Weather Inside STATE NEWS MICHIGAN Fair and continued cool Sartre Wins Nobel Prize, today. High in low 40's. p. 5; Lansing Symphony, STATE Fair and warmer tomor- p. 5; Sports Tabloid-12 UNIVERSITY East Lansing, Michigan Fridoy, October 23, 1964 Vol. 55, Number 198 25,000 Alumni Coming Home Today Five To Be Honorary Alumni_ also is director of the . . Michigan MSU will designate five prom¬ Associated and General Tele¬ inent Michigan citizens as Hon¬ phone companies and the National orary Alumni at homecoming Bank of Jackson. festivities this weekend. Named to receive the awards Kelly, holder of the Croix de Guerre with Palm and the Purple Midnight Beaumont Sing ire: Paul D. Bagwell of Grosse Heart, was governor of Michigan fcointe Park, president of K-S Funds, Inc. and member of the from 1943 through 1947. He was Follows'GatewayTrio' Hoot elected to the Supreme Court in Board of Trustees; Leland W. 1953 and 1961. Carr, Lansing, retired chief jus¬ Metzel has been with Oldsmo¬ tice of the Michigan Supreme bile for 36 years, joining the firm Court; Raymond VV. Herrick, Te- Some 25,000 alumni will begin pouring onto in 1928 as an experimental tester. cumseh, board chairman ofTe- On July 6 he was appointed gen¬ campUs today to join 31,000 students in what cumseh Products Co.; Harry F. eral manager of Oldsmobile, Kelly, Gaylord, former governor vice president of General Motors Director of Alumni Relations Jack Kinney of Michigan, and Harold N.Metzel East Lansing, general manager of and a member of the GM admin¬ describes as "one of the best planned home¬ istration committee. General Motors' Oldsmobile di- comings ever in terms of both student and ■ • .f.T' -X"*- _jj.lura.ni activities.'' .. distinguished Michigan cm-eta is for their services to education Hoover s A "Spartan Spirft-sponsorea pep may will H. N. METZEL kick off student activities at 7:30 tonight on and the community. President John A. present the Hannah will citations at an alumni head MSU, was president of of Michigan Supreme Court Jus- Service Old College Field, while alumni activities club officials' banquet Friday the U.S. Junior Chamber of Com- tices when he retired last year will begin with a Homecoming banquet in evening ir. Kellogg Center. Awards for Kelly and Herrick wi'l be made "in absentia." rr.erce and head of several as so- ciations for the mentally and physically handicapped. after 42 years as a jurist. He was appointed to the Supreme Court in 1945 by Gov. Kelly. Kept Plain the Big Ten Room of Kellogg C enter at 6 p.m. Highlight of the banquet will be honorary alumni awards going NEW YORK f-Herbert Clark Bagwell, a former department Former Justice Carr was dean Herrick,-i native of Muskegon, Michigan citizens. Presi¬ Mississippi to five Hoover, 31st President of the United States, was given a sim¬ dent John A. Hannah will speak a-.d Homecomingc o-chairman ple, impressive private funeral Warren Plan, St. John's, Ariz., Special Session Of AUSG service Thursday. President Johnson came from Washington to join the mourners. Explosion senior; Sue Lindsay, Romeo sen¬ ior; and Homecoming Queen Janis The fanfare and tumult of the Triggered Flanders, Monroe Junior, will bs introduced. Accepts Procedure Rules 1964 political campaign died away A hootefinany show at Jenison momentarily as Johnson was BAXTERYILLE, Miss. f-THe Fieldhouse will follow the pep joined inSt. Bartholomew's Epis- TROPHYof FOR A:hairman MISS FLANDERS- the Sparta Spirit and Joh United States exploded a five rally at 9 p.m., featuring "The standing s: Congress copai Church on Park Avenue kiloton nuclear device a hall Howie Wilchins, Paterson, committees, which chooses chairman of the Homec ning Dane Gateway Trio" and "The Vll- busine.s and iizatlons, stu- by his running mate, Sen. H - underground Thursday to ^ N.J., junior, was elected speaker members, cha,. m.,i <«r.c ^ .e or out the polish Stompers." Ticket* are $1 dent rights and finance bert H. Humphrey, and their if ican American detection de- 1 ' . ... „„ ■-president of Student chairmen, of the four other stand- ^ —-«-—— year to Jan per person and will be on isle Congress at its second special ing committees, were Dav and academic affairs. Under the Republican opponents,Sen.Barry to be presented thi can spot sneak atomic tests at the door. session Wednesday night. Jensen and Greg Owen, East new rules of procedure, the cor- Goldwater and Rep. William E. by foreign powers. The first midnight carillon With a ground tremor and a Lansing representatives, and Jim responding cabinet member is an Miller. sing, sponsored by Spartan Spirit, ith Wilchins win be Graham, North Wonders. The ex-officio committee member. Thus the death of the 90- deep, muffled explosion the blast will end Friday's activities. The Serving Don Erickson, Riverdale, 111., senior, as speaker pro tem and speaker and speaker pro tem are members of this commit'. Louis Hekhuis, director of stu- dent affairs and All University year-old Hoover stilled partisan °ratorV ^ brought the four top Ohio State erupted 2,700 feet below the sur¬ face in the Tatum Salt Dome. A State Singers will begin a pro¬ gram on the Union steps at Sue Smith, East Mayo repre- candidates together under fine dust haze appeared above 11:40 p.m. and march to Beau¬ Accepted at the lengthy meet- student Government (AUSG) Help LBJ's ^ e and Highland Park sen- viser, and Bob Ha; AUSG roof for the first time since last mont Tower at midnight. Wendell summer's nominating conven¬ The device had about a fourth s secretary. 11 p.m., were rules of proced¬ president, spoke. Westcott, associate professor of tions. It was a rare few minutes the punch of the atomic bomb that ure for the Fourteenth Congress 37 per cent, 19,156 > 10,777. music, will play the carillon. Wilchins and Erickson mated by Dick of political history, President Lyndon B. Johnsc leveled Hiroshima in World War sponsored by Wilchins, Miss Michigan State gav Johnson Living unit displays will be West Fee Hall ,, ,, . , and hast Lansing Lansing, The service was conducted by again received a major! II. Smith and Brian Walsworth, Easi the biggest margin of Judged starting at 8:30 a.m. Sat¬ representatives, respectively. the Rev. Terence J. Finlay.Rec- Big Ten mock election "Everyting went off as ex¬ Lansing. defeated Walsworth for tor of St. Bartholomew's. It start¬ Ohio State University added of the participating universities. urday and the results will be but their seats were declared Deleted from the order of bus- speaker's post, >ived 6,610 votes to pected," Dr. Philip Randolph, the announced at Saturday night's ed with a prayer that began: returns to the total Wednesdav. Johnson Atomic Energy Commission's vacant upon their elections to iness without discussion was 2,822, or 70 per dance, sponsored for the first Student Congress offices. "I am the resurrection and Johnson swamped Barry M. Goldwater'! project director, told newsmen period of silent meditation pri Goldwater 5,045 to 3,224 at Ohio 30 per cent of the votes time this year by All Univer¬ Elected to the committee on the life, saith the Lord." following a check of instruments ceding the meeting. This pro- for three years and served the committee on committees and Hoover's two sons, Herbert State, 61 per cent to 39 per in the blast area. sity Student Government (AUSG) posal caused lengthy debate in Every participating university in conjunction with the Alumni last year's Congress. Congress business and organi- Jr., and Allan Henry Hoover, cent. This brings Johnson' ;r gave Johnson a majority. North- A worldwide network ol seis- Club. itions committee. Maintaining a front row pew in the Ten mographic stations, including two will be given The section on committee he western University gave Johnson Three awards Goldwater's 10,777. Out of Archbishop of the impressive Byzan- behind the Iron Curtain, had been ■ meeting absences was changed 3.3 all-University grade point of the smallest edge, however, with alerted prior to the explosion in in each of six divisions; co-or¬ make it mandatory that hall average, he is i e- 52 per cent to 48 per cent or dinated by Men's Halls Associa¬ this south Mississippi piney Hits Church nted for those lege. minated by (continued on page 7) ceived 63 per centtoGolcivvatei ,270 to 1 1 :old d; tion, Women's Inter-Residence Hall Council, MHA and WICcom¬ I he AEC said the test results On Document without the an excuse approved b> speaker. Members with more Walsworth, defeated Owen for speaker pro tem. A forn t the Uni Daily bined; Inter-Fraternity Council; Pan-Hellenic Council and Stu¬ VATICAN CITY .^England's rfour dropped gress member, sponsoring the Big Ten Thant Wants To Hear than abseni Ulini, is dents Oft-Campus. leading Roman Catholic church- {rom congress and vaicanciesde- chairman of the student rights event. A vote of 3,570 was turned Displays will carry out the men called Thursday for revision ciared in their districts,:ts. and welfare committee. in for Johnson while 2,084 was theme, "Morrills—Yesterday, 2 From MSU K's Version Of Coup with laymen's help of the Vatican Miss Smith, nominated by Congress defeated a for Goldwater. Today and Tomorrow." Ecumenical Council's document to hold meetings every twi Owen, won over Natalie Keiser, Iowa gave 2,226 votes to Alumni activities will also get on modern world problems to r such things as birth control rather than weekly, to all' tjme for tings, West Akers. This is Miss Smith's fourth year in Student Congress. UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. i#> news conference, where hi Johnson and 1,161 to Goldwater. Minnesota showed gieat voter Take Medals off to an early start with a dairy homecoming breakfast from 9 to pills. Tom Partridge, East Lansing, Last year's secretary, she has Secretary-General U Thant said called also for a meeting Interest will, its la; ge turn out, d I/v'i)i 11 a.m. at the Crossroads Cafe— Archbishop John C. Heenan of sponsored the motion. beer l the committee yesterday it would be helpful and of the nuclear po< ng Communist China. lud— giving Johnson a victory of 4,350 In Olympics ./ III/ *4| / lerij- International Center. Westminster attacked the docu¬ if Nikita Khrushchev Other alumni meetings include Immediately following the first mittees, was Asked to assess the situnti< it ion W 3,530. ment, or schema, as "a set of Id about the Michigan State captured a little special session, the first regular steering comn in the Soviet Union in viewv» Purdue and the University of a nursing alumnae social hour rcumstances leading to hise: of the glory of the Olympic Games platitudes" and brought the con¬ meeting, consisting mailnly ol sently senior clas the shakeup in leadership, Thal,ant Michigan did not hold elections, and business meeting at 9:30 a.m. Indiana's election was invalidated Wednesday as alumna Marcia leader of the Soviet Unior traceptive pill issue openly be¬ had praise both for Khrushcht tht-v in 32 Union; an alumni-varsity- fore the assembly in St. Peter's Thant made the s use of a "lack of communi- ( Hones wi n the bronze medal in and the new leaders, Communi freshman swimming meet at Basilica for the first time. the women's kayaK singles. The >ns between the Student Elec- 10 a.m. in the Men's Intramural He lashed out at the clerics Party Chief Leonid I. Brezhrn Com mission and the Young winning time, by Russia's and Premier Alexei N." Kosygin. Building; a Music Department Ludmiia Khvedosuik, was 2:12.87; who prepared the document as Thant said Khrushchi lld Democrat and Young Re- coffee hour at 10 a.m. in the men "who hardly know the