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Extension Service Funds Cut A tentative accumulative pay raise of $900,000 for Univer- sity faculty members was ap- proved in the budget reported out of committee in the State Senate Monday night. The Senate Appropriations Committee recommended that Gov. George Romney’ s suggested MSU budget of $46.5 million be accepted with the addition of the $900,000 which it specifically earmarked for faculty raises. Sen. Guy Vander Jagt, R-Cad- illac, said the committee felt there was a definite need to improve faculty salaries at all of Michigan’s state supported institutions. A total of $4.9 million was ear- marked by the committee above and beyond the governor's budget for the purpose of improving sal- aries at state supported insti- tutions. The University of Michigan’s share was also pegged a: $900,000 Wayne State University was sug- gested for the largest single share, $1.2 million, Vander Jagt said that this was because salaries at the Detroit school arc lagging behind tne other big state universities. Wessin Quits Dominican Army QUITE A FEET — The skate board craze that has captured the hearts (and feet) of many Michigan Staters is as tricky and dangerous as its watery west coast to the canoe rental area gives the skaters fun. Photo by David Sykes parent. The pathway from Bessey Hallt< a continuous “ surf's up" and hours of Total 512 Years Service H a n n a h H o n o r s R e tir e e s MSU honored 18 retiring faculty members, including two who have taught more than 40 years each, at Mondsv's annual, ri'tirt c.‘ lunch - The budget passed by the Ap- prppiriBfjCT»• Committee' w give MSU $47.1 fnillion in state funds if passed as recommended. eon. The two with longest service to MSU are Walter L.. Mailman, pro- fessor pf microbiology and public 'V O * w h o will retire-July 1,1966,> after 48 years, and Hubert M. A cut. of $234,199 in funds earmarked for the Cooperative Extension Service was approved by the committee. Vander Jagt said this cut was made with the stipulation that the cuts must be made in urban areas. Brown, assistant professor of crop science, who ends 44 years at MSU on July F. President John A. Hannah pre- sented "diplomas of honor" to each retirée. He noted that the 18 retiring faculty had given a total of 512 Four Professors Air Views On Viet Nam Four professors will explain their views on Viet Nam tonight at a discussion sponsored by As- sociated Students of MSU. The free program will begin at 8 p.m. in 109 Anthony. Speaking will be Wesley Fishel and Guy H. Fox, professors of political science, L. H. Battistini, professor of social science, and Thomas H. Greer, chairman of the Humanities Department, Fishel and Fox support the present policy. The other two were sponsors of the recent Teach-In on Viet Nam, opposing U.S. action. Each side will have 20 min- utes to present its opinions, with an optional summary. The speakers will answer writ- ten questions from the audience. Fishel is a consultant to the U.S. government on Viet Nam and was a special adviser to the Viet- namese government from 1956- 58. Greer is a former chief of Army-Air Force historical stud- ies, while Battistini was supreme commander of the Allied Powers in Tokyo during World War II. Fox headed the MSU project to aid Viet Nam in 1961. years to MSU, an average of more than 28 years each. President Hannah said that if "there were such a curious thing as an average retiree," he would have joined the faculty in 1937 when 5,212 students were en- rolled. Xi'tjM’493" commcnre’^ir^b» ■ added, 575 bachelor's degrees were conferred. This contrasts with nearly 4,500 to be given during 1964-65, plus 1,500 mas - ter’s degrees and more thagySOO doctor’s degrees. Hannah observed that "no in- stitution, least of all a univer- sity, is built by any one man, or woman, or any small group of in- dividual s. "It is built instead by the lov- ing labor of many persons.” Those who have been retired during the past year are: Mrs. Irene M. Baird, Cooper- ative Extension Service (CES), 11 years; Victor C. Beal, (CES), 28 years; Paul R, Krone, horti- culture, 35 years; Miss Grace Mitchell. (CES), 29 years; Clarence C. Mullett, (CES), 35 years; Francis L.O'Rourke, hor- ticulture, 19 years; Mrs. Grace E. Vanderkolk, (CES), 29 years; and Orville F. Walker, (CES), 28 years. Scheduled to retire this year are: J. Murray Barbour, music, 26 years; Werner A. Bohnstedt, humanities, 19 years; Karl Dressel, forestry, 39 years; Miss Florence Kempf, nursing educa- tion, 15 years; Mrs. Lydia Lightring, health, physical edu- cation and recreation, 35 years; and Mrs. Thelma Porter, heme ec'onomics, 15 years. Two persons will retire July 1, 1966: William Morris, engineer- ing instructional s . r v i c e s, 19 years, and G. Malcolm Trout, food science, 38 years. SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic, May 10 f — Brig. Gen. Elias Wessin, whose planes and tanks beat off Dominican rebels in the bloody first days of the Dominican revolt, resigned from the armed forces Monday under reported U.S. pressure. His re- tirement appears to have re- moved a major obstacle toward settling the Dominican crisis. Wessin’s resignation came aft- er meetings with U.S. Ambassa- dor W. Tapley Bennett Jr . and Lt. Gen. Bruce Palmer, com- mander of the21,000 U.S. Marines and parachute troopers in this troubled Caribbean country. The tough career officer agreed to leave the army and his post as commander of the Armed Forces Training Center, but he balked at leaving the country. Col. Francisco Camaano Deno, rebel- proclaimed provisional presi- dent, has been demanding that Wessin go abroad. Holed up in a maze of crowded apartment houses and business buildings, the rebels showed no tendency Monday to capitulate to a tnnk and Howitzer-backed force of and Dominican troops sur- rounding them. Scoffing at an invitation to quit the revolt, Camaano’s insurgents appeared to be organizing their stronghold in CiudadNueva, a low income residential and business section in southeast Santo Domin- go. US. military spokesman said American forces had moved 105 mm Howitzers and six smaller cannon into position in the U -S.- occupied international safety zone west of Ciudad Nueva. The guns are "tuned on rebel tar- gets," the spokesman said. In addition, 15 U.S. M-48 tanks rumbled into position in the city. Wessin fought army rebels and armed civilians wfco tried to re- store f o r m e r President Juan Bosch at the outset of the revolu- tion, before the arrival of U.S. troops. His opponents said he was re- garded by many Dominicans as the man responsible for the air bombardments of the city that took more than 1,000 lives in the first week of the fighting. U.S. Marines and paratroopers were sent in by President Johnson to protect Americans and to pre- vent a Cuba-style communist takeover of the country. U.S. of- ficials charged that communists had infiltrated key positions of the rebel movement. The U.S. embassy had no com- ment on Wessin’ s resignation but it was understood the U.S. gov- ernment had pushed for Wessin’ s retirement as a means of re- moving roadblocks to "compos- ing the situation," as a spokes- man put, it. The r e b e l s announced they would not receive, converse or negotiate further with OAS repre- sentatives until it ousts Jose A. Bonilla Atiles as the Dominican Republic representative in the OAS. Bonilla represents the junta regime in the Dominican Republic which sent a surrender demand to U.S., Viet Pilots Slash Dozen North Bridges SAIGON, Viet N a m # —UJ5. and Vietnamese pilots slashed at North Viet Nam’ s bridges through darkness and daylight Monday in the continuing effort tohaltCom- munist traffic. They were re- ported to have destroyed or dam- aged at least a dozen. U.S. spokesmen said ground fire was light to moderate and all planes returned safely. No enemy aircraft were sighted. Official accounts gave these details: U.S. Navy planes from the car- riers Coral Sea and Midway opened the day with a series of sorties from midnight to 4:45 a.m. Ranging as far north as the 20th parallel, 65 miles south of Hanoi, they damaged four brid- ges and also hit four trucks and a large junk. A group of U.S. Air Force fight- er—bombers took to the air at noon with an escort of 32 fighters. In what was called a highly suc- cessful operation, they dropped one span of the Ha Tinh Bridge on Route 1, 150 miles south of Hanoi; demolished one span of FISHING BREAK— Phyllis Helper, University Heights, Ohio, sophomore, fell nook, line and sink- er for a relaxing pastime to pass away the time between mid-terms. The pleasant temperatures and the cool waters of near-by Park Lake provide an appropriate setting for her newly discovered sport. Photo by Bob Barit another bridge nearby and then destroyed the Tho Ngoa Bridge south of Ha Tinh. Sixteen F104 Thunderchiefs, flying an armed reconnaissance mission that covered six high- ways, destroyed three small bridges, three railroad boxcars and ona,truck. The Vietnamese A ir Force sent its propeller-driven skyraider flghter-bombers to pound other bridges. Four Navy planes pumped Bull- pup m issiles and cannon fire into a railroad bridge and a string of box cars 90 miles south of Hanoi late in the day. The bridge ap- proaches were damaged. Radio Hanoi declared North Vietnamese gunners shot down five of the U.S. planes that took part in raids Sunday. American authorities had announced the loss of one plane that day. This was a Navy F8 Crusader jet, which crashed in strafing a truck. The pilot was killed. The pilot's death and the killing of two U.S. Army men by the Viet Cong in South Viet Nam increased to 366 the total American combat dead in the Vietnamese war« Two Britons Sell Secrets LONDON /PI— Britain sent two government employes to jail Monday for ¡espionage—one for selling guidea missile secrets to the Russians, the other for hawk- ing defense ministry secrets to two.Arah.patlitfis. Both,79.90 • they were driven to their acts by their need for money. Prime Minister Harold Wil- son immediately announced in the House of Commons that a top-level Investigation had been ordered to learn how the two men wriggled through the se- curity net. The separate trials in the same old Bailey court on the same day were without precedent in Lon- don history. Lord Chief Justice Parker heard them both. Both defendants pleaded guilty. In the first case, Justice Par- ker sentenced Frank C. Bossard, 52-year-old electronics engineer in the aviation ministry, to a 21-year term. IT WAS POLLINATION— The Red Cedar isn’t the only place to study the birds and the bees. The blossoms on several apple trees near Marshall Hall provide an excellent place for real bees to indulqe in a little of their own birding and beeing. Photo by Cal Crane N A T O Ministers Try To Break Deadlock LONDON (JPI—American, B rit- ish and West German ministers launched a new attempt Monday night to break their deadlock with France over the future of Ger- many. They met at a dinner in the American Embassy given by Un- der-Secretary of State George W, Ball on the eve of a min- isterial conference of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). One purpose of the get-toge - ther, which has become tradi- tional at NATO meetings, was to resolve if possible French ob- jectlAn^which la/?t.'\efk ihW^rt-. ed publication of an American- Brltlsh-French declaration of German policy. This was to have been issued May 8 to mark the 20th anniversary of V-E day.' But hopes of agreement were slender. Foreign Minister Maurice Couve de Murville of France was reported under President De Gaulle's orders to stand fast on his new insistence for a Eur- opean approach to a German settlement. Such an a p p r o a c h would seem to imply the ultimate exclusion of the Americans from the settlement. France’s line has been hailed by Communist powers, including the East German regime. It has been resisted by Foreign Sec- retary Michael Stewart of Brit- ain, Foreign Minister Gerhard Schroeder of West Germany and President Johnson. The probing operation by Ball, Stewart and Schroeder was car- ried out in top secrecy. the rebels last night.This was re- jected by the forces led by Col. Francisco Caamano. The proposal for a three-man commission, composed of former presidents Jose Figueres of Cos- ta Rica and Romulo Betancourt of Venezuela, and former Gov. Luis Munoz Marin of Puerto Rico, was reported to have met with stern opposition within ther OAS itself. The crisis caused postpone- ment of a session of the OAS special conference on the Domin- ican situation which had been scheduled for 9;30 a.m. EST Mon- day. 7 Divers Probing Ship Hull MACKINAW CITY (UPI)—Div- ing for bodies continued Monday in the hull of the ship Cedar- ville which sank Friday after col- liding with the Norwegian freight- er Topdalsfjord in the Straits of Mackinac. Officials of U.S. Steel Corp., owners of the sunken Cedarville, said they had not yet reached a decision on whether they would attempt to salvage the limestone carrier. The bridge of the ship is about 35 feet below the surface of the water and the Coast Guard said if she remained there, she would not,.- J»e "a m,ew>fe lof.iW j ' vgv Meanwhile, another phase the Inquiry was-held-atClovelnnd. In that session, the captain of the German ship Weisenberg told how he saw the shadow of the Cedarville on his radar and heard the "hissing" sound through the fog as the giant ship went under in less than 25 minutes. Four divers in suits and hel- mets joined three scuba divers in probing the hull of the sunken Cedarville. The suited divers probed the aft section and the scuba divers the fore section. The divers did not find any of the bodies of the missing men. V-E Program Tape Slated A tape recording of a radio program originally broadcast on Victory in Europe Day, May 8, 1945, will be played back to- night at 8 in Parlor C, Union. The program "On a Note of Triumph," which was written by Norman Corwin, an outstand- ing radio writer, and featured the voice of William L. Shlrer, a well-known broadcaster, is be- ing presented to commemorate the 20th anniversary of VE Day. This is the sixth in a series of playbacks of radio classics called "Radio Encores” present- ed by the Department of Tele- vision and Radio. Columbia Professor Talks On The Negro Challenge’ ELI GINSBERG Eli Ginsberg, director of con- servation of human resources, project at Columbia University, will speak here Wednesday on "The Negro Challenge to the Business Community," Ginsberg’s address,sponsored by the MSU School of Labor and Industrial Relations, will be giv- en in the Ericksor. Kiva at 4p.m. The meeting is open to the pub- lic. Among the topics he will dis- cuss will be the question of wheth- er to give the Negro preferential treatment in employment. He will also outline specific techniques and procedures a company may adopt to comply with the employ- ment section of the 1964 Civil Rights Act. Tr s,„o- MICHIGAN ROTC Awards, p. 5-Sing - ing Statesmen re tu rn , STATE UNIVERSITY TATE MEWS Weather Fair and cool today and tonight. High near 70. Tuesday, May 11, 1965 Price 10< Committee Favors Faculty Raises
Transcript
Page 1: TATE MEWS Committee Favors Faculty Raisesarchive.lib.msu.edu/DMC/state_news/1965/state_news_19650511.pdfSen. Guy Vander Jagt, R-Cad- illac, said the committee felt there was a definite

E x te n s io n S e rvice F u n d s C u t

A tentative accumulative pay ra ise of $900,000 for U niver­sity faculty m em bers was ap­proved in the budget reported out of committee in the State Senate Monday night.

The S e n a t e Appropriations Committee recommended t h a t Gov. George Romney’ s suggested MSU budget of $46.5 million be accepted with the addition of the $900,000 which it specifically earm arked for faculty ra ise s .

Sen. Guy Vander Ja g t, R -C ad- illac , said the committee felt there was a definite need to improve faculty sa la r ie s at all of Michigan’ s state supported institutions.

A total of $4.9 million was e a r­marked by the committee above and beyond the governor's budget for the purpose of improving sa l­a r ie s at state supported insti­tutions.

The U niversity of Michigan’ s sh are was also pegged a: $900,000 Wayne State U niversity was sug­gested for the largest single sh are, $ 1 .2 million,

Vander Ja g t said that this was because sa la r ie s at the Detroit school arc lagging behind tne other big state un iversities.

Wessin Quits Dominican Army

QUITE A FEE T — The skate board c raze that has captu red the hea rts (and feet) of many M ich igan S ta te rs is as t r i c k y and dangerous as i ts w a te ry west coast

to the canoe ren ta l a rea g ives the ska te rs fun. Photo by David Sykes

pa ren t. The pathway f r o m Bessey H a l l t< a continuous “ s u r f ' s u p " and hours o f

Total 512 Years ServiceH a n n a h H o n o r s R e t i r e e s

MSU honored 18 retiring faculty m em bers, including two who have taught more than 40 years each, at M ondsv's annual, r i't irt c.‘ lunch -

The budget passed by the Ap- prppiriBfjCT»• Committee' w give MSU $47.1 fnillion in state funds if passed as recommended.

eon.The two with longest serv ice to

MSU are Walter L.. Mailman, pro­fe sso r pf m icrobiology and public

'V O * w h o will retire-Ju ly 1,1966,> after 48 ye ars , and Hubert M.

A cut. of $234,199 in funds earm arked for the Cooperative Extension S ervice was approved by the committee. Vander Jagt said this cut was made with the stipulation that the cuts must be made in urban areas.

Brown, assistant p rofessor of crop science, who ends 44 years at MSU on Ju ly F.

President John A . Hannah p re­sented "diplom as of honor" to each re tirée .

He noted that the 18 retiring faculty had given a total of 512

Four Professors Air Views On Viet Nam

Four p ro fesso rs w ill explain their views on Viet Nam tonight at a discussion sponsored by A s­sociated Students of MSU.

The free program will begin at 8 p.m . in 109 Anthony.

Speaking will be Wesley F ishel and Guy H. Fox, p ro fesso rs of political science, L . H. Battistini, p rofessor of social science, and Thom as H. G re e r, chairman of the Humanities Department,

F ish el and Fox support the present policy. The other two w e r e sponsors of th e recent Teach-In on Viet Nam, opposing U .S. action.

Each side w ill have 20 min­

utes to present its opinions, with an optional sum m ary.

The speakers w ill answer w rit­ten questions from the audience.

Fish el is a consultant to the U .S . government on Viet Nam and was a special adviser to the Viet­nam ese government from 1956- 58.

G reer is a form er chief of A rm y-A ir Force h istorical stud­ie s , while Battistini was supreme commander of the Allied Powers in Tokyo during World War II.

Fox headed the MSU project to aid Viet Nam in 1961.

y e a rs to MSU, an average of m ore than 28 years each.

President Hannah said that if "th ere were such a curious thing as an average re t ir e e ," he would have joined th e faculty in 1937 when 5,212 students were en­rolled.

Xi'tjM’493" com m cnre ’̂ i r ^ b » ■ added, 575 bachelor's degrees w ere conferred. T h is contrasts with nearly 4,500 to be given during 1964-65, plus 1,500 m as­te r ’ s degrees and more thagySOO doctor’ s degrees.

Hannah observed that "n o in­stitution, least of all a univer­sity , is built by any one man, or woman, or any sm all group of in­dividual s.

" I t is built instead by the lov­ing labor of many p erson s.”

Those who have been retired during the past ye ar are :

M rs. Irene M. B aird , Cooper­ative Extension S ervice (CES), 11 ye ars ; Victor C . B ea l, (CES), 28 y e ars ; Paul R , Krone, horti­culture, 35 y e a rs ; M iss G race M i t c h e l l . (CES), 29 y e a r s ; C laren ce C . Mullett, (CES), 35y e a rs ; F ran cis L .O 'R ourke, hor­ticulture, 19 y e ars ; M rs. G race E . Vanderkolk, (CES), 29 years; and O rville F . W alker, (CES), 28 y e a rs .

Scheduled to re tire this year a re : J . M urray Barbour, m usic, 26 y e ars ; Werner A. Bohnstedt, humanities, 19 y e a r s ; K a r l D re sse l, fo restry , 39 ye ars ; M iss F lorence Kempf, nursing educa­tion, 15 y e a r s ; M rs. L y d i a Lightring, health, physical edu­cation and recreation , 35 years ;

and M rs. Thelm a P o rter, heme ec'onomics, 15 y e a rs .

Two persons will re tire Ju ly 1, 1966: William M orris, engineer­ing instructional s . r v i c e s, 19 y e a rs , and G. M alcolm Trout, food science, 38 ye ars .

SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic, May 10 f — B rig . Gen. E lia s W essin, whose planes and tanks beat off Dominican rebels in the bloody first days of the Dominican revolt, resigned from the arm ed forces Monday under reported U.S. p ressu re . His re­tirement appears to h a v e re ­moved a m ajor obstacle toward settling the Dominican c r is is .

W essin’ s resignation came aft­e r meetings with U.S. A m bassa­dor W. Tapley Bennett J r . and L t. Gen. Bruce P a lm er, com­mander of the21,000 U.S. M arines and parachute troopers in this troubled Caribbean country.

The t o u g h c areer officer agreed to leave the arm y and his post as commander of the Armed F o rces Training Center, but he balked at leaving the country. Col. Fran cisco Camaano Deno, rebel- proclaim ed provisional p re si­dent, has been demanding that Wessin go abroad.

Holed up in a maze of crowded apartment houses and business buildings, the rebels showed no tendency Monday to capitulate to a tnnk and Howitzer-backed force of and Dominican troops su r­rounding them.

