C lo u d y A W o m e n 9s M EW S L i t t l e te m p , change, p la c e Is In th e M IC H IG A N w ro n g . h ig h : m id 4 0 ’ s, --Ja m e s T h u rb e r STA TI Same F rid a y . U N IV E R S IT Y East L a n s in g , M ich ig a n T h u rs d a y , November 11, 1965 Price 10c P ow er P ro b e R e d C h in a A d m is s io n B e g in s FPC Q uiet S u p p o rte d B y Fra n c e On In q u iry A c c e p t a n c e S a id WASHINGTON i t — The Fed­ eral Power Commission met In S e tb a ck P u ts Ik e closed session Wednesday with Industry and government power representatives In Its investi­ M a t t e r O f J u s t ic e gation of Tuesday night’ s power In O xygen Tent failure in the Northeast. UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. OP)--France spoke out Wednesday for the Chairman of the commission F T . GORDON, Ga. if!— Fo r­ would be about two weeks of con­ first time in the United Nations on behalf of seating Communist Joseph C. Swidler declined to mer President Dwight D. Eisen­ tinued recuperation. China, and declared the long-standing dispute should be settled by comment on what had taken place. hower suffered another attack of There was a mid-afternoon an­ simple majority vote. Some participants in the meet­ heart pains late Wednesday— nouncement that the former pres­ Echoing the reasoning of President Charles de Gaulle in estab­ ing, which brought together re­ "m o re prolonged and of longer ident would fly to Washington F r i­ lishing diplomatic ties with Peking last year, French Ambassador presentatives of power compan­ duration" than the first, and was day to enter Walter Reed Army Roger Seydoux argued for Red China’ s admission as a matter of ies serving the area involved placed back in an oxygen tent. Hospital there. Justice, political realism and historical inevitability. in the m assive blackout, and This setback f o l l o w e d word Little more than an hour later Without Peking's participation, Seydoux told the 117-nation Gen­ government officials, said there earlier that the 75-yea r old Ike came work of recurrence of chest eral Assembly on the third day of the China debate, there could be had been no determination of the was making a good recovery irom discomfort and an announcement no solution to the vital issues of peace in South Asia and nuclear cause of the power failure. what his physicians called a mild that plans for the trip to Walter disarmament. The hastily assembled i n d u s ­ attack heart pains just after mid­ Reed were being held in abey­ " Why delay the outcome of something that is a foregone conclusion try - government committee did ance. D W IG H T D. E IS E N H O W E R night Monday. by rehashing an old debate?" he not include any representatives In fact, they said, he should asked. , of Consolidated Edison Co., which be able to play golf again In two In the past, F r a n c e voted serves New York City, the hard­ weeks. against Peking’ s admission. est-hit area; nor of the New Dr. Thomas Mattingly, spokes­ With a reversal foreshadowed York S t a t e Power Authority. Commission spokesmen said they man for the six-man team of phy­ sicians attending Eisenhower No M SU Tax Backed by French recognition of Peking, only Seydoux’ s request for a sim­ were not asked to send repre­ sentatives because their person­ v t' V ' M i si said that the heart pains during the afternoon were of the same ple majority vote in the assembly contained any element of sur­ nel would be too busy working type Eisenhower suffered less prise. In 1961 the assembly de­ to restore service. than 48 hours earlier. cided the question was sufficient­ About 30 million Americans, a sixth of the population, felt the effect of the paralyzing electri­ Asked w h e t h e r the former president’ s condition was more R a d io , S a ys Hannah ly important to require two- thirds approval, but it has not serious, Mattingly replied: been decided yet whether the cal failure in seven northeastern " I t is more prolonged and of same rule should applythisyear. states and parts of Canada. longer duration.” President John A. Hannah has voiced disapproval of an all­ A U .S. spokesman described At its peak, the breakdown The sudden change in Eisen­ campus radio station financed through a University collected student Seydoux’ s reasoning as curious, spread over 80,000 square miles hower’ s condition occurred in a tax. saying the importance he at­ of the nation’ s most populous cor­ matter of a few hours. M O O N G L O W — A b r i g h t f u l l m o o n l i t th e s k i e s "T h e University won't back the radio if the money collected tached to seating Peking seemed ner, trapped 900,000 persons in He was feeling well enough and o v e r N e w Y o r k C i t y as w e ll as MSU T u e s d a y n ig h t. through the University in student taxes is used to subsidize it” an admission that it was " a very commuter trains, elevators and obviously the doctors thought he M a n y New Y o r k e r s w e re th a n k fu l th a t n a tu re p r o ­ Hannah said Tuesday at a luncheon meeting with the Student important question and not one to office buildings in scores of was well emugh to change hos­ cities, and set m motion a mo­ v i d e d a lig h t o f h e r Ow'r. d u r i n g th e u n p r e c e d e n t e d Board and seven members of the faculty and administration. be decided by a simple major­ b la c k o u t. P h o to b y L a n c e L a g o n i pitals to continue what they said By setting up an all-campus radio station, student government bilization o f police and emer­ ity*” would create a situation allowing a small group to control a power­ Diplomatic observers predict gency forces unmatched outside ful propaganda agent with a huge potential for embarrassment Mao Tse-tung’ s regime again of a war or disaster area. to the University and student government, he said. will be barred from the United Consolidated Edison Co. and Hannah said Thursday, however, that the only way that the Nations, especially if the two- Niagara Mohawk Power Co. of­ ficials said they still could not I f M SU P o w er F a ile d — University would collect fees to finance campus radio would be thirds rule is applied. It takes if on-campus students voted a separate levy for the support of only a simple majority to de­ pinpoint the precise origin of campus radio in a special referendum. mand a two-thirds vote. the failure. Hannah said that if such a referendum were favorable, the ad­ When the assembly last de­ Consolidated E d i s o n , which serves New York City and some It C o u ld B e O ff F o r D ays ministration might collect the radio fee, subject to the approval of bated the China issue in 1963, the United States mustered a 16- of the metropolitan area, said in the Board of Trustees. happen on campus— o n ly on a about 500 to 550 tons a day in Hannah pointed out that this is the way State News subscription vote margin to defeat a move to a statement the blackout "seem s to have been caused by a m assive By E L L E N ZURKEY sm aller scale. the winter." fees are handled. oust P residentC hiangK ai-shek's loss of generating capacity some­ S ta te News S ta ff W r i t e r "Under the worst conditions Most of the coal is shipped to Several members of the radio study committee have been known Nationalists and replace them where on the interconnected elec­ it could take-several days to MSU by rail from Kentucky and to favor this type of direct financing in order to make campus radio with the Chinese Communists in tric system to the north of our S u p p e r by candlelight--and restore full power to the campus, West Virginia, at a total cost of responsible to the student body instead of to a student government JO H N A . H A N N A H all U.N. organs. depending on the nature of the $9,42 a ton. organization. territo ry." studying, too. A power failure at " I f either coal miners or ra il­ "T h e University can’ t com­ "T h is threw so much load on MSU? failure,” JesseCam pbell, super­ intendent of the power plant, said. roads went on strike MSU' has pete with commercial interests the remaining facilities of the The recent East Coast power enough coal to supply its needs and advertising in the commun­ R E P L Y D U E T U E S D A Y combined electric companies in shortage left people stranded In ‘ The amount of time it would for about 30 days,” Campbell ity said James H. Denison, as­ the Northeast that they were elevators, traffic tied up at inter­ take would depend on the nature said. sistant to the president. unable to meet the demand and sections, and dinners in ovens of the failure, Campbell said. The coal is stored near each "S ta ff members get extra work the entire electric system col­ only naif-cooked. "P o w er could be restored in of the three power plants and every time student government lapsed, losing its synchronism," Should the MSU power supply only a matter of hours or e v e n the company said. be disrupted, the same thingcould minutes if the shortage were near the tracks of the Grand goes into one of these p rojects," said John A. Fuzak, vice pres­ S c h if f G e t s H e a r in g R e c e s s due to a circuit break," Camp­ Trunk south of the football sta­ ident of student affairs. ponement to prepare his argu­ still lists him as "provisional.’ ’ bell said. “ But if it were due dium. B y D A V E H AN S O N Michigan State is also connect­ "T w o years from now it may ments. A delay was granted until Frederick W illiam s,professor to the breakage of a large ma­ become our responsibility to keep S ta te N e w s S t a f f W r i t e r of history and chairman of the ed with surrounding power com­ next Tuesday at 7 p.m. Refrain Sounds Again chine, full power might not bc- restored for days." MSU currently generates about panies. Should power fail on cam­ pus, Lansing can generate some it going," Fuzak said. A week’ s recess was granted The College of Communication in the hearing between Paul M. Arts doesn’ t want responsibility Schiff and MSU before the Fa­ Schiff said that he will call witnesses next week when he presents his case. committee, would not comment on the matter. " I can't say anything about what 75 per cent of its own power. of the needed electricity. Lansing for running the radio Hannah culty Committee on Student Af­ For U.S. War Dead in turn is connected with Detroit Schiff sent a written reply went on in the closed meeting,” It depends on outside commer­ said. fairs Tuesday night. he said. Edison, which could manufacture to the University last week and cial suppliers for the rest of its The University administration At the closed meeting held in Williams said a complete re­ power for most of Michigan. attached a transcript of his re­ supply. When the new power plant would have no objection If the the Heritage Room of Kellogg cord of the hearing was being WASHINGTON If)—The haunt­ Gray in the Civil War to recall goes into service Monday, MSU “ We are -looking forward to a cord obtained through a mem­ Men’ s Halls Assn. and Women’ s Center the committee heard wit­ made by a court recorder for ing refrain of taps will sound Bull Run, Gettysburg or Shiloh. will fill almost its entire power day when all MSU’ s power needs ber of the economics faculty. again for the nation’ s war dead There were two Confederates will be supplied by a nuclear Interresidence Council were to nesses for the University testify He said Wednesday that the ( c o n t i n u e d on p a g e 8 ) and one Union trooper alive in needs. finance c a m p u s radio through about Schiff’ s activities leading committee had been presented today— Veteran’ s Day. "T h e University is currently power plant,” Campbell said. 1954. dormitory dues, he said. up to the denial of his readmis- with a different transcript and using between 400 and 500 tons "B u t like sending a man to the In ceremonies where the white There are Just seven left now moon, we just don't know exactly The financing proposal pre- slon for study last spring. that his written reply had been A lc o a R e v e rs e s cro sses stand row on row, there who in memory can recall the of coal a day for fuel,"Cam pbell Schiff then asked for a post- re-typed before being reproduced when it will be.” ( c o n t in u e d on page 7) will be many memorial remem­ Indian wars, the Western fron­ said. "T h is figure will rise to to be distributed to the commit­ Its P r ic e S ta n d brances, one of the most sym­ tier forts and the warrior foes tee members. bolic at Arlington, where men who are l e g e n d : the C o m - Schiff was classified as a "p ro ­ WASHINGTON !.P - The Alum­ and women who served in al­ manche, the Sioux, Cheyenne, visional" student when he came inum Co. of- America informed most all the nation’ s wars sleep. Apache, Kiowa. to MSU, he said, because he had Secretary of Defense Robert S, Of the 80,000 veterans of the not t a k e n t wo undergraduate McNamara on Wednesday night V i c e President H u b e r t H. Spanish-American war alive in courses required by the history it is willing to rescind its alum­ 1954, only 15,000 survive today. Humphrey is scheduled to lead inum price increases, a Penta­ department. ceremonies at this vast resting gon spokesman said. The ranks of those who served The transcript he sent to the place across the Potomac from in World War 1 have thinned to University witli his reply stated Alcoa President John Harper the Lincoln Memorial. 