world )l0 publicans," ,aid Joe McNally, Miss Jenes' was 2:15.68. Music Building choral room; an be remembered as a man who as it really is" and said the re¬ campus editor of the Indiana Reportedly, Miss Jones first agricultural engineering open had advanced the cause o( peace¬ became interested in Kayaking in sults would dash the hopes of Daily Student. house at 10 a.m., an American ful coexistence with some degree 1960 when she attended the Olym¬ everyone who has been awaiting Society c.' Agricultural Engineers of success, particularly among pics in Rome. Appalled at the and Department of Agricultural some of the leaders of the west¬ United States' last place show¬ Archbishop Heenan proposed Engineering luncheon at noon in that a new commission of lay spe¬ ern world. "It would be helpful and even Eisenhower ing in the competition, she de¬ cided to take up the sport. Four the west parlors of the Cross¬ cialists and priests with long roads Cafeteria, Internation¬ desirable if Mr. Khrushchev were years and not a fewvictories lat¬ pastoral experience be set up immediately to do over the doc¬ able or inclined to make a public Statement on the situation lead¬ Hospitalized er, Marcia won first place in the New York tryouts and followed al Build'ng. More alumni meet¬ ings include a hotel, restaurant ument. He suggested a long re¬ WASHINGTON, !V--Former and Institutional management cess of the Council in the interval. ing to his exit," he said. President Dwight D. Eisenhower up with a third place in Tokyo. alumni brunch at 11 a.m. in He made clear, however, ihat "Then after three or four years was admitted to Walter Reed Another feather in oldSparty's 21 Union preceded by the annual he had transmitted no request let the fourth and final session to Moscow that Khrushchev be General Hospital Thursday suf¬ cap is Gary Dilley; of Huntington, meeting at 10 a.m. in the Union of the Council be convened to dis¬ fering from a very painful cough Ind. This sophomore in pre- Green Room; a short course de¬ permitted to speak out. dental won the silver medal in cuss all these social problems," He said he knew both Brezhnev and inflammation of his windpipe. partment luncheon at 11:15 a.m. and Kosygin, and regarded the Lt. Gen. Leonard D. Heaton, i's 200-meter backstroke aie UrJon;' Class of '54 with a deep surgeon general of the Army, luncheon at 11:30 a.m. in the Homecoming former as a man knowledge of world affairs. said the 74-year-old former president was admitted at 3:20 Last year Gary freshman practice worked out in and "showed Union Ballroom, and the claaa meetings in Spartan Stadium fol¬ He expressed the belief that Fete Tonight the two leaders have a realistic p.m. "He promise.'' under Coach But this summer, McCaffree, he made lowing the MSU Northwestern football game. approach to the world situation, (Eisenhower) speaks with President John A. Hannah will extreme difficulty and has a very the vast progress that was to win Halftime ceremonies at the and were unlikely to reverse the address the homecoming banquet painful, productive (SIC) cough," him first place in the tryouts in game will include the preaen- course of history and take the tonight at 6 p.m. in the Kellogg Heaton said in a statement. "His New York. Ironically, Prince¬ tation of the queen and her court Soviet Union back to the 1953 Center. general condition otherwise is ton's Jed Graef, who placed sec¬ and a show by the marching band. era of Stalinism and the cold war. Alumni club awards and honor¬ satisfactory." ond under Gary in New York, was Members of the court arejane He recalled that Nikolai T. ary alumni awards will be pre¬ technical diagnosis was to switch piacrs witli Dilley in Fedorenko, the Soviet Union's [he Lundy, runner-up and South Hav- sented and the home9omin^ dMegaic, ~c"gr? waclKgfcpjjBr,. .Tpltfc, :.'-ilne grii! gftlal Swr,: GebrieUeAdler, Dear¬ queen. Miss Janis Flanders, will VIEW FROM T'Ht "DE P I Mb'--Opsning of fhe incroar Vr?r page 7) day:. and Gary'" 2;i0.3- (continued on pofl* 4) $3.50 per person. p^oto-bug Jim Hile. Friday, October 23, 1964 2 Michigan State News, East Iytnsing, Michigan Letters To The Revolution That Isn't The so-called conservative have been "indoctrinated" by lib¬ The Editor revolution on the campuses, eral professors. Bus Signs For Recognition which has been ballyhooed How then can the huge six-to- To the Editor: throughout the nation during the one margin received by Gov. Will you be so kind as to advise me, to the best of your knowledge, pas>t four years, is largely a George Romney at MSU be ex¬ . of the person or persons responsible for the commuter bus manage¬ myth if the results of Tueday's plained in terms of the theory ment? My purpose for this request is a simple one: Fur the sake ot the "Parking Lot Y" commuters 1 would like to ask the manage¬ Big Ten mock election are to be of liberal indoctrination? While ment if it be possible to place small signs in the rear and side win- ' believed. Johnson received a three-to-one dows of the buses stating their destinations, or that they are a com¬ muter bus. Results of the voting from five margin here, Romney completely So often' 1 have rushed up to the front of three buses parked at universities are already in, and emulsified his Democratic op¬ the Shaw bus stop to see if the head bus is the commuter— usually it is not and I am satisfied to wait the 5 or so minutes for the com¬ they show President Lyndon B. ponent Neil Staebler. muter bus to arrive; but more than slightly annoyed that 1 had to Johnson the winner over Sen. This does not seem to indicate struggle through a crowd to see which bus was which. Also 1 have Barry Goldwater by nearly that students are blindly liberal, observed, while waiting for the correct bus to arrive, many other students doing the same thin. Some run to catch the bus but find it a two-to-one margin. The but that they have a tendency to the wrong one when they reach the door. have been vote If small signs, not obstructive to the driver's rear vision, were fc. hools whose votes independently. to be placed in the "-ear windows, they would be easily read cross¬ counted are MSU, Illinois, Iowa, The results of the election at ing from Farm Lane, Bessey Hall or walking from anywhere in that tht University of Minnesota and MSU indicate that students reject vicinity toward the bus stop and much confusion and frustration would be eliminated. I'm sure 1 speakfcr many commuters in this request. Nu ithwestern University. More the conservative philosophy of th.wi 21,500 students participated, Sen. Goldwater but are not sheep¬ with MSI' students casting nearly like followers of one party. Re¬ half of the votes in the election. sults from the other Big Ten schools indicate the same rejec¬ Hagadorn Sidewalk Needed The Big Ten schools probably To the Editor: include as wide a social spec^ tion of the Goldwater brand of conservatism. We thought we should bring it to the attention of the authorities trum of students as any univer¬ that there is a vital need for a sidewalk along Hagadorn Road be¬ sities in the country. All of them This still leaves the unan¬ tween Grand River Avenue and Shaw Lane. Since the building of the bat Northwestern are state- swered question of why the "con¬ dorms on the East end ofcampus, there has been an increase in pe¬ destrian traffic along this road. supported, indicating that most servative revolution on the cam¬ Students from East Lansing walk along it to reach their classes of the students are drawn from puses" has received so much at¬ in the new dorms and students from the dorms use it to walk up to the shopping center on Grand River. As new dorms go up in this average American homes. It can- tention during the past four years. area the foot traffic w i 11 not only increase rather than lessen. This ^ .. . Mlifc -Oil We aJflt . the students must waft '!»• * a/ong. The speed limit is lifty miles per hour voting from Big Ten schools are of college conservatives has in¬ and the road is very busy with numerous large trucks and cars. mt rely the opinions of anarrow- creased significantly. We simply Whose responsibility it is, we are unsure. The University owns most of the land on the west side of the road. However, since the ly privileged class. think that the conservative mi- road itself is not on the campus, the responsibility may be the city's. nority, spurred by S« n. Whose ever it is, we feel something should be done before there is The accident that everyone will regret. enormous margin which Goldwater's candidacy for the an the students gave President presidency, has become more vo¬ Johnson is far greater than that cal. received by any candidate in an The resurgent expression of actual national election. Some American conservatism is Patriotism Mot Antiquated conservatives would attribute To the Editor: healthy in our democracy. th udents to the belief that all college are liberal because theyl ' However, revolution the just isn't. conservative 4Iron Curtain' After of View last carefully reading Mr. Schiff's opinions expressed ir. Point Friday, I find my reactions divided into these follow¬ ing thoughts: I In Soviet Uni First, 1 love and am an American citizen who is not ashamed to admit his pride of country. Concurrently, I find myself a graduate student in personnel and a member of an armed forces reserve unit. water are reckless people, will¬ The young people, enjoy our Thomas H. Greer, chairman Neither of the later situations have shown me any logical reason, New Ad ing to risk nuclear war. films and envy the clothes we students who have attempted Building Overdue ces are on the first floor. If a of the humanities department, says he found "no Iron curtain" when he visited the Soviet Union As far munists feel as the Berlin wall is justified in building wear concerned, Greer said the Com¬ drive, he said. and tile automobiles we Though the people are well- nor afforded me just cause, forprostitutingmypatriotism for some other "ism" mentioned ay Mr.Schiff inhispseudo-intellectual con¬ demnation of the director of the F.B.I. Now if Mr. Schiff and his followers, who hopefully are few, would the wall. nourished, observed Greer, the to transact any type of business pfoblem arises, students must Accompanied by his wife and then place me in the company of J.Edgar Hoover, Barry Goldwater two teenage children, Greer tra¬ "There much resentment agricultural system of the Soviet and the late Joseph McCarthy in the administration building often run up and down the stairS was by dint of my remarks, then so be it. veled through Russia for a month, Union is lagging. against the draining of the pro¬ However, they surely must be sophisticated erough to recognize cashiers must make lengthy Greer said the Russians admit will breathe a sigh of relief at or talking to people and Just ob¬ fessional people from East to the ill-feeling, if not rancor and hate, that their position engenders serving. West Berlin." they are behind and haven't suc¬ for them in our American democracy, a democracy paid for many the University's $2 million re¬ phone calls to straighten the Greer said the Russians art ceeded in bringing their agricul¬ times over by American lives. Take note, Mr. Sc hiff, I said Amer¬ Greer found that the Russian quest to the state legislature for matter out. ture up to Western standards bitter toward the United States ican lives. people are as interested in the of productivity. a new ad building. Where are your communists and socialists when we are at war? A new administration building U.S. presidential election as "Discontent is expressed by There are several compelling Americans are. some Russians in the form of The belief in democracy I profess tf r.H on*-sided. If I may will undoubtedly be designed to apply the words of Disraeli here, youwn.1 md that "I disagree with "The Russians are very fear¬ wanting to travel more, to have reasons why the legislature facilitate rather than hamper ad¬ ful of Goldwater's being elected," more things, and to have more what you say, but I will defend to the de. rn your right to say it." So I say to Mr. Schiff, and all-of simiur ilk, "stand up, with should grant MSU's top-priority he said. "In fact they are un¬ ministrative services. freedom of expression,but what pride I cannot possibly imagine, and be counted." The more able to understand why a major request for funds to begin con-' A less important reason for basically, the bulk of the people of your breed loyal Americans can clearly recognize lor what they party would nominate such an support their government." struttion on the building. are, the faster the rivers of freedom will fk.w. construction of a new ad build¬ 'unpredictable' and 'uneducated' The Russians are a proud, Drake Morin In the first place, the present courageous people, and believe ing is that the new structure will The Russians liked the late their social system is funda- building just is not big enough to be located on the Red Cedar President John F. Kennedy, not mentally sound, commented of 31,000 stu¬ only because he desired peace serve dent.