seconid frotl page $ BIfriitan I ati NEWS PRONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 For Information: 8-6416 TODAY at 1,3,5,79P.M. d i c lm "The best picture about voung people I have seen."-ABC TV Sunday, October 19, 1969 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three New Emonuel L Wo presents AN ALLED ARTISTS FILM uR A FwnkPeryAsid Prodction +. w Union' image: By CAROL HILDEBRAND man By next fall the Union may be Boa] a place for student organization Th offices, the bookstore, and regu- from lar after-class coffee breaks. " ' .,This is the "new Union" image runI presented by UAC President Wally to s Stromberg. He is now heading a culty special committee studying space says allocation in the Union. H "We're agreed that more stu- by C dent activities should be moved mee into the Union-it offers m o r e orga services than the Student Acti- ni to vities Building,' says Stromberg. tern The SAB would become an 8-5 " office building giving additiinal ona space to such offices as housing tow and admissions. take A special study is now under the way to consider methods of gov- ion, erning the Union, and ways to as e finance its activities. Currently "B three students chosen by the UAC, stru three alumni, and three faculty cha members join with the Union L A place ager to make up the Union which re rd of Directors. ion be r he Union is financed largely its use 1 n tuition money. its finan The only way that it can be 8-studen to serve the people its meant board. erve is to have students, fa- The U y, and alumni in control," is the U Stromberg. primary owever, a committee headed Two y George Ladner '70 will begin berg, th ting next week with student its food anizations, faculty and alum- The R o discuss their ideas for an al- bur Pie ative governing system. Financia We're basing much of our work re-organ assumptions that the changes food sere ard greater student use will Harla place," says Ladner. He cites and me discount store, the credit un- studying and maybe the new bookstore the adm vidence of the "trend." a "solut But the present governing solvent" cture may not necessarily "Pierp nge at all," says Ladner. that mF ast year's Osterheld report, to some 0a 1 A l in o o BARBRA OMAR 0 SIREISAND SHARIF f O o ° 'I THE 'WLAM WY[ER O 0 o FLAY STARK PRODUCTION Admission Today't $1.75 ~ ecommended that the Un- restructured to encourage by students and improve ncial status, suggested an t, 6-faculty member 'nion's financial condition niversity administration's concern. ears ago, explains Strom- e Union lost $100,000 on services alone. Regents then made W i 1- rpont, Vice President for al Affairs, responsible for nizing and streamlining vices. n Mulder. asst. to Pierpont mber of the committee Union government, says ninistration is looking for tion to make the Union Pont wants to make sure anagement is responsible ebody," s a y s Stromberg. for students SUNDAY at 1:30 P.M. and 7:30 P.M. the news today by The Associated Press and College Press Service ASPEN JANUARY 3-10 TOTAL COST-$230 (plus food) FINAL MEETING-OCTOBER 20 Room 3-Y, Michigan Union' For Information: DAVID OEMING-663-3202 DARYL BARTON-761 -9125 U. of M. Ski Club --------- ------- LARGE NUMBERS of .North Vietnamese troops have unac- countably withdrawn from the strategic Plain of Jars easing a threat in northern Laos. However, Laotian military leaders, the U.S. and other Western diplomats say the North Vietnamese still pose a serious threat in the central and southern parts of Laos. MIKE MANSFIELD, senate majority leader, advocated com- plete U.S. military withdrawal from a neutralized mainland after peace is achieved in South Vietnam. Mansfield said Vietnam and the adjacent nations should be left "under the umbrella of a guaranteed neutrality," with the United States, Communist China and the Soviet Union joining in the guarantee. All foreign troops should be withdrawn from Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia and Thailand, he said, so that "any outside fears any of these countries have would be alleviated." * * . RIVAL SCHEMES of the United States and the Soviet Union for settling the Middle East conflict have become known in London. The Soviet Union supports a new Big Four commission, con- trolling a U.N. force, to act as a watchdog over the phased fulfill- ment of an Arab-Israeli peace. The U.S. is keeping the door open for agreed adjustments of the Israeli-Arab frontier and a new status for the