3,093,000 off from 3,236,000 11 that he was a regular student and Executive Vice President There was a poignant note years ago. since spring term, 1964. , Lee Hickman informed McNama- this Veterans Day E v e / as the From W rii ,y*e —state University; 1 ADVt '3 $ 5 * 8 2 5 5 * 'J cT 4 . Second class postage paid at East Lansing, A rthur Langer ................. AdvertisingM anager Mich. Editorial and business offices at 341 Student B U S IN E S S -C IR C U L A T IO N 35 5-8 29 9 Services Building, Michigan State University. D O W N T O W N -L A N SIN G Fast Lansigg, Mich. P H O T O G R A P H IC 3 5 5 -8 3 1 1 Li — rO Thursday, N ovem ber 11, 1965 3 M ichigan State N ew s, E ast Lansing, Michigan_________________ — • Complacency 1 ... Rarely has m o d e r n man ap­ that failed. A man In a car did be diverted from New York. to come back on the air with ment's radio system went dead etahdSr Vulnerability Seen , PiirKf Eight radio ctofinnc stations monaoMl managed In M aw Vnrli. New York, fhp the fir^ aBD8rt* fire depart­ SAME day service EVERY day By SAUL PETT peared so vulnerable to his own better than a man in a big modern Countless stores were shuttered, ,l U D , n G SM U RD AV AP S p e c ia l C o r r e s p o n d e n t reduced auxiliary power but only for t h r e e hours. Dispatchers NEW YORK IJF—One fouled-up technical achievements. Rarely Jet which circled New York, un­ their owners gaining no conso­ those wi t h battery - powered tried to keep in touch with fire- has modern society appeared so able to land. A man on foot lation out of their dead burgular t h e b e s t se r v i c i n t o w n switch. Or a single failure In a radios could hear them. houses and vehicles by telephones wire connection. Or indigestion In knotted by its own inter-related got farther than a man in a alarms. The New York Telephone Co, and walkie-talkies. modern commuter train, who got Television channels in New a fool-proof computer. Or any complexities. The New York Stock Exchange York went dead - and anyway managed to function with emer­ one of a hundred tiny things gone The thing they told us couldn't nowhere. gency power but there was the and the American Stock Exchange wrong. happen happened Tuesday night A single candle in a single win­ nobody had power to plug in P R O F E S S IO N A L a set. The New York Tim es was chilling thought: if somebody or opened late Wednesday. In many And upward of 30 million peo­ and all the giants of automation dow 80 stories up in the E m pire and all the electronic brains of State Building supplied m ore light the city’ s only morning paper to some thing had knocked it out, offices throughout the Northeast, 0^ \a ò k DRY C L E A N E R S A N D ple in eight highly developed would you call your wife, electronic smugness was shat­ American states are thrown into the computers were helpless. than the billion-dollar Consoli­ publish and that was a 10-page how or an ambulance or a doctor or tered as computers stopped com­ M SHIRT LAU SHIRT LAUNDERERS NE also coin operated In great and small ways men dated Edison Co. could. paper without advertising, prin­ black confusion in the year 1965 when men orbit the earth and w e r e stopped, i m p r i s o n e d , One leg in one fireplace sup­ ted in the plant of the Newark ategic cop or a general in the Stra­ puting and suddenly there were * FRANDOR SHOPPING CENTER and 2801 W. SAGINAW slowed, confused, frightened, ex­ plied m ore heat than all the slick, N .J. News A ir Force? only' men to think. their spacecraft explore the moon. hausted and defeated by machines p u s h - b u t t o n heating system s M SU B o o k S to re M SU B ook S to re M SU B ook S to re M SU B ook S to re M SU B ook S tore M SU B ook S tore MSU M could provide in thousands of M apartment buildings, and private S homes dependent on electricity. S u World News Many dwellings went without wa­ ter as pumps failed. u On t h e ¿found, below the B at a Glance ground, above the ground, men were trapped and stranded by the break in the electrical umbili­ B o RECORD SA LE OF REC0RDIN 6S o o War Protester Dies Of Burns cal cord. o k Upward of 800,000 people were k N E W Y O R K ( A P ) — A yo u n g p a c i f i s t w h o s e t h i m s e l f atire in f r o n t of th e U n it e d N a t i o n s to p r o t e s t w a r caught in stalled subways and dark station platform s and 10,000 s S in g le A lb u m s il OUSTER S died W e d n e s d a y of b u r n s . were s t i l l trapped in sub­ t * HE ,N O H D I B L E J IM M Y S M IT H A N A N O IO AMDCOM0VCTS0 DVOUVtDMÊLgOM Roger LaPorte 20, a v o l u n t e e r in th e C a t h o l i c way' train s five hours after the t W o r k e r m o v e m e n t , b e c a m e t h e t h i r d A m e r i c a n to blackout began. Thousands of o $3.98 o die that w a y th is y e a r . others sat it out in com m uter r Joan Baez: Vol. 2 L i k e the o t h e r s , h e h ad p o u r e d a f l u i d on h i s c l o t h ­ train s that suddenly were going 1 r ing and i g n it e d it. H e w a s b u r n e d o v e r 95 p e r c e n t nowhere. And still thousands of e Peter, Paul & Mary $2.98 e o f h i s b o d y , a n d d o c t o r s at B e l l e v u e H o s p i t a l th ough t others were caught in elevators. it r e m a r k a b l e h e l i v e d a s lo ng a s h e d i d - m o r e t h a n In hundreds of great and tiny Stan Getz; The Soft Swing $3.98 21 h o u r s . / ways, modern technology seemed M M helpless. Many factories closed. S ftrahams: Piano Concerto No. 2 $1.88 S Two hundred airplanes had to Meg’s Resting In Tucson u u Irrin i Lopez: Live at Basin St. East $2.98 LOS ANGELES T - - re s t in the vast desert of P rin ce ss M argaret and her Tucson, Ariz. B Ian and Sylvia $3.98 B The p r i n c e s s , L o r d H a n n a h husband, the E arl of Snow­ o don, left the hubbub of this Snowden, and the official Joan Baez: In Concert $3.98 o sprawling m etropolis Wed­ party left Los Angeles by o 3.98 A g a i n s t 3.98 o nesday for a quiet, private plane at 1:2 5 p.m. Prokofiev; Peter & the Wolf $1.88 k trOfcHbC k Secret Service Reorganizing B o o k s t o r e T rin i Lopez; At P .J .’s $2.98 j lA FORZA DEI DESTINO com*n S . I t l ì 111 U .IIV > S W A SH IN G TO N ( A P ) — C h ief Ja m e s J. R o s J » y re c e iv ­ President John A. Hannah told t Buffy Saint-Marie: Many a Mile $3.98 i j ed the title of d i r e c t o r W e d n e s d a y a n d Rtm is Y o u n g ­ studer.: g o v e r n m e n t leaders t blo o d , h e a d of the W h i t e H o u s e d e t a i l , b e c a m e an T uesday they should find som e­ o o a s s i s t a n t d i r e c t o r in a m a j o r r e a l i g n m e n t of the S e ­ thing more useful to do than r r starting a student bookstore, “ Student bookstores a l w a y s e cret Se rvice. T h e p r o m o t i o n of Y o u n g b l o o d w a s in r e c o g n i t i o n of e h is outstandin g w o rk w h ile head of the W h ite H ouse fall flat after a while,” he said. “ T h ere is nothing student gov­ d e ta il, the o f f ic ia l sa id . Youngblood was rid in g with P r e s i d e n t L y n d o n B. ernment can do in the way Of a M J o h n s o n , t h e n v i c e p r e s i d e n t , in N o v e m b e r 1963 w h e n bookstore t h a t the University S isn’t already doing," he said. P r e s id e n t John F . K en ned y w as a s s a s s in a te d . Yo u ng ­ blood w as c re d it e d with actin g q u ic k ly i n pushing Jo h n ­ Student government can’t com ­ u s o n to t h e f l o o r o f t h e c a r a n d p r o t e c t i n g h i m w i t h pete with the University bouk- h is body. store or the local ones, the B president said. 3.98 Cuba Wants Prisoner Exchange Hannah recommended that Stu­ dent Board m em bers discuss the 3 R e c o rd S e ts o o other Latin*American na­ possibility of employing a law’ $5.64 H A V A N A .F—C u b a ' s yer to aid students witiyLeland Gilbert £ Sullivan Operettes S T EREOPHONI C k Communist regime p r e s s ­ tions. C a r r, the University' attorney, ed the Urn ted States on The Communist news­ C a r r is too busy to handle D ili $5.64 Wednesday to exchange Cu­ paper Granm a said Cuba students’ cases, Hannah sai Vq MozafV: Don Giovanni © S ban political prisoners for is willing and it is up to Students should r e a l i z e the $5.64 I -»’m e w s K y e i pro-C om m unists jailed in the United States^to make Bach: St. Matthew Passion t the firs t move. useful services available to them «aM iH M iW I« t i-■'Jk:- only because they are students m m n iM B a« Bizet; Carmen $5.64 I v - i t e ' o fin n iiR H he said. iisauawMi r Macapagal Losing In Philippines T he televised away' footbal Bach: Christm as Oratorio $5.64 games are one of the useful e M A N I L A ( A P ) — W a r h e r o F e r d i n a n d E . M a r c o s built services which he mentioned. up a s u b s t a n t i a l l e a d o v e r P r e s i d e n t D i o s d a d o M a c - “ T he new student government c a p a g a l to d a y in r e t u r n s f r o m th e P h i l i p p i n e g e n e r a l (ASMSU) has had a very encour­ Ml election. aging eight months,” said G or­ S B u t l e s s th a n h a l f the e ig h t m i l l i o n b a l l o t s f r o m don A. Sabine, vice president u T u e s d a y 's e le c tio n had been counted. T h e r e w e re c h a r ­ for special projects. “ It has g e s of i r r e g u l a r i t i e s . D e l a y in r e p o r t i n g t a b u l a t i o n s been zig-zagging in finding its w a s r e p o r t e d th ro u g h o u t the a r c h ip e la g o . T h e s e d e la y s course, but it has done w ell," 3.76 B o fte n le ad to c h a r g e s of b a ll o t s t u f f i n g . he said. 2.98 o o k W e st G e rm a n 2 R e c o rd S e ts C h a n c e llo r H \ 1 If \ S Strauss: Werner Blut $3.98 t Irto * tap IW bi. IVMc. a Itatw To V is it Doraki: Slavonic Dances $3.98 o JOHNSON C I T Y . Tex. r Handel: La Resurrezione $3.98 Chancellor Ludwig E rhard, who n il 10 hi e wants a share in nuclear defense $3.98 for West Germany, is coming Mendelssohn: St. Paul to this country in early Decem­ Ml ber for his fifth meeting with S President Johnson. u T h e Texas White House said 1.88 2.98 Wednesday the two leaders will meet D e c . 6-8, but didn’t say B w h e t h e r they would confer in o Washington, th e LBJ Ranch, or e l s e w h e r e in this country. o E r h a r d told the West Germ an k P arliam en t W e d n e s d a y t h a t m e m b e r s of the North Atlantic T r e a t y Organization “ must share All Of These And Many, Many More At Greatly Reduced Prices! S in the n u c le a r defense according t to the degree in which they are o threatened.” He said West G er­ many should not be deprived of r a nuclear defense because it is For Generations e p a r t of a divided country. . th e h a n d k n i t t i n g in D e n m a r k MSU T he issue of nuclear a rm s for has been a t r a d it io n handed ♦1 West Germany, a^sore spot wit-fi o v e r f r o m f a m i l y to f a m i l y . M Russia, is certain to be among S the topics of the Johnson-Erhard It h a s bee n an e x e r c i s e f o r discussions. t h e f i r m o f D a n s p u n to g a t h e r u th e m o s t c le v e r h a n d k n itte r s W hen th e h a n d ­ In o u r C o u n t r y , • k n itte rs in t h e i r B E a s t L a n s i n g ’s h o m e s h a ve f i n ­ B o BOOKSTORE is h e d th e s w e a t ­ S c h o o ls G e t O K ers , m a l le d th e s e to are th e o Voters in the East Lansing houses o f Dan­ k school district Tuesday approved spun. two construction bond issues to­ taling 87.3 million. danspun th e q u a l i t y i s h e r e • re s u lt of e x p e r- S t H aN D M M ,M u*»m i a i ^ e , fo r ^ .r je r ^ - J.M I U « 4 1 .♦ * for $6.7 million for generaf'con- struction purposes. It passed by tTon*. in th e C e n te r f o r In te r n a tio n a l P ro g ra m s o a vote of 1,835 to 1,714. r A $615,000 bond issue to pro­ ]j ja y ic i a 203 East e vide funds for two swimming S III H R I UJ (, H K Grand River MSU Book S tore M SU Book S to r e MSU B ook S toge M SU pools in the district passed by a 1,408 to 1,139 margin.