E i s e n h o w e r R e s t i n g A ß t e r P o s s i b l e H e a r t A t t a c k F T . GORDON, Ga, i t )— Form er President Dwight D. Eisenhower, stricken with chest pains on a vacation golf trip, was hospitalized Monday with a possible mild heart attack. He was placed in an oxygen tent periodically, but doctors said he was resting comfortably— and stayed in bed only because of their orders. They said it would take up to 36 hours to determine if the 7 5 - year-old five-star general had suffered another heart attack. M IC H IG A N But if so, "b y all symptoms and characteristics, it certainly was a mild one," said Dr. Thomas W, Mattingly, who treated Eisen­ hower for his heart attack in 1955. S T A T E Mattingly flew herefrom Washington to examine the former presi­ dent and to consult with other physicians called in soon after the U N IV E R S IT Y chest pains began. In a statement, the physicians said: "In view of his heart his­ tory, recurring episode of chest discomfort must be carefully East Lansing, Michigan Wednesday, November 10, 1965 Price 10< evaluated until it is adequately explained.” Vol. 58, Number 50 They said tests are under way -------- .. — to determine the nature of the chest pains which sent the for­ mer president to the Ft. Gordon POWER FAILURE BLACKS OUT Arm y Hospital shortly after 2:00 a.m. Tuesday. After a piorning news confer­ ence, the physicians said there would be no further conference until 11:00 this morning with pos­ sibly some interim statements. Eisenhower first experienced EAST COAST AT RUSH HOUR the chest pains about 12:30 a.m. He and M rs. Eisenhower were vacationing at nearby Augusta National Golf Club, where the former president maintains a cottage once known as his little WTtite House. They arrived there Oct. 27, and he has spent much time playing g o l f in beautiful PRESIDENT IN T O U C H U.S. Mum OnSabotage balmy weather. Mattingly, acting as spokesman N e w Y o r k , B o s t o n , for other doctors who had re ­ mained at Eisenhower’ s side C a n d l e s L i g h t U p during the early morning hours, said the former president was in C a n a d a A f f e c t e d good spirts and enjoyed a visit Thousands Stalled JOHNSON CITY i.Pl— President retary said he could say nothing as he heard of the situation to with his son, John. Johnson kept in close touch Tues- about the possibility of sabotage, Secretary of Defense Robert S. ‘ G r e a t W h i t e W a y John Eisenhower arrived from In Elevators, Subways his home at Phoenixville, Pa., day night with the northeastern P ress Aide Bill D. Moyers said McNamara, Director Buford El­ Tuesday morning. His mother power failures and his press sec- Johnson placed calls as soon lington of the Office of Em er­ remained at her husband’ s side. gency Planning and Presidential NEW YORK I.F— Radio City Music Hall in NewYork managed Assistant Joseph A. Califano at to put on its stage show by the use of auxiliary power but was Mattingly said Elsenhower will the White House. unable to show the movie that accompanies it. Patrons were N E W Y O R K I/R --A m a s s i v e e l e c t r i c p o w e r remain in bed upon recommen­ dations of the doctors and not T o p D o n o r s N a m e d Moyers said he asked all three offered refunds but many of the audience stayed. fa ilu r e p lu n g ed N e w Y o r k C ity , B o s to n and men “ to stay on top of the sit­ because he doesn’ t feel like uation as long as necessary” Women walked in the middle of the blacked-out streets in v a s t a r e a s o f the n o r th e a s t b a c k in to the d a y s getting up. The fall term blood drive tabulations show that the 1,5 5 4 pints "W e think this is simply good, donated beat last year’ s total by 46, but fell short of this year’ s goal and to offer whatever aid might some sections of the city rather than venture down sidewalks. of ca n d lelig h t T u e sd a y , ch o k in g traffic and be possible to affected states. At the swank ” 2 1 Club” business went on as usual despite common sense,’ ’ he said. of 1,700 pints according to Rhys Curtis, chairman of the drive. Asked whether the possibility the lack of power. d isru p tin g c o m m u n ic a tio n s. The men’ s dormitory winners vvere Armstrong with a 39.5 Mattingly s a i d the former president is free of discomfort, per cent turnout for first place and Emmons with a 22 per cent of sabotage was being consid­ T h e b la c k o u t, w h ich e x te n d e d in to p a r ts o f ered, Moyers said: " I t ’ s very gay," said club president BobKriendler. "E v e r y ­ and his blood pressure is un­ turnout for second place. " 1 have nothing more than body is acting as though it were New Year’ s E v e.” C a n a d a , w a s e s t i m a t e d to h a v e h it c i t i e s , changed at the level of 130 to 140. The women’ s dormitory winners showed East Mayo taking first place with a turnout of 21. 8 per cent and Gilchrist taking second what 1 have given you.” On sections of Long Island teen-agers assisted sorely beset to w n s and c o u n t r y s i d e in w h ic h at l e a s t 20 Assistant Secretary of Defense "T h is Is h,ls usual, normal place with donations of 13 per cent. Arthur Sylvester said that gov­ police in directing traffic. m illio n p eo p le liv e. Broadway, long known as "T h e Great White Way” because of lev el," the heart specialist said. The fraternity final count has not been completed but so far, ernors and mayors In northeast­ its millions of electric lights, saw something new. Street ven­ C o u n t l e s s c o m m u t e r s w 'ere s t r a n d e d in He added that he had checked Phi Sigma Delta is leading with 100 per cent turnout. Elsenhower's b l o o d pressure For the sororities, Alpha Delta Pi took first place with a ern areas affected by a massive dors sold candles along the darkened street. su b w a y s and e le v a to r s and on e le c t r ic tr a in s . power failure were, offered "the many times since the 1955 heart 44.9 per cent turnout and Kappa Kappa Gamma took second place full support of all available mili­ A bus ran into a group of pedestrians in Queens, New York A irlin ers w ere d iverted from N ew Y o rk ’s attack. with a much lower percentage. Mattingly said alio the use of Bower House took first place with 100 per cent contributing tary units.” City, injuring six people. b l a c k e d - o u t a i r p o r t s to N e w a r k a n d P h i l a d e l ­ The Defense Department said By coincidence, Vice Adm. H. G. Rickover said in a speech oxygen periodically is a fire- and Hedrick House was second well down in the Co-ops. earlier ” a rapid check of major prepared in a'dvance for delivery in Washington tonight that p h ia p o r ts . caution usually taken in such One interesting finding wa« that, except for Akers Hall, the women cases where chest pains are in­ beat the men in every category for co-ed dorms. military installations, including “ I can think of no single material blessing I would rather N a tio n a l G u a r d s m e n w e r e a l e r t e d to p r e ­ the Strategic Aid Command and volved. _______________ the North American Air De­ have than electric light." vent lootin g . fense Command, confirms that P r e s i d e n t J o h n s o n w-as i n f o r m e d t h a t t h e 58 Die As Jetliner communications were intact.” The Pentagon said the Air b la c k o u t, w h ich fir s t P a r k in s o n T o T a lk Force had been ordered to make c l o s e d in a b o u t 5 :3 0 available its air fields for any p .m . E S T , w ould b e Hits Kentucky commercial fields were blacked out. o v e r by 10 p .m ., as O n l a w s ’ T o n ig h t T h r e e major strategic air h a rried p ow er ex p e rts command bases in the North­ C . Northcote Parkinson, whose which will be the subject of his east were operating on auxiliary s t r o v e to r e m e d y th e golden rules for efficiency ap­ talk here,” Borgstrom added. peared in the bestselling " P a r ­ His analysis of east and west power, a Pentagon spokesman break or breaks. said. kinson’ s Law ,’ ’ will, s p e a k in is brought into sharpest focus on They are Westover Air Force CINCINNATI, Ohio if]—Char­ attempt, but Capt. William J . apart in the debris of the three- The O ffice of E m e r ­ Fairchild at 8 tonight. the western expansion during the red bodies were removed Tues­ O’ Neill, 39, normally would have engine Boeing 727. The front of the plane disin­ g e n c y P lan n in g s a i d Base, Chicopee F alls, M ass., The speech is part of a series 19th Century, followed by with­ day from the wreckage of a Jet been In command. Grlffiss Air Force Base, Rome, tegrated. The ground was seared. t h a t p o w e r arranged by the Forum Commit­ drawal in the 20th, Borgstrom N .Y ., and Plattsburgh Air Force passenger airliner which car­ The other pilot was Capt. Dan­ was r e s ­ tee and is open to the public said. Parkinson ends with a chal­ iel J . Teelln, 46, a supervisor The fuselage flew apart, One en­ without charge. lenging account of east and west Base in northern New York. ried 58 of the 62 persons aboard who was making the flight for a gine was hurled 25 feet. t o r e d in M a s s a c h u ­ to death Monday night. Survivors b e s i d e s Weekley s e t t s , m ost of C on­ First Army headquarters at Parkinson’ s satires on the bus­ today, emphasizing that in this By afternoon, with smoke still routine Inspection. Usually such Ft. Ja>, N .Y., reported it was iness world shatter the ideas of struggle the USSR belongs to the "b ig ” business. NSON also fully operational on its own whlsplng from wreckage, offi­ supervisors serve as co-pilot while checking the regular cap­ were stewardess Toni F . Ket- chell, 25, West Monroe, L a ., and n ec tic u t, T oron to and west. cials said 46 bodies had been passengers Israel Horowitz, 49, B u f f a l o by 7:45 E S T . Human Torch His first law states that work backup power resources. lifted from the mangled Am eri­ tain. expands to fill the time available Ellington said at OEP head­ can Airlines plane that crashed Workers continued to search Closter, N .J., and Norman N. The cause was reported to be for its completion. He goes on to quarters in Washington that the Into a Kentucky hillside as it for bodies— most of them torn Spector, Valley Stream, N.Y. a disruption near Niagara Falls, power breakdown was "v a st and Close To Death say that if more people work on neared the Greater Cincinnati unique but no cause for undue N .Y., In a vital point In a vast one project, each will do less. Airport for a landing in a light­ alarm .” grid system carrying electricity Parkinson has written “ M rs. ning storm. to far-fling areas. Parkinson’ s L a w , ” t he " L a w Prophets” and "T h e Evolution of Politics: Inlaws andOutlaws" and Ellington said the combined efforts local of the authorities federal, were state mobilized and The hill is about 300 feet high and the plane hit on the slope and Honors College Label With s t a r t l i n g suddenness, normal activity stopped. Building careened several hundred yards lights went out. Streetlights went will soon release a book which forms the subject matter for to­ night's talk, “ East and West.” inch NEW YORK if’—A young Roman Catholic pacifist, almost every to correct the situation. of his body burned, lingered on the brink of death himself into a human torch Tuesday outside the United Nations to after turning Johnson spread power heard about failures the on his wide­ au­ toward the peak. "W e Just didn’ t see it. We Just Misrepresents Group out. News tickers stopped. Net­ work radio and television sta­ protest the Viet Nam war. to radio during a 5 p.m. CST didn’ t see the hill,” one survivor Honors College membership College students wrote a letter tions were silenced. Thousands Currently he is visiting pro­ Tiews broadcast, Moyers said. said. should be "Invoked only with the to th e S t a t e N e w s protesting of office workers were stranded Later, he