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December 10, 1972 - Image 10

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Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1972-12-10

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THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Sunday, December 10, 1972

i

Hairy sign law may clip city's
remaining spinning barber pole

LIBERALS DEFEATED:

Reusables

yh

By BOB MURRAY ual pollution.I
City officials and local hair- Gene Haner, whose shop at 107
stylists have recently become en- E. Liberty sports the only barber
tangled in a kinky controversy in- pole in town which stands right on
volving barber pole revolutions. . the sidewalk, was among several
Barber poles are among those local barbers who recently met
signs which are banned under a with City Attorney Jerold Lax to
city ordinance enacted in 1966 discuss the possibility of amending
which prohibit any revolving sign the ordinance to exclude barber
used for commercial purposes. The poles from the ban.
ban was aimed at eliminating vis- Haner maintains that the revolv-
Tru-man still critical'
but improving slowly

ing pole shows potential customers:
that his shop is open.
"Many of my customers have
told me that they're in favor of
keeping the revolving barber pole,"'
he said. "It's one of the few re-
maining connections with the past."
Barber poles are said to have
originated in the Middle Ages.
According to Lax this hairy situ-
ation is the least of the problems
involving the sign ordinance. Re-
cently the State Supreme Court
agreed to head a case involving the,
Central Advertising Co. which
questions the legality of that part
of the ordinance dealing with lim-
itations on the size and placement
of signs.
Also in question is a provision
which requires removal of signs
which do not conform to the specifi-
cations of the ordinance, but which
were in place before the ordinance
was enacted.
Barbers could be clipped with a
$100 fine or 90 days in jail for
violation of the ordinance. Lax
says, however, that he plans to take
no action against the barbers.
"This ordinance was not intended
to be oppressive of any group,
such as the barbers. I do not ex-
pect to prosecute the barbers, at
least, not until the matter is fully
resolved in council," he com-
~t[ d

Strauss wins post
(Continued from Page 1) letters, telegrams, nhone calls and
came the symbol of George Mc- personal conversations.
Govern's massive defeat. Rep. Thomas Foley, (D-Wash),
The conservative Strauss emerg- who directed the Strauss forces on
ed as the leading contender with the floor of the committee meeting,
backing from officials of the AFL- declared that the ouster move was
CIO, former campaign aides to not in any shade or meaning a
Sen. Hubert Humphrey of Min- criticism of her (Westwood)."
nesota and Sen. Henry Jackson of
Washington. But, Foley said, in light of the
However, most of the party's party's overwhelming defeat by
nationally prominent figures, in- President Nixon last month, new
cluding Sen. Edward Kennedy of leadership is needed.
Massachusetts, Sen. Walter Mon- Mitchell, the second leading vote-
dale of Minnesota, Humphrey and getter for the job, was the cam-
Jackson stayed out of the fray paign manager for Maine Sen. Ed-
publicly. mund Muskie's unsuccessful cam-
Most of the intraparty campaign paign for the party's Presidential
consisted chiefly of a series of nomination and had been a dark
backroom efforts aimed at appeal- horse compromise candidate for
ing to committee members through chairman.
Comparative Zoo1., Harvard. "Evolu-
tion of Land vertebrates," Aud. B, An-

a success
(Continued from Page 1)
DeGrieck (HRP-First Ward) and
Nancy Wechsler (HRP - Second
Ward) at the request of the Ecol-
ogy Center.
Mayor Harris, who is on the
committee, recently cited several
possible negative effects he felt the
ban might have.
Aside from the economic rea-
sons, Harris said that consumers
could still buy non-returnable pro-
ducts outside the city and drop
their litter here. A decrease in
litter is one of the primary goals
of the entire project.
Harris also added that a ban on
non - returnable bottles might
drive certain companies off the
market and result in a loss of pro-
duct variety for the consumer.
Rm., 4 pm.
Student Services Policy Bd. Meeting:
3rd Fl, Mich. Union, VP's Conf. Rm.,
7:30 pm.
Residential College: Concert, Resi-
dential Coil. Singers, R. C. Aud., 8
pm.
School of Music: Chamber Music
String Students, SM Recital Hall, 8
pm.
Rive Gauche: French language night,
1024 .Hill St., 9 pm.
CAREER PLANNING & PLACEMENT
3200 SAB
ATTENTION SENIORS: Opportunity
for Seniors to interview employers dur-
ing Christmas vacation at Community
Career Conferences in: Canton, O., Dec.
27-28; Cleveland, O., Dec. 27-29; Elyria,
O., Dec. 27; Toledo, O., .Dec. 27-28; Ev-
anston, Ind., Dec. 27-28; Philadelphia,
Pa., Dec. 27-29; Harrisburg, Pa., Dec. 27;
New Haven. Conn., Dec. 28.

