THE MICHIGAN DAILY r Erratic Earth Causes Bureau To Adjust Official U.S. Clocks UNEMPLOYMENT, HOUSING, INFLATION: Illia Seeks To Ease Argentina's Economiie Gloom By JOHN BARBOUR Associated Press Science Writer WASHINGTON-Scientists an- nounced yesterday that the Earth is turning on its axis at a slower speed-a consistently slower speed since April of last year. Real time as measured by atom-' ic clocks shows that the Earth is lagging by' as much as one tenth of a second, and international time signals are off by that much. Accordingly, the National Bur- eau of Standards and the United States Naval Observatory an- nounced that their transmitting clocks will be set back one-tenth of a second at the end of this month. World Use The radio tihe signals broadcast by worldwide stations are used for navigation, satellite tracking and astronomical observations. Scientists had always relied on the Earth as a clock-as mankind itself had-using the 24-hour per- iod it takes the Earth to make one complete rotation on its axis. The Earth turns at a fairly quick speed, so that if someone on the moon were looking at you on the Earth's equator, you would appear to be moving about 1000 miles an hour with the Earth's spin. Changeover But since 1955, scientists have used the vibrations of atoms in atomic clocks to measure real time, since this is a much more un- changing a'nd precise measure- ment./ Since then, they've f6und that the Earth is a fairly unreliable clock for their precise purposes. In 1955, the Earth's spin was slow- ing. About September of 1957 it started accelerating again. Then in April, 1962, came another de- celerating period. While it doesn't do much to the daily turn of events, the setback greatly affects scientific measure- ments. Astronomers found that some heavenly bodies were show- ing up in their telescopes later than they should have. No one is sure why the Earth speeds up and slows down in its rotation. But one theory relies on varia- tions in the action of a molten core inside the Earth on the Earth's rotational speed. Another theory holds that acceleration or deceleration is caused by the rise and fal of land masses. Get Set for the NEW CHRISTY MINSTRELS CONCERT MiTSIC SHOP' Check our extensive stock of folk music including recordings by the New Christy Minstrels 417 E. Liberty Ph. NO 2-0675 ALLEN DULLES ... CIA the 'scapegoat' By FRANK N. MANITZAS Associated Press Staff Writer BUENOS AIRES-Arturo Um-I berto Illia took the oath of office as Argentine president in neither the gold braid of a military officer nor the traditional white tie and tails Saturday. The 63-year-old doctor from the hill country seeks to epitomize the common man in his dress, in his talk and in his way of doing business. He put aside his full-time duties as a physician to start directing South America's second largest country-sick for 19 months with political and economic pains. Humble Background Illia speaks the language of an average middle class citizen. His background is not unusual: one of 14 children whose father was an Italian immigrant and the mother an Argentine. Illia worked his way through an education, settled down in the small hill town of Cruz Del Eje and played politics while practic- ing medicine. He emphasizes that Argentina will maintain a Western-oriented but independent foreign policy. He pledges to promote business on an "Argentina first" basis, making the state's view predominant in dealings with foreign-based enter- prises, specifically in the fields of oil production and financial nego- tiations. Social Problems For the man in the street, Illia promises political and economic stability coupled to a firm attack on the problems he considers most important. Unemployment is es- timated at 10 per cent. In housing, 1.8 million family units are needed. The cost of living is rising amid danger of uncontrolled inflation. The educational system is in- adequate-three of every ten are limited to one year of formal schooling. To master these problems Illia will lean primarily on his own political machinery, the People's