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October 25, 1960 - Image 5

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1960-10-25

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

)te IJ(tnt-Cnd lime

COLLEGE ROUNDUP:
Stevellson Write-in Tally.
Aids Nixon in Mock Vote

C _ I

Grou Gof SUITS
39.98
Tweeds and solids, boxy and
fitted styles.. . Sizes 10-18

ITHACA-Vice-President Rich-
ard M. Nixon narrowly edged Sen.
John F. Kennedy in a mock elec-
tion at Cornell University with a
vote of 1595-1503. It was generally
conceded, however, that a write-in
vote for Adlal Stevenson was part-
ly responsible for Kennedy's de-
feat; the former Illinois governor
received 216 votes.
In 1952, President Dwight D.
Eisenhower out-polled Stevenson,
but previous to that, election,,
Thomas Dewey had been favored
over Harry S. Truman in 1948,
and Alfred E. Landon and Herbert
Hoover had been favored over
Seven Tapped
ByHectoriants'
When Zeus climbed high on
golden dawn
And smiled on fates of Priam's
land
He blessed pursuit at Hector's
hand.
The call went forth
For each to take his stand.
Then all the best of Troy were
brought
By honor to this noble band.
Those tapped were James Burns,
'61E, Phi Gamma Delta; William
Gomez, '61E, Beta Theta Pi; Wil-
liam Heaphy, '61, Sigma Phi Ep-
silon; Frank Legacki, '62 Ed,
Sigma Chi; Louis Senunas, '61E,
Kappa Sigma; Gary Slaughter,
'61 BAd., Sigma Alpha Epsilon;
and Dwane Wasmuth, '63E, Phi
Delta Theta.

Franklin.D. Roosevelt in 1936 and
1932, respectively.
* * *
LANSING-Michigan State Uni-
versity officially acknowledged that
it would allow communist speakers
on the Lansing campus. The ques-
tion arose after Wayne State Uni-
versity refused to allow a com-
munist speaker on its campus.
Provost Paul, A. Miller said that
if a speaker came to the university
and had been invited by respon-
sible agencies, he would be allowed
to speak as long as he was con-
sidered competent and was not
attempting to gain propaganda
from his speech.
BLOOMINGTON-A university
is not responsible for starting a
person drinking, but, it does en-
courage the continuation of the
habit and also the taking of al-
cohol to excess, a University of
Indiana sociology teacher, Prof.
John T. Liell, told an honorary
group last week on the Blooming-
ton campus.
Prof. Liell explained to the
group that there is much excess
drinking in college today.
"I believe that the policies of a
university have little effect on the
amount of drinking on a campus,"
Dr. Liell said. Rather the informal
norms, such as social situations,
determine the amount. In an at-
mosphere such as is found in local
taverns, students become loud and
rowdy, not because of the amount
of liquor they have consumed but
rather because of the social situa-
tion.

For Direct Classified Ad Service, Phone NO 2-4786
from 1:00 to 3:00 P.M. Monday through Friay, and Saturday. 9:30 'W'i11:30 A.M.
LOST AND FOUND BUSINESS SERVICE
LOST -- 'Sealpoint Male Siamese Cat. C ASS1IiF ADVERT IKlN HOKAY KEED thees is eet. U m
Black collar around neck with bellsC arL SSIeFILED/ VERFI S [.e"Lumbards;" 1225 South Un
on it. Lost in Oakland Ave. area.
Reward. NO 3-7659. A41
LOST-Round gold charm with 2 pearlsSPECIALTEN-DAY SPECIAL ON
lost between campus and MichiganTE AYBEIALDOO
Stadium. Reward. Please call NO LINES ONE-DAY RATE RUBBER-MAID DOOR-MA
2-6962. A42 Regular price $2.39. Now
(V'We carry a good line of rubbE
FOUND-Men's glasses on Haven St. .8..39.n a ad coo mati
near Monroe on Monday morning. link mats and cocoa matt
NO 3-8316. A43 3« l 7MUEHLIG & LANPHEAR HARI

FOUND--Beige boy coat at Charcoal
House Monday noon. Will exchange
for my own. NO 5-7711, Ext. 6238. A44
FOUND-Money in W. Eng. Bldg. Lost
between 10 a.m. and 12 p.m. on Oct.
21. Owner may claim the sum by
calling HU 3-4787. A39
LOST-Double log slide rule in leather
sheath. Initials inside sheath E.L.W.
'36 and D.S.W. Reward, $10. Call 414
Winchell Hs. W.Q. after 6:30. A38
LOST? To find; yourself try the Michi-
gan Daily. Just find a telephone and
dial NO 2-3241. A3
FOUND: 30 weeks (a full school year)
of interesting, n~ewsy reading. This
was foundon the Diag June 6, 1960,
and the owner is wanted desperately.
Please call NO 2-3241 for information,
and find a year's DAILY subscription
as a reward (only $7.00 too). A2
BARGAIN CORNER
ARMY-NAVY type Oxfords-$7.95; socks
39c; shorts 69e, military supplies.
SAM'S STORE, 122 E. washington
Wi
MUSICAL MDSE.,
RADIOS, REPAIRS

Call
and

2 groups of
BETTER
DRESSES
-of every kind
for day and evening
10.00 and 14.98
Sizes 7-15, 10-201
12V2-24V2
Tall 10-20
Group of DRESSES
mostly winter cotton
prints and knits
7.95

