M IC H IG A N W e a th e r In s id e Coed engineers, p. 7; V iet Nam, p. 8 ; Eisenhow er, p. 3 STATE U N IV E R S IT Y ÇW S Partly cloudy and cooler to­ day. High near 50. E a s t L an sin g , Michigan Monday, November 11, 1963 P rice 10< Vol. 5 5, Number 53 Spartans Begin To Smell Red Roses T o p P u r d u e 2 3 - 0 , R e s e r v e P o w e r R u n s $ 0 1 T a k e B i g 1 0 L e a d C a m p u s A f t e r B l a s t M u st W in G a m e W ith Illinois The campus is operating on completes repairs in its power "W e don’t know how long it To Insure Possible B o w lT rip reserve,electricity today follow­ system. will be until we can begin op­ ing an explosion at the Moores Non-essential fixtures like hall erating on r e g u l a r pow er," By J E R R Y MORTON River power plant in Lansing lights will be disconnected until Campbell said. "However, we State News Sports Writer Friday which knocked out nearly regular power is restored. Re­ know Lansing is working to re­ all of the power in the area. sidence hall occupants have been pair the plant, and we shouldn’t S p a rta n fa n s e n jo y e d an e le g a n t a fte rn o o n University electrical e q u i p ­ urged by the Department of Pub­ be on reserve more than a few ic Safety to use only a mini­ d ays." o f f o o t b a ll S a tu rd a y w h ic h w a s s p ic e d w ith ment will continue running on reserve power u n t i l Lansing mum of electrical fixtures. Another result of the power C h a m p a ig n and r o s e s . MSU’ s power problems began failure was a smoke-filled base­ M S U is in f r o n t in th e B ig T e n ra c e to d a y , in Lansing at approximately 1:30 ment in the Horticulture Build­ Nat Sci p.m. Friday when a worker re ­ pairing water mains struck a main cable triggering the ex­ ing. Three fire trucks were called to the scene to avert the pos­ and th e y ow e i t a l l to t h e i r 2 3 - 0 p a s tin g o f P u rd u e and M ic h ig a n ’ s 1 4 -8 u p s e t v ic t o r y Credits Cut plosion at the Moores River plant. The power at MSU was cut off almost immediately because the sibility of a fire . No significant damage was reported. Campbell and Mayo halls were o v e r I l l i n o i s a t C h a m p a ig n . The Spartans stand 4-0-1 in To 180 University was purchasing 1,000 kilowatts of power from the Lan­ sing Board of Water and Light both evacuated at approximately 8 p.m. while the tunnel between the two dormitories was being Britons See conference play with Ohio State owning a 3-0-1 mark and Illi­ nois a 3-1-1 record. The College of Natural S ci­ ence announced changes today at the time. Theodore B. Simon, superin­ repaired. A cable had snapped when the electricity was turned H o t F ight MSU rooters are grateful to their Ann Arbor neighbors for their victory at Illinois, but they’d affecting Senior graduation r e ­ tendent of physical plant plan­ quirements. Formal announcement that the ning, said the power failure came during MSU’s peak hours for on earlier in the afternoon. Both halls were dark for almost three hours. For Power be even happier if the Wolverines could come through against Ohio State a week from Saturday. college would c h a n g e require­ power usage. The University pur­ LONDON.l’-The British P a rli­ * * * Ohio State s t i l l has North­ ments was made to President chases about 20 per cent of its ament reconvenes Tuesday for John A. Hannah at the Academic Deans meeting Tuesday. power needs from the Lansing Board of Water and Light be­ Candlelight, the start of the Conservatives' battle to stay in power. Britons expect the hottest political fight western and Michigan remaining on their schedule, aijd Illinois must face Wisconsin and MSU. ColdFood... All students except those in tween noon and 9 p.m. nursing will come under the new Je sse M. Campbell, superin­ of the century. Any way you look at it, the Spar­ requirement of 180 credits plus tendent of the power plant, said s v '* The new Prim e Minister, Sir tans’ battle with Illinois looms as physical education and military MSU's plant is loaded to capa­ C h a r l i e B ro w n M a k e s A G a m e B u t V a i n E ffo r t T o B lo c k Punt Alec Douglas-Home, will take one of the b i g g e s t games in What happens to MSU when the several years for the Green and science requirements, John W. city. his freshly won seat in the House power goes off? of Commons to face the assault White. A win over the Illini Zimmer, assistant dean, said. “ After the explosion in Lan­ Secretaries work by candle­ sing, our power plant could not of opposition leader Harold Wil­ would assure the Spartans of at The nursing requirement of 200 light. Students get out of cla s­ La w m a k e rs H o ld H o u s in g credits will remain unchanged. stand the strain,” Campbell said. son and his Labor Party, which least a tie in the conference race ses early. Dorm residents eat pollsters predict stands a good and a possible trip to the Rose The change is effective this It took nearly an hour and a cold food. And West C ircle Drive half for workers to restore po­ chance of taking control for the Bowl. term . Any senior who might have is c r o w d e d with pajama-claa wer to most of the University. first time since 1951. Douglas- Purdue has put an end to many enough credits under the new pro­ coeds. $ F o r P o w e r P la n t G ro w th Home must call new national e - a Spartan Rose Bowl dream, and gram to graduate this term should Since the University has no Friday afternoon’ s power fail­ lections within a year’ s time. for a while it looked like this contact the dean’s office in the reserve generative capacity, it ure left many parts of the cam - It’s a near-Herculean task Sir could be another one of those Natural Science Building as soon will remain on reserve power un­ (continued on page 8) Recent action by the Michigan pay for increased demands on to build two housing units to Alec is taking on. He’ s got to years. as possible, Zimmer said. til the Lansing plant is repaired. legislature may have far-reach ­ heat and power facilities. hold 200 and 300 students each. reverse a voting tide that has The stubborn Boilermaker de­ ing implications for the state’s The resolution, which passed The new dormitories are expec­ been running against the Con-- fense wouldn’t let the Spartans college and university housing both houses without debate, would ted to solve Oakland’ s student servatives persistently in special cross the goal line during the first programs. 'empower the state treasurer to housing problem. elections for the last two vears. half, and it took the kicking of The house and senate approved collect the funds and hold them “The legislature is establish- Earl Lattimer to give MSU a a resolution Thursday requiring in reserve for future power plant halftime lead. (continued from page 6) R e g is tr a tio n Lattimer booted 28-yard field that two per cent of Oakland Uni­ expansion. versity’s $2 million dormitory Oakland University, MSU’ s af­ goal with 2:40 remaining in the building budget be set aside to filiate near Pontiac, is planning M a te r ia ls second period to put the Spartans M a r c h e r s ahead to stay. Guard John Karpinski set up T o O b s e rv e Seniors and graduate students the kick by pouncing on a Purdue Campus Fires Keep going through early registration, fumble at the Boilermaker 30- Nov. 20 and 21, should pick yard line. The Spartans went for V e ts 9 D a y up reservation cards today or the field goal when they were E. L. Fire Dept. Busy The Scots Highlanders, Drum Tuesday. and Bugle Corp. and the drill They can also get their re - (continued on page 5) teams of the ROTC units from servtion p a c k e t s and winter A freak series of three fires in two days on campus resulted MSU will march in Lansing to­ several weeks because the stove day in the 9th Veteran’ s Day and all cooking equipment are celebration. damaged beyond repair. term time schedules at the first floor Union concourse 8 a.m - 5 p.m. both days. ID cards must Japanese Disasters in a busy weekend for the East Today the most widely known be presented as proof of eli­ Lansing F ire Department and the “ We will have to order and ceremony of Veterans’ Day is gibility. MSU Department of Public Safe­ install completely new facili­ the laying of te wreath on the Seniors who had taken at least Kill 608 ties,” he said. "In addition, the Tomb of the Unknowns at Ar­ ty- 126 credits by the beginning of The East Lansing F ire Depart­ lington National Cemetery, out­ fall term are eligible, said Reg­ (Continued on page 7) ment put out three campus fires side Washington, D.C. istra r Horace C. King. in addition to making one “ dry- TOKYO, (AP)—Japan mourned run" due to an overheated fuse Traffic Changes In Effect Tuesday its dead Sunday from the twin in the Horticulture Building. disasters of a coal mine explo­ The Shaw Hall grill was the sion and triple train wreck that scene of a fire Saturday after­ killed 608 persons. noon estimated to have caused $3,000-$4.000 worth of damage. The entire dormitory was evac­ uated in what many residents To Ease Shaw Lane Tie-Ups The one-way traffic system on stallation is expected some time south bound Chesnut Road would The toll in the mine explosion Saturday on the southern island of Kyushu was officially put at 446 miners dead, 450 injured and thought was a routine fire drill. North and South Shaw Lanes will in February. The oneway exten­ be prohibited. 10 missing. be extended from the Farm Lane sion designed to bring the new Southbound traffic on Chesnut The train wreck left 162 dead, Gary Kilborn, w eek-end man­ intersection to S c i e n c e Road parts of Shaw Lane into coor­ Road in order to go east on including an American student, ager of the g rill, said the fire Tuesday at 7 a.m. announced dination with the present traffic Shaw Lane will have to turn and a t least 70 injured. 11 oc­ G o a lie C h a r l i e D e d ic h L e a p s H i g h T o P r e v e n t A S t . L o u is S c o r e was apparently caused by a short University Traffic Engineer J . control system farther west on right onto West Shaw Lane and curred 15 m iles south of Tokyo, circuit in the electrical system of the french frie r. Cooking Carl McMonagle and Public Safe­ Shaw Lane. make a U-turn through a di­ near Yokohama, six hours after ty D irector Richard O. Bernitt. vider strip. the mine disaster. grease boiled over, and within McMonagle and Bernitt also On Tuesday traffic will only reported that stop signs would be Science Road will become one­ A spark apparently ignited a Soccerm en N i p St. Louis seconds the flaming grease had be able to go westward on North installed soon at Chestnut Road way northbound between the two cloud of coal dust in the under­ spread over most of the french ground tunnels of the Miiki mine fry and cooking area. It then Shaw Lane between Science Road and West Shaw Lane, and that Shaw lanes when the new traf­ and Farm Lane. Eastbound traffic left turns onto Shaw Lane from fic pattern goes into effect. at the port city of Omuta. Many moved to the wall and ceiling miners were burned by a giant in the southeast corner of the will use South Shaw Lane. F o r First C o n fe re n c e Title fire ball while others suffocated grill. McMonagle said, "University in deadly carbon monoxide fumes police report traffic backs up The blaze burned for about ten left by the explosion. on North Shaw Lane from Farm As the news of the explosion By RICHARD SCHWARTZ wing in the outset of the se­ minutes before the fire alarm was Lane all the way to Owen Hall The Spartan total of four goals, at Japan's largest and most mo­ cond period, Dimitriou wasted t u r n e d i n , while employees many times each day and as late State News Sports Writer surpassing the number scored in dern mine spread across the na­ all five previous meetings with little time in chalking up scores. attempted to fight it with fire as 10 p.m. The only means avail­ In what has the earmarks of extinguishers. When six fire ex­ tion, disaster struck again. A St. Louis, carried MSU to its able to us to relieve this type a banner fall for Spartan teams, On a towering center from tinguishers proved of no use packed passenger train speeding ninth win and first undefeated of unpredictable congestion is Michigan State’s soccer squad Clare DeBoer at right wing, Di­ in fighting the blaze, the East toward Tokyo smashed into a de­ season in the Midwest Collegi­ to extend the one-way system. railed freight train, then leaped became the first to claim a mitriou headed the ball over St. Lansing F ire Department was During h e a v y traffic periods, ate soccer league. Louis goalie, Roger Rupp. Rupp, across the tracks into the fourth conference championship, with a called. vehicles pass the intersection For Michigan State, it was a and fifth cars of a commuter 4-3 upset over St. Louis Satur­ camped low in front of the nets, at the rate of 2,300 per hour. reserve forward linesman, Van East Lansing firemen had the train coming from the opposite day. made a futile leap at the 10:11 Extension of both North and T USTW ) Ær- □imitriou, who provided taost of b ^ ze. extinguished in a few min-. ’ scoie. direction. the scoring punch. utes. South Shaw Lanes has been com­ State’s victory, coming after Amo n g the dead was William Trailing 2-0 after the first Hardly twenty seconds had e - The grill opened for sale of pleted as far as the Bogue Street „five fruitless attempts to defeat Scott, 28, of Colorado Springs, quarter, Dimitriou exploded for lapsed before Dimitriou picked soft drinks and packaged goods Traffic C ircle near Owen Grad­ ^ th e national champion Billikens, Colo., a student at Tokyo’sin ter- three goals in the second period up a loose ball and sent it soar­ at 7:30 p.m. Saturday following uate Hall. national Christian University. He assures the Spartans of a berth to put the Spiartans out in front, ing into the upper right hand a thorough cleanup and airing. T raffic signals for the two in the National Collegiate Ath­ died in a hospital a few hours Kilborn said the grill will have Shaw Lane intersections on Farm letic Association playoffs later 3-2 at halftime. later. Replacing Karl Thiele at left (continued on page 5) to operate on a limited basis for Lane have been ordered and in­ this month. v I Michigan State N e w s , East Lansing, Michigan Monday, N o v em b er 11, 1963 A s Y o u L i k e It T he S tu d e n ts S p ea k T h e s tu d e n ts o f M ic h ig a n g r e a t e r n u m b e r o f ju d ic i a r y E a s t w a r d H o ! S ta te h a v e v o te d in f a v o r o f h e a r in g s b e in g o p e n t o th e h a v in g s tu d e n t ju d ic i a r y m e e t­ p u b lic . By B ob B earm an in g s op e n to th e p u b lic . A t No r ig h t s w o u ld be i n f r i n ­ The Presidential Prim aries in the East, especially the one in le a s t th is is w h a t one m ig h t New Hampshire as it is the first, are important to the Presidential ged in th e p r o c e s s . O n th e aspirations of Senator Barry Goldwater. It will be a fairly good s u r m is e f r o m th e o v e r w h e lm - c o n t r a r y , we fe e l th a t th e indication of whether or not a conservative will be able to carry in g s u p p o r t 3 ,3 5 2 s t u d e n t s any of the big Eastern states. n e w s