Tuesday, December 2, 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven .............. 7 l _... _ , .. _ F t $75-$ 100 INCREASE: Panel to THE LOTTERY SOUTH U. INCIDENT: Former U' student cleared (Continued fromi Page 1) JUNG 1 12 ... 272 13... 69 14...... 356 15 ......180 16 .. .274 17...... 73 18......341 19......104 20......360 21.....60 22 . ... 247 23...109 24...... 358 25.137 26.. 22 27.. 64 28...222 29...353 30.. 09 4 CLV 1. 93 2 ...350 3..115 4..279 5. 188 6......3 27 ........50 8. .... 13 9.....77 10 ...,..284 11...248 12.....15 13...... 42 14...331 15 .... 322 16.....20 17.....98 18...190 19.....27 20...187 21.....27 22...153 23...172 24.. 23 25.....67 26...303 27...289 28 . .. 88 29......270) 30..287 31..193 A1UG UST 1..111 2. 45 3..261 4..145 5....,, 54 6 .. ..114 7..... 168 8..48 9..106 10..21 11.324 12..142 13..307 14..198 15 ...102 16 .44 17. 154 18..141 19. 11 20..344 21..291 2 ..... 339 23..116 24... .. 6 25 . ... 286 26 . ... 245 27 ...352 28. 167 29..61 30. 333 31..11 SEPTEMBER 1. 225 2..161 3 .49 4 .... 232 5. 82 6 ... 6 8 8..184 9 .... 263 10. 71 11 ...158 12..242 13. 175 14 1 15. 113 16-..207 17..255 18 .... 246 19. 177 20..63 21. 04 22.160 23.119 4..195 25 ...149 26..18 27 .... 233 28. 257 29 .... 151 30 .... 315 OCTlOBlER 1..359 2...25 3. 244 4 .... 202 5. 24 6 .... 87 7 ... 234 8 .....283 9..342 10.. 20 11.237 12. 72 13. 138 14.294 15 ... 171 16..254 17..288 18 . . 5 19..241 20..192 21..243 22..117 23..201 24 ... 196 25.176 26......7 27.264 28 .94 29 ...229 30..38 31..79 NOVEMiBER 1...... 19 2.34 3..48 4..266 5 .. . 10 6..76 7..51 8..97 9..80 10..282 11..46 12..66 13 ... 126 14.127 15..131 16..107 17..143 18 ... 146 19.203 20. .185 21. 156 22...... 9 23......182 24..230 25.....132 26. 309 27..47 28.281 29..... 99 30.....174 DJECEMBER 1..129 2..328 3..157 4. 165 5..56 6..10 7..1'2 8..105 9..43 10.-41 11...... 39 12..314 13......163 14..26 15.320 16..96 17..304 18..128 19..240 20..135 21..70 22. 53 23..162 24..95 25..84 26..173 27..78 28..123 29..16 30...... 3 31..100 between two or the same draft Ask dorm hike today discuss Some indisonBy ROB BIERroinCitingtoriot'char e the order of business for the Residence Hall Rate Committee at their CO-ed halls 4 p.m. meeting this afternoon in the SAB. While final determination is y crease is not expected to exceed $10 The estimate, made by comm sents inflation, increased services, a total increases could amount to employed to help reduce that figure One such reduction could be the ing fund to the University general education-oriented such as library grams, and staff oriented, such as s Another reduction could result breakfasts, which won approval in tion of $57 was placed on that ite the figure included the elimina-, tion of continental breakfast as yet to be made, the proposed in- By JUDY KAHN If a tie exists more persons in board when that draft board reaches the last birthday it needs to fill its quota, selection will be as1ed on the first letter of the last naie as followvs: ...J 2...0 3... ..D 4..N. .......N 6- 0 9. ...Zw 10. P 11 Q 12.....Y 13..U 14........C 15....... 16..I 17..K 18......H 19...... 20..L 21. M 22.- 23. R 25. 26..V well.I "A more realistic estimation for eliminating the regular breakfast would be only $30," Myers said. Final figures should be forth- coming, according to committee member Barry Blauer, '71. "We've been discussing the various issues pretty heavily and now we have to make someddecisions on them, before the end of the term," he said. A referendum on the proposed: increases, suggested by Tenants' Union representative Peter Dent- on, may delay a final decision. The rate committee, which is made up of five students and one housing representative, appears evenly di- vided on the question of a refer- endum. Student Government Council President Marty McLaughlin pointed out, "It depends on what th3 committee wants to do. There's not much question about the cost-of-living increase, but if they want to add some services which weren't favored in the sur- vey, then they should ask the stu- dents' opinion." Once the Rate Committee reach- es a decision, its proposal will go to the Regents for final action. "We hope to have our recom- mendations to the Regents at their February meeting," said committee member Tom Jones, Grad. r i E 0, and may be as low as $75. A decision to recommend the ittee member Jack Myers, repre- conversion of four residence halls nd changes in funding. While the to co-educational housing may be $130, various reductions may be reached today by the Fall 1970 Planning Committee of the Office transfer of costs from the operat- of University Housing. fund. The operations included are The proposal affects Oxford acquisitions and faculty meal pro- Housing, Couzens and Stockwell which are presently womens' tflar es and security measures. dorms and West Quad which fro th elmintio ofreglarhouses men. a residence hall survey. A reduc- A final decision on