apparently repented the ghastly deed. fessor at the University of Illi­ Both pilots were veterans and “ gross moral outrages perpe­ In elevators In black skyscrap­ " I ’ m antiwar, all wars, I did this as a religious action,” said He said Johnson was in the car greatest care’ ’ In order to pre- nois and he has taught in the Har­ near his ranch home and quick­ familiar with the approach. It v e n t a misrepresentation of trated by a government which we ers. Roger LaPorte, 22, the second American in a week to set fire to vard school of business adminis­ ly went Inside to call the offi­ was not known who was at the members as a whole, according to would like to support but can­ Air traffic stopped at this himself in such a protest. ‘ tration and in many other U.S. controls for the visual landing a statement made by Director not." The letter identified them city’ s two major airports— Ken­ Taken to Bellevue Hospital with 95 per cent of his body seared, cials In Washington. universities. John D, Wilson. as Honors College members and nedy and LaGuardla. Planes c ir ­ He has taught in England and LaPorte showed signs of kidney . Wilson referred to a proposal members of honorary societies. cling In the air were unable to Scandanavia. damage and his breathing was get down and planes on the ground by Douglas Lackey, Wayne, N .J., "Parkinson built his world- labored. Nevertheless, he was senior, to draft and publish an "T h is letter was entirely in­ were unable to take off. Radio and famous law on his accuracy as conscious and able to talk. advertisement f e a t u r i n g the dependent of our campaign to radar communications apparent­ an observer,” commented Georg " 1 know of no one who had 95 run an advertisement in theState ly were blacked out. After about names of Honor sCollege students A, Borgstrom, MSU professor per cent total body burns sur­ who oppose the war in Viet Nam. News,” Lackey said. "W e will a half hour, the planes In the of food science who arranged viving,” declared Dr. Ja y G ros- Wilson said that a minority should try to get at least 20 signa­ air were diverted to Newark, for his visit. AA feld, a member of a medical team tures. The war in Viet Nam Is Philadelphia and other eastern not attempt to represent the ideas “ His ability To seize upon es­ working over LaPorte. being waged In symbols. We hope fields. of the whole group, sentials and present them sim­ The last rites of the Roman Along Kennedy International’ s "T h ose H o n o r s College stu­ ( c o n t in u e d o n p a g e 2 ) ply Is most conspicuous In his Catholic Church were adminis­ dents who share Mr. Lackey's longest runway, emergency lights recent book, “ East and West,’ ’ tered to LaPorte, after he ex­ view,” Wilson said, "and who were posted for emergency land­ pressed repentance over his vio­ ings. wVjiv.f.y Join him Jn^the pro­ lation of its sfnct re, igrtfeiSiTedo posed advertisement, should, in M cD onald Wins The TransitAutnoi reporrecf against suicide. at least 850,000 stranded in sub­ L a st D a y The Rev. Alexander Busuttil, Catholic chaplain at Bellevue, courtesy and truth, take great pains to avoid the impression that Time Extension ways. This did not Include the the view is shared by all stu­ The Michigan Court of Appeals thousands of suburban commut­ For B o o k s said: " I t was the most devout act of contrition I’ ve heard. He dents who happen to share mem­ bership in the Honors College.” has granted MaJ. Gen. Ronald D. ers whose trains suddenly were McDonald an indefinite extension not running. Today is the last day to pick was clear and expressive when 1 There are over 1,100 students Outside many subway stations, of time to file a new appeal up winter term schedule books. spoke with him ." In the Honors College this term, on his ouster as adjutant general huge crowds of commuters gath­ They are available In the Inter­ Eventually, th e p r i e s t an- Wilson said, who are enrolled in of Michigan. ered trying to get down—while national Center lobby, the Union nointed LaPorte’ s right cheek, every college of the University. Presiding Judge Timothy C . others were trying to get' out. Concourse and 107 Administra­ to fulfill the Church's last sa­ "T h ese people, no doubt, hold Quinn r u l e d Monday that Mc­ There was some chaos in the tion. crament of extreme unction. a variety of views on all im­ streets with traffic suddenly halt­ Donald may wait to file any Students should complete ad­ A hospital spokesman said La­ portant issues facing us as a new appeals until after the court ing. vising, If necessary, this week Porte nodded affirmatively when society," he said. ‘ *My obligation disposes of petitions in involving Walpole, Mass., State Prison and fill out the schedule card asked by hospital psychiatrists If is simply to do what I can to his case. officials said a "fu ll-sca le riot*’ found In the packet of reglstra- he wanted to live. > wijKti,-r.c'OO»^* 7 •oubseqaen? •• CUrrentiyTéKtííiíg rs a petuTcrn ■b rx c i;* c u t' - T a c > r . i g l T & - i n th e - JtJWZJS&hj JUBrsHtf.ehiied - wHV'ihe LaPorttr’ s iuimSiatitWftiS’iOwed advertisement by those Honors by* Me Do na Id challenging the maximum security section short­ 4 schedule book. - by a week the suicide of Norman College students who do not op­ appointment by Go v . George ly after power failed at 5:20 E ST . The schedule card should be R. Morrison, 3 1 , who burned T I N Y P R O B L E M — W i t h th e e x p a n s io n o f th e U n i v e r s i t y , p u b l i c s a f e t y o f f i c i a l s Romney of MaJ. Gen. Clarence Nearly four hours later, officials h a v e t o a c c o m m o d a t e e v e r y o n e ’ s p a r k i n g t r o u b l e s . If y ° u w o n d e r w h y t h e r e Is a pose United States policy in Viet taken to early enrollment next himself to death outside the Pen­ Nam ." C . Schnipke to the adjutant gen­ said the rioting was continuing week where only the registration tagon in Washington in protest p a rk in g sh orta g e, ju s t r e m e m b e r t h a t M S U 's y o u n g e r s e t n e e d s s p a c e , t o o . unabated. P h o to b y T o n y F e r r a n t e Lackey and three other Honors eral’ s post. request form will be filled out. over the VietNam war. 2 Michigan State N ew s, E ast Lansing. Michigan W ednesday, N ovem b er 10, 1965 EDITORIALS CHARLES C. WELLS S h o u ld U n iv e rs itie s P a y N o P o lit ic ia n F o r S tu d e n ts 9 C rim e s ? H a s P r iv a c y IF IN G H A M C O U N T Y B I L L E D MSU re n until th ey a r e no l o n g e r m i n o r s , f o r the c o s t of h a u lin g 59 student the u n i v e r s i t y i s e x p e c t e d to p a y f o r If a government is representative, can it tolerate "clo sed ” d e m o n s t r a t o r s o ff to ja il l a s t s p r i n g , the a c t i o n s o f s o m e of its students. or "inform al” sessions in which reporters are excluded? I think the a d m in is t r a t io n w o u ld be fu r io u s . S u r e ly the U n i v e r s i t y of C a l i f o r n i a not. Y e t this is p r e c is e ly what A la m e d a w i l l f ig h t t h i s a b s u r d c l a i m . So f a r By its very nature, the term "representative" implies that C o u n t y h a s done to th e U n i v e r s i t y P re s id e n t C l a r k K e r r and B e r k e le y those represented know what is going on in the government. of C a l i f o r n i a at B e r k e l e y . A b i l l f o r C hancellor Roger W. Heyns have If we would test ASMSU by this definition, we would find that it is $ 1 5 , 9 8 2 h a s b e e n s e n t to t h e s c h o o l declined comm ent on the c o u n ty 's quite UNrepresentative. to p a y the e x p e n s e of p o l i c e w o r k i n g a c tio n . W e hope th is s i l e n c e is an Last week an important thing happened. Cabinet President Jim o v e r t i m e to h a l t V i e t N a m p r o t e s t i n d i c a t i o n o f m a p p i n g s t r a t e g y , not Tanck was under fireandthewholecabinetsystem was under exam­ m a r c h e s O c t . 15 a n d 16. T h e C o u n t y ig n o r i n g the s i t u a t i o n , ination. B o a r d of S u p e r v i s o r s t h i n k s the U n i ­ A recall motion was presented at the regular board meeting versity should pay b e c a u s e the N o v .. 2 which would have in effect fired Tanck. Before voting, m a r c h e s w e re sp e a rh e a d e d by a group T A K I N G T H I S I S S U E to c o u r t m a y however, the ASMSU board wanted to discuss the matter and give c e n t e r e d on c a m p u s . be the o n ly w a y that the U n i v e r s i t y Tanck a chance to answer. of C a l i f o r n i a can settle this con­ But the board members did one other thing. They adjourned into IN L O C O P A R E N T I S — t h e u n i v e r ­ f l i c t of r e s p o n s i b i l i t i e s . If B e r k e l e y a "Committee of the Whole" session which excludes the public o f f i c i a l s do n o t c h a l l e n g e A l a m e d a s i t y a c t i n g i n p l a c e o f a p a r e n t —- and the press. is bein g f o r c e d upon the B e r k e l e y C o u n t y ’ s c l a i m of p a y m e n t , M S U and Three other closed hearings were held before the final vote adm inistration by county o fficials. other ca m p u se s w h e re students have Friday. The motion to recall Tanck was defeated, but this was a J u s t as the p a re n t s t a n d s re s p o n ­ p r o t e s t e d in m a r c h e s , w i l l s o o n be rubber stamp action. The decision had been formulated at the s i b l e in a c o u r t of l a w f o r h i s c h i l d - f o r c e d to d e al w ith s i m i l a r d e m a n d s . earlier closed hearings. And, oddly enough, there was no dis­ cussion either on the recall motion or the vote of confidence. Students now know the decision, but the ASMSU board has cheated them by failing to give the thinking and the discussing behind the decision. B ook F in e R is e F in e - As it stands, students are ignorant of what influenced this major ASMSU action. They don’ t really know what the charges against Tanck were, who made them, why they were made or . Tanck’ s answer to the charges. Closed sessions have been rationalized on the grounds that the B u t M o re Is N eeded charges might have hurt Tanck’ s image and that the whole matter was really just "in tern al." A P R O P O S A L by a l i b r a r y student b o o k s ou t f o r t w o w e e k s . B u t at th e Let’ s be realistic. Politics are public. If an official comes s u b c o m m i t t e e to r a i s e o v e r d u e bo ok sam e tim e faculty m e m b e rs m ay bo r­ under fire, the voter should know who is making the charge, what row books fo r indefinite tim e p e rio d s. * DAVID HANSON f i n e s f r o m f i v e to 25 c e n t s p e r d a y the charge specifically is, the answer to the charge and any action would help m ake l i b r a r y r e s o u r c e s O ne f a c u lt y m e m b e r had a book c h e c k ­ arising from it. m o r e e a s i l y a v a i l a b l e to M S U s t u ­ ed out f o r s i x y e a r s without e v e r But open hearings on personnel matters are also essential r e t u r n i n g it. F a c u l t y m e m b e r s sh o u ld dents. because publicity cuts down ------------------------------------------------ B u t the p r o p o s a l is only a f ir s t h a v e c e r t a i n p r i v i l e g e s in u s i n g the on the number of irresponsible s t e p t o w a r d a s o l u t i o n to t h i s p r o b ­ lem . to the Other circu m stan ces p r o p o s e d i n c r e a s e in f i n e s related l i b r a r y , bu t t h e y s h o u l d c o n f o r m to s o m e type of tim e s tip u la tio n . Another Remapping Try, charges leveled at an individual. If the accuser knows his charge will be printed, he will go to M is re p re s e n ts s h o u ld be t h o r o u g h l y e x a m i n e d and ANOTHER PR O BLEM IS c r e a t e d ( c o n t i n u e d f r o m p a g e 1) greater lengths to document its w h e n s t u d e n t s h a v e p r o j e c t