Sssteam heat-in winter months HILLEL GRAD MIXER SUNDAY, NOV. 2, 8:30 P.M. at THE HOUSE 1429 Hill St. REFRESHMENTS By NADINE COHODAS Radiator Reporter Classrooms can be like grandmother's chickensoup, an old philosopher once said. They're either too hot or too cold. If it's the former, you sweat to death and the latter may just make you ill. Angell Hall seems to fit this category better than most campus buildings and has a propensity to be hothothot when its cold outside. In September, early October, April and May, it's not too bad. Open windows and doors bring in some semblance of breeze. But come late October, November and the bonafide winter months, bodies of all shapes, sizes, intellect and class rank are in difficulty. The heat is turned on to com- bat the cold, but unfortunately never seems to take a rest until spring. Consequently, classrooms become saunas and during a scant 50 minute class studen.ts feel compelled to peel off all the layers of ipage three clothes they so industriously applied before setting a toe outside. Naturally at the end of the h ur they must re-garb to face the elements en route to the next class, the library, the store or home. Clearly a nuisance. "There must be a reason for this nuis- ance," you think to yourself. For those of you with an inquisitive mind, the plant department has the answer. It's steam heat and its component parts: radiators; both automatic and hand, ther- mostats, leaky valves and condensation in the pipes. Most of the radiators in the classrooms are automatic, explains plant department worker Richard Stewart, a steam expert. Thermostats are supposed to regulate them, but he says that some of the regulatory knobs have been removed because they have either broken or teachers have mis- used them. Early in the morning the temperature might be pushed up to heat the room, but by the middle of the day the room would be boiling, another plant department work- er explains. Then someone else would set it down low. Now the thermostats appar- ently are set at the discretion of some centralized finger in the heating plant on Forest Ave. Under ideal conditions, Stewart says the thermostat is supposed to c o n t r o 1 the amount of air going to the valve on the radiator. The air should expand a small rubber balloon inside the valve which cuts off the five pounds of steam flowing con- tinually to the radiator from the central pipeline. When the steam is cut off, Stewart says, it builds up pressure in the radiator pipes and h e a t is produced. The greater the pressure, the greater the heat. If a room needs more heat the thermo- stat is supposed to release more air to start See STEAMY; Page 6 Ili The University of Michigan giAert andSullivan So0ciety is accepting petitions for the position of PRODUCER 2531 SAB-663-5408 4A, £iri4 ign tit NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Friday, October 31, 1969 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three TON IGHT AT 8 P.M. ACADEMY AWARD WINNER! BEST ACTRESS!I BARBRA STREISAND COLUMBIA PICTURES and RASTAR PRODUCTIONS pesent BARBRA OMAR STREISAND 0SHARI F DIAL 5-6290 7"A Magnificent Mo- tion Picture! Every Line, Every Son is - WABC-TV TATE HELD OVER - 4th Big Week!I Program Informotion 662-6264 where the heads of all nations meet SHOWS TODAY A C 1, 3, 5, 7, the news today by The Associated Prass and College Press Ser vice ARAB GUERRILLAS blasted a Lebanese mountain fortress yesterday and then were driven back from storming an army stronghold, military spokesmen said. Rashaya, which has been under attack for three days, could prove a decisive factor in the conflict between the Arab guerrillas, who want to use Lebanon for anti-Israel raids and the government, which fears Israeli reprisals. SEN. JOHN J. WILLIAMS (R-Del) claimed yesterday that federal land worth more than $2 million was given improperly to a group of Texans towards the end of the Johnson admin- istration. Williams urged the government to recover the property and told the Senate that in addition to the land the Texans had received $8 million in loans from the Federal Housing Administration and nearly $500,000 in Welfare Department grants to finance a geriatrics center in Austin. He said he has asked the Justice Department to investigate the matter. NORTH VIETNAM AND THE VIET CONG turned down a U.S. proposal in an attempt to break the deadlock for new closed session talks. The United States' proposal would have restricted the peace talks to four principle delegates and a few advisors. Both sides agreed that no progress has been made in the Paris discussions and each blamed the other for the failure. U.S. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge felt the proposal would help{ "break out of this sterile situation and promote serious negotiations." However, Mrs. Nguyen Thi Binh, chief of the Viet Congs Provisional Revolutionary Government delegation denounced the proposal as a 'maneuver' to avoid direct talks with her government. ** * THE HOUSE COMMERCE COMMITTEE called yesterday for a contempt-of-Congress citation against Chairman Rosel H. Hyde of the Federal Communications Commission.j Hyde had refused to deliver records of the FCC's license renewal of WIFE-AM-FM, Indianapolis. The panel's unprecedented action came while an FCC ceremony1 was in progress to honor Hyde, whose retirement takes effect today. seize Ad Bldg. Women seek own dormitory, ask concentration program POUGHKEEPSIE, N.Y. (M - Black girls from V a s s a r College's Afro-American Society, aided by black male stu- dents, occupied a portion of Main Building early yesterday. They took over the administration section of the