Montana Kaimin, April 23, 1965
Transcript of Montana Kaimin, April 23, 1965
University of MontanaScholarWorks at University of Montana
Montana Kaimin, 1898-present Associated Students of the University of Montana(ASUM)
4-23-1965
Montana Kaimin, April 23, 1965Associated Students of Montana State University
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—by Kaimin photographer Todd Brandoff MEETING OF MINDS—Team captains of the four Brain Bowl teams check over a fellow “brain" in the computer center. From left are Anne Sappenfield, Knowles Hall; Richard McKean, SAE; Spike Fuller, At Large (independent team); and Don Brown, SPE. The four teams participating in the academic tilt w ill compete in the Music Recital Hall Saturday at 8 p.m. Les Hankinson will be master of ceremonies and Dr. Robert Turner, professor of history, w ill moderate the program. A panel of three faculty judges will be the final authority for the contest.
Ross, Asselstine Lead Primary; 'Charlie Brown9 Takes Fourth
By STEVE SMITH KAIM IN REPORTER
John Ross and Don Brown w ill vie for the ASMSU presidency in next Thursday's general election, with Brett Asselstine and Bill Pedersen contending for the vice presidency.
The final tally of votes from yesterday’s primary showed Ross with 669 as opposed to Brown’s 533. Candidate Frank White received 271 votes while write-in Charlie Brown polled 244.
For the vice presidency, Asselstine received 702 votes against Pedersen’s 578.
In a close • race for secretary, Lynne Morrow with 614 votes will oppose Mary Ann Peterson with 599. Linda Boston received 466 votes.
Candidates for Store Board include Elinor Lyons, 691 votes; Ron Pitt, 638; Don Cowles, 636 and Russell Meech, 581.
For Judicial Council, the names John Anderson, Gene Mead, Dave Howlett, Pete Reiss, Ben Startt, Eugene Enrico and Mike Poe were written in. Anderson received four votes while the other six received three apiece.
For business manager, Dave Wendte with 849 votes will go against Peg Wallace with eight.
For senior delegate, Torval Stockap led with 188 votes. He was followed by Ray Cosman with 187, Barbara Nisbet with 182 and James Bums with 177. Two positions are open, so all four candidates will appear on the ballot.
Brett Asselstine, presently a
junior delegate, is a holdover delegate and will be a senior delegate should he lose the vice presidential
The six contenders for the three junior class delegate posts w ill be Tom Behan with 217 votes, Paul Reagor with 181, Whitey Fairley and Carl Lawson, each with 174, Fritz Pierce with 163 and Keith Dalbec with 156. Edwin Russell received 117 votes.
For sophomore delegates, it will be Mike Meade with 252 votes, James Peregoy with 240. Susan Lanman with 215 and Dallas Viall with 158. Candidate Cliff Christian polled 200 votes but withdrew his petition. Frances Smith received 147 votes and Wiliam Allen 77.
A total of 1,085 persons voted in the primary election.
MO N T A N A K A I M I NIFC Puts Three Fraternities On Probation for Low Grades• Three fraternities were placed on social probation and the new Interfraternity Council open rush rules were passed at last night’s IFC meeting.
Theta Chi, Alpha Tau Omega and Delta Sigma Phi were placed on social probation this quarter for failure to meet the IFC grade standard.
The IFC requirement states that fraternities must exceed the allmen’s . average or the IFC set standard of 2.3, whichever is lower. A house that does not meet that requirement is warned. A second failure puts the house on social probation. A ll three houses were warned previously.
Sigma Nu is close to the 2.3 requirement, Tony Valach, assistant dean of students and IFC adviser, said. Sigma Nu will probably make the necessary .grade points through changes in grades and errors in calculating grades, he added. For this reason they were not placed on social probation.
The new rules for open rush were amended slightly from those previously proposed. The, IFC Rush Committee eliminated any restrictions on the times or places a fraternity man may talk to a rushee.
Other changes included a provision for rushees to be assigned to three groups. Each day a group w ill be required to visit three houses. He can visit any number of houses that day but he must visit these assigned fraternities. This was done to enable each
Bus. Ad. School Newly Organized
A reorganization of the School of Business Administration was announced by Pres. Robert Johns.
The newly formed departments are accounting, management and business education and office administration. The d e p a r t m e n t chairmen are, respectively, Donald J. Emblen, Thomas G. Johnson and Mrs. Brenda F. Wilson.
The Bureau of Business and Economic Research, previously an independent group, is now included in the business administration school, James L. Atheam, dean of the school said.
The reorganization clarifies lines o f authority, gives students more effective specialized training and provides for a more efficient operation, Dean Athearn said.
house to keep a record of rushee visits.
Former MSU students w ill be allowed to pledge at any time. They do not have to register or participate in fall rush. New students, however, must register and participate in fall rush in order to be eligible to pledge during fall quarter.
Three Travel To Corvallis
Three university students will attend the Northwest Manuscript Conference on April 30 and May 1, at Oregon State University in Corvallis.
Fiction and poetry instructors from colleges and universities throughout the Northwest w ill attend the conference. Each instructor will sponsor a student.
The instructors w ill be divided into panels of two or three members. Each student’s work w ill be reproduced and read to the conference delegates. The panel will evaluate the work and the audience will critique the pieces.
Larry Cripe will be sponsored by Warren Carrier, chairman of the MSU English department. Mr. Carrier is going as a novelist and a poet. Martha Gobdel, a graduate student, is sponsored by John Herrmann, head of creative writing at MSU. Herrmann w ill attend as a . short story writer. Herbert Gottfried w ill be sponsored by Richard Hugo, a visiting poet. Hugo w ill attend the conference as a poet.
MSU Receives Works of Art
Five pieces of primitive New Guinea art have been presented to the MSU School of Fine Arts.
The pieces are from one of the last remaining primitive cultures in the world. Joan Smith, assistant art history professor at MSU, said the art is thought to have religious significance.
The articles are a gift of Cedric Marks of New York City, who sponsored several expeditions to New Guinea to collect the native art.
A 123-year-old group w ill appear at MSU tonight.
The original Christy Minstrels, started in 1842 by Edward P. (Pops) Christy, was a group of polished musicians and performers with an international reputation. Previous to their fame, they were called the Virginia Minstrels.
The newer version of the Christy Minstrels got its start in 1961 when Randy Sparks expanded his trio and the young group made its first album.
The next big break came with their contract to do the Andy W illiams Show.
The pressure of learning to read music caused all but five of the original members to drop. They were soon replaced after the auditioning of more than 300 musicians.
Still changing members periodically, the New Christy Minstrels have appeared at the Trou- bador, New York’s Latin Quarter,
Los Angeles’ Greek Theater and Carnegie Hall.
One of the biggest stepping stones was their 1964 White House performance. President Johnson asked them to perform for world dignitaries at a presidential dinner.
Since that time, the troupe earns about two thousand dollars more per engagement. The President has also enlisted their help in the National Fitness Program.
In 1964, the leader, Randy Sparks sold his interest to George Greif and Sid Garris for an estimated two and one-half million dollars.
