1 1 1 1 1 1 1 GOAL 200 500 1,000 1,500 1,700 ... 1 1------------ 1 1 Optimism Sunny . . . M ICH IGA N . . . . . i s w h e n you c a n th in k o f ro s e s w h ile w a lk ­ STATE W a rm e r. L o w 6 0 ’ s. U N IV ER SITY W ednesday: F a ir , m ild . i n g p a s t th e J u d g in g P a ­ v ilio n . — R aym ond L a n tin g a E a st L a n s in g , M ic h ig a n T u e sd a y, November 2, 1965 P r ic e 10< V o l. 58, Number 44 A f r i c a n M a jo r it y R u le S e e n F o r R h o d e s i a B l o o d NO DATE SET W ils o n D r i v e M u st H e a r C l a im s A n e m i c T im e W o n Donations on the firs t day of M S U ’ s blood drive were 50 pints less than last y e a r's opening S c h if f C a s e Illegal Seizure day turnout, according to Shelby Robertson, E a s t Lansing junior and p r e s i d e n t of Alpha P h i In 1 0 D a y s B y D A V I D H AN S O N Warned Against Omega. L e s s than 200 pints were given S ta t e N e w s S t a f f W r l t e r L O N D O N (jB — Monday as compared to the 250 W ithin 10 days, a standing com­ P r im e M in ister H ar­ pints tallied for the same per­ iod in 1964, Robertson said.There mittee of 10 faculty m em bers w ill old W ilso n M on d ay hear the arguments in the case of are four more days for the drive P a u l M . Schiff, a graduate stu­ c l a i m e d to h a v e w on to "c o m e from behind,” he said, dent who claim s he was denied tim e for a p eacefu l and students are urged to help re-adm ission last spring because reach the fall term goal of 1,700 of his po litical a ctivities. settle m e n t of in d e­ pints. Schiff has now replied to the p e n d e n c e - seek in g L e a d e rs in the firs t day are: U n iv e rsity , which sent him a frate rn itie s, P h i Sigma Delta, statement listing the reasons for R h o d e s i a ’ s future with nine pints; so ro rities, Kappa not admitting him for advanced b a sed on eventu al A f­ Kappa Gamma, with three pints; co-ops, Bow er House, with 17 study last summer. Eldon R , Nonnamaker, secre­ rica n m a jo rity ru le. pints; a n d dorm itories, E a s t B O O K S G A L O R E — I r w i n H a m b u r g e r , r e p r e s e n t i n g t h e A m e r i c a n C o u n c il f o r ta ry of the Faculty Committee J u d a i s m , p r e s e n t e d s o m e 100 b o o k s and p a m p h l e t s to th e M i c h i g a n S ta te l i b r a r y . Reporting to the House of Com­ Shaw, with 11 pints. on Student A ffa irs , said the com­ T h e d rive continues in Demon­ A c c e p t i n g th e b o o k s is R i c h a r d C h a p in , d i r e c t o r o f l i b r a r i e s . mons on his 13,000-m lle jour­ m ittee has not set a date yet for P h o to b y C a l C r a n e stration H all today, Wednesday G O O D E V E N I N G — A n d a g o o d m o r n i n g , to o , f o r th e the hearing required u n d e r a ney to Africa, Wilson said impor­ ,and Thursday from 2-8 p.m. F r i ­ b l o o d d r i v e , a n y w a y . J a c k B r e s l i n , s e c r e t a r y o f th e court ruling Octz 14. tant differences remain but he day hours are from 9 a.m. until B o a r d o f T r u s t e e s , s t r e t c h e s out as th e f i r s t p e r s o n T h re e Fed eral D istric t Court could not believe Rhodeaia will 3 p.m. MSU is competing with U C LA t o d o n a te b l o o d a n d t h u s o p e n s t h i s f a l l s b l o o d judges dism issed Schiff*s injunc­ BUSINESS OFFICE DIRECTS: embark on a policy of "danger­ ous lunacy." Organizations Denied Mail d r iv e . The d r iv e w il l la s t f r o m N o v . 8 - l 2 a n d do n o rs tion against the U n iv e rs ity and through their respective A s so ci­ c a n r e p o r t to D e m o n s t r a t i o n H a ll b e tw e e n 10 a . m . M SU ’ s request for dism issal and Wilson disclosed he had pulled ated Students organizations, ac­ an d n o o n and f r o m 1 to 5 p . m . • said the m atter should be handled no punches in talking with the cording to John McQuitty, c h a ir­ P h o to b y J e f f F r i t z l a n at the U n iv e rsity level. white rulers of the colony and man of ASM SU. Under the ruling, the U n iv e r­ with their African opponents. sity now has 10 days to give the activity involved was a part this summer, Hekhuis said, be­ To Prim e Minister Ian Smith M S U , U -M H is t o r y C o n t r a s t s Schiff a hearing before the Com ­ B y CHAR JOLLES of the U n ive rsity program .” and his all-white government, m ittee, at which time either he cause the business office felt S ta te N e w s S t a f f W r i t e r or the U n ive rsity may ask for Ju s t exactly what “ o fficialU n i- the service was being abused Wilson said, he had uttered no S t u d e n t organizations have by unchartered student organi­ threats if they tried to seize in­ further consideration by the court v ersity business” and " i n the in­ been denied the use of campus zations. dependence w it h o u t Britain's which retained Jurisdiction over terest of the U n iv e rs ity ” mean m ail under a new d irective is ­ consent. But there were warn­ In R o le O f lln L o c o P a r e n t is 1 the m atter for 90 days. is being determined by Hekhuis Only chartered student orga­ sued by the U n ive rsity Business and the Committee on Student nizations may use U n iv e rs ity fa­ ings of what Britain would do, According to the action taken Office, according to Louis Hek- Organizations and the business c ilitie s , he said. what the United Nations might by the Academic Council on June huis, director of student a ctiv i­ In a d d i t i o n to unchartered do, and of actions African states 2, 1964, the Student A ffa irsC o m - office. ties. The mail policy was changed might take. A tidy Latin phrase— " i n loco mittee is responsible for ex­ (continued on page 7) T he d irective, which states that a r e n tis "— has provided the MSU amining, evaluating and recom ­ campus m ail may be used “ for Then he said: dministratlon with tight reins ‘ t/’ mending to the office of the Dean official U n ive rsity business and "N o one in authority in Rho­ m social conduct regulations for ts students. " I n place of a p a re n t" is a A n (second in 5 parts) d Y o u of Students appropriate action a ll p o licies affecting student af­ fa irs . on not by student organizations," has spurred objections from such organizations as the Associated F e r e n c y C o n s id e r s desia can now be in any doubt of the dire consequences, legal, constitutional or economic, of G u b e r n a t o r ia l R a c e •ole the U n ive rsity has assumed It sp ecifically studies scholar­ Students of MSU (A SM SU ), Men’ s an illegal seizure of pow er." ships, student organizations, dis­ or at least 108 ye a rs and re ­ H a lls Assn. (M HA) and Women’ s — By L IN D A R O C KE Y — — cipline and housing. It maintains To Joshua Nkomo, N.A. SI- lent statements by administra- Interresidence Council (W IC ). a system of re-evaluation in thole and other Rhodesian A fri­ ors seem to indicate the Uni­ of the country," says John Blng- "Y o u didn’t run for the State A proposal for revision of the Zolton Feren cy, chairm an of est and best known candidate to o rder to update regulations. run against Rom ney,” he said. can nationalist leaders, Wilson versity w ill continue its role ley, Michigan's student activities Board of A g ricu ltu re if you w ere new policy w ill be drawn up the Dem ocratic State C e n t r a l related, he was equally tough. Each college, with the excep­ ‘in loco p a re n tis" for the time and organizations director. a law yer from D e tro it," says and presented to the U n iv e r­ Com m ittee, s a i d recently he "N o one knows who 1 am .” tion of Ju stin S , M o r rill and the Feren cy named two Democrats No thunder bolt in the shape of >eing. Michigan's administration has Madison Kuhn, professor of his­ sity Business Office sometime would run for governor of M ich­ the Royal Air Force would come But Michigan State’ s aging sis- come a long way from its swad­ tory and M SU historian. college of Human M edicine, has who might have a chance in the this week by the student-faculty igan if a more experienced and one representative on the Com ­ gubernatorial race. He said fo r­ hurtling from the skies to end :er Institution, the U n iversity of dling years when even faculty Many members of the govern­ committee on Student Organiza­ well-known candidate w ere not mittee. m er governor G . Mennen W il­ white rule and to Impose A fri­ vlichigan at Ann Arbor, has no members were cautioned to ex­ ing board belonged totheGrange, tions, Hekhuis said. available. W h e n t h e representative’ s liam s would have a w illing or­ can rule. ¡uch plans. ercise control over student be­ F a rm Bureau and profession of H arlan K irk , director of Gen­ U-M has repeatedly relaxed havior. term expires, the college sub­ Speaking on campus, Fe re n cy ganization if he decided to re­ v eterin ary medicine, he explain­ e ra l U n iv e rsity Services, said And although Britain is "deep­ m its the names of three faculty turn to state politics and A ttor­ ts social regulations for stu­ Ironically, the attitude of Mich­ ed. that, under his interpretation of said he felt the most Important ly and irrevocably committed" to the Committee onCommittees. thing for his party in 1966 was ney General Frank J . K e lly would dents since its founding in 1837. igan State’ s present administra­ The U n iversity of M ichigan’s the new policy, campus orga­ to work toward majority rule It T h is committee submits two to maintain its l e g i s l a t i v e also be a strong candidate. " W e try to keep one step ahead tion toward "in loco parentis" enrollment drew heavily from nizations could use campus m all won’ t be coming today or to­ jf or at least up with the m ores is reflected in a statement from industrial centers both in-state names to the president, who then as long as this use “ was in the strength in the state. " I would feel compelled to NewPower morrow, he said, adding that U-M catalogs of the 1840s: ( c o n t i n u e d on p age 9) interest of the U n iv e rsity and " W e have to find the strong- run rather than let the nomina­ ( c o n t i n u e d on p age 3) time and patience are needed "In the government of the in­ tion go by d efau lt," he said. for passions to cool and for die Plant Opens stitution, its faculty ever keep F e re n c y said that as fa r as races to work and live together. in mind that most of the students he was concerned, Senator Pat are at an age which renders some . . . A n d B o th A r e N a t io n a l L e a d e r s ! M acN am ara is the D em ocratic Illegal To Send Officially substitution for parental super­ candidate for the Senate next intendence absolutely n e c e s ­ year. He said he would not be­ Blood To VC s a r y ." lieve that M acNam ara would re ­ For example, MSU’ s present tire from his senate seat until rule forbidding possession or he heard it from M acNam ara him self. It is illegal for U.S. citizens M SU ’ s new $8.9 m illion power consumption of intoxicants goes " I would be v e ry surprised to send money or supplies to plant opened officially Monday. back to 18 57 and is roughly the North Viet Nam or to the Viet same. It was the founders' con­ if he said he would not run Located on the south campus Cong in South Viet Nam. a g a in ," said Feren cy. "Nobody between the Chesapeake and Ohio viction that alcohol is not essen­ The warning was issued F r i­ tial to a college education, that te lls Pat M acNam ara what to and Grand Trunk W estern r a il­ day by the State Department. do or say.” road tracks, Pow er Plant *65 w ill it may even be detrimental. It was prompted by reports that Comparisons indicate that-dis- W illia m s has been increasing­ replace the two present power the left-wing May Second Move­ ly active in the past few months, ¡Slants located on C ir c le D rive clplinary action taken by the ment plans to send blood plasma University of Michigan for in­ raising speculation that he w ill and next to Spartan Stadium. and other supplies to the Com­ seek a Senate seat if M acN a­ Je s s e Campbell, power plant fractions of this rule is much munists in Viet Nam. less severe than that taken by m ara re tire s . superintendent, s a i d the n e w power plant was operating as w ell M SU officials. as could be expected. Administrators at both uni­ " A n y new equipm ent," he said, versities agree that the disparity THE IN S ID E L O O K "h a s a few bugs in it . " between the two attitudes toward Campbell went on to explain student conduct might be under­ the plant’ s equipment was being stood in the history of each in­ tested to find any weak points stitution. 1 T h e body o f a Ku K lu x K l a n n e r , w ho a p p a r e n t l y Michigan Agricultural College K la n M em b er c o m m itte d s u ic id e when or m istakes in construction. i t was d is c o v e re d th a t he "Y o u might compare our pre­ was established in 1855 for the w a s a Jew , h a s b e e n f o u n d K ills S e lf sent operations to a new c a r farm er and home economist. The , xbe.,pr o V it v ^ U n i v e r s i t y of Michigan was 1Jtaxnt ground,” said Campbell. founded fn*~1837 f$r students of “ The whole thing was put up mathematics, classics and medi­ A State N ew s survey has ’ in a h u rry,” saidCam pbell, “ snd cine. discovered that the clocks T ic k - T a c k when you h u r r y you make m is­ The first U-M regents were all over campus are doing takes, but,” he added, " w e have mostly politicians. Until MSU be­ a bit of individual thinking T ra u m a no fears about not being able to came a university in 1955, its and causing^timely prob­ take ca re of any heating problem s governing body was known as lem s. P. 10. that might come up.” the State Board of Agriculture. T uesd ay, N ovem b er 2, 1965 2 M ichigan State N ew s, E ast L ansing, M ichigan E D IT O R IA L S F ro m W C T U — A G r a p e J u ic e G u z z le r A Vote For Wise $ Carries Obligation RICHARD SCHWARTZ JIM STERBA A W O R D O F C A U T I O N to th e h i e r ­ n itio n by m a n y , bu t not m o s t, u n d e r­ B u t Let M e Pasteur Was A Phony? a r c h y o f A s s o c i a t e d S tu d e n ts o f M i c h ­ g r a d u a t e s t h a t A S M S U ne e d s m o r e ig a n S to te (A S M S U ) w ho m a y t h i n k m o n e y to c a r r y o u t i t s o p e r a t i o n s . T h u r s d a y ' s r e f e r e n d u m w a s an u n ­ I f th e S tu d e n t B o a r d o r C a b in e t o r A ssu re Y o u q u a l i f i e d v o te o f a p p r o v a l f o r m o r e any o t h e r o f f i c i a l s e g m e n t o f ASMSU m o n e y f o r a g r e a t new g o v e r n i n g m is h a n d le s fu n d s , e s p e c ia lly its in ­ body: c re a s e d funds, its c o n s titu te n ts a re How w ill y o u r c o n s c ie n c e s ta ke it, not g o in g to b e o v e r l y z e a l o u s about Lo u is Pasteur, who incidently developed his antl-bacterial proc­ S tu d e n t B o a r d and C a b i n e t m e m b e r s , p a y in g th e t a x . ess sp ecifically for use on wine, once called the fermented fruit of i f you r e t u r n as a l u m n i 10 y e a r s f r o m M E M O TO THE W C TU : grapes, "th e most healthful and most hygienic of all beverag es." n o w and r e a d a S ta te N e w s h e a d li n e : R E M E M B E R , t h e s t u d e n t d i d not Benjam in Franklin called same, “ proof that God loves us and v o lu n te e r h is 25 c e n t s to ASM SU 1 never thought the day would come when I ’d find m yself agree­ " D e f u n c t A SM SU F o u n d G u i l t y o f ing with the Women’ s C hristian Temperance Union. But I do. I loves to see us happy.” M i s h a n d l i n g F u n d s " ( b y a new s t u ­ d u rin g fa ll t e r m r e g i s t r a t i o n . He The son of God, however, according to an informed modern-day i s n ’ t g o in g to o f f e r 35 to 50 c e n ts agree that the drinking age should not be lowered to 18 ye ars. dent g o v e r n m e n t o f c o u r s e ) . legion of evil-stoppers, didn’t ever drink wine. He was a strict th is w in te r. The ta x c o m e s out of I think it should be 18 months. grapejuice drinker, they say. A P P R O V A L o f a h i k e in th e ASMSU an a r b i t r a r y t u i t i o n f e e . If th e u n d e r ­ If this is the case, it is about time someone gof around to expos­ ta x b y n e a r l y t h r e e to one is not g r a d u a t e is o b l i g a t e d as a s tu d e n t P O S T S C R IP T TO THE W C T U : ing Pasteur for what he re a lly is: a phony who took credit for de­ n e c e s s a r i l y o v o te o f c o n f i d e n c e f o r to pay t h a t f e e , A S M S U l e a d e r s had veloping a pasteurization process which was in re a lity developed Before you cru cify me, ladles, let me assure you that I ’m for th e new s tu d e n t g o v e r n m e n t . It is b e t t e r o b l i g a t e t h e m s e l v e s to a w is e over 18 hundred years before he was born. motherhood and m arriage. j p r o b a b l y n o th in g m o r e t h a n a r e c o g ­ c o n s t r u c t i v e u se o f it. Grapes and grapejuice ferment naturally, and within days of when Yes, motherhood at 18 and m arriage at 21. they are plucked from their vines. So anyone who started on any kind Line Romney Drew of journey back In the tim e of C hrist could have began the trip with M E M O TO A L L G R A N D M A S : grapejuice but ended it with wine. That is, unless someone pasteur­ I ’m also for rocking chairs, sewing needles and m edicare. ized the grapejuice before the trip , And if that was the case, we’ ve given the wrong guy cred it for developing the pasteurization process. Someone, in a recent letter to the State News, said it might be Won9t Contain Budget M E M O TO NEW Y O R K E R S : good for college students to do some research in order to "fin d out T alk about East Lansing being a dry town . . . what alcohol is and what it does." Don’t be so cocky because the drinking age is 18 years in