-. the needs In the past decade, MSU's River national near the Center for Inter¬ Programs. This build¬ and understanding among nations, but because he realized the dan¬ "They would doubtless remain socialists even if the present Letter Policy stuuent body has doubled, yet the gers of living in a nuclear age, leadership were to be removed," ing site is close to the present according to Greer. President he emphasized. The State News welcomes all letters to the editor from its mi; m- administration is still in center of campus. readers. Johnson is well liked because Greer was able to converse he is following In Kennedy's foot¬ Letters should be no longer than 300 words and typed double A new administration building with some professors and found steps, Greer added. spaced if possible. Longer letters may be considered for publica¬ no significant difference between >t c. ondly, the present ad build¬ will be a great aid to the Uni¬ "The Russians don't want to tion as "points of view" columns. them and his own colleagues. ing is not functionally designed. versity in every way, if the leg¬ be our enemies. They still re¬ "The Russian professors were MWW-mm member the last war. Because SEAM 1 is ■ □aa free-thinking men, who knew what Any student who has attempted to obtain information from the reg¬ islature funds. sees fit to authorize the they are so fearful of another war, one high official stated they THOMAS GREER was happening in the world and didn't try to cover-up facts." E. R U A I □□□ istrar and been shuttled from were willing to give up export¬ However, Greer, felt cut off ACROSS 27. Ballads P L A 1 (1 17"6|t1 for helping to build up and to from news sources while in the ing revolution or any other policy ]□□□ Vault 106 oiUee on 3 on in the basement to room the first floor to the main the third floor knows | Red Cedar Report By having freshmen register at counseling cli¬ nic they postpone their first encounter with | that may risk war." . The Russians classify Gold- water, and the Chinese Communists the Germans as threats to re-arm West Germany. "Russians misconceptions cans, seem to have few about Ameri¬ available commented Greer. "They Soviet Union. Though foreign newspapers in and periodicals are libraries and by private subscription, the tra¬ 1. Well-liked 8. Hindu \'I. "The run" 13! Having 28. Second 29. lull 33. Football position: A P T O r R Ill □□one IE ■ £ A hoc] BlAlEQ M E.TD envious of our standard of veler finds it difficult to secure awkward the peace, Greer said, and they feel £ 0Tm how are building is. It p o|s|c«i ' O f1 E. regular registration until January. This way the Chinese leaders and Gold- living." publications printed in English. ,.wi"gs. 14. Sundry ** Girl's 34 ^iris name name J L : R M is obviously equally awkward for they can still enjoy Christmas. 15. Staff of 35. Both uHuB m IBTa ul 1 rf E 1r s 1 administrators to function effi¬ office comb torm Soon the leaves will be 16. The i7' Roman ciently in such a setup. falling. Then the Grounds nahoor The University Business Of¬ fice, for example, is located on and Maintainance one rake side of them Dept. rakes the leaves to the campus then the next to the other day they side, and finally on 'Equal WASHINGTON, D.C. (UPI)~ Time' Republican requests down flat. in the middle. Republican Burch 17. Trail 19. lap. family badge ^"ote Jh°r" 44. Sun disk , 2. Kiln 3. Small armadillo 8 9P l ith ic ulic the second floor. Cashier's offi¬ the third day a big air hose comes and blows The broadcast networks are back The Federal Communications said that his party will initiate 20. Take place 45 fa< the leaves in the river. Commission backed them up and 21 Mountain Minus 10. oft CO on an election-year merry-go- legal action against the agency's round known to the industry as said the address was not of the decision denying the GOP equal jn'pa 47. Importune 6. Culture tile 23. Vacation DOWN medium 11 andy nature that made it subject to time to answer Johnson. 7. Backslide Behind all the controversy is spots 1 Defile 18. President Johnson touched off the equal time law. . 211 'on li quid MICHIGAN the latest round The National Broadcasting section 315 of the communica- 5 4 7 a 3 10 " Sunday night / 2 1 4 STATE UNIVERSITY TATE NEWS when he delivered a 20-minute Company went along with the ~~ 4 W 22. Cabbage report on the world situation. idea that the speech was non- 2 That section says that when 12 23 Fundamen¬ The Republican National Com¬ political but out of courtesy to a broadcaster gives time to a ~ tal 14 24. Vulcanite mittee labeled the address as the other side offered 15 min¬ legally qualified candidate for % 25. Law-mak¬ political designed to boost utes of time. The time was of¬ public office, that broadcaster Ik 79 Member Associated Press, United Press* Editor John VanGieson ing bodies Johnson's candidacy. The GOP fered to GOP chairman Dean also must give equal time to all International, Inland Daily Press Associa¬ Advertising Manager Arthur Langer put in immediate demands for Burch, instead of Senator Barry other candidates for that office. *0 21 26. Shudder tion, Associated Collegiate Press, Michigan Press Association. Campus Editor Managing Editor CharlesC. Wells Liz Hyman time to answer. Democrats called the appear¬ Goldwater, to avoid bility of having to spin the the possi¬ From Nowhere m 2J 2'» 2S ** Tf~ 30. Flexible 32. Tantalum Wire Editor Hugh J. Leach merry-go-round again to give ance non-political. But whatever w 30 36. Chaffy part Published every class day throughout winter and spring terms and twice weekly» fall,} } Sports Editor Richard Schwartz Ass't. Advertising Manager ..Ken Hoffman it is called for the purposes of Johnson and other presidential Driving A long- 26 of wheal the law, no one can say that a candidates another ride. 32 w 3' 37. Capable summer term by the students of Michigan j *. Marcy Rosen Presidential address Burch took NBC up on its offer Mike Hofmann, Bloomfield to 60- 38. Charles State University. J Photography Advisor Dave Jaehnig million people has no political gnd appeared on the screen Mon¬ Hills junior, said Thursday that 31 IT 37 31 Lamb Circulation Manager Bill Marshall he and four other students were impact of any kind. day night. And Democratic Na¬ 39. Delivered 7T~ Night Editor Jim Sterba All tional Chairman John Bailey not returning from a Qa rty when 40 41 I Second class postage paid at East Lansing; a President has to do is 41 Abstract <~0Wdesk A.H,V<,CW >.fctenry Prir«i bat* wfdi a recftlest they-were -a tVA&toci ' • hii&tigMt:.- ■"■■■" M "• * ■ ,« . e.-.C£~Wuring an Election cam¬ Came right Editorial and- business offices at 341 Sm- News Advisor Richard E. Hansen paign and the political barometer for equal time to answer Burch. in Shiawassee County last spring 44 4S 43 Tommune Editorial Editors The NBC decided that enough's as was reported in Thursday's wavers. TT Building, Michigan State Uf i- 1 der.t Services veraity. East Lansing, Michigan. r » .»■ Stoan "Filson, Michael Kindman Two of the networks, the Amer¬ enough, and denied the Bailey State News. Hofmann said the group was just driving along 46 - - - - 3- Hungary ican BroadcastingSystem, turned request. But the FCC is still verv much when they were stopped. y, October 23, 1964 3 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan From Our Wire Services Red China Rejects Test Ban Treaty TOKYO-Peking rejected Thursday President Johnson's sugges¬ tion that Communist China sign the limited nuclear test ban treaty and repeated its proposal for abolition of nuclear weapons at a world summit meeting. The Peking People's Daily, organ of the ChineseCommunist party, •said in an editorial that the treaty, now signed by more than 100 na¬ tions, is "nothing but a fraud." "How can we be expected to walk into the trap now that we possess the means to break the nuclear monopoly of the United States? Fan¬ tastic, isn't it?" People's Daily said theCommunistChineseproposalfora summit meeting on nuclear weapons is "practical, reasonable, easily feasible and involves no question of control." U.S. Atty. Charged With Contempt of Court JACKSON, Miss.-UJS. Dist. Judge Harold Cox held U.S. Atty. Robert Hauberg guilty of contempt of court and ordered contempt THE REALISTIC APPROACH--Army ROTC cadets, like Don Tompsett, above, proceedings against acting Atty. Gen. Nicholas Katzenbach Thurs¬ ordinarily viewed as prospective officers and gentlemen, have a new look th day after they refused to handle grand jury indictments. fall as intensive drill in the practical side of Army Bayonet driMPhoto takesby Ji Hauberg, a veteran Jackson attorney, told Cox that Katzenbach the parade-type drill of former years. had instructed him not to draw up or sign indictments the grand jury want id to return. if Outside attorneys called the judge's action "extremely unusual not unprecedented," and the Justice Department said it would appeal the ruling to the 5th UJS. Circuit Court of Appeals at New Bike, Car Registration Increase The bicycle may eventually re¬ "The same may also be said "Because of the reliability , Oneans. automobile buses have more than solved the place the automobile as the pri¬ of the revenue. Think "Joe Bananas" In Bottom of River mary traffic problem on campus. Though we take in a lot, we traffic problem,". Bernitt said. "Thert just wasn't the steet That seems to be the trend now. spend more for the construction As of Oct. 8, the bicycle reg¬ of parking facilities such as the capacity to handle all the cars NEW YORK Authorities in New York City say they think kid¬ istration was 5,476. This is an Shaw Ramp," Pierson said. before. Last year, for example, naped gangland chieftain Joseph "Joe Bananas" Bonanno has been increase of 67 per cent over Poth Bernitt and Pierson are the traffic on Farm Lane equaled "dumped." the similiar period last year. more than pleased with the cam¬ that on Grand River before 1-96 A Justice Department official said, "If 1 had to guess, I'd say Richard Benitt, Director of pus bus service. V opened," Bernitt said. Joe Bananas