d FACULTY JMEMIERS

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C a m p u s B o o k S t o r e

C a m p u s B o o k S t o r ethanks you for vour repeated

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