New Sooner or later, just about eve ry college student does a little of York State. What good w ill liquor do you if you die from a water this type of research. T h e results are sometimes amazing. One stu­ shortage? dent, who had already completed a little personal experimenting with alcoholic beverages, recently went to the lib ra ry to continue M E M O TO T H E D E L L S ’ G O -G O G IR L : his research in depth. C O M M E N T IN G IN T E L L IG E N T L Y and th e q u a l i t y o f s t u d e n t s i t a t t r a c t s . W hile scanning some psychology journals, he came across an in­ Come, come. on th e B o a r d o f T r u s t e e ’ s p ro p o s e d T h e b u d g e t s h o u l d u l t i m a t e l y be d i ­ teresting account of some experiments conducted by psychologists b u d g e t r e q u e s t is l i k e t r y i n g to e v a l ­ r e c t e d t o w a r d m a i n t a i n i n g th e g ood at Princeton. f a c u l t y w e now h a v e and b r i n g i n g in M E M O TO P IC K E T S : T h e men at Princeton set up a maze and got some rats to run u a te th e f i s c a l needs o f th e N a tio n a l A e r o n a u t i c s and Space A d m i n i s t r a ­ m o r e o f h ig h q u a l i t y . If a d e p a r t ­ So fa r this year we haven’t heard about how w e’re No. 9 in the through it a number of tim es so the rats would rem em ber how they t i o n . W e a r e l a y m e n in f i n a n c i a l a f­ m e n t a s k s f o r m o r e m o n e y to b u y an Big Ten in lib r a r y volumes, No. 9 in student-teacher ratios or did It. Then they separated the rats into two groups. The first group f a i r s b u t we do h ave s e v e r a l o b s e r v a ­ e l e c t r i c t y p e w r i t e r w h e n i t c o u l d be No. 9 In health center fa c ilitie s . . of rats were fed a normal diet. The second group got fed a liquid tio n s . u s e d to h e lp f i n a n c e a n o t h e r f a c u l t y Does that mean you found out who No. 10 is ? that contains large amounts of calcium — m ilk. T h e re were no other R e p r e s e n t i n g a $12 m i l l i o n i n c r e a s e p o s i t i o n , th e b e s t i n t e r e s t s o f th e v a ria b le s . in la s t y e a r ' s r e q u e s t , th e bu d g e t p r o ­ U n i v e r s i t y a r e not b e in g s e r v e d . T hey were sent through the maze again. And the rats on the normal M E M O TO D U F F Y D A U G H E R T Y : p o s a l i n d ic a t e s t h a t h i g h e r e d u c a tio n We w e l c o m e a b u d g e t r e q u e s t th a t diet remembered more than the rats on the m ilk diet. p r o v i d e s n e a r l y $6 m i l l i o n f o r new Ju st because you’re not certain the team's going to the Rose Bow l, T he explanation had to do with axons, dendrites, synapses and is e x p a n d in g . So m u s t l e g i s l a t i v e ap­ don’t generalize about the whole school. I, for one, plan to spend p r o p r i a t i o n s f o r it . H o w e v e r , t h i s is a c a d e m i c s t a f f i n c l u d i n g 342 n e w f a c - M IL K . u l t y p o s itio n s .. T h e r a t i o o f f a c u l t y New Y e a r ’s Day at Pasadena. T he calcium from the m ilk, they said, was attracted to a chem ical h a r d l y in k e e p in g w it h G o v. G e o r g e Now, whether or not you decide to join me is another matter en­ W. R o m n e y 's s t a t e m e n t t h a t he h o p e s to s t u d e n t s need not n e c e s s a r i ly w id e n given off when a nerve Impulse Jumps from one nerve c ell to another. just because we have m o r e stu d e n ts . tir e ly . But, I hear there’ s plenty of room at the hotel where I ’m e d u c a tio n a l in s titu tio n s w ill " h o ld t h e T he calcium , in the form of positively-charged ions, a t t r a c t s staying. — —— — —— — —— - negatively-charged nerve im ­ l i n e ” on b u d g e t r e q u e s t s . W h y s h o u ld th e p r e s e n t MSU r e c o m m e n d a t i o n s L I B R A R Y I M P R O V E M E N T w i l l ge t pulses, and this attraction slows f o l l o w th e g o v e r n o r ’ s a d v i c e w hen th e a h e a l t h y s h o t in t h e a r m i f i t s down the nerve impulses. H u m a n it a r ia n is m P r o m p t e d D r iv e f a c t s i l l u s t r a t e an i n c r e a s i n g need $ 8 2 3 ,9 0 0 r e q u e s t is a p p r o p r i a t e d . R e­ T h e psychologists said that ac­ f o r m o re m oney? o r g a n i z a t i o n ha s a l r e a d y m a d e t h i s cording to t h e "re v e rb e ra tin g a c a d e m i c c e n t e r a b e t t e r p l a c e in c irc u it theory of m e m d ry," any H O L D IN G THE B U D G E T anyw h ere w h ic h to r e s e a r c h an d s t u d y , b u t it sort of stimulus worth rem em ­ n e a r la s t y e a r ’ s f i g u r e w o u l d b e h i g h l y c a n a l w a y s us e m o r e m o n e y to i m ­ T o the Ed ito r: PEANU TS bering automatically sets one of p r o v e e x i s t i n g f a c i l i t i e s . A l s o , $1.5 THÉS oiH*:' DiD I DEliKRATcIV i m p r a c t i c a l in v i e w o f m u s h r o o m i n g these negative impulses tra v e l­ m illio n is b e in g r e q u e s t e d to get LETTERS 60 COT 0? Mh uJM 10 B06 „ e n r o l l m e n t and c o s t s . E v e n i f th e le g ­ I would like to comment on your ing In a c irc le on a chain of m il­ LlNUé ABClT The " 6REAT PUMPKIN ? i s l a t u r e a p p r o p r i a t e s a l l $ 5 0 ,5 5 3 ,3 4 4 s t a r t e d on a b a d l y - n e e d e d $4 m i l l i o n a rtic le "H u m an ists P la n Blood lions of n e r v e ce lls . And the r e q u e s t e d , an e x p e c t e d e n r o l l m e n t o f a d d itio n . D riv e for V iet Cong.” Isomehovg T he Humanist Society w a s nerve impulse, Just like any oth­ 3 8 ,7 5 0 w i l l c u t s p e n d in g p e r s fu d e n t feel uniquely qualified for such prompted in the main by human­ e r moving thing, is subject to the t o $1,046, a b o u t $38 l e s s th a n t h i s C A P I T A L O U T L A Y f o r a n e w ad­ a ro le as it was I who was to laws of friction. itarianism and not by iconoclasm. y e a r's fig u re . m i n i s t r a t i o n b u i l d i n g is a p a r t i c u l a r ­ have made all those nasty state­ We feel that there are in eve ry T he rats that ran through the If M ich iga n a d h e re s to the p h ilo s­ l y c r u c i a l i t e m on th e p r o p o s e d bud­ ments. w ar those who, while they are ob­ maze, had set up a bunch of mem­ ophy that e v e r y q u a lifie d re sid e n t g e t. T h e o l d b u i l d i n g h a s c a u s e d T he blood drive Is s till within livious to any ideological con­ ory nerve impulses on how to get sh ould be a b le to get a col le ge e d u ca ­ w a s t e and i n e f f i c i e n c y f o r y e a r s and the realm of m ere possibility, flic t, nevertheless find them­ through the maze. The calcium tion, then the MSU budget m ust expand a d m i n i s t r a t i v e o f f i c e s , w h ic h s h o u ld its actualization being contingent selves the Innocent victim s of the in the m ilk slowed down these a c c o r d in g to the p opulation in c r e a s e . be housed u n d e r one ro o f, a re s c a t­ on many variables, the more Im ­ carnage wrought by w ar fought on LINUS IS R tA llV A idONDERRL Impulses and the rats In the sec­ Not only a r e m o re g rad u a tin g fro m t e r e d as f a r a w a y as th e M a n l y M i l e s portant of which are the as yet th e ir so il. It is our hope that the LITTLE 6 UY, AND I SHOULDN'T ond group forgot more than the high sch oo l e v e r y y e a r , but a la r g e r B u i Id in g . unattained cooperation of the In­ blood donated In such a drive INSULT HIS BELIEFS... u)HY DO ra ts in the firs t group. p e rc e n ta g e of them want to go to c o l­ P r e s i d e n t John A. H a nn ah s a i d la s t ternational Red C ro ss andclear- I DO TH 1N6 S LIKE THAT? would be used for those who have Eve n though the “ re v e rb e ra t­ le g e . E d u ca tio n is no lo n g e r r e s e r v e d F r i d a y th a t " w e a r e l e a r n i n g h o w to ance from the Department of Ju s ­ suffered these unfortunate m is­ ing c irc u it theory of m em o ry" f o r a p r iv ile g e d fe w . And with th ese l i v e w it h s i z e and g r o w t h . ” L e g i s l a ­ tice for such a project. takes of mass war. has since been discounted, it c h a n g e s com e in c r e a s e d c o s t s f o r ed­ tiv e a p p ro p ria tio n s p la y a v ita l p a rt The blood, If collected, is not would be interesting to see what u catio n al f a c i l it ie s and p e rso n n e l. in t h i s l e a r n i n g p r o c e s s . A ch a n g e to go to the F L N but Is to be Fu rth e r, I feel that the rep rin t­ would h a v e happened if fe r­ i n G o v . R o m n e y ’ s " h o l d th e l i n e " credited to the Units of the In­ ing of the following letter which mented grapejuice was substi­ A D I S T I N G U I S H E D F A C U L T Y de­ a d m o n i t i o n to e d u c a t i o n b u d g e ts w o u ld ternational R e d C ro s s within was sent by our society to the In ­ tuted for the m ilk in the experi­ te r m i n e s M ic h ig a n S ta te ’ s p r e s tig e b e an i m p o r t a n t s te p f o r w a r d . North V ie t Nam. ternational Red C ro ss, w ill c le a r ment. up some of the other more g la r­ ing m isinterpretations included in your a rticle! M O R E FR O M TH E L A D IE S 4Guts9 To Stand Up And Be Counted " T h e United States is now un­ dergoing a period of maximum " w a r " hysteria. Any individual or group at all adamant in its c ritic is m of our foreign policy T o the Ed ito r: they are old enough to know by finds itself the victim of red­ first-hand experience the heavy baiting and coercion. T h e re are On Oct. 5, there was a quota­ hand of sorrow that alcoholism s till, however, many who w ill tion on the front page, a quote by reeks out in too many homes and not “ fa ll into line,” the local Alan Schaffer which called the on the highways. Some others chapter of the Humanist Society WCTU a "s le e p y organization” are members because they know being one case in point. filled w i t h sleepy old ladies, there are health problems which some of whom wear sneakers. present themselves all too quick­ I would also re fe r to your a r­ ly to those who imbibe. We also ticles on page 2 entitled "D r in k ­ know that m orals reach a low ing Ju s t a Symbol until You’ re ebb w h e r e drinking prevails. " W e believe that under its present administration the U .S . looms as an ominous threat to world peace and humanism. Spe­ O u r S t u d e n t S p e c ia l Allowed” by Jim Sterba and’*But Doctors, scientists and social c ific a lly we feel that the U .S . is W here Is A ll theAtmosphere” by w orkers are aware of these prob­ K yle Kerbawy. We would like you to know that though our organization has sur­ lem s even more than we. B y the way, some of us are young e n o u g h to be wearing sneakers, but why what one wears the obvious aggressor in a need­ less war in South V iet Nam. How­ e ver, more basic than these be­ liefs is the fact that in any w ar For vived for 90 ye a rs the subject of know the real atmosphere of al­ L e t ’ s R a is e makes a difference, 1 r e a l l y there are those who, while com­ W e e k o f N o v . 1 -6 and fight for temperance in all coholism. We stand on the sc i­ mitted to neither side, suffer things is as old as the B ib le It­ couldn’t say. entific evidence that no one is from atrocities committed by self. It is an honor to belong to a You c a n be t h a n k f u l , Jim exempt from becoming an alco­ O u r M o r a ls both sides. group that has stood for p rin c i­ Sterba, that your drinking stu­ holic except the abstainer of all alcoholic beverages. To the Editor: ples which are not generally pop­ dents do leave town. Your prob­ ular and to have the “ guts” as lem s would increase indeed if I am writing to you concerning "B ecau se there have been of you young folks might term it, to they were “ under floor” so to M rs. Della E , C ro ss articles printed in the Michigan late so many patriots willing to stand up and be counted for speak. Flin t Federation State News recently to the fact ‘ bleed-in’ to give aid to the FREE: W e w ill o ffe r o n e something worth standing for. A s to M r. Kerbaw y’ s "a tm o s­ Wom en's C hristian Tem perance that students think they should wounded on ‘ o*'s4 {e«Lv | Some a r e members because phere” I hope you never have to Union have liquor available for pur­ that, In the name of International chase on the campus. humanism, we would be of most L a u n d ry b a g , FH fyw ith I feel this would be a terrible use by helping those Innocent vic­ mistake for it would surely bring tims of the horrors of war com­ an 8 lb . lo a d of L a u n d ry . more immorality of all nature mitted by the forces of the U.S. STATE NEWS M IC H IG A N STATI among those attending the Uni­ U N IV ItS IT Y versity and also give our Uni­ “ We had hoped that a blood H u rry ! versity a bad name. Let us try drive could be conducted by you to raise the morals of our state under our auspices on our cam­ J Member Associated P re ss, United P ress E D IT O R IA L 35 5-8252 of Michigan not lower them, pus. The blood is being credited C O «f* O P I R A T I O C O IM O t E H A T E O International, Inland Daily P ress Association, Gladys Bentley to the Red C ro ss units In North Associated Collegiate P re ss, Michigan P ress Charles C. W ells.................... Editor-In-Chief W ASH N D R Y C LEA N Richard Schwartz Managing Editor Swartz Creek Viet Nam to be disposed of in W A SH N D R Y C LEA N O n to Association, Michigan Collegiate P ress A s­ Jim Sterba ...................... CampusEditor any manner they see fit. 1 Protest, Too! soc ist Ion. V. cl* 4M day iaU,- L a r r y Hogg ............... Lind a M. Rockey m h h m w Editorial Editor Shorts Editor "Would you please advise us wlnter, and spring terms and twice weekly summer term by the students of Michigan of the efficacy of such a scheme A D V E R T IS IN G 3 55-8255 T o the Editor: State University. Second class postage paid at East Lansing, Mich. Arthur L a n g e r............... AdvertisingM aM ger I am writing this to protest end of the steps necessary for its actualization should it merit your your e d i t o r i a l s s b o u t the approval." A n n S t r e e t S u n s h in e C e n t e r Editorial and business offices at 341 Student Services Building, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Mich. B U S IN E S S -C IR C U L A T IO N P H O T O G R A P H IC 3 5 5 -8 2 9 9 35 5-8 31 1 W jC .T JJ, and I’ m not a member. M rs. Delilah Doctor Henry R . Blackledge 213 Ann Street Muskegon Heights President, Humanist Society M ichigan State N ew s, E ast L ansing, M ichigan T uesday, N ovem ber 2, 1965 0 In d o n e s ia n L e a d e ï S lip p in g JAKARTA, Indonesian’!— First Other Moslem organizations Army dislike for Subandrio bandrlo r e f l e c t e d Communist Deputy Premier Subandrio, sec­ and newspapers - Including one dates back long before the at- party policies, which were criti­ ond only to President Sukarno in owned by an army general - tempted coup. cal of the army. Indonesia’ s power structure, ap­ have picked up the PSI charges Subandrio also had his own In­ pears to be engaged In a desper­ that Subandrio secretly was hold­ . With no political affiliations, donesian c e n t r a l intelligence ate struggle for his political life. ing hands with the plotters. In Subandrio threw his support to agency, BPI, which spied on gov­ D a N an g B a tte re d Fo r F o u rth T im e A campaign for his removal the past few weeks, scrlbblings the Indonesian Communist party, ernment and army agencies. De­ from office seems to be gaining have appeared on Jakarta walls PKI, which was receiving backing mands are being made now that S A IG O N ( U P I ) “ - C o m m u n i s t V i e t C o n g I n f i l t r a t o r s momentum. connecting Subandrio with the from Sukarno. the BPI be removed from his M o n d a y n i g h t a t t a c k e d U .S . S eabee and M a r i n e de­ coup. In speeches and statements Su- supervision.