A concert tour of Europe was arranged for the New Christy Minstrels in early 1965. While in Italy, they competed in the San Remo Festival, becoming one of the first asked to do an encore by the judges and the first American artists to win the festival.
Following the festival, two of their songs became top hits, a first
sociology; Clarence Gordon, James Habeck and Richard Solberg, botany; Donald Johnston, music; Fannie Milodragovich, home economics; Thomas Nimlos, forestry; John Peterson, mathematics; A rnold Silverman, geology; James Templeton, zoology and John Van de Wetering, history.
Moving up from instructor to assistant professor are Kent Adair, forestry; Robert Brock, foreign languages; John Herrmann and W. Ross Winterowd, English and George Mitchell, business administration.
Richard Hugo, lecturer in English, was promoted to assistant professor.
for American songs in Italy.The Minstrels w ill make a
State Department sponsored tour of the USSR in the near future.
Today, their records are still at the top of the hit parade. A total of five million copies of their last six albums have been sold.
Each member of this versatile group, in addition to singing solo and together, plays a musical instrument.
Over three-quarters of the 4,701 Field House seats have been sold. Tickets w ill be available at the door.
After leaving Missoula, the New Christy Minstrels w ill travel to Eugene, Ore., for another weekend engagement.
Six Sororities Pledge Coeds
Spring Rush is over and eight girls have pledged in the six local sororities.
The new pledges are: Alpha Omicron Pi, Raenelle Maxwell and Carol White; Delta Delta Delta, Marsha MacDonald; Alpha Phi, Nancy Senechal, Betsy Schulte and Jan Mendicelli; Sigma Kappa, Pat Jahn; and Kappa Alpha Theta, Sue Lanman.
The pledging marked the end of formal rush. Open rush is from April 26 to June 4.
There w ill be no more formal rushing until fall quarter.
Forestry Forum Set Wednesday
The MSU Forestry Club w ill present a Forestry Forum designed to acquaint students with current problems in natural resources Wednesday night at 7:30 in Room 206 of the Forestry Building.
The forum is the second in a series of panel discussions conducted by the Forestry Club. The topic w ill be wilderness areas.
The meeting is open to forestry students and any persons interested in natural resources.
K K G, SN Attend ConfabKappa Kappa Gamma and
Sigma Nu are attending regional conventions in Pullman, Wash, this weekend.
Members of the Kappa house w ill meet with other chapters from Idaho, Washington, Oregon and Montana.
The Sigma Nu regional convention w ill be attended by 20 local members. In addition to discussions of fraternity business the delegates will hold a basketball tournament.
Leadership Camp Forms DueLeadership Camp applications are due at the Lodge desk. Group
representatives pay the $18 fee at the student acouunting office. Students who are not representatives pay $17 for the two-day camp.
Representatives will leave after classes on May 6, and stay at the camp at Flathead Lake Lodge until noon on Saturday. Recreation facilities will be available to the students for the entire time. Those who drive cars w ill be reimbursed for gasoline used on the trip.
Professors Given Promotions
—Kaimin Photo by Todd Brandoff CHARLIE GETS A HAND— More than 200 students gathered outside Main Hall Wednesday afternoon to hear a hootenanny for the fictitious ASMSU protest candidate. The Hootenenny was sponsored by the Students for the Improvement of MSU.
AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPERMontana State University Missoula, Montana
Friday, April 23, 1965 Vol. 67, No. 90
Original Group Began 123 Years Ago
Tonight at MSU—Christy Minstrels
Thirty members of the MSU faculty have been promoted.
Advancing from associate professor to professor are the following: Jesse Bier, Merrel Club Jr., and Jacob Vinocur, English; Robert Hoffmann, zoology; John How- er Jr., geology; George Millis, education; R. K. Osterheld, chemistry; Charles Parker, speech pathology and audiology; William Pierce, forestry; Florence Reynolds, music; Richard Shannon, economics and Norman Taylor, business administration.
Promoted from assistant professor to associate professor were Larry Elison,. law; Idris Evans,
Constitutionality of Aid Bill In Grave Doubt
We regret that President Johnson failed to use his considerable influence to provide education in the United States with an aid bill as constitutional as it is comprehensive. But insensitivity to fundamental law in the current administration is becoming the rule rather than the exception, and we now join The American Jewish Congress and other concerned organizations in the conviction that the recently passed $1.3 billion aid-to-education bill is in violation of First Amendment to the Constitution.
The AJC describes the legislation as “a grave violation of church-state separation” and is presently preparing to challenge the bill in the courts—probably with the help of individual taxpayers and school boards.
We have already expressed our forthright approval of federal aid to public education, as well as our very definite objections . to public support of private and parochial institutions. We have no desire to contribute to the narrow-mindedness, for example, of a “ college” that requires special permission (and a special key) to acquire access to some of the best literature of the ages. Neither do we care to contribute our public tax monies to institutions that distort history and philosophy to their own advantage.
We join the AJC and the American Civil Liberties Union in portesting articles of the recent legislation that provide for the “ loan” of public school personnel and materials to their private counterparts. The “shared time” concept inherent in these provisions could conceivably usher into the parochial schools, by virtue of this interaction, some measure of enlightenment. But there is little cause for hope, for several parochial institutions have already made stringent stipulations with regard to the type of materials and personnel that w ill be welcomed. Rather than be consoled with hope, we are distraught, for the measure opens the door to further and even mpre damaging deterioration of the First Amendment.
One of the most regrettable aspects of the bill’s passage was the defeat, 53-32 in the Senate, of an amendment that would have permitted court tests of the measure’s constitutionality on the part of taxpayers protesting aid for students attending religious schools. We are confident, however, that the “ shared time” provisions of the bill w ill eventually be declared unconstitutional. I f not by the normally provincial state courts, by the Supreme Court. rorvik
James Bond and the YAFFROM THE NATION
The length of a craze is usually inversely proportionate to its intensity, but no one can say how long the James Bond mania w ill persist—at least three more Ian Fleming movies are scheduled and they w ill each give added spin to the wheels of the bandwagon. A t present, you can dress like 007, drink like 007 (vodka), carry 007’s exploding attache case and even smell like him (cologne, after-shave lotion, hair grease and deodorant).
It is all very funny (timid boys dousing themselves with lascivious scent and lounging about in raincoats with secret pockets), but the Young Americans for Freedom, who, like reactionaries generally, lack a sense of humor, take the phenomenon very seriously. Bond, they say in “The Young Guard,” “ is an individualist” whose rough-and-tumble moral code has promoted . . . virtue . . . His gift to the West has been protection from evil.” Readers with very long political memories w ill recall that almost the same \yords were used of the Young Americans’ previous idol, Barry Goldwater—who, unhappily for him, was not immune to the enfilade of common sense.
