pace Tcn THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, October 24, 1969 I Free school tries again ai 'U' PARIS PE4SCE TALKS: Lodge remains silent MEN: try a new hairstyle designed to your personality flascnaaRarbers MIKE'S STEAKS Formerly Steak 'rn' Shake- 1313 S.U. By UICHARD KAGAN Interested in Yoga, witch- craft, blues harp and maybe even frisbee throwing? These and other esoteric topics are among the courses offered by this year's Free University. The Wayne State Free Uni- versity is not new to Ann Ar- bor. In the :41st few years, sev- eral attempts a. its formation have been made, but due to in- adequai te or'.nxani tiion and a lack of intorcct, it. has faded out after a brief period of o1)erat ion. Hlowever. in ;mite of its abor tive history. the Free Univer- sity is still needed here, Mark Tillotson, co-ordinator of the university. says. The Free U'i- versity is able to initiate new and relevant courses, he ex- plains. which the University would probably not have for severai \_air. Tillotson's 0onc'eot is to cre- ate a place for social -inter-ac- tion and personal intellectual development without the re- strictions of an authoritarian, reward-punishmeit education. A Free University course is formed when two or mory xet- ple with a common interest ard some motivation decide to hold a class. Topics and direction for each class are deteimined by the class-members themselves with the assistance of an in- structor. Enthusiasm is the only cre- denial required to be a -arope leader. A college drop-out, could conduct a class on community power structure or a policeman could teach a course in law and order. The goal of the Free Univer- sity, says Tillotson, is to pro- vide an "open-ended experi- ence," so there is no syllabus or time limit. A class may go on for years, as a course on the John Kennedy assasination did at a Free University in Cali- fornia. Any type of class is con- ceivable. At Wayne State where 20 free university class- es are in-operation, a Metho- dist minister holds a class called "Come let us play God." Other classes include s u c h topics as "Woman as nig- ger," mysticism, "Who gov- erns the university," comput- er operation, and a study of ESP. The hardest problem Tillot- son envisions is obtaining funding from the University or some other organization in order to print up a catalogue and organize publicity. He believes there will be no problem in gutting student support, and will hold his first organizational meeting today at 4:00 p.m. in Room 3524 of the SAB. However in the past, the Free University could not sur- vive on this campus because of a lack of organized sup- port. In 1966 interest in a free universiy led several profes- sors to hold additional classes for interested students. Also in the summer of 1968 thre' hundred students form- ,d th Ann Arbor Free School which offered classes on campus, utopian communities, guerrilla theatre, and tactics for social change. But the Free School declined during the ensuing academic semester. Its lack of structure even led the people in the course on utopian communi- ties to break contact with the Fro School and try to start their own utopian society. 'Continued from Page 1) Speaking to newsmen after the meeting, Lodge said that no par- ticular statement made by t h e other side provoked his action. "It was a whole long series that's been going back for weeks and months and today was more of the same," he said. "There is obviouf ly not much sense sitting there trying to re- spond when they are saying the same old intransigent and vitu- perative things," said Lodge. "I hope our action today may call attention generally to the com- pletely negative attitude which has consistently characterized the other side, and that there may be progress in the future." Meanwhile new fighting raged on old battlefields in the central highlands and around Tay Ninh City, U.S. Command spokesmen said Wednesday. There was no pattern in the string of fights to indicate a new offensive, but both areas - scenes of some of the war's major battles - had been relatively quiet during the past four months. U.S. and government t r o o p s killed 75 North Vietnamese a n d Viet Cong while suffering one killed and four wounded, the Arborland-Maple Villoae spokesmen said. OPEN 3 NIGHTS Double Charbroiled North Vietnamese army troops, Mon.-Thurs.-Fri.-9-8 a r and who lost 12 men in a Sunday Tues.-Wed.