__________________ Subandrio also is Indonesia’ s f e n s e s on th e D a N ang E a s t P e n in s u l a , t o u c h i n g o f f foreign minister and is regarded a f u r i o u s b a t t l e w i t h m o r t a r , m a c h i n e gun an d a r ­ • s the architect of the country’ s tille r y fire . campaign to c r u s h British- T he V ie t Cong w it h d r e w a f t e r a 4 5 - m in u t e c la s h . backed Malaysia and Its pro- It w a s th e t h i r d C o m m u n i s t a t t a c k in f o u r d a y s on Chinese Communist foreign pol­ M a r i n e u n i t s s t a t i o n e d i n th e Da N ang a r e a - - s i t e o f icy. t h e b i g g e s t A m e r i c a n m i l i t a r y c o m p l e x in V i e t N a m . Next to Sukarno, Subandrio, T h ree V C SAM S ite s D e stro ye d short, bespectacled and 50, is perhaps the most widely known Indonesian at home and abroad. Many considered him Sukarno’ s W e c o u ld S A I G O N OR—U.S. A ir Pilots reporting Monday likely successor. t e ll y o u Force and Navy Jets— some on the strikes said they But since the collapse of the operating as new "hunter- left one site in ruins and Sept. 30-Oct. 1 pro-Communist klller” t e a m s — silenced knocked the two others out coup - which had the professed three surface-to-air mis­ of action in 20 minutes aim of protecting Sukarno from sile sites Sunday In the air despite heaVy m issile and right-wing army officers - Su­ a t h in g defense ring set up by Rus­ conventional antiaircraft bandrio has come under heavy sians around Hanoi. fire 35 miles northeast of fire. He Is accused of having Hanoi. been sympathetic to the Com­ munist organizers of the coup. The Moslem political party PS1 has demanded Subandrio’ s o r t w o N ew Q u a r te r s R e le a s e d M onday ouster on the ground that the In­ M A K E H A Y W H E N T H E SUN S H IN E S — S tu d e n ts o f f - donesian people have lost faith W A S H IN G T O N ( U P I ) — A m e r i c a n s ge t th e f i r s t o f c a m p u s p r e p a r e f o r t h e i r ann u al h a y r i d e S a t u r d a y in him. The Moslems also charge t h e i r new s i l v e r l e s s c o i n s t o d a y . T h e g o v e r n m e n t is a t th e H i - w a y R i d e r s R an ch on E a to n H ig h w a y . that Subandrio has tried to pro­ r e l e a s i n g 230 m i l l i o n q u a rte rs — th re e -la y e re d tect Communists accused by the a b o u t T i c k e t s a r e $1 .5 0 p e r c o u p l e and a r e o n s a l e on th e ‘ ‘ s a n d w i c h ’ ’ c o i n s o f c o p p e r and n i c k e l . T h e new f o u r t h f l o o r o f th e U n io n . P h o to b y L a r r y F r i t z l a n army of plotting the coup. t w o - b i t p i e c e s , lo o k , f e e l and s o u n d m u c h l i k e th e The Indonesian army claims Chicago Wiretaps o l d o n e s and, b e s t o f a l l , t h e y s t i l l b u y 25 c e n ts to h a v e uncovered documents w o r t h o f Ic e c r e a m a n d c a k e . showing that the aim of the coup S o m e b a n k s g e t t h e m t o d a y , o t h e r s T u e s d a y , and was at first to ’ ’ sa v e " Sukarno s t i l l o t h e r s l a t e r in th e w e e k . by killing the so-called rightist M o ll F la n d e r s . In 1943 Revealed generals out to unseat him. Later, however, the coup or­ ganizers aimed to assassinate S ta n fo r d S e e k s B lo o d F o r R e d s Sukarno and putCommunist party leader D, N. Aldit in power, the S T A N F O R D (UPI)— A namese victims of Am eri­ NEW YORK (UPI)— A former «irmy intelligence agent said Sunday alleged documents show. group c a l l i n g Itself the can bombing raids. night his agency eavesdropped on the private conversations of many The same goes for S T U D Y *M A S T E R ’ G u id e s re v ie w , ’ ’Committee for Medical A n a t o l e A nt o n, 26, a prominent people who came through Chicago during 1943, including Tom Jones. O r M a­ a n a ly ze , and criticize. They supply bio­ Aid to Viet Nam” Monday graduate student from New M rs. Eleanor Roosevelt and scientists working on the atom bomb York who is co-chairman d am e B o v a ry . O r g raphical information on the author announced plans for a noon project. B o a r d H e a d Q u it s rally on the Stanford Uni­ of the committee, said the The agent, identified as Willis Adams, disclosed during a tele­ J u liu s C a e s a r. O r a sum m ary of characters,- often even versity campus Tuesday to group had contacted the In­ vision news special wiretapping "T h e Big E a r” — NBC that Army F o r S t u d y T im e H a m le t . O r T h e a ch ap ter by ch ap ter plot a n a ly s is . ask for donations of blood ternational Red C ro ss and intelligence crews "did a tremendous amount of wiretapping" Best of a ll, they're not boring, but are G re a t G a ts b y . O r and money for North Viet­ the American Red C ro ss during ‘ .‘ the latter part of 19 4 3 ." He indicated that his team of for advice. K y l e K e r b a w y , Bloomfield Romeo and Juliet. w ell w ritten, easy to read. That makes agents was part of a nationwide network using wiretaps for na­ Hills Junior, resigned Friday as O r a g re a t m a n y for better reports, higher grades. tional security reasons. president of Union Board for Adams, who Is now a private investigator In the Washington, academic reasons. of the other g reat Most STUDY*M ASTER’ Guides cost D.C., area, said his team was responsible for Illinois and Mich­ W i l l i a m A. (Bill) Zllmer, names in literature. just a dollar. There are over 135 titles to Y And You igan and parts of Indiana and Wisconsin. "W e had the Chicago hotels—practically all of them— wired. There was kind of an exchange of Information gleaned from wiretaps Green Bay, Wls., senior and former Union Board vice presi­ dent, was chosen to replace him. B e c a u s e w e 'r e STUDY* MASTER*— choose from . A v a ila b le at all leading book stores or w rite: STUDY*M ASTER, 148 Lafayette Street, N ew York, N .Y ( c o n t i n u e d f r o m pag e 1 ) bigotry on the one hand and athe­ between the military authorities and the civil authorities.” Kerbawy, who Is also assist­ the in -d ep th o u tlin e s you need to and out, but MAC was geared toward the Michigan farm er and ism on the other. And the success of the university. Its life, energy, Adams said his group monitored the conversations of many prominent people, the most prominent ofwhom wasM rs. Roosevelt. One of the most important assignments of Adams’ group was to ant campus editor of the State News, said he had found he did not have time to fulfill both posi­ master the M asters on your required reading list. STUDY* M ASTER small town laborer. character and usefulness, will essentially depend on the adop­ monitor the private conversations of atomic scientists doing pre­ tions and to study. One of the reasons farm ers tion of that medium cou rse." liminary work on the Manhattan Project, he said. . and small town workers have been more conservative socially, Admission of women was ini­ Kuhn says, Is that they have to tiated by both Institutions In 1870. get up much earlier than city •F e a tu rin g * The coeds at MAC studied ag­ dwellers. riculture and home economics. A secretary of the State Board Madelon L . Stockwell, thefirst • H ot P izza of Agriculture said at MAC’ s semi-centennial in 1905: woman at the U-M, studied lit­ • Foot Longs erature. Amanda Sanford of Au- "T h e brightest farm boys and born, N .Y., the U of M’ s first • S u b m arin es girls are being educated for the THE woman graduate, received a de­ farm . One of the most praise­ FO R D E LIV E R Y gree In medicine in 18 7 1. worthy lines of work being done MSU has e n c o u r a g e d non- C A L L PIZZAPIT at our agricultural college is the Michigan residents only recent­ training of young women in what pertains to themselves and others including d o m e s t i c economy, sanitation, nutrition, ventilation ly, but the on-going debate be­ tween U-M and the legislature over out-state— so-called “ for­ ED 2-0863 eign students"— started before and correct living, resulting In 1900. At that time an officer of 203 M .A .C . the American girl, unique, un­ the university maintained that: equalled, p erfect." "Foreign students have contri­ Samples from the 15 rules buted very greatly to the growth, written In 1858 for student be­ reputation and usefulness of the havior are: University, to swell the stream "T h e use of tobacco and other of attendance which has been so narcotics, being disapproved of potent in drawing from the legis­ under all circumstances, Is for­ lature those necessary appro­ bidden In any of the college build­ priations.” ings.' L e ss than 19 per cent of last "C a rd playing and other games year’ s MSU enrollment was from of chance are wholly prohibited.” out of the state and 24 per cent No similar regulations for Uni­ of U-M ’ s were "foreign.” versity of Michigan students at The state of Michigan at the that time are recorded. turn of the century was In the John D. Pierce, the first state U.S. "B ib le B e lt." The U-M’ s superintendent of public Instruc­ more liberal views stem partly tion and "father of the U of M " from drawing s t u d e n t s from once commented: "le s s pious" areas of the nation. "T h e re Is a medium between EV ER Y W ED N ESD A Y is 49r'*e D A Y D ig In to A l l O f T h e G o ld e n S n l i r t Ü E f S S C i* » V c-. C an Eat For P e r C u sto m e r ""Bring along your prospectors r 2820 E . Grand River Lansing, Michigan Phone 4 8 7-376 1 STEAKS-SHAKESSANDH ICHES T u esd ay, N ovem b er 2, 1965 4 M ichigan State N ew s, E ast L ansing, M ichigan Duffy Faces Up To Top Grid Ranking Dancing 6 nite-week >»e M E T R O LO U NGE featuring DONI WELSH and the The N E W S n N a t c h ! G r id M a c h in e S t ill T o p s SK Y LARK S Corner of Jolly & Logan * * * The Nation’s 10 Best * * * S ta te H a s N o P e e rs 12 minutes from MSU W -L -T P T S . AP P r e s s Standings W -L -T PT S. UPI Standings In U P I, A P P o lls JOIN THE You must be 21 (7-0) 481 1.) MICHIGAN STATE (7-0) 336 1.) MICHIGAN STATE (7-0) 294 2.) Arkansas (7-0) 457 2.) tie Nebraska “GRETSCH 3.) Arkansas (7-0) 294 3.) Nebraska (7-0) 432 K n ic k s T r a d e (5 - 1) 257 4.) Notre Dame (5-1) 4.) Notre Dame NEW YORK (UPI)— Mighty Michigan State opened the largest lead SET" 5.) Southern Calif. (4 -1-1) 136 5.) Alabama (5 -1 - (4 -1- of the season Monday in the voting for the nation’ s No. 1 major 6.) UCLA (4 -1-1) 104 6.) Southern Calif. J o h n n y G re e n ( 4 - 1- 1) 103 7.) Georgia Tech (5 -1 - college football team conducted by United P ress International. 7.) Alabama The unbeaten, untied Spartans, the scourge of the Big Ten, re­ 8.) Georgia Tech (5-1-1) 83 8.) UCLA (4-1- ceived 25 first place votes and 336 points (both high water marks F o r t h e A u t h o n t le F o r B e lla m y 9.) Texas Tech ( 6 - 1) 47 9.) Missouri (4 -2 - (5-2) for the year) from the UPI Board of Coaches to draw away from S o u n d o f t h o T im e s 10.) Missouri (4 -2 -1) 43 10.) Kentucky Nebraska and Arkansas, which were deadlocked for second with NEW YORK (UP1)— Walt Bel­ The Gretsch Folk Guitar is the lamy, who owns the fourth highest M IC H NORTHWESTERN 294 points. Nebraska, which held undisputed possession of second place last hands-down favorite on campus scoring average In National Bas­ week, narrowly squeaked by Big Eight foe Missouri 1 6- 1 4 to earn and at folk festivals. For ketball Association history, was S T A T E m i n u t e s 1 four votes for the No. 1 position and Arkansas of the Southwest Gretsch gives you the rich, traded Monday by the Baltimore Conference received five after drubbing Texas A & M 3 1-0 . Each resonant bass and the clear Bullets to the New York Knick­ ? I / O b ' 1 of the top three teams is 7-0 for the season. singing highs that only come erbockers for forwards Johnny TO P L A Y Michigan State, which edged Into the top spot last week by bouncing the work of skilled guitar makers. Green and Jim Bad News Barnes and guard Johnny Egan plus cash. Purdue, added 18 points to its leading total after throttling North­ At Gretsch we work with Bellamy, a 6-foot-ll-lnch cen­ q u a r t e r western 49-7. Duffy Daugherty’ s Spartans are almost assured of aged woods carefully chosen ter with a 27.8 career scoring y a r d s t o g o the Big Ten title and the Rose Bowl berth that accompanies it. for mellow resonance. Seasoned average, was said to be “ dis­ D O W N I_ 1 Fourth-ranked Notre Dame may have something to say about rosewood is used for fingerboards, couraged” about playing for Bal­ State’ s bid for a perfect season, however. The Irish, who drew molded to specially contoured timore. 257 points to hold their ground, tangle with the Spartans at South Action-flo necks to make Green, a former Spartan, was Bend on Nov. 20. fingering fast and easy. th e oldest Knlck In point of While the first four retained a semblance of order, the rest of Magnificent sound... a wider service, beginning his seventh the top 10 underwent changes. Florida, Louisiana Stateand Purdue, world of music... is yours when season on the club with a 13.0 ranked fifth through seventh lastweek, all nosedived after suffering you join the Gretsch Set. lifetime scoring average. The Knicks obtained the six-foot Egan losses. Purdue fell completely out of the ratings for the first time this season. from Detroit in 1963 but the Three newcomers— Alabama, Georgia Tech and Texas Tech— □ n iT S C H GUITARS former Providence star had not vaulted from the second 10 Into seventh, eighth and ninth positions, Fo lk • Classic { respectively. The biggest gain was posted by Texas Tech, which re­ The Fred. Gretsch Mfg. Co. | started a game for New York 60 B’way., B’klyn, N.Y. 11211 D ep’t. D -3 i' this season. ceived one first place vite and advanced all the way from 19th The 26-year-old Bellamy, a place. Please send me your Free folk j former Indiana University A ll- Southern California and U CLA, a pair of once-beaten once-tied guitar catalog. j America, had his w o r s t pro members of the Athletic Association of Western Universities, N am e_ season last year with a 24.8 each gained four places. The Trojans stepped up from ninth to scoring average. In his rookie fifth and the Bruins marched from 10th to sixth. A d d re ss. s e a s o n with the now defunct Missouri, whose loss to Nebraska was its second of the season, C it y - r Chicago Zephyrs, Bellamy av­ nevertheless clung to a«berth among the top 10 , slipping slightly S ta te . - Z ip C o d e . eraged 31.6. " from eighth to 10th. U s 1— Still the p re m ie r football power a c r o s s the An unusual feature of the top 10 this week is that five of the teams country Is Michigan State! Both UPI and AP major have played to a tie on one occasion. They are Southern Cal, UCLA, grid polls placed State ir the fir s t slot again after Alabama, Georgia Tech and Missouri. beating Northwestern, 49-7, Saturday^ HELD O V E R ! PO LLY PA N H EL SA Y S D u e T o T re m e n d o u s D e m a n d , SEA RCH S IG N - U P T O N IG H T Is A l l o w i n g Y o u 2 E x tra D a y s To S e n d In F o r Y o u r Q u e s tio n n a ir e . If Y ou W a n t To Be In O n T h e F u n , Y o u ’d B e tte r H u r r y ! R e q u e s ts M u s t B e P o s tm a r k e d N o L a te r T h a n M id n ig h t , N o v e m b e r 3 ,1 9 6 5 . S O R O R IT Y Definitely * N o t a Lonely Hearts Club! * N o t Oriented Tow ard s M atrim ony! * Fo r Fun Lo vin g M .S .U . Students Only! L o o k o v e r o u r q u e s tio n n a ir e d e s ig n e d b y te a c h in g p s y c h o lo g is t s w ith y o u in m i n d - t o find not o n e but F IV E G R E A T B A T E S J u s t fo r yo u . F o r m o re in fo r m a tio n an d y o u r q u e s t io n n a ir e , u n d e r no o b lig a tio n . T o n ig h t N o v . 2 -W o n d e r s H a ll R o o m 1963 ( 6 :3 0 -9 :0 0 ) Sand to: SEARCH, Box 630 SV W ed n esd ay, N o v. 3 - A k e r s Hall ro o m 1 9 6 4 ( 6 :3 0 -9 :0 0 ) • E a st Lansing, Michigan Our Computer In Boston T h u r s d a y , N o v . 4 -S tu d e n t S e r v i c e s B uild ing ro o m 309 ( 1 - 5 p .m .) Rem ember • • • w^tll flnH This is the same system •Name.» for you that you will enjoy. that was. first so s u c c e s s ­ Give it a try. It’ s only $3.00 F r i d b y N o v . 5 -S tu d e n t S e r v ic e s Building ro o m 309 (1-5 p .m .) ful in the Harvard and A ddress Deadline is 1 1 /3/65 at mid­ M.l. T. area. More recent­ night. Do not Include money ly’ at the University of when you send In this Michigan and Ohio State coupon. R e g is tr a tio n Fee $1.50 University. M ichigan State N ew s, E ast L ansing, M ichigan T uesday, N ovem ber 2, 1965 5 Spartan Football Yardstick S o c c e r C lu b C o u r t s N o . 1 R a t in g (7 Game Totals) N a t io n a l Louis. Regional play begins Nov. 19. T h i s enormous area talent time. The stadium holds 8,500 gives the Billlkens great bench people. Besides the importance of the strength, which Is one advantage The Spartan soccer field seats they have over State, Kenney said. 2,200 people, but extra seats will Show dow n IN D IV ID U A L S T A T IS T IC S T E A M S T A T IS T IC S Midwest berth, the game will de­ cide the conference champion and The Spartans have only four re ­ be Installed for the game. Two MSU OPP will leave one team with an unde­ serves. years ago. when St. Louis was In R U S H IN G TC YG AVG TD R US H IN G feated record In regular season In 1961 when MSU played St. town, fans were lined up In rows Y a r d s ru s h in g 1642 402 W it h B ills C . Jonas 115 586 5.1 5 5 7.4 play. State hasn't lost a game out­ Louis for the national champion­ along the sidelines and behind A p ls a 95 535 5 .4 9 Avg. p e r game 2 3 4 .5 side of tournament play since ship, the game had to be moved the goals. The Billlkens usually Laa 48 151 3.1 1 to the football stadium of the Un­ have a number of their own fans St. Louis beat it in 1962. Last R aya 17 125 7.3 1 P A S S IN G B y B O B H O R N IN G year they played to a 1-1 tie and iversity of Washington at St. along. Juday 44 91 2.1 2 Louis to seat all the spectators. Students need only their ID P a s s e s a tte m p te d S ta te N ew s S p o rts W r i t e r In 1963 State won, 4-3. C o tto n 20 54 2 .7 0 Even then, the game had to be card for admittance. The cost Is P a sse s c o m p le te d D. G a r r a t t 14 34 2 .5 0 The game the Spartan soccer Spartan Coach Gene Kenney held up for 30 minutes because $1 for adults and 50 cents for Y a r d s p a s s in g J. G a r r a t t 6 32 5 .3 0 team has been waiting for all Is expecting a "rip -sn o rtin g" fans were still buying tickets and children. Game time is 1:30 Sat­ 1 A vg . p e r game O th a rs 11 34 3.1 year comes Saturday. game. “ It will be the usual tough pouring through the gates at game urday. P e rc e n ta g e com p. UNIFORM Perennial powerhouse and top battle and breaks will be very P A S S IN G PA PC TD P C T YDS I n te rc e p tio n s Important since both teams are Juday 65 3 55 836 rival St. Louis comes to East 118 so evenly matched,” he said. Raya 2 1 0 50 13 Lansing for the top college game T O T A L OFFENSE of theyear.excludlngNCAAtour- “ Our forward line gives us CENTER N e t y a r d s g a in e d 2491 1363 COACH GENE K E N N E Y one advantage over them, but R E C E IV IN G PR YD S AVG TD nament play. W a s h in g to n 29 403 14.0 1 A vg. p e r game 355 194 to win the national champion­ their defense has been real rough Again this year it Is the battle this year, so It Is Impossible to Jo n a s 20 263 13.1 2 ship. : of the giants. tell if It will be a high or low A p is a 6 93 15.1 0 P E N A L T IE S Regardless of which team wins, P ro a b s tla 4 43 10.8 0 Currently the two teams are both will receive Midwest berths scoring game. In the past the Number games have been low scoring. Angal 2 24 12.0 0 regarded by most as the 1-2 for the NCAA tournament and it O F L A N S IN G Y a r d s lo s t “ We always get off to a bad O th a rs 5 23 4.6 0 : teams In the nation, and the o r- is very possible that they could : der will be determined Saturday. start against them, maybe be­ 3009 V I N E S T . have a rematch for the national S C O R IN G TD CK CP FG TP IN T E R C E P T IO N S : The winner also will be favored title In early December at St. cause we’ re a little excited, and B E T W E E N C L I P P E R T & HOMER A p is a 9 0-0 1 0-0 56 Number they play cool-headed ball. The C . Jones 7 0-0 1 0-0 44 Y a r d s lost boys will have to use their heads J U S T WEST OF FRANDOR Kannay 0 12-14 0 9 -1 6 39 and play to their potential be­ Juday 2 0-0 0 0-0 12 cause you can bet St. Louis will “ F o r All Your ■CALL- 0-0 P U N T IN G W a s h in g to n 1 0 0-0 ó 23 46 be ready.” Uniform N e e d s ” 4 8 5 -4 4 7 4 L o w th a r 1 0- 0 0 0- 0 6 N u m b e r o f p u n ts I n t r a m u r a l N e w s Kenney expects the Billlkens Y a rd a g e 851 1710 Raya 1 0- 0 0 0-0 6 M E N 'S to be Just as good, and probably A v g . p e r punt 37 37 Lae 1 0-0 0 0-0 6 better than last year, based on fr n lty B o w lin g 1 7:30 Wil Rebs-Delta Slg. PI their impressive record. They A lltp flV 6 p .m . 