The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, August 4, 1981--Page 5' Jerry Ford Museum gets finishing touches GRAND RAPIDS (AP)-The room looks like the Oval Office, but the trap- pings-the wheel from the captured merchant ship Mayaguez, a pipe holder from Leonid Brezhnev-seem just a lit- tle out of date. And no wonder. It's the Oval Office of former President Gerald Ford, who took over the White House when Richard Nixon resigned in 1974 and who lost the 1976 election to Jimmy Carter. THE ROOM, the only full-scale replica of the Oval Office, is one of the highlights of the new Ford Museum, Grand Rapids' tribute to its favorite son. The cement and mirrored glass building will be dedicated Sept. 18 in ceremonies that will feature President Reagan, Ford's onetime Republican rival. Ford's brief presidency saw the end of the Vietnam War and the wrapup of the Watergate scandal, and one is quickly reminded of the painful cir- cumstances under which Ford took of- fice. WITH A 40-FOOT geyser of water gushing from the reflecting pool outside the visitor is greeted by a massive wall of travertine marble on which sculptor Harold Vogel has inscribed parts of Ford's inaugural address. "You have not elected me your president by your ballots, and so I ask you to confirm me as your president with your prayers ... I have not sought this enormous responsibility, but I will not shirk it .,." The first floor of the museum houses a 257-seat auditorium, where a 28%- minute film of Ford's life will be shown. An elaborate control booth at the rear of the auditorium also will control three slide shows in the second-floor display area. For luncheon, dinner or snack That will make your hungry lips smack, To the Michigan League go Where the menu they show Will make you keep coming back! Lunch 11:30 to 1:15 Dinner 5:00 to 7:15 C.M. SPECIAL LOW PRICES FOR STUDENTS Send your League Limerick to: Thefichlian Manager, Michigan League 227 South Ingalls LAZl@L Next to Hill Auditorium You will receive 2 free dinner Located in the heart of the campus. tickets if your limerick is used in it is the heart of the campus . .. one of our ads. A 40-FOOT-HIGH fountain rises in front of the Gerald Ford Presidential Mu- seum in Grand Rapids. The museum, commemorating Ford's years in the Oval Office will open Sept. 18. The Ford Presidential Library was opened in Ann Arbor last May. Beer keg explodes, killing Sparty host LONG BEACH, Calif. (AP) - A 20- gallon keg of beer, apparently overheated, exploded at a weekend fraternity gathering and killed the host of the party, police said yesterday. Robert Harris, a 25-year-old member of Sigma Phi, died early Sunday at Long Beach Community Hospital of in- * juries described as "multiple major trauma." ACCORDING TO police Sgt. Rod Carpenter, the beer keg had been taken to a beach for the Saturday afternoon party. He said it probably heated up in the sun, causing pressure inside to build. Carpenter said the keg was taken back to the fraternity house Saturday night and that Harris was standing next to it when "the keg suddenly decided to take off." Lt. Douglas Bostard said the bottom of the keg blew out, turning it into a missile that blasted into Harris. He said Harris suffered a broken arm, bruises and abrasions to his torso and internal injuries. Carpenter said the keg was intended for 12 pounds of pressure per square in- ch but that the pressure regulator gauge registered 60 pounds per square inch when the keg exploded. Carpenter said that instead of pressurizing the keg by means of a hand pump, as is common,, a separate bottle of carbon dioxide gas had been used. The five most dangerous words in the English language. American Cancer Society We want to cure cancer in your lifetime. THIS SPACE CONTRIBUTED BY THE PUBLISHER AS A PUBLIC SERVICE