8
Inside Grosser, p. 3; Baseball, p. 4; Church News, p. 7; Makeba, p. 8. MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY Vol, 55, Number 136 Friday, May 1, 1964 IWS Weather Cloudy and cool today with periods of rain. High near 50. East Lansing, Michigan Price 10« Bishop, Governor Ask Law To Change Prayer Decision 'In God We Trust Urged For Schools WASHINGTON f - A Roman Catholic bishop and the governor of Alabama called on Congress Thursday to overrule the Supreme Court and permit prayers in the public schools. Bishop Fulton J. Sheen, Auxiliary bishop of the New York arch- diocese, left to the House judiciary committee, before which he appeared, the means by which such an end could be reached. He suggested that the "perfect prayer” for use in school would be the words "in God PISTOL PORTER INSPIRES UMOC’S-Skip Scdndirito, left, Frank Russ, Mel Borack, Bob Flonders, right, and John Zahnow, seated, prepare for the Ugliest Man on Campus contest. Much of the humor seems to have evolved from Shiawassee County events featuring county justices and Sheriff Porter. Photo by Gerald Carr Shoplifting Increase Troubles Local Stores Twenty’ students have been picked up for shoplifting within the past two to three weeks, East Lansing police detective Robert Brown said. The thefts have been mostly of small items, such as pens, erasers and similar items along with a few books, he said. Brown said the thefts may seem small and insignificant, but they add up over time and become big losses to the store owners. East Lansing bookstores are the prime targets, he said. Persons caught w ith stolen items concealed on themselves in the store or walking out of a store with an unpaid for article are arrested for simple larceny, he said. This means a fine, fingerprint- ing and a permanent criminal record, Brown said, and students should think of that before taking anything. East Lansing bookstores and shops selling small articles hire private detectives to prevent pil- fering, he said, and East Lansing police make periodic checks, also placing officers in the stores dur- ing Christmas rushes and regis- tration. There has been a tendency to increase the fine from $25 to $50 due to the increase in thefts. Those caught possibly could be charged w ith larceny from a building, a felony, instead of sim - ple larceny, a misdemeanor, Brown said. He said two persons have been caught within an hour and three have been observed taking things at one tim e. Lack of money is not the rea- son for shoplifting, because 50to (continued on page 8) Shaw, Mayo Lead Blood Drive Donors A total of 1,497 pints of blood have been donated in the four days of the ROTC drive. Today is the last day of the blood drive, being held in the Demonstration Hall b a llro o m from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. "All students who came to do- nate should be sure to bring the permission slip with their parent’s signature,” Joe Mon- tana, Buffalo, N.Y., senior and chairman of the drive said. Leading men’s halls is East Shaw with 22.5 per cent dona- tions. Women’s halls leader is West Mayo with 11.2 per cent. Theta Delta Chi heads frater- nities with 123 per cent dona- tions. Alpha Omicron Pi leads sor- rities with 23 per cent. Bower House still leads the co- ops with 100 per cent. The leading precinct for men’s halls is East Shaw #6 with 56.1 per cent. Chinese Unwelcome At May Day Fete MOSCOW [If )—Gay splashes of colored bunting decorated Mos- cow Thursday for the May Day holiday as the capital took on a festive air despite the ugly schism with Communist China. The official New China News Agency announced that Russia nas withdrawn an invitation to a Chinese delegation to attend the cele- bration today and witness the big parade in Red Square. TASS, the official Soviet news agency, said trade delegations from more than 50 countries in Europe, Asia, Africa and Latin America will be on hand. They will have places in Red Square, a privilege denied to most Moscow residents. Karume Frees Zanzibar Prisoners ZANZIBAR If)—On the heels of his union with Tanganyika, President Abeid Karume toured the jails and prison camps in Zanzibar Thursday and personally ordered the release of 1,000 Dolitical prisoners. He was made good on a promise made in a speech Wednesday that all but the major enemies of the people would be out of jail in time to attend a May Day celebration Friday. UN Sets Up Cyprus Observation Posts NICOSIA, Cyprus f — Reacting swiftly after a truce-breaking skirmish between Greek and Turkish Cypriots, the U.N. peace- keeping force planted 10 observation posts on the Kyrenia Moun- tains Thursday in an effort to discourage further fighting. Roving U.N. patrols had failed to stem hostilities in that hottest sector of a war which Secretary-General U Thant is trying now to end through a new nine-point peace plan. Harris Set To Alter Cabinet Student Congress indicated its willingness to work with new A ll- University Student Government President Bob Harris, Bryan, Ohio, junior, Wednesday night by approving his plan for reorgan- izing the executive cabinet. The plan would maintain the offices of executive and adminis- trative vice-president, executive secretary, treasurer, Elections Bureau, Spartan Spirit, Student Government S e r v i c e s , Inter- national Cooperation Committee, Student Insurance, and National Student Association coordinator much as they now exist. However, H arris’ plan will di- vide the public relations depart- ment into two sections, one to deal with internal affairs and giving information to the State News and one to handle a pro- posed newsletter and an AUSG booklet. The plhn also calls for mak- ing Academic Affairs an execu- tive office which will work in conjunction with the congress academic affairs committee and placing Campus Chest and fall orientation under the Organiza- tions Bureau. The only part of the plan that met any opposition was placing Campus Chest under Organiza- tions Bureau, but, after Harris explained his reasoning, the plan passed unopposed. simply the words "in uoa we trust,” which appear on the offi- cial seal of the United States. Gov. George C. Wallace of Ala- bama, however, urged enactment of a constitutional amendment that wouid undo the Supreme Court’s decisions banning offi- cial prayers and required Bible reading in public schools. This would require ratification by two-thirds of the states. Both the bishop and the gover- nor, in separate appearances be- Mre the committee, strongly criticized the court for the de- cisions. ' Bishop Sheen said, "Any time the court goes to the question of 'to pray or not to pray,’ it ex- ceeds its competency.” Wallace termed the decisions "as sweeping and as deadly as any ever issued by any dicta- torial power on the face of the earth." Wallace testified that he agreed thoroughly on this matter with B .shop Sheen, but he said: "1 wouldn’t want to say the bishop agrees with me on all m atters. I don’t want to get the bishop in any trouble. "In fact,” Wallace added, "I don’t think he agrees with me on any matter except this one.” The widely known clergyman and the southern governor who has carried his states’ rights campaign against racial inte- gration into the presidential pri- maries of three states, were the most colorful witnesses yet to appear in the hearings, which began April 22. The committee has before it 146 resolutions proposing 35dif- ferent forms of constitutional amendments. More than 40mem- bers of Congress have already testified, only one of them in opposition to any amendment. JUNIOR 500 WARM-UP-Delta Tau Delta starts training for the annual Junior 500 race to be held May 23. Driving is Bruce Tinker, while Byron Treaster switches pushing chores with Bob Donaldson. Photo by George Junne G O P C a u c u s In H o u s e A s k s C o lle g e B u d g e t R e s to ra tio n Concert Lnder Stars Opens South Campus Weekend A jazz concert under the stars Friday night will open the ac- tivities of South Campus Week- end, the second annual event sponsored jointly by Case, Wil- son, and Wonders Halls. Weekend plans include games and movies Saturday afternoon and an all-University’ street dance Saturday night. All halls will hold open houses from 2-5 p.m. Sunday. The jazz concert, to be m.c. d by Maurice A. Crane, associate professor of humanities, will in- clude George West and his All- Stars, the Activity Band, the Londons, and Sharie Payne and Lou Hilfman. It will begin ai 7:30 p.m. in the area between Case and Wonders. Among Saturday’s games will be a tug-of-war, a bicycle race, and an upside-down beauty con - test, in which the girls will walk across the stage upside down. The Scots Highlanders and the Spartan Drill team will alsoper- form. The Treblemakers and the Spartones will play at the dance, to be held in the complex park- ing lot 9 p.m. to midnight. General chairmen are Rick Hollander, Wilmette, 111., sopho- more, and Joan Scialli, Birming- ham junior. The house voted late Thurs- day to knock out the amendments proposed by the ways and means committee to reduce college aid allocations by 5 per cent. Earlier, a Republican caucas Jesse Plans To Rem ain In A U S G James Jesse, Buchanan junior and loser in the contest for the All-University Student Govern - ment (AUSG) presidency, said he is not yet sure of his plans for the future except that they will involve student government. Jesse said he expects to be in either an executive position or on congress next year. He definitely intends to stay in student gov- ernment and do his best to make student government effective. Commenting on the actions of Bob Harris, Bryan, Ohio, junior, who h a s been moving rapidly since taking over the office of AUSG president, Jesse said he was “ glad to see action being taken,” and added that “ I will help in any way that I can.” Referring to the electionTues- day, Je.j . said one of the rea- sons he lost was because "I didn’t push hard enough,” but added that “ I have two more years left in student government. “ I am definitely intent on some sort of reorganization,” Jesse said, adding that his presence on the AUSG reorganization com- mittee would give him an oppor- tunity to present his ideas. . "Bu: ” he said, referring to the committee, "i will go along with . majority opinion.” voated to restore the proposed cut. This would restore over $2 million to Michigan State's bud- get and bring the total appro- priations to $39,566,833. "The caucus’ position is to stand with Gov. Romney’s pro- posal on education,” Allison Green, R-Kingston and speaker of the house, said. “There seemed little reason to try and support the committee recommendation because seemed unlikely it would get the 56 votes necessary to concur on the senate bill.” Rep. Arnell Engstrom.'R-Tra - verse City and chairman of the ways and means committee, will move that the house not concur with the committee's recom- mendations on the budget cut, Green said. This means that the caucus up- held the committee’s recommen- dation to withhold the $190,000 slated for the University’s tie-in with Lansing while construction is going on the new power plant. Green said that the 5 per cent figure on the total higher edu- cation budget represented 30 per cent of the increase recom- mended by the governor. Restoration of the senate- approved budget would give the University of Michigan $44,086,139. Wayne State would get $20,127,062. French President Out Of Hospital PARIS I A1)—Crowds waved and cheered Thursday as President Charles De Gaulle left a hos- pital two weeks after he was operated on for noncancerous tu- mor of the prostate gland. Disclosing the nature of the president’s ailment for the first time, doctors pronounced him in excellent shape. Hundreds of police lined the route as the president and Mrs. De Gaulle rode in a limousine from Cochin Hospital to Elysee Palace. Student G ivesVersion O f Shiaw assee Arrest By JOANN MIKOLUSKY State News Staff Writer "Guilty until proven innocent,” says Lloyd Thurston, Sarnia, On- tario, junior about the altitude of the two Shiawassee County Justices of the Peace. Thurston, the one student who pleaded not guilty to the charge of aiding and abetting 'to the delinquency of a minor, spent last Sunday and Monday in ja il. S h e r r iff S a v s R a id s N o t P la n n e d Recent Shiawassee County police raids were not planned in ad- vance, but a sheriff’s deputy may have signed the complaint against the MSU students arrested. This is what the State News learned in a telephone interview with Clifford Porter, Shiawassee County Sheriff. "The raid was not planned in advance,” he said. “ We received a complaint between 10 and 10:30 p.m. Saturday night and started making arrests at about 11 p.m.” When asked how police from Ingham County, Owosso, Corunna and other Shiawassee County village and township departments arrived at the party scene in little more than a half-hour, he re - plied, “ We have real good radio communications.” When asked who filed the complaint against the 111 students arrested at the three "grassers” going on in the area, he declined to answer. He was then asked if one of his deputies filed the complaint and he replied, "That is possible. "W e knew of the situation out there because we were called out on a party a week before. This was some distance away but in the general vicinity.” Several students disclosed that the police yelled at them to "get the hell out of here—all we want is the beer.’ ’ Many of the students who had scattered came back to the scene and were arrested when they drove out onto a dirt road, the said. Porter denied that the police had used bad faith in making the arrests. "No police officer ever told the students this,” he said. At first he maintained that the rooms in which the students waited for arraignment were not overcrowded and then said they may have been overcrowded for a brief period. Some students had charged that the sheriff’s men had fired several shots in the air when a car they had hailed failed to stop. He said he had no knowledge that any shots were fired. Students also complained that -hey were not allowed to call their dorms, parents or legal counsel. “ Shortly after they arrived at the jail a fraternity president volunteered to be a spokesman for the group. A little later a dorm housemother called, and he was allowed to talk to her.” Porter said that about 1 a.m. the fraternity president gave her numerous numbers to call to relay the information that the students had been picked up. "Shortly after 1 a.m. Sunday, one of our officers notified the campus police,” he added. Lt. Allen H. Andrews, Jr., department of public safety, said MSU police received a call about 2 a.m. notifying them of the girls involved. They were also advised that arraignment would begin about 2:30 a.m., he said. Porter bee ame sheriff in Shiawassee County in January, 1963. He declined to speculate on whether he would run again or whether the raids would have any effect on his campaign if he did Chose to run. "1 do think the majority of the people want these parties stopped,” he said. He said that arresting officers claimed that it was not necessary for him to have purchased any liquor to be guilty of the charge and that as long as he was drinking with someone under age he was guilty of aiding and abett- ing. "They were assuming 1 knew everyone at the party,” said Thurston, “ but I only knew one person there.’ ’ Thurston, 21, said that he a- voided being caught in the raid by driving his car to the other side of the field. He said that police didn’t enter the field, but had waited for the students to come out. Thurston had remained with his car but said four other per- sons with him had escaped by going through a swamp. It was approximately 2 a.m., he said, when a police cruiser, as it was leaving, spotted his car. Thurston described the police as being extremely rude and said they bullied the students. He said that one officer was going to handcuff him as he was getting out of his car, and that he was ordered in and out of several police cruisers before he was taken to Corunna. Arriving in Corunna, he said he was put into a room with s other students and that while (continued on page 3)

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InsideGrosser, p. 3; B aseba ll, p. 4; Church News, p. 7; Makeba,p. 8.

M I C H I G A NS T A T E

U N I V E R S I T Y

V ol, 55, Number 136 F riday , May 1, 1964

IW S WeatherCloudy and cool today w ith periods o f ra in . H igh near 50 .

E ast Lans ing , M ich igan P rice 10«

B ish o p , G o v e rn o r A sk Law

To C h a n g e P ra y e r D ecision'In G o d W e T r u s t ’

U r g e d F o r S c h o o lsWASHINGTON f - A Rom an C atholic bishop and the governor of

A labam a ca lled on C on gress Thursday to o v erru le the Suprem e Court and p erm it p ra y e rs in the public schools.

B ishop Fulton J . Sheen, A uxiliary bishop of the New York arch ­d io cese , left to the House ju d iciary com m ittee, b efo re which he appeared, the means by which such an end could be reached .

He suggested that the " p e r fe c t p ra y e r” for use in school would bethe words " in God

PISTO L PORTER INSPIRES UMOC’ S -S k ip S cdnd irito , le ft , Frank R uss, Mel Borack, Bob F londers, righ t, and John Zahnow, seated, prepare fo r the U g lie s t Man on Campus contest. Much o f the humor seems to have evo lved from Shiawassee County events fea tu ring county ju s tic e s and S heriff P orte r. Photo by Gerald Carr

Shoplifting Increase Troubles Local Stores

Twenty’ students h a v e b e e n picked up fo r shoplifting within the past two to th ree w eeks, E a st Lansing p olice d etective R obert Brow n said.

T h e th efts have been m ostly of sm all item s, such as pens, e r a s e r s and s im ila r item s along with a few books, he said .

Brown said the thefts may seem sm all and insign ificant, but they add up over tim e and becom e big lo sse s to the s to re ow ners.

E a st Lansing bookstores a re the p rim e ta rg e ts , he said .

P erso n s caught w ith stolen item s con cealed on th em selves in the s to re o r walking out of a s to re with an unpaid fo r a r t ic le a re a rre s te d for sim p le larcen y , he said .

T h is m eans a fine , fin gerp rin t­ing and a perm anent cr im in a l reco rd , Brow n said , and students should think of that before taking anything.

E a st Lansing bookstores and shops sellin g sm all a r t ic le s h ire p riv ate d etectiv es to prevent p il­ferin g , he sa id , and E a st Lansing police m ake p eriod ic c h e ck s, a lso placing o ff ic e rs in the s to re s dur­ing C h ristm a s ru sh es and re g is ­tra tio n .

T h e re has been a tendency to

in c re a se the fine from $25 to $50 due to t h e in c re a se in th e fts . T h o se caught p ossib ly could be charged w i t h larcen y from a building, a felony, instead of s im ­ple larcen y , a m isdem eanor, Brow n said .

He said two p erso n s have been caught within an hour and three have been observed taking things at one tim e .

L ack of money is not the re a ­son fo r shoplifting, becau se 5 0 to

(con tinued on page 8)

Shaw, M ayo Lead Blood Drive Donors

A total of 1 ,497 pints of blood have been donated in the four days of the ROTC d rive.

Today is the la st day of the blood d riv e , being held in the D em onstration Hall b a l l r o o m from 8 a .m . to 3 p .m .

"A ll students who cam e to do­nate should be su re to bring the p e r m i s s i o n slip with th e ir p arent’ s s ig n a tu re ,” Jo e Mon­tana, B uffalo , N .Y ., sen io r and chairm an of the d rive said .

Leading m en’ s halls is E a s t Shaw with 2 2 .5 p e r cen t dona­tions.

Women’ s h a lls lead er is W est Mayo with 11.2 p er cen t.

T heta D elta Chi heads fr a te r ­n ities with 123 p e r cent dona­tions.

Alpha O m icron P i leads s o r - r i t ie s with 23 p e r cen t.

Bow er House s till leads the c o ­ops with 100 p er cen t.

T h e leading p rec in ct fo r m en’ s h a lls is E a st Shaw #6 with 56.1 p er cen t.

Chinese Unwelcome A t May Day Fete

MOSCOW [If)— Gay sp lashes of co lo red bunting decorated M os­cow Thursday fo r the May Day holiday as the cap ita l took on a f e s t i v e a i r despite the ugly sch ism with Com m unist China.

T h e o ffic ia l New China News Agency announced that R u ssia nas withdrawn an invitation to a C h in ese delegation to attend the c e le ­bration today and w itness the big parade in Red Square.