* Thursday, N ov em b er 11, 1965 4 Michigan State N ew s, East Lansing, Michigan Color Big Ten Statistics Green & White ■ By R O B ER TA Y A F IE S ta te N e w s S p o r t s W r i t e r They’ re not turning out Big Ten statistics sheets like they used to. They’ re turning out M i c h i g a n State stats instead. - « Everything the Spartans touch turns tq g r e e n , as indicated by the 18 categories b e g i n n i n g with BPs J . 3 "M SU ” or the name of a Spar­ tan player. For Clint Jones, the have the best scoring a v e r a g e - for this week at least. Illinois’ Spartan touch is turning to gold. 2 9 .3, most yards gained— 382.7, Jim Grabowski leads the Big Ten Clint’ s basic requirement to be m o s t yards gained rushing— rushers with 6 13 yards in 130 filled this weekend is a pretty 258.7, top yards per play aver­ carries for a 4.7 average. Next easy one. Just score two touch­ age— 5.3, best average in rushing comes Jones, with 506 yards on downs. That will bring his total yards per play— 4.6, best punt 104 rushes and a 4.9 average. C O O L I N G O F F — T h r e e m e m b e r s o f S t a t e 's n a tio n ­ Bob Aplsa rounds out the top to 80 points and give him the return average— 10.3, and the a lly ra n k e d d e fe n s iv e p la tto n ( l . - r . ) G e o rg e Web­ modern-era single-season scor­ fewest Interceptions per game— t h r e e ground-gainers with 83 s t e r , C h a r l i e T h o r n h i l l and B u b b a S m i t h , ta k e t i m e carries for 439 yards and a 5.3 ing record in the Big Ten. The 0.8. ou t to le t th e o f f e n s e s h o w t h e i r a b i l i t i e s . O p p o ­ Only the Hoosiers can upset mean. mark has been held since 1943 n e n ts ha v e a v e r a g e d le s s th a n 50 y a r d s r u s h i n g Tops in passing is Purdue’ s by Purdue fullback Tony Butko- the defensive applecart and they g a in p e r g a m e a g a i n s t MS U . P h o to b y Bob B a r i t vich. The Boilermakers were un­ must roll up 230 yards on the Bob Griese. He’ s completed 76 defeated that year as Butkovich ground to do so. That seems very of 142 attempts for 884 yards, * amassed 78 points, scoring 13 unlikely considering the Spartans three touchdowns and .535 aver­ touchdowns in four games. leading marks of 29.5 per game age. Steve Juday follows, having State wormed its way into the and 0.93 per carry concerning connected on 50 of 99 attempts national picture as well. The opponents’ rushing activities. for 7 3 1 yards, a .505 average NCAA ranks the Spartans tops in The rest of the defensive pic­ and three scores. scoring defense with a 5.9 aver­ ture is equally sunny. State has Juday leads in total offense. age of all games. In offensive held opponents to fewest net yards On the ground, he’ s picked up scoring they stand tenth. — 17 2 .3, fewest yards per play— 107 yards in 40 plays. Alongwith Back in the Big Ten, Spartan 2.9, fewest plays— 58.7, given up his passing marks he's got a C l i n t Jo n e s , D w i g h t L e e and B o r i s total offense and defense again the fewest first downs— 1 1 .3 , and total mark of 838 yards in 90 N O W I T ’ S OUR T U R N - - G e n e W a s h i n g t o n rank No. 1. The Green and White allowed a scant 7.2 points scored. plays, a v e r a g i n g 6.0. Jones D i m i t r o f f ( l . - r . ) .t a k e fi ve, as th e d e fe n s e s w in g s b a c k in to a c t i o n . B o th th e o f f e n - have taken top honors in seven Several outsiders have pene­ stands ninth in that department. s i v e and d e f e n s i v e u n i t s to p m o s t o f th e B ig T e n s t a t i s t i c c h a r t s r e l e a s e d W e d n e s - y P h o to b y B ob B a r i t total offense categories. They trated the individual standings, Iowa’ s Karl Noonan tops the day. receivers, having caught 27 for 299 yards. Bob Hadrick of Pur­ due is second with 25 receptions TH E 'S P IT T O O N ’ IS T H E T H IN G for 274 yards. With top receiv­ J I B I 6 S IN G ing yardage at 432, Gene Wash­ ington is third in the standings, having snared 24 passes and one with THE G LAD D O G JUG B A N D and W ho C a res A bout R o ses? touchdown. Jones ranks 11th with 17 receptions for 174 yards and 82 attempts, good for 539 yards X OTHERS* § 1 Oat f t S B y R IC K P I A N I N S ta te N e w s S p o r t s W r i t e r Th ere's more at stake for and five touchdowns. Stavroff is backed by quarterback G a r y T o - pound end is Stavroff s prime receiver. Malinchak has snagged two scores. Jones heads the conference 31 passes for 458 yards and four scoring column with 68 points Where is our biggest challenge — in space, or on some the Spartans this Saturday than fil, who has completed 25 of 56 touchdowns. coming on 11 touchdowns and one battlefield? Or does it lie in the realm of thought, where The UNION z l / j O d merely the Big Ten champion­ attempted passes for 352 yards Malinchak’ s closest rival is two-point conversion. Next is men strive for deeper insight and spiritual renewal . . . BALLROOM ^ ship and an almost certain in­ and two touchdowns. Senior Bill Malinchak, 6 -1,19 0 — end Ed Kalupa, 6 -2, 209-pound Apisa with seven touchdowns and vitation to the Rose Bowl. senioB^vho has caught only eight a two-pointer for a total of 44. for the discovery of man in God's image There's so much When State clashes with In­ p a s s e ® o r 1 1 1 yards. Dick Kenney stands sixth, his diana here, the Spartans will be Left Halfback John Ginter is 26 points coming on four field more to life than what's on the surface. Hear this public F o r t h e B e s t struggling to regain one of it= among the Big Ten scoring lead­ goals and 14 extra points. lecture titled "The Mythology of Matter" presented by m o s t prized p o s s e s s i o n s : the C a rd S e c t io n e rs with four touchdowns. Ginter The only category minus Spar­ "Old B rass Spittoon." LENORE D HANKS. C.S.B., of the Board of Lectureship i n I t a l i a n F o o d 5 -11, 187-pound junior, has gain­ tan figures is kickoff returns. The "O ld B rass Spittoon?” W a n ts P a sse s The other team just never seems ed 243 yards rushing in the con­ of Tffe First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston. Mass. The spittoon is currently held to score. ference in 69 carries. by Indiana and is awarded to the CMaii sciencelecture T e r r y Cole, 6-1, 213-pound game victor each year since O f A b se n te e s right halfback, is second in rush­ 1950. Members of Block S who will The relic came from one of Michigan's earliest trading posts not be sitting in the section for ing with 198 yards in 57 carries. Ginter has been effective on N e b r a s k a , Pizza and is believed to be more than the Indiana game are asked to turn in their Block S passes so kickoff returns, averaging 30.3 yards in eight carries. Sponsored by the C hristian Spaghetti 100 years old. A victory over the Hoosiers there can be a full block. Passes should be turned in at Indiana benefits from a big, D e v a n e y S cien ce O rganization. rugged defensive line, which av­ would give State its ninth v ic­ the Spartan Spirit offices, 3 15 erages 223 pounds. tory this season and seventh Thursday, November 11 Submarine Sandwich Big Ten win. No other MSU Student Services building by 5 The line is composed of left end A l a n V o o r h l s , 6 -2, 197 B o w l i n g 7:30 P.M . P a rlo r C Union Building team in history could make this p.m. today. To assure its return, the owner should write his name, pounds; left tackle Tom Galla­ A D M I S S I O N F R E E E V E R Y O N E IS W E L C O M E Ravioli claim. And no other team in the coun­ address and student number on the back of the card. gher, 6-4, 245 pounds; left guard John Jones, 6 -2 ,2 3 8 pounds; right LINCOLN, Neb. (UP1)— N e ­ braska Coach Bob Devaney said try today could enjoy the pres­ People who are not members Tuesday that an announcement T-Bone Steak tige of possessing an old brass spittoon. of the block, but wish to sit guard Randy Beisler, 6 -4, 242 pounds; right tackle Ken Hollis­ concerning which bowl bid the Cornhuskers would consider, will And many other Italian-American Dishes in it for the Indiana game should ter, 6-4, 235 pounds; and right The Hoosiers have an unim­ inquire at th e Spartan Spirit be m a d e following Saturday’ s end Alan Myszewski, 6 -2, 199. A convenient place for Lunch pressive 1-4 league record and office. I n d i a n a defeated State last ■ contest with Oklahoma State— are 2-6 overall, but gave out­ Open for Lunch at 11 D aily, 4 Sum_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ There w i l l be no Saturday year, 27-20. The two teams’ if Nebraska wins. standing performances in their morning practice for Block S series-stands at 13 -5 -1 in State's Second-ranked Nebraska, 8-0 last two games. as was originally planned. on the year, is under consider­ favor. Indiana defeated Iowa, 21-17, ation for the Orange, Cotton and L a s t year’ s l o s s to the Badminton and then gave Ohio State a rug­ Sugar bowls. Hoosiers, coupled with the in­ M & V & * 2 ged battle before succumbing, centive to regain the old brass Devaney disclosed that play­ 17-10, to a fourth-period touch­ ers have discussed the post­ 4 Doors North On M .A.C. down. spittoon, should give the Spartans season bowl situation and may SIN EKI! The deadline for all badminton added momentum. Best Pizza In Town H o o s i e r quarterback Frank rosters is noon Friday and 5p.m . Besides, that spittoon would have made up their minds. Stavroff has completed 35 of Last New Year’ s the Huskers Friday, for all wrestling entries. make a dandy Christm as gift competed in the Cotton Bowl at Badminton and wrestling will be­ f o r tobacco-chewing assistant gin Monday. Dallas. The year before Nebras­ coach Hank Bullough. _______ ka was in the Orange Bowl at Miami. 1 CAN’T GET STARTED? The Oklahoma State game will be played at Stillwater. Nebras­ A W e ll-D e sig n e d ka can clinch a tie for its third consecutive Big Eight title with Hair Style a win. C om es F irst! In tr a m u r a l News T o uc h F o o t b a l I DRY C LEA N T im e F ie ld I S alo n s o f H a i r D e s ig n 6:00 A.T.O.-Delta Chi s i , . • .* » , j ¿ M í Y o u r C lo t h e s 6:45 Theta Chi-Sigma Chi LOWER CONCOURSE -KN APP’ S CAMPUS C EN TER 7:30 M cGregor-FeeMales 8:15 Farm Equip.-Elev. I (Short Course) 9:00 Jets-P lo w J o c k i e s (Short O K iw A w tó jU - Course) 9:45 N3 C h a l l e n g e r s - Block -t.#inandaskabout our "WinaSIOOOWardrobe" Contest 1 winner F ie ld 2 '6:00 Wolverine-VVoodpecker 6:45 Road Apples-Winner (Univ. ri £> " UiV VUl.-Cedarbrook Heff.) ■ «•i 7:30 Scorpions-The Boys 8:15 Soil T ech .-Elev. 11 (Short Course) 6179 9:00 Sharks-Razorbacks ( S h o r t -■ ' £ ours£) F ie ld 3 Most l u m i Open At Your Convenience . . . 24 Hours A Day-7 Days A Week. Y o u ’r e O n l y t f i l H f l f i n Y o u r M i s s A m é r i c a S h o e s —B e double-chic with a com b inatio n pum p in su ed e and 6:00 Cameron-VV ildcats 6:45 Six Pak-Bacchus 8:15 McTavish-Holmes 9E 9:00 Aristocrats-Ballantine SOCIAL SATIRIST CCMN OPKflATIO COIN O^CTATID lea th er Two re aso n s th at M iss A m erica sh o e s se t a “ miles- ah ead' pace. P riced right, too. 9:45 Eminence-Arpent F ie ld 4 6:00 L.C»A.-Bet? Theta Pi IF«■nM E! 6:45 Deuces-Arhouse WASH N DRY CLEAN WASH N DRY CLEAN c o lo r s: 7:30 Emerald-Baal 8:15 Fenwick-Holmes 2W brown and $ 1 2 9:00 Red Doors-Hatchetmen green m R e s id e n c e H a ll P a d d l e - b a ll «w. C o u r t s 1,2,3 7 p jn . Fee-McDonel r e p r is e RECORDS Ann Street Sunshine Center C a rtw rig h t S h o e s C o u r t s 1,2,3 8 p.m. Case-W'ondef s C o u r t s 4 ,5 , 6 8 p.m. Snyder-East Shaw T O P L A Y & P L A Y A G A IN 2 1 3 A n n S tre e t 1381 E a st Grand R iver C o u r t s 7 ,8 ,9 8 p.m. Balley-Emmons T h u rsday, N ovem ber 11. 1965 Michigan State N ew s, East Lansing, Michigan S t u d e n t s S h a r e E x p e r ie n c e P la c e m e n t B u r e a u general science, mathematics, omlcs (Dec. and March grads.) T u e s d a y , N o v e m b e r 16 Peerless Division - American industrial arts, s p e e c h cor­ Booth Newspapers Inc.: adver­ Cement Corp.: electrical engi­ O f B la c k o u t V i a P h o n e tising, journalism, economics, rection. Graduate School of Business neering, mechanical, chemical They were already three hours getting into a cab. Other New management and m a r k e t i n g , engineering. B y DON S O C K O L Administration - Northwestern Yorkers were more helpful. English, political science (Dec. School District of the City of S ta te N e w s S t a f f W r i t e r late In returning. Univ.: all majors, all colleges They returned In the middle of Another student’ s father told and March grads only.) Ferndale: early elementary edu­ Little more than a century ago, i n t e r e s t e d in Northwestern’ s him it took him five hours to J .I . Case Co.: agricultural en­ cation, biology, special educa­ electricity was unharnessed.To­ the call. MBA program in the College of get from downtown Manhattan to gineering, mechanical engineer­ tion and visiting teacher (Dec. day it is not only harnessed, but "Y o u don't know what's going Business. (Dec. and March grad the south side of Brooklyn, a trip ing, a c c o u n t i n g , management, and March grads). rides firm ly in the saddle of on h ere!" were his mother’ s first m a r k e t i n g (Dec.