s to r e ­ su g g estio n s should be p re se n te d . F O R IN S T A N C E , u n d e r g r a d u a t e and search or term papers to w r i t e . W ith a l i m i t e d n u m b e r of r e f e r e n c e s Another Political Game? correctness than if he is allowed to create a few symbols of our to make general criticism s in a own.” closed session. Wilson s a i d that he trusts g r a d u a t e s t u d e n ts a r e a I lo w e d to c h e c k in a c e r t a i n a r e a and a l a r g e n u m b e r of students wanting to use them , Courts ruled last week that the Legislature dog house. Voters have the idea that dividing up The real test of ASMSU’ s rep­ Lackey’ s judgment “ Implicitly.” it’s first come, first served. Two must try once, more to chop up Michigan so that the power structure b e t w e e n the p a r t i e s resentativeness will come at its "H e is a bright guy who will üJli w e e k s i s a long t i m e to w a i t f o r a every vote counts the same. is the best way to keep both sides honest. meetings during the rest of the word the advertisement in such a I1* year. More closed sessions will way that the Honors College as a book you nee d t o d a y . The basic problem is that when the Democrats If the problem of reapportionment is any ,. C f v O n ly fa c u lty and g ra d u a te students are running things they tend to look on voter tell students quite plainly that whole will not be represented as example, the voters are thinking clearly. a r e a l l o w e d to s e e t h e n a m e o f a equality as a process by which the Democrats ASMSU is a fraud as far as a sharing hisbeliefs,” Wilson said. One goal of Michigan’ s Constitutional Con­ p e rs o n who h a s a p a rtic u la r book th ey stay in power. Republicans frown on this unless representative g o v e r n m e n t is “ My only concern is that no group vention was to work out an apportionment r f n n e e d . T h i s m e a n s t h a t no u n d e r g r a d they are in power and try the same thing. system to give more equality in light of at concerned. be misrepresented.’ ’ c a n a s k to u s e th e b o o k a s s o o n a s It's called politics. The rich try to stay rich least the 1960 census. po ssible. or get richer and the poor pick up the crumbs. Con-Con members were to have been elected Every once in a while people decide that the on a non-partisan basis to keep politics out E V E R Y S T U D E N T s h o u l d b e a b l e to rich have gotten too rich and complacent and of this and other decisions. k n o w the n a m e of th e p e r s o n who h a s support the underdog— until the dog gets too Of course that didn’ t work out. The most c h e c k e d out a b o o k h e n e e d s s o t h a t fat and lazy and it’ s time for another switch. non-partisan vote in Michigan is the one for our L i b r a r y r e s o u r c e s c a n be u s e d Nationally, the fat dog has been the Democrats Supreme Court judges. Each party nominates m o re e ffe c tiv e ly and e ffic ie n tly by for all but eight years since FDR took over candidates and the affiliations are left off everyone, undergraduates included. the chow dish in 1932. L B J has a firm grip the ballot. .. Althoug h w e s u p p o rt the p r o p o s e d on the bbne and seems reluctant to give it i n c r e a s e in f i n e s on o v e r d u e b o o k s , up until 1972. Con-Con came up with a partisan apportion­ it i s o n l y a p a r t i a l a n s w e r at b e s t . A few young pups in the GOP camp are cud­ ment. The Legislature came up with a partisan B e la t e d p r o b le m s sh o u ld be s e r i o u s l y dling up to the public in hopes that by then the apportionment. They sent the figures through an c o n s id e re d by l ib r a r y o ffic ia ls and th e public will want a change of breed. IBM machine and, because there are more student c o m m i t t e e - - t h e s o o n e r the In Michigan, the top dog has usually had to Democratic voters in the state, the results better. work with a Legislature that slept in the other were called slanted by the Republicans. What the Democrats want is LETTERS a fair decision because the fig­ ures are on their side. What the Republicans want is to make all the Democratic votes equal all the Republican votes. That, they reason, would be equality. G o v ern m en t B y , F o r , A n d W ith o u t The P e o p le The problem is Wayne County. It has too many people and not Unless there is some clarifi­ its present form should exist at enough Republican voters. To the Editor: wasting time or effort to consult n't agree with them, they do it in Like C h i c a g o , New Y o r k , student opinion. It gets things secret so they won’ t hurt the cation of past activities and a all, much less have its financial Cleveland and every big city in 1 would like to comment on our done, but seems to benefit its poor guy’ s feelings. So what if drastii improvement in the near support doubled. a state with sparse population wonderful Student Board. The constituents very little. the one in question cannot de­ future, we as students of MSU Dean T ra v is out-state, Detroit makes it im­ efficiency of that group is amaz­ The Student Board members fend himself or if the student should withnold all financial sup­ Shepherd sophomore possible for all votes to count ing. When in doubt it apparently are also very thoughtful. When body cannot hear their discus­ port of student government. Re­ does as it pleases instead of meeting to discuss one who does- sion? We really don’ t count any­ cent happenings should make us Darryl VeCasey the same. " B u s in e s s S id e ” o f wonder if student government in East Lansing sophomore Detroit complains that it sup­ way. ports the rest of the state with The area of financial man­ if it it agement is where they really taxes and should have more power in Lansing to say how that money N e w s p a p e r s P r o v id e s Solution’s Simple shine. Less than a week after a 60 per cent tax Increase they up it another 40 per cent. Not H o w M u c h L o n g e r is spent. There is no easy answer to the problem. Detroit could se­ C h a lle n g in g C a r e e r s that they need the money, you To the Editor: pay 10 or 15 per cent more on cede from the state and exist understand. Its Just easier to col­ a name brand item which can be as a separate province. Detroit lect larger sums. So what if After having read Miss Solo­ purchased at nationally adver­ T h i s I n c o m p e t e n c e ? could give up some of its in­ N e w s p a p e r li f e is n ’t a ll ty p e w r it e r s , presses, d e a d ­ it does give them a few thou­ mon’ s article in the Nov. 4 edi­ tised prices by merely going to dustry to the underprivileged up­ lin e s a n d n e w s scoops. sand extra? The money will go tion of the State News which Frandor Plaza. per peninsula— along with a good somew’here and with a little luck To the Editor: S o m e o n e has to h a n d le th e a d v e r tis in g t h a t m ake s bew'ailed the fact that East Lan­ part of its population. Until these merchants realize some may trickle back down to new s g a th e r in g p o s s ib le . S o m e o n e has to p re p a re sing’ s merchants are finding it Re the drama of closed sessions. Is it possible that so many Or we could face the fact that the average student. increasingly more difficult to at­ that the students know the score, supposedly intelligent people can tolerate the actions of ASMSU, one man-one vote means that p a y r o lls , a n d h a n d le c r e d it , a n d p u rc h a s e s u p p lie s , This tax brings up a question. tract student clientele, it seems 1 wish Frandor the best of luck. Detroit and Wayne County are A tax of 50 cents per student is i a group of students playing at being grown up? a n d lo o k a f te r c ir c u la tio n . obvious to me that the said mer­ The recent tax increase is an excellent example of the incon­ going to get more of the dog A n in c r e a s in g n u m b e r o f th e s e “ s o m e o n e s” a re c o l­ Craig Frederickson to be collected each term for a chants are either extremely naive biscuits because that’ s the way Rossford, Ohio, sophomore total of about $56,000. Jim sistent actions of ASMSU. We, the students, were led to believe le g e g ra d u a te s . F e llo w s lik e G e o rg e P ra tt, a b o v e , or are blinded by their past suc­ the cookie crumbles. Dave Kagan Graham, in the Nov. 4 State that ASMSU needed money. Yet if the ends toward which the w h o , a f t e r g r a d u a tin g f r o m th e LTn iv e r s it v o f M ic h i­ cesses. Grand Rapids sophomore News, said the total budget for money is to be used are examined, the question arises of whether But that doesn’ t have to mean Why should the average student perpetuating the D e m o c r a t i c g a n in 1961, b e g a n h is b u s in e s s c a re e r w i t h th e B o o th four terms will be between $30 or not the tax increase was justified. -$36,000. What is happening to Specifically: Why must student government accept the debts of cause in Michigan. N e w s p a p e r g ro u p . the other $20-$25,000 they will the various classes? It would seem that this is class obligation and It means the Republicans will A f t e r a y e a r in B o o th ’s T r a in in g P ro g ra m , G e o rg e collect? It seems to me that this should be treated as such. have to go to work and win over Is there a need for an expanded Lecture-Concert Series when the voters with imagination. b e c a m e a m e m b e r o f th e c la s s ifie d a d v e r tis in g s ta ff is a lot of money to leave in S T A T E M E W hands of a bunch of kids who have the campus seems to have already reached the saturation point? This may not happen soon. But unless we reapportion the o f th e K a la m a z o o G a z e tte . W i t h B o o th h e w i l l fin d admirably demonstrated com­ Should we not improve quality instead of quantity? a m p le o p p o r t u n it y f o r a d v a n c e m e n t. H e has a lr e a d y plete lack of judgment. Is there actual need for another student book store? Does the state on the existing facts instead fo u n d t h a t s a la rie s , p e n s io n s a n d o t h e r b e n e fits are Member Associated P ress, United gre ss International, In­ It's about time these so-called proposed 10 per cent personal saving justify the use of monies of the present political power structure, we are perpetuating an» c o m p a c id x L v 't^ d x jh o s e o f o th e r hvu»\n^sses. land Sa ily Preu*'>sBociation, AS*oc>Stet> C*l>eg»te Frs-su, representatives make a full ac­ which, we have been led to believe, are desperately needed else­ Michigan Press Association, Michigan Collegiate P ress A sso­ insanity that represents the worst B o o th N e w s p a p e rs a re lo c a te d in B a y C ity , M u s ­ counting, financial and otherwise, where? ciation. of their recent activities. If they These thoughtless proposals and lack of coordination with the aspect of “ politicking.". kegon, S a g in a w , F lin t , G ra n d R a p id s , K a la m a z o o , Published every '"lass day throughout fall, winter, and spring cannot J u s t i f y past action and University leave grave doubts in our minds as to the real worth Michigan has until spring to set J a c k s o n , Y p s ila n ti, and Ann A rb o r. E ach p re s e n ts terms and twice weekly summer term by the students of Michi­ handle future responsibilities in a of student government. How long must we pay for this incompe­ the districts for the 1966 presi­ e x c e lle n t o p p o r tu n it ie s f o r h a p p y , s u c c e s s fu l lif e t im e gan State University. more appropriate manner, they tence? dential election. Chances are that Second class postage paid at East Lansing, Mich. would perform a great service the solution will be as unreal­ ca re e rs . I n v e s tig a te B o o th ’s p o s s ib ilitie s b e fo re you Editorial and business offices at 341 Student Services Build­ Michael Atkinson istic as those