it u a t io n w o u ld o n ly add When Goldwater was in New Hampshire last week at a fund g a ve to th a t p ro p o s e d a m e n d ­ to th e s e c u r it y o f s tu d e n ts ’ raising dinner in honor of the late Senator Styles Bridges, he m e n t o f th e AUSG c o n s t it u ­ w e lf a r e . had an enthusiastic reception. And while he was there the Senator gave one of his fiery, but old, speeches on the overcentralization t io n . O n ly 662 p e r s o n s w e re A s i t s ta n d s , th e s tu d e n t of the federal government. o p p o s e d to th e a m e n d m e n t. ju d ic i a r y m e e ts m o s t r e g u ­ The next day in New York he stated that the Kennedy Admin­ istration "adds up to nearly a thousand days of wasted spending, W h ile a m a jo r i t y o f t h e l a r l y in an a tm o s p h e r e o f wishful thinking, unwarranted interventions, wistful theories and s tu d e n ts e n r o lle d m a y n o t h a v e waning confidences.” s ile n c e . In s o m e in s ta n c e s v o te d , we fe e l c e r t a in t h a t He also feels that the administration "stands wall-eyed in t h is is s u r e ly th e b e s t f o r Berlin and cross-eyed in P aris and blind in Cuba,” and that th o s e w ho c a r e d d id . T h u s a l l c o n c e rn e d . “ even» the liberals will have to recognize that what we have now t h is g ro u p h a s a r ig h t to h a ve in Washington is a would be king and want-to-be dynasty, not a B u t s ile n c e c a n n o t h e l p President and a party.” it s d e c is io n s ta n d . b u t b r e e d s u s p ic io n and ca n It is statements such as these that lead one wonder how Gold­ T h e a m e n d m e n t now a w a its water could ever get the Republican Presidential nomination, o n ly f o s t e r la c k o f c o n fid e n c e . much less defeat President Kennedy in 1964. For these state­ f in a l a p p r o v a l f r o m th e F a c ­ I f m o r e o f th e j u d i c i a r y ’ s ments show that Senator Goldwater has not yet penetrated beneath u lt y C o m m itte e on S t u d e n t the slogans that are so prevelant in politics. h e a r in g s w e r e o p e n , w i t h ­ And unless the Senator does penetrate beneath these slogans, A f f a ir s . o u t je o p a r d iz in g a n y o n e , he will not be elected even if he does get the nomination. For U n t il nowr a ll ju d ic i a r y h e a r ­ these slogans, at least the ones he’ s been using, appeal only to e v e r y o n e m ig h t s ta n d to b e n e ­ in g s h a ve b e e n r e g u la r ly the right-wing elements of the country. But if Goldwater wants f it . to win he will have to capture the great middle of American c lo s e d w ith the s tu d e n t h a v ­ politics-something he won’t be able to do if he keeps on making in g th e r ig h t to an op e n h e a r ­ T h is w o u ld p la c e j u d i c i ­ statements such as those quoted earlier. The Senator leaves many questions unanswered. Does he really in g o n ly i f he r e q u e s ts i t . a r y u n d e r added s c r u t in y , believe that he can win without carrying the East? The indication T h e new r u le w o u ld r e ­ th e r e b y in s u r in g a h ig h le v e l is now that he is planning to win by carrying the South and the Midwest. And if what happened recently in Hershey, Pennsylvania, v e r s e the s it u a t io n , le a v in g o f in t e g r i t y on it s p a r t . 11 is any indication of how the East feels toward Goldwater, he may a ll h e a rin g s ope n e x c e p t w hen w o u ld a ls o d is p e l m a n y r u m ­ as well forget about the East. a s tu d e n t s p e c if ic a lly a s k s th a t The Hershey Arena was only two-thirds full, and his speech b lin g s a b o u t p o o r p r o c e d u r e was not good. He tied the Kennedy administration to big-city a h e a r in g be c lo s e d . and s u p p o s e d in t e r f e r e n c e N o Y o u C a n 't C o B a c k In ! M 5 U Fire machine politics, and the audience applauded half-heartedly. Even C e r t a in ly , h u m a n i n e r t ia Governor Scranton looked bored. f r o m h ig h e r p o w e r s . In t h is D rills A re R ealistic. In the West, however, the audiences responded more favorably. b e in g w h a t i t is , th e new s t a ­ w a y i t w o u ld s e r v e to p r o ­ At San Antonio, Texas, and Eugene, Oregon, he was enthusiastically t e c t th e j u d ic i a r y i t s e l f . welcomed. There were many college students present at these tu te w o u ld r e s u lt in a f a r Letters lo The Editor rallies. One often wonders what a Goldwater rally would be without these non-voting participants. Goldwater, in this w riter’s opinion, will have to carry some of S ee The See the g i r l . She is a p r e t t y B o y , S ee T he She is a b ig g i r l . G ir l 'F o r e ig n ’ S tu d e n ts the Eastern states if he is to win. And yet, because of his con­ servatism and the East’ s liberalism this will be next to im­ possible to do. No man in modern politics has ever been elected A n In ta n g ib le A s s e t President without the support of at least some of the East. g i r l . She h e r c h e c k e d , m a d r a s See th e m in c la s s . T h e b o y s k i r t . A n d c o tto n b lo u s e . A nd is s lu m p e d in th e c h a ir . He is W e e ju n s . A n d p u ffe d o u t h a ir . a s le e p . T h e g i r l is s lu m p e d in To the Editor: munism versus anything." This, gan for the Michiganders,” and She is a c o lle g e g i r l . She g oe s h e r c h a ir . She is a s le e p to o . In the November 5 article of as stated, doesn’t make much consistent, therefore, with his I F ro m O th e r C am p u ses | to th e U n iv e r s it y o f G e o r g ia . T h e p r o f e s s o r is v e r y d u ll. her series on out-of-state stu­ sense to me. Although I admit most illustrious predecessors, dents, Jackie Korona quotes Rep. that sometimes I do say things Guzowski has maintained that Christianity, Morality And Sex See th e b o y . H e is a c o lle g e See th e m s tu d y in g . I t is 4:3 0 Richard Guzowski (D-Wayne) as that don’t make much sense to "Michigan cannot be expected to m a n . See h is ta p e r e d s la c k s . in th e m o r n in g . T h e y h a v e a saying that the legislators’ r e ­ me, in this case 1 refuse to serve the nation." Nowl wouldn’t sponsibility " i s to provide the accept responsibility. A goup of students at Southern Methodist University, Dallas, A n d G a n t s h i r t w ith th e lo o p . t e s t to d a y . See th e l i t t l e p i l l s . say that it is all quite that Texas, met to discuss "Christianity, Morality and Sex” recently. best type of education for our For the record, questions put bad, for the state does serve Am­ own student.” He f e e l s that to me implied that in the re­ This discussion progressed to the topic of love where one boy A n d c o r d o v a n s . W ith no s o c k s . T h e y k e e p th e m a w a k e . See erica in certain respects. Without groaned “ But, how do you know you’re really in love? How can “ there’s no sense in building fac­ porter’ s mind there was the pos­ a Michigan, New York’s Lake See th e m a t a d a n c e . W a tc h th e b o t t le s u n d e r th e b o y ’ s ilities toprovide education for the sibility of interpreting the pre­ you be sure before it’s too late? E rie would lack an extreme west­ “ Guesswork,” answered one girl smugly, and she smiled. th e m t w is t and y e l l and w a ve b e d . T h e y p u t h im to s le e p . whole nation.’ ’ sent conflict in Algeria-Morocco ern snore; witnout a Michigan, "Our own student’ ’ can be any­ and involvement o f outside pow­ the Yankees would lack an add­ p a p e r c u p s in th e a i r . I t is N o w th e y a r e ta k in g th e t e s t. From Credits To Courses one who lived in Michigan for ers as simply another instance itional 18 victories a year; and h o t and n o is y . See th e m a f t e r See th e l i t t l e p ie c e s o f p a p e r only six months, and who has of the "spread of Communism.” without a Michigan, which is just paid next to nothing in state taxes I attempted to point out the his­ Beginning with the class enrolling at Gustavus Adolphus College th e d a n c e in th e g i r l ’ s p a r k ­ in t h e i r la p s . T h e y h e lp th e m a part of that appendage to New this fall for the first time, the academic load will be measured compared to the lifelong Michigan tory in the Arab world, of dif­ York called the United States, in g lo t . T h e y a r e in h is c a r * p a s s th e t e s t. I t is h a r d . resident. Many of “ our own stu­ ficulties in achieving unity. And New Yorkers would be deprived in term s of courses, rather than the previous credit system. The dents” are no longer Michigan’s underscored that there were un­ normal load will be four courses for a sem ester and the require­ w ith th e lo u d m u f f le r . T h e y T h e y a r e c o lle g e s tu d e n ts . of much genuine folk humor which ments for graduation will be thirty-two courses, attendance at after graduation. With today’s doubtedly many social and polit­ makes life so gay. a r e on th e f r o n t s e a t a nd , no, T h e ir a d u lt f r ie n d s c a l l th e m ever-increasing mobility, it is ical factors involved. I said that four winter term s, a course in physical education to be completed The "F oreig n Student Ques­ on s e c o n d th o u g h t, d o n ’ t see not uncommon for a native of it certainly was not simply a in four terms and a reading course to be completed in eight term s. “ Y o u n g m e n and w o m e n .’ ’ tion" could, 1 guess, be solved one state to attend college in question of Communism versus by mass emigration; but that’s th e m in th e p a r k in g lo t . A n d “ F u t u r e le a d e r s o f A m e r ­ another state and to work and pay anything else. already been tried and it doesn’t N o w i t is 1 2 :3 0 . See t h e g i r l ic a .’ ’ taxes in a third state. Is it reason­ Speaking for my part in the work. And in view of a remote­ able, therefore, to call a student m atter, I couldn’t agree more L e tte r P o lic y r u n f r o m th e c a r . She m u s t G od s a v e A m e r ic a . ness for the usual alternative h e r e is a h o o k "o u r own’ ’? with the opening statement by "solu tion s," I would surmise g e t in s id e h e r d o r m on t im e . -U n iv e rsity of G eorgia Red and White The research to be conducted Khalaf Al-Delaimy that the com­ that Michigan State is doomed to Letters should not be longer at MSU through the recently mentators "attempted to put light eternal contamination by the aw­ I h a I is • awarded Atomic Energy Comis­ on the Algerian-Moroccan border than 300 words, and should be ful foreigners. typed double spaced if possible. ’N k r u m a h N e v e r D i e s sion grant will benefit not only question, but they only scratched Representative Guzowski could Michigan, but the United States the surface and left their readers Names and address should also h e lp it x q u s From Our Wire Service take his cue from this fact and be included. No unsigned letters and the entire world. The role with a rather foggy idea of the turn his attention to less polemic In an assembly hall in downtown Accra 100 faith they want,” says a headquarters brochure. of a university, as the MSU ad­ situation. will be printed, but names may The movement, it explains, has never meant and less assinine projects which be withheld if we feel there is lo boys and girls raise right hands and pledge ministration h a s i n d i c a t e d , Charles C. Hughes to imply that President Kwame Nkrumah is might genuinely serve the re s i­ reason. to "liv e by the ideals of the redeemer, Kwame should not be confined to an area Associate Professor immortal e v e n though the c h i l d r e n sing dents of his d istrict. Nkrumah, founder of the State of Ghana, initiator defined by artificial boundaries. Department of of the African personality .” "Nkrumah never dies ” Sociology and The State News reserves the| Then the children, from tots of 4 to youths "T h e ideals and teaching for which Osagyefo Good students c o m e from Anthropology John P. Dellera night to edit letters to fit space] fin d of 17, chant in unison: (The Redeemer) Dr. Kwame Nkrumah stands everywhere. O u t - o f - s t a t e and 265 Snyder Hall requirements. "Nkrumah does no wrong. Nkrumah is our in his lifetime, and which not only Ghana but foreign students are not a liabil­ the whole of Africa has embraced, like his ity, but an asset. They help leader. Nkrumah is our messiah. Nkrumah never dies .” soul, will forever enjoy immortality,” the the University broaden the hori­ o u r s e lv e s D e b a te ■ P A N i C n AMG O These are Ghana’ s Young Pioneers and this brochure says. zons of its students, not limit m s -j Bag» i ; vvx..«$ T;;; ; • •■lifi •? ;f s is K A L E MA A N 1 O N is the ceremony that opens their meetings. "H is name will live after his death, in the them. To the Editor: O R L O P S T 1 E R S Similar pledges are repeated in schools and sense that other great personalities of history The presence of "fo reign " stu­ The annual debate on the vir­ dents (both from the US and tues and evils of admitting out- A L E S T A R C E E village halls throughout the nation. still enjoy immortality ACRO SS 2 3 . Antique abroad) provides an intangible, of-state students to MSU has been L O G s E R O D c NT The s t a t e-sponsored youth movement of 1. Father of 2 4 . Shift "W e say 'Nkrumah is our m essiah’ because but nonetheless valuable part of renewed en force by the same J e h o sh ap h at 2 5 . Hindu A R E c A E N E Ghana’ s ruling party claims a mill ion members. the word messiah implies one who was born one’s education. Students are ex­ state politicians who apparently 4. Siam , coins g arm ent A D A S A 8 E R With an obvious smack at the Boy and Girl with a mission and has delivered his people posed to new ideas, attitudes, and ca n think of nothing Michigan 7. J a p . out­ 2 7 . NoUon 0 E D R O C K L E N O Scouts, an official description of the Young from some form of bondage or evil. Dr. Kwame cultures. n e e d s more t h a n no " f o r ­ casts 2 8 . Winter E R A R E A L WA S Pioneers declares: “ In organization and program it is a com­ Nkrumah has done that. He saved us from the Morton Rosenberg eigners.” 