Radical Civic Union. It comes to power for the first time in 33 years and the party may prove difficult to hold back from political spoils, Backed by Labor His informal personal approach and his spiel in the countryside "I'm for the working man"- have lined up the powerful organized labor movement behind him. This, in effect gives him more support than shown by the July 7 elec- tion where only one out of foura Argentines voted for him. Many businessmen are placing their bets on the chances that Illia may depart from his reform-' minded party platform, once he sees the problems of politics and the need for association between3 business and government. E When he took the oath of office,; he did not ride with President Jose Maria Guido, whom he suc- ceeded directly, or the past elected president, Arturo Frondizi, who was ousted by the military March 29, 1962. Shows Line To show that no separation has been made between the civilian and military leaders, the new president rode with a military es- cort. Illia was in an open car with the commanders in chief of the army and air force at his elbows. The road back to a constitution- al government has not been easy. Argentina has paid untold millions of dollars in loss of trade and production due to military-led re- bellions. Background Arturo Frondizi was overthrown, claim the military, because he would have allowed forces loyal to exiled dictator-president Juan Domingo Peron to return to power. The military also did not approve of policies with regard to Cuba, and finally forced a diplomatic break. *FIht But what Frondizi promised, Il- lia also has promised. He, too, would allow Peronists to vote openly for their candidates. The new chief executive says Argen- tina does not need laws that dis- criminate against ideologies. Illia also promises trade with every nation including Cuba and Communist China, but he adds that "trade does not necessarily mean diplomatic recognition." Economic Task Making up for lost time will be Illia's biggest job. Government economists say Ar- gentina's production activity is ALL-CAMPUS PEP RALLY Friday Night 8:00-10:00 ON THE DIAG Sponsored by IFC and State Street Fraternities OCTOBER SPECIAL Firdoy the 11th thru Friday the 18th First Run Diamond Needles Most Types 4495 The MUSIC CENTER, Inc. 304 S. Thayer 1304 S. University Dulles Backs CIAActions NEW YORK MP)-Former Cen- tral Intelligence Agency Director Allen W. Dulles was reported yes- terday as saying the nation's spy apparatus is being made "the goat" for American blundering in South Viet Nam. "Occasionally the CIA has °to be made the goat,"- he was quoted in a copywright story in the New York Journal-American by Wil- liam McCullam. "It looks like it has to be the goat again. "Still-it may be better for the CIA to be tarred in the Vietnamese mess than the President of the United States or the secretary of state." Any disputes between the CIA, the State Department and military leaders involved in the war against Communist guerillas in South Viet Nam have been due to the lack of a clear-cut operational policy in Washington, Dulles said. No operations of a political na- ture ever have been mounted by the CIA without White House ap- proval and there never has been a case where the agency has failed to go along with White House policy to the best of its ability, he added. back to 1958 rates. After a four per cent drop in the gross national product in 1962, an 8.2 per cent decline is forecast this year. Bright lights of a favorable foreign trade balance barely pen- etrate the gloomy clouds hanging over the national budget deficit, Compensation It is expected to hit a record high: 45 billion pesos or more. What this means in hard cur- rency is difficult to say. The peso dropped from 83 pesos to $1 at the time of Frondizi's ouster to about 150 pesos, and no bottom is in sight. Tied up with all this is operation of vast government chinery which spills over into mills, transportation on land and in the air, electrical pl oil refineries, and communici systems. Just about everythir in the red. Optimistic