8:15 Scrofts-Evans Scholars 9:00 Akhllles-Akat have given up but two goals In their six victories an d have Th e R t. R e v . K ilm e r M ye rs 'Rose Bowl Bid No Cinch 1-2 5^AÎM.-Phl Gama Delta H IN G E S O N V O TE 9:45 Holmes 8W-12W scored 31 times themselves. 3 -4 D .U .-A .T.O , In the last six years, St. Louis T e a m P a d d le b a ll 5 -6 BetaTheta P 1-A .E .P 1 has won the national champion­ S u ffra g a n B is h o p o f th e The four-man teams in sports 8 :3 0 p . m . E p i s c o p a l D io c e s e o f M i c h i g a n such as paddleball and badminton ship four times. Last year they 1-2 Phi Sig. Kappa-Tau D. Phi were eliminated In the semi­ will compete' in the single elim­ 3 -4 Slg. Phi Ep.-D .T.D . final round of the nationals and B y R IC K P IA N IN In spite of the fact that both the against Iowa this Saturday. The 5 -6 L.C .A.-D elta Chi ination tournaments to determine Buckeyes and the Gophers have rest of the team, including left 7-8 Sigma Nu-Pl K. Phi the champions of the various that marked the first time they S ta te N e w s S p o r t s W r i t e r W ill sp eak W ed n esd ay E v e n in g been to the Rose Bowl more re­ tackle Buddy Owens, will see ac­ l e a g u e s . In each match, the had missed the finals in tourna­ If you are among those who have Touc h Fo otball cently than the Spartans, the final tion. doubles and singles players will ment history. N o v e m b e r 3 a t 7 :3 0 p .m . already made plans for a trip to T im e F ie ld I decision hinges on the vote of the meet the doubles and singles St. Louis h a s the greatest the R o s^Sb w l this season, opti­ Daugherty’ s discussion turned 6:00 Wivern-Wright conference schools. players of the same team. Each “ feeder" system in the country mistic Spm an Head Coach Duffy to State’ s rugged running com­ 6:45 McRae-McFadden In theory, even a fifth-place match won will count as one for soccer talent. Every week Daugherty has a few words of ad­ bination of right halfback Clinton 7:30 Red Doors-Duffwackers end 12,000 boys play in the sev­ vice for you. What he said, In effect, was team could represent the Big Ten, If the voters were so inclined. In Jones and fullback Bob Aplsa. 8:15 EM U-Em bers The two combined for five touch­ 9:00 Brutus-Dences point. The team that wins either both singles matches or one sin­ eral area leagues, and the B llll- 'T h e C h urch and S o c ia l Fe rm e n t” theory, the New York Mets could gles and the doubles match will kens draw their talent from these that you shouldn’ t count your rose downs in State’ s 49-7 victory 9:45 W .S.2-5 win the World Series next year. win the total match and will sources. The players are scouted buds before they’ re hatched, etc. over Northwestern last Saturday. T i m e F ie ld 2 R o o m 31 U n io n s p o n s o r e d b y C a n t e r b u r y Both seem unlikely. advance Into the next round of from the kid leagues through high “ Winning the Big Ten cham­ 6:00 Mlsfits-Condottlers II The Spartans are now con­ “ I’ ve never s e e n a runner play. school play. pionship doesn’ t assure the team 6:45 Brandy-Brinkley of going to the Rose Bowl,’ ’ he fronted with the task of beating break more tackles than Jones,’’ 7:30 SOC U-Toads Iowa and Indiana to win the con­ he said. “ He’ s got confidence now said. "T h is Isn't decided until 8:15 Bower-Montle the end of the season, when ath­ ference title and dumping tough that he didn’ t have last year. 9:00 Em bassy-Em erald letic directors from all the con­ ference schools vote for a rep­ Notre Dame f o r the national championship. "W ith a little crisper blocking 9:45 Holmes 4W-10W down field last week, Jones might T i m e F ie ld 3 r resentative to California.’ ’ “ We still haven’ t proved our­ have gone all the way several 6:00 Winshlre-Winchester It has always been the custom selves to be a great team,’ ’ tim es,” Daugherty said. 6:45 Cachet-Cavalier i DO N O T in the past to send the top Big Daugherty said. “ We still have Daugherty said that Aplsa is 7:30 McT avi sh-McC oy Ten team west, although com­ to answer a few more questions. “ Right now, we’ re a good team an effective first-down runner. 8:15 McDuff-McNab i plications can set In.' For ex­ “ We .doii't .want to make him -$jß0. Fen cllif-Fen rlr ample, if State shQuld lose one of with great opportunities. Let’ s into a ’ fancy-dan’ runner who 9:45 Sultans-Setutes Its remaining tw o conference hope the team makes the best of goes veering off to the side»-He T i m e F ie ld 4 games, while either Ohio State or them.“ goes right through the line for , 6:00 Woodbridge-Worst i Minnesota wins both its gam es,a Daugherty said that right tackle that needed yardage," he said. 6:45 McGregor-McBeth D IS T U R B tie would result._________________ Don Blerowlcz will m iss the game i F ly t o N e w Y o i k f o r L . . . b u s y r e a d in g a M o d e r n L i b r a r y B o o k CUT OUT, PASTE ON BO AR D , H AN G OR T A C K ON DOOR T h a n k s g iv in g U s e t h is s ig n w h e n r e a d in g ASMSU is sponsoring this non­ a n y m o d e r n lib r a r y b o o k profit service to students. lis t e d h e r e : (n e w title s ) □ A N N A K A R E N IN A Round trip between campus to New York □ by Leo T o ls to y ..............................................$ 2.4 5 O UR L A D Y O F T H E FLO W ER S by Jean G e n e t........................ $2.4 5 airports $59.50. □ C O M P L E T E P O E M S and SE L E C T E D L E T T E R S O F M IC H E L A N G E L O F lig h t s to N e w Y o r k : E d. by G ilb e rt & L m s c o tt .......................... $2.45 □ C O N F E S S IO N S O F N ovem ber 24; N o r th w e st A ir lin e s F lig h t 210Y D e p a r t M etro p o lita n F E L IX K R U L L by Thom as M a n n .........................................$2.4 5 3:00 P .M ., A r r iv e N E W A R K A ir p o rt 4:15 P .M . F o rty s e a ts a re □ S H O R T S T O R I E S (V o l. I I ) ava ilab le by Leo T o ls to y ...................... $2 .45 □ T H E A D V E N T U R E S O F N o r th w e s t A ir lin e s F ligh t 2 1 2 Y D e p a rt M etro p lita n A ir p o rt 3:30 A U G IE M A R C H P .M . A r r iv e John F. K e n n ed y A ir p o r t 4:53 P .M . T h ir ty -fiv e by S aul B e llo w ................................................ $2.45 □ P A R O D I E S —A n A n t h o l o g y s e a ts are ava ilab le. E d. by D w ig h t M a c d o n a ld ........................$3.95 ( c u r r e n t fa v o rite s ) N ovem ber 28:* N o rth w est A ir lin e s F ligh t 215Y D ep a rt John F. □ SW A N N 'S W A Y b y M arçel P roust .............................. $2.45 □ T H E SOUND A N D FU R Y , □ TH E T R IA L by Franz K a fk a. 1 $2.45 AS I L A Y D Y IN G K e n n ed y A ir p o r t 12:05 N o o p A r r iv e M e tr o p o lita n A ir p o r t 1:45 P .M . □ L IG H T IN A U G U S T b y W illiam Fau lkn er ....................$2.46 □ C O M PLETE T A L E S AND by W illiam Fau lkn er ....................$2.45 □ IN TR O D U C TIO N TO n * °-■ ra ^ a , i l a b 4 t v . W e t h e eue^JL s o f N g ^ r t f j - . v i * F f « j p C P ' S » ...«%.*« POEM S OF ED G AR .J M S by A lbert Camus. $2.46 □ D IA R Y OF A w e st A ir lin e s for lu n ch * □ OF HUM AN BONDAGE v YO m UtxtNG/— G m I oR lL □ LEA V ES OF GRASS $2.95 a by W. Somerset Maugham. . $1. 9 5 by Aim * Frank. $1.95 b y W all W hitm an ........................ C h a r te r e d b u s e s w ill tr a n s p o r t all p a s s e n g e r s b e tw e e n M e tr o p o li­ tan A ir p o r t and c a m p u s on b oth d a te s . B r in g t h is lis t to u s , w e ll T r a n s p o r t a t io n f r o m N e w a r k A ir p o r t to Y o rk C ity o r K en n edy g iv e y o u a n e x t r a s ig n . N e w A ir p o r t is a v a ila b le at e x tr a c o s t . Full p aym en t m u st a cc o m p a n y r e s e r v a tio n s , w h ich m a y b e m a d e % r .u v r Tr~ 5 A y * «je*» r e s e r v a tio n s m u st b e m a d e b y 5 :0 0 P.M ., W ed n esd ay, N o vem b er 3 . >•( > I n f o r m a t io n i s a v a ila b le b y c a llin g th e S tu d en t T r a v e l B u r e a u at 3 5 3 -0 6 5 9 , o r the A S M S U in fo r m a tio n d e s k at 3 5 3 -7 8 0 7 . C X M P U S B O O K 'S T O R E 2 S T O R E S -A C R O S S FR O M U N IO N , A C R O S S F R O M B E R K E Y T uesday, N ovem b er 2, 1965 £ M ichigan State N ew s, E ast Lansing, M ichigan Viet Visitors Explain University O f Saigon ’s Student Union The operation of University of said Nguyen Y h Due, vicep res- ion is often asked to support icy in Southeast A sia,’ * accord­ elected from each college with­ . hygiene, housekeeping, t u t o r • i.. . j l notes submitted by students, Due said. j ______ ' _ n 1 4 medical old m c e i t / Lstudent A n f dent of th e Medical Students a n d presi­ and n ra c l. in the university to coordinate them in academic subjects and Saigon's student union was ex­ ident of the unio external af- strike activities of workers in ing to Bob Borosage, East Lan­ A ssn ., c o n s i d e r themselves the Union’ s programs, he said. introduce them to technology and The lecture n o t e s are sten­ plained last week tt an eat-and- fairs. neighboring cities. sing senior and president of Pi " f r e e thinkers.” Under one of their programs, modern farm practices, like the cilled and printed on a mimeo­ run luncheon in the MSU student The union is the most power­ Due and four other of South Sigma Alpha political science graph machine, and then sold on Due, speaking f o r Thu and Viet Nam’ s most influential stu­ the union sends teams of volun­ use of fertilizers. union. ful association of student* in honorary, which sponsored their a non-profit basis to the student Dong, said that as free thinkers teer students to peasant villages A s a service to Saigon Univer­ The Saigon student union is an South Viet Nam, Due told mem­ dent leaders have been traveling MSU visit. they believe In "leading a moral to live with the people. sity students, the union compiles body at large. autonomous, politically active bers of M SU 's Student Boar i and to campuses all over the nation, An executive committee, or Due, a 27-year-old medical life,” but not in following the senate, administrates the union. The volunteer students attempt booklets for each college of the association which includes all of Louis Hekhuis, director f stu­ in an effort "to clear up mis­ student, Is editor of the Medical rituals of the Catholic or Budd­ dent activities. Due said the un­ conceptions about American pol­ Members of the committee are to teach the peasant families best and most complete lecture the university's 21,000 students, School Journal and a Hanoi ref­ hist faiths. ugee. Thu, in reply to a question He considers himself " a free raised by Jim Graham, Detroit thinker," aligning himself with Junior and Student Board mem­ neither the Buddhist nor the Cath­ ber-at-large, said that a college olic faith. education in Viet Nam costs about He said the only member of the $20 a year. group who considered himself The University of Saigon is the Catholic was Nguyan Anh Tuyet, largest university in Viet Nam. 24, a graduate student at the Un­ A total of about 5,000 students iversity of Saigon and past pres­ attend the other two Vietnamese ident of theCatholic Student Assn. universities. The only Buddhist is Tr an Tin Graham asked if anything un­ Tu , 32-year-old graduate student usual happened to them when they in economics at Van HanUniver- visited the University of C ali­ sity. fornia at Berkeley, and Due re­ The rest, Due, and Dang Thu, plied, ’ ’ Yes, we talked with mem­ 21, vice chairman of the Anti- bers of the International House. I Corruption Youth Confederation, talked with a Russian. 1 almost and DuongThien Dong, a 2 5-y e a r- screamed.” G REEN S T A M P S C o l l o q u i a P l a n n e d B y P la y in g N a t i o n a l s M A T C H th e S «. H S T A M P 1 O n C u r r e n t T o p i c s t'* :a K fIpi a ^ «’ oHr, i'-’flilV ;'-a ' 1 ^ pTji M '■ y ff* Students will be given an op­ The topic of the next discussion portunity to voice their opinions will be “ Birth Control on Cam­ on campus issues in “ Campus pus,” Coyer said. The date has USA.” not been announced. Y o u C o u ld ~ «IRE'S HOW TO PLAY: ★ ★ ★ "Student Protest Movements” will be the first topic in the student-sponsored c o l l o q u i a , said Bill Coyer, moderator of the M a y R e q u ir e Be The N ext lath tiff«« yov vtoH ytwt Nohoool you N rttetvt • Molth ih t SAH first discussion. The program is a part of the College of Social F iv e Y e a r s N A T IO N A L ilomp envelope contaimn§ ono N()THINC TO hoM• f*ont SAH Stamp. No pur- Science discussion series. i Noso netettory BUT! GIT TOUR B IG CoHoct tNo tap and baitam al an SA HStamp witK tNo tamo amavnt printtd an tham and win that amount al stamp» fR H MATCH TMf SAH STAMP FO O D S T O R E S Coyer said students will be given the opportunity to discuss F o r E n g i n e e r s MSU and national campus issues W IN N E R ! r SUP AT wth University authorities. A five-year course of study for Watch far tha Inttant Wmnen ' TNoy can bo rodoomod immodtataty IIIA TI0N A I t y n Htb i . Pikao affastiva The first discussion will be a master’ s degree may be re­ for tha amaunt al »tamp» paintad Btwrday, Na«, é. held at 8 p.m. Thursday in the quired of engineering students an tham. men’ s lounge of West Fee Hall. due to recent recommendation by Y o u Ju st C a n 't B e a t T h a t N a tio n a l M e a t Three MSU professors will the American Society far Engi­ give brief talks on aspects of neering Education. the Issue relevant to their field. "T h is recommendation results After the talks discussion will be from demands on the practicing U.S.D.A. Choica Baaf, Valua-Way Trimmad U.S.D.A. Choico Beof—Soloct Biada Cut thrown open to students, Coyer engineer for increasingly higher said. levels of professional compe­ tence,’ ’ said William K. LeBold, C H U C K “ The purpose is to give an academic orientation as author­ project coordinator of A SE E ’ s ities view the problem,” Coyer Goals of Engineering Education said. study. R O A S T S T E A K U.S.D.A. Choice Baal—Valua-Way Trimmed The three authorities in Thurs­ The four-year bachelor’ s de­ day’ s discussion will be Milton gree program would be retained Rokeach, professor of psychol­ for an "introductory” engineer­ ogy; Joseph Roberts, assistant ing degree, he added. professor of political science; Other recommendations in­ S IR L O IN S T E A K clude increased support for re-, OR CLUB and Jam es Legrand, assistant search, more experimentation at F a r m - F r e s h G o v .» , I n s p e c t e d (BONE IN).. . . . Lb. professor of police administra­ tion and public safety. the graduate level, and a more Hygrade's Brisket liberal education for engineers F r y e r s The discussion series was or­ ganized by graduate assistants in to better prepare them for new the College of Social Science. and varied responsibilities In CO RN ED B EEF In the future, graduate a ssis­ tants will work in a coordinating capacity with dormitory graduate modern society. LeBold predicted that by 1976, there would be 75,000 bachelor’ s Hunter's Spedali Hickory Smoked and resident advisors who will degrees, 40,000 master’ s de­ present topic Ideas from students grees and 6,000 doctor’ s degrees W hole .b 29 ^ Fresh, Loan, All Boof H A M BU RG ER SLA B BACPN to a committee, Coyer said. awarded in engineering. c Cul-tP t'°Y f°< - , i» 3 3 3>lbs. or Moro Lb. 4 9 £ Plu» 5 0 Proa Stam ps With Coupon Bo low Wholo, Half or First Cuts 5 9 P l a c e m e n t B u r e a u C H EC K a n d C O M P A R E N A T IO N A L'S E V E R Y D A Y LO W , LO W P R IC E S ! M o n d ay a n d T u e s d a y N o v. 8 a n d 9 Caterpillar T racto r Co.: all als, mechanics and materials science majors. Humble Oil and Refining Co.: 3 9 « Gold M edal 5 A 49* Kitchon-Tostod Fleur 120Z. all majors of the colleges of 2 3 Peanut Butter on Jif Croam y or Crunchy Surf Detergent Dsal Pack m ajors of the colleges of engi­ 1-LB 4-OZ. WT. neering and business (Dec. and A rts & letters, Business, Com­ • # JAR o o o o munication A rts, Social Science WT. BOX March grads). (Dec. and March grads), 2 9 « Jell-0 G e la tin & 9 |o o | Breast O ’ Chicken Light M oat Assorted Flavors )«4 L A C Chevron Chemical Co.:-Ortho Hunt's Catsup . 2 3 9 Chunk T u n a . . . Rich Tomato Flavor 14-OZ. éh-OZ. Michigan Blue Shield: account­ WT. WT. Division: all majors of the col­ ing and financial administration, BTIS. CAN leges of A rts and Letters, busi­ business law, insurance and of­ ness, communication arts, social 1-QT. K aro Syrup BTL ^b3 f Blue la b e l IS. fice administration, economics, Natco C o ffee. . 