- and March only). usually taking less than an hour. Fieintzen School District: early School District City of Royal American life. words. He had picked up nine persons grads). " I t 's like something out of an and later elementary education, Oak: elementary education, vocal Students from the East, react­ on the Brooklyn Bridge in an Connecticut General Life In­ H.G. Wells novel.” counseling and guidance, a r t , music, science, English-social ing to an unprecedented power effort to help out the bridge’ s surance Co.: all majors, all col­ g i r l s ’ physical education, in­ studies, industrial arts, speech failure catastrophe, began phon­ As she continued, her story newly acquired pedestrians. leges (Dec. and March grads). dustrial arts (Dec. and March correction, deaf, hardofhearing, ing home as soon a s ' news of unfolded. She and the student’ s The first student’ s mother and Detroit Bank and Trust: all grads). orthopedically h a n d i c a p p e d , the massive breakdown reached sister were on 34th Street and sister did not learn the extent majors of the College o f Busi­ mentally retarded, Type " A " , here. Fifth Avenue, in a well-known Marathon Oil Co.: all majors, of the breakdown until they stop­ ness emphasising accounting or visiting teacher (Dec. and March all colleges (Dec. and March One New York student called department store. The lights went ped In a dark coffee house at economics, and all majors of the grads only). home and received news from off. Thinking there was merely grads only). 60th Street, half the walk home, colleges of Arts and Letters, U.S.Rubber Co.: chemical and his sister that his mother and New Holland M a c h i n e C o.- a short-circuit in that particular and heard It on a transistor Communications Arts and Social mechanical engineering, chem- another sister were in the heart Dtvision of Sperry Rand Corp.: store, they left the building. radio. Science (Dec. and March grads). istry and physics. of Manhattan when it happened. agricultural and mechanical en­ Realization of the full nature of "I t was a long walk home, but Ethyl Corp.: Chemistry. Flint Public Schools: early and gineering. the catastrophe was still far thank God we weren’ t caught in off, even as they saw people pour­ an elevator or the subway." his later elementary education, Eng­ Panhandle Eastern Pipe Line as low as Co.: accounting, finance, econ- P o w e r ’s R e tu rn ing out of buildings up and down mother said. lish-soc ialstu d ies^ b o /s^ P ^ E ^, Fifth Avenue as far as the eye with gas C a r e fu lly T im e d could see. People never even How about a considered that it could be any­ NEW Y O R K (UP1)— Persons 6H a r a s s e d 9 with electric clocks on the east thing more than a local break­ FREE Spray Wax side of midtown Manhattan did down. not have to reset them because of the power blackout. The power Rush hour traffic, usually mov­ ing at a snail’ s pace, slowed to H u m a n is ts SOME J A Z Z Y F O L K S g a t h e r e d M o n d a y n ig h t at £>rim s0 FRA N D O R went off at 5:28 p.m. Tuesday a virtual standstill. Taxis took th e F a t B l a c k P u s s y c a t f o r a " c u l t u r e f e s t " s p o n ­ A u to m a tic advantage of the emergency by H it B a c k and returned at 5:28 a.m. Wed­ nesday. ___ charging $5 a head for merely "T h e issue is whether to break s o r e d by Z e i t g e i s t m a g a z i n e . P h o to b y C a l C r a n e A D V E N T U R E A u to W a s h with ASMSU or put up with its harassm ents," Humanist Society President Henry Blackledge said at the O N T A R IO A ID E D R u s s ia n R e lig io u s L ife finest M i c h i g a n P o w e r P o o l at a joint meeting of the Hu­ manists and MSU’ s Young So­ cialist Club Tuesday. "A SM SU has required us to T o B e S u b je c t O f T a lk skiing spots STATE submit membership lists, to ac­ The Rev. F r . Francis Donahue summer. He will show slides count for ourselves, and to change associate professor of religion, taken during the trip. in Europe? DISCOUNT will give an illustrated lecture The lecture will deal with reli­ our constitution," he said. H e l p E a s e d B l a c k o u t gious life in Volgograd, Moscow, C o s m e tic s "T h e Humanist Society exists on the state of religion in the Kitzbuhel, St. Anton, Zurs, as a forum for unpopular ideas Soviet Union at 7 tonight in 137 Leningrad and the important Rus­ & V it a m in s M i c h i g a n power companies of such cooperation between com­ and unpopular people," lie added, Akers. sian Orthodox monastery of the Klosters, Davos, Grindelwald, ~ were called upon to buttress parts panies. F r . Donahue made his third Holy Trinity-St. Sergius Lavra Wengen, St. Moritz, Zermatt, It was the suddenness of the " b u t o u r membership l i s t s Chamonix, Courchevel, \al 619 E . Grand River of Ontario when that province shouldn’ t be abused." visit to the Soviet Union this at Zagorsk. was shaken in the power failure request from Ontario that was "T h e Student Board’ s Mem- D’ lsere, Cortina, Sestriere. affecting the northeastern United unusual, and not the request it­ b e r - a t - L a r g e J i m G r a h a m Daily q a . a - 6 p.m. States and parts of Canada. self, the c o m p a n y spokesman Wed. 9 a.m. • 9 pun. charged MSU to have groups such Find out how easy it is to Consumer’ s P o w e r Co. in said. as ours disbarred from campus,' enjo> any or all of these famous Jackson responded to an urgent Consumer’ s Power o f f i c i a l s he said. areas. call for h.elp from the Ontario were reticent about commenting d p l^ '^ o e on the Eastern power blackout Humanist Club Vice President Hydroelectric Co. and it, in turn, John Dennis was sent by the called on Detroit Edison to help before the meeting of the Federal group to Tuesday’ s meeting of replenish its power supply. Power Commission in Washing­ the Student Board. w r - CO LLEGE T R A V E L O FFIC E Both Michigan companies are ton today. "John McQuitty told me that 332-8667 The Michigan Power Pool was 130 W G R A N D R IV E R members of the Michigan Power there was no point in my being G iv e Q u a lit y ' ¥ Pool, a one state version of the established after a number of at the board meeting until its multi-state cooperative involved studies on pooling had been made, organizations committee had got­ In the east coast catastrophe. the spokesman indicated. IIEBERMANN'S' Power companies often call on Officials of the Consumer’ s ten in touch with u s ," Dennis P a p e r B o u n d s Power Co. indicated that a mas­ said. each other for aid during peak hours of power usage, a spokes­ sive power failure could not oc­ groups have had much harass­ Blackledge said that the two T ip fo r yo u r t r i p . . . ta k e man for Consumer’ s Power in cur here. The Michigan Power ment for their stand on Viet Nam fo r Jackson said. The establishment Pool is much smaller than the and the Human!st Club’ s proposed #'•' f of the pool ¿r>$l962 en largei the organization affected in the East, V EN TU R A LUG GAG E campaign to send blood to the technical and legal framewortc he said. North Vietnamese. C h r is t m a s "W e believe that the United J I M States should not intervene in countries where its help is not [4 N AT ION A L 4P r o j e c t 8 0 ’ F o r e s e e s requested,” he said. "O ur goal is the betterment of mankind. v CHILDRENS HOOK . W E E K s'1 _ We are in favor of this blood S t a t e F a r m e r s ’ F u t u r e drive to aid the innocent victims of w a r ." Society is so complex that By 1980 there will be one- "T h e motive behind the blood state government must plan needs half as many farm ers in Mich­ drive is to point out that the 10, 15 or 20 years ahead, act­ igan as there were in 1960, ac­ foreign policy of the United States ing Gov. William G. Milliken cording to Milliken. said Wednesday morning. is wrong,” Blackledge said. "T h e Today one farmer is able to fact that blood is the issue is S p a rta n B o o k s to re Milliken was speaking to mem­ supply the needs of 32 persons, sufficient proof that our group is bers of the Michigan Farm Bur­ he said. humanitarian, because we see Corner of Ann St. & MAC eau in the Auditorium about Pro­ A uniform state program of war as a moral issue.” meat and milk inspection has ject 80. Project 80 is a scientific look been passed by legislature, he ahead at Michigan agriculture for said, and will be effective In 1980. July, 1966. A measure of pro­ A S M S U -P o p u la r E n te rta in m e n t moting the sales of Michigan He said it is expected by then products both at home and abroad that crop land will be down by a has also been passed. P re s e n ts th e million acres but production up by Milliken expressed the govern­ 50 per cent. ment’ s viewpoint that livestock A farm er will be a manager industry should be increased in more than a laborer, he pre­ Michigan. There is a bright pros­ dicted, and the net income of the pect for stock raisers. farm er will be 85 per cent high­ er. He urged the Farrn Bureau to continue telling its needs to the KINGSM EN M i l l i k e n stressed, however, government. that such projections are not in­ The 46th annual convention of the Michigan Farm Bureau closes evitable. They can be changed by the careful planning of farm ers. this afternoon after three days Automation is responsible for of conferences, s p e e c h e s and the decrease In farm ers, since banquets. farm production is requiring few­ The meeting was sponsored by er workers, he said. the College of Agriculture. G e t R e a d y F o r W in t e r ! * LIM ITED TIM E ' I / ONLY C O M PLETE E L E C T R IC A L ON A LL AMERICAN T a k e th e lu g g a g e th a t’ s year's ah ead . It’ s tuugh . . . M A D E CASS., v lip h t *. . . and fa s h io n r ig h t. K e y l e s s c o m b in a u u n CHECK-UP fd2f71'' aVe s o ax ** ffen t. WorK?eV?tj4—fa sh io n c c r lo r s,- • B ATTER S $4.50 Iro m s2 4 50 • REGULATOR • GENERATOR • STARTER . FAN B E L T • COOLING SYSTEM N O V E M B E R 13 •COMPLETE* Specials Available "L A R G E S T MACHINE SHOP 8 -1 0 J E N IS O N F IE L D H O U S E DISCOUNTS IN TOWN” AUTO GLASS EL ECTRI CAL • SPRING AIR CONDITIONING SERVICE At East Lansing T i c k e t s - s2 °° Store Only c o m pleteunejnev ^ a n p r e b u il t a u t o p a r t s N O W Union 8-5 p.m. C o u p o n s G oo d T h r u SERVING GREATER LANS/NG FOR 50 YEARS 'V ■ I> . i '&»•: ' - W h o l e s a l e & Retai l - " ' iV v * h ] t r W '' A V A IL A B L E Student Services Bldg. KRAMER 80Ü E. Kalamazoo AUTO P A R T S Phene I V 4.1335 A T Information Desk - 3rd Floor 3-5 p.m. Nov. 8-12 E A S T LANSING - 209 E. Grand R iv e r DOWNTOWN *1 0 7 S. Washington A v e . F re e P a rk in g A t R e a r o f S to r e Thursday, N ov e m b e r 11, 196! SOMETHING TO SELL? A ROOM TO RENT? CALL 355-8256 TODAY. 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C atures, AKC registered champ­ 487-5880. 3 1 - 3 T R -3 1956, 1964 T R -4 engine. to 8:30 p.m. - Sat. 9:30 a.m. to 1 W A N T AD CHEVROLET 1 71965( 5? new trans­ mission. Excellent engine. Good FORD, 1^58, 2-door sedan, $1 1 5. Want to hear more? Call 332 - 6 p.m. Ages 2 1-4 0 . Apply Man­ your free time into $ $. For appointment in your home, write DRUMMERS EXCLUSIVE— Wil- cox Music scoops the market. ion stock. 8 weeks. 2 males, 2 females. 372-4856. 35 -5 1852. 3 3 -3 power, Inc., 303 E.Michigan. 31 shape. Dependable. Radio, good Phone IV 4-4829. 3 1-3 See the newest Trixondrum set T A P E RECORDER, Webcor. One • AUTOMOTIVE M rs. Alona Hucklns. 5664 School tires. Best offer. 3 5 1-5 36 2. 3 1 - 3 FORD 1763 Falcon Futuri sedan. VOLKSWAGEN 19 6 5, Bahama great H akes em plo ym ent Street, Haslett, Michigan or call with the egg-shaped bass drum year old. Excellent condition. • EMPLOYMENT CH EVRO LET I960 convertible. 6 cylinder automatic. V i n y l Blue, 5,000 miles. Driven in for permanent positions for men evenings, F E 9-8483. C 31 and twin drum pedals. A gleam­ $60. Call after 5 p.m., ED 2 - • FOR RENT All p o w e r , automatic. New trim, turquoise color. OSBORN Europe. Phone 351-4592. and women in office, sales, ing chrome and silver sparkle 3839. 