Undertaking these problems more, Illia seems to have ir favor his own faith plus people's desire to get out of mess. "I think that in six month can get the country mo again," he says. ARTURO ILLIA ... tasks ahead JUSTIFIED? To Examine .Price .Rises WASHINGTON (M--President John F. Kennedy's Consumer Ad- visory Council said yesterday it will make a special study of re- cent price increases in steel, elec- trical equipment, aluminum and heavy chemicals. The council said the price rises "do not appear to constitute an immediate inflationary threat." But it added that is was plan- ning a study "to determine wheth- er such increases appear to be justified from the consumer point of view." HELP WANTED FULL OR PART TIME HELP-Apply McDonald's Drive In, 2000 W. Sta- dium. 1H44 PART-TIME-10 a.m. to 12 noon Mon., Wed., Fri. 8:30 p.m. to 1 a.m. 2 or 3 nights. Apply in person after 1 p.m., Drake's Sandwich Shop. H43 FOR RENT SPACIOUS 3 RM. APT. Ideal for grad or prof. couple. 605 Elmcrest Dr., one block N. of Summit off Minor. Can be seen after 1 p.m. C17 MALE ROOMMATE wanted to share State St. luxury apt. with 3. 665-2719. C16 3 BDRM. APT., fireproof, laundry fa- cilities, garage. In SW Ann Arbor. NO 2-6958. C13 3 ROOMS AND BATH near campus. Off- street parking. NO 5-7215 or 2-2545 after 6. C12 GIRL ROOMMATE Wanted to share furn'd. apt, near campus. Call NO 5-7112 after 5:00. 010 ROOM FOR RENT-Clean, pleasant; garage included. Male student-pre- ferred. 223 Buena Vista. NO 2-7692. C50 TIFFANY APARTMENTS Modern, fully furnished, carpeted, air- cond Available NOW and for second semester. Comfort and economy for 1, 2, or 3 persons. Call NO 3-8866. 015 GARAGE and open parking available near intersection of Wilmont, Forest and Geddes. Also next to Harris Hall. Call NO 2-7787. 014 PARKING PLACE Block from Law Quad. $4.50 per m. NO 3-7268, C45 BEL-AIR APTS.-1 and 2 bedrooms. All new. Danish modern furniture. Air- conditioning, balconies, wall to wall carpeting. Campus location. 2-5780. Eves. 2-5140. C24 REAL ESTATE HOUSE FOR SALE-2 Bedrm, $9500, 3 lts, Roe face cement block garage. Whitmore Lake Sub. Callb30175. F 4 BIKES AND SCOOTERS H D SCOOTER, 4500 miles, $275. Call Brian, 662-9301. Z27 1960 CUSHMAN SCOOTER-New paint job. Call 662-7880. Z22 1961 LAMBRETTA - All extras. 2900 miles, exc. running cond. $270. 665- 4111, Ext. 257 after 7:30 p.m Z28 FOR SALE-Bella Motor Scooter, like new. One of the finest made. Must' see to appreciate. 665-3291. Z12 BUSINESS SERVICES CUSTOM MAKING for ladies fine ap- parel. Restyling on your favorite suit or dress. Also fast alteration on any garment. 665-6965. J16 AVON REP. now on N. Campus. Will service dorms. Xmas gift specials. Call 665-7490. J13 ANY MOTH HOLES, tears, or burns in your clothes? We'll reweave them like new. WEAVE-BAC SHOP, 224 Arcade. ANN ARBOR PIANO SCHOOL-Classics, Jazz, Theory, taught by pro. pianist. 308 Catherine, Ann Arbor. 662-3735. J15 WILL DO TYPING at home. Have taken University qualifying tests. Have dis- sertation experience. 25c a page, 5c a copy. Marilyn McGuire, 663-5328. J141 665-8184 MANUSCRIPT typing, transcription,7 medical, legal, technical confer- ences, mimeographing, offset. Quick, Accurate, Experienced. PERSONAL BENNY, who is bringing Matilda's kangaroo to the MSU-UM MIXER? F37 AUSTIN DIAMOND CORPORATION - "Where marginal prices buy quality diamonds!" 1209 S. University. 663- 7151. F73 $10,000 WORTH of liquor waiting to be sold at: The Village Apothecary, 1112 So. University Ave. F12 DIAMONDS-Highest quality at com- petitive prices. Call C. K. Reaver Co. of Ann Arbor, 300 S. Thayer, NO 2-1132. P18 ROMANOFF'S RESTAURANT 300 S. Thayer Serving German Food SQO READING & Discussion Group presents number 5 in the current seminar series: "Franz Kafka: His Art and Meaning." Tonight, 7:30 p.m., Multipurpose Room, UGLI. Speaker: Dr. Arnold Kaufman, Dept. of Philoso- phy. F46 4 MSU-UM GAME TICKETS, adjacent seats 20% off., Will sell 1, 2, 3 or 4. Call Chris, NO 3-7076. F44 WAH ROO WAH for-All Dartmouth Alumni. Dartmouth Night in Ann Arbor, Fri., Oct. 11, 8:30 