TA SS, the o ffic ia l Soviet news agency, said trad e delegations from m ore than 50 cou n tries in E urope, A sia , A frica and Latin A m erica w ill be on hand. T hey w ill have p la ce s in Red Square, a p riv ilege denied to m ost M oscow res id e n ts .

Karume Frees Z anz iba r P risoners

ZANZIBAR If)— On the h ee ls of h is union with Tanganyika, P resid en t Abeid Karum e toured the ja i ls and prison cam ps in Z anzibar Thursday and p ersonally ordered the re le a s e of 1,000D olitical p r is o n e rs .

He was made good on a p ro m ise made in a speech Wednesday that a ll but the m ajor en em ies of the people would be out of ja il in tim e to attend a May Day ce leb ra tio n Frid ay .

UN Sets Up Cyprus O bserva tion Posts

NICOSIA, Cyprus f — R eactin g sw iftly a fte r a tru ce-b reak in g sk irm ish between Greek and T u rk ish C y p rio ts, the U.N. p eace­keeping fo rce planted 10 observation p osts on the K yrenia Moun­ta in s T hu rsday in an effort to d iscou rage fu rther fighting.

Roving U .N . p atro ls had failed to stem h o stilitie s in that hottest s e c to r of a w ar which S e cre ta ry -G e n e ra l U Thant is trying now to end through a new nine-point p eace p lan.

H a r r is S e t T o A lt e r C a b in e t

Student C o n gress indicated its w illingness to work with new A ll- U niversity Student Governm ent P resid en t Bob H a rris , B ry an , Ohio, ju n ior, Wednesday night by approving h is plan fo r reo rg an ­izing the executive cab in et.

T he plan would m aintain the o ffice s of executive and adm inis­tra tiv e v ice -p re s id e n t, executive s e c re ta ry , tre a s u re r , E lec tio n s B ureau , Spartan S p irit, Student Governm ent S e r v i c e s , In te r­national C ooperation C om m ittee, Student In su ran ce , and National Student A sso ciation coo rd in ato r much as they now e x ist.

H owever, H a rr is ’ plan will di­vide the public re la tio n s depart­ment into two section s, one to deal with in tern a l a ffa irs and giving inform ation to the State News and one to handle a p ro ­posed n ew sletter and an AUSG booklet.

The plhn also c a lls for m ak­ing A cadem ic A ffa irs an execu­tive o ffice which w ill work in conjunction with the co n g ress academ ic a ffa irs com m ittee and p lacing Campus Chest and fall orientation under the O rganiza­tions B ureau .

T he only p art of the plan that m et any opposition was placing Cam pus C hest under O rganiza­tions B u reau , but, a fter H a rris explained h is reasoning, the plan p assed unopposed.

sim ply the words " in uoa we tru s t ,” which appear on the o ffi­c ia l sea l of the United S ta te s .

Gov. G eorge C . W allace of A la­bam a, how ever, urged enactm ent of a constitutional amendment that wouid undo the Suprem e C ourt’ s d ec isio n s banning o ffi­c ia l p ra y ers and required B ib le reading in public schools.

T h is would req u ire ra tifica tio n by tw o-thirds of the s ta te s .

Both the bishop and the g o v er­nor, in sep arate appearances b e - M re the com m ittee , s t r o n g l y c r itic iz e d the cou rt fo r the d e- c is io n s.

' Bishop Sheen said, "A n y tim e the court goes to the question of 'to pray or not to p ra y ,’ it e x ­ceed s its com p etency.”

W allace term ed the d ecisio n s " a s sweeping and as deadly as any ev er issued by any d ic ta ­to ria l power on the face of the e a r th ."

W allace testified that he agreed thoroughly on this m atter with B .shop Sheen, but he said:

"1 wouldn’t want to say the bishop a g re es with me on all m a tte rs . I don’t want to get the bishop in any trou ble.

" In fa c t ,” W allace added, " I don’ t think he ag rees with m e on any m atter except this o ne.”

T he widely known clergym an and the southern governor who has c a rr ie d h is s ta te s ’ righ ts cam paign against ra c ia l in te­gration into the p resid ential p r i­m a rie s of th re e s ta tes , w ere the m ost co lo rfu l w itnesses yet to appear in the hearing s, which began A pril 22 .

T he com m ittee has befo re it 146 reso lu tio n s proposing 3 5 dif­ferent fo rm s of constitutional am endm ents. M ore than 4 0 m em ­b e rs of C o n g ress have already te stified , only one of them in opposition to any amendment.

JUNIOR 500 W A R M -U P -D elta Tau D e lta s ta rts tra in in g for the annual Jun ior 500 race to be held May 23. D riv ing is Bruce T inker, w h ile Byron T reaster sw itches pushing chores w ith Bob Donaldson. Photo by George Junne

G O P C a u c u s I n H o u s e A s k s

C o l l e g e B u d g e t R e s t o r a t i o n

Concert Lnder Stars Opens South Campus Weekend

A jazz co n ce rt under the s ta rs Frid ay night will open the a c ­tiv ities of South Campus W eek­end, t h e second annual event sponsored jo in tly by C a se , W il­son, and W onders H alls .

Weekend plans include gam es and m ovies Saturday afternoon and an a ll-U n iv e rs ity ’ s tre e t dance Saturday night. All halls w ill hold open houses from 2 -5 p .m . Sunday.

T h e ja z z co n ce rt, to be m .c . d by M aurice A. C ran e, a sso cia te p ro fe sso r of hum anities, will in­clude G eorg e W est and h is A ll- S ta rs , the A ctivity Band, the Londons, and S h a rie Payne and Lou H ilfm an. It will begin ai

7 :3 0 p .m . in the area between C ase and W onders.

Among Saturday’s gam es will be a tu g -o f-w ar, a b icy cle ra c e , and an upside-down beauty con­te s t , in which the g ir ls will walk a c ro s s the stage upside down.

T h e S co ts H ighlanders and the Spartan D rill team will a ls o p e r - fo rm .

T h e T re b le m a k e rs an d the Spartones w ill play at the dance, to be held in the com plex p ark­ing lot 9 p .m . to midnight.

G en eral chairm en a r e Rick H ollander, W ilm ette, 111., sopho­m o re, and Jo an S c ia lli , B irm in g ­ham ju n io r .

T he house voted late T h u rs ­day to knock out the amendm ents proposed by the ways and m eans com m ittee to reduce college aid a llocation s by 5 per cen t.

E a r l ie r , a Republican cau cas

J e s s e P l a n s T o R e m a i n

I n A U S GJa m e s J e s s e , Buchanan junior

and lo se r in the contest fo r the A ll-U n iv ersity Student G overn­ment (AUSG) p resid ency , said he is not yet sure of his plans fo r the future except that they w ill involve student governm ent.

J e s s e said he expects to be in e ith er an executive position o r on co n g ress next y ear . He definitely intends to stay in student gov­ernm ent and do his best to m ake student governm ent e ffectiv e .

Com menting on the actions of Bob H a rr is , B ryan , Ohio, ju n io r, who h a s been moving rapidly s in ce taking over the o ffice of AUSG p resid ent, J e s s e said he w as “ glad to see action being taken ,” and added that “ I w ill help in any way that I ca n .”

R e fe rrin g to the e le c tio n T u e s- day, J e . j . said one of the re a ­sons h e lo st was b ecau se " I didn’t push hard enough,” but added that “ I have two m o re y e a rs le ft in student governm ent.

“ I am definitely intent on som e so rt of reorgan ization ,” J e s s e said , adding that his p re se n ce on the AUSG reorganization com ­m ittee would give him an oppor­tunity to present his id eas. .

" B u : ” he said , re fe rr in g to the com m ittee , " i w ill go along with . m a jority opinion.”

voated to r e s to r e the proposed cut.

T h is would re s to r e over $2 m illion to M ichigan S ta te 's bud­get and bring the total appro­p riations to $39 ,566 ,833 .

" T h e cau cu s’ position i s to stand with Gov. Romney’ s p ro ­posal on education,” A llison G reen , R -K ingston and speaker of the house, said .

“ T h e re seem ed little reason to try and support the com m ittee recom m endation b e c a u s e seem ed unlikely it would get the 56 votes n ece ssa ry to concur on the senate b i l l .”

Rep. A rnell E n g s tro m .'R -T ra ­v e rse City and chairm an of the ways and m eans com m ittee, w ill move that the house not concur with t h e co m m ittee 's re c o m ­m endations on the budget cu t, G reen said .

T h is m eans that the caucus up­held the co m m ittee’ s recom m en­dation to withhold the $190 ,000 slated for the U n iversity ’ s t ie - in with Lansing while construction is going on the new power p lant.

G reen said that the 5 p er cent

figure on the total higher edu­cation budget rep resented 30 per cent o f t h e in cre a se re co m ­mended by the governor.

R estoration o f the se n a te - approved budget would give the U n i v e r s i t y o f M i c h i g a n $ 4 4 ,086 ,139 . Wayne State would get $ 2 0 ,1 2 7 ,0 6 2 .

French President Out Of Hospital

PARIS I A1)— Crowds waved and cheered Thursday as P resid en t C h a rles De G aulle left a hos­p ital two weeks a fter he was operated on for noncancerous tu­m or of the p ro sta te gland.

D isclosin g the nature of the p resid en t’ s ailm ent for the f i r s t tim e, d octors pronounced him in exce llen t shape.

Hundreds of po lice lined the route as the president and M rs. De G aulle rode in a lim ousine from Cochin H ospital to E ly se e P a la c e .

S t u d e n t G i v e s V e r s i o n

O f S h i a w a s s e e A r r e s tBy JOANN MIKOLUSKY State News S taff W riter

"G u ilty until proven innocent,” say s Lloyd T hu rston , Sarn ia , On­ta rio , ju n io r about the altitude of the two Shiaw assee County Ju s t ic e s of the P e a ce .

T hu rston , the one student who pleaded not guilty to the charge of aiding and abetting 'to the delinquency of a m inor, spent la st Sunday and Monday in ja i l .

S h e r r i f f S a v s R a i d s N o t P l a n n e dR ecen t Shiaw assee County p o lice ra id s w ere not planned in ad­

v ance, but a sh e riff’ s deputy may have signed the com plaint against the MSU students a rres te d .

T h is is what the State News learned in a telephone interview with C lifford P o r te r , Sh iaw assee County S h eriff.

" T h e ra id was not planned in advance,” he said . “ We received a com plaint between 10 and 10 :30 p .m . Saturday night and started making a r r e s t s at about 11 p .m .”

When asked how police from Ingham County, O w osso, Corunna and o ther Shiaw assee County v illag e and township departm ents arriv ed at the party scene in l it t le m o re than a h a lf-hou r, he r e ­p lied , “ We have re a l good radio com m u nications.”

When asked who filed the com plaint against the 111 students a rre s te d at the th ree " g r a s s e r s ” going on in the a re a , he declined to answ er.

He was then asked if one of h is deputies filed the com plaint and he rep lied , " T h a t is p o ssib le .

"W e knew of the situation out th e re becau se we w ere called out

on a p arty a week b efo re . T h is was som e d istance away but in the general v ic in ity .”

S ev era l students d isclosed that the p o lice yelled at them to " g e t the h e ll out of h e re — all we want is the b e e r .’ ’ Many of the students who had sca tte re d cam e back to the sce n e and w ere a rrested when they drove out onto a d irt road, the said .

P o r te r denied that the police had used bad faith in making the a r r e s ts .

"N o p o lice o ffic e r ev er told the students th is ,” he said .At f i r s t he maintained that the room s in which the students

waited fo r arraignm ent w ere not overcrow ded and then said they may have been overcrow ded for a b r ie f period.

Som e students had charged that the s h e r iff ’ s m en had fired sev era l shots in the a ir when a c a r they had hailed fa iled to stop. He said he had no knowledge that any shots w ere fire d .

Students a lso com plained that -hey w ere not allowed to ca ll their d orm s, p aren ts or legal counsel.

“ Shortly a fte r they arrived at the ja i l a fra tern ity president

volunteered to be a spokesm an fo r the group. A l it t le la te r a dorm housem other ca lled , and he was allowed to talk to h e r .”

P o rte r said that about 1 a .m . the fra tern ity p resid ent gave h er numerous num bers to c a ll to re la y the inform ation that the students had been picked up.

"S h o rtly a fter 1 a .m . Sunday, one of our o ffic e rs notified the cam pus p o lic e ,” he added.

L t. A llen H. Andrews, J r . , departm ent of public safety , said MSU p o lice receiv ed a c a ll about 2 a.m . notifying them of the g ir ls involved. T hey w ere also advised that arraignm ent would begin about 2 :3 0 a .m ., he said .

P o r te r bee ame sh e riff in Sh iaw assee County in Jan u ary , 1963. He declined to speculate on w hether he would run again o r w hether the ra id s would have any e ffe c t on h is campaign if he did Chose to run.

"1 do think the m ajority of the people want these p a rtie s stopped,” he said .

He said that a rres tin g o ff ic e rs cla im ed that it was not n e c e ssa ry fo r him to have purchased any liquor to be guilty of the charg e and that as long as he was drinking with som eone under age he was guilty of aiding and abett­ing.

" T h e y w ere assum ing 1 knew everyone at the p arty ,” said T hu rston , “ but I only knew one person th e re .’ ’

T hu rston , 21 , said that he a - voided being caught in the ra id by driving h is c a r to the other side of the fie ld . He said that p o lice didn’ t en ter the field , but had waited fo r the students to com e out.

Thurston had rem ained with h is c a r but said four o ther p e r­sons with him had escaped by going through a swamp. It was approxim ately 2 a .m ., he said , when a p o lice c ru is e r , as it was leaving, spotted h is c a r .

Thurston d escribed the p olice as being e x trem ely rude and said they bullied the students. He said that one o ffice r was going to handcuff him as he was getting out of his c a r , and that he was ordered in and out of sev eral p o lice c r u is e r s before he was taken to Corunna.

A rriving in Corunna, he said he was put into a room with

s other students and that while

(continued on page 3)

2 Michigan State News, E a st Lansing, Michigan F rid ay , May 1, 1964_______________________ i

Immorality In The WoodworkM a s s a r r e s t s o f 1 1 1 c o l l e g e

s t u d e n t s , m o s t o f t h e m f r o m M S U ,

a t “ g r a s s e r s ” l a s t w e e k e n d h a s

p r o m p t e d a D e t r o i t l e g i s l a t o r t o

c a l l f o r a c o m m i t t e e i n v e s t i g a t i o n

o f s t a t e a l c o h o l l a w v i o l a t i o n s a t

s t a t e - s u p p o r t e d s c h o o l s .

R e p . D a n i e l W . W e s t w a n t s a

c o m m i t t e e , w i t h p o w e r t o a d m i n ­

i s t e r o a t h s , s u b p o e n a w i t n e s s e s s

a n d e x a m i n e b o o k s a n d r e c o r d s ,

t o a n s w e r s o m e q u e s t i o n s .‘ • I w a n t t o k n o w w h a t t h e s t u ­

d e n t s a r e t r y i n g t o p r o v e , ” h e

s a i d . ‘ ‘ I w a n t t o k n o w w h o i s b e ­

h i n d t h i s . I w a n t t o k n o w w h o i s

s u p p l y i n g t h e l i q u o r a n d w h y . ”

I t s e e m s a l i t t l e u n n e c e s s a r y

t o f o r m a s t a t e g o v e r n m e n t a l

c o m m i t t e e t o a n s w e r t h e s e q u e s ­

t i o n s o r t o h a n d l e l i q u o r l a w

v i o l a t i o n s .

I n a n s w e r t o W e s t ’ s q u e s t i o n s ,

w e a s k i n r e t u r n , w h a t a n y o n e - -

s t u d e n t o r e v e n l e g i s l a t o r - - i s

t r y i n g t o p r o v e b y d r i n k i n g a t a

p a r t y ? W e d o u b t t h a t t h e r e i s a

p l o t o r c o n s p i r a c y b e h i n d t h e

g r a s s e r s ” - - t h e s t u d e n t s , l i k e

o l d e r b r o t h e r s a n d s i s t e r s a n d

p a r e n t s , o f t e n g e t t o g e t h e r a n d

d e c i d e t o h a v e a p a r t y . A n d t h o s e

s t u d e n t s o v e r 2 1 b u y b e e r a n d

l i q u o r f o r t h e i r d a t e s a n d f r i e n d s

w h o a r e m i n o r s s o t h a t t h e y w i l l

h a v e s o m e t h i n g t o d r i n k , t o o .

A n d t h e S h i a w a s s e e c o u n t y p o ­

l i c e a n d j u s t i c e s o f t h e p e a c e

d o n ’ t s e e m t o n e e d a n y h e l p f r o m

L a . i s i n g i n h a n d l i n g t h e v i o l a ­

t i o n s . C i v i l l a w s a l r e a d y o n t h e

b o o k s h a v e p r o v e d a d e q u a t e t o

c o v e r t h e s i t u a t i o n , t o a t u n e o f

o v e r $ 3 , 0 0 0 i n f i n e s .

N o n e o f t h e s e p e r e n n i a l s p r i n g

“ g r a s s e r s ” h a v e o c c u r r e d o n

s t a t e - s u p p o r t e d c a m p u s e s - - f o r

t h e o b v i o u s r e a s o n t h a t c a m p u s

p o l i c e a n d a d m i n ' s t r a t i o n s a r e

a s d e f t a s t h e S h i a w a s s e e s h e r i f f

i n m o w i n g d o w n t h e s e p a r t i e s .

W e s t h a s i n d i c a t e d t h a t t h e

c o m m i t t e e w o u l d g o f u r t h e r t h a n c h e c k i n g c o l l e g e d r i n k i n g p a r ­

t i e s , i n t o i n v e s t i g a t i o n o f m a r r i e d

l i v i n g u n l t s a n d o f f - c a m p u s h o u s ­

i n g .