KANSAS CITY (AP)-The gen-
eral trend of slow improvement
for critically ill Harry Truman
continued yesterday evening with
a report the former president was
"resting better than at any time
in recent days."
Although Truman, 88, remained
on the critical list at Research
Hospital and Medical Center, his
physicians relayed a statement
indicating the former chief exec-
utive was showing signs of suc-
cess in his battle with heart,
bronchial and kidney problems.
It was the fourth straight time
in a 24-hour period that hospital
authorities had indicated im-

Truman is being fed through
a nasal tube.
A hospital spokesman said Dr.
Graham did not elaborate on the
term "resting better."
The statement ended by noting
Truman's condition still is de-
fined as critical.
Three hours earlier, Margaret
Truman Daniel, who recently
wrote a book about her father,
met with newsmen for the fifth
time since her arrival here Wed-
nesday night and observed, "I
think he feels much better since
he is being fed."
The Trumans' only child called
b~ ftr httr bn t t t

Daily Official Bulletin
SUNDAY, DECEMBER 10
DAY CALENDAR
UAC-Ebony Players: Two Plays, "Con-
tribution," "Happy Ending," Frieze
Arena, 2, 8 pm.
School of Music: Michael Nascimben,
saxophone doctoral, SM Recital Hall,
2:30 pm.
School of Music: Christine Rinaldo,
piano, SM RecitAl Hall,. 4:30 pm.
School of Music: Jo Ann Ogle, con-
ductor, SM Recital Hall, 8 pm.
School of Music: Linda Pound, or-
gan, Hill Aud., 8 pm.
MONDAY, DECEMBER 11
Zoology Seminar: A. Romer, Mus. of

gell Hall, noon.
Environmental & Industrial Health
Seminar: D. Shynoweth, "Microorgan-
isms in Water," vaughan Aud., SPH I,
1 pm.
SACUA Meeting: W. Alcove, Rack-
ham, 2 pm.
Senate Assembly: Rackham Amph.,
3:15 pm.
Macromolecular Research Center: J.
Halpin, Wright-Patterson Air Force
Base, "Applications of Composite Me-
chanics in High Polymer Physics," 1042
E. Engin., 4 pm.
Psych. 171 Film Series: "The Great
American Novel," "Grapes of Wrath,"
Dorothea Lange: Under the Trees," U-
GLI Multi-purpose Rm., 4 pm.
Physics Seminar: T. Lee, Columbia
Univ., "Scaling in High Energy EM &
Weak Interactions," P&A Colloquium

4

AP Photo
Up on the roof
A construction worker looks down on a cathedral in Frankfort,
Germany as he stands on a scaffold in a nearby construction site.
LANSING ACTION:
Mass transit faces
final legislatve test

(Continued from Page 1)
that precondition, however, and
voted 3-2 to report the bill to
the Senate floor before the House
had taken action on the amend-
ment.
'Proponents of the bill have ex-
pressed optimism that it will pass
when reconsidered next week, pos-
sibly tomorrow. Several senators
who voted against the bill com-
plained that proponents were forc-
ing the bill on the Senate too fast,
and said they resented what they
called high-pressure tactics used
by Milliken aides.
Some senators reportedly had
only one hour to study the 45-page
proposal before debate began.
Of an estimated $21 million that
would be raised for mass transit
programs twenty per cent would
go for bonds to aid presently fail-
ing bus systems. It would also
fund a nine-member advisory com-
mittee to study highway and mass
transit programs.
The transportation p a c k a g e
could also finance a $200,000 inde-

pendent study on the best ways
to finance mass transit and a two-
year studyeof the state's highway
lneeds.
The mass transit section of the
bill would set up a proposed Trans-
portation Fund within the State
Highway Dept. Until voters ap-
prove the Fleming' amendment
funding for mass transit would
temporarily come from loans pro-
vided by the State Motor Vehicle
Fund.

provement inT escribing Tru- ner a arnererĀ± out r no ouL men JeU.i-
man's condition. of the woods by any means."
An evening statement quoted In the evening statement, Gra- Although mining once played an
Dr. Wallace Graham, Truman's ham said, "We are trying to es- extraordinary role in Colorado's
doctor, as saying "President.Tru- tablish a better nutritional bal- finances, as a profession it now
man continues to tolerate his ance, stabilize and regulate his
feedings well . . . his pulmonary body chemistry and strengthen occupies less than 2 per cent of
status is clearing well." his heart and its functions." the state's work force. MsN
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CCS 473: Intro, to Digital Computers
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