3 3 -3 ■ • FOR SALE technical. IV 2 -15 4 3 . C 31 M A LE: FU LL time also part brakes, extras. Very go o d . $695. AUTO. INC.. 2601-7 E. Michi­ VOLKSWAGEN 1964, llkethenew time help Friday, Saturday and set; Ziljian cymbols, a gorgeous PORTABLE T Y P E W R I T E R . • LOST & FOUND Call Russ, ED 2 -3 57 7. ¿ 2 -3 gan. C 32 -5 1600 square-back model. (Small R E C E P T I O N I S T CLER IC AL Sunday. ROCKET AUTO WASH, set as featured by a leading Smith-Corona. S i l e n t super. • PERSONAL CHEVROLET, 1959, 5-door, V-S-, FORD 1959 convertible."convertible. Auto­ stationwagon). $1,74 5 . Call 332- work part-time. Afternoons 1 2905 West Saginaw. 3 3 -3 rock and roll group, the Ven­ Pica type, $50. Call 332 -30 18 . • PEANUTS PERSONAL automatic. $300, or best offer. matic. Full power, white. Me­ 0942. 3 1-3 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. Medical doc­ tures. See it now at WILCOX 3 3 -3 • REAL ESTATE chanically good. $450. Call 35 5 - VOLVO 1960. Good condition. En- tors office, typing ability nec­ AMBITIOUS K E L L Y girls are a l- MUSIC DEPARTMENT. Over Must sell. F E 9-8882 after 5 ways in demand. Industry needs TWO TICKETS to Indiana game. • SERVICE p.m. 32 -3 5895. 3 2 -3 gine overhauled t h i s spring. essary, dictaphone experience your office and marketing skills. 200 guitars in stock. Electrics, Section 2 1. Call Tom. 337-2040. • TRANSPORTATION CHEVRO LET 1955", new trans- FORD 19: V-8 standard shift. $600. Call 485-0961. 3 1-3 desired, W r i t e Box B -2 , c/o A p p l y K E L LY TEMPORARY slabs, flat-top, classic; jazz 31-1 . • WANTED good tires, good mileage. Call VOLKSWAGEN, 1961. red, radio, State News. 5/32 models and beginner’ s instru­ mission. Excellent engine.Good S E R V I C E S , IV 2 -12 77, 400 SINGER (SWING-needle sewing Doug “ - 1 1 ]j.m. 3 3 2 -18 10 . 3 2 -3 STUDENT WIFE or coed to sell ments, starting at $16.95; used shape. Dependable. R a d io , good seat belts, panel m eters, win­ S. Washington, Rm. 206. Equal machine) zia-zag dial for but­ DEADLINE tires. Best offer. 35 1-536 2. 3 1 - 3 F O R D STATION WAGON 19 59 dow vents, low mileage, $650, new O VATION beauty products, opportunity. 5/32 accordions, band instruments, ton holes, embroidery, blind 2 p.m one c la s s day be­ V -8, standard transmission. 1 phone 485-2586. 32 -3 off campus. Full or part-time. new and used best selection of CHEVROLET 1961. 4-door , Bel PAR T-TIM E, I need five men to hem, monograms, etc. Need re­ owner, v e r y good condition VOLKSWAGEN 1962, 2 - d o o r , Will train. Write Box A -l, State instruments in Lansing. Easiest fo re p u b lic a tio n . Air. Automatic, r ad io, heater, work three hours, three even­ terms, lay-aways, trade-ins. liable party toassumepayments throughout. Far above average. News. 32 -5 good condition, good price. sedan. Excellent running con­ ings a week, In sales. Call 37 2- of $7.08 monthly or $49,56 cash. C a n c e lla tio n s - 12 noon one Beechem & K N I G H T AUTO GIRLS WANTED immediately. Come in and see Jack Sova, Phone 484-0423. 3 3 -3 dition. By owner. Phone 339- 3 1 1 0 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., to a r­ Phone IV 2- 1 641 . c la s s d a y b e fo re p u b lic a tio n SA LES, 1300 E. Michigan. 32 -3 Telephone sales. $1.25 per hour guitar p l a y e r and musician CHEVROLET CORVAIR Monza 2725. 34-3 range interview. 3 3 -3 * around Lansing for many years. ENCYCLOPEDIA ERITANICA. guaranteed, plus bonuses. Call 1963, deluxe, 4 - d o o r , bucket FORD 1963 1. 2 Galaxie 500 XL VOLKSWAGEN, l c) 6$, red, low Jack will help you select the Complete set with year books. PHONE seats. R a d i o , 4-speed. New automatic. P o w e r steering, mileage, e x c e l l e n t condition. 372-6608 between 4-8 pm. 32 -5 For Rent instrument best suited to your Excellent condition. Call 3 “2 - 355-8255 tires, ED 2-4845. 3 5 -5 vinyl top, 390 V-8. Many extras. Phone after 4:30, 332 -356 3. 32 -3 GIRLS TO answer telephone. B IC YCLE REN TALS, storage, pleasure. Remember, see Jack 312 7 . 3 3 -3 Like new. 355 -9 5 0 9 .• 34-5 VOLKSWAGEN'S 1962 and 1963. $1.25 per hour. Easy work, lots RA TES CHEVY 'II 1964 Nova hardtop. sales and services. E A S T L A N - at WILCOX’ S for a musical deal MOVIE CAMERA Argus M -3, FORD GALAXI E 1959, 4-door, Must sell. F a c u l t y member of b o y s around. V A R S I T Y SING C Y C L E , 1215 E. Grand normal, wide angle, telephoto 6 cylinder, standard shift. Low that will please you. 509 E. 1 D A K ............. s i . 50 hardtop. Original paint, no rust, leaving on M.S.U. Turkey Pro­ DRIVE-IN, ED 2 -6 517. 32 -5 River. Call 332-8803. C lenses. Sacrifice. Marvelous mileage beauty. OSBORN AUTO, Michigan. P h o n e IV 5-4391. 3 D AYS.......... .$3.00 INC., 2601-7 E.M ichigan.C 32-5 power brakes, steering. Factory ject. Will accept highest offer. EMPLOYERS OVERLOAD com- T V R EN TA LS for students. Eco- Hours daily, 8 am. to 5:30. camera for $25. 351-489 8. 3 1 - 1 5 D AYS.......... ¿5.00 air conditioning. IV 4-3428. 3 3 -3 ED 2-0270 after 5 p.m. 32 -3 pany, temporary assignments nomical rates by the term and COMET i960, 4-door, radio, Gun racks make an ideal gift. FORD i960 Fairlane black 4- VOLKSWAGEN 1962, sedan, ex- for experienced office girls. No month. UNIVERSITY TV RENT­ Animals heater, automatic transmission, Wall-type, 2 gun-$ 2 .8 8 , 3 gun (b a se d on 15 w o rd s per ad) door. Full power. Good con­ cellent condition, Must see to fee, top pay. Phone 487-6071. MINIATURE SCHNAUZERS, 6 exceptionally clean, good me­ A LS 484-9263. C32 Over 15, 10c per word, per day. dition. $375. Call 3 3 7 -2 3 6 9 .3 2 -3 appreciate. Call I V 9-9422. 34-5 C31 - $ 3 .8 8 , 4 gun-$ 4 .8 8 , and 4 weeks old by Thanksgiving. AKC chanical c o n d i t i o n . $495. PARKING ACROSS Grand River BUSBOYS WANTED for jobopen- gun with drawer - $5.88. Also registered l i t t e r . Phone IV T h e re w i l l be a 5 0 c s e rv ic e Beechem k K N I G H T AUTO M ERCURY, i960, 2-door white- VOLKSWAGEN 1962 convertible. from C a m p u s , $5 monthly. 3 gun walnut floor model $8.88. SALES, 1300 E. Michigan. 3 2 -3 walls, radio, heater, Baby-blue. Radio. New whitewall tires.New ings at S.A .E. All meals avail­ Phone 489-1003. 3 3 -3 4-0007. 35-10 a n d b o o k k e e p in g c h a rg e it CORVAIR MONZA 1961, 4-speed. ED 2-6400 . 31-7 battery. Excellent c o n d i t i o n . able. Inquire Steward 337-9091. RENT A DISHWASHER, $8 per P .X . ST O R E - FRANDOR A L A S K A N M ALEM UTE PUP- t h is ad is n o t p a id w ith in Excellent condition. $850. Call MERCURY 1959. Good condition. Call 355-28 27. 32 -3 3 2 -3 month. Saves you the time and JACKSON ST A TE Prison sweat­ PIES, 6 weeks old and 2-year o ne w e e k . HOUSEWORK, Monday, Wednes­ drudgery of old fashioned hand old. Female, Qai! 4 8 5-5251. 351-520 8 after 5 p.m. 31-5 Power brakes, steering. Radio, VOLKSWAGEN 1965 B a h a m a shirts with a 1-6 diget serial day, Friday, May bring one pre­ washing. For instant installation 31-3 CORVAIR. 1962, white, red ir.- heater. $190 or best offer. Phone, blue. V i n y l interior. 5,000 number of your choice. Black The State News does not 3 3 2 -5 7 3 3 . 31-3 m iles. Driven in Europe. Best schooler. ED 2-6400. 3 2 -3 of space-saving G .E. Porta- MIMTURE SCHNAUZERS, salt terlor, 2-door, floor shift, four or gray. $4. Call 3 5 5 -2 6 15 . permit racial or religious new tires. $725. Phone I V 2 - offer over $1,490. 35 1-4 5 9 2 . L A ST C A LL!! Two months ago we maid, call State Management, 3 2 -3 and pepper color. Registered.7 MG, 1753 Midget, New. 5,0()0 discrimination in its ad­ 2126. 33-5 3 3 -3 ran an ad and hired eleven men. 332-8687. 39 -10 SAXOPHONE, A new Alto sax. weeks. 3 left. Call 882-2093 or mile warranty. L e a v i n g coun­ vertising columns. The CORVAIR MONZA, 1962 black, WHEELS OF LANSING. Qualified Nine of them had no previous 882-7960. 3 3 -5 try. Radio, heater, wire wheels. "'ill sell at wholesale price. State News will not accept automobiles at r e a s o n a b l e direct sales experience and none Apartments 2-door, with red interior, 4- $1,850 . ED 7-2024. 31-3 Cash, trade or terms. Call 699- MINIATURE SCHNAl'ZER. F e - advertising ‘ rom persons speed. Excellent c o n d i t i o n . prices. From $95 to $2,995. of them were experienced in our E A S T S I D E . 1-1/2 bedroom, male 3 months. Champion sired. MG MIDGET l96i." I must sell! 2027. 3 2 -3 discriminating against re­ Phone IV 4 -8 721. 33-5 2200 S. Cedar.______________ C field (three left $15,000 or ever ground floor, garage and water E a rs t r i m m e d . n o n - shedding, ligion, race, color or na­ Extra cl ear. , top mechanical yearly salaries to come with us). paid; '$150 furnished, $125 un­ HAPPY BIRTHDAY c a k e , § permanent shots.Call 3 3 7 -2 3 9 1. CORVAIR M O N Z A l 962auto- shape. Must see. Real reason­ Auto Service & Parts I n c h e s d e l i v e r e d $3.87. tional origin. As of this date, ten are still furnished. No pets or children. matic. Metallic blue. New tires. able. 351-4 9 32 . 32 -3 with us. Last month these ter. Call IV 9-1017. 34-10 Specials: Wednesday-Thursday, MINIATURE SCHNAUZERS sired Excellent condition. Call 3 32 - N E W BATTER IES. E x c h a n g e c r e a m - s t i c k s b / 3 9 f KWAST by c h a m p i o n Handfull P o p u p . O L D S M O B IL E , 1961, F'8o, F ’8 5 , 4- price from $7.95. New sealed men averaged >1, 814 (high man ONE M ALE roommate needed Ears cropped, permanent shots. 4098 after 1 p.m. 3 3 -3 BAKERIES, Brookfield Plaza, Automotive CORVAIR 500 1 9 6 1 . 3-speed, aoor, radio, standard shift. Very beams, 99^. Salvage cars, large $ 3 ,871-low man $1,242). Two of for winter term only. Burcham East Lansing; Frandor; 303 S. $150 . Phone IV 2-5987 after 5. good condition. New tires. Eco- stock used parts. ABC AUTO them are now district managers. Woods Apartment. Call 3 3 2 - A L F A RO M EO Spyder 1 960. Wil- floor shift, clean, 2-door. Eco­ nomlcal to run, 33,000 miles. Average earnings' for all men: Washington. IV 4 - 1 3 1 7 . C 31 FORCED TO sell my Daschund io w g r e e n R o a d s t e r . N e w top nomical, e x c e l l e n t condition. PARTS, 613 E. South St., T V 42 54 after 5 p.m. 31-3 puppy through lack of time and ED 7-0384. 3 1-3 last month was $2,061. We are WANTED: ONE girl to sublease SEARS A U T O M A T I C washer. and p a in t. F o r details , call 5450. 332-2960. 3 3 -3 5T 5-1921.________________________C space. 3 months, black male. OLDSMOBILE 1957 *88*. power GENERATORS AND STARTERS. a multi-million dollar company luxury apartment, near campus, $25. In good working condition. 337-2024. 3 4 -5 CO RVETTE 283 cu. in. 3-speed, steering, power brakes. Good currently expanding in Michi­ Phone ED 2-2209. 3 2 -3 3 3 2 -115 3 . 3 3 -3 Rebuilt 6 or 12 volt. Guaranteed! winter term. Call 35 1-4 19 4 . AN T IQ U E C A R . Chrysler Wir.d- 2 tops. New paint and tires. Best condition. Phoné IV 4-9547. 3 1 - 3 gan with a prestige program of DAL MAT ION PUP, black and s c r 194(3. All o r ig i n a l . Excellent Exchange price, $7.90. Mechan­ 33-5 MUMS, $2.75 plant, apples, all offer takes. Phone IV 5-2459. ic on the job! Installation serv­ unbelievable sales appeal. Men varieties, fresh cider,PRINCES white, 7 weeks old male. AKC OLDSMOBILE 19 6 1F - 8 5 , 2-door. c o n d itio n . C all William Bennett, 29 -3 selected w i l l be completely ONE MAN needed for two bed­ FARM MARKET, W. G r a n d registered. Good. ED 2 -5 1 5 6 Excellent condition. Phone 3 7 2 - ice a v a i l a b l e . ABC AUTO I o n i a . 5 2 7 - 0 0 4 4 . 24 Lovell CO R VETTE 1964y freer, co:-- trained at our expense. They room luxury apartment. $50 River at Okemos Road, Okemos. or ED 2-2438. 3 2 -3 \ 3542. 31-3 PART*». 613 .E. South St., IV monthly. Call Paul, 332 -52 7 3. p la ce. 32 -5 vertlfcie. 17,000 rft:|es. 300 h.p. 5-1921? C will do no traveling or cold 3 3 -5 OLDSMOBILE D ELTA '8S’ ,l965, 3 2 -3 Mobil* Homes AU STIN - lii A L E Y § 0 0 0 , 1961. Radii, heater. Must sell. Two Holiday coupe. Power with many canvassing. To be considered, HAND WOVEN rugs, reasonable. G ood c o n d itio n , n e e d s some r e ­ new snow tires. $2,750. Phone 'C O M P L E T E must have some sales or public WANTED, TWO girls to sub- 1954 MOBILE HOME, 29'. Very accessories, N o c t u r n e Mist. Priced a c c o r d i n g to length p a i r s . M u st s e l l . Best offer. 882-3825. 31-3 AUTO G LA SS S E R V IC E contact experience and be above let house, winter-spring terms. reasonable. On lot, close to 8,500 miles. Price $2,750. 484- Two blocks from campus, $50. wanted. Made to your order. C a ll 3 5 1 - 4 2 8 3 . 3 3 -3 DESOTO 1955 , 2 - door hardtop. 0756. 3 2 -5 free pickup and delivery average in personality and ap­ Phone IV 2 -17 7 6 . 3 3 -5 campus. Completely furnished.. 3 5 1-5 0 1 3 . 32 -3 BL'ICK l 3 ?“ c o n v e r t ib le . V a lv e Fully equipped including power C O R EY G LASS, INC. pearance. If selected this should Phone 3 5 1-4 3 3 3 . 