is at the bottom of a river somewhere." Bonanno was the Department of Public Safety, kidnaped at gunpoint Wednesday—pulled from a cab on New York's said the increase was primarily fashionable Park Avenue. from the decrease in student Rc*w*vc\ sVx'.cA before a federal gijand jury investi- (VS reskiu'^un • aa not too serious a problem though," Flint Buick Settles in GM Contract Dispute Bernitt said, "because it is much easier to handle bicycle traffic than automobile congestion." • DETROIT-Negotiators tried Thursday to evaporate the diminish¬ Automobile registration has ing pool of local issues in the General Motors strike before United also increased from 7,400 last Auto Workers vote Sunday on contract and return-to-work proposals. year to 8,200 at present. A "yes" vote on the national contract and resolved local terms, The increase in registrations plus agreement to work in factories with still-open disputes, could also means a considerable in¬ put GM back into the automobile production picture next week. crease in revenue. The cost for The Flint Buick complex has reached a local level agreement registering a bicycle is 50 cents covering nearly 15,000 workers. and the automobile fee is $6 The world's no. 1 automaker stopped turning out its 1965 models for single students. when some 260,000 UAW workers walked off their Jobs Sept. 25 in According to Merrill Pierson, support of new contract demands. assistant treasurer, the on bikes last year was $5,500. "However much more than this Truman Leaves Hospital After Nine Days figure was spent for the con¬ struction of bicycle paths," KANSAS CITY-Harry S. Truman left Research Hospital Thurs¬ Pierson said. day after spending nine days there recovering from injuries suf¬ fered in a fall. . The 80-year-old former President was wearing pajamas and a LOPuS robe when he left for home with Mrs. Truman and Lt. Mike Westwood 1 vvu of the Independence, Mo., Police Department. Truman received a cut over his right eye and fractured two ribs Cars Collide when he fell in the bathroom of his home in Independence Oct. 13. A maid found him there, semiconscious, and called police. He was A Grand Rapids graduate stu¬ taken to the hospital, 13 miles away, in an ambulance. dent, Annette R. TenElshof, suf¬ fered bumps and bruises when her car collided with two others How Now, Trapped Brown Cow in front of the Music Building on West Circle Drive. AMSTERDAM, N.Y.-Well, there was this 900-pound cow some¬ Campus police said Miss how it fell into a wide, 15-foot deep well. TenElshof's car was struck by Farmer Gustave Lenz of nearby Minzaville wasn't worried that the automobile of Carol A. Starke, the animal would drown. Only a few inches of water were in the Frankenmuth freshman, when she well. attempted to turn left into a park¬ But, to lift the cow free, he needed help from volunteer firemen. ing place from the right lane. Rather than attempt a rescue with a derrick, the firemen simply Her earthen struck another which pumped the well full of water and let the cow float to safety. was parked. UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LAWRENCE RAD IAT 1 ON LABO RATO RY matched for LIVERMORE, CALIFORNIA his and hers tennis sweaters Box Lunches They spread the word of who's dating who! All wool sweaters for two .... in white with stripes of wine and For Saturday's Game navy. Great mates for the tennis season. . . at after ski sessions ... or wherever the young at heart gather in pairs. GIANT HAM SANDWICHES For Her Fully fashioned cable knit pullover with paired stripes at neck, waist and cuff. Hand made in MAJOR PROGRAMS NOW UNDER PLOWSHARE—Industrial and scientific uses of WAY SUBMARINE SANDWICHES Hong Kong of 100% pure wool. White. Sizes s-m-1.14.98 nuclear explosives. WHITNEY— Nuclear weapons for national defense. SHERWOOD — Power pro¬ Call ahead and place order For Him All wool, hand knit sweater from England. duction from controlled thermonuclear reactions. BIOMEDICAL—The effects of radioactivity on Open daily for lunch at 11 Cable knit design in white with navy and wine banding man and his environment. Far-reaching programs Sun.at 4 at V-neckline and waist. Sizes 36 to 46. 18.98 utilizing the skills of virtually every scientific and ED M6G8 technical discipline. STORE FOR MEN • STREET LEVEL Laboratory staff members will be on campus to interview Science and Engineering students Monday, October 26 C^ll^your placement office for an appointment. $<»»•»* SPORTSWEAR ■ STREET LEVEL U. S Citizenship Required • Equal Opportunity Employer 4 Doors North on M.A.C. Shop Saturday 5:30 to 9:30 Best Puio in Town 4 Friday, October 23, 1964 Michigan State Sews, East LOhsing, Michigan DON'T Homecoming (continued from page 1) Lola Miller, Leole, Pa., junior; Ferry, W. Va., junior, dance Sherrie Payne, Detroit senior; chairman; JimTanck, Waterford, HOMECOMING Jeri Phlanz, Detroit senior; Anne Wis., junior, pep rally; Rick Stifler, Glen Arbor junior; Anne Maynard, Pleasant Ridge sopho¬ Bera, East Lansing sophomore, more, and Jim Halverson, Ra¬ and Judith Dengel, Dearborn cine, Wis., sophomore, show; sophomore. Rick Hollander, Wilmette, 111., The Homecoming dance, from junior, special events; Patty 8:30 p.m. to 12:30 ajn. in the Vaughn, Akron, Ohio, Junior, pub¬ Auditorium, will have music by licity; Bob Amsler, Warren jun¬ Maynard Ferguson and his or- ior, half-time show, and Skip HOOTENANNY Scandirito, Mt. Clemens senior, "The Gateway Trio" will sing at intermission, at which time the court will be presented again, four new members of Excaliber, senior men's honorary, will be Coed Hurt tapped, and display trophies will be awarded. Abrams Planetarium shows In Wreck this weekend will be at 7 and An MSU coed is in satisfactory featuring 8:30 p.m. Friday; and 11:15 a.m. 9. 9:45, 10:30 Saturday; and condition but under intensivecare at Edward W. Sparrow Hospital 2:30 and 4 p.m. Sunday. today following a two-car colli¬ sion at Grand River Ave. and VET MED BUILDING PROGRESSES—Due to be finished this coming spring, the Kresge Art Gallery will be open 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Satur¬ Audubon Road Wednesday night. Veterninary Medicine Building is a long awaited addition to the swiftly growing science complex on South Campus. Work on the exterior is nearing completion The Gateway Trio day and 2 to 5 p.m. Sunday. Nancy E. Babcock, Huntington Woods in time to avoid the nearing winter weather. Photo by Larry Fritzlan Working with Piatt and Miss junior, received a deep Lindsay on Homecoming have forehead cut when the car she been John Newcomer, Harpers was driving collided with another driven by Kirk C. Campbell, 17, Dance For Victory of East 4383 Elmwood St., Okemos, Lansing police said. Women's Journalism A witness told police Miss The men of East Shaw are and Babcock pulled into the path of sponsoring an open Homecoming Mixer Saturday night in the Low¬ er Lounge from 8:30p.m. to mid¬ Campbell's car when attempting to turn left onto Grand River Hears Talk On Com Ave. from Audubon Road. night. Music will be provided by Police said Miss Babcock could Three of speakers presented dif¬ director the Asian Studies "The total jobs available in Shaw Radio, WKME. Admittance not remember what happened ferent aspects of getting jobs in Center. the communications fields have' is free. when questioned after the acci¬ the communications field at a Haight explained the role of never been better for graduates," The Village Stompers dent. She was issued a summons meeting of Theta Sigma Phi, the Placement Bureau in help- Haight said, Sorority Initiates for failure to yield the right of women's journalism honory, ing graduates and alumni secure Women are needed for home Kappa Alpha Theta Recently Wednesday night. jobs. arjd society sections of news- The speakers were William He stressed the importance of initiated five new members.They papers, for public relations-sec- having correct, up-to-date in- r nival Deadline Haight, associate professor of retarial work, and in retail ad- ham soptiomorer i>u& Lansing sophomore; Jane Haven, Nov. 1 is the deadline for re¬ "professor of journalism, and mem Bureau for employer's McNelly talked about the "?ri- Thomas at Jenison Fieldhouse Clarendon Hills, ill., sophomore; serving Activity Carnival booths W. Simons, associate ference. ety of jobs open to women in the for MSU organizations. This may international communi¬ Marty Woodruff, Ann Arbor soph¬ be done at Student omore; and Michelle Giba, Silver Bureau, 326 Organizations Student Services. Calendar of cations field. "It doesn't cost anything to Springs, Md., sophomore. Tonight at 9 P.M. NOW; 65< to s:3o Omiiii" Events Wayne Sets look said. into any field," McNelly CAMPUS- Evening & Sunday 90? Friday Student Meet Women who self-confident and are enthusiastic, can ask ques- - T H EAT « E~ "«■««. ;»y» Socialist Club, Art Room-Un¬ tiong are potentially suited for The Midwest Student Confer¬ work abroad in communications, ' Tickets on Sale: MT-OSm ..rSHSfSU* SSO-MM— ion — 7:30 p.m. ence on Independent Political Inter-Varsity, Room 32-Union Action will be held RICHARD BURTON:AVA GARDNER Saturday and Simons related some of his — 7-8 p.m. - Hillel Sabbath Services, Hillel Sunday at Wayne State Univer¬ experience with the United sity. States Information Service DEBORAH KERR SUE LYON House 7:30 p.m. at the Union Desk — The conference is sponsored (USIS), affiliated with the For¬ Saturday by the Youth Committee for eign Service Organization, and Hillel Sabbath Services Kid- DeBarry and Shaw and the Young introduced a variety of careers dush, Hillel House — 10 a.m. Socialists Alliance, said Jan open to women in communica- one Garrett, former president of the or at the Door man... three Zambia IndependenceCelebra- tions, American Legion Memor¬ M.S.U. Young Socialists Club. Prominent officials of the So¬ Interpretation of the position ial Hall — dinner 6p.m.—dance of the United States abroad, and women.m. 8:30 p.m. cialist Workers Party will ad¬ cultural programs to promote dress the conference on the "real understanding were only two as¬ Sunday issues of 1964," Garrett said. _ w—** Baha'i Club, Art Room-Union Further information on rides pects of this service. "It's a growing impression Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and Seven Arts Productions present 3 p.m. $1 - to and from Detroit may be ob¬ that its Hillel Supper-Forum, getting to be more of Hillel Only Per Person theUohn Huston -Ray Stark Production of Tennessee Williams' •House, Prof. Carroll J.Hawkins, "What is Fascism?" — 6 p.m. tained by calling Walt Graham, a woman's world," Simons said. 353-1931. Kappa Alpha Psi Storts Thurs. U.N. Session I West Fee Slate To Crown Queen at "HI-LILI HI-LO" The campus United Nations Officers serving West Fee Hall -TODAY and SATURDAY- will hold a briefing session for this year are Herbert Winge, The Kappa Alpha Psi queen will SHOWN TODAY at 1:15-3:15-5:15-7:15-9:18 be crowned at a dance at the Lans¬ "LILT member countries Saturday from president; Louis Benson, vice- GLADMER CARROL BAKER in 10 a.m. to Area to be noon in Berkey Hall. represented at the president; and Julian Levant and Howard Wilchins, AUSG repre¬ ing Civic Center, Saturday. The dance will last from 8p.m. THEATRE "STATION SIX ■ SAHARA" meeting are the United States, sentatives. to 1 a.m. and the admissionprice is $2.25 per couple or $1.50 SHOWN SATURDAY at 3:15-7:1Q-LATE the African bloc, the Latin Winge, a Buchanan junior, American bloc, Western Europe, served as AUSG representative single. Two o'clock permits will be SUPER BARGAIN DAY Middle East, Asis andthesocial¬ ist countries. from Case Hall during his fresh¬ man year. Benson is freshman from available for all women living in University dorms. People are needed to help with a this session. Anyone who is in¬ Coral Gables, Fla. terested is requested to call Both Levant, a Detroit soph¬ 8 NewPhi Gams the U.N. office any day between omore, and Wilchins, a junior losive! 