p.m. Stag. VFW (314 E. Liberty), $2.00 (at the door). Refreshments from Tanzi's. Phone 665-3502 for reservations. F32 SHORT STORIES NOW BEING considered for publi- cation in the campus inter-arts mag- azine, GENERATION. All material submitted will be carefully read, criticized, and returned if not used. Manuscripts may be left at the main office, Student Publications Bldg. First issue in October. GENERATION "IF YOUR FEET are big and your head is small, you can go to State just to play football." Hear this and many other Michigan songs sung by the Men's Glee Club. Two popular rec- ords now on sale in the Fishbowl. F45 PERSONAL SCRIPTS AVAILABLE for filming to 543 Church. Will return to a $1.25 HAIRCUT, Mon. thru Thurs., 347 nard, near Arcade. $1.50 Fri. ant FRESHMEN! ARE you feeling the of the campus, the diag, the to trees, the Saturday afternoons traditions that are Michigan? Don't paniel Simply buy a Glee record this week in the fishbowl if this doesn't instill in you a feeling for the old alma mater, t panic! NEED MC for World's Faird V Show, November 8-9. Sign ul Interview this week at Union St offices. THE THETAS invite you to cor their OPEN HOUSE after the S game. Come and see Johnny' an Starglows . . . from 4-6 WANT TO GO out but in need good babysitter? Look no furth I am not available, I will see that you get another competent sitter. Call Syd-663-1561, Ext. FURNITURE for Sale. Call 30175. RONI, HOW 've ya' BEEN? TRANSPORTATION RIDERS WANTED to Lancaster Leaving early Oct. 11. Return Oct. 13. Call Bob P., 662-5614. WANTED-Ride to Miait of Oh Oxford, Ohio, the weekend of Oc Call Judy at 3-7541, Ext. 761. WANTED-Ride to Pittsburgh or I City, Pa., the weekend of Oc' Call Markley, Ext. 6426. WANT RIDE Tuesday and Thu: from Ypsi to campus and arrive a.m., to. leave at 8p.m. Will expenses. Call 483-4452. ECON-O-CAR RENT A COMPACT C $39 per 12 hr. period plus pennies per mile ECON-O-CAR of ANN ARBOR CAMPUS INTERVIEWS Tuesday, October 22 ... .... ..A.... ................. . .r. ..... ... DAILY OFFICLAL BULLETIN ATTENTION STUDENTS ENGINEERING SCIENCES ALL DEGREE LEVELS * Electronics * Mechanical * Industrial * Engineering Physics * Mathematics * Statistics The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of The Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsibility. Notices should be written in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3564 Administration Building before 2 p.m. of the day preceding publication, and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10 General Notices Next Week: Wed. through Sat., 8:00 p.m. in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, the Univ. Players, Dept. of Speech pre- sent Moliere's "The Miser." Box office open 12:30-5:00 daily next week, 12:30 to 8:30 performance nights. Season tickets on sale at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre box office, 12:30- 5:00. Season Tickets on sale through the 19th. Individual performances on sale Mon., Oct. 14-18. Student Government Council Approval of the following student-sponsored ac- tivities becomes effective 24 hours after the publication of this notice. All pub- licity for these events must be withheld until the approval has become effective. Young Americans for Freedom, Speech by Karl Prussion, former FBI counter- spy, Oct. 10, 4 p.m., Union. Interquadrangle Council-Assembly As- soc., Residence Halls Conclave, Oct. 6, 2-5:30 p.m., League Ballroom.; Interquadrangle Council-Assembly As- soc., M-MSU Mixer, Oct. 12, 8 p.m.-1 a.m., East Quad. Michigan Christian Fellowship, Dis- cussion hour, Oct. 18, 7:30 p.m., Ann Arbor homes. Interquadrangle Conucil-Assembly As- soc., Big Ten Residence Halls Assoc. Presidents' Conference, Oct. 25, 26, 27, SAB, Stockwell, West & South Quads. Members of the University Community who desire to present to the Commit- tee on Referral their views on the pro- posed Regulations on Membership Se- lection in Student Organizations adopt- ed by Student Government Council on Oct. 2, 1963 may present them by writ- ten communication before Oct. 16, 1963. An open hearing will be conducted that day at 3 p.m. in Room 3540, SAB, at which time oral presentation may be made. Those who wish to appear before the Committee on that date should give their names in advance to the sec- retary to the committee, Mrs. Pfiffner, in Room 1546, SAB, 663-0553.