Scoffing at an invitation to quit the revolt, Camaano’ s insurgents appeared to be organizing their stronghold in CiudadNueva, a low income residential and business section in southeast Santo Domin­go.

US. m ilitary spokesman said Am erican forces had moved 105 mm Howitzers and six sm aller

cannon into position in the U -S .- occupied international s a f e t y zone west of Ciudad Nueva. The guns a re "tuned on rebel ta r­g e ts ," the spokesman said.

In addition, 15 U.S. M -48 tanks rumbled into position in the city.

W essin fought arm y rebels and arm ed civilians wfco tried to re ­store f o r m e r President Juan Bosch at the outset of the revolu­tion, before the a rriva l of U.S. troops.

His opponents said he w as re ­garded by many Dominicans as the man responsible for the a ir bombardments of the city that took m ore than 1,000 lives in the firs t week of the fighting.

U.S. M arines and paratroopers w ere sent in by President Johnson to protect Am ericans and to p re­

vent a Cuba-style communist takeover of the country. U.S. of­fic ia ls charged that communists had infiltrated key positions of the rebel movement.

The U.S. em bassy had no com­ment on W essin’ s resignation but it was understood the U.S. gov­ernment had pushed for W essin’ s retirem ent a s a means of re ­moving roadblocks to "com pos­ing the situation ," as a spokes­man put, it.

The r e b e l s announced they would not receive , converse or negotiate further with OAS rep re­sentatives until it ousts Jo se A. Bonilla A tiles as the Dominican Republic representative in the OAS. Bonilla represents the junta regim e in the Dominican Republic which sent a surrender demand to

U .S ., V ie t Pilots S la s h D o z e n N o r t h B rid g e s

SAIGON, Viet N a m # —UJ5. and Vietnamese p i l o t s slashed at North Viet Nam’ s bridges through darkness and daylight Monday in the continuing effort tohaltCom - munist tra ffic . They were re ­ported to have destroyed or dam­aged at least a dozen.

U .S. spokesmen said ground fire was light to moderate and all planes returned sa fe ly . No enemy aircraft were sighted.

Official accounts gave these details:

U .S. Navy planes from the c a r­r ie r s C oral Sea an d Midway opened the day with a se r ie s of sorties from midnight to 4:45 a.m . Ranging as fa r north as the 20th p aralle l, 65 m iles south of Hanoi, they damaged four brid­ges and also hit four trucks and a large junk.

A group of U .S. A ir Force fight­e r —bombers took to the a ir at noon with an escort of 32 fighters. In what was called a highly suc­cessfu l operation, they dropped one span of the Ha Tinh Bridge on Route 1, 150 m iles south of Hanoi; demolished one span of

FISHING B R E A K — P h y l l is H e lpe r , U n i v e r s i t y Heights, Ohio, sophom ore, f e l l nook, l ine and s ink ­e r f o r a re la x in g pas t im e to pass away the t im e between m id - te r m s . The p leasant te m p e ra tu re s and

the cool w a te rs o f n e a r-b y P a rk Lake p rov ide an a p p ro p r ia te se tt ing f o r h e r new ly d iscove red sport.

Photo by Bob B a r i t

another bridge nearby and then destroyed the Tho Ngoa Bridge south of Ha Tinh.

Sixteen F104 Thunderchiefs, flying an armed reconnaissance m ission t h a t covered six high­ways, destroyed t h r e e sm all brid ges, three railroad boxcars and ona,truck.

The Vietnam ese A ir Force sent its propeller-driven skyraider flghter-bom bers to pound other bridges.

Four Navy planes pumped B u ll- pup m issiles and cannon fire into a ra ilroad bridge and a string of box c a rs 90 m iles south of Hanoi late in the day. The bridge ap­proaches were damaged.

Radio Hanoi declared North Vietnam ese gunners shot down five of the U.S. planes that took part in raids Sunday. Am erican authorities had announced th e lo ss of one plane that day. T h is was a Navy F8 Crusader jet, which crashed in strafing a truck. The pilot was killed.

The p ilot's death and the killing of two U .S. Arm y men by the Viet Cong in South Viet Nam increased to 366 the total Am erican combat dead in the Vietnamese war«

T w o Britons Sell Secrets

LONDON /PI— Britain sent two government employes to j a i l Monday for ¡espionage—one for selling guidea m issile secrets to the R ussian s, the other for hawk­ing defense m inistry secrets to tw o.Arah.patlitfis. Both,79.90

• they w ere driven to their acts by their need for money.

P rim e M inister Harold Wil­son im m ediately announced in the House of Commons that a top-level Investigation had been ordered to learn how the two men w riggled through the se­curity net.

The separate tr ia ls in the sam e old B ailey court on the same day w e re without precedent in Lon­don h isto ry . L ord Chief Justice P a rk er heard them both. Both defendants pleaded guilty.

In the f ir s t case , Justice P a r­k er sentenced Frank C. Bossard, 52 -ye a r-o ld electronics engineer in the aviation m inistry, to a 2 1 -y e a r term .

IT WAS P O L L IN A T IO N — The Red Cedar is n ’ t the only p lace to study the b i r d s and the bees. The b lossom s on severa l apple t rees near M a rs h a l l Hall p ro v id e an exce l len t p lace fo r rea l bees to indulqe in a l i t t le o f th e i r own b ird in g and beeing.

Photo by Cal C rane

N A T O M inisters T r y T o B r e a k D e a d lo c k

LONDON (JPI—A m erican, B r it ­ish and West German m inisters launched a new attempt Monday night to break their deadlock with Fran ce over the future of G er­many.

They met at a dinner in the Am erican Em bassy given by Un­d er-Secretary of State George W, Ball on the eve of a min­iste r ia l conference of the North Atlantic T r e a t y Organization (NATO).

One purpose of the get-toge­ther, which has become tradi­tional at NATO m eetings, w as to resolve if possible French ob- jectlAn^which la/?t .'\e fk ihW^rt-. ed publication of an A m erican- B rlt lsh -F re n ch declaration of German policy. This was to have been issued May 8 to m ark the 20th anniversary of V -E d ay.'

But hopes of agreement w ere slender.

Foreign M i n i s t e r M aurice Couve de M urville of F ran ce was reported under President De G au lle 's orders to stand fast on his new insistence for a E u r­opean approach to a Germ an settlem ent. Such an a p p r o a c h would seem to imply the ultim ate exclusion of the A m ericans from the settlement.

Fran ce ’ s line has been hailed by Communist powers, including

the East German regim e. It has been resisted by Foreign Sec­retary Michael Stew art of B r it ­ain, Foreign M inister Gerhard Schroeder of West Germ any and President Johnson.

The probing operation by B all, Stewart and Schroeder was c a r ­ried out in top secrecy .

the rebels last night.This was re ­jected by the forces led by Col. Francisco Caamano.

The proposal for a three-man com m ission, composed of form er presidents Jo se F igueres of C os­ta R ica and Romulo Betancourt of Venezuela, and form er Gov. Lu is Munoz Marin of Puerto R ico , was reported to have met with stern opposition within ther OAS itself.

The c r is is caused postpone­ment of a session of the OAS special conference on the Domin­ican situation which had been scheduled for 9;30 a.m . EST Mon­day.

7 Divers ProbingShip Hull

MACKINAW C ITY (UPI)—Div­ing for bodies continued Monday in the hull of the ship C edar- v ille which sank Frid ay after col­liding with the Norwegian freight­e r Topdalsfjord in the Straits of Mackinac.

O fficials of U .S. Steel Corp., owners of the sunken C edarville , said they had not yet reached a decision on whether they would attempt to salvage the limestone c a r r ie r .

The bridge of the ship is about 35 feet below the surface of the water and the Coast Guard said if she remained there, she would not,.- J»e "a m,ew>fe lof.iW j ' vgv

Meanwhile, another phase the Inquiry was-held-atClovelnnd.In that session, the captain of the German ship Weisenberg told how he saw the shadow of the Ced arville on his rad ar and heard the "h is s in g " sound through the fog as the giant ship went under in less than 25 minutes.

Four d ivers in suits and hel­m ets joined three scuba d ivers in probing the hull of the sunken C ed arville . The suited d ivers probed the aft section and the scuba d ivers the fore section.

The d ivers did not find any of the bodies of the m issing men.

V -E P ro g ram T ap e S lated

A tape recording of a radio program originally broadcast on V ictory in Europe Day, May 8, 1945, w ill be played back to­night at 8 in P arlo r C , Union.

The program "On a Note of T riu m p h ," which was written by Norman Corwin, an outstand­ing radio w rite r, and featured the voice of William L . S h lrer, a well-known broadcaster, is be­ing presented to commemorate the 20th anniversary of VE Day.

T h is is the sixth in a se r ie s of playbacks of radio c la ss ic s called "R ad io Encores” present­ed by the Department of T ele­vision and Radio.

C o l u m b i a P r o f e s s o r T a l k s O n T h e N e g r o C h a l l e n g e ’

E L I GINSBERG

E li G insberg, d irector of con­servation of human resources, project at Columbia U niversity, w ill speak here Wednesday on "T h e Negro Challenge to the B usiness Com m unity,"

G insberg’ s address,sponsored by the MSU School of Labor and Industrial Relations, will be giv­en in the Ericksor. Kiva at 4p.m . The meeting is open to the pub­lic .

Among the topics he will d is­cu ss will be the question of wheth­e r to give the Negro preferential treatment in employment. He will also outline specific techniques and procedures a company may adopt to comply with the employ­ment section of the 1964 C iv il Rights Act.

Tr s,„o- MICHIGANROTC Aw ards , p. 5 -Sing­ing S tatesmen r e t u r n , STATE

UNIVERSITY TATE MEWSW eather

F a i r and cool today and ton ight. High near 70.

Tuesday, May 11, 1965 Price 10<

Committee Favors Faculty Raises

Page 2: TATE MEWS Committee Favors Faculty Raisesarchive.lib.msu.edu/DMC/state_news/1965/state_news_19650511.pdfSen. Guy Vander Jagt, R-Cad- illac, said the committee felt there was a definite

2 M ich ig a n S tate N e w s , E a s t L an sin g . M ich ig an T u e sd a y . May 11, 1965

msmtmst EDITORIALS»*®*T h e C o n s t i t u t i o n A n d .

. . .The March . .DistributionL a n s i n g i s an a l l - A m e r i c a n

c i t y . So a l l - A m e r i c a n t h a t a w e e k a g o i t r e f u s e d to g r a n t a p a r a d e p e r m i t to a g r o u p o f s t u d e n t s p r o ­t e s t i n g A m e r i c a n p o l i c y in V i e t N a m .

So A m e r i c a n t h a t w h e n t h e y p a r a d e d a n y w a y , w a l k i n g on s i d e ­w a l k s in o r d e r n o t to b r e a k a n y l a w s , t h e L a n s i n g p o l i c e w e r e o u t in t e a m s to p r e v e n t t h e m f r o m b e ­c o m i n g v i o l e n t in. t h e i r p e a c e f u l p r o t e s t a n d to p r e v e n t m a n y o t h e r l o y a l A m e r i c a n s f r o m b e c o m i n g t a i n t e d b y e x p o s u r e to t h e i r v i e w s .

L a n s i n g i s s o a l l - A m e r i c a n t h a t t h e p o l i c e o u t to p a t r o l t h e 4 0 - to 5 0 - p e r s o n p r o t e s t - m a r c h h a d a x - h a n d l e s on t h e i r m o t o r ­c y c l e s a n d t e a r - g a s p a c k s a n d g a s m a s k s s t r u n g o v e r t h e i r s h o u l d e r s , a n d s a t in u n m a r k e d c a r s on n e a r l y e v e r y c o r n e r t h e m a r c h e r s p a s s e d a n d . c o n t r a r y to t h e f i g u r e s r e l e a s e d in m o s t p l a c e s , n e a r l y o u t n u m b e r e d t h e m a r c h e r s .

L a n s i n g i t e s a r e s o A m e r i c a n t h a t m a n y o f t h e m w o u l d d e n y t h e s t u d e n t s t h e r i g h t to p i c k e t f o r t h e i r i d e a s . S o m e e v e n s a i d T h u r s d a y , w h e n t h e m a r c h e r s r e a c h e d t h e c a p i t o l . t h a t t h e y h a d no r i g h t to p r o t e s t b e c a u s e o u r l e a d e r s a r e e l e c t e d to d o a job a n d we s h o u l d n ’t i n t e r f e r e w i th t h e m .

V e r y f e w L a n s i n g i t e s a r o u n d t h e c a p i t o l T h u r s d a y w e r e s o u n - A m e r i c a n a s to d e f e n d t h e r i g h t o f p e o p l e to b r i n g t h e i r d i s s e n t i n g v i e w p o i n t to l i g h t , e v e n t h o u g h i t m a y n o t b e a p o p u l a r o n e .

' A l o t o f . ' ¡V^ las t wcekv*r'ca c t e d to t h e V i e t N a m p r o t e s t s in m u c h t h e s a m e w a y . T h e y c a l l e d t h e p r o t e s t o r s C o m m u n i s t s , t o l d t h e m t h e y h a d no r i g h t to s p e a k u p . c a l l e d t h e m • u n - A m e r i c a n .

T h a t ' s a n i n t e r e s t i n g q u e s t i o n .; I s i t m o r e A m e r i c a n to d e f e n d

to f a n a t i c a l l e n g t h s i f n e c e s s a r y t h e e s t a b l i s h e d p o l i c y o f t h e U n i t e d S t a t e s o r to r e c o g n i z e , c l a i m a n d t e s t , i f n e e d b e . y o u r i i g h t to y o u r o w n o p i n i o n , e v e n w h e n i t i s o p p o s e d to t h e e s t a b ­l i s h e d p o l i c y ?

W e t e n d to b e l i e v e t h e l a t t e r . L a n s i n g , b y i m p l i c a t i o n i f n o t e x p l i c i t l y , s e e m s to b e l i e v e t h e f o r m e r .

T h e L a n s i n g C i t y C o u n c i l in t u r n i n g d o w n t h e V i e t N a m p r o ­t e s t o r s ’ p a r a d e p e r m i t c l a i m e d i t h a d n o t h a d e n o u g h t i m e to d e ­l i b e r a t e t h e q u e s t i o n , a n d f e a r e d t y i n g u p t r a f f i c a t p e a k h o u r s . B u t i t a l s o d e b a t e d t h e w i s d o m o f " e n d o r s i n g ” a p o l i t i c a l a c t i v ­i t y c r i t i c a l o f f e d e r a l p o l i c y . T h e q u e s t i o n s h o u l d n e v e r h a v e e n ­t e r e d t h e c o u n c i l m e n ’ s m i n d s .

T h e L a n s i n g p o l i c e , w h i l e t h e y c o u l d c l a i m to h a v e b e e n p r o t e c t ­i n g t h e m a r c h e r s , s e e m e d a w f u l l y s u s p i c i o u s a t s o m e p o i n t s . T h e y w e r e m a s s e d a t t h e c i t y l i n e w h e n t h e ’ m a r ' c f i ^ s *appr6aclTecT**along

: M i c h i g a n A v e n u e , in s o m e c a s e s • s w i n g i n g t h e a x - h a n d l e s t h e y l a t ­t e r p r o p p e d i n t o t h e i r m o t o r c y - . c l e s ’ h a n d l e b a r s , p r e s u m a b l y ; r e a d y f o r u s e .• T h e y l o o k e d a t no p o i n t a s i f : t h e y w e r e o v e r l y c o n c e r n e d w i t h ; t h e c r i t i c a l f a c u l t i e s o f t h e• m a r c h e r s , b u t r a t h e r m o r e w i t h : t h e i r p r e s e n c e a s d i s s e n t e r s , o r ; a s b e a t n i k s , o r a s e n e m i e s , o r a s

u n - A m e r i c a n s , o r e v e n a s C . . .W e w o n d e r , w h o i s m o r e A m e r ­

i c a n .

W h e n t h e M e n ’ s H a l l A s s o c i a ­t i o n a n d t h e W o m e n ’ s I n t e r - R e s i d e n c e C o u n c i l l a s t m o n t h a d o p t e d n e w r u l e s on t h e d i s t r i ­b u t i o n o f p r i n t e d m a t e r i a l s in t h e r e s i d e n c e h a l l s , i n c l u d i n g a b a n o n d o o r - t o - d o o r d i s t r i b u t i o n , t h e y m e a n t i t . A l m o s t .

T h e e v e n i n g a f t e r t h e p a s s a g e o f t h e n e w r u l e s b y t h e F a c u l t y C o m m i t t e e o n S t u d e n t A f f a i r s w a s a n n o u n c e d in t h e S t a t e N e w s , a n e w i s s u e o f L o g o s w a s d i s t r i b u ­t e d by t h e C o m m i t t e e f o r S t u d e n t R i g h t s .

T h e e v e n i n g o f A p r i l 2 2 , C S R ’ s d o r m ‘ ‘c o o r d i n a t o r s ” - - w h o d e ­c i d e on t h e a t t r i b u t i o n m e t h o d s in e a c h d o r m - - h a d a n e w f a c t o r to c o n t e n d w i t h . F e w o f t h e m h a d an y t r o u b l e . S o m e h a d i t e a s i e r t h a n e v e r .

Not s o in S o u t h C a s e . C S R c o ­o r d i n a t o r G r e g M a r t i n a t t e m p t e d to d i s t r i b u t e L o g o s u n d e r r o o m d o o r s , a s a t e s t o f t h e n e w r u l e s . He w a s c a u g h t by an RA a n d t o l d by th e h e a d a d v i s e r n o t to c o n ­t i n u e . H e d i d c o n t i n u e , a n d a s k e d tw o o t h e r C S R l e a d e r s w h o l i v e o f f - c a m p u s to c o m e in a n d h e l p h i m .

All t h r e e w e r e s t o p p e d . A l l t h r e e w e r e t o l d t h e y w o u l d b e ; d i s c i p l i n e d a c c o r d i n g to t h e p r o - : v i s i o n s o f t h e n e w r u l e s . M a r t i n b y t h e d o r m g o v e r n m e n t a n d t h e o t h e r s t h r o u g h t h e d e a n o f s t u ­d e n t s o f f i c e .

M a r t i n i s n o w c o m p l e t i n g t h r e e w e e k s o f s o c i a l p r o b a t i o n in t h e d o r m , w i t h w e e k e n d s o f f . H e d o e s n o t w a n t to a p p e a l . H e i s b e n e - f i t t i n g f r o m t h e e x t r a s t u d y t i m e .

T h e tw o o t h e r s - - o n e t h e e d i ­t o r o f L o g o s , t h e o t h e r e x e c u t i v e

. . s e c r e t a r y o f C S R . .L o t h , g r a d u a t e *)5 “ •- * '• * 9 A* * gFWs t u d e n t s - - h a v e n o t b e e n c o n ­t a c t e d . T h e d e a n o f s t u d e n t s o f ­f i c e h a s n o t c o m e t h r o u g h w i t h a n y d i s c i p l i n e d r p r o m i s e o f d i s ­c i p l i n e .

I t w o u l d s e e m t h a t d o r m i t o r y r e s i d e n t s a r e m o r e s u s c e p t i b l e to t h e r e s t r i c t i o n s o f t h e n e w r u l e s t h a n a r e o f f - c a m p u s s t u ­d e n t s . O r p e r h a p s t h o s e in c h a r g e d o n o t w a n t to go to o f a r t e s t i n g t h e r u l e s , b u t j u s t w a n t t h e m to k e e p in l i n e t h o s e m o s t in n e e d o f b e i n g k e p t in l i n e .

T h e r u l e s w e r e s o m e w h a t q u e s t i o n a b l e f r o m t h e f i r s t , a n d w e r e f r a n k l y i n t e n d e d b y t h e i r f o r m u l a t o r s to r e g u l a t e t h e f l o w o f p r i n t e d m a t e r i a l s i n t o t h e d o r m s .

T h e r u l e - m a k e r s s a i d t h i s w a s to a l l o w t h e g r e a t e s t e f f e c t i v e ­n e s s f o r t h e m a t e r i a l s , a n d to k e e p d o r m i t o r y r e s i d e n t s f r o m b e i n g b o t h e r e d b y t h e i r d i s t r i b u ­t i o n . C S R s e e m e d ;to f e e l o t h e r ­w i s e .