2 and 5 p.m. or to come to from Patterson, N.J., have had The Omicron Chapter of Phi 305 Student Services. The previous experience in Univer¬ Gamma Nu, professional busi¬ U.N.'s number is 355-4503. sity government. ness sorority, recently added eight members. Initiated were: Carol Janetzke, F00 WNS CAFE Northville senior; Linda Tower, Redford Pontiac Detroit junior; senior, Bea Stephens, Margo Caukin, sophomore; Mary FEATURING Molenaar, Kalamazoo sopho¬ TAKE OUTS more; Sandra Scales, Pontiac • CANTONESE Call sophomore: Judy Slusne, River- view sophomore: and Ann Packer, • CHINESE IV 2-7211 Jonesville sophomore. THPATCP ' 7:00 P.M.--Sat., Sun. 1 P.M. OPEN 6 DAYS • AMERICAN STATE E. LANSING Feat. 7:50, 9:55 P.M.-Sat., Sun. 1:50> 3.50, 5:55, 8:00,10 P.M. . TUES.THRU SUN. 11 TO 11 FOOD it's the bestseller THE DAVE CLARK FIVE ESTABLISHED SINCE 1924 207 1/2 S. Washington that stuns from COLUMBIA PICTURES « I the very first scene •••and FAIL ^ SAFE builds to the dan o'heruhy walter matthau COMING TO THE Join us in Istanbul —we'll cut you in on the theft of the century! frank overton last word in edward BINNS Lansing MHO! larry hag MAN suspense! fritz weaver [henry fonda] . Wednesday, November 4th TICKET PRICES-A4-Q0. S3.50 & ,52.50 MICHIGAN mural ARTISTS Tfto»l, I (m/mrw the jewels ereJ) -fJT V y No One, But No One, Will Be Permitted To Penetrate The Tickets on Sale at the Box Office V^EFR E „A T R 1 •• _ NOW SHOWING "FAIL SAFE AREA", During The Last 10 Minutes Of The 10 AM - 6 PM 485-24 Feature at—1:00- SOON! "SEND ME NO FLOWERS' 3:10-5:20-7:30-9:45 Film. Friday, October 23, 1964 Michigan State News, East Lansir.;r. Michigan New York Philharmonic Symphony Op WKAR Airs Sunday Concert Featuring Musi Because of the change to East¬ Britten wrote his Sinfonia da nor, Op. 104" was the last work ern Standard Time in New York, Requiem" during a 1939-1942 the Bohemian composer com¬ the New York Philharmonic con¬ visit to America. The New York pleted in the U.S. during his visit cert will be broadcast 3 p.m. Philharmonic gave this work its between 1892 and 1895. For James F. Niblock, profes- its 35th season 8:30 p.m.,Tues- Jazz-man Dave Brubeck, TV Sunday on WKAR. world premiere in March 1961. Milton Cross serves as com¬ sor and chairman of music, the day in the Sexton High School, composer Henry Mancini, and Guest conductor, Josef Krips, The "Sinfonia" is in three move¬ mentator for the Philharmonic opening concert of the Lansing Niblock is former concert- the 300-v o i c e LanSymphonic will conduct the broadcast. Lorne ments: Lacrymosea, Dies Irae, throughout the Sunday afternoon Symphony Orchestra Tuesday master of the LansingSymphony. Festival Chorus appear as part Munroe, the Philharmonic's new and Requiem awternam. series over MSU radio. marks the world premiere of Gyorgy Sandor, concert pi- of the new Philharmonic Series solo cellist, will play Dvorak's In 1960 on a commission from his "Symphonic Overture." anist, will play Rachmaninoff's of the Lansing Symphony season. "Cello Concerto." the Royal Liverpool Philhar¬ House mother Tea Niblock composed the music "Concerto No. 2 for Piano and The Symphonic Series will in¬ In addition to Dvorak's work, monic Society, Sir William Walton , for the Orchestra, which begins Orchestra in C Minor, Op. 18." clude appearances by John luele, the program includes "Sinfonia completed his latest symphony, All housemothers and resident conductor of the Winston-Salem, da Requiem" by Benjamin Britten "Symphony No. 2." (N.C.) Symphony Orchestra; and "Symphony No. 2" by Sir The Philharmonic Society gave advisors are invited to a house¬ the symphony its world premiere mothers' tea Sunday honoring Cash Prizes Offered Leslie Parnas, young American William Walton. cellist who won the "Tschaikow- in September that year. Three new fraternity and sorority sky Prize" in Moscow; and Hugo months later George Szell di¬ housemothers at 2:30 p.m. in the Case Open House rected the Cleveland Orchestra Student Services lounge. Vianello, musical director and During Poetry Contest conductor of the Kansas City Civic Orchestra. Gregory Millar returns for his North Case Hall will hold open house on Saturday after the Homecoming game from 4- an in the symphony' sU.S. premiere. Dvorak's "Concerto for Vio- lincello and Orchestra in B Mi¬ The tea is sponsored by the Panhellenic Council and Intra- fraternity Council. third season as conductor of the One book publication and $1,50C n a sealed Lansing Symphony Orchestra. in cash prizes await winners of the second annual Kansas City Poetry Contests. College students can submit The Pizza MSU single poems for six honor SYMPHONY TO PREMIER NIBLOCK OVERTURE — Pro¬ Reserved sectic awards totaling $600. These cessor of music James Niblock, shown above, reviews honor awards are sponsored by the score of his new overture to be premiered Oct. 27 Students Have Hallmark Cards, Inc., of Kansas by the Lansing Symphony. Photo by Ken Roberts C ity, Mo. Been Looking For a book-length manuscript the Dr. Edward A. Devins Award Placement Bureau For offers cash payment of $500.The manuscript will be published by Placement Bureau interviews R. L. Polk and Company: Ac¬ Even After the University of Missouri Press. scheduled for Oct. 30 are: counting (B). -M The total value of the Devins Sinclair Research, Inc., and award will be determined by The $500 is in Oct. 30, Friday Bobbie Brooks, Inc.: Mechan¬ Other Sinclair Companies: Sartre Given sales of the book. ical Engineers (B). M Chemistry (Organic) Chemical the form of a guaranteed advance Bureau of the Census: All ma¬ Engineers (B,M,D). M STOCKHOLM --The 1964 Simone de Beauvoir, herself a royalty payment. United Church Boardfor World Nobel Prize for literature was noted writer. Both the Devins award and the jors of the College of Business, Economics, (December and Ministries: All majors of the won Thursday by Jean-Paul The Swedish Academy of Let¬ * Real Homeade Italian Sausage Hallmark awards are offered in College of Education (B,M,D), Sartre, French playwright, nov¬ ters, which presents the annual March Grads Only), Math or open competition on a national Statist y.c.s, Sociology (December (December March Grads elist and philosopher. He said • — 1 <*• the basis. The Hallmark open to students of junior col¬ arii/March Grads M Only) (B,M,D). Only), English (December and March Grads Only), Mathemat¬ he will not accept the $53,f23 of" S wedish 'p How to Make Out in the Business World! JOE SILVER DOM DE LUISE ARLENE GOLONKA PAULA STEWART WILLIAM TRAYLOR- ;:kh bawtt smmndy howard HIT NO(2) IN COLOR AT 7PM I HIT NO (3) ONCE AT 10:40 | m% NIGHT OF THE IGUANA WJACKIEMM0N fr VTNCINT ALBERT GEORGE MELINA JEANNE SHOWN 2ND AT 9:45 - "UNDER, TtlE EDWARDS FINNEY HAMILTON MERCOURI MOREAti GEORGE ROMY ROSANNA ELKE DEEP SIX with Alan Ladd aOWiyUHTRfE' PEPPARD ELI SCHNEIDER sndMICHAEL PETER SCHIAFFINO JAMES SOMMER SENTA -SHOWN TWICE 7:22-1:40 Jl WALLACH CAILAN FONDA MITCHUM BERGER 5 BOLD WOMEN SHOWN 3RD At, 12-07 1 ijlttANlt VuvVERS vi n I ROBERT CONRAD VI fj. technicolor/ ' Presented by WARNER BROS. Friday, October 23, 1964 ichigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan PLACE A WANT-AD DEADLINE: 1 p.M. 1 Class TODAY 355-8255 day before publication Automotive Automotive For Rent For Sale Personal Service TftlUMPH, 1556 YR-3. Califor TWO MALE Wire-HairTerriers. WE DESIGN and execute unusual ACCIDENT PROBLEM? Call CHEVROLET 1958, 2-door hard¬ PARTIALLY Fl RNISHEDApart- nia car. Body and engine in ex¬ ment. Available November 1. 5 months old. AKC Registered. rings. Talhsman, 211 Abbott Kalamazoo Street Body Shop. top. W-3 automatic. Well taken Road, 337-0398. 17 cellent mechanical condition. Married couple or working Call 489-2225. Small dents to large wrecks. care of. MSU student must sell! Must sell immediately. 332- SMALL SNACK-BAR refriger- TWO ATTRACTIVE semi-angora American and foreign cars. Phone 355-0022 or may be seen people only. Near bus line and FIREPLACE WOOD 0241. 18 stores. $100. Call ED 2-081! day¬ ator. Excellent condition. $65. kittens for adoption. Call 332- Guaranteed work. 489-7507.1411 at Patterson's Gulf on W. Mt. Well Seasoned Maple Electric. IV 4-8987. 20 0000. 19 East Kalamazoo. C Hope-W. of Logan. 19 time, or ED 7-2474 evenings. 17 699-2867 C FOR SALE- 40 inch Frigidaire HALLOWEEN CONTEST - Prize PAINTING - PAPERHANGING. • AUTOMOTIVE comet 19*4 six. 4-door, radio, EAST LANSING. Deluxe fur- TYPEWRITER - REMINGTON- Stove and baby bathinette. Phone for best decorated pumpkin. Quality work guaranteed. Floyd • EMPLOYMENT whitewalls, automatic. One year nished apartment for college or Rand deluxe portable, $50. Also, VOLKSWAGEN, 1960. Sunroof. "professional personnel. Three 655-1114. 18 Also, purchase decorated pump¬ Jones. IV 5-0428, evenings. 18 • FOR RENT warranty left. Good gas mileage. 10-volume American Educator kins anddecorationsforparties. Bought 1965; must sell. Will con¬ Good condition. $950. Call 372- rooms, ceramic b.ath. Phone encyclopedias, $45. Call ED 7- SOFA. STATTON Colonial. 80 in. JOB RESUMES 100 copies, $4.00. « FOR SALE Fruits and tomatoes, 10£ a sider trade in. 627-7403. 18 1497. 18 332-3505 9:30 am. - 5:30 pm. 1561. 18 Tan and brown print. $175, or ALD1NGER DIRECT MAIL ad¬ • LOST & FOUND pound! 400 Clare on Beltline VOLKSWAGEN, 1960 Black Se- Or 332-3135. 22 best offer. ED 2-4395. 18 vertising. 533 North Clippert. • PERSONAL CORVAlft, 1962 toon/a. White- BICYCLE SALES, service and Railroad. IV 4-3180. 22 dan. Sharp. Call IV 2-4290. 18 WANTED: TWO girls to sublease IV 5-2213. C • PEANUTS PERSONAL walls, buckets, automatic, etc. rentals. East Lansing Cycle, luxury apartment. Winter TV SERVICE calls- $5. TuBes • REAL ESTATE Black. 25,000 miles. Perfect. VOLKSWAGEN, 1962 Pickup. 6- 1215 East Grand River.Call 332- and/or Spring terms. Call 351- 17 THE NIGHT SHIFT is coming! discounted 25%, except picture • SERVICE $l;350. Will haggle. 332-3109.19 passenger. Mechanically A-l. 8303. C tubes. Estimates on shop ser¬ • TRANSPORTATION $850. Call 882-8464. See at 4358. 17 CORVA1R, 1961 and FORD, 195^. NIKKOR, 35mm F2.8 lens; Sonn- Mobile Homes 20 vice. ACME TV, IV 9-5009. C • WANTED 3001 W. Holmes Rd. is WANTED TWO girls over 21 to No rust. Make offer. Perry, agar 135mm F2.5 lens, convert¬ VOLVO, 1963 Model 544. Tan 4- share apartment near campus ible to 225mm. Larry Fritzlan, PONTIAC CHIEF. 1963. 50' x Peanuts Personal FREE, TEN lubrications from 625-3138. 113 E. Second Street, DEADLINE for winter term. Call 332-5531. STORY OLDS, one ot $150.00 Perry. 21 speed, radio, clean. Must sell. 355-8311 mornings, or 337-0508 RETRACTIONS: Jonathan Paul of values in the Student Sample 11 a.m. one class day be¬ $1,435. Call 393-1617. 17 CORVA1R, 19^2 Monza Coupe. Callender paid a $50 fine for Book. Call 351-4548. 18 fore publication Automatic transmission. White Auto Service & Parts Houses Lost & Found illegal parking, not stealing. Cancellations • 12 noon one interior, red trim. Whitewall LOST: MEN'S Hamotite Ring in Michael Baldwin was named LATE CHEVROLET V-8 heads ROOM AND board for < nomical rates by the term and s day before publication tires. Radio. Owner. ED2-4604. and sportcoat, 38-40. IV 2-7996. Men's Intramural on Thursday. president, not treasurer, of month. UNIVERSITY TVRENT- with P.C. seals, less rockers. 