-Sat,-9-6 Hamburger and clash, set an ambush around a Bowl of Homemade U.S. armored personnel carrier ON CAMPUS that had been damaged and 8:30-5:30 Soup - $1.10 abandoned in the Sunday fight. CENTRAL STUDENT JUDICIARY Announces Open Petitioning Grads and Undergrads for SEVEN SEATS Sign up for interviews at SGC offices, ist floor, SAB Petitions due Monday, November 3, 5:00 P.M. 3 STATE SENATE PROPOSAL: Discipline asken 0 t X X ..... .. ...... By The Associated Press A move to force Michigan State University to expell and prosecute 150 black students for a disruptive incident Tuesday failed to gain immediate support in the Senate yesterday. The motion, introduced by Sen. John Bowman (D-Wyandotte re- suited from an attempted seizure of a dormitory cafeteria Tuesday night. So far MSU authorities have not indicated whether any disciplinary action will be taken. Protesting the alleged harrass- ment of a black student the night before, some members of the Black Liberation Front (BLF) entered Holden Hall's cafeteria Tuesday night. They reportedly carried at least one billy club and told stu- dents there to leave. The dormitory administrators then closed the cafeteria and told students to eat at Wilson Hall. On Monday night Sam Riddle, a member of the BLF, tried to enter the cafeteria through the back door. Tom Haring, a student cafeteria employe, told him no one is allowed to enter through that door. What happened after that is not clear, but a fist fight began. Haring has filed assault and bat- tery charges against Riddle. Bowman called the students "a bunch of hoodlums trying to 'iet their cause . . . into the limelighi'' and said MSU officials "can no longer say it's just a little tan- Bowman's resolution said the students "walked into the cafe- teria . . . and in a manner remins- cent of the storm troopers of NAZI Germany demanded that all wlielos leave the dining room." He urged that officials take "im- mediate and strong action against the perpetrators of this outra e and that criminal action be in- stituted against them and if they are found to be students at the university that they be expelled." Sun. Coleman Young 'D-De- rroit) told Bowman "The whole . resolution is racist." .Ie cited language in the resolu- tioin, as first printed, that called the students "black hooligans" ;nd black bums." Bowman denied writing the res- olution with those terms, saying someone in the legislative service bureau had come up with the lan- guage. Bowman struck the words "hooligans" and "bums." Sen. Gary Byker (R-Hudson- ville) moved that the Senate take up the resolution immediately, by- passing the scrutiny generally ac- corded resolutions in the Senate Business Committee. Senate business chairman Rob- ert Vanderlaan (R-Grand Rapids) opposed the motion as did Sen- ators Gilbert Bursley (R-Ann Ar- bor), and Basil Brown (D-High- land Park). GOOMmlD andS FOOD ER VICE WOW! A three-piece Treasure Chest chicken dinner, plus trench tries, fur only /9! Lorger take-home orders also. Try a box soon!! u-s lLiNG SPEEOY Q ERlVCE West of Arborland Dr. Furstenberg E x-dean o 1-Ied school dies at 79 Dr, Albert C. Furstenberg, Dean emeritus of the University's Medi- 'al School died yesterday at St. Josep~h's Mercy hio.pital. Dr. Fur- 4enberg had been a patient since April when ne sulffred a streke. it' was 79. D r. Furstenb'x'g 'av a s uerhtus (me of Gie i t. known phvsicians ni Michigan. As D an of the inv,-:- cal school he supervised sweeping :hanges at 'e Me' cal Center. Dr. Fursteneg was dean of tUe .rhool from 19:3c ,itil 1959 ad vas the fouth e in appointed o the post in t ii'chool's 117- ear history. 'In i770other profession ate .aandards as high or as well en- orced mo i tI tn and v;;trhow and nowhe(re else has t here~ been is rapid proeress in t'e last txen- y years,' he once sd about ned- 11cine. ,Medicine is a h 'ier wav of life han any other." Di'. Furster ber old his student ,, 'if a p r'son s villing to devote his life to i " He .:as an ear, nose, and throat spec- aist, but was interested In ail 'nedicine. P~rivate fi1nieral sei'vices art, be- ingr arranged:c. 1 M dical train A 15-week course in emergeiicy diieQcal training is being offered o policiem n, firemen. and ambu- ance d:is'!,a in Washtenaw Coun- y aid surr0undini a'eas by Ann Arbor chapter of the American Colig, of Surgeons. The classes. which are free to .articipants. will be held at Uni- ersity Hospital on Thursday eve- ings. -he course will run until Jan. 29. 'he course was offered for the iirst time last year. Dr. William C. Grabb, associate professor of surgery at the U-M Medical ,School. is course coordinator. COMPUTA-DATE "Finds People for People" CALL 662-4401 iA JOIN THE SPORT OF THE SPACE AGE PARACHUTING SERVICE TECUMSEH, MICHGAN Michigan's Most Active Sport Parachuting Center Saturday, Sunday, Holidays -For Information Call- MON.-FRI.-291-3634 WEEKENDS-423-7720 ENJOY SKYDIVING AT ITS BEST Classes Start I11:00 Sat. & Sun. GIEEK AHT IN THE KITCHI'EN 0T' THANO'S LAMPLIGHTER BRINGS CONTINENTAL EXCELLENCE TO YOUR EVERY DININ G EXPERIENCE AT THANO'S LAMPLIGHTER 421 East Liberty-Seven Days a Week Old Iteidelberg '7it1 1 :) 1 " AA C+'r,',ZTO L'Q DeLong's Pit Barbecue FEATURES THESE DINNERS: . Bar-B-Q Ribs Shrimp Bar-B-Q Chicken Scallops Bar-B-Q Beef Fried Chicken Bar-B-Q Pork Fried Fish Fried Oysters All Dinners Include Fries, Slaw, and Bread Subscribe 1( Tohe Michign Daily L2 -21 JN. 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HURON at FOURTH Res: Phone 769-2455, 769-3074 MIKE and JOE CA Invite You and Your Date to Casa Nova for PIZZA, ITALIAN ,ry 1 4 k ( t ',.Y: ' ,xr e k t S ,k, * Thetod ')Ox Located in Scenic Northern Ann Arbor Area (Dixborit Y4 9 1 mod" I ;; ,. ,t'l J i'1...}... wY NSTA LL A TION lljl 11 1 ljjl a MXMM I WRITTEN GUARANTE For as long as you own your ~urget ~-'~--~- Terms I I