U- shaped building and nailed the doors shut. The two wings which house dormitories were not affected. "We have stopped the school," said a spokesman for the society, which claims to represent more than half of the 59 Negroes attending the 1,600-student college. A spokesman for the group said Vassar blacks VASSAR GIRL talks to self-appointed guards in a hallway of the Administration Bldg. The building is partly occupied by black women students inside. DESEGREGATION: Nixon backs Court 9 P.M. Friday and Saturda at 1, 3,5, 7,9P.A AND 11 P.M S oon "EASY RIDER E~ ly r fI, 'I A«< w""AUICE'S RESTAURANT'Z,'h. ARLO GUTHRIE PA pMM Mt BRO , ICK h nnw ,PETE SEEGER . f HAYS u" MESta W WCIM4A QW WVM- .M - TR M0M0W-Poe *,f WLW OBAM~I O Q4" *, .Qw l0 1% SwqIVENABLE HERNDON ., ARTHUR PENN bmt ,,ILR ELKINSXJOE MANDUKE NftI~ARIHUR PENN COL.OR by Deluxe . A MLAhOf4NTEORJSS lnit * TONIGHT * BUDDIES in the SADDLE WOW-EE ROCK-A-BILLY 9:30 on-$1.00 only AT S pA RK' COFFEE HOUSE MS605 E. William P.S. Halloween Party Friday t 1 7 WASHINGTON (A) - After an initial and uncertain response, the Nixon administration pledged its, resources yesterday to enforce- ment of the Supreme Court de- cision ordering an immediate end to racially separate public schools. President Nixon promised the executive branch would "assist in every possible way" to overcome the "practical and human prob- lems involved." Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell said the Justice Department will use "every available resource" f o r enforcement. And Robert H. Finch, the sec- retary of health, education a n d welfare, said his department is "committed to the goal of finally ending racial discrimination in schools." Before they spoke out, the NAACP Legal Defense and Edu- cational Fund, which won the Mississippi schools case over the government's opposition, began to move ahead on its own. Jack Greenberg, the fund's di- rector-counsel, called fund law- la-yers to his office in New York City to start applying the princi- ple of Wednesday night's decision to pending school desegregation cases throughout the south and in parts of the north. Nixon's statement, issued at the White House in early afternoon, ended an 18-hour period in which the government said virtually nothing about the court's historic decision. At no point in the statement did Nixon say anything about prompt enforcement of the court's rul- ing. Press Secretary Ronald Zieg- ler said he himself was at fault for neglecting to say, while issu- ing the statement, that enforce- ment would be carried out. In Mississippi the government had broken with civil rights forces and proposed delay in the dese- gregation of 33 school districts in the state. the building would be held until the college met their demands. The girls said they wanted an all-black dormitory and a black studies program leading to a de- gree. Vassar officials said one floor of Kendrick House on campus is al- ready almost all black. A black studies program was instituted last year on a pass -fail basis without a degree. It's, an experimental program. It was not immediately known how many girls took part in the seizure or how many male students helped them. The occupied section includes a cafeteria, the school post office, telephone switchboard and admjin- istrative offices. Most classes were held as usual, but the seizure cur- tailed service in the occupied areas. Vassar's faculty met in the af- ternoon with school President Alan Simpson to discuss what toj do about the takeover. The demonstration began at 3:25 a.m. when the girls walked through the front door of t h e building and asked the night watchman and switchboard oper-, ator to leave. College officials notified t h e Dutchess County Sheriff's Depart- ment of the occupation, but made no request for police help. Teboys inside the building stoodewatch behind the locked doors of the building and kept visitors away. Groups of whites gathered out- side to discuss the takeover. President Simpson, who came to the 108-year-old school in 1964, met with the group throughout the day. Pharmacy professor Deno dies Prof. Richard A. Deno of the pharmacy school died yesterday morning from a heart attack. He was 63. Deno's specialty was pharma- cognosy - the study of drugs derived from plants. However, in recent years he devoted his efforts to pharmacy education and stu- dent affairs. He was a member of the Senate Assembly's Student Re- lations Committee. Dean Tom D. Rowe of the phar- macy school said, "Dr. Deno was one of the outstanding pharma- ceutical educators in America. He had made many important cpntri- butions to the improvement of pharmaceutical education both here at Michigan and throughout the United States." Dr. Deno received his under- graduate and graduate degrees from the University and had been on the faculty since 1952. He is survived by two sisters. Funeral arrangements are pending. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan, 420 Maynard St.. Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier, $10 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $3.00 by carrier, $3.00 by mail. I k t w w w w w ww -wwm lf LUTHER ALLISON BLUES BAND In Chicago "Luther Allison laid everybody low with his in the alley gui tar"-Rolling Stone "The best of both worlds-soul and blues."-Washington Post BLUES TO KNOCK YOU ON THE FLOOR' FRI.-SAT.-SUN. $2.50 all night Doors open 8 P.M. $1.50 last set PLUS Halloween Film Orgy t' _ 7 A kA t-- rl_ n ------ I ,r. .1_ - n - IA__.r - LOW PRICED PREVIEWS MON. and TUES., Nov. 3 and 4 WORDPRMIERE MON.,NOV.3-SA.NO V. AUDRA LINDLEY JAMES WHITMORE CATHERINE BURNS a.ar wv amt. 9 TE bpf na 7M I