17 17 "Winter land". 16 PHONE Call 332-6876. Name your own reward. IV 7- ALS. 484-9263. C CORVETTE 1964 Stingray Con- ENGLISH . 3 SPEED bicycles, 5575. 17 JUST ARRIVED! Antidote for guy IRONINGS - BY the piece. Done FREE BRAKE adjustment, car 355-8255 vertible. 365 hp. 4:11 rear end. wash, and many, many others EAST LANSING -1548Snyder Rd. $39.77. ACE HARDWHERE 8, LOST: BLACK Bermuda shorts with JVG's. Can be picked up at in my home. Reasonable. Phone 4-speed. Excellent condition. GIFTS, across from Union. ED 345 Student Services. between Jenison and McDonel ED 7-0145. 19 RATES $3,900. 33"-2328. 18 in Student Sample Book. Call 2-bedroom, garage. $25 week. 2-3212. C last Thursday. Please turn into TO THE Flaming Redhead from THESIS PREPARATION by elec- 351-4548 for delivery. 18 Available Nov. 12 Phone IV 5- BEAGLE PUPPIES. 10 weeks old. 1 DAY SI.50 Lost and Found at Union. 17 Flint...Happy Late Birthday. tronic computer. 60% or more 3 DAYS. $3.00 2289, IV 2-0529. 20 From good hunting stock. Clean, . . . Perfect mechanical condition. Scooters-Cycles LOST: PUPPY. German Shepherd The 5100 Club. time lovable children's pets. $10. savings on all typing after 5 DAYS . . . $4.50 Rebuilt engine. Grey. 6 months MOTOR SCOOTER 1962 Vespa. Rooms coloring. Vicinity Avondale initial draft. Phone WonchGraf- guarantee. Phone 351-5407. 339-2713. - 18 Real Estate (Based on 15 words per ad) MOVE TO the best for less. Single ATTENTION DEER Hunters! 270 Apartments. Red collar. Call fic for details. 484-7786. 17 There will be a 50c sendee FALCON 1565 4-door Deluxe rooms for girls. Unapproved. 332-6019 or 332-0747. 18 MARBLE SCHOOL. Attractive and bookkeeping charge if Stationwagon. Automatic trans- Weatherby Magnum. Scope, LOST: brick cape cod. 2-bedroom. Ex¬ Now available. Walkingdistance K.D. Sorority pin. Dia- HONDA 1964. 305 cc Super Hawk. sling, case. Brass. Excellent fthis ad is not paid within Tniss\c->. 5kssJV}> Ueater. White- u r ■ 2—">03? C17 WARDS Lincoln, Mercury Deal¬ School St., Haslett. Michigan or TROPICAL. AQUARIUMS-. Ac.^ Michigan. IV 9-1939. Open Mon¬ and $8.00 per month. New Ze¬ Make us an offer. Phone IV 3125 E. Saginaw (North of call evenings, FE 9-8483. C17 cessories, tropical fish and sup¬ day and Friday until 9. 21 nith 19" portables for $9.00 per 5-3868. Is er. WAITRESS, 5 10 evenings. Must plies. Low prices. 1555 Ballard. month. Call 482-0624 for FREE BU1CK, 1957 2-door hardtop. Hy- Frandor). Open Monday-Thurs¬ - dramatic. Good transportation . day-Friday til 9 pm. C17 be dependable. Apply Muir's Phone 372-4938. 19 Knight. Garrard turntable with delivery. C for $300. Phone 355-4843, any¬ FORD 1964 Galaxie 500. 4-door Drug, 1399 E. Grand River, East CHRISTMAS TREES. You cut. speakers. Best offer over $125. MEMO TO: The Smothers Broth- time before noon. 18 hardtop. Call 482-2375. 18 Lansing. 18 100 to 1,000 Scotch Pine.Special IV 9-1923. 21 ers. Don't forget that Thursday, BU1CK 1953 Convertible. Good DELIVERY"BOf wantedT Must deal to non-profit groups. 484- November 12, is the date for FORD WAGON, 19 5 3. Cheap. BICYCLE. MAN'S 4-speed Ital- have car. Part or full-time. 1679. 20 your Lansing Civic Center con¬ top. Desperate: Room and board Also, Guatemalan gift items and ian. $25. Two 650 x 13 tubeless payment coming. As is, $30. skirts. ED 2-6360. 17 Apply in person. Ricardo's HOUSEHOLD GOODS. Westing- white sidewall snow tires. cert. Ticket sales open Monday, 355-6286. 17 Pizza, 1452 E. Michigan. 20 house Roaster. Duncan Phyfe $22.50. 355-9895. 17 October 26 at the Civic Center JEEP PICKUP 1959. 4-wheel coffee table. Kitchen cabinet- and the Paramount News in CHEVELLE-1964. Midnight blue. Cab over engine, with drive. TEFLON FRYING pans, house- Standard transmission. 6-cyl- cleaning department. Must be 25" x 24" x 36". Sun lamp. Lansing and East Lansing. C31 enclosed box, seats and rear wares and gifts. ACE HARD¬ able to sew. Apply in person. Other miscellaneous items. IV inder. Sell or trade. 485-4714 step. For people carrier, hunt¬ WHERE & GIFTS, 201 E. Grand ENJOY A THRILLING FREE hour Louis Shirt Laundry and Dry 2-8319. Sunday 1-5 pm. 17 o"f beauty! For appointment, call any time after 5. 19 ing and camping too. Snow plow River, across from Union. ED CHEVROLET-1937. 2-door. See also. Call 332-0942. 17 Cleaners, 623 E. Grand River, SIAMESE KITTENS (3). Seal- 484-4519, Merle Norman Cos¬ East 2-3212. C at Kwik Car Wash on S. Cedar Lansing. 18 point. Al! male. Please call metics Studio, 1600 East Michi- call 489-9691. 17 BABYSITTER LIVE in. 5 days 882-7074 after 6 pm. ESPANA CLASSICAL guitar. or Roadster. All 17 options. $1,000, Very good condition. Call 351- CHEVROLET, 1964 Biscayne 4- and light housework. Boy, 8 DOUBLE BARREL shotgun, 20- FULLER BRUSHMAN living on Good condition. Rebuilt engine. 4132. Ask for Mike. 18 door sedan. Fullpower plus air- years old. Phone IV 2-8021. 17 campus. Will give you free cat¬ 351-5277. 20 gauge. Excellent condition. conditioning. 300 H.P. V-8 en¬ WAITRESS-FULL Hunter Arms Company. $75. CORN PICKER. Co-op. Ready to alogue and gifts. Call GaryRue, MERCEDES 190. !$62. 20,000 or part-time. gine. 10,000 miles. Excellent Over 18. Neat and reliable. Ap¬ Call IV 2-8795. 18 pick your corn. 1 row. Pull type. 355-6390, 484-9793. 18 miles. Mint condition. Service condition. $2,500. Call between ply in person. Millers Dairy 1964 EDITION $100. Call, NA 7-5301. 19 HAYRIDES, PONY-drawn for 8 record. Texleather reclining Encyclopedia am. and 5 pm. 699-2139. 19 Store, Okemos. 19 small groups. Tractor for seats. Undercoated. Call 355- Americana with bookcase. Also CHEVROLET, 19 58 Impala 2- 9876. 21 RELIABLE LADY to live in East 10-volume set of P o pu 1a r Sci¬ larger. By reservations only. door hardtop. IV 2-4662 after Call 355-2943. Not COLTSFOOT PONY RIDES. OLDSMOBILE, 1961 - 96 Holiday Lansing home. To do simple ence. a 5 pm. 18 nursing care and light house¬ salesman. 18 ANTIQtjfiS. Coffee grinder, old Laingsburg. 651-5637. 17 hardtop. One owner. Like new. CHEVROLET-1963 Super Sport. work. Sunday off. References CIDER AT MILL. Fresh laces, beadwork, ironstone, doll 4-door. Fully equipped. Phone daily. Automatic power. Low mileage. 372-4219. 17 exchanged. ED 7-9318 18 Special price on quantities. clothes, silver dishes, inkwells, invite you to their annual Greek Maroon. Phone IV 9-6068. 17 OLDSMOBILE, 196 3 dynamic DELIVERY MEN-wanted. Part- Also, have appies and honey. colored bottles. 676-5308. 18 Open house. 528 M.A.C. Imme¬ '88'. Convertible. Hydramatic time. THE Pizza Pit, 203 M.A.C. CORDA WEST, 5817 N. Okemos USED T.V.'s. Good selection. diately following Northwestern CHEVROLET, 1955 - 2-door, 8- and power. Red with white inter¬ Avenue. 22 Rd., East Lansing. ED 7-7974. Prices starting at $25. Modern cylinder, stick. Also, 1956 Cad¬ 17 ior. Low mileage. $2,200. HELP WITH mailing. Part-time. T.V. Center, 2017 E. Michigan. illac Coupe DeVille, sharp. Call 393-1114. 17 Rhynard's Truck Sales, 200 N. Temporary. Arranged hours. USED BICYCLES for sale or rent. IV 4-1393. 19 dorms, when BIMBO'S will de¬ Larch. IV 7-5491. 17 ACE HARDWHERE & GIFTS, liver your Pizzas to you! Call Apply 123 Albert, back entrance. TELEVISION. SILVERTONE 21" FALL and CHEVROLET-1954 convertible. OLDSMOBILE-1956. Red and 17 201 E. G r a n d River, across 484-7817. C17 Console. Late model in good Red with black top. $110. TU white 4-door hardtop. Hydra¬ from Union. ED 2-3212. C LOST K.D. Sororr.y pin. Diamond DELIVERY BOYS. Car needed. condition. Phone 355-2890. 19 2-8962. 11085 Jolly Rd. 19 matic. White sidewalls. Dis¬ shaped. Lost near Berkey or Nights. Part-time. Apply in per¬ ONLY $2ft required for new, 21" ZENITH TV. Table model. Horticulture. Call Marty Brown. HOMECOMING continued commuting. 332-8635. son, Casa Nova, 211 M.A.C. 18 CHEVROL£T-l9Sl Six standard English 3-speed, light-weight 1964 set of Fncylopedia Amer¬ Garv Lanedon. 17 bikes. On rental-purchase plan. 337-1327. 17 transmission. Overhauled babysitting, ironinc, house- Call 355-1042 after 5:30. . en¬ icana. OLDSMOBILE 1963 - F-85, white ACE HARDWHERE & GIFTS, GOT YOUR NEW CAR figured gine. New'battery. Clean, inex¬ cleaning. Full or part-time. Own 19 with red interior. Good condi- 201 E. Grand River, across to the penny? State Farm Car pensive transportation. Best of¬ SPANISH RECORDS complete fer. ED2-2972. 17 l. $1,595. Call 882-8994. 17 transportation preferred. ED 2- 0014. 20 from the Union. ED 2-3212. C units for two terms. 101 and 102. Finance Plan may save you A Hard Combination To Beat New; never used. $9. 337-0242. money. Call or see State Farm excellent, body good. $100 take WAITRESS, EXPERIENCEbpre- agent, ED KARMANN, IV 5- J B's USED CARS ferred. Also, ladies 18 or over 14 And now B & B's RE¬ over payments, or best offer. 7267, in Frandor. for DRAPES-PICTURE window size VISED RENTAL SCH¬ Consider older car in trade. bussing. Light's Restaurant, Exclusively Chevrolet 2005 N. Larch. 17 and various smaller sizes. NEARLY EVERYBODY likes EDULE is hard to beat! Andy, 126 Division. Wallboards to match. IV 2-7758 Bubolz Insurance because con¬ Yes... for the balance OLDSMOBILE 1955 Holiday, 4- STOCK BOY. Part-time. Prefer- Call 5-8:30. 17 tinuing personal insurance ser¬ of the school year, the door hardtop. Power steering, ably to start at 1 pm. Apply, vice in all lines - boat, home, owners of the apart¬ 1963 Chevy II. Nova Super brakes. Needs water Personnel Office, Second Floor, pump. car, business, life - year in and ments that B & B man¬ . Sport. Bronze and white. $100. 353-2167 after 7. J.W. KnappCo., East Lansing.17 condition. Size 12.Call 355-9850 Immaculate condition.... year out can be counted upon. age have authorized a PONTIAC, 1955 4-door. Good after 5:30. 17 $1695. BUSBOY TO wash morning dishes t C17 lower rental schedule condition. See at 709 Randall, in exchange for lunches. ED 7- CbRVfcTTE (Schwinn). Used 2- ■Gives the tacts about moving. HAYRIDES BY the finest team and shorter lease Lansing. 9734. 17 speed men's bicycle. DODGE, Explains the moving estimate. of mules in the area. Clubroom time. There's a deal PONTIAC, 1960 Catalina 2-door 1962 383 Convertible. Full house Shows how charges are deter¬ for dancing. St. John, 224-4181 for anyone... now or 1963 Chevrolet sedan. Hydramatic, radio, heat¬ performance. Package. See at Winter term. So see B Impala mined IfsFREfc... call soon for er, good tires. Recent tune-up. FURNISHED CABIN, Lake Lans- Golf-0-Tron. 19 hardtop. Metallic blue fin¬ & B .. .and score a big Excellent condition. TU 2-4468. ish. 409 cu. in. 425 hp. ing. 2 male students. Utilities deal today. 4-speed. 11,000 actual PONTIAC, 1957 4-door hardtop, paid. $8 per week per student. 332-8932. 17 484-1421 LIVE, LAUGH, LEARN, and miles....$2,295 no rust, automatic, V-8. Runs BE HAPPY good. $295. Smallwood's Ga¬ PARKING FOR eight compact fOEHM C> ' # rage, 1103 Ballard. IV 9-6204.20 cars. Near Bogue and Grand at OWE* MAN River. $6 monthly. ED 2-2276, THUNDERR1RD, Two passenger 1960 240 Chevrolet Corvette. hp. 4-speed. Whlte- 1957. Excellent condition. $315 after 5:30 pm. 17 BURCHAM ■ EYDEAL A p? V. OR * rax v w PROPERTY MANAGEMENT CO. ning condition .. $1,995 332-1894. WOODS VILLA TR-3, 1961. Condition good. Light cept range and refrigerator. blue convertible. White top with $115 - $135. Phone B.A/Faunce 730 E. Michigan 444 Mich. Ave. Phone 332-0838 new windows. Fully carpeted. Co., Realtors, 332-2596. Eve- IV 4-4501 485-9589 after 5:30 pm. 19 nings. ED 2-5986. 