Rice ......... 21 USC ......... 21 Purdue ....... 28 Illinois ....... 24 Indiana ...... 18 Nebraska ...... 7 Missouri ... .. .1 Navy . , . ... . 7 MSU ..........17 Notre Dame ... 21 Pittsburgh ..... 6 Kansas ........15 Minnesota...... 0 Northwestern ... 3 Ihlenber.. .6 6UItrsinus. ..6 Cal Pass Stuns Wolverines, -9 By GRAYLE HOWLETT Associate Sports Editor Special To The Daily BERKELEY-Sun-soaked Straw- berry Mountain, harboring Cali- fornia's memorial stadium, seem- ed to be waiting impatiently for yesterday's California-Michigan football game to end. Michigan led 9-3 . . . China- town was going to be a great place to visit . . . only a little over two minutes remained in an other- wise uneventful game. Then from out of the side of Strawberry Mountain, a pass from reserve California quarterback Randy Humphries floated into the hands of fullback John McGaffie and a 77 yard Bear touchdown was his- tory. As was Michigan's first loss of the 1967 season,.10-9. You could point out the cold hard statistics-"California's first victory in five tries against Mich- igan," "The Bears first victory over a Big Ten opponent since 1952," and "The winning pass play, third longest in California his- tory." But most important to the Gol- den Bears of the Pacific Eight Conference was simply that they had beaten a Big Ten team. Cal- ifornia coach, Ray Willsey, had recently stated that a natural riv- alry had developed between his conference and the Big Ten. But after the way the California team carried Willsey off the field after the final gun, you inight think the Bears had just won the Rose Bowl or beaten their arch-rival Stanford. "This game was about as tough physically and emotionally as I ever want to play. It's the first time I've beaten a Big Ten team since 1952 when I was a player, but it won't be the last," a jub- ilant Willsey shouted from the balcony outside the California dressing room. Field Goal The Bears winning score was set up after Michigan had expanded its lead on a 30 yard field goal by Mike Hankwitz. After the kick- off following the three pointer, California and Michigan exchang- ed punts. The Bears put the ball in play on their own 23, and on the first down play, Humphries and McGaffie teamed up for Cali- fornia's second victory in three starts. McGaffie described the winning play this way: "I'm nicknamed --iron hands" because I'm so poor at catching the ball. But we had run that play five times and I had been free every time, so I told the coach and he decided to make it the first call the next time we got the ball. Then I told Randy Humphries) 'You throw it there and I'll catch it.' That was only the third time I'd touched the ball all day. But I'm all through run- ning pass patterns. I hope I never have to catch another pass." Signs of Heroics Michigan showed signs of re- peating its last minute heroics of last week when, after Califor- nia's kickoff following their touch- down, Dick Vidmer hit Jim Ber- line on a 72 yard scoring play. But Michigan halfback Ernie Sharpe was in motion on the play, nullifying u h at x mid hav be Ii ~he xvinning touecdown and ma k ing Berlits alk back t o t he huddle alm st as loion as the Wol- verine's tlip back t .\nn Aih Michigan oach ump Elit. munching on an apple a ewr ths game, comnien e on lic pn xxhich mnight hax e kept hs teai undefeated.' -Even before Ber- line caught the bail i aw the fla drop. You really cant lalw Eime on the llay. The CFitonia cxd xxas excited about their touch- down andi xxas stil prett nosy. I don-t think Ernie could hear the signals.'' California jumped of to a 3-U booted a 44 yard feld goal. Juniot college trausi erPu W\lliams had set up Mile'soppoi'umut Micign . alback Troyco then carried to the 24 MeGaflic dived for two, but txwo other play See LAST', Page 7 -Associated Press JOHN MCGAFFIE, California fullback, runs under a pass from quarterback Randy Humphries in the last minutes of yesterday's game with Michigan to complete a 77 yard pass play that defeated the Wolverines 10-9. Chasing McGaffie are Michigan defensive backs Jerry Hartman (26) and Brian Healy (24). It was the only pass McGaffie caught all day. BOARD OF EDUCATION PREPARES FOR FARCE See editorial page Yi t e Sir Dait PARTLY SUJNNY Iligh--68 Low-38 Warmr and aliost no chance of ui'r:ain Seventy-Seven Years of Editorial Freedom SUNDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1967 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 1,.1967 SEVEN CENTS T';[GHT PAGES r REGENTS MUST APPROVE: U' To Submit Tentative Budget To State Legislature Tomorrow By PAT O'DONOHUE The University will submit a 2 "tentative" budget to the legis- lature tomorrow for the 1968- 69 fiscal