I Miraculous Mets phI NEW YORK 641i -- The absolutely amazing New York Mets completed their journey to the moon at 3:17 p.m. yesterday by adding their first world championship to their first pennant with a 5-3 victory over the Baltimore Orioles in the fifth game of the World Series. A swirling nass of humanity from the largest. crowd ever to see a game at Shea Stadium, 57,397, swarmed over the field after the final out while the giddy Mets were clubbing Jerry Koosman on the back. Cannon crackers burst in the stands and a phalanx of wide-eyed fans, shouting "We're Num- bar One" milled in front of the Met dugout. An orange smoke flare was carried across second base and some kids propped up a sign that asked "What Next?" There were igerocs galore for the Mets, once the ragamuffin clowns of the National League. Pitcher. Koosman went all the way to win his second series game with a five-hitter. Donn Clen- denon, proclaimed the series hero and winner of a sports car, hit a two-run homer. Al Weis, a .215 hitter, slammed his first home run ever at Shea. And in the eighth inning it was Ron Swoboda's double following a double by Cleon Jones that did the Orioles in. A second run in the eighth on a combination of errors by first baseman Boog Powell and relief pitcher Eddie Watt really didn't matter. Desperate Baltimore had opened up a 3-0 lead in the third inning on a two-run homer by D a v e See related story, Page 9 McNally, Koosman's lefty pitching foe, and ano- ther home run by Frank Robinson. Suddenly, the Mets broke through in the sixth after a shoestring pitch nicked Jones on the foot. At first, the plate umpire, Lou DiMuro, refused to let Jones take first. Out of the dugout came Gil Hodges, the Mets' manager, walking slowly on tippy toe, calling for the ball. He pointed to the shoeshine stain and DiMuro changed his mind, waving Jones to first 7'ck Birds base. Naturally, there were loud dissents from the Baltimore bench. Watt had just taken over for McNally, who was lifted for a pinch-hitter in the eighth, when the Mets struck the blows that ended the long years of frustration. Jones smashed a long double that bounced off the wall in left center at the 396-foot mark. Swoboda, the hero of Wednesday's fourth game with a dramatic catch, proceeded to double down the left field line. After Jones took first, Clendenon ripped a 2-2 pitch into the mezzanine in left field for a two- run homer that closed the gap to 3-2. The Mets were just not to be denied. This time it was one of the little men, Al Weis, an American League discard, who led off the seventh inning with a home run over the left field fence around the 371-foot mark. Jerzy Grote then smashed a liner off Boog Pow- ell's glove. The Oriole first sacked tried to throw to Watt but the ball was dropped. Swoboda streak- ed home to put icing on the cake and both Powell ;and Watt were changed with errors. -Associated Press JERRY GROTE AND JERRY KOOSMAN meet in a flying bear hug on the mound while ecstatic Ed 'the Glider' Charles flies towards the dugout after the New York Mets clinched the World Series yesterday. The Mets crushed the last cynics by spotting Baltimore three early runs before storming back in the late innings for a 5-3 victory that capped an incredible rags to commercial riches season. AN ACCEPTABLEA4' A ALTERNATIVEt See Editorial Page irz rn Vol. LXXX, No. 38 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, October 17, 1969 Ten Cents BURRRRR High-42 Low-36 Cloudy, cool, chance of showers Ten Pages UNANIMOUS VOTE: House panel backs lottery WASHINGTON 11Th - President Nixon's lottery plan to limit the draft to 19-year-olds was approved yesterday by the House Armed Services Committee'and sent toward the House floor for action late next week. The speedy action on a 31-0 vote indicated the chances or House approval are good and that the Senate might take ip the bill before the end of the year. Senate Armed Services Chairman John C. Stennis (D- Miss) has said his committee may take up the President's )roposal this year if it passes the House. The House committee refused even to consider eliminat- ng draft deferments for college students. Such a proposal by Rep. Richard H. Ichord (D-Mo) was ^uled out of order on a 21-10 roll call. Ichord said "continuing - - the policy of college defer- Teaching fellows plan union, By JIM BEATTIE Political science department or- ganizers of an LSA teaching fel- lows' union yesterday advanced plans for securing legal assist- ance for their effort and sched- uled a weekend meeting for teach- ing fellows from all LSA de- partments. The legal advice will be' em- loyed to expedite the distribu- ion of unionizing petitions, while he meeting will seek to broaden he base of the organizational ef- orts, which have