11. B o d y of month R A V E IS R O T AT E exploitation of the colonialists. Thus he is Lacking everything but verbos­ advisers 3 0 . Batter E T 1 T E AL A R E 5 plete departure from colonial youth movements Ghana’s messiah.” P r o f R e to rts ity, Rep. Guzowski of Detroit, 13. Satiate 3 3 . K in d of T O T E D T A P E P ■ and other colonial hangovers with their cult 14. Red dye light of romanticism, exclusivity and loyalties to has r e t u r n e d with hatchet and Nkrumah does no wrong, it explains, because To the Editor: 15 . Three-spot 3 4 . Co un ter S O L U T IO N O F Y E S TER D A Y'S PUZZLE another time and place ’’ 1 write with reference to the musket to rid Michigan of all 16. And ten: 3 5 . Valley he never acts without consulting the people Following charges by church leaders that the column by Khalaf Al-Delaimy in imperial invaders. "An ‘A’ for suffix 3 6 . H eavy 43. Baste 4. Social through their elected representatives. an out-of-state student doesn’t 44..Liquor insect movement was Godless, the Young Pioneers In practice, the Young Pioneers are less which he referred to earlier 17. Mythica l h a m m er even come close to a 'C ’ for a lance DOWN 5. Chord of added "fe a r of God” to their rules of conduct. politically c o n s c i o u s t h a n their opening comments by me and other s on 3 8. U n c o m ­ Y ou , like m any of us, m ay be "Although the movement does not formally Michigander," he proclaims— 1 9. Sp an o f pounded 1. Things four tones ceremony would indicate. There are sessions the conflict between Algeria and y ears bought 6. Low bench reaching out in an effort to iden­ include religious education in its program, which is probably true—and, con­ 4 0 . Church for the teaching of "Nkrumahist” ideology, Morocco published l a s t week. 20. M ake a recess 2. More 7. Newt tify yourself properly, to learn members are free to pursue whatever religious I refer particularly, to th e sequently, "foreigners ( t h e m ) but few children seem to take them seriously. slip 4 1 . Cabinet sensible 8. Harangue who you are and where you are semantically confusing s t a t e ­ must go!” /II 2 3 124 s i 7 09 10 2 1 . Schedule 4 2 . Necessity 3. "Lil — " 9. Sour ale going. W e believe we have found ment, "B a sica lly , it is C o m­ In a spirit speaking of "M ichi- 10. More un­ the answers to these questions in ---^ //- // derhanded M IC H IG A N PFA N U TSI the Christian Science textbook, STATE U N IV E R S IT Y ! STATE M EW S j' Cl h At e \ ÉVÉRY D M I SIT MERE >. m ission is truly a product of the s p a c e age, With the introduction of this lighter, highly and is typical of te ch n ica l p ro g ress at Ford. d urable and efficien t tran sm ission in 1964 A nother a ssig n m e n t co m p leted ; another c a s e Com et, Fairlane and Ford m odels, our e n g i ­ of en g in eerin g lead ership at Ford providing n ee rs have taken still an oth er step toward putting extra pep per pound into Ford-built ca rs. fresh id e a s for th e A m erican Road. TU ES. N O V . 12 2n d F lo o r MOTOR COMPANY 7 l o 9 P .M . U n io n The American Road,Dearborn,Michigan W H I M ■NOINKKRING LRADBRSMIR B R IN G S YOU R R TTSR -R O Il-T C A R S Michigan State News, E a s t La n s i n g , Michigan Monday, N ovem b er 11, 1963 Booters Score First Victory Over St. Louis, 4-3 C a p tu re Lo o p T itle , D re a m C o m e T ru e N C A A P la y o ff B id • For Coach K e n n e y Bv LARRY MOGG By with their eyes glued .to. .u the. up f i e Id center from George State News Sports Writer playing field and their ears next ( continued from pago 1) Janes, drew the Billiken goalie to their radios. The crowd, how­ out and skirted to his left to Soccer C o a c h Gene Kenney corner of the Billiken goal, to ever, didn’t have time to shiver record the deciding goal. chalked up another win Saturday. tie the score. as they alternated o-ooh-ing and For the most part, however, For the statistical-minded the With ten seconds remaining in 4-3 victory over St. Louis was a-ah-hing for the soccer and foot­ the half, the Spartan left wing it was a show of defense. State ball squads as they both battled had to engineer a way to pre­ Kenney’ s and State’ s sixtieth win put State ahead, 3-2, scoring on in seventy tilts. But it was un­ for post-season laurels. a rebound off Rupp. Bill Sch­ vent St. Louis from maintaining When the Spartan gridders put its 8.4 goal average. On the other C o a ch K en n ey G e ts doubtedly Kenney’s finest hour in warz was credited for an as­ their game out of reach, the en­ hand, the B ills had to contain seven sucessful years of coaching sist in a wild scramble to boot the ball which preceded Dimin- triou’s goal. the Spartans who were sporting a “.3 mark. A B ig L i f t In tra m u ra l News Spartan soccer teams. Accompanying the hard-fought thusiastic fans urged the booters to preserve their slim one goal lead. The outcome told the story. a "hard, rough and robust game, verdict was a perfect regular * * * * St. Louis, gunning for its fifth MEN'S Paddle ba 11 Schedule season mark, the Spartan’ s first State, after a faltering start which the greatest ever played between Coach Kenney manipulating his straight conference title, made Midwestern Conference champ­ allowed two scores, braced it­ St. Louis and Michigan State.” Football Schedule scant bench , shook off a first a promising bid with two first Court 7 p.m. Singles ionship and a second straight period scores. self while at the same time period knockout punch to gain St. Louis Coach Bob Guelker*, Time Field 1 1—Bethal Manor (Brown)-Rinky shot at the NCAA playoffs. Also started threatening offensively. the victory. A three goal blitz Pat Me Pride, St. Louis inside who has guided St. Louis through 6.-00—W. Shaw 3-5 it brought the elimination of that Spartan Loach Gene Kenney, Dinks. by reserve Van Dimitriou in right .who was selected for the t h r e e national championships, 6:45—W.Shaw 4-10 ghastly word, jinx, from conver­ who had tagged St. Louis as the 2—S.O.C.I (Bloom)-Commuters the second period gave the Spar­ L'.S. Olympic team earlier this called it " a deserved victory 7:30—Wight-Wildcats sations whenever Michigan State greatest soccer team ever as­ 3—S.O.C.II (Nash)-S.O.C.I(Reis- tans an opening half lead. After for State. 8:15—McCoy-McKinnon ner) and St. Louis soccer games are the B ills had knotted the score sembled, said: "No doubt we were the great­ "1 think they showed more 9:00—Snyder 11-14 4—Rinky Dinks-Elsworth(Kutch- recalled. midway through the third stanza, est soccer team out there Sat­ hustle and spirit, especially when 9:45—NO GAME inski) For the first time in five newcomer C lare DeBoer tallied urday. ‘‘ When a team is down two down by two goals,” Guelker Field 2 Court 7 p.m. Doubles meetings State preceeded S t. the winning goal less than two In the last five seconds of goals, it usually folds,” he said. said, "W e had them beat, but 6:00—Winchester-Wimbledon 5—Rinky Dinks-Tots(Clever & Louis in the final won-lost box- minutes later. the period, Tom McDonnell, left "But our forwards put the pre­ 6:45—Arsenal-Aristocrats Foster) score. * * * * they wouldn’t fold. wing for St. Louis, scored c ssure on and our defense held its 7:30—Cachet-Casopolis 6—S.O.C.II (Jaffa & Schneeber- Although it was his boys who State’s offensive line was only an assist from Car! Gentile. " I t was a hard game and e i­ 8:15—Worcester-Worship ger)-Commuters. won the contest, much credit must outshone by a determined and ground." Gentile, Billiken center forward, ther team could have won,” he 9:00—Fyjimo’s-Duffwackers be given to the fast, talking, rea­ scrambling defensive unit. St. Kenney called it “ the great­ sold a fake kick to State goalie said. “ But State had the most 9:45—Sigma Nu-Farmhouse WOMEN’ S son's start Kenney was faced Louis native Dennis Checkett and est team effort with every man Charlie Dedich, opening the way goals and that's what counts,” Field 3 with an almost impossible head­ Captain Sam Donnelly were the playing his best. Residence Hall Block play-offs for McDonnell’ s shot. Guelker felt his team put out 6:00—Brinkley-Six Pak ache of replacing eight ‘62 start­ stalwarts of a great defensive "We didn't give them a mo­ 6:45—D ueces-Bristol for Volleyball begins tonight. All blanket that held the high scoring State’s 3-2 halftime advantage 100 per cent but said " i t wasn’t ers. This included the entire ment’ s notice once we got going,” 7:30— E.Shaw 1-7 teams should contact the Wo­ B ills from the tie-breaking score held until Gentile scored on a our day. offensive line, which rang up a men's I.M. Office for the pair­ W m m m m breakway at 14:5/ of the third he said. 8:15- NO GAME ings and schedule. There will sparkling 9-2 record and Went to in the final thirty minutes.. Goal­ "W e’ll be back,” heconcluded, 9:00— Argonaughts-Ar House the NCAA sem i-finals. keeper Charles Dedich turned in a quarter. "T h eir fullbacks couldn't run be a meeting for all Sports Chair­ F u l le r P la y s H e a d s -U p " s o just don’t count us out.” 9:45—Cache-Carthage Kenney for the most part had tremendous job in the nets. Stan Any vision St. Louis had of any more in the late stages, men of Residence Halls and Sor­ Among the most jubilant in X-Country ^n undefeated season was erased thanks to the constant drive and Field 4 to rely on a small contingent Stelmashenko, Louis Eckhardt, S t a t e ' s lockeroom celebration 6:00—McN'ab-McBeth orities at 7:00 p.m. in the Sem­ and George Rendon were the other with a goal by DeBoer two mi­ desire of our men,” he added. of reserves and sophomores in a following the victory was Cap- inar Room of the Women’s I.M. members of the defense that nutes later. DeBoer, on a long The MSU head man termed it 6;45—P ills -B .M .F .’ s force-fed youth movement. The _tain Sam Donnelly. building tomorrow evening. If choked off a last gasp rally. Title Race >•*> 7:40—NO GAME Spartan booters polished off eight you are unable to attend the meet­ * * * * 8:15—Wollstone-Worthington s t r a i g h t opponents in g r a n d "What a climax to my ca - ing please send a substitute as Both Billiken mentor Bob Guel­ 9:00—Rangoon-Red Trojans fashion before the vital bout with Breer,” he said. " I ’ve been wait- this is an important meeting. ker and Coach Kenney agreed that Is Today the Billikens. Eing four years ever since I was Notice the fact that the Spartan’s didn’t The team proved itself against |a freshman, for th is.” Rule Change give up, despite being down by Please call the Intramural Of­ St. Louis Saturday in a pres­ Dimitriou, recounting his se- two goals, was the turning point fice if your play-off schedule for CHAMPAIGN, 111. - - State’ s sure packed episode, and then Icond period scoring spree, said: Revision of eligibility Rule 5 in the contest. Touch Football does not appear seven-man h arrier team will be carried the jubilant Kenney trom * * * * ¡ “ Think you were surprised about that appears on pages 13 and 14 out to retain possession of their the field. it? What about me?” in the State News. * * * * Maybe State was bound to win of the Women’ s Intramural Hand­ Big Ten crown here today. The book. Effective: November 11, It was a Spartan version of a anyway. Sam Donnelly had the Hockeyettes Boost Spartans will put their title on 1963. ’’Tale of Two Triumphs” for an same lucky British half penny in the l i n e against s e v e n chal­ o v e r f l o w partisan throng, al­ his boot that he had there during lengers. % College varsity team members most 5,000, huddled in the cold the tough Akron win. Record Over .500 The conference championship are ineligible to compete in the meet will get underway at 11 T h e Women’ s Varsity Field Hockey team tied one game and goalie for preserving the sport in which they are regarded as varsity. Cheerleading awards will not affect intramural eligi­ a.m. (CST) with the Spartans, Wisconsin, and Minnesota as­ suming co-favorite roles. DiversDon’t, But Lead a ! won another in a Sports Day outing at Western Michigan Uni­ versity, pushing t h e i r season mark over the .500 point. The MSU second team had a better time of it winning their two contests 5-0 and 3-1. In bility.4 NOTE Varsity gymnasts are ineligible for diving events. With a couple of get-acquain­ ted practice sessions on thepre- dominatly level University of Illi­ nois cro ss country course under Swimmers To Victory team by using the Green and Michigan State's varsity wo­ The hockeyettes are now 3 -2 - their morning game, against a Women with an advanced com­ their belts, the Spartans are men’ s swimming team’ s divers White " B ” squad to defeat them 1 in intercollegiate play and 4 -2 - much less experienced Kalama­ petitive background in a sport seeking to extend their tight- became swimmers S a t u r d a y in the final event. 1 if their homecoming game with zoo College team, the second will be in’eligible for that par­ fisted grip on the league tourn­ morning in Lafayette, Ind. and IS M the MSU alumni squad is in- squad held a 4-0 half-time lead ticular activity. Judgement on ament. State won last year and. helped the regular swimmers In the butterfly race State’s eluded. and added another goal in the eligibility will be made by the has walked off with a Big Ten dunk Purdue 52-14. Dolly Graening took first place, final frame to secure the win. Intramural Office. title ten tim es in thirteen tries. followed closely by diver-turned I F S H E A D M IR E S S H A R P A T T IR E Kathy Collins led the Spartan Other conference competitors It was the third win in four swimmer L o l a M iller. M iss You want t he O sh ko sh Cas ua l look! It d o e s n 't ta k e a Phi half-time margin and held on ■scorers with three tallies, while will be Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, outings for the fern swimmers, Graening then teamed with Carol IMPORTANT: Any team using n u , i ii .u i iu . , to defeat Western Michigan, 2-1. Linda Centolella and J ill Thomas a student who is ineligible due Ohio State and host Illinois, who who had no trouble with a Pur­ Kowalewski, Karol Brown and B eta Kappa key to sell you on th e s e n s e of th e tap er-tailo red Kay Stoney and phyllis Huerstel have been installed as a dark- Anne Shaubel to win the 200- each had a score. to Rule 5, shall lose all con­ due squad that had a few good flair t hat ' s f or m- f a s hi o ne d into O sh k o sh Ca s u a l s for your scored for the Green and White. horse. Northwestern and Purdue swimmers, but lacked depth and yard freestyle relay. tests in which the student played Slack tim e w ardrobe. G et ■ ■ Coach Dorothy McKnight said In the afternoon the second if the violation is d e t e c t e d did not field squads this sea­ a diver. into O shkosh sla ck s and t J S H | % U S H the game marked the team 's best squad rallied in the last half to (through protest or officials) be­ son. Connie Clark captured first effort of the season. dump Western Michigan. The fore the league play-offs begin. Coach Fran Dittrich’ s squad place in the 25-yard backstroke, join th e actio n factio n . The Boilerm aker’ s diver was C A SU A LS In their second contest, against Spartans could do little in the If detected during play-offs the is expected to be paced by the while team co-captain Chris Klu- Kalamazoo College, the stickers first half, except keep Western team shall lose the game in strong foursome of Dick Shar­ out of the meet and in the Pur­ ter wrapped up an easy win in again led at half-time, but had from scoring and were tied at which the player is detected. key, Rick Zemper, Jan Bowen, due hospital, so State diver Diane the 50-yard backstroke. Miss Ko­ the intermission 0 -0. Cyndy En­ The game will be awarded to and Mike Kaines. Sophomores Ice entered the 50-yard breast­ walewski won the 100-yard free­ to settle for a 1-1 tie. Miss Sto­ ney had State's lone goal in this sign, Miss Thomas and Miss Cen­ the opposing team. Sharkey and Zemper will be get­ stroke race. To the surprise of style event and Janet Langland contest. tolella each hit one through the ting their feet wet in collegiate Coach Ann Chadwick and the took the 50-yard race. The Spartans had many so cr- next in the second period to c h a m p i o n s h i p ranks, while rest of the MSU team, Miss offset Western’s lone tally and The team manager is respon­ battle-wise juniors Bowen and Ice defeated State’s Sue Barbour ing opportunities, but failed to Next Saturday following the capitalize on them. Coach Mc- insure the t e a m ’ s third win, sible for the eligibility of her Kaines both gained top ten plac- and won the event. MSU-Notre Dame football game Knight gave credit to Kalama- against one loss and a tie. ____ players. ings in last y ear's league title the swimmers will meet Val- encounter. Because of Purdu’es lack of pariso University at the Women’ s Rounding out State’ s team is depth many of the races turned IM Building pool. There will be captain Bob Fulcher, senior and into intra-squad affairs. To give no charge for this meet, although two-time letterwinner Ron B e r- the Boilerm akers a f i g h t i n g there will be for the Champion­ by, and newcomer Paul M c- chance only those contests where ship meet on Dec. 7. Collam. they had entrants were scored. The Spartan runners downed The swimmers doubly enjoyed the two league teams they met However, the judges' good na­ their trip to Purdue. After stop­ ture didn’t seem to help Pur­ your h a ir know s in the regular season play .edging ping the Boilerm akers in the pool Wisconsin in a dual meet and due as State rolled up eight they watched the football team topping Ohio State in triangular first places and humbled the run over Purdue on the grid­ affair. Purdue 200-yard medley relay iron. John Laetz, university bus­ Ticket Information iness manager secured g a m e tickets for the team. it’s there! Choice tickets for the Mich­ seniors in the outer areas. Ju­ igan State-Notre Dame clash next niors may pick up theirs Tues­ Saturday are still available at day, sophomores Wednesday and Jenison Fieldhouse ticket office, freshmen, Thursday. reports B ill Beardsley, univer­ Saturday’ s football game with Notre Dame will begin at 2 p.m., because It's invisible, man! You c a n ’t se e it. S h e c a n ’t feel it. Only your hair sity ticket manager. There will not be a "buck day” of the regional telev isin g By knows it’s t h e r e ! It’s CODE 1 0 for men, the new invisible h aird ressin g Student tickets will be d istri- special for students of high school b u te ^ s t^ tin g ^ t^ ij3 ^ o d a ^ Jo ^ age or under this week._________ of the game. from C olgate-Palm olive. N o n g rea sy CODE 1 0 d isap p ears in your hair, Capital.” THIS WEEKS VACATIONS gives it th e clea n , manly look th at inflam es women, in fu riates in­ ferior m e n ! B e in. Let new CODE 1 0 groom your hair all day, invisibly. BUDGET PLANNED A E u r o p e a n S u n je t You see all the sights with the "elbow room” to enjoy them. DAILY CAMPUS PICKUP AND DELIVERY 21 davs in 4 countries. . . $1072.60 inclusive - from Lansing. MON - SAT. H a w a ii This 14 day Hawaiian tour features fun-filled days in the sun 4:3 0 - 5:30 - B A IL E Y , WONDERS, M cD O N E L, WEST SHAW and sand of Waikiki Beach. You stay at the beautiful Hawaiian 5:30 • 6:00 - EMMONS, CASE WILSON, ARMSTRONG Villiage or Princess Kaiulani Hotels right in the heart of this 6:00 . 6:15 - EAST SHAW BRYAN tropical paradise. A real vacation for $531.90 plus tax inclu­ sive from Lansing. C a r ib b e a n G o lf S p e c ia l Capital This trip includes transportation, ocean from accommodations, breakfast and dinner, greens fee and every resort pleasure (he golf widow. $300.00 inclusive form Detroit. You C a n A ffo rd A T rip P r e p a r a d B y U s . W aldoTravelAfeocy mimmi LAUNDRY & CLEANERS College Travel Office 2000 W. SaAnaw Call IV 2-0768 115 W. A llagan IV 5-4341 R ich te r T ra ve l o f Saginaw 130 W. Grand R ivar ED 2*8667 T ra ve l S yltem o f M ichigan I Monday, Novem ber 11, 1963 Michigan State N ew s , East Lansing, Michigan R o se s O n ly O n e G a m e A w a y ? (concluded from page 1) tensive riddle, while MSU’s h er­ faced with a fourth down and three alded line was rendering the B oil­ situation on the 11, erm akers’ offensive punch help­ Though first-half scoring was less. Co-captain Dan Underwood re ­ light, there was a sensational run during the first two quarters. covered a Purdue funble on the One school record was set and Purdue 31 early in the third per­ another was tied. iod, and the Spartans had a touch­ Sherman Lewis raced 64 yards down two plays later. :o score on . one of MSU's first Sherman L e w i s scooted 30 plays from scrimmage, but a yards t o the Boilermaker one, and backfield-in-motion penalty nul­ f u l l b a c k Roger Lopes punched lified the play. over for the score on the next The school record was set by play. Lou Bobich whose “1-yard punt The Spartans made their only was the'longest ever booted by a sustained drive of the afternoon Spartan tr. a Big Ten conference late in the third quarter when game. they marched 57 yards in 11plays Lattim er’ s field goal placed with Tom Krzemienski taking an him in a tie for most field 11-yard touchdown pass from Dick goals in a season with Art Brand- Proebstle with 14:15 left in the statter, who kicked three in 1959 game. and againg in 1960. The Spartans added an insur­ There were no records set in ance touchdown with “:05 remain­ M o lle n k o p f T e l l s D u ffy W h e r e P a s a d e n a Is the second halt, but the Spartans ing, when Roger Lopes intercep­ managed to solve Purdue's de- ted a Purdue pass at the Boiler- maker 23 and then scored on a The Boilermakers were held to % at one-yard plunge six plays later. a mere 68 yards on the ground It took the MSU offensive forces and 68 through the air. a while to get going, but the The Spartans rushed for 233 Spartan defensive squad was at yards and passed for 33 yards, L e w i s : I t ’ s N e a r H o n o lu lu I s n ’ t I t , R o g e r ? peak performance all afternoon. with the defense setting up two The Boilerm akers didn’t come touchdowns and a field goal by close to scoring even though they their alert play. rank as the best offensive team A n d e r s o n O p t i m i s t i c in the Big Ten. After the game, Spartan coach P u r d u e quarterback R on Di- Duffy Daugherty went out on a Gravio led the Big Ten in pass limb. “ I think we’re in the run­ completion percentage last week, ning for the Rose Bowl,” he said. A f t e r I n t r a - S q u a d G a m e W a itin g F o r H a l f - t i m e but he could complete only 9 The fact had become too ob­ of 19 against the Spartans. vious to hide any longer. By DUANE LANCASTER State News Sports Writer A fast and high scoring game Big Ten J f l l f / was predicted for Friday night’s intra-squad scrimmage, and fast and high scoring it was.TheMSU Is Still S M A R T Li Confusing White squad downed the G r e e n unit 98-81 before a large crowd' at the Men’ s Intramural build­ ing. ¡s to th e After a rather sluggish start both teams began to pick up the With two weeks of Big Ten foot­ 7 -M B A N D O R pace and the game moved at a ball remaining State, Ohio State V ■ j4F"\ fast tempo. Fred Thomann led all scorers and Illinois still are in conten­ tion for the Rose Bowl on Jan­ Lopes (4 5 ) T a l l i e s A g a i n UbuuADjounsonJ with 24 points, most of them com­ uary 1, 1964. ing on his patented short hook. A seven game league schedule Spartan Special Marcus Sanders added 23 points, keeps Illinois in the race despite while Stan Washington, in addi­ Saturday’s .loss to Michigan. O tn u in tlta f ton Spaghetti tion to playing an outstanding de­ Next week Michigan State now fensive game, tossed in 21 for the leading the loop with a 4-0-1 - A ll you can to t “ Whites” . mark, will be playing a non­ B ill Berry led the “ Greens” conference foe, Notre Dame. Ohio with 19 points and Tom Douglas State, now 3-0-1, will be meeting g . « > < W Dt t k f Anw 1 .1 5 and B ill Curtis tied for the run- Northwestern , while the lllini, sporting a 3-1-1 loop record, will ★ NO W IC K , FLIN T, OR BATTERY R c lu U {< * * 3 “ “ Served with T eaaod Soled. ReUn. gad Buttar nerup spot with 14 apiece. ★ ODORLESS, TASTELESS, SMOKELESS The inexperience of many of be traveling to Madison to face ★ LIFETIME G U A R A N T E E HERE'S HOW YOU the players led to an unusual Wisconsin. ★ W E IG H S LESS T H A N O N E O U N C E CAN GET ONE FREE: .'number of mental and mechani­ If Ohio State wins they will AIRFlAM needs dealers on your be tied with the Spartans for Just remove AIRFLAM’s cap. exposing the campus Send $3 00 for your cal erro rs. Several layups were platinum and silver element to air - and, personal sample demonstrator missed and both teams combined first place. An Illinois win will poof! It lights with a clear blue flame. and complete details We'll Windproof—you can’t blow it out1 Replace credit the sample cost to your for a total of 20 bad or missed leave the lllini in third place cap to extinguish flame Handsome black first order for one dozen or .150 points behind the leaders. and gold case, fits in pocket or purse more—so you get it FREE1 | passes in addition to mental Packed in dazzling scarlet gift box. com ­ lapse's, w h i c h included walking In the final week of action plete with fluid. with the ball and violation of the State will host Illinois and Ohio MURPHY REIER Inc., Dept. CP, 410 N. Highway 59, Barrington, III. 60010 three-second zone rule. State will play at Michigan. The game remained close for about the first six minutes of H o w e S e ts p l a y before the White team started to pull away. Leading by only eight points at A ll- T im e the intermission, the Whites held What’s the matter, no appetite? 2. Worried about exams, huh? the Green unit scoreless for the G o a l R e c o r d first two minutes of the second 1 have more important things No, about getting old. frame, while piling up an un­ DETROI T, (U P I)-D e­ to think of than food. rivaled lead. tr o it’ s Gordie Howe scored Despite the many erro rs, coach Forddy Anderson remained op- the 545th goal of h is career tom istic. “ There aren’t ma n y tonight in the Red Wings’ teams we won’t give a battle,” gome ag ain st the Montreal the veteran coach quipped. “ The Canadians in D etroit. The boys are used to playing on a goal moves Howe ahead of better floor,” he added. Although there were many m is- Maurice Richard fo r the No* cues, the ball handling was not tional Hockey L eagu e’ s all- inadequate and there w e r e , sev­ eral passes which resulted in easy baskets. At times both time gosk time goal scoring record. ONEWAYTOTRAVEL \ clubs moved the ball well enough, J o e J o h n s o n ! 1 1 ) B a t t l e s FORLESS . Ed C rary(l3)For Ball to offset the e rro rs. Anderson w as e s p e c i a l l y pleased with the speed demon­ strated by both squads on their MunnOnBSACommittee Primary duties of the commit­ S u d d e n l y fast breaks. Clarence L. "B iggie” Munn, director of athletics has been The game was the highlight of appointed a memberof the Na­ tee are maintenance of high health and safety standards at all Boy I L o s t M y THAN GREYHOUND f You’re kidding? 4. You should be celebrating not brooding. the 11th a n n u a l high s c h o o l tional Committee on Health and Scout camps and installations Not at all. I’ve reached a coaches clinic held here Friday Safety for the Boy Scouts of Am­ throughout the nation and at all milestone today. I’m 21. The The age of responsibility and Saturday. national jam borees. days of mv vouth have flown. is upon me. erica. M e m o r y ! NFL SONG BOOKS A noted publisher in Chicago j.Divisions reports there is a sim ple tech ­ nique for acquiring a powerful AT |HSCj!U|[ PRICES memory which can pay you real dividends in both business Knotted • New Christy Minstrels and social advancem ent and works like m agic to give you added poise, necessary self-con­ A s h o r t w a lk is g o o d f o r y o u . B u t w h e n y o u r e a lly fidence and greater popularity w a n t t o t r a v e l y o u c a n ’t b e a t G r e y h o u n d f o r g o in g There is a two-way tie for the According to this publisher, p l a c e s a t lo w e s t c o s t . In f a c t G r e y h o u n d c o s t s l e s s lead in both divisions of the » Journeyman m any people do not realize how m uch they could influence oth­ t h a n t r a i n s , p l a n e s o r d r iv in g y o u r s e lf . F o r e c o n o m y , National Football. League. ers sim ply by remembering • Kingston Trio accurately everything they see G O G R E Y H O U N D . . . A N D LE A V E T H E D R IV IN G T O U S. The Green Bay Packers and the C h i c a g o Bears remained hear, or read. W hether in busi­ No other form of publictransportation hasfParITT essolow.Forexample; SBURG, PA. ness, a t social functions or even deadlocked in the Western Di­ • PeteSeegar in casual conversations with D E T R O IT , MICH. 3.15 5.70 11.80 21.25 C L E V E L A N D , OHIO vision, while the New YorkGiants new acquaintances, there are G RAND RAPID S, MICH. 6. Relax. You can let Living and Cleveland Browns share the ways in w hich you cab domi­ 7.55 13.60 5. How come you’re not a member 2.70 4.90 COLUMBUS, OHIO of the Drama Club? Insurance from Equitable take top spot in the eastern section. • Sing Out n ate each situation by your MUSKEGON, MICH. 8.90 . 16.05 care of responsibilities. It can a b ility to remember. C IN N ., OHIO Already my father’s provide for vour family, your The Packers beat Minnesota, 4.15 7.50 T o acquain t th e readers of NEW YORK C IT Y , N .Y . 7.55 13.60 talking about my being mortgage, the kids’ education 28-7, Sunday. The Chicago B ears matched that of the Packers by • Leadbelly th is paper w ith the easy-to- follow rules for developing skill 25.15 45.30 LO C AL- EAST LAN SIN G , MICH “self-supporting." I see responsibilities all around ... even build a sizable retirement fund for you. P H IL A D E L P H IA , P A . defeating the Los Angeles Rams, in rem em bering anything you 308 W. GRAND R IVER me —wife, children, choose to rem em ber, the pub­ 21.95 39.55 E .D . 2-2813 Sav, this is good spaghetti. lawn, leaves. 6-0. • And Hundreds More lishers have printed full details BAGGAGE: You can take wore « a G'eyncund. It youprefer send laundry or extra baggage on ahead t»y Greyhound Packai Express. It's there in hours and costs you less. o f th eir self-training method The Pittsburgh Steelers kept in a new book, “Adventures in their flickering eastern division If Y ou Are Buying S o n g b o o k s M em ory,” w hich will be mailed hopes alive with a 9-7 win over free to anyone who requests it. Cleveland- N o obligation. Sim p ly send For information about Living Insurance, see The Man from Equitable ♦• A* A n yw h ere else. Y o u 're Spending Toe M uch! y o u r re q u e st to ? M em o ry For information about career opportunities at Equitable, see your The New York Giants moved P la c e m e n t Officer, n r write- to William E. Blevins, Emplw.'*vtwtAl%l\8$fir Studies, 835 ’ D iversey Park into a tie with Cleveland by way, D ept. 5028, Chicago 14 D IS C S H O P The EQUITABLE Life Assurance Society of the United States , romping o v e r Philadelphia, 42- 14, as Y.A. Tittle fired three 111. A postcard will do. ...and leave the driving to us Home Office: 1285 Avenue of the Americas, New York 19, N. V © 1903 touchdown passes. 