Spartans bumped to second place by Irish NEW YORK (UPI) — Notre Dame, which • •IIIIIIMMIIIIII Minili III III! llll IIII began the season with a green passing combination that since has turned golden, UPI poll edged past defending national champion Tuesday Michigan State into the No. 1 position 1. Notre Dame (12) 317 among the major college football teams 2. Michigan State (14) 315 today in the United Press International 3. UCLA (6) 265 weekly ratings. 4. Alabama (2) 240 MICHIGAN The bruising Irish, who have overrun 5. So. Cal. (1) 200 their first four opponents, drew 12 first- 6. Ga. Tech 152 STATE place votes from the 35-man UPI board 7, Nebraska 139 of coaches and a total of 317 points, two 8. Fla. 91 UNIVERSITY more than the runnerup Spartans, who 9. Purdue 59 dropped from the top position for the 10, Ok lahoma 55 first time since Oct; 26, 1965. Numbers in parenthesis are first-place Second a week ago, Notre Dame crushed votes. Vol.59 Number 61 East Lansing, Michigan October 18, 1966 10c North Carolina 32-0 last Saturday while Michigan State rallied in the final min- utes to nip Ohio State 11-8. The Spar- tans actually received more first place but Georgia Tech, a 17-7 winner over support than the Irish with 14 votes for Auburn, replaced Nebraska in the sixth No. 1, but their secondary support was slot, rushing the Huskers down to sev- not as strong. enth. Nebraska, which has failed to Im- Each member of the top 10 emerged press In scoring five victories this year, unscathed from last weekend's activity struggled plast wlnless Kansas State21-10. Florida, Purdue and Oklahoma com- Strike Board Named and, as a result, the only other changes in the elite group were minor ones. pleted the top 10 in that order. They each Alabama also had to come from behind held the same positions last week. Pur- to beat Tennessee 11-10 and consequently due, which lost to Notre Dame in the first surrendered the third position to UCLA, game of the season, remained the only which wallopped PennState49-ll.TheTide member of the top 10 without a perfect slipped one notch to fourth. record. As G.E. Walkouts Erupt Southern California clung to fifth place WASHINGTON F - More strikes erupted Many of the strikers are In the AFL- They left Immediately to first look But the Evendale plant appeared to be at General Electric Co. plants Monday CIO international Union of Electrical at the walkout of 6,000 at the Evendale, the Immediate pressing problem. Officials as President Johnson named a board of Workers which over the weekend rati- Ohio, plant which has slowed produc- said the board might complete its action Inquiry to look into the stoppages which fied a national agreement with GE. The tion of engines for F4 Phantom fighters there quickly and get it to Johnson through may imperil the national safety. agreement came under White House medi- used In Viet Nam. hfcs White House communication channels. More than 30,000 workers in six states ation to avert a nationwide strike. From there, the board is empowered Secretary of Labor W. Willard Wlrtz, have been Idled. Most disputes are re- But the strikes are also by others to go to other struck GE plants. Secretary of Défense Robert S. McNamara New grid ticket policy There was j'alk of some of the struck and acting Atty. Gen. Ramsey Clark rec- ported over local issues. of GF's 125,000 unionized workers in craft Under the Taft-Hartley law the board unions such as the machinists and guilds. plants resuming work, but new walkouts ommended to the President that the In- of inquiry reports its findings to the Picket lines were being respectftd where hit GE at: Fort Wayne, Ind.; Warren, quiry board be set up. President without recommendations. If he requested. Mich.; Pittskield, Mass.; and Sandusky, Wlrtz and McNamara were active in proposed by Murin feels a strike is deemed to "imperil the The board of inquiry named by Johnson Ohio. Strikes already had begun at Owens- working out the contract approved by national safety," he may direct the At- consists of John Dunlop, economics pro- boro, Ky.; Ashland, Mass.; and Schenecta- the IUE and 10 other unions with which Several changes in football ticket dis- 1. Students who are returning in the torney General to seek a federal court fessor at Harvard; David Cole and Jacob dy, Auburn and Utica, N.Y. Action was the IUE held coordinated negotiations. tribution have been proposed to eliminate fall will be. given an opportunity to pur- injunction sending the strikers back to Seidenberg, veteran labor experts and delayed as talks continued at Louisville, The IUE represents 80,000 of G E's 125,000 .the long waiting lines and assure every chase season tickets in the spring of the work for an 80-day cooling off period. mediators. Cole is