these con- r, but it was later discovered that versions will be made by the Board of Governors of the Residence jj. get Halls later this year. F e*snm en Figures for next year project about 600 excess spaces for women ,. in the dormitory system. A mini- mm of 412 extra spaces for men dorn ch icare needed, but even this will re- quire the rejection of more males IContinued from Page 1) than female students from the dents or foreign students will also residence system. Five hundred be given preference. thirty spaces are needed for males Henry Malin, program co-or- to accommodate men and women dinator for the International in equal proportions. Center believes it is "about time Pete Jensen, a member of the that the University started giving Planning Committee and a resi- priority to students who have not dent of West Quad, said yesterday been previously climatized to Ann that if 600 spaces are converted in Arbor, the women's dorms, West Quad He adds, "The hundred foreign can be made co-ed. students living in Markley din- According to partial returns ing room might have had a lot to from a survey circulated in West do with the decision" to include Quad, 93 per cent of those who them on the priority list. Housing returned their questionnaires are had not been planned for the stu- in favor of some kind of co-educa- dents this fall. tiona living. These statistics are After priority students approxi- based on returns from four of mately 2,000 spaces will be open West Quad's six houses. in the dorm system for which Results from a survey being run about 2,600 students normally ap- at Stockwell could not be obtained a 6nl last night. ply. +A+ i f^AW^V" $10,000. The new code also includes a The jury heard testimony from precise definition of the periods Deputy Police Chief Harold Olson during which buildings must be By CARLA RAPOPORT center for juvenile delinquents Tapert and Long placed Dover A 12-man jury acquitted last where he was employed. on the opposite side of the street Wednesday former University stu- Also testifying for the defense from where the prosecution con- dent Michael Dover on a felony were Thomas Long, '70, Andrew tended the objects were thrown. charge stemming from last sum- Barbas, 70, and Donald Tapert, After deliberating for four mer's disturbances on South Uni- 71. Barbas testified that the per- hours, tie jury asked to re-hear versity St. son who threw the objects wasI Ketchumn's testimony. Ten min- similar in appearance to, but was utes later they delivered the "not- Dover was charged with hurling not, Dover. guilty" verdict. objects at police and inciting to riot. The three day trial, with CircuitIN e1 hgeed Cout JudgeWilliam ger l jNwiisho sntc d a siding was among the first t temepts to proscute under the " state anti-riot statute adopted In erease tenantprotection following the Detroit riots in July, 1967. Maximum penalty is 10 years imprisonment and/or a fine of (Continued from Page 1) siders the illegality of the strike and Patrolman Theodore Ketchum of the Ann Arbor Police that, Dover, on two occasions, ran out in front of the crowd and hurled1 two unidentifiable objects towards police lines on East University St. Dover told the jury he could not have thrown anything, because he had just been released from Uni- versity Hospital. He said he had undergone a weeklong treatment for a stab wound received while , breaking up a fight at the Vine-j yard, a residential care treatment inspected. The time between in- spection of apartments would be at most two years. Five years will, be allowed 'for single and two-} family dwellings. The escrow provision, according, to members of the Tenants Union steering committee, would weaken an argument used by the laid- lords' attorney, William Barense, in a conspiracy suit filed by theI landlords against the union this summer. To demonstrate what he con- as a fundamental attack on pri- vate property, Barunse has con- tended that rents withheld can only be paid into a city-establish- ed escrow account and not into a private fund of the type the Ten- ants Union currently uses. Barense bases his argument on a state housing law, which, he claims, permits rent payments only into a city-operated account when withheld from a landlord. He believes his case would be unaffected by the proposed code because "the city cannot pass leg- islation contrary to the state" of which it is a part. ;I t 1 I i _ PRE-ROSE BOWL SHOE SALE Cavanaugh accepts r(U' lecture position Since most of the space is re- quired for men approximately 300 slots in women's dorms will have to be converted to men's rooms, Myers says. Next year's freshman class will have until May 1 to claim the space being tentatively reserved for them. 