17 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, October 23, 1964 St. Peter's Grotto Is Oldest Church ANTAKYA, Turkey if:-As ^ lars, a stone altar placed long bridge between numerous civili¬ after St. Peter, and a statue ct zations, the* land where Turkey St. Peter abeve the altar. This i hes today also saw the istab- listtnent of the first church of the Christian world. statue is here Antakya. from said to have been brought another church in Less than two miles north of I he cave, about 30-feet wide, Antakaya, capital of Turkey's 40-feet long and 20-feet high, Vs southernmost province, is a cave hollowed out of rock 011 the slopes of Mt. Stauris. This is St. Peter's Grotto. It is here that St. Peter, after was made into a church Crusaders in as the Today it is, however, almost simple inside as it used to be by th< 12th and 13th 1 Mine when St. Peter started to preach to the followers of Christ about THEY SHALL NOT PASS!--Ne motto of the recently inantly noticeable in front of Bessey Hall each class the new faith. liberated pedestrian on campu: which has followed the change when students wander across, sidewalk, grass Christ. A few patches of mosaic on the restricted driving regulations, this theme is predom- and roadway with little or no heed for motor vehicles. It is in this cave-church in floor are believed to belong to Photo by Larry Fritz|an ancient Antioch (Antakya today) the 4th or 5th centuries. On the that the group of people met who right is a cavity where wstcr had no definite name until they fiows from the rocks. Chi >a..ns received the name "Christiani," considered this sacred Hoover's Funeral in Antioch WMSB T meaning "belonging to the faith of Christ." Greek letters CONSERVATISM president in YOU SAY--With 1664, one of the arr> Goldwater for . funny slogan"- of this preside' ^a .campaign, this slo- (continued from page 1) St. Peter arrived Antioch j in thealtai the ti John Muirs in ., sered if Calvin Coo- sometime between 29 and 40 AJ)„ nd last letters of the Greek Truman and his wife sent a wives, and Hoover's grandchil¬ basket of white after the crucifixion of Christ, lphabet — Alpha and Omega — dren and great grandchildren chrysanthemums and white gladiolus. to spread the new I nth. Fhiswas signifying that God is the begin¬ were with them. 'he same period when the other ning and the end of all creation. The life of John Muir, whose lives of 13 prominent Americans, Hoover died Tuesday morning A number of iloral tributes apostles chose various routes A door on the left of the altar influence upon President Theo- p.< t-er leaders 1: i.elds rang- in his 31st floor apartment in came from abroad. Among them out of the Holy Land for a sim¬ opens into a tunnel, now assumed dore Roosevelt led to the crea- tion of Yosemite National Park, is depicted in the first ot WMSB- mg from to spoils . p •; itics ,nid philosophy :.a .rdutectui I he determin tior of Scottish- o. the Waldorf-Astoria Towers, on Park Avenue Street from St. directly across 50th Bartholomew's. was a wreath from King Bau- doun; of Belgium, a country many were saved where from starvation ilar purpose. The first meeting of Christians to have served as route should an esc ip; the church be at¬ Sec. General Thant TV;s "Pathfinders" series 12:30 born writer Jon.< Muir kdt . Ie>:- in World War 1 by an Amer¬ is said to have beon held in St. tacked by unbelievers. (continued fr< The body, in a sealed, flag- Peter's Grotto, and that is why A divine service is held here p.;n. Sunday. illation which provided for the draped casket, has lain in state ican relief mission which Hoover peaceful coexistence and supi r:. Cot.J. . "Pathfinders" relates the creation of Y"Semite National this hollow rock in Mt. Stauris every year, on June 29, to cele¬ of the United Nations. Then he fished out a newspaper in the chancel at the east end came to be known as the first brate St. Peter's Day. The flow In making the [■;■ posal for . chppii g containing the Londoi of. St. Bartholomew's for two One of the most poignant of church of the world ofChristian- Christian tourists reaches its days, and the public has filed the floral offerings was a bas¬ ut meeting of the world's atomic suggestion, and said he approved ket of yellow and bronze chry¬ ity. powers, Thant said he was en¬ past in homage at a peak rate of 3,600 per hour. santhemums. It came from Mrs. dorsing a recent suggestion made 'I leel that It could be very! •thwhile to have dialogue be- J From 3 to 5 p.m., the church John F. Kennedy, widowed exactly Ihmlatid House by former Kansas Gov. All M. e; a the United States, the So-v' ctoseA ^ but. U\e I.Z5Q 11 months ago yesterday when Landon, the 193<> Republic.i. I i i l "led Kingdom. her husband, the nation's 3>&th presidential nominee. . «v.tts Pre side nr, was assassinated n Sets Hall Theme ope .i the public aga.n until Dallas. t expiui as regi China perhaps some n'm-x Tomorrow Hoover's body goes he said. :: Hoover was one of three liv¬ theme of the Ho*iandHous.* ing former Presidents of the to Washington, to lie in state in the Capitol Rotunda, just as crucified, has been surrounded party to be field 9 p.m. to 1 United States. The two remain¬ President Kennedy's did last by a high wall, forming a small Saturday. ing are Democrat Harry S. garden accessible only through II Truman and Republican Dwight November. i knou) vou ujantto sav it! Hoc an iron gate. been granted dates attendm D. Eisenhower. Neither was able iequei i talked too much amd i One has to accustom himself Howland House term party. to attend the funeral. A housi-. -wide decoratinc j 0leuj the election;50 60 Eisenhower had planned to be starkly simple, Kith Choi to darkness and keep the door ahead and sm it.1 just open in order to see inside pil- d tor 10 a.m. Satin there, but he has been hospit¬ ri6ht ahead and gm it i alized East Maro Tea Kansas City'by injuries suffered East May s I In iming sc¬ ii a fall. He -was represented tivities include a atter the ai the funeral by his son-in- Open House law and Clifton Daniel. daughter, Mr. and Mrs. game Saturday whi ill beheld house on Sunday, f •'P.m. East Wilson Hall, will hold an open house Surd'.y, irom 2 to 5 p.m. in the 1962 Ro m. Refreshments wilt be served. Alpha Phi Omega ■©• OLIN A dance will be held later Sat¬ urday, in the tr.st Wilson cafe- ReportsPledges ©•HOSPITAL Alpha Phi Omega, national ser¬ REPORT games, refreshments and a band vice fraternity, has announced its Admissions include: Allen will highlight the event. Fall Term pledge class. Hassen, Milan sophomore; Gary THE 1IM HARVIN TRIO The dance is limited to Wilson 'I he pledges are Peter Schaevitz, Brooklyn, N.Y., jun¬ residents and their guests. Hoffman, East Lansing freshman; ior; Peter Glance, Mio sopho¬ Rich Krouskip, Grand Rapids ju- more; Hope Sprunger, St. Joseph nior; La Verne Lamkin, N.Y., freshman; James H. Davev, Mar- Enjoy Dinner and Dancing Spartan Wives freshman; Peter Lippincot, Flint cellus, N.Y., graduate student; at tlie freshman; 1 omMacMeekin, West and Bruce E. Henderson, Perk- Meet Monday Hartford junior; Doug McCall, esie, Pa., freshman. Women Voters wiil Highland Park sophomore; Tom Porter, East Lansing sophomore; Ivan Sherburn, omore; Scottville soph¬ Ralph Stadelman, West Tea In Gilchrist Gilchrist will sponsor a com¬ SAG BUGGY BOOM Nightly H» cept Sunday first general meet in Lafayette, Ind., freshman; bination tea and open house after Homecoming game Saturday FOX'S George the "Our Responsib.; Stone,^ St. Clair Shores from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. 1 he tea Berkley senior; and Gary Sturm, Paul St. Pigeon sophomore. will he held in the recreation room in Gilchrist Hall. Direct Dianupml Importers er^a3i)a\ Frandor Shopping Center HILLEL FOUNDATION and 203 S. Washington DISCOUNTS ON typing in the Stu¬ 319 Hillcrest (corner Grand River) dent Sample Book. Call 351- 4548. 18 New & Used SABBATH SERVICES TYPING, THESES, term papers, Textbooks FRIDAY 7:30 P.M., SATURDAY 10 A.M. etc. XEROX copy service. IBM electric typewriters. 337-1527. Paperbacks SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25 6 P.M. BARBI MEL, Professional typist. No job too large or too small. Block off campus . . . .332-3255 SPARTAN SUPPER - FORUM - SOCIAL C BOOKSTORE ANN BROWN typist and multi- lith offset printing (black & M.S.U. Souvenirs Buffet Supper - Everyone Welcome white & color). IBM. Genera! for rides call: ED 2-1916 typing, term papers, theses, CORNER of ANN & MAC dissertations. ED 2-8384. C TYPING IN my home. Anytime. Experienced. 315 Bartlett, Lansing. Phone 482-7168. MARSHALL MUSIC CO. EDIE STARR, typist. Theses, dissertations, term papers, general typ i n g. Experienced. IBM Electric, OR 7-8232, or IV 5-0861. C All LP's Always subdivision within the city of East QUALITY" THESIS preparation, references available. Ph Wonch Graffic, 484-7^86. 17 TERM PAPERS, theses. E)^r~ PINECREST ienced. IBM Electric. Marianne Harrington, 372-3280. Transportation CI" FINE-BUT HOMES Homes $22,000 to $30,000 OFFER YOU THE RIDE WANTED daily before 8 am. from Abbott Rd. and M-78 to campus. Return after 1 pm. 351-4195. 17 Keys To Better Living NEEDED, RIDE to Western New York, Th ank sgiving vac ation. ANDREA HILLS Leave Tuesday afternoon or On Tulane Just east of the Groesbeck Golf Course. Wednesday morning. Call ED 7-9738, ask for Carolyn. City o,f Lansing advantages. 17 RIDE TO LANSING, mornings from Abbott and Saginaw. 8 or SUNSET HILLS 8:15 am. Will Share gas. 332- 0775.. ' 17 RIDE TO Madison for MsL - Homes $15,000 to 520,000 Wisconsin game for three people on Oct. 30. Dick. 353-2141. 17 Friday, October 23, 1964 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Politics Friday Mass English Preacher For SCF Baptist S For Wetzel To Hold Services In keeping with the upcoming The American SponsorBaptist Student ory Mass will be said in of Bill Wetzel at 4:45 Fri¬ day afternoon at St. John's Stu¬ mem¬ national elections, tonight's from a piano-playing tour of the dent Parish. All who knew him as Boston, Philadelphia, San Foundation is sponsoring a sa¬ Far East. She visited the coun¬ The Rev. Canon Bryan Green, Spartan Christian Fellowship are requested to attend this ser- Francisco, Houston, Washington, cred concert Sunday at 5:30 p.m. tries of Pakistan, Taiwan, Japan well-known preacher, lecturer meeting will be an election spe¬ at the Baptist Student Center, 336 and author, will fly here from D.C., and New York. cial entitled "Political andSocial and Malaysia. Wetzel was killed when hit by While his services are evan¬ Oak Hill, East Lansing. Before becoming a minister, England for a series ot speaking Implications of Christianity." a car near Wilson Hall during gelistic in character, Canon Featured artists will be Frank Gonzales was a trumpeter with engagements in Lansing and other The meeting will be held in one of the most tragic week¬ Green shuns the sawdust-trail, Gonzales of Los Angeles, Calif., several West Coast dance bands. Michigan cities during the first 34 Union at 7 p.m. In charge ends in University history as and Linda Isaac, of London, On¬ two weeks of November. Bible-banging, highly emotional will be Tom Williamson and Dave Following the concert, a light automobile accidents took the techniques of religious oratory. tario, Canada. supper will be served. Chamberlin to lead the discus- lives of three MSU students. Nonetheless he is said to be Both widely traveled, the two have A poem composed by Wetzel appeared throughout the a powerful speaker, able to ex¬ world with their musical min¬ St. Johns Sets was read at funeral services press