1 col, x 87 lines Ad # M R 34 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Monday, Novem b er 11, 1963 “ D in n e r J a c k e t , te x a c c e s s o r i e s a n d DINNER JACKET SOLD ON FIRST CALL WHITE DINNER JACKET, tux a ll w e r e s o ld b y 1 0 :3 0 th e f i r s t d ay and accesso ries, size 39 long, m y ad r a n “ s a i d th is p le a s e d a d v e r ­ like new, reasonable. sp40 tiser. A u t o m o t i v e ______ j f E m p lo y m e n t iF F o r R ent i t For Sale IFC Rush Conclave Tuesday j f I960 AUSTIN HEXLEY Sprite. RECEPTIONIST: Age 20-35 for APAR IMEN1S GUITAR, new, must sell, make Excellent condition. R & H re­ E a s t Lansing doctors office. ONE M.\N needed to room in an offer, $1 to $35 call John 332-4287 after 7:30 p.m. 36 The Inter-Fraternity Council tive rushees will have a chance University of Virginia, he served cent complete overhaul. Like new Write letter to Miss Emily J e r ­ Eydeal Villa, Unsupervised un­ MEN'S WEDDING rings-2.N ever rush conclave will be held Tues­ to talk to members of each fra­ in various positions, including di­ tires, clutch, brakes, $950, also sey, 715 North Jenison, Lansing, approved. Call 332-6086 after used. Phone 372-2895. 33 day evening, second floor Union. ternity. rector of admissions and direc­ 1955 Plymouth. Go o d running stating age, previous experience 6 p.m. _________ 33 SCHNAUZERS-Miniture A. R. C. Tom Aylward, conclave chair­ At 8:15 p.m. Richard R. F let­ tor of student affairs, before tak­ •AUTOMOTIVE condition, radio, heater, $150. and salary expected. 34 NEWLY FURNISHED, unsuper- re g is te re d , excellent breeding. man, said, "T h e conclave is p r i- cher, national executive secre­ ing on the national secretarial •EMPLOYMENT Call ED at 332-5092- 35 HOWARD JOHNSON’S at F ran - vised for three girls. Reason- tary of Sigma Nu fraternity will 2 male, one female. Phone TL marily aimed at introducing the job for Sigma Nu in 1956. 1963 CHEVY II, 300 series 4- dor is adding to its staff. G irls able rent. U tilities furnished, give a special address in P ar­ •FOR RENT 2-4525.______________________ 35 new freshmen to the fraternity "F le tch e r put a real stimulus door 6 cylinder stick Many ex­ interested in working with the Near campus. Phone 332-620.. lors A, B and C on fraternity •FOR SALE ELECTRIC ROOM heaters - Hot system. This should prove to be into the fraternity system at the tras 16,000 miles new car war­ public should apply for w a it r e s s _____________ 33 life and its special significance University of Maryland when he •LOST & FOUND position, immediately! 35 TWO BEDROOMS furnished. Stu- plates, coffee cup heaters. B rrr! the most comprehensive expo­ ranty. Must sell. Phone 355- sure to the Greek system that to the young man. Fletcher’s spoke there,” Olstein said. "T h e dents preferred. Call 482-6068 ACE HARDWARE, 201 East •PERSONAL 1904 or 355-9833. 37 DRUMMER WANTED. For good talk will be followed by a movie. 35 Grand River, across from Union. most men will have prior to men just had to go out and see •PEANUTS PERSONAL THUNDERBIRD, 1957black, good rock and roll band, previous after 5 p.m. ED 2-3212. C actual rushing next term .” Fletcher has devoted his life what made a man feel so strongly c o n d i t i o n . For further infor­ •REAL ESTATE e x p e r i e n c e necessary. G ood HOUSE SKIS 6* new safety bindings, ex­ Each social fraternity will set to the interests of young men, about fratern ities.” j mation phone 482-7143, or see money. Phone 353-2871. 35 COMFORTABLE BRICK home, cellent for beginners. $20. Call up a booth 7-9 p.m. andprospec- including eight years as director Rush brochures and rush reg- w < •SERVICE at 1305 George St. 37 ED 2-5610. 37 of athletics and head coach of istration cards have been sent •TRANSPORTATION 1955 MERCURY 2-door hardtop MALE CHEMIST or Chemistry 3-4 bedrooms, 2 baths, den,fire­ football, basketball and baseball C H R I S T M A S PRESENTS for •¥» R e a l E s t a t e _________ out to the freshmen men to pro­ •WANTED with 1956 engine. Snow tires. engineer. Full or part-tim e. Start places, finished basement, gar­ at Virginia’s largest high school, children 3 adorable male, min­ MSU-near. Two new homes near- vide additional information about Phone 669-“620. 33 immediately Call IV 4-7406,M r. age, $125. 355-6577, 1-3 p.m. in Norfolk, Bob Olstein, presi­ D EADLIN E: 37 iature Schnauzers. Order now. ing completion. Buy now and the Michigan State fraternity sys­ CHEVROLET 1959, wagon. V-8 Ray^ 34 dent of Sigma Nu, said. 1 p.m. one class day be­ tem, Rick C arr, IFC member at automatic transmission, radio, COOKS, SHORT order, experi­ FOR FOUR MALES, furnishec Also stud service, 372-3465. choose your own decor. 4 bed­ During his 19 years at the large, said. fore publication. washers, five good tires, clean, ence desirable. Top wages paid house for rent, cooking facil­ 35 room split level with 2 baths, ities, near campus, call 489-088C CHEVROLET-Truck and 10' self family room, basement and 2- C o n c e l l a t lo n s - 12noonbne $815. Phone 355-2854. 34 to good person. Apply Howard after 3:30 p.m. MI 1-6227. c l a s s d a y before p u b lic a lio r CHEVROLET, 4-door. Bixcayne Johnson’s, Frandor. 35 c o n t a i n e d camper. New Con­ car garage. $29,500. Also 3 bed­ 35 dition. Phone IV 2-9482. 36 room brick ranch, 1 1/2 baths, PHONE: 3 5 5 -8 2 5 5 6 cylinder stick, 22,000 miles like new. See at 1232 Marigold. Phone ED 2-5989. 34 REGISTERED NURSES. 11-7 or TWO BEDROOM modern. P ri­ 3-11 shift. Full or part time. vate. 516 Armstrong Rd. (South WASHE R-DRYER combination, garage and basement. Distinc­ Philco, Bendix. Excellent con­ tive r u s t i c exterior. $21,900. Placement Bureau t Good Salary and differential. Cedar-Jolly Road). Furnished, 1960 BITCK, A L L white, 4-door dition. $275. Phone NI 6-3901. Turn East off Hagadorn Rd. on RATES: Meal furnished. Phone ED 2- $85. monthly. Phone 489-5316- hardtop. 1963 Ford, Galaxie, XL 33 Cahill Drive. 7 blocks. Don Hod- Students must register at least math, electrical and mechani­ 1 DAY 51, 25 0802.____________________ 38 ______________ 34 500 convertible. M u s t S e l l . RC 88GARRAD turntable, auto- ney Builders. ED 2 -8654-F E 9- two days prior to date of inter­ cal engineering, psychology, sta­ 3 DAYS.. . . 32.50 ROUTE SA LEMAN. Must be part- MODERN FURNISHED cottage to matic changer, 3-speed, with ce­ 8258. 50 tistics, biophysics, (D). Phone, ED 2-2602. view. time student with at least 2 reliable couple. $50 per month ramic cartridge. $50. Call 355- Johnson and Johnson: en­ 5 DAYS. . . . $3.75 OL DS MO B I LE - 1959, Hydra- years of college. Married. A or $300 for 7 months. 207 South S e r v ic e gineering and a l l other col-., (Based on 15 words per ad) 9539 9 a.m .-5 p.m. 355-7760 i t Monday, Nov. 18 matic, power brakes and steer­ good driving record and sales Francis Ave Lansing. 34 after 5 p.m. 33 YOU REALLY ought to talk to leges (B). There will be a 25t service ing. 40,000 m iles. $900. cash. ability and personality essen­ PICTURE F R A M E S - W e will Bob C arr. Standard Life Col­ Livonia Public Schools: ele­ and bookkeeping charge if Cai! IV 5-5715. 33 tial- Guarantee wage. Phone IV ROOMS make any size you desire. Three lege Division. 919 East Grand American Agriculture Chemi­ mentary education, English (jr . this ad is not paid within i960 M.G.A. 1600 mechanically 4-7441 for interview. 37 ROOM FOR two boys. Bath on day service. Also art supplies. River, 337-1663. ._________C33 cal Co: general agriculture (B) high), social studies (jr . High), one week. sound. Needs body work acces­ GREAT LAKES EMPLOYMENT floor, $10 each including break­ Roberts Wallpaper and Paint Co. JUNIOR LEAGUE THRIFT Shop, (agricultural e n g i n e e r s , ag­ math (high school), English (high for permanent positions in office, fast. 1633 Vermont, Lansing, IV ronomy, a g r i c u l t u r a l econ­ sories included $600. Phone ED 2513 South Cedar, IV 2-0726. 211 East Michigan. Save on next - school); all other fields. (B,M). j f A u t o m o t i v e ________ 7-1471.______________________ 14 sales, technical. Call IV 2-1543. ___________________ TCto-new 39 omics); general chemistry (B). 9-3176. 37 w e a r i n g apparel and Men and women. C35 MUST SE L L -5-strin g banjo, ex­ household furnishings. Open 10 Corn Products Co: mechani-' 1957 FORD 6, 2-door, $200.Good SPARTAN MOTOR’S INC. DOUBLE, SINGLE-male, unap­ Morton Chemical Co: chem­ HERE IS AN OPPORTUNITY to proved. Private entrance, tele­ cellent condition. G o o d tone, a.m .-4 p.m ., Wednesday-Satur- cal and chemical (B,M) en­ transportation- Call ED 2-2673. Whole Sale Prices istry (organic, physical, inor­ make money for your tuition, phone. 3 blocks from campus. strap and extras included. Phone day. gineers; packaging technology 34 33 ganic, analytical) (B,M,D), Xmas gifts etc. easily and plea­ Private parking available, 332- ED 2-1979. ____________ 34 T.vT RENTALS for students. E c- (B.M). OLDSMOBILE, 19 * 3 Cutlass Reduction, year-out inventory Parke, Davis and Co: mechan­ santly without leaving the campus 1887. 37 SOFA BEDS, frize covers. Chose onomical rates by the term and The Detroit Bank and Trust convertible, 5700 miles. Power ical and chemical (B,M) engi­ for one moment. Be our cam­ of popular colors, new, $59.95. month. UNIVERSITY TV RENT- Co: accounting. (B); economics neers; accounting (B); biology^| s t e e r i n g , hydromatic, radio, CHEVROLET , i960 Impala 2- ROOM for rent in private home. pus representative and just wear Platform rockers, new, $14.95. ALS-355-6026. Call after 5. c (B); arts and letters, business, heater, and extras. Phone 485- door hardtop, $1395. Washing and cooking privileges chemistry (B,M,D); and busi­ one of our TruLove B racelets. Bedroom suites, 3 piece, maple ALTERATIONS-!) e m s , zippers communication arts, social sc i­ 6403, 2407 Woodview. 37 G irls only. Call IV 2-1892. ness (B). Show it to your friends, c l a s s - 1 _________________ 33 finish, new $78. Inner spring button holes, all types of sewing ence (B). FORD, 1957 2-door, 6 cylinder, CORVAIR, 1960 4-door stick. mates, sorority sisters. We will MEN 21 or over. Nicely fur- m attress. $19.95. LOOK B-4-U by former sewing instruction. Great West Life Assurance fordo-matic. Runs likenew, $150. $995. Monday and Tuesday, back you up with advertising in nished room. Close in. Reason­ buy furniture. Carpet, T.V ., ap­ Phone 332-2949. Co: business, arts and letters, Phone Tt: '2-9770.__________ _37 35 the Mich. State News. Write to­ able. Phone, ED 7-2345. 35 pliances and stereo Term s or communication arts and social vl955 CH E VRO L ET 6, automatic, FALCON, i960 station wagon, DIAPER SERVICE to your de- Nov. 18, 19 day to TruLove Inc., 1684 West­ EAST LAN'SING-Girls to share lay-a-way. S t o r a g e Furniture science (B). good rubber, motor excellent, standard shift, $995. sire. You receive your own dia­ fall Road, Rochester 18, New double room. Private entrance. Sales, 4601 Northeast St. 2.4 International B u s i n e s s Ma- body good, best offer. Phone 337- pers back each time. With our Union Carbide Corp. (Carbon York. 33 Two blocks tocampus. Phone miles north of Grand River Ave. chines: physics, c h e m i s t r y 0 5 5 3 . __________________________ 34 SIMCA, 1960, 4-door, $395. service, you may include up to Products D i v : electrical, me­ 1957 PLYMOUTH 4-door, $295, TOWN AND COUNTRY FOOD ED 2-5157.__________________ 33 on U.S. 27. OPEN until 9 p.m. COMPANY needs men. Married two pounds of your baby’ s under­ chanical, chemical, and civil 1958 R a m b l e r station wagon, VOLKSWAGON, 1959, $995 DOUBLE ROOM, available win- Monday and Friday. 7 p.m. daily. perferred with time on their shirts and clothing which will not $395, both in good condition. ter-spring t e r m . Two blocks Call IV 7-0173. C35 (B.M) engineers; chemistry, phy­ hands to work at exceptional from UNION, 135 Linden. Will fade. White, blue or pink dia­ Phone IV 9-7453. 36 VOLKSWAGON, 1 9 6 1 ’s 4 to CASHMERE SWEATERS, black L e g is la to r s sics (B,M). selling job. For appointment call per pails furnished. FOREM959, 6-cylinder, stahd- choose from-priced from $1195. rent single._________________ 35 (satin trimming), red (lacetrim ­ ard shift, 4-door, power steer­ 484-4317. C ming), worn once. Size 36. Call AMERICAN DIAPER SERVICE (continued from page 1) SINGLE ROOM for male stu­ 914 E. G ier Street Tuesday, Nov. 19 ing, no rust, back-ups, seatbelts FORD, 1961 Galazie 2 - d o o r , i t F o r R ent M arji, 355-8052. 35 ing a new practice in approving dent. Call ED 2-0205 after 5:30 Lansing, Mich. and other extras. $750. Private hardtop, cruisomatic, $1395. C R O C H E T AFGHAN- blocked the new requirem ent," said Sen. Acme Steel: packaging tech­ owner. Call ED 2-1921 after PARKING SPACE for one car. p.m. or weekends. 443 Grove, IV 2-0864 C Frank D. Beadle, R -St. C lair, 36 patterned, color, yellow combi­ nology (B); all majors, all col­ Very near campus. East side, East Lansing. _________ 6 p.m. 33 CORVAIR, 1962 ‘700’ 2 - do o r , nation. Make nice golden wedding ACCIDENT PROBLEM? C a l l chairman of the senate appro­ leges (B) for sales; engineer­ 1959 FIAT, 1100, 103D, excel­ $1495 332-1448._________ 34 ★ F o r S a le gifts. Will take orders. Phone Kalamzaoo Street Body Shop. priations committee. ing (B); natural science, arts lent condition. Phone 355-1269. APARTMENT ___________ 669-6271. 36 Small dents to l a r g e wrecks. There is some question as to and letters, communication arts, G R E A T BOOKS OF Western 35 Home of personally selected used GIRLS NEEDED to share apart­ World, 52 volumes. Bookcase S I N G E R SEWING MACHINE- American and f o r e i g n cars. whether the legislature has any social science, business, (with 1960 PONTIAC CATALINA, 4- cars. ment winter term. One block included, $450. Value! Sell for Never claimed from lay-away. Guaranteed work. 489-7507. 1411 power to set requirements on some math) (B), door, radio, heater, outdoor side 3000 East Michigan from campus. 265 West Grand $300. Phone Perry 625-3152. 37 Will sell for small balance due. East Kalamazoo. c self-liquidating p r o j e c t s . An Alcona Community S c h o o l s : m irror, g oo d condition. $950. IV 7-3715 This beautiful machine is equip­ SKIRTS and COATS shortened. attorney general’ s ruling indi­ elementary education (B); coun­ River, Phone 337-2773. 35 BLACK AND SILVER German Phone 339-2298 after 5 p.m. 36 _______________________ C34 ped to zig-zag, buttonhole, blind- Also mending. Call TU 2-7184. cates that legislative permission seling and guidance (M). Men MARRIED STUDENTS - Raider police dog, female, 9 months OLDSMOBILE - 1963 C u tTa s s 1957 D ESO TO -reconditioned, Street. Entire ground floor fur­ old. A.K.C. registered, t a l l OX hem and do fancy stitches. Only 33 is not needed for a constitut­ and women. c o u p e . Take over payments. power-steering, power brakes, $49.50 or $5 per month. Trade- FOR MUSIC designed with your ionally independent body like MSU Archer-Daniels - Midland Co: nished. Utilities paid. Garage. 4-9881._______ 35 Phone 484-4244. ________ 37 automatic transmission. Call IV ins accepted. PHONE OL 5-2054. taste in mind, cafl on the Larry to c o n s t r u c t self-liquidating chemical (B,M) engineers; chem­ $125. Phone IV 4-6341 or IV P O O D L E S - S i l v e r miniature, 1957 OLD'S convertible, $425 4-2225 before 5 p.m. after 6 ________________________ C35 Devin Orchestra. IV 2-1240 or buildings. istry (organic) (B,M,D); chem­ 9-0098.