officially begun nly in the political science de- artment, says Bruce Greenberg, teaching fellow in the Resi- ential College. The decisions to proceed w i t h lans were facilitated by the gen- al acceptance of the unioniza- on idea at yesterday's meeting, ,cording to organizers, who ex- 'essed optimism concerning the ture of their effort. "People were generally positive- inclined toward the idea at yes- 'ay's meeting," said 0Gr e e n- rg, "and the procedure f o r rming the union is remarkably sy if people just have the pro- T philosophical stance." See TEACHING, Page 7 ments in time of a shooting war one of our biggest mis- takes." The draft lottery approval was unanimously recommended by a special subcommittee that was highly critical of the plan during four days of hearings this month. The subcommittee headed by Rep. F. Edward Hebert (D-Lal said in its report it is not per- suaded that Nixon's plan "would provide any greater equity in the selection process than is provided by the present oldest-first system. "However, in view of the strong recommendation of the President in this regard, urging the Congress to permit him to modify the existing system of se- lection, the subcommittee believes that this request of the com- mander-in-chief of our armed forces should be honored." Hebert indicated strong oppo- sition to permitting amendments on the House floor which he said could open up a "Pandora's Box" for revising the entire draft sys- ten rather than approving the, lottery only. But committee critics said they will carry a fight to open the bill up to floor revision to the Rules Committee and the floor itself if necessary. , "This bill deals with how people get pulled out of the hat for the draft," said Rep. Otis G. Pike (D- NY. "But it doesn't deal in any manner with whogets put, in the hat in the first place," Nixon's lottery plan is aimed at giving 18-year-olds advance no- tice of their prospects for being drafted in their 19th year. Regents on boolj bSU By RICK PERLOFF A sharply-divided Board of Regents is expected to vote today on the establishment of a student - faculty controlled bookstore. Student Government Council has called for a 2 p.m. Diag rally and march on the meeting in the Administration Bldg. to press for passage of a proposal calling for student control of the store. SGC Executive Vice President Marc Van Der Hout said disrup- tion of the meeting was "possible" if the Regents made an unsatis- factory decision. Van Der Hout added that he felt the attendance at the meet- ing should be peaceful prior to the vote. However, Regent Robert Brown (R-Kalamazoo) is reported as saying yesterday that "if they (the students) are there to come and disrupt our meeting, we are going to table everything." President Robben Fleming also said that it would be an error for students to attend the meeting in mass. He added that any sort of disruption would probably lead f~o adjournment. Fleming said he was not sure exactly when the vote would be taken, though he had earlier said it would occur in the afternoon. With the Regents divided on the issue, the decision appears to hinge on the vote of Lawrence Lindemer (R-Stockbridge) who-,---- cast the crucial vote in September for an administration-run book- store. The Regents discussed a new :store; S rally to vote 'The wvalrus vaIs Paul' -Daily-Sara Krulwich A service in memory of Beatle Paul McCartney last night sobered the students in the Residential College. Following a spec- ial sermon, the mourners sang Beatles songs. Letters concerning McCartney's alleged death appear on Page Two. SUPPORT MOTHERS: Professionals to march for ADC clothing funds By ROBERT KRAFTOWITZ A renewed drive for increased payments to welfare nothers will begin next Tuesday when a group of professional members of the comupunity plans to march peace- fully outside the Washtenaw County Bldg. The proposed march coincides with a public hearing called by the County Board of Supervisors to discuss the proposed 1970 coun- ty budget. The protesters, who will include' social workers, doctors, nurses, lawyers, educators, journalists, and housewives, will demand that the Supervisors provide funds to meet the requests of the five-member Welfare Rights Committee (WRC).j WRC represents some 200 wel- fare mothers in Washtenaw Coun- ty. The committee has been de- manding: --an immediate allocation of $46 for the purchase of school! clothing for the children of wel- fare mothers: -an additional allocation of $46.50 in January to meet the cost of school clothing next term; ---a provision in the 1970 budget which would increase the current monthly payments to welfare mothers by 25 per cent, to reflect a similar increase in the cost of living since 1960. Current pay-a ments are based on 1960 prices. Planners