complex ideas in the sim¬ Wednesday: plest language. istry. I Home Gonzales, an ordained Ameri¬ Hayride, Hunt Bought r Canon Green is presently Rec¬ We love and we hate can Baptist minister andevange- tor of St. Martin's Church, Bir¬ St. John's Student Center will We build and we destroy mingham, England, and is Canon sponsor an auto-scavenger hunt We grow and we die of the Birmingham Cathedral. He broadcasts regularly over If r By Mormons and hayride Oct. 31. The scavenger the Center at 6 hunt will leave p.m. and end We are children of God and we are human. an English radio station and Sj writes a weekly column for one of England's largest newspapers. ' The Church of Latter-day of Jesus Christ Saints (Mormon), with a h iyride and hot d< g and marsh.nallow roast at 9 p.m. Individuals and couples may A man of great vitality, Canon ABRACADABRA— lliu 149 Highland Ave. , East Lan¬ UNIVERSITY Lm sign upthisSunday after any mass Green sometimes works from six special representativ sing, has purchased a home at or during the week. The cover in the morning until two the fol¬ eeting 4938 Hagadorn Road and plans BAPTIST CHURCH Christ group useH his i charge is 75 cents with a "free lowing morning. to illustrate how Christ create a Mormon Student Cen- ride" allowed anyone providing should be reconciled to ea r to "Serve the MSU campus. During one U.S. visit, for ex¬ transportation for the scavenger ample, he spoke five times in American Legion Memorial four different places within fifty- Dedicate Chapel At the present time, a small Center, 1 Block Nerth of East University five minutes. The dedication of the new Episcopal Services house stands on the 1 1/2-acre lot overlooking the Red Cedar Christian Church Lansing Bus Station Worship Service 10:00a.m. Canon Green is visiting Mich- Martin Luther Chapel andStudent * 310 N. Hagadorn Rd. CANON GREER The initial Episcopal Sunday River, but eventually a new build¬ Church School 11:00 a.m. Don Stiffler, Minister tgan at the invitation of the Rt. Center last Sunday was a com¬ service of the11 m, held recently ing will be erected. FRANK GONZALES Ph 337-1077 Nursery Provided 10:00- He will conduct .1 sw-day Rev. Richarc' Emrich, Bishop plete success. More than 2,000 in the Alumni Memorial Chapel, 12:00a.m. mission in Lansing's Sexton-High of the Eqiscopal Diocese of Mich¬ persons attended the four ser- list, has toured Europe and Latin Bible School 9:45 a.m. was also the first Episcopal ser¬ The center will house classes Campus Bus Service Sen..'! auditorium. Nightly ser¬ igan. America, appearing personally Worship Service 10:45 a.m. vice ever to be held in the of religious instruction for any vices will be held at 8 p.m., Many area clergymen, along interested student, andwill serve before the president of Guate- In addition to his appearances Nov. 1 through 6. with various MSU officials and Services are being observed as a base for Mormon students' Canon Green has traveled in Lansing, he will conduct local civic leaders, WORSHIP SERVICES participated regularly at 9 a.m. each Sunday. social activities. Miss Isaac has just returned throughout the world preaching "Bishop's Missions" in Ann Ar¬ in the dedication. bor and Detroit. Alumni Memorial Chapel to thousands in such U.S. cities Olivet Baptist Church Lansing Central Free St. Andrew's Eastern I 11:00 Sunday 2215 E. Michigan Methodist Church ALL SAINTS EPISCOPAL CHURCH Orthodox Church & Uni- , Rev. William Hartman, Pastor 82.8- N. Washington, Lansing Episcopal—Holy Communion a .id Serr ■^9£1 Sij Z .---^.-wwwt All Saints Parish Sunday School 9:45 a.m. S:00 a.m. Holy Communion at Chapel of the Plymouth Morning Worship 9:00 and Sunday School 10:00 a.m. 11:00 a.m. Worship Service 11:00 a.m. 11:00 a.m. Methodist, Presbyterian, United Church of Aposle Wesley Foundation Congregational Christ, Disciples and Evangelical United 9:00 a.m. Holy Communion and Sermon at Baptist Youth Fellowship 5;30 "Faith is a Journey" Brethren Alumni Memorial Chapel Church Evening Worship 6:30 p.m. 9;30 a.m. Morning Prayer and Church School Edgewood United 6:00 Youth Fellowship MID-WEEK SERVICE : 1:00 a.m. Morning Prayer and Church School Church 7:00 p.m. S;30 p.;... Canterbury Meeting Wednesday, 7:15 p.m. Evening service; lliese services are provided each Sunday for the convenience Interdenominational For church bus schedule For transportation call of students who reside on the Eastern side of campus by the ":00 i.m. A i.:)NESDAY Holy Communion United 469 North Hagadorn Road Across from Capitol on Allegan call IV 2-8419 355-8031 Campus Ministry :;0U p.m. SUNDAY or 8:00 p.m. MONDAY, Adult confirmation class East Lansing, Michigan ardner. Episcopal Chaplain First Presbyterian LUTHERAN WORSHIP (5 blocks north of Grand River] i-sity FIRST CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE Martin Luther Re i Rotli, Rector Genesee at Butler Streets Ottawa and Chestnut Chapel Worship Service 444 Abbott SUNDAY SERVICES Supervised nursery provided An 9:30 11:00 Open Chapel is Being Held from 3:00—5:30. Light UNITED CAMPUS CHRISTIAN Church School 9:45 a.m. refreshments will be served; EVERYONE IN'Vf I ED Sunday, October 25th Morning Worship 11:00 a.m. FELLOWSHIP Rev. Truman A. Morrison Youth Groups b:00 p.m. SERVICES: 10:00 and 11:30 a.m University Life Program Evangelistic Hour .7:00 p.m. Children's Sunday School Hour and Adult Bible Class 'Answer to Practical Atheism" 10:00 a.m. Church School WEDNESDAY EVE Prayer Service 7:30 pun. Co-operative Nursery Both Services. Sunday, October 25 Dr. Seth Morrow, preaching Rev. David k. Ehrlin -Minister loin D. Thompson-Music Dir. EDGEWOOD UNITED CHURCH 9:30 A.M. & 11:00 A.M. Free Bus Service Transportation Available A warm and friendly welcome 5:30p.m. Debate on Election Issue by a representative from Owned and Operated by the Chapel the Young Democrats & the Conservatives Club. Supper at 5:30,50^ Call Church Office IV 5-0613 awaits you at First Presbyter- Cribroom through Senior High If No Answer, Call 332-4696 Schedule 10:00 a.m. FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH (Disciples) 9:25 5:30 p.m. "Person, Party or Platform" Mr. Doug Cook. Edgewood College Concern Abbot First Christian W. Akers 9:30 Supper at 5:30, 50tf FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH-OKEMOS Group 5:30 p.m. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Supper & Program Reformed Church E. McDonel S:00 p.m. "Thinking Together About Religion" Dr. Seth Mari Affiliated with United Church 4684 Okemos - Haslett Rd. 240 Marshall St., Lansing W. Shaw 1014 .Valbridge, E.L. Phone 48:-0668 or 337-2341. Of Christ, Congregational- SERVICES: FEOPLLS CHURCH Rev. John M. Hofman, Pastor N. Case Christian, Evangelical and Morning Service 9:00 & 11:15 5:30 p.m. "Who makes the Decision?" Rev. Walter Kania. Kellogg Center Reformed. WELCOME I SUNJ.-O SCHOOL Supper at 5:30 , 50£. Sunday School 10:15 COLLEGIATE CLASS 10:00 a.m. Evening Service 7 p.m. MORNING WORSHIP 11:00 a.m. Eastminster Central Methodist COLLEGIATE TRAINING HOUR Those in tation call: need of transpor¬ "The Road To Life!" Peoples Church Across From the Capitol 6:00 p.m. Presbyterian Church WORSHIP SERVICE EVENING WORSHIP 7:00 p.m. Mr. Jack Vander Slik at East Lansing 3^5-3030 131*5 Abbott Rd., 9:45 & 11:15 a.m. or Rev. Hofman at 5-3650 Interdenomination East Lansing (WJIM 10:15 a.m.) DR. ALLBAUGH, PASTOR THRILLING MUSICAL PROGRAM 200 W. Grand River Minister "The Wrong out of Right FIRST CHRISTIAN SUNDAY 7:00 P.M. at Michigan Rev. Robert L. Moreland Religion" Always a warm welcome at 541 Walbridge Drive Dwight S. Large, preaching CHURCH Seventh-Day SUNDAY SER\ ICE ED 7-0183 Crib Nursery, So Bring The Baby. Take home a copy of the Adventist Church (Disciples of Christ) SOUTH BAPTIST CHURCH Sunday Schedule Worship Services 8:30 & 11:00 "What Then Are We To Do?" Church School Temporarily meeting at Uni¬ 9:45 a.m. 9:00 and 11:00 a.m. sheet for study and appli- UCCF Group 5:00 p.m. Church School versity Lutheran Church university for Division and Ann St. lutheran church Cribbery through ADULT YOUTH FELLOWSHIP Third Grade Saturday services 10:00 a.m. CHURCH OF JESUS 8:30 P.M. 9:30 a.m. Sabbath School Church School for CHRIST of LATTER 11:00 a.m. Worship Service For transportation call the DISCUSSION--RE FRESH ME NTs Fourth Grade-Adults For information or transpor¬ Foxes at 337-9605 including Students DAY SAINTS tation call Pastor Ainsley Sweanys at 332-2964 through 8:30 9:30 10:30 11:30 Crib room 9:00 and 11:00 a.m. (MORMON) Blair. 485-3997. Worship Services Sixth grade. Visitors Welcome First Baptist Church 149 Highland. ED 2-3385 Capitol at Ionia j UCCF program - supper Priesthood meeting 9:00 a.m. & P.M. 5:30 p.m. Program: SI. NTS WELCOME Inter-City Bible Church SEE THIS PAGE FOR FREE BUS SERVICE A.M. Sunday School 10:30 a.m. Call 482-8325 or 332-4880 Sacrament meeting 5:00 p.m. 2728 E. Mich Ave.—or\ly 4 blocks W. of Brody Dorms "Such Geat Faith" "Who Makes the Decis for transportation COLLEGE CLASS 9:45 A.M. o SUNDAY SERVICES: Rev. Scott Irvine, preaching. Sunday Bible School (for all ages) 9:45 a.m. Worship Services 11:00 a.m. 7:00 p.m. Training Hour (for all ages) 6:00 p.m. Free Transportation Morning And Evening Collegiate 1-el lowship 8:45 p.m. CLEAR, BIBLE-CENTERED Watch for Volkswagen Bus to your Dr. Ward Dorm ,i;i Sunday Morning. SOUTH BAPTIST CHURCH First Church of University Methodist TRINITY CHURCH St. Johns Student ] Kimberly Downs Church of Christ Christ, Scientist Church Interdenominational SOUTH WASHINGTON AT MOORES RIVER DRIVE- LANSING Parish 120 Spartan Avenue 1007 Kimberly Drive, Lansing 1120 S. Harrison Rd. MINISTERS Fr. R. Kavanaugh Fr. T. McDevitt (2 blocks W. of Frandor Wilson M. Tennant, Minister E. Eugene Williams Norman R. Piersma Route No. 2 Father J. Fromeyer, DI M Shopping Center on E. Church Service: and 327 M.A.C. Grand River) Dr. Glenn M. Frye, Minister Lloyd R. Bergren IV 9-7130 Sunday 11:00 a.m. Services 8:30 Si 11:00 a.m.. Sunday Masses Subject- 7:15-8:30-9:45 (high) William G. Hall and WORSHIP GOD IS THE DIFFERENCE! Probation After Death 11:00 & 12:15 & 4:45 Gerald O. Fruzia, Sr., Akers Hall 9:15 6:25 9:15 6:25 Evening service-7K)0 Ministers Fee Hall 9:1,5 6:25 Landon E and W 9:15 6:25 Sunday School: 9:45 a.m. & 11:00 a.m. 6:25 babysitting at 8:30--9;45—11:00 SUNDAY SERVICES University Students THE EPIS1 L.E OF JOY E. Campus //5 9:15 6:25 Yakeley 9:15 • McDonel E and W 9:15 6:25. Williams 9:15 6:25 Morning Worship 10:00 a.iru & regular 9:30 a.m. "God in the life of Man" 8:15 p.m. Irinity Collegiate 9:15 6:25 Butterfield 9:20 6:30 Bible Study 11:00 a.m. Wed. Evening Meeting-8 p.m. Fellowship Stimulating Owens Emmons 9:20 6:30 Rev. Wilson M. Tennant Shaw E and W 9:18 6:28 Evening Worship 6:00 p.m. program & buffet Supper 9:20 6:30 Bailey 9:20 6:30 9:45 a.m. Phillips Daily Masses Reading Room located at 134 9:20 6:30 Armstrong 9:20 6:30 Wednesday evening Bible University Class & Inter¬ E. Grand River . Mason Church School 9:45 a.m. all 9:20 6:30 Bryan 9:20 6:30 8:00 a.m. & 12:10 p.m Study 7:30 p.m. national Class Snyder Rather 9:20 6:30 & 4:45 ages & 11:00 a.m. children 2-5 Abbot 9:20 6:30 Open Mon. thru Sat. 9:00 a.m. Case N and S 9:25 6:35 Bethel Manor 9:25 6:3? -5 p.m. Wilson F. wsl W 9:25 6:35 Membership Class 9;30 a.ta- Wonders S and N 9:25 6:35 Mo*. lues.. i davs 7:00-9:00 p.m. All are welcome to attend Free bus transportation 15 to Phone ED 7-9778 Church Services, and visit and 30 minutes before each ser¬ Bible School 9:45 Church 11:00 & 7:00 Adult Youth 8:30 P.M. vice around the campus. use the Reading Room.