The trouble with Bond, that dipsomaniac skirt-lifting one- man world vigilante corps, is that no one can defeat him at the polls. He and his politer TV imitation, “The Man from U.N.C.L.E.,” become substitutes in the child parts of our minds for the Security Council; they relieve us of the frustrations of world diplomacy and lull us to the dangers of world conflict. Says Jay Emmett, who heads the commercial promotion of 007, “ In today’s world there are lots of people who think James Bond really exists.” Probably this illusion is not sufficiently"' widespread to have any critical effect on the affairs of.state, but it does throw further smog on our murky times.
M O N T A N A K A IM IN"Expressing 67 Years o f Editorial Freedom”
Dave Rorvik------------------- EditorKeith Nichols--------------------Mng. EditorKaralee Stewart.-------- Bus. Mgr.Bill Schwanke_____ Sports EditorTom Behan_______________News EditorTodd Brandoff___Photographer
Rat Kennedy______ Assoc. EditorCheryl Hutchinson Assoc. EditorEd Mende]-----------------------Assoc. EditorKay Morton--------------------Assoc. EditorPaula Latham___Asst. Bus. Mgr.Prof. E. B. Dugan---------- Adviser
King Comments On Jesus EditorialTo the Kaimin:
I cannot resist replying to your editor’s ill-tempered editorial on the decline of Christianity, in particular to the sentence: “ Imagine, for example, your clergyman telling you how to vote when, in all probability, because of his limited and illiberal education, he knows less about government, economics and political science than your -self.”
Paul Tillich, then, writes and preaches from a “ limited and illiberal education?” Reinhold Niebuhr? Karl Barth? And my own clergyman, with his degree in divinity from Union Theological Seminary, has been blighted by a “limited and illiberal education?” And students who earn degrees from the Yale Divinity School and from its counterparts at Princeton and Harvard and other distinguished universities are illiberally educated? I suggest that your editor glance through the catalogs of these institutions. He may learn something.
There are, of course, illiberally educated clergymen, just as there are illiberally educated scientists, physicians and surgeons, businessmen and English professors. There are also under-educated jo.umal-
WALTER N. KINGProfessor of English
Policy on LettersLetters to the editor should generally
be no longer than 400 words, preferably typed and triple spaced, with the writer’s fu ll name, major, address and phone number listed. They should be brought to the Kaimin office in Room 206 o f the Journalism Building by 2 p.m. the day before publication or mailed to the editor in care o f the Kaimin.
Letters must be within the lim its of lib el and obscenity and should amount to m ore than a series o f name calling. The editor reserves the right to edit or reject any letter.
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2 — MONTANA KAIMIN ir k Friday, April 23, 1965
MSU’sB R A I NB O W LSimilar to TV ’s
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“A MASTERWORK”Student Union Foreign Film SeriesUniversity Theater — 7 :30 p.m. Saturday
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Published every Tuesday. Wednesday. Thursday and Friday of the school year by the Associated Students of Montana State University. The School of Journalism utilizes the Kaimln for practice courses, but assumes no responsibility and exercises no control over policy or content. ASMSU publications are responsible to Publications Board, a committee of Central Board. Represented for national advertising by National Advertising Service, New York, Chicago, Boston, Los Angeles, San Francisco. Entered as second-class matter at Missoula, Montana. Subscription rate, $5 per year.
Trio Indicted in Liuzzo Case,First-Decree Murder Charged
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (A P ) — Three white men indicted on first- degree murder charges in the slaying of Viola Liuzzo, a civil rights worker from Detroit, Mich., surrendered to Sheriff Mel Bailey on Thursday.
The three—-Eugene Thomas, 42, and William Oroville Eaton, 41, both of Bessemer, Ala., and Collie Leroy Wilkins Jr., 21, of Fair- field, Ala.—posted $10,000 bond each and were relecTsed.
The indictments charged that each man “unlawfully and with malice aforethought killed Viola Gregg Liuzzo by shooting "her with a pistol.”
Mrs. Liuzzo, 39, mother of five and the wife of a Teamsters Union official, was shot to death in her car near Lowndesboro, Ala., the night of March 25. She had taken part in the civil rights march from Selma to Montgomery.
She was shot from a passing cat .on U.S. 80, the same route taken by the civil rights marchers.
Mrs. Liuzzo, who was white, had driven some marchers from Montgomery back to Selma and was returning to Montgomery for more when shot.
President Johnson, who was criticized by the grand jury, announced the arrest the next day of four white men whom he described as members of the Ku Klux Klan.
The three arrested Thursday also were indicted by a federal grand jury on civil rights charges, but the fourth—Gary Thomas Rowe,
RED SLANDERFive years ago — Moscow re
jected as slanderous a West German note protesting Soviet defamation of West Germany.
34, of Birmingham—was not indicted. He subsequently appeared as a witness before the county grand jury.
CALLING UTODAY
Women’s Varsity Tennis Team, 4 p.m., meet in Room 112, Women’s Center.
WUS, Friday at 4 at 3:15, ATO’s Jim Stegmiller, MC.
Montana Forum, 12 noon, Territorial Room 5, Dean Thompson.
TOMORROWModel UN, 1 p.m., Mr. Kuhn’s
house, 705 North 4th.SUNDAY
Newman Club, after 10 a.m. Mass, Territorial Rooms, election of next- year’s officers.
Wesley House, 6 p.m., informal evening with the Rocky Mountain College Choir.
UCCF, 5 p.m., 430 University, UCCF Dinner, Ben Wright, Sociology lecturer, “What L ife Means to Me.”
MONDAYAWS, 4:15, Committee Room 2.AWS, 12:30, AWS Office, exec
utive meeting.
An MSU Library book sale will begin National Library Week, April 26 to May 1.
The sale will be in the Northwest History Room of the Library from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
The books to be sold have been duplicated by the Library or are outdated by new material. They will be priced from 5 cents to 3 dollars.
The first two days of the sale will be open to the campus only. The last day will be open to the public.
The Friends of the Library will
Extension Course Enrollment High
During the 1964-65 school year 1,707 students registered for MSU correspondence courses.
According to the University Extension Service the majority were from Montana with students from 26 other states, Canada, Peru and Norway. The largest enrollment was in history, mathematics, psychology and sociology.
University extension courses, conducted in 16 Montana towns and cities, enrolled 831 students.
hold a dinner at 6:30 p.m. in Territorial Rooms 2 and 3 "on Wednesday, April 28. Reservations must be made by Monday, April 26, with Carol Hansen in Health Science 104.
Following the dinner will be a lecture on “Lady in a Men’s Club” by Miss Margare't Scherf of Kali-
spell. Miss Scherf is the author of numerous mystery stories.
Students and public are invited to this lecture at no charge. It is to be at 8 p.m. in the Territorial Rooms.
Library Week is designed to bring library matters to the attention of Montana citizens.
After The New Christy Minstrel Concert
STOP AT
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PICTURES OF CANDIDATES Pictures of ASMSU primary
election winners w ill be taken Monday, at 12 noon in the Journalism Building.