the chairman. Ky., and Rockford, 111. workers in 160 plants. eligible student an opportunity to purchase preceding year. In a taped interview for ABC's radio a season pass. These tickets would either be mailed program "From the Capital," Secretary Specifically, the changes proposed by to the students during the summer or of Commerce John T.Connor said Johnson Biggie Munn, MSU Athletic director and had no choice but to take action under they could be picked wv».t. four, or five . Bill Beardsley, ticket manager, are: Taft-Hartley because of GE's key defense locations on campus prior to the first INTERVIEWS role. game. 2. To avoid confusion and standing in He added there is the question of whether line for tickets on a game-to -gan.e basis, the national settlement is inflationary and season ticket assignments would be made this I.- being studied. Connor commented $3.7 billion for the same seat for all games. Then that the GE settlement was generous, 50 pet. rate MSU 'friendly that the GE settlement was generous. the season pass itself could be used as a ticket at the gate. pollution bill Season pass assignment would be done By ANDREW MOLLISON on a class priority and first-come basis. State News Executive Reporter In 1934 an Australian, Kenneth S. Cunning- In other words, if the student who will "I am a multiversity student. Do not ham, noted that "the severest and most search- be a senior in the coming fall orders bend, staple, spindle or mutilate me." ing criticisms of American education come from Red leaders OK'd in D.C. his ticket in the spring, he will have a That sign, carried by a Berkeley stu- within rather than without." So do the shallow- better location than the senior student who dent at registration, reflects an oft- est, maintains executive reporter Andrew Mol- WASHINGTON Jf - Congress authorized waits until falL repeated concern with the cle personali- lison, who today discusses the second of five Monday a four-year, $3.7 billion program Under this system tickets will also be zation" of the large state university. stereotypes which he believes handicap stu- meet for talks for an all-out battle to clean up the sold at fall registration and at freshman The "living-learning" complexes of co- dentsnts, faculty anad aamtntsTra<administratorpors in rnettheir i . j nation's public waters. orientation clinics as In the past. st educational dormitories at Michigan State ruggle to educate each other. OH /^QQ jDOl/C)/ Both the House and Senate approved Before these changes could be installed were designed partially to counter this the water pollution bill, sending it to they would have to be approved by the threat. But loyalty to the complexes did President Johnson, who had requested it. Athletic Council and student government. not develop, and many students moved think Michigan State was such a de- students thought about courses they had MOSCOW 4' - Leaders of the Soviet The measure authorizes $3.4 billion to Munn said that long lines were nothing out of them as soon as they were eligi- personalized institution In the first place taken via closed circuit TV. bloc assembled in Moscow Monday night help construct sewage treatment plants new at Michigan State and that in the ble to. —deserves consideration. One of the questions they tried to an- to try to decide what to do about China's for the four years 1968 through 1971 and past "we had lines of students extending The usual explanation is that the com- Some extremely tentative and carefully swer was: Does de personalization in the errant brand of communism and its ob- $305 million for research and develop- from the Jenison lobby beyond the statue plexes were still too impersonal—that qualified findings in a recent study spon University affect student attitudes toward struction of aid to North Viet Nam. ment to prevent pollution. of Sparty". a gathering of 1,000 to 3,000 students and sored by MSU's Educational Development CCTV? The top Communists from Bulgaria, a smattering of faculty in one acre did Program (EDP) Indicate that this is at First they had to find out what students Cuba, Czechoslovakia, East Germany, not provide the personal teaching, learning least a possibility. think about de-personalization. Davis, Hungary, Mongolia, Poland, Romania and and social atmosphere that students Robert H, Davis, director of learning Johnson and two graduate assistants in- the Soviet Union are also expected to see wanted. service, and F. Craig Johnson, assistant terviewed 136 randomly selected students Soviet c osmonauts launched into orbit Arab says Goldberg A seldom - discussed alternative ex- director uffrEDP, wanted to find out what from 171 C'CTV sections of eight courses Thursday.
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