proposed in the d e c id e . by resigning. No student govern­ ing, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Mich. ment would be better than bad Camaritto, C al., freshman past, but it would be nice to Ask your Placement Officer for the date and time of William Baum get a surprise from downtown Booth Newspapers' visit to your campus, or write student government. ED IT O R IA L '355-8252 Heidelberg, Germany, freshman for a change. Coordinator, Training Program, Booth Newspapers, Inc., Charles C. Wells .......................................... Editor-In-Chief Suite 2100, 211 West Fort Street, Detroit, Michigan 48226. Richard S ch w a rtz ........................................................Managing Editor 60CRATÉÍ, cicero, Robespierre lF YOU'RE HAVING TROUBLE 6TARTIN6 THE GPEcCH HASN'T Jim Sterba....................................... L a rry Mogg . ....................................... Campus Editor •SportsEditor Dis r a e l i , Gla d sto n e ...it h a s SPEECHES iN IT BY ALL SORTS GETTING YOUR SPEECH STARTED, THIS BOOK COULD HELP YOU... uJORRlEDME . I JUST TH0U6HT I'D BEGIN 8Y6AYlN6\MLU5EW£D BO O TH N E W S P A P E R S t i n t ® .39< ; of any kind of | the purchase of any 10-lb. bag of I MAKE KROGER YOUR HOLIDAY 1 ■ A P P L E S i BAKING HEADQUARTERS | i 1 P O T A T O E S 1 ■ Redeem at Kroger thru 1 9* ® I Where is our biggest challenge — I l a p s r t i i P itta i Fresh Dates Ib 3 9 ? I Sun., November 14; 1965 I ■ Redeem at Kroger thru in space, or on some battlefield? ■ ■ “ j Sun., November 14, 1965 I Calif. Pitted Frutti Dates in-lb 8 9 ? Or does it lie in the realm of thought, where men strive for R e i Cberriea lb 9 9 ? TOP VALUf TOP VAlUt deeper fCrSf$ft -wrd sp/rftuG\ re» Green Cberriee a -oz. wt 7 9 ? r t a m a i 2 5 r L _________________ S T A M P S w i Tm i mi s c o u r o N ÖFT7 newal... for the discovery of man in God’s image. There's so much Ib 4 9 ? | the purchase of 1-lb. or .more pkg. ot | | e $1 or more purchase of | Calava Frait Caka Mia more to life than what's on the Dal M alta P itta i P ra iee Ye-lb 3 9 ? I Shelled or In Shell I I Candied Fruits &Peals | surface. Hear this public lecture titled "The Mythology of Matter' Dal Maata M ai. Fraaaa 2-lbs 6 9 ? |P NUTS °| |> orFrashData. ” | by LEN0RE D. HANKS, C.S.B.. ■ Redeem at Kroger thru _ Redeem at Kroger thru . MAKE KROGER YOUR HOLIDAY I I Sun., November 14, 1965 I I Sun., November 14, 1965 I member of the Board of Lecture­ NUT HEADQUARTERS ship of The First Church of Christ. Scientist, in Boston, Mass. B - Diamond Shallad v a l u a b l e c o u p o n VALUABLE COUPON I Faglieli Walaata Ib. 9 9 ? Pure Granulated | irn n n a ii m t le a irc 1 B ’ “ O l i a s s i Sh ellai F i c a i a Diamond Larga Ih SÍWÍT Ib. 9 9 * f KRO G ER FLO U R I I SUGAR I Sponsored by the Christian Science Organization. T h u r., I Eigliah W alaite 2 lbs. 9 9 ? I* 10'bb.. 5 9 / 1 Ie Limit 1 with a $5 or more purchase 5 fb. bag 4 9 < I Limit t with a $5 or more purchase I . I la Shall M ixei Nata 2 lbs. 9 9 ? Nov. 1 1 , 7:30 P.M . Parlor C, (excluding beer, wine or tobacco) I (excluding beer, wine or tobacco) | Union Building. I la Shall Brazil Nats 2 lbs. 9 9 ? • Redeem at Kroger thru . ■ Redeem at Kroger thru - Admission Free • Everyone is welcome 1 la Shall P e e n e I Sun., November 14, 1965 J I Sun., November 14, 1965 J 2 jb ^ 99? W ednesday, N ovem b er 10, 1965 6 Michigan State N ew s, East Lansing, M ichigan NEW NON-CREDIT CO Pianist, Quintet R e a d in g H e lp A v a ila b le SetConcert contextual meanings of words in shown us that students feel the Woodwinds By M A R Y U L L R IC H Rockle. professor of the College of Education and head of thepro- t h e i r historical settings,” he class is helping them with their S ta te N e w s S t a f f W r i t e r said, “ and word relationships other courses. They have gained The ability to read and com­ gram. To Accompany ‘ 'Professors expect c o l l e g e are also emphasized.” more confidence in their reading prehend is basic to success In level proficiency in reading and Students in the course are ability.” any college course, yet many writing, but they’ re not getting taught how to read and study for Van Rockle said that because students are not equipped with it,” he said. "There is much to exams. a student is enrolled in the read­ □tvld Renner, young Am eri­ this basic skill. ing course does not suggest a learn about English that isn't “ We definitely do not coach our can concert artist and a new Help is now available in Mich­ taught in the high schools." students on exams,” Van Rockle deficiency in his basic skills. member of the Department of igan State’ s non credit reading The course emphasizes MSU’ s said. “ They are taught to read “ Actually, the students we en­ Music faculty, will appear as proficiency courses, begun this exam questions for their mean­ roll are superior or they wouldn't pianist with the Richards Wood­ fall and available winter term to University College curriculum. ings, and to perceive what is be here in the first place,” he wind Quintet in its first on- every student. "It was felt that if a student could read well enough to com­ expected in answering them.” said. campus concert 8 :15 p.m. Friday The course was required this F o u r t e e n advanced graduate B e g i n n i n g next term, the in the music auditorium. term for freshmen who scored prehend the material in these students in the fields of English, course will be open to upper­ This concert marks the first below a set percentile on their classes, he could do the same math and education teach the classmen “ who haven’ t acquired time the group, formerly known orientation tests, but it is not for any course he might take,’ course with specially designed the basic proficiency in reading as the Faculty Woodwind Quintet, remedial and does not teach speed Van Rockle said. materials correlating to basic and writing which their profes­ will appear as the R i c h a r d s reading, according to Byron Van "W e teach students to see the college classes. sors expect.” Woodwind Quintet. The renaming “ Vocabulary, reading selec­ "W e are trying to alleviate is a tribute to Lewis Richards, tions and word relationships are students’ academic troubles by RUSH IS O N — T h e a n t i c i p a t i o n o f a p o s s i b l e R o s e B o w l s e e m s to h a v e r e m o v e d the first head of the Department • P r e s c r ip tio n le n se s emphasized,” Van Rockle said. catching the causes early,” Van a lo t o f th e g r i p e s a b o u t th e t i c k e t s y s t e m f o r f o o t b a l l g a m e s . S tu d e n ts s t i l l of Music, who served from 1927 g ro un d ” We administer a standardized Rockle said, "because many stu­ w a i t In l o n g l in e s t o p i c k up t h e i n c o n v e n i e n t p a s s e s to th e g a m e . until his death in 1939. test at the end of the course, dents drop out of school or lose Since its beginning in 1948 the • C o m p le te s e le c tio n which has nothing to do with incentive after midterm grades quintet has performed in Phila­ o f fram es grades,” he said. are Issued.” delphia, Atlanta, Washington, De­ “ The purpose of the test is to “ We want to equip them with troit and Chicago and has toured • S u n g la s s e s demonstrate to the students how the basic resources to prevent H a n s o n ’s G o ld e n R u le : throughout the Midwest. well their reading ability com­ this, and to help upperclassmen The Richards Woodwind Quin­ • R e p a irs w h ile you w a it pares to college students at other achieve better grades,” he added. tet, organized by Roy Under­ universities,” he said. wood, then chairman of the de­ When the class was begun, Law Students 6N e v e r L o s e Y our C o o l9 partment of music, was one of Van Rockle said, the students dis­ the first quintets in residence. B a t o r O p t i c i a n s played a noncommittal attitude. ★ ★ ★ ★ ----------------------------------- The program Friday consists “ But that attitude has chang­ Lose Deferments B y D A V I D H AN S O N S ta te N e w s R e v i e w e r of "D ix -Sept V a r i a t i o n s ” by 223 A b b o tt ( N e x t to S tate T h e a te r) ed,” he added. “ Response has ANN ARBOR (UPI)— Roy F . Profitt, assistant dean of the “ Casanova 70” Is a rare com­ edy. It is sexy and slick, silly 'C A S A N O V A 7 0 ’ Jean-Michel, “ La Cheminee du Roi Rene” by Darius Milhaud U n i v e r s i t y of Michigan law and sick, but never loses its -C A M P U S ' and "Sextour for Piano and school, said Tuesday several law cool. Winds” by Francis Poulenc. school students have lost their Marcello Mastroianni stars as and an imaginative musical score ful? That may be stretching the Members of the quintet are student draft deferments. a guy who attracts women like keeps things bouncing. The open­ point, but the women are beau­ Romana Dahlborg, graduate as­ Profitt said six to 10 students flies but is too hung-up to take ing art and music for the titles tiful and the scenes are funny, sistant, flute: Daniel Stolper, as­ have told him they were re­ advantage of it. He must have promise something clever and so they get away with it. There sistant professor of music, oboe; classified 1-A by their local excitement to get excited. the movie lives up to it— espec­ is a lot of flesh, but whenever Elsa Ludewig, assistant profes­ draft boards. He said they asked ially in the last episode. something starts to look dirty, sor of music, clarinet; Douglas Pre Rose Bowl Special him to write their draft boards explaining the students were still He gets into situations that would be smut if they weren’ t so funny. Mastroianni is a mas­ M arcello gets involved with a it ends up to be pure .comedy. It Is a slick production. The married woman whose husband colors are great except for a Campbell, associate professor of music, French horn; and Edgar properly enrolled and should re­ Kirk, associate professor of mu­ 4 Days Only - W ed.-Sat. ______ tain their former 2 -S student terful comic as well as drama­ is overprotective and supposedly few tossed-in scenes for tran­ tic actor and this film gives him sic, bassoon. deferment classification. deaf. They carry on their affair sition or a few paste-up jobs S in gle G o o se n e c k F oil W rap p ed P ro fession a l the chance to combine both tal­ before his ears and the two men where the scenery Is projected Renner, an instructor in mu­ sic, will appear with the quintet ents. He is dead serious when M I C H I G A N plot each other’ s death by bal­ on a screen behind the action. In “ Sextour.” he is conspiring to bring some ancing a ball of marble that over­ All the comedy elements are D e sk Lam p H e rsh e y K is s e s Aqua N et i excitement into his affairs and looks the dinner table. there. The chase after he se­ ÿ clowns it up in the interim. R eg, 79c H air S p ray duces a girl whose “ purity” was O o p s ! F ig u ré s O ff S in gle C ane 13 o z . c a n T O D A Y L A D IE S D A Y The film starts with Charles Probably the funniest mansion in question seems to end in tra­ De Gaulle in a parade down the in'the world is the location for w /w o o d sw itch R e g . 79C Champs Elysee, but that is just this little tale. Everything is gedy when his car goes over a The State News incorrectly R eg. 2.99 LB. 5 0 * from 1:00 to 6:00 p.m. cliff and into the bcean. That reported two figures in the last 570 there for color. Then we switch crumbling, bridges and buildings, stops the audience for a minute two editions of the paper: 470 T n n i V Feature Ot to Marcello and a redhead. He with a stockpile of marble dogs, TO DAY 1; 20-3:20-5:20-7:20-9:25 in shock. Then we cut to M ar­ The budget for WMSB-TV is OR Now seems bored. He leaves a party Now $037 5* SIEVE EDWARDG ANN- to take her home and leaves her balls and obelisks filling the in­ cello dangling from .a twig and side of the house. everything is OK. $400,000, not $4 million as re­ ported in the Monday edition. 