2 1 H aw aiian P unch. With That "S u n -U p " Flavor Delicious Red Tropical Fruit Drink WT. ,14-FL. OZ.' science (Dec. and March grads management, m a r k e t i n g and CAN CANS I only) and natural science majors. transportation, mathematics and Monsanto Company: chemical, statistics. 3 4 Sw ift'ning . . . . 3 0 9 Dm I Pack—All Purpp»« Shortening a u # A # Grape Juice . . . W elch's Refreshing W mechanical, electrical engineer­ Chocolate M ilk. • • Lockshoro Delicious i-ft. "3 A t Pan A m e r i c a n Petroleum QT. 8-R. OZ. ing, chemistry, physics, packag­ • CTN o o STL ing technology and all majors C orp.: geology, geophysics, phy­ sics, mathematics, and engineer­ l000 2 5 « Scott T is s u e Sf 12 W hit# or C alaiad Bathroom Tissue ■ * 1-QT. of the College of Business. 2 4 9 Tomato Juice . . _ Garden Froth Healthful ing majors with geology back­ M argarine . Good Luck Goldon Yellow 14-H. OZ. 1-LB . Union Carbide Corp.-Nuclear ground. S U M M E R EM PLOY­ WT. CTNS. o CAN Division: biochemistry, biology, M ENT: Juniors, seniors, and c h e m i s t r y , mathematics,phy­ above in physics, geology, math­ 7-n v 1-LB. 3 7 « Facial T issu e s_ _ _ *Sf ■2 3 Scotties, W hite or Colored | | d | * 2 9 W heaHes. . . . . . mm mm Breakfast of Cham pions sics, statistics, metals, mechan­ Pum pkin P ie s. Pot Rita Frosen Mines or 1-LB. 2-OZ. 200-CT. PRO. ics and m a t e r i a l s science, ematics and engineering. 4 -O Z . • WT. PRO. Roadway Express, Inc.: gener­ l|0 t • WT. m chemical, electrical and mechan­ al business, management,, mar­ Hunt's C a tsu p . 2 Hickory or Pizza Flavored 14-OZ. ical engineering majors. Lipten Tea Bags. Brisk Flavor W 100 WT. keting and transportation admin­ M eat Pies^iir.,6.“ '. . Banquet Frozen 8-OZ WT. CT. BTIS. istration (Dec. and March grads). o o MI o o oMCO N o v e m b e r 9: Rohm and Hass Co.: chemis­ 19« M iracle W h ip . K raft's Fam oRi S a lad Dressing JB ttttC try. C ra ck e rs.. . . . . A.B.C. Saltlno Del Monte Cream Stylo or Wholo Kernel W Golden Corn . . . . 1-LA. WT. Abraham & Straus - Division Tacoma Public Schools: ele­ W Pork & Boons S* 1-OZ. WT. CAN o o BOX of Federated Department Stores: mentary openings for all special •Wl ♦H, ¿if. the ,c o l l i e s ,, y^catltw^. jan a lo r % •V . o'-C r ■■ s -a . ’ ’ Baby Feeds. . . . « 2 5 Pie Crust M ix MefctfclfiAr htYdmdtf • • * * A rts & Letters, Business, Com­ March grads), social work, edu­ munications A rts, Home Eco­ cational psychology; counseling • • • » » nomics and Social Science (Dec. and guidance. and March grads). irrv ffA y rru v .iii'J -tr N A T IO N A L C O U P O N N o v e m b e r 9 a n d 10: M WITH THIS COUPON n i l WITH THIS COUPON H ea v y W ith Ju ic e Applied Physics Laboratory - 2 5 EXTRA om sn STAMPS The Johna Hopkins University: E .l. duPont deNemours & Co., 5 0 EXTRA ohhn STAMPS With OurchaM ef Any 3-lb. B«f or Men el With Purebate of Any FLORIDA electrical and mechanical engi­ Inc.: chemical, mechanical, elec­ neering, mathematics and phy­ trical engineering, metals, me­ APPLES VICKS PRODUCT ItiA n r thb coupon at National Hod Rodoom this coupon at Notional Pood sics majors. chanics and materials science, Storoc. Coupon ■>(*** Saturday, .Nov. S. Storoc. Coupon bpiroc Saturday, Noiq 4. O R A N G E S Chebron Oil Co.: geophysics & geology. County of Los Angeles: civil chemistry, physics, mathemat­ ics and packaging technology. The Standard Oil Co. of Ohio: accounting, all majors of the » U ' i v i V A T t | J ’tT T T l f k H l l gpUem ? ol A n a &,Leuers,<',o;m- — - ■“ Dow Corning Corp.: chemical, munication Arts, Business and physics, chemical and mechani­ Social Science (Dec. and March cal, electrical engineering, ac­ graduates), chemical engineer- I counting and all majors of the lng, mechanical engineering, ag College of Business (Dec. and economics and agronomy. March grads). Union Carbide Corp.: chemis­ Goodman Manufacturing Co.: try and physics, chemical engi­ mechanical and electrical, met- neering. M ichigan State N ew s, E ast L ansing, M ichigan T uesday, N ovem ber 2, 1965 f N .Y . K la n L e a d e r K ills H im s e lf A f t e r E x p o s e READING, Pa. fl— The body tivltles as grand dragon of the 2 1, described by police as Frank- Burros, who was visiting him In a copy of the Times and brought houser said he ran out of the of Daniel Burros, Ku Klux Klan KKK In New York State, killed houser’ s girl friend. Reading, had been worried F r i­ it back to the apartment. room to telephone for help. official who killed himself when himself Sunday with two shots All three, as well as Burros' day about the expected publica­ Rotella told police he asked Rotella, who had followed Bur­ his own Jewish heritage was re­ from a 32-caliber pistol, a few parents, were in seclusion Mon­ tion of the Times article, writ­ whether the article were pub­ ros, said Burros appeared dazed, vealed, was claimed Monday by minutes after reading an article day, their whereabouts a secret. ten by McCandlish Phillips. He lished, and Burros replied, " I but put the pistol to his temple, his grlef-strlcken parents. In the New York Tim es revealing Burros* parents declined to said Burros told him he had haven't read la yet.” Burros fired again, then collapsed. George Burros, In his 70s, and his Jewish background, police make any comment In two brief threatened to kill both Phillips flipped the paper onto a bed, his wife, Esther, arrived here said. encounters with newsmen at the and a policeman who had ac­ Rotella said, and it landed with from New York City Monday. They identified the body of Dan­ iel, 28, their only son, just be­ City Hall and at a local funeral Burros’ death took place In parlor here, but police describ­ the apartment of Roy E. Frank- ed them as grief-stricken. The companied the reporter during an interview Thursday, In New York, If the article were pub­ a four-column headline showing on the front page: "State Klan leader hides secret of Jewish No Mail (continued f r o m page 1) fore the start of an autopsy that houser J r ., 25, also named by Burros Indicated the body would lished. origin.” groups, chartered groups used was expected to confirm the pre­ the House committee as grand be cremated. Frankhouser said he told Bur­ Burros yelled, "T h is will de­ campus mail service for mass liminary police finding of sui­ dragon of the Klan In Pennsyl­ Police sources said the par­ ros he was "c r a z y to threaten stroy m e,” and ran to Frank- publicity mailings, "destroying cide. The father is a retired ma­ vania. Present then were Frank ents told them Daniel had been a cop,” and B u r r o s replied, houser’ s room, Rotella related. the efficiency of the system ," chine operator. Rotella, 28, New York City, iden­ away from home for more than "W ell then, I’ ll have to kill my­ Frankhouser said Burros be­ he said. Burros, named by the House tified as a New Je rse y Klan a year, and they had been una­ se lf." gan k i c k i n g the f u r n i t u r e , An evaluation of these mass Committee on Un-American A c - leader, and Regina Kuplszewskl, ware of his connection with what Saturday’ s Tim es did not con­ screaming, and raving, " I have mailings and of the means of they termed "un-Am erican” or­ tain the article and Burros seem­ to kill m yself.” sending out publicity Is needed, ganizations until July, 1964. ed relieved, Frankhouser said, Then, he said. Burros grabbed Hekhuis added. This apparently referred to but later began to worry again. a pistol from the dresser and Ever since the mall policy Burros’ reported memberships Sunday morning Burros bought shot himself in the chest. Frank­ excluded them, major govern­ in the American Nazi party, and ing groups and other large stu­ the National Renaissance party, dent organizations have exper­ a right-wing group. ienced hardships, according to Zippity Do-Da . . . Zippity Day . . . They said they first learned of his Klan affiliation about five weeks ago. M u s i c G r o u p s H o n o r e d Delta Omicron, the only pro­ fesslonal Music Fraternity for John Mongeon, president of MHA and Fairfax, Va., senior. “ It is impossible for us to The Burros couple told police fessional music sorority on cam­ Women at the triennial confer­ mail out the minutes of our they did not like Daniel’ s In­ pus for three years, is already ence this summer in Bedford, Pa. meetings, agendas, reports and N a m e B ry a n A s N e w volvement with such groups, but could do nothing about It. They said they, did not know feeling the spur of competition "Knowing we were going to so on, and this has hampered our from Sigma Alpha Iota, a music have competition this fall started communications a great deal,” sorority j u s t ccflonlzing t h i s us improving the sorority last Mongeon said. A s s t . B u s in e s s D e a n The C o l l e g e of Business, National Association of F o o d where Daniel had been living for the past year, but the father said the son had been working for a printing firm. term. y e a r," Carolyn Woolpert, Grand Delta Omicron received the Rapids sophomore, said. most Improved award In competi­ Delta Omicron members now tion with 48 other chapters of the tutor students In music, usher at He said he spoke for all ma­ jor governing groups on campus. Frankhouser told police Sunday ¿ M IC H I G A N MSU’ s second largest college, Manufacturers. Delta Omicron International P ro - concerts, hold musicales month­ has a new assistant dean for un­ Bryan said he was happy with ly, and give receptions for facul­ D f H ...I Ì I T t 1 ty members after recitals. A --- 4eS-7St1 «m a “ L » MI-SM9 .. dergraduate student affairs an­ the appointment and looked for­ Sigma Alpha lota is the only Y AT l:20-4:00-< 3:40-9:30 nounced Alfred L , Seeley, Col­ ward to working with the stu­ lege of Business dean Monday. dents. music sorority having open rush “Superb, M Bk Stanley E . Bryan, management A graduate of UCLA and In­ this fall. Delta Omicron will not M a g n i f i c e n t ! " ^ \ professor, has been named to diana University, Bryan was an rush so Sigma Alpha lota can —Radbook 'replace Assistant Dean Edward associate professor of general fulfill its membership require­ A , Brand. business at MSU from 1949 to ment. Both sororities aim to "T h e Board of Trustees did 1952. He taught business policy improve the standard of profes­ ***TOMORF o w * * * not act on the change at its Oc­ and production at the University sional musicianship on the cam­ LADIES DAY Only 50$ tober meeting,” said Seeley, "but of Washington from 1952 to 1956. pus. FROM 1:00 to 6:00 P.M. all the professors have been noti­ Bryan returned to MSU In 1956 LAST 3 DAYS! Not To Be Outdone fied and the board will make the as a professor of management change retroactive at its next and has served on the MSU B ra ­ 75$ to 5 : 3 0 - Eve. $1.00 m eeting." zil project since his return. C AM PU S: Feature Brand said the change would ' T H E A T R E= 1:0 0 -3:10 -5:20 -7:30 -9 :40 2 YEARS ON BROADWAY allow him to devote full time to H 2 -M 4 4 -- teaching and research In the field of marketing and transportation, x c itin g A d u lt Entertainm ent! his major field of interest. "T h e area needs more work,” he said. “ I have written one book on the subject and have another one started.” 'S t o p T h e W o r ld ’ A t M S U ljauurueerCHns cenarrievev-DtmBOGaroe JOSEPH6.16VID6 *tsenrs Besides teaching and writing, "Stop the World— I Want to company he re-enacts his life In for "Stop the World” are by Brand said he would be doing Get Off,” the British musical the turning circus world. L e s l i e Bricusse and Anthony research In cooperation with the hit that earned rave reviews while Warner established himself In Newley. on Broadway from 1962 to 1964, the legitimate theatre in his first show, "Hold It.” S i n c e then Also appearing In "Stop the will be a special lecture-concert series attraction Wednesday. The he has had roles In "W ish You W prld" are: Dana Haskell, Judy Wlfey, Aranetta Marte, Michele T ru c k S t r ik e s performance will begin at 8:15 Were Here,” "Damn Yankee,” It’s The Motor Scooter Way p.m. in the Auditorium. "And Bells Are Ringing,” " C a r ­ C o n a w a y , Mara Joyce, Jane C r o s s in g C oed Stuart, Meredith Pogue and Judy Jackie Warner, who has been nival,” "Irm a La Douce,” and Friday "CASANOVA '70’ In show business since childhood, "W ild cat." He also acted in "A ll Jenson. An MSU coed was injured Mon­ is the director and plays the For L o v e " and"Happy as L a rr y ” day morning when she crossed in front of a bus near McDonel principal role of "Littlechap,” under Burgess Meredith. a cirrus clown. Warner also has directed sum­ hall and was struck by a p.ick- The stage is a one-ring circus, mer stock productions of "B orn C o e d In F a ir C o n d it io n up truck. M ary R .C rltelli, Warren soph­ and the plot concerns the clown's search for a new act. His own Yesterday,” "G uys and Dolls,” "Operation Madball" and "W ish A 22-year-old MSU coed, found unconscious In an East Lansing hind Evergreen Street, about 1 - 1/2 blocks north of campus and S T EP O U T FR O M omore, was taken to Olln Memor­ life and aspirations suggest the You Were Here.” less than half a block from the ial Hospital where her condition is reported as satisfactory._____ act, and together with the circus The book, music and lyrics alley Sunday, was reported In fair condition Monday at Spar­ East Lansing police station. TH E CROW D Prof Joins War On Poverty row Hospital. When police arrived, on a tip Hospital officials said Jeanne from an anonymous caller, M iss L . Mayhew, of 130 Oakhill, was Mayhew was found with a laundry responding to treatment but was bag beside her. suffering from amnesia. She was found In the alley be- Police said she regained con­ Daniel Kruger, professor of pany is preparing a comprehen­ sciousness long enough to give labor and Industrial relations sive compilation of mathematical her name and address but It was has been named to a 14-man task force to review the U.S. Employment Service’ s role In the war on poverty. F AC U LTY ACTS tables. The advisory board will deter­ mine the scope of material in­ cluded in the book. 4-PointersD ine The President’ s A ll-A Banquet not known why she collapsed. NOW . . G L A D M E R FEA T U R E A T 1:0 5-3:10 Secretary of Labor W. Wil­ De skin’ s responsibility will be will be held this evening In the 5 :15 -7 :2 0 -9 :2 5 p.m. lard Wlrtz recently announced in the field of algebra. union for students who received perfect grades last spring term. SfVMARTSJ the appointment of Kruger with Fram e, president of Pi Mu RROOUCUONS 13 others. Epsilon n a t i o n a l mathematics The banquet will begin at 6p.m. rSAI ROHMERST H E A number of professors of The task force, according to Secretary Wlrtz, will consider honorary, will speak this fall at installations of new chapters at mathematics attended the Ann Arbor Combinatorial Conference In Parlors A, B and C after a 5:30 reception. Of the more than 400 students with 4.0 grade aver­ FAC E measures to Improve the Em­ the University of Florida, the ployment Service as an agency of manpower, e d u c a t i o n and State University College of New York at Fredonia, St. Johns Un­ at the University of Michigan Oct. 2 1-2 3 . ages, about 220 have accepted OF FU M ARCHO _________ TECHNICOLOR* TECHN*SCQPE* The w e r e W, E . Bonnice, training in thepoverty war. Find­ iversity and the University of Branko Grunbaum, L.M . Kelly, & :"v 'v 'v 'v ''‘ ings a re scheduled to be sub­ Maine. E . A . Nordhaus, J.R . Reay and mitted by Jan. 15 , 1966. Kruger Joined the MSU faculty W. E . Deskins, professor of B.M . Stewart. PROFESSIONAL In 19 57 as an associate profes­ mathematics, has been appointed sor. He was appointed to the rank of professor July 1, 1963. to the Advisory Board of the Chemical Rubber Co. The com- M SU l* t ;r i u t i o R a l BROADWAY J , S . F r a m e , professor of p re se n ts . . . CAST mathematics, addressed theUni- versity of Toronto Mathematics Colloquium Tuesday on the topic TOTE I’ritif! fc W r iw iC F ... ) Oil II lit VAI EH ... "Continued Fractions and the Stability of Linear System s.” ; ’M IIL L lAN T. HILARIOUS?1: ra il \ E l E H ... Jor/irt ! S W T H E W b lJ P IW R T B R E T O F F ! A L O v T c H Â *À D S r — N Y Journal Amartcan piprmté Tilbvæ JOSEPH E LEVINE PONTI V A D W rS C W O £ K^STRQIANNI USI « E i® AT 7:00-10:05 Book. Music and Lyrics by S te p U p T o O rd e r A BRICUSSENEWLEY LESLIE ANTHONY Y u m m y Fish sa n d w ic h S ta irm g Jackie W arner C o ve re d W ith .T a s ty T a rte r S a u c e F r o m . If Tonight: Tuesday, Nov. 2 S P E W ed n esd ay, N o v. 3 C I A L 8 :15 p .m . jjiP P u r T H n n l Storta Friday -Color : A T ft 45 ONLY' Matinee: T oday, Tuesday- »i Fairch ild 3 P .M . u in v n a n io h t o m m R e s e r v e d S e a ts : $ 4 .5 0 , $ 3 .5 0 , $ 2 .5 0 M e D o ld ß C AM PU S ■FR, DAY' AND HOW T h e a tre « 50$ r e d u c t i o n to M SU s t u d e n t s O n S a le a t U n io n T i c k e t O f f i c e G o ld e n A r c h e s •Th« T H I Ä T R t — K n a c k . . . to g e t it ’ i A d m i s s i o n : 5Q d I r T uesday, N ovem b er 2, 1965 Q M ichigan State N ew s, E ast L ansing, Michigan^ S E L L IT F A S T - R e n t It T o d a y - C a l l 3 5 5 -8 2 5 5 with a A u to m o tiv e CORVAIR SPYDER 1S>04 Convert - ible. Maroon with white top. automatic A u to m o tiv e transmission, 5 brand E m p lo y m e n t TE M P EST, l96'3‘ convertible. V -6 D ELIVERY BOYS wanted. Make from $1.25 up to $3 per hour. tions. E m p lo y m e n t LUNCH HOUR waitresses. E x - LIVING ROOM suite occasional cellent pay and working condi­ Apply In person, Teak- F o r S o le chair, lamps, tables, chrome kitchen set and stroller - ail in P erson al BUB6L~2 M A K E S no f a n c y claims. Just settles them. Auto, fire, boat and home insurance, Who’s Whose Pinnings new tires. Good top. Call 882- Apply after 5 pm. In person to 220 Albert. Representing All Barbara Hook, Midland sopho- , Wire wheels. Warranty. Call good condition. PhoneIV 9-3971. lowcost 26 Varsity Drive-In. ED 2 -6 5 17 .2 5 wood Lounge, 3602 S. Logan. 