'Ahose accepted after May 1 will have two weeks toI claim their residence hall space.I Students in 'xord rdHousing have petitioned the planning com- mittee to convert 130 spaces there. The planning committee meeting will take place today at 4 p.m. on the third floor of the Student Activities Bldg. I By TIM BRANDYBERRY Detroit Mayor Jerome P. Cava- naugh1 has agreed to deliver a series of lectures on urban prob- lems at the University next se- mester, William Haber, Special Assistant to the President, said yesterday. Cavanaugh had been previously approached by several departments. Haber said the arrangement is still tentative. "Discussions with Mayor Cavanaugh are still in the informal stage," he said. "No con- clusions have been reached. No recommendations have as yet been made to the Regents." If an arrangement can be work- ed out, Cavanaugh, who will be leaving the mayor's post this January, will deliver 8 to 10 lec- tures "hopefully in the winter term or else in the fall of next year," said Haber. The schools of Natural Resources, Architecture and Design and Engineering are among those requesting Cavanaugh's services. It was also announced that Ber- nard Klein, City Controller of De- troit and former University liaison with the state legislature, would come to the University as a visit- ing lecturer for the winter term. Cavanaugh, if he accepts the post, will be officially teaching in the Institute for Public Policy Stu- dies (IPPS), a two-year program offering a masters degree. Haber commented that "from the University's point of view, having Mayor Cavanaugh teach here would be highly desirable." He said that the departments are "very enthusiastic" about the pos- sibility of obtaining Cavanaugh's services. "It will be an enriching experi- ence for University students to have advantage of the experience of a man who was chief executive of one of the most difficult urban areas in the country," he added. "Mayor Cavanaugh, from his long association with urban problems, can bring a high degree of sen- sitivity and expertiseto his post as lecturer in urban affairs," Huber said. The institute formed two years ago from the defunct Institute of Public Administration. t E t' ,, )' ; T ',, r y, r ', F? L IE T1"V RENTALS 10 per month FREE Service and Delivery ---NO DEPOSIT REQUIRED--- CALL:' Nejac TV Reintals 662-5671 SERVING BIG 10SCHOOLS SINCE 1961 wrr-rarCOUPON-rmm. in 1 r IPZ / r *a off 50c off : r Large one item (or more) i pizza. One coupon per pizza Mon., Tues., Wed., Thurs. Only DEC. 1-4 u --r rrs-- ri"r" " rr U T a" s ; ' S-H t . i Jx a k , yi I " R . ," Y:> AT 2 7h s/joe ONLY 14.90 and 10.90 0 Sbicco Bandolino * Realites * Italian and " Spanish Imports 1210 S. University-769-2088 _ _ _ _ _ __ . _ _ _ a 'A p-o by "" . f lw. c7anyhave moved. but the 'Pa u.is 8tayOn.. Z4 4 D (* i- r ' 1 a till our all-new poncho for Miss J is fringed crochet,. this su.per south-of-the-border look goes softand see-through in Acrylar1' acrylc with a fling of fringe. Eggplant, ecru or black in one size. 16.00 MlsJi n e r~e*** We encourage job-hopping. We do try to keep it intramural-within Du Pont that is-and we do have a more formal title for it, "planned mobility." j Saylor Gilbert, CH.E., V.P.I., 1962, tells it like it is. Take a goodlook around you, and you'll see people at Du Pont who've had a lot of movement through very different kinds of jobs. There's no doubtthat this diverse experience helps you. For example, I had four assignments concerned with different aspects of polymerizing, casting, stretching and finishing our polyester film base." 0 0 00 s o n- - - o I It only means we don't put you in a training program. We put you in growth jobs-to help you get to the top.of your field the way you want to get there. The Paulists arrived on the West -Side of New York City in 1858. In 1895 they moved into San Francisco's China- town and into the fringes of Chicago's Loop in 1904. They're stilt there. Times change. Neighborhoods change. Sometimes they go up. Sometimes they go down - but through it all the Paulist stays. As long as there are people to be served the Paulist will be there. The Paulist may be in the same old place but he con- stantly does new things. That's one of the characteristics of the Paulist order: using their own individual talents in new ways to meet the needs of a fast-changing world in the col- leges... in communications.. . in the ghettos. C -- "Having had all this, lfeel I was better prepared for my present position of training supervisor. But aside from the. fact that variety can help you, I believe most people just like a change after working at one , job for a period of time." 4 . 4*. 0 000Your Du Pont recruiter will be a guy like Saylor.. 00 Ask him about planned mobility-or anything else yo - Du u Pont Company 4co #' Room 6687 + to .' Wilmington, DE 19898 Please send me the booklets checked below. /r JChemical Engineers at Du Pont Q Mechanical Engineers at Du Pont flEngineers at Du Pont ! QAccounting, Data Systems, Marketing, Production rI Name I' IUniversity u'd like to know about Pont. Mailing the upon is the surest way get in touch with him. L I I