2 2 lb. $ 1 <>o McOUEEN•ROBINSON•MARGRET KAM.MALDEN* TUESDAYWELD AMARTINRANSOHOfF PRODUCTION T H E at the door saying he has to go to work. Then he sneaks back, breaks into the house and gets shot at. He loves it. He’ s ex­ The lovers paddle down a creek It is a fascinatingly funny film. on the property that looks like the Because it is episodic, it is not Red Cedar and park their boat in even, but everything fits together The price of tickets for the opera workshop Friday and Sat­ urday was $ 1 for adults and 50 cents for students and children K re sg e s C a m p u s Sto re C IN C IN N A T I K ID cited. He’ s nuts. Typically, the psychiatrist he a flotilla of empty bottles that like a big and bawdy gag-saw clink together In the breeze. puzzle. , under 15. »mitrocolor Across from the Union Open 9:30-5:30 Wed. 9:30-9:00 seeks out is not much help. He In one scene, Marcello tries ♦ S T A R T S F R ID A Y tells him to give up women If he can, or he will end up In bad to strike a match to light a can­ M S UIn te rn a tio n a l FilmS e rie s You Can Charge It at Kre&ge’s ” dle on one of the marble dogs trouble. The psychiatrist says and gets g r o w l e d at— he is presents there is a demon in him that craves excitement— animalistic scratching on the only real dog ' in the room. JOHN VALERIE ALEC MILLS HOBSON• GUINNESS tendencies. Funny? Marvelously so. Taste- ’ So Marcello tries to kick the habit. He hooks up with Virna Libertarian Crest L isi, who comes from a reli­ in J. A R T H U R R A N K 'S gious family and vows chastity. It looks like he might be out of trouble with her. They go to the circus. The ringmaster asks if any young man To Talk Here ♦t in the audience has the guts to Noted civil libertarian Curtis go into the lion’ s cage and col­ D. MacDougall of Northwestern lect a kiss from the redheaded University’ s M ed i l l School of T O D A V U lion tamer. The demon, dormant, Journalism will address apoliti­ bj CHARLES DICKENS rises up and moves Marcello to cal science c o l l o q u i u m on Ulth BERNARD MILES • FRANCIS L SULLIVAN lA C lfS ’PAV action. “ American Foreign Policy and end iinrodnneit ANTHONY WAGER jmJ JEAN SIMMONS “A perfect Directed by DAVID LEAN • Produced bt RONALD NEAME . It is a well developed plot that the P re ss,” at 7 p.m. Thursday Executive Producer ANTHONY HAVELOCK ALLAN leads to the final and funniest in Union Parlor A. story. The locations a re a s beau­ £ 4 5 0 * A m e m b e r of the National motion picture tiful as the women he deals with Council of the Emergency Civil Liberties C o m m i t t e e and the CAMPUS American Civil LibertiesUnion, MacDougall has also been active T H EA T R T - in Democratic and Progressive — B osley C ro u th e r, Time.* g l a d m i r 1 837 *08 7 1 ,N p 3 m m  ti Ô n ^ 3 3 2 -0 0 4 4 — party politics. He ran for theUJS. Senate from Illinois on the Pro­ Th u rs., Fri.-N o v. 11-12 gressive party ticket in 1948. T O D A V ¿i 7 & 9 p.m. H U R R Y ...L A S T 3 D A Y S FEA TU R E AT 1 :1 5 - 3 :1 5 5 :18 -7 :2 0 -9 :2 3 P.M. LAOlfS'PAV MacDougall’ s address is spon­ sored by Professor Joseph K. Roberts, professor of political FAIRCHILD Admission: 50C THEATRE COLUMBIA PiCUiH science. Richard W id m ark S id n e y Poitier D R I V E T h e B e d fo rd IftomfCoSp-m- - I N WlAVtR D M H is Som tTW M t of L a n s in g o n M -7 8 In c id e n t T h e a tre co-starring james m«aruiur LA S T 2 DAYS 7 5 * to 5 :3 0 E v e . $ 1 .0 0 tyOW! THRU SUNDAY? S ta rts S A T U R D A Y 1:00-3:05-5:10-7:20-9:30 It F i e r c e l y L i v e s A g a i n M a rc e llo M a s tro ia n n i and S M IL E , L U V . NOW! E LE C T R IC -IN -T H E CAR ....the L u sty W orld V irn a L is i in the P U N © «O lM Sj H EA TER! OPEN A L L WINTER H ila r io u s A d u lt C om edy o f the W ar L o rd ! 7 :0 0 - JOSEPH E LEVINE ......i. Feature at 7:40-9:50 H IT N O . ( l ) SHO W N A T 7 P M - 1 I : 4 0 Charlton H eston M An (M tA tS V RtCTuMCS NOm h "m i A N T H O N Y Q UINN I S B R IL L IA N T ! - B o s le y C roeeiner M y T .m e s 7 » P in k P a n th e r C a rto o n Color ANTHONY QUINN ALAN BATESIRENE PAPAS “ T H E P IN K P H I N K " M ICHAELCACOVANNIS PRODUCTION ZORBATHE GREEK Starts Friday ## A L L RIG • - 'I ’M ALLR IGH HT* T* St*rm • and hew lo g e l an international classcs presentation PETER SELLERS _ 1? 15. ? 45 5 15 7 55 10 30 » 9 9 IANCARMKML H IT N O . (2) S H O W N O N C E A T 10 P . M . TERRYTHOMAS m -pfu s . * ^ * " 33 » -------- lU H I M E A M H jtAVV r-AOC BELMONDO FRArtroVra'c DORLEAC jO *r SERVAIS “ Simply elonous.” AW00DFALL FILM ^ A UNITEDARTISTS-10PERT RELEASE ITHISPICTUREISRECOMMENDEDfQW»PULTSONuT] , f V W H U M FR O M RID * HEAVENS ABOVE? E x tra Added Short lAiraucoux »LOPERTPICTURESCORPORATION «i “D Y L A N T H O M A S ” FARAH MANUFACTURING CO., INC EL PASO, TEXAS W ednesday, N ovem ber 10. 1965 / Michigan State N ew s, E ast Lansing, Michigan "T H E S K IE R S ” U g ly Am erican Im age F a d in g | FROM ENGLAND Exciting 90 Min Warren Miller Film Because of the Peace Corps, " W e don’ t furnish money o r "It is difficult to go into a vil­ find themselves in a basically goods,” Anderson said. " I f we lage that has a negative Ameri­ uncreative, rigid structure.” N e w L a b o r P r o f the Ugly American image is grad­ ually fading in foreign countries, did, i t would change the func­ can a t t i t u d e , ” he said. "B u t "T h e re has been more publi­ tion of the Corps.” sometimes by working with the city,” Moore continued, " o f those >•: Shirley W. Lerner, a specialist in industrial relations at a member of the Corps recruit­ ing team said on campus this The Peace Corps must first people we can ease this feeling.” volunteers who can't find Jobs :i;i the University of Manchester, England, will Join the faculty be invited into a country by the Moore explained that a clari­ than those who do. Most return of MSU as a.visiting lecturer during winter term. week. Charles Moore, associate di­ host government with a program fication of American culture and to graduate school, go into teach­ M rs. Lerner will teach a graduate course in trade union rector for the Peace Corps ca­ cooperatively set up by the gov­ the development of understand­ ing and some enter government development and labor management in Western Europe. The reer- information service, ex­ ernment and the Peace Corps ing are two of the main reasons work. It is not one of our major course, LIR 854, will meetTuesdays andThursdays, 3-4:30 p.m. plained that the main reason staff. for the Peace Corps* existence. problem s." She did her undergraduate work in the United States at The United States staff re­ The two men a g r e e d that Moore said that the Peace Chicago’ s Roosevelt University where she majored in labor for the Corps’ existence is to promote better understanding of searches the area and data, works some problems arise when a Corps program has been accept­ & economics. M rs. Lerner received her Ph. D. from the London out a development p r o g r a m , volunteer returns to the United ed both by the American people School of Economics in 1957 and has been teaching at the the United States through service. "When the Peace Corps was trains American volunteers for States after his two years over­ and foreign countries from its i; University of Manchester since then. organized in 1 9 6 1 ," he said, "its specific positions and then sends seas. beginning. She has written a book "Breakaway Unions and the Small them into the country to work "M ost volunteers, after re­ "W e feel the program has been Trade Union” and several of her articles have been published function was to provide devel­ S un., N o v . 14 3 : 3 0 ' oping countries with the skills with the people of the host vil­ turning to the United States," successful both here and abroad in professional journals. L a n s in g C iv ic C e n te r we had and those they requested. lage. Moore said, "a r e confronted with because of this human under­ The appointment was announced by Albert A . Blum, chair- F o r T i c k e t s & MSU Ski C lu b I n f o r m a t i o n A volunteer’ s Job may be ei­ finding meaningful, creative jobs. standing,” he said. "Andthrough ii man of academic studies in the MSU School of Labor and "Along with this was the idea C A L L NOW ; J oe l 3 3 2 - 0 4 6 6 ther structured or unstructured. "O verseas they must use their assistance we can create better >: Industrial Relations. to promote better understanding G re g 353-7403 If a volunteer is teaching in a own resources with a great deal understanding and better interna­ among peoples as a type of pub­ school, his job is structured. of freedom and upon returning, tional relations." _______ lic relations,'* he said. The corps has received much The volunteer is responsible to political criticism from Commu­ the village principal and works "Super-Right" Mature, Corn-Fed Beef nist countries representing it as under him. W h a t M a k e s a subversive propaganda orga­ On the other hand, if he works in the field or on construction, Come CHUCK ROAST nization. Moore said the criticism was his job is more flexible. The P ic k e ts T ic k , volunteer must use his own re­ You'll expected and described the Corps sources and imagination to solve as a "people organization supply­ P ro te s t? any problems that arise. ing host "countries with people and skills.” "T h is is the genius of the Why does Johnny go off to col­ at A&P! Peace C o rp s," Anderson said, lege beardless, sandleless and "Money is not given to for­ "the individual has the freedom maybe even somewhat wet behind eign countries through the Peace and must use his imagination the ears, only to return home a 59 Corps,” Moore said. "Themoney to solve his problems.” few weeks later with a poster on for Peace Corps projects comes from the host country.” In some cases, the village is not receptive to the Peace Corps his shoulder? And lets no one knock if off. ARM c CU T John Anderson, former Peace program. Anderson, who was stationed ln Or, another way: what prompts lb Corps volunteer, explained that a protester to protest publicly? by r.ot having United States gov­ Nepal, said that he remembered Answers to these and other BLAD E one village leader who did not CU T 69 ernment money to work with, the ruckus-raising questions may be Corps volunteers are put on a want assistance. The Corps felt forthcoming Wednesday night in equal basis with the villagers. it was best to leave. an attempt to pick the SNCC E N G L IS H c psyche. CU T About 30 Friends of SNCC lb will take tests comparing the L o c k w o o d C h a r g e s personalities of protesters with non-protesters, said Sandra Jen­ kins, club chairman. A llg o o d B ran d KING OF ROASTS! "Super-Right" S t a t e F u n d s M i s u s e d The study will be conducted by M iss Carol Dressel, grad stu- State Senator Emil Lockwood, 2-P eter Bill has used ln guidance, personnel se r- S L IC E D B A C O N S ta n d in g R ib R o a s t R -St. Louis, Mich, charged to­ supposed position as insurance and educational psychology, day an "in vestigator" for the investigator to help sell in- v i « class pr0ject. 1-LB. PKG. Senate Insurance Committee had surance for said company. lne _____ O . 