B u t w h e n t h e r u l e s a r e e n f o r c e d s e l e c t i v e l y , n o t o n l y w i t h d i f f e r ­e n t i n t e r p r e t a t i o n s in d i f f e r e n t d o r m s ( a p p a r e n t l y a p e r m a n e n t f a c t o r o f U n i v e r s i t y o r g a n i z a ­t i o n ) b u t w i th v a r y i n g a p p l i c a ­t i o n s in t h e s a m e d o r m , t h e n t h e y a r e p r o v i n g t h e m s e l v e s to b e l a c k i n g s o m e w h a t i n p r o t e c t i o n o f t ffe s p i r i t o f f r e e e x p r e s s i o n .

G r e g M a r t i n i s s t i l l o n p r o b a ­t i o n . P a u l S c h i f f a n d S tu D o w t y a r e n o t . T h e r e s i d e n t s o f S o u t h C a s e r e a d L o g o s a n y w a y . S c h i f f a n d D o w t y f i n i s h e d t h e d i s t r i b u ­t i o n w h e n M a r t i n w a s s t o p p e d . S e v e r a l r e p o r t e d l y h a v e s a i d t h e y p r e f e r u n d e r - t h e - d o o r d i s t r i b u ­t i o n t o t h e h a n d - t o - h a n d o r d e s k d i s t r i b u t i o n m e t h o d s r e q u i r e d b y t h e n e w r u l e s .

W h o h a s b e e n p r o t e c t e d , a n d w h o h a s m e r e l y b e e n r e s t r i c t e d , b y t h e n e w d i s t r i b u t i o n r u l e s ?

Oh, I Don’t P lay Any Of Them . O ver The Years I ’ ve Bought Them F rom The F ra te rn ity Next Door

L E T T E R S T O T H E E D IT O R

P h a n t o m S a m p l i n gT o the Editor:

I was greatly disappointed in th e naivete exhibited by M r. Stewart in his column appearing in the State News on May 6. It appears to me that M r. Stewart was carried off on a runaway horse.

type of thinking, .is a sourrcmg board for m acro-inte-“’ grationist unrest, 1 would suggest that M r. Stewart avail him self of the privilege of informing him­se lf, rather than couching vague opinions in the form of fact and gospel.

I must join M r. Stewart in voic­ing my disappointment with the Greek system at Michigan State insofar as the practice of Negro discrim ination is c o n c e r n e d . Other un iversities have taken the initiative to break this racial bar­r ie r , and I am sure that Michigan State in due course will be follow­ing their exam ples, as we usually

do when it com es to precedent- setting.

With regard to other form s of racia l discrim ination, I am con­vinced that M r. Stewart must have used a phantom sample in determining the extent to which these other form s of d isc rim i­nation ex ist.

A quick look at the Sigma Alpha Mu and P si L'psilon fratern ities «rTil^Yeveii that ‘“’$®?Jliar.r. * \* Je w s don’ t find it that hard to live with each other. In fact, P si U . has been served th isp astyear by a Jew ish secre tary , and this sam e brother was designated out­standing junior by the' rest of the p rim arily C hristian chapter.

I’ m sure that M r. Stewart would do him self a big favor to acquaint h im self with the objectives of our G reek system . Our fratern ities an d so ro rities don’ t " p r e f e r r a c e s ,” they "p re fe r ” people, people who can live together in harmony. P lease observe, M r. Stewart! Kevin D> Conne]ly

Bloom field H ills sophomore

The 'Pros’ And The 'Conns’To the Editor:

I deplore the public approach of the U niversity administration and th e national Establishment in g e n e r a l towards "student un­r e s t ." At this U niversity this is ­sue appears centered on the ex­istence of "ou tsid e ’ 1 or "p ro fe s­sional” agitators using a battery of "stan d ard " techniques.

I feel I know personally every campus rad ical: a ll are students; most live all year in East Lan­sing; none are "p ro fessio n a l" anythings. T h eir techniques have been used before; they come from the national m iracle known as the c iv il rights movement.

T h eir issues are varied be­cause their cause is the varied problem of the defense of free­dom, and yet the more they set about their work the more the U niversity hastens to assure the community that the students are “ under contro l."

It would be a far more disturb-

ing anddangerous situation if they re a lly were.

Nationally, one need only cite the incredible sm ear suffered by the DuBois C lubs. Hoover’ s let­te r, circulated some months ago, branded the clubs Communist- inspired, yet failed to offer one shred of evidence for its a s se r ­tion.

As of now, not one item has been offered in proof, yet the charge has been leveled in the m ass media hundreds of tim es, right down to the Saturday E ve­ning Post.

The country has yet to free it­s e lf of these M c C a rth y - lik e in­sinuations, and one wonders if there w ill e v e r be a day when M cCarthy will be squarely faced.

The valid refutation of the charges is not “ the clubs really aren 't Com m unist" (which they aren’ t), but: "W hat if they are ; we should judge them by their ac­tions and not their label.”

Douglas Lackey, Wayne, N .J ., junior

MICHIGANSTATI

UNIVIRSITY S T A T E N E W S

- — — — — — — Points Of View —

O h , T h a t !

Pro-Israel And ConBy F R A N K L Y N COHEN Sh rew sbu ry , N.J., se n io r

Some Ideas Are M ore EqualT o the Editor:

The Orwellian principle called "double-think" has long been a staple in the Am erican political cupboard, but it seem s to have ingrained itself so deeply that, again in O rwell’ s term s, it’ s nearly im possible these days to

• JfiR .Jh S-/ . r»,the farm ers.I h / ’ co ld War has, i f ¿eem s,

spawned a generation of political tran svestites.

Thus, we find the Lansing C ity Council abrogating th e right of assem bly and peaceful demon­stration in th e name of Patriot­ism by the curiously Southern tactic of denying the MSU Com ­mittee for Peace in Viet Nam a parade perm it, thereby hoping to squelch their proposed march to the capitol to p rotestU .S . aggres- ' sion in Southeast A sia .

L ike a dog and a postman, a second injustice snapped at the heels of the f irs t , this one the work of student Patriots who ev­idently believe that the best way to beat The Enemy is to join him.

These students, although ex­trem ely v o l u b l e them selves, tried to silence the opposition in the person of Reinhard Mohr and the MSU Committee for Peace in Viet Nam, through the tim e- dishonored techniques of jeering at what one cannot attack logic­ally , laughing at what one is in­capable of comprehending, and sm earing all those with whom one d isagrees.

When I, naively secure in the idea that I was acting within my Constitutional righ ts, defended M r. Mohr’ s position, my "fe llo w A m e rican s" w ere very quick to point out that my supposed rights were m ere figments of the A m er­ican imagination.

T h ese tw o incidents, when coupled with the steadily em erg­ing pattern of like events which have burgeoned l i k e hydra’ s heads from M cCarthyism , lead me to the inevitable conclusion that Patriotism is a Communist plot to subvert the Am erican way

^ e* Richard A. OgarE ast Lansing graduate student

In reference to the letter of M r. Khadduri, the land that he has been writing about belonged not to the A rabs, but totheBritish man­date. It was given to the Je w s by the B rit ish —we did not take it from the A rabs.

Secondly, s i x Arab nations chased their fellow A rabs from Is ra e l, hoping to. defeat tiny I s ­ra e l in 1948; then, of course, the A rabs would return. They failed to defeat Isra e l; thus, they were not able to fulfill their obligation to the displaced A rabs of Is ra e l.

Of all the things that seem most ironic to me in this Isra e li-A ra b letter-w riting is t h a t e v e r y spring term Imad Khadduri here in the United States c rit ic iz e s pro-U .S, Israe l while the Arabs exhibit questionable behavior in respect to the U .S.

T h e ir l e a d e r Gamel Abdul N asser no m ore than two months ago told the U*5. to go drink from the sea . On May 9,1964, the lead­e r of theCommunist world, Nikita Khrushchev, arrived at Alexan­d ria , Egypt, to have a friendly 16 day visit with N a sse r; and by the w ay, President Abdel Salam A rif of M r. Khadduri's country was at their side. U lbricht of East G er­many recently visited with the A rab-w orld leader for s e v e n days, much to the dism ay and d is­approval of the West.

The Arabs speak of war while p ossessing Russian-m ade wea­pons.

Now I do realize that the A rabs are not Com m unists, but the aforementioned certain ly makes me wonder how p ro-U .S . the Arab states are .

Isra e l is closely united with Fran ce and the United States. She is aiding the newly-em erging Af­rican nations. She scorns Russia , Red China, E ast Germ any and other enem ies of the Western world.

Isra e l tr ie s to extend peace to­wards. the A rabs, but they refuse to negotiate. In fact, the other day when Habib Bour^iba of Tunisia advocated friendly relation’s with Isra e l, the other Arabs con-dem nej «><--•prom ptly’ withdrew their ambas­sadors.

Why aren’ t the Arabs friendly toward Isra e l? With this e x is ­tence of Israe l the A rabs have a common enemy to unite against.

A ctually, Isra e l is good for the A rab nations. It helps greatly to unify these people w ho un­fortunately cannot get along with them selves, let alone with Isra e l.

By K H A L IL N IAZYSaudi A rab ia , f resh m an

It was boring for me to read the letter by M r. Howard Finkel in the May 6 State News, but 1 forced m yself to read so that I would know the ideas of unin­formed people about a problem as complicated as the situation between the Arab states and I s ­ra e l.

It was v e r y c le a r that M r. Finkel has heard only the Israe li side of the story and was pushed by these one-sided view s to write as he did.

The Jew's didn’ t choose P a les­tine as a permanent home because it was theirs 2,000 years ago. (If every land is to revert to its original owners, why not give A m erica back to the Indians and Spain to the A rabs, who occupied it for four centuries?)

They chose Palestine because it was one of the richest Arab states in so il, not a desert waste­land. Palestine was famous for the citrus fruits and other prod­ucts developed by its original Arabian owners.

Many of the Arab refugees who supposedly left Israe l of their own accord were killed on their way out. More than a million of them live in the desert now, suffering hunger and d isease , not because the Arab states haven’ t tried to help them, but because they want to return to their Palestinian homes.

But Isra e l has so far ignored instructions from the L'.N. to let the refugees r e t u r n to their homes.

The only ’ ’ f ir s t - c la s s ’ ’ Arab C itizens in Israe l are ? minority who are considered tra itors to A rabia because t h e y s w o r e against their culture i ver Israe li radio . The m ajority of Arabs in Is ra e l live in abject poverty.

Incidentally, women aren't le­gally required to be veiled in any Arabian country.

A fter World War II, the P a les­tinians w ere very sympathetic to the Je w s who h ad suffered so much brutality under H itler, and accepted the refugees into P a les­tine, sharing moi ey md property with.them., h ,

C > v ' ' t *But the J ews wer e ' ir-w e .thi r

friends, fighting and killit g their own country men and neighbors instead of appreciating and re ­specting the sympathy and kind­ness that had been extended to them.

1 hope after this, M r. Finkel m akes the effort to learn both sides of the story before he w rites.

Letter PolicyThe State News welcom es all letters to the editor from any mem­

b ers of the MSU community or non-Universi y read ers.' L etters should be no longer than 300 words and typed double­

spaced if possib le . Longer letters may be considered for publica­tion as "P oin t of View” colum ns. Correspondents should include name and, if applicable, U niversity standing. This information may be withheld upon request, but no unsigned letters will be printed.

The State News re se rv e s the right to select and edit all letters to fit space requirem ents.

M em ber Associated P re ss , United P re s s International, Inland Daily P re s s A sso c ia­tion, Associated Collegiate P re s s , Michigan P re s s \ssociatior..

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Second c lass postage paid at East Lansing, M ichigan.

Editorial and business o ffices at 341 Stu­dent Services Building, Michigan State Uni­v e rs ity , East Lansing, Michigan.

Editor ..................................... John Van Gieson, A dvertising M anager ............. Arthur LangerCampus Editor ............ C harles C . WellsManaging Editor ................. Hugh J . LeachSports Editor ..................... Richard SchwartzW ire Editor ............................ B ill KraseanA ssistant Ad M anagers .......... Ken Hoffman,

M arcy RosenCirculation M anager ................. Jim BakerEditorial Editors ............. M ichael Kindman,

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Page 3: TATE MEWS Committee Favors Faculty Raisesarchive.lib.msu.edu/DMC/state_news/1965/state_news_19650511.pdfSen. Guy Vander Jagt, R-Cad- illac, said the committee felt there was a definite

M ich ig a n S tate N e w s , E a s t L a n s in g , M ichigan T u e sd a y . May 11, 1965

World News at a Glance

Expert To Consider Medical Education

F ro m O ur W ire Se rv ices

Red General Says China Won’t Attack

TOKYO—Gen. t_o Ju i-C hing of Red China declared Monday the h istory of the 20 y e a rs since World War 11 “ has fully demonstrated that, with a ll its nuclear weapons, UJS. im perialism is like a large tree eaten hollow with w orm s.’ ’

“ The day is drawing nigh when this tree will be uprooted by the worldwide storm of the people’ s (Communist) revolution,” theChi- nese arm y chief of staff wrote iiu h e magazine Red F lag .

Lo cited rem arks by M aoTze-Tung that “ without the struggles waeed by the people, atom bombs by them selves would be no avail, and "th e atom bomb is a paper tiger which the U .S. reactionaries use to scare people.”

King Wants A n ti-P o lI Tax Clause

SELM A —Dr. Martin Luther King J r . said Monday that it would be a national tragedy if C ongress fails to write an anti-poll tax clause into the new voting rights bill.

King held a news conference on his a rriva l in Selm a ior a two-day tour of counties where his Negro voting drive has been centered. His return, he said, was aimed at assessin g the campaign and keeping the momentum going.

Judge Denies Charges

OKLAHOMA C IT Y --H is voice calm , Oklahoma Supreme Court Ju stice N. B . Johnson denied as “ absolutely fa lse ” Monday a fo r­m er colleague’ s testimony that Johnson shared in payoffs oi $15. ,500 to m em bers of Oklahoma’ s highest court.

Taking the stand in the fourth day of his State Senate impeachment tr ia l, Johnson swore he did not accept $10,000 in bribes from form er Ju stice N. So Corn to influence his decision on two pending ca se s .

Adenauer Suffers Delayed Shock

BONN, Germ any— Form er Chancellor Konrad Adenauer of West Germany has suffered a delayed shock after being in a railw ay collision and has been ordered by his doctor to re ­main in his home for a week. Adenauer i s 59.

The statesman w a s aboard the firs t car of th e luxury Rheingold E xpress Frid ay night on his return from vacation at Lake Como. The locomotive hit a truck at a grade c ro ss ­ing, injuring the truck driver and damaging the locomotive.

Body Identified As T y le r ’ s

The purpose and needs of med­ical education today and in the future will be d iscussed inapub- lic lecture by a federal medical executive here Wednesday.

William L . K issick , M.D., Dr. P .H ., who has served on several top-level'governm ent health pro­gram s, will speak at 8 p.m . in the Anthony Hall Auditorium.

His topic will be "M edical Ed­ucation: Prelude or Continuum?” The talk is sponsored bythe.MSU Pre-M edical Society andtheCol- lege of Human Medicine.

D r. K issick has been with the Department of Health, Education and W elfare since 1962 and is now serving as staff assistant to the special assistant (health and medical affairs) to the secretary of the DHEW.

He is also currently serving as a consultant to the National

Com m ission on C o m m u n i t y Health S ervice and as a consultant to the Office of Economic Oppor­tunities.

Other assignm ents h a v e in­cluded participation in a cultural exchange program on m edicaled- ucation in th e L’nited States and the Soviet Union. In addition, he has been a staff assistant on the President’ s C o m m i s s i o n on Heart D isease, C a n c e r a n d Stroke, and a technical assistant to the Panel on Environmental Pollution of the President’ s S c i­ence Advisory Comm ittee.

Born in Detroit in 1932, Dr. K issick received four degrees at Y a le U niversity: the B .A . in 1953, the MJD. in 1957, the M .P J 1 . (Pub­lic Health) in administration in 1959 and the D r. P.H . in epidem­iology in 1961.

I f

W S

S to le n B o o k s Listed In Lo c a l B o o k Stores

F a r m e r T a l k T i c k e t s H e r e

Tickets a re still available to Jam es F a rm e r ’ s speech here Thursday.

F a rm e r, national director of the Congress for Racial E q u a l- ' ity (CORE) w ill speak as part of a fund-raising project for the summ er Student Education P ro j­ect (STEP) in Holly S p r i n g s , M iss.

Tickets a re $ 1 each and are on sa le at the Union, Interna­tional Center, and Paramount News Stand.

They w ill also be sold at the door.

F arm er w ill speak at 4 p.m . in Fairchild Theatre.

He was a founder of CORE in 1942 and led the first Freedom Ride in Jackson, M iss., in 19 6 1.

1 he STEP project w ill send student and faculty volunteers to work at a reading clinic for high school juniors and sen iors, as w ell as help students at Rust C ollege and Holly Springs re s i­dents.OCEAN C IT Y , Md.—The bodies of C aro le T y le r and Robert H.

D avis were recovered Monday from the sunken wreckage of the plane which carried them to their death in the Atlantic Ocean. # # r> I I

M iss T y le r , 26, a form er beauty queen from Lenoir C ity, Tenn,, E n g i n e e r i n g n a i l was a secretary to Bobby B aker during the Senate investigation o! .■Baker’ s outside business interests while he was secretary to the Senate Democratic m ajority.

Russia May T ry Soft Landing

ib & V l'li i 'i t 't f a t te m p t s u m e - on th e A irter -

\R6>f i .»s.a’ s new rrcj•s ie ty + ifM jc ')#take photographs of the moon, and may even thing more spectacular in an effort to go oi e-up ican lunar program , unofficial sources said Monday night.

Moscow ob servers said the Russians might attempt to beat the U .S. Surveyor program in making a soft l a n d in g of an in­strument packaee on the moon.

Gold Stock Remains StableWASHINGTON—U .S. monetary gold s t o c k has remained stable

over the past few days, S ec re ta ryo fT h eT rea su ry Henry H. Fowler indicated Monday.

In answ er to a question at a White House news conference, Fowler said that the United States had sold $ 9 , 5 million worth of jmld_this ye ar . He said the figure represented sa le s throtigh'May 3. U .S , gold stocks now stand at about $14,413,000,000.

The Engineers’ B all wil l be held at 6;30 p.m . Saturday in the Ja c k T a r Hotel. The all-U n iver- sitv dinner-dance is open to fac­ulty m em bers, students and ■¿ueigs. . - ■“ *

<£> O U N H O SPITAL R EP O R T

Adm issions include: R o b e r t Berm an, Roslyn, N .Y ., sopho­m ore; Judith Bos, Pontiac fresh ­man; Paul Blake, Clio freshm an; C arro l Boltz, White Cloud soph­om ore; Robert Buchanan, Che­boygan freshm an; John D. C ase, Clinton, N .J ., junior; Nancy Cun­ningham, J a c k s o n freshm an; Daniel D. Dean, Coldwater soph­om ore; LouAnn D eL isle , Ben­ton H: -bor freshm an.

A lso : Suzanne Catalino, Wor­thington, Ohio, freshm an; Mur­iel D ryer, Itasca, 111., sopho­m ore; John Gaa, Okemos jun­io r; P atric ia Ann Fox, K ala­mazoo sophomore; Edward Gui- d e r , Ypsilanti freshm an; Jon Hartman, Ludington freshm an; Jam es Hansman, Rocky R iv er , Ohio, graduate student; Andrew Hoban, Ravenna sophomore; J e r ­ry Humerickhouse, East Lansing j u n i o r ; A lessandra Jungwirth, E ast Lansing graduate student.

A lso: David M arable, Wayne freshm an; K r iss Middleton, Fen­wick junior; Gail O’ H ara, De­troit freshm an; Janne Ruther-

. ford, Okemos freshm an; Robert Saurer, Charlotte sophomore; Allen C. Strunk, Detroit junior; M ary Jane Voelker. Battle Creek sophojjiore; Stanl y T h o m a s , E ast Lansing junior; Nancy Two- ney, South Lincoln, M ass., sen­io r ; C aro l Van A rkel, T ra v e rse C ity junior» •■ ,

’ H ER E ’S THE P L A N ’— John M cQ u it ty , cen te r, gen­e ra l ch a irm a n fo r next y e a r 's C a re e r C a rn iv a l , goes over plans fo r the event w ith a r t d i r e c to r s Pat Taggart, le ft, and Tom P r ic e . They arte looking over a f lo o r p lan of the Union, decid ing where to p lace the e xh ib i ts .