-Prof. Jo- seph E. Kallenbach, chairman, Comm. on Referral, 4624 Haven Hall. Raymond Goodrich, Radiation Labora- tory, will speak on "The Physical In- terpretation with Regge Poles in Dif- fraction Theory," Thurs., Oct. 10, at 4 p.m. in Room 275 West Engineering. Refreshments will be in Room 350 W. Engrg. at 3:30 p.m. Lecture: Oct. 10, 4 p.m., Prof. Evsey Domar, Dept. of Econ., MIT, to talk on "Index Problem Tournament" in Aud. C, Angell Hall, sponsored by Economics Society. Open to grad and undergrad students. Statistics Seminar: Prof. Bruce Hill will speak on "The Estimation of Vari- ance Components," Thurs., Oct. 10, at 4 p.m. in 3201 Angell Hall. Astronomy Department Visitors' Night: Fri., Oct. 11, 8 p.m., Room 2003 Angell Hall. Dr. Richard G. Teske will speak on "Fun with Light." After the lecture the Student Observatory on the fifth floor of Angell Hall will be open for inspection and for telescopic observa- tions of Saturn, Jupiter, and Hercules cluster. Children welcomed, but must be accompanied by adults. Placement PLACEMENT INTERVIEWS, Bureau of Appointments-Seniors & grad students, please call Ext. 3544 for interview appts. with the following: MON., OCT. 14- Mead Johnson & Co.,-U.S. & Over- seas-Men-Dec. & May grads. (p.m. only). Seeking general Liberal Arts for Management Training and Sales. Na- ture of organization: research, mfg. & bktg. of Pharmaceutical & nutritional specialities. The Company is interested in inter- viewing any Filipino students who would be interested in a 1-yr. trng. prog. in the States prior to assignment in the Philippines. Degree in a business relat- ed subj.-special opening leading to an assignment in the International Div. Make appts., Mon., Oct. 14. Univ. of Virginia, Charlottesville, Va. -Men & Women-Dec. & May grads. Seeking students with any major who are interested in the Graduate Sch. of Bus. Ad. MBA program. TUES., OCT. 15- U.S. Civil Service C oem m i s s i o n- Throughout U.S.-Men & Women-Dec., May & Aug. grads. Seeking Liberal Arts of all majors for all kinds of positions with the Federal Govt. Social Security Admin., Chicago, Ill. -Men & Women-Dec. & May grads. Seeking: 1) Claims Examiner Trainee- All the recruiters from the above agencies will talk to seniors or grads, male or female, regardless of degree, to inform them about the oppor. in the Fed. Govt. through the FSEE. U.S. citizenship required. WED., OCT. 16- Socony Mobil Oil Co., Inc.-Through- out the U.S. Men-Dec. & May grads. Seeking general Liberal Arts, Econ., Chem., Geol., Math. for positions in Merchandising, Mgmt. Trng., Econ., Elec. Computing, Transportation, & Sales Promotion. U.S. citizenship re- quired. H. J. Heinz Co., Mich. & Ohio-Men- Dec. & May grads. Seeking Liberal Arts majors for Merchandising & Sales. U.S. citizenship required. Bureau of the Census, Wash., D.C.- Men & Women-Dec. & May grads. Seeking majors in Econ., Bus. Ad., Stat., & Math. For positions in Statistics (all levels), Stat. Analysis & Economist. THURS., OCT. 17-- Argonne National Laboratory, Ar- gonne 111. & Idaho Falls, Idaho-Dec. & May grads-(p.m. only). - Men & Women. Seeking all levels Math, PhD in Chem., Biochem. & Physics for posi- tions in Statistics & Res. & Dev. Non- citizens must be exceptionally quali- fied. Bureau of International Commerce, Wash., D.C.-Men & Women-Dec. & May grads, Seeking majors in Econ., ForeignrTrade, Bus. Ad., Mktg. & re- lated subjs. for positions as Economist & Business Analyst (Trade Specialist, research & trade promotion). Entrance level positions are filled through the FSEE. U.S. citizenship required. FRI., OCT. 18- Texaco, Inc., Chicago, I11.