31-3 jo c i n s w b r a ice s, ¿ o o c tir e s» steering and brakes. All origin­ OLDSMOBILE 1962, 4-aoor dy­ be the last ad you ever answer, WATERS EDGE Apartments need LIKE NEW, Takumar 200 mm NEW MOON 1963, 12’ x 66* with namic. P o w e r steering and 2504 East Michigan Avenue f/3 .5 telephoto lens. Complete. ■p o w e r s t e e r i n g and b r a k e s . al equipment in top working Lansing — Phone IV 5-726 1 as this is truly a once-in-a- one girl for winter and spring 9' x 19’ attached jalousie porch brakes, hydramatic transmis­ Fits most Honeywell 35 mm SLR $ 1 5 0 . C a li 3 5 1 - 4 3 3 2 . 3 1 -3 order. Body and interior like lifetime opportunity. For all terms. Call 35 1-4 35 8 . 32 -3 - on lot. IV 5-0594 days, 9-6, sion, radio, heater, 1 owner. FIBER GLASS H A R D T O P for CAMERAS. Priced for quick BL'ICK 1964 S p ec ia l c o n v e r t i b l e , new. Ar. exceptional buy at $350. $1 , 375. 332-0 347. 32 -3 Austin - H e a l e y , 3000-100-6. th e facts, see Martin HAPPINESS IS living with us sale. Ask for John at 3 5 1 — nights, 393-3386. 5/32 w h ite w ith blu e top. Snow t i r e s , BEECHEM & K N I G H T AUTO Schlissberg, November 15 or 17 winter t e r m . Girl n e e d e d ; e x c e l l e n t c o n d itio n . A s s u m e SA L E S. 1300 E. Michigan. 32 -3 OLDSMOBILE 1965 F- S 5 deluxe, Two-seater. Also detachable by appointment in Student Place­ Colonial House Apt. Near cam­ 5378 5 -7 p.m. any day 3 1-3 Lost & Found 4-door sedan. Power steering luggage rack. 3 5 1-5 3 3 0 . 3 1 - 3 b a .a r .e e. 3 3 2 - 4 2 7 5 . 3 4 -5 DODGE STATION WAG ON 1962 ment Bureau. 3 2 -3 pus. 3 5 1-5 37 0 . 3 3 -3 WIG, T U R B A N style. Light LOS . BLACK Si WHITE spotted and brakes. Good condition. Call CAR WASH 25£ . Clean, heated. brown. Human hair. Never worn. cat in Spartan Village. $5.00 C H E V E L L E 1965 M a lib u c o n v e r t - automatic 6. One owner. Ex­ 37 2-6 19 4. 32-3 You-Do-It. 430 S. Clippert, back WANTED by RECORD CLUB OF TH REE GIRLS, needed to sub- Head mold, case. Reasonable. ib le , s a d d le tar.. V - S . O nly 5 ,0 0 0 cellent c o n d i t i o n . Must sell. AMERICA, Campus representa­ lease Haslett luxury apartment. reward. Call I\ 5 - 3 2 1 1 , ext. m i l e s . M u st s e l l . P l e a s e c a ll 332-0789. . 3 3 -3 OLDSMOBILE 1959 4-door. In of Koko Bar. C32 tive to earn over $100 in short Winter and spring terms. Ideal ED 7-0 485. 3 1-3 328 afternoons. 31-3 482-6963. 32-5 DODGE 1956, Custom Royal. V-8, good conditior Call 332-6874. Scooters & C ycles time. Write for information: location. 3 3 2 -1 1 5 3 . 3 3 -3 WASHER, FRIDGIDAlRE, l i k e 34-5 new. Metal storage cabinets, C H E V R O L E T 1962 B i s c a y n e 6 - automatic. New tires. Runs well. O L D S M O B I L E 1962, ' F - 8 5 ' . LAM BR ETTA SCOOTER, 1958, Record Club of America, Col­ ROSE BOWL! Two girls wanted Capehart T V . Call 3 3 2 -0 5 15 . SplIt cowhide c y 1i n d e r , s t a r c a r d s h if t , 2 —d o o r . $100. Call a f t e r 5 ,355 -9 9 0 0 . Hydramatic, radio, full power. $50. See at 351 6 Lucie Street, lege Dept. 1285 East Princess to sub-lease luxury apartment 31-3 fle e c e *1 Ined L a d y - d r i v e n . See* at O SB O R N 'S 33-3 $895. Call 485-7548. 3 3 -3 Lansing. Call TU 2 -5352 after S t ., York, Pa. 3 2 -3 Winter term. Call 337-0244. RCA WHIRLPOOL washer-dryer coats for A U T O , IN C ., 2601—~ E. M ic h i­ B R EAK FAST C OO K full/part 3 3 -3 men and ga n . C 32-5 FALCON 1961, 4-door, standard PACKARDS, TWO. 1951, straight 04 p.m. 3 1 -3 time. HOLIDAY INN at Frandor. M ALE TO share 12 ’ x 561 house- combination. O r i g i n a l price eights, No r u s t . Best offer HARLEY DAVIDSON Sprint 1963. shift, completely rebuilt engine. $500. Will sell for $15 0 . 669- women C H E V R O L E T 1959 I m p a la , 2 - $425. Phone IV 5-9275. 572 E. 31-3 trailer. Car necessary. 3 5 5 - d o o r , a u t o m a t i c . G ood r a d io , a roun c $300 each. Phone 627- ' 250cc. Best o f f e r . C a l l 35 5 - GIRL TO do housework andiron- 8332, ext. 72 before 5 p.m. 7794 . 3 2 -3 Greenl'awn 32-3 34-5 3097 . 32 STEREO T A P E S—factory seal- h e a t e r . N e w fron t end, u n i v e r - 5220. ing. 5 days per week including 676-2630 after 7 p.m. 32-2 F A L L SPECIA L: Following cars HONDA 250cc Scrambler, very ed, fully guaranteed. 25-65% s a l s . G ood t i r e s . >450 o r b e s t PONTIAC 1962, Catalina sta­ Saturday, 9 -5. ED 2 -12 9 7 . 3 1 - 3 NEEDED FOURTH girl for Bur- low mileage, t a k e over pay­ off list price. Call 5 -9 p.m. P ER K IN S offer. 355-6231. 31-3 must be sold below book: 1963 tionwagon. Good condition, orig­ CAB DRIVERS, part-time work cham Woods Apartment. Win­ 355-58 4 7. 3 2 -3 C H E V R O L E T . 1965 I m p a l a , Austin 850; 1959 Oldsmobile inal owner. Best offer. Phone ments. 353-0044. 5-6 only. Wed- available. All hours. Must be at ter, spring, and summer. Avial- Leather Shop s u p e r sp o r t h ar d to p . R e g a l r e d , *88’ ; 1960 Fora Galaxie; 1959 4 85-5776. 3 3 -3 nesday-Friday. 32 -3 TV USED RCA table model, dark 2410 S. Cedar St. least 25 years old and have able now. 337-9206. 3 3 -3 b l a c k / w h i t e i n t e r i o r . 2 5 0 hp MG A; 1958 MG A; 1962 Fiat 1965 TRIUMPH 500 cc. Excel- wood cabinet, $25. IV 5-6322. Parki ng at Rear Di 11 3 7 2 -3 4 3 9 RAM BLER CLASSIC 1959 §tand- knowledge of Lansing area. Good (3 2 “ ) 4 - s p e e d t r a n s m i s s i o n , 600 - D; BROOKS IMPORTED lent condition. Must sell. 3 5 1— 32 -5 ard. G o o d condition, cheap driving record necessary. Call Houses lo a d e d . 9 ,0 0 0 a c tu a l m i l e s , p r i ­ CARS; 5014 N. Grand River. transportation. Must sell. $160. 5160. 3 2 -3 COURTESY CABS, IV 4-4488. ONE MAN to share five bedroom v a te o w n e r . IV 9 - 6 2 3 2 . 33-5 IV 9-5568. 3 2 -3 Phone 353-22 3 3 or 35 1-5 0 2 3, HONDA §90 196$, must sell. 3 3 -5 mm home. Four blocks from cam- Edith. 31-1 Good condition. Call Mike, 3 5 1— ORDERLIES, NURSES Aids, no 31-3 pus. Call 337 -2339 . 4658. 3 2 -3 experience necessary. Please SPACE A RENAULT DELUXE 1962. Ex- VAILAB LE in large, AVAILABLE BOYNE MT. cellent condition. Must sell. Back-breaking insurance costs Employment WAITRESS* GOOD working con- apply in person. COUNTY HOS­ PIT A L, Dobie Road, Okemos. roomy house for 4-5 quiet, stu­ dious men. Full facilities,close ACROSS 1. Impede 27. Ital. painter 29. Rabid 37-10 5. Simian too high. 3 3 2 - 1 2 “ 4. 3 2 -3 to campus, limitedparking. 3 5 1— LODGE SERIES III Sunbeam, 1963, body dltions. Apply In person after WAITRESS FOR night club. Hours 11 am. THE EAT SHOP, 605 E. 8:30 pm. to 2:30 am. Call JOE 5674 after 2 p.m. EAST SIDE Cape Cod, threebed- 3 2 -3 8. Duct: anat. 1. Horse's gait 3 1 . Novel 32. Headliners 34. Haw. and engine excellent condition. Grand River. Please No phone JOSEPH’ S PRO BOWL, IV 7 - and You must see to believe. Best offer over $1,30 0 .332 -8 12 5.32 -5 calls. TWO MEN needed, part-time, 31-5 5802. CASHIER WANTED p a r t-time 32 -5 room, furnished, gas heat, pre­ fer professor. No pets. $150 . 2. Worthless matter 14. Courtly gooseberry 36. Willow s 38. Honey - HIGHLANDS THUNDERBIRD 1955, fair con- dition, must sell. Best offer, w a r e h o u s e work. GORDON FOOD S E R V I C E , 2226 Spike Street. Ask for M r. Boven, IV evenings 4-9 SPlRO’ s C A F E . Kewpees. Apply in person. 32 -5 IV 5-0 336 . WORKING WOMAN w a n t s to shgre her three bedroom house 35 -5 16. Trend 7. Apocry­ badgcr 4 1. Headship 43. Opposite phal book Phone ED 2-8972. 3 3 -3 4-5354 . . 31-5 G RILL M A N wanted 4 to 9. with two students or working 44. Anchor SPIRO’ S C A F E , Form erly Kew­ 18. Wife of W A N TS pees. Apply In person. 32 -5 women. All home privileges. Call 3 9 3 -15 7 4 after 5:30 p.m. Osiris 45. Sonnet 46. Poetic 2 La c e ra te d 3. Conjectural 8. Prophecy 9. Arouse 20. Vulcanize a PHARMACIST R ELIEF or part- 3 3 -3 contraction 4. M e x ic a n 10. Drv. as tire wine Men Ann Women Winter Term: IS HERE! time. Call Haslett 339-2660. 32 -5 Rooms 22. Nigerian negro 47. Eng. princess DOWN 5 c o in s . T im e 6. Co venant p a st 13. Inlants 15. Journev 24. Place WANTED: GUYS and Dolls inter- WOMAN, 1 place in double room 7 . M is ta k e 19. lutul ' * •t *• % ested in extrcasoiy fine job op­ with kitehc* facilities, - lour.g«- 26. Location a* 1. Uth,. „ 21. Seat hi* W a itr e s s e s L A K E LJCNSINGI portunity. This is selling money and bath. Sheets provided, $45 church 1 X 3 4 s « 7 % 5 10 Busboys to make money. Contact Martin month. 523 Sunset Lane. 3 3 7 - 22 Land % Schlissberg, November 15 or 17 119 4 . 3 1-3 II i it 19 measures by appointment in Student Place­ R60M FOR four students in three 23 . In bed Dining Room Managers ment Bureau. 3 2 -5 i<4 $is 25. Faucet room student wing of new house. 28. Peace Bartenders ATTENTION P R O F E S S O R S , Walking distance campus. 33 7 - nr i t goddess graduate students, technicians, , 0031. 3 3 -3 % % 30. Copper­ Desk C lerks | K E L L Y TECHNICAL needs youl IS 19 to ZI field s wife Apply now - K EL LY TEMPOR­ For Sale % % 29 7tm 33. Holy: Fr. Sales and Office Personnel ARY SERVICES, IV 2-1277, 400 GUN'S FOR SA L E or Rent, by St ss 14 35. Came S. Washington, Room 206. Equal day, w e e k or season, KEN­ ST %si ti 30 il plaved on a Grounds Maintenance opportunity. 5/32 NEDY’ S HOBBY SHOP. 1420 % checker SS 94 % 3$ board Mt. Hope Rd. Woodbine. Phone IV 9-1165. 32 St WANTED: 1 lead guitarist and 1 % 37. Situated: singer for Rock and Roll group. SNCLIsH L I C T T T -W n C TTT3 B* ST iè % 39 49 Fr. , R o o m an d B o a r d p r o v i d e d . . ft.» IW.-Hitjp ■ fCxpoiHfc’. ia' c^aar ascv- Ccrlij Vs..-■ • :4 k * M ■ mr a 41 school p l u s S a l a r y and F r i n g e B e n e f i t s at 337-9 326 . - 3 3 -3 price. Rental-purchase terms 40. Ancient f o r in te r v ie w a p p o in tm e n ts HONDA of HASlin E X C E L L E N T BUSINESS oppor- tunity for ambitious young coed. Full/part time. No door to door available. We also have tennis racquets, golf balls, badminton birdie^, gifts and housewares. is a r 44 % 44 47 stringed instrument 4 1. For c o n t a c t S tu d e n t E m p l o y m e n t O f f i c e IN THE NEW HASLETT SHOPPING CENTER selling. For interview phone A C E HARDWHERE, a c r o s s ’ê â 42 Write I n t e r v i e w i n g N o v e m b e r 15 and 23 photie 339-2039 M on -Fri,9a.m .-8p.m .,Sat8-5 372-6350 or 489-3034. 3 3 -3 from Union. ED 2 -3212. C Par tim e 30 min. Nf ' > * •" * Thursday. N ovem ber 11, 1965 f M ichigan State N ew s, East Lansing, Michigan Lost & Found F ire D e p a rtm e n t R e p o rt, «LÖST : F RATERS, ir» ’ pi n, on Cam pus R ad io T ry Our campus. Reward. Phone 35 5 - ( c o n t i n u e d f r o m pa g e 1 ) Choice 6763. 3 1-3 It is not certain that MHA and sented to Student Board, MHA Personal and VVIC last month, called for W1C would be willing to pay for ASMSU to pay 50 per cent of campus r a d i o . Pete Sorum, Few er C a lls O n Cam pus N e w Y o rk R EN T YOUR TV from N E JA C . campus radio costs, and for MHA Abbott Hall president, speaking Zenith and GE portables for and VVIC to share the other half as representative for MHA, said B y B R U C E S M IT H to the campus; 54 were actual that when the department Is ans­ Strip only $9 per month. Free serv­ that MHA had voted unanimous­ fires and 36 involved only the wering a false alarm they are ice and delivery. Call N EJA C of the expenses. S ta te N e w s S t a f f W r i t e r rescue squad. unable to respond to actual fires Steaks The campus radio study com­ ly table the financing proposal The East Lansing F ire Dept, T V REN TALS, 482-0624. C "T h e University’ s purchase of should one be called in ." mittee is perparing a full re­ twice. He added that MHA and VVIC has answered only 180 calls to NEED A BAND? 1 book for 1H E port on the operation of campus will not support the campus radio the MSU campus so far this an inhalator has somewhat re­ He continued by explaining how, P R E S I D E N T 1 A L S and THE radio, and will now have to pre­ proposal unless it is shown to year, says Arthur P. Patriache, duced our rescue squad calls,” even on false alarms, firemen ONES. Call T erry. 482-4590. sent a new proposal for financ­ have the support of—and be of assistant East Lansingfirechief. he added. completely search the building 33 -5 ing the operation. There are no cost breakdown looking for a fire. __________ benefit to— the student body. According to department re­ "LIVE SANTA For r e n t . For cords, he said, this year’ s cur­ figures available covering indi­ So far this year East Lansing Christmas parties and enter­ rent total of 180 calls is running vidual alarms answered, he said. Fire Dept, records show an es­ T h e P iz z a P it tainments. Call 332-6678 after jelow the average for past years. But he estimated the value of timated fire loss for the Univer­ 