P h i Sigs A n d K a p p a s T o p B lo o d D o n o r List

the fraternity competition with 100 per cent andTheta Delta Chi was third with 90 per cent.

Kappa Kappa G a m m a won in the sorority division.

East Shaw, Arm strong and Em ­mons took the first three places among men’ s halls.

The three winners in the worn-

M en’s Club Sets O akland Tour

Buses ior the Men’ s Club trip to Oakland U niversity are sched­uled. to leave campus at 4 p.m . Tuesday. A tour and dinner fol-

• Towed by a program is planned at the Oakland campus with re ­turn a rr iv a l »et at 10y»U p.m ;

Phi Sigma Delta, with 130 per cent participation, won the spring Blood Drive plaque given to the fraternity with the highest p er­centage of m em bers giving blood.

A total of 1,059 pints of blood were collected in the drive spon­sored by the Arm y ROTC last week.

f armhouse placed second in en’ s halls competition were East Mayo, G ilchrist and East Fee.

Bethel Manor p l a c e d first among the religious living units with 118 per cent.

Bower House won in the co o p ­eratives division with 100 per cent.

"T h e units that had over 100 per cent participation get help from pledges, employes and frien d s,” chairman of the drive, John A lbers, Ridgefield, N .J ., se,nier ̂ ..explained.

O N L Y 3 M O R E D A Y S L E F T T I L L

WATER CARNIVALR o a d R a lly

W in n e rs A n n o u n c e d

Ì K V A T E R U f i f DCRÊEK

The winning d river of the Theta Chi Road Rally held Saturday was Lance Hauer, Detroit graduate student, with Dan Tabor, Mon­tague ' sophomore, as his navi­gator.

In second place was Jim Cus­ter, B elle Plain, Iowa, graduate student with Mike K elly , Holt Junior, navigating. In third was Phil O p p e n h e i m , Birmingham sophomore, with Robert Rosen­thal, Buffalo, N .Y ., sophomore.

The d riv ers and the naviga­to rs of the first three car's re­ceived trophies with the next, eight runners-up being awarded dash plaques. John LeBlond and Pat Benidict, the chairm en of the event, awarded the p rizes Saturday afternoon following the ra lly . .

The ra lly will be featured on Spartan Sportcast, Channel 10 , at 7 p.m . and again at 1 1 p.m . Monday.

Photo Labs OpenThe Information Services Pho­

to Lab will hold an open house from 1 to 4 p.m . today in 10-A Ag. Hall.

Rapid film developing w ill be featured with the recently ac­quired Versam at Film P ro cesso r for those bringing a roll of Plus X or T ri X film .

Faculty and staff m em bers are being invited to acquaint them­selves with the varied fac ilities and operations of this a ll-U ni- versity serv ice .

/

/

o

COMPLETE SCIENTIFIC INSPECTIONfor American-Foreign.Compacts featuring

• Wheel balancinge Custom brake service# Steering correction

T H I S F R I D A Y a n d S A T U R D A Y N IT E

M A Y 1 4 t h a n d 1 5 t h

We also do expert tuneup work on American and Compact cars

LISKEY’S AUTO SAFETY CENTER124 So. Larch o ff Mich. Ave. - Lansing

FRIDAYNITE

TICKETS SOLD AT . .

BRODY AND WILSON DORMS 5 -7 P .M .CONRAD A U D ITO R IU M 2:30-3:30C A M P B E L L ’S SUBURBAN VAN NEAR A U D IT O R IU M 2-4 P .M. C A M P B E L L ’S SUBURBAN SHOP UNION T IC K E T OFFICE 8 A .M .-5 P .M .IN T E R N A T IO N A L CENTER H A . M . - t P .M .IN FRONT OF BER KEY AND BESSEY H A LLS

SATURDAYNITE

The value of books stolen from MSU students since January to­tals about $1,26 0 , an MSU public safety o fficer has reported.

S a f e t y o f f i c e r Ronald H. Mahaffy said that of this amount, approximately $331.13 in books has been recovered . Stolen books are som etim es recovered when a student tr ie s to se ll them to local book sto res, he said.

" I average one or two student apprehensions a week,” Mahaffy said.

In order to aid the "book stores in detecting stolen books, a stolen book list is distributed to them by the campus police, lie said. The list contains the name of the book, the author and any markings such as the student's name and student number on th e inside cover.

The MSU book store checks close ly on students who sell used books to make sure they aren’ t stolen, Robert H. Frew , manager of the MSU book store, said.

“ We have students show their identification card and sigh their nauie and student number 111 books they s e ll ,” Frew said. “ Then if a book is stolen we know who sold it to u s ," he said.

" I t is difficult to detect a stol­en "book from other books," a sa les clerk at the MSU book store said. "H ow ever, there are some ways that a clerk can tell if a student is selling a stolen book.”

"W e watch for students who act suspicious or have books w ith the name and student number of another p e r s o n marked out. Som etim es the firs t page of a book is torn out which suggests that the book is stolen,” she said.

If a sa les clerk suspects a stu­dent of selling a stolen book, she goes ahead with the transaction, Frew said.

After the purchase she checks

the book with the stolen book list and if it is stolen the campus po­lice are notified. The bookstore does not attempt to apprehend the student, he said. $

Many times a book store w ill not p ress charges against a stu­dent, Mahaffy said . However, if they do, a student is charged with sim ple larceny and turned over to the lnghamCounty Prosecutor.he said.

Young Dems

Elect O fficersBy u n a n i m o u s vote, Peter

White, Bay City junior,w as e lec- ted area representative f r o m Lansing and Ann Arbor, and Janel Shogan, Detroit freshman, state secretary , Saturday at the Mich­igan ̂oung Democrats Conven­tion.

White w ill represent all area clubs to the state executive board and M iss Shogan w ill handlecor- respcmdence of state officers and coordinate the Michigan Young Dem ocrats Clubs with each other and the senior party in the com­ing year.

With 12 representatives at the convention held in Capitol P a r k , ’ Lansing, Michigan State had the second largest number of votes. The, only other o fficers elected unanimously w ere f i r s t v i c e chairm an and college coordina­to r, both University of M ichi­gan students.

Joseph Rauh, national v i c e chairm an of the Am ericans for Dem ocratic A c t i o n . a d d r e s s e d the convention on the need for young people’ s participation in the c iv il rights movement.

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J a c o b s o n sCASUAL DRESSES

Page 4: TATE MEWS Committee Favors Faculty Raisesarchive.lib.msu.edu/DMC/state_news/1965/state_news_19650511.pdfSen. Guy Vander Jagt, R-Cad- illac, said the committee felt there was a definite

4 M ich ig a n S tate N e w s , E a s t L an sin g , M ich ig an T u e sd a y . May 11. 1965

' T o k y o J o e 1 O r ' C o l l e g e J o e )

P u l e o A t H o m e W i t h W e i g h t sBy R O BERTA YA F IE

State News Sports W r i t e rAthletes lift weights as an integral part of

their on and off-season conditioning program s. Adipose blobs lift weights to become the he- men of tomorrow. G ir ls lift weights to gain lovelier figures.

Joe Puleo lifts weights because he’ s a weight- lifte r.

Sounds sensible, doesn’ t it? To Puleo, weight­lifting is a sport, not Just a physical conditioner or pastim e. He is the ste llar member of the M SI' Weightlifting Club, with a score of world and national titles to his credit.

Just last weekend Puleo added to his tro­phy collection, lifting a total of 960 pounds in three attempts, to capture an NCAA crown in the lSl-pound c lass .

Although many sports fans may not be fam il­iar with lifting, it is one of the 2 1 sports con­tested ir. the Olympic Gam es and has a history' dating back to ancient G reece.

The first weightlifter of record was a fellow named The Great Milo. Thev didn’ t have weiehts in M ilo’ s day, so he im provised— he carried a new-born calf around on his back. He went around the country like that day after day and, as time went on, the calf grew up and he grew stronger, until his training was complete and he was ready to demonstrate his p h e n o m e n a l strength in the Grecian Olympiad. Milo wowed the crowds by carrying a full-grown bull on his shoulders.

Fortunately for men 11 have to plunder farme weights, but have equip: which they car. execute their feats of strength and sk ill.

The last century saw the arriva l of what has been called the " E r a of the Strong Man.” Ekiring this time, the sport progressed rapidly from one in ' which there were no set rules or weights to a sport which is laid out along set lines. The early competitors just lifted; each man could proclaim him self a champ, for there w ere no standards by which to judge.

Weightlifting has made leaps and bounds since the turn of the century in improving the Caliber of lifting. Naturally, strength is the prim e fac-

ke Jo e Puleo, they don’ t r s ’ herds in search of ment of their own with

almost oosolete, a s evidenced by the Russian and Japanese athletes.

Today’ s lifte r must be a superb all-around athlete a s w e ll. T h is is one area where the Europeans have an advantage over the Am er­ican lifte rs . Europeans play a good deal of soccer, basketball, and track and field to keep them selves in top condition. At theTokyoGam es this sum m er, several of the Russian lifte rs w ere entered in gym nastics competition as we l l . *

"Dynam ic*’ Jo e Puleo has been lifting for some six y e a rs , during which time he’ s am as­sed the teenage and Junior national champion­ships, the 1963 Pan American Gam es title and the national crowns in 1962 and 1964. F o r­m erly a middleweight, Puleo now lifts in the 181-pound c la s s , one of the seven Olympic rankings.

The Tokyo Olympics capped off a success­ful year with a bitter disappointment. After he had qualified for the team in his c la ss , the AAU offic ia ls decided to hold re tr ia ls .

General opinion a s to the reason behind holding these extra and unscheduled tria ls rested on the resu lts of the 198-lb . c la ss , and outside p re s­sures that w ere brought to bear on the AAU. Puleo. c lea rly the winner in his division, was told that he, too, had to compete again.

The outcome of the tr ia ls sent both of the men in the 198-pound c la ss to Tokyo and left Puleo in M ichigan. There was no represen­tative from his division at the gam es.

Joe is rated as the second-best light-heavy- weight in the nation, behind Minnesota’ s Gary Cleveland, and ranked among the top ten lift­ers in the world.

B O N U S B A B Y F O R B A S K E T B A L L

Baseball Tender Lures Jordán

tor, espec;ally. 01' ic lifts, other e le-ments have entered the picture as well, name­ly speed and agility. The muscle-bound lifter is

Rich Jordan, the 5 -7 , 16 0 - pound jumping-Jack from Fenn- vllle , signed a baseball tender with Michigan State Monday, much to the delight of bas­ketball coach John Benlngton.

Jordan, who is an outstand­ing pitcher-outfielder this sea­son for the C lass C school, la also a top-flight eager, and there is speculation that he could help the basketball team even m ore than coach D a n n y L itw h iler’ s baseballers.

Lee Lafayette, the a ll-A m er­ican center from Grand Rapids South, was sent a tender T h urs­day, im m ediately a fter his re ­cords had been cleared by the B ig Ten office, but has not yet returned it. However, he told United P re ss International Mon­day that he had signed the tender and it was on its way here.

Today is the deadline for ten­ders to be filed with the school if the athlete plans to attend.

Jo rd an 's signing doesn’ t count against the s ix tenders State is- allowed fo r basketball, so now Benlngton Is scanning the jun­ior colleges for other signees.

If State got short-changed by the acquisition of the not-too- big athlete, it w ill take a lot to prove it to Benington.

“ Even if he hadn’ t signed a baseball tender, we would have signed him for basketball,” Ben­ington s a i d . “ Michigan State wouldn’ t have tendered Jordan

*** if we didn’ t feel he could make the grad e .”

Lltw h iler appears just a s happy over the deal. “ He’ s a fine ath­le te ,” L itw h ile r said . “ Usually a good basketball p layer can

■ * become an outstanding baseball p layer and I’m sure h e 'll help u s.”

Both L itw hiler and Benington said they felt Jordan could make the grade despite his sm all s ize .

"Nobody realized the challenge Jordan w ill face better than he h im self.” Benington said . " A s a coach, it’ ll be my responsi­bility to make the most of every inch we have.”

" I 'v e had sm aller guys play for me who went on to the m ajor leag u es,” L itw hiler said , re fe r­ring to Cleveland shortstop Dick H owser.

“ Dick was the sam e height as Jordan but didn’ t weigh as much— only about 140 ,” Litw hiler added.

Jord an ’ s high school basket­ball coach, Ray Feh er, is just as high on the chances of the form er a ll-s ta te r .

" I don’ t have any doubt in my mind that he’ ll do all r ig h t," F eh er said . “ He’ s got ability, he’ s strong for his size and has

one of the best shots_ I’ ve seen .” " H e 'l l get his shot off, too,”

he added, “ because of his fan­tastic jumping ab ility .”

Feh er said Jordan has already c leared 6-2 and just m issed 6-4, which is nine Inches higher than the top of his head.

Benington, whose recru ite r* have a lready signed 6 - 1 1 a l l- state center Tom Lick from Gay­lord and form er Lansing Sexton standout John Holms, seem ed the most jubilant over the Jo r ­dan acquisition.

“ Now that we have signed him and L ick and Holms, the main task is to keep them from the clutches of n o n - c o n f e r e n c e schools who can still sign them up,” he said.

H o l m e s A l l o w s 3 H i t s ,

S p a r t a n s B e a t I r i s h , 3 - 0

C u r z i A l l - A m e r i c a n W o l v e s S t a l k M S U N e t sJ ir Curzi, captair

state’ s 1 9 66squad giate tearr ye ir.

Mich:- with P err State s M ikejacobsen irastics : C òlie-

t-t e a rn.■ s P -.j..

Alsu, ranted t ¿lie first team w e r e : A il-V ro u n d —Jacobsen; floor exerçise and trampohr.e— Frank Scftpiitz, S . Illinois; .side horse--B §k E lsin ger; ‘ Spring­field; vaulting—D an Millman, C a lifa rn ta i and r in g s—G ie G a ilis , ico.»««» vvpxte 1

By RICK PIANIN State News Sports W r i t e r Spartan t e n n i s coach Stan

Drobac has made an impassioned .p lea to all spectators to rc-main in * the bleacher» provided them at the varsity courts this

rt ft tec a vs, from 2fS0 oj:, ncçrel'gpjs -a safety precaution.

O n T h e

C l o s e d - C i r c u i t T V S c r e e n

A t Lansing ’s C ivic CenterC A S S IU S S O N N Y

C L A Y V s ’ L I S T O NC ham pion C hallenger

s

A

V 1 - • !*■ -'1 .

E

W o r ld ’s G re a te s t S in g le S p o r t in g E v e n t ! ”Wtlson Springer. Hearst Newspaper Headline Service

M o n d a y

MAY 31l i l i( ( II . I% m W h , ON THE

CLOSED-CIRCUIT TV SCREEN

IT ! i WILL NOTTechnical Facilities I cmmmsupplied by TelePromPter IVon home tvE X C I T I N G

H O U R S ! EVERY THRILL FROM START TO F IN IS H !

Buy Your Tickets Now!O N L Y $ 4 . 0 0 a t t h e P a r a m o u n t N e w s t a n d s

$5.50 at the door211 E v e r g r e e n

103 E . M i c h i g a n

Six vicious Wolves w ill.be re ­leased onto the playing area at that tim e, and State’ s tennis team w ill then be confronted with the arduous task of catching these c ritte rs by the tail.

The Wolves,* who hail from nearby. SS&avi-Arbc,r,-Jiaye waited patiently for the comrng^f'f the spring-thaw before venturing to East Lansing. L ast ye ar , bold MSU stalked the Wolves in their own den at the U niversity of Michigan, but the- hapless Spar­tans were savagely torn apart, 8 -1.

Michigan is undefeated in Big Ter. competition this season with a 3-0 record. U-M was predicted to be a chief contender for the conference title this spring and has more than lived up. to its billing.

Leading the W olves’ , pack, is team captain Flood Brian, a Canadian product. Other team m em bers ire K arl Hedrick, John F r a s e r , George Russell, Hal Lowe, Jim Swift and Bo B arker. New to the team is sophomore J e r r y Steward, who has shown much prom ise.

Coach B ill Murphy is in his 17th season at Michigan. During his tenure there, his squads have won seven B ig Ten champion­ships and one NCAA title.

The Spartans are on a hot

streak, having won their past four matches. At present, State holds a 2-2 conference record and is 6-5 overall.

L a ird W arner, number three singles, Vic Dhovge, number five man, and number s ix Mike Youngs

. ¡>U«Aare the lead in t b v leam ’ s individual pefform ance record, with 9-4 m arks. Warner and Youngs are tops in doubles com­petition with an 8-3 record.

Dwight Shelton (4-9) will start for State at number one Singles and Captain C h arlie Wolff (6-7) w ill take the number two spot. Ph illip s will play number four sin gles for the Spartans.

Shelton and Wolff w ill team up for number one doubles, while Ph illip s and Dhooge w ill see ac­tion at the number two slot.

Coach Drobac has been excited recently over his squad's p er­form ance and new-found confi­dence. He felt that the turning point in State’ s successfu l cam ­paign cam e last week in the West­ern Michigan match, when MSU squeaked by with a 5-4 win.

The ultimate test com es this afternoon, and while the Wolves cannot be described as “ leanand hungry,” t h e y certa in ly h a v e proved them selves to be “ maul­e r s ” on the courts — and the Spartans have only their ra c ­quets to fend them offf.

By DUANE LA N C A S TER State News Sports W r i t e r

MSU pitcher Dick Holmes al­lowed just three hits and struck out ten Notre Dame batters as the Spartans nipped the Irish 3-0 at Lansing Municipal Park Monday night.

Holmes also got one of the three Spartan hits off Notre Dame pitcher Dan McGinn.

State took an e ar ly lead when Steve Juday, playing f irs t base, walked, m o v e d to third on a throwing e rro r by the pitcher, and scored on a passed ball.

The Spartans added the clin ­ch ers an inning la ter when third baseman John Biedenbach singled and left fielder Bob Speer walked. C atcher Dick Kilbourn moved the runners along with a sa crifice and Juday drove them both home with a double.^^^

Michigan State is now 22-7 for the year and Notre Dame dropped to 14 - 12 . The Spartans now have only to win their next four gam es- which are conveniently scheduled within the next five days—to set a new season record for v ictories

The old m ark, 25 wins, dates back to 1954.

Holmes, hurling before a crowd of 1,503 fans, allowed only sin - ' 'n j , j: d prevented IrTs8*7'®-«ir <-

r, getting to second

jpM If single by Alan K ristow ski, Irish second-base- man, the only man to t o u c h Holmes was Tom Tencza, Notre Dame shortstop, who singled In the second and fifth innings.

State threatened to score in the fifth inning when McGinn walked three batters. However, he then got J e r r y Walker on a force play at the plate, and retired Holmes on strikes.

McGinn is now 4-2 and Holmes, 2 -0 .

ND 000 000 000 0 -3 -1MSU 012 000 OOx 3 -3 -0

WASHINGTON (UPI)— A 6 8 - year-o ld patriarch of law less­n ess, C h a r l e s Bryan H arris , Wednesday becam e the oldest person ever placed on the F B I ’ s list- of 10 most wanted crim i-

T O P S . . .

That’s what you’ll say after you have tried a delicious MCDONALD’S meal.