Your Name Im printed on Your “ GRIZZLY ” Check s— F R E E — when you
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Friday, April 23, 1965 ftft M O N T A N A K A IM IN — 3
Library Book Sale to Begin Monday
GET YOUR CARa
MONDAY26 April
7:00 NEWS AT SEVEN 7:15 S P E C I A L FEATURES AND
DOCUMENTARIES Civil Rights
8:15 BBC WORLD REPORT 8:30 MONDAY CONCERT
Grieg: Piano Concerto Strauss: Ein Heldenleben
10:00 KUFM MONTAGE OF MUSIC 10:55 KUFM SPECIAL REPORT ,
Law in the News: Self-incrimination in criminal cases
11:00 NEWS. FINALTUESDAY27 April
7:00 NEWS AT SEVEN 7:15 EUROPEAN REVIEW 7:30 GEORGETOWN FORUM
Why the Gold Standard?8:00 SONGS OF FRANCE
French Eastertide Songs 8:15 UNIVERSITY REPORTER 8:30 TUESDAY OPERA
Bizet: Carmen10:50 GRIZZLY SPORTS ROUNDUP 11:00 NEWS FINAL
WEDNESDAY28 April
7:00 NEWS AT SEVEN 7:15 ANATOMY OF A SATELLITE What Goes Up Doesn't Always Come Down . . . The ballistics and geometry of space flight
7:30 SPECIAL FEATURES 8:00 UNIVERSITY CONCERT HALL 8:30 PACEM IN TERRIS
Guest speaker: N. N. Inozemstev, Deputy Chief Editor. Pravda
9:00. SPECIAL OF THE WEEKMrs. Gladys Philpott of AID- Viet Nam
9:30 ORPHEUS LEGENDFrench Solo Cantatas of _ihe Eighteenth Century: Jean-Pnil- ippe Rameau’s “Orfee”
10:00 KUFM MONTAGE OF MUSIC
10:55 KUFM SPECIAL REPORT 11:00 NEWS FINAL
THURSDAY29 April
7:00 NEWS AT SEVEN 7:15 WORLD OF THE PAPERBACKS
Paul Angle, Director of the Chicago Historical Society, looks at The Lincoln Reader, edited by
7:30 GATEWAY TO IDEASSpiritual Poverty Panelists: William Hubbard.Columbia University Student; The Reverend William van Meter. Director Christian Social Relations, The Protestant Council of New York
8:00 CINCINNATI SYMPHONYHaydn: Symphony No. 86 in D MajorScott Huston: Toccato: Alberto Ginastera: Pampeana No. 3 Dvorak: Concerto in B Minor for Cello and Orchestra
10:00 MONTAGE OF MUSIC 10:55 KUFM SPECIAL REPORT 11:00 NEWS FINAL
FRIDAY30 April
7:00 NEWS AT SEVEN 7:15 JAZZ FROM CANADA
Oscar Peterson Trio 7:30 AMERICAN RADIO JOURNAL
Dame Sybil Thorndike 8:30 PACEM IN TERRIS
Guest speakers: Hon. George Kennan, former U.S. Ambassador to U.S.S.R. and Yugoslavia: Hon. Carlo Schmid, Vice President of the Bundestag of the Federal Republic of Germany.
9:00 THE GOON SHOW Seagoon M.C.C.
9:30 FRANCE APPLAUDS 10:00 KUFM MONTAGE OF MUSIC 10:55 KUFM SPECIAL RETORT
Doctor. Tell Me: Are All Drugs Dangerous?
11:00 NEWS FINAL
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Clover Bowl ActionSilvertip Netmen to Meet ISU, USU
ATO EDGES SIGMA NU Trailing 3-0 after three innings,
Alpha Tau Omega rallied to edge Sigma Nu 7-6 in softball action at the Clover Bowl Wednesday. Gene Hallock blasted a three-run homer for the ATO’s. The winning pitcher was Bruce Johnson. Dick Wilmot took the loss for Sigma Nu.
BLUE WAVE VICTORIOUS Blue Wave moved to an 8-4 lead
after two innings and coasted to an 11-8 softball victory Wednesday against the Stompers. Tom Hammer was the winning pitcher. It was the second loss of the year for the Stompers.
PAF SKUNKS RANGERS Phi Alpha Falfa scored five runs
in the first inning and five more in the second while on their way to a 12-0 win over the Darby Rangers Wednesday at the Clover Bowl. Jerry Bittner, Drew Lindstedt, Steve Laughrun and Norm Clark hit homers for the winners. Harold Peterson was the winning pitcher.
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FIFTHS CLOBBER WESLEY Dick Bird and Russ Doty hit
homers for Wesley, but it was not enough, as their team came out on the bottom of a 12-2 score in softball action against the Fifths Wednesday. The Fifths were ahead 6-1 after the first inning. Bob Crippen pitched for the winners. Chip Tudor was the losing pitcher for Wesley.
FORESTERS 12-2 WINNERS Niles Sacia hurled the Foresters
to a 12-2 victory over the R.F.’s in a softball game at the Clover Bowl Wednesday. The game lasted only three innings. The Foresters have won two games and lost none this season.
DOOS OUTHIT POUNDERS The Voo Doos had what it took
yesterday as they defeated the Ground Pounders 9-6 in Clover Bowl softball action. Dowling was the winning pitcher for the Voo Doos.
ADVOCATES WIN Louis Nybo pitched the Advo
cates to a 10-8 softball win over Dumas 45’s at the Clover Bowl yesterday. The 45’s rallied in the fifth inning, but fell short.
CANDLE GI AGAIN Gary Towner tossed one-hit
softball for the Candle GI team as it shut out the Apothecaries, 3-0. The Candle got six • hits against losing pitcher Ernie Koestner. The GI’s have not been scored on in two games this season.
WINKS EDGE PADS The game was close all the way,
and was tied in the fourth inning, but the Tilly Winks came out on top, 13-12 on the Clover Bowl yesterday. Joe Upshaw homered for the winners. J. C. Weingartner was the losing pitcher for the Knee Pads.
D-13 WINS FIRST ONE D-13 led from the start as it
earned a 10-8 victory over the Rainiers. Fuller hurled for the losers, while Lewis was the winning pitcher. Both teams are one and one for the season.
BANDITS BY FOUR The Bandits rallied from a 9-5
second inning deficit to grab a 16- 12 win from the Chodda Choppers yesterday on the Clover Bowl. Taylor was the winning pitcher, Dunstan the loser. The Bandits are now 2-0, the Choppers 0-2.
Former Champion DiesEAST ORANGE, N.J. (A P ) —
Johnny Dundee, former world’s featherweight champion, member of boxing’s Hall of Fame and veteran of 321 pro fights, died Thursday.
Dundee had been hospitalized since April 9.
The MSU tennis team travels to Pocatello, Idaho this weekend to play last year’s Big Sky Champions, Idaho State, and Utah State University.
Because of budget and scheduling problems, the Grizzlies w ill have to play Idaho State in the
Tips to Meet Bobcats Twice
The Grizzly baseball team opens its conference schedule this Saturday against the Bobcats of Montana State.
The doubleheader, rescheduled from last weekend, is slated to get under way at 11 a.m.
After winning six games in a row, the Tips have an 8-3 record this season.