year, according to a University official. The monetary request which had to be submitted to the legis- lature by Oct. 1 or 2, has not yet been approved by the Regents and is still subject to Regental approval and minor revisions. There is no detailed breakdown in the figures sent to Lansing but "they're pretty close to the final ones that we'll submit," said l a University vice-president. "We hope the University won't have to operate on another aus-, terity budget next year," he con- tinued. Experts have been debating the amount of surplus that will be in the state treasury at the be- ginning of the 1968 fiscal year. If state income has been under-I estimated, as one University economist has suggested, appro- priations may be increased. How- ever, many University officials+ are pessimistic. "There has to be an increase of at least four-five per cent just to maintain present levels of expenditures," he ex- plained.; It has also been argued that even if state revenues have been+ underestimated, the Detroit riot and the United Auto Workers I strike against Ford will require additional funds from the 1967 budget. "The demand for services will increase and therefore there will be a corresponding increase in costs. Too, we have to increase' wages for the faculty and non- faculty. We may need an increase of 10 per cent in order to stay even," he continued. "This year's fiscal reform will not take care of the state's needs for the next two-three years; the state will have to increase reven- ues by $50 million just to stay even. This figure doesn't even take the cost of progress into ac- count." Difficult Year Most University officials agree that "it looks like a difficult year." The House is up for re-election Faculty To CourseWr -Us Saekinclusioni ofOierSioI InI LSA Class Descripti i Book By WALTER SH1APIRo The Faculty-Student Committee for Course and Teacher Evalu- ation agreed yesterday to revise and expand the literary college course description book to include other academic units within the University. "We decided to correct immediately the lack of an adequate course description book and then move on to the more controversial area of course and teacher evaluation," explained Prof. Donald R. t Brown. director of the Center for Learning and Teaching. and chair- man of the SACUA faculty-student committee. Brown explained that a sub-committee under the direction of Prof. William Freehling of the history department would try this week. to establish a consistent format for the course descriptions to follow. "We will then invite representatives of the other units of the University to meet with us and discuss this format," said Brown. "We hope to establish review - groups within each school to an- nually update and revise the book." Brown stressed that the book would not be published for gen-e eral distribution because "such a G ive'si SHA, Rent Union Focus i-I ~t'1 I' By Use of "s er" to obt2 housing con will domini the Studen (SHA) and ion (SRU) year, A curren campus hou cording to and Mike K pointed chi SHA, enabl their power such as an e landlords. T and SRU, t to mobilize t W Schreiber boycotts of responsible means of ga In a prosy ly SRU out] tion of a apartment t cation of a l phlet to ad' rights in the 1 onsumer" sPower next Year and members are not ex- pected t actively endorse an inI- crease in taxes. "It's also difficult ROB BEATTIE their legal rights in housing mat- i for us because we don't have the tudent consumer pow- ters such as damage deposit with- leeway of increasing student fees ain better off-campus holding, and repair claims. Ac- every year of course." editions in Ann Arbor cording to Schreiber, the pamphlet'Another budgetar ble ate the programs of will discuss legal problems in lan-' Anothe bUrobem con- SHousing Associationuage that the average student fxonting the University is that of tHudent Renctalon- can understand. expansion. The University is not rStudent Rental Un- S is c nt. receiving state funds for construc- during the coming SHA is currently working close- tion purposes because of its re- ly with the student committee on p t surplus in the off- housing, which is connected with sal t cml wit ublic Act using market will, ac- the University housing office and1 Mark Schreiber, '69, under the direction of John Feld- !office approve building plans. :oeneke, '69, newly ap- kamp, to develop a plan for the $55 M Drive airmen of SRU and University to build single unit The University had hoped to use e students to exercise housing structures. These units a good portion of the funds from to gain concessions would be similar to the apart- the $55 Million drive but the ma- ight-month lease from ments in the Oxford