* Fish Sandwiches. • Hamburgs - .....* Cheeseburgers* Fries* Shakes

M c D o n a ld s!ast Lansing-1 B lk . East o f Campus2 B lks . West o f Union

Lansing*4015 W. Saginaw 4700 S. Cedar 2120 N. L a rc h

E Y E -O P E N E R - - Coach , Danny L i t w h i le r ponders o v e r the p o s s ib i l i t y of a new v ic to ry m iles tone , 26 w ins, as he watches h is team ta l ly i ts 22nd dec is ion Monday n ight. Photo by David Sykes

In tra m u ra l News

Always stop at the golden arches sign

M E N ’ S V O L L E Y B A L L

T im e G ym 1 C ou rt 17 Brannigan-Brandy 7:30 Abode-Abundantia8 E . Shaw 1-58:30 Brougham -Brutus T im e G ym 1 C ou rt 3

E. Shaw 4-2 7:30 Aku Aku-Akvavit 8 Abel-Abbington 8:30 B rin k ley-6 Pak

T im e Gym 2 C ou rt 47 Cachet-Cabana 7:30 Akrojox-Aktion8 Abendego-Abdication 8:30 Shieks-T rojansT im e G ym 2 C ou r t 67 Akohol-Akbarama 7:30 Baw diers-N ebishes8 Vikings-Rinky Dinks 8:30 Akua Pahula-Akarpous

BO W LING A l le y s 6 p .m .1-2 Sam m ies-Lushw ell 3-4 A lley C ats-Bow er 5-6 Ka Boom s-R ippers A l le y s 8:30 p .m.1-2 Delta Sigma P i-V ets 3-4 Red T ro jan s-Evan s schol­a r s5-6 Sigma Chi-SOC

S O F T B A L L F ie ld 5:20 p .m .1 Rinky Dinks-Nebishes2 F e n c ilir -F e e M ales3 Akrojox-Akbaram a4 Abel-Abbington5 W icliff-W ildcats6 Butcher B oys-S c r e a m i n g Eagles

7 Tab Top-Fyjim os

F ie ld 6 :3 0 p . m .

2 Em bers-Em powerm ent3 Em inence-Em pyrean4 M cBeth-M cLean5 W. Shaw 6-76 W ormwood-W orcester 6 Argonauts-Arhouse8 A rlsto cra ts-A res9 Abdication-Abaddon

F ie ld 7:40 p .m .1 Setutes-C ellar Dw ellers2 Serutan-Snark

Resident hall track entries a re due today at 1 p.m . T h ere w ill be a scratch meeting for track m anagers in 208 Men’ s IM at 4:45 p.m.

All teams in the softball play­offs ca ll the IM office for your schedule.

All entrants in the tennis sin­gles individual tournament ca ll the 1M office fo r pairings.

The Skish (bait casting) con­test runs until F rid ay . Those in­terested report to the supervis­or in front of the Men’ s IM Build­ing between 12 -1 p.m . or 3 - 5 p.m. this week.

W O M E N ’S S O F T B A L L

F ie ld 5 p .m .1 Phillips 1-S . Wonders 23 Rather-W . Landon

F ie ld1 C asey ’ s Cats-W . Mayo

6 p .m.dr

’ s C ats- 3 Block Playoffs

•F ea tu ring*

• H o t P i z z a• F o o t L o n g s

. « . S u b m a r i n e s

T H E P IZ Z A P IT

FOR DELIVERY ! C A L L ;

E D 2 - 0 8 6 3 1203 M .A .C .

Page 5: TATE MEWS Committee Favors Faculty Raisesarchive.lib.msu.edu/DMC/state_news/1965/state_news_19650511.pdfSen. Guy Vander Jagt, R-Cad- illac, said the committee felt there was a definite

M ich ig a n S tate N e w s , E a s t L a n s in g , M ich igan T u e sd a y , May 11, 1965 5

C a d e t s T o B e H o n o r e dBy C O L L E E N O ’ BRIEN State N e ws Staff W r i t e r

AYE LA D D Y — Tak ing i t s t ra ig h t f r o m the h o rs e ’ s mouth is B a rb A l len , Petosky jun io r , a m em be r of the ROTC Scots H igh lande rs . The H igh landers took p a r t in the B lossom Parade in Benton H a rb o r and St, Joseph o ve r the weekend. Photo by Cal C rane

There9s A Meetin9

R a t i f i e d ’ R e s e a r c hWayne Van Huss, of the Hu­

man Energy' Research Labora­tory, w ill speak Wednesday on the resu lts of forced exerc ise with ra ts .

The colloquium, "P re-p u b erty E x e r c i s e : Im plications f o rGrowth,” w ill be in 128 Erickson,

( at 4:10 p.m.Van Huss’ s research is in­

tended to give direction to a more scientific r a t u w l ^ o r education. He" studied three zt '+ups c r ’ani- m als and differentiated on the amount and type of e xerc ise giv­en—none, free and forced.

At the colloquium, resu lts and interpretations of the study will be presented. •

Jackson to explore means by which N1SU engineers can aid pub­lic utilities.

Twenty-one faculty members will , take part in the meeting, which includes a tour of th e Consum ers Power fac ilities on Parnell Road near Jackson .

B o s s e s L u n c h e o nThe annua! B o sses Luncheon,

spac.s^gp by the Business Wom­en’ s Club, Will be iiebd at 11:30 a.m . Thursday in the Kellogg Center B i g T e n Room. R eserva­tions ape still being accepted. Countess M aria Pulaski is the speaker. Information on re se rv a ­tions can be obtained" by calling B everly Hamilton, 5-4650.

Y o u n g R e p u b l ic a n s U M p h i |o s o p h e rThe Young Republicans club

meeting scheduled for tonight has been cancelled.

The next meeting will be at 7:30 p.m ., .May 26, in the Union.

I

R e t i r e e s ’ C lu b

The R etirees ’ Club will meet in the Union Men’ s Clubrooms at 1:45 p.m . today. Election of offi­c e r s for the coming year v%il! be held. John L azell will explain the u ses of so lar batteries.

P a c k a g in g S o c ie t yRobert Hayden, assistant pro­

fesso r in m arketing and trans­portation, will speak on "T h e Packaging Role In Production Differentiation an d Marketing Segmentation” at the meeting of the Packaging Society at 7 tonight in 106-107 International Center.

Anyone interested may attend.

F r i e n d s Of SNCCThe Friends of SNCC (Student

Non-Violent Coordinating Com­mittee) will meet at 8 tonight in 34 and 35 Union. P lans for the upcoming fast for freedom and E ast Lansing action cam paign' w ill be discussed.

Metal ColloquiumThe M etallurgy,M echanics and

M aterials Science Department colloquium will be held at 4:15 today in 108 B essey .

i V r t& M R - w . j i » i , , a j r u s s ,“ Strain G ages,” by videotape.

A lp h a P h i S ig m aThe regular meeting of Alpha

Phi Sigm a, police sciencehonor- a ry , will be held at 7:30 tonight in 22 Union instead of on T h u rs­day as previously planned. Offi­c e r s for next year will be e lec­ted.

A ll pledges should meet at 6:45 tonight in 22 Union.

E n g i n e e r s In J a c k s o n

R e p r e s e n t a t i v e s from the E lec trica l Engineering Depart­ment will meet today with offi­c ia ls of Consum ers Pow er Co. in

Ge r i e M avrodis, professor of philosophy at the U niversity of Michigan, w ill speak on "T h e U ses of Subjectivity'” at 12 :30 p.m . in P a rlo r B, C rossroad s C afeteria . International Center.

Faculty and staff m em bers are invited to meet for lunch at noon p rio r to the talk.

Doane AwardedT e rry Edington, Grand Ledge

sen ior, was given the annual Doane Award for leadership, sac­r ific e and integrity at the Foun­ders Day dinner-dance sponsored by the Farm house fraternity re ­cently.

The annual award, which is given to the man who has worked hardest behind the scene to help build a better fraternity, was p re­sented by Herb B erg , MSU Exten­sion Serv ice , one of the chapter founders.

Honorable Mention was given to Ja m e s Gibson, now teaching in Westphalia.

Abbot-Mason

Outstanding A ir F o rce and A r­my ROTC cadets w ill be hon­ored at the annual ROTC Awards Day Parade today at 4:20 p.m . on Demonstration Hall F ield .

Awards contributed by corpor­ations, newspapers, m ilitary and patriotic organizations w ill be presented to 2 1 A ir F o rce and 26 Arm y cadets.

The cadets a re selected on the basis of ch aracter, scholarship, leadership potential and m ilitary aptitude during the 1964-65 aca-

.demic ye ar .Four Arm y RO IC cadets w ill

receive the Superior Cadet Rib­bon: Cadet Capt. John L . Wil­liam s, B rain tree, M ass., sen­io r; Cadet L t. Edward J . H er- moyian, Keego Harbor Junior; Cadet 1s t Sgt. George A. Rey­nolds, New C astle , P a ., sopho­m ore; and Cadet Cpl. Crawford H. Blakem an.

The most o u t s t a n d i n g A ir F o rce cadet is Col. Chvid M. G rim m , Springfield, V a., who w ill receive the A ir F o rce As­sociation Award and the Society of Am erican M ilitary Engineers Senior Award.

The Am erican Ordnance A s­sociation Scholarship Key Award w ill be presented to Arm y Cadet Capt. William H. Bullen, Masonsenior.

Cadet M aj. Jack M. A rm i- stead, East Lansing senior, w ill receive the R eserve O fficers A s­sociation Award for excellence in m ilitary science.

The Arm ed F o rce s Chemi­cal A ssociation Award w ill be presented to Cadet Capt. L a rry W. R eeves, Country Club H ills, Ul., sen ior.

Four Arm y cadets and one A ir F o rce cadet w ill receive Chi­cago Tribune Gold M edals. The Arm y cadets a re Cadet L t. Col. Rae W. Dehncke J r . , G ro sse Pte. Woods senior; Cadet L t. Jam es L . D eForest, F o w le r- v ille Junior; Cadet SFC F red e r­ick J . Thomas, Richmond, Ind., sophomore; and Cadet Cpl. M i­chael G elner. St. Lou is, Mo., freshm an.

A ir F o rce Cadet L t. Col. Wil­ton B. Hunter J r . , Owosso sen­io r, and Cadet L t. Col. David E, B u ll, Xenia, Ohio, senior, w ill a lso receive the Chicago T r i­bune Gold M edal.

The Chicago Tribune S ilver Medal Award w ill be presented to four Army cadets, Cadet L t . Col. Ralph T . Anderson, Fran k­lin P ark , W , — Jia « . Cadet Lt. Jonathan K. Wylie, Pittsburgh, P a ., junior; Cadet 1s t Sgt. G er­ald E. W illiam s, Saginaw soph­omore and Cadet Cpl. Kenneth R. Smith, Detroit junior.

A ir Force recipients of the Chicago Tribune Silver Medals

. w ill be Cadet 1s t L t. Joseph M. Vairo, St. Ignace junior and Cadet 2nd L t. John C. C alla­han, N ashville, Ind., junior.

Detroit News Awards w ill be presented to two outstanding sen­ior cadets: Arm y Cadet Capt. William E. Kail, G ro sse Pte. F a rm s, and A ir F o rce Cadet C o l. Stephen A. Canavera, N or­way, M ich.

A rm y Cadet L t. G ary C. Stein­hardt of Dewitt w ill receive.the Defense Supply Association Jun­io r Award.

Ford Motor Co. awards w ill be given to Arm y Cadet L t. Roy E. Fouch, Lansing junior, and A ir F o rc e Cadet Capt. L a rry L . Sh river, Lansing junior.

A rm y Cadet L t. Landis K, C rockett, East Lansing junior, w ill be awarded the A ssocia­tion of the United States Arm y M edal.

The Association of the United States Arm y M ilitary History award fo r excellence in m ili­tary history w ill be presented to Cadet L t . Jam es H. Eckl, Cat- sk ill, N .Y ., sophomore.

Detroit F re e P re s s m edals w ill be given to two outstand­ing sophom ores: A rm y Cadet M/ Sgt. Robert C . Low es, Detroit, and A ir F o rce Cadet T /Sgt. Wil-

liam L . Ph illips, Jeffersontown, Ky.

The Michigan Aerospace Foun­dation Awards w ill go to two m ore outstanding sophom ores: Arm y Cadet M /Sgt. William F . Kale, Cleveland, Ohio, and A ir F o rce Cadet S/Sgt. J o h n B. K e a n , G ro sse Pte.

K elsey Hayes Co. awards w ill be presented to two outstanding freshm en: Arm y Cadet Corp. Syl­vester V. Quitiquit, W aterford, and Airm an 2nd C lass Richard F . C u rrey , Bay City.

Company K 1 of the National Society of Scabbard and Blade has selected the following out­standing Arm y cadets fo r these aw ards: Cadet L t. C o l. Rae W. Dehncke J r . , senior award; Ca­det L t. G ary W. P u ry ear, Di- mondale, junior award; Cadet 1 s t Sgt. Walter A. M orningstar, N orfolk, Va., sophomore award and Cadet Corp. John M. Haines, Salt Lake City. Utah, freshm an award.

Other A ir F o rce cadets who w ill receive awards a re Cadet Airman 1s t C la ss F ran cis J . Batem an, Wayne s o p h o m o r e , from the 9622nd A ir F o rce Re­se rve Squadron of Lansing; Cadet Airman 3rd C lass Thomas A. Havel, Mt. Clem ens freshm an, from Lansing’ s C ivil A ir Pa­trol Group 6 3 15 ; Cadet M aj. Ron­ald R. Sch aller, Lafayette, Ind., sen ior, the Armed F o rce s Com­munications and E l e c t r o n i c s award.

Cadet 2nd L t. August Golden, H esperia junior, w ill receive the Society of American M ilitary En­gineers award.

Cadet Capt. Thomas E. P ratt, R ochester junior, Cadet T/Sgt. D aryl B , Kordenbrock, Detroit

sophomore and Cadet Airman 2nd C la ss John H. C ro ss,C h risto va l, T e x a s , freshman, w ill receive R e s e r v e O fficer Association M edals.

Cadet S, Sgt. Donald P. C le­m ents, St. Louis, Mo., sopho­m ore, w ill receive the General Dynamics award.

Cadet Airman 2nd C la ss Ken­neth A. Katzen, Baltim ore, M d„ freshm an, w ill receive the Sons of the American R e v o l u t i o n aw ard.

The Philip Bek Arnold A ir Society award w ill go to Cadet Airm an 3rd C la ss Daniel K, Wil­lia m s, Rockville, M d., fresh ­man.

A ra b Position To Be Given

Mohamad M e h d i , secretai y- general of the Action Committee on American - Arab Relations, w ill speak at 7:30 p.m . Wednes­day on "T h e Fqture of A rab- Am erican Relationships" in the Union P arlo rs .

His address is part of a sym ­posium planned to give the Arab position of the A ra b -lsrae li d is­pute. Harold Walsh, associate p ro fesso r of philosophy, w i l l speak on the moral challenge the dispute presents th e U n i t e d States.

Mehdi is author of the book " A Nation of Lands. . . Chained: An Arab Looks at A m erica.”

The Arab Club is sponsoring the symposium, "C hallenge to U.S. Policy in the A ra b -lsrae li D ispute," organized on the teach- in principle.

do you know about

j - n a p p ’s

f r e e c l a s s e s

i n b a b y c a r e ?new series s ta rts May 13,

you can jo in any Thursday at 2:00 P.M .7-week series in continuousPlan now to be completely at ease with the new member of your fam ily when he, or she, finally a rr iv e s . Gain confidence in meeting this new situa­tion, by joining other expectant parents for demon­strations and practice in dressing, handling and bath­ing baby. Otber highlights of the course are instruc­tions oil what to pack for the hospital, and 3 visit to a local m aternity ward.

Knapp’s Downtown 5th F loo r A ud ito rium

Abbot andM asonH alls a re p re ­senting a festival this week.

The Abbot-Mason H alls Art Show will be run the entire week.

A satiric lecture will be given on Wednesday in the Abbot C afe­teria at 8:30 p.m . on the ‘•‘ Anat­omy of a Cow” .

A„.talent show j s L.scjiyduled fo j,Thursday at 8:30 p.m . in the Via son Lounge.

A fashion show will be given on Saturday at 2 p.m . in the Mason Cafete ria .____________■

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Tuesday 9:30 to 5:30

W ednesday 12:00 to 9

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I V I I I I ■ « - i t mm i l i . . e e e v e e v e V i i f • • r i i . — i i i i « ■ m m m m i • M • • m mm m m m m mfmm i i i t a i i i i

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B . B a l i - L o L o n g p l u n g e s a l m o s t w a i s t d e e p i n b a c k , s h a p e s a n d s m o o t h s t h e m i d r i f f . U n d e r w i r e d n y l o n l a c e c u p s . W h i t e o r b l a c k . 3 2 - 3 8 B a n d C . $ 1 0 . D c u p

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Page 6: TATE MEWS Committee Favors Faculty Raisesarchive.lib.msu.edu/DMC/state_news/1965/state_news_19650511.pdfSen. Guy Vander Jagt, R-Cad- illac, said the committee felt there was a definite

6 M ich ig a n S tate N ew s , E as t L an sin g , M ich ig a n T u e sd a y , May 11, 1965

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PHONE355-8255

RATES1 DAY $1.503 DAYS. . . .$3.50 5 DAYS. . ..$6.00

(based on 15 wprds per ad)Ove- 15. lOe pe- word per day.

There w ill be a 50c service and bookkeeping charge if th is ad is not paid within o ne week.

AutomotiveCHEVROLET 1963 S u p er Sports

convertible. Real s h a rp inside and dlitside. All power and many extras. Must sell - leaving for the serv ice June 1st. 32

CHEVROLET 1957 Bel A ir t o n - vertib le. Standard. 283. 4 -b ar- reL New tire s . Radio, Excellentcondition. 355-290". 30

C H E VROLET 1961 E e l A ir " 6 " , Standard t r a n s m i s s i o n . 4-door. Radio, Low m i l e a g e . No rust. Bruce, 355 -9 4 4 3 . 33

CH EVRO LET, l95s. Automatic t r a n s m i s s i o n . R a d i o , heater. Rusty, but goo d r u n n e r . $110. 3 32 -4 58 2 . 31

CORVAIR, 1961 M o n z aC c u p e . Ê x - c e l l e n t c o n d i t io n . M u st s e e . 351- 4730. 1975 B lo o m f ie ld , Okemos.

33CORVAIR !9n0. R ed . Automatic.

4 - d o o r s e d a n , W h i te w a l l s . Real c l e a n and s h a r p . C a l l any tim e, 337-1571. 29

T h e S ta te N ew s d o e s not p e r m i t r a c i a l o r r e l i g i o u s d i s c r i m i n a t i o n in i t s a d ­v e r t i s i n g c o lu m n s . T h e S t a t e New s w il l not a c c e p t a d v e r t i s i n g f r o m p e r s o n s d i s c r i m i n a t i n g a g a in s t r e ­l ig ion , r a c e , c o l o r o r na­t i o n a l o r ig in .

A u t o m o t iv eAUSTIN H E A L E Y S p r i t e MK I.

1953. R ed . R a d i o .C a l l E D 2 -S 3 6 979

AUSTIN H LALEY S p r i t e , 1962. T h r e e to p s . E x c e l l e n t c o n d i t io n . O r i e n ta l o w n e r . Si, 195 .C all 3 3 7 -

, 2 03 5 . 31E A R . C OjEdlß64 D e lu x e . H a s

e v e r y h ire ' ' A4,000 m i l e s . E x ­c e l l e n t c o n d i t io n . M u s t s e l l . G e t t in g c o m p a n y ca n . 6 9 9 -2 8 3 8 .

.34B U C K , STATION w agon S k y la rk ,

1964. A i r - c o n d i t i o n e d . Windows on to p . S e a t B e l t s . 351-4187. 29

B l l C K i960 E l e c t r a . 4 - d o o r . 6 y o w n e r . 51,100. P h o n e 6 2 7 -2 2 9 8 . 36 31 W, S t . J s ep h H ig hw ay . 33

C H E V R O L E T 1963 ImpaTa co u p e . R ed . V - 8 . F u l l p o w e r . S h a r p ' L a s t y e a r ' s g r a d u a t e f u r n i s h e d c o m p a n y c a r . Below book . IV 9-3E90." 30

C H E V R O L E T 19*0 2 - d o o r V -8 , s t i c k . W h i te . 4 8 ,000 m i l e s . A lso 1959 T r i u m p h B o n n ev i l le m o t o r ­c y c le . 650 c c . 351-4745. 30

C H E V R O L E T 1961 B e l A i r . 4 - d o o r . V - 8 , P o w e r g l id e , R ad io , h e a t e r , low m i l e a g e . O ne o w n -

- e r . $950, ED 7 -2 2 6 9 . 29

CORVAIR, ¡962 Mor.za Coupe. 4- s p e e d , 102 h.p. Tachom eter. Head rest. New 7x13 whitewalls. >900. 482-5680. 31

CORVAIR CO NVERTIELE, 1962 Monza. White, black top, 4- speed. Many extras. Excellent condition. $1,150. 355-8703. 31

DODGE i960, 2-door h a r d t o p . Power s t e e r i n g , new tire s . Better-than-average condition. S400. Call owner, days, TU 2-5777. 31

DODGE 1 9 6 Cl” V-8 automatic transm ission. R a d i o , heater. Very good condition. 353-2816.