I f it should rain here again this weekend, there is a chance that the game could be moved to Boze-
Following the games this weekend the Grizzlies will still have to make up another doubleheader with the Bobcats in Bozeman.
Black Hawks Whip Montreal
CHICAGO (A P )— Ailing Kenny Wharram, who missed the first two games of the Stanley Cup championship round, sent home a tie-breaking goal in the third period Thursday night to give the Chicago Black Hawks a 3-1 victory over the Montreal Canadiens.
The triumph lifted the Hawks from the brink of despair after they had lost the first two games of the best-of-7 series in Montreal.
The fourth game of the series, which Montreal now leads 2-1, will be played in Chicago Sunday night and game No. 5 will be in Montreal Tuesday night. If more games are needed, the sixth will he played in Chicago next Thursday and the seventh in Montreal May 1.
FIRST FIELD GOALGrizzly football player Chuck
Allard of Ravalli booted the state's first field goal in a game against the Bobcats in 1898.
Oscar HaugeSPECIAL AG EN T
N EW Y O R K LIFE IN SU R A N C E C O M PAN Y
402 Western Bank Bldg. Phone 549-5500
morning and Utah State during the afternoon. The combined matches will put the MSU team at a definite disadvantage, according to Brian Sharkey, tennis coach.
Returning to the Idaho State team is Don Axtell, last year’s Big Sky singles champion and member of the winning doubles team.
Both Idaho State and Utah State
provide scholarships and limited financial assistance for their tennis teams. MSU, however, does not grant scholarships to players, or purchase their equipment.
Players making the trip in order of position are John Alexander, Rich Curry, Mike Emerson, Brett Asselstine, Tony Bonavist and Kit Walther.
KING OF THE ROAD!Take Your Girl For A Weekend
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1801 South Higgins
• Quality Meats & Groceries• Pop & Snacks• Frozen Foods & Drugs
OPEN—Mon.-Sat. 8 a.m. to 10 p.m.Sunday—9:30 a.m. to 10 p.mi.
Honda Super Hawk 305 cc.Smooth, Sure, Powerful
The Honda above is designed for high speed cruising and competition. It has a 305 cc, twin cylinder engine, with 27.4 h.p. at 9,000 rpm.At the Vineland 4-hour produc
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4 — M O N TA N A K A IM IN Friday, April 23, 1965
LET’S TRAVEL LITEto . . and . . from THE HALL TREETake the Reese brothers’ advice and go the Commuter Sport Coat for spring. Both Mike and Marsh, MSU students, w ill tell you, “ It’s the only way to travel.”
The Traditional Shop for
men who prefer natural
shoulder clothing.
527 N. Higgins
Open Friday Night T il 9
• Double Cardinal Stamps
• 24-Hour Service 93 STRIP
Tuesdays and Fridays (Saves you 3c per gallon at the redeemable value)
Start thinking about insurance now.The longer you wait, the higher the rate!Today's smart college student begins his program of life In* suranee now when rates are lower for him than they'll ever be. I have specialized la the problems of students for New York Ufa. Let me discuss with yea the opportunities wo oder.
Grizzly Golfers Lose Two, Beat Whitworth
SPECIAL FROM SPOKANEMontana State University golf
ers had a little bad luck yesterday as they were defeated twice while winning once.
The only Grizzly victory of the day came when the Tips defeated Whitworth College,. 14-4.
Washington . State University beat MSU, 11-7. In the third team match, Eastern Washington College defeated Montana, ll% -6% .
Results for the Whitworth match were: Larry Lee, Whitworth, def. Don Waller, 3-0; Harland Peschel, MSU, def. Bob Ross, 3-0; Jim Roberts, MSU. def. Vic Parschall, 2%- %; Jack Marcure, MSU, def. Dave
O U RSuppliesServicesSalesmanship
AND
EASY TERMS W ill Bowl You Over
Huse, 2%-%; Gary Kopravica, MSU, def. Dave LaCosta, 3-0; John Warren, MSU, def. Tom Mc- Lure, 3-0.
In the Eastern Washington match, results were: Carl Ota, EWC, def. Waller, 3-0; Bill Lufkin, EWC, def. Peschel, 2-1; Bob Lanning, EWC, def. Roberts, 3-0; Steve Farrell, EWC, def. Marcure, 2-1; Bill Koberstein, EWC, and Kopravica tied, 1%-1%; Warren, MSU, def. Fred Amundson, 3-0.
Results in the MSU-WSU match were: John Groshell, WSU, def. Waller, 3-0; Peschel, MSU, and Bob Carlson tied, 1%-1%; Mike Coleman, WSU, def. Roberts, 3-0; Marcure, MSU, def. Ken Hammer, 2%-%; Kopravica, MSU, def. Brent Watson, 3-0; Greg Mulvihill, WSU, def. Warren, 3-0.
Medalist for the entire afternoon was Lee of Whitworth with a 69.
Welton to Visit CampusMike Welton, star basketball
player at Billings West High School, w ill visit MSU the weekend of May 8.
Welton was an outstanding performer at this year’s Class A basketball tourney in Bozeman. He has been selected for all-state honors three times.
SAVEUp To Vzl
At The Westerners big, month-end clearance
Typewriter Supply Co. '
314 N. Higgins
STARTS TODAY
The MSU track team leaves today for a triangular meet in Pocatello, Idaho. Idaho State and We- - ber State are the other teams competing.
This meet will be scored both as a triangular meet and as a dual meet between Montana and Weber. The dual meet originally scheduled last Saturday between
SoftballStandings
Fraternity League
☆ * *
IM SoftballTODAY
Fraternity League4 pan.
Field One—TX vs. SAE Field Two—DSP vs. PSK
5 pan.Field One—SX vs. ATO Field Two—SPE vs. PDT
SATURDAY A League
10 a an.Field One—Vapors vs. Rejects Field Two—Bitter Roots vs.
Nads11 a an.
Field One—A1 & Ray’s vs. Quest Gargoyles
Field Two—Dumbells vs. Kali- spell
Knowles WRA Tourney Champs
Knowles Hall ran away from Kappa Alpha Theta yesterday to capture the WRA basketball championship. The score was 33-10.
The two teams were all that remained after three weeks of double elimination play.
Knowles Hall was the uncontested winner, since the team was undefeated throughout the tournament.
O P E NSUN. - THURS.
8 a.m. to 10 p.m.
FRI. & SAT.8 a.m. to Midnight
GROCERIES & BEVERAGES Fish Bait
Tackle
OLSON’SGROCERY
2105, S. Higgins
Montana and Weber was rained out.
The Tips w ill not be at full strength without the aid of sprinter Willy Jones and pole vaulter Dennis Stempel, who are both injured.
La Faye Hope, intermediate distance runner, w ill make the trip, but probably won’t be at full strength because of a leg injury.
Head Coach Harry Adams is taking 23 men on the trip.
Competing in the running events w ill be Jim Casey, Ken McDonald, Rod Ottenbreit and Don Schimtz in the 440-yard relay; Doug Brown, Fred Friesz and Bob Gibson in the mile; Casey and Ottenbreit in the 100- and 220-yard dashes.