____________________ 37 A.K.C. show quality, champion or best offer. All good tires. p m. call IV 4-9310. 36 PLEASANT, 5 room apartment blood line. Reasonable, Phone GAS SPACE heater, co rn et,clar- IV 2-9800. C Despite th“ ruling, universities istry (physical-organic) (D); in­ Good running order. Phone ED i960 FALCON, 4-door sedan, au­ completely furnished. Four stu­ TU 2-9165.____________ enet, Selmer saxaphone, violins, STUDENT TV R E N T A L S . New have usually .ooperated by seek­ dustrial microbiology (D); agri­ 2-3770.______________________ 37 tomatic, r e 1 i a b 1e , economical 36 ing legislative permission before dents (Lake Lansing) Phone FE HAMMOND CHORD organ. Ex­ iron -rite ironer and pressure 1 9 " portable, $9 per jnonth. 21” cultural (M) engineers; math, 1961 R E N A U L T DAUPHIN'E, transportation. Call ED 2-0258. canner, ED 2-6375.____ ' 36 table models, $8 per month. All s t a r t i n g self-liquidating pro­ statistics, operations research 9-8288 or FE 9-2443._______36 cellent condition, mahogany cab­ 11,000 miles. May be seen 1528 33 FRIGIDAIRE refrigerator $3!a. sets guaranteed, no service 'or grams. Legislators argue that MAN TO SHARE FURNISHED inet, $695. Call after 6 p.m. (M); mechanical (M) engineers; North High, Lansing. $600 cash. CORVETTE 1961, 4-speed, two Call after 5 p.m. Phone 337- delivery charges. Call Nejac, IV self-liquidating projects should accounting (B); tran sp o rtatio n 485-7959. 36 tops, maroon. Must Sell! Make house near Frandor or take sin­ Phone TU 2-8153. 34 also bear the cost of a univer­ gle apartment in East Lansing. GERMAN SHEPERDS, color bred 2038. 34 2-0624. C (B); psychology (M); and busi­ ISET\, 1958 model, 9,000 actual offer, 485-2355. 1________ 36 sity’ s heat and power needs. ness (M). 372-2906. 36 white, also black and silver pup­ HAMMOND ORGAN MODEL-B POODLE TRIMMING, q u a l i t y miles. New paint. New white sun- P O N T I A C , 1956 Star Chief. Another contention is that while School D istrict #7, City of pies. Ruth’s, 14645 Airport Road, and L eslie tone cabinet. Excel­ work, choice of trim . Toys and liner top. Good rubber. Phone Power steering and brakes, lea­ such projects do not cost the Dearborn Heights: women only: IV 4-4026. 35 lent condition. $1425. Call 485- Minitures $5.00, Standards $8.00. IV 2-6817. 36 ther interior, new tires. $325. EVERGREEN ARM S P O R T A B L E T Y P EWR1TER- 6625 after 5 p.m. 35 Phone OX 4-4691.________ TC3S state more in construction funds, elementary art (B,M); elemen­ TWO 760 X 15 snow treads, al- Phonè IV 9-31761 37 they do build up hidden expense tary education (B,M); English and Olympia precision. Buy the finest. T-BIRD HARDTOP ’55-'57. New most new, on wheels ready to OLDS JE T FIR E , 1963 4-speed, 341 EVERGREEN T e r m s available. Hasselbring in 1958. Call Jim IV 9-3069 or TYPING SERVICE in maintanence and utility needs. social studies (B,M). mount, $30. 332-1360. 34 excellent condition. Will consider 1 Block from Campus Jack Breslin, secretary, said Durand Area Schools: elemen­ Co. 310 N. Grand, IV 2-1219. 355-9714._______ 32 TYPING in my home. Shirley 1962 4-door, '9 8 ' 35,000 miles, trade-in. Call anytime, OX 9 - he had not seen the resolution, tary education (B); English-sci- Phone 332-1011 ___________________________ C35 BICYCLES-Rentals, Sales, an3 Decker, Forest Ave. Lansing. radio, h e a t e r , automatic win­ 2665. 36 and therefore would not comment ence (B); English, mathematics, Service- Also used. East Lans­ dows, seat belts, $2,500. Call FORD 1931 Model-A coupe. Ex- BICYCLE-BOY’S English racer. Phone IV 2-7208._________ c on its validity. He declined to chemistry, and physics (B). Men ing Cycle, 1215 East Grand River, 339-2742.______________ 34 cellent condition. $325. Phone 1961 V.W. sunroof, black, ra­ ED 2-1174.__________________36 H A S L E T T A P A R T M E N T S Like new. $40, Call 332-3551 between 2 & 7 p.m. Judy Rear­ 3 blocks East of campus. Phone EDIE STARR, TYPIST, Theses, comment on whether interest and women. 332-8303. , C dissertations, term papers, gen­ would be paid on the money the Edgerton, Germeshausen, and dio, heater, w.w., seat belts. 1962 RAMBLER convertible, red 1/2 Block from Campus don. 36 GIRLS BICYCLE, good condition, eral typing. Experienced, IBM University would have to send G rier, Inc.: physics, electrical Cash to equity and take over with white top, excellent con­ C A M P E R TR.M LER-fo 1 di ng, the state treasurer. p a y m e n t s . $42.16/month. 337- dition. Phone St. John’ s 224-4080. 332-8412 must sell, make an offer, call E lectric. OR 7-8232. c engineers (M,D). Higgins, good condition, extra " T h e resolution w i l l cause ___________________ 35 John 332-4287 after 7:30 p.m. ANN BROWN typist and multi- General Motors—Inland Manu­ 1583 after 5 p.m. 35 wheel and tire . ED 2-3585. 36 Oakland some severe financial 36 lith offset printing (black &white facturing Division: mechanical fI960) Renaul t - Good condition. A V A IL A B L E S E WI N G MACHINE, ZIG-ZAG & color). IBM. General typing, problem s," Breslin said. "The and chemical (B) e n g i n e e r s ; Good tires, $185. See at 412 STORY 1963 MODEL. Does all zig-zag- i t L o st & Found term papers, theses, disserta­ new requirement will mean about chemistry (B,M); and business Haze Street, Lansing. 35 sewing without attachments. This a $40,000 loss for the $2 million CHEVROLET 1955. No rust, runs N C W LOST: ON campus man’s college tions. ED 2-8384. C (B). machine still ca rries service building p ro ject." General Telephone Co.of Mich­ perfectly. Automatic transm is­ and parts warranty and sewing ring University of Connecticut. GENERAL TYPING. Immediate sion, radio. $295. Call ED 7 - F o r T h e B e s t In . instructions. Must sell....no mo­ Initials i n s i d e T .E .B . reward service, 355-1237. 37 ' T h e l e g i s l a t u r e d i d n o t a u th o r­ iz e any i n c r e a s e about th e $2 igan: business (B); and electri­ cal (B) engineers. S e lls F o r L e s s 2723. 33 ney down. Make nine payments Phone 332-3750 or 355-3278. 36 TYPING, fast, accurate, exper- m illio n m a r k when it added the S tu d e n t A p a r tm e n ts of $5.70 per month. PHONE OL ienced. Call 882-5382 37 e x p a n sio n fund re q u ir e m e n t. The GliddenCo: accounting (B); 1960 CHEVROLET IMPALA, 2- accounting, economics, finance 5-2054 . ____________________C35 i t P e a n u ts P e r s o n a l FAST, ACCURATE, service on Helping to trigger the senate door, hardtop, V-8 standard shift. EDWARD G. HACKER CO. (B). Women only: secretarial sc i­ 61 Ford Galaxie, 4-door, po­ Black with a redinterior. W.s.w., GENUINE HUDSON seal coat)!/^ P.R. for Jam es E. E llis. Happy term papers, theses, etc. Two amendment was the recent legis­ ence (B). wer s t e e r i n g , power radio and heater. Come in and REALTORS length, size 14, $25. Good con­ Birthday from JudyandAlice. 33 blocks from Union. Call 337- lative debate over MSU’s power Michigan Civil Service Com­ brakes, radio, heater, au­ drive this one at J .B .'s exclus­ IV 5-2261 dition, phone IV 2-1824. 34 2737. 33 plant. Some $800,000 was appro­ HAPPINESS IS a t h i n g called mission: all m ajors, all colleges, tomatic, white-wali tires. ively Chevrolet Used Cars. 2801 OLYMPIA STANDARD typewrit- BOSSA NOVA. Is everybody hap- XEROX COPIES anything: even priated several weeks ago for (B,M,D). Men and women. S1395. South Cedar. TU 2-1478. C33 WANTED GIRL to share apart­ er in perfect condition. $100. py? 33 pages in a bound book. Aldln- MSU to get the project under­ 1953 VOLKSWAGEN, station^ ment. Two blocks from Union. Phone IV 9-6296. 35 ger Direct Mail, 533 N. Clip- way. T h e National Cash Register wagon, like new. Gas heater, 314 Abbott. Phone 332-0431 be­ HI-FI STEREO and T.V ., 1963 P erso n al pert. IV 5 - ^ 1 3 ._____________ C Much of the debate centered Company: electrical, mechani­ ‘60 Chevrolet Impala, hard 1500 motor, equipped for camp- fore 5 p.m. 36 models. Close out prices. Por­ around the contention that since cal, and chemical (B,M,D) en­ CALIFORNIA T R I P S arranged i f T r a n s p o r ta tio n self-liquidating p r o j e c t s used gineers; math (B,M,D); chemis­ top coupe, radio, heater, Phone 372-1124. 36 OKEMOS-lovely three room fur table hi-fi with automatic chang­ for student budgets. Los Angeles try, physics (B,M,D); and metal­ stick s h i f t , whitewall MOTORCYCLE nished apartment. All private. er, $39. 95 Stereo, $49.95. Port­ or San Francisco. Call Main LEAVE LANSING for Jackson university power and heating fa­ Utilities paid. Fre#parking. 332- able T.V ., $99.95.Console stereo, 8:15 a m. arrive back 7:00 p.m. cilities, they should bear some lurgy (B,M,D). tires $1295. Travel IV 4-442 C35 MOTORSCOOTER ALLSTATE 8 0 8 2 . ___________________ 33 $139.95. Shop for Capehart, Sy- every day except Thursday and of its cost. J . C. Penney Company, Inc.: ELECTROLYSIS SUPERFLUOUS business, communication arts, Cushman, like new, $125. For in­ FOUR GIRL apartment. Close to vania, M o t o r o l a and Muntz. Sunday, 337-2503.___________ 37 Future university power plant hair removed permanently by formation phone 372-3291. 36 campus, modern furniture, call Term s and lay-a-way at Storage FLIGHTS TO Europe, June, 1964, expansions may have to be met arts and letters, social science '58 Oldsmobile 88 2-door, short wave method. Over 20 years p o w e r steering, power CUSHMAN SCOOTER, excellent after 5:30 p.m., 332-2195. 33 Furniture Sales , 4601 Northeast experience. Phone Lyle Clark, round-trip cost $275. Phone after by the two per cent sinking fund (B). condition, dependable, economi­ F m m f D I A T E OCCUPANCY of St. 2.4 miles north of Grand expansions may have to be met The Prophet Company: hotel, b r a k e s , radio, heater, IV 2-7744.__________________ 35 12 p.m. ED 7-1558. 36 cal transit. Graduating senior. sem i-fur nished a p a r t m e n t a- River Ave. on U.S. 27. Open by the two per cent sinking fund r e s t a u r a n t , and institutional Hydramatic, two t o ne , YOU’VE TOLD your friends our RIDE WANTED TO New York on Must Sell. Call Walt, 355-2574. cross from Home Econ Build­ until 9 p.m. Monday and Friday. requirement, some 1 e g i s 1 a tive management (B). white wall tires. $695, _______________________ 37 ing. $120 per month. 332-6913. 7 p.m. daily. Call IV 7-0173 c35 ads are funny, now tell your Friday, Nov. 22. Call A1 332- Riverview Community Schools: sources indicated. The action 1963 VESPA 150, excellent con­ friends we saved you money on 4351. 36 elementary; self-contained; jr . 33 RUMMAGE TODAY: Books, re ­ may have indicated the legis­ dition, windshield, buddy seat, Homeowners, Auto, Travel in- high English; business education; c o rd s , ca r, c l o t h i n g , bicycle, ★ W a n te d lature wants future power needs luggage ca rrie r, Bargan!! Call surance-Bubolz Agency ED 2- special education type A; visiting 59 Rambler American, sta­ 355-5892 after 4 p.m. 37 W I N T E R T E R M miscellaneous o b j e c t s , dart, 8671. C33 IRONINGS WANTED, quality or at Oakland to be met by that teacher (B). Men and women. tion wagon, radio, heater, T.V., free stuff. 358N. Harrison. institution itself. two tone, white wall tires. i f E m p lo y m e n t AT _____________________________36 UNCLE FUD’S'-For the best Ko- quantity work done, $1.25 an The Union School D istrict of the river’s edge sher sandwiches in Town East hour. Phone 484—6760. 35 the City of Jackson, Michigan: $795. apartments on the cedar CARPETING SAMPLES: Beauti­ IDLE HOURS MAKE AVON DOL­ ful colors with thick nap. Close Grand River Ave. For Delivery, GIRLS’ ENGLISH bike and fish BRUNSWICK, Ga. (f) —A 62- accounting (B). river st. 332-5689. C aquarium. Phone IV 2-4962. 35 U. S. Naval Avionics Facility: LARS Use your spare time sel­ out price $2.88 each. Ace Hard- year-old man was charged with ED 2-4432_______________ STORYOLDSMOBILE) W O R LD S L A R G E S T ling Avon’s wonderful new Xmas Gift li.se. -Openings Sn-Eaei Lap­ «■FURNISHED TW-O b e -ir sing and Okemos. For appoint­ apartment for 3-4-5 or 6 stu­ , ware. Across from Union. 201 ■ East-Grand River. C39 ARE YOU PAYING more than BABYSITTER in my southside yuU iig e d to for auto insurance? home. Five Call or see your State Farm after 5:30 p.m. 482-8672. week. Call 33 violating state liquor laws when police Teumf 49 gs lions of iifieir whisky hidden beneath his dog­ electrical engineering (B,M,D). U nited , SMAes Rubber T i r e C o m p a n y : chemistry (M,D); O L D S M O B IL E D E A L E R ment in your home write or call: dents. Available now. Call Glenn HOUSEHOLD ITEMS and furnP agent and compare prices. Ask MALE, 2T years, share large house. chemical, mechanical, electircal Mrs. Alana Huckins, 5664 School D. H arris, IV 5-2261 or even­ ture. Tables, chairs, electrical for GEORGE TOBIN or EDKAR- house with four other students. O fficers said the underground (M,D) engineers. 3165 E. MICHIGAN St., Haslett, Michigan or Call ings, IV 2-1009, EdwardG. Hack­ appliances, lamps. Phone IV 4- MANN, IV 5-7267, In Frandor. Roomy, p a r k i n g . Reasonable. hideout was. almost big enough Wyandotte Chemicals Corpor­ a t Frandor ation: accounting (B,M). evenings, FE. 9-8483. C35 er. 38 3261. ' 37 ' ............ C33 Phone IV 7-0716. 37 to be a fallout shelter. V Michigan State N ew s , Ea st Lansing, Michigan Monday, Novem ber 11, 1963 Millionth Volume Coeds Are Moving In Due At Library U s e O p p o n e n t s By A« R. Drury a poor percentage play. On a Gang- Way, E ngi nee rs! 2-2 trump, break, the queen would The MSU library will add the purchase the millionth volume, Make way for the g irls!