T h e p r o p o s e d i n v e s t i g a t i o n a n d

a n o t h e r s t a t e m e n t b y W e s t , t h a t

“ t h e s e r e c e n t s h o c k i n g e v e n t s

a n d v i o l a t i o n s a r e m u c h l i k e t h e

e p i s o d e s p u b l i c i z e d a t H a r v a r d

r e c e n t l y , ” h i n t a t a n “ i m m o r ­

a l i t y h u n t ” o n c o l l e g e c a m p u s e s ,

a n d s t r o n g l y e c h o t h e h y s t e r i a o f

t h e “ R e d h u n t s ” o f t h e M c C a r t h y

i n v e s t i g a t i o n s 1 0 y e a r s a g o .

A Lesson LearnedW i t h t h e u p r o a r o f t h e p a s t

m o n t h ’ s c a m p u s e l e c t i o n s

q u i e t e d , i t i s a p p r o p r i a t e t o g i v e

c r e d i t f o r a n e f f i c i e n t , e t h i c a l a n d

s p e e d y b a l l o t c o u n t t o t h e E l e c ­

t i o n s C o m m i s s i o n a n d t h e U n i ­

v e r s i t y D a t a P r o c e s s i n g C e n t e r .

T h e c e n t e r , w h i c h o f f e r e d i t s

s e r v i c e s f r e e t o A l l - U n i v e r s i t y

The 'Right' AtmosphereA n a t m o s p h e r e u n u s u a l f o r

M i c h i g a n S t a t e h a s p e r v a d e d

p a r t s o f t h e c a m p u s a r e a t h i s

w e e k , a s s e v e r a l e n t e r t a i n e r s

a c t i v e i n c i v i l r i g h t s m o v e m e n t s

p e r f o r m e d h e r e .

T h e c o n j u n c t i o n o f f o l k s i n g e r

J o a n B a e z ’ s a p p e a r a n c e i n L a n s ­

i n g S u n d a y a n d c o m e d i a n D i c k

G i g o r y ’ s b e n e f i t p e r f o r m a n c e

o r . c a m p u s M o n d a y p r o v i d e d a n

o p p o r t u n i t y f o r s t u d e n t s t o h e a r

s o m e s t r o n g a r g u m e n t s f o r a c t i v e

s u p p o r t o f t h e c i v i l r i g h t s s t r u g ­

g l e i n t h i s c o u n t r y .T h e g o o d t u r n o u t f o r b o t h s h o w s

i n d i c a t e s t h a t s t u d e n t s a r e a t

l e a s t t a c i t l y i n - f a v o r o f d e d i c a t e d

e n t e r t a i n e r s w o r k i n g f o r c i v i l

r i g h t s o n s t a g e .

S o u t h A f r i c a n f o l k s i n g e r

M i r i a m M a k e b a , w h o a p p e a r e d

h e r e W e d n e s d a y , i s a l s o a w o r k e r

i n r i g h t s m o v e m e n t s . S h e d e v o t e s

h e r t i m e a n d e a r n i n g s t o s u p p o r t

t h e s t r u g g l e f o r f r e e d o m o f o p ­

p r e s s e d p e o p l e i n h e r n a t i v e

c o u n t r y .

C o n s i d e r i n g t h e r e l a t i v e

s i l e n c e o f M S U s t u d e n t s a n d

f a c u l t y i n t h e c i v i l r i g h t s f i g h t ,

i t i s p e r h a p s s l i g h t l y i r o n i c t h a t

p e r f o r m e r s w h o s u b o r d i n a t e

t h e i r t a l e n t s t o t h e i r m o r a l f i g h t

s h o u l d b e s o p o p u l a r h e r e .

O r p e r h a p s t h e r e c e p t i o n g i v e n

M i s s B a e z , G r e g o r y a n d M i s s

M a k e b a i s a s i g n t h a t t h e c i v i l

r i g h t s f i g h t w i l l n o t r e m a i n t h e

s i l e n t , t e n s e t h i n g i t i s o n c a m ­

p u s a n d i n E a s t L a n s i n g .

P e r h a p s .

Red Cedar ReportBy Jim D eForest

We know of 111 students who would like to give S h e riff C lifford P o r te r of Sh iaw assee CouiTty a g reat big hand— right a c ro s s the fa c e . Don’t they honor a man who keeps h is word?

I’ve never seen sucn sham eful conduct! All those people by the pool in front of the lib ra ry watching that fem ale duck take a bath.

One Spartan we know of never m is se s an issu e of P layboy. You might say he’ s a " r a b b it” fan of that m agazine.

M IC H IG A NS T A T I

U N IV E R S IT YSTATE MEWS

M em ber A ssociated P r e s s , United P r e s s International, Inland D aily P r e s s A ssociation , A ssociated C olleg iate P r e s s A ssociation , M ichigan P r e s s A ssociation .

Published by the students of M ichigan S tate U niversity. Issued on c la ss days Monday through F rid ay during the fa ll, w inter and spring q u a rters , tw ice weekly during the

E d ito r................................................B ru ce Fab rican tA dvertising M anager.........................F re d LevineCampus E d ito r................................. G e rry HinkleyA ss’ t Campus E d ito r...........................L iz HymanE d ito ria l S taff. . .B a rb B rad ley , D aveStew art ................................................M ike KindmanSports E d ito r....................................... J e r r y Caplan

summer term; special Welcome Issue in Sep­tember.

Second class postage paid at East Lansing, Michigan.

Editorial and business offices at 341 Student Services Building, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan. Mail subscriptions payable in advance: term , $3; 2 terms, $4; 3 term s, $5; full year, $6.

Wire Editor............................. John Van GiesonNight Editor.......................... Leslie GolflstoneAsst. Adv. Mgrs . .Frank Senger J r . ,.......................................................... Arthur Langer

Circulation Manager.................... Bill MarshallNews Adviser..................................Dave Jaehnig

Point of View

Letters To The Editor

G r e g o r y ’ s S e n s e O f H u m o r

S t u d e n t G o v e r n m e n t , a n d t h e

c o m m i s s i o n m e m b e r s d e c l a r e d a

n e w A U S G p r e s i d e n t a n d s e n i o r

c l a s s s e c r e t a r y w i t h i n t h r e e

h o u r s a f t e r t h e p o l l s c l o s e d , w i t h ­

o u t a n y q u e s t i o n s .

A t l e a s t t h e f i r s t e l e c t i o n

m a r a t h o n s e r v e d a s a l e s s o n i n

e f f i c i e n t e l e c t i o n p r o c e d u r e f o r

f u t u r e e l e c t i o n s .

T o the E d ito r:

A fter attending t h e p e rfo rm ­ance of Dick G regory a n d the FreecTififi S in g e rs on A pril 27 , I was left with the im p ression that many did not re c e iv e the re a l m essag e of the event.

Then upon reading an account of the p erfo rm an ce in the State News on A pril 28 by L i n d a M ille r , I w a s thoroughly co n ­vinced.

At the p erfo rm an ce I becam e aw are of sporadic and uncoordi­nated laughter in resp onse to com m ents w h ic h stru ck h a r d blows at the contem porary sce n e . A m a jo rity of the com m ents p e r ­tained to N egroes e ith er d irec tly o r in d irec tly . My observations w ere that many whites rece iv ed only the su rfa ce sig n ificance of the com m ents by M r. G regory .

T h e headline of M iss M ille r ’ s a r t ic le read , "N eg ro C o m ed ian ’ s Quips C harm Student A udience.” T he sign ificant word in this group is "C h a r m ” . 1 do not believ e that the com m ents and Jokes w ere in­tended to " c h a r m ” anyone. Dick G reg o ry is not the type of com e­dian who m akes you laugh so that you can forg et your troubles at hom e.

R a th e r , he m akes you laugh so that you w ill admit that these c i r ­cu m stan ces do e x ist and d eter­m ine how long you will let them e x is t . T h e S tate News a r t ic le went on to q u o t e many of M r. G rego ry ’ s com m ents. Many of them w ere misquoted in such a way as to indicate that the w riter m issed the biting sign ificance of what was sa id .

It has been my b e lie f for many y e a rs that many supposedly in tel­

ligent and educated whites know very litt le about N eg ro es- how they liv e , how they think, th e ir asp iratio n s, th e ir p roblem s, e tc . The p erfo rm an ce Monday and the a r tic le Tuesday f u r t h e r con­vinced m e.

I f a ll in attendance had an un­derstanding of N egroes a n d a feeling fo r th e ir p roblem s, they may have le ft the p erform an ce amused and a bit angry but c e r ­tainly not ch arm ed . I shover to think that so much of s ign ificance was thrown out to the audience by Dick G regory a n d so litt le a c ­tually penetrated and was c a rr ie d away.

W illiam B . Daniel

Found Problems In Dorm Election

T o the E d ito r:

D orm itory e lec tio n s w ere held T u esd ay . It would seem that a fte r AUSG had such trouble with the e lec tio n , precau tions would have been taken by the dorm to insure a c o r r e c t a n d legal e l e c t i o n . G ilc h r is t , how ever, is p ossib ly the exception .

S ev era l friend s an d m yself went to vote in the dorm lobby. B y m istake , my room m ate picked up two b a llo ts . Jokingly , I picked up a handful, and com m ented that now our candidates would be su re to be elected !

We both returned the e x tra b a l­lo ts . H ow ever, t h e fact is that h e re was an open opportunity to anyone who would c a re to c a s t two, th re e , o r m ore v o tes . T h e re was no one actually watching the b allot box, and it would have been

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so sim p le to vote m ore than once it am azes m e.

T ru e , th ere was a g ir l checking off the nam es of those who had voted, but beyond th is point, no p recautions fo r an en tire ly legal election w ere taken.

A n e w proced u re defin itely needs to be found.

C arolyn K rish

Offers A Solution For Parking Woe

T o the E d ito r:

During t h e past fe w w eeks, th ere h a v e been many le tte rs c r it ic iz in g the parking situation and I think it ’ s tim e there should be som e re s e a rc h done. T he fo l­lowing suggestions a r e taken from my knowledge of the p ark­ing situation at U .C .L .A ., a p r i­m arily com m uting un iversity .

T h e re should be a set fee of b e­tween $25 and $50 p er y e a r for which a student would re ce iv e p erm issio n to park in an assigned lot, en tran ce to be gained into this lot by a ca rd -k ey fo r that lot.

Along with the card there would be a d ecal, e ith e r attached to the bum per or to a plaque to b e placed inside the windshield (fo r tra n s fe re n ce ), but in e ith er c a se , th is d ecal m ust be in full view fo r identification purposes when the v eh icle is in the lo t.

With this system in e ffe c t, the num ber of c a r s in one lot could be regulated t h u s solving t h e problem of o v er-fu ll lo ts .

T h e se p e rm its should be given out on a f ir s t com e b a s is with p rio rity given to com muting and off cam pus students.

Under this sy stem , I fee l that the volume of c a r s would be suf­fic ien tly cut as to solve the t r a f ­fic problem becau se the mone­tary ch arg e would alm ost fo rce students to unite with one another to form c a r p o o ls.

By use of such a system , the un iversity could con tro l the vol­ume of v eh icles on cam pus and s t il l get full usage of the e x is t­ing parking fa c il it ie s .

Brad Rosenberg

Conscience Head Objects To Stand

By J im DellerCI

E d ito r’ s note: John P. D e lle ra , H un ting ton , N .Y . sophomore, is the ed ito r o f "C o n s c ie n c e ,” the M ichigan State Conserva- f iv e C lub new s le tte r.

T h e word was passed A pril 27 that the State News does not like co n se rv a tism . T h is was not esp ec ia lly su rp ris in g , judging from s im ila r suggestions in previous e d ito ria ls , but seldom has the Job been d o n e with quite as much p assion as w a s in " T h e Word is P a ss e d .”

T he rep resen tation of con serv ativ e p o sitio n s— which, we must assu m e, was m ore than m erely a c a r ic a tu re — would be befitting of nothing but s ile n ce if it w ere not com mon among Jo u rn alistic and alleged sch o la rly groups; but, unfortunately, the d istortion s and fab­r ica tio n s a re common and the p re fe rred co u rse cannot always be follow ed. T hu s, as much as it is ta s te le ss to dignify such rantings with an answ er, we feel im pelled to respond.

T h e re can be no question but that we a re "p ro u d of our ancient h e rita g e ” and that we agree with Edmund B urke that "p eo p le will not look forw ard to p o sterity , who never look backw ard to th eir an­c e s t o r s ."

T he sentim ent has been exp ressed many tim es and by many fine m inds, and, the e sse n ce of ratio n ality , it d eserv es m ore than the in­tem p erate sligh t with which you honor it .

But the m o re insipient re m a rk s follow, and they might be com ic if the issu e s w ere of le s s consequence o r the author p o ssessed of le ss opportunity to know the tru th .

Opposed To Extreme Measures

C o n serv atives a re hardly "op posed to helping the poor out of their p light,” but a re m ost strongly opposed to ex trem e m easu res which presum e to know what conditions people should o r should not be in, which accep t what R u sse ll K irk recen tly d escribed as " lo s s of man­lin e ss , lo ss of freedom , lo ss of v a rie ty and profound bored om " for m a teria l benefits usually not needed and generally un su ccessfu l, and which m ea su res a re , from the outset, m ore p o litica l baiting than genuine e ffo r ts .

The solution to the sta te of poverty in this country l ie s , then, not in an em otional "w a r on p o v e rty " but in a r e a lis t ic a ssessm en t of the p roblem , encouragem ent of local e ffo rts at alleviation through co rp o ra te ventures, and in crea sed m obility of the p o v erty -strick en as a la te r re c o u rs e .

C o n serv a tiv es , a lso , a re not “ opposed to organized groups cam ­paigning fo r righ ts guaranteed under our C onstitution .” Prom inent co n serv a tiv es have long been instrum ental in achieving c iv il rights and human r ig h ts fo r m inority groups.

B a rry G oldw ater, an honorary m em ber of the NA AC P and a m em ­b e r of the U rban League, has long been at the forefront of the rights movement in A rizona. R ich ard Durant of D etro it, d e s c r i b e d as "so m e tim e s B ir c h e r ,’ ’ has been constantly active in the local NAACP in effecting solutions to Negro p ro b lem s.

F ina l Charge Baseless F in a lly , s im ila rly b a s e le ss is your charge that con serv ativ es are

"op p osed to allowing underdeveloped a re a s to e x e r c is e th e ir righ ts to freedom b ecau se they may m ake som e m istak es in the p ro c e s s .”

R ecen t evidence indicates that the natives of theCongo, a fter much bloodshed and m isery , a re ea g er fo r increased B elg ian guidance as they seek e sca p e from a freedom they a re incapable of managing. T he natives of New Guinea, som e of whom had to be warned by heli­copter-drop ped lea fle ts recen tly not to “ eat the cand id ates,” lik e­w ise d e s ire renew ed influence by th eir fo rm er m other country, N etherlands.

O bviously, these people, i l l i te r a te and many s t il l savage, w ere incapable of taking p art in any such election determ ining national destiny as was forced upon them by theU .N . and a few extrem e na­tio n a lis ts . The New G uineans, in fa c t, w ere denied th e ir inherent right to choose th eir p o litica l future when the United Nations in e f­fect presented the a re a to Indonesia a fte r a m ock p le b isc ite .

A dm ittedly, these a re "in hum ane” and " ir r a t io n a l” v iew s.B u tin your top sy-turvy world of tw isted reaso n , inhumanity and irra tio n ­ality a re obviously good. We go even so fa r a stray as to p resen t our view s to a voluntary audience: f re e from the forced su bsid ies sus­taining other opinion c e n te rs .

Asks Hannah To A ir ViewsT o the E d ito r:

A week ago John A. Hannah was o ffered a l i f e tenure as P resid en t of M ichigan S ta te U ni­v e rs ity . I fe e l th is was the high­e s t tribute we could pay to this g re a t m an. He is not only resp o n ­sib le fo r the growth of M ichigan S tate but fo r the m aintenance of a fine academ ic standard.

A recen t l e t t e r in the State News ca lled fo r com m uting stu­dents to w r i t e le tte rs to D r. Hannah and sta te th e ir ob jections to the new parking regulations that will go into effect next fa ll. T h e le tte r a l s o ca lled on D r. Hannah to ad d ress the com m ut­ing students.

1 am su re that the authors of that le tte r as well as m y self and the com m uting students know that D r. Hannah does not have to give h is re a so n s fo r the new parking reg u lations o r address us as an assem bled group.

I know we cannot change these reg u latio n s, but if D r. Hannah ad d resses the com m uting stu ­d ents, it will once again show that

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he has not forgotten the idea that made him so resp ected — “ N ever sim ply cru sh the issu es brought up by the student body.”

I now appeal to the man who has sefv ed us so w ell, D r. John A. Hannah, to ask the com muting students to assem b le at a c e r ­tain p lace and tim e and th ere p re ­sent his plan fo r the new parking regu lations and hear the student view s on that plan.

R ich ard A. Goodrick

Letter PolicyL e tte rs should not be longer

than 300 w ords, and should be typed double spaced if p o ssib le . N am es and ad d ress should also be included. No unsigned le tte rs w ill be printed , but nam es may be withheld if we feel th ere is reaso n .

The S ta te News re s e rv e s the right to edit le tte rs to fit space req u irem en ts.

Michigan State News, E a s t Lansing, Michigan Frid ay , May 1, 1964

Could Thwart ClearanceO l y m p i c + P i c n i c -

U n i o n B o o k S t o r e U n i o n B o o k S t o r e U n i o n B o o k S t

A w e S t J M o y B a r J o b s O l y m p n i c F o r B r o d yA rre s ts fo r c iv il o ffenses dur­

ing a student’ s co llege c a r e e r are potential h indrances la te r in l ife , U n iv ersity o f f i c i a l s warned T u esd ay .

T h e e ffe c ts of S a t u r d a y ’ s " g r a s s e r ” in Shiaw assee County, which ended in the a rre s t of 111 stu d en ts,i. w ere d iscussed at a m eeting of the Faculty C om m it­te e on Student A ffa irs . A dm inis­tra to rs em phasized a f t e r the m eeting that a r r e s ts can hinder a student in applying fo r Jobs or graduate sch ool.