Jon Krutar and Schmitz-in the high hurdles; Krutar and Tom Gopp in the 330-yard intermediate hurdles; LaFaye Hope and Gibson
After Class
Drop In For A
Chocolate MALT CONE
at
Tastee Freez93 Strip by Tremper’s
in the 880-yard run; Brown and Friesz in the two-mile run; and Casey, McDonald, Gibson, Gopp and Jim Miller in the mile relay.
Competing in the field events ' w ill be Wayne Harrington and
Dave Montague in the discus; Bruce Dailey, Tony Dumay and Leroy Mickens in the javelin.
Bill Rice, Gary Dunckel and Miller in the high jump; Rice, Jesse Parks and McDonald in the broad jump; Dunckel, Parks and Rice in the triple jump; and Bob Fletcher, Miller and Lynn Putnam in the pole vault.
Y E S !We Do Have:
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• Today• Land of Giants
Mono and Stereo Recordings
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Friday, April 23, 1965 ★ ★ M O N T A N A K A IM IN — 5
451 North Higgins
Team W LSPE 2 0TX ------------------------------------- 2 0SAE ------------------------------------ 1 0ATO __________ L------------------- 1 1PUT _________________ 1 1SN --------------------------------------- 1 1SX .................................. 0 1DSP __________________________ 0 2PSK ____________________ 0 2
A League
Bitter Roots ------------------------2 0Dumbells ___________ 2 0Kali spell _____________________2 0Quest Gargoyles ---------------------1 1Vapors _______________________1 1A1 & Ray’s ................... 0 2Nads------------------------------------- 0 2Rejects---------------------------------- 0 2
B LeagueTeam W L
Mets _______________________ 2 0Phi Alpha Falfa__ .___________ 2 0Uglers _______________________ 2 0Blue Wave ____________ 1 169ers ------------------------------------ 1 1Craig 1st West ......- ........—. 0 2Darby Rangers----------------------0 2Stompers____ - --- --------------- 0 2
" C LeagueTeam W L
Advocates ____________________ 2 0Foresters _____________________2 0Dumas 45’s * 1 1The Fifths____________________ 1 1R.F.’s ________________________ 1 1Voo Doos _____________________1 1Ground Pounders ________ 0 2Wesley _______________________ 0 2
Team W LBandits ______________________ 2 0Candle GI ___________________ 2 0Apothecaries-------------------------- 1 1D-13 _________________________ 1 1Rainters _____________________ 1 lTilly Winks __________________ 1 1Chodda Choppers_____________ 0 2Knee Pads ____________ 0 2
Adams Taking 23
Track Team to Compete in Triangular
614 South Higgins
M usical Note
8 Pounds Of Drycleaning for $2
at theSUNSHINE
LA UND E R CENTER(N. E. Corner of Holiday Village)
• Coin-operated Dry Cleaners• Attendant on duty to assist you
MADRAS SPORT COATS $25 - $45
men’s storeK-G
Open Weekdays ’til 9 — Saturdays ’til 6 HOLIDAY VILLAGE
After theChristy Minstrels
Complete your evening with a fine selection of Pizzas, German sandwiches and
European atmosphere.LIVE MUSIC — H IG H W AY 93 SOUTH
Heidelhaus
It's terrific!
Skaggs DRUG
LBJ Declares Iowa Disaster AreaBy THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Flood water of the rampaging
Mississippi River, far out of banks along a 400-mile stretch, posed new threats Thursday to communities in a four-state area.
With approaching crests still one or more days away, the river pounded near the tops of makeshift dikes from Prairie du Chien, Wis., to Louisiana, Mo.
In Washington, President Johnson designated Iowa a disaster area eligible for federal aid, the third state so defined as a result of Mississippi River flooding. The others are Minnesota and Wiscon-
Cresting of the Mississippi at Dubuque and East Dubuque is expected late Saturday.
NOW!!! thru MAY 4thACADEMY AWARD
JULIE ANDREW S B ES T A C TR ES S
Friday, April 23 at 8:00 p.m.
The MSU Field House
The Exciting Flavor Of The Orient
Is Just
Tickets $2.00, $2.50 and $3.00
On Sale in the Field House
Hurry, They’re Moving Fast!
JULIE ANDREWS * DICK VAN DYKE DAVID TOMLINSON • GLYNIS JOHNS
LET'S HEAR IT FOR CHARLIE— MC Bob Richards introduces Mary Jo Murray and the “The’s” who campaigned for Charlie Brown on Wednesday.
ADVANCE ACTIVITY PLANS Groups planning activities for
the 1965-66 academic. year are asked to have applications for dates in the office of the associate dean of students by April 29.
It is recommended that they submit three possible dates.
Shastri Visit Postponement Reportedly Upsets Indians
Unusual Adult Entertainment
TheConjugal
BedI f you’ve ever been damned, you won’t want to miss this one!
TIMESDamned — 7 p.m. & 9:43 p.r
Bed — 8:18 p.m.
STARTS SUN.A House Is Not A Home
andMurder She Says
NEW DELHI, India (A P )—The Indian government was not enthusiastic Thursday about the White House’s suggestion that Prime Minister La Bahadur Shastri reschedule his canceled visit to Washington for late summer.
“There is no new thinking on the matter,” a spokesman for Shastri said.
He was commenting on a statement by President Johnson’s press secretary, George E. Reedy, that conversations with Shastri would be more fruitful in late summer.
Shastri Was scheduled to visit Washington June 2. When Johnson asked that the trip be postponed, the prime minister canceled the visit.
Johnson said he would be too busy with the Vietnamese war and his congressional program.
An Associated Press analyst here reported the Indian government feels President Johnson deliberately snubbed the prime minister when he asked for the postponement.
Many Indian officials feel the American President was impolite or even arrogant in the abruptness of his request. Shastri is deemed to have been disgraced publicly and thus to have lost face— and in Asia that’s serious, the writer said.
Reports from neighboring Pakistan indicate there was much the same reaction there to Johnson’s request that Pakistani President Mohammed Ayub Khan also put off his visit. Ayub was scheduled
to travel to Washington April 25.Many government officials and
almost the entire Indian press do not believe the explanation.
Foreign Minister Swaran Singh told Parliament'this week the government had informed the U.S. government there is likely to be misunderstanding in India over the postponement. Members shouted “nonsense” and “shame” when the foreign minister suggested India should accept Johnson’s explanation that he would be too busy to meet Shastri.
It is generally believed Johnson wanted to show displeasure over Indian criticism of U.S. foreign policy. Indian officials, particularly Foreign Minister Singh, have been highly critical of Johnson’s Viet Nam policy. The belief is widespread here that Johnson took offense at Indian efforts to pressure the United States into negotiations, the analyist reported.
A Dinner Away
M I N G ’ SBOTH M ANDARIN AND CANTONESE FOOD
Comer 93 South and West Central
Take Your Date To
TINY TEEPlay Miniature Golf
Ride the Tandem BikesOff 93 South of Holiday Village
Don’t Miss
The New Christy Minstrels
6 — MONTANA KAIMIN * * Friday, April 23, 1965
—by Kaimin photographer Todd Brandoff
G OLDEN HORN2023 SO. HIGGINS
Fri. & Sat.