33FALCON, 19 .■>2 2-dcor. Stick

shift, radio, hea 'er. A lso, AM - FM Panosot ic radio. Cal l 484-8512. 29

FALCON, 1961. Good condition. S625 or best offer. New battery, exhaust, lo w m i l e a g e . ED 7-0867; ED 7-2372. 30

FALCON SPRINT 1963 Convert- lble. 4-speed, floor shift. Good tire s . Good condition. 339-8396 after 6 .pm, 30

FALCON, 1960 Stick. New en- gine, clutch. Good tire s . Needs some body w y k . F irm , $425.351-5489.

C E D A R B R O O K E A R M S208 Cedar Street

C h o i c e A p a r t m e n t s f o r F a l l O c c u p a n c yOne Block F rom Campus

FEATURING:

• \Y a lk - in - c l o s e t s• Laundry facilities• Air-conditioning

• Private balconies• Wood paneling •Contem porary living

,0 ' »»..-* Wt ’ • ’w * • . . ’-rpN ow L e a s i n g

2 a n d 4 S t u d e n t A p a r t m e n t s

S h o w Y o u r P a r e n t s t h e B e s t in S t u d e n t L i v i n g Open H O U Se

Friday , Saturday and Sunday, May 14 - 16 , 1 - 5 p.m .

Cedarbrooke A rm s Lowebrooke A rm s Evergreen A rm s

Autom otiveP 6 r D 1957 Stationwagon. Must

se ll . $150. 676-2241. 31MGB 1964. 10.0OO m iles. W i r e

wheels, tonneau cover. Radio, heater. Best offer. 355-1087 aft­e r 5:30 pm. 31

M G-TD, 1951. Engine, body, op in fine condi: ion. Needs new cu r­tains. $1,300. 355-5899 after 6.

31FALCON, 1960 Station Wagofi.

S ix-cylinder. Standard. N ew battery, tires.-G ood condition. 2,510. 355-2146 evzz ^ 31

FALCON 1960 deluxe i-d T -r se­dan. Standard transm ission. Ra­dio, snow tire s . C lean. 8495. Phone ED 2-0919.

FORD 1964 G alaxie 50O. Sharp with power and extras . Cal l IV 4-9210. 29

FORD 1962 Fairlan e 500. 4-door sedan. S ix-cylin d er, standard. Owner. 484-5123. 15055 Wood Road. 29

FORD, l9o4 V-8 automatic. New brakes. Clean in terior. Radio. Good rubber. 353-2700; 355- 6862. ’ • 31

FORD 1957 Fairlan e 500. Good mechanical condition. $100 or best o ffer. C all 337-0409. 30

FORD, 1962 Fairlan e 500. Stand- ard transm ission. 6-cylinder. $395. 337-2035. , 31

29MONZA 1963 4-speed. R adio.B ig

engine. 22,000 m i l e s . Good tire s . Must se ll. 337-2256 . 31

OLDSMOBILE 19o2 9-passenger stationwagon. Automatic trans­m ission. Radio, heater, p o w e r brakes, power steering. 484- 5284. 30

OLDSMOBILE ¡962 D y n a m i c " 8 8 ” convertible. Automatic. Power steering, brakes. New tire s . Excellent condition. Will trade. 372-1973. 29.

OLDSMOBILE 1958. 4-door se- dan. Good condition. $195. Honda 1964, 150. White. $400.Call 372- 0413. 29

OLDSMOBILE 1962 " 8 8 " con- vertib le . Power brakes, win­dows, steering. Exceptionally clean. One-owner. Good condi­tion. 669-9223. 29

PLYMOUTH 1964 Fury. 426. 4- speed, p o s i t r a c t i o n . 9,000 m i l e s . W arranty. Phone IV 9-0783. 2718LaSalleG ardens.30

PLYMOUTH 1959 stick six . En- gine has 10,000 m iles on it. Body in fair shape. 337-9166.29

OUR USED CAR lot is-em pty! We are paying,extra high prices for late model used trade-ins. Save on a newT965 Ford or Mus­tang. SIGNS FORD SA LES, Wil- liam ston, 655-2191. C30

CH EVRO LET 1959 Impala, 47- door hardtop. Power steering and brakes. Automatic tran s- v m ission. Com pletely r e b u i l t motor. $795. Nothing down!

C H E V R O L E T C o r v a i r 1961 Monza, 2 -door. A u t o m a t i c transm ission . Radio, heater. - White with blue in 'erio r. Really sharp! $995.

VALIANT 1960 -1-door. Power steering. Automatic transm is­sion. New brakes, new tires . Like new, no rust. $695;

' far’ IPLYMOUTH 1961 ! ury Convert­

ible. Power steering andbrakes. Excellent t i r e s . Very clean. $995.

^CHEVROLET 1 9 6 3 C o r v a i r Monza. 4-speed transm ission. Radio. Whitewall t i r e s . Lan­sing c a r . L ike new. $1,495.

SPARTAN MOTORS 3000 E. Michigan

IV 7 -3 7 15 ’ cTHUNDERBIRD 1 9 6 4 . Landau

hardtop. 9,500 m iles. Power windows. Leather seats. Like new! $3,195. 882-2727. 33

TRIUMPH T R -4 , 1964 roadster. C l e a n . 14,500 m i l e s . Never raced. Four on the floor, wire wheels, radio, heater, wind­shield w asher. Green, black top. Racing stripes, seat belts. One owner. $2,500. Can be seen at 523 Neff Road, G ro sse Pointe. C all TU 2-8535 for appoint­ment. • 30

Autom otiveVOLKSW AGEN, 1959.G as heater. Good condi'ion. $550. C ali 355- 3145. 29

VOLKSWAGEN, 1 9 6 2 . G r e e n Good condition. One o w n e r . 37,000 m iles. Custom interior. $850. C all 355-5729. 33

VOLKSWAGEN 1962. Excellent condition. Must se ll this week. Make an offer. C all 484-8036.33

VOLKSW AGEN 1960. Radio, heat- e r . Clean. Good condition. IV 9-0056 after 5 pm. 33

Employment F o r Rent F or Sale F o r Sale

VOLVO 195-. Clean, ru stless , overhauled in 1962. Maintenance records. Asking $425, C all 337- 0282, evenings. 29

VOLVO, 1959. .Must se ll. Cal l694-2097 31Auto Service & Ports

N EW B A T T ER IES, Exchange price from $7.95. New sealed beam s, 99^. Salvage c a rs , large stock used p arts. ABC AUTO PA RTS, 6 13 E. South St. IV 5 - 19 2 1 . C

GENERATORS AND STA R TER S. Rebuilt 6 or 12 volt. Guaran­teed! Exchange price $7.90. Me­chanic on the job! Installation serv ice available. ABC AUTC PARTS, 6 13 E . South St. IV 5 - 19 2 1 . C

Scooters & CyclesHONDA SUPER Hawk. Excellent

condition. B est o ffer. C a ll 337- 1540 after 6 pm. 31

650 TRIUMPH. STOCK. B est of- fer over $550. C all Otto, 351- 5565. 29

HONDA 1964 " 3 0 5 ’ ’ . Driven three months. $625. 355-6736. 29

AirplanesF L Y ? Y E S, F L Y : New equipment

open to students and staff. MSL ' FLYING C L L B . 355-9133; 337-

0774. 31LEA RN TO F L Y AT SHEREN

AVIATION DAVIS A irport. Low -as—§8* per hour. Also a ircra ft for sa le . North Abbott Rd., East Lansing. Phone ED 2-0224. 31

TA Y LO R C R A FT . LO W hours since m ajor. Excellent for three or four students who want cheap flying tim e. $1,200. Phone ED 2-3014. A fter 5 pm. ED 2-2181,

31 -fr*. j t1 Employment

PART-TIM E W O RK.Several stu- dents with use of car w ill be hired to help in promotion of new teaching machines in Lansing area. Approxim ately $50 p e r week for 20 hours. Evenings and weekends. Some full-tim e sum­m er positions also available. C all Nora at Answering Serv ice any time. IV 5-4381. 31

GREAT LAKES EMPLOYAIENT for permanent positions in of­fice, sa le s , technical. C all IV 2-1543. C30

CHOOSE YOUR OWN HOURS. A few hours a day can mean exce l­lent earnings for you as a trained Avon representative. Fo r ap­pointment in your own home, write or c a l l M rs. Alona Huckins, 5664 School St., Has- lett, Michigan or call evenings, FE 9-8483. C29

BUS BOYS wanted this ye ar and next. C a l l M rs. Brown, ED 2-4741, or apply, 605 M .A .C , 33

STUDENT FOR yard work and m iscellaneous. Y e a r round op­portunity. ED 7-0485. 31

CEDAR V ILLA G E, one m an share luxury apartrrtent. F a ll, 9 months l e a s e . $63.75. G a r y Sawicke, 351-4659. 31

WANTED T W O g ir ls . Share apartment sum m er term . Four blocks from cam pus. Low rates. Phone 332-0143. 33

APARTM ENTS FOR 3 or 4 p er- sons. Near cam pus. Unsuper­vised . Summer or F a ll. A fter 5:30, 332-1008. 33

SU BLET UNIVERSITY Village apartment for sum m er. F u r­nished. $90 monthly. U tilities paid. M arried couple. 355-5967.

______________ 31ONE BEDROOM apartment. Uni­

versity V illage, to sublease for sum m er. A v a i l a b l e Juhe 13 .' M arried couple..355-5863. 31

WANTED: Roommate For Sum7 m er in Boston. With or without apartment. C a ll 355-8291 10-5. Ask for Ken.

Houses

CO LLEGE MEN; Summer work available in Lansing area. Op­portunity for $120 p erw ee k .C ar n ecessary . C a l l M r. Blythe, 882-6629. 36

EM PLQ YERS OVERLOAD Com ­pany needs g ir ls for tem porary assignm ents. Office experience required. 616 Michigan National Tow er. Phone 487-6071. C30

HARBOR SPRINGS. A ttractive modern bluff cottage. T h r e e beds. S leeps five. $55 per week. Phone IV 4-8901. 30

ATTRACTIVE HOME, 6 rniles from cam pus. N ear Lake Lan­sing. Wanted 4 students for sum­m er. 339-2597. 31

YOUNG ADULT couple wanted to operate rooming house. Cut rent in half. A vailable June. 332- 4970. 33

For Rent Rooms

TUX REN TA LS. Why pay m ore1) $8.50 for whites, $9 for black. $9,50, other co lors. Includes complete outfit. Latest s ty les . Evening appointments. W'end- rows South Lansing C lean ers, 1 1 3 - 1 1 5 W. South St. IV 9-2435.

3 1RENT YOUR TV from N E JA C .

New Zenith portable for only $9 per month. F ree serv ice and delivery . C all NEJAC TV Ren­tal. 482-0624. C

Apartments

BEAU TIFU L L U X U R Y apart- ment needs one more g irl to make it complete. School year 65-66. 355-8646. 30

SINGLE ROOM for mer,. P a rk ­ing, local use of phone. C all ED 7-9305. 30

M E N . INTERNATIONAL Stu­dents. One block to cam pus. Cooking. Summ er rates. F a l l space. 332-2195 after 5 :30p m .36

A P P R O V E D , S U P E R V I S E D rooms for women. Contact now for sum m er. Walking distance to campus. 337-0759 . 31

ROOMS A V A ILA B LE for surri- m er term at B eal House. Room and board, $ 15 5 .C a ll E D 2-5555 .

33PRIVATE ROOMS for lo r 2. Near

campus. U nsupervised. Summer or F a ll, Phone after 5 :30 , 332— 1008. 33

STOVE, FRIGIDAIRE.Apartm ent size re frig e ra to r. Blond desk. B reak fast set, twin size mat­tre ss , springs. M iscellaneous item s. 484-9043. 30

CHILDREN’S BOOKCASE. Bunk beds, (2) complete with mat­tre sse s and springs. $40. C all ED 7 -2535 . 30

EV1NRUDE 35 hp. E lectric sta rt- e r , m otors. (Have two). C all 339-8396, after 6 pm. 30

MORGAN‘SIGN Machine. Sign and show card printer, with wood and metal type. Varied sty les. Perfect for reta il store or ?. CA N FIELD S U P P L Y .IV 5-9593.

37NORMALS AND cocktail d re sse s

size 7, 11 and 15. Phone 484- 0775 before 2:30 pm. Reason­able. 30

UNIFORM. A R M Y Ordinance Corp. D ress blues. S iz e 42 long. Excellent condition. $65. 329 W. Saginaw. 484-9920. 32

GO LF C LU B S. Full set. H aig- U ltra . 4 woods, 10 irons. All $100 or separately. 351-4110 . 29

GRO LIERS AND RICHARDS. En- cyclopedia sets . L i k e ne w. Worth over $400. Asking $200. 351-4169 after 6 pm. 29

LONG FO RM AL, size 12, royal green silk linen. A lso, B lack cocktail d re ss , size 10, Bobbie, 332-0821. 29

ALEXAN IAN 'S - A distinguished name in rugs, carpeting. Orien­tals for over 50 y e a rs . Cal l us this spring. 2521 E . Michigan. IV 2 -2 122 . 35

KENMORE AUTOMATIC z .g-zag sewing machine. Last y e a r ’ s model including walnut f l o o r model console, 16 decorative stitch drop-in cam s, p leater, buttonholer, fender, zipper foot, etc. $110. Cal l 655-2361. 30

Delta A rm s Haslett A rm s U n ive rs ity T e rrace

State Management Corp. 444 M ich. Ave. 332-8687

VALIANT, 1960 4-door. AutoL m atic. Whitewalls. All ex tras. Excellent c o n d i t i o n . 20,000 m iles. $650 or .nearest offer. 355-9646; 332-3208. 29

C O LLEG E STUDENTS. M a l e . Full time, summ er work. P art- time during school year if de­sired . Earn enough during sum­m er to pay for entire year of schooling. Over 15 $1,000 schol­arsh ips w ere awarded to quali­fied students. On the job train­ing for p ractical use of your ed- ' ucation during summer months. Earn while you learn program designed by this multi-million dollar corporation, that hun­dreds of studen's have taken ad­vantage of. Many form er stu­dents are still in our company in key executive positions. For arrangem ents ofpersonal inter­view, time, schedule, in the city you wish to work, call G r a n d Rapids, GL 9-5079; Kalamazoo, 345-0463; Lansing, 484-2367, 482-1185; South Bend, 234-4949; Battle C reek, 963-7988. C48

INTERVIEWING ON c a m p u s Wednesday, May 12 for m.ile stu­dents to se ll a public relations program in Michigan vncation- land t h r o u g h o u t s ' u m m e r . Weekly d r a w i n g account and com m ission. T ra v e l. 29

>■ E d e n R o c , ^ p t s . ,252 R iver St., E .L .

N o w l e a s i n g f o r. S u m m e r & F a l l

Nat Hammond 332-8488

F ar

TWO OR three man apartment for sum m er. Pool, a ir condi­tioning. Burcham Woods, 351— 5407. 30

WOMEN OVER 2 1 . Nice 2 ,3 ,4 g ir l apartment. For sum m er. C lose to campus. ED 2 -2276 .28

TWO BLO CKS, MSU. 4 room s, bath, downstairs. Stove, re fr ig ­erato r. G arage, basement, util­itie s . May 24th. IV 9-9524. 30

APARTM ENT to sublease for sum m er term . Cedar V illage. Phone 351-5587. 32

ONE GIRL wanted to share Eden Roc apartment. Summer term . $57.50 monthly. 355-4222; 355- 4240. 30

V O L K S W A G E N 1961 s e d a n . Through only one Michigan win­ter. $950. C all 351-5093 or 355- 1865. 31

Get Out of the

SUMMER'S HOT, H O T SUN

and enjoy the fresh coolness of one of our

Swimming Pools

O FFICE H E LP . Good typist. R e­liable. Four to five afternoons weekly. $1.25 hourly, start. 332- 0726 after 8 pm. 29

W AITRESSES AND bartenders wanted to work at the C oral Gables Old Crow in Saugatuck. Part and full-tim e. See Gee at the C oral Gables in E a s t Lan­sing or send your qualifications to the Old Crow in Saugatuck.32

We still have a few one & two-bedroom apartments available for Summer and F a ll.

BURCHAM WOODS and

EYDEAL VILLA

Hurry, Call Today ED 2-5041 or ED 2-0565

for better

Calling AD StudentsR egister for Detroit area summer jobs.(some permanent, also)

(No fee to you)

Tuesday, May 18

9 -1 2 1:30-5

Men and Women

Stenos, T yp ists, C lerks, Business machine opera­tors, demonstrators.

Men Only

Warehouse clerks, Stockmen, D rivers, Industrial labor.

Em ployers Overload Co.

2 2 16 Penobscot Building Detroit, Mich., Ph. 962-316 1

Contact M r. Rand Placement Bureau

?-------------------

APARTM EN TS FOR 3-5 men or women. N icely furnished. Rea­sonable. Summ er or F a ll . ED 7-2345. 29

APARTM EN T SU BLEA SE f o r sum m er term . Dishwasher, sun porch, a ir conditioner. C lose to cam pus. C all 351-4248. 29

GIRLS,. LOUR. Nicely furnished home. Lovely yard . T w o-girl apartment. C lo se to campus. Summer an d winter. 332-2195 after 5 :30 . 31

SU BLET BURCHAM Woods lux- ury apartment for sum m er.Two bedroom, a i r - c o n d i t i o n e d . Swimming pool. C all 351-4273.

29E A S T LANSING. Interesting,

E a rly Am erican Decor. Prim e location. Sum m er, fall occu­pancy. Over 21. 332-2936; 332- 1887. 31

SPARTAN V ILLA G E. Sublease, sum m er term . M arried couple. C a ll after 5. 355-3096. 29

C EN TR A L LOCATION. E very- .jdung.iucnvsbed expe^i „Un^iS,

d ish es; Two men. ED 2 -336 3 .3 1

RELA X -A -C ISO R . P erfect work­ing condition. C a l l 337-0759 after 5 pm. _ 31

CAM ERA. N 1KKO REX-F with f/2 50 mm lens and c a se . $150 or best offer. C all 337-1540 . 31

HorsesAM ERICAN SAD D LEBRED GelcP

ing. 10 y e ars old. Well gaited. Needs experienced rid er. Cal l D r. T u fts, 355-6450. 29

HALF ARAB Gelding. Red roan, six y e a r s old. Registered . Gentle, b u t sp irited . C h ild 'shorse. 651-5696. 29

SPE A K E R S, WOOFERS. S w e e t S ixteens, many others. Cheap! ED 2-8369. 32

B IC Y C LE STORAGE: Sales, s e r - v ice and ren tals. EAST LAN ­SING C Y C L E . 12 15 E . Grand R iv er . C all 332-8303. C

FRESH F R U I T S , vegetables, plants and many other quality item s. PRIN C E’S FARM M AR­K E T . Okemos Road at Grand R iv er . Opening May 1s t . Hours, 9-8. C

GfeT YOURS - Phil F ra n k 's C a r- toon Book. 50 of P h il's best Cartoons in a beautifully bound book - $1.00 each. F o r ord ers of five or m ore, ca ll: 351-4322 between 6 p.m . and midnight.

E N G L I S H L I G H f - W E I G H T 3-speed b icycles, $39 .77, full p rice . Rental-purchase term s available. We also have tennis racquets, golf balls, badminton b ird ies, gifts and housewares. A C E HARDWHERE, a c r o s s from Union. ED 2 -3 2 12 . C

8mm MOVIE CAM ERA, with lens and light b ar. Used four tim es. $75. 351-4169 after 6 pm. 29

MOVING. STUDIO couch set; kit- chen c h airs ; folding steel beds; screen doors; m iscellaneous. ED 2 -13 17 after 4:30 pm. 30

S T E R E O EQUIPMENT. Well- known company is having a one- tim e-only sa le on repossessed stereophonic record p layers and m usic. Stereo unit has walnut cabinet, G arrard turntable, etc. Records an d walnut r e c o r d stands, also available. T erm s can be arranged. STOP IN, 6-9 pm., WEDNESDAY, MAY 12, 3132 S , Pennsylvania, Lansing.