of Tuesday's demon- stration stress that the partici- pants will be composed solely of professionals in the community and a few selected student groups, in contrast to the welfare moth- ers' unsuccessful march Oct. 2. "'f k a 'Ins1 lo f nQ I n - --Daily-Sara Krulwich regents discuss bookstore aeprt conde'mns It s been shiown that t ieupe- proposal for a student-faculty visors do not listen when the wel- booksoreo an open meeting yes- fare mothers protest, explainsbook sore at an mee tye SGail Spietz, a nurse who is helpingmteA visam ong mm ters onh pla th dmontraio. "ow heSenate Advisory Committee on plan the demonstration. "Now the University Affairs (SACUA) Stu- 1II(lal'ill O'011Will/u e.LIWLy jJLO1A. jU- PLANS FOR WASHINGTON N Mb By DEBBIE THIAL Local members of the New Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam (New Mobe) are unanimous in their opin- ion that Wednesday's anti-war moratorium was a great success. "It was the biggest anti-war demon- stration in the history of Michigan," mem- bers of the local New Mobe steering com- mittee say. "The students demonstrated their unity of feeling, their desire for the war to be brought to an immediate halt." Although New Mobe leaders had orig- inally predicted that 50,000 people would e hails strike' results American people the extent of opposition to the war. "Nixon will not change his stance. He is a captive of the most reactionary elements of the establishment," says Dave Gordon,. a steering committee member. "But the moratorium and the activities which will follow will serve the show that the American people are united in wanting an immediate end to the war," Gordon adds. "They showed that they want the troops home now." Gordon says he does not expect that the Moratorium will change many minds in tion in conjunction with the moratorium. "The affect of the moratorium on the pr,'sident will only come when the pres- sure has grown so strong that he can't ignore it. And Oct. 15 is only the begin- ning," Gordon said. New Mobe is not planning a strike, or any other local anti-war activity in No- vember, when the focal point of the peace movement is expected to shift to Washing- tin. New Mobe officials see the Washington protests - which will take place Nov. 13. 14, and 15, as the culmination of all the efforts for peace thus far. ple they are responsive to in polit- ical matters." Another organizer, Social Work Prof. Rober't Segal explains, "We hope to show the Supervisors that the community backs the reason- able requests of the welfare' mothers." WRC had hoped that the Oct. 2 demonstration would prompt the Supervisors to meet their imme- diate request for $46 by using part of the county's' $124.000 budget surplus. However, after a day of protest, the Supervisors met with the mothers and informed them that the $124,000 was earmarked for other county expenses. According to Board Chairman Bent Nielsen (R-Ann Arbor), most of the $124.000 was recently di- vided among the various depart- ments of the county government to meet expenses for the remain- der of 1969. The balance of the surplus, says Nielsen, has been ,J tprl fr , -p 10 n hi,,aof dent Government Council, the BookstoretCoordinating Commit- tee and the college student gov- erning bodies. The hour and a half meeting-, chaired by President Fleming and attended by a number of highl University officials-was conduct- ed in an informal'question-answer set-up with the Regents asking questions about the proposal and SACUA chairman Prof. Joseph Payne and student leaders an- swering them. The proposal was drafted last; See REGENTS, Page '7 11 ousing office policies By CAROL HILDEBRAND Hopefully, University students will never again have to live in a dormitory cafeteria. A four-page report to the Board of Governors for Uni- versity housing from Inter-House Assembly (IHA) empha- sized that "the University's primary concern should be the well-being of, and service to, the students." The four-page report condemned the present policies and procedures that led to the mass dormitory space shortage this fall. The report also attacked the over-use of converted rooms. Jack Myers, IHA president, said "converted rooms should be arranged beforehand only to cover the expected rate of no- ! ._ _ i On Today's Page Three shows in the dorm system." These converted rooms would then be de-converted after the n u m b e r voiding their housing c o n t r a c t s became known. Refunds on housing deposits should be permitted until the first day of class, the report recom- mended. Mvrsr noted that housni should ' institute new regulation to cash cheeks [ The Union and the League an- * Criticism, support, and two suicides are among the re- actions to Wednesday's anti-war moratorium. ! c-~,.. A- -f- b.1-4- 1, n f