Gaza Strip. It has also suggested demilitarizing all Arab territory that Israel oc- cupied in the 1967 war. RADICAL JAPANESE STUDENTS invaded Prime Minister Eisaku Sato's residential compound where other student mili- tants were under arrest. Right now the Union Board of Directors are directly responsible to the Regents. According to Stanfield Wells, the Union manager, unions around the country are generally responsible to their university's financial officer. Ladner's committee has met with Pierpont. "He is not trying to make a power struggle," says Ladner, rather "his concern is that the Union stay in the black." Ladner praised Pierpont for his "tactfulness in dealing with us." Stromberg's commitee on space allocation expects to complete its final proposals in two weeks. Lad- ner says his committee on gov- ernment hopes to make its report in November. Both will be studied by the University's executive of- ficers and hopefully, says Strom- berg, will be voted on by the Re- gents in December. Cyclamate products to stop Grocery-shelf removal by Feb. 1 WASHINGTON 4 - Acting on new evidence of a cycla- mate-caused cancer in an!- mals, the government ordered yesterday an immediate pro- duction halt of all foods and drinks containing the artifi- cial sweetener, and grocery- shelf removal by Feb. 1. But in issuing this order, Sec- retary Robert H. Finch of the De- partment of Heath, Education and Welfare added, "we have no evi- dence at this point that cycla- mates have indeed caused cancer in humans." The widely used cyclamates, de- scribed by Finch as a $1-billion- a-year industry, are found in both diet and non-diet substances. The secretary said at a news conference 'he sees no need f cr families to stop using such arti- ficially sweetened products as diet soft drinks they now have in their homes. "My decision to remove cycla- ars. mates from the list of approved tary substances in no sense should be r - mterpreted as a lif e-saving or the emergency measure," Finch said. and "I have acted under the provis- an ions of law because it is impera-, tive to follow a prudent coursein del- all matters concerning public ated health." uld IThe strong action followed dis- 1969-70 THE EASTERN MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY 1969-70 -Associated Press PLAYERS SERIES a tuneful delight PAINT YOUR WAGON Oct. 31-Nov. 2 and Nov. 5-8 amercia's most searching drama DEATH OF A SALESMAN December 10-14 brecht's multi-media anti-war explosion MOTHER COURAGE March 5-8 sauciest comedy of a saucy age THE COUNTRY WIFE May 20-24 Fin(h at press conference STUDY ORDERED: Servicemen on welfare rolls WASHINGTON (IV - Thous- A gasoline bomb was tossed into the compound but its explosion ands of servicemen have b e e n created no damage or injuries. The prime minister was at home forced to put their families on the when the attack occurred, and two students were arrested. nation's welfare rolls because their' Japanese police also received a threat that the American Em- military salaries and allowances bassy would be bombed unless authorities free 3,000 student mill- can't cope with rising living costs. tants in jails around the country. However, no bomb was found. From New Jersey to California, The wave of student raids in Tokyo, Kyoto, Osaka, and Fukuoka an Associated Press study showed, was regarded as a prelude to the student proclaimed International public welfare agencies are sup- Anti-war Day this Tuesday. plementing allotment checks from Vietnam, paying the rent of mar- THE SOVIET UNION'S cosmonauts returned to earth with little to show for their five days in orbit, I L aw S ch a No breakthroughs in space technology were reported in the mass IJ W JU1I 0PUI of official information provided during the three-craft mission. There were signs that plans to construct some type of permanent orbital , Kenneth L. Yourd, assistant space station had to be abandoned.dean of the Law School, die d Friday, Oct. 17 in University Hos- pital following a brief illness. He PRESIDENT NIXON told leaders of business and labor they was 58. must display price-wage restraint or face lower profits and rising Law School Dean Francis A. Al- unemployment. len said, "Ken Yourd's administra- The White House pade public the letter Nixon will send Monday tive duties at the Law School to 2,000 business and labor union officials appealing for their help were primarily concerned with the welfare of students. He brought to in fighting