housing com- jority of those funds have been, Phe programs of SHA plex. John Bishop, Grad, is out- earmarked for designated projects hey say, are designed lining these plans which would leaving relatively little to wo'k this power. hopefully provide low cost housingwith. Toud oycttfor students within the next four1 wth ould Boycottrs "These are difficult financial considers selective A is also investigating the times for the University and for poor housing and ir- possibility that there may have the state. They become even more landlords as one been instances of price fixing in difficult when the nation is experi- ining concessions. the Ann Arbor housing market in encing a period of prosperity. It pectus released recent- the past several years. Koeneke makes it hard for us to compete," lined plans for initia- points out that this investigation he concluded. complaint service for will require extensive legal re-W tenants and for publi- search and an opinion from state egal information pam- Attorney General Frank Kelley be-' vise students on their fore anything definite can be A.L. RACE private housing mar- concluded. W L Pet. GB Daily--Robert Sheffield TIGERS DOUBLEPLAYEDJ comprehensive book would prob- ably be about the same size as the Manhattan telephone direc- TiHE TIGER'S JIM NORTHRUP slides into second base in an effort to break up a double play in the pressure-packed doubleheader with the Angels yesterday. Angels' shortstop Jim Fregosi put out Northrup and successfully completed the double play. The Tigers won the first game of the twin bill, 5-0, but dropped the second 8-6 on a six run Angel uprising in the eighth inning. To tie for the AL pennant they must sweep today's doubleheader. OPPOSES KAHN PLAN: tory." Engineering Council Suggests Student Government' Revisions By JENNY STILLER The Engineering Council Thurs- day night recommended that rep- resentatives to all campus stu- dent government organizations be elected by the individual colleges. Each college, according to the rec- ommendation, would have either an equal number of representa- tives or a number determined by the size of its student body. "We feel that both the present set up and the plans suggested in the Knauss Report are not truly representative," said Eugene A. DeFouw, chairman of the Knauss Report Review Committee of the Engineering Council. "We are al- from the Law and Medical Schools, so in complete disagreement with as well as from Rackham." Bruce Kahn, Student Government He pointed out that, while en- Council president, on the question gineering students vote at large of geographic representation." for SGC members under the pres- The ad hoc Knauss Report Re- ent system, they are themselves view Committee, which proposed rarely elected to office. "We hate the recommendations, was form- to have to adhere to rules we have ed in April to study how the re- had no say in making," DeFouw port would affect the College of said. Engineering. Engineer Plan Pushed The Engineering Council found Rhines stated that he has been Rather, he said, copies of a loose leaf book containing exten- sive descriptions by the professor who teaches each course would be placed for student use within counselor's offices and dormitor- ies. Brown added that in cases where different, professors teach separate sections of the same course, each would prepare a de- scription. - According to Stephen Spitz, '68, a member of the SACUA commit- tee and chairman of the SGC Committee on Course and Teacher Evaluation, the matter will be presented to SACUA at its Novem- ber meeting. Brown said that offi- cial SACUA approval was "ex- ceedingly likely." Charles Goldberg, '69, vice- chairman of the SGC committee, hailed the SACUA action, saying, "This means that definitely next semester students will have more information to make wise and ra- tional decisions in selecting cours- es." The SGC committee is current- ly preparing a course evaluation book for publication this academic year, while according to Brown, his committee "was charged by SACUA to bring in a report about the role of 'course evaluation' in the University." T0 Tech-I The Young Republican ('YR) Club added its support last week to the University's first multi-is- sue teach-in in the hope of pre- senting a variety of opinion at the Oct. 4 event, entitled "The Amer- ican Crisis." "We want to present a broad scope of viewpoints at the teach-in, for Republicans also have strong feelings about foreign affairs," ex- plained Michael Renner '69, YR president. He added that the group was in the process of obtaining Republican speakers for next Wed- nesday's teach-in. The YR action followed a similar indorsement of the teach-in