26 W ANT AD 487-3220 after 6:30 pm. 27 7407. 25 American and Home. C25 more and Delta Zeta to John C LER K -T Y P IST , ability in math TRIUMPH 1964 T R -4. Excellent MEN. WORk one or two terms C6RVA1ft" 1961 Monza ClubCoupe, helpful. Excellent working con­ FOR WEDDIMj and practical A P P LES, DEER hunting special) Buege, Midland junior and Delta automatic transmission, new condition. O v e r d r i v e . 18,000 this winter. Even If you’ ve grad­ McIntosh, $1.89 bushel. Fancy Chi. ditions. Five-day work week. shower gifts, see A C E HARIV tires. Black color, red bucket m iles. Black. Radio. 355-2924 uated and waiting for the draft. large mum plants, $2.7 5, Fresh Apply personnel office, Michi­ Where'S s e l e c t i o n s , 201 E. • a u t o m o t iv e or 372-3799 . 24 Bartenders, busboys, chair-lift C i d e r d a i l y , 59$ g a l l o n . E ngagem ents seats. Always lots of compacts gan National Bank, 4th floor, Grand River, across from Un­ • EMPLOYMENT at OSBORN AUTO, INC., 2601-7 VOLKSWAGEN 1963 Sunroof. Ra- operators, ski patrol, kitchen Michigan National Tower. 26 ion. Phone ED 2 -3 2 12 . C PRINCES FARM M ARKET, W. help, desk clerk. Also GIRLS, Gwen Victor, Detroit senior to • FOR RENT E , Michigan. 027 dlo, heater, low mileage. $1,095. GAS DRYER and washer, F rig i- Grand River, at Okemos Road, we n e e d waitresses! Write EARNINGS ARE unlimited as an Jay Gampel, Detroit graduate • FOR SALE CO RVETTE 1963 Fuel injection, YOUNG’ S P O N T I A C , 147 W. Avon representative. Turn your daire. New! Capehart T V 2 1 " , 3 3 7 -2 34 3. ’ 28 Boyne Mt. Lodge, Boyne Falls, student at U of M. • LOST & FOUND Glen green. Clean and sharp. Grand River, Wllliamston. 24 free time into $ $. For appoint­ metal storage cabinet,, house­ BONNE B E L L Cosmetics. Ten- Judy Dallaire, Grosse Pointe • PERSONAL Michigan. 25 IV 2-3136 . 24 VOLKSWAGEN, 1961. Excellent BUSBOYS! P A R T -fü vlÈ to work ment in your home, write M rs. hold items. 332-0 515. 25 O-Six Lotion. MAREK REX ALL junior and Delta Zeta to Ed • PEANUTS PERSONAL DODGE, 1960 2-door, radio, heat- condition, recent tune-up. Call Alona Huckins, 5664 School St., ST E R E b CARTRIDGE S h u r e . DRUGS, 301 N.Clippert at Fran­ Christian, Grosse Pointe junior • REAL ESTATE 489-5895 after 5:30 weekdays. lunches 10 am. - 2:30pm .,M on- dor. Free gift with this ad. 24 at Wayne State University. er, one owner. Call IV 4-2896. Haslett, Michigan or call eve­ M 7-N21D. T V . c h e a p . Men’ s • SERVICE 1411 Lenore, Lansing. 25 day-Frlday. Meals, uniforms, After 6:30 pm. 26 nings, F E 9-8483. C24 suits, sizes 37-40 . Call 3 3 7 - AT+ENT'lON Social Chairmen, Diane Gronat, Detroit junior • TRANSPORTATION plus $1.50 per hour. Call City VOLKSWAGEN 1961 sedan. Must 2047. 25 clip and save this ad. It’ s your to Howard Becker, Chicago, 111. FI AT 1^63 Roadster. White. New Club of Lansing, 484-9233, ask • WANTED black top. Radio, heater. Excel­ sell. Radio, excellent condition, F o r Rent GUNS FOR SA LE or Rent, by ticket to th e wildest s o u n d senior at Northwestern Univer­ for M r. Brown. 25 $550, Call 489-4875 after 6 pm. TV R EN TA L, $7 per month, ln- day, w e e k or season, KEN­ around. THE ESQUIRES. 351— sity. lent condition. Must sacrifice. D E A D LIN E 25 EVENING COOK, Male or female. cludlng stand, free service, de­ NED Y’ S HOBBY SHOP, 1420 5180. 25 Call 355-9420. 27 Uniforms, m e a l s , furnished. S e rv ic e 2 p.m. one c la s s day be­ FORD 1965 Galaxie '500’ con- VOLKSWAGEN 196$, only $1,695. livery. Call State Management, Woodbine. Phone IV 9-1165. 32 Company benefits. Apply In per­ S E X fore publ ic a tio n . vertible. 2,800 miles, automat­ Low mileage, extra clean. 1962 332-86 87. 29 TRI POWER carbs and manifold. THESES PRINTED, Rapid Serv~- son- H O W A R D JOHNSON’ S, ic, radio, heater, power steer- OLDSMOBILE *88 ’ convertible. 3224 E, Saginaw. 25 B IC Y C LE R EN TA LS, storage, Original *65’ GTO. fit any 389 "T h e College Student and ice. Drafting supplies. Xerox C a n c e lla tio n s - 12 noon one One owner, $1,395. FORD 1965 sales and services. EA ST LA N ­ copies. C APITAL CITY BLU E­ ing, safety panel. Call L e s mill 1961-1965. Best offer. 3 5 5 - the New Era In S e x ." c la s s day before p u b lic a tio n Gallagher, IV' 2-0610, or IV c u s t o m 2-door, 6-cylinder, tlSSU'E TECHNICIAN tor hospit- SING C Y C L E , 1215 E . Grand 0499. 25 PRINT, 221 South Grand. 482- standard transmission, $1,895. al laboratory. Full-tim e posi­ 5-7212. 25 River. Call 332-8803. C MOVING. MODERN end tables, Union Ball Room, 8 p.m., 5431. C25 SIGNS FORD SA L ES, 162 W. tion with excellent salary and PHONE FORD 1961 2-door hardtop, good employee bènefits. Contact P er­ chrome breakfast set, uphol­ Thursday, November 4th. A C C I D E N T p RQb LEM ? C a ll Grand River, Williamston. 10 Apartments Refreshments s e r v e d . KALAMAZOO ST R E E T BODY 3 5 5 -8 2 5 5 shape, new tires. 217 Madison, minutes East of MSU. 655-2191. sonnel Department, St. Law­ stered chairs, odds and ends. B EA L ENTRANCE. One or twp Saturday, Sunday, 9 - 4 . 801Glen- Sponsored by the Pre-Med SHOP. Small dents to large Grand Ledge, 627-2660. 24 rence Hospital. 26 RATES C25 men for first floor apartment Club and the College of wrecks. American and foreign FORD 1961 Galaxie convertible. VOLKSWAGEN 1959. Excellent DRIVER FOR morning delivery, haven, East Lansing. 26 for four. Call 332-0939. 24 Human Medicine. Speaker: cars. Guaranteed w o r k . 489- 1 DAY............ $1.50 Low mileage, V - 8. Automatic. 8 -12, 6 days weekly. Apply Jon GIBSON B 2512 N li string guitar mechanical and physical condi­ WANTED ROOMMATE for win- dr. Max Levine. Professor 7507. 1411 E . Kalamazoo. C 3 DAYS......... ¿3.00 Clean throughout. Private own­ tion. Completely overhauled. Anthony Florist, 809 E. Michi­ and case. $150. Ask for Sherry, ter term. Two-girl apartment of Neurology, New York 5 DAYS......... ¿5.00 er. W i l l accept t r a d e . B o b One owner, $595. Phone 351- gan. 24 355-4 2 56 . 28 Medical College. Typing Service Winters, A -l Furniture, 1216 across from Berkey. $57.50 per 5597. 27 B A B Y S I T T E R - Housekeeper. month. Call 337-1867. REFRIGERATOR. G E N E R A L JOB RESUMES, 100 copies, $4.5ti. (based on 15 words per ad) 27 Turner. 2 ° VOL K SW AG EN 1 V 6 5, 2-door, L ive in or out. Private room, Electric. Very good condition. Peanuts P e rso n a l ALDINGER DIRECT MAIL Ad­ O v e r 1 5 , 10« p er w o rd , p er d a y . GTO 1964 hardtop, tri-power, TWO BEDROOM luxury apart- $ 35 . Call ED 2 -2 7 3 7 ._______ 24 Dl: NOW that you have attained vertising, 533 N. Clippert. IV white, low mileage, like new. bath. TV . Good salary. Phone H.D. suspension, close ratio, ment. Available November 1st. T h e re w i l l be a 50« service Phone days, 485-2226 after five. IV 4-8280 . 26 the Big 21, you can be the 5 -2 2 13. C 4-speed, positraction. Like new. Riverside E a s t Apartments. Animals and bookkeeping charge it 26 Wa i t r e s s e s ANDFountainheip. "source*' of many happy times! ANN BROWN & GORDON, typist $2,100 . 484-7605 . 28 Phone 332-0 255.____________ 24 t h i s ad is not paid w it h in VOLKSWAGEN, 1959. In go o d Meals, uniforms furnished. Paid GIRLS NEEDED for winter term. HORSE— 9 -y e a r -o ld B a y G e ld - Have a great year. Pat, 23 and multilith offset printing, one week. ___________ LINCOLN CONTINENTAL 1963. running condition. For sale by vacations, Insurance benefits. ing. Will do most anything. Call HAPPY BIRTHDAY to a swing- (Black and white and color). Watersedge apt. Low rates. Call Full power, new tires, exhaust owner. $450. Call 332-538 9 . 26 Apply in p e r s o n , H O W A R D 351-5292 . 26 ing Kappa— none other than IBM, General typing, term pa­ system. Air. Trades consid­ 351-4380. 27 VOEK§WAGEN7Tf9£2TTow"’ mIIe^ JOHNSON’ S, 32 2 4 E. Saginaw. 25 M .J.Q ...B est wishes, Phyl. 24 pers, theses, dissertations. ED The State News does net ered. ED 2-3601; 1707 Parxvale. NEED M ALE roommate for win- L o st & Found perm it racial or religious age. Excellent condition. F a c- M E D I C A L STENOGRAPHER, ter term only. Eden Roc Apart­ L Q S T : L a d i e s g o l d Buiova PSI U^s: Thanks Loads for the 2-838 4. C MALIBL’ 1965 Convertible. Sad- transcription experience. Med­ lovely addition to our homecom­ FAU LA ANN HAUGHEY. Typist discrim ination in its ad­ culty-staff owner. Must sell. ments. N e a r campus. Phone watch, Friday morning along vertising columns. The dle tan. 5,000 miles. Must sell. Call Dave 10 am. to 9 pm., 489- ical terminology helpful. Excel­ 332-6408 . 27 ing display. We always heard IBM Selectric & E x e c u t i v e . Bessey to Music Building route. State News w ill not accept Leave name, address, phone at 2 4 33, 24 lent salary. Contact Personnel you farm boys had generous Multilith Offset Printing. Pro­ APARTM ENT FOR three, winter Call Claudia, 353-340 8. 25 j j v e r t i ^ i r a from persons 482-6963. 27 VOLKSWAGEN, 1962 light blue Dept., St. Lawrence Hospital. 26 hearts. Love, the PI Phis. 24 fessional Theses Typing. N e a r and spring term. Upstairs of LO ST: PAIR Tortoise shell rim campus. 337 -15 27 . C . MERCURY, 1^57 4-door, power convertible, r a d i o . Excellent F E M A LE Llf^E Guard wanted. THE "O VER W H ELM ED " girl in discrim inating against re- house, $135 month. Call 332 - glasses, Dr. Bennett on case. steering, automatic, radio, new condition. $995. C a l l Carlos Must have nice figure, and WS1 the Jack T ar Hotel Friday night BARB1 M EL, Professional typist. lis io r, -ace, color or na­ 2 233. 26 Please call 35 3-25 36 , Susie. Re­ paint. Very g o o d condition. 353-38 7 9 or 355-7892. 27 card. Apply in person only, was Marsha. 24-1 No job too large or too small. tional "rie in . ward. _________ Phone 485-8486. 26 WHEELS OF LANSING. Qualified SLENDER FORM and UNIVER­ TWO GIRLS for winter term. 27 A R T and Mike, we love you, Block off campus. 3 3 2 -3 2 5 5 . C MG lift), 1964 British racing SAL HEALTH SPA. Frandor Cedar V i l l a g e Apartments. LO ST AT the game— gold, Lady WILL DO TYPING. Electric type- automobiles at r e a s o n a b l e Close to campus. Call anytime, you’ re really groovy. Thanks green. New tires, excellent con­ Shopping Center. Please do not Hamilton watch. Reward. Call writer. Experienced. 2886 E. A u to m o tiv e prices. From $95 to $2,995. 351-4216. 26 for the three hours you spent. dition. $1,2001 Call Dick, 3 5 5 - phone. 24 collect, Mt. Pleasant 775-4869. Jolly Road, 10 minutes from AUSTIN H EALEY Sprite I, 1$66, 2200 S. Cedar. ___________ C Rae and Nan, 24-1 9042. 24 O R D E R L I E S . EXPERIENCED MAN FOR luxury apartment. $¿6 26 campus. 337-7607. C good condition. $495. ED 2-6280. LADIES IN waiting: The Great OLDSMOBlLE, 19 60 Dynamic Auto Service & Parts monthly. Eden Roc Apartments. LO ST: GIRL’ S suede Jacket, taken CAROL WIN E L Y , Smith-Corona and full-time preferred, or will­ Pumpkin is dead. Long live The 26 Call Paul, 3 3 2 -5 2 7 3 . 26 -3 ' 88’ . Power brakes, steering, N E W B ATTER IES. E x c h a n g e ing to train days. Contact P er­ by m i s t a k e at Homecoming Great Turkeyl King, Glow, Je st- Electric. Theses,dissertations, ■, CHEVROLET 1959 Impala. Auto- hydramatic. Clean and OK. $530. general typing, term papers. price from $7.95. New sealed sonnel Department, St. Law­ SU B -LE A SE new a p a r t m e n t . game. Section 9, ro w 37. Re­ er. 24-1 matic. New tires, burglar alarm ED 7-186 3. 26 Now-June 15. Suitable for one ward. 351-4814. 26 HEY, PLViPKIN; 1 eagerly await Spartan Village. 355-2804. C27 beam 3 , 99$. Salvage cars, large rence Hospital. 26 set-up. Must sell. Call after 8 OLDSMOBiLE IV64 4-door hard- or two, one block from Berkey LO ST: LAD Y’ s Hamilton watch, stock used parts. ABC AUTO KITCHEN AID, 3 - 9:30 pm .Serv- your return. The Great Pepper CAROLYN PIERSMA, T y p i s t . pm., 355-6281. ’ 25 top. Excellent condition. Double Hall. $145 month. Act now, save Saturday night at Homecoming PARTS, 613 E. South St., IV ing, dishwashing and clean up, Plant. 24 Theses, dissertations, manu­ CHEVROLET 1958 Impala 2-door power, dual 90 tires. Extras. 5-1921. C two weeks rent. 351-4262. If no Dance in Auditorium. Please "P R O F. NADIM" Happy 23rdl scripts. Experienced t y p i s t , at Holt Home, 5091 Willoughby hardtop. No rust, good tires. IV 4-3095 before 6 pm. 25 GENERATORS .AND STARTERS. answer, call Howell 546-4810.26 call Pam, 353-6063. 2 6 -3 electric typewriter. Phone 484- Rd. Need own transportation. Have a *spank-in’ good time. Runs good. $395. Call 393-1114. OLDSMOBILE 1% 5 F - 8$ deluxe Rebuilt 6 or 12 volt. Guaranteed! Also weekends. Nurses aid op­ 1546. 25 Houses The two Chem. Majors ? I 24 CHEVROLET 1961 Impala 4-door 4-door, full power, loaded with Exchange price, $7.90. Mechan­ portunities. Phone 699-2144. 24 P erson al TERM P A P E R S done, quickly and V - 8. Power steering. Radio, extras. 7,000 miles. Excellent ic on the job! Installation serv­ NEEDED O N E roommate ( o r R EN T YOUR TV from N E JA C . R eal E state accurately, by experienced the­ GIRL TO do babysitting and light four-bedroom m o d e r n Ranch whitewalls. Fine c o n d i t i o n . condition. $2,400. Phone 372- ice a v a i l a b l e . ABC AUTO Zenith and GE portables for sis typist. Two blocks from Un­ housework, in exchange fo rp rl- House. Rent $56. Need car. 332 - e a s t L a n s i n g , c l o s e to m s u Phone IV 9-7084. 25 0467 after 4 pm. 25 PARTS, 613 E. South St., IV only $9 per month. Free serv­ ion. 33 7 -2 7 3 7 .______________ 24 vate room, board and salary. 2359. 24 and all schools. Excellent con­ CHEVROLET 1960 Biscayne, 6- OLDSMOBILE 1956 ’ 88’ . Excel- 5-1921. C ice and delivery. Call N EJA C 337-0231. 26 dition. Three bedrooms, recre­ cylinder, standard shift sedan. lent condition, but needs rings. TH R EE MEN for house. E very- T V R EN TA LS, 482-0624. C T ra n sp o rta tio n Scooters & C y c le s E x p e r i e n c e ^ - Sp o r t s w e a r ation room, screened porch, Engine Just completely over­ Excellent tires, radio. Will sep­ thlng furnished. Three blocks STUDENTS: ON your birthday large lot. Under $20,000, will M ALE NEEDS ride to New York salesgirl, 5-day w e e k , go o d hauled in our own shop. Red and arate. Cheap. 485-5672. -25 HARLEY DAVIDSON 1% 5 &0cc, s t a r t i n g s a l a r y S e e Mr . from campus. Move in now. come down for a free pizza. carry contract. 337-9415 after this weekend. Share expenses . white beauty. See at OSBORN'S OLDSMOBILE 1964 F -8 5 Sports low m i l e a g e , 3 months old. Phone 337-2339 . 2 6 -3 BIMBO’ S P IZZ A , 489-2431. 25 Kauffman, no phone calls. THE 5, all day Saturday and Sunday. and driving. Call 337-0 731. 24-1 AUTO INC., 2601-7 E.Michigan. coupe, V - 6, standard trans­ Phone IV 9-5881. 25 MEMO TO: The New Christy 25 TOG SHOP, next to Campus Rooms IV 9-1424. C27 mission, power steering, radio, 1965 HONDA 250 Scrambler. Good Theater, East Lansing. 25 M instrels. Don’ t forget that Sat­ W anted CHEVY 11 1962 2-door hardtop. heater. After 6 pm., 372-1419.25 shape and 1965 Honda Sport 50, EXCEPTIO NAL ROOM for single urday, November 13, is the date S e rv ic e TWO TICKETS to Notre Dame WANTED: ORGAN Player for male. Quiet, clean, conveniently White with red interior. Auto­ OLDSMOBILE *88’ , 196(5, 4-door, Good shape. Bought car. 3 3 2 - for your concert at the Lansing IRONINGS DONE in my home, $3 game. P rice no object. Call 3 5 5 - established band. Must be able located. $9 a week. Contact Ray, matic. Call Howie at 351-4588. automatic, all power, top shape, 6408. 26to play 6 nights a week. Must be Civic Center. Tickets on sale a basket. 1127-1/2 S. Washing­ 2684. 26 27 new tires. Professor owner. ED HONDAS: Now open, HONDA Oh 482-8269. 24 at Civic Center Box Office, and ton. Phone 482-2430.________25 WANTED D E SP E R A T E L Y :T ick - able to play rock. Call 485- COMET CONVERTIBLE, 2-60 22. # 25 H A SLETT. 2 blocks east of 1486. 27 WILL OPEN my private home to Paramount News Shops In Lan­ CHILDREN DAY care. Five days ets to Notre Dame game. Call automatic V - 8, power steering, PLYMOUTH 19 5 7 convertible. blinker light In Haslett on H as- two working girls, students, or sing and East Lansing. C32 a week from 8 -5, age 2 -6 pre­ 355-50 6 3, a s k for D i a n a or A&lBlTlO)US M AN- To work in new- tires, like new. Take over Make-offer. Sell oiTtrade. Phone lett Road. 24 stock room. S t a r t i n g salary teachers. Available November ferred. 1964 Yuma T ra il, 337 — Barbara. 27 1st* Transportation. 393*1574 M ISE R Y „ 9449, 25 payment. C a l l after 6. TU 676-5015. 25 HONDAS: NOW open, HONDA OF $1.77 per hour. Must be able to Is Not Seeing WANTED: UNIVERSITY Married 2-9 153. 28 PONTIAC 1965 Bonneville 4-door HASLETT» 2 blocks E a s t of after 5:30 pm. 26 -3 TUTOR, TWO masters. In your pass physical examination and The MSU - Iowa Game housing apartment to sublease hardtop. Fully equipped, Includ­ blinker light on Haslett Road. On TV home. Reasonable, open rates. for winter term only. 355-6 337. CORVAIR 1962 Spyder convert- a p t i t u d e t e s t . Call J a c k ing factory a i r-conditlonlng. Repair work wanted. 24 F o r S a le $ 9.00 per month History, R u s s i a n literature, 26 -3 ible. Bucket seats, 4-speed. New Pressnall, 882-2480 . 25 Under 5,000 miles. Save $1,000. YAMAHA 1965 BOcc, Black. E x- EM PLOYERS OVERLOAD Com- T V , PHILCO 2 1 " console blonde. NEJAC TV RENTALS philosophy. Basil Roberts, 713 tires. On l y $895 at B I L L BABY CARRIAGE, go o d condi­ YOUNG’ S PONTIAC, 147 W. cellent condition. $300. Phone A C E high condition. Reasonable. 