—for The girls presently enrolled in fall. millionth volume to its collec­ Chapin said. The cost will run One of the important require­ eight of them, at least, who are the engineering school constitute 2. You may want to use the tion this term , Richard E. Cha­ about $9,000. ments in winning bridge is to holding their own against the a broad area of study. Their opponent who holds the queen pin, director of lib raries, an­ The University of North Car­ make your opponents help you men in engineering. majors vary from mechanical to to help you make your bid. nounced recently. olina is believed to have spent whenever possible. And it seems that they are a civil and metallurgical engin­ If the queen falls to the see­ The occasion will be celebra­ in the neighborhood of $50,000 In kibitzing games, I frequently welcome addition to the depart­ eering. king leads, you make your bid ted- at a Christmas dinner on for their millionth volume two see declarers m iss making a ment. Most women choose to major in easily, as you can lose only two Dec. 5 at Kellogg Center for years ago, he said. contract simply because they fail "W e’re happy to have girls engineering because it offers a hearts and one club if you guess the Friends of the Library. Chapin said he is considering to use their opposition. The fol­ come into engineering," Carl I. combined study of science and wrong on the club finesse. The Friends of the Library one of four possibilities. They lowing hand is an example. Mensendick, assistant dean of en­ math. If the queen does not fall, you is a fund raising and social or­ are: N gineering said. " It isn’t a great Despite t h i s advantage, how­ strip the hands of diamonds in ganization which promotes the li­ A 15th Century Book of Hours S J864 number who come, but it isa fin t ever, the number of women en­ the hope that the opponent how brary and its books among stu­ with examples of miniature paint­ H 975 and fertile field for them.” rolled in engineering remains holds the trump queen also has dents and faculty. ings depicting the era. Dk32 Mrs. Elizabeth A. Unger, re­ three diamonds. If he doesn’t, relatively small. The eight girls A committeS of businessmen A medieval atlas of hand-col­ D K32 search instructor, and the only you’re still no worse off, because now studying engineering at irfd faculty members of the F r i­ ored cartographic plates. C AJ8 women members o f th e engin­ you can still try the club fin­ Michigan State are a small per­ ends are in the process of col- A collection of books compar­ W E eering staff at Michigan State, esse. As it is, when the hands centage of th e approximately Mecting the necesTary funds to able to the library's collection S Q53 S 9 feels that not enough girls are in are reduced to five cards each 1,952 students enrolled in the de­ on the French Monarchy. H AK10 H Q J843 the field. She says: and a trump is led by South, partment. An addition to the library's D 10985 D J64 MIND OVER M ATTER-A coed ta k es a lesso n in engineering "Many opportunities are open West’s queen has to take the And how do the girls feel about holdings of first editions in En­ C 543 C Q972 from male students. Or could she be giving them le sso n s? to women in engineering, and M T E G iv e n trick and he is faced with the this? glish and American literature,. S little prejudice is shown toward following problem: Karen Jane Heffner, Redlands, I n F e b r u a r y Canadiana, herbáis, or autograph letters. "W e will certainly appreciate S AK1072 H 62 D AQ7 N S J8 Flaws In Style Mar them.” Mrs. Unger graduated from Michigan State in 1961, as an en­ C alif., junior, and mechanical engineering major, i s enthusi­ astic. She enjoys the challenge 'Winter Light’s’ Glow The National Teacher Examin­ any donations,” he said. Then C K106 H void gineering major, and received ations (NTE) will be admini stered D void offered to her in engineering. he jokingly added: South dealer, neither vulner­ her Masters degree in math in here in February to seniors pre­ C AJ8 " If some girl is interested " I f we could get all the stu­ able. The bidding: 1962. paring to teach and to teachers w E in trying engineering, she must dents to donate a quarter, we S W N E applying for positions in school SQ S void be sure that it is what she wants," could pretty well buy the book IS P 2S P Thi s is port one of pellent, the film destroys all systems which encourage or re ­ H void HJ she says. "Sh e must be stub­ right there.” 3S P 4S P a two-part s e r ie s . warmth. quire applicants to submit (NTE) D9 D void born, for it is a lot of work.” P P P C 543 C Q972 By DOUGLAS LACKEY Bergman’s "T h e Seventh Seal” R e fu g e e A id In reference to the men stu­ -sco res. Opening lead was the king of ended in a death that affirmed S State News Review er MINNEAPOLIS (UPI)—Senator dents, Miss Heffner says: These exams are administered hearts. the very triumph of being alive: S 107 Ingmar Bergman’s " W i n t e r Philip Hart savs he plans to in­ "T h e boys d o n ’t really know annually by the Educational T est­ The bidding was normal and the "W inter Light” ends with living H void Light," now at thq State Theater, troduce legislation to ease the why you’re there. You must prove in g Service. opening lead was rather obvious. people who affirm nothing but D void has flaws in both conception and plight of Cuban refugees in this to them that you will work just Candidates may take the com­ (concluded from page 1) However, it does place the queen diseased inhumanity. C K106 execution. country. The Michigan Democrat as hard as they do.” mon examinations, i n c l u d i n g in E ast’s hand because if the But Bergman fails to convince damaged sections will have to The film, horribly marred by says his bill will change the Pamela McAllister, Algonac tests of professional information, king were only a doubleton, it Any card led gives the de­ us of his theme: bis ideas seem be Inspected thoroughly and re­ dubbing, is artistically unsatis­ status of the Cuban refugees junior, and a metallurgical en­ general culture, English expres­ would mean East would have five cla re r the remaining tricks, ei­ to have outrun his technique. wired in several places. We plan factory; however, 1 found it deep­ from parolee to that of perman­ gineering majors, says: sion and nonverbal reasoning, and hearts and would have bid them. ther by a ruff and a sluff of to redocorate the entire a re a .” ly stimulating, not for what it His dialogue is stilted, some­ ent immigrant. He says he hopes "T h e attitudes of the junior and one or two of 13 optional ex­ Once he gets in by ruffing the a club loser or through the club The first fire began early F r i­ is, but for what it attempts and times absurd, and his shots of the refugees will be offered more senior men students toward the aminations designed to demon­ third round of hearts, South’s lead. day afternnon at 1:17 p.m. in for what it means in the light the environment seem uninspired resettlement opportunities if his g irls were poor, at first, but have strate m astery of subject matter problem is the location of the Many tim es it is poor play Bessey Hall before the power of Bergman’s past work. and shallow for the ideas they bill passes. Hart says this can improved.” in the candidate’ s chosen field. black queens. His proper play to take out the one remaining failure w h i c h left the campus The theme of ‘‘Winter Light," attempt to communicate. be accomplished by speading out M iss M cAllister hopes to earn Applications and bulletins may is to insure his contract against high trump, for it can often without electricity for an hour the death of faith due to God’ s the $70 million a year Cuban her Master degree, and do en­ be obtained from the testing of­ any distribution in trumps. be used to your advantage later Bergman’s problem in film­ and a half. silence, is narrow but deep. budget which current is allotted gineering research after gradu­ fice, Counseling Center, or di­ As the cards lie, there seems in the play. ing has always been his attempt Since for Bergman, faith, or only to the Miami, Florida area. ation. rectly from National Teacher The small blaze bagan in a cus­ to be a finesse in spades, but In the recent Tuesday afternoon to force his ideas through the Examinations, Educational T e st­ game at Holiday Lanes, Bob J a ­ certainty, means life, the film ’s todian’ s room in the south wing South shouldn’t take it for tow cinema, instead of having h is ing Service, Princeton, New J e r ­ cobson, Detroit senior and Rich­ characters are sick, either phys­ of Bessey. An East Lansing F ire good reasons: thought develop from technique ically or emotionally, in their w ith sey. Department official said it was caused by debris from ashtrays on a custodian’ s cart which set 1. When nine trumps are held and the queen is missing, it’ s ard Schwartz, senior, were the winners. Anyone is welcome to play inability to show campassion, to fight crippling fears, and to ful­ fill their own basic needs. Uself. S A fe ô h u lm a n fire to some dust brooms and at any Ingham County c l u b . (.4 uthor of “ Rolln Rounil the Flag, Boys!" rags. Firem en took only a few For more complete information, The trapped, disenchanted pas­ C A M P U S : anil “ Barefoot Bog W ith Cheek.") C u ltu r a l tor is unable to accept affection seconds to extinguish the fire. call ED 2-5446. or provide guidance. His m is­ T H I A T R T - tress, Martha, demonstrates an — 3 3 7 -0 8 7 1 „ .Í S S & f í S « ► 3 3 2 - 0 0 4 4 .- - Damage at Bessey amounted to S e r ie s H e ld NOGALES. A r i z . i f - - N o - I W A S A T E E N -A G E S L ID E R U L E affection that is a sick desire about $51, according to the De­ ales city librarian Mrs. Ann LAST 4 DAYS! for possession. partment of Public Safety. Ashby was puzzled when a large In a recent learned journal (Playboy) the distinguished board A t K e llo g g Jonas, the troubled fisherman 65* to 5:30 Eve. 90* box of books arrived. She could­ seeking solace about nuclear war, chairman (Ralph THot Lips” Sigafoos) of one of our most Saturday-night scholars were Hilarious Adult Comedy) n’t remember placing an order commits suicide, abandoning his important American industrial corporations (the Arf Mechan­ « disturbed by the last fire of the Although most students are 1:10 - 3:15 - 5:20 - 7:30 - 9:35 for any new reading material. ical Dog Co.) wrote a trenchant article in which he pinpointed ■ weekend, in the library. Burned- out balast on the fourth floor of fam iliar with the Lecture-Con­ She opened the box and found cert S e rie s, few ,may know that this note atop the books: “From f wife and children. Surrounding and r e f l e c t i n g these bleak characters is a cold mmam our single most serious national problem; the lack of culture among science graduates. the library was responsible for Kellogg Center sponsors a sim i­ Cleveland tourist who passed by world of elaborate services in JOANNE Let me hasten to state that Mr. Sigafoos’» article was in no lar, though broader, cultural ser­ another call to the East Lansing ies which is open to the public. your beautiful new library build­ e m p t y churches, of snow and WOODWARD sense derogatory. He said emphatically that the science grad­ F ire Department.' ing." uate, what with his gruelling curriculum in physics, math, and The Kellogg Center Series be­ shadow, of gray landscapes cut There was no name on the card. chemistry, can hardly he ex|>eeted to find time to study the gan last year as part of the by icy stream s. Deliberately r e ­ The library was not evacuated Continuing Education Service’ s arts too. What distresses Mr. Sigafoos— and, indeed, ail of us— and no damage except the balast .THE BEST IN FOPJEiGN FILMS is the lopsided result of today’s science courses: graduates was reported. N A A C P To M e e t Cap and Gown Series. The Cap and Gown Series pro­ vides t r a v e l i n g entertainment such as the State Singers and ■ I TODAY... Thru WEDNESDAY! I a t 7 :4 5 - 9 :5 5 P.M . 9 0 * ¿TATE A f R I • ASA1814 mvoTmsimmi►SSA-MIT — ¡HMlWA NEW who can build a skyscraper but can’t compose a concerto; who know Newton’s Third Law but not Beethoven’s Fourth Sym- the Spartan Bell Ringers, while KIND OF LOVE The campus NAACP chapter the Kellogg Center Series at­ " B R I L L I A N T L Y D O N S ... will meet tonight at 8 in 32 THIS IS A FI LM TO SEE TECHNICOLOR’ tempts to make Kellogg a cul­ Union. tural spot for the entire East AND P ONDE R! ” * Starts Friday* Maxie Gordon, Columbia,S.C., Lansing community. IN G M A R BERG M AN’S - B o s l e y C r o w t h s r , N .Y . T im e s A Very Special M otion P ictu re l senior, will discuss highlights of m er 3 the recent human relations con­ FRIDAY! vention at Battle Creek and make C a le n d a r o f “ THIS plans for future action. SPORTING — TO PREPARE FOR FINAL EXAMS! ( x m iin g E v e n ts L IFE " BEST F IL M "1963 SiONI»POiTii« Y our headquarters for Data-Guide plastic summary charts THUR. •■“Charles D ic k e n s ' -Int’l. Film Critics give you SPECIAL HELP when time Dairy Seminar—4 p.m ., 126 G REAT E X P E C T A T IO N S " seem s to be running out. Data Guides Anthony. Geology Seminar— 4 p.m., 409 % to}tided w ilt of / Data-Guides pare down the subject and other study a id s . Nat. Sci. phony; who are familiar with Fraunhofer’s lines hut not with to the important core facts. They con­ centrate your final studying efforts. Mechanical Engineering Space Shelley’s. S e m i n a r —4 p.m., Engineering Mr. Sigafoos can find no solution to this lamentable unbal­ You'll review faster, with less strain Auditorim. ance. I, however, believe there is one— and a very simple one. — and remember more! / Data-Guides present these facts C A M P U S Physics Colloquium—4 p.m., It is this: if students of science don’t have time to come to Physics-Math. Conference Room. the arts, then the arts must come to students of science. on permanent, single sheet loose-leaf Sailing Club Executive Meet­ charts (8Vi " x l l "). No hunting through For example, it would be a very easy tiling to teach jxietry ing—4 p.m., Oak Room, Union. and music right along with physics. Students, instead of lieing pages - on Data-Guides, your eyes can B O O K Alpha Chi Omega Scholarship sweep in whole chunks of information, called upon merely to recite, would instead lie required to D essert—6:30 p.m., Art Room, rhyme their answers and set them to familiar tunes— like, for and re-scan again and again until the Union. instance, the stirring Colonel Bogey March. Thus recitations 'facts are fixed in your mind. STORE A.A.U.P,— 7:30 p.m ., 31Union. would not only be chock-a-block with important facts but / Data-Guides organize the facts for Young Democrats— 7:45 p.m .. would, at the same time, ex|x>se the students to the aesthetic you. You know what is important. You ACROSS FROM THE Tower Room, Union. UNION BUILDING delights of great poetry and music. Here, try it yourself. You learn and review in a systematic man­ T o w e r Guard— 8:30 p.m., all know The Colonel Bogey March. Come, sing along with me: ner, as numbers, letters, colors and Beaumont Tower. Physics differing type faces lead you through Is what we learn in class. the subject. Einstein / There are Data-Guides in every sub­ je c t-M a th , Science, Business, Lan­ guages, History, English. . . Remember... Said energy is mass. Newton Is high-falutin’ LEARN THE FACTS ON DATA-GUIDES th e And Pascal’s a rascal. So's Boyle. AND YOU WILL DO BETTER! Do yod see how much more broadening, how much more u[>- IMPORTANT NOTE: After this term’s notes and texts are gone, your perma­ PATRICIAN’S lifting it is to learn physics this way? Of course you do. What? You want another chorus? B y all means: Leyden nent Data-Guide summaries are the keys to higher grades next term! At book stores. Only 79* each. PINK He made the Leyden jar. Trolley He made the Trolley car. Curie ROOM Rode in a surrey And Diesel’s a weasel. So's Boyle. Once the student has mastered The Colonel Bogey March, he can go on to more complicated melodies like Death and Trans­ W e d n e s d a y S p e c ia l figuration, Sixteen Tons, and Boo-Hoo. And when the student, loaded not only with science but with culture, leaves his classroom and lights his Marlboro P e r m a n e n t... $ 1 0 .0 0 Cigarette, how much more he will enjoy that filter, that flavor, D o e s a man really take unfair advantage o f women that pack or box! Because there will no longer be a little voice T ip p in g ... $ 1 2 .5 0 when he u se s Mennen Skin B ra c e r ? within him repeating that he is culturally a dolt. He will know —know joyously— that he is a complete man, a fulfilled man, and he will bask and revel in the pleasure of his Marlboro as a W a s h ’ n S e t... $ 2 .5 0 All depends on why he uses it. colt rolls in new grass— exultant and triumphant— a truly «i Most men simply think Menthol-Iced Skin Bracer is the best after-shave lotion around. Because it cools rather than burns. educated human person— a credit to his college, to himself, and OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY ‘T IL 8 B ecause ¿t helps heal shaving nicks and scrapes. Because it to his tobacconist! NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY 1963M u S b u lm a n helps prevent blemishes. So who can blame them if Bracer’s crisp, long-lasting aroma * * * PATRICIAN’S PINK ROOM just happens to affect women so remarkably? Of course, some men may use Mennen Skin Brafcer because of this effect. j We, the m akers o f Marlboros and sponsors o f this colum n, urge you not to roll colt-wise in the grass if you are carrying a soft pack o f Marlboros in your pocket, it, however, you SP A R TA K SHOPPING C E N T E R How intelligent! are carrying the crush-proof box and weigh less than 209 PLASTIC SUBJECT SUMMARIES pounds, you may safely fling yourself_ahout._____________ ♦94-01 BARCLAYAVENUE.FLUSHING N.V. SOUTH HARRISON RD._____________________ ED 2-4 5 2 2 0 Michigan State N ew s , East Lans ing, Michigan Monday, N ovem b er 11, 1963 ¥ Profs Say Viet Nam Chicken Bones Fail Overthrow Inevitable Î4N To Deter Howland L o o k in ' b The Viet Nam military coup was bound to come, said Wesley R. Fishel and Robert B. S ci- several attempts to overthrow the regime but they failed be­ cause of bad luck. on In Job Success To a dormitory busboy which of Wilson, promoted Howland to B ack gliano. The two political science “ I call it luck. President Diem sight is more discouraging: rice Student supervisor in the latter Nov. 11, 1947 professors discussed this and called it Divine Providence,” spilled all over the table or part of his freshman year. various other Viet Nam topics at said Scigliano. chicken bones piled on theplates? In spite of the pressures in­ a p a n e l discussion Thursday The real heroes were the Bud­ “ Having gone this far, the National Student Association cannot According to one form er bus­ volved in supervising the feed­ night. dhists,” Scigliano said. “ They afford to fail,” Tom King, counselor for men, told campus leaders boy, both bring the ultimate in ing of 1,100 men every day How­ The Diem regime, which had showed the rigidity and stupidity Sunday at a meeting sponsored by the Studnet Council’s NSA com­ frustration. Nevertheless, Jam es land said he really enjoyed his been in power since 1954, had of President Diem. They also mittee. E. Howland, B u f f a l o , N . Y . . s e n ­ work at Shaw. He has not set­ undone what it had done, Fishel brought into the open the key There are several organizations of a subversive character that ior, says perseverance in spite tled on hotel and restaurant man­ said. The N'hus were responsible role of the N'hus.” would be only too willing to step in and pick up the pieces, if the of these temporary obstacles paid agement as his major. for far more harm that good. As for the future Scigliano pre­ NSA should fa ll,” King said. off as he worked himself up In explaining his quick rise The May 8 killings produced dicted improvements, not drastic from the bottom of the dormitory from busboy to student supervis­ the big change in the people’s changes. He said there was the job ladder to his present posi­ or in less than a year, McMillan Nov. 12, 1951 attitudes, he said. “ When the chance that coup d’etat may breed tion as full-tim e director of stu­ said: pagodas were raided, Nhu made cou d’etat. dent personnel at McDonel. “ He was always very effec­ the Army look like the ogre. A question was asked about Enrolling as a freshman non- tive, and you can’t argue with "Toward the end of the old Madame Nhu’ s accusation that Intercollegiate athletics will undergo the scrutinization of a pref, Howland took a job as effectiveness.” regime there wasn’t a single news reports were bias. Fishel committee appointed by the American Council on Education and busboy in Shaw Hall to work He also said that his self non-communist Vietnamese who said that at first poor quality headed by President John A. Hannah. his way through school. confidence played a large part. supported the government. reporters were sent to Viet Nam The committee, composed of presidents of 10 educational institu­ After two term s as a bus­ Soon after Howland was trans­ “ When the coups were executed but as the situation became more ferred to Wilson as a student tions, will try to dig out the evils of college athletics. boy a promotion to student cook they were well planned and bril­ important better newsmen were “ We firmly believe that there is much that is good in inter­ T H t B O S S -J omes Newlond, right, in stru cts o new recru it in followed, he said. Donald R. Mc­ supervisor he was named a ssist­ liantly executed.” sent and therefore better news collegiate athletics, and that what’ s good should be preserved,” art of bussing. Millan, form er food service man­ ant to the manager, according The U.S. role in Viet Nam was was gathered. Fishel said that Dr. Hannah said. “ That’s what our committee will attempt to do— ager of Shaw and present manager "to McMillan. to win the war and provide a it has always been difficult to take out what’s bad and leave in what's good.” This last s u m m e r he was base with the people, Fishel said. gather news in Viet Nam. chosen to be the first director When the regime became unfav­ On the question of what will of student personnel at the new orable to the U.S. they applied happen to Ambassador Chuong, P r o f S a y s S t a n l e y Professo rTo T a lk Nov. 12, 1962 McDonel dormitory. heavy pressure in d i p l o m a t i c Fishel said he will probably be “ This new position has proved ways. given a cabinet post in the new Fred Vescelani, professor of a real challenge for me,” How­ “They had a policy of delib­ regime. education, will speak at a state E x p l o i t e d A f r i c a land said, “ and it gives me a Reversing the stand taken by his predecessor (Bob Howard), erately not doing things,’ ’ said conference on teacher recruit­ ra re opportunity for practical All-University Student Government President Jim Barnes, Flint Fishel. 5 P a r t ic ip a t e ment in Battle Creek Tuesday. experience.” junior, has announced his intention to take a seat on the con­ Scigliano said that Diem and The electrifying news that Africa, although they were some­ He said his plans call for a troversial Student-Faculty Speaker Clearing Committee. Nhu feared their military leaders Stanley had found Livingstone times misguided.” The c o n f e r e n c e , having the theme, “ Who Shall Teach?” is move to Philadelphia after grad­ In a statement mailed to members of Student Congress, Barnes and therefore constantly shifted I n C h ic a g o alive flashed around the world uation aiming for an administra­ pledged himself to work for a “ more liberal” speaker policy their positions and fragmentized 92 years ago Sunday. The "benevolent” Livingstone, being sponsored by the Michigan however, died too soon after the Education Association and the tive position with the Philadelphia which would be acceptable to the Board of Trustees and for the the power of these leaders. But the meeting itself was of Orchestra which has been a spec­ dissolution of the committee "when such a policy is adopted or C o n fe re n c e meeting to exert much influence Michigan Congress of Parents Scigliano also stated that stu­ little importance in comparison ial goal of his since high school. when progress become unsatisfactory.” dent offices were fixed so that Five University faculty mem­ with the influence of the after on the future course of Africa. and Teachers. safe leaders could be elected and bers are participating in the effects, said Harm D eBlij, as­ " It was Stanley—who failed the Nhu went even so far as to annual meeting of the Associa­ sociate professor of geography in to carry out his calling as an close the opposition press. tion of State Universities and the .African Studies Center. explorer and began exploiting “The coup didn’t take place Land-Grant Colleges now in pro­ “ F irst the s t a r t l i n g news- Africa—who made the im pact,” >.3SS sooner because of bad luck,” Scigliano said. There had been gress in Chicago. making fact focused the attention Thomas K. Cowden, dean of of the world on Africa and arous­ agriculture, is giving an address ed an interest in an area that DeBlij said. Stanley, having become aware (« X4 Rj M O N D A Y COUPON SPECIAL PJ 12” Pizza with Pepperoni m U Peanuts Books Iti 15%OFF on “ Impacts of Changing Uni­ was to Europeans a dark con­ of the profits to be gained in T, ♦ fr X versities on Colleges of Agri­ tinent,” said DeBlij. Africa, like many other explor­ P o w e r culture.” Alfred L. Seelye, dean "Secondly, searching for Liv­ m UJ ►z e rs, became a fortune hunter. He #* of business, is speaking on the ingstone involved Stanley in Af­ guided the interests of King Le­ 6 Dooks to choose from H Agri-Business Program: "Ad­ rica and changed h isch aracter— opold I of Belgium in the Con­ R plus tax and delivery charge (continued from page 1) vantages and Disadvantages.” to the misfortune of A frica.” go and as an administrator help­ plus Peanuts 1964 Calendar pus without electricity for up to Presiding at a meeting of the Nov. 10, 1871, Sir Henry Mor­ ed to "c re a te terrible condi­ [(fD i « elivery ' Hours: 4 PM - 2 A M »UXJ Coupon good Mon.-Tues.-Wea. engineering division is John D. ton Stanley, New York Herald SPARTAN Bookstore two hours. tions” under Leopold Il’s govern­ p iz z a By P rice Good only with Coupon In Student Services building and the Union secretaries continued their tasks by the light of flic­ kering candle flames. Ryder, dean of engineering. correspondent, located Dr. Liv­ Willis W. Armistead, dean of ingstone on the shores of Lake veterinary medicine, is taking Tanganyika. The d o c t o r , how­ part in a panel meeting on “ Pro­ ever, refused to return to Eu­ ment. AwardProf (rf RICARDO 482-1554 J - U ’« CORNER ANN & M.A.C. m A candle lit the steps between the second and third floors of the Union. One office worker in Student fessional Manpower Needs (in rope, and Stanley arrived in En­ veterinary medicine) by 1980.” gland alone four months later. Discussion leader at a session DeBlij classifies Livingstone on “ New Plan for Programs” among the “ benevolent explor­ StudyGrant W. Lloyd Warner, professor Services p r o d u c e d a needed in the home economics division e r s ." of management, has been awar­ r S t k «. S S Sab * SSL. flashlight from her closet. is Jeanette A. Lee, assistant “ They were interested in gain­ ded a $25,000 research grant by Throughout th e campus, ’in­ dean of home economics. ing and r e c o r d i n g knowledge the Ford Foundation. .S PAY M O RE-W HAT FOR? structors let students out of class ten and fifteen minutes before the 3 p.m. hour. Happy with The meeting will end Nov. 13. about Africa and spreading what ZBT A ctivates they considered the helpful know­ ledge of European civilization to The grant, one of eight made by the foundation for research» in business administration, will «CAMEL BLAZERS EH 100% WOOL (| Uncle Johns Pancake House is jw Buttermilk Pancakes 2oraers for Price of 1 »J 27.50 their freedom and curious about provide for continued work in th e cause, students wandered Seven P ledges a study Warner is conducting of I)J coupon - good Monday & Tuesday. abount campus, watching steam Zeta Beta Tau activated seven Pope N o w large-scale organizations, par­ ONLY 2 8 2 0 East G ra n d R iver pour from the two power plants. members recently. They are Alan ticularly big corporations. In Mary Mayo Hall, coeds ate Hollander, Rockville C e n t r e , Bishop His study also involves such iff L E N K O S IT C H E K ’S a buffet-styled dinner b e c a u s e N. Y., sophomore: Gary Schae- at Frandor ROME (UPI)— Pope Paul of­ institutions as l a r g e unions, V A R S IT Y S h o p there was not enough power with vitz, Brooklyn, N.Y., junior: Roy ficially became the Bishop of churches, g o v e r n m e n t and which to cook. Tepper, Long Beach, Long Island, Rome at a three-hour ceremony schools. The corporation and the 228 A B B O T T RD, E ast La nsing PHONE IV 7-3761 At Brody, a food services em­ N.Y., sophomore: Les Richwald, «"VMS' w '» '*• taweaat > at th e Church of Saint John kinds of people who inhabit it ployee said it looked as if the Valley Stream, N.Y., sophomore: Latern. He received the keys will be examined. students would be eating cold Robert Green, Detroit, sopho­ to the cathedral after crossing Warner has done extensive re­ cuts for dinner. more; Andrew Kramer, Detroit, the city in a limousine, follow­ search into the behavior of high- “ The ovens were off, but luck­ sophomore; and Ronald Foon, ing the route taken by popes level business and government ily they retained enough heat Detroit, sophomore. for centuries to reach the church. executives. to finish cooking the m eal,” he ¿WSK4N ♦ ¿C99K<4 said. Hallways in other dorms were PAY M ORE-W HAT FOR? black, and coeds and men alike found it dangerous to walk down a hallway quietly. NOW OPEN SKI-JACKETS REG. 19.95 EAST LA N S IN G “ If 1 had’ nt said something to myself out loud, 1 would have run into another g irl,” said one Campbell Hall resident. Perhaps the most unusual re­ ONLY$16.95 L E N K O S IT C H E K ’S sult of the power failure occur­ red at Campbell Hall more than [ft V A R S IT Y S h o p five hours aftev power had been restored to much of the cam­ 228 A B B O TT RD. pus. An electric cable reportedly snapped between Campbell and Mayo dorms, causing the latter to be completely without power. In order to repair the cable FREECOKE and restore power to this sec­ tion of the campus, workmen had jì First of the week VALUE SPECIALS GILLETTE FOAMY to shut off all power complet­ ely. i * * “ We had about 15 or 20 mun- m Large 16 oz. Coke Free with utes to warn the girls and to get them out of the building,” said M rs. Ella Fenstemacher, North Campbell head resident E v e r y S u n r is e E v e ry w h e re mthis coupon. Also w ith deli O ffer good M o n d a y onl REG. 71* 59< with $5.00 purchase adviser. All the girls in the dorm were asked to leave until power could be restored. fjVARSITY DRIVE pjjjgU Vjj ,, TRY OUR 101 VARIETIES V e ra B a it U -M R e g e n t F o rm e r D ie s Special PricesfroCampusOrganizations, DETROIT(UPI)—Funeral se r­ vices will be held Tuesday for ResidenceHalls, Fraternitiesand Sweatpants ZZSb*S3t;*.SSk*>9b*.SSit* Bal PointPens Vera Bait, former University of Michigan regent who died F r i- day in Detroit. The 70-year-old Sororities andCo-ops. White - LL Blue - Black Small - Medium - Large StiCK Type NOW M rs. Bait, a resident of G rosse Pointe Farm s, died in Cottage Hospital. She was appointed re­ gent in 1943 by former Gover OPEN EVERYDAY 5 AM TO 1 AM NOW Were $3.35 to $3.75 $ 2 .8 8 with coupon Reg. 39, ea 5 for $1,008 Mix ‘em and Match ‘em with coupongn Choice Of Colors & Points * nor Harry Kelley. Like to Buy Hi-Fi? DAWN DONUTS SiudentfTAcross Prom B si4is r j 4 . l l 0o°RE ____ UNIONBOOKSTORE Right on Campus - A Dept. Of MSU jjy Hi-Fi Bargains Coining Soon 1135 East Grand River Phone 332-2541