inflation. his duties professional experience, 'The danger of hlation is real," he wrote. "The cure requires intelligence, and perhaps m os t some unpleasant medicine, patience on the part of all and self- important, a genuine interest in discipline by government, business and labor." students and concern for t h e i r The letter was more specific than Friday' speech on rising future careers." Allen added, "He living costs. I will be greatly missed by the stu- ried draftees, or buying groceries for families whose breadwinners serve overseas. The problem is compounded in many areas by a shortage of on- base quarters for military families. The shortage resultsr in part from a sharp increase in the number of, married men in uniform - in the Army's lower ranks, for example,' the number of married men has SS'I. dean diles dents and by everyone associated with the Michigan Law School." Yourd was appointed assistant: to the dean of the Medical School in 1962 and was appointed to a comparable position in the Law, School in 1966. Last year he was promoted to assistant dean. He received his bachelor's and Juris Doctor's degrees from this University and another Law degree from Harvard Law School. He held a variety of positions in law practice and business. Yourd is survived by his w i f e Mary and a daughter and a son. jumped 37 per cent in three ye The precise number of mili families on welfare isn't known their n a m e s are hidden in bureaucratic morass of stateE local welfare departments. But Secretary of Defense M vin R. Laird recently estima that 50,000 service families co nnalifv fnr uhlic ss ,eistanre ust SEASON COUPON BOOKS -still only $5.00 for four great plays PERFORMANCES IN THE QUIRK AUDITORIUM --box office open weekdays 12:45- 4:30 p.m. Information: 482-3453 SEASON COUPON BOOK HOLDERS -save 29% over the individual ticket price --get first choice of perforronces and locations --exchange their coupons (and order quest tickets if desired) a full week ahead of open sale President Nixon's proposed wel- osue w o the govern fare program. s ment of laboratory findings that "Too many families suffer fi- cylamate caused bladder cancer nancial hardships, some of whom I in rats and mice. are forced to go on welfare to sur- One s t u d y sponsored by vive," said Laird, who - under Abbott Laboratories - the princi- congressional prodding - has or- pal cyclamate manufacturer -. dered a nationwide survey to de- found bladder tumors after rats termine the number of military were fed cyclamates over a life- welfare cases. time. The last Pentagon report, made The amount fed rats, Dr. Jesse four years ago, disclosed 20,000 Steinfeld, an HEW aide, said, "is military families w e r e receiving fifty times the maximum amounti some sort of public assistance, and previously proposed for adult hu- that more than a third of all men man consumption." - including officers - moon- Finch said cyclamate products lighted at some time during the i still will be available on a pre- year to bolster their income. scription basis for persons who The Nixon welfare plan, now, must avoid sugar for medical rea- before Congress, sets $3,920 a year sons. Such persons would include as the poverty level for a family those being treated for diabetes See SERVICEMEN, Page 9 a or obesity. EASTERN MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY THEATRE YPSILANTI, MICHIGAN 48197 Please Send - EMU Plavers 1969-70 Season Coupon Books at the Total Price Per Book of $5.00 for the Four Plavs I r game-. _ Stree . _ - .__Telcphone,__ CORRECTION! $2500 LOAN MAXIMUM at U of M STUDENTS CREDIT UNION State -Zip Code I Enclose a Stamped, Self-Addressed 4"x9 " Envelope Plus Check or Money Order (Payable to the EMU Theatre) Totaling $ . PRESENTS THE ORCHESTRA OF L'ACCADEMIA DI SANTA CECLIA, ROME FERNANDO PREVITAEI, Conductor Thursday, Oct. 23-8:30 WHY HAS THE TENANTS UNION BEEN SUCCESSFUL -gaining rent reductions for tenants -forcing landlords to improve maintenance -making private rental conditions into a major political issue for Ann Arbor -securing support for a wide variety of groups and individuals -showing that landlords CAN be dealt with CINMAIUIL WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 22 i- i DR. CHICAGO Directed by Ann Arbor's Own George Manupelli Starring: ALVIN LUCIER MARY ASHLEY FOX EASTERN THEATRE 375 No. MAPLE PD. "769.130 MON.-FRI.-7:20-94:30 SAT._and SUN.--1:00-3:05- 5:10-7:20-9:30 OCTOBER 18-19 FALSTAFF I I