482-0624 W. Michigan Avenue. 24 RICHARDS BU1CK and RAM­ pany, temporary assignments tion. 489-5345.____________ 2 5 -3 Grand River, 655-2278. 24 332 -22 35 . 25 Call IV 2 -15 5 3 . 26 G o L L e G L d I p LQMA B l a n F DlAp>ER SERVICL. Three types BLER out S. Cedar on US 127 be­ for experienced office girls. No BLOOD DONORS needed. $5 for ( form. Great for parties, apart­ of diapers to choose from. Bulk tween Holt and Mason. Phone OR PONTIAC BONNEVILLE 1 9 6 3 1965 H O N D A 160cc. Electric fee, top pay. Phone 487-6071.C 25 Late for class-Icywindshield? RH positive; $7 for RH nega­ Convertible. Original o w n e r . s t a r t e r . 700 m i l e s . $495. ments, etc. Also blank birth wash f o r cleaner, whiter dia­ 7 -354 1. 25 WOMAN" W A N T E D for h o u s e T r y our spray D E -IC E R -9 9 $ , tive. DETROIT BLOOD SER V­ Low mileage. Loaded with ex­ OSBORN AUTO, INC., 2601-7 E. certificates, marriage certifi­ pers. Fluff dried and folded. Use work. One day a week. Own Window scraper 49$, Snow ICE, INC., 1427 E. Michigan tras. Yours for balance owed Michigan. C27 cates. Standard or wallet size. your own or rent ours.Contain­ VO LKSW AGEN t r a n s p o r t a t i o n , H a s l e t t — brush with window scraper- Avenue. H o u r s 9-4 Monday, bank. Call Mr. Ben, 484-2988. A LL ST A T E 1965 Ó0cc. 850 miles, $1 e a c h . CAMPUS G IFT and ers furnished. No deposit. 25 Williamston a r e a . C a l l 332 - 69$, at the Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday. R E P A IR S ___________________________ 25 N O VELTY, P.O. Box 420, East years experience. B Y -L O DIA­ 45 m.p.h., 100 m.p.g. Like new, 4082 . 24 12-7 Thursday. 489-7587. C42 PONTIAC 1954. Motor needs r e - „ Red, s p e c i a l winter starter, p . x . ( t o r e - FRANDOR Lansing. 24 PER SER VICE, 1010 E. Mich- Inspections & Tune-ups FLOORS TO be cleaned. Special- pair. Good transmission, body WANTED: ST A FF Photographer PO RTABLE T A P E Recorder igan. IV 2-0421. C $250. 355-2548. 27 SOCIETY FOR I nE study of ob- izing in cafes, taverns, stores. New i Used Engines and interior. Make offer. Phone for BOYNE MOUNTAIN LODGE DIAPER SERVICE-Hospital pure HONDA 150cc, 63ÖÖmiles, loaded battery operated. Excellent for jectivism now being formed. Contact M EILLER SERVICES. Specialized Repair Service 355-8220 . 25 December 20th to March 15th. diapers. We’ re the most mod­ with accessories, likenew.Cost lectures. AC adapter, plus many Write Box 293, East Lansing, Call 485-4150._________ C On Most Import Cars. RAM BLER 1962, 4-door classic. A p p l y : SYMONS G E N E R A L ern and the only personalized $620, sell for $400. IV 9-6347. accessories. $160 value- best Mich. 24 WANT 4 Notre Dame tootbail Automatic, radio, heater, fac­ STORE, Petoskey, Michigan. 27 offer accepted. 351-5369. 25 diaper service in town Pails 27 tickets. Call 332-0218. 27 C A M E R O N ’S tory air-conditioning; m a k e s BUBOLZ M A K E S no f a n c y furnished. No deposit. 2 pounds WHITE HONDA 1964. 3,$00 GR EAT LA K ES EMPLOYMENT HAPPY BIRTHDAY Cake, in- claim s. Just settles th-m. Auto, of baby clothes at no extra cost. WANTED: M A R R I E D Housing IM P O R T S into bed. Reasonable, 337-2259. for permanent positions for men ches, delivered $3.87. Specials apartment to sub-lease winter miles. Excellent c o n d i t i o n . fire, boat, and home insurance, T ry our new Dlaperene Process. 220 East Kalamazoo St. RED’ S BUYING now. Any make, $200. Call ED 7-9 738, ask for and women in office, sales, Monday and Tuesday, Old fash­ 220 Albert. Representing All term. Call 355-8379 or 482- AMERICAN DIAPER SERVICE, any model. Will pay top dollar. technical. IV 2 -1543. C25 482-1337 RED WHITING, Call IV 9-6639. Pat Kelly. 25 ioned baked cinnamon cookies, 6 /39 $. K W A S T B A K E R I E S , American and Home. 24 914 E . Gier St. IV 2-0864. C 7801 for Pat. 25 HARLEY DAVIDSON Sprint 1963. NEED MONEY? vVant to have a 350cc. Best o f f e r . C a l l 3 5 5 - lot of fun? Supplement your in­ Brookfield Plaza, East Lansing; 3097. - 32 come. Contact Dick or Gee at Frandor; 303 S. Washington. IV THIS IS WHAT Í fou HAVÉ BUN WAITING FOR M SU V ETS HARLEY DAVÍDSON Sprint l9bá. 250cc.aBest o f f e r . C a l l 3 5 5 - O T ..‘ - . r *N .. säfe, CORAL G A BLES, ED 7-1311. 27 CAR EER NEEDED! M ELHL 4 -1317. ENGLISH L I G h T-VVe I g TTTI a ae e d ,,.b icycle sv $39.77 .( M_1 price. Rental-purcnase terfris* C24 M eeting Tonight A f T h e 1962 ZÜÑDAPP 2$0cc. Must »ell. $300. Phone ED 7-7118. 25 THE WOOLWORTH COMPANY available. We also have tennis racquets, golf balls, badminton birdies, gifts and housewares. C O R A L G A B LE S Show B ar a coffa© h o u s© IS NOW HIRING: MANAGEMENT TRAINEES: A C E HARDWHERE, a c r o s s If you’ re between the ages from Union. ED 2 -32 12 . C in PenAon 3 0 0 0 Va E a s t K a la m a z o o of 20 and 26» have some college training, want a chal­ EVENING EMPLOYMENT L a n s in g , M ic h ig a n lenging opportunity to de - PART-TIME WORK (MALE) velop to high management If you are free 4 evenings HEW CHRISTY in retailing and have cre­ per week and Saturdays, ative imagination» we would you can maintain your stu­ MINSTRELS like to discuss your ambi­ F o r R e s e rv a tio n s , C a ll 372-4570 w . L an sin g C iv ic C en ter tion and career with you. GOOD STARTING salary and ‘ 'ÿstt&AiiAîJ »lÆiilrîiiMïiitè/'ifyw' dies and still enjoy a part- time job doing J.D Y N A M iq Y f ^ ' < « (?"• Tv* j»..r su r a n e e , hospitalization, that will bring an average T ic k e ts On S ale: discount on purchases, pen­ income of $ 5 5 per week. #C i v i c C e n t e r - 8:30 p.m. sion plan, paid h o l i d a y s , If you are neat appearing TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 2 Param ount Christm as bonuses, etc. and a hard worker, call thru New Members Welcome M r. Arnold, 3 5 1 -4 0 1 1 , Mon. N ew s Shop A.B. DUSSEAU 200 S. WASHINGTON & Tues. between 10 a.m . & SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 6 $4-3.50-3-2.50 PHONE IV 4 -1519 . 1 p.m. (No other time). M ichigan State N ew s, E ast L ansing, M ichigan T uesday, N ovem ber 2, 1965 V R h o d e s i a ’s B l a c k s S m a ll- S c a le A n t i- P o llu t io n B a c k e d UNITED NATIONS, N .Y. U K - B y U .N . The committee’ s r e s o l u t i o n P r o c e s s D e v e lo p e d B y P ro f Over the objections of Britain called on Britain to use military plants and two pairs of guppies Despite his success, Schulze A MSU scientist has develop­ ed a process that he hopes will and the United States the A sian- force if required to release all points out that his study actually are living. African bloc rammed through political prisoners, to r e p e a l underscores a need for more re­ someday help clean up polluted "T h ese fish ," said Schulze, the U.N. Trusteeship Committee discriminatory legislation and to search on such things as long­ streams and rivers. "have never received any out­ Monday a resolution calling on remove " a l l restrictions on Af­ term effects of detergents and At present, Karl L . Schulze’ s side food. They exist entirely on Britain to use military force rican political activity and the water p u r i f i c a t i o n effort is pesticides on life in water. Sci­ living food produced in the tank. to assurecomplete political free­ establishment of full democra­ entists of many disciplines, he s t r i c t l y sm all-scale, perhaps The only thing we have to do is dom and equality for Rhodesia's tic freedom and equality of po­ adds, should be Involved in this several years away from an at­ remove the excess of young gup­ four million blacks. litical righ ts." tempt at practical application. research. pies and the excess of plant By a 79-8, with 17 abstentions, But he already has turned murky, growth.” His water purification method, It called for military force the committee approved a reso­ also to enforce suspension of the foul-smelling effluent from East Schulze admits, would Involve Schulze enlarged his research high cost before lt could be ap­ lution m u c h tougher than th e 1961 constitution and summon a Lansing’ s present sewage treat­ last summer and Installed a se­ plied to present sewage treat­ one adopted by the General A s­ new constitutional conference at ment plant into clear, odorless cond series of tanks, each with ment methods. But he adds: "I f sembly Oct. 12. That one had which respresentatives of all po­ effluent in which fish have been a 200-gallon capacity. we have enough money to shoot urged Britain to take all neces­ litical parties would participate. thriving. Schulze, an associate profes­ The treatment tank in this people to the moon, I feel we sary steps to bar a unilateral British d e l e g a t e F r a n c i s sor of civil and sanitary engi­ series contains two blocks of also should have enough money declaration of independence by Brown appealed in vain for a neering with training in biology, plastic foam instead of fiber­ to solve our water problem s." the white minority government in Salisbury. delay in the vote on the grounds has purified the water to the point glass sheets. It is producing a that Prim e Minister Harold Wil­ clear effluent in which such fish The vote in the assembly was son was engaged in negotiations where it provides an almost ideal as shiners, dace, blueglll and Auto Liability Ins. environment for the minute or­ (annual premiums) 107-2 with 1 abstention. But the with the Rhodesian government ganisms that consume pollutants. large-mouth bass are flourish­ resolution in the 117-nation com­ aimed at a peaceful settlement His project, called "Biological ing. Under Age 25 mittee had enough votes to as- based on eventual African ma­ Recovery of Waste Water,” was Schulze points out that even From — — --------$149.00 'sure adoption by the two-thirds jority rule. started in May, 1964. It involves treatment p l a n t s operating at Age 2 1 & Married majority required in the assem­ adding an extra step to the stan­ peak efficiency—as will the new From ----------- $95.00 U .S; Representative Jam es M. bly. Nabrit J r . described as "en tire­ NAMES THE SAME — Linda F r i e s * (pronounced Freezy), Jackson-Senior^ watches dard sewage treatment process. one that East Lansing plans to Scooters Under J e r r y Johnson, Cheyenne, Wyo. Wyo. graduate student work with a " f r e e z yy ’ exp eri­ The key to Schulze’ s method open soon— remove about 90 per 125cc F r o m ----------- $38.00 Britain did not take part in ly inappropriate" any urging of ment of his own. These experiments "on the r o c k s " a r e part of a study of special is a series of fiber-glass sheets, cent of the pollution in raw sew­ the committee vote, following use of military force at a time the same course it did in the when Britain was seeking a sol­ effects that tem peratures near absolute zero have on the magnetic properties of like those u s e d in w i n d o w age. Tibbetts Ins. Agcy. c r y s t a ls . Photo b7 L a r r y F«rrante screens. They are placed ver­ This maximum, he contends, assembly. ution by peaceful methods. 1723 E . Mich. Lans. tically in a 15-gallon tank which will not be sufficient in areas IV 4-1488 receives effluent that has been where people will need to make treated by the East Lansing plant. increased use of surface water. With a churning action provi­ This increased use, he adds, will G O P C o u n t s O n O f f - Y e a r E le c t io n s ded by air diffusers in thewater, occur as groundwater supplies the surface of each screen has become coated with what the are diminished. STATE Poet To Speak In Philadelphia, Republicans MSU researcher describes as "a ing with Genovese, says to fire WASHINGTON L¥-Republicans polls, while disagreeing on the hope to launch a nationwide elec- outcome, are agreed that the against Gov. Nelson A. Rocke­ feller. him would be to violate ada- are running a former Democrat, biological community with a re­ DISCOUNT Cosmetics Arlen Specter, for district attor­ markable capacity for cleaning up In the legislative race, Demo­ demic freedom. 1 toral comeback in off-year bal­ 39-year-old Buckley may poll ney against incumbent Demo­ polluted w ater." Francis Ponge, a contempor­ crats are favored to retain con­ In Virginia, Godwin’ s major & Vitamins loting Tuesday by capturing the more than 300,000 votes. crat Jam es C . Crumlish J r . The "comm unity" consists of ary French poet, will speak at trol of the Assembly, while the problem has been the entry into New York City mayoralty and Beame, 59, received President Three Democratic mayors are huge numbers of microorganisms 8 p.m. today in Akers audi­ governorships in New Je rs e y and Lyndon B . Johnson’ s backing last GOP has a good chance of re­ .the contest of Conservative par­ expected to win new terms easi­ such as bacteria, algae,protozoa torium. Friday and has the advantage of capturing the Senate. In the only ty nominee William J . Story. Ponge’ s poems have been col­ Virginia. and worms. Rep. John V. Lindsay's bid to a 3 -1 Democratic registration. statewide race, former GOP Sen. R e p u b l i c a n s are counting on ly. They are Jerom e Cavanagh Connected to the first treat­ lected into a two-volume work B19 E. Grand River Story to draw off enough Demo­ of Detroit, Joseph B arr of Pitts­ end two decades of Democratic He defeated Paul R. Screvane, Kenneth B . Keating is running ment tank is a second tank in entitled "Grand Recueil,” pub­ crats to give Holton,” an attor­ burgh and Richard C . Lee os domination in New York City retiring Mayor Robert F . Wag­ for the Court of Appeals against which several species of water lished in 1962. * Daily q a.m. - 6 p.m. Democrat-L i b e r a 1 Owen M c- ney, a c h a n c e for an u p s e t . New Haven. appears to afford the GOP its n er's choice, in a bitter Demo­ • Wed. 9 a.m. - 9 p.m. Givern. Godwin, candidate of the state’ s best chance of demonstrating re­ cratic primary. newed strength after last year’ s In New Je rse y , Democrats hope dominant Byrd organization, has Lindsay, 43, is rated a possi­ broad support including labor. IN FORECASTING Space-Crop Links Seen disastrous defeat. ble Republican presidential can­ for a Hughes landslide that will give them undisputed legislative Both candidates have made vig­ Lindsay, who has the support didate of the future if he wins or control for the first time in half orous efforts to capture the in­ of the independent Liberal par­ makes a close race. He has re­ a century. Republicans contend, creasing Negro vote. ty, is in what pollsters rate a lied heavily on vigorous street- however, that Dumont has been The Democrats are expected tight contest with Democratic corner campaigning and what he narrowing the gap and c o u l d to retain overwhelming legisla­ city Comptroller Abraham D. termed the unpopularity of the Beame« Also running is author Wagner administration. spring an upset. tive control. The principal issue has been In C l e v e l a n d , R e p u b l i c an The ability to f o r e c a s t crop seased trees could be detected slstant chief engineer, Tractor and publisher William F .B u c k - The polls indicate the biggest on these slides. Division, Ford Motor Co, Dumont’ s attack on Rutgers Uni­ County Auditor Ralph J . Perk is yields and requirements on a ley, J r ., the Conservative party vote-getter may be Queens Dist. The importance of the lunar Such a system is needed, he versity Prof. E u g e n e T . Ge­ facing three Democrats: Mayor worldwide basis may soon be nominee. Atty. F r a n k D. O ’ C o n n o r , program, however, extends be­ said, " s o that members of our novese, who said last spring he Ralph S. Locher, Negro State possible because of lunar space Besides New York, municipal Beame* s running mate for pres­ yond “ earthly objectives.” profession may have continuity welcomed a Viet Cong victory in Rep. C arl B. Stokes and school explorations, Donald A . Beat­ 'elections in Cleveland, Philadel­ ident of the New York CityCoun- tie, chief of apollo extended sys­ Clyde Murtaugh, engineering of knowledge and currency in the Viet Nam. Dumont says he should board member Ralph M cAllister. phia, Louisville and Akron, Ohio, cil and a potential Democratic tems manned lunar mission stu­ manager of Surveyors of Roving technical abilities that are being be fired. Hughes, whiledisagree- Lecher is favored. seem to offer the Republicans gubernatorial candidate next year Lunar Vehicles, Bendix Systems developed.” dies, said Saturday. hope of making inroads in Demo­ Division, presented the group cratic big-city strength. Speaking at the annual meeting O lin Report a film showing thé progress that Schiff Hearing In 10 Days D e m o c r a t s , however, are of the Michigan section of the has been made on the development strongly favored to win the New American Society of Agricultural of Lunar E x c u r s i o n Modules Je r se y and Virginia governor’ s Engineers, Beattie said the large (LEM ). .ra ce s . (continued from page 1) rocket boosters and spacecraft Although his company is pres­ These terms expire in 1967: developed for Project Apollo can Sunday's admissions to Olin In New Jersey, Democratic appoints the college’ s represen­ of counseling and personnel serv­ ently c o n c e r n e d with making Memorial Health Center Include Gov. Richard J . Hughes, 56, seeks tative on the Student A ffairsC o m - ice, College of Education: Jam es Woodrow W. Snyder, profes­ be used to orbit large labora­ LE M ’ s for exploring and sur­ Robert Apisa, Robert Brawley, Limit One a second four-year term against mittee. B . McKee, professor of sociol­ sor of dairy, College of A gri­ tories from which such studies veying the moon, someday they Roland Carter, Mary Borntrager, Republican State Sen. Wayne Du­ ogy, College of Social Science: culture; Vera Borosage, instruc­ could be made. Term s are for