by the Young Democratic Clubon Wed- nesday. Other sponsors of the, teach-in are the Student Govern- ment Council and Ann Arbor Friends of Vietnam Fall (AAFVNF) with the bulk of the financial support coming from AAFVNF and private contributions. Vietnam, Racial Crisis Tentative plans for the teach-in which will analyze the relation- ship between the war in Vietnam, the problems of the third world, and America's urb n and racial. problems were announced by teach-in committee chairman, Harriet Friedman '69. The teach-in will begin at 10:15 p.m. in the Angell-Mason Hall complex, following the Voice of Civilization panel discussion in Hill Aud, sponsored by the Uni- versity featuring Gunnar Myrdal, a Swedish economist, and Ralph Ellison, a Negro author, ket. SRU's complaint service will gather student complaints about housing problems or disagree- ments with landlords, offer legal advice if possible and follow them up by notifying the landlord and possibly alerting the off-campus housing bureau. A file of com- plaints will be kept and used in! establishing a rating of local land- lords. Landlord List The complaint office will be under the direction of John Kelly, '68, administrative vice-president of SHA. It will be open between 2 and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Students may call 764- 3174 or come to the SHA office in the Student Activities Building. A list of SRU approved land- lords which SRU will encourage, students to rent from is being es- tablished. The criteria for good SHA also plans to draw up a model eight-month lease which it hopes the University's off-campus housing bureau will adopt. Boston 91 70 .565 - Minnesota 91 70 .565 - Detroit 90 70 .563 !' i i t both the Knauss Report's recom- mendation for a Student Govern- ment Council composed of 20 members elected at large and SGC President Bruce Kahn's current proposal for geographical repre- sentation unsatisfactory, according to Engineering Council President Wally Rhines. working for weeks on convincing members of the Knauss commit- tee and other interested people that the engineers' plan should be adopted. "We go on record say- ing this is what we prefer," he said. "We hope eventually to im- plement it in any way we can." LSASteering Comn Study ofLanguage By JUDITH KOMISHANE and, as of this year, on the a istrative and admission I Examination of the foueign Representatives from the language distribution require- mittee also sit on trial- ments and the University grading handling cases of student system are among the projects I. that the literary college steering tlrnt. committee will undertake this bOther proposals to bes year. by the committee this yes ylude extending the pa Diane Saltz '69, chairman, pre- option to all courses, exc sented these and other topics last those used for concentratio l 7 ti"PP plqit C 11 L' -L...J U.A .L The resolution passed by the Council stated that the presentC *;method of electing SGC represen- tatives results in a Student Gov- L ernment Council composed chief- of literary college students. dmin- partment. where major changes The system does not "obtain ap- boards. in the conduct of recitation sec- propriate representation on the By JAN MALINOWSKI com- tions were recommended." part of students in the smaller boards The committee was set-up about colleges, nor the College of Engi- The Center for Continuing Ed- cheat- 20 years ago by James Robertson, neering," the resolution claimed. ucation of Women yesterday held dean of the Residential College, Voter Apathy Problem a one-day orientation session for tudied then dean of the literary college, Engineering Council felt that women returning to the Univer- axr in- to act as a personal advisory an undergraduate assembly whose sity after a period of some years. ss-fail group to him. It has been charac- embers were elected by the var- Any woman returning to the epting terized by Dean Shaw as "a valu- ious colleges would both inspire University was eligible to attend p a b y e g dresponsibility on the part of its the program, which was held on )n, and' able idea-generating body." ducation Unit Lining Women cae bac anre afrid r1they aren't going to make it," she explained According to Miss Friedman "They are afraid they can not there will be a series of panels compete with recent graduates." designed "to bring together ex- According to Mrs. Likert, an- perts in each of the three areas other worry is that they won't be of crisis, confront them with each welcomed by the students and fac- other, and cause them to try and ulty. These problems of accept- relate other problems to their ance and confidence were dealt own area of expertise," with in discussions led by James