30FIBER G LA SS, 15'- 40 h.p. John-

son. T ilt trailer.-Skiing acces­so r ie s . Red and white. Sharp. Phone 355-0517. 29

DAVENPORT. G o o d condition, ' Phone f f 4 -32 tff. ** 29

FO IL AND MASK, used. lOOClas- s ica l L P phonograph records. L o v e l y diamond engagement ring sets , used, at bargain p r i-

’ c e s . 25 golf sets , used and new T e n n i s r a c q u e t s . A rchery equipment. Aqua lungs. B a r­bells and e x e rc ise se ts . I c e skates, 75 gu itars, $16.95 up. Band instrum em s, used and new. Stereo and portable tape re ­cord ers. WILCOX S E C O N D -HAAaX*v 509 E .M icb lg .....IV 5-4391. C 23

Mobile Homes

8’ x 35' "ANGFLUS T R A IL E R . Excellent condition. M o b i l e Homes Manor. Lot C -5 after 6 pm. 30

H OUSETRAILER, 19o2 Huron 50’ x 10 '. Good condition. Two bed­room s, washing machine. On park lot. Reasonable. 337-0316.

PACEM AKER 1956. S' x 45’ . Well made. Excellent condition. Best ofter over $1,900. IV 9-0056 aft­e r 5 pm. 33

HOMECRAFT 10' x 50*. Lived in 18 months. Excellent condition. Many ex tra s . C all IV 2-2114 aft­e r 5;30 pm. 31

S T A R 1963 1(5’ x 50’ . T w n - bedroom. Excellent condition. In E ast Lansing park. Cal l 332- 0570. ' 31

Lost & FoundLOST: RAINCOAT at Shaw dance

last F r id ay . Valuable identifica,- tion papers inside. R ew ard .C all 489-8002. 28

LOST: BLU E P u ll-o ver parka with w rist watch in pocket. IM F ield . T hursday. Reward. 355- 9361. 30

LO ST: B LA C K airline AM -FM portable radio. N ear B essey . C all 355-5638. Rew ard. 33

FOUND: LADIES Elgin w a t c h (gold). Near Men’ s IM. Initials E .H .Y . on inside. Cal l 355- 9282. 31

PersonalRENT your TV from N EJA C .

New Zenith portable for only per month. F re e serv ice

1/3 SAVINGS ON Optical needs, p rescrip tions, r e p a i r s . OP­TICA L DISCOUNT SU P P L Y , 416 Tussing Building, Lansing. IV 2-4667. 29

BRAND-NEW 1 9 6 5 Britannica Jun ior Encyclopedia. 15 vo l­um es. $100.’ C all TU 2-9810. 29

USED T V ’S . Excellent condition. $ 15 -$35 . C all IV 9-4556 after 6 pm. 31

VIOLINS, VIOLA, cello , guitar. Custom made. G eneral re p a ir­ing. C a se s , strings, p arts, ac­c e s s o r ie s . NOLAN BARTOW, Violin m aker, 306 1/2 N. Wash­ington. IV 7-5697. - 31

T A P E RECO RD ER. RCA Victor Model 7 -T R -3 . Good condition. $45. C all 353-2803 after 6. 29

J 3 F T . CABIN C ru ise r . Home made. 4-wheel tra ile r . T w o Johnson 25 hp engines. Manual s t„ . .m g. Com plete, $395. 489- 7950. 31

GIBSON CLASSIC guitar. E xcel- lent condition. Plush linedcase. Nylon strin gs. $80. 355-6412 .29

GO LF C LU B S. Must sa crifice . One year old. 8 Spalding irons, 3 M cGregor woods. C all 351— 4013. ' 31

A M PEL ELE C T R IC B ass ,G u ita r am plifier. Seven months old. $275 or b e s t o ffer. S t e v e n Bergm an, 351-4235 . 33

8mm YASH1CA movie cam era. $100 value for $50. A lso , student m icroscope, $5. Cal l 355-2146 evenings. 31

t a b l e , "beautiful, C a ll 485-

29

$9and d elivery . C all N EJAC TV « ,< » $1. .482-0624.'' ^ k # ' . -

F A R \ 1S A N D /or.farrrT lard lo- cated near M SL. If interested in selling , write !o M r. Simon, 17266 MACK A ve., Detroit. 29

WEDDING AND BRIDESMAID’ S d re sse s . Custom handmade, to fit you. Al so other sewing and alterations. IV 2-4256. 33

VACATION IN scenic Canada. Fabulous fishing. $55 weekly for two. Box 72, Jackson , M ichi­gan. 33

MEN WITH stretchy imaginations and big minds are willing to in­sure students, p ro fesso rs and secre tar ie s with good or bad driving records. BUBO LZ Auto Insurance. _______________ C'29

Peanuts PersonalFARMHOUSE PLED G ES: You’ ll

be watched during the “ C r e s ­ent B a l l " t e r m party Friday night. An attempted pledge raid will be met with "m a s s iv e re ­ta liatio n ". Good l u c k ! 60 Ac-

29tives.P F .A N C T S .And one

brother lives in uIAshineton , and THE OTHEK IN /

EXAS y

/vU*.-

ONE SISTER LIVES IN ST.LOülS, ONE IN HOLLYWOOD AND ONE IN KANSAS...HOW A60l’T THAT?

D R O P-LE a F old, ch erry . Seats 10. 3946.

A Q U A R I U M M ETAFRAM E 55 gallon. Complete set-up includ­ing stand, pump, filter, etc. 5 months new. 355 -3 132 . 31

OPEN U TILITY tra ile r , 4 x 6 . Hwavy „construction. -.Two .good t ire s plus spare . Aluminized cover, hitch. 355-3 132 .

why don't we write tö them, AND ARRA%*-ATNM:lv-?E*JNCV?

31

I t ■ - '-■¿j» y..

R i v e r s E d g e A n d W a t e r s E d g e A p t s .Now leasing for Summer & F a ll term s

End of R iver St. Mike Stitt ED 2-4432

I

EVENING EMPLOYMENT SUMMER WORK

If you a re fre e 4 evenings p er week and Saturdays, you can maintain your stu­dies and still enjoy a p art- tim e job doing

SPECIAL INTERVIEW WORKthat w ill bring an average income of $55 p er week.If you a re neat appearing and a hard w orker, call M r. Arnold, 3 5 1 - 4 0 1 1 , be­tween 10 a.m . & 1 p.m . (no other tim e).

THINK I'M- 6ÛIN6 TO CRY.

Page 7: TATE MEWS Committee Favors Faculty Raisesarchive.lib.msu.edu/DMC/state_news/1965/state_news_19650511.pdfSen. Guy Vander Jagt, R-Cad- illac, said the committee felt there was a definite

M ich ig a n S tate N e w s , E a s t L a n s in g , M ich ig an T u e sd a y , May 1 1 , 1965 /

Peanuts PersonalESOTERICS! COMING soon from The 810 Club, Khaki top sid ers. Y ea, yea, yea! 29

TO THE Flying Salam i. Thanks for th e black eye. Pleasant dream s. The balcony. 29

MSU IS: B arn s, Brownie in the r a f t e r s , tombstones, ATO’ s from Albion, Pi Kappa Phi. The Red Apples. 29

PHANTOM G O BBLER, of Beta Theta P i. We heard no kaboom, kaboom. Only the noisy flapping of wings. Delta Chi. 29

Real EstateFOR S A L E : T wo four-bedroom ■ homes now under construction.

923 and 945 Southfield D rive, Smith and Smith Construction, 140 High Street, Williamston, 655-1716 or 655-20'"6. 34

South Korea Wants U.S. Aid Guaranteed

ServiceDIAPER SERV IC E, three types

of d iapers t o choose from . Bulk wash for cleaner whiter d iapers. Fluff dried and folded. Use your own or rent ou rs.C on­tainers furnished. No deposit. 25 y e ars experience. B Y - L O DIAPER S E R V I C E . 10 10 E. Michigan. IV 2-04 21. C

WATCH REPAIRING and clean- ' ing, using the new ultrasonic

cleaning equipment. Ring s iz ­ing and remounting. A ll work g u a r a n t e e d . T H O M P S O N JE W E L R Y , 223 M .A.C ., East Lansing. C all ED 2-2293. 48

DIAPER SERV ICE, sam ediapers returned. Either yours or ours. With our serv ice , you may in­clude 'wo pounds of baby clothes that do not fade. Diaper pail furnished.AMERICAN DIAPER SERVICE

914 E , G ier St.IV 2-0864.

CTV REN TALS for students. Econ-

omical ra 'e s by the term and month. U niversity TV Rentals. 484-9263. C

EOAT REPA IR done reasonable by Marine craftsm an. Also one beautiful new 16’ "W olverin e" super runabout. Fully equipped with bucket seats, sedan re a r running lights. Wheel, shield. $800. l v 9-1845. Custom Boat Design E Repair. 1020 Dakin St., Larfsing. 8 am .- 9 pm., 7 days.

ACCIDENT PROBLEM ? C a l l KALAMAZOO STR EET BODY SHOP. Sm all dems to large

. w recks. American and foreign * c a rs . Guaranteed work. 489-

"507. 1 4 1 1 East Kalam azoo. C

TOD KINTNER se rv ic e to buy Estate. IV 5-1

-'tiers counseling, )r~, . • Real'77 or ED 2-2810.

35

SEOUL (UPI)—South Korean President Park Chung Hee flies to the United States Monday May 17 to strike a bargain— several of them, In fact.

And from the way the U.S. adm inistration is handling his v isit, it looks from this d is­tance as though he has every chance of getting them.

The diminutive (5 feet, 2 inch) 47-year-o ld Park, his w ife, and a 10-m an official party that in­cludes four cabinet m inisters a re being flown in a U.S. jet plane dispatched esp ecia lly to Korea to pick them up.

O fficials here see a good deal of difference between this treat­ment and the brush-off given to I n d i a n P rem ier L a i Bahadur

H a n n a h O Ks D istribu tion

President John A. Hannah ap­proved Monday the new printed m aterial distribution policy in a letter to the chairm an of the ' Faculty Committee on Student A ffa irs .

The proposals by the Men's H alls Association and Women’ s Inter-residence Hall Council can now be considered official Uni­vers ity policy, said. C h a r l e s T itkem eyer, associate professor of anatomy and com m ittee chair­man.

L'nchartered student organiza­tions may leave non-comm ercial m aterial at residence halls desks under the new policy.

W ho’s WhosePinnings

Kathy F latley, Detroit junior and Pi Beta Phi, to Doug Edwards,M errick , N .Y , senior and Sigma Alpha Mu.

Ann Ruebensaal.Chigrin F a lls , Ohio junior and Pi Beta Phi, to Rick M orrow, Bloom field H ills, junior and Lambda Chi Alpha.

, 7 Prudy McIntosh, Port Huron, 32 senior and Pi Beta Phi to Roger

Bow ler, G rosse Pointe, junior and P si Epsilon,

Beth White, Buchanan junior and Pi Beta Phi, to J im Gierach, Oak Lawn, 111. Junior and Theta Chi.

E ngagem ents--HV W ) i ,

Shastri and Pakistani President Mohammed Ayub Khan.

There is a reason. South Ko­rea is a keystone a lly in A sia for the U.S. It maintains a tough 600,000-man arm y. It is staunch­ly anti-Communist, having been the victim only 15 y e ars ago of violent Communist aggression .

Most important, it is already involved in the Viet Nam w ar with 2,000 troops there and m ore like­ly to come.

Park has been Korea’ s consti­tutionally elected president since November, 1963. Before that he was its dictator as head of the m ilitary junta that tossed out a gang of corrupt politicians on May 16, 19 6 1.

Park has proved to the sa tis­faction of the United States and his nearby neighbor Japan that he can put a strong hand on the tille r .

This is not to sav that Park hasn't had his troubles. He is having them right now, in fact, and that is one reason he’ s go­ing to Washington.

Park w ill meet President John­son twice on business and at three social a ffa irs , and w ill con­fer with Secretary of State Dean Rusk and Defense Secretary Rob­ert S. M cNam ara. He wants a guarantee of continued m ilitary- and political aid.

' S i n g i n g S t a t e s m e n ’ R e t u r n

VVenSy - S iüa» junior and Alpha E i Phi to

BABYSITTING SER V IC E. A vail­able after school and weekends. And, mother available days in awn home. IV 5-0218.

side 489-

31

IRONINGS, IN my home. $1 an hour. 2334.

W ei

Typing ServiceBARBI M EL, Professional typist.

No job too large or too sm all. Block off campus. 332-3255. C

ANN BROWN typist and m ulti- lith offse ' printing (Black and

• white and color). IBM . General typing, ' e r m papers, theses, d isser 'a tio n s. ED 2-8384. C

BARBI M EL, Professional typist. No job too large or too sm all. Block off campus. 332-3255.

C

Wayne M. Cohen, Detroit.C arol Ann Stadel, Ann Arbor,

junior to Randolph W. White, Ann Arbor senior and Phi Kappa P s i.

B arb B e ll, Jackson , senior, and P i Beta Phi, to B ill Bockman, De­troit, Western Graduate, and Delta Chi.

Carolyn Holbrook, N ashville, Tenn. senior, Pi Beta Phi, and Kevin Connelly.B loom fieldH ills, and P si Upsilon.

Gail Kinsel, Birm ingham , sen­io r, and P i Beta Phi, to Jon Cam pbell, Rochester, N .Y ,, sen­io r, and Lambda Chi Alpha.

Wanted

PAULA ANN HAUGHEY, typist. IBM Selectric . D issertations, theses, term papers. 3 3 7 -15 2 7 .

CJOB RESUM ES, 10 0 copies, $4.50

ALDINGER DIRECT MAIL Ad­vertis in g , 533 N. C lippert. IV 5 -2 2 13 .

B ÈV T Ä L L .VÌAN. Your theses, term papers, etc. Typed in my home. E lectric typewriter. 372- 3849. C30

T YPIN G . T E R M papers and theses. E l e c t r i c typewriter. Fast S erv ice . 332-4597. 30

Transporta tionRIDE VVANTED to Cornell t_'ni-

versity or Ithaca, N .Y . area. M ay-13, 14. Contact Judy, 355- 0378. 30

ALASKA: NEED passenger one­way to Anchorage. Leavingjune 18.' Cost $30. LeRoy, 482-5910 after 3 pm. 31

Wanted.BLOOD DONORS Needed. $5 fo r .

RH Positive; $'"rTof RH ’nega­tive . Detroit Blood Service , Inc. 1427 E . Michigan Ave., Hours 9-4, Monday, Tuesday, Wednes­day, F rid ay , } 2 - - Thursday. 489-7587. 48

A B E T T E R PRICE for your car at PH ILP DODGE, 1431 East Michigan. See Russ Lay. Phone IV 4-4517. C

TH REE GIRLS wish to sublet apartment, close to campus, for summ er term . C all 353-1240 or 353-1007. 33

PIANO, SM ALL upright or spinet. C a s h . MacLaughlin’ s Piano M art. Phone IV 2-7356 . 32

WANTED: USED furniture (all or part) to furnish house by June

, 15. C all 355-4028 after 7. 29

ORIENTAL IMPORTS• Straw Handbags

• Housecoats• Snack Trays

• Bamboo Skewers519 W. Grand River

C a le n d a r o f

C o m i t y E v e n ts

A SING O U T — John M c ln t i r e , C o ra l sophomore, and F rank P h i l ip , M id land sophom ore, rehea rse fo r the Singing Statesmen s p r in g conce rt Sunday. M c­ln t i r e is a m em ber of the Burgandy T r io , P h i l ip is teno r s o lo is t f o r the g le e c lu b . Photoby Cal C rane

K re s g e P la n s D is p la y O f Fre n c h L ith o g r a p h s

PIANOS- A LL kinds, including old uprights. ROBERT WEAR Refinishing Shop. Phone TL‘ 2-3320. 35

JE E P OR Jeep wagoneer in good condition. C all 655-1069, ask for M rs. Watts. 29

FURNISHED APARTM ENT want- ed June 19—Ju ly 19, or for first 5-week term . P re fer 2-bedroom convenient to campus c-r sub­lease apartment in m a r r i e d housing. P lease write immedi­ately: Robert Jennings, Univ. of South Dakota, Verm illion, SJD.

30

T uesdoyAg Engineering C l u b — 7:30

p .m ., 119 Ag Engineering Build­ing.

Block and B rid le Club— “ :30 p .m ., Informal Initiation, Judg­ing Pavilion..

Campus 4-H Club— 7:15 p.m ., Panel discussion on D iscrim i­nation. Moderator, Doug Spike. 312 Ag Hall.

Students Off Cam pus— 8 p.m ., Tow er Room, Union.

Baptist Student Fellow ship— Bob and Becky Brunton will p re­sent sacred ltiusic concert at 7:30, 332 Oakhill St.

Theta Delta Chi In itia tes Pledges

Theta Delta Chi recently ini­tiated L a tw ijire r term • p-lede* c la ss .

The initiated pledges include Alan Rose, R o c h e s t e r , N .V., freshm an; C asey Kolovos, Pon­tiac freshm an; Harvey Hoadley, T ra v e rse City sophomore; Jam es A shley, Dearborn Heights fresh ­man; Philip Wefthman, Mecosta freshm an; Ja y M esser, Sandusky freshm an; Matthew Wray, Park F o re st , 111., freshm an; G ary San­ford , G ro sse P o i n t e F arm s freshm an; M i c h a e l Thies, St. C la ir Shores freshm an; and Chris Pruszynski, P i t t s b u r g , P a., freshm an.

Faculty Folk ForeFaculty Folk Club members

interested in the golf league are invited to a coffee in the Union Green Room at 9:30 a.m. Wednes­day.. For further information call M rs. Raymond F . Johnston, ED 7-9794, or M rs. C larence L . Vinge, ED 7-7230.

SeniorSw ingoutSenior Swingout, o r i g i n a l l y

scheduled for Sunday, May 16, has been changed to June 1. Watch the State News for fur­ther details on picking up caps and gowns and other informa­tion on swingout.______

A magazine published by the French Maeght art gallery pro­vides the lithographs by French artists Chillida, Bazaine andTal- Coat, on display in the K resge hall lounge through Sunday.

The magazine, "D e r r ie re le

O n W M S BT uesdoy

1 1 :3 0 a.m . and 7 p.m . THE CREA TIVE PERSON— Stage and screen star O ssie Davis and his a c tre ss-w ife Ruby Dee express them selves in a dram atized read­ing based on the theme of man’ s loves.

Davis wrote the reading, "T h e G hetto ," and in i* he develops his theme of love— love of peace, love between men and women, love of life and. love of se lf— ¿ 'l^ ig h selection-* Ert-m " 1 0 0 1 - ble and through his own free v e rse and prose.

Noon AT ISSUE— " E a s t e r n E u ro p e "— "A t Issu e " cam eras go to Hungary, Rumania an d Czechoslovakia to examine con­tem porary developments forcing lead ers to reappraise and mod­ify existing policies.

A r t P r o f e s s o r W i n s G r a n t

Sadayoshi Omoto, associate p rofessor of art history, has been awarded a Ford Foundation fac­ulty fellowship to study Asian philosophy and religion at the 1965 Summer Inter-U niversity Rotat­ing Program on South A sia .

During the eight-week program Omoto will study Brahm anism , Hinduism and Buddhism, with specia lists in the fields.

The fellowships are awarded to p ro fesso rs teaching in a South Asian field at a university to broaden their b asis of know­ledge. The U niversity pays part of the stipend.

Omoto, who teaches a course in Asian art h istory, said the philosophy cou rses would be of benefit to his U niversity c lasses since Asian ; rt and religion are so closely interi elated.

M iro ir ,” a highly specialized catalogue for exhibition, uses the original blucks for lithographing and the original plates for etch­ing in producing its copies.

"Y o u might call these litho­graphs h a lf -o r ig in a ls ," Paul Love, director of K resge Art Center, said. "T h e y -ire pro­duced from the original blocks, but they lose some value by being put out an a large scale .