1 29 been paid almost $4,000 by the P K G - ■ state without authorization. In a scathing letter to Senate Insurance Committee Chairman B e r n a r d F . O’ Brien J r ., D- 69 SUPER-RIGHT" COUNTRY STYLE 4 th & 5th R ib s F ir s t 5 R ib s F ir s t 3 R ib s 2-LB. u 3 9 Detroit, Lockwood said the com­ PKG. mittee had never authorized the T h ic k -S lic e d B a c o n 1 7 9 ~M U employment of an outside inves­ "SUPER-RIGHT” tigator identified as Peter Bill. 1-LB. < Lockwood s t r » n ‘g l y sugges­ F a n c y -S lic e d B a c o n PKG. 79 ted that Bill return the money he lb. ,has been paid to the state. "T h e Senate resolution for the GOVERNMENT INSPECTED LB. 2 9 « Insurance Committee’ s operation W h o le F r e s h F r y e r s "SUPER-RIGHT" authorizes the committee to hire outside investigators,” w r o t e B e e f S h o r t R ib s . . “ 45* S lic e d B e e f L iv e r 'SUPER-RIGHT” LB. 39 Lockwood. But "th e Insurance Committee has not authorized the employ­ SAVE ON CHINESE FOODS . . . in solitaire and ment of one Peter Bill or any A&P GRAD E " A ” wedding bands I 1-Q T. other outside investigator. I have 1 4 -O Z . all th e minutes and official . . . pulsating in new SULTNA BRAND P in e a p p le J u ic e 8 9 2 27 CANS actions of the committee to verify precisely balanced bamboo design. that there is no authority for the From our 14K gold chairman to hire anyone. R I C E SULTAN A collection of beautifully matched LB. "One Peter Bill has received through S e p t e m b e r close to threesomes“'. The diamond engagement ring, JAR $4,000 of the taxpayers’ money., $18 0 . Her wedding band, with LA CHOY — MEATLESS 1-LB. P e a n u t B u t t e r . • 6 7 ’ presumably authorized by you CAN diamonds, $ 3 5 . His wedding band, $6 5.(X) C h o p S u e y N U T L E Y — IN QUARTERS illegally. I have the dates and amounts for each month through LA CHOY CHOW MEIN 4 1 -L B . September.” Lockwood asked O'Brien to Est. 1876 N o o d le s k m ) n i t 0wi t CANS M i 2 9 M * M a r g a r in e • • . • . CTNS. 8 9 99* verify or refute other “ hearsay” LA CHOY CHOW MEIN o /fa ja m # ,ao .o z . 7 0 W HO LE AND SPLIT items concerning Bill: “ 1-None other than President Convenient Terms M u s h r o o m CAN M JÊ« Johnson himself recommended * JE W E L E R S LA CHOY CHOW MEIN Peter Bill to you. A YEA R 2-LB. lo -o z. Q A c X U O a s is F i g s O TO PAY 12 1 S. Washington C h ic k e n CAN W m OUR OWN LA CHOY CHOW MEIN 'D r o p It To 18 ’ B e e l . . * S - 8 9 * T e a B a g s ............................................... iN'0p°KG- 9 S a y s R e is ig Save 1 6 c — J a n e P a rk e r 8 -In c h I n g h a m County Prosecutor PURE VEGETABLE MARVEL Donald L . Reisig has suggested that M i c h i g a n ’ s drinking age should be lowered from 2 1 to 18. " I don’ t suggest we do this immediately,” he added. C h e rry P ie déxo Shortening Ice M ilk 3 9 He said that the matter de­ 1-LB. Vanilla or Chocolate 3 c*n6 5 39 serves study in an effort to 8 -O Z . reduce under-age drinking. Reducing the age, he said, SIZE HALF may remove the challenge of GALLON CARTON sidestepping a c c e p t e d norms SAVE 10c—JANE PARKER 1-LB. and reduce the number under 21 who are drinking now. Angel Food Cake. . . 1-OZ. RING 39* 7c OFF LABEL IM «. 7 7 * WISCONSIN CHEESE Æ OD Reisig made the suggestion JANE PARKER Spry Shortening. CAN B Sharp C h e d d a r lb. 69* before the Ingham County Bar 1-LB. Association’ s Law -C lergy Day Whole Wheot Bread LOAF 2 1 * conference. He said that New York author­ ANN PAGE PANCAKE & W A FFLE S P E C IA L SAVINGS ON ities report that their 18-year- old drinking age law has reduced . the amount of under-age drink- m§- , , m “ But I don t know if they can a lo ve lie r you MARSH SEEDLESS OR RUBY RED G r a p e f r u i t .. S y r u p . • • 1 V»-QT. BTL. 69 CANNED VEGETABLES A&P Grade "A " French Style—1-Lb. Can SUNNYFIILD G r e e n B e a n s back this up statistically,” he w ith W a lla c e e y e w e a r OR FLORIDA 2 - LB. PKG. 27* A&P Grade "A "—Whole Kernel or Cre< said. P a n c a k e F lo u r . . 1-Lb. Can While the current law exists, said Reisig, his office will con­ W a lla c e ’ s s e le c tio n o f fa s h io n e y e w e a r w ill c e r t a i n l y m a k e t h a t an e a s y a c c o m p l i s h m e n t . O ra n g e s G o ld e n C o m tinue to crack down on drinking A fra m e l i k e th e one s h o w n h e r e i s v e r y A&P GRADE "A "—NET WT. ISVfc OZ.—I minors A & P I n s t a n t C o f f e e e l e g a n t , as w e l l as s l i m , l a d y - l i k e a n d d e lic a t e - G r e e n B e a n s Dancing 6 nite-week l o o k i n g . I t ’ s k n o w as ‘ ‘ D i s c r e e t ’ ’ and i t ’ s at e ith e r W a lla c e lo c a tio n . 8 ^ 6 9 C P r e m iu m 09 N ET W T. FINE QUALITY—1-LB. CAN the METRO •y e examinations by DR W, C JENSEN, registered optometrist DELICIOUS IN SALADS Q u a lit y 1 10-OZ. JA R Io n a T o m a t o e s Bananas........ 2 « 25* 4 59‘ LO U NG E Your C h o ic e •irr.raXrie * * « * r. 71A css -Um, ios. • DOM WELSH and the SK Y LA R K S WAUACE OPTiCBHS Apples IIS size DELIGHTFU IN SALADS DELIGHTFUL IO ’ »« 5 9 * Juper Markets Corner of Jolly & Logan 12 minutes from MSO 3040 Vine (Opposite Frandor) also offices downtown at 107 N. Washington. Ph. IV 2 *1175 Phone IV 9-2774 Anjou Pears 2 «s 3 9 * A MI B I ( A S DI PI ND AB I » 0 0 0 * » 0 ( h * Mt v * < l U S * You must be 21 Dr. ReC# Jones and Dr. B.C. Bustard, registered optometrists RESULTS COME 'NATURALLY' WHEN YOU DIAL 355-8255 FOR AN ACTION AD. Automotive Employment For Rent For Sale For Sale Automotive Automotive GUITAR AND amp. Was $320; R E N f A DISHWa SHER. $0 per C H EVftoLETS 10 to choose from. fORD G A L \X IE , 1961 Victoria W H EELS DF LaNsING. Q u a lifie d SALAD l a d y , age 25 to 40, must Animals automobiles at r e a s o n a b l e be neat and clean, above-aver­ month. Saves you the time and asking $240 or $125 separately. hardtop, 2-door, automatic, V - 1955’ s - 1959*s. Most are sharp age wages. Apply in person, drudgery of old fashioned hand Call Tom 489-9476 for details. MINIATURE SCHNAUZERS, ¿ CC(y 8, radio, low mileage, excellent prices. From $95 to $2,995. and all run good. $125 to $588. washing. Fo r Instant installation 30 -3 weeks old by Thanksgiving. AKC lOfc condition. A real buy. Phone 2200 S. Cedar.______________ C KENTUCKY FRIED CHICKEN, W ANT AD Phone 393-1114. C30 2901 N. East St. 30 -3 of sp ace-savin g G .E . Porta- FORM ALS, 4 - size 10 and 12. registered l i t t e r . Phone IV CHEVROLET, 1965 I m p a l a , 487-5880. 3 1-3 4-0007. 35-10 Auto Service & Porta AMBITIOUS K E L L Y girls are a l- maid, call State Management, C all 655-2589. 30 -3 super sport hardtop. Regal red, FORD, 1958, 2-door sedan, $ l l 5 . ways in demand. Industry needs 332-8687._________________39 -10 NIKON-F PHOTOMIC finder, new A L A S K A N M ALEM UTE P U F- black/white i n t e r i o r . 250 hp Phone IV 4-4829. 3 1 - 3 N E W ¿A I'I'E K Ie S . E x c h a n g e P IES, 6 weeks old and 2-yea r • a u t o m o t iv e price from $7.95. New sealed your office and marketing skills. Apartments m o d e l , b l a c k . $50. L a rry (327) 4 - s p e e d transmission, FORD 1958. Fairlane ‘ 500J, V-8, old. Fem ale, Call 4 8 5 -5 25 1. • EM PLOYM ENT beams, 99^. Salvage cars, large A p p l y K E L L Y TEMPORARY Fritzlan. 351-4898. 5/32 loaded. 9,000 actual miles, pri­ Power Steering, Automatic, Ra­ E A S T S I D E . 1-1/S bedroom, 3 1-3 stock used parts. ABC AUTO S E R V I C E S , IV 2 -12 77 , 400 • FOR REN T vate owner. IV 9-6232 . 3 3 -5 dio, good tires, only $225. Phone ground floor, garage and water PARTS, 613 E . South St., IV S. Washington, Rm. 206. Equal MINITURE SCHNAUZERS, salt • FOR S A L E CHEVRO LET 1965, new trans- 351-4020. 3/30 paid; $150 furnished, $125 un­ Let them hear you at the and pepper color. Registered.7 5-1921. C opportunity. 5/32 • LO ST & FOUND mission. Excellent engine. Good FORD 1963 Falcon Futura sedan. GENERATORS AND STARTERS. LO T ATTENDANT wanted. 8 a.m. furnished. No pets or children. game! Buy a Spartan Meg­ weeks. 3 left. Call 882-2093 or • PERSO N A L shape. Dependable. Radio, good 6 cylinder automatic. V i n y l Rebuilt 6 or 12 volt. Guaranteed! - 1:30, 6 days, except for Wed­ Call IV 9-1017. 34-10 aphone, only $1.00 at the 882-7960. 3 3 -5 • PEAN U TS PERSO N A L tires. Best offer. 3 5 1 - 5 3 6 2 .3 1 - 3 trim, turquoise color. OSBORN Exchange price, $7.90. Mechan­ TOPPER APARTM ENT, quiet, MINIATURE SCHNAUZER. Fe- nesday, 8 -3 . Contact Parking • R EA L ESTA TE CHEVROLET I960 convertible. AUTO, INC., 2601-7 E. Michi­ ic on the Job! Installation serv­ ideal for studying. Sub-lease, P .X . S T O R E * FRANDOR male 3 months. Champion sired. Superintendent, City of E a s t • S E R V IC E All p o w e r , automatic. New gan. C 3 2 -5 ice a v a i l a b l e . ABC ALTTO $85 per month. Located near E a rs trim m ed.non-shedding, Lansing. ED 7-173 1. 3/30 « TRANSPO RTATIO N brakes, extras. Very good. $695. FORD 1959 convertible. Auto- PARTS, 613 E. South St., IV Gables. 351-4 727 between 6 and MEN’ S ENGLISH bicycle, $15 permanent shots.Call 3 3 7 -2 3 9 1. BUSBbYS NE EDED at Kappa Del- 7 pm. 30-3 New canvas book bag with leath­ • WANTED Call Russ, ED 2 -3 57 7. 3 2 -3 matlc. Full power, white. Me­ 5-1921. C 3 1-3 ta House. 528 M .A.C. 30 -3 er strap, $2. IV 5-3848. 817 N. CHEVROLET, 19 5 9 ,5 -door, V -8, chanically good. $450. Call 3 5 5 - CABIN FOR deer hunting, Har- MINIATURE SCHNAUZERS sired Cedar. 3/30 DEADLINE automatic. $300, or best offer. 5895. 3 2 -3 A V E R Y ’ S AUTO P A R T S PART TIM E. I need 5 men to rlson, Michigan. Sleeps four. by c h a m p i o n Handfull Popup. Try Us For work about 4 hours, 3 evenings Before 5, 489-5786; after 5, 312 FOR WEDDING an d practical 2 p.m one c la s s day be* Must sell. F E 9-8882 after 5 FORD 1957. V -8 standard shift, E a rs cropped, permanent shots. New and Rebuilt a week, in sales. Call 372-3110 E. Lenawee, Apt. 203. 30 -3 shower gifts, see A C E H A RI^ fo re p u b lic a tio n . p.m. 3 2 -3 good tires, good mileage. Call $ 15 0 . Phone IV 2-59 87 after 5. Parts for All Cars 10 am. to 5 pm. to arrange in­ Where’ S s e l e c t i o n s , 201 E. CHEVROLET 19567 new trans- Doug 7 - 1 1 p.m. 3 3 2 -18 10 . 3 2 -3 ONE M A LE roommate needed 3 1-3 Cancellations * 12 noon one terview. 30 -3 Grand River, across from Un­ mission. Excellent engine. Good E O ftD STATION WAGON 1 9 5 9 208 E . Grand River, North for Avinter term only. Burcham DALM AtlO N PUP, black and ORDERLIES, NURSES Aids, no ion. Phone ED 2 -32 12 . C c la s s d a y b e fore p u b lic a tio n shape. Dependable. Radio, good V -8 , standard transmission. 1 Lansing — Call 489-6147 Woods Apartment. Call 3 3 2 - white, 7 weeks old male. AKC experience necessary. Please 42 54 after 5 p.m. 3 1 - 3 DRUMMERS EX CLUSIVE— W il- tires. Best offer. 3 5 1 - 5 3 6 2 .3 1 - 3 owner, v e r y good condition V lB fek C LA SS H A R D T O P fo"r registered. Good. ED 2 -5 1 5 6 apply in person. COUNTY HOS­ cox Music scoops the market. PHONE CHEVY II 1964 Nova hardtop. throughout. F ar above average. Austin - H e a l e y , 3000-100-6. P IT A L, Dobie Road, Okemos. WANTED: ONE girl to sublease See the newest Trixon drum set or ED 2-2438 . 3 2 -3 355-8255 6 cylinder, standard shift. Low Beechem 8i K N I G H T AITTO Tw o-seater. Also detachable luxury apartment, near campus, 37-10 with the egg-shaped bass drum mileage beauty. OSBORN AUTO, SA LES, 1300 E. Michigan. 3 2 -3 luggage rack. 3 5 1-5 3 3 0 . 3 1 - 3 winter term. Call 3 5 1-4 19 4 . Mobil* Homes RATES WAITRESS FOR night club. Hours 3 3 -5 and twin drum pedals. A gleam­ INC., 2601-7 E.M ichigan.C32-5 FORD 1963 1/2 Galaxie 500 XL Scooters & C y cle s 8:30 pm. to 2:30 am. Call JOE ing chrome and silver sparkle 1954 MOBILE HOME, 2 9 ’ . Very 1 DAY . . . . S I . 50 COMET I95U; 4-door, radio, automatic. P o w e r steering, ONE MAN needed for two bed- reasonable. On lot, close to JOSEPH’ S PRO BOWL, IV 7 - set; Ziljian cymbols, a gorgeous 3 DAYS .$3.00 heater, automatic transmission, vinyl top, 390 V-8. Many extras. LA M B R E+T A SCOOTER, l9$8, 5802. 32 -5 room luxury apartment. $50 set as featured by a leading campus. Completely furnished. exceptionally clean, good me­ Like new. 355-9509. 34 -5 $50. See at 35 16 Lucie Street, ' monthly. Call Paul, 3 3 2 -5 2 7 3 . Phone 3 5 1-4 3 3 3 . 31-3 5 DAYS .