Edwin B . F itz p a trick , a ssistan t d ire c to r of the placem ent bureau, said th ere a re cer ta in types of jo b s which req u ire s e c u r i t y c le a ra n c e s .

" I n defense jobs which req u ire secu rity c le a ra n c e s f r o m the governm ent, an a rr e s t fo r any­thing but a m inor parking v io la ­tion can p ra c tica lly d isqualify a p e rso n ,” he said . "E v e n if a person does not need a secu rity c le a ra n ce when he is h ired , he may not get a job if an a r r e s t would prevent him from re c e iv ­ing a secu rity c le a ra n ce at som e future d ate.”

F itz p a tr ick has been an in te r­v iew er for two firm s holding de­fen se c o n tra c ts .

" T h e r e a re som e c a s e s when we would actually h ire a p erson , with h is em ploym ent contingent on secu rity c le a ra n ce from the governm ent. If t h e c le a ra n ce

FT A Clubs To Meet Here

Student Education A ssociation w ill sponsor a field day S a tu r­day fo r 350 M ichigan high school students in terested in education as a c a r e e r .

T h e Fu tu re T e a ch e rs of A m er­ica field day will co n sist of a m orning sess io n of sp eeches and d iscu ssio n , tours of the campus and p artic ip ation in a c tiv itie s .

Students w ill be w elcom ed at 9 a .m . in the E rick so n Kiva by D orothy Mann, Lansing Jun­io r and p resid ent of SEA , and S h irley B re h m , in stru cto r in edu­cation and sponsor of the event.

T e r r e n c e J . C arey , a sso c ia te d ire c to r of adm issions and sch ­o la rsh ip s , w ill speak on "T h e A dm issions O utlook.” Keith An­d erson , coord inator of student advising in education, w ill an­sw er questions on te a ch e r p re ­p aration .

MSU Gives Tests For CPS Ratings

MSU has been selected as one of 78 o ffic ia l te st c e n te rs in the U .S . and Canada to conduct the 14th annual C ertified P ro fe ss io n ­al S e cre ta ry exam inations today and Saturday.

T h e exam s w ill be given in B e r - key H all from 8 :30 a .m . to 5 :30 p .m . T h is w ill m ark the 11th tim e that MSU has been designated as a C PS te st c e n te r .

S in ce 1951, by p assing the s ix - p art exam ination, 2 ,7 3 7 s e c r e ­ta r ie s have achieved the C PS r a t ­ing which has becom e the tested standard of p ro ficien cy fo r the s e c re ta r ia l p ro fessio n , reco g ­nized by m anagem ent, educators and s e c r e ta r ie s alike.

The te st co v e rs in tw o-hour segm ents: p ersonal adjustm ent and human re la tio n s , b u sin ess ad m inistration , b u sin ess la w , s e c re ta r ia l accounting, s e c r e ­ta r ia l sk ills and s e c re ta r ia l pro­ced u re s.

doesn’t com e through, th e re is nothing a firm can do about i t .”

M ost of the students a rres te d at the g r a s s e r w ere charged with illeg a l p o sse ssio n of liquor or supplying liquor to m inors.

“ T h is might not be a te rr ib ly ser io u s a r r e s t on a p erso n ’ s re c o rd ,” F i t z p a t r i c k sa id . "H o w ev er, a r r e s ts fo r drunk- an d -d iso rd erly conduct o r d is -

Shiawassee(con tinued from page 1)

one p o lice o ffic e r guarded the door another one took nam es.

Thurston said that the o ffic e rs refu sed to p erm it anyone to m ake a phone c a ll and ignored all questions com ing from students. However, he said , what rea lly angered him was that im m edi­ately a fte r being ordered to put out a c ig a re tte and doing so , two o ff ic e rs lit c ig a re tte s and stood th e re sm oking them .

T h u rsto n , who said he wanted to stick up fo r h is r ig h ts, said that im m ed iately after pleading innocent he was booked, ordered to s trip h is c lo th es , put in uni­form and taken to a c e l l .

He said that when he pleaded innocent he was told by the ju s ­tice of the p eace that he would have a hearing at 9 :3 0 Monday m orning. However, said T h u rs ­ton, he rem ained in ja i l all day Sunday and Monday, and the only com m ent anyone would m ake to him on Monday was that his judge hadn’ t arriv ed y e t.

He said that at 6 p .m . Mon­day he was taken in front of a ju s tic e of the p eace who asked him the sam e questions he was asked when he was a rre s te d — w hether he wanted to plead in­nocent or guilty .

He said the Ju stice of the p eace told him if he pleaded innocent he would have to h ire h is own law yer and fight the c a s e h im se lf.

T hurston said the a r r e s t and the treatm en t of the students was "e n t ir e ly unfair” . He said , " I have never heard of o r seen anything lik e i t .”

turbing the p eace would be a big blot on anyone's re c o rd .”

F itz p a trick also pointed out that p o lice ad m inistration m a jo rs woùld be g reatly affected by an a r r e s t on th e ir re c o rd s .

" I t goes without saying that po­l ic e work re q u ire s a c lean back­ground,” he pointed out.

Numerous governm ent agen­c ie s a lso req u ire secu rity c le a r ­a n ces.

N early every graduate and law school application asks if a stu­dent has ev er been a rre s te d . If a student says he has been a r ­re s ted , sch o o ls usually check into the c irc u m sta n ce s .

A com bination Olym pic and p icn ic , ca lled an "O ly m p ic ,” w ill be the Brody group of re s id e n ce h a lls ’ contribution to spring term as they p resen t “ Brodyland by Day” Saturday. R ev e ille at 10 a .m . w ill signify the s ta r t of the fe s tiv itie s , and a sp ecia l din­ner in Brody will end the a ffa ir at 5 p .m .

Com petition will include vol­

leyball, a scavenger hunt, an egg throwing c o n t e s t , an o b stacle ra c e , a tug of w ar, a frizb y throwing co n te st, a lim bo con­te st , and a p ie eating co n test. T he com petition will be held on the lawn of the Brody group.

A picn ic atm osphere w ill be supplied by the Brody G r il l , which w ill have a con cessio n stand outdoors during the day.

Jacobsons

Miss Lansing 1 Çm m MlTo Be Picked j

A pplications f o r the M i s s 1

I_ I!i nLansing pageant must be post­m arked by m idnight. In form a­tion may/ be obtained from the Ju n io r C ham ber of C om m erce o ffice at the Lansing C iv ic C en­te r , between noon and 5 p .m .

Annual sp onsors of the M iss L ansing a c tiv itie s w ill hold a party fo r the 12 local f in a lis ts , to be chosen Monday and T uesday. They w i l l com pete f o r M iss Lansing t it le on May 23 .

T h e party w ill be held at the R oosev elt Rotunda Room on May 12. Attending w ill be M iss L an s­ing of 1963, M ary Ja n e K lu iber, M ayor W illard I. Bow erm an of Lansing anC M ayor Gordon L . T h om as of E a st Lansing .

R obert C a rey from WILS R a ­dio Station w ill be the m aster of cere m o n ie s fo r the fin a ls on May 2 3 .

Israeli Students Note Anniversary

I s r a e l ’ s sixteenth Indepen­dence Day w ill be celeb ra ted by the Is ra e li Students O rganization at 8 p .m . Saturday in the Union B a l l r o o m . T he Is r a e l i Hoote­nanny Quintet and E re lla B a r - L ev , I s r a e l i folk s in g e rs , w ill p erfo rm .

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Michigan State News, E ast Lansing, Michigan Frid ay, May 1, 1964

I n t r a m u r a l N ew sMEN'S

D eadline All R esid en ce Hall and Inde­

pendent X eam Tennis ro s te r s a re due in the Intram ural O ffice by 5 this afternoon.

F ro te rn ity Tenn is Thanks to the w eatherm an f r a ­

tern ity tennis finally g o t under­way Wednesday night. Som e of the m atches w e r e played from the point at which th ey h ad b een called the previous evening. Defending cham pions T heta Chi proved that

they are still the team to beat, as they won their doubles match 6-0 , 6-0 over Beta Theta Pi, while one of their singles team members, Bob Borosage, de­feated Gerry Butterfield of Phi Kappa Tau 6-0 and 6-1.

The other singles match was re-scheduled for Friday. D.T.D. and L.C.A. last year’s second place finishers showed that they are determined to win it outright this year. Both won their doubles matches D.T.D. defeating S.A.E.

(con tinued on page 5)

Trip le Troub le A w a its Batsm enS ta te ’ s b aseb all team is in

s to re fo r another th ree-g am e weekend of tough B ig Ten com ­petition .

T h is afternoon at 3 :30 the Sp ar­tans fa ce league defending cham ­pion Illin o is o n O ld C o lleg eF ie ld . S a t u r d a y D a n n y L itw h iler’s ch a rg es have a doubleheader with Purdue, cu rren t league lead er, beginning at 1:00 p.m .

Illin o is , with only s ix le tte r - men back from last season ’s

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championship team has sunk to the league’ s c e l la r with an 0 -3 m ark.

lllin l Coach L ee E ilb ra ch t is faced with a m ajor rebuilding problem this season and isn ’ t too op tim istic about his team ’ s chances of repeating as cham ­pions o r of even being in con ­tention.

" I don’t expect Illin o is to be a contender in the B ig T en this sea so n ,” he said , "A nd I’ ll be surp rised if we f i n i s h a b o v e ,5 0 0 .”

Among the re g u la rs back from last season ’ s 2 1 -1 5 c lu b a re right fie ld er Rich C allaghan, R o n M auer in cen te r field and ca tch e r J e r r y B a k e r . J im Vopicka, a

good glove man, anchors the in­field from his shortstop position.

E ilb rach t, now in his thirteenth season as baseball coach, has to develop a pitching staff. Three righthanders, Craig Mundt, Bill

Tookey and J e r r y Weygandt could be ju st what he needs to do so .

The Boilermakers of Purdue, currently in first place with a 3-0 mark, look as though they might stay there for awhile.

Lacrosse Club Faces Irish Seeks Season’s First W in

Coach Joe Sexon, whose team finished ninth last season, has lost only two regulars and the Rivets are expected to show vast improvement over their 5 -1 0 Big Ten mark last spring.

The defense is rated better this year and pitching should improve with Bob Purkhiser, Joe

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The MSU la c ro s s e club goes to South Bend th is weekend to play N otre Dam e. The Spartans lo st to the Ir ish e a r l ie r in the se a ­son in ov ertim e 1 0-8 .

The Spartans have in jury prob­lem s which could hurt them . A lf Norwood is nursing a leg in jury, B ill Hagger has a few sep arated rib s and Chet G rabow ski, who has been doing a good steady job at goal a ll season also w ill be out of the lin e up. Freshm an goalie B ill R a s te tte r w ill be in goal fo r S tate rep lacing Grabow­sk i.

The Spartans have no coach, but they plan to keep developing and hope the popularity of la­crosse increases so that the University will recognize the club and help them out. The players are not so much concerned with winning as they are with how many players come out.

The players are pleased with the development of midfieldmen Rocky Ry i.i, Randy Boros and Rip Turn'.''', who are all developing into fine players. Ryan and Boros q re sophom ore, while Turn nr is a freshman.

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The undefeated S tate women’s tennis team ta k es on the U niver­sity of M ichigan at 2 p .m . today.

The n etettes a re seeking th eir third v ic to ry . T hey hold d ecisio n s over Purdue and Grand Rapids Ju n io r C o lleg e .

The G reen and White a re led by Captain Kay F o r r e s t and coached by M iss L u c ille D ailey . T e a m m em bers a r e J a n a V edets, M aureen a n d M arcia S t r a i t , H eather Hudson, Margo G ilson , Pat C onger, Sue Thom son, Kathy Neff and Sue B o rsa .

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SO U N D O F SPEEDSee! AJ. Foyt W in A Spectacular Victory A t Daytona

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Driven AT THE SOUND OF SPEED

SEE! “ SCARAB” Put Through T r ia ls At Famous R iverside Race Course In C a lifo rn ia

Sound Of Speed Shown 2 nd At 9:40

Cagglano, Creighton Burns and Mike Purvis giving us starting depth.

Purkhiser, also a star on Pur­due’s basketball team, led the Big Ten last season with a 0.74 ERA as a sophomore.

Dick Lui, a third baseman, basketballer Mel Garland at se­cond base and backstop Dave Mckenzie top the Boilermaker hitting attack.

Spartan hitters will probably see Purkhiser and Purvis, while State Coach Lltwhiler has named John Ellward and Bill Collins as probable starters.

Friday John Krasnan Is ex­pected to oppose Illinois.

C h ilje a nT h i r d I n B a t R a c e

Michigan State baseball captain Mai Chiljean, who was having trouble with his hitting in the early stages of the season due to a hand Injury, has broken out with a rash of base hits in league com­petition.

The s e n i o r Shortstop h a s moved into third place in the Big Ten batting race, with a six for eleven performances In t h r e e games. His .545 average puts him right behind Arnie Chonko (.600) and A1 Silverman (.571) both of Ohio State.

Rlghtfielder D i c k B i l l i n g s , whose-home run Tuesday helped the Spartans to a 5-4 victory over the University of Detroit, is In seventh place with a .455 aver­age, w h i l e Joe Porrevecchio (.357) holds down the 18th spot.

Crew Club Rematch Set

The State crew club faces Cul­ver Academy this afternoon at the school’s private lake in the first of a "rem atch weekend” of racing.

Last weekend Culver defeated the Spartan crew by one-half a length at Lake Lansing.

Saturday State meets Wayne State on the Detroit River. Last Saturday the Tartars topped MSU by three lengths at Lake Lansing. The race Is State’ s first on a riv­er and should serve as a good warmup for the club’s appear­ance In the Philadelphia National . Regatta, May 8 and 9, on the Quaker City’s Schuylkill River.

W hat’s th is j a z zabout 3 .

s e c r e t

T H EP I R A T E S O E

P E N Z A N C EB y W . S . G i l b e r t a n d A r t h u r S u l l i v a n

M A Y 2 1 - 2 3 , 1 9 6 4

M S U A U D I T O R I U M

Sponsored by the Departments of MUSIC and SPEECH

Michigan State News, E a st Lansing, Michigan Frid ay, May 1, 1964 5

Meet Saturday

Lewis Quits Track Team

Sherman L e w is , fo o tb a ll A ll* Am erican and track team cap* ta in , has ended h is a th le tic career a t M ich igan State.

L e w i s , according to track coach F ra n D ittrich , decided to quit a fte r he was unable to get in shape fo r the tra ck sea so n .

“ He’ s been bothered by a groin in ju ry ,” D ittrich said “ and with only two w eeks of p ra c tic e le ft b efo re the B ig T en Champion­ships he decided it was b e st to * c a ll it q u its ."

D ittrich has appointed sen io r h a lf-m ile r a n d c r o s s country standout Ron Horning acting tra ck cap tain .

During h is tra ck c a r e e r , Lew is had tw ice won the B ig T en broad jump crow n and once won the indoor 3 0 0 -y a rd dash t it le .

* * *

Spartan cinderm en w i l l have revenge in mind when the O h io State B u ckeyes i n v a d e Ralph Young F ie ld fo r a dual m eet to ­m orrow afternoon.

F ie ld events w ill begin at 1 p .m . with running events slated to s ta r t at 1:30 p .m . T h e re w ill be only one other hom e tra ck m eet th is y e a r , b esid es Saturday’ s m atch.

T h e m eet w ill m ark the f ir s t outdoor con feren ce e ffo rt of the season fo r MSU, but the B u ck­ey es re g is te re d a 7 8 -6 3 trium ph when the squads m et atColum bus during the w inter Indoor seaso n .

T he G reen and W hite a re in b e tter o v era ll condition fo r to ­m o rro w 's m eet than they w ere when they m et Ohio S tate indoors, but the tem p orary lo ss of top 440 man John P a rk e r w ill ham per the S p artan s.

P a rk e r suffered a slight m us­c le pull in the Penn R elays and w ill be forced to m iss Saturday’s action .

Fu lly ready fo r com petition, how ever, is s p e e d s t e r Bob M oreland who pulled up lam e ir

the 100-yard dash p re lim in a rie s at Penn.

D espite the fact that the B uck­ey es captured 11 of 15 f ir s t -p la c e s against the Spartans in th e ir dual m eet, they could do no b e tte r than seventh p lace in the team s c o r ­ing at the B ig T en league m eet.

MSU placed third in the B ig T en m eet behind champion M ich­igan and W isconsin .

A w elcom e addition to the re g - ,ular lineup fo r the Spartans w ill be d istancem an Dick Sharkey who led State in c r o s s country , but m issed m ost of the indoor track season due to a leg in jury.

| Gymnast Curzi j 1 Makes ‘AList 1

Sophom ore gymnast J im C u rzi has been named to the 1964 c o lle ­giate a ll-A m erica n gym n astics team by the N ational A ssociation of C ollege G ym nastic C oaches.

C urzi was given a third team b erth in both the all-arou nd com pe­tition and the long h o rse vaulting.

Only Southern C a lifo rn ia 's Ron B arak and P e n n S tate ’ s Ed Isa b e lle w ere rated higher in the all-around event than the sopho­m ore standout.

B a ra k was selected as the country’ s top gym nast and was named to the f i r s t team in the high b a r and p a ra lle l b a rs , as well as the a ll-arou nd . Southern Illin o is ’ Rusty M itchell t o o k two f ir s t team b erth s, the floo r e x e rc ise and tum bling.

Y a le ’ s R u ss M ills (sid e h o rse ), M ichigan 's G ary Erw in (tram po­line), S y ra cu se ’ s Sid O glesby (vaulting) and C h ris E vans of A rizona S tate (s till rings) round out the f i r s t team se le c tio n s .

Other B ig T en gym nasts named to the th ree squads w ere: Iowa’ s G lin G a ilis (second in rin g s), M ichigan’ s Arno L a s c a r i (third on p a ra lle l b a rs ) and G eorge H ery of Iowa (tied fo r third on tram p oline).

M ichigan captured a c lean sw eep in the tram poline with Erw in on the f ir s t team , John H amilton on the second and F red Sanders tied with H ery fo r th ird .