7 p.m. 3 2 -3 N e w C h r i s t y M i n s t r e l s If everything continues at the equipment sent to answer each sity of only $5,000, he said, but 203 M .A.C. ED 2-0864 present rate, we will be well be­ alarm at around $100,000. East Lansing's loss Is estimated MUSICIANS AND SINGERS, lS - low last year’ s total of 278 as­ “ Besides the wear and tear on at around $261,000, and the last 20. Must have some time to sorted alarms, he said. equipment,” Patriache said, "the two estimates (Pizza Pit and a practice, be good musicians and I n L a n s i n g S a t u r d a y The majority of campus calls, biggest danger in false alarms Is garage) are not in yet. D R I V E singers. Looking for lead,bass, rhythm, guitarists, d r u m m e r he said, are trouble calls and - I N The New Christy Minstrels, performed and called for more. not fire calls. Of the 278 an­ fMUni and organist, to sing with the group known as THE SURFERS. the folk-singing group that sells When the group returned from swered last year only 60 calls its records in 12 1 countries, its tour of Italy. Scandanavia, involved actual fires. MSU International Film Series I of L a n sin g on AA-78 If interested call Art Sullivan France, the Netherlands and Eng­ presents at 337 -9 7 8 1, ext. 29 after 5p.m .; comes to the Lansing Civic Cen­ He said the remaining 218 land, the New Christy’ Minstrels involved everything fr.om false NOW! THRU SUNDAY! ter, 8:30 p.m. Saturday. possibly before Saturday but not Tickets are available at P ar­ became the first folk-group to alarms to flushing gasoline down JO H N V A L E R IE A LEC NOW! E LEC T R IC -IN -T H E CAR necessary. Must have long hair amount News Shops and the Civic ever headline New York's Copa- sewers. if possible. G r o u p to sound H EA TER! OPEN A L L WINTER somewhat like the Beach Boys, Center, 505 VV. Allegan St., phone cabana. During 1964, the East Lansing M IL L S H O BSO N G U IN N ES S Great 485-2419. Prices are $4, $3.50, The New Christy Minstrels are That's the reason why good F ire Dept, answered a total of H IT N O . ( I ) SHOWN A T 7 P M - I 1:40 now planning for a State De­ 44 ^ in J. ARTHUR RANK S singers are needed. Destined $3 and $2.50. 1 7 1 6 calls, the majority of which When President L y n d o n B. partment tour of the USSR, which to be one of the fastest rising w ere within the city of East Lan­ Johnson invited the New Christy permits the state radio to play ‘ A N T H O N Y Q U IN N I S B R I L L I A N T ! ” groups in the country. 32 -3 sing, he said. — Bc^ Cv CrOwt''‘?r. N Y t'TTies Minstrels to perform for digna- the Minstrels albums. Organized in 1961,' the Min­ "T e n of these were f a l s e taries at the White House last tf CHAPLIN FANS year. President Segni of Italy strels pattern their style after alarm s,” he c o n t i n u e d , " s ix ANTHONY QUINN coming from the campus andfour said, "T h is is the kind of music a group of pre-Civil War sing­ N o v . Î3 " G o ld R u s h " Europe should know more about." ers founded by Edwin "P o p s” from within East Lansing." ALANBATZSTRENE PAPAS Early this year the Europeans Christy. The original group is Patriache said that only 10 M ÎC HAElC ACO YANNlS W O D U C TIO N did learn more about the Min­ credited with introducing Stephen false alarms from within an area Z0RBATHE GREEK’ D e c. 11 " S h o u ld e r A rm s ” in CHARLES DICKENS i , uh BER NAR D MILES • FRANCIS L S U LL IV A N strels when the group took its Foster’ s greatest songs. the size of East Lansing was tutrodti, ina J Al*J ÎH O N Y W A G E R jh JEAN S IM M O N S “A perfect E x p lo rin g Cinema Society first overseas concert tour. The New Christy Minstrels’ "re al, good.” Directed by D A V ID LE A N • Prodded by R O N ALD NEAM E AN INTERNATIONAL C lA S S C S PW EStN ÎA “ S T h r o u g h October, he said, ExecutiveProducer Phone 485-3912 At the San Romeo Festival in last six albums together sold five there have been only 169 calls A N T H O N Y H A V ELOC.1C-ALLAN _ 1? 15 2 45 5 15 7 55 0 SUTTON Italy the Minstrels stacked up million copies. TOE "KN IG H TS OF HARMON V three firsts. They were the first H IT N O . (2) SHOW N O N C E A T 10 P . M . motion picture Americans ever to win in the Dance music to suit, from Rock M r . J o h n ’s to Society. Casual to formal. contest and they took both first J! \ PAUL FRANÇOISE JEAN ’ 355-74 16 . 35 and second prize. Hair Fashions 99 E MONDO D0RLEAC SERVAIS « F R E E !!! A Thrilling h o u r of They were among the few per­ beauty. For appointment call formers ever to be asked to per­ W is h e s to In tro d u c e ■* — B o s le v C r o u t h e r , T i m e s / rw M A NFR O M R ID 484-4519. M E R L E NORMAN form two numbers. In four days the two winning songs were No.l M r. C ra ig M a c K a y Th u rs., Fri.-N o v. 11-12 .««, EASTMAUC010R COSMETICS STUDIO. 1600 East 0 * t* u ie OP€RT PICTURES CORPORATION hits throughout Italy. It was the Past Co-owner Elda Dianne Beauty Michigan. C32 first time American a r t i s t s Salon in E. Lansing. 7 & 9 p.m. WANTED TWO French speaking reached the top of the Italian hit character actresses, call 353— F A I R C H I L D T H E A T R E parade. Also past owner of 5 M r. C raig’ s 6281. Excellent opportunity. _______________ 3 3 -3 In Holland Dutchmen broke into Beauty Salons in Lansing and Okemos Admission: 50£ Peanuts Personal TO FACE-m an number 2. Here s a snake dance when theMinstrels Wanted W ANTED, RAY. A n y w h e r e in Mr, C ra ig M acKay Present owner of M r. C ra ig ’ s in Ft. M eyers, Florida. CAMPUS [L A S T D A Y ! 1:00-3:05-5:10-7:20-9:30 . • JOSEPHt LEVINE ; TODAY is the DAY hoping you*re a great success Hove A nsw er To Your this afternoon. Shorty. NATICK, MASSACHUSETTS girl 31-1 Michigan or N o r t h e r n Ohio. Phone 3 3 3 -2 7 2 1. 3 3 -5 O p e ra to r Hair Problem The . TH E A T R I - ; ¡( M im a AwEMBASSYPtCTuWS*•*•••• i • to have a taste tempting, , ^ 3 3 2 -6 9 4 4 — BLOOD DONORS needed. $5 For 501 1/2 E. Grand River A c ro s s from who called Craig Monday night without leaving her name, please call again. 31-1 RH positive; $7 for RH nega­ tive. DETROIT BLOOD SER V­ 24 h r. a n s w e rin g s e rv ic e Berkey Hall Starts Tomorrow! inC o lo r * ’ ink Panther Cartoon savory luncheon at the ICE, INC., 1427 E. Michigan & F R ID A Y “ “ “ Service Avenue. H o u r s 9-4 Monday, “ “ TODAY “ CINCINNATI K ID ” TWO BEST SELLERS -TOGETHER! -DIAPER SERYICE-Hospital pure diapers. We’ re the most mod­ ern and the only personalized diaper service in town Pails Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday. 12 -7 Thursday. 489-7587. C42 FLOORS TO be cleaned. Special- izing in cafes, taverns, stores. M I C H I G A N ~ W -H - I :A - f * , » MI MOS I- • ST E V E MCQUEEN, EDW. G. ROBINSON, ANN-MARGRET TODAY at 1:20 3:20-5:20-7^20-9^25 A brilliant THE BRIGHTEST. LIVELIEST C0ME1IYOF THE YEAR!" BIG 10 CLUB furnished. No deposit. 2 pounds Contact M EILLER SERVICES. Call 485-4150. C • TOMORROW s u p e r b a r g a in d a y com edy.” TMALLRIRHT N y TIMES of baby clothes at no extra cost. T ry our new Diaperene P rocess. AMERICAN DIAPER SERVICE, WANTED AT least one ticket to Notre Dame game. Call Steve, “ D evastatin g II J 914 E. Gier St. IV 2-0864. C 3 5 3 -2 17 9 . 31-1 to th e well- A C C I D E N T PROBLEM? L a i ! WANTED: TWO tickets, Notre KALAMAZOO ST R E E T BODY Dame game. Call M r. Swan, tuned funny SHOP. Small dents to large days 3 7 3 -3 5 3 5 ; evenings, IV 5- ,J Lit THOMPSON bone.” svrecks. American and foreign 0167. 3 3 -3 NO ONE cars. Guaranteed . wor k. 489- WANTED 1 bedroom furnished MAY ENTER 7507. 1411 E. Kalamazoo. C a p a r t m e n t immediately. Call R e tu rn star'mg THE F ro m The PETER PETER .THESES" PRINTED. Rapid Ser- after 5 p.m., 882-6367. 31-1 THEATRE A s h e s SELLERS e n i coc vice. Drafting supplies. Xerox WANTED TO sublease married AFTER FABI copies. C a p i t o l c i t y ' b u l e - PRINT. 221 South Grand. 482- housing immediately or for win­ ter term. Call after 5 p.m.; ENTERS PANAVISION ^HEAVENS IA NCA RM ICH AEL 5 4 3 1. C 31 882-6367. 3 1-3 HER BATH! DIAPER SERVICE. Three types WANTED D ESP ER A TELY four ABOVE! ABCiAIINCBROTHERSPRODUCTON of diapers to choose from. Bulk tickets to Notre Dame game. •B e Sure To Arrive At The Start Of The Feature B e­ R e - r e le a s e d b y C in e m a V Ô cause No One May Enter During the 27 Minutes wash f o r cleaner, whiter dia­ Call John, 355-6350. 3 3 -3 After Fabi Enters Her Bath! — T O D A Y and F R I D A Y ” pers. Fluff dried and folded. Use WANTED D ESPER ATELY tw o * F e a tu re T im e s F r id a y * FEATURE A T 1 :1 5 - 3 :1 5 your own or rent ours. Contain­ tickets to Notre Dame Game. "CINCINNATI KID" at G L A D M E R 5 :15 -7 :18 -9 :2 0 P.M. ers furnished. No deposit. 25 "R E T U R N FROM THE ASH ES" Call 355-3889. 3 3 -3 1 :3 5 -5:2 0 -9 jl0 .___________ 3:20 7:05 & Later If H I A T -A I; Richard W idm ark i ran years experience. BY'-LO DIA­ PER SERVICE. 1010 E. Mich­ Sid n ey Poitier igan. IV 2-0421. C T O N IG H T from 7 :0 0 P .M . STARTS T he B e d fo rd CHILDREN DAY’ care. Five days a week from 8 -5, age 2 -6 pre­ ferred. 1964 Y’uma T ra il, 33 7 - fSirtaNsme T h e a tr e E Feature Times SATURDAY! In c id e n t 9949. 3 3 -3 A u w IS Z -U I4 D 7:40-9:50 ‘ WAR LORD” Prem iere Engagement "COMPLETE F O R M A L wear Tomorrow rental, available in stock.TIME CLEAN ER S, Advisory Service Exclusive Showing available. Call today, 3 3 2 -12 15 . 32 -3 Thereisa niche Our Specialty: T y p in g S e rv ic e for“TheKnack” JOB RESUMES, Ilk)copies, $4.5U. ALDINGER DIRECT MAIL Ad­ vertising, 533 N. Clippert. IV r "BROASTEO"* CHICKEN 5 -22 13. C Due to our special scientific process, .ANN BROWN i GORDON, typist and multihth offset printing. broasted chicken is greasless and B v p a ¿¿a n la w ... (Black and white and color). extraordinarily tasty-you have to try IBM, General typing, term pa­ ¡ t f- ' pers, theses, dissertations. ED a n o t h e r m a n ’s h r i d e it. 2-838 4. C w a s h is o n her PAULA ANN HAUGHEY. Typist IBM Selectric & E x e c u t i v e . Multilith Offset Printing. Pro­ w e t lc lin ^ n ¡ ¿ l i t . . . STEAK-FISH-SHRIMP fessional Theses Typing. N e a r m i N o w , he m u st r is k .arid ta w . mm call 332-6565 campus. 337 -15 27 . , C BARBI M E L, Professions Hyp ist. j - 3 rd F e a tu r e Jt I h o n o r, L tn c l, l i f e No job too large or too small. .togetit and pick up your lunch or Block off campus. 33 2 -3 2 5 5 . C WlLL DO TYPING. Electric type- w u n “H O LD EN1 to k e e p h e r! dinner just 10 min. later writer. Experienced. 2886 E. Jolly Road, 10 minutes from Tme“W o *ld Of / b e s t PICTURE À , i: CANNES C hariion Heston ^ R ichard B oone campus. 337-7607. C \ . FILM FESTIVAL,/, EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do SllZiE II THIS IS ; •CCOI**R€»*OCDBO* . 1985 * B r o s t e d : S p e c ia l p r e p a r a t i o n i n v o l v i n g s u p e r h ig h h e a t and p r e a s u r e - e l e c t r o n i c a l ly c o n t r o l l e d and general typing, term papers, L O R D H AOULÎSON4.V i s c i e n t i f i c a ll y c o n c e iv e d f o r best p o s s ib le f l a v o r . a» theses, dissertations, IB M elec­ N \I O ß G STAMMNG A tric typewriter. Student wife. »a. R IU m iW C H A M Technicolor sJrV/ Panavision Cosionm ç RAY BROOKS MICHAEL CRAWFORD D0NAL DONNELLY 3 5 5 -1 1 3 8 . 3 2 -3. crKW AN kl fir CAROL WINELY, Smith-Corona Electric. Theses, dissertations, Spartan Village 355-2804r~€32 M l HCHM* *PARAM OUNTPE-RELEASEM i*v>* t -E X T R A - R ich o rd B u rto n N o rra te s th e A w ard ‘V Wicxiaina Short S u b je ct BIG JO CLUB 34)) E . Michigan between MSU A LL T Y P E S of typing done, b y The All-Winter "D y la n Thom as " a t7 :io - 9 :2 5 campus and F randor experienced t y p i s t , electric R O SEM AR Y F 0 8 S Y T H G U Y STO CKW ELL typewriter, close to campus. Drive-In Theater Form erly Golf-O-Tron 33 2 -10 7 5 . 