$5.00 rock and roll group, the Ven­ Lansing. Call TU 2 -5 3 5 2 after PART TIME service attendant 3 2 -3 chanical c o n d i t i o n . $495. MERCURY, i960, 2-door whlte- must be neat appearing, 18 or tures. See it now at WILCOX NEW MOON 1963, 12’ x 6 0 ' with (b a se d on 15 w o rd s per ad) 4 p.m. 3 1-3 sub- 9’ x 19* attached jalousie porch Beechem & K N I G H T AUTO walls, radio, heater, Baby-blue. over with sales ability. Should WANTED, TWO girls to MUSIC DEPARTM ENT. Over O .er 15, 10e per *o rd , per day. SALES, 1300 E. Michigan. 3 2 -3 ED 2-6400. 31-7 H ARLEY DAVIDSON Sprint 1963. let house, winter-spring terms. 200 guitars in stock. Electrics, - on lot. IV 5-0594 days, 9-6, be available 3:30 weekdays and CORVAIR MONZA l96l, 4-speed. MERCURY 1959. Good condition. 250cc. Best o f f e r . C a l l 3 5 5 - Two blocks from campus, $50. slabs, flat-top, classic; Jazz nights, 393-3386. 5 /32 T h e re w i l l be a 5 0 * s e rv ic e Saturday, Sunday. Inquire at Excellent condition. $850. Call Power brakes, steering. Radio, 3097. 32 3 5 1-5 0 1 3 . 3 2 -3 models and beginner’ s instru­ TOWN TALK SERVICE STA ­ a n d b o o k k e e p in g c h a rg e it 351-520 8 after 5 p.m. 3 1-5 heater. $190 or best offer. Phone MORTON 1965 750 Scrambler. TION, 2720 N. East Street, US- M ALE TO share 12 ’ x $6 ’ house- ments, starting at $16.95; used Lost & Found t h is ad is n o t p a id w ith in 1,000 miles. Like new. Take over trailer. C ar necessary. 3 5 5 - CORVAIR, 1962, white, red ln- 3 3 2 -5 7 3 3 . 3 1-3 27. 30 -3 accordions, band instruments, LO ST : FRATERNITY pi n, on o n e w e e k . ____________ _ _ _ _ payments. Phone 3 7 2 -13 5 7 . 30 8332, ext 72 before 5 p.m. 676- campus. Reward. Phone 3 5 5 - terior, 2-door, floor shift, four MG, 1965 Midget, New. 57550 CASHIER WANTED p a rt-tim e new and used best selection of new tires. $725. Phone IV 2 - HONDA 250cc Scram bler, very 2630 after 7 p.m. 30 -1 instruments in Lansing. Easiest 6763.______________________ 3 1 - 3 mile warranty. L e a v i n g coun­ evenings 4-9 SPIRO’ s C A F E . The State News does not 2126 .________________ 3 3 -5 try. Radio, heater, wirewheels. low mileage, t a k e over pay­ Kewpees. Apply in person. 32 -5 W ATERS EDGE Apartments need term s, lay-aways, trade-ins. LO ST: LADIES silver Hamilton perm it racial or religious CORVAIR MONZA, 1962 black, $1,850 . ED 7-2024. 3 1-3 ments. 353-0 0 4 4 .5 -6 only. Wed- G RiLL M A N wanted 4 to 9. one girl for winter and spring Come in and see Jack Sova, watch on c a m p u s . Reward. discrimination in its ad­ 2-door, with red interior, 4- MG MIDGET l962.~I must sell! nesday-Friday. 3 2 -3 SPIRO'S C A F E , Form erly Kew­ term s. Call 35 1-4 35 8 . 3 2 -3 guitar p l a y e r and musician Please call Debbie or Sue, 3 5 3 - vertising columns. The speed. Excellent c o n d i t i o n . Extra c l e a n , top mechanical 1965 TRIUMPH 500 cc. Excel- pees. Apply in person. 3 2 -5 Houses around Lansing for many years. 0363. 30 -3 State News will not accept Phone IV 4 -8721. 3 3 -5 shape. Must see. Real reason­ lent condition. Must sell. 3 5 1 - Jack will help you select the LO ST. BLACK & WHITE spotted advertising from persons CO RVETTE 283 cu. in. 5-speed, able. 3 5 1-4 9 32 . 3 2 -3 5160. 3 2 -3 PHARMACIST R ELIEF or part- TH REE BEDROOM, 1-1/2 bath instrument best suited to your cat in Spartan Village. $5.00 discriminating against r e ­ 2 tops. New paint and tires. Best OLDSMOBILE, 1961, F'fiS, 4- HONDA §90 196$, must sell. time. Call Haslett 339-2660. h o me . Furnished. Available pleasure. Remember, see Jack reward. Call IV 5 - 3 2 1 1 , ext. ligion, race, color or na­ offer takes. Phone IV 5-2459. door, radio, standard shift. Very Good condition. Call Mike, 3 5 1— 3 2 -5 January thru July. Faculty or at WILCOX’ S for a musical deal 328 afternoons. 3 1-3 tional origin. CO RVETTE 1964, red convert- good condition. New tires. Eco­ 4658.___________ 3 2 -3 WANTED: GUYS and Dolls inter- professional f a m i l y . Refer­ that will please you. 509 E. LO ST: PRESCRIPTION glasses ested in extremely fine job op­ ences, deposit required. $175. Michigan. P h o n e IV 5-4391. Men’ s black. Vicinity of IM ible, 4-speed, 25,000 miles. nomical to run. 33,000 miles. $2,400. AM -FM radio. Loaded ED 7-0 384. 3 1-3 Employment portunity. This is selling money 332-0085. 30-5 Hours daily, 8 am. to 5:30. Field. Call 353-76 20. 3-30 Automotive with extras. IV 5-8977. 3/30 OLDSMOBILE 1957 ‘ 88’ , power WAITRESS, GOOD working con- to make money. Contact Martin ONE MAN to share five bedroom JACKSON ST A T E Prison sweat- \L F A ROMEO Spyder 1960. Wil- CO RVETTE 1964, green con- steering, power brakes. Good ditions. Apply in person after Schlissberg, November 15 or 17 home. Four blocks from cam­ shirts with a 1-6 diget serial Personal by appointment in Student Place­ low green Roadster. New top vertible. 17,000 miles. 300 h.p. condition. Phone IV 4 - 9 5 4 7 .3 1- 3 11 am. THE EAT SHOP. 605 E. ment Bureau. 32 -5 pus. Call 337 -2 339 . 31-3 number of your choice. Black R EN T YOUR T V from N E JA C . and paint. For details , call Radio, heater. Must sell. Two OLDSMOBILE l9 6 lF -8 5 ,2 -d o o r. Grand River. Please No phone SPACE A V A ILA B LE in large, or gray. $4. Call 3 5 5 -2 6 15 . Zenith and GE portables for 337-2024. 34-5 new snow tires. $2,750. Phone Excellent condition. Phone 3 7 2 - calls. 31-5 ATTENTION P R O F E S S O RS, roomy house for 4 -5 quiet, stu­ 3 2 -3 only $9 per month. Free serv­ ANTIQUE CAR. C hrysler Wind- 8 82-3825. 3 1-3 3542. 3 1 - 3 TWO MEN needed, part-time. graduate students, technicians, dious men. Full facilities,close SAXOPHONE, A new Alto sax. ice and delivery. Call N EJA C sor 1940. All original. Excellent DESOTO 1955 , 2 - door hardtop. OLDSMOBILE D ELTA '8&’ ,l965, w a r e h o u s e work. GORDON K E L L Y TECHNICAL needs you! to campus, limited parking. 3 5 1 - Will sell at wholesale price. T V R EN TA LS, 482-0624. C condition. Call William Bennett, Fully equipped including power Holiday coupe. Power with many FOOD S E R V I C E , 2226 Spike Apply now - K E L LY TEMPOR­ 5674 after 2 p.m. 3 2 -3 Cash, trade or terms. Call 699- MEMO TO: The New Christy I o n i a . 527-0044. 24 Lovell steering and brakes. All origin­ accessories, N o c t u r n e Mist. Street. /Lsk for M r. Boven, IV ARY SERVICES, IV 2 -12 7 7 , 400 S. Washington, Room 206. Equal Rooms 2027. 3 2 -3 M instrels. Don't forget that Sat­ Place. 32-5 al equipment in top working 8,500 miles. Price $2,750. 484- 4 -5354 . 3 1-5 5/32 TRO UBLE CONCENTRATING? HEATHKIT STEREO,_ 40 - watt urday, November 13, is the date 3LICK 195" convertible. Valve order. Body and interiojr. likq 0756. 3 2 -5 R e L e p t i o n i $ t c l e r ic a l opportunity. T r y us. Quiet, studying! Serious amplifier. Jensen speakers, 7 - for your concert at the Lansing job, new brakes, good tires. new. An exceptional buy at $350.' work part-time. Afternoons 1 PART-TLM E or full, telephone men, kitchen, parking. 939 Bur­ tube FM tuner. Heathkit turn­ Civic Center. Tickets on sale Power s t e e r i n g and brakes. BEECHEM & K N I G H T ALTO OLDSMOBILE 1962, 4-door dy- p.m. to 5:30 p.m. Medical doc­ girls needed. Call 3 3 2 -3 5 7 1 or cham. $9. 332-2788; 337-0881. table. Asking $210 . 3 5 3 -13 4 6 . at Civic Center Box Office, and $150. Call 351-4332. 31-3 SA L E S. 1300 E. Michigan. 3 2 -3 namic. P o w e r steering and tors office, typing ability nec­ IV 5 -4 3 8 1. 3 2 -3 30-5 SEAR S A U T O M A T I C washer. 3 2 -3 Paramount News Shops in Lan­ 3LTCK 1964 Special convertible, FALCON 1961, 4-door, standard brakes, hydramatic transmis­ sion, radio, heater, 1 owner. essary, dictaphone experience c h o QS e Y o u r o w n h o u r s , a few hours a day can mean ex­ WOMAN, 1 place in double room sing and East Lansing. C32 white with blue top. Snow tires, shift, completely rebuilt engine. $ 1,3 7 5 . 332-0 347. 3 2 -3 desired, W r i t e Box B -2 , c/o with kitchen facilities, lounge $25. In good working condition. excellent condition. A s s u m e $425. Phone IV 5-9 2 75 . 572 E. State News. 5/32 cellent earnings for you as a and bath. Sheets provided, $45 Phone ED 2-2209. 3 2 -3 CHAPLIN FANS balance. 332-4275. 34-5 Greenlawn_______________ 32 -3 OLDSMOBILE l965 F -8 5 deluxe, 4-door sedan. Power steering CIGA RETTE SAMPLING - pro- trained A v o n representative. For appointment in your home, month. 523 Sunset Lane. 3 3 7 - HAPPY BIRTHDAY c a k e , 9 ZHEYELLE 1965Malibuconvert- F A L L SPECIA L: Following cars motion. 10 girls needed2 - 3 days 119 4 . 3 1-3 inches d e l i v e r e d $3.8 7. Nov. 13 "Gold Rush" ible, saddle tan. V-S. Only 5,000 must be sold below bock: 1963 and brakes. Good condition. Call 372-6 19 4 . 32 - 3 during week ending November write Mrs'. Alona Huckins, 5664 School Street, Haslett,Michigan SINGLE OR double for men. Close Specials: Wednesday-Thursday, m iles. M ust sell. P lease call Austin 850; 1959 Oldsmobile 20. Hours: during week, noon or call evenings F E 9-8483. C30 in. Reasonable. Unapproved. ED c r e a m - s t i c k s 6/39£ KWAST Dec. 11 "Shoulder Arms" 482-6963. 32-5 *88’ ; 1960 Ford Galaxie; 1959 OLDSMOBILE l9$9 4-door. In to 8:30 p.m. - Sat. 9:30 a.m. to 2 -474 6 . 3 2 -3 BAKERIES, Brookfield Plaza, CHEVROLET 1962 Blscayne 6 - MG A; 1958 MCA; 1962 Fiat good condition. Call 332-6874. 6 p.m. Ages 2 1-4 0 . Apply Man­ L A S T C A L L !! Two months ago we East Lansing; Frandor; 303 S. E x p lo r in g Cinema S ocie ty cyllr.der, standard shift, 2-door. 600 - D; BROOKS IMPORTED 34 -5 power, Inc., 303 E.Michigan. 31 ran an ad and hired eleven men. For Sale Washington. IV 4 - 1 3 1 7 . C 31 Lady-driven. See at OSBORN’S CARS; 5014 N. Grand River. PACKARDS, TWO. 1951, straight Nine of them had no previous direct sales experience and none GUNS FOR SA LE or Rent, by RCA WHIRLPOOL washer-dryer Phone 485*3912 AUTO, INC., 2601-7 E. Michi­ IV 9-5568. 32 -3 eights. N o , r u s t . Best offer GREAT LAK ES EM PLOYM ENT combination. O r i g i n a l price for permanent positions for men day, w e e k or season, KEN­ THE "KNIGHTS OF HARMONY1 '. gan. C32-5 FORD STATION WAGON l963, around $300 each. Phone 627- and women in office, sales, of them were experienced in our field (three left $15,000 or over NED Y’ S HOBBY SHOP, 1420 $500. Will sell for $15 0 . 669- Dance music to suit, from Rock 5220. 3 4 -5 CHEVROLET 1959 Impala, 2- Fairlane, 8-cylinder, automat­ PLYMOUTH, 1957, 4-door, V-S technical. IV 2 -15 4 3 . C 31 yearly salaries to come with us). Woodbine. Phone IV 9-1165. 32 7794 . 3 2 -3 to Society. Casual to formal. door, automatic. Good radio, ic. $1,395. Falcon 1962, 2-door, automatic. Radio, heater, good STUDENT WtFE or coed to sell As of this date, ten are still ENGLISH L l G H T - W E l G i m STEREO .TAPES— factory seal- 3 55-74 16 . 35 heater. New front end, univer- standard transmission, $595. tires, runs well. $10 0 .355-30 75. new OVATION beauty products, with us. Last month these ten s p e e d bicycles, $39 .77 f u l l ed, fully guaranteed. 25-65% STUDENTS: WHY l e a v e your sals. Good tires. $450 or best Ford 1965, custom 2-door, 6 30-3 off campus. Full or part-time. men averaged $ 1 , 81 4 (high man price. Rental-purchase terms off list price. Call 5 -9 p.m. dorms, when BIMBO’ S will de­ offer. 355-6281. 31-3 cylinder, standard transmis­ RENAULT DELUXE 1962. Ex- Will train. Write Box A -l, State $ 3 ,871-low man $1,24 2 ). Two of available. We also have tennis 35 5 -58 4 7 . 3 2 -3 liver your pizzas to you! Call IHEVROLET 1965 Impala hard sion, $1,895. S I G N S F O R D cellent condition. Must sell. News. 32 -5 them are now district managers. racquets, golf balls, badminton BONNIE B E L L cosmetics. Ten- 489-2431. C 30 -3 top V-8. Full power. Must be SA L E S, 162 W. Grand River, Back-breaking insurance costs WANTED: MEN and women in- Average earnings for all men: birdies, gifts and housewares. o-Six lotion. Marek R E X A L L NEED A BAND? I book for THE sold immediately.Cash or trade. Williamston, 10 minutes east of too high. 3 32 -12 7 4 . 3 2 -3 terested in substitute teaching last month was $2,081. We are A C E HARDWHERE, a c r o s s DRUGS 301 N. Clippert at Vine OX 9-2027. 