G EO RG ESA N D E R S
B A R B A R ASHELLEY
VILLAGE OF THE
DAMNED
Plus 4 other Academy Awards!
WALTDISNEYS
FINE ENTERTAINMENT FOR ALL THE FAMILY ADMISSION
Adults ___ 1.50Students _ 1.25 Children _ 75c
at all showings
—POLICY—Weekdays—
Weekdays and 12 Noon
FOX
MARY POPPINS
Screenbeat . . .Mason Elected Senate President
Mary Poppins is at the Fox, entering its second week, one more to go. Don’t miss it.
Mondo Pazzo, showing at the Wilma, is a sleazy imitation of a crazy world and an ineffective second to Mondo Cane.
Ikiru, at the University Theater Saturday night, is an excellent Japanese film which portrays very effectively the Calvary of a common man. A middle-aged bureaucrat discovers that he has six months to live. “ I can’t die, I don’t know what I ’ve been living for.” He reacts violently, stops working, begins to drink. One morning while recuperating from a hangover, he meets a young girl who looks alive and seems to epitomize everything he has missed in life. He asks her to show him how to touch life fully just once before he dies. She replies that she loves living ; and enjoys her new job in a toy factory because the toys give pleasure to many children she will never see. Resolve shapes his soul and he realizes that only dying is death. Two hours and 20 minutes of relentless intensity portray what director Akira Kurosawa wants to say, that to love is to live, the rest is cancer.: Pleasure Seekers, at the State Drive-in. Pathetic. A remake of ‘ ‘Three Coins in the Fountain,”
•which takes place in Spain intsead pf Italy. The Spanish scenery has much more to offer than the movie’s three-strand romantic plot enacted by Ann-Margret, Pamela Tiffin and Carol Lynley. “Adult” overtones dominate the picture which has a trite ending.
Stop Train, co-hit at the Drive-in.Conjugal Bed, showing at the
Golden Horn, is a supposed comedy that compares its heroine’s marital habits to those of a queen bee. Although well acted and directed, the movie makes no distinction between ludicrous and serious matter so that the audience is
printshirt
totally unprepared for the almost tragic ending. In the movie, a middle-aged Italian marries a devoutly religious girl and with her marriage comes another outlet for her zeal. She literally pursues her husband til their first baby is born. Her husband dies from the physical strain and she casts an eye at her former husband’s business partner. Funny but ferocious.
Village of the Damned, co-hit, is a very convincing science fiction thriller. Midwich, England falls asleep one day for two hours. When the village wakes up every-
CHINA CHARGES INTRUSION TOKYO (A P ) —- Communist
China claimed a U.S. warship and three planes intruded into Chinese territory off South China today.
thing appears to be normal, except for one thing. Many of the women in the village are pregnant apparently without the assistance of men. The babies which result all look alike and are exceptionally bright. A t the age of nine they are intellectual geniuses and are able to read minds. George Saunders attempts -to cope with these demons who plan to take over, the world and his solution involves some ticklish moral questions.
Part of a well-rounded education is knowing how to use the easy to use Coin Operated Gasoline Pumps at GASAMAT— Come by and get rounded out. GASAMAT at Mount & Russell in Missoula.
David R. Mason, professor of law, was elected president of the MSU Faculty Senate without opposition yesterday. He w ill serve a one-year term.
Elected to the Senate’s Budget
TAXES RETURNED In 1895, the Supreme Court de
clared the income tax law passed in 1894 was unconstitutional; taxes collected were returned.
and Policy Committee were Robert W. Fields, associate professor of geology; Douglas C. Sheppard, associate professor of languages; and Vernon O. Sletten, profe&or in the School of Education. Other committee members, with one year left to serve, are C. Rulon Jeppesen, of the physics department; Edward B. Dugan, professor of journalism; and Chester B. Beaty, chairman, geography department.
Hear The Christy Minstrels Tonightand then
Get Their Newest Albumat
JER EYE’S MUSICIn The Hammond Arcade
Busy bees buzz among the flowers on this all cotton coverup. Pleated ruffling at the neck, twin pockets. 30-36, $4.
TOWN AND COUNTRY . . . second floor
Friday, April 23, 1965 * * M O N T A N A K A IM IN — 7
by Pat Kennedy
NOW PLAYING! Tonight Through TuesdayIT STA R TS W H ER E MONDO CANE LE F T O FF!
SEE never before shown films of the actual public suicides of Buddhist Monks in Saigon. See them die by fire and gasoline! SEE strip-teasers clothed only with wet transparent tissue paper. SEE actual scenes of today’s active slave trade! SEE the hilarious slap concert where music is produced by the viciousslapping of the faces of SEE the shocking and
WEIRD!INSANE!WILD!TOO
MUCH!
“A ll the scenes you will see in this film are true and taken only from life. I f often they are shock
ing, it is because there are many
shocking things in this world.”
—GUALTIERO JACOPETTI
RIZZOLI FILM DISTRIBUTORS INC. PRESENT
MONDO PAZZOin T E C H N I C O L O R • D ire cte d b y G U A L T I E R O J A C O P E T T I & F R A N C O P R O S P E R I • P ro d u c e d b y M A R IO M A F F E I & G IO R G IO C E C C H I N I • P h o to g ra p h y b y B E N I T O F R A T T A R I • M u s ic co m p o s e d b y N IN O O L IV IE R O • C o n d u cte d b y
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POSITIVELY ADULTS ONLY
EXTRA!Swimming Featurette
Late Newsreel Pepe Le Pew Cartoon:
“Heaven Scent”
FEATURE TIMES
Tonight: 6:25-8:20-10:15 Saturday — 4:00-6:25-8:20-10:15 Sunday —-12:15-2:35-4:55-7:15-9:25 Monday and Tuesday — 7:00-9:20
Showplace of Montana
W I L M APhone 543-7341
$4
CHARGE IT!
TheMercantile
MSU Honorary Elects Officers For Next Term
Officers of Phi Kappa Phi, scholastic honorary, were elected
.for 1965-66.Ludvig R. Browman, professor
of zoology, is president; David R. Howlett, a Billings junior, is vice president; Arnold Bolle, dean of the forestry school, is secretary, and Mrs. Emma Lommasson, assistant registrar, is journal secretary.
To he considered for membership in Phi Kappa Phi, students must have a 3.3 grade-point average. The top five per cent of the junior class and top ten per cent of the senior class are initiated every year. Phi Kappa Phi includes students from all departments and schools in the University.
CONCERNING U• The Departments of Geology
and History have announced the joint appointment of Mrs. Maxine Van de Wetering. She will be teaching a one-year sequence of the history of science in the history department starting next year.
Mrs. Van de Wetering has taught in the geology department for two years. With the new appointment, she will divide her time between geology and history.
• The deadline for all women students applying for the Delta Delta Delta $125 local fund scholarship is May 10. Applications are available at Dean Clow’s office.