Groupk
girdles and
pantie girdles
2.49 to 4.49
originally were 4.95 to 8.95
Broken sizes, mostly small and
large. Group long cinch bros &
other stretch girdles included.
All PLAYTEX
Fashion Magic Bras-
Reg. 2.50
2 for 3.99
CHECK YOUR CLOSET
... then ride in to

"- "-,

------

* Broken len
* Frames rel
* Contact lei
CAMPUS
240 Nickels Arcade

ases duplicated
placed
ms fluid sold
)PTICIANS
NO 2-9116

ON S. FOREST
off S. University
opposite Compus Theatre,
CUSTOMER PARKING
AT REAR OF STORE!
Read and Use
Michigan Daily Classifieds

COME TO GRINNELL'S Michigan European Car Corp
FOR THE 424 S. MAIN
GREATEST OF GREATS4N5
Be sure to graduate, when that 1960 SIMCA Elysee deluxe sedan. Lively
time comes, with thle help of a roomy luxurious economy car. On]t
Webcor Tape Recorder. Free langu- 1,000 miles since bought in Pari
age course with each Recorder. NO 5-7327. N
Prices range from $149.00.
Reconditioned Uprights $69 up 55 MERC Hard-top. Low mil. No rus
One beautiful Steinway B. Radio and Heater. $598. NO 5-580
Save $2500 on this model evenings.N5
MAKE GRINNELL'S ENGLAND'S FINEST SPORTS CAR, 195
YOUR PIANO HEADQUARTERS Aston-Martin DB3 Coupe. The ulti
323 S. Main NO 2-5667 mate in performance, refinement, an
X4 prestige. Only 8500 miles by one cat
tious owner. Standard equipment in
S A-1 New and Used Instruments cludes dual overhead cam engine
BANJOS, GUITARS and BONGOS aluminum body, leather upholstery
Rental Purchase Plan etc. Will accept trade. HU 3-1279. NA
PAUL'S MUSICAL REPAIR_
119 W. Washington NO 2-1834
x1 MISCELLANEOUS
BIKES and SCOOTERS
SMOTORBIKE for sae. Allstate Moped B E K
59. Excellent condition.tOver 75 miles TAKE A BREAK!
per gallon. $75 cash. Will deliver.
Peter Marin, 713 Pierce, Birmingham,
Man 0 Z For the largest hamburger
PARILLA SCOOTER. Excellent condi-
tion, Floor shift, luggage rack and in town visit
spare tire. Windshield, speedometer,
etc. NO 2-4010. Z16
1957 TRIUMPH T 20 in immaculate
condition. With bags and windshield.
Must sell. Contact Frank Crawford,
NO 8-6978. Z14
ROOM AND BOARD INN
SINGLE ROOM for man. Clean and
quiet. Close to cai mus and all sports1
areas. Linens futrnished, 57. Phonefetrn
* * featuring
NO 2-8372. E35
SINGLE, DOUBLE-Two large rooms; "The Poor Boy Santkwich'
quiet, clean. Linens furnished. Get-
ting married, have to move. Double
only $15. Single takes best offer. Only 215 Ashley
2% blocks to campus. 307 N. State,
or call NO 2-4250. E34 M

PEUGEOT
Buy Your PEUGEOT from
Stanford Brothers
Authorized Renault-Peugeot Dealers
SERVICE
25900 Outer Dr. DU 6-0699
Lincoln Park - Outer Dr. of Fort

"

THE DIVERSITY
OF ELECTRONICS '. Command Control a" d
Information Processing
ACTIVITY AT HUGHES PRO- Micro-Electronics

VIDES AN IDEAL ENVIRON-
MENT FOR THE GRADUATING
ENGINEER OR PHYSICIST.
THESE ACTIVITIES INCLUDE:
I Polaris Guidance Development
Army/Navy Computer Systems
" Space Ferry
" Fixed Array Antennas
" Fire Control Radar Systems
* Pulsed Doppler Radar and
Anti-Submarine Warfare
# Naval Tactical Display Systems
3-Dimensional Radar
r Air-to-Air Missiles
* Space Propulsion Systems
Tunnel Diodes
* Infrared Devices
* Satellite Active Repeater
Development
g Wide Band Scanning Antenna
Feed Systems
# Microwave Antenna-: d
Radomes
" Guidance and Navigation
Computers
* Satellite Communication
Systems
" Satellite Reconnaissance Drone
" World-Wide Communications
Networks

" Linear Accelerators
" Gamma Rays
* Nuclear Fission
" Remote Handling Devices
* Photoconductive Materials
" Electroluminescence
'" Solid State Display Devices
" Terminal Communications
" Line-of-Sight UHF and
VHF Relay Systems
" Air Traffic Regulation and
Landing System
" Pincushion Radar
" Logi-Scale General Purpose
Computer
" Radar Closed Loop Tester
a Missile-Range Ship
Instrumentation
" Precision Trajectory
Measurement System
" Space Vehicle Subsystems
" Telemetering Systems
" Radiation Sources, Detecti",
Handling Equipment and
Effects Ahalysis
" Inertial Missile Guidance
Systems
" Machine Tool Controls
" Microwave Tubes
i Transistors and Diodes
" Rectifiers
" Thermal and Magnetic Relays
" Crystal Filters
" Digital Components and Devices
" Plasma Physics Research

ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS AND PHYSICISTS
B.S., M.S. or Ph.D. (Mid-Year and June Graduates)
Members of our staff will conduct
CAMPUS INTERVIEWS
November 7 and 8
Find out more about the wide range of programs, unique
Pr tMCA ...l ..4----r a .lmn arlnr.,,~na., ev- - 4

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