32-3 MSU. 655-2191. 3/30 at elementary and secondary a multi-million dollar company from Union. ED 2 -32 12 . C by Frandor. Free gift with this P R E S 1 D E N T I A L S and THE ONES. Call T e rry , 482-4590. SERIES III Sunbeam, 1963, body and engine excellent condition. level. 20 miles from MSU. Con­ currently expanding in Michi­ T V USED RCA table model, dark ad. C30 3 3 -5 When Mailing a Want Ad Use This You must see to believe. Best tact Potterville Public Schools. gan with a prestige program of wood-cabinet, $25. IV 5-6322. offer over $1,300. 332 -8 125 .32-5 645-9371. 30-3 unbelievable sales appeal. Men 32 -5 s’T c R E A s T A Classified Ad Order Blank TR - 3 1958. New paint job. Re- M A LE KITCHEN help. Must be 18 selected w i l l be completely NEWSWEEK 8«45mm ca m e ra , 5' p.m*. 13 2 -3 On Most Import Cars. sales and services. EA ST LA N ­ mm f20 coupled light m e te r, - a Her. r* VOLKSWAGEN T O sedan, ex- 44 AS % MICHIGAN SING C Y C L E , 1215 E . Grand case, accessory shoe, $175. ED A t 43 42. Health cellent condition, Must see to resort CAMERON’S % ti STATI R iver. Call 332-8803. C 2-6084. 3/30 UNIVIRSITV « S T A T E N E W S appreciate. Call I V 9 -9 4 2 2 .3 4 -5 4 4 41 4k 43. Afflict T V R EN TA LS for students. Eco- GUITARS, M A R T I N , Gibson, 44. Intoxi­ IMPORTS U ti VOLKSWAGEN 1962 convertible. Radio. New whitewall tires. New nomical rates by the term and Fender, many models. New. Will A * 3* *1 cating pepper 345 Student Services 220 East Kalamazoo St. month. UNIVERSITY T V RENT­ sacrifice. Call Ron, 337-1496. plant battery. Excellent c o n d i t i o n . East Lansing, Mich. 4 8 2 -1 3 3 7 A L S 484-9263. C32 30 -3 Par time 20 min. Call 35 5 -2 8 2 7 . 3 2 -3 % Michigan State N ew s, East Lansing, Michigan Wednesday, N ovem ber 10, 1965 Personal C a n a d a s Parries Fa c e R e v a m p in g would not lead the Liberals in call for an election this year. Crusoe Visitors A pair of MSU researchers from the botany department leave this week to live in the shadow of the Robinson Crusoe legend created by Daniel Defoe. another campaign if it takes place And he has not Indicated that the outcome of the voting changed three or four years from now. H*A. Imshaug, associate professor of botany and plant One thing in Pearson’ s favor his mind. F irst indications were t ha t pathology, and Dennis Jackson, East Lansing graduate is that nobody wants another Pearson would get the backing assistant, will Join botanists from the United States and election soon. of the New Democratic party, Chile in collecting and studying unusual and near-extinct A l t h o u g h the Conservatives biggest of the small parties with flora on the Robinson Crusoe Islands, 400 miles west of made gains, they still are not 21 members. Its leader, T .C , Chile. powerful enough to topple the Douglas, brushed aside sugges­ The project, a combined effort by the Chilean and U.S. government without the support tions for a coalition with the governments sponsored by the National Science Foundation, of virtually all the 37 votes of is expected to last six weeks. Specimen collections will the combined smaller parties. Liberals, but he is expected to cooperate with them as he has go to both U.S. and Chilean universities. Diefenbaker was one of the most vigorous critics of Pearson’ s for 2 - 1 / 2 years. M SU B ook S tore M SU B ook S tore M SU B ook Store M SUM i t ’s w h a t ’s h a p p e n i n g N O T E B O O K S !! Regular 40C to 490 searching for self-identity. Mod­ ern American novels will be used in solving these philosophical problems, Blackman said. The four-credit course, which is open to seniors, will be of­ fered again spring term with the same faculty. The course is list­ ed as University College 499 in the time schedule. Interested jun­ iors and graduate students may contact Blackman. Rosemary Forsyth is a fast- rising young Hollywood star. The 21-year-ola actress works with Charlton Heston, Maurice Evans and R i c h a r d Boone In “ The War Lords,” but they do not sway her confidence in her own acting ability. Before going to Detroit for the premiere of her latest movie, "T n e War Lords,” she was sche­ duled to visit a Michigan State drama class Tuesday in F a ir­ child on a quick tour of the Lansing and Kalamazoo areas. M iss Forsyth played Jim m y Stewart’ s daughter in “ Shenan­ M o n ., T u e s ., F r i. 8 :3 0 -5 :3 0 doah,” a Civil War drama that ran three weeks at the Michi­ gan Theater this summer. And W e d . & T h u rs . 8 :3 0 a .m .-9 :0 0 p .m . people began asking “ Who is she?” M iss Forsyth is the actress S a t. 8 :3 0 -1 2 :3 0 who worked on the road with Art Carney in "T im e Out For Gin­ Wanted ger” and who appeared in two W.ANTED, HAY. A n y w h e r e in off-Broadway plays. She is thfe Michigan or N o r t h e r n Ohio. actress who, Just out of her Phone 3 5 3 -2 7 2 1. 3 3 -5 teens, tackled the role of Helen WANTED ONE or two tickets to Keller’ s mother in “ The M ir­ Notre Dame game. Call Doug acle Worker” for summer stock. 3 5 3 - 13 3 3 . 3 2 -3 And M iss Forsyth is the act­ SINGLE PRIVATE room, near re ss who will star with tjie French bus line in East Lansing for actor Alain Delon and*DeanMar- retired Army Private. Call Joe, tin in a movie to be filmed this ^ M S I 35 1-4 8 7 8 . 30-1 winter. |i( X ) K S T ( )H I lot "fkßOßnitei •firt, Inguaitonal / Ptogto/wA \ in th e C e n te r f o r In t e r n a t io n a l P r o g r a m » e M SU B ook S tore M SU B o o k S tore M SU B ook Store M SU B ook S tore M SU B ook S tore M SU B ook Store M SU > | U Michigan State N ew s. East Lansing, M ichigan W ednesday, No ve tn'frerr $S>, 3^65 $ 2 B IL L IO N Y E A R L Y Industry Should Y E S -P A Y L E S S Treat Alcoholics Alcoholism in industry, which coholism program. The company if FOR NAME BRAND FOODS . . . Y00 ALWAYS DO AT THE BIG E! ALL PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SATURDAY NOV. 13 costs about $2 billion a year, found it saved $750,000 a year can be reduced by company pro­ in sick pay alone, he said, which S 370 Value-Plllsbury Mocha Fudge Or Bavarian Creme Yellow grams planned and conducted by is equivalent to a $ 15 to $20 JUST OFF THE CAMPUS AT professionals, according to a na­ million increase in sales. C A K E M IX E S tional authority on the disease. Industry, he said, is only be­ "Counseling and treatment of the man ill with alcoholism is a ginning to recognize the fact that alcoholism is a d i s e a s e and SH O PPERS F A I R _ 8 A.M. to 10 P.M.! Job for people skilled in this should be treated as such. Where 3301 EAST MICHIGAN AVE. MONDAY THRU SAT. area, not the plant supervisor or the union steward, said Ross \ on Wiegand of the National Council 10 years ago, only four of 100 major companies in the nation had alcoholism programs, 25 out of NEXT DOOR TO FRANDOR ¿T w* i P S m m g Bfe ‘ CLOSED SUNDAYS Sm m m b b m w M " ; -j M f w m . !' sI - on Alcoholism. "T h e alcoholic in i n d u s t r y 100, have them today, he noted. ■ M é g jt I ’ M: iS « , should be handled the same way *7' f ' Ip 1 r ix s m m * * as the man ill of diabetes or heart A C U L T Y ^ L_ US* m Ä f f K ,,.*¡*1 I# .1 r S B f if e V disease,” he told a Michigan State rPt I eS f « M S â m îM P S à University conference recently. He said plant supervisors or stewards should concern them­ selves primarily with job per­ F A C T S IT % § 1 và ' \ \ i!*'' iS p - ¡Êfc BP * M Katherine M. Hart, chairman kJ « ’ formance, and refer employees with alcohol problems tothepro- of the Department of Institution Administration, has been named MON E Y SAVOR C E N T E R C U T MONEY SAVOR LEAN SWI F T ' S P R O T E N T E N D E R ¡Ü ! per agencies or individuals. i A company alcoholism pro­ gram, planned and conducted by president of the American Die­ tetic Assn. M iss Hart joined the CHUCK ROAST 490 RIB STEAKS LB. 780 ROUND STEAK LB. 880 BETTY CROCKER-CREAMY VANILLA, 390 MSU staff in 1931 and became professionals, can pay great di­ vidends, Von Wiegand contended. head of the department in 1950. LEMON VELVET OR CHOCOLATE FUDGE She received her B .S . from the He told of a New York trans­ University of Wisconsin and her 1 LB. H OZ. portation company with 34,000 o a t i i i READY TO M.S. from the University of Chi­ CAN Y employees which boasts an 85 per O A IIN SERVE FROSTINGS cent r ecovery rate through, Its al- cago. *** t?* Eugene Doll, associate pro­ fessor of soil science, will begin ÍW-; BOX, LIGHT OR DARK BROWN a one-year leave on Dec. 1. Doll O lin R e p o r t will do research aimed at boost­ Admitted to Olin Health Center ing corn production in Central DOMINO SUGAR »150 Monday were Pamela Reck, Diane and South America. HONEY, NEW ENGLAND OR BAKED LOAF HYGRADE'S POLISH OR DIAMOND BRAND Zaranko, Jack Miller, John Cole, Jane Salmon, Virginia Zack, Pau­ ★★★ Anton Lang, professor of bot­ la Gensler, Michael Hearsch, any and plant pathology, has been Riste Donald Cisler, Patricia elected a trustee of the newly HERRUD’S LUNCH MEATS »“ kg. 580 ROASTED SAUSAGE LB. 59t WALNUT OR PECAN MEATS ■99C Kennedy, Robert Schadel, David formed Argonne Universities A s­ Weber and David Postal. sociation, Inc. The AUA consists C EN TER CUT TASTY I Big “ E” Special Coupon | .7 6 ' Admitted Tuesday were Rita of 2 6 universities, includingMSU, !M Kirstein, Toni Gay Megas, Jere which participate in the manage­ A. Brown, Leland Elatt, Kathleen ment of the Argonne National McDonald, David Nellen, Michael Laboratory. The laboratory is Venus, Mary A. Malay, Libby operated by the University of Marshall, Robert Gabriel Jr.and Chicago and is supported by the PORK CHOPS » %m Seoc-ky Kim. Atomic Energy Commission. MEATY HOME STYLE SPARE RIBS lb 580 RI0NEER IP m- , 'W m East Lansing’s Newest Jewelry Store § in H m n H H t a n n H % lls. SUGAR to ­ "m f 49C VALUE-COUNTRY FRESH LIMIT ONE, P LE A SE WITH COUPON AND $5 FOOD PURCHASE 7 * COUPON GOOD THRU SATURDAY, NOV. 13 HALF AND HALF D I A M O N D R I N G S m m.mm. H i REG. 2 FOR 47« T E N D E R K R U S T 14< VALUE-JIFFY WHITE BREAD - — 190 HONEY DATE $1. 09 V A L U E FRUIT CAKE i l M f M I M M L B . TIN 880 MUFFIN MIX 33c VALUE-REG. RED OR LO-CAL DELICIOUS With A Young Viewpoint 69c VALUE-BIG E DELICIOUS VANILLA WITH ORANGE SHERBET HALF GAL. 580 HAWAIIAN PUNCH This 'Smart Set’ diamond by Orange Blossom, reflecting OR 29c VALUE DOLE áSSIIÉíÉF'- the vibrant young viewpoint, is just one of the trend H I setting designs ir. our large collection. The extra brilli­ 89c VALUE-ARISTOCRAT i. ance of a “ Leon G” diamond costs no more . . . com­ pare for yourself, PEPPERM INT STICK ICE CREAM HALF GAL. 690 PINEAPPLE iKsBi East Lansing’ s Authorized Orar.se Blossom Dealer P E T R ITZ FROZEN-9 IN. SIZE -mmm GRAPEFRUIT Loyoway Shop W n e a p p le - G r a p e f r u it DRINK For Christmas J E W E L R Y and ART CENTER Wednesday Til 9 P.M. PIE SHELLS ~ Z 9 C J u i c e D r in k CHOCOLATE, DARK SWEET CHOC. OR 319 E. Grand River Ave.-Across From Home Ec. Bids. ROYAL VANILLA PUDDING 4'/2 TO 6 OZ. WT. PKG. I U U HIP FRESH, NUTRITIOUS 27* VALUE-THANK YOU COLORED mm THANK YOU PUMPKIN PIE FILLING lbc*hoz 190 GOLDEN RIPE N’SWEET A P P L E R IN G S 14 OZ. WT. JAR 220 Vi PRICE SAL E-PI LLSBURY'S BANANAS I BUTTERFIELD Y A M S PIECESIN SYRUP 1 lbca7noz- 250 It’s what’s between PIE CRUST MIX SOLO PRUNE, POPPY, DATE OR 2 350 the buns that you’ll ,:o z I HARVEST SALE! ALMOND FILLING wi. PKG. p y u §$ YOUR CHOICE OF MICHIGAN like in a McDonald's SUN MAID 11 PAK A A JL I YELLOW 0N I0N S-3 L B . BAG Fish Sandwich. SEEDLESS RAINS 1 § TENDEB CARROTS-2 a' v~*- to - Vl# I'P A R S N L P S OB TURNIPS- LB. 39c VALUE^IABilSCO (Yummy Fish Filet CINNAMON OR FUDGE RINGS WT.» PKG.. 29C » y | WAXED RUTABAGAS- 2 CHOICE Eoch Unjt and Tasty Tartar Sauce.) 15c VALUE-WHITE m 52759 V A L U E ' S A V E ON DRY DOG FOOD! $ 2 .2 9 V A L U E - M A Z O L A DIAL SOAP CORN McDonaldk Golden Arches Drive-In a m i *