Tal-C oat and Ba/ainc a r c known prim arily a s painters and Chillida as a sculptor.

The first graduate exhibition also ends Sunday. The second graduate exhibition, concentrat­ing on sulpture, will open May ,20.

S igm a K a p p a

In itia te s 19Sigma Kappa sorority initiated

19 new m em bers Sunday.They a re : Pat Adair, Vpsi -

lanti sophomore; Pam A l l e n , Midland sophomore; C arla An­derson, Arlington Heights, 111., sophomore; Cinny Auble, Battle Creek sophomore; Sue Blayney, Lou isv ille , Ky., sophomore; Ka­thy Braden, Birmingham soph­om ore; L iz Byrd, Okemos soph­om ore; Ju lie Dreisbach, M ush­ing sophomore; P a m E s s e r , Farmington f r e s h m a n ; Jenny F a irch ild , Syracuse, N .Y ., soph­om ore; K a t h y Hess, D e t r o i t freshm an; Jane Lange, Roseville s o p h o m o r e ; Linda Prettym an, Spring Lake freshm an; Natalie Prychodko, D e t r o i t freshm an; Pat Quiter, P i t t s b u r g h , P a ., sophomore; Cheryl Roddy, B ir ­mingham freshm an; Cheryl Top­ping, Dearborn freshm an; Karen V ass, Alma freshm an; and Cindy W allace, Midland freshm an.

The Men’ s G lee Club, who will present their spring concert Sun­day in Erickson K iva, have been the U niversity ’ s am bassadors of good will to thousands of people throughout the nation.

T h eir perform ances at 3 and 8 p.m . Sunday bring them home for an a ll-U niversity concert aft­e r a spring break tour on the Up­per Peninsula where they sang to audiences who plowed through four feet of snow to hear them.

W a t e r S h o w N o w ’C a r n e y ’

F o r decades, MSU’ s spring festival has been called Water C arn iva l. A fter 43 y e a rs , the "c a rn iv a l ’ ’ aspect of this event has become a reality .

This y e ar , an actual carnival is being set up with between 12 and 14 rides. The rides include a fe r r is wheel, a ro ller coast­e r and an "o cto p u s," among others. The carnival w ill take place at parking lot C , ad ja - cent to the Judging Pavillion, between the Engineering Build­ing and the International Cen­ter.

Other innovations of this y e a r 's Water Carnival include the use of choreography in the produc­tion. A new stage has been built on the side of the bandstand, and a 15 -p iec e band w ill provide m usical accompaniment.

A lso new this year, children from local Boy Scout and G irl Scout troops have bought blocks for the Thursday night p erfo r­m ance.

Tickets for Sunday’ s concert are on sale at theUnion ticket of­fice and from m em bers of the G lee Club at $1 for students and $1.50 for the public.

Under the direction of J .L o re n Jon es, assistan tp ro fesso r of mu­sic , the glee club, or the Singing Statesmen, w ill present a pro­gram of choral music that ranges from Lotti’ s "C ru c if ix u s " to their own arrangem ent of "O ld King C o le ," one that Mother Goose would never recognize.

The Burgundy T r io , who are m em bers of the Glee Club, are scheduled tcj provide interm is­sion entertainment with the folk song flavor.

In their am bassadorial role, the Singing Statesmen went on an Eastern tour last year that in­cluded an E a ster perform ance in Rockefeller C enter in New York C ity . They chalked up 26 p er­form ances on tours this year.

The Campus SingerA rgo R eco rd ing A r t i s t

A Return F o r One Of Our Most Popular

C A M P U ST H E A T R E -

MID-WEST PREMIERE 75c to 5:30 Eve. $1.00

Feature 1 :10 -3 :10 -5 :15 -7 :2 5 -9 :3 0

■ 337-0271 „r^sasf.o- ► a**-'

"O ne of the h ig h -w a te r m a rk s of A m e r ic a n f i lm com e dy !” -N ew s Week

THAT WHOOP-iT-UPF U N N Y W E S T E R N ! g pt Production

B A L L O UI in COLUMBIA COLOR I

J a n e F o n d a - L e e M a r v i n • N o t K i n g C o le

Next ,,Att. Steve McQueen “ Baby The Rain Must Foil

Look!It’s FREE

r

STATE; V s B G r a 3 K

7:009:30 P.M.TODAY

ACADEMYAWARDWINNER

A N T H O N Y Q U IN N ÁLAN BATÍ .!-} .IRf N L PAPAS

Z O R B A T H E G R E E K

FRIDAY:One Of T he World’ s

F inest F ilm s!

J o h n S t e i n b e c k ' s

“ Grapes of W rath”Henry Fonda- Jane D arw ell- John C arrad in e- John Qualen- Eddie Quillan

TRACY».. SINATRAM l « »

IÜÜ) KOHIMAR

/ 4 « kIEMIYN LeHOY FREQ KOH

Biasimar U l l i ■ « COLUMBIA PlCIUBiS Htliast

During their spring break tour, the management of a ski slope near Ironwood treated the club to a day on sk is, Steve Peterson, Rockford junior and president, said.

Next year, the Statesmen plan an exchange with the U niversity of Puerto Rico, and while the plans have not yet b e e n con­firm ed, profits from this Sun­day’ s concert will go towards this goal.

"T h e glee club has been im­proving every y e a r ," saidGeorge Steinmetz, assistant professor of German, who has been with the Statesmen 18 y e a rs . “ If they ever started going downhill, I imagine that 1 would re tire .”

In addition to their concerts, the Statesmen have appeared on television and have made several recordings which are available at the Union, the MSU Book­store and through Yhe glee club.

Nursery Conference, Clinics Held Today

On W KT u e s d o y - - A M

10:05 a.m . M u s i c R o o m — B R U C H : V io lin C o n c e r t o No. 1.

.2:00 p .m . S p r i n g t i m e — R. STRAUSS: "S a lo m e ," D a n c e of S e v en V e i l s ; C R E S T O N : In v o c a ­t ion a n d D an ce ; M O Z A R T : Turk­i s h M a r c h ; R E S P IG H I: A n c ie n t A i r s nnc D a n c e s , S e t N o. 3; J . ST RAL SS; B lu e D an u be ; S T R A ­VINSKY: C i r c u s P " l k a ; C O P ­L A ND : D an zó n C u b a n o ; T C H A I­KOVSKY: N u t c r a c k e r B a l l e t .

T u e s d o y - - F M 10:00 a .m . On C a m p u s — D r .

L d c y A s i r v a t h a m , P r e s i d e n t , R a n c h i C o l l e g e , In d ia , " I s India a S e c u l a r S t a t e ? "

1:00 p . m . M u s i c T h e a t e r — Mu­s i c a l , " ’S h o w b o a t , "

, p .m . R eQ iia l S f a g e — P i a n - V.AR n G o u ld it, > * •

How does the young child han­dle aggression? What a re the emotions involved in learning?

What a re the new sto ry-te ll­ing devices for the picture book set?

Answrers to these and other questions w ill be provided in workshops and clin ics at the 14th annual Conference of the Michigan Council of Coopera­tive N u rseries today.

This y e a r ’ s meeting at K el­logg Center is expected to draw between 500 and 600 coopera­tive nursery school parents and teachers from all parts of the state.

Blaine P o rter, chairm an, De­partment of Fam ily L ife Educa­tion, Brigham V oung U niversity, w ill speak tonight on "Com m u­nications in the Fam ily with

Young C h ild ren ." Esther Mid- dlewood, chief, Education Sec­t i o n , Michigan Department of Mental Health, will talk at the final noon session on "T h e Young Child’ s Handling of A ggression .”

In-depth workshops w ill deal with such topics as discipline, meeting emotional needs, crea­tive ideas for nursery play, art in the nursery school, creativ ­ity and patterns of growth.

Open houses at n urseries on campus and in the community, new film s for nursery school and parent education program s, ex­hibits of creative a rts , books and music and demonstrations of var­ious kinds a re other highlights.

T he conference is jointly spon­sored by the College of Home Econom ics.

D R I V E - I N

WlATftf: MUm S o u lh w M l of L a n s in g o n M -78

STARTS THIS WEDNESDAY, May 12th

A C A D E M Y A W A R D W I N N E R ! ■ “ B E S T A , So ph ia , , p \n tM ,* * MUM n#. " if1 F lLm W i m a r t e l lo T T 7 , - 1

® MASTROIANNI f / V zj » | .VITTORIO De SICAs ►’ 5

' 1 TMISYANd

CARLO PONTI in COLORC o-F e a tu re On Same P ro g ra m

JOSEPH E LEVINE ,-,»..iMARCH 10 (

MastroianniWHNNfft HI AC ’OR AMARO Italian

. No W aiting at

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Cleaners &Sh irt Laundry

6 2 3 E . G ra n d R i v e r

E D 2 -3 5 3 7

WETS0 * , ÄS A ^ VOÚjBo0'r°KlU M°9K office

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/ % : 3 0 t o

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M a y 2 1 *2 2 , 19 6 5 MSU A u d i t o r i u mSponsored by the MUSIC and SPEECH Dcpartmentt

Page 8: TATE MEWS Committee Favors Faculty Raisesarchive.lib.msu.edu/DMC/state_news/1965/state_news_19650511.pdfSen. Guy Vander Jagt, R-Cad- illac, said the committee felt there was a definite

8 _ , „ . . . . . -Tuesday, May 11* 1965Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan___________________________ _____________ ______________________________________________________________________ _ il i ----------—

S a v e S & H G r e e n S t a m p s a t H a t i o n a l • • • A m e r i c a ' s M o s t V a l u a b l e S t a m p s !

S & H

G r e e nE V E R Y W e d n e s d a y

L m r a d T e n d e r , “ C o m C o u n t r y ” P o r k ,

P o r k C h o p s N A T I O N A L

Cook with Cabbage, Hygrade's Famous Paint Cut Brisket

Corned B eef .Braise or Bar-B-Q, Loan "Corn Country" Park, Country Stylo

S p a re Ribs . .■toM . F . . ,h .„ FU— , M kk. I P g % C t * . - — ™ Fort— A ( i t

Polish Sausage *• 3 7 Pork Loin Roast. . ------* 4 7 «

F O O D S T O R E S W eReserve the

R igh t to L im it Q u a n titie s . Prices a f­

fe c t iv e th ru Sat., M a y 15

B o n e l e s s —U .S .D .A . C hoice Reef, V a lu e W e y T r im m e d O É 7 Q

le s s Top Sirloin . . . '*■ 1

$ 1 8 9

8 9

II, \DoneU .S .D .A . C hoice B eef. V a lu e W e y T rim m ed

(Boneless Rib Eye Steak .

T u r k e y ^

D r u m s t i c k s

S.D .A. C h a le t Beef, Rolled and T ie d ^ % ^ \ t

H ills id e , F inest Q u a lity , M ich . G rade 1 U So Fresh B rand, Pon-Reedy t , u ^ Q ( B o i i e l c S S CHlICk R O S S t ■ a

S k 6 d B o lo g n a - - V t F n u n M M ~ ¿ T 1 « , M u l - 6 9

C o o ked H i i k k c k - . 8 9 T r y A l l T h r e e !F O R Y O U R C O O K - O U T '

' S t : 1' ' •"> «■ > » • * « «fra m U . S. Gov t Inspected Fryers F lum p 'n Tender, W hole

Fryer legs . . . . . . . . . .

Gold H i l l , Peeled end D e-V e ined, F re ie n

U S D * ^ o m iî S « *The whole »« p |u n lpfo r the»«. , nd goodtender * * te« thank

over the t ook-out

iuncW bo* to o l

Peter Pen, Cream y-Sm ooth

Peanut Butter.......All-Purpose L iqu id Detergent, Deo! Pk.

Palmolive Liquid. . . .Puts New W h ite S trength in Y our W ash

Ajax Laundry Detergentd k r Lu suricrv! CMigtbgfon ■ ‘

Palmolive Soap ..For Luxurious C om plex ion C e rt ^

Palmolive Soap .. JLathers In to Oceans o f F rag ran t Suds n

Vel Beauty Bar . . . 2Deal Pock, Gets C lothes C leaner

FABulous Fab Detergent

4 9

5 9 ,j W ith Ribs

ftyer Breasts . . . .J e r k h to e f, T e n d . , J u ic f jPuiwheei fryers 4 9 , ;i ’ " e * r ,BarJ Q ’ Gr»de A _ _

Cornuh Game Hens . . . 5 9

Cocktail Shrimp *1 4 9 . . . .U. S. D. A. Choice Beef, Value Way Trimmed ^IB B . * ■ S * uU g o

* H ygrade 's S ta te F a ir

Polish SausageS w is s S t e a kH ygra de 's B lack Forest

■ ■ ■ ■ e

Fancy B iado C u t C huck S toak

H ygrade 's , M ic h . G rade 1, A l l M e a t

Bail Park Franks. . . . .

1-Lb .Pkg.

1-Lb .Pkg.

1-Lb .Pkg.

6 9

6 9

6 9

ib.

1 2 -0 « .Jor

Lockshoro, Creamy and Rich, far a Refreshing Spring Salad

i - p t . ,6-0«.S iio

3 -L b .,1-0«.Bo«

B athBara

5 9 s 6 9. . . a 1 9 *

S

i t * * ,

cl b

W E ' V E G O T I T !

4 5 e C ottage Cheese5 3 V Garden Fresh Brand, Fancy, Tender Green

7 9 « Frozen P eas . . .„ # % 9 ^ « . . l h r » fc »r" S e jla d y ^ m h i n j T yrh q P a g s , e ^ R ic h . ’ n P e i ^ u s

i - a 2 3 y ud ge B ars . . . 1 2 ifM “

a Boies

• o o o o o o

White or Colors, Soft, 2-ply Facial

Rag.B a n

3 -L b .,1 t/4 -O s.

Bax

4 9

3 9 Scotties Tissues6 9

B r ig h t e n H e r L i f eW ith a H i g h - F a s h i o n

W e n d y D o l l

White or Colors, 2-Ply Tissue for Your Buthroom

Soft-W eve . . . . 4 “ 3 9 *They’ re New—Burgers 'n Gravy or Chicken Croquettes 'n Gravy JtÊ Ê Ê ■ B B S

Rival Dog Food . 7 ^ 1

I » e w S 'Ä n 's t a m p

! . . I D E A B O O K i

R e d e e m C o u p o n fo r W e n d y

D o ll

Reg.$1 . 19V a lu e ,WithCoupon

7 9

M akes Good Foods Teste Even

B e tto r!

M W an M an no C o u p o n o M an tm an m

R ed eem T h i s Coupon for Reg. $ 1.19

W E N D Y D O L L

O N L Y 790 W IT H C O U P O N

R e d e e m coupon at National Food S to re s . E x p i r e s Sat., M ayl5L im it one.

I

■ ■ • ■ C o u p o n ■ e " * * " *

R e d e e m T h i s Coupon for Reg. 69£

W E N D Y W A R D R O B E

O N L Y 590 W IT H C O U P O N

R e d e e m coupon at National Food S to re s .’ E x p i r e s S a t . , May 1 5 L im it o n e / *’

I - -

I

1 1 1 , 2 In ch es 1

M o v e ab le Head, A r m s and L egs!18 Luxurious Wardrobes!

all!

T R e d e e m T h i s Coupon for Reg. $ 1.19

\ W E N D Y W A R D R O B E

} O N L Y 796 W IT H C O U P O N

- R ed ee m coupon at National Food Stores. Expires Sat., M ayl5L im it one.

•*-''™vnvrmvraTOWJIWR8ÍJ¡qi!:S

D e l M o n t o C a t s u p3 4 9 *D e l M o n t e P e a s

2 £ 3 9 *Sweet, Early G arden A lw ays V a ry

T e nd« ,I

lijationat J J ’uA the ^}resheAt. . . < 2 )<Fresh Fro m Flo rid a . . . R e d , Ripe ’ n S w e e t!

W a t e r a n e l o n

3 9

}au/n ^ òeu / y ï re â h !

T *Sise

Californie Yellow Cling

Slicae, in Honvy Syrag

1 - lb . ,13 -O x.

Cam

D e l M o n t e P e a c h e s

2 5 eD e l M o n t e C o r n

3 ~ 4 9 eVncuum Pnekod,

Tendor, Galdón WhoM Rerwa»'

juianBSWHar------

Fresh fro m H o w o ii, Royol H o w o iio n B rand

Fresh Pineapple . . . .G arn ish Y o u r S teak w ith H o t House G row n M Q c

Fresh Mushrooms * 4 7For Y o u r Snack T ra y , Frash 4 $ 9 0 0Roasted Peanuts.. J - IC a lifo rn io , Tender and H eavy 4 $ 's 9

Fresh Artichokes. . . .R efresh ing Lew -C a lo rie O range D rin k M a)f

m m S I t 1 " 1 N a t i o n a l H a s R o s e s , U . S . N o . J , F r e s h , N e w C r o pH o w Is th e T im e te Use I t | H W O u m

Michigan Peat.. 5 0 - 5 9 ¡MssTriumph B ran d ‘ f “ * « * 9 5 U . 9 ^ 1 9

H i d d e n M a g i c

» * 1 * °H olds Y e u r

H a ir in P laco AJI D o y ! P ius. neg.

Bsc Iso Tex

Real Peal Moss . . . . K * 3F inest Q u a lity , fo r Y o u r Law n C i A Q

Spartan Lawn Food 2 2 - IFinest Q u n llty , fo r Y o u r Law n p a a a a

Park Green Grass Seed 5 - I

C o la n in l B randl o s t s u n n s

u » t M

Id a a l B randROSEBUSHES

I.. 8 9 *N a tio n a l B eau tyDOSI SUSHISu . * | t o

N A T I O N A L I H i P O N n a t . o n a l c o u p o n

FREE W IT H T H IS C O UPO N } FREE W IT H T H IS COUPON

50 EXTRA oitiiN STAMPS j | 50 EXTRA SAiit STAMPS jw ith Purcheue o f | SWIM. Purchase a* onui J o « . o r M ore jA N Y ROSEBUSH i FRESH ORANGES

Redeem N ils I * ! £ » S W l u W l y ° ! S l IsS uJ B S K S S S J U ...........................

R econstitu ted , Ready to Use

Realemon Lemon Juicea-O s.Bottle 2 5 (» 6 9 <

3 5 0 B x t r a S & H G r e e n S t a m p s

With These Ceupens

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

FREE W IT H T H IS COUPON

j 25 EXTRA ¿ b in STAMPS |! w i th purchase e t e Pkg. e t Ores!» Psck ;

CANOY CHICKEN BONES

| Redeem th is coupon e t s Meres. Coupon exp ires 8«»., Mey is.

..........

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

EREE W IT H T H IS C O UPO N

SO EXTRA ¿ ,h n STAMPSW ith Purchase e t e 1-Lb. JarTOP TASTE GRAPE J A M

FREE W IT H T H IS COUPON

25 EXTRA ¿ A .hn STAMPSW ith Purchase o f a M i

MATCO R U C K PEPPER

N A T K I N A l < O U P O N

FREE W IT H T H IS CO UPO N

SO EXTRA uV m n STAMPSW ith Purchase o f any 3-Lb. Jar

HAZEL PRESERVES

N A T I O N A L COU PON

FREE W IT H T H IS COUPON

100 EXTRA • r b in STAMPSW ith Purchase o f any B ottle o f

RLUE RIBBON V IT A M IN S

! Redeem th is coupon e t Motiona l Food j ! Stores. Coupon exp ires Set., M ey ■>. ¡

........(

MATCO BLACK r t r P X R HAZEL r R O H f n ; -------- ------------

{ Redeem th is coupon et Wetienel Peed ) • Redeem th is e“ ^ , ? L N£í.,onÍ¿ . ! * í * ! ! 1 «Sres?1 C o ìrn m 1•«p ires ’ seî?,"»»»'0??. •• Stör«». COUPOVI OKpIrOS l i t . , M iy 1S. • • S to r t i. Coupon o u p lr t l Sov»# ••*•»■»# 5MBgB*»»»B»»mBmmBBBBmmmBmBmmBBmmmmmBmmmmaBBBmB#reuususeeeuMcesuioeeeueuueeeiuuuuuodeeeutuuuoue issssssissstissutseeiuuMl****!*11" " * "


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