three years, and may be converted and used to Tim G r e e n , Sheryl H a r k i n s , mont J r ., 51. a third of the members are re­ and Charles Titkemeyer, pro­ tor of home management and Using p i c t u r e s taken from irrigate and harvest crops on Je r r y Hurlbutt, Robert Hutchin­ In Virginia, Lt. Gov. M ills E . placed each year. No member can fessor of anatomy, College of child development, College of Gemini flights, Beattie explained the surface of the moon. son, E i l e e n Kostner, Thomas ■Godwin J r ., 50, seeks to succeed serve more than one consecutive Veterinary Medicine. Home Economics: and Jam es M. how more extensive photographs “ The r e a l problem in de­ L i t t l e , M i n u r o S a t o , Susan retiring Democratic Gov. Alber­ term on any of the standing com­ These members’ terms expire Elliott, professor of natural sci­ could be taken from space with veloping such veh icles," Mur­ Scherbarth and Robert Viney. tis S. Harrison J r . against a mittees. in 1966: ence, University College. new infra-red and radar tech­ taugh said, " i s in testing them, Monday’ s admissions Include strong Republican challenge from Chairman of the Student Af­ Williams, David C ,R alph,pro­ The College of Business has no niques. . y o u cannot take one up there Gail Anderson, Ja n isB eers, Alan A. Linwood Holton, 42. fairs Committee is Frederick fessor of speech. College of Com­ representative on the committee "T h e se allow us to see beyoncT and test it before you sell it.” Blackwood, Carol J , Ccoburn, Legislatures are being elected Williams, associate professor of munication A r t s ; G e o r g e H. at this time. the foliage and into the struc­ The necessity for a retrieval M a r y Rose Critelli, C a r o l also in New Je rse y, Virginia and history. Martin, associate professor of Individual committee members ture of the ground itself,” he system of new scientific infor­ Fa leris, Douglas French, Stephen New York. Kentucky is filling John A. Fuzak, vice president mechanical engineering, College report to the faculties of their said. mation, whereby such data would Karnish, J o h n Mlchalek, J a n some seats. In the only con­ for student affairs, is an ex colleges, and the committee as Limit One of Engineering: and Robert N. He showed the group slides be collected by a central bureau Oakley, Lynn Robbins, Kenton T , gressional race, RepublicanCla- officio, non-participating mem­ Hammer, associate professor of a whole advises and reports to of a citrus grove, taken with and made available to everyone, Schurr, Mary Jo Senese, Mark ence J . Brown J r . is favored to ber of the Committee. chem istry. College of Natural the dean of students and the Aca­ the new techniques, and how di­ was noted by Robert Owen, a s- Sherman, Daniel Sullivan, Elana win the seat of his late father Associate De a n of Students Science. demic Council. Turner, and Patricia Warren. in Ohio’ s strongly Republican7th Eldon R, Nonnamaker serves as District against Democrat Jam es secretary to the committee and A , B erry. has no vote. R a d io R e p o rts T o B e H e a r d In New York City, about 2.5 Members whose terms expire THE MICHIGAN STATE million voters are expected to at the end of this year are: UNIVERSITY cast ballots. Newspaper straw Walter F . Johnson, professor Reports by major governing groups on the all-University ra­ Relations Club at 7:30 tonight in 34 Union. GRADUATION dio will be discussed at the A s­ hhh RING M i t ’s w h a t ’s h a p p e n i n g sociated Students of MSU (AS- Green Helmet, s o p h o m o r e ACROSS 27. Accomplish MSU) meeting at 7 tonight in the men’ s honorary, will meet at 8 1. Fuel 28. Part of "to tonight in 328 Student Services. Student Board Room. 4. Food fish be” NOW AVAILABLE- The possibility of a central hhh 8. Friend's 29. Mme titled "C a n Man Tamper with A DIAMOND IN LIEU pronoun M arie.... contingency fund for Water C ar­ A paper on Arthur, Guinevere Forestry Club will meet at 7 H eredity?" A film on "T h e Ge­ OF A STONE. 1 1 . River 30. Dress nival, Winter Carnival and Pop­ and L a n c e l o t in " L e M o r t e tonight in 1 Forestry. netic Revolution" will be shown. island leather ular Entertainment will be dis­ D’ Arthur" and "Idylls of the *** hhh 12. Symbol of 3 1. Lanced cussed. King” will be p r e s e n t e d by 33. Pastime Pianist David Renner will be Block and Bridle Club will M aine The area of special projects George Wood Tuma, English grad 13. Teeny 34. Bird's crop will be evaluated. Including the presented in a Music Department hold their annual Informal initia­ 14. Silvered 35. Beat □ E JU U U recital at 8 :15 tonight in the Mu­ tion today. assistant, to the English Grad petitioning procedure for chair­ Club at 8 tonight in Physics- 16. Task 36. Parcel out SOLUTION OP YESTERDAY'S PUZZLE manships and the effectiveness sic Auditorium. *** 18. Supreihe 38. Blinked hhh MSU Outing Club will show the Math Conference Room. DOWN 7. Loathe of present personnel. Being 4 1. Eye-in­ Poultry Science Club will meet films "W ilderness T r a il" and 19. Armadillo fecting worm 1. Hiatus 8. Spin Student board will also dis­ 9. Biddy at 7:30 tonight in 233 Anthony. "W ildlife in the Rockies” at 7:30 FAST 3 HOUR 20. Three in 42. Sign 2. A fillet cuss the possibility of a closed 10. However circuit telecast of the Notre Dame *** tonight in 128 Natural Science. canasta 44. Stowe 3. Produced a S E R V IC E character show 15. Plaything game, a student discount ser­ Leroy Augensteln, chairman *** Rings i n c l u d e degree, 22. Increased three times 45. Caldron 4. Hastened 17. Binding vice and the external relations of biophysics, will speak at a Allan Horton will d i s c u s s PLUS seal, 3 engraved Initials oa, ( v ^ y i . . , 4.ft t. S.Seytfterf ,, fabric of. the MSU Newcpmers "A ra b SocJalisjn , in t h ^ U A R ” CIt lift: ■©Ofx-i * “*• U l of ** 26. Selected 47. Kingi'Sp. 6Î One *** Club at 8 tonight. His speech is at a meeting of the InteniationaT arum family 20.. Not that Union Board bridge lessons & D E L IV E R Y R i rigs Must Be / !F “ 3 7“ r I“ T 1 T ~ T ~ It 2 1. Grate will be held at 7 tonight in 21 Ordered Before ATTENTION CAR OW NERS 7 1 " 22. Tossed - November 15 For >3‘ Union. VAe 7T~ 2 3. Cheese % *** C hristm as Delivery 7 5 " IT 24. Completed i r 26. Custodian Campus Crusade will meet at Jm L IP 29. Dear: Ital. 7 tonight in the Alumni Memor­ 19 * 30. Merchant ial Chapel lounge. Ted Ward, c o m p le te fr o n t end r e p a i r and a lig n m e n t if V » <9 ship director of the Higher Learning 32. Splendor Specials Available ir 24 1 7 " 33. Cotton- Institute, will speak on "C h rist, * b rakes * su sp e n sio n Ca/uL Shop' seeder Man or G od." ii w » 35. Breeze *** * w h eel b a la n c in g * ste e rin g c o rre c tio n s A c ro ss From At East L a isiii P 36. Eng. There will be an Agriculture H om e E c o n o m ic s B ld g. 37" « * m o to r tun e u p s ■Wl _ 7T5 bullfinch Mechanization meeting at 7:30 ED 2-6753 Stnn Oily WV F S ! *111 V• ■■ ^ N ’ iffrlljlfE ’ ¿1 V.® ^* -■u.»«* << « r »> . * »P ___ UZ¿ V U game r P Coupons Good Thru ' E 37 □ % Í 3 1 n j T TFT 47 39 4# 38. Small neoplasm 39. Twilight 40. Period of Alpha Phi Sigma, national po­ lice honorary, will hold an open meeting at 7:30 tonight in 33 USKEY’S A it s Safety Cw ler IV 4-7346 S H IR T L A U N D R Y s h o p A w ie * Nov. 4, 1965 F r e e Parking _ _ _ light E t = mmmm 13. Myself Union.’ Chief Charles F . Pegg of 124 SOUTH LARCH Spartan Center A t'R ear of Store die East Lansing Police Depart­ Par tim* 28 min. ment will speak. I T u esd ay, N ovem b er 2, 1965 1 0 M ichigan State N ew s, E ast Lansing, M ichigan Politicians To Speak W ith P rofs P a rty chairm en, Senate lead­ ers and Capitol newsmen w ill speak to political science pro­ n e w s y n o t io n s to Clocks Caught Contributing fessors from 41 Michigan college campuses at a faculty workshop Thursday and F rid a y at Kellogg Center. Michigan Center for Education n o t e , fro m K n a p p ’s To Confusion On Campus In P o litic s , directed by Robert W. Kaufman of W estern Michigan U n ive rsity, has arranged the an­ nual program. Speakers w ill include Demo­ — Checking th e dorm itory cratic State Chairm an Zolton A. Education rooms. Humanities II, By B IL L KRASEAN Ferency; Republican State C h a ir­ tucked away in the basement, clocks, we found that all but the S ta te N e w s S t a f f W r i t e r main clock In the Brod y building, man E lly M. Peterson; Senate works better alone: It's only two the lobby clock in East A k e rs and m ajority floor leader B a s il W . minutes behind Beaumont. T h e t i m e is o u t o f jo in t , Brown, D-Detroit, and Sen. G a r ry — The engineers in Olds H all the main hallway clock in Ea st 0 c u rs e d s p ite . W ill e v e r Holmes H a ll, are running behind E . Brow n, R-Schoolcraft, form er apparently don’t have much to do th e U n i v e r s i t y set i t Senate Republican floor leader. with their clocks. They run two the tim es. rig h t? — The c l o c k s in the main Capitol newsmen taking part minutes slow. In the Computer --S h a ke sp e a re (c o rru p t­ lobbies of West Wilson and East in a Thursday panel session are C enter, the gigantic 1401 does ed): H a m l e t (I, i v ) . Fe e halls are the record holders W illia m C .K u l sea of Booth News­ everything but set the clock, lt, for slothness. Both are four min­ papers, W illa rd B a ir d of the too, is two minutes slow. utes slow. State Jo u rn a l, Glenn Engle of Hamiet had his problems with — Students rushing to B essey / — North C ase H all, South Won­ The Detroit News and Thom as tim e. And so, too, does the MSU H all for an on-schedule class ders H a ll, West Holm es H all, Shawver of The Detroit F r e e hamlet have some t.mely prob­ m ay find themselves three min­ Owen graduate center and Van P re s s . lems of its own — the clocks utes e arly . Be ssey’ s clocks are Hoosen Hall are all three m in­ Other speakers w ill include across campus are not synchro­ slow, too. If these»game students utes to the re a r. East W ilson and C h arle s R . Adrian, professor nized. need to go from Be ssey to the East McDonel halls a re both two of p o l i t i c a l science; R o b e r t Students and faculty have been N atural Science Building, they minutes slow, and South C ase, R oselle, director of D etro it's complaining lately abput rolling w ill have no w orries. Nat S c i’ s West Fee and West McDonel halls anti-poverty program; D a rre ll D. into cla ss three, four, even five clocks aren’t any more accurate are only one minute behind. Smith, Milwaukee area director minutes late. This interrupts the than B e ss e y 's . The two build­ class and often the student m isses — And, as a special note to for labor’ s committee on political ings could f o r m a classroom Instructors of State News p er­ education; and Glenn Scott, man­ some of the instructor’ s best complex of their own and have sonnel, if they are late, it's be­ ager of the M ichiganStateCham - stories. no time problems — their clocks cause the clock in the StateN ews ber of Com m erce public affairs The State News wanted to in­ are coordinated, both three min- 7I vestigate this phenomena of tardy .U l l / office is five minutes slow. department. timepieces. H ere is what we discovered when checking various clocks in both classroom s and residence halls across campus. Using the chimes of Beaumont Tow er as the ‘ ‘co rre c t’’ time, we com­ your choice: deluxe gold quilted pared the variety of times, — On the third floor o fB erk e y H all, an area relatively unex­ B ro d y vinyl closet accessories plored by students, the main clock is coordinated co rre c tly w i t h Beaumont on one face and is run­ B o a rd ning one minute behind on the re verse face. — On the second floor, both D u s t - f r e e p r o t e c t i o n in c l e a r p l a s ­ B la s t e d clocks are correct. But the all- important first floor clocks are two and three minutes slow. The clock, visib le from the main en- tic p o u c h e s . 1 8 - p r . s h o e c l o s e t , 8 - handbag h o ld er, or co m b o for 8 $ 2 each Brody Board has been placed on a y e a r’ s warning probation trance is one minute slow on the h a n d b a g s and 8 p a ir s of s h o e s . south side and loses all control, > by joint action of the Men’ s Hall recording a four minute lag, on Assn. and the Women’ s Inter­ the north side. jumbo vinyl residence Council for failure to properly register a number of — Both clocks in theHorticul- social activities of the winter and ture Building are one minute be­ spring term s of 1965. MHA first ruled on the case spring term of 1965 and placed hind tim e. Jo u rn a lists, known for precise deadlines, have to re ly on a clock that is three minutes garment bags Brody Board on one term of so­ cial probation and a ye a r of warning probation but in a sub­ slow in the Jou rn alism B u ild ­ ing. Two other buildings along ant.quity row, the Conservation by White House sequent meeting this fall, lifted Building and the Adm inistration the social probation. Building, have tim epieces that In addition to the Improper reg- poke along two minutes behind ' istration of organized functions, Beaumont. M H A found that students w ere a l­ lowed to dance to the music of rock and ro ll groups which fre ­ quently practice in the Brody -- T h e F o re s try Building, where you can see the clock de­ spite the trees, runs two minutes 2 f°r * 5 a h e a d of the Administration recreation rooms. building — right on tim e. W id e ra n g e of c o lo r s , According to MHA and U n ive r­ sity regulations, t h e s e im­ — If a student loses his way and p a tte r n s. 3 - hook promptu dances constitute unreg­ in M o r rill H all and finds the f r a m e , 1 4 ” w i d e , iu-Hr istered social functions and may need to know the time quickly, cause Brody Board to lose its he might as well give up; there len gth z ip p e r s . social schedule if t h e y occur are no hallway clocks to be found. again this year. W illia m W ilkie, Brody activi­ — In th e Home Econom ics ties co-ordinator, said he feels building, a three-minute egg, if Brody Board is not responsible timed by the main hall clock and for such impromptu events since Beaumont, would turn out only the use of the activity rooms is one minute done. It, like all of famous KleinerCs the responsibility of the Brody the clocks in the Union, runs two H all management and often there minutes slow. . is no member of Brody Board — In a ra re burst of individual Spra~On Sheild In the building. ism, the main hall clocks in the M HA Social Chairman Richard L ib r a r y are on time. But don’t Kolasa said he could not release put any bets on the accuracy of any information concerning the the clocks hidden away in the case. various research rooms. The P ro tects clo th es from C harles Pettee, B a ile y Hall president and MHA representa­ Reference Room employes work p ersp ira tio n stain s or three minutes over tim e and tive, said the probation passed don’ t know it, as do the lib r a r ­ odors. P revents m a t ­ unanimously although there was considerable discussion regard­ ians in the Social Science and tin g. Q u ic k -s e tt in g . 1.69 ing the unscheduled dancing since lt often occurs in co-educatlonal 2 Coeds personalized living areas. He also said there is little pos­ Christmas cards. sibility of getting such events registered since they usually oc­ cur after 8 p.m. on nights pre­ ceding classdays which Is also against MHA and U niversity pol­ In ju r e d Your choice from In C r a s h e s 1965* nlhiKWS OvenFire icy. 3- *-«# i ijfri'' **% w «• . ,OUr Injures Two T w o MSU coeds were injured F a m o u s m a k e c a r d s . A ll F rid a y night and Saturday morn­ types: r e lig io u s, s c e n ic , party ago-gofashionsfor ing in separate automobile acci­ dents, E a s t Lansing police re ­ n o v e l t y . All p r i c e ported. ran ges. O rder now. juniors andjuniorpetites Tw o U n iv e rsity employes were M a ry lin Snider, Saginaw fresh­ injured in the Brody Food Cen­ man, was injured Saturday when Solitairemaster ter Saturday when an oven they the c a r in which she was riding Smith Corona were lighting exploded, campus collided with another automobile playing board police reported. at the corner of West Grand R iv ­ Robert L , Brown, 1905 Olds e r Avenue and H arrison Road. A ve ., Lansing, was taken to Olin M em orial Hospital and treated for burns on M s left arm and M iss Snider suffered a cut knee and bruises. D i.a n a Saw ickl, Southbridge, W h ite b r o c a d e s k ir t s a so ftly fittin g c r e p e b o d ic e of y e llo w ,, aqua o r b lu e. Thy w a ist is b elted , typewriter, case Styled by M |g te r W ood-^ ‘ * forearm , fie- » i r r e i * s e a ^a t- ‘ ''Mai-s.* senior, receive* ccrrs%ncf fr o v ^ e c f a h a ‘ r i'a o o r r ^ Y ji o s s o it f t - r r f1 fc in u .fi' p < r c /« r . C l a s s i c 12 p o r t a b l e , C r a f t. C a r d s c a n ft s lip . * * urday. bruises to her mouth, chest and Donald D. Hambleton, 308 N. legs in a two-car collision at the w ith sta n d a r d f e a t u r e s . B o o k let on 150 v a r ia ­ it » S h e e r w o o l g o e s w h e r e the ju n ior a c tio n i s . F o r tio n s of s o lita ir e . 2.98 Ottawa St., St. Johns, suffered corner of Grand R iv e r Avenue 5 - y r . g u a r a n te e . 1 0 2 .9 8 minor burns to his right hand. and Hamilton Road, State P olice a f t e r d a r k , it t u r n s u p in a l i n e d s l e e v e l e s s reported. P o lic e said that the explosion knocked lighting fixtures from M iss Sawicki was taken to Ed ­ s h e a t h in w h ite o r b la c k . J u n io r s i z e s . $25 N O T IO N S -S E C O N D L E V E L E A S T L A N S IN G the celling of the kitchen. Dam­ ward W . Sparrow Hospital for ages have yet to be determined. treatment.