33t3 NEXT: 'W h ite V o ic e s ’ and ‘ Mondo P a z z o •U triM S «»«ICO,* MSMBIINO MAURICE tVANS Only 4 m i. E . of MSU 8 Michigan State N ew s, East Lansing, Michigan Thursday, N ovem b er 11, 1965 S tro n g e r B irth C o n tro l S ta n d A s k e d who woul d not be able to cope because it is a " m e s s ," he “ The Republican P arty has fairs, no Augenstein said he had program for quick m ilitary By B ILL P R IT C H A R D s a i d . T he population problem to decide whether to become Campus Community Commis­ George W. Radimersky, pro­ Open petitioning will be held S ta te N e w s S ta ff W r i t e r wi t h t h e i r e n v i r o n m e n t . find victory but the adm inistration's sion is sponsoring a junk drive fessor of German, will speak at for vice presidents of special T o help the parents who want m ust be dealt with in a modern goals,” he said. e x t i n c t pr gram is good only if the U.S. this week. Any old, used items If the Republican Party does to avoid this problem, he s a i d perspective, he said. intends to occupy Viet Nam. a meeting of the MSU German Club at 8 tonight in 33 Union. projects and university affairs not face up to the issue of birth clinics under local and federal Presently the Department of that can be used for arts and for Associated Students of MSU control and birth defects it will sponsorship should be set up Health, Education and W elfare What is needed is the replace­ crafts projects should be do­ *** (ASMSU) through 5 p.m., Nov. die a well-deserved death, L e ­ to test potential m arriage p a rt­ is spending $11 million a year ment of 13,000 village leaders nated in boxes placed in all re­ Beta Beta Beta, national bi­ 15 . Petitions are available In roy Augenstein told the MSI ners for dangerous recessive B i r t h C o n t r o l in aid to dependent children, killed off by the Viet Cong, he sidence halls. Donations will be ological honorary, will m eet at 334 Student Services. Young Republicans Tuesday. genes. Augenstein said. T esting clinics said. used by children in Lansing. 7:30 tonight in 34 Union. Augenstein, ■chairm an of the would cost only $2 million a T he federal government is now *** *** T e s ts car predict s me ner­ F o ru m Set year. training leaders, he said, but " Is T h ere a Home for M e?" Square, folk and round danc­ Douglas D. Feaver of Lehigh Biophysics Dept, and possible vous system malfunctions, Aug­ He suggested the clinics could So far has only 300. is the title of a panel discussion ing will be included as MSU University will give a lecture on Republican nominee for the U.S. enstein sa.d. Alan Schaffer, assistant pro­ be staffed by local pediatricians Augenstein called for a la r ­ on g rea ter Lansing housing prob­ Prom enaders meet from 7 to "T h e Music and Musical Instru­ Senate, said he did not think :l T he Republican Party must not fesso r of history, and Dr. Jam es supported by funds from local ger, accelerated, training pro­ lem s which will be presented by 8:15 tonight in 127 Women’s LM. ments of the Ancient G reek s" right to give birth to children skirt the issue o ' birth, control Feurig, director of Olin Health organizations such asCom m unity gram . the Ingham County Democratic *** at 8 p.m. Thursday in 221 Phy- C enter, will discuss birth control Chest. He said he chose to run for W omen's Group at 8 tonight in S p a r t a n Spirit 'will hold a sics-Mathematics Building. and its application to college stu­ the Senate instead of the House the Lansing YWCA. Both men "Spartan Salute" pep rally at The public Is Invited to the dents at 8 p.m. next T uesday. T h e federal government could of Representatives because he and women a r e invited. 8:30 p.m. Friday on the IM field. meeting sponsored by the Cen­ P r o f i t e e r i n g C h a r g e d The discussion, sponsored by train the clinic doctors and help b e l i e v e d Rep. C h a r l e s C. Coach, team m em bers and cheer­ tral Michigan Society of the A r­ the College of Social Science, pay for clinic facilities, he said. Chamberlain was doing a good leaders will be there. chaeological Institute of Am er- will be In the West Fee Hall However, Augenstein said, the Job. lounge. states and the federal govern­ Augenstein said he agreed with O lin R e p o r t I n A l u m i n u m I n c r e a s e Also participating in the panel ment should not rur the clinic most of B arry Goldwater’s .po­ Aluminum price increases re - nate the tariff on aluminum Im­ discussion associate will be Myrtle Ruel, p ro g ram s for a '0 to 15-year licies in the last presidential professor of s o c i a l trial period and thus allow com ­ election but that Goldwater did ter T u e s d a y were Kathleen Admitted to Olin Health Cen­ p r e s e n t " a n atm osphere of p o r ts ," he continued. sham eless w a r profiteering," Accusing the industry of war work. uate Michael McAleenan, grad­ munities to work out thepr'Tgram not make his program relevant W r o c k , Abdulraham Al-Duaij, assistant in social science, on a local basis. Clio B roussard, Nancy Yapp and Walter A d a m s , professor of profitteerlng, Adams pointed out will be m oderator. to the times. economics, said Tuesday. that aluminum requirem ents for Augenstein called him self a Jam es B aar. Vietnam a re fixed by the Penta­ attended L ast week over 150 students Decisions must be made at fiscal conservative but a lib e r a l. A d m i t t e d Wednesday were T h e government, contending a sim ilar program on the local level, he said. on domestic and international Sharon Fried, Linda Ecklund, that p rice increases announced gon. student protest movements. T urning briefly to foreign af- afiairs. Rose Ellen Kelley, L eslie R a- by m ajor aluminum companies P ric e s go up because of ex­ To get the nomination, Augen­ vitz, Geoffrey Hild, R obert H e r- a r e not justified, has announced cess demand o r shortage of m a n , B arbara Brogren, T e r ­ plans to release its stockpiled supply," he explained. "T he de­ stein may have to compete with aluminum. mand is fixed by our national U.S. Rep. Robert P. Griffin and rance Majchrzak, Frank R om - "T h e price increases a re not defense commitment. The only O f f - C a m p u s H o u s i n g possibly Gov. George W. Rom- pel, Sandra Schnetzky and Nat­ L A S T 3 D A Y S 1 justified," A d a m s said. "T he alternative is to do something alie Cohen. aluminum industry is normally about the supply. competitive. If the prices went "T h e stockpile exists presum ­ G r i p e B u r e a u N a m e d up because of a shortage, the ably f o r national defense p u r­ 2 P a n t s S u it s s6 9 ” government is helping the indus­ poses and we need it now for •A compl bureau to handle M em bers of the com m ission A T T E N T IO N C A R O W N E R S try to correct a n Inadequate national d e f e n s e purposes and student ap :ent problem s will are Stoddard; Bob Am es, C o rt­ (Values to $90.00) supply without inflation." we need it npw for national de­ be set up by the 13 newly selected land, N.Y., senior; G reg Owen, "I think the government ought fense. It's sitting there, so we m em bers of the O ff-C am pus Glenview, 111., junior: B a rry B el- co m p lete fro n t end re p a ir and alig n m en t to go one step further and elim i- might as well use it." Housing Commission, ler, Rockville C enter, N ,Y „ jun­ The bureau will try to mediate ior; J o h n Leiphart, Dearborn * b ra k e s * su sp e n sio n S p o rt C o a ts s2 9 98 complaints ot students and will sophomore; Mary Opdyke, D ear­ recom m end vvhether they have born Junior; Paul C arric k , High­ * wheel b a lan cin g » s te e rin g c o rre c t io n s ($39.98 Values in Herringbone, G len-) Student Help Sought leg.timntr leg¡a! problems, said land Park sophomore; Bob Flack, Chuck Stoddard, East Lansing Jackson junior; G reg -Hopkins, * m otor tune ups Plaid - Tweed Junior and chairman of the com ­ Lansing sophomore;SueRathbun, m ission. Verm ilion Ohio, sophom ore;Tom For Christmas Rush T he c o m m i s s i o n is also P rice, East Lansing junior; Scott plannir g to prepare a booklet on Romney, East Lansing senior; L IS K E Y ’S A uto S a fe ty Center Ttoger Stuart W Need extra cash for C hrist­ Application form s may be ob­ the responsibilities of apartment Candy C arm an, Houghton Lake mas, winter tuition, or maybe the tained in the Student Employment living. Heights senior; J a y Shifley, IV 4-7346 Frandor Shopping Center Office of the Placement Bureau, Named by the chairm an last Eaton Rapids senior; and Sharon 124 SOUTH LARCH trip to Pasadena? The Student Employment Office on the first floor of the Student week after open petitioning and Kuslick, Trenton senior. will launch its annual C hristm as Services Building. interviewing, the com m ittee is Jub Program to fill area jobt. Optional interviews to discuss made up of five students living during the vacation, said Al Luce, types of jobs available and na­ in apartments, one student who YOU'LL “ CLEAN-UP” WITH assistant director of the Place­ ture of work will begin next form erly lived in an apartm ent, ment Bureau, T hursday and may be scheduled two f rom fraternity houses, two Y A N J L E E L ast year 167 C hristm as jobs 9-11 a.m. and 2-4 p.m. living in rented houses and two were filled by students, with total Students will then be given a living at home, Stoddard said. earnings of approximately $23,- referral slip to present to a The commission isconsidering 000, Luce said. prospective employer. an open forum Dec, 1 for stu­ Luce said most jobs are for dents to discuss problem s of THESE FLOOR CARE BUYS Most positions available are w sales clerks, cashiers and stock- three to five weeks. apartm ent living. boys, he said. "M ost em ployers want stu­ T he commission decided at Its dents to start p a rt-tim e work first meeting Sunday to concern fairly soon to learn about the job itself specifically with unsuper­ before the rush season begins." vised housing. S c h if f (cont i nued f r o m p age 1) S T A D I U M JUST SAY "CHARGE IT” TAKE MONTHS TO COMPLETE PAYMENT use of the Federal D istrict Court a t . . . th e tog sh o p which returned the case to the University Oct. 14, after a hear­ ing. The Federal Court has r e ­ tained jurisdiction for t h r e e got a good th in g going ! SHETLAND DELUXE SUNBEAM LIGHTWEIGHT SU N B EA M months. Sen iff said the witnesses at TW IN BR U SH T uesday's hearing were: Louis F. Heckhuis, director of student activities; John A. Fuzak, vice P O L IS H E R president for s t u d e n t affairs; Robert Lanzlllotti, chairman of economics; Dan E. Hankins, s e r­ geant in the campus police; Rob­ a n d ert Andringa, who was head ad­ visor of C ase Hall last spring; and East Lansing City Manager M ic h ig a n S ta te John M. Patrlarche. Schiff was denied re-ad m is­ sion to MSU last spring term R o se B o w l S p a rta n s when he completed his course REGULAR work in history and applied for 19.88 VAL additional course work in eco­ REGULAR nomics sum m er term . 15.88 VAL Includes 7 pc. set of cleaning The University said that be­ lik e pin m a te s a Powerful - dependable 2 tools. 5 big uses. B uffs-w axes- c a u s e Schiff dropped out of speed motor is much m ore Revplvlng nigh speed brush. Quick polishes-cleans ru g s-sc ru b s school, his application for re ­ functional. Gleaming silver pickup rug and floor cleaner. Light­ Complete with a l l purpose admission cam e before adm is­ n u m b e r 1 c o m b in a tio n - king finish. 48 oz. dispen­ weight but powerful. Easy to change brushes-scrubbing pads liquid sions officials. ser-floating brushes. Rug disposable bag. Fingertip on an,d off disp en ser. Sunbeam s i n g l e Schiff alleges that the Univer­ [y rug cleaning 2 year switch. Nylon ro lle rs and attach­ brush polisher also available sity is denying his rights under re a lly -" g o t a g o o d thing g o ing !” guarantee. ment for bare floors. at sam e low price. the first and 14th amendments in ’• n r ? not re-adm itting him or giving him a hearing before the denial. He said the decision not to ad­ mit him was made because of his activities in "student rights" " D E S I DUT” RATING : EASY-TO-HANDLE demonstrations on campus. 23 Attending NAB Meet T w e n t y - t h r e e MSU students axe av#wd)n j the As­ sociate! of B roadensfers (NAB) gopvention in Chicago today and Friday. T he meeting is one of eight- regional conferences being held this fall. It includes the upper J METROPOUTAN WESTINGHOUSE midwest areaz T he purpose of the meeting HAND VACUUM CLEANER CANISTER CLEANER is to keep professional broad­ th e w o o le n la d y b u g SUNBEAM CANISTER CLEANER Handy haiyd vac is c a ste rs informed of the latest ideal for cleaning Powerful one horse­ power cleaner with 6 , technical, legal and production u p h o l s t ery, piece attachment kit. developments in t h e radio-tv Big 1 1/4 H.P. 88 motor - 2 year d r a p e s , stairs, Lightweight. Sits on field. T h e To g Sh o p 39 hose, guarantee. car. P o w e r f u l stairs for easy clean­ A mong the speakers at the E n c l o s e d t ool m otor -sucks up ing. All purpose floor conference will be Sen. fcverert Positive- loti, for guys and gals storage stands on z .: : - v V » v .. too} • Dirk sen (R-Hl.). s t a i r w a y . Sun­ Lightweight - REGULAR. "wands. Toss away dirt" R EG U LA R •The MSU students are ac­ beam Quality, Easy to handle. 11.88 VA L, bag. 26.88 VAL companied by Roderick Right- Ne x t to C a mp u s T h e a t e r m ire, instructor, and G e o r g e Lott, graduate assistant, both in radio-television. East Loosing E. LANSING-ON GRAND R. IUST EAST OF CAMPUS- W. SAGINAW AT WAVERLY