Golfers Return To Home Turf

W r e s t l e r s H o n o r T r i o , B y i n g t o n ’ 6 4 C a p t a i n

Golf fans in the area w ill get th e ir one chance to watch the Spartan golf team in action this Saturday.

The Spartans w ill play host to four other B ig T en team s fo r their only home m eet of the y e a r and w ill tee off at 8 a .m .

The G reen and W h i t e f a c e M i c h i g a n , Indiana, W isconsin , and N orthw estern in a pentagonal event that should be one of the big m eets of the spring. M ichigan

$132,232 TakenW E S T B U R Y , N. Y .,üP)-The

m ystery winner of a world’ s r e c ­ord $132,232 twin double finally put in an appearance Thursday at Roosevelt Racew ay to c la im the p r iz e . He turned cut to be M ichael Sherm an, a New Je r s e y trotting ho rse ow ner, who will share the money with s ix other p erso n s.

and Indiana a re two of the toughest tea m s in the co n feren ce, while both W iátonsin and N orthw estern have fielded team s that a re im ­proved over 1963.

S ta te , 2 - 4 o v era ll, w i l l b e hoping to im prove its B ig Ten m ark , which now stands at 1 -1 . Coach John Brotzm ann fe e ls that while h is club has a good chance of downing the B ad g ers and the W ild cats, M ichigan and Indiana p resen t a much g re a te r o b sta c le .

T h e Sp artans had trouble with th e ir short gam e during th e ir la st dual m eet against Purdue, and the hope is that they have im proved enough to make a good showing th is Saturday. However.

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the p ra c tic e green is not in shape yet so it is possib le that such im provem ent may be slight.

T h e top four of Phil M arston, Bob M eyer, D ick M arr and Shep R ichard a re se t to s ta r t . M ar­ston fire d h is best rounds of the y ear at Purdue la st week, shoot­ing a 7 5 -7 3 fo r 148 total and leaving h is season average at 75 .9 .

Two o ther startin g positions are s t i l l up fo r grabs, with Doug Hankey, Doug Swartz and F red M ackey leading the pack. A lso.

sophom ores Ken Benson and Dave M ille r , and ju nior Ron Hartm an are c lo se enough to make runs at the No. 5 and No. 6 sp ots.

Karras Inks Pact(U PI)— A lex K a rra s has signed

a two y e a r con tract with the De­tro it L ions ca llin g for a sa la ry of about $20 ,000 a y e a r .

K a rra s is the p layer who was indefinitely suspended fo r gam bl­ing on football gam es— a su s­pension that was lifted recen tly

M ichigan S t a t e w r e s t l e r s Monty Byington, Jo e Ganz and H om er M cC lure a r e the re c ip ­ien ts of annual awards p assed out to Spartan m atmen at season ’ s end.

Byington was e lected team ca p -

Travel Series Views Skiing

John Ja y , noted sp o rts photog­rap h er, w i l l p resent a f ilm - lectu re , "C a tc h a Skiing S ta r ’ ’ at 8 p .m . Saturday in the Auditor­ium.

T h e W orld T ra v e l S e r ie s mo­tion p ictu re fea tu res the insp ired skiing of S tein E rik sen on the slopes of the 7 ,000-fo o t Snow R iv ­e r Mountains in A u stra lia .

T ra v e l le c tu re r Ja y w ill also take h is audience on a film ed tour of a number of A m e rica 's famous ski r e s o r ts in M aine, V erm ont, W isconsin and Colorado.

T ic k e ts fo r the trav el p rogram w ill be av ailab le at the Auditor­ium box o ffice .________________

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tain fo r the season ju st concluded, Ganz was p resented the team ’ s L ead ersh ip Award and M cC lure was given the Ja c o b s Award fo r being the team ’ stop p o in t-g e tter .

Byington was S ta te ’ s reg u lar at 157 pounds and won four and lost nine as M ichigan S tate com ­piled a 5 -5 -1 dual m eet re co rd . H e 's a sen io r from Lansing and a graduate of E a ste rn High who’ s m ajorin g in physical education.

Ganz w restled at both 130 and 137 pounds th is past season , win­ning five tim e s and losing five tim e s . He’ s a ju nior from T renton m ajoring in m ath em atics.

M cC lu re, ju n ior from T u lsa , O kla ., Edison High School, was S ta te 's heavyweight andcom piled a re co rd of seven v ic to r ie s , two lo sse s and five draw s.

Intramural News

(con tinued from page 4)

6-1 and 6 -0 while L .C .A . bested Sigm a Nu 6 -2 and 6-1 but as the draw would have it , D .T .D . and L .C .A . w ill m eet the next round in doubles.

WOMEN’ SN o tice

Open Swim will be held on S a t­urday from 11:30 a.m . until 2 p .m . instead of the custom ary 3 p .m . and 6 :3 0 p .m . - 9 p .m . It w ill not take p lace during the evening and w ill c lo se an hour e a r l ie r in the afternoon.

Deadl ine All B e s t B a ll Golf Tournam ent

e n tr ie s a re due in the Women’ s In tram u ral O ffice by 3 this a fte r ­noon. T he tournament w ill begin next T hursday at 4 p .m . ________

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6 Michigan State News, E ast Lansing, Michigan Frid ay , May 1, 1964 *

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There w ill be a 2 5 c s e r v ic e and bo o kk eep in g ch a rg e if th is ad is not paid w ithin one w eek.

The S tate News does not perm it ra c ia l o r relig ious d iscrim ination in its ad­v ertising c o l u m n s . The State News w ill not accept advertising from persons d iscrim in atin g against re ­ligion, r a c e , c o l o r or national origin .

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Where the May Action Is

3165 E . MICHIGAN IV 2-1311

★ AutomotiveO LD SM O BILE 1963, F85 C u tlass co n v ertib le . White w alls , auto­m atic floo r sh ift, con so le , bucket s e a ts . $2250. 3 3 7 -2202 . 22FO RD $ 6 3 G alax ie station wagon. C ru ise -O -M a tic . P o w e r s t e e r ­ing, rad io, h eater, luggage ra c k . $ 2 ,2 0 0 . S a c r if ic e 6 7 6 -5 9 7 3 . 23M ERCU RY I960 Com m uter S ta - tion Wagon. 9 -p a ssen g er. M ulti­d riv e . Radio, h eater, white wall t i r e s . Pow er s t e e r i n g a n d b ra k e s . E xcellen t body, m o to r, t i r e s and fin ish l! $1,285. A1 Ed­w ards C o. 3125 E . S a g i n a w (North of Fran d or.) C22RA M BLER 1960. Custom 4-d oo r sedan. 6 -cy lin d e r, s t a n d a r d tra n sm issio n , rad io. Reclin ing s e a ts . 4 8 7 -5 8 8 0 . 23AUSTIN H EA LEY $ 5 5 . M o t o r and body in excellen t condition. Burgundy. T ir e s and battery in fine condition. Must be seen to be ap p reciated . P rivate o w n e r . S ee Saturday and Sunday at 1705 E . M ichigan A ve. or c a l l IV 5 -7 0 2 2 a fte r 9 pm. 22BUICK E le c tra co n v ertib le .C u s- tom built, genuine leath er, buc­k e ts , p o w e r , a ir-conditioned . $1275. Phone 332-5327 . 2 5K A R M A N N -G H IA C on vertib le. B la c k . $35 tr a i le r hitch and se a t b e lts . Must s e ll . $795. TU 2 -7 3 9 8 evenings. , 26FORD 1959, 4-door sedan, V -6 . Automatic tran sm issio n . R adio, h e a te r . Good condition. $600 . C a ll afte r 2 :3 0 . 355-7997 . 23RENAULT 1959. L ike newTTow m ileage. 5 excellen t M ichelin t i r e s . New b ra k es, shocks. $400 . 332-0911. 22PLYMOUTH 4-d oor, 1958. V -8 , s tic k ; rad io, heater and white w alls . C lean . $275. Phone 3 5 3 - 1373. 22

C H EV RO LET IMPALA C o n v erti- b le , 1958. 348, power glide, full pow er, rad io, h eater, white side w a lls . $750. IV 4 -0 2 2 9 . 22C H EV R O LET 1 9 5 5, exce llen t running condition. 2-d oo r, stand­ard sh ift, s ix cy lin d er. V ery e co ­nom ical. Phone 337-2190. 23‘ 62 FO RD C O N V ER TIBLE. B lue and w hite. Pow er steerin g , low m ileage, excellen t condition. 1 ow ner. 33 7 -7 1 3 4 . 22RA M BLER 1960 Deluxe Stand- ard ‘ ‘ 6” . 4 -d o o r, good t ir e s , c le a n . $600 . IV 5 -2 0 2 6 . C a ll a fter noon. 26TRIUM PH 1959 f R S .M e t a l ic m a - roon, exce llen t condition. See in McDonel p a r k i n g lo t. $1195. Phone 353-1413. 25

FORD 1955. Overhauled recen tly . Good condition. A buy at $75. Phone 3 3 2 -0 2 0 3 even ings. 24 TH UN DERBIRD C O N V E R T IBL E, 1959. B la c k . A ll pow er, super t i r e s . 337-1110 o r Lam bda Chi Alpha. 128 H asle tt. 22VALIANT 1961. W hite; 4-d oor, V -2 0 0 . F lo o r sh ift, Radio, E x ­ce llen t condition. Must s e l l . 3 3 2 - 3936 a fter 5 pm . 24

VOLKSWAGEN 1962 sedan. E x - cellen t condition. Low m ileage. O riginal owner ju st bought new c a r . Phone 355-1071. 22O LDSM OBILE 1957 C on vertib le. Sharp . Red a n d w hite. L o w m ileage, power s tee rin g , radio and h ea ter. IV 9-3124 . 23M lR iU R Y C O N V E R T I B L E , 1957. 330 H .P . M arauder engine, s t ic k j o v erd riv e. Radio, heater and other e x tra ’ s . Must be seen . IV 2 -0 0 5 5 a fte r 4 pm . 22

SPRING-$ - SAVERS‘ 63 C H E V R O L E T , super sp ort, 2 -d o o r, hardtop. ■ • ■

$2290’ 61 CH EVRO LET Im p ala , 2 - door, hardtop, V -8 , autom atic tra n sm issio n , R & H, b lack . .

$1,590

*62 F O R D G alax ie X L .h d tp ., R & H, autom atic tra n sm is ­sion , P S , bucket s e a t s . . $1,790

‘63 VOLKSWAGEN red , b a r­gain p riced at..................... $1 ,390

‘ 59 ENGLISH FORD L t. blue c o lo r , white vinyl in te rio r , R & H, excep tionally c lea n . . .

$490.

J A C K DYKS TR A FORD

(Open Mon, T h u rs , F r i 't i l 9 ) N. C edar at Grand R iv er

IV 2 -1 6 0 4

★ Automotive*62 C H EV RO LET IM P A L A , Sport Coupe. C lean , econ om ical. $1650 o r b est o ffe r . C all Dave at 3 3 2 - 5736.___________________________ 22

SPARTAN MOTORS C H EV R O LET 1963Monza 2 -d o o r; 4 -sp eed tra n sm issio n . Low m il­eage . Two to choose from .

1957 M ERCURY M O N TEREY 2 - door, hardtop. A utom atic tra n s­m iss io n . Pow er s tee rin g a n d b ra k e s . No ru st. E x tra sharp .

C H EV RO LET 1962 C o rv a lr . 4 - d o o r , 3 - s p e e d tra n sm issio n . Sharp.

1960 FO RD FALCON, 2 -d o o r. C lean , econom ical tran sp o rta ­tion.

3000 E . M ichiganIV 7-3715 c

M E R C M y 1965 Station Wagon, M eteo r. 9 -p a sse n g e r; sm all V -8 engine. Autom atic tra n sm issio n . R adio, white wall t i r e s . Pow er s tee rin g and b ra k e s . L ike n e w throughout!! Only $ 2 ,285 . A1 Ed­w ards C o . 3125 E . S a g i n a w (North of F ran d o r.) C22B tJIC K . 1951, ¿ -d o o r hard -top . Dynaflo. G o o d condition. $90 .Phone 3 5 5 -7 9 5 8 .______ 22PLYMOUTH 1959, custom wagon. ‘ ‘ V -8 ” autom atic. Pow er b ra k e s , exce llen t body. Must s e l l . 3 7 2 - 2284 a fte r 5 pm . 22FO RD $ 5 9 4 -d o o r hardtop, c le a n . New rebu ilt tra n sm issio n , power s teerin g a n d b ra k e s . $550 . IV 9 - 189 5 . 25JTb T s E x c l u s i v e l y C hevrolet U sed C a r s . 1957 and 1959 Con­v e r tib le s . V -8 A utom atics. New white vinyl tops. F o r the sh arp est used Chevys in town, com e out to J . B . ’ s and brow se around. 2801 S . C ed a r. CPLYM OUTH 1953. Rusted, but dependable and econ om ical to run. E x ce lle n t local tra n sp o rta ­tion. C a ll 3 5 5 -0 7 7 4 . $75. 22T H 0N £)E R B lftD 1959 h a r d t o p . B lu e . E x ce lle n t condition.Buying M ustang, m ust s e l l . $1,250. P r ic e negotiab le. 4 8 9 -7 9 5 0 . 22AUSTIN H EA LEY 1957, 100-6 . New paint, b ra k e s , rad io , e tc . 33 7 -0 6 5 6 days; 4 8 9-6048 a fte r 6 pm . 22C H EV RO LET $ 5 8 , 2 - d o o r lm - p a la . 4 0 ,0 0 0 m ile s . No ru st, ex ­ce lle n t condition, $825 . C a l l J e r r y , 337-1001 o r 355-4618 . 22 FO RD 1958 Country Squire S ta - tion wagon. E xcellen t condition insid e and out. B e s t o ffer over $4 0 0 . ED 2 -0 0 7 0 . 22C H EV R O LET 1954- 2 -d o o r. Ra ' - dio, h ea ter, new t ir e s . Body av­era g e , in te rio r exce llen t, engine e x ce lle n t. $195. IV 2 -6 9 2 5 . 23SUNBEAM 1962 Alpine, C o n v ert- ib le . W ire w heels. C lean and in good condition. $1,750. 332-6982 a fte r 5 :3 0 pm . 24C h e v r o l e t . 1955. Body rough, runs w ell. Cheap! C all IV 9 -0 8 7 3 .

22C O R V ETTE i9 6 0 . W hite, b lu e in - te r io r . 4 sp eed s. P o s itra c tio n , m ichelin t i r e s . Racing sh o ck s. D u -co il d is trib u to r. Heavy duty clu tch . 300 hp. N ever ra ce d .$1,995. 337-0156 .______________ 27C H EV R O LET 1960. 4 -d oo r B e l - a ir . E conom ical 6 cy lin d er en­gine. Radio, h eater, white wall t i r e s . Pow er glide. F la w less m e­ta llic b l u e fin ish . Sp otlessly c lean ! I M echanically p e rfe c t! I $ 1 ,085 . A1 Edwards Co. 3125 E . Saginaw (North of Fran d or.)

__________________________ C22MOTOR SCOOTERS A LL ST A T E M OPED - 1958, good ru nner. Only $95. 1317 R a v en s- wood D riv e . Phone IV 4-8193 .

23SCO O TER 1959 Cushman E a g le . E x ce lle n t condition. E conom ical, dependable. Graduating sen io r . C all Walt 3 5 5 -2 5 7 6 . 22TRIUM PH 1958 M otorcycle. E x - ce lle n t condition, 4 -sp eed , 200 c c . $275 o r b est o ffer. Phone

TRIUM PH M O TO RCYCLE 1959 E x celle n t condition. M ust s e l l . F o r in form ation , c a ll 3 3 7 -0035 a fte r 6 pm . 24M O TO R C Y C LE, i960 Zundapp, 300 c c . Engine, c h a s s i s and paint in e xce llen t c o n d i t i o n . R eason ab le . 355-1254. 22HONDA 5 6 ,l9 6 S . E le c tr ic s ta r te r , d irection al s ig n a ls , windshield and in good condition. $185. C a ll 6 5 5 -2 8 8 5 . 22HONDA $ 6 3 . Show room con d i- tion . 3 ,400 m ile s . Enjoy benefits of W orld’ s b est engineered b ike. E le c tr ic s ta r te r , e tc . A fter 5 :3 0 . 337-1123. 23

★ For Rent

T H E K O - K Oadjacent to the KWIK-STOP party store

presents

T h e D e l t a M e nappearing

Friday, May 1, 3-7- PM

M u s ic - D a n c in g Your favorite beverages

it Employment R?ST5fFRlcn3ClSfes, fsh orp art tim e . 11-7 o r 3-11. Good s a l­ary and d ifferen tia l plus other frin g e b e n e fits . F le x ib le tim e sched ule. M eal furnished . PhoneED 2 -0 8 0 1 . 26CHOOSE YOUR own h ou rs. A few hours a day can mean exce llen t earnings fo r you as a trained Avon rep resen ta tiv e . F o r ap­pointment in your hom e, w rite or c a l l : M rs . Alona H ucklns,5664 School S t ., H aslett, M ichi­gan o r c a ll evenings, F E 9 -8 4 8 3 .