-Men-Dec. & May grads-(p.m. only). Seeking ma- jors in Econ. & general Liberal Arts for Marketing of petroleum products, including service station merchandis- ing & sales. U.S. citizens. ORGANIZATION NOTICES Cercle Francais, Baratin, Oct. 10, 3-4 p.m., 3050 FB. Christian Science Organization, Tes- timony Meeting, Oct. 10, 7:30 p.m., Lower Level, SAB, Room 528D. Congregational Disciples E & R Stud. Guild, Midweek Worship, Oct. 10, 12:10- Furniture, bookcases, books, chests, desks; Appliances; Antiques; Musical instruments. Bought, sold. DARWINS, 2930 S. State. NO 8-7744. F11 SAM AT SDT . . . gum chewing obli- gates one , . . or did you guess? Ask the grubby one on sweetest day. She has eleven walls for- memories. F47 FOR SALE; One roommate. Slightly used. Best of- fer accepted. May be inspected be- tween hours 6-8 p.m. Mon. thru Fri. Call Tom, X 372 S. Quad. F43 Meet The Right People The purpose of our organization, using established techniques of persorllity appraisal and an IBM system, 14 to introduce unmarried persons to others whose background and ideals are congenial with their own. Interviews by appointment. Phone after 9 a.m. NO 2-4867. MICHIGAN SCIENTIFIC INTRODUCTION SERVICE BLUE FLASH - Listen-next time we have to do a professional job on the bridge. Security reasons you know. P42 BETSY: Where have I gone wrong? Am intelli- gent, am handsome, am junior, am English major. WW, X 372 S.Q. F41 The MET-TET is MUSIC. NO 8-6807. F26 341 E. Huron USED CARS 1963 VW-NO 5-0405. N5 1957 FORD-Excel. mech. cond. Body and tires very good. $450. NO 2-1291 after 5:30 p.m. N4 1960 FIAT-In good condition, less than 10,000 miles. Phone NO 2-2625. N50 1929 HUDSON super 6, 4 door sedan. Call 449-7051. N48 1960 PORSCHE-1600 coupe, absolutely like new. 5 new tires. NO 2-0280, eve- nings. N49 1963 BUICK LE SABLE-4-door hard- top, power brakes and steering, many extras. Excellent condition, low mile- age, private owner. HU 2-0405. N37 COMPETITION PREPARED 1963 Sunbeam Alpine: Engine and trans. just rebuilt; a very competi- tive race car. Call Bill Wooding - NO 3-4213. 62 ALFA-ROMEO'S 1964 models on display now. ALSO: 1960 Alfa '2000 roadster, sharp, 28,000 miles, 1959 Alfa Giulietta Spider, black, radio, nice, $1495. 1958 Alfa, Super Spider, red, engine overhauled, nice, $1495. Overseas Imported Cars inc. 331 S. 4th. 662-2541 N FOR SALE FOR SALE-Two tickets to the MSU game. Call NO 5-2519. PORTABLE STEREO, Motorola. Two 4%" detachable speakers with 10' cords. One 6" speaker. Excellent con- dition. Reasonable price. Call NO 3- 9348 between 5 and 7 P.M. Ask for John W. B27 FOR SALE-Microscope "Zeiss' mono- cular-binocular, excellent cond. Ph. 542-6431, Detroit. B9 RCA-VICTOR clock-radio for sale. AM, almost new, works very well. White with gold numerals. 5-9761, Ext..-104. Bl NO 3-203 ANN ARBOR PROFESSIONAL SERVICE ASSOCIATES 334 Catherine RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT * Computer Technology -Hardware Design -Software Research V Communication Systems -Propagation Research --Complex Design Engineers, Mathematicians, and Physicists should contact their COLLEGE PLACE- MENT OFFICER for an dppointment with an NSA representative. No test required. B2 MUSICAL. MDSE., RADIOS, REPAIRS GUITARS, ETC. Make, Repiar, Buy and Sell Private and Group Instruction. Hoots Daily Herb David Guitar Studio 209 S. STATE NO 5-8001 X1 MISCELLANEOUS GIVE YOUR TUMMY A TREAT WITH GOODIES FROM RALPH'S MARKET 709 Packard Open every night 'til 12 BARGAIN CORNER SAVE 40c-This ad and $1.60 good for 1 giant 14" cheeze and pepperoni pizza. Free delivery. Pizza King, 665- 9655 or 665-3800. 1308 S. University. This offer good thru Thurs., Oct. 10. F9 We are happy to announce a new addition to the bulletin board-A spanking new 32-A. Bob M. and the 69ers F40 THANKS DR. REVELLI, but it's brother Jerry and 8 kids-Al. F29 The MET-TET for the JET-SET. NO 8-6807. 30 MO-FOR heavens sake don't forget to clean up the room for the Open House after the Game. Everybody's going to be there-our room at the Theta House-you know. Sue. F39 TYPICAL BLIND DATE, girl (hideous deformed, studious) would like a date to the U. of D. Hootenanny next Sun. An old friend of mine is performing. If interested, call Markley Ext. 5315. kAM~3ut~AkI lIIv