• Senior comprehensive examinations for majors in history and political science are scheduled for Thursday, May 13, in LA 2 and Friday, May 14, in L A 311 from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. each day.
Seniors in these majors should check with either Prof. Melvin Wren in history or Prof. Thomas Payne in political science.
A cumulative GPA of 2.5 or
at the service station which features
Tune-ups Brake Service
Do-It-Yourself Car Wash
Brooks Street Conoco
5 Minutes From Campus
FOUNTAIN FAVORITESCones .10 and .20 — Banana Splits .50
Hot Fudge Sundae .30 Thick Shakes .25 and .30
Also Minit Bun Hamburgers .25 at
Hansen’s Ice Cream Parlor519 South Higgins
READY! SET!Let’s Go and Get Our
SPRING SNACKS
at
WORDEN’S MARKET434 North Higgins — Phone 549-9824
better through winter quarter, 1965, will exempt students from the examinations. Students should establish their exemptions by checking with their departmental chairmen.
Seniors planning to graduate with honors or high honors in either history or political science must check with their departmental heads immediately regarding an honors program.
• The Friends of the Library will hold their dinner at 6:30 p.m. in Territorial Rooms 2 and 3 on Wednesday, April 28. Reservations, $2.50 each, must be in by Monday, April 26 to Carol Hansen in Health Science 104.
• A ll students presently enrolled who plan to student teach during fall quarter, 1965, must submit applications to the School of Education office before May 3. Applications- received after that date will be assigned to winter or spring quarters, 1966.
• Two representatives of the American Friends Service Committee will be on campus Monday.
The AFSC attempts to relieve human suffering and to resolve conflicts of all sorts nonviolently. The Committee offers relief and rehabilitation programs and social and technical assistance.
The representatives are Hugh Cummings and Soren Sorenson. They will discuss summer and permanent assignments for AFSC with students from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. in the Territorial Rooms in the Lodge.
• Anyone interested in being a counselor for Freshman Camp next fall can pick up an application at the Lodge Desk. They should be returned to the Lodge desk after completion.
• Bear Paw applications ate due by May 1 at the Lodge Desk.
CLASSIFIED ADS
Music Major Wins AwardJames Terrel, a Billings senior
in music, won first place at the northwest regional auditions of the San Francisco Opera at Seattle.
Terrel has been in several theater productions at MSU including “Girl of the Golden West” and “The Fantastics.” He toured the Orient with the Fantastics company and played Jack Ranee in “Girl of the Golden West.”
Contestants in the auditions sang selections in at least three languages. Terrel sang arias in Italian, French, German and English.
Terrel has been a member of the University Choir, Jubileers and Opera Workshop.
Today’s WeatherWeather for today will be mostly
sunny. A high of 65 degrees and low of 40 degrees are expected.
Judy Fisher, senior from Blackfoot, Idaho, was the second alternate winner in the Seattle contest.
EVERYONEWho Likes To
SWINGWill Have A Ball
MILITARY(That Is)
APRIL 30
8 — MONTANA KAIM IN ir k Friday. April 23. 1965
JAMES TERREL
SHOP AT The
Shoppe225 East Broadway
Opposite Post O ffice
mAUm
TAKE HERTO
SHARIEFThis Weekend
FOR
PIZZA
PIZZA OVENHighway 93 South
PIZZA PARLORHighway 10 West
Ph. 549-7112 Holiday VillageOpen Wednesday - Thursday - Friday Evenings ’til 9 p.m.
’’• Iffu r.i
Mr Pay'sEach line (5 words average)
first insertion_____ 20cEach consecutive insertion___ 10c
(No change of copy in consecutive insertions)
Deadlines: Noon the day preceding publication.
If errors are made in advertisement, immediate notice must be given the publishers since we are responsible for
only one Incorrect insertion.Phone 543-7241, Ext. 219, or 9-7200
1. LOST AND FOUNDLOST, GLASSES, black frames withtapestry case. Call 9-3470.________87-4cLOST: Blue looseleaf notebook at Clover Bowl Wed. night. Call 3-7496.
90-lc3. PERSONALSNEED CASH QUICK? Faculty and staff need not leave campus to borrow $35 to $35,000. Call employee-owned MSU Federal Credit Union, Ext. 406.
__________ 89-6c4. IRONINGIRONING #6 YELLOWSTONE. 543-8428._____________________________ 79-tfCIRONING WELL DONE. 90c an hour. Phone 9-4510.____________________56-tfc6. TYPINGTYPING FINEST QUALITY. MSU business graduate. Electric typewriter. Phone 543-4894. 77-tfcTYPING. FAST. Electric. 3-7944. 39-tfc TYPING: FAST, accurate. 9-5236. 6-tfc TYPING. EXPERIENCED. Call 9-7282.
53-tfc7. INSURANCESTATE FARM INSURANCE. Paul Zie- kowskl, 601 W. Broadway, 549-1471.
85-tfc8. HELP W ANTED BABYSITTER WANTED in my home; start immediately. Call 549-2594 after5 p.m.____________________________ 88-4cTEACHERS WANTED: $5400 up. West, Southwest and Alaska. Free registration. Southwest Teachers Agency, 1303 Central Ave. NJE., Albuquerque, New Mexico. ____________________________18. MISCELLANEOUS STUDIO GIRL COSMETICS. Dee Price, 9-3363, 1436 Cooper afternoons. 84-tfc CAROL’S IN AND OUT. CHICKEN to go $1. Open until 4 a.m. On Strand Avenue by the Elbow Room. Phone9-9700.___________________________ 80-tfcUNITY LECTURE, Mary E. Wessel, “Our Lifeline to God,’’ igriday, 8 pan., Florence Hotel, Room 203, Mezzanine.
90-lc21. FOR SALESMITH-CORONA PORTABLE type-wrlter, 9-5225. 87-4cFOR SALE: 1961 Triumph CYCLE Tr-5A/C 500 cc. Top condition.______3-3219FIVE-STRING B A N J O , GUITAR. 3-8024. 90-3cFREE-FALL OUTFIT. Five-panel T-U. 28-ft. chest pack,_______________ 3-802422. FOR RENTONE-BEDROOM BASEMENT APART- MENT, new. 2021 S. 14th.________90-2c27. BICYCLESLUCKY’S BICYCLE SHOP. Sendee, garta, new, used. 2021 S. HiggirM.
Don’t Walk Around in Circles MisterBowl Over That Tension At TheLIBE RTY BOW LING CENTER211 East Main-—Six Blocks from Campus
• 18 Fully Automatic Lanes Open A ll Weekend
• Snack BarW here Friendly People M eet
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K e e p s a k eD I A M O N D R I N G S
For birthday, anniversary or any special occasion there's no gift like a diamond ring and no diamond ring like a Keepsake. The matchless brilliance and beauty of its perfect center diamond, superb styling and fine quality mean lasting pride and satisfaction. Choose your very personal Keepsake from our wide selection.
BOB WARD & SONS321 North Higgins Ave.
Open Friday 'Til 9 p.m.