C22C O L L EG E STU D EN TS, m a l e .Fu ll tim e sum m er w ork. P a rt tim e during school y e a r if de­s ire d . E arn enough during sum ­m er to pay fo r e n tire y e a r of schooling. O ver 15 $1,000 sch o l­arsh ip s w ere awarded to qualified students. On the job training for p ra c tica l use of your education during the sum m er m onths. An earn while you learn p rog ram de­signed by th is m u lti-m illio n dol­la r C orp oration that hundreds of students have taken advantage of.Many of whom a re s t ill with our C o . In key executive p o sitio n s.F o r arrangem en ts of p ersonal in terview , tim e, schedule and c ity you wish to work, ca llG ra n d Rapids, G Lendale 9 -5 0 7 9 . A lso Lansing , 485-3146 . South Bend,C E n tra l 4 -9179 . K alam azoo, c a ll Grand Rapids num ber. 48 G IR L S: IF you think y o u c a n s e ll- h e re ’ s your opportunity to let your s a le s ability e arn fo r you.P a rt tim e and full tim e p ositions S a l eav a ilab le . F o r p ersonal in te r - view c a ll 3 5 5 -8255 o r com e to 345 Student S e rv ic e s Building a fte r 1 pm . 32

★ F o r SaleHOUSESCO TTA G ES. G LEN lake . Som e v acan cies. Phone IV 5 -6 6 7 0 o r w rite : C o ttag es, 1817 Je ro m e , Lansing. 24BU IL T 1960. $ bedroom s. Double garage, o ffice , la rg e re c room . Screen ed p o rch . Two fire p la ce s . W ill lea se fo r $275 monthly. ED 2-4518 even ings. 24

NEW 2-b ed ro om , f u r n i s h e d . F ire p la c e , basem ent, parking.U p to four adults. $125 monthly until S e p t e m b e r . (629 M ifflin). IV5-4917. 24STU D EN TS- 2 bedroom home in quiet suburban a re a . Fu rnished , u tilities e x tra . $125 m onthly .C all332-3311. ______________ 23FURNISHED 5 ROOM house f o r four men students. Sum m er te rm . Unapproved. O ff-s tre e t p ark ing.IV 5 -0 5 5 5 ._____________________ 24IN TEltLO CH EN . 4-bedroom c o t - tage com p letely modern on lake front. W alking d istance to M usic C am p. 655-2812 . 22

ROOMS

DO YOU WANT:Room and B o a r d . . .$155 par term

• Good Food• S e lf Governm ent• 3 B lo c k s from Union

14(51 PROGRAM M ERS. E x p e r- ienced . M ore than 1 opening. L ansing . Growth opportunity. Im ­m ediate in terview . B o x A -l,c/o S tate News. _________25F U L L T tM E f e m a l e g ro ce ry c a s h ie r . Apply in p erso n . P rin ce B ro th e rs M arket, 555 E , Grand R iv e r , E a st L ansing . 24W A ITRESSES: Good w orking co n - d itions. M ust have som e exp er­ien ce . S ee M r. M itch ell o r M r. B osh eff. No phone c a lls p le a se . EA T SHOP. 605 E . G rand R iv er . 26J . W. KNAPP C o. Shoe D ep art- m ent. F u ll tim e o r p a r t-t im e . E xp erienced s a le s o r s to ck . Ap­ply P erso n n el D epartm ent, 5th flo o r . Downtown S to re . 24 R E L IA B L E F U L L and p a rt-tim e men and women. If you have a day o r half day that you a re availab le fo r w ork, apply now .C allbetw een 8:15 am and 10 am ; o r a fte r 6 pm f o r inform ation regarding e m - ploym ent. C a ll 332-3417 . 22G IR LS WANTED fo r p a rt-tim e w ork. H ours 9 -1 ; 1-5 pm o r 5 -9 pm . T elephone survey w o rk .C all M r. Goodwin, 332-1321. 22

★ For Rent £ ! in 5 5 X 7 5 7 ? is h b T g T )o a ts 7 ^ a ^n o e s- by day, week o r month. Grand -R -M a r ln a . 7086 C r ie tz R d ., D lm ondale. 646-2231. 24

APA RTM EN TSEA ST LANSING Deluxe furnished o r unfurnished. F o r C ollege or p ro fessio n a l p ersonnel. 3 ro o m s. Phone ED 2 -3 5 0 5 9 :3 0 am - 5:3C pm; o r ED 2 -3135 . 26W ANTED: 1 m ale student to share apartm ent with 3 . Sen ior o r G rads p re fe rre d . Ideal study conditions. P arking sp a ce . 33 2 -3 9 8 0 . 22U N IV ERSITY E M P L O Y EE S: A t- tention! E ffic ien cy a p a r t m e n t c lo s e to cam p u s, bus and shop­ping. B eau tifu lly furnished. Ideal fo r one. C all Fabian R ealty . ED 2-0811 o r evenings ED 7 -2 4 7 4 ,

__________________ 32a t t e n t i o n f a c u l t y . F u r - nished e ffic ien cy a p a r t m e n t . A vailab le soon. Quiet atm os­p h ere , c lo s e to - cam pus. $90. Fabian R ea lty , 332-0811. 22F U R N I S H E D APARTM ENTS av ailab le fo r sum m er and fa ll te rm s fo r 1, 2 , 3, or 4 students. C lo se to cam p u s. C all 332-0811, evenings 3 3 7 -2 4 7 4 . F a b i a n R e­a lty . 22E A ST LANSINCj . One bedroom couple only. Stove and r e fr ig e r ­ator furn ished . Parking . C all ED 2 -1 0 2 7 . 26FURNISHED A PA RTM EN T fo r two. Unapproved. $85 p er month. U tilitie s included. Inquire O ke- m os H ardw are. 22NEW FURNISHED a p a r t m e n t (includes a ir-con dition in g).Su m ­m e r te rm only. $45 p er month, p o ssib ly le s s . 355-9004 . 24B U R d H A M "W 6 0 t> $ , EYDEX'L V ILLA A PA RTM EN TS. Pool, a ir conditioning. Sum m er and fa ll te rm le a se s availab le. E D 2-5041.

C22

C o ll : BO W ER C O -O P E D 7-0185 /2 D obfeL ^ T O sh a re . Cooking,

parking. F o rm e r re n te r requ ired to leave sch o o l. ED 7 -0 8 3 0 eve­nings. 22

E I C O - O SC ILLO SC O PE. Model No. 460 ; tubes and textbooks and o ther te s t equipm ent. Phone TU 2 -5 3 4 7 . 22T u x E f » . C O M P L E T E o u t f i t .S iz e 38 . Worn 4 tim e s . In e x ­ce llen t condition. C all 3 5 5 -4 0 5 8 .

22BOOKS, G R EA T A ges of World A rch itec tu re , 4 volum es. O’Neil A m erican P lay w rite , A m erican Language R e fe re n ce L ib ra ry . H. L . M enken, 4 volum es. Many o th ers . IV 9 -7 2 5 5 . 22B IC Y C L E SA L E S, se rv ic e and re n ta ls . E a st L ansing , C y cle , 1215 E a st Grand R iv e r . C all 3 3 2 - 8303. CENGLISH 3-sp eed b i c y c l e s . $ 3 9 .7 7 . A C E HARDWHERE & G IF T S , 201 E . G r a n d R i v e r , a c ro s s from Union. ED 2-3212 .

CSCUBA HEALTHWAYS tank and re g u la to r . E xcellen t condition. $95 . Owner going into s e r v ic e . C a ll D ale a fte r 4 pm . E D 2 -5 5 0 3 .

27N O BILITY ACCORDION - 110 B a s s . Red and wnite with c a s e . Needs tuning. $125. Phone MI1 - 6 2 5 0 . __________________ 21M O TO R- d a le B u cca n eer, 1957. 12 H .P . with tank a n d 2 p ro ­p e lle r s . E x celle n t c o n d i t i o n . $125. Phone IV 9 -0 4 8 2 . 23C A R P E T LO o M. 4 h arn ess with ca rp e t r a g s . $75 . Phone IV9-2 1 5 4 . _______________________ 24BO AT RUNABOUT. 2 y e a rs old with a l l c o n tro ls . M otor a n d t r a i le r . IV 5 -6 7 2 5 . 1628 H erb ert S tre e t . 22CHINA C A BIN ET, Jumping h o rse , modern mahogany tea c a r t , old com m ode ch e st and m ir r o r . C allIV 5 -4 2 2 1 .____________________ 24G O LF BAG, seven mixed iro n s and co lla p s ib le c a r t . Good condi­tion . $30 . Phone 3 5 3 -4 7 9 2 . 23SCH O BER CON CERT Organ with sep a ra te sp e a k e rs . Make o ffe r . M ust s e l l . Phone NA 7 -6 9 4 6 . 24 18 1/2 ft . DUMPHY - 78 M ercu ry M otor, R iv ersid e Tandem T r a i l ­e r . Loaded w it h a c c e s s o r ie s . R easo n ab le . Phone IV 5-0411. 23 17” TV tab le m odel. Z enith . $40 . M en’ s E nglish bike $ 1 5 ,4 8 4 -4 0 0 9 a fte r 6 pm o r w eekends. 23 ESPAÑA CLA SSIC gu itar. Hard sh ell c a s e . S e lls new $366 . Fu ll gu arantee. 3 months old. 3 5 5 -68 0 3 . _________________________ 24T V 'S U SED as low as $25. At the h o m e of M otorola, Sylvania, Muntz, T V S te re o s . S torage F u r ­niture S a le s . T e rm s available at 4601 N. U .S . 2 7 . C a l l IV 7-0173 . C 22

T E FL O N fry ing p a n s , hou se- w ares and g ifts . ACE HARD­W HERE & G IF T S , 201 E . Grand R iv e r , a c ro ss from Union. ED 2 -3 2 1 2 . CB IK E . ENGLISH, boys, f speed. W hitew alls, hand b ra k e s , e tc . $13 o r b e st o ffe r . C a ll J im A. 3 3 2 -5 0 3 9 . 25ID ÉÁ L G IF T fo r M o th er's Day o r birthday. Intelligent, a ffe c ­tion ate . AKC b l a c k m iniature poodle puppies. Perm anent sh o ts . 3 3 9 -2 5 6 9 . 24G IB áoN S sT ftlN G , long neck ban- Jo; c a s e . R e co rd s , books, should­e r s tra p . $140. C a ll 337-9621. 23 LACÉ WÉDDING gowm Several fo rm á is and co ck ta il d re s s e s . S ize 11. Worn once. R easonable. Phone IV 2 -8 6 8 1 . 22

SCHÜMANN PIANO. $80. D a rt wood. C a ll 4 8 9 -2 8 6 9 . 26SUPRO SPANISH E le c tr ic G u itar. A m p lifie r . 2 channels, twin 12 inch sp e a k e rs . L ike new. $150. 355-9319 . 24MONTZ’S ' 23 ” T .V ., r a d i o , s te re o , phonograph com bination. New $199.95 with trad e . Open evenings. T U B E CADDY. 4400 S. Logan. 24GRETCH GUITAR with double p ick -u p . 4 channel amp. m icro ­phone. C a ll 332-8641, ask fo r M ike. 22AEGHAN P U P P Y . F em a le , blond. S u p erio r AKC breeding. $150. W ill con sid er t r a d e fo r a c c o r ­dion, b o at, cam ping equipment o r item equal valu e. 4 8 2 -0 0 0 8 . 24 M O BILE HOMES M O BILE HOME $ 6 3 . 54 ’ x 10’ . C om pletely furnished, p e r f e c t condition. C a ll IV 9 -0 8 5 3 . 25M O BILE HOMÉ, 42 ' X l t f .T r a i l - e r Haven L ot 113. See from 7 p m - 9 pm . 23C A M P IN G T R A I L E R - 6X 8’ . S leep s tw o . Cupboards, tab le, s to ra g e . Phone 372-1573 o r 4 8 4 - 50 7 2 . 26T R A V E L T R A IL E R - i960, H olly. 2 0 -fo o t with th re e -p ie ce bath. C a ll 6 4 5 -0331 . 23

★ Lost & FoundL O S T P H IL C < ^ p o c K e ^ iz ^ a d lo 7 tu rq u oise . Sunday, South R iv er by E . Shaw . Rew ard. C a ll 3 5 5 - 8755 . 24L Ó ST : P R E S C R I P T I O N su n- g la s s e s . R e w a r d . V icin ity of Anthony H all. Phone 353-2381.

23

LOÍ5T PAIR of hearing a id g la s s - e s . C a ll 3 3 7 -1 0 7 0 ,3 2 8 E v erg reen .

22

LO ST GOLD watch Tuesday. V i- c in ity K ew p ees- B erkey-U nion . R ew ard . 3 5 5 -4 4 4 7 , leave m es­sag e K arin B ra m s ; R ath er. 23

★ P ersona l

★ Peanuts Personal1st FLOOR Landon, E a s t - ‘ ‘T h e b est l a i d p lans of m i c e and m e n ...” fro m C ase H all. 22

TO O TIE , D E T R O IT 'S a p o o rs u b - stitu te fo r th is w eek-end. Hope you enjoy y o u rse lf. 22JIM M Y B . (the vamp of M usic Building) b e tte r hide in your c la rin e t c a s e . 22

★ Real Estate_______IF YOU a re Thinking of buying or se llin g a h o m e , I would b e p leased to h e l p you. Ju s t c a ll S a llv H artley 3 3 2-0004 o r Tod K intner R ealty 4 8 5 -1 7 7 7 . 232 BEDROOM home near cam pus with 5 lo ts . $300 down, $60 p e r m onth. C all OX 4 -9 6 5 2 . 255 BEDROOM IN C O M E . E ir e - p la ce . N ear a ll schools and U ni­v e rs ity . L a rg e yard . $ 25 ,000 . Phone 3 3 7 -2 7 5 3 ; Floyd W allace with B a rn h ill R eal E s ta te . Shown by appointment only. 22

★ S e rv ice

23 V ia P o , Rom e is E n g l f s h speaking insu ran ce o ffice that w ill handle your insurance c la im .- Bubolz, 220 A lb ert, is the one that w rites your p o licy . C22

W ILL TRA D E space in our trophy c a se fo r m issin g Sigm a Chi tro ­p h ies . F o r te rm s o r a rran g e­m ents, c a ll ED 2 -0 8 5 4 . 22

VACATION A T beautiful L ake M ichigan lodge two hours from cam p u s. Reduced ra te s t i ll June 15. W rite : Sea F e v e r Lodge P .O . B o x 87A W hitehall, M ich. Phone TW 4 -4 3 5 3 . 27

STU D EN TS: Why l e a v e your d o rm s, when B im bo’ s w ill de­liv e r your P iz z a s to you! C a ll 484-7817 . C22

A LA BA STER! TH A T'S Italian for un-insured m o to ris t. Don’t use the word but insure against him at Bubolz Insurance 332-8671.

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ST A T E FA RM 'S HOMEOWNER’S policy gives you m ore home p ro ­tectio n , sav es $$. Ask your State F a rm agent about it today. ED KARMANN, IV 5 -7 2 6 7 , in F ra n ­d or. C22MEN O F W est M cD onel: Vote NO on proposed dorm constitution. C .D .D .C . ______ 24

B E S T T V B uys in town- new and used. K eyes T V & S e rv ic e . 2500 E . M ichigan. Phone IV 5 -0801 .

22KEN’S CA RBU RETO R SER V IC E

New and reb u ilt C arb u re to rs M em ber I.G .O .

M otor tune-up sp e c ia lis ts .1100 S . W ashington 4 8 9 -5 3 4 6 . 22 a c c i d e n t p r o b l e m ? C a l lK alam azoo S t r e e t Body Shop. Sm all dents to larg e w reck s . A m erican a n d foreign c a r s . G uaranteed w ork. 4 8 9 -7 5 0 7 . 1411 E a st K alam azoo. cPRO M PT D E L IV E R IE S, t h r e e types of d iap ers to choose fro m . Bulk w a s h fo r c le a n e r , w hiter d iap ers, flu ff dried and folded. U se yours o r ren t o u rs.C o n ta in ­e r s furnished . No deposit. 25 y e a rs exp e r ie n ce . B y -L o D iaper S e rv ic e . 1010 E . M ichigan. IV 2 -0 4 2 1 . CFORM AL WEAR renta l s e rv ic e . Step out to those form al prom s and p a rtie s in our a l l new p r i­vate stock of P alm B each form al w ear. Only at T im e C le a n e rs . S p ecia l group ra te s . Evenings by appointm ent. C all 332-1215 o r stop in at 515 W. Grand R iv e r .

29STUDEN T T V re n ta ls . New 19” p ortab le , $9 p er month. 21” tab le m od els, $8 p er month, 17” tab le m odels, $7 p er month. All s e ts guaranteed, no s e r v i c e o r d e­liv ery c h a rg e s . C a ll N ejac T V R e n ta ls , IV 2 -0 6 2 4 . CW HITE felkCH S ta b les . E e s t in r i d i n g , E nglish o r W e s t e r n . H o rses , ta ck , h ayrid es, p a rtie s and rid ing le sso n s . Q uarter h o rsestud. OR 7 -3 0 0 7 ._____________ 22D IAPER S E R V IC E , sam e d iap ers returned e ith e r yours o r o u rs . With our s e r v ic e , you may in­clude two pounds of baby c lo th es that do not fade. D iaper pail fu r­nished.AM ERICAN D IAPER SER V IC E

914 E . G ie r S tre e t

! v 2 - 0 8 6 4 - _____

EYDEAL VILLAand

B U R C H A M W O O D S

N o w Renting for

Summer & Fall Terms

featuring:•Swimming Pool• Barbeque Area •G-E Appliances• Completely furnished• Choice of Interior Colors

for further information

C o ll ED 2-5041 ED 2 - 0 5 6 5

thir iv e r s e d g

Summer & Fall Leases Available

ED 2 -4 4 3 2261 River Street

yRed C®dar R .

Bogue B rid g e

South Cam pus

A New Way of Living

The Cedar Village Apartments

T h e student parking and driving re s tr ic t io n s next F a ll w ill c re a te an acutep roblem . B e fo re making any d ecisio n s about w here you a re going to live rem em b er that you w ill only be able to d rive and park on South Cam pus during the day. When you live at C edar V illage you won’t be faced with any parking o r driving p roblem s. You won’t have to fight the tra ffic Jam s o r dodge the p ed estrian s and b icy c le s becau se you can walk to alm ost any building on cam pus in a m atter of m inu tes. C ed ar V illage ap artm ents a re c lo s e and con­venient. " I t ’ s a New Way of L iv ing” in th ese beautiful luxury ap artm ents. A way you’ ll love o n ceyo u try it . Don’t take our word fo r it, com e over and se e our model ap art­ment today. Saturday and Sunday from 1-5 p .m . By the way, if you don’t have a c a r don’ t w orry , we a re located only one block fro m the Bogue S tre e t bridge, m inutes from anywhere on cam pus. Drop in th is w eek-end o r c a ll us anytim e at 332-5051. Don’t wait until it is too la te . . .sign up fo r F a ll T e rm now (Sum m er su b -le a se s a re a lso av ail­able.)

Cedar Village Apartments 252 Cedar St.

Service 1T E e S I ? P E ! ì ^ ì :d

Rapid S e rv ic e D rafting Supplies, XERO X C opies

C A PITA L C IT Y BLU EPR IN T ’ 221 South Grand

L ansing , 482-5431 or 4 8 2-5038______________________________ C 22

WHY PAY M ÒRE? F o r p ro fe s - sional dry clean ing , WENDROWS. P an ts, s k i r t s , sw eaters, 60£ . P lain d re s s e s , su its, co a ts , $1.19. 3006 Vine S t ., 1/2 block w est ofF ra n d o r .- C22C o n tà c F L in F ^ P È iC IÀ n S T T ò r Inv isib le B eau ty . 500 C rea tiv e Fash io n s in G la s se s . C apital Op­tica l Studios, 115 E . M ichigan,IV 2 -7 4 3 4 . cT V , RADIO, PrfONo REPA IR

Don’ t S e a rch —C a ll Church IV 2 -5 6 0 8

Prom pt S erv ice -N ew & U sed S ets CHURCH T V SER V IC E

808 W. W illow, Lansing CCo m p l e t e c o l l i s i o n s e r - <VICE. Bumping a n d painting. F ra m e straightening . Valley Auto Body. 4711 N. E a st, o r c a ll IV5 - 8 5 4 7 . ________________ 22T V REN TA LS for students. E c o - nom ical ra te s by the term a n d month. U N IVERSITY T V R EN T­A L S - 4 8 4 -9 2 6 3 . 22T y p i n g s e r v i c eBA RBI M EL E xperienced typ - ing and m ultilith s e rv ic e . B lock off cam pus. No job too large o r too sm a ll. Phone 33 2 -3 2 5 5 . 26 IM M EDIATE SE R V IC E . T h e s e s , g en era l, e tc . E le c tr ic typ ew riter. 355-1246 a fte r 5 :3 0 pm . 24 T E R M P A P E R S, th e se s , e x p e r - ienced . IBM e le c t r ic . M arianne H a rrington, 3 7 2 -3 2 80 . C22 ‘ANN BRÓWN typist and m ultilith o ffset printing (black & white & c o lo r). IB M . G en eral typing, term p ap ers, th e s is , d isse rta tio n s . ED2 - 8 3 8 4 ._________________________CED iE ¿T A R R , typ ist. T h e se s , d isse r ta tio n s , te rm pap ers, gen­e ra l typing. E xp erienced , IBME le c tr ic . OR 7 -8 2 3 2 ._________ CTYPIN G In rriy hom e. S h irley D ecker, 265 4 M elville, E . L .Phone 332-0721 .__________ CT Y PIN G . T e rm p ap ers, th e se s . S .M .C . E le c t r ic . W o rk guar­anteed. 337-1527 . 48JÓ 6 RESU M ES 100 cop ies, $4 .0 0 . A ldinger D ire c t M ail advertising. 533 North C lip p ert. IV 5-2213^

★ Transportation \WANT 2 r id e rs to L incoln , Ne­b ra sk a . Leaving F rid ay , May 8; returning Tuesday. C all Sue 3 5 3 - 1150. 22

Boehm and

Bowerman

Property Management Co.

present

THE FINESTin

StudentA p a r tm e n ts

THE DELTA2 3 3 -2 3 5 D elta St.

EVERGREEN ARMS341-345 E verg reen St.

HASLETT APARTMENTS135-145 H aslett St.

UNIVERSITY TERRACE444 M ichigan Ave.

(under construction)

THE CLOSEST

to

C a m p u s & S h o p p in g

APPLIANCES by GE

• Air Conditioning• Range• Refrigerator• Garbage Disposal

Stop in and see the Resi­dent Managers in the apart­ment building of your choice.

B H M (3*O W B K M A N

PROPERTY MANAGEMENT CO.

235 Delta 332-0838

Michigan State News, E ast Lansing, MichiganFrid ay. May 1, 1 96 1

Holds Easter Observances

Orthodox C h ristia n s around the world w ill o b serve cerem o n ies com m em orating the death, burial and re su rre c tio n of Je s u s C h rist th is w eekend.

Students w ill be able to attend sp ecia l s e r v ic e s at S t. Andrew’ s Orthodox C hurch, 1216 G re e n - c r e s t .

Good F rid ay s e r v ic e s w ill be held at 7 :3 0 p .m . tonight. Divine liturgy w ill begin at 9 :3 0 a .m . Saturday.

E a s te r M ass will be ce leb ra ted at 10 a .m . Sunday.

★ T ransportationWORLD’S FA IR HOLIDAY. P e r - fect graduation g ift. June 15-19, round t r i p flig h t. A ccom m oda­tions and e x tra s $99. C a ll now, 3 5 5-5465 M onday-Friday. 1 to 5 p m . 22WANTED RIDE for 1 g irF to New Y ork C ity o r New Je r s e y . L eave on T hu rsday , May 7 o r F rid a y , May 8 . C a ll Susan, 3 5 5 -7 2 9 9 .

' 23

WantedNEED A h o u setra iler to rent for sum m er fo r fam ily of fiv e . Phone IV 4-1451..................... 26

Lansing Central Free Methodist Church

628 N. W ashington, Lansing

SundaySunday School 10:00 a .m .

W orship S e rv ic e 11:00 a .m . R ev . F o r r e s t VanValin,

Speaking Youth Rellow ship 6 :0 0 p.m . Evening S e rv ic e 7 :00 p.m .

F o r transp ortation ca ll E D 7-1294

C h u r c h S t a n d O n Appeal Cost Prohibitive

R e m a i n s U n c h a n g e d

Church Official

By JE A N P IT C H F O R D S ta te N ew s S ta ff W riter

T he o ffic ia l position of the R o ­man C atholic Church on fam ily lim itation , in reg ard to co n tra ­cep tive b irth con tro l, has not c h a n g e d , t h e R ev . R o b e r t Kavanaugh sa id .

T im e M agazine hinted that a change in the C h u rch 's position regard ing b i r t h con tro l is on h a n d . It c ited t h e R ev . Louis Ja n sse n as "ca u tio u sly end ors­ing o ra l con tracep tiv es as a le ­gitim ate m eans of fam ily lim ita ­tio n " and said that som e of the keenest theological minds in E u r­ope agree with Ja n s se n . T h e a r t i ­c le c la im s that A m erican Catho­lic s f a v o r a change in t h e C hurch’s attitude on b irth con tro l by a m argin of 3 to 2 .

"R eg a rd in g the steroid p i l l , " said F a th e r Kavanaugh, " th e of­fic ia l statem ent of Pope P iu s XII in 1958 is s t ill the au th o ri-

Ward SpeaksT he Spartan C h ristian Fellow ­

ship will h ear T ed W ard, a s s o c i­ate p ro fe sso r of education, speak tonight at 7 p .m . at 803 E . Grand R iv e r .

tative position of the C h u rch ."Pope P iu s indicated that any

use of the steroid p ill fo r con ­tracep tiv e purposes would be a violation of the law of God.

F a th er Kavanaugh’s two broth­e r s a re o b ste tr ic ia n s and w ill not p re s cr ib e o ra l con tracep tiv es, he said .

"P e rh a p s the u ltim ate solution will be found within the next few y e a r s ,” he said .

E n d ocrin o lo g ists, such as D r.

E A S T LA N SIN G F R IE N D S M E E T IN G

(Quakers'i M eeting fo r W orship, Room 101 P eoples C hurch, 200 W. Grand

R iv er 3 :00 p .m .P e te r Stettenhein , C le rk ,

ED 2 -1 9 9 8

East Lansing Unity Center

11:00 a.m . W orship S erv ice “ A Right Sen se of V alu es”

R obert Peppel, So lo ist

11:00 a.m . Sunday School

Wednesday Evening P ra y e r S e rv ic e 7 :00 p.m .Study C la ss 7 :30 p .m .A ffiliated with Lnity School of C h ristia n ity , L e e ’ s Sum m it, M issouri

F irs t Baptist ChurchCapitol at Ionia

L ansing, M ichigan

Rev. Sco tt Irv in e , M in ister Church School 9 :45 a.m . Morning- W orship 10:50 a.m .

G uest m issio n ary ,

D r. W illiam E . B ra iste d

6 :3 0 Youth Groups

People of a ll ra c e s welcom e

bus n u rsery

u niversity lutheran church

a lc - lc a

8:30 9 :3 0 10:30 11:30

F irs t PresbyterianOttawa and Chestnut

W orship S e rv ic e s 9 :3 0 & 11:00 a.m .

C rib b ery and nu rsery c a re provided.

"Wounded Along T he Highway" D r. M orrow , preaching

A warm and friendly welcom e aw aits you at F ir s t P re sb y te r­ian.

! St. Johns Student Parish

F r . R . Kavanaugh F r . T . M cD evitt

327 M .A .C .

Sunday M a sses 7:15 - 8 :30 - 9 :4 5 (high)

11:15 & 12:30

¡Babysitting at 8 :30 - 9 :4 5 - 11:11

Y oungsters R elig ion C la ss 9 :45 a .m .

Sunday Fo ru m : 7 :0 0 PM "C a n C ath olics Do Without

M ary 7”

Daily M a sse s 8 :00 a.m . - 12:10 p .m .

4:45 p.m .

Sat. M a sse s 8 :00 & 9 :00 a .m .

Confession daily at 8 :00 a.m . 12:00 p .m . - 4 :45 p .m .

Phone ED 7 -9 7 7 8

A ll Saints Episcopal Church

8 0 0 Abbott Koad ED 2-1313

Rev. R obert G ard n er,E p iscop al Chaplain to the U niversity

Rev. Edward Roth. R ector Rev. G eorge Tum a, C urate

SUNDAY SER V IC ES 8 :0 0 a.m . Holy Communion at

All Sain ts P arish 8 :00 a.m . Holy Communion at

Chapel of A p ostles, W esley Foundation

9 :3 0 M orning p ra y er andSerm on

11:00 Holy Communion and Serm on

5 ;30 p .m . C anterbury Meeting 8 :30 a .m . Monday thru Friday

Daily O ffice T u e s . - 10:15 a.m .Holy Communion Wed. - 7 ;00 a.m .Holy Communion T h u rs . - 5:15 p.m.Holy Communion

V elard o at the Institute of Human R e sea rch in Cleveland, h a v e fo re c a st that a sim ple, inexpen­sive and a ccu ra te te st fo r the tim e of ovulation is on the h o r i- 20n.

F a th e r Kavanaugh said that in the m eantim e, " a l l C ath olics who re sp e ct the teaching authority of the Church have c le a r guidelines in the authoritative pronounce­ment of Pope P iu s XI and Pope P iu s X II .”

M a y D a y Focus O n Race Relations

E ffo rts by a group of students to get what they c a ll " J u s t ic e ” in Shiaw assee County have bogged down.

About 60 of the 111 students a rres te d Saturday night during a p o lice ra id on th re e “ g r a s s e r s ” n ear M o rrice had agreed to fight th e ir guilty p le a s .

A Lansing attorney had been retained to fight th ree te s t c a s e s . I f he won, then the students be­lieved they could get the r e s t of the c a se s re v e rsed .

High legal c o s ts w ere c ited as the rea so n why m ost stu ­dents w ill not appeal. T h e law­y e r reportedly told them it would co st from $300 to $400 p er p e r­son becau se each c a se would have to be tried sep arately .

" I t ’ s too bad, but it ju s t c o s ts too much to get ju stice in M ichi­gan ,” an out - of - sta te student sa id . " T h e law yer was op tim istic

United C h u r c h Women o f G re a te r Lansing w ill observe nation-w ide May Fellow ship Day today with an eye to the them e "A ssig n m e n t: R a c e .”

T he day w ill begin locally with a 12:30 p .m . luncheon at the P ly ­mouth C ongregational Church in L ansing . T h e R ev. W allace R . R obertson of E a s t L a n s i n g P eop les Church w ill speak at 1:45 p .m . on the national them e, "O n e Fam ily U nder God: Freed om of R esid en ce and Jo b Opportunity.”

F o r 30 y e a rs women have m et interdenom inationally and in te r- ra c ia lly to face urgent dom estic issu e s .

M rs . A lbert Boyd, chairm an of C h ristian S o cia l R elations in Lansing , said that the women w ill

"NEED SICKNESS BE FATAL?”

IS TH ER E HOPE FOR A CONFUSED GENERATION?

TH RILLIN G MUSICAL PROGR.AM

SUNDAY 7:00 P.M.

SOUTH BAPTIST CHURCH1518 S. WASHINGTON A VE., LANSING

11:00 A.M. “ PUT ON YOUR BADGE!”

PA STO RS: DR. HOWARD F . SUGDEN-DR. T E D WARD R E V . ALVIN H. JON ES

CALL 482-0754-FREE BUSMORNING AND EVENING * ________

focus attention on the points of g re a te s t ra c ia l tension and need in t h e com m unity: housing a n d jo b s .

L o ca l ob serv an ces are open to the public.

Brooklyn College To Honor Prof

H erb ert W eisinger, p ro fe sso r of E n glish , w ill be presented a D istinguished A lu m n i H onors Award during com m encem ent e x ­e r c is e s Ju n e 7 at B rooklyn, N .Y ., C o lleg e .

W eisinger will be cited fo r h is sch o larsh ip in the idea of the R en a issa n ce , myth c r it ic is m and Shakesp eare studies.

F irs t C hris tian Reformed Church

240 M arsh all S t ., Lansing

R ev . John M. Hofman, P a sto r Morning S e rv ic e 9 :0 0 &

11:15 a.m .Sunday School 10:15 a.m .Evening S e rv ic e < p .m .T h o se in need of tra n sp o r­tation c a ll :

M r. Ja c k Vander Slik at 35 5 -3 0 3 0 or Rev. Hofman at 5 -3 6 5 0

11:00 Sunday

PlymouthCongregational

Church

A cro ss from Capitol on A llegan

Peoples Church East LansingInterdenom ination

200 W. G rand R iv er at M ichigan

SUNDAY SER V IC ES 9 :3 0 and 11:00 a.m .

M usical Cantata under the d irection of

D r . C o r l is s Arnold

CHURCH SCHOOL

9 :3 0 & 11:00 a .m . C rib room through Adult C la sse s

UN ITED CAMPUS CHRISTIAN

FELLO W SH IP

C ollege House

5 :30 PM Supper

6 :0 0 PM D iscu ssion : R a c i a 1 Ju s t ic e Now.

BIBLE SCHOOL ADULT YOUTH9 : 4 5 A . M . 8 : 3 0 P . M .

C O LLEG E CLA SS TAUGHT BY DR. TED WARD OF MSU

YOU’ L L ENJOY THE GOOD DISCUSSION AND

REFRESH M EN TS

TRINITY CHURCHInterdenom inational 120 Spartan Avenue

M IN ISTERS E . Eugene W illiam s Norman R. P ie rsm a

Daniel E . W eiss

M orning S e rv ice - 11 a.m .

"E S T IM A T E — THEN A C T !"

Evening S e rv ice - 7 :00 p .m .

"W H A T IS YOUR L IF E ? ” (Holy Communion Serv ice )

8 :15 p .m . T rin ity C o lleg iateF e l l o w s h i p — Stim ulating

P ro g ram and Buffet Supper Other S e rv ic e s

9 :4 5 a .m . U niversity C la s s & International c la s s

7 :0 0 p .m . Wed. Evening P ra y e r and B ib le Study

C all 33 7 -7 9 6 6 for cam pus bus schedule

Kimberly Downs Church of Christ

1007 K im berly D rive, Lansing

(2 b locks W. of Frand or Shopping C en ter on E .

Grand R iv er)

IV 9 -7 1 3 0

W illiam G Hall and G erald O. F ru z ia , S r .,

M in isters

SUNDAY SER V IC ES

M orning W orship 10:00 a.m . B ib le Study : 11:00 a.m .Evening W orship 6 :00 p.m . Wednesday evening B ib le

Studv 7 :30 p.m .

Thursday evening L ad ies B ib le C la ss 7 :30 p .m .

F o r T ransp ortation C all FE 9 -8 1 9 0

ED 2 - 1 9 6 0 , or ED . 2 -2 4 3 4

and he indicated he thought we could win, but c o s ts a re p ro­hib itiv e .

T h e students have filed a com ­plaint with M ichigan A ttorney G en era l F ra n k K elley .

F in e s m ust be paid by S a tu r­day, but students h a v e u n t i l W ednesday to appeal th e ir guilty p leas en tered e a r ly Sunday m orn­ing during arra ig n m en t.

Chairmen Attend Scholastic Meet

S ch o la stic chairm en from 16 res id en ce h a lls attended a w ork­shop p resen ted by the E a st Shaw sch o la stic com m ittee Saturday.

T he program con sisted of sem ­in ars a n d le c tu re s by I r v i n Lehmann of evaluation s e r v ic e s and S o rre ll C h esin , head ad viser of N. W onders,____________________

H i t R a d i o B i a s

W A S H IN G T O N (U PI)— O f- , f ic ia ls of a m a jor P rotestant de­nomination Thursday asked the National A ssociation of B ro ad ­c a s te rs (NAB) to in itiate a p ro­gram of “ se lf-reg u la tio n ” by broad casting stations to avoid d iscrim in ation against N egroes.

T he req u est was made by of­f ic ia ls of the United Church of C h rist, a two m illio n -m em b er body w h ic h recen tly filed p e­titions with the Fed era l C om ­m unications C om m ission to deny renew al of lice n ses to two J a c k ­son, M is s ., te lev ision s ta tio n s. It alleged the stations had failed to serv e the Negro population of M iss iss ip p i.

R e p r e s e n t i n g the United

F irs t Church of Christ, Scientist

709 E . Grand R iv er E a st Lansing

Church S e rv ice :Sunday 11 A.M.

Subject -

"E v e r la s tin g Punishm ent"

Sunday School:U niversity Students 9 :30 a .m . R egu lar 11:00 a .m .

Wed. Evening M eetin g -8 p.m .

Reading Room located at 134 W. Grand R iv er .

Open Mon. thru Sat. 9 :0 0 a.m . -5 :0 0 p.m .M on., T u e s ., T h u rs ., & F r i ­days 7 :0 0 -9 :0 0 p.m .

All a re w elcom e to attend Church S e rv ic e s , and v is it and use the Reading Room .

‘WHAT’S WRONG WITH THE YOUNGER GENERATION”

J o h n E . D i e t r i c h ,

A s s i s t a n t P r o v o s t

D i r e c t o r E d u c a t i o n a l

D e v e l o p m e n t P r o g r a m

Unitarian-Universalist Churchl im e : 11-12:00 D ate: Sunday, May 3 P la ce : Holmes & P ro sp e ct,

Lansing

W o m a n F o r m s C o m m i t t e e T o S o l v e S c h o o l D i l e m m a

G R A N D RAPIDS, (U PI)— A one-w om an fight has been laun­ched to rev iv e a fo u r-m ill tax in c re a se proposal in an attempt to re s to re norm al a c tiv itie s in Grand Rapids schools.

As a resu lt of the recen t de­feat of a four-m il) tax hike, the

B oard o f Education has e lim i­nated a th le tic s , reduced p erso n ­nel, and cut four grades to half­day attendance in next fa l l ’ s p ro­g ram s.

M rs . R obert Gordon Dunn wan­ted to p ass out petitions fo r the new vote Monday night when the

UNIVERSITY BAPTIST CHURCH

(THE AMERICAN B A P T IST CONVENTION)

G uest P a sto r D r. A rthur F a r r e ll

A m erican Legion M em orial C en ter, 1 B lo ck North of E a st Lansing B us Station W orship S e rv ic e 10:00 a.m . Church School 11:00 a.m .N ursery Provided 10:00 —

12:00 a.m . Campus B us S erv ice

Central MethodistA cro ss From the C apitol

WORSHIP SER V IC ES 9 :4 5 and 11:15 a .m .(W JIM 10:15 a .m .)

"H an d s Around the W orld” D r. John L . P e te rs ,

P r e s , of W orld N eighbors, Inc.

C rib N ursery , So B rin g T he Baby T ak e home a copy of.the “ What

Then A re We T o D o?” sheet for study and application.

Eastminster Presbyterian Church

1315 Abbott Rd.,E ast Lansing

M in ister

Rev. R obert L . M oreland 541 W albridge D rive

ED 7-0183

9 :0 0 & 11:00 a .m .Church School

fo r C rib b ery through Third G rade

10:00 a .m . Church School

Fourth G rade - Adults

9 :00 & 11:00 a .m .

Church S e rv ice s

Serm on

"C o n ce rn in g the A scension”

STUDEN TS W ELCOM E

C all 3 3 7 -9 3 3 6 o r 3 3 2 -6 9 0 3

fo r transp ortation

Always a w arm w elcom e at

Seventh-Day Adventist Church

T em p o rarily m eeting at Uni­v e rs ity Lutheran Church

D ivision and Ann St.

SATURDAY SER V IC ES

9 :3 0 a.m . Sabbath School 11:00 a .m . W orship S erv ice

F o r inform ation or tran sp o r­tation ca ll 485-9273

Olivet Baptist Church2215 E . M ichigan

Rev. W illiam H artm an, P a sto r SUNDAY

Sunday School 9 :45 a.m .Morning W orship 9 :0 0 and

11:00 a .m . B ap tist Youth Fellow ship

5 :3 0 p.m .Evening W orship 6 :3 0 p.m .

M ID-W EEK SERVIC E W ednesday, 7:15 p.m .

F o r churcn bus schedule ca ll IV 2-8419

University Methodist Church

1120 S. H arrison Rd.

W ilson M. Tennant, M in ister

D r. Glenn M. F ry e , M in ister

WORSHIP

9 :4 5 a .m . & 11:00 a.m .

"T e a c h in g fo r C h rist” R ev . W ilson M. Tennant

Church School 9 :45 a .m . all ages & 11:00 a .m . ch ild re n 2 -5 y e a rs .

M em bership C la ss 9 :30 a.m .

F r e e bus transportation 15 to 30 m inutes before each s e r ­v ice around the cam pus.

Edgewood United Church

Interdenom inat ional 469 North Hagadorn Road

E a st Lansing , M ichigan (5 b locks north of Grand R iver)

WORSHIP SER V IC ES

9 :3 0 & 11:00 a .m .

Sunday, May 3 Serm on by

Rev. Trum an A. M orrison

Church School

9 :3 0 & 11:00 A.M .

A ffiliated with United Church Of C h rist, Congregational - C h r i s t i a n , E vangelical and Reform ed.

W ELCO M E*

FIRST CHURCH OF THE NAZARENEG en esee at B u tler S tre e ts

SUNDAY SER V IC ES Supervised n u rsery provided

Church S ch o o l.........................t • • .9 :4 5 a .m .M orning W orship................................11:00 a .m .Youth G roups.........................................6 :00 p.m .E van gelistic Hour.......................7 :00 p .m .

WEDNESDAY EVE P ra y e r S e rv ice 7 :30 p.m .H .T . Stanley - M in ister Dean W aldfogel - M usic D ir.

T ro n s p o r ta t io n A v a i la b le

C all Church O ffice IV 5-0613 If No A nsw er, Call IV 26994

LUTHERAN WORSHIP

Alumni M em orial Chapel

10:00 a.m .11:15 a.m .

M issouri Synod

Holy E u ch arist M orning Worship

Alumni M em orial Chapel

F re e bus se rv ic e and nu rsery provided

R ev . Theodore K. Bundenthal, P a sto r 332-6386

board invoked its au sterity pro­gram but the m eeting dragged and she is ju st getting organized.

M rs . Gordon, who has a dau­ghter in co lleg e and a son who is a ju n io r at one of the local high sch o o ls, does not con sid er h e rs e lf a self-appointed d ire c ­to r of a new movement to put the issu e back on the ballot.

But fo r openers she already has rece iv ed phone c a lls from people o ffering to help and un­doubtedly the move w ill grow and becom e organized la te r ,” with o r without m e. 1 ju st want to help ,” she said .

Deputy School Supt. Ja y L. Pylm an said the School B oard itse lf could not institu te the pe­titions.

T he school system is about $ 1 ,0 0 0 ,0 0 0 in the red and the B oard is attem pting to bring the cu rren t budget to a balance in o rd er to e lim in ate continuing de­f ic its .

"M any people do not apparently re a liz e the serio u sn ess of our

's itu a tio n ,” Pylm an said .The c u r r e n t enrollm ent in

Grand Rapids schools is 3 2 ,313 , including 3,000 students at Grand Rapids Ju n ior C ollege. Pylm an says another 1,000 pupils a re ex­pected by fa ll.

T he howls w ere s till echoing about the austerity program in­voked by the board..

Church of C h rist in T hu rsd ay 's con ference with NAB P resid en t L eroy C ollin s w ere the Rev. E v e re tt C . P a rk e r , N .Y., d ir e c ­to r of the ch u rch 's o ffice of com ­m unication: and the Rev. T r u ­man B . D ouglass, executive v ice president of the B oard fo rH o m e- iand M in is tr ie s .

They asked the NAB to see that its m em ber television and radio stations p r o v i d e " im p a rtia l treatm en t of n e w s events con­cerning c iv il rights and ra c e r e ­lations with adequate re p rese n ­tation of Negro v iew points."

They said the association also should s tr e s s the obligation of licensed b ro a d ca sters to:

— Provide "adequ ate cov erage of news of the Negro community and Negro activ ities in the sam e m anner and in the sam e tim e periods as news of the white com m unity.”

— R e fe r t o N egroes by the cou rtesy t it le s of M r., M rs ., and M iss “ in the sam e manner accorded to white p e rso n s ."

— Insu re " a d e q u a t e p a r t ic i­pation by N eg ro es" in local pub­lic a ffa irs d iscu ssion s and edu­cation al p ro g ram s.

C ollin s issued a statem ent la ­te r saying that he was "g la d to have the view s” of the United Church o ffic ia ls .

"N o other fo rce in A m erica has done as much to m ake all A m erican s c iv il rights con sciou s as broad castin g , C ollins said .

He added that "e x c e p t through our code of good p ra c tice , the NAB does not te ll any licen see how to p rogram h is station . T h is is h i s individual resp onsib ility under law, fo r which he must account to the people of h is com ­munity and the F C C .”

Prof Gets PlaqueL e s te r B e it, p ro fe sso r of fo r ­

e s try fo r the C ooperative Ext eli­sion Set- ire , It.ts rece iv ed , plaoue fo r "outstanding s.ervxr in fo re s tr y ” from the s ta te a s ­sociation .

'Wine And Roses’ Is Party Theme

"W in e and R o se s” was the them e of M ayo's term party din- e r-d a n ce held at Dine’ s R e sta u r­ant Saturday evening. Dancing to the m usic of the Ron G ibn's band followed dinner.

Typewriter Tired?P a p e r s t o H n ,

N o t e s t o t y p t ,

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t h e A r t C e l l a r a t _______

East Lansing's Department Store For Students on G. River where E. Lansing & M.S.U. meet.

CAMPUS BOOK STORE

A C R O SS FRO M T H E UNION B U IL D IN G )

HOT PIZZA DELIVERY

P I Z Z A M O B I L EDelivers Your Pizza Sizzljng hot

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8 Michigan State News, E ast Lansing, Michigan F rid ay , May 1, 1964

Two Honored

Seniors Excel In Scholarship

M ary Ja n e W eaver and Bob A lldridge, sen iors of the week, maintain h ig h sch o lastic av er­ages while participating in varied a c tiv ities .

In addition to having served as president of both W est Y a k e- ley and R ather d orm s. M iss Wea­ver h a s a 3.7 all - U niversity grade-point average.

A g S q u a re D an ceThe A griculture Council Spring

Swing is slated to be held at S :30 Saturday evening in Demon­stration Hall. Old fashion square dancing and entertainm ent a re planned.

Violinist Presents Recital Tonight

Violinist A n n e De Vroom e, Grand Rapids graduate student will present a solo re c ita l in the M usic Auditorium tonight at 8 :15 .

P F A N U T S

•s

L_

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F R E EA well Sound copy of the Hebrew —£ oq iish bilingual New T*■? .ramenr will be sent obso-

. I u - e.ly free wit haul any obliga­tion to onv Jewish student or person desiring copy upon re­quest. Please write

H. M. MAEL P.O. Box 90S2 Grand Rapids, M ich.

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A lldridge has a 3 .4 av erag e , and has served on S en ior Coun­c i l , as chairm an of the ‘cu ltural and s e r v i c e com m ittee f o r Frosh-Sop h Council and a s a Spartan A m bassador.

A so c ia l sc ien ce m a jo r from E ast Lansing , M iss W eaver w as a lso an A ssociated Women Stu­dents Ju d icia ry rep resen ta tiv e . She is a m em ber of M ortar B oard and C irc le Honorary.

A lldridge, P ort Huron accoun­ting m a jo r is a m em ber of D elta Upsilon f r a t e r n i t y , and the accounting and finance club, and has been active in A ll-U n iver­sity Student Government.

He is a m em ber of B lue Key honorary and was a fin a lis t in the M r. MSU contest.

M iss W eaver has spent the last sev era l sum m ers as a w ait­re s s in r e s o r ts .”

A lldridge spent last sum m er a s an auditor for the Glidden Co. He has traveled a ll over the W est C oast.

M iss W eaver plans to teach high school social studies a fte r graduation. Alldridge plans to attend graduate school and then work e ith er as a C ertified P ublic Accountant o r fo r an industrial accounting firm .

C a l e n d a r o f

< M i n g E v a U s

Zoology Sem inar — 12 noon, 401 Nat. S c i.

B a se b a ll, I llin o is — 3:30 p .m .Law Day A ddress — 4 p .m .,

Fa irch ild .Golf, Indiana, Michigan, North­

w estern , and W isconsin — 8 a .m ., Sat.

B a se b a ll, Purdue (2) — lp .m ., Sat.

T ra c k , Ohio State — 1 :30p .m ., Sat.

Is ra e l Student O rganization I s ­ra e l Independence Day C e le b ra ­tion — 8 p .m ., S a t., Union B a ll ­room .

Spartan C h ristian Fellow ship — 7 p .m ., 803 E . Grand R iver Ave.

H illel Sabbath S e rv ic e s — 7:30 p .m ., H illel House.

H illel Sabbath S e rv ic e s — 10 a .m ., S a t., H illel House.

T h e f t s(co n tin u e d from p ag e 1)

60 p er cen t of those caught had m ore than enough money to pay fo r the a r t ic le s and had bought things already, he said.

M ost of those a rres te d do not have any reaso n fo r th e ir a c ts , Brow n said . One said he wanted to se e If he could get away with it . Another said he had not planned to take anything when he went in the s to r e .

Much of t h e stealing stem s from a com pulsion to ‘ ‘ try to get away with i t ,” Brow n said , but the consequ ences can be serio u s to the student.

"W e a re not trying to build up an a r r e s t re c o rd ,” Brown said . ‘ ‘ We a re only trying to prevent m ore th e fts .”

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McDonakfeLansingI 4 0 1 5 W. Saginaw I 4 7 0 0 S. C ed ar I 2 1 2 0 N . L a rch

East Lansingon Grand R iv er A ve.1 B Ik . E a s t of Campus2 B lk s . W est o f U nion I

M i r i a m M a k e b a V e r s a t i l e T a l e n t

Placement Bureau

May 6A ce Foods: H otel, r e s ta u r -

a n t ., institutional management(B ).

Camp Fairw ood: S U M M E R EM PLO YM EN T: G eneral coun­s e lo rs , a rch e ry , a r ts and c r a f ts , cam p c ra ft , canoeing, d ram a­t ic s , tennis, w ater-sk iin g , fo r s ta ff p osition s. M/F

C arm an School D is tr ic t : E le ­m entary education, physical edu­cation, secondary math, E nglish , co u n se lo rs , sp ecia l education ty le A, s p e e c h c o r re c tio n is t , v isitin g te a ch e r , d iagnostician . M/F

Grand B lan c Township U nit: E lem en tary education, j u n i o r h ig h language - so c ia l stud ies, gen eral sc ie n c e , a rt, home econ­o m ics, Spanish . Sen ior high coun­s e lo r , F r e n c h , m a th -p h y s ica l s c ie n ce , m ath, E n g lish -F re n ch , E n g l i s h - S p a n i s h , E n g lish - jo u rn a lism . S p ecia l education, visiting te a ch e r , type A speech c o r re c tio n is t . M/F

May 6 -7L e i l a Y . P o st - Montgomery

H ospital: M edical tech n ician s,b io -ch e m istry , ch em istry (B ,M ). M/F

Dance BroadcastThe Shaw dance tonight w ill

be broad cast over WKME with the radio station ’ s d isc jo ck ey , U ncle Bob Zook, as host. T h e dance w ill be 9 p .m . to mid­night.

R eco rd s, p riz e s and tick ets to the Campus and State T h e a ­tre s will a lso be awarded.

By M IK E KINDMANS ta te N ew s R e v ie w e r

M iriam M akeba’ s f i r s t appeal fo r A m erican audiences, and the m ost unique asp ect of h er ta len t, is h e r ability to m ake A frican tr ib a l m usic exciting and m ean­ingful to people in this country.

But she has proven o v er the p ast sev e ra l y e a rs that h er talent is m ore than as an in te rp re te r of her native d ia le c ts ; M iss Ma­keba has becom e a m a jo r s in g er of folk' and popular m u sic with a w orld-w ide re p e r to ire .

H er program Wednesday night in the Auditorium included songs from such p la ces as Indonesia, A u stria , Cuba and Is ra e l , in addi­tion to a healthy sam pling of E nglish and A frican m u sic .

Such Makeba s t a n d a r d s as ‘ ‘S u lira m ,” “ The Naughty L ittle F le a ,” and “ One M ore D ance” w ere included, as was the fam ous “ C lick Song.”

" B a c k home where I c o m e from , the E nglish - speaking people c a ll th is the C lick Song,” M iss Makeba explains, "b e c a u s e they can not say . . . ”

T h e re is no equivalent in our language fo r the sound which is the b a s is of the trib a l wedding son g 's title , a tongue-click ing which has been com pared to the

s o u n d of a champagne bottle popping.

T he many A frican d i a l e c t s which M iss Makeba speaks and sings a ref o r e i g npeople.

She has to e xp ress

filled with s .o u n d s t o English-speaking

a rem arkab le ability with these sounds

a com p lete range of em otion understandable despite the lan­guage b a r r ie r .

She explained the m eanings of som e of the A frican songs, which con cern everyday o ccu r­re n ce s in the liv es of trib a l p eop les.

M iss M akeba explained la te r in h er so ft, husky v o ice that many of h e r songs have p oli­tica l s ig n ifican ce , p rotesting the harsh r a c ia l p o lic ies of h er native South A fr ica .

T h e th ree -m a n com bo which provided the accom panim ent fo r M iss M akeba’ s singing cre a ted a haunting A frican atm osp here, with heavy rhythm s a n d in ­stru m en ts approxim ating jungle sounds.

But M iss Makeba h e rse lf p re ­sented the c le a r e s t p ictu re of South A frican tr ib a l life , in te r­sp ersin g h er songs with b its of dances and explanations of con ­ditions of native life .

I S R A E L I S T U D E N T O R G A N I Z A T I O N

a t M . S . U .

p r e s e n t s

ISRAEL INDEPENDENCE DAY CELEBRATION

Saturday, May 2 , a t 8 :00 P .M . in the Union B a l l r o o m .

DR. A L B E R T 1. RABIN, P ro fe ss o r of Psychology M .S.U ., w ill ad d ress the gathering.

ISRA EL HOOTENANY QUINTET from Is ra e l and ER AELA B A R -